Arctic Explorations and Discoveries During the Nineteenth Century: Being Detailed Accounts of the Several Expeditions to the North Seas, Both English and American, Conducted by Ross, Parry, Back, Franklin, M'Clure, Dr. Kane, and Others, Including the Long and Fruitless Efforts and Failures in Search of Sir John Franklin. Ed. and Completed to 1855J.W. Lovell, 1886 - 640 sider Narrative of chief adventures and discoveries of arctic explorers during the nineteenth century. |
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Side xii
... Cape Bathurst - Cape Kendall -Coppermine River - Kendall River - The Esquimaux of this region - Their religion -Their different races and tribes - The Kutchins - Fort Confidence - Basil Hall Bay -Bear Lake - Return . The Second Voyage ...
... Cape Bathurst - Cape Kendall -Coppermine River - Kendall River - The Esquimaux of this region - Their religion -Their different races and tribes - The Kutchins - Fort Confidence - Basil Hall Bay -Bear Lake - Return . The Second Voyage ...
Side 27
... Cape Taimur and Cape Shelatskoi . And certainly , if skill , perseverance , and courage , could have opened this passage , it would have been accomplished . Soon after the general peace of Europe , when war's alarms had given way to the ...
... Cape Taimur and Cape Shelatskoi . And certainly , if skill , perseverance , and courage , could have opened this passage , it would have been accomplished . Soon after the general peace of Europe , when war's alarms had given way to the ...
Side 32
... Cape , ( neuer certainely knower before , ) and of a conuenient passage into the huge em- pire of Russia by the Baie of St. Nicholas and of the Riuer of Duina , as for the Portugales , to have found a sea beyond the Cape of Buona ...
... Cape , ( neuer certainely knower before , ) and of a conuenient passage into the huge em- pire of Russia by the Baie of St. Nicholas and of the Riuer of Duina , as for the Portugales , to have found a sea beyond the Cape of Buona ...
Side 44
... Cape Adair , and Scott's Bay . On September the 10th , they landed on an island near Cape Eglington , which was named Agnes ' Monu- ment . A flag - staff and a bottle , with an account of their proceedings was set up . The remains of a ...
... Cape Adair , and Scott's Bay . On September the 10th , they landed on an island near Cape Eglington , which was named Agnes ' Monu- ment . A flag - staff and a bottle , with an account of their proceedings was set up . The remains of a ...
Side 45
... Cape Walsingham to Cum- berland Strait . The 1st of October having arrived , the limit to which his instructions permitted him to remain out , Ross shaped his course_homeward , and after encountering a severe gale off Cape Farewell ...
... Cape Walsingham to Cum- berland Strait . The 1st of October having arrived , the limit to which his instructions permitted him to remain out , Ross shaped his course_homeward , and after encountering a severe gale off Cape Farewell ...
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Arctic Explorations and Discoveries During the Nineteenth Century: Being ... Samuel Mosheim Smucker Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2016 |
Arctic Explorations and Discoveries During the Nineteenth Century: Being ... Samuel Mosheim Smucker,William L Allison Ingen forhåndsvisning - 2015 |
Almindelige termer og sætninger
Admiralty Arctic arrived August Back Baffin's Bay Barrow's Strait Beechey Behring's Strait boats Cape Walker Capt Captain Parry Captain Sir coast Commander Coppermine Coppermine River crew direction discovered discovery dispatched drifted eastward England Enterprise Esquimaux examine expedition exploring feet floes frozen Fury gale Greenland harbor Hecla hope Hudson's Bay Hudson's Bay Company icebergs journey July June Kane Lady Franklin Lake Lancaster Sound land latitude Lieut Lieutenant Mackenzie Mackenzie River Melville Bay Melville Island miles natives navigation night North Somerset northern northward officers pack party passage passed pemmican perilous Polar Sea Pole proceeded provisions reached Regent Inlet regions Repulse Bay Rescue Richardson River sailed seamen season sent ships shore Sir James Ross Sir John Franklin Sir John Ross sledge snow southward Spitzbergen tion traveled vessels voyage Wellington Channel westward whalers wind winter
Populære passager
Side 316 - Venerable, off the coast of Holland, the i2th of October, by log (nth1 three PM Camperdown ESE eight mile. Wind N. by E. Sir, I have the pleasure to acquaint you, for the information of the Lords Commissioners of the Admiralty, that...
Side 154 - Medal of the Bath and West of England Society for the Encouragement of Arts, Manufactures, and Commerce, was unanimously voted to him.
Side 73 - Previous to setting out the whole party ate the remains of their old shoes and whatever scraps of leather they had to strengthen their stomachs for the fatigue of the day's journey.
Side 89 - An Act for more effectually discovering the longitude at sea, and encouraging attempts to find a northern passage between the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans, and to approach the North Pole.
Side 130 - ... the ship received. We found, by the well, that she made no water, and by dark she struck no more. God was merciful to us, and the tide, almost miraculously, fell no lower.
Side 130 - Never perhaps was witnessed a finer scene than on the deck of my little ship, when all hope of life had left us. Noble as the character of the British sailor is always allowed to be, in cases of danger, yet I did not believe it to be possible, that among forty-one persons, not one repining word should have been uttered.
Side 593 - We hailed it in God's name. It ate the food it ne'er had eat, And round and round it flew. The ice did split with a thunder-fit; The helmsman steered us through ! 70 And a good south wind sprung up behind; The Albatross did follow, And every day, for food or play, Came to the mariners...
Side 67 - Prayer-Book but the Lord's Prayer and Creed were always read to them in their own language. Our diet consisted almost entirely of reindeer meat, varied twice a week by fish and occasionally by a little flour, but we had no vegetables of any description. On the Sunday mornings we drank a cup of chocolate but our greatest luxury was tea (without sugar) of which we regularly partook twice a day.
Side 133 - ... weeks, but for more than half a year together. Whichever way the eye is turned, it meets a picture calculated to impress upon the mind an idea of inanimate stillness, of that motionless torpor with which our feelings have nothing congenial ; of anything, in short, but life. In the very silence there is a deadness with which a human spectator appears out of "keeping. The presence of man seems an intrusion on the dreary solitude of this wintry desert, which even its native animals have for awhile...
Side 278 - WHITHER sail you, Sir John Franklin ?" Cried a whaler in Baffin's Bay ; " To know if between the land and the Pole, I may find a broad sea-way." " I charge you back, Sir John Franklin, As you would live and thrive, For between the land and the frozen Pole No man