A view of the ice taken from 'Alert' (1856), when beset in the ice off Cape Beechey.
A view of the ice off Cape Beechey, taken from the port side of the upper deck looking over the stern of 'Alert' (1856). Note the davit for shifting the rudder. The floe-berg forced 'Alert' onshore, lifting the stern three to five feet out of the water, before it grounded and the ship settled to being about six inches above her usual waterline. The crew employed in reducing the height of the larger piece of ice to the port side of 'Alert', in order to let it float, thus releasing the ship. The process took three days, involving the use of explosives alongside more manual equipment like axes, picks and chisels. The hieght of the ice in the background, which was recorded by Commander A. H. Markham as being sixty or seventy feet thick.