Dennis Rawlins

He is known to the public mostly from media coverage of his investigations into two early twentieth-century North Pole expeditions.

In 1976, as the only astronomer on the Committee for Skeptical Inquiry, he looked into the purported Mars effect.

[4][5] In 1996 he made headlines[6] when page one of the New York Times covered his report to Ohio State University which concluded that in 1926 Richard E. Byrd's airplane flight towards the North Pole turned back 150 miles from the pole.

[7] Rawlins's third book, his detailed report on Byrd's trip and on the competence of lingering defenses of it, was co-published[8] simultaneously in 2000 by DIO volume 10, 2000 and by the polar research center at the University of Cambridge.

[9] Because explorer[10] Frederick Cook's story of reaching the North Pole in 1908 is generally rejected, the elimination of Peary[11][12] and Byrd leaves fourth North Pole claimant Roald Amundsen as first there in 1926 in the airship Norge (Norwegian for Norway).