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American Explorations in the Ice Zones
Originally published in 1884, this is a guide to all the major American expeditions into the Arctic.
Joseph Everett Nourse (Author)
9781108049870, Cambridge University Press
Paperback / softback, published 7 June 2012
600 pages, 112 b/w illus. 1 map
21.6 x 14 x 3.4 cm, 0.75 kg
In 1879, the steamer Jeannette went missing near Alaska. It had been sent by the American Navy in search of a missing Swedish expedition. Having become trapped in ice, the ship was not heard from for almost two years, when her remaining crew finally reached safety. By this time, any American expedition that focused its efforts further north than the sixtieth parallel was usually considered to be within the Arctic, and these invariably perilous expeditions were often launched in search of lost ships. In 1884, Joseph Everett Nourse (1819–89) published details of all the major American expeditions, including the efforts to rescue the Jeannette, Hayes's attempt to prove the existence of the Open Polar Sea, and Schwatka's 3,000-mile sledge journey across the tundra. Written to make the journals of explorers more accessible to young readers, Nourse's comprehensive text is still of relevance to students of American maritime history.
1. The Arctic regions, sea and land
2. The Grinnell expeditions
3. The second Grinnell expedition, 1853–5
4. Explorations of Lieutenant John Rogers
5. Explorations of Dr Isaac I. Hayes
6. The Grinnell and Haven expedition of C. F. Hall
7. Hall's second Arctic expedition
8. Hall's voyage in the Polaris
9. Sledge journey of Lieutenant Schwatka
10. Lieutenant DeLong's expedition toward the Pole
11. Relief expeditions for the Jeannette
12. The Antarctic cruise of Lieutenant Charles Wilkes
13. Summary of the expedition
Appendix
Index.
Subject Areas: Historical geography [HBTP]
