"Fram" in the port of Bergen, Norway. Photo: Johan von der Fehr, in the collection of the National Library of Norway – Public domain, Wikimedia
Fridtjof Nansen's crew leaves the "Fram", 1895. Photo: from a polar ship expedition to the North Pole (June 24, 1893 to August 13, 1896). The plan was for the ship to drift in the ice on ocean currents from the Siberian coast through the North Pole towards Greenland. Photo” from Fridjof Nansen's book "Farthest North", Constable & Co, London 1897 (p. 112) - Public domain, Wikimedia
Arctic Ocean. Fridtjof Nansen (1861-1930) and Fredrik Hjalmar Johansen (1867-1913) pull sleighs on rough ice. In March 1895, they undertook a dangerous dog-sled ski expedition, trying to reach the Pole. Photo: Fridtjof Nansen, in the collection of the National Library of Norway – Public domain, Wikimedia
Meeting of Fridtjof Nansen (right) and Frederick Jackson at Cape Flora, Franz Josef Land, June 17, 1896. Photo: from the book "Farthest North" by Nansen, volume II, Constable & Co, London, 1897 (pages 462) – Public domain, Wikimedia
Fridtjof Nansen (on the left) and Hjalmar Johansen after arriving at Jackson's camp -- August 1896. Photo: Frederick Jackson (1860-1938) -- from Nansen's Farthest North, Volume II, Constable & Co, London, 1897 (pages 466 and 468) - Public Domain, Wikimedia