Model ships built by two young brothers have been launched on a mission to circumnavigate Antarctica in what is thought to be a world first.
Ollie and Harry Ferguson from Turriff, Aberdeenshire, took inspiration from the Ross scientific expedition of 1839-43 where the HMS Erebus and HMS Terror discovered the Ross Ice Shelf.
They have built one-metre long replicas of the two vessels, which will follow the circumpolar current around the coastline of Antarctica, a journey of more than 12,500 miles which could take up to two years.
During the journey, the boats will transmit back scientific data including air temperature, ocean temperature and ocean pH which can be markers of climate change.
Harry, 11, told the PA news agency: “It feels awesome, we’ve been trying to do it for two years now and we’ve finally got them in and it feels amazing.
“We’re interested to collect data about climate change and also just trying to see what happens to the boats and the end result and – though there is a very low chance – to see if we will ever see them again.”
The boats have been crafted from elm wood and are fitted with bespoke tracking and monitoring devices developed by Icoteq, with a battery life of more than six years.
They are also fitted with cameras which will be able to send around one image a month.
After the boats were completed, they were shipped to family friends in the Falkland Islands until the family received official approval from authorities that they could be launched into the Southern Ocean.
They were quickly attacked by a pair of petrels which seemed to think the boats were food but fortunately the birds soon lost interest and flew away.
The boys are no strangers to such challenges as they have undertaken many adventures, previously setting the world record for the longest distance travelled at sea by a toy boat.
They sailed their Playmobil pirate ship Adventure more than 3,700 miles across the Atlantic to the Caribbean as part of a list of 500 adventures.
The boys’ father, MacNeill Ferguson, said that this has been one of their biggest challenges so far.
He said: “The boys are absolutely over the moon that we’ve finally achieved this. It’s probably one of our hardest adventures.
“This was by a long way the most involved and hardest adventure that we’ve had to do.
“The sheer amount of learning and skills the boys had to learn to make these boats, and to build them, and to test them, and the understanding of how all these things work, it’s just a joy to see them learning in this way by doing stuff.”
He added: “Both boys are absolutely delighted that the boats are in the water and we check a couple of times a day to see how they are doing.”
The boys included masts and rigging when they built the vessels but these have been taken off for the voyage as they would not have withstood the conditions.
Ollie, 13, said it is “probably one of our most challenging and ambitious adventures yet” and is delighted that the boats are now underway on their journey.
He said: “It’s amazing because it’s taken over two years and the scientific data that could be collected as markers of climate change is going to be amazing, hopefully.”
Anyone wanting to see where the boats are, and find out more about the project, can do so at https://www.icoteq.com/project-erebus/