Reading Comprehension

Read the passage carefully. Then answer the questions below.

It was the strangest of all races. Two teams of five men each – one British, the other Norwegian – set out at the beginning of the 1911 Antarctic summer, both bent on becoming the first explorers to reach the South Pole. The British team was led by 43-­year-­old Robert Falcon Scott, the Norwegian team was led by 39­-year-­old Roald Amundsen. Each man had already made expeditions to the Antarctic region.

Yet because the two expeditions had chosen to build their coastal base camps 600 miles apart, their paths would never overlap at either edge of the vast Ross Ice Shelf. The two teams would never meet each other. There was no way to know who was leading the race.

Amundsen’s team set out on October 18. Scott’s party did not depart from Cape Evans until November 1. The two parties had about the same distance to cover (nearly 800 miles in a straight line) to get to the South Pole. Yet, their travelling styles were completely different, and those differences would spell victory or defeat. Amundsen used dogs to haul his sledges while the men were skiing. When they were close to exhaustion, they could kill and eat the dogs. Scott experimented in vain with ponies and motorised tractors to pull his sledges but ended up heading for the Pole with his men in harnesses, pulling their heavy sledges themselves.