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The north polar regions lie within the Arctic circle, and at their center is the North Pole. The distance from the circle to the pole is more than fourteen hundred miles. Intense cold and the hardships of ice navigation have made the discovery and exploration of this region very slow and hazardous.
It is believed that Norsemen from Norway and Sweden, after colonizing Iceland, made settlements on the Greenland coast and carried their seal hunting beyond the Arctic circle, far into the polar regions. But in 1347 a plague broke out in Norway, and the people forgot their far-off colonies. For more than a hundred years after this no attempt was made to enter the Arctic circle.
It is a singular fact that the famous voyage of Columbus in 1492, although made toward the south, should have influenced to some extent discovery in the north polar regions. After Columbus had really proved that the earth was round, navigators believed that by sailing westward far enough they might reach the rich lands of India and Cathay (China).
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Veröffentlichungsjahr: 2021
MAP OF THE NORTH POLAR REGIONS
AN ACCOUNT OF ARCTIC EXPLORATION FOR USE IN SCHOOLS
BY
EDITH HORTON
REVISED EDITION
© 2021 Librorium Editions ISBN : 9782383830078
First Edition, 1904
While abundant material has been put before children with the purpose of making them familiar with the history and industrial development of various parts of the known world, very little has been written to inform them of the work which is now being done in the comparatively unknown regions of the north, or of the history of the early discoveries which have led to it.
The importance of the present determined search for the North Pole is admitted by all thoughtful people, and the subject is one which must increase in interest until the entire North Frigid Zone is correctly mapped and charted.
Accounts of the pioneers in this work of discovery, of Franklin and of Kane, and in our own day of Nansen and Peary, are available only in such exhaustive works as are unsuitable reading for children, and which sometimes tax the patience of the adult. Hence the work done by these intrepid explorers upon the American continent and north of it remains unstudied and unknown.
It is hoped that this book may give our young people sufficient knowledge of the subject to enable them to read farther with intelligence, and that it may also inspire them with interest in the many expeditions that are being sent out.
The descriptions of the strange people who inhabit these cold countries, their dress, their ways of living, their customs, and their manners, all interest the child, and meet his natural desire to hear about other people than those living in the part of the world about him.
No complete history has been attempted, but rather a series of sketches which, it is hoped, will enable the reader to appreciate the achievements of the brave men who have lent and are lending their best efforts to the task of unlocking and wresting from the Frozen North, the secrets so necessary for the advancement of science.
CHAPTER
I.
Introduction
II.
Sir John Franklin. 1818
III.
Franklin’s First Land Journey. 1819–1821
IV.
Franklin’s Second Land Journey. 1825–1827
V.
The Erebus and the Terror. 1845
VI.
Elisha Kent Kane. 1853
VII.
Winter in Rensselaer Harbor. 1853–1854
VIII.
The Eskimos. 1854
IX.
Hunting in the Icy North
X.
Home Again. 1855
XI.
Nordenskjöld and the Northeast Passage. 1878–1879
XII.
Voyage of the Jeannette. 1879–1881
XIII.
Greely in Grinnell Land. 1881–1883
XIV.
Farthest North of the Greely Party. 1882
XV.
Lieutenant Schwatka in Alaska. 1883
XVI.
Nansen crosses Greenland. 1888
XVII.
The Voyage of the Fram. 1893–1896
XVIII.
Peary crosses Greenland. 1891–1897
XIX.
Andrée’s Balloon Expedition to the Pole. 1897
XX.
Expeditions of 1902
XXI.
Discovery of the North Pole by Robert E. Peary. 1909
Map of the North Polar Regions
The Aurora Borealis
Sebastian Cabot
The Earth on June 21
The Earth on December 21
Daily Motion of the Heavens as seen at the North Pole
Daily Motion of the Heavens as seen at the Equator
The Midnight Sun
The Change of Seasons
Sir John Franklin
Glacier, English Bay, Spitzbergen
A Ship in the Ice Pack
Icebergs in the Polar Sea
A Post of the Hudson Bay Company
In Winter Quarters
Relics of the Franklin Expedition
Elisha Kent Kane
Fiskernaes, Greenland
An Eskimo Dog Team
Eskimos and their Dogs
Interior of an Eskimo Hut
A Walrus Hunt
A Herd of Seals
Polar Bears
Traveling over the Ice Hummocks
Dragging the Boats over the Ice Floes
Upernavik, Greenland
A Greenlander in his Kayak
Samoyed Huts in Summer
A Samoyed Family in Winter Costume
The “Vega” firing a Salute at Cape Tcheliuskin, the Most Northern Point of the Old World
Tchuktche and Reindeer
Tchuktche Man and Woman
Hunting Reindeer
The “Jeannette” in the Ice Pack
Bird Cliffs
Musk Ox
An Arctic Snowstorm
Sitka, Alaska, in 1880
Crossing the Coast Range
Tanana Station, River Yukon, in Winter
The Raft on which a Journey of Thirteen Hundred and Three Miles was made
A Man on Ski
Fridtjof Nansen
A Herd of Reindeer
Nansen’s Camp on the Drift Ice
A Group of Greenland Eskimos
A View in the Interior of Greenland
Sledging across Greenland
Skating off the Coast of Greenland
The Launching of the “Fram”
Boat attacked by Walrus
Nansen and Johansen leaving the “Fram”
Setting Fox Traps
Red Cliff House after the Storm
Godthaab
The “Tent” Meteorite
Andrée begins his Journey
Peary in Arctic Costume
Moonlight in the Arctic Regions
Eskimo Dogs
The Aurora Borealis.
THE FROZEN NORTH
The north polar regions lie within the Arctic circle, and at their center is the North Pole. The distance from the circle to the pole is more than fourteen hundred miles. Intense cold and the hardships of ice navigation have made the discovery and exploration of this region very slow and hazardous.
It is believed that Norsemen from Norway and Sweden, after colonizing Iceland, made settlements on the Greenland coast and carried their seal hunting beyond the Arctic circle, far into the polar regions. But in 1347 a plague broke out in Norway, and the people forgot their far-off colonies. For more than a hundred years after this no attempt was made to enter the Arctic circle.
It is a singular fact that the famous voyage of Columbus in 1492, although made toward the south, should have influenced to some extent discovery in the north polar regions. After Columbus had really proved that the earth was round, navigators believed that by sailing westward far enough they might reach the rich lands of India and Cathay (China).
The only route then known from Europe to India was through the Mediterranean Sea. At Constantinople, the cargoes of metals, woods, and pitch were unloaded and sent on by caravan to the East, while returning caravans brought silks, dyewoods, spices, perfumes, precious stones, ivory, and pearls, to be shipped from Constantinople.
When the Turks, through whose country the merchants passed, began to realize how valuable the Eastern trade was, they sent bands of robbers to seize the caravans, making traffic by this route more difficult and more dangerous as time went on; so that European merchants tried to find some other way of reaching that part of the world.
Sebastian Cabot.
John and Sebastian Cabot, two English navigators, set out in 1497 to sail westward, but finding their way blocked by the American continent, they returned. In 1498 Sebastian Cabot made a second voyage, with the object of finding a passage north of America which would lead to the Spice Islands and rich Cathay. In this way the long hunt for the northwest passage was begun.
The Cabots did not find the northwest passage; and though many voyages were made in search of it by other navigators during the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, nobody met with success. The severe cold, added to the difficulties of a voyage through the ice of ages, prevented further investigation in that direction for some time.
Meanwhile, the Spanish and the Portuguese had been active in seeking for southern routes to the East, and had discovered two,—one around the Cape of Good Hope and one through the Strait of Magellan. They guarded these waterways jealously, and would not allow the ships of other nations to pass. Thus they succeeded in controlling all the rich Eastern trade, and were growing very wealthy and powerful.
The English and the Dutch, who were also anxious to obtain a share of the rich commerce with the East, saw the importance of finding a northern route to India; consequently they experimented by sailing northeast along the coast of Europe and Asia. The route which they sought was known as the northeast passage.
England sent out the first expedition in 1553, but the severity of the weather prevented the ships from making much progress. Several other vain attempts were made by the English, and then the Dutch took up the work; but they failed, too, and for a time the search for northern passages to the Indies was abandoned.
The Earth on June 21.
The total absence of the sun from the Arctic regions during a large part of each year makes the climate severe and the country desolate. Direct sun rays are necessary to insure warmth, and the regions within the Arctic circle receive at the best only slanting rays.
The Earth on December 21.
In the temperate zones the sun is never exactly overhead. For people who live within the tropics it is overhead twice every year. At all places along the equator the sun is overhead at noon on the 21st of March. Each day after, it comes overhead at noon at places farther north, until the 21st of June, when it is overhead at the tropic of Cancer. After this the sun appears to turn and go south, and on September 22 it is again overhead at noon at the equator. The sun then continues to move southward each day until December 21, when it is overhead at the tropic of Capricorn. And so it goes back and forth the year round.
While the sun is north of the equator, there is constant day somewhere within the Arctic circle; when the sun is south of the equator, there is constant night somewhere within the Arctic circle. The farther a region is from the equator, the longer are the days and nights at different seasons of the year. At the pole there is a night of six months and a day of six months. The night is sometimes lighted by the moon and sometimes by the aurora borealis.
Daily Motion of the Heavens as seen at the North Pole.
There are but two seasons in the Arctic regions—a long, cold winter and a short, dry summer. It is during the summer that the explorers do their work. Throughout the dark winter they can do nothing. Even in the summer, navigators meet with many perils, for Arctic navigation is not an easy matter. Besides the danger that the vessel may be frozen in an ice pack, or crushed between icebergs, the navigator is often blinded by fogs and snows, and has to face unknown tides and currents.
Daily Motion of the Heavens as seen at the Equator.
The vegetation within the Arctic circle is scanty. During the summer the bright, warm sun causes the plants to spring up and grow rapidly. Willows, dwarf birches, and rush grasses are plentiful in some localities. In southern Greenland, and in some sheltered places along its western coast, yellow poppies and dandelions grow. Farther north only mosses and lichens are to be found, and beyond the moss line there is no trace of vegetation.
Nevertheless there are plenty of animals in this land of ice and snow. The polar bear, Arctic fox, blue fox, wolf, ermine, reindeer, and musk ox are plentiful. Seals and walruses come out of the water upon the ice, during the summer, to enjoy the sun, and thousands of snow buntings, auks, and eider ducks visit the shores of the cold seas to build their nests and catch food. When the summer of three months is over, nearly all outward signs of animal and vegetable life disappear and the entire landscape becomes a dreary, white expanse.
The inhabitants of this cold land are called Eskimos. They find it hard to get a living, and their dwellings are of the rudest and most primitive sort. Many of the tribes move from place to place, building their snow huts wherever game is most plentiful, but never going far inland, because fish forms a large part of their food. The Eskimos do not mind the bitter weather. They are quite accustomed to a temperature of 50° below zero.
Within the Arctic circle are two principal areas of great cold, one in North America and one in Siberia. The mildest winters are at Bering strait and in the Spitzbergen Sea, where there is usually open water. The former is affected by the warm Japan Current and the latter by the Gulf Stream.
We have as yet learned but little about the icy North. Nearly three million square miles of our earth lie within the Arctic circle and are unknown to-day. Much more information must be gained before man can hope to understand the physical laws of this mysterious region.
The Midnight Sun.
For a century and a half after the sailing ships of the sixteenth century had failed to find the northern passages to the East, little was done in the way of Arctic exploration. The whale and cod fishers were the only navigators who ventured into the frozen seas. These fishermen carried on a profitable business in fish and oil. One of them, a Scotch whaler named William Scoresby, succeeded in driving his ship as far north as latitude 81° 12ʹ 42ʺ. He spent all the time that he could spare on this voyage in collecting information about this unknown part of the earth, and on his return to England, he told such wonderful stories that the English people became once more interested in the frozen North.