12/15/2011 04:02:00 PM EST
Compliance and the South Pole

We reckoned now that we were at the Pole. Of
course, every one of us knew that we were not standing on the absolute spot; it
would be an impossibility with the time and the instruments at our disposal to
ascertain
that exact spot. But we were so near it that the few miles which
possibly separated us from it could not be of the slightest importance.
Roald Amundsen - December 14, 1911
The South Pole is a harsh and isolated environment. It's
bit more plush now that when man first stepped on the location 100 year ago.
Amundsen slept in a small tent. Today visitors can take it a bit easier in the Amundsen-Scott South Pole
Station. You can even see a picture of the day
from the South Pole.
At least during the Antarctic summer when the average
high is a balmy -15°F with near endless daytime. From mid-April to mid-August,
the only natural light comes from the moon and the aurora australis. Those
settled in for the Antarctic winter don't see the sun for months and the
average high drops to a bone-chiling -68°F
The current station is on jacks so it can battle the 8
inches of snow that accumulates each year by raising its elevation. Since it's
sitting on a moving glacier it moves about 10 meters each year. It's in
constant movement, battling the forces of nature that kept in uninhabited until
modern technology was able to fight back against the elements.
There are many comparisons you can draw between the South
Pole and a compliance program. I'll let you draw your own.
For
additional commentary on developments in compliance and ethics, visit Compliance Building,
a blog hosted by Doug Cornelius.
For more information about LexisNexis
products and solutions connect with us through our corporate site.