Missing man's remains found frozen 60 years later
Dennis 'Tink' Bell, at the time 25, fell into a crevasse during an Antarctic mission – leaving his devastated family unable to repatriate his body.
Dennis's body was never recovered – until January 29, when a team of Polish researchers from the Henryk Arctowski Polish Antarctic Station stumbled upon bones later confirmed to be his.
His brother, David Bell, told the BBC: 'I had long given up on finding my brother. It is just remarkable, astonishing. I can't get over it.'
Born in 1934, Dennis worked with the RAF and trained as a meteorologist before joining the Falkland Islands Dependencies Survey – later renamed the British Antarctic Survey.
In 1958, he began a two-year posting at the UK base in Admiralty Bay, Antarctica.
His main role was to send up weather balloons and radio the data back to the UK every three hours – work that meant firing up a generator in brutal subzero conditions.
The base sat on King George Island – around 120km off the northern tip of the Antarctic Peninsula.
Archivist Ieuan Hopkins from the British Antarctic Survey unearthed detailed reports describing work on the 'ridiculously isolated' island.
One report described Dennis as 'cheerful and industrious, with a mischievous sense of humour and fondness for practical jokes'.
He was said to have loved the husky dogs that pulled sledges around the island and was known as the hut's best cook – often managing the food store through the long winter when no supplies could get in.
The fatal accident happened just weeks after his 25th birthday, while Dennis was surveying King George Island to help map the terrain.
On July 26 1959 – deep in the Antarctic winter – Dennis and his colleague and pal Jeff Stokes had climbed and surveyed a glacier.
Dennis was encouraging the weary dogs but wasn't wearing his skis when he suddenly vanished into a crevasse, according to British Antarctic Survey accounts.
Jeff shouted down to him and Dennis was able to call back, grabbing hold of a rope lowered in a rescue attempt.
The dogs pulled at the rope, hauling Dennis – who had attached it to his belt – up towards the edge of the hole.
But tragically, the belt broke and Dennis fell back into the crevasse.
When Jeff called out again, Dennis didn't reply.
David Bell recalled how, in July 1959, a telegram boy knocked on the door of the Bells' family home in Harrow, London to deliver the devastating news of Dennis' death.
He said two men from Dennis's base later visited the family and brought a sheepskin as a gesture of sympathy.
'But there was no conclusion. There was no service; there was no anything. Just Dennis gone,' David says.
David described feeling overwhelmed by the news and expressed his gratitude to the Polish researchers who found his remains.
'I'm just sad my parents never got to see this day,' he said.
David, who lives in Australia, plans to visit England with his sister Valerie so they can lay their beloved brother to rest.
'It's wonderful; I'm going to meet my brother. You might say we shouldn't be thrilled, but we are,' David said.
'He's been found – he's come home now.'
Professor Dame Jane Francis, Director of the British Antarctic Survey, paid tribute to Dennis: 'Dennis was one of the many brave personnel who contributed to the early science and exploration of Antarctica under extraordinarily harsh conditions.
'Even though he was lost in 1959, his memory lived on among colleagues and in the legacy of polar research.'
Since 1944, 29 people have died working in the British Antarctic Territory on scientific missions, according to the British Antarctic Monument Trust.
Among them were Alan Sharman and Russell Thompson, who also died in 1959.
Meanwhile, last week a hiker who went missing in Pakistan 28 years ago was found dead inside an icy glacier – with his body and clothes shockingly well-preserved.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles

Sydney Morning Herald
17 hours ago
- Sydney Morning Herald
Jeff Bezos ‘obsessed' with making wife Lauren Sanchez next Bond girl
Jeff Bezos is 'obsessed' with casting his wife Lauren Sanchez in the latest Bond film, Hollywood insiders have claimed. The Amazon founder is reportedly pushing the makers of Bond 26 to consider Sanchez, a journalist, trained pilot, and one-time astronaut, for a role as the latest Bond girl. Since Ursula Andress first hit screens as the original Bond girl in 1962, playing Honey Ryder in Dr No, the role of the fictional spy's love interest has become a coveted one. The role, which has become almost as iconic as that of Bond himself, has been played by the likes of Eva Green, Honor Blackman, Halle Berry and Jane Seymour. 'This isn't just fantasy casting – Jeff wants her on screen, period,' a Hollywood source told Rob Shuter, a British gossip blogger and former executive editor of OK! magazine's US edition. The insider added that the billionaire is 'obsessed' with finding a role for his wife, 55, in the new film, which is slated for release next year or early 2027. Despite fervent speculation, it's still not clear who will replace Daniel Craig as 007 in the film. The actor bowed out of the franchise after starring in No Time To Die in 2021. The film's director was announced as Denis Villeneuve, the French-Canadian filmmaker behind the Dune franchise, in July.

The Age
17 hours ago
- The Age
Jeff Bezos ‘obsessed' with making wife Lauren Sanchez next Bond girl
Jeff Bezos is 'obsessed' with casting his wife Lauren Sanchez in the latest Bond film, Hollywood insiders have claimed. The Amazon founder is reportedly pushing the makers of Bond 26 to consider Sanchez, a journalist, trained pilot, and one-time astronaut, for a role as the latest Bond girl. Since Ursula Andress first hit screens as the original Bond girl in 1962, playing Honey Ryder in Dr No, the role of the fictional spy's love interest has become a coveted one. The role, which has become almost as iconic as that of Bond himself, has been played by the likes of Eva Green, Honor Blackman, Halle Berry and Jane Seymour. 'This isn't just fantasy casting – Jeff wants her on screen, period,' a Hollywood source told Rob Shuter, a British gossip blogger and former executive editor of OK! magazine's US edition. The insider added that the billionaire is 'obsessed' with finding a role for his wife, 55, in the new film, which is slated for release next year or early 2027. Despite fervent speculation, it's still not clear who will replace Daniel Craig as 007 in the film. The actor bowed out of the franchise after starring in No Time To Die in 2021. The film's director was announced as Denis Villeneuve, the French-Canadian filmmaker behind the Dune franchise, in July.

ABC News
a day ago
- ABC News
Antarctica – a continent dedicated to science
Antarctica is unique with no government and no citizens. Instead, the entire continent is dedicated to science - a land shared across nations as a natural reserve. But as Ellen Coulter reports, the arrangement that protects this last great wilderness appears increasingly fragile.