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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and
+Europe, Volume I and Volume II, by A.E. Nordenskieold
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and Europe, Volume I and Volume II
+
+Author: A.E. Nordenskieold
+
+Release Date: January 20, 2008 [EBook #24365]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Eric Hutton and the Online Distributed
+Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net (This file was
+produced from images generously made available by The
+Internet Archive/Million Book Project)
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ROUND ASIA AND EUROPE. VOL. I.
+
+[Illustration: OSCAR, II ]
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ROUND ASIA AND EUROPE
+WITH A HISTORICAL REVIEW
+OF PREVIOUS JOURNEYS ALONG THE NORTH COAST OF THE OLD WORLD
+
+
+BY A.E. NORDENSKIOeLD
+
+TRANSLATED BY ALEXANDER LESLIE
+
+_WITH FIVE STEEL PORTRAITS, NUMEROUS MAPS, AND ILLUSTRATIONS_
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES--VOL. I
+
+London
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+1881
+
+
+TO HIS MAJESTY
+KING OSCAR II.
+THE HIGH PROTECTOR OF THE VEGA EXPEDITION
+THIS SKETCH OF THE VOYAGE
+HE SO MAGNANIMOUSLY AND GENEROUSLY PROMOTED
+IS WITH THE DEEPEST GRATITUDE
+MOST HUMBLY
+DEDICATED
+
+BY A.E. NORDENSKIOeLD.
+
+
+
+
+AUTHOR'S PREFACE.
+
+
+In the work now published I have, along with the sketch of the
+voyage of the _Vega_ round Asia and Europe, of the natural
+conditions of the north coast of Siberia, of the animal and
+vegetable life prevailing there, and of the peoples with whom we
+came in contact in the course of our journey, endeavoured to give a
+review, as complete as space permitted, of previous exploratory
+voyages to the Asiatic Polar Sea. It would have been very ungrateful
+on my part if I had not referred at some length to our predecessors,
+who with indescribable struggles and difficulties--and generally
+with the sacrifice of health and life--paved the way along which we
+advanced, made possible the victory we achieved. In this way besides
+the work itself has gained a much-needed variety, for nearly all the
+narratives of the older North-East voyages contain in abundance what
+a sketch of our adventures has not to offer; for many readers
+perhaps expect to find in a book such as this accounts of dangers
+and misfortunes of a thousand sorts by land and sea. May the
+contrast which thus becomes apparent between the difficulties our
+predecessors had to contend with and those which the _Vega_ met with
+during her voyage incite to new exploratory expeditions to the sea,
+which now, for the first time, has been ploughed by the keel of a
+sea-going vessel, and conduce to dissipate a prejudice which for
+centuries has kept the most extensive cultivable territory on the
+globe shut out from the great Oceans of the World.
+
+The work is furnished with numerous maps and illustrations, and is
+provided with accurate references to sources of geographical
+information. For this I am indebted both to the liberal conception
+which my publisher, Herr FRANS BEIJER, formed of the way in which
+the work should be executed, and the assistance I have received
+while it was passing through the press from Herr E.W. Dahlgren,
+amanuensis at the Royal Library, for which it is a pleasant duty
+publicly to offer them my hearty thanks.
+
+A.E. NORDENSKIOeLD.
+
+STOCKHOLM, _8th October_, 1881.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSLATOR'S PREFACE.
+
+
+Having been honoured by a request from Baron Nordenskioeld that I
+would undertake the translation of the work in which he gives an
+account of the voyage by which the North-East Passage was at last
+achieved, and Asia and Europe circumnavigated for the first time, I
+have done my best to reproduce in English the sense of the Swedish
+original as faithfully as possible, and at the same time to preserve
+the style of the author as far as the varying idioms of the two
+languages permit.
+
+I have to thank two ladies for the help they kindly gave me in
+reading proofs, and my friend Herr GUSTAF LINDSTROeM, for valuable
+assistance rendered in various ways.
+
+Where not otherwise indicated, temperature is stated in degrees of
+the Centigrade or Celsius thermometer. Longitude is invariably
+reckoned from the meridian of Greenwich.
+
+Where distance is stated in miles without qualification, the miles
+are Swedish (one of which is equal to 6.64 English miles), except at
+page 372, Vol. I., where the geographical square miles are German,
+each equal to sixteen English geographical square miles.
+
+ALEX. LESLIE.
+
+CHERRYVALE, ABERDEEN,
+_24th November_, 1881.
+
+
+
+
+TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
+
+Typographical errors corrected, and alternative spellings noticed
+during the preparation of this text has been placed at the end.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL. I.
+
+
+INTRODUCTION
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+Departure--Tromsoe--Members of the Exhibition--Stay at
+Maosoe--Limit of Trees--Climate--Scurvy and Antiscorbutics--The
+first doubling of North Cape--Othere's account of his
+Travels--Ideas concerning the Geography of Scandinavia current
+during the first half of the sixteenth century--The oldest Maps
+of the North--Herbertstein's account of Istoma's voyage--Gustaf
+Vasa and the North-East Passage--Willoughby and Chancellor's
+voyages.
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+Departure from Maosoe--Gooseland--State of the Ice--The Vessels of
+the Expedition assemble at Chabarova--The Samoyed town there--The
+Church--Russians and Samoyeds--Visit to Chabarova in 1875--Purchase
+of Samoyed Idols--Dress and dwellings of the Samoyeds--Comparison of
+the Polar Races--Sacrificial Places and Samoyed Grave on Waygats
+Island visited--Former accounts of the Samoyeds--Their place in
+Ethnography.
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+From the Animal World of Novaya Zemlya--The Fulmar Petrel--The
+Rotge or Little Auk--Bruennich's Guillemot--The Black Guillemot--The
+Arctic Puffin--The Gulls--Richardson's Skua--The Tern--Ducks and
+Geese--The Swan--Waders--The Snow Bunting--The Ptarmigan--The Snowy
+Owl--The Reindeer--The Polar Bear--The Arctic Fox--The
+Lemming--Insects--The Walrus--The Seal--Whales.
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+The Origin of the names Yugor Schar and Kara Sea--Rules for
+Sailing through Yugor Schar--The "Highest Mountain" on
+Earth--Anchorages--Entering the Kara Sea--Its Surroundings--The
+Inland-ice of Novaya Zemlya--True Icebergs rare in certain parts
+of the Polar Sea--The Natural Conditions of the Kara Sea--Animals,
+Plants, Bog-ore--Passage across the Kara Sea--The Influence of
+the Ice on the Sea-bottom--Fresh-water Diatoms on Sea-ice--Arrival
+at Port Dickson--Animal Life there--Settlers and Settlements at
+the Mouth of the Yenisej--The Flora at Port
+Dickson--Evertebrates--Excursion to White Island--Yalmal--Previous
+Visits--Nummelin's Wintering on the Briochov Islands.
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+The history of the North-east Passage from 1556 to 1878--Burrough,
+1556--Pet and Jackman, 1580--The first voyage of the Dutch,
+1594--Oliver Brunel--The second voyage, 1595--The third voyage,
+1596--Hudson, 1608--Gourdon, 1611--Bosman, 1625--De la Martiniere,
+1653--Vlamingh, 1664--Snobberger, 1675--Roule reaches a land north of
+Novaya Zemlya--Wood and Flawes, 1676--Discussion in England
+concerning the state of the ice in the Polar Sea--Views of the
+condition of the Polar Sea still divided--Payer and Weyprecht, 1872-74.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+The North-east Voyages of the Russians and Norwegians--Rodivan
+Ivanov, 1690--The Great Northern Expedition 1734-37--The supposed
+Richness in metals of Novaya Zemlya--Iuschkov, 1757--Savva Loschkin,
+1760--Rossmuislov, 1768--Lasarev, 1819--Luetke, 1821-24--Ivanov,
+1822-28--Pachtussov, 1832-35--Von Baer, 1837--Zivolka and Moissejev,
+1838-39--Von Krusenstern, 1860-62--The Origin and History of the Polar
+Sea Hunting--Carlsen, 1868--Ed. Johannesen, 1869-70--Ulve, Mack, and
+Quale, 1870--Mack, 1871--Discovery of the Relics of Barent's
+wintering--Tobiesen's wintering 1872-73--The Swedish Expeditions
+1875 and 1876--Wiggins, 1876--Later voyages to and from the Yenisej.
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+Departure from Port Dickson--Landing on a rocky island east of the
+Yenisej--Self-dead animals--Discovery of crystals on the surface of
+the drift-ice--Cosmic dust--Stay in Actinia Bay--Johannesen's
+discovery of the island Ensamheten--Arrival at Cape Chelyuskin--The
+natural state of the land and sea there--Attempt to penetrate
+right eastwards to the New Siberian Islands--The effect of the
+mist--Abundant dredging-yield--Preobraschenie Island--Separation
+from the _Lena_ at the mouth of the river Lena.
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+The voyage of the _Fraser_ and the _Express_ up the Yenisej and
+their return to Norway--Contract for the piloting of the _Lena_ up
+the Lena river--The voyage of the _Lena_ through the delta and up
+the river to Yakutsk--The natural state of Siberia in general--The
+river territories--The fitness of the land for cultivation and the
+necessity for improved communications--The great rivers, the
+future commercial highways of Siberia--Voyage up the Yenisej in
+1875--Sibiriakoff's Island--The _tundra_--The primeval Siberian
+forest--The inhabitants of Western Siberia: the Russians, the
+Exiles, the "Asiatics"--Ways of travelling on the Yenisej, dog-boats,
+floating trading stores propelled by steam--New prospects for Siberia.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+The new Siberian Islands--The Mammoth--Discovery of Mammoth
+and Rhinoceros mummies--Fossil Rhinoceros horns--Stolbovoj
+Island--Liachoff Island--First discovery of this island--Passage
+through the sound between this island and the mainland--Animal life
+there--Formation of ice in water above the freezing point--The
+Bear Islands--The quantity and dimensions of the ice begin to
+increase--Different kinds of sea-ice--Renewed attempt to leave the
+open channel along the coast--Lighthouse Island--Voyage along the
+coast to Cape Schelagskoj--Advance delayed by ice, shoals, and
+fog--First meeting with the Chukches--Landing and visits to Chukch
+villages--Discovery of abandoned encampments--Trade with the natives
+rendered difficult by the want of means of exchange--Stay at
+Irkaipij--Onkilon graves--Information regarding the Onkilon
+race--Renewed contact with the Chukches--Kolyutschin Bay--American
+statements regarding the state of the ice north of Behring's
+Straits--The _Vega_ beset.
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+Wintering becomes necessary--The position of the _Vega_--The ice
+round the vessel--American ship in the neighbourhood of the _Vega_
+when frozen in--The nature of the neighbouring country--The _Vega_
+is prepared for wintering--Provision-depot and observatories
+established on land--The winter dress--Temperature on board--Health
+and dietary--Cold, wind, and snow--The Chukches on board--Menka's
+visit--Letters sent home--Nordquist and Hovgaard's excursion to
+Menka's encampment--Another visit of Menka--The fate of the
+letters--Nordquist's journey to Pidlin--_Find_ of a Chukch
+grave--Hunting--Scientific work--Life on board--Christmas Eve.
+
+
+
+
+PORTRAITS.
+
+Engraved on Steel by G.J. Stodart of London.
+
+
+King Oscar II
+
+Oscar Dickson
+
+Alexander Sibiriakoff
+
+
+
+
+LITHOGRAPHED MAPS.
+
+
+1. Map of North Europe, from Nicholas Donis's edition of Ptolemy's
+ _Cosmographia_, Ulm, 1482
+
+2. Map of the North, from Jakob Ziegler's _Schondia_, Strassburg, 1532
+
+3. Map of North. Europe from _Olai Magni Historia de gentium
+ septentrionalium variis conditionibus_, Basil, 1567
+
+4. Map of Port Dickson, by G. Bove. Map of Cape Bolvan on Vaygats
+ Island, by the author. The _Lena's_ cruise in Malygin Sound, by
+ A. Hovgaard. Map of Cape Chelyuskin, by G. Bove
+
+5. Map showing Barents' Third Voyage, from _J.L. Pontani Rerum et urbis
+ Amstelodamensium historia_, Amst., 1611
+
+6. Russian Map of the North Polar Sea from the beginning of the 17th
+ century, published in Holland in 1612 by Isaac Massa
+
+7. Sketch-Map of Taimur Sound; Map of Actinia Bay, both by G. Bove
+
+8. Map of the River System of Siberia
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF WOOD-CUTS IN VOL I.
+
+
+_The wood-cuts, when not otherwise stated below, were engraved at
+Herr Wilhelm Meyer's Xylographic Institute in Stockholm._
+
+1. The _Vega_ under sail, drawn by Captain J. Hagg
+
+2. The _Vega_--Longitudinal section, drawn by Lieut. C.A.M. Hjulhammar
+
+3. ,, ,, Plan of arrangement under deck, drawn by ditto
+
+4. ,, ,, Plan of upper deck, drawn by ditto
+
+5. The _Lena_--Longitudinal section, drawn by Marine-engineer J. Pihlgren
+
+6. ,, ,, Plan of arrangement under deck, drawn by ditto
+
+7. ,, ,, Plan of upper deck, drawn by ditto
+
+8. Flag of the Swedish Yacht Club, drawn by V. Andren
+
+9. Tromsoe, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+10. Old World Polar dress, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+11. New World Polar Dress, drawn by Docent A. Kornrup, Copenhagen
+
+12. Limit of Trees in Norway, drawn by R. Haglund, engraved by J. Engberg
+
+13. Limit of Trees in Siberia, drawn by ditto
+
+14. The Cloudberry (_Rubus Chamaemorus_, L.),
+ drawn by Mrs. Professor A. Anderssen
+
+15. Norse Ship of the Tenth Century, drawn by Harald Schoeyen, Christiania
+
+16. Sebastian Cabot, engraved by Miss Ida Falander
+
+17. Sir Hugh Willoughby, engraved by J.D. Cooper, London
+
+18. Vardoe in 1594
+
+19. Vardoe in our days, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+20. Coast Landscape from Matotschkin Schar, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+21. Church of Chabarova, drawn by V. Andren
+
+22. Samoyed Woman's Hood, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+23. Samoyed Sleigh, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+24. Lapp Akja, drawn by ditto; engraved by J. Engberg
+
+25. Samoyed Sleigh and Idols
+
+26. Samoyed Idols, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+27. Samoyed Hair Ornaments, drawn by ditto
+
+28. Samoyed Woman's Dress, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+29. Samoyed Belt with Knife, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+30. Sacrificial Eminence on Vaygat's Island, drawn by R. Haglund;
+ engraved by J. Engberg
+
+31. Idols from the Sacrificial Cairn, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+32. Sacrificial Cavity on Vaygat's Island, drawn by V. Andren
+
+33. Samoyed Grave on Vaygat's Island, drawn by R. Haglund; engraved
+ by O. Dahlbaeck
+
+34. Samoyed Archers
+
+35. Samoyeds from Schleissing's _Neu-entdektes Sieweria_
+
+36. Breeding-place for Little Auks, drawn by H. Haglund
+
+37. The Little Auk, or Rotge (_Mergulus Alle_, L.), drawn by M. Westergren
+
+38. The Loom, or Bruennich's Guillemot (_Uria Bruennichii_, Sabine), drawn
+ by ditto
+
+39. The Arctic Puffin (_Mormon Arcticus_, L.), drawn by ditto
+
+40. The Black Guillemot (_Uria Grylle_, L.), drawn by ditto
+
+41. Breeding-place for Glaucous Gulls, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+42. The Kittiwake (_Larus tridactylus_, L.), and the Ivory Gull
+ (_Laruse burneus_, L.), drawn by M. Westergren
+
+43. Rare Northern Gulls--Sabine's Gull (_Larus Sabinii_, Sabine)--Ross's
+ Gull (_Larus Rossii_, Richards), drawn by ditto
+
+44. The Common Skua (_Lestris parasitica_, L.)--Buffon's Skua
+ (_Lestris Buffonii_, Boie)--the Pomarine Skua (_Lestris pomarina_,
+ Tem.) drawn by ditto
+
+45. Heads of the Eider, King Buck, Barnacle Goose,
+ and White-fronted Goose, drawn by ditto
+
+46. Bewick's Swan (_Cygnus Bewickii_, Yarr.), drawn by M. Westergren
+
+47. Breastbone of _Cygnus Bewickii_, showing the peculiar position of the
+ windpipe, drawn by ditto
+
+48. Ptarmigan Fell, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+49. The Snowy Owl (_Strix nyctea_, L.), drawn by M. Westergren
+
+50. Reindeer Pasture, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+51. Polar Bears, drawn by G. Muetzell, engraved by K. Jahrmargt,
+ both of Berlin
+
+52. Ditto
+
+53. Walruses, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+54. Walrus Tusks, drawn by ditto
+
+55. Hunting Implements, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+56. Walrus Hunting, after Olaus Magnus
+
+57. Walruses (female with young)
+
+58. Japanese Drawing of the Walrus
+
+59. Young of the Greenland Seal, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+60. The Bearded Seal (_Phoca barbata_, Fabr.), drawn by ditto
+
+61. The Rough Seal (_Phoca hispida_, Erxl.), drawn by ditto
+
+62. The White Whale (_Delphinapterus leucas_, Pallas), drawn by ditto
+
+63. Section of Inland-Ice
+
+64. View from the Inland-ice of Greenland, drawn by H. Haglund
+
+65. Greenland Ice-fjord, drawn by ditto
+
+66. Slowly advancing Glacier, drawn by ditto
+
+67. Glacier with Stationary Front, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+68. Umbellula from the Kara Sea, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+69. _Elpidia Glacialis_ (Theel.), from the Kara Sea, drawn by ditto
+
+70. Manganiferous Iron-ore Formations from the Kara Sea,
+ drawn by O. Soerling
+
+71. Section from the South Coast of Matotschkin Sound,
+ drawn by the geologist, E. Erdman
+
+72. Map of the Mouth of the Yenisej (zincograph)
+
+73. Ruins of a Simovie at Krestovskoj, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+74. _Sieversia Glacialis_, R. Br., from Port Dickson,
+ drawn by Mrs. Prof. Anderssen
+
+75. Evertebrates from Port Dickson, _Yoldia artica_, Gray,
+ and _Diastylis Rathkei_, Kr., drawn by M. Westergren
+
+76. Place of Sacrifice on Yalmal, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+77. "Jordgammor" on the Briochov Islands, drawn by ditto
+
+78. Russian "Lodja"
+
+79. Dutch Skipper
+
+80. Capture of a Polar Bear
+
+81. Jan Huyghen van Linschoten
+
+82. Kilduin, in Russian Lapland, in 1594
+
+83. Map of Fietum Nassovicum or Yugor Schar
+
+84. Unsuccessful Fight with a Polar Bear
+
+85. Barents' and Rijp's Vessels
+
+86. Barents' House, outside
+
+87. Ditto inside
+
+88. Jacob van Heemskerk
+
+89. De la Martiniere's Map
+
+90. Ammonite with Gold Lustre (_Ammonites alternans_, v. Buch)
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+91. View from Matotschkin Schar, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+92. Friedrich Benjamin von Luetke, drawn and engraved by Miss Ida
+ Falander
+
+93. August Karlovitz Zivolka, drawn and engraved by ditto
+
+94. Paul von Krusenstern, Junior, drawn and engraved by ditto
+
+95. Michael Konstantinovitsch Sidoroff, drawn and engraved by ditto
+
+96. Norwegian Hunting Sloop, drawn by Captain J. Hagg
+
+97. Elling Carlson, engraved by J.D. Cooper, of London
+
+98. Edward Hohn Johannesen, engraved by ditto
+
+99. Sivert Kristian Tobiesen, engraved by ditto
+
+100. Tobiesen's Winter House on Bear Island, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+101. Joseph Wiggins, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+102. David Ivanovitsch Schwanenberg, drawn and engraved by Miss Ida
+ Falander
+
+103. Gustaf Adolf Nummelin, drawn and engraved by ditto
+
+104. The Sloop _Utrennaja Saria_, drawn by Captain J. Hagg
+
+105. The _Vega_, and _Lena_ anchored to an Ice-floe, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+106. Hairstar from the Taimur Coast (_Antedon Eschrictii_, J. Mueller)
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+107. Form of the Crystals found on the ice off the Taimur Coast
+
+108. Section of the upper part of the Snow on a Drift-ice Field in
+ 80 deg. N.L.
+
+109. Grass from Actinia Bay (_Pleuropogon Sabini_, R. Br.),
+ drawn by Mrs. Professor Andersson
+
+110. The _Vega_ and _Lena_ saluting Cape Chelyuskin, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+111. View at Cape Chelyuskin during the stay of the Expedition,
+ drawn by ditto
+
+112. _Draba Alpina_, L., from Cape Chelyuskin, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+113. The Beetle living farthest to the North
+ (_Micralymma Dicksoni_, Mackl.) drawn by ditto
+
+114. Ophiuroid from the Sea north of Cape Chelyuskin
+ (_Ophiacantha bidentata_ Retz.), drawn by ditto
+
+115. Sea Spider (_pycnogonid_) from the Sea east of Cape Chelyuskin,
+ drawn by ditto
+
+116. Preobraschenie Island, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+117. The steamer _Fraser_, drawn by ditto
+
+118. The Steamer _Lena_, drawn by ditto
+
+119. Hans Christian Johannesen, engraved by J.D. Cooper, London
+
+120. Yakutsk in the Seventeenth Century
+
+121. Yakutsk in our days, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+122. River View from the Yenisej, drawn by ditto
+
+123. Sub-fossil Marine Crustacea from the _tundra_,
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+124. Siberian River Boat, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+125. Ostyak Tent, drawn by ditto
+
+126. Towing with Dogs on the Yenisej, drawn by Professor R.D. Holm
+
+127. Fishing-boats on the Ob, drawn R. Haglund
+
+128. Graves in the Primeval Forest of Siberia, drawn by ditto
+
+129. Chukch Village on a Siberian River, drawn by ditto
+
+130. Mammoth Skeleton in the Imperial Museum of the Academy of Sciences
+ in St. Petersburg, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+131. Restored Form of the Mammoth
+
+132. Siberian Rhinoceros Horn, drawn by M. Westergren and V. Andren
+
+133. Stolbovoj Island, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+134. _Idothea Entomon_, Lin., drawn by M. Westergren
+
+135. _Idothea Sabinei_, Kroeyer, drawn by ditto
+
+136. Ljachoff's Island, drawn by E. Haglund
+
+137. Beaker Sponges from the Sea off the mouth of the Kolyma,
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+138. Lighthouse Island, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+139. Chukch Boats, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+140. A Chukch in Seal-gut Great-coat, drawn and engraved by
+ Miss Ida Falander
+
+141. Chukch Tent, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+142. Section of a Chukch Grave, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+143. Irkaipij, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+144. Ruins of an Onkilon House, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+145. Implements found in the Ruins of an Onkilon House, drawn by ditto
+
+146. Alga from Irkaipij (_Laminaria Solidungula_, J.G. Ag.),
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+147. Cormorant from Irkaipij (_Graculus bierustatus_, Pallas),
+ drawn by ditto
+
+148. Pieces of Ice from the Coast of the Chukch Peninsula,
+ drawn by O. Soerling
+
+149. Toross from the neighbourhood of the _Vega's_ Winter Quarters,
+ drawn by R. Haglund
+
+150. The _Vega_ in Winter Quarters, drawn by ditto
+
+151. The Winter Dress of the _Vega_ men, drawn by Jungstedt
+
+152. Cod from Pitlekaj (_Gadus navaga_, Kolreuter), drawn by M. Westergren
+
+153. Kautljkau, a Chukch Girl from Irgunnuk, drawn and engraved
+ by Miss Ida Falander
+
+154. Chukches Angling, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+155. Ice-Sieve, drawn by ditto
+
+156. Smelt from the Chukch Peninsula (_Osmerus eperlanus_, Lin.),
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+157. Wassili Menka, drawn by O. Soerling, engraved by Miss Ida Falander
+
+158. Chukch Dog-Sleigh, drawn by ditto
+
+159. Chukch Bone-carvings, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+160. Hares from Chukch Land, drawn by M. Westergren
+
+161. The Observatory at Pitlekaj, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+162. An Evening in the Gun-room of the _Vega_ during the Wintering,
+ drawn by ditto, engraved by R. Lindgren
+
+163. Refraction Halo, drawn by ditto
+
+164. Reflection Halo, drawn by ditto
+
+165. Section of the Beach Strata at Pitlekaj
+
+166. Christmas Eve on the _Vega_, drawn by V. Andren
+
+ERRATA [ Transcriber's note: these have been applied to the text ]
+
+Page 44, under Wood-cut _for_ "chammmorus" _read_ "chamaemorus."
+
+Page 58, lines 21, 24, end 28 _for_ "pearls" _read_ "beads."
+
+Page 140, line 13 from top, _for_ "swallow" _read_ "roll away."
+
+Page 184, last line, _for_ "one-third" _read_ "one-and-a-half times."
+
+Page 377, note, _for_ "It is the general rule" _read_
+"For the northern hemisphere it is a general rule."
+
+Page 476, line 12 from top, _for_ "leggins" _read_
+"leggings."
+
+Page 481, under wood-cut, _for_ "half the natural size"
+_read_ "one-third of the natural size."
+
+Page 494, under wood-cut, _for_ "half the natural size"
+ _read_ "one-third of the natural size."
+
+
+
+
+INTRODUCTION.
+
+
+The voyage, which it is my purpose to sketch in this book, owed its
+origin to two preceding expeditions from Sweden to the western part
+of the Siberian Polar Sea, in the course of which I reached the
+mouth of the Yenisej, the first time in 1875 in a walrus-hunting
+sloop, the _Procven_, and the second time in 1876 in a steamer, the
+_Ymer_.
+
+After my return from the latter voyage, I came to the conclusion,
+that, on the ground of the experience thereby gained, and of the
+knowledge which, under the light of that experience, it was possible
+to obtain from old, especially from Russian, explorations of the
+north coast of Asia, I was warranted in asserting that the open
+navigable water, which two years in succession had carried me across
+the Kara Sea, formerly of so bad repute, to the mouth of the
+Yenisej, extended in all probability as far as Behring's Straits,
+and that a circumnavigation of the old world was thus within the
+bounds of possibility.
+
+It was natural that I should endeavour to take advantage of the
+opportunity for making new and important discoveries which thus
+presented itself. An opportunity had arisen for solving a
+geographical problem--the forcing a north-east passage to China and
+Japan--which for more than three hundred years had been a subject of
+competition between the world's foremost commercial states and most
+daring navigators, and which, if we view it in the light of a
+circumnavigation of the old world, had, for thousands of years back,
+been an object of desire for geographers. I determined, therefore,
+at first to make use, for this purpose, of the funds which Mr. A.
+SIBIRIAKOFF, after my return from the expedition of 1876, placed at
+my disposal for the continuation of researches in the Siberian Polar
+Sea. For a voyage of the extent now contemplated, this sum, however,
+was quite insufficient. On this account I turned to His Majesty the
+King of Sweden and Norway, with the inquiry whether any assistance
+in making preparations for the projected expedition might be
+reckoned upon from the public funds. King OSCAR, who, already as
+Crown Prince, had given a large contribution to the Torell
+expedition of 1861, immediately received my proposal with special
+warmth, and promised within a short time to invite the Swedish
+members of the Yenisej expeditions and others interested in our
+voyages of exploration in the north, to meet him for the purpose of
+consultation, asking me at the same time to be prepared against the
+meeting with a complete exposition of the reasons on which I
+grounded my views--differing so widely from the ideas commonly
+entertained--of the state of the ice in the sea off the north coast
+of Siberia.
+
+This assembly took place at the palace in Stockholm, on the 26th
+January, 1877, which may be considered the birthday of the _Vega_
+Expedition, and was ushered in by a dinner, to which a large number
+of persons were invited, among whom were the members of the Swedish
+royal house that happened to be then in Stockholm; Prince JOHN OF
+GLUeCKSBURG; Dr. OSCAR DICKSON, the Gothenburg merchant; Baron F.W.
+VON OTTER, Councillor of State and Minister of Marine, well known
+for his voyages in the Arctic waters in 1868 and 1871; Docent F.K.
+KJELLMAN, Dr. A. STUTXBERG, the former a member of the expedition
+which wintered at Mussel Bay in 1872-73, and of that which reached
+the Yenisej in 1875, the latter, of the Yenisej Expeditions of 1875
+and 1876; and Docents HJALMAR THEEL and A.N. LUNDSTROeM, both members
+of the Yenisej Expedition of 1875.
+
+[Illustration: Oscar Dickson ]
+
+After dinner the programme of the contemplated voyage was laid
+before the meeting, almost in the form in which it afterwards
+appeared in print in several languages. There then arose a lively
+discussion, in the course of which reasons were advanced for, and
+against the practicability of the plan. In particular the question
+concerning the state of the ice and the marine currents at Cape
+Chelyuskin gave occasion to an exhaustive discussion. It ended by
+His Majesty first of all declaring himself convinced of the
+practicability of the plan of the voyage, and prepared not only as
+king, but also as a private individual, to give substantial support
+to the enterprise. Dr. Oscar Dickson shared His Majesty's views, and
+promised to contribute to the not inconsiderable expenditure, which
+the new voyage of exploration would render necessary. This is the
+sixth expedition to the high north, the expenses of which have been
+defrayed to a greater or less extent by Dr. O. Dickson.[1] He became
+the banker of the _Vega_ Expedition, inasmuch as to a considerable
+extent he advanced the necessary funds, but after our return the
+expenses were equally divided between His Majesty the King of Sweden
+and Norway, Dr. Dickson, and Mr. Sibiriakoff.
+
+I very soon had the satisfaction of appointing, as superintendents
+of the botanical and zoological work of the expedition in this new
+Polar voyage, my old and tried friends from previous expeditions,
+Docents Dr. Kjellman and Dr. Stuxberg, observers so well known in
+Arctic literature. At a later period, another member of the
+expedition that wintered on Spitzbergen in 1872-73, Lieutenant (now
+Captain in the Swedish Navy) L. PALANDER, offered to accompany the
+new expedition as commander of the vessel--an offer which I gladly
+accepted, well knowing, as I did from previous voyages, Captain
+Palander's distinguished ability both as a seaman and an Arctic
+explorer. Further there joined the expedition Lieutenant GIACOMO
+BOVE, of the Italian Navy; Lieutenant A. HOVGAARD, of the Danish
+Navy; Medical candidate E. ALMQUIST, as medical officer; Lieutenant
+O. NORDQUIST, of the Russian Guards; Lieutenant E. BRUSEWITZ, of the
+Swedish Navy; together with twenty-one men--petty officers and crew,
+according to a list which will be found further on.
+
+An expedition of such extent as that now projected, intended
+possibly to last two years, with a vessel of its own, a numerous
+well-paid _personnel_, and a considerable scientific staff, must of
+course be very costly. In order somewhat to diminish the expenses, I
+gave in, on the 25th August, 1877, a memorial to the Swedish
+Government with the prayer that the steamer _Vega_, which in the
+meantime had been purchased for the expedition, should be thoroughly
+overhauled and made completely seaworthy at the naval dockyard at
+Karlskrona; and that, as had been done in the case of the Arctic
+Expeditions of 1868 and 1872-73, certain grants of public money
+should be given to the officers and men of the Royal Swedish Navy,
+who might take part as volunteers in the projected expedition. With
+reference to this petition the Swedish Government was pleased, in
+terms of a letter of the Minister of Marine, dated the 31st
+December, 1877, both to grant sea-pay, &c., to the officer and
+eighteen men of the Royal Navy, who might take part in the
+expedition in question, and at the same time to resolve on making a
+proposal to the Diet in which additional grants were to be asked for
+it.
+
+The proposal to the Diet of 1878 was agreed to with that liberality
+which has always distinguished the representatives of the Swedish
+people when grants for scientific purposes have been asked for;
+which was also the case with a private motion made in the same Diet
+by the President, C.F. WAERN, member of the Academy of Sciences,
+whereby it was proposed to confer some further privileges on the
+undertaking.
+
+It is impossible here to give at length the decision of the Diet,
+and the correspondence which was exchanged with the authorities with
+reference to it. But I am under an obligation of gratitude to refer
+to the exceedingly pleasant reception I met with everywhere, in the
+course of these negotiations, from officials of all ranks, and to
+give a brief account of the privileges which the expedition finally
+came to enjoy, mainly owing to the letter of the Government to the
+Marine Department, dated the 14th June, 1878.
+
+Two officers and seventeen men of the Royal Swedish Navy having
+obtained permission to take part in the expedition as volunteers, I
+was authorised to receive on account of the expedition from the
+treasury of the Navy, at Karlskrona--with the obligation of
+returning that portion of the funds which might not be required, and
+on giving approved security--full sea pay for two years for the
+officers, petty officers, and men taking part in the expedition; pay
+for the medical officer, at the rate of 3,500 Swedish crowns a year,
+for the same time; and subsistence money for the men belonging to
+the Navy, at the rate of one and a half Swedish crowns per man per
+day. The sum, by which the cost of provisions exceeded the amount
+calculated at this rate, was defrayed by the expedition, which
+likewise gave a considerable addition to the pay of the sailors
+belonging to the Navy. I further obtained permission to receive, on
+account of the expedition, from the Navy stores at Karlskrona,
+provisions, medicines, coal, oil, and other necessary equipment,
+under obligation to pay for any excess of value over 10,000 Swedish
+crowns (about 550_l_.); and finally the vessel of the expedition was
+permitted to be equipped and made completely seaworthy at the naval
+dockyard at Karlskrona, on condition, however, that the excess of
+expenditure on repairs over 25,000 crowns (about 1,375_l_.) should
+be defrayed by the expedition.
+
+[Illustration: _THE VEGA._ Longitudinal section. ]
+
+Plan of arrangement under deck.
+
+ 1. Powder magazine.
+ 2. Instrument room.
+ 3. Sofa in gunroom.
+ 4. Cabin for Lieut. Brusewitz
+ 5. Cabin fur Lieuts. Bove and Hovgaard.
+ 6. Pantry during winter.
+ 7. Corridor.
+ 8. Cabin for Dr. Stuxberg and Lieut. Nordquist.
+ 9. Gunroom.
+ 10. Table in gunroom.
+ 11. Cabin for Dr. Almquist.
+ 12. Cabin for Dr. Kjellman.
+ 13. Stove.
+ 14. Cabin for Capt. Palander.
+ 15. Cabin for Prof. Nordenskioeld.
+ 16. Corridor (descent to gunroom).
+ 17. Coal bankers.
+ 18. Boiler.
+ 19. Storeroom 'tween decks.
+ 20. Pilot's cabin.
+ 21. Cabin for Lieut. Bove built in Japan.
+ 22. Cabin for two petty officers.
+ 23. Petty officers' mess.
+ 24. Cabin for carpenter's effects ) built
+ 25. Cabin for collections. ) in Japan
+ 26. Cabin for library.
+ 27. Gunroom pantry.
+ 28. Hatch to provision room.
+ 29. Hatch to the cable-tier.
+ 30. Hatch to room set apart for scientific purposes.
+ 31. Galley.
+ 32. Bunks for the crew--double rows.
+ 33. Cable-tier and provision store.
+ 34. Hatch to store-room.
+ 35. Hatch to room for daily giving out of provisions.
+ 36. Hatch to rope-room.
+ 37. Sail-room.
+ 38. Storeroom for water and coal.
+ 39. Engine-room.
+ 40. Cellar.
+
+
+Plan of upper deck
+
+ _a._ Thermometer case.
+ _b._ The rudder.
+ _c._ Binnacle with compass.
+ _d._ ) Skylights to the gunroom.
+ _e._ )
+ _f._ Mizenmast.
+ _g._ Descent to the gunroom ) companion common
+ _h._ Descent to the engine ) to both.
+ _i._ Bridge.
+ _k._ Funnel.
+ _l._ Boats lying on gallows.
+ _m._ Mainmast.
+ _n._ Booms (for reserve masts, yards, &c.).
+ _o._ Main hatch.
+ _p._ Steam launch.
+ _q._ Fore hatch.
+ _r._ Hencoops.
+ _s._ Water closet.
+ _t._ Foremast.
+ _u._ Smoke-cowl.
+ _v._ Descent to lower deck (companion).
+ _x._ Windlass.
+ _y._ Capstan on the forecastle.
+ _z._ Catheads.
+
+
+[Illustration: _THE VEGA._ Longitudinal section. ]
+
+Plan of arrangement under deck.
+
+Plan of upper deck.
+
+ A. Engine-room.
+ B. B. Hold.
+ C. Cable.
+ D. Water ballast tank.
+ E. Forecastle.
+ F. F. Coal bunkers.
+ G. Fireman's cabin.
+ H. Engineer's cabin.
+ K. Provision-room.
+ L. Captain's cabin.
+ M. Mate's cabin.
+ N. Kitchen.
+ O. Pantry.
+ P. Saloon.
+ Q. Q. Presses.
+ R. Engine-room companion.
+ S. Bridge.
+ T. Hatch to hold.
+ U. Descent to provision-room.
+ V. Winch.
+ X. Descent to engine-room.
+ Y. Descent to forecastle and engineer's cabin.
+ Z. Descent to captain's cabin, saloon, &c.
+
+On the other hand my request that the _Vega_, the steamer purchased
+for the voyage, might be permitted to carry the man-of-war flag, was
+refused by the Minister of Marine in a letter of the 2nd February
+1878. The _Vega_ was therefore inscribed in the following month of
+March in the Swedish Yacht Club. It was thus under its flag, _the
+Swedish man-of-war flag with a crowned O in the middle_, that the
+first circumnavigation of Asia and Europe was carried into effect.
+
+The _Vega_, as will be seen from the description quoted farther on,
+is a pretty large vessel, which during the first part of the voyage
+was to be heavily laden with provisions and coal. It would therefore
+be a work of some difficulty to get it afloat, if, in sailing
+forward along the coast in new, unsurveyed waters, it should run
+upon a bank of clay or sand. I therefore gladly availed myself of
+Mr. Sibiriakoff's offer to provide for the greater safety of the
+expedition, by placing at my disposal funds for building another
+steamer of a smaller size, the _Lena_, which should have the river
+Lena as its main destination, but, during the first part of the
+expedition, should act as tender to the _Vega_, being sent before to
+examine the state of the ice and the navigable waters, when such
+service might be useful. I had the _Lena_ built at Motala, of
+Swedish Bessemer steel, mainly after a drawing of Engineer R.
+Runeberg of Finland. The steamer answered the purpose for which it
+was intended particularly well.
+
+An unexpected opportunity of providing the steamers with coal during
+the course of the voyage besides arose by my receiving a commission,
+while preparations were making for the expedition of the _Vega_, to
+fit out, also on Mr. Sibiriakoff's account, two other vessels, the
+steamer _Fraser_, and the sailing vessel _Express_, in order to
+bring to Europe from the mouth of the Yenisej a cargo of grain, and
+to carry thither a quantity of European goods. This was so much the
+more advantageous, as, according to the plan of the expedition, the
+_Vega_ and the _Lena_ were first to separate from the _Fraser_ and
+the _Express_ at the mouth of the Yenisej. The first-named vessels
+had thus an opportunity of taking on board at that place as much
+coal as there was room for.
+
+[Illustration: Alexander Sibiriakoff ]
+
+I intend further on to give an account of the voyages of the
+other three vessels, each of which deserves a place in the
+history of navigation. To avoid details I shall only mention
+here that, at the beginning of the voyage which is to be
+described here, the following four vessels were at my disposal:--
+
+1. The _Vega_, commanded by Lieutenant L. Palander, of the Swedish
+Navy; circumnavigated Asia and Europe.
+
+2. The _Lena_, commanded by the walrus-hunting captain, Christian
+Johannesen; the first vessel that reached the river Lena from the
+Atlantic.
+
+3. The _Fraser_, commanded by the merchant captain, Emil Nilsson.
+
+4. The _Express_, commanded by the merchant captain, Gundersen; the
+first which brought cargoes of grain from the Yenisej to Europe.[2]
+
+When the _Vega_ was bought for the expedition it was described by
+the sellers as follows:--
+
+"The steamer _Vega_ was built at Bremerhaven in 1872-73, of the best
+oak, for the share-company 'Ishafvet,' and under special inspection.
+It has twelve years' first class 3/3 I.I. Veritas, measures 357
+register tons gross, or 299 net. It was built and used for
+whale-fishing in the North Polar Sea, and strengthened in every way
+necessary and commonly used for that purpose. Besides the usual
+timbering of oak, the vessel has an ice-skin of greenheart, wherever
+the ice may be expected to come at the vessel. The ice-skin extends
+from the neighbourhood of the under chain bolts to within from 1.2
+to 1.5 metres of the keel The dimensions are:--
+
+ Length of keel ... ... ... 37.6 metres.
+ Do. over deck ... ... ... 43.4 metres.
+ Beam extreme ... ... ... 8.4 metres.
+ Depth of hold ... ... ... 4.6 metres.
+
+"The engine, of sixty horse-power, is on Wolff's plan, with
+excellent surface condensers. It requires about ten cubic feet of
+coal per hour. The vessel is fully rigged as a barque, and has pitch
+pine masts, iron wire rigging, and patent reefing topsails. It sails
+and manoeuvres uncommonly well, and under sail alone attains a speed
+of nine to ten knots. During the trial trip the steamer made seven
+and a half knots, but six to seven knots per hour may be considered
+the speed under steam. Further, there are on the vessel a powerful
+steam-winch, a reserve rudder, and a reserve propeller. The vessel
+is besides provided in the whole of the under hold with iron tanks,
+so built that they lie close to the vessel's bottom and sides, the
+tanks thus being capable of offering a powerful resistance in case
+of ice pressure. They are also serviceable for holding provisions,
+water, and coal."[3]
+
+
+We had no reason to take exception to this description,[4] but, in
+any case, it was necessary for an Arctic campaign, such as that now
+in question, to make a further inspection of the vessel, to assure
+ourselves that all its parts were in complete order, to make the
+alterations in rig, &c., which the altered requirements would render
+necessary, and finally to arrange the vessel, so that it might house
+a scientific staff, which, together with the officers, numbered nine
+persons. This work was done at the Karlskrona naval dockyard, under
+the direction of Captain Palander. At the same time attention was
+given to the scientific equipment, principally in Stockholm, where a
+large number of instruments for physical, astronomical, and
+geological researches was obtained from the Royal Academy of
+Sciences.
+
+The dietary during the expedition was fixed upon, partly on the
+ground of our experience from the wintering of 1872-73, partly under
+the guidance of a special opinion given with reference to the
+subject by the distinguished physician who took part in that
+expedition, Dr. A. Envall. Preserved provisions,[5] butter, flour,
+&c., were purchased, part at Karlskrona, part in Stockholm and
+Copenhagen; a portion of pemmican was prepared in Stockholm by Z.
+Wikstroem; another portion was purchased in England; fresh ripe
+potatoes[6] were procured from the Mediterranean, a large quantity
+of cranberry juice from Finland; preserved cloudberries and clothes
+of reindeer skins, &c., from Norway, through our agent Ebeltoft, and
+so on--in a word, nothing was neglected to make the vessel as well
+equipped as possible for the attainment of the great object in view.
+
+What this was may be seen from the following
+
+PLAN OF THE EXPEDITION,
+
+PRESENTED TO HIS MAJESTY THE KING OF SWEDEN AND NORWAY, _July_ 1877.
+
+The exploring expeditions, which, during the recent decades, have
+gone out from Sweden towards the north, have long ago acquired a
+truly national importance, through the lively interest that has been
+taken in them everywhere, beyond, as well as within, the fatherland;
+through the considerable sums of money that have been spent on them
+by the State, and above all by private persons; through the
+practical school they have formed for more than thirty Swedish
+naturalists; through the important scientific and geographical
+results they have yielded; and through the material for scientific
+research, which by them has been collected for the Swedish
+Riks-Museum, and which has made it, in respect of Arctic natural
+objects, the richest in the world. To this there come to be added
+discoveries and investigations which already are, or promise in the
+future to become, of practical importance; for example, the
+meteorological and hydrographical work of the expeditions; their
+comprehensive inquiries regarding the Seal and Whale Fisheries in
+the Polar Seas; the pointing out of the previously unsuspected
+richness in fish, of the coasts of Spitzbergen; the discoveries, on
+Bear Island and Spitzbergen, of considerable strata of coal and
+phosphatic minerals which are likely to be of great economic
+importance to neighbouring countries; and, above all, the success of
+the two last expeditions in reaching the mouths of the large
+Siberian rivers, navigable to the confines of China--the Obi and
+Yenisej--whereby a problem in navigation, many centuries old, has
+at last been solved.
+
+But the very results that have been obtained incite to a
+continuation, especially as the two last expeditions have opened a
+new field of inquiry, exceedingly promising in a scientific, and I
+venture also to say in a practical, point of view, namely, the part
+of the Polar Sea lying east of the mouth of the Yenisej. Still, even
+in our days, in the era of steam and the telegraph, there meets us
+here a territory to be explored, which is new to science, and
+hitherto untouched. Indeed, the whole of the immense expanse of
+ocean which stretches over 90 degrees of longitude from the mouth of
+the Yenisej past Cape Chelyuskin--the Promontorium Tabin of the old
+geographers--has, if we except voyages in large or small boats along
+the coast, never yet been ploughed by the keel of any vessel, and
+never seen the funnel of a steamer.
+
+It was this state of things which led me to attempt to procure funds
+for an expedition, equipped as completely as possible, both in a
+scientific and a nautical respect, with a view to investigate the
+geography, hydrography, and natural history of the North Polar Sea
+beyond the mouth of the Yenisej, if possible as far as Behring's
+Straits. It may be affirmed without any danger of exaggeration, that
+since Cook's famous voyages in the Pacific Ocean, no more promising
+field of research has lain before any exploring expedition, if only
+the state of the ice permit a suitable steamer to force a passage in
+that sea. In order to form a judgment on this point, it may perhaps
+be necessary to cast a brief glance backwards over the attempts
+which have been made to penetrate in the direction which the
+projected expedition is intended to take.
+
+The Swedish port from which the expedition is to start will probably
+be Gothenburg. The time of departure is fixed for the beginning of
+July, 1878. The course will be shaped at first along the west coast
+of Norway, past North Cape and the entrance to the White Sea, to
+Matotschkin Sound in Novaya Zemlya.
+
+The opening of a communication by sea between the rest of Europe and
+these regions, by Sir Hugh Willoughby and Richard Chancelor in 1553,
+was the fruit of the first exploring expedition sent out from
+England by sea. Their voyage also forms the first attempt to
+discover a north-east passage to China. The object aimed at was not
+indeed accomplished; but on the other hand, there was opened by the
+voyage in question the sea communication between England and the
+White Sea; the voyage thus forming a turning-point not only in the
+navigation of England and Russia, but also in the commerce of the
+world. It also demanded its sacrifice, Sir Hugh Willoughby himself,
+with all the men in the vessels under his command, having perished
+while wintering on the Kola peninsula. In our days thousands of
+vessels sail safely along this route.
+
+With the knowledge we now possess of the state of the ice in the
+Murman Sea--so the sea between Kola and Novaya Zemlya is called on
+the old maps--it is possible to sail during the latter part of
+summer from the White Sea to Matotschkin without needing to fear the
+least hindrance from ice. For several decades back, however, in
+consequence of want of knowledge of the proper season and the proper
+course, the case has been quite different--as is sufficiently
+evident from the account of the difficulties and dangers which the
+renowned Russian navigator, Count Luetke, met with during his
+repeated voyages four summers in succession (1821-1824) along the
+west coast of Novaya Zemlya. A skilful walrus-hunter can now, with a
+common walrus-hunting vessel, in a single summer, sail further in
+this sea than formerly could an expedition, fitted out with all the
+resources of a naval yard, in four times as long time.
+
+There are four ways of passing from the Murman Sea to the Kara Sea,
+viz:--
+
+_a._ Yugor Sound--the Fretum Nassovicum of the old Dutchmen--between
+Vaygats Island and the mainland.
+
+_b._ The Kara Port, between Vaygats Island and Novaya Zemlya.
+
+_c._ Matotschkin Sound, which between 73 deg. and 74 deg. N. Lat.
+divides Novaya Zemlya into two parts, and, finally,
+
+_d._ The course north of the double island. The course past the
+northernmost point of Novaya Zemlya is not commonly clear of ice
+till the beginning of the month of September, and perhaps ought,
+therefore, not to be chosen for an expedition having for its object
+to penetrate far to the eastward in this sea. Yugor Sound and the
+Kara Port are early free of fast ice, but instead, are long rendered
+difficult to navigate by considerable masses of drift ice, which are
+carried backwards and forwards in the bays on both sides of the
+sound by the currents which here alternate with the ebb and flow of
+the tide. Besides, at least in Yugor Sound, there are no good
+harbours, in consequence of which the drifting masses of ice may
+greatly inconvenience the vessels, which by these routes attempt to
+enter the Kara Sea. Matotschkin Sound, again, forms a channel nearly
+100 kilometres long, deep and clear, with the exception of a couple
+of shoals, the position of which is known, which indeed is not
+usually free from fast ice until the latter half of July, but, on
+the other hand, in consequence of the configuration of the coast, is
+less subject to be obstructed by drift ice than the southern
+straits. There are good harbours at the eastern mouth of the sound.
+In 1875 and 1876 both the sound and the sea lying off it were
+completely open in the end of August, but the ice was much earlier
+broken up also on the eastern side, so that a vessel could without
+danger make its way among the scattered pieces of drift ice.
+The part of Novaya Zemlya which is first visited by the
+walrus-hunters in spring is usually just the west coast off
+Matotschkin.
+
+In case unusual weather does not prevail in the regions in question
+during the course of early and mid-summer, 1878--for instance, very
+steady southerly winds, which would early drive the drift ice away
+from the coast of the mainland--I consider, on the grounds which I
+have stated above, that it will be safest for the expedition to
+choose the course by Matotschkin Sound.
+
+We cannot, however, reckon on having, so early as the beginning of
+August, open water _direct_ to Port Dickson at the mouth of the
+Yenisej, but must be prepared to make a considerable detour towards
+the south in order to avoid the masses of drift ice, which are to be
+met with in the Kara Sea up to the beginning of September. The few
+days' delay which may be caused by the state of the ice here, will
+afford, besides, to the expedition an opportunity for valuable work
+in examining the natural history and hydrography of the channel,
+about 200 fathoms deep, which runs along the east coast of Novaya
+Zemlya. The Kara Sea is, in the other parts of it, not deep, but
+evenly shallow (ten to thirty fathoms), yet without being fouled by
+shoals or rocks. The most abundant animal life is found in the
+before-mentioned deep channel along the east coast, and it was from
+it that our two foregoing expeditions brought home several animal
+types, very peculiar and interesting in a systematic point of view.
+Near the coast the algae, too, are rich and luxuriant. The coming
+expedition ought, therefore, to endeavour to reach Matotschkin Sound
+so early that at least seven days' scientific work may be done in
+those regions.
+
+The voyage from the Kara Sea to Port Dickson is not attended,
+according to recent experience, with any difficulty. Yet we cannot
+reckon on arriving at Port Dickson sooner than from the 10th to the
+15th August. In 1875 I reached this harbour with a sailing-vessel on
+the 15th August, after having been much delayed by calms in the Kara
+Sea. With a steamer it would have been possible to have reached the
+harbour, that year, in the beginning of the month. In 1876 the state
+of the ice was less favourable, in consequence of a cold summer and
+a prevalence of north-east winds, but even then I arrived at the
+mouth of the Yenisej on the 15th August.
+
+It is my intention to lie to at Port Dickson, at least for some
+hours, in order to deposit letters on one of the neighbouring
+islands in case, as is probable, I have no opportunity of meeting
+there some vessel sent out from Yeniseisk, by which accounts of the
+expedition may be sent home.
+
+Actual observations regarding the hydrography of the coast between
+the mouth of the Yenisej and Cape Chelyuskin are for the present
+nearly wholly wanting, seeing that, as I have already stated, no
+large vessel has ever sailed from this neighbourhood. Even about the
+boat voyages of the Russians along the coast we know exceedingly
+little, and from their unsuccessful attempts to force a passage here
+we may by no means draw any unfavourable conclusion as to the
+navigability of the sea during certain seasons of the year. If, with
+a knowledge of the resources for the equipment of naval expeditions
+which Siberia now possesses, we seek to form an idea of the
+equipment of the Russian expeditions[7] sent out with extraordinary
+perseverance during the years 1734-1743 by different routes to the
+north coast of Siberia, the correctness of this assertion ought to
+be easily perceived. There is good reason to expect that a
+well-equipped steamer will be able to penetrate far beyond the point
+where they were compelled to return with their small but numerously
+manned craft, too fragile to encounter ice, and unsuitable for the
+open sea, being generally held together with willows.
+
+There are, besides these, only three sea voyages, or perhaps more
+correctly coast journeys, known in this part of the Kara Sea, all
+under the leadership of the mates Minin and Sterlegoff. The first
+attempt was made in 1738 in a "double sloop," 70 feet long, 17
+broad, and 7-1/2 deep, built at Tobolsk and transported thence to
+the Yenisej by Lieutenant Owzyn. With this vessel Minin penetrated
+off the Yenisej to 72 deg.s 53' N.L. Hence a jolly boat was sent
+farther towards the north, but it too was compelled, by want of
+provisions, to return before the point named by me, Port Dickson,
+was reached. The following year a new attempt was made, without a
+greater distance being traversed than the summer before. Finally in
+the year 1740 the Russians succeeded in reaching, with the double
+sloop already mentioned, 75 deg. 15' N.L., after having survived
+great dangers from a heavy sea at the river mouth. On the 2nd
+September, just as the most advantageous season for navigation in
+these waters had begun, they returned, principally on account of the
+lateness of the season.
+
+There are, besides, two statements founded on actual observations
+regarding the state of the ice on this coast. For Middendorff, the
+Academician, during his famous journey of exploration in North
+Siberia, reached from land the sea coast at Tajmur Bay (75 deg.
+40' N.L.), and _found the sea on the 25th August_, 1843, _free of
+ice as far as the eye could reach from the chain of heights along
+the coast_.[8] Middendorff, besides, states that the Yakoot Fomin,
+the only person who had passed a winter at Tajmur Bay, declared that
+the ice loosens in the sea lying off it in the first half of August,
+and that it is driven away from the beach by southerly winds, yet
+not further than that the edge of the ice can be seen from the
+heights along the coast.
+
+The land between the Tajmur and Cape Chelyuskin was mapped by means
+of _sledge_ journeys along the coast by mate Chelyuskin in the year
+1742. It is now completely established that the northernmost
+promontory of Asia was discovered by him in the month of May in the
+year already mentioned, and at that time the sea in its
+neighbourhood was of course covered with ice. We have no observation
+as to the state of the ice during summer or autumn in the sea lying
+immediately to the west of Cape Chelyuskin; but, as the question
+relates to the possibility of navigating this sea, this is the place
+to draw attention to the fact that Prontschischev, on the 1st
+September, 1736, in an open sea, with coasting craft _from the
+east_, very nearly reached the north point of Asia, which is
+supposed to be situated in 77 deg. 34' N. Lat. and 105 deg. E. Long., and
+that the Norwegian walrus-hunters during late autumn have repeatedly
+sailed far to the eastward from the north point of Novaya Zemlya
+(77 deg. N. Lat., and 68 deg. E. Long.), _without meeting with any ice_.
+
+From what has been already stated, it is evident that for the
+present we do not possess any complete knowledge, founded on actual
+observations, of the hydrography of the stretch of coast between the
+Yenisej and Cape Chelyuskin. I, however, consider that during
+September, and possibly the latter half of August, we ought to be
+able to reckon with complete certainty on having here ice-free
+water, or at least a broad, open channel along the coast, from the
+enormous masses of warm water, which the rivers Obi, Irtisch, and
+Yenisej, running up through the steppes of High Asia, here pour into
+the ocean, after having received water from a river territory,
+everywhere strongly heated during the month of August, and more
+extensive than that of all the rivers put together, which fall into
+the Mediterranean and the Black Seas.
+
+Between Port Dickson and White Island, there runs therefore a strong
+fresh-water current, at first in a northerly direction. The
+influence which the rotation of the earth exercises, in these high
+latitudes, on streams which run approximately in the direction of
+the meridian, is, however, very considerable, and gives to those
+coming from the south an easterly bend. In consequence of this, the
+river water of the Ohi and Yenisej must be confined as in a proper
+river channel, at first along the coast of the Tajmur country, until
+the current is allowed beyond Cape Chelyuskin to flow unhindered
+towards the north-east or east. Near the mouths of the large rivers
+I have, during calm weather in this current, in about 74 deg.
+N.L., observed the temperature rising off the Yenisej to +9.4 deg.
+C. (17th August, 1875), and off the Obi to +8 deg. C. (10th August
+of the same year). As is usually the case, this current coming from
+the south produces both a cold undercurrent, which in stormy weather
+readily mixes with the surface water and cools it, and on the
+surface a northerly cold ice-bestrewn counter-current, which, in
+consequence of the earth's rotation, takes a bend to the west, and
+which evidently runs from the opening between Cape Chelyuskin and
+the northern extremity of Novaya Zemlya, towards the east side of
+this island, and perhaps may be the cause why the large masses of
+drift ice are pressed during summer against the east coast of Novaya
+Zemlya. According to my own experience and the uniform testimony of
+the walrus-hunters, _this ice melts away almost completely during
+autumn_.
+
+In order to judge of the distance at which the current coming from
+the Obi and the Yenisej can drive away the drift ice, we ought to
+remember that even a very weak current exerts an influence on the
+position of the ice, and that, for instance, the current from the
+Plata River, whose volume of water, however, is not perhaps so great
+as that of the Obi and Yenisej, is still clearly perceptible at a
+distance of 1,500 kilometres from the river mouth, that is to say,
+about three times as far as from Port Dickson to Cape Chelyuskin.
+The only bay which can be compared to the Kara Sea in respect of the
+area, which is intersected by the rivers running into it, is the
+Gulf of Mexico.[9] The river currents from this bay appear to
+contribute greatly to the Gulf Stream.
+
+The winds which, during the autumn months, often blow in these
+regions from the north-east, perhaps also, in some degree,
+contribute to keep a broad channel, along the coast in question,
+nearly ice-free.
+
+The knowledge we possess regarding the navigable water to the east
+of Cape Chelyuskin towards the Lena, is mainly founded on the
+observations of the expeditions which were sent out by the Russian
+Government, before the middle of last century, to survey the
+northern part of Asia. In order to form a correct judgment of the
+results obtained, we must, while fully recognising the great
+courage, the extraordinary perseverance, and the power of bearing
+sufferings and overcoming difficulties of all kinds, which have
+always distinguished the Russian Polar explorers, always keep in
+mind that the voyages were carried out with small sailing-vessels of
+a build, which, according to modern requirements, is quite
+unsuitable for vessels intended for the open sea, and altogether too
+weak to stand collision with ice. They wanted, besides, not only the
+powerful auxiliary of our time, steam, but also a proper sail rig,
+fitted for actual manoeuvring, and were for the most part manned
+with crews from the banks of the Siberian rivers, who never before
+had seen the water of the ocean, experienced a high sea, or tried
+sailing among sea ice. When the requisite attention is given to
+these circumstances, it appears to me that the voyages referred to
+below show positively that even here we ought to be able during
+autumn to reckon upon a navigable sea.
+
+The expeditions along the coast, east of Cape Chelyuskin, started
+from the town Yakoutsk, on the bank of the Lena, in 62 deg. N.L.,
+upwards of 900 miles from the mouth of the river. Here also were
+built the vessels which were used for these voyages.
+
+The first started in 1735, under the command of Marine-Lieutenant
+Prontschischev. After having sailed down the river, and passed, on
+the 14th August, the eastern mouth-arm of the Lena, he sailed round
+the large delta of the river. On the 7th September he had not got
+farther than to the mouth of the Olonek. Three weeks had thus been
+spent in sailing a distance which an ordinary steamer ought now to
+be able to traverse in one day. Ice was seen, but not encountered.
+On the other hand, the voyage was delayed by contrary winds,
+probably blowing on land, whereby Prontschischev's vessel, if it had
+incautiously ventured out, would probably have been cast on the
+beach. The late season of the year induced Prontschischev to lay up
+his vessel for the winter here, at some summer yourts built by
+fur-hunters in 72 deg. 54' N.L. The winter passed happily, and the
+following year (1736) Prontschischev again broke up, as soon as the
+state of the ice in Olonek Bay permitted, which, however, was not
+until the 15th August. The course was shaped along the coast toward
+the north-west. Here drift ice was met with, but he nevertheless
+made rapid progress, so that on the 1st September he reached 77 deg.
+29' N.L., as we now know, in the neighbourhood of Cape Chelyuskin.
+Compact masses of ice compelled him to turn here, and the Russians
+sailed back to the mouth of the Olonek, which was reached on the
+15th September. The distinguished commander of the vessel had died
+shortly before of scurvy, and, some days after, his young wife,
+who had accompanied him on his difficult voyage, also died. As
+these attacks of scurvy did not happen during winter, but immediately
+after the close of summer, they form very remarkable contributions
+to a judgment of the way in which the Arctic expeditions of that
+period were fitted out.
+
+A new expedition, under Marine-Lieutenant Chariton Laptev, sailed
+along the same coast in 1739. The Lena was left on the 1st August,
+and Cape Thaddeus (76 deg. 47' N.L.) reached on the 2nd September,
+the navigation having been obstructed by drift ice only off Chatanga
+Bay. Cape Thaddeus is situated only fifty or sixty English miles
+from Cape Chelyuskin. They turned here, partly on account of the
+masses of drift ice which barred the way, partly on account of the
+late season of the year, and wintered at the head of Chatanga Bay,
+which was reached on the 8th September. Next year Laptev attempted
+to return along the coast to the Lena, but his vessel was nipped by
+drift ice off the mouth of the Olonek. After many difficulties and
+dangers, all the men succeeded in reaching safely the winter
+quarters of the former year. Both from this point and from the
+Yenisej, Laptev himself and his second in command, Chelyuskin, and
+the surveyor, Tschekin, the following year made a number of sledge
+journeys, in order to survey the peninsula which projects farthest
+to the north-west from the mainland of Asia.
+
+With this ended the voyages west of the Lena. The northernmost point
+of Asia, which was reached from land in 1742 by Chelyuskin, one of
+the most energetic members of most of the expeditions which we have
+enumerated, could not be reached by sea, and still less had any one
+succeeded in forcing his way with a vessel from the Lena to the
+Yenisej. Prontschischev had, however, turned on the 1st September,
+1736, only some few minutes, and Laptev on the 2nd September, 1739,
+only about 50' from the point named, after voyages in vessels, which
+clearly were altogether unsuitable for the purpose in view. Among
+the difficulties and obstacles which were met with during these
+voyages, not only ice, but also unfavourable and stormy winds played
+a prominent part. From fear of not being able to reach any winter
+station visited by natives, the explorers often turned at that
+season of the year when the Polar Sea is most open. With proper
+allowance for these circumstances, we may safely affirm that no
+serious obstacles to sailing round Cape Chelyuskin would probably
+have been met with in the years named, by any steamer properly
+fitted out for sailing among ice.
+
+From the sea between the Lena and Behring's Straits there are much
+more numerous and complete observations than from that further west.
+The hope of obtaining tribute and commercial profit from the wild
+races living along the coast tempted the adventurous Russian
+hunters, even before the middle of the 17th century, to undertake a
+number of voyages along the coast. On a map which is annexed to the
+previously quoted work of Mueller, founded mainly on researches in
+the Siberian archives, there is to be found a sea route pricked out
+with the inscription, "_Route anciennement fort frequentee. Voyage
+fait par mer en_ 1648 _par trois vaisseaux russes, dont un est
+parvenu jusqu'a la Kamschatka_."[10]
+
+Unfortunately the details of most of these voyages have been
+completely forgotten; and, that we have obtained some scanty
+accounts of one or other of them, has nearly always depended on some
+remarkable catastrophe, on lawsuits or other circumstances which led
+to the interference of the authorities. This is even the case with
+the most famous of these voyages, that of the Cossack, Deschnev, of
+which several accounts have been preserved, only through a dispute
+which arose between him and one of his companions, concerning the
+right of discovery to a walrus bank on the east coast of Kamschatka.
+This voyage, however, was a veritable exploring expedition
+undertaken with the approval of the Government, partly for the
+discovery of some large islands in the Polar Sea, about which a
+number of reports were current among the hunters and natives, partly
+for extending the territory yielding tribute to the Russians, over
+the yet unknown regions in the north-east.
+
+Deschnev started on the 1st July, 1648, from the Kolyma in command
+of one of the seven vessels (_Kotscher_),[11] manned with thirty
+men, of which the expedition consisted. Concerning the fate of four
+of these vessels we have no information. It is probable that they
+turned back, and were not lost, as several writers have supposed;
+three, under the command of the Cossacks, Deschnev and Ankudinov,
+and the fur-hunter, Kolmogorsov, succeeding in reaching Chutskojnos
+through what appears to have been open water. Here Ankudinov's
+vessel was shipwrecked; the men, however, were saved and divided
+among the other two, which were speedily separated. Deschnev
+continued his voyage along the east coast of Kamschatka to the
+Anadir, which was reached in October. Ankudinov is also supposed to
+have reached the mouth of the Kamschatka River, where he settled
+among the natives and finally died of scurvy.
+
+The year following (1649) Staduchin sailed again, for seven days,
+eastward from the Kolyma to the neighbourhood of Chutskojnos, in an
+open sea, so far as we can gather from the defective account.
+Deschnev's own opinion of the possibility of navigating this sea may
+be seen from the fact, that, after his own vessel was lost, he had
+timber collected at the Anadir for the purpose of building new ones.
+With these he intended to send to Yakoutsk the tribute of furs which
+he had received from the natives. He was, however, obliged to desist
+from his project by an easily understood want of materials for the
+building of the new vessels; he remarks also in connection with this
+that the sea round Chutskojnos is not free of ice every year.
+
+A number of voyages from the Siberian rivers northward, were also
+made after the founding of Nischni Kolymsk, by Michael Staduchin in
+1644 in consequence of the reports which were current among the
+natives at the coast, of the existence of large inhabited islands,
+rich in walrus tusks and mammoth bones, in the Siberian Polar Sea.
+Often disputed, but persistently taken up by the hunting races,
+these reports have finally been verified by the discovery of the
+islands of New Siberia, of Wrangel's Land, and of the part of North
+America east of Behring's Straits, whose natural state gave occasion
+to the golden glamour of tradition with which the belief of the
+common people incorrectly adorned the bleak, treeless islands in the
+Polar Sea.
+
+All these attempts to force a passage in the open sea from the
+Siberian coasts northwards, failed, for the single reason, that an
+open sea with a fresh breeze was as destructive to the craft which
+were at the disposal of the adventurous, but ill-equipped Siberian
+polar explorer as an ice-filled sea; indeed, more dangerous, for in
+the latter case the crew, if the vessel was nipped, generally saved
+themselves on the ice, and had only to contend with hunger, snow,
+cold, and other difficulties to which the most of them had been
+accustomed from their childhood; but in the open sea the ill-built,
+weak vessel, caulked with moss mixed with clay, and held together
+with willows, leaked already with a moderate sea, and with a
+heavier, was helplessly lost, if a harbour could not be reached in
+time of need.
+
+The explorers soon preferred to reach the islands by sledge journeys
+on the ice, and thus at last discovered the whole of the large group
+of islands which is named New Siberia. The islands were often
+visited by hunters for the purpose of collecting mammoth tusks, of
+which great masses, together with the bones of the mammoth,
+rhinoceros, sheep, ox, horse, etc., are found imbedded in the beds
+of clay and sand here. Afterwards they were completely surveyed
+during Hedenstroem's expeditions, fitted out by Count Rumanzov,
+Chancellor of the Russian Empire, in the years 1809-1811, and during
+Lieutenant Anjou's in 1823. Hedenstroem's expeditions were carried
+out by travelling with dog-sledges on the ice, before it broke, to
+the islands, passing the summer there, and returning in autumn, when
+the sea was again covered with ice. As the question relates to the
+possibility of navigating this sea, these expeditions, carried out
+in a very praiseworthy way, might be expected to have great
+interest, especially through observations from land, concerning the
+state of the ice in autumn; but in the short account of Hedenstroem's
+expeditions which is inserted in Wrangel's _Travels_, pp. 99-119,
+the only source accessible to me in this respect, there is not a
+single word on this point.[12] Information on this subject, so
+important for our expedition, has, however, by Mr. Sibiriakoff's
+care, been received from inhabitants of North Siberia, who earn
+their living by collecting mammoths' tusks on the group of islands
+in question. By these accounts the sea between the north coast of
+Asia and the islands of New Siberia, is every year pretty free of
+ice.
+
+A very remarkable discovery was made in 1811 by a member of
+Hedenstroem's expedition, the Yakoutsk townsman Sannikov; for he
+found, on the west coast of the island Katelnoj, remains of a
+roughly-timbered winter habitation, in the neighbourhood of the
+wreck of a vessel, differing completely in build from those which
+are common in Siberia. Partly from this, partly from a number of
+tools which lay scattered on the beach, Sannikov drew the
+conclusion, that a hunter from Spitzbergen or Novaya Zemlya had been
+driven thither by the wind, and had lived there for a season with
+his crew. Unfortunately the inscription on a monumental cross in the
+neighbourhood of the hut was not translated.
+
+During the great northern expeditions,[13] several attempts were
+also made to force a passage eastwards from the Lena. The first was
+under the command of Lieutenant Lassinius in 1735. He left the most
+easterly mouth-arm of the Lena on the 21st of August, and sailed 120
+versts eastward, and there encountered drift ice which compelled him
+to seek a harbour at the coast. Here the winter was passed, with the
+unfortunate result, that the chief himself, and most of the
+fifty-two men belonging to the expedition, perished of scurvy.
+
+The following year, 1736, there was sent out, in the same direction,
+a new expedition under Lieutenant Dmitri Laptev. With the vessel of
+Lassinius he attempted, in the middle of August, to sail eastward,
+but he soon fell in with a great deal of drift ice. So soon as the
+end of the month--the time when navigation ought properly to
+begin--he turned towards the Lena on account of ice.
+
+In 1739 Laptev undertook his third voyage. He penetrated to the
+mouth of the Indigirka, which was frozen over on the 21st September,
+and wintered there. The following year the voyage was continued
+somewhat beyond the mouth of the Kolyma to Cape Great Baranov, where
+further advance was prevented by drift ice on the 26th September.
+After having returned to the Kolyma, and wintered at Nischni
+Kolymsk, he attempted, the following year, again to make his way
+eastwards in some large boats built during winter, but, on account
+of fog, contrary winds, and ice, without success. In judging of the
+results these voyages yielded, we must take into consideration the
+utterly unsuitable vessels in which they were undertaken--at first
+in a double sloop, built at Yakoutsk, in 1735, afterwards in two
+large boats built at Nischni Kolymsk. If we may judge of the nature
+of these craft from those now used on the Siberian rivers, we ought
+rather to be surprised that any of them could venture out on a real
+sea, than consider the unsuccessful voyages just described as proofs
+that there is no probability of being able to force a passage here
+with a vessel of modern build, and provided with steam power.
+
+It remains, finally, for me to give an account of the attempts that
+have been made to penetrate westward from Behring's Straits.
+
+Deschnev's voyage, from the Lena, through Behring's Straits to the
+mouth of the Anadir, in 1648, became completely forgotten in the
+course of about a century, until Muller, by searches in the Siberian
+archives, recovered the details of these and various other voyages
+along the north coast of Siberia. That the memory of these
+remarkable voyages has been preserved to after-times, however,
+depends, as has been already stated, upon accidental circumstances,
+lawsuits, and such like, which led to correspondence with the
+authorities. Of other similar undertakings we have certainly no
+knowledge, although now and then we find it noted that the Polar Sea
+had in former times often been traversed. In accounts of the
+expeditions fitted out by the authorities, it, for instance, often
+happens that mention is made of meeting with hunters and traders,
+who were sailing along the coast in the prosecution of private
+enterprise. Little attention was, however, given to these voyages,
+and, eighty-one years after Deschnev's voyage, the existence of
+straits between the north-eastern extremity of Asia and the
+north-western extremity of America was quite unknown, or at least
+doubted. Finally, in 1729, Behring anew sailed through the Sound,
+and attached his name to it. He did not sail, however, very far (to
+172 deg. W. Long.) along the north coast of Asia, although he does
+not appear to have met with any obstacle from ice. Nearly fifty
+years afterwards Cook concluded in these waters the series of
+splendid discoveries with which he enriched geographical science.
+After having, in 1778, sailed a good way eastwards along the north
+coast of America, he turned towards the west, and reached the 180th
+degree of longitude on the 29th August: the fear of meeting with ice
+deterred him from sailing further westward, and his vessel appears
+to have scarcely been equipped or fitted for sailing among ice.
+
+After Cook's time we know of only three expeditions which have
+sailed westwards from Behring's Straits. The first was an American
+expedition, under Captain Rodgers, in 1855. He reached, through what
+appears to have been open water, the longitude of Cape Yakan
+(176 deg. E. from Greenwich). The second was that of the English
+steam-whaler Long, who, in 1867, in search of a new profitable
+whale-fishing ground, sailed further west than any before him. By
+the 10th August he had reached the longitude of Tschaun Bay (170 deg.
+E. from Greenwich). He was engaged in whale-fishing, not in
+an exploring expedition, and turned here; but, in the short account
+he has given of his voyage, he expresses the decided conviction that
+a voyage from Behring's Straits to the Atlantic belongs to the
+region of possibilities, and adds that, even if this sea-route does
+not come to be of any commercial importance, that between the Lena
+and Behring's Straits ought to be useful for turning to account the
+products of Northern Siberia.[14] Finally, last year a Russian
+expedition was sent out to endeavour to reach Wrangel's Land from
+Behring's Straits. According to communications in the newspapers, it
+was prevented by ice from sailing thence, as well as from sailing
+far to the west.
+
+Information has been obtained through Mr. Sibiriakoff, from North
+Siberia, regarding the state of the ice in the neighbouring sea. The
+hunting in these regions appears to have now fallen off so
+seriously, that only few persons were found who could give any
+answers to the questions put.
+
+Thus in Yakoutsk there was only one man (a priest) who had been at
+the coast of the Polar Sea. He states that when the wind blows off
+the land the sea becomes free of ice, but that the ice comes back
+when the wind blows on to the land, and thereby exposes the vessels
+which cannot reach a safe harbour to great danger.
+
+Another correspondent states, on the ground of observations made during
+Tschikanovski's expedition, that in 1875 the sea off the Olonek was
+_completely_ free of ice, but adds at the same time that the year in
+this respect was an exceptional one. The Arctic Ocean, not only in
+summer, but also during winter, is _occasionally_ free of ice, and at a
+distance of 200 versts from the coast, the sea is open even in winter,
+in what direction, however, is uncertain. The latter fact is also
+confirmed by Wrangel's journeys with dog-sledges on the ice in
+1821-1823.
+
+A third person says, "According to the information which I have
+received, the north coast, from the mouth of the Lena to that of the
+Indigirka, is free from ice from July to September. The north wind
+drives the ice towards the coast, but not in large masses. According
+to the observations of the men who search for mammoth tusks, the sea
+is open as far as the southern part of the New Siberia Islands. It
+is probable that these islands form a protection against the ice in
+the Werchnojan region. It is otherwise on the Kolyma coast; and if
+the Kolyma can be reached from Behring's Straits, so certainly can
+the Lena."
+
+The circumstance that the ice during summer is driven from the coast
+by southerly winds, yet not so far but that it returns, in larger or
+smaller quantity, with northerly winds, is further confirmed by
+other correspondents, and appears to me to show that the New
+Siberian Islands and Wrangel's Land only form links in an extensive
+group of islands, running parallel with the north coast of Siberia,
+which, on the one hand, keeps the ice from the intermediate sea from
+drifting away altogether, and favours the formation of ice during
+winter, but, on the other hand, protects the coast from the Polar
+ice proper, formed to the north of the islands. The information I
+have received besides, refers principally to the summer months. As
+in the Kara Sea, which formerly had a yet worse reputation, the ice
+here, too, perhaps, melts away for the most part during autumn, so
+that at this season we may reckon on a pretty open sea.
+
+Most of the correspondents, who have given information about the
+state of the ice in the Siberian Polar Sea, concern themselves
+further with the reports current in Siberia, that American whalers
+have been seen from the coast far to the westward. The correctness
+of these reports was always denied in the most decided way: yet they
+rest, at least to some extent, on a basis of fact. For I have myself
+met with a whaler, who for three years in a steamer carried on trade
+with the inhabitants of the coast from Cape Yakan to Behring's
+Straits. He was quite convinced that some years at least it would be
+possible to sail from Behring's Straits to the Atlantic. On one
+occasion he had returned through Behring's Straits as late as the
+17th October.
+
+From what I have thus stated, it follows,--
+
+That the ocean lying north of the north coast of Siberia, between
+the mouth of the Yenisej and Tschaun Bay, has never been ploughed by
+the keel of any proper sea-going vessel, still less been traversed
+by any steamer specially fitted out for navigation among ice:
+
+That the small vessels with which it has been attempted to traverse
+this part of the ocean never ventured very far from the coast:
+
+That an open sea, with a fresh breeze, was as destructive for them,
+indeed more destructive, than a sea covered with drift ice:
+
+That they almost always sought some convenient winter harbour, just
+at that season of the year when the sea is freest of ice, namely,
+late summer or autumn:
+
+That, notwithstanding the sea from Cape Chelyuskin to Bearing's
+Straits has been repeatedly traversed, no one has yet succeeded in
+sailing over the whole extent at once:
+
+That the covering of ice formed during winter along the coast, but
+probably not in the open sea, is every summer broken up, giving
+origin to extensive fields of drift ice, which are driven, now by a
+northerly wind towards the coast, now by a south wind out to sea,
+yet not so far but that it comes back to the coast after some days'
+northerly wind; whence it appears probable that the Siberian Sea is,
+so to say, shut off from the Polar Sea proper, by a series of
+islands, of which, for the present, we know only Wrangel's Land and
+the islands which form New Siberia.
+
+In this connection it seems to me probable that a well-equipped
+steamer would be able without meeting too many difficulties, at
+least obstacles from ice, to force a passage this way during autumn
+in a few days, and thus not only solve a geographical problem of
+several centuries' standing, but also, with all the means that are
+now at the disposal of the man of science in researches in
+geography, hydrography, geology, and natural history, survey a
+hitherto almost unknown sea of enormous extent.
+
+The sea north of Behring's Straits is now visited by hundreds of
+whaling steamers, and the way thence to American and European
+harbours therefore forms a much-frequented route. Some few decades
+back, this was, however, by no means the case. The voyages of
+Behring, Cook, Kotzebue, Beechey, and others were then considered as
+adventurous, fortunate exploring expeditions of great value and
+importance in respect of science, but without any direct practical
+utility. For nearly a hundred and fifty years the same was the case
+with Spangberg's voyage from Kamschatka to Japan in the year 1739,
+by which the exploring expeditions of the Russians, in the
+northernmost part of the Pacific Ocean, were connected with those of
+the Dutch and the Portuguese to India, and Japan; and in case our
+expedition succeeds in reaching the Suez Canal, after having
+circumnavigated Asia, there will meet us there a splendid work,
+which, more than any other, reminds us, that what to-day is declared
+by experts to be impossible, is often carried into execution
+to-morrow.
+
+I am also fully convinced that it is not only possible to sail along
+the north coast of Asia, provided circumstances are not too
+unfavourable, but that such an enterprise will be of incalculable
+practical importance, by no means directly, as opening a new
+commercial route, but indirectly, by the impression which would
+thereby be communicated of the practical utility of a communication
+by sea between the ports of North Scandinavia and the Obi and
+Yenisej, on the one hand, and between the Pacific Ocean and the Lena
+on the other.
+
+Should the expedition, contrary to expectation, not succeed in
+carrying out the programme which has been arranged in its entirety,
+it ought not to be looked upon as having failed. In such a case the
+expedition will remain for a considerable time at places on the
+north coast of Siberia, suitable for scientific research. Every mile
+beyond the mouth of the Yenisej is a step forward to a complete
+knowledge of our globe--an object which sometime or other must be
+attained, and towards which it is a point of honour for every
+civilised nation to contribute in its proportion.
+
+Men of science will have an opportunity, in these hitherto unvisited
+waters, of answering a number of questions regarding the former and
+present state of the Polar countries, of which more than one is of
+sufficient weight and importance to lead to such an expedition as
+the present. I may be permitted here to refer to only a few of
+these.
+
+If we except that part of the Kara Sea which has been surveyed by
+the two last Swedish expeditions, we have for the present no
+knowledge of the vegetable and animal life in the sea which washes
+the north coast of Siberia. Quite certainly we shall here, in
+opposition to what has been hitherto supposed, meet with the same
+abundance of animals and plants as in the sea round Spitzbergen. In
+the Siberian Polar sea, the animal and vegetable types, so far as we
+can judge beforehand, exclusively consist of survivals from the
+glacial period, which next preceded the present, which is not the
+case in the Polar Sea, where the Gulf Stream distributes its waters,
+and whither it thus carries types from more southerly regions. But a
+complete and exact knowledge of which animal types are of glacial,
+and which of Atlantic origin, is of the greatest importance, not
+only for zoology and the geography of animals, but also for the
+geology of Scandinavia, and especially for the knowledge of our
+loose earthy layers.
+
+Few scientific discoveries have so powerfully captivated the
+interest, both of the learned and unlearned, as that of the colossal
+remains of elephants, sometimes well preserved, with flesh and hair,
+in the frozen soil of Siberia. Such discoveries have more than once
+formed the object of scientific expeditions, and careful researches
+by eminent men; but there is still much that is enigmatical with
+respect to a number of circumstances connected with the mammoth
+period of Siberia, which _perhaps_ was contemporaneous with our
+glacial period. Specially is our knowledge of the animal and
+vegetable types, which lived contemporaneously with the mammoth,
+exceedingly incomplete, although we know that in the northernmost
+parts of Siberia, which are also most inaccessible from land, there
+are small hills covered with the bones of the mammoth and other
+contemporaneous animals, and that there is found everywhere in that
+region so-called Noah's wood, that is to say, half-petrified or
+carbonised vegetable remains from several different geological
+periods.
+
+Taking a general view of the subject, we see that an investigation,
+as complete as possibly, of the geology of the Polar countries, so
+difficult of access, is a condition indispensable to a knowledge of
+the former history of our globe. In order to prove this I need only
+point to the epoch-making influence which has been exerted on
+geological theories by the discovery, in the rocks and earthy layers
+of the Polar countries, of beautiful fossil plants from widely
+separated geological periods. In this field too our expedition to
+the north coast of Siberia ought to expect to reap abundant
+harvests. There are besides to be found in Siberia, strata which
+have been deposited almost contemporaneously with the coal-bearing
+formations of South Sweden, and which therefore contain animal and
+vegetable petrifications which just now are of very special interest
+for geological science in our own country, with reference to the
+discoveries of splendid fossil plants which of late years have been
+made at several places among us, and give us so lively an idea of
+the sub-tropical vegetation which in former times covered the
+Scandinavian peninsula.
+
+Few sciences perhaps will yield so important practical results as
+meteorology is likely to do at some future date--a fact, or rather
+an already partly realised expectation, which has won general
+recognition, as is shown by the large sums which in all civilised
+countries have been set apart for establishing meteorological
+offices and for encouraging meteorological research. But the state
+of the weather in a country is so dependent on the temperature,
+wind, pressure of the air, etc., in very remote regions that the
+laws of the meteorology of a country can only be ascertained by
+comparing observations from the most distant regions. Several
+international meteorological enterprises have already been started,
+and we may almost consider the meteorological institutions of the
+different countries as separate departments of one and the same
+office, distributed over the whole world, through whose harmonious
+co-operation the object in view shall one day be reached. But,
+beyond the places for which daily series of observations may be
+obtained, there are regions hundreds of square miles in extent from
+which no observations, or only scattered ones, are yet to be had,
+and here notwithstanding we have just the key to many meteorological
+phenomena, otherwise difficult of explanation, within the civilised
+countries of Europe. Such a meteorological territory, unknown, but
+of the greatest importance, is formed by the Polar Sea lying to the
+north of Siberia, and the land and islands there situated. It is of
+great importance for the meteorology of Europe and of Sweden to
+obtain trustworthy accounts of the distribution of the land, of the
+state of the ice, the pressure of the air, and the temperature in
+that in these respects little-known part of the globe, and the
+Swedish expedition will here have a subject for investigation of
+direct importance for our own country.
+
+To a certain extent the same may be said of the contributions which
+may be obtained from those regions to our knowledge of terrestrial
+magnetism, of the aurora, etc. There are, besides, the examination
+of the flora and fauna in those countries, hitherto unknown in this
+respect, ethnographical researches, hydrographical work, etc.
+
+I have of course only been able to notice shortly the scientific
+questions which will meet the expedition during a stay of some
+length on the north coast of Siberia, but what has been said may
+perhaps be sufficient to show that the expedition, even if its
+geographical objects were not attained, ought to be a worthy
+continuation of similar enterprises which have been set on foot in
+this country, and which have brought gain to science and honour to
+Sweden.
+
+Should the expedition again, as I hope, be able to reach Behring's
+Straits with little hindrance, and thus in a comparatively short
+time--in that case indeed the time, which on the way can be devoted
+to researches in natural history, will be quite too short for
+solving many of the scientific questions I have mentioned. But
+without reckoning the world-historical navigation problem which will
+then be solved, extensive contributions of immense importance ought
+also to be obtainable regarding the geography, hydrography, zoology,
+and botany of the Siberian Polar Sea, and, beyond Behring's Straits,
+the expedition will meet with other countries having a more
+luxuriant and varied nature, where other questions which perhaps
+concern us less, but are not on that account of less importance for
+science as a whole, will claim the attention of the observer and
+yield him a rich reward for his labour and pains. These are the
+considerations which formed the grounds for the arrangement of the
+plan of the expedition which is now in question.
+
+It is my intention to leave Sweden in the beginning of July, 1878,
+in a steamer, specially built for navigation among ice, which will
+be provisioned for two years at most, and which, besides a
+scientific staff of four or five persons, will have on board a naval
+officer, a physician, and at most eighteen men--petty officers and
+crew, preferably volunteers, from your Royal Majesty's navy. Four
+walrus-hunters will also be hired in Norway. The course will be
+shaped at first to Matotschkin Sound, in Novaya Zemlya, where a
+favourable opportunity will be awaited for the passage of the Kara
+Sea. Afterwards the voyage will be continued to Port Dickson, at the
+mouth of the Yenisej, which I hope to be able to reach in the first
+half of August. As soon as circumstances permit, the expedition will
+continue its voyage from this point in the open channel which the
+river-water of the Obi and the Yenisej must indisputably form along
+the coast to Cape Chelyuskin, possibly with some short excursions
+towards the north-west in order to see whether any large island is
+to be found between the northern part of Novaya Zemlya and New
+Siberia.
+
+At Cape Chelyuskin the expedition will reach the only part of the
+proposed route which has not been traversed by some small vessel,
+and this place is perhaps rightly considered as that which it will
+be most difficult for a vessel to double during the whole north-east
+passage. As Prontschischev, in 1736, in small river craft built with
+insufficient means reached within a few minutes of this
+north-westernmost promontory of our vessel, equipped with all modern
+appliances, ought not to find insuperable difficulties in doubling
+this point, and if that be accomplished, we will probably have
+pretty open water towards Behring's Straits, which ought to be
+reached before the end of September.
+
+If time, and the state of the ice permit, it would be desirable that
+the expedition during this voyage should make some excursions
+towards the north, in order to ascertain whether land is not to be
+found between Cape Chelyuskin and the New Siberian group of islands,
+and between it and Wrangel's Land. From Behring's Straits the course
+will be shaped, with such stoppages as circumstances give rise to,
+for some Asiatic port, from which accounts may be sent home, and
+then onwards round Asia to Suez. Should the expedition be prevented
+from forcing a passage east of Cape Chelyuskin, it will depend on
+circumstances which it is difficult to foresee, whether it will
+immediately return to Europe, in which case the vessel with its
+equipment and crew may be immediately available for some other
+purpose, or whether it ought not to winter in some suitable harbour
+in the bays at the mouths of the Tajmur, Pjaesina, or Yenisej. Again,
+in case obstacles from ice occur east of Cape Chelyuskin, a harbour
+ought to be sought for at some convenient place on the north coast
+of Siberia, from which, during the following summer, opportunities
+would be found for important surveys in the Polar Sea, and during
+the course of the summer some favourable opening will also certainly
+occur, when southerly winds have driven the ice from the coast, for
+reaching Behring's Straits. Probably also, if it be necessary to
+winter, there will be opportunities of sending home letters from the
+winter station.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Footnote 1: The expeditions to Spitzbergen in 1868, to Greenland in
+1870, to Spitzbergen in 1872-73, and to the Yenisej in 1875 and 1876. ]
+
+[Footnote 2: The first cargo of goods from Europe to the Yenisej was
+taken thither by me in the _Ymer_ in 1876. The first vessel that
+sailed from the Yenisej to the Atlantic was a sloop, _The Dawn_,
+built at Yeniseisk, commanded by the Russian merchant captain,
+Schwanenberg, in 1877. ]
+
+[Footnote 3: In order to obtain sufficient room for coal and
+provisions most of these tanks were taken out at Karlskrona. ]
+
+[Footnote 4: The consumption of coal, however, was reckoned by
+Captain Palander at twelve cubic feet or 0.3 cubic metre an hour,
+with a speed of seven knots. ]
+
+[Footnote 5: The preserved provisions were purchased part from Z.
+Wikstroem of Stockholm, part from J.D. Beauvois of Copenhagen. ]
+
+[Footnote 6: The potatoes were to be delivered at Gothenburg on the
+1st July. In order to keep, they had to be newly taken up and yet
+_ripe_. They were therefore procured from the south through Mr. Carl
+W. Boman of Stockholm. Of these, certainly one of the best of all
+anti-scorbutics, we had still some remaining on our arrival at
+Japan. ]
+
+[Footnote 7: A carefully written account of these voyages will be
+found in _Reise des Kaiserlich-russischen Flotten-Lieutenants
+Ferdinand von Wrangel laengs der Nordkueste von Siberien und auf dem
+Eismeere_, 1820-1824, bearbeitet von G. Engelhardt, Berlin, 1839;
+and G.P. Mueller, _Voyages et Decouvertes faites par les Russes le
+long des Cotes de la Mer Glaciale_, &c. Amsterdam: 1766. ]
+
+[Footnote 8: Th. von Middendorff, _Reise in dem aeussersten Norden
+und Osten Siberiens_, vol. iv. I., pages 21 and 508 (1867). ]
+
+[Footnote 9: Compare von Middendorff, _Reise im Norden u. Osten
+Siberiens_ (1848), part i., page 59, and a paper by von Baer, _Ueber
+das Klima des Tajmurlandes_. ]
+
+[Footnote 10: The map bears the title, "Nouvelle carte des decouvertes
+faites par des vaisseaux Russiens, etc., dressee sur des memoires
+authentiques de ceux qui ont assiste a ces decouvertes, et sur d'autres
+connaissances dont on rend raison dans un memoire separe. St.
+Petersbourg a l'Academie Imperiale des Sciences, 1758." ]
+
+[Footnote 11: Pretty broad, flat-bottomed, keelless vessels, 12
+fathoms long, generally moved forward by rowing; sail only used with
+fair wind (_Wrangels Reise_, p. 4). ]
+
+[Footnote 12: Wrangel's own journeys were carried out during winter,
+with dog sledges on the ice, and, however interesting in many other
+respects, do not yield any other direct contribution to our
+knowledge of the state of the ice in summer and autumn. ]
+
+[Footnote 13: This is a common name for the many Russian expeditions
+which, during the years 1734-1743, were sent into the North Polar
+Sea from the Dwina, Obi, Yenisej, Lena, and Kamschatka. ]
+
+[Footnote 14: _Petermann's Mittheilungen_, 1868, p. 1, and 1869, p. 32. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+ Departure--Tromsoe--Members of the Expedition--Stay at
+ Maosoe--Limit of Trees--Climate--Scurvy and Antiscorbutics--
+ The first doubling of North Cape--Othere's account of his
+ Travels--Ideas concerning the Geography of Scandinavia
+ current during the first half of the sixteenth century--
+ The oldest Maps of the North--Herbertstein's account of
+ Istoma's voyage--Gustaf Vasa and the North-east Passage--
+ Willoughby and Chancelor's voyages.
+
+
+The _Vega_ left the harbour of Karlskrona on the 22nd June, 1878.
+Including Lieutenants Palander and Brusewitz, there were then on
+board nineteen men belonging to the Swedish navy, and two foreign
+naval officers, who were to take part in the expedition--Lieutenants
+Hovgaard and Bove. The two latter had lived some time at Karlskrona
+in order to be present at the fitting out and repairing of the
+vessel.
+
+On the 24th June the _Vega_ called at Copenhagen in order to take on
+board the large quantity of provisions which had been purchased
+there. On the 26th June the voyage was resumed to Gothenburg, where
+the _Vega_ anchored on the 27th. During the passage there was on
+board the famous Italian geographer, Commendatore CHRISTOFORO NEGRI,
+who, for several years back, had followed with special interest all
+Arctic voyages, and now had received a commission from the
+Government of his native country to be present at the departure of
+the _Vega_ from Sweden, and to make himself acquainted with its
+equipment, &c. At Gothenburg there embarked Docent Kjellman, Dr.
+Almquist, Dr. Stuxberg, Lieutenant Nordquist, and an assistant to
+the naturalists, who had been hired in Stockholm; and here were
+taken on board the greater part of the scientific equipment of the
+expedition, and various stocks of provisions, clothes, &c., that had
+been purchased in Sweden.
+
+[Illustration: TROMSOE. After a photograph by Glaus Knudsen,
+Christiania. ]
+
+On the 4th July the _Vega_ left the harbour of Gothenburg. While
+sailing along the west coast of Norway there blew a fresh head wind,
+by which the arrival of the vessel at Tromsoe was delayed till the
+17th July. Here I went on board. Coal, water, reindeer furs[15] for
+all our men, and a large quantity of other stores, bought in Finmark
+for the expedition, were taken in here; and three walrus-hunters,
+hired for the voyage, embarked.
+
+On the 21st July the whole equipment of the _Vega_ was on board, the
+number of its crew complete, all clear for departure, and the same
+day at 2.15 P.M. we weighed anchor, with lively hurrahs from a
+numerous crowd assembled at the beach, to enter in earnest on our
+Arctic voyage.
+
+The members of the expedition on board the _Vega_ were--
+
+
+A.E. Nordenskioeld, Professor, in command
+of the expedition........................ born 18th Nov. 1832
+
+A.A.L. Palander, Lieutenant, now Captain
+in the Royal Swedish Navy, chief
+of the steamer _Vega_..................... ,, 2nd Oct. 1840
+
+F.R. Kjellman, Ph.D., Docent in Botany
+in the University of Upsala, superintendent
+of the botanical work of the
+expedition.............................. ,, 4th Nov. 1846
+
+A.J. Stuxberg, Ph.D., superintendent
+of the zoological work................... ,, 18th April 1849
+
+E. Almquist, Candidate of Medicine,
+medical officer of the expedition,
+lichenologist........................... ,, 8th Aug. 1852
+
+E.O. Brusewitz, Lieutenant in the Royal
+Swedish Navy, second in command of
+the vessel.............................. ,, 1st Dec. 1844
+
+G. Bove, Lieutenant in the Royal Italian
+Navy, superintendent of the hydrographical
+work of the expedition ................. ,, 23rd Oct. 1853
+
+A. Hovgaard, Lieutenant in the Royal
+Danish Navy, superintendent of the
+magnetical and meteorological work
+of the expedition....................... ,, 1st Nov. 1853
+
+O. Nordquist, Lieutenant in the Imperial
+Russian Regiment of Guards,
+interpreter, assistant zoologist........ ,, 20th May 1858
+
+R. Nilsson, sailing-master ............. ,, 5th Jan. 1837
+
+F.A. Pettersson, first engineer......... ,, 3rd July 1835
+
+O. Nordstroem, second engineer........... ,, 24th Feb. 1855
+
+C. Carlstroem, fireman .................. ,, 14th Dec. 1845
+
+O. Ingelsson, fireman................... ,, 2nd Feb. 1849
+
+O. Oeman, seaman........................ ,, 23rd April 1843
+
+G. Carlsson, seaman..................... ,, 22nd Sep. 1843
+
+C. Lundgren, seaman..................... ,, 5th July 1851
+
+O. Hansson, seaman...................... ,, 6th April 1856
+
+D. Asplund, boatswain, cook............. ,, 28th Jan. 1827
+
+C.J. Smaolaenning, boatswain........... ,, 27th Sep. 1839
+
+C. Levin, boatswain, steward............ ,, 24th Jan. 1844
+
+P.M. Lustig, boatswain.................. ,, 22nd April 1845
+
+C. Ljungstrom, boatswain................ ,, 12th Oct. 1845
+
+P. Lind, boatswain...................... ,, 15th Sep. 1856
+
+P.O. Faeste, boatswain.................. born 23rd Sep. 1856
+
+S. Andersson, carpenter................. ,, 3rd Sep. 1847
+
+J. Haugan, walrus-hunter[16]............ ,, 23rd Jan. 1825
+
+P. Johnsen, walrus-hunter............... ,, 15th May 1845
+
+P. Sivertsen, walrus-hunter............. ,, 2nd Jan. 1853
+
+Th. A. Bostrom, assistant to the scientific
+men..................................... ,, 21st Sep. 1857
+
+
+There was also on board the _Vega_ during the voyage from Tromsoe to
+Port Dickson, as commissioner for Mr. Sibiriakoff, Mr. S.J.
+Serebrenikoff, who had it in charge to oversee the taking on board
+and the landing of the goods that were to be carried to and from
+Siberia in the _Fraser_ and _Express_. These vessels had sailed
+several days before from Vardoe to Chabarova in Yugor Schar, where
+they had orders to wait for the _Vega_. The _Lena_, again, the
+fourth vessel that was placed at my disposal, had, in obedience to
+orders, awaited the _Vega_ in the harbour of Tromsoe, from which
+port these two steamers were now to proceed eastwards in company.
+
+After leaving Tromsoe, the course was shaped at first within the
+archipelago to Maosoe, in whose harbour the _Vega_ was to make some
+hours' stay, for the purpose of posting letters in the post-office
+there, probably the most northerly in the world. But during this
+time so violent a north-west wind began to blow, that we were
+detained there three days.
+
+Maosoe is a little rocky island situated in 71 deg. N.L.,
+thirty-two kilometres south-west from North Cape, in a region
+abounding in fish, about halfway between Bred Sound and Mageroe
+Sound. The eastern coast of the island is indented by a bay, which
+forms a well-protected harbour. Here, only a few kilometres south of
+the northernmost promontory of Europe, are to be found, besides a
+large number of fishermen's huts, a church, shop, post-office,
+hospital, &c.; and I need scarcely add, at least for the benefit of
+those who have travelled in the north of Norway, several friendly,
+hospitable families in whose society we talked away many hours of
+our involuntary stay in the neighbourhood. The inhabitants of course
+live on fish. All agriculture is impossible here. Potatoes have
+indeed sometimes yielded an abundant crop on the neighbouring Ingoe
+(71 deg. 5' N.L.), but their cultivation commonly fails, in
+consequence of the shortness of the summer; on the other hand,
+radishes and a number of other vegetables are grown with success in
+the garden-beds. Of wild berries there is found here the red
+whortleberry, yet in so small quantity that one can seldom collect a
+quart or two: the bilberry is somewhat more plentiful; but the
+grapes of the north, the cloudberry (_multer_), grow in profuse
+abundance. From an area of several square fathoms one can often
+gather a couple of quarts. There is no wood here--only bushes.
+
+[Illustration: OLD-WORLD POLAR DRESS. Lapp, after original in the
+Northern Museum, Stockholm. ]
+
+[Illustration: NEW WORLD POLAR DRESS. Greenlanders, after an old
+painting in the Ethnographical Museum, Copenhagen.[17] ]
+
+[Illustration: LIMIT OF TREES IN NORWAY. At Praestevandet, on
+Tromsoen, after a photograph. ]
+
+In the neighbourhood of North Cape, the wood, for the present, does
+not go quite to the coast of the Polar Sea, but at sheltered places,
+situated at a little distance from the beach, birches,[18] three to
+four metres high, are already to be met with. In former times,
+however, the outer archipelago itself was covered with trees, which
+is proved by the tree-stems, found imbedded in the mosses on the
+outer islands on the coast of Finmark, for instance, upon Renoe. In
+Siberia the limit of trees runs to the beginning of the estuary
+delta, _i.e._, to about 72 deg. N.L.[19] As the latitude of North
+Cape is 71 deg. 10', the wood in Siberia at several places, viz,
+along the great rivers, goes considerably farther north than in
+Europe. This depends partly on the large quantity of warm water
+which these rivers, in summer, carry down from the south, partly on
+the transport of seeds with the river water, and on the more
+favourable soil, which consists of a rich mould, yearly renewed by
+inundations, but in Norway again for the most part of rocks of
+granite and gneiss or of barren beds of sand. Besides, the limit of
+trees has a quite dissimilar appearance in Siberia and Scandinavia:
+in the latter country, the farthest outposts of the forests towards
+the north consist of scraggy birches, which, notwithstanding
+their stunted stems, clothe the mountain sides with a very
+lively and close green; while in Siberia the outermost trees are
+gnarled and half-withered larches (_Larix daliurica_, Turez),
+which stick up over the tops of the hills like a thin grey
+brush.[20] North of this limit there are to be seen on the Yenisej
+luxuriant bushes of willow and alder. That in Siberia too, the
+large wood, some hundreds or thousands of years ago, went
+farther north than now, is shown by colossal tree-stumps found
+still standing in the _tundra_, nor is it necessary now to go far
+south of the extreme limit, before the river banks are to be
+seen crowned with high, flourishing, luxuriant trees.
+
+[Illustration: LIMIT OF TREES IN SIBERIA. At Boganida, after
+Middendorff. ]
+
+[Illustration: THE CLOUDBERRY (RUBUS CHAMAEMORUS, L.) Fruit of the
+natural size. Flowering stalks diminished. ]
+
+The climate at Maosoe is not distinguished by any severe winter
+cold,[21] but the air is moist and raw nearly all the year round.
+The region would however be very healthy, did not scurvy, especially
+in humid winters, attack the population, educated and uneducated,
+rich and poor, old and young. According to a statement made by a
+lady resident on the spot, very severe attacks of scurvy are cured
+without fail by preserved cloudberries and rum. Several spoonfuls
+are given to the patient daily, and a couple of quarts of the
+medicine is said to be sufficient for the complete cure of children
+severely attacked by the disease. I mention this new method of using
+the cloudberry, the old well-known antidote to scurvy, because I am
+convinced that future Polar expeditions, if they will avail
+themselves of the knowledge of this cure, will find that it conduces
+to the health and comfort of all on board, and that the medicine is
+seldom refused, unless it be by too obstinate abstainers from
+spirituous liquors.
+
+
+It enters into the plan of this work, as the _Vega_ sails along, to
+give a brief account of the voyages of the men who first opened the
+route along which she advances, and who thus, each in his measure,
+contributed to prepare the way for the voyage whereby the passage
+round Asia and Europe has now at last been accomplished. On this
+account it is incumbent on me to begin by giving a narrative of the
+voyage of discovery during which the northernmost point of Europe
+was first doubled, the rather because this narrative has besides
+great interest for us, as containing much remarkable information
+regarding the condition of the former population in the north of
+Scandinavia.
+
+This voyage was accomplished about a thousand years ago by a Norwegian,
+OTHERE, from Halogaland or Helgeland, that part of the Norwegian coast
+which lies between 65 deg. and 66 deg. N.L. Othere, who appears to have
+travelled far and wide, came in one of his excursions to the court of
+the famous English king, Alfred the Great. In presence of this king he
+gave, in a simple, graphic style, a sketch of a voyage which he had
+undertaken from his home in Norway towards the north and east. The
+narrative has been preserved by its having been incorporated, along with
+an account of the travels of another Norseman, Wulfstan, to the southern
+part of the Baltic, in the first chapter of Alfred's Anglo-Saxon
+reproduction of the history of PAULUS OROSIUS: _De Miseria Mundi_.[22]
+This work has since been the subject of translation and exposition by a
+great number of learned men, among whom may be named here the
+Scandinavians, H.G. PORTHAN of Abo, RASMUS RASK and C-CHR. RAFN of
+Copenhagen.
+
+Regarding Othere's relations to King Alfred statements differ. Some
+inquirers suppose that he was only on a visit at the court of the
+king, others that he had been sent out by King Alfred on voyages of
+discovery, and finally, others say that he was a prisoner of war,
+who incidentally narrated his experience of foreign lands. Othere's
+account of his travels runs as follows:--
+
+ "Othere told his lord, King Alfred, that he dwelt
+ northmost of all the Northmen. He said that he dwelt in
+ the land to the northward, along the West-Sea; he said,
+ however, that that land is very long north from thence,
+ but it is all waste, except in a few places where the Fins
+ at times dwell, hunting in the winter, and in the summer
+ fishing in that sea. He said that he was desirous to try,
+ once on a time, how far that country extended due north,
+ or whether any one lived to the north of the waste. He
+ then went due north along the country, leaving all the way
+ the waste land on the right, and the wide sea on the left.
+ After three days he was as far north as the whale-hunters
+ go at the farthest. Then he proceeded in his course due
+ north, as far as he could sail within another three days;
+ then the land there inclined due east, or the sea into the
+ land, he knew not which; but he knew that he waited there
+ for a west wind or a little north, and sailed thence
+ eastward along that land as far as he could sail in four
+ days. Then he had to wait for a due north wind because the
+ land inclined there due south, or the sea in on that land,
+ he knew not which. He then sailed along the coast due
+ south, as far as he could sail in five days. There lay a
+ great river up in that land; they then turned in that
+ river, because they durst not sail on up the river on
+ account of hostility; because all that country was
+ inhabited on the other side of the river. He had not
+ before met with any land that was inhabited since he left
+ his own home; but all the way he had waste land on his
+ right, except some fishermen, fowlers, and hunters, all of
+ whom were Fins: and he had constantly a wide sea to the
+ left. The Beormas had well cultivated their country, but
+ they (Othere and his companions) did not dare to enter it.
+ And the Terfinna[23] land was all waste, except where
+ hunters, fishers, or fowlers had taken up their quarters.
+
+ "The Beormas told him many particulars both of their own
+ land and of other lands lying around them; but he knew not
+ what was true because he did not see it himself. It seemed
+ to him that the Fins and the Beormas spoke nearly the same
+ language. He went thither chiefly, in addition to seeing
+ the country, on account of the walruses,[24] because they
+ have very noble bones in their teeth, of which the
+ travellers brought some to the king; and their hides are
+ very good for ship-ropes. These whales are much less than
+ other whales, not being longer than seven ells. But in his
+ own country is the best whale-hunting. There they are
+ eight-and-forty ells long, and the largest are fifty ells
+ long. Of these he said he and five others had killed sixty
+ in two days.[25] He was a very wealthy man in those
+ possessions in which their wealth consists, that is, in
+ wild deer. He had at the time he came to the king, six
+ hundred unsold tame deer. These deer they call rein-deer,
+ of which there were six decoy rein-deer, which are very
+ valuable among the Fins, because they catch the wild
+ rein-deer with them.
+
+ "He was one of the first men in that country, yet he had
+ not more than twenty horned cattle, twenty sheep and
+ twenty swine, and the little that he ploughed he ploughed
+ with horses. But their wealth consists mostly in the rent
+ paid them by the Fins. That rent is in skins of animals
+ and birds' feathers, and whalebone, and in ship-ropes made
+ of whales'[26] hides, and of seals'. Every one pays
+ according to his birth; the best-born, it is said, pay the
+ skins of fifteen martens, and five rein-deers, and one
+ bear's skin, ten ambers of feathers, a bear's or otter's
+ skin kyrtle, and two ship-ropes, each sixty ells long,
+ made either of whale or of seal hide."
+
+The continuation of Othere's narrative consists of a sketch of the
+Scandinavian peninsula, and of a journey which he undertook from his
+home towards the south. King Alfred then gives an account of the
+Dane, Wulfstan's voyage in the Baltic. This part of the introduction
+to Orosius, however, has too remote a connection with my subject to
+be quoted in this historical sketch.
+
+[Illustration: NORSE SHIP OF THE TENTH CENTURY. Drawn with reference
+to the vessel found at Sandefjord in 1880, under the superintendence
+of Ingvald Undset, Assistant at the Christiania University's
+collection of Northern antiquities. ]
+
+It appears from Othere's simple and very clear narrative that he
+undertook a veritable voyage of discovery in order to explore the
+unknown lands and sea lying to the north-east. This voyage was also
+very rich in results, as in the course of it the northernmost part
+of Europe was circumnavigated. Nor perhaps is there any doubt that
+during this voyage Othere penetrated as far as to the mouth of the
+Dwina or at least of the Mesen in the land of the Beormas.[27] We
+learn from the narrative besides, that the northernmost part of
+Scandinavia was already, though sparsely, peopled by Lapps, whose
+mode of life did not differ much from that followed by their
+descendants, who live on the coast at the present day.
+
+[Illustration: Map of North Europe, from Nicholas Donis's edition
+of Ptolemy's _Cosmographia_, Ulm, 1482. ]
+
+[Illustration: Map of the North, from Jakob Ziegler's _Schondia_,
+Strassburg, 1532. ]
+
+[Illustration: Map of North Europe from _Olai Magni Historia de gentium
+septentrionalium variis conditionibus_, Basil, 1567. ]
+
+The Scandinavian race first migrated to Finmark and settled there in
+the 13th century, and from that period there was naturally spread
+abroad in the northern countries a greater knowledge of those
+regions, which, however, was for a long time exceedingly incomplete,
+and even in certain respects less correct than Othere's. The idea of
+the northernmost parts of Europe, which was current during the first
+half of the 16th century, is shown by lithographed copies of two
+maps of the north, one dated 1482, the other 1532,[28] which are
+appended to this work. On the latter of these Greenland is still
+delineated as connected with Norway in the neighbourhood of
+Vardoehus. This map, however, is grounded, according to the
+statement of the author in the introduction, among other sources, on
+the statements of two archbishops of the diocese of Nidaro,[29] to
+which Greenland and Finmark belonged, and from whose inhabited parts
+expeditions were often undertaken both for trade and plunder, by
+land and sea, as far away as to the land of the Beormas. It is
+difficult to understand how with such maps of the distribution of
+land in the north the thought of the north-east passage could arise,
+if voices were not even then raised for an altogether opposite view,
+grounded partly on a survival of the old idea, we may say the old
+popular belief, that Asia, Europe and Africa were surrounded by
+water, partly on stories of Indians having been driven by wind to
+Europe, along the north coast of Asia.[30] To these was added in
+1539 the map of the north by the Swedish bishop OLAUS MAGNUS,[31]
+which for the first time gave to Scandinavia an approximately
+correct boundary towards the north. Six hundred years,[32] in any
+case, had run their course before Othere found a successor in Sir
+Hugh Willoughby; and it is usual to pass by the former, and to
+ascribe to the latter the honour of being the first in that long
+succession of men who endeavoured to force a passage by the
+north-east from the Atlantic Ocean to China.
+
+Here however it ought to be remarked that while such maps as those
+of Ziegler were published in western Europe, other and better
+knowledge of the regions in question prevailed in the north. For it
+may be considered certain that Norwegians, Russians and Karelians
+often travelled in boats on peaceful or warlike errands, during the
+fifteenth and beginning of the sixteenth century, from the west
+coast of Norway to the White Sea, and in the opposite direction,
+although we find nothing on record regarding such journeys except
+the account that SIGISMUND VON HERBERSTEIN[33] gives, in his famous
+book on Russia, of the voyage of GREGORY ISTOMA and the envoy DAVID
+from the White Sea to Trondhjem in the year 1496.
+
+The voyage is inserted under the distinctive title _Navigatio per
+Mare Glaciale_[34] and the narrative begins with an explanation that
+Herbertstein got it from Istoma himself, who, when a youth, had
+learned Latin in Denmark. As the reasons for choosing the unusual,
+long, "but safe" circuitous route over the North Sea in preference
+to the shorter way that was usually taken, Istoma gives the disputes
+between Sweden and Russia, and the revolt of Sweden against Denmark,
+at the time when the voyage was undertaken (1496). After giving an
+account of his journey from Moscow to the mouth of the Dwina, he
+continues thus:--
+
+ "After having gone on board of four boats, they kept first
+ along the right bank of the ocean, where they saw very
+ high mountain, peaks;[35] and after having in this way
+ travelled sixteen miles, and crossed an arm of the sea,
+ they followed the western strand, leaving on their right
+ the open sea, which like the neighbouring mountains has
+ its name from the river Petzora. They came here to a
+ people called Fin-Lapps, who, though they dwell in low
+ wretched huts by the sea, and live almost like wild
+ beasts, in any case are said to be much more peaceable
+ than the people who are called wild Lapps. Then, after
+ they had passed the land of the Lapps and sailed forward
+ eighty miles, they came to the land, Nortpoden, which is
+ part of the dominions of the King of Sweden. This region
+ the Rutheni call Kayenska Selma, and the people they call
+ Kayeni. After sailing thence along a very indented coast
+ which jutted out to the right, they came to a peninsula,
+ called the Holy Nose,[36] consisting of a great rock,
+ which like a nose projects into the sea. But in this there
+ is a grotto or hollow which for six hours at a time
+ swallows up water, and then with great noise and din casts
+ out again in whirls the water which it had swallowed. Some
+ call it the navel of the sea, others Charybdis. It is said
+ that this whirlpool has such power, that it draws to
+ itself ships and other things in its neighbourhood and
+ swallows them. Istoma said that he had never been in such
+ danger as at that place, because the whirlpool drew the
+ ship in which he travelled with such force, that it was
+ only by extreme exertion at the oars that they could
+ escape. After passing this _Holy Nose_ they came to a
+ rocky promontory, which they had to sail round. After
+ having waited here some days on account of head winds, the
+ skipper said: 'This rock, which ye see, is called Semes,
+ and we shall not get so easily past it if it be not
+ propitiated by some offering.' Istoma said that he
+ reproved the skipper for his foolish superstition, on
+ which the reprimanded skipper said nothing more. They
+ waited thus the fourth day at the place on account of the
+ stormy state of the sea, but after that the storm ceased,
+ and the anchor was weighed. When the voyage was now
+ continued with a favourable wind, the skipper said: 'You
+ laughed at my advice to propitiate the Semes rock, and
+ considered it a foolish superstition, but it certainly
+ would have been impossible for us to get past it, if I had
+ not secretly by night ascended the rock and sacrificed.'
+ To the inquiry what he had offered, the skipper replied:
+ 'I scattered oatmeal mixed with butter on the projecting
+ rock which we saw.' As they sailed further they came to
+ another great promontory, called Motka, resembling a
+ peninsula. At the end of this there was a castle, Barthus,
+ which means _vakthus_, watch-house, for there the King of
+ Norway keeps a guard to protect his frontiers. The
+ interpreter said that this promontory was so long that it
+ could scarcely be sailed round in eight days, on which
+ account, in order not to be delayed in this way, they
+ carried their boats and baggage with great labour on their
+ shoulders over land for the distance of about half a mile.
+ They then sailed on along the land of the Dikilopps or
+ wild Lapps to a place which is called Dront (Trondhjem)
+ and lies 200 miles north of[37] the Dwina. And they said
+ that the prince of Moscow used to receive tribute as far
+ as to this place."
+
+The narrative is of interest, because it gives us an idea of the way
+in which men travelled along the north coast of Norway, four hundred
+years ago. It may possibly have had an indirect influence on the
+sending of Sir Hugh Willoughby's expedition, as the edition of
+Herbertstein's work printed at Venice in 1550 probably soon became
+known to the Venetian, Cabot, who, at that time, as Grand Pilot of
+England, superintended with great care the fitting out of the first
+English expedition to the north-east.
+
+There is still greater probability that the map of Scandinavia by
+Olaus Magnus, already mentioned, was known in England before 1553.
+This map is an expression of a view which before that time had taken
+root in the north, which, in opposition to the maps of the
+South-European cosmographers, assumed the existence of an open
+sea-communication in the north, between the Chinese Sea and the
+Atlantic, and which even induced GUSTAF VASA to attempt to bring
+about a north-east expedition. This unfortunately did not come to
+completion, and all that we know of it is contained in a letter to
+the Elector August of Saxony, from the Frenchman HUBERT LANGUET, who
+visited Sweden in 1554. In this letter, dated 1st April 1576,
+Languet says:--"When I was in Sweden twenty-two years ago, King
+Gustaf often talked with me about this sea route. At last he urged
+me to undertake a voyage in this direction, and promised to fit out
+two vessels with all that was necessary for a protracted voyage, and
+to man them with the most skilful seamen, who should do what I
+ordered. But I replied that I preferred journeys in inhabitated
+regions to the search for new unsettled lands."[38] If Gustaf Vasa
+had found a man fit to carry out his great plans, it might readily
+have happened that Sweden would have contended with England for the
+honour of opening the long series of expeditions to the
+north-east.[39]
+
+England's navigation is at present greater beyond comparison than
+that of any other country, but it is not of old date. In the middle
+of the sixteenth century it was still very inconsiderable, and
+mainly confined to coast voyages in Europe, and a few fishing
+expeditions to Iceland and Newfoundland.[40] The great power of
+Spain and Portugal by sea, and their jealousy of other countries
+rendered it impossible at that period for foreign seafarers to carry
+on traffic in the East-Asiatic countries, which had been sketched by
+Marco Polo with so attractive accounts of unheard-of richness in
+gold and jewels, in costly stuffs, in spices and perfumes. In order
+that the merchants of northern Europe might obtain a share of the
+profit, it appeared to be necessary to discover new routes,
+inaccessible to the armadas of the Pyrenean peninsula. Here lies the
+explanation of the zeal with which the English and the Dutch, time
+after time, sent out vessels, equipped at great expense, in search
+of a new way to India and China, either by the Pole, by the
+north-west, along the north coast of the new world, or by the
+north-east, along the north coast of the old. The voyages first
+ceased when the maritime supremacy of Spain and Portugal was broken.
+By none of them was the intended object gained, but it is remarkable
+that in any case they gave the first start to the development of
+England's ocean navigation.
+
+[Illustration: SIR HUGH WILLOUGHBY. (After a portrait in the
+Great Picture Hall, Greenwich.) ]
+
+Sir HUGH WILLOUOUGHBY's in 1553 was thus the first maritime
+expedition undertaken on a large scale, which was sent from England
+to far distant seas. The equipment of the vessels was carried out
+with great care under the superintendence of the famous navigator,
+Sebastian Cabot, then an old man, who also gave the commander
+precise instructions how he should behave in the different incidents
+of the voyage. Some of these instructions now indeed appear rather
+childish,[41] but others might still be used as rules for every
+well-ordered exploratory expedition. Sir Hugh besides obtained from
+Edward VI. an open letter written, in Latin, Greek, and several
+other languages, in which it was stated that discoveries and the
+making of commercial treaties were the sole objects of the
+expedition; and the people, with whom the expedition might come in
+contact, were requested to treat Sir Hugh Willoughby as they
+themselves would wish to be treated in case they should come to
+England. So sanguine were the promoters of the voyage of its success
+in reaching the Indian seas by this route, that they caused the
+ships that were placed at Sir Hugh Willoughby's disposal to be
+sheathed with lead in order to protect them from the attacks of the
+teredo and other worms.[43] These vessels were:--
+
+[Illustration: SEBASTIAN CABOT. After a portrait in E. Vale
+Blake's Arctic Experiences, London. 1874.[42] ]
+
+1. The _Bona Esperanza_, admiral of the fleet, of 120 tons burden,
+on board of which was Sir Hugh Willoughby, himself, as captain
+general of the fleet. The number of persons in this ship, including
+Willoughby, the master of the vessel, William Gefferson, and six
+merchants, was thirty-five.
+
+2. The _Edward Bonaventure_, of 160 tons burden, the command of
+which was given to Richard Chancelor, captain and pilot major of the
+fleet. There were on board this vessel fifty men, including two
+merchants. Among the crew whose names are given in Hakluyt we find
+the name of Stephen Burrough, afterwards renowned in the history of
+the north-east passage, and that of Arthur Pet.
+
+3. The _Bona Confidentia_, of ninety tons, under command of
+Cornelius Durfoorth, with twenty-eight men, including three
+merchants.
+
+The expense of fitting out the vessels amounted to a sum of 6,000
+pounds, divided into shares of 25 pounds. Sir Hugh Willoughby was
+chosen commander "both by reason of his goodly personage (for he was
+of tall stature) as also for his singular skill in the services of
+warre."[44] In order to ascertain the nature of the lands of the
+east, two "Tartars" who were employed at the royal stables were
+consulted, but without any information being obtained from them. The
+ships left Ratcliffe the 20/10th May 1553.[45] They were towed down
+by the boats, "the mariners being apparelled in watchet or skie
+coloured cloth," with a favourable wind to Greenwich, where the
+court then was. The King being unwell could not be present, but "the
+courtiers came running out, and the common people flockt together,
+standing very thicke upon the shoare; the Privie Consel, they lookt
+out at the windowes of the court, and the rest ran up to the toppes
+of the towers; the shippes hereupon discharge their ordinance, and
+shoot off their pieces after the maner of warre, and of the sea,
+insomuch that the tops of the hilles sounded therewith, the valleys
+and the waters gave an echo, and the mariners they shouted in such
+sort, that the skie rang again with the noise thereof."[46] All was
+joy and triumph; it seemed as if men foresaw that the greatest
+maritime power, the history of the world can show, was that day
+born.
+
+The voyage itself was, however, very disastrous for Sir Hugh and
+many of his companions. After sailing along the east coast of
+England and Scotland the three vessels crossed in company to Norway,
+the coast of which came in sight the 24/14th July in 66 deg. N.L.
+A landing was effected and thirty small houses were found, whose
+inhabitants had fled, probably from fear of the foreigners. The
+region was called, as was afterwards ascertained, "Halgeland," and
+was just that part of Norway from which Othere began his voyage to
+the White Sea. Hence they sailed on along the coast. On the 6th
+Aug/27th July they anchored in a harbour, "Stanfew" (perhaps
+Steenfjord on the west coast of Lofoten), where they found a
+numerous and friendly population, with no articles of commerce,
+however, but dried fish and train oil. In the middle of September
+the _Edward Bonaventure_, at Senjen during a storm, parted company
+with the two other vessels. These now endeavoured to reach
+Vardoehus, and therefore sailed backwards and forwards in different
+directions, during which they came among others to an uninhabited,
+ice-encompassed land, along whose coast the sea was so shallow that
+it was impossible for a boat to land. It was said to be situated
+480' east by north from Senjen, in 72 deg. N.L.[47] Hence they
+sailed first to the north, then to the south-east. Thus they reached
+the coast of Russian Lapland, where, on the 28/18th September they
+found a good harbour, in which Sir Hugh determined to pass the
+winter. The harbour was situated at the mouth of the river Arzina
+"near Kegor." Of the further fate of Sir Hugh Willoughby and his
+sixty-two companions, we know only that during the course of the
+winter they all perished, doubtless of scurvy. The journal of the
+commander ends with the statement that immediately after the arrival
+of the vessels three men were sent south-south west, three west, and
+three south-east to search if they could find people, but that they
+all returned "without finding of people or any similitude of
+habitation." The following year Russian fishermen found at the
+wintering station the ships and dead bodies of those who had thus
+perished, together with the journal from which the extract given
+above is taken, and a will witnessed by Willoughby,[48] from which
+it appeared that he himself and most of the company of the two ships
+were alive in January, 1554.[49] The two vessels, together with
+Willoughby's corpse, were sent to England in 1555 by the merchant
+George Killingworth.[50]
+
+With regard to the position of Arzina it appears from a statement in
+Anthony Jenkinson's first voyage (_Hakluyt_, p. 335) that it took
+seven days to go from Vardoehus to Swjatoinos, and that on the sixth
+he passed the mouth of the river where Sir Hugh Willoughby wintered.
+At a distance from Vardoehus of about six-sevenths of the way
+between that town and Swjatoinos, there debouches into the Arctic
+Ocean, in 68 deg. 20' N.L. and 38 deg. 30' E.L. from Greenwich, a
+river, which in recent maps is called the Varzina. It was doubtless
+at the mouth of this river that two vessels of the first North-east
+Passage Expedition wintered with so unfortunate an issue for the
+officers and men.
+
+The third vessel, the _Edward Bonaventure_, commanded by Chancelor,
+had on the contrary a successful voyage, and one of great importance
+for the commerce of the world. As has been already stated, Chancelor
+was separated from his companions during a storm in August. He now
+sailed alone to Vardoehus. After waiting there seven days for Sir
+Hugh Willoughby, he set out again, resolutely determined "either to
+bring that to passe which was intended, or else to die the death;"
+and though "certaine Scottishmen" earnestly attempted to persuade
+him to return, "he held on his course towards that unknown part of
+the world, and sailed so farre that hee came at last to the place
+where hee found no night at all, but a continuall light and
+brightnesse of the sunne shining clearly upon the huge and mighty
+sea."[51] In this way he finally reached the mouth of the river
+Dwina in the White Sea, where a small monastery was then standing at
+the place where Archangel is now situated. By friendly treatment he
+soon won the confidence of the inhabitants, who received him with
+great hospitality. They, however, immediately sent off a courier to
+inform Czar Ivan Vasilievitsch of the remarkable occurrence. The
+result was that Chancelor was invited to the court at Moscow, where
+he and his companions passed a part of the winter, well entertained
+by the Czar. The following summer he returned with his vessel to
+England. Thus a commercial connection was brought about, which soon
+became of immense importance to both nations, and within a few years
+gave rise to a number of voyages, of which I cannot here give any
+account, as they have no connection with the history of the
+North-east Passage.[52]
+
+[Illustration: VARDOE IN 1594. After Linschoten. ]
+
+[Illustration: VARDOE IN OUR DAYS. After a photograph. ]
+
+Great geographer or seaman Sir Hugh Willoughby clearly was not, but
+his and his followers' voluntary self-sacrifice and undaunted
+courage have a strong claim on our admiration. Incalculable also was
+the influence which the voyages of Willoughby and Chancelor had upon
+English commerce, and on the development of the whole of Russia, and
+of the north of Norway. From the monastery at the mouth of the Dwina
+a flourishing commercial town has arisen, and a numerous population
+has settled on the coast of the Polar Sea, formerly so desolate.
+Already there is regular steam and telegraphic communication to the
+confines of Russia. The people of Vardoe can thus in a few hours get
+accounts of what has happened not only in Paris or London, but also
+in New York, the Indies, the Cape, Australia, Brazil, &c., while a
+hundred years ago the post came thither only once a year. It was
+then that a journal-loving commandant took the step, giving evidence
+of strong self-command, of not "devouring" the post at once, but
+reading the newspapers day by day a year after they were published.
+All this is now different, and yet men are not satisfied. The
+interests of commerce and the fisheries require railway
+communication with the rest of Europe. That will certainly come in a
+few years, nor will it be long before the telegraph has spun its
+net, and regular steam communication has commenced along the coast
+of the Arctic Ocean far beyond the sea which was opened by Chancelor
+to the commerce of the world.
+
+[Illustration: COAST LANDSCAPE FROM MATOTSCHKIN SCHAR. After Svenske. ]
+
+
+[Footnote 15: In many Polar expeditions, sealskin has been used as
+clothing instead of reindeer skin. The reindeer skin, however, is
+lighter and warmer, and ought therefore to have an unconditional
+preference as a means of protection against severe cold. In mild
+weather, clothing made of reindeer skin in the common way has indeed
+the defect that it is drenched through with water, and thereby
+becomes useless, but in such weather it is in general unnecessary to
+use furs. The coast Chukchis, who catch great numbers of seals, but
+can only obtain reindeer skins by purchase, yet consider clothing
+made of the latter material indispensable in winter. During this
+season they wear an overcoat of the same form as the Lapps' _pesk_,
+the suitableness of whose cut thus appears to be well proved. On
+this account I prefer the old-world Polar dress to that of the new,
+which consists of more closely fitting clothes. The Lapp shoes of
+reindeer skin (_renskallar, komager_) are, on the other hand, if one
+has not opportunity to change them frequently, nor time to take
+sufficient care of them, quite unserviceable for Arctic journeys. ]
+
+[Footnote 16: Haugan had formerly for a long series of years carried
+his own vessel to Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya, and was known as
+one of the most fortunate walrus-hunters of the Norwegian Polar Sea
+fleet. ]
+
+[Footnote 17: The original of this drawing, for which I am indebted
+to Councillor of Justice H. Rink, of Copenhagen, was painted by a
+German painter at Beigen, in 1654. The painting has the following
+inscription:--
+
+Mit Ledern Schifflein auff dem Meer De groenleinder fein bein undt
+her Boen Thieren undt Bogelen haben see Ire tracht Das falte lands
+bon winter nacht ]
+
+[Footnote 18: The birch which grows here is the sweet-scented birch
+(_Betula odorata_, Bechst.), not the dwarf birch (_Betula nana_,
+L.), which is found as far north as Ice Fjord in Spitzbergen (78
+degree 7' N.L.), though there it only rises a few inches above
+ground. ]
+
+[Footnote 19: According to Latkin, _Die Lena und ihr Flussgebiet_
+(_Petermann's Mittheilungen_, 1879, p. 91). On the map which
+accompanies Engehardt's reproduction of Wrangel's _Journey_ (Berlin,
+1839), the limit of trees at the Lena is placed at 71 deg. N.L. ]
+
+[Footnote 20: On the Kola Peninsula, and in the neighbourhood of the
+White Sea, as far as to Ural, the limit of trees consists of a
+species of pine (_Picea obovata_, Ledeb.), but farther east in
+Kamschatka again of birch.--Th. von Middendorff, _Reise in dem
+aeussersten Norden und Osten Sibiriens_, vol. iv. p. 582. ]
+
+[Footnote 21: An idea of the influence exerted by the immediate
+neighbourhood of a warm ocean-current in making the climate milder
+may be obtained from the following table of the mean temperatures of
+the different months at
+
+ 1. Tromsoe (69 deg. 30' N.L.);
+ 2. Fruholm, near North Cape (71 deg. 6' N.L.);
+ 3. Vardoe (70 deg. 22' N.L.);
+ 4. Enontekis and Karesuando, on the river Muonio, in the interior
+ of Lapland (68 deg. 26' N.L.).
+ Tromsoe Fruholm Vardoe Enontekis
+ January........... -4.2 deg. -2.7 deg. -6.0 deg. -13.7 deg.
+ February.......... -4.0 -4.7 -6.4 -17.1
+ March............. -3.8 -3.2 -5.1 -11.4
+ April............. -0.1 -0.9 -1.7 -6.0
+ May............... +3.2 +2.7 +1.8 +0.9
+ June.............. +8.7 +7.5 +5.9 +8.0
+ July.............. +11.5 +9.3 +8.8 +11.6
+ August........... +10.4 +9.9 +9.8 +12.0
+ September......... +7.0 +5.8 +6.4 +4.5
+ October........... +2.0 +2.5 +1.3 -4.0
+ November.......... -1.7 -1.1 -2.1 -9.9
+ December.......... -3.2 -1.9 -4.0 -11.3
+
+The figures are taken from H. Mohn's _Norges Klima_ (reprinted from
+O.F. Schubeler's _Voextlivet i Norge_, Christiania, 1879), and A.
+J. Angstroem, _Om lufttemperaturen i Enontekis_ (Oefvers. af Vet. Akad.
+Foerhandl, 1860). ]
+
+[Footnote 22: Orosius was born in Spain in the fourth century after
+Christ, and died in the beginning of the fifth. He was a Christian,
+and wrote his work to show that the world, in opposition to the
+statements of several heathen writers, had been visited during the
+heathen period by quite as great calamities as during the Christian.
+This is probably the reason why his monotonous sketch of all the
+misfortunes and calamities which befell the heathen world was long
+so highly valued, was spread in many copies and printed in
+innumerable editions, the oldest at Vienna in 1471. In the
+Anglo-Saxon translation now in question, Othere's account of his
+journey is inserted in the first chapter, which properly forms a
+geographical introduction to the work written by King Alfred. This
+old Anglo-Saxon work is preserved in England in two beautiful
+manuscripts from the ninth and tenth centuries. Orosius' history
+itself is now forgotten, but King Alfred's introduction, and
+especially his account of Othere's and Wulfstan's travels, have
+attracted much attention from inquirers, as appears from the list of
+translations of this part of King Alfred's Orosius, given by Joseph
+Bosworth in his _King Alfred's Anglo-Saxon version of the
+Compendious History of the World by Orosius_. London, 1859. ]
+
+[Footnote 23: By Fins are here meant Lapps; by Terfins the
+inhabitants of the Tersk coast of Russian Lapland. ]
+
+[Footnote 24: Walruses are still captured yearly on the ice at the
+mouth of the White Sea, not very far from the shore (cf. A.E.
+Nordenskioeld, _Redogoerelse foer en expedition till mynningen af
+Jenisej och Sibirien ar_ 1875, p. 23; _Bihang till Vetenskaps-A kad.
+Handl_. B. iv. No. 1). Now they occur there indeed only in small
+numbers, and, it appears, not in the immediate neighbourhood of
+land; but there is scarcely any doubt that in former days they were
+common on the most northerly coasts of Norway. They have evidently
+been driven away thence in the same way as they are now being driven
+away from Spitzbergen. With what rapidity their numbers at the
+latter place are yearly diminished, may be seen from the fact that
+during my many Arctic journeys, beginning in 1858, I never saw
+walruses on Bear Island or the west coast of Spitzbergen, but have
+conversed with hunters who ten years before had seen them in herds
+of hundreds and thousands. I have myself seen such herds in
+Hinloopen Strait in July 1861, but when during my journeys in 1868
+and 1872-3 I again visited the same regions, I saw there not a
+single walrus. ]
+
+[Footnote 25: As it appears to be impossible for six men to kill
+sixty great whales in two days, this passage has caused the editors
+of Othere's narrative much perplexity, which is not wonderful if
+great whales, as the _Balaena mysticetus_ are here meant. But if the
+narrative relates to the smaller species of the whale, a similar
+catch may still, at the present day, be made on the coasts of the
+Polar countries. For various small species go together in great
+shoals; and, as they occasionally come into water so shallow that
+they are left aground at ebb, they can be killed with ease.
+Sometimes, too, a successful attempt is made to drive them into
+shallow water. That whales visit the coast of Norway in spring in
+large shoals dangerous to the navigator is also stated by Jacob
+Ziegler, in his work, _Quae intus continentur Syria, Palestina,
+Arabia, AEgyptus, Schondia, &c._ Argentorati, 1532, p. 97. ]
+
+[Footnote 26: In this case is meant by "whale" evidently the walrus,
+whose skin is still used for lines by the Norwegian walrus-hunters,
+by the Eskimo, and the Chukchis. The skin of the true whale might
+probably be used for the same purpose, although, on account of its
+thickness, perhaps scarcely with advantage without the use of
+special tools for cutting it up. ]
+
+[Footnote 27: It ought to be remarked here that the distances which
+Othere in that case traversed every day, give a speed of sailing
+approximating to that which a common sailing vessel of the present
+day attains _on an average_. This circumstance, which on a cursory
+examination may appear somewhat strange, finds its explanation when
+we consider that Othere sailed only with a favourable wind, and,
+when the wind was unfavourable, lay still. It appears that he
+usually sailed 70' to 80' in twenty-four hours, or perhaps rather
+_per diem._ ]
+
+[Footnote 28: The maps are taken from _Ptolemaei Cosmographia latine
+reddita a Jac. Angelo, curam mapparum gerente Nicolao Donis Germano,
+Ulmoe_ 1482, and from the above-quoted work of Jacobus Ziegler,
+printed in 1532. That portion of the latter which concerns the
+geography of Scandinavia is reprinted in _Geografiska Sektionens
+Tidskrift_, B.I. Stockholm, 1878. ]
+
+[Footnote 29: These were the Dane, Erik Valkendorff, and the
+Norwegian, Olof Engelbrektsson. The Swedes, Johannes Magnus,
+Archbishop of Upsala, and Peder Maonsson, Bishop of Vesteraos, also
+gave Ziegler important information regarding the northern countries. ]
+
+[Footnote 30: Of these much-discussed narratives concerning
+_Indians_--probably men from North Scandinavia, Russia, or North
+America, certainly not Japanese, Chinese, or Indians--who were
+driven by storms to the coasts of Germany, the first comes down to
+us from the time before the birth of Christ. For B.C. 62 Quintus
+Metellus Celer, "when as proconsul he governed Gaul, received as a
+present from the King of the Baeti [Pliny says of the Suevi] some
+Indians, and when he inquired how they came to those countries, he
+was informed that they had been driven by storm from the Indian
+Ocean to the coasts of Germany" (Pomponius Mela, lib. iii. cap. 5,
+after a lost work of Cornelius Nepos. Plinius, _Hist. Nat._, lib.
+ii. cap. 67).
+
+Of a similar occurrence in the middle ages, the learned AEneas
+Sylvius, afterwards Pope under the name of Pius II., gives the
+following account of his cosmography:--"I have myself read in Otto
+[Bishop Otto, of Freising], that in the time of the German Emperor
+an Indian vessel and Indian merchants were driven by storm to the
+German coast. Certain it was that, driven about by contrary winds,
+they came from the east, which had been by no means possible, if, as
+many suppose, the North Sea were unnavigable and frozen" (Pius II.,
+_Cosmographia in Asiae et Europae eleganti descriptione, etc._,
+Parisiis, 1509, leaf 2). Probably it is the same occurrence which is
+mentioned by the Spanish historian Gomara (_Historia general de las
+Indias_, Saragoca, 1552-53), with the addition, that the Indians
+stranded at Luebeck in the time of the Emperor Frederick Barbarossa
+(1152-1190). Gomara also states that he met with the exiled Swedish
+Bishop Olaus Magnus, who positively assured him that it was possible
+to sail from Norway by the north along the coasts to China (French
+translation of the above-quoted work, Paris, 1587, leaf 12). An
+exceedingly instructive treatise on this subject is to be found in
+_Aarboeger for nordisk Oldkyndighed og Historie_, Kjoebenhavn, 1880.
+It is written by F. Schiern, and entitled _Om en etnologisk Gaade
+fra Oldtiden_. ]
+
+[Footnote 31: Olaus Magnus, _Auslegung und Verklerung der neuen
+Mappen von den alten Goettewreich_, Venedig, 1539. Now perhaps
+(according to a communication from the Librarian-in-chief, G.E.
+Klemming) there is scarcely any copy of this edition of the map
+still in existence, but it is given unaltered in the 1567 Basel
+edition of Olaus Magnus, "_De gentium septentrionalium rariis
+conditionibus_," &c. The edition of the same work printed at Rome in
+1555, on the other hand, has a map, which differs a little from the
+original map of 1539. ]
+
+[Footnote 32: To interpret Nicolo and Antonio Zeno's travels towards
+the end of the fourteenth century, which have given rise to so much
+discussion, as Mr. Fr. Krarup has done, in such a way as if they had
+visited the shores of the Arctic Ocean and the White Sea, appears to
+me to be a very unfortunate guess, opposed to innumerable
+particulars in the narrative of the Zenos, and to the accompanying
+map, remarkable in more respects than one, which was first published
+at Venice in 1558, unfortunately in a somewhat "improved" form by
+one of Zeno's descendants. On the map there is the date MCCCLXXX.
+(Cf. _Zeniernes Reise til Norden, et Tolknings Forsoeg_, af Fr.
+Krarup, Kjoebenhavn, 1878; R.H. Major, _The Voyages of the Venetian
+Brothers Nicolo and Antonio Zeno_, London, 1873, and other works
+concerning these much-bewritten travels). ]
+
+[Footnote 33: The first edition, entitled _Rerum Moscoviticarum
+Commentarii, &c._, Vienna, 1549, has three plates, and a map of
+great value for the former geography of Russia. It is, however, to
+judge by the copy in the Royal Library at Stockholm, partly drawn by
+hand, and much inferior to the map in the Italian edition of the
+following year (_Comentari della Moscovia et parimente della Russia,
+&c., per il Signor Sigismondo libero Barone in Herbetstain, Neiperg
+and Guetnbag, tradotti nuaomente di Latino in lingua nostra volgare
+Italiana_, Venetia, 1550, with two plates and a map, with the
+inscription "per Giacomo Gastaldo cosmographo in Venetia, MDL"). Von
+Herbertstein visited Russia as ambassador from the Roman Emperor on
+two occasions, the first time in 1517, the second in 1525, and on
+the ground of these two journeys published a sketch of the country,
+by which it first became known to West-Europeans, and even for
+Russians themselves it forms an important original source of
+information regarding the state of civilisation of the empire of the
+Czar in former times. Von Adelung enumerates in _Kritisch-literaerische
+Uebersicht der Reisenden in Russland bis 1700_, St. Petersburg and
+Leipzig, 1846, eleven Latin, two Italian, nine German, and one
+Bohemian translation of this work. An English translation has since
+been published by the Hakluyt Society. ]
+
+[Footnote 34: _Von Herbertstein_, first edition, leaf xxviii., in
+the second of the three separately-paged portions of the work. ]
+
+[Footnote 35: An erroneous transposition of mountains seen in
+Norway, the northeastern shore of the White Sea being low land. ]
+
+[Footnote 36: An unfortunate translation, which often occurs in old
+works, of Swjatoinos, "the holy headland." ]
+
+[Footnote 37: Instead of "north of," the true reading probably is
+"beyond" the Dwina. ]
+
+[Footnote 38: Huberti Langueti _Epistoloe Secretoe_, Halae, 1699, i.
+171. Compare also a paper by A.G. Ahlquist, in _Ny Illustrerad
+Tidning_ for 1875, p. 270. ]
+
+[Footnote 39: The first to incite to voyages of discovery in the
+polar regions was an Englishman, Robert Thorne, who long lived at
+Seville. Seeing all other countries were already discovered by
+Spaniards and Portuguese, he urged Henry VIII. in 1527 to undertake
+discoveries in the north. After reaching the Pole (going
+sufficiently far north) one could turn to the east, and, first
+passing the land of the Tartars, get to China and so to Malacca, the
+East Indies, and the Cape of Good Hope, and thus circumnavigate the
+"whole world." One could also turn to the west, sail along the back
+of Newfoundland, and return by the Straits of Magellan (Richard
+Hakluyt, _The Principael Navigations, Voiages, and Discoveries of
+the English Nation, &c._, London, 1589, p. 250). Two years before,
+Paulus Jovius, on the ground of communications from an ambassador
+from the Russian Czar to Pope Clement VII., states that Russia is
+surrounded on the north by an immense ocean, by which it is
+possible, if one keeps to the right shore, and if no land comes
+between, to sail to China. (Pauli Jovii _Opera, Omnia_, Basel, 1578,
+third part, p. 88; the description of Russia, inserted there under
+the title "Libellus de legatione Basilii ad Clementem VII.," was
+printed for the first time at Rome in 1525.) ]
+
+[Footnote 40: In the year 1540, London, exclusive of the Royal Navy,
+had no more than four vessels, whose draught exceeded 120 tons
+(Anderson, _Origin of Commerce_, London, 1787, vol. ii. p. 67). Most
+of the coast towns of Scandinavia have thus in our days a greater
+sea-going fleet than London had at that time. ]
+
+[Footnote 41: For instance Article 30: "Item, if you shall see them
+[the foreigners met with during the voyage] weare Lyons or Bears
+skinnes, hauing long bowes, and arrowes, be not afraid of that
+sight: for such be worne oftentimes more to feare strangers, then
+for any other cause." (_Hakluyt_, 1st edition, p. 262.) ]
+
+[Footnote 42: The endeavour to procure for this work a copy of an
+original portrait of Cabot, stated to be in existence in England,
+has unfortunately not been crowned with success. ]
+
+[Footnote 43: According to Clement Adams' account of the voyage.
+(_Hakluyt_, 1st edition, p. 271.) ]
+
+[Footnote 44: "Cum ob corporis formam (erat enim procerae staturae)
+tum ob singularem in re bellica industriam." Clement Adams'
+account--_Hakluyt_, p. 271. ]
+
+[Footnote 45: Ten days earlier or later are of very great importance
+with respect to the state of the ice in summer in the Polar seas. I
+have, therefore, in quoting from the travels of my predecessors,
+reduced the old style to the new. ]
+
+[Footnote 46: "Vibrantur bombardarum fulmina, Tartariae volvuntur
+nubes, Martem sonant crepitacula, reboant summa montium juga,
+reboant valles, reboant undae, claraque Nautarum percellit sydara
+clamor." Clement Adams' account.--_Hakluyt_, p. 272. ]
+
+[Footnote 47: At the time when the whale-fishing at Spitzbergen
+commenced, Thomas Edge, a captain of one of the Muscovy Company's
+vessels, endeavoured to show that the land which Willoughby
+discovered while sailing about after parting company with Chancelor
+was Spitzbergen (_Purchas_, iii. p. 462). The statement, which was
+evidently called forth by the wish to monopolise the Spitzbergen
+whale-fishing for England, can be shown to be incorrect. It has also
+for a long time back been looked upon as groundless. Later inquirers
+have instead supposed that the land which Willoughby saw was
+Gooseland, on Novaya Zemlya. For reasons which want of space
+prevents me from stating here, this also does not appear to me to be
+possible. On the other hand, I consider it highly probable that
+"Willoughby's Land" was Kolgujev Island, which is surrounded by
+shallow sand-banks. Its latitude has indeed in that case been stated
+2 deg. too high, but such errors are not impossible in the determinations
+of the oldest explorers. ]
+
+[Footnote 48: The testator was Gabriel Willoughby, who, as merchant,
+sailed in the commander's vessel. ]
+
+[Footnote 49: _Hakluyt_, p. 500; _Purchas_, iii. p. 249, and in the
+margin of p. 463. ]
+
+[Footnote 50: It is of him that it is narrated in a letter written
+from Moscow by Henrie Lane, that the Czar at an entertainment
+"called them to his table, to receave each one a cuppe from his hand
+to drinke, and tooke into his hand Master George Killingworths
+beard, which reached over the table, and pleasantly delivered it the
+Metropolitane, who seeming to bless it, sad in Russe, 'this is Gods
+gift.'"--_Hakluyt_, p. 500. ]
+
+[Footnote 51: As the Dwina lies to the south of Vardoehus, these
+remarks probably relate to an earlier part of the voyage than that
+which is referred to in the narrative. ]
+
+[Footnote 52: Writings on these voyages are exceedingly numerous.
+An account of them was published for the first time in Hakluyt,
+_The principael Navigations, Voiages, and Discoveries of the English
+Nation, &c._, London, 1589; _Ordinances, King Edward's Past, &c._,
+p. 259; _Copy of Sir Hugh Willoughby's Journal, with a List of all
+the Members of the Expedition_, p. 265; _Clement Adams' Account of
+Chancelor's Voyage_, p. 270, &c. The same documents were afterwards
+printed in Purchas' _Pilgrimage_, iii. p. 211. For those who wish to
+study the literature of this subject further, I may refer to Fr. von
+Adelung, _Kritisch-literaerische Uebersicht der Reisenden in Russland_,
+St. Petersburg and Leipzig, 1846, p. 200; and L. Hamel,
+_Tradesrunt der Aeltere 1618 in Russland_, St. Petersburg and
+Leipzig, 1847. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+ Departure from Maosoe--Gooseland--State of the Ice--
+ The Vessels of the Expedition assemble at Chabarova--
+ The Samoyed town there--The Church--Russians and Samoyeds--
+ Visit to Ohabarova in 1875--Purchase of Samoyed Idols--
+ Dress and Dwellings of the Samoyeds--Comparison of the
+ Polar Races--Sacrificial Places and Samoyed Grave on
+ Vaygats Island visited--Former accounts of the Samoyeds--
+ Their place in Ethnography.
+
+
+The _Vega_ was detained at Maosoe by a steady head wind, rain, fog,
+and a very heavy sea till the evening of the 25th July. Though the
+weather was still very unfavourable, we then weighed anchor,
+impatient to proceed on our voyage, and steamed out to sea through
+Mageroe Sound. The _Lena_ also started at the same time, having
+received orders to accompany the _Vega_ as far as possible, and,
+in case separation could not be avoided, to steer her course to the
+point, Ohabarova in Yugor Schar, which I had fixed on as the
+rendezvous of the four vessels of the expedition. The first night,
+during the fog that then prevailed, we lost sight of the _Lena_,
+and did not see her again until we had reached the meeting place.
+
+The course of the _Vega_ was shaped for South Goose Cape. Although,
+while at Tromsoe, I had resolved to enter the Kara Sea through Yugor
+Schar, the most southerly of the sounds which lead to it--so
+northerly a course was taken, because experience has shown that in
+the beginning of summer so much ice often drives backwards and
+forwards in the bay between the west coast of Vaygats Island and the
+mainland, that navigation in these waters is rendered rather
+difficult. This is avoided by touching Novaya Zemlya first at
+Gooseland, and thence following the western shore of this island and
+Vaygats to Yugor Schar. Now this precaution was unnecessary; for the
+state of the ice was singularly favourable, and Yugor Schar was
+readied without seeing a trace of it.
+
+During our passage from Norway to Gooseland we were, favoured at
+first with a fresh breeze, which, however, fell as we approached
+Novaya Zemlya; this notwithstanding, we made rapid progress under
+steam, and without incident, except that the excessive rolling of
+the vessel caused the overturn of some boxes containing instruments
+and books, fortunately without any serious damage ensuing.
+
+Land was sighted on the 28th July at 10.30 P.M. It was the headland
+which juts out from the south of Gooseland in 70 deg. 33' N.L. and 51 deg. 54'
+E.L. (Greenwich). Gooseland is a low stretch of coast, occupied by
+grassy flats and innumerable small lakes, which projects from the
+mainland of Novaya Zemlya between 72 deg. 10' and 71 deg. 30' N.L. The name is a
+translation of the Russian Gusinnaja Semlja, and arises from the large
+number of geese and swans (_Cygnus Bewickii_, Yarr.) which breed in that
+region. The geese commonly place their exceedingly inconsiderable nests
+on little hillocks near the small lakes which are scattered over the
+whole of Gooseland; the powerful swans, which are very difficult of
+approach by the hunter, on the other hand breed on the open plain. The
+swans' nests are so large that they may be seen at a great distance. The
+building material is moss, which is plucked from the ground within a
+distance of two metres from the nest, which by the excavation which is
+thus produced, is surrounded by a sort of moat. The nest itself forms a
+truncated cone, 0.6 metre high and 2.4 metres in diameter at the bottom.
+In its upper part there is a cavity, 0.2 metre deep and 0.6 metre broad,
+in which the four large grayish-white eggs of the bird are laid. The
+female hatches the eggs, but the male also remains in the neighbourhood
+of the nest. Along with the swans and geese, a large number of waders,
+a couple of species of Lestris, an owl and other birds breed on the
+plains of Gooseland, and a few guillemots or gulls upon the summits of
+the strand cliffs. The avifauna along the coast here is besides rather
+poor. At least there are none of the rich fowl-fells, which, with their
+millions of inhabitants and the conflicts and quarrels which rage
+amongst them, commonly give so peculiar a character to the coast cliffs
+of the high north. I first met with true loom and kittiwake fells
+farther north on the southern shore of Besimannaja Bay.
+
+Although Gooseland, seen from a distance, appears quite level and
+low, it yet rises gradually, with an undulating surface, from the
+coast towards the interior, to a grassy plain about sixty metres
+above the sea-level, with innumerable small lakes scattered over it.
+The plain sinks towards the sea nearly everywhere with a steep
+escarpment, three to fifteen metres high, below which there is
+formed during the course of the winter an immense snowdrift or
+so-called "snow-foot," which does not melt until late in the season.
+_There are no true glaciers here, nor any erratic blocks, to show
+that circumstances were different in former times._ Nor are any
+snow-covered mountain-tops visible from the sea. It is therefore
+possible at a certain season of the year (during the whole of the
+month of August) to sail from Norway to Novaya Zemlya, make sporting
+exclusions there, and return without having seen a trace of ice or
+snow. This holds good indeed only of the low-lying part of the south
+island, but in any case it shows how erroneous the prevailing idea
+of the natural state of Novaya Zemlya is. By the end of June or
+beginning of July the greater part of Gooseland is nearly free of
+snow, and soon after the Arctic flower-world develops during a few
+weeks all its splendour of colour. Dry, favourably situated spots
+are now covered by a low, but exceedingly rich flower bed, concealed
+by no high grass or bushes. On moister places true grassy turf is to
+be met with, which, at least when seen from a distance, resembles
+smiling meadows.
+
+In consequence of the loss of time which had been caused by the
+delay in sailing along the coast of Norway, and our stay at Maosoe,
+we were unable to land on this occasion, but immediately continued
+our course along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya towards Yugor
+Schar, the weather being for the most part glorious and calm.
+The sea was completely free of ice, and the land bare, with the
+exception of some small snow-fields concealed in the valleys. Here
+and there too along the steep strand escarpments were to be seen,
+remains of the winter's snow-foot, which often, when the lower
+stratum of air was strongly heated by the sun, were magnified by a
+strong mirage, so that, when seen from a distance, they resembled
+immense glaciers terminating perpendicularly towards the sea. Coming
+farther south the clear weather gave us a good view of Vaygats
+Island. It appears, when seen from the sea off the west coast,
+to form a level grassy plain, but when we approached Yugor Schar,
+low ridges were seen to run along the east side of the island, which
+are probably the last ramifications of the north spur of Ural, known by
+the name of Paj-koi.
+
+When we were off the entrance to Yugor Schar, a steamer was sighted.
+After much guessing, the _Fraser_ was recognised. I was at first
+very uneasy, and feared that an accident had occurred, as the course
+of the vessel was exactly the opposite of that which had been fixed
+beforehand, but found, when Captain Nilsson soon after came on
+board, that he had only come out to look for us. The _Express_ and
+the _Fraser_ had been waiting for us at the appointed rendezvous
+since the 20th. They had left Vardoe on the 13th, and during the
+passage had met with as little ice as ourselves. The _Vega_ and
+_Fraser_ now made for the harbour at Chabarova, where they anchored
+on the evening of the 30th July with a depth of fourteen metres and
+a clay bottom. The _Lena_ was still wanting. We feared that the
+little steamer had had some difficulty in keeping afloat in the sea
+which had been encountered on the other side of North Cape.
+A breaker had even dashed over the side of the larger _Vega_ and
+broken in pieces one of the boxes which were fastened to the deck.
+Our fears were unwarranted. The _Lena_ had done honour to her
+builders at Motala works, and behaved well in the heavy sea. The
+delay had been caused by a compass deviation, which, on account of
+the slight horizontal intensity of the magnetism of the earth in
+these northern latitudes, was greater than that obtained during the
+examination made before the departure of the vessel from Gothenburg.
+On the 31st the _Lena_ anchored alongside the other vessels, and
+thus the whole of our little Polar Sea squadron was collected at the
+appointed rendezvous.
+
+Chabarova is a little village, situated on the mainland, south of
+Yugor Schar, west of the mouth of a small river in which at certain
+seasons fish are exceedingly abundant. During summer the place is
+inhabited by a number of Samoyeds, who pasture their herds of
+reindeer on Vaygats Island and the surrounding _tundra_, and by some
+Russians and Russianised Fins, who come hither from Pustosersk to
+carry on barter with the Samoyeds, and with their help to fish and
+hunt in the neighbouring sea. During winter the Samoyeds drive their
+herds to more southern regions, and the merchants carry their wares
+to Pustosersk, Mesen, Archangel, and other places. Thus it has
+probably gone on for centuries back, but it is only in comparatively
+recent times that fixed dwellings have been erected, for they are
+not mentioned in the accounts of the voyages of the Dutch in these
+regions.
+
+The village, or "Samoyed town" as the walrus-hunters grandiosely
+call it, consists, like other great towns, of two portions, the town
+of the rich--some cabins built of wood, with flat turf-covered
+roofs--and the quarter of the common people, a collection of dirty
+Samoyed tents. There is, besides, a little church, where, as at
+several places along the shore, votive crosses have been erected.
+The church is a wooden building, divided by a partition wall into
+two parts, of which the inner, the church proper, is little more
+than two and a half metres in height and about five metres square.
+On the eastern wall during the time the region is inhabited, there
+is a large number of sacred pictures placed there for the occasion
+by the hunters. One of them, which represented St. Nicholas, was
+very valuable, the material being embossed silver gilt. Before the
+lamps hung large dinted old copper lamps or rather light-holders,
+resembling inverted Byzantine cupolas, suspended by three chains.
+
+[Illustration: CHURCH OF CHABAROVA. After a photograph by L. Palander. ]
+
+They were set full of numerous small, and some few thick wax lights
+which were lighted on the occasion of our visit. Right above our
+landing-place there were lying a number of sledges laden with goods
+which the Russian merchants had procured by barter, and which were
+to be conveyed to Pustosersk the following autumn. The goods
+consisted mainly of train oil and the skins of the mountain fox,
+common fox, Polar bear, glutton, reindeer, and seal. The bears'
+skins had often a very close, white winter coat, but they were
+spoiled by the head and paws having been cut off. Some of the wolf
+skins which they showed us were very close and fine. The merchants
+had besides collected a considerable stock of goose quills,
+feathers, down, and ptarmigans' wings. For what purpose these last
+are used I could not learn. I was merely informed that they would be
+sold in Archangel. Perhaps they go thence to the dealers in fashions
+in Western Europe, to be afterwards used as ornaments on our ladies'
+hats. Ptarmigans' wings were bought as long ago as 1611 at
+Pustosersk by Englishmen.[53]
+
+At the same time I saw, among the stocks of the merchants, walrus
+tusks and lines of walrus hide. It is noteworthy that these wares
+are already mentioned in Othere's narrative.
+
+As I was not myself sufficiently master of the Russian language,
+I requested Mr. Serebrenikoff to make inquiries on the spot, regarding
+the mode of life and domestic economy of the Russians in the
+neighbourhood, and I have received from him the following
+communication on the subject:--
+
+ "The village consists of several cabins and tents. In the
+ cabins nine Russian householders live with their servants,
+ who are Samoyeds.[54] The Russians bring hither neither
+ their wives nor children. In the tents the Samoyeds live
+ with their families. The Russians are from the village
+ Pustosersk on the Petchora river, from which they set out
+ immediately after Easter, arriving at Chabarova about the
+ end of May, after having traversed a distance of between
+ 600 and 700 versts. During their stay at Chabarova they
+ employ themselves in the management of reindeer, in
+ catching whales, and in carrying on barter with the
+ Samoyeds. They bring with them from home all their
+ household articles and commercial wares on sledges drawn
+ by reindeer, and as there is a poor ruinous chapel there,
+ they bring also pictures of St. Nicholas and other saints.
+ The holy Nicholas also figures as a shareholder in a
+ company for the capture of whales. Part of their reindeer
+ is left during summer on Vaygats, and after their arrival
+ at Chabarova they still pass over on the ice to that
+ island. Towards the close of August, when the cold
+ commences, the reindeer are driven across Yugor Schar from
+ Vaygats to the mainland. About the 1st October, old style,
+ the Russians return with their reindeer to Pustosersk.
+ Vaygats Island is considered by them to afford exceedingly
+ good pasturage for reindeer; they therefore allow a number
+ of them to winter on the island under the care of some
+ Samoyed families, and this is considered the more
+ advantageous, as the reindeer there are never stolen. Such
+ thefts, on the contrary, are often committed by the
+ Samoyeds on the mainland. For thirty years back the
+ Siberian plague has raged severely among the reindeer. A
+ Russian informed me that he now owned but two hundred,
+ while some years ago he had a thousand; and this statement
+ was confirmed by the other Russians. Men too are attacked
+ by this disease. Two or three days before our arrival a
+ Samoyed and his wife had eaten the flesh of a diseased
+ animal, in consequence of which the woman died the
+ following day, and the man still lay ill, and, as the
+ people on the spot said, would not probably survive. Some
+ of the Samoyeds are considered rich, for instance the
+ 'eldest' (starschina) of the tribe, who owns a thousand
+ reindeer. The Samoyeds also employ themselves, like the
+ Russians, in fishing. During winter some betake themselves
+ to Western Siberia, where 'corn is cheap,' and some go to
+ Pustosersk.
+
+ "The nine Russians form a company (artell) for
+ whale-fishing. There are twenty-two shares, two of which
+ fall to the holy Nicholas, and the other twenty are
+ divided among the shareholders. The company's profit for
+ the fishing season commonly amounts to 1,500 or 2,000 pood
+ train oil of the white whale (_Beluga_), but this season
+ there had been no fishing on account of disagreements
+ among the shareholders. For in the Russian 'artell' the
+ rule is, 'equal liability, equal rights,' and as the rich
+ will never comply with the first part of the rule, it was
+ their arrogance and greed which caused contention here, as
+ everywhere else in the world.
+
+ "Neither the Russians nor the Samoyeds carry on any
+ agriculture. The former buy meal for bread from Irbit.
+ The price of meal varies; this season it costs one rouble
+ ten copecks per pood in Pustosersk. Salt is now brought
+ from Norway to Mesen, where it costs fifty to sixty
+ copecks per pood. The Samoyeds buy nearly everything from
+ the Russians. There were many inquiries for gunpowder,
+ shot, cheap fowling-pieces, rum, bread, sugar, and
+ culinary vessels (teacups, &c.). The Samoyed women wear
+ clothes of different colours, chiefly red. In exchange for
+ the goods enumerated above there may be obtained fish,
+ train oil, reindeer skins, walrus tusks, and furs, viz,
+ the skins of the red, white, and brown fox, wolf, Polar
+ bear, and glutton.
+
+ "The Russians in question are 'Old Believers,' but the
+ difference between them and the orthodox consists merely
+ in their not smoking tobacco, and in their making the sign
+ of the cross with the thumb, the ring finger, and the
+ little finger, while the orthodox Russians, on the other
+ hand, make it with the thumb, the forefinger, and the
+ middle finger. All Samoyeds are baptised into the orthodox
+ faith, but they worship their old idols at the same time.
+ They travel over a thousand versts as pilgrims to their
+ sacrificial places. There are several such places on
+ Vaygats, where their idols are to be found. The Russians
+ call these idols 'bolvany.'[55] Both the Russians and
+ Samoyeds are very tolerant in regard to matters of faith.
+ The Russians, for instance, say that the Samoyeds
+ attribute to their 'bolvans' the same importance which
+ they themselves attach to their sacred pictures, and find
+ in this nothing objectionable. The Samoyeds have songs and
+ sagas, relating among other things to their migrations.
+
+ "The Samoyed has one or more wives; even sisters may marry
+ the same man. Marriage is entered upon without any
+ solemnity. The wives are considered by the men as having
+ equal rights with themselves, and are treated accordingly,
+ which is very remarkable, as the Russians, like other
+ Christian nations, consider the woman as in certain
+ respects inferior to the man."
+
+I visited the place for the first time in the beginning of August,
+1875. It was a Russian holiday, and, while still a long way off at
+sea, we could see a large number of Russians and Samoyeds standing
+in groups on the beach. Coming nearer we found them engaged in
+playing various different games, and though it was the first time in
+the memory of man that European gentlemen had visited their "town,"
+they scarcely allowed themselves to be more disturbed in their
+occupation than if some stranger Samoyeds had suddenly joined their
+company. Some stood in a circle and by turns threw a piece of iron,
+shaped somewhat like a marlinspike, to the ground; the art
+consisting in getting the sharp end to strike it just in front of
+rings placed on the ground, in such a way that the piece of iron
+remained standing. Others were engaged in playing a game resembling
+our nine-pins; others, again, in wrestling, &c. The Russians and
+Samoyeds played with each other without distinction. The Samoyeds,
+small of stature, dirty, with matted, unkempt hair, were clad in
+dirty summer clothes of skin, sometimes with a showy-coloured cotton
+shirt drawn over them; the Russians (probably originally of the
+Finnish race and descendants of the old Beormas) tall, well-grown,
+with long hair shining with oil, ornamentally parted, combed, and
+frizzled, and held together by a head band, or covered with a cap
+resembling that shown in the accompanying woodcut, were clad in long
+variegated blouses, or "mekkor," fastened at the waist with a belt.
+Notwithstanding the feigned indifference shown at first, which was
+evidently considered good manners, we were received in a friendly
+way. We were first invited to try our luck and skill in the game in
+turn with the rest, when it soon appeared, to the no small
+gratification of our hosts, that we were quite incapable of entering
+into competition either with Russian or Samoyed. Thereupon one of
+the Russians invited us to enter his cabin, where we were
+entertained with tea, Russian wheaten cakes of unfermented dough,
+and brandy. Some small presents were given us with a naive
+notification of what would be welcome in their stead, a notification
+which I with pleasure complied with as far as my resources
+permitted. A complete unanimity at first prevailed between our
+Russian and Samoyed hosts, but on the following day a sharp dispute
+was like to arise because the former invited one of us to drive with
+a reindeer team standing in the neighbourhood of a Russian hut. The
+Samoyeds were much displeased on this account, but declared at the
+same time, as well as they could by signs, that they themselves were
+willing to drive us, if we so desired, and they showed that they
+were serious in their declaration by there and then breaking off the
+quarrel in order to take a short turn with their reindeer teams at a
+rapid rate among the tents.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED WOMAN'S HOOD. One-eighth of natural size. ]
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED SLEIGH. After a drawing by Hj Theel. ]
+
+The Samoyed sleigh is intended both for winter travelling on the
+snow, and for summer travelling on the mosses and water-drenched
+bogs of the _tundra_. They are, therefore, constructed quite
+differently from the "akja" of the Lapp. As the woodcut below shows,
+it completely resembles a high sledge, the carriage consisting of a
+low and short box, which, in convenience, style, and warmth, cannot
+be compared to the well-known equipage of the Lapps. We have here
+two quite different types of sleighs. The Lapp "akja" appears from
+time immemorial to have been peculiar to the Scandinavian north; the
+high sleigh, on the contrary, to northern Russia. Thus we find
+"akjas" of the kind still in common use, delineated in Olaus Magnus
+(Rome edition, 1555, page 598); Samoyed sleighs, again, in the first
+works we have on those regions, for instance, in HUYGHEN VAN
+LINSCHOTEN'S _Schip-vaert van by Noorden_, &c., Amsterdam, 1601, as a
+side drawing on the principal map. Such high sleighs are also used
+on the Kanin peninsula, on Yalmal, and in Western Siberia.
+The sleighs of the Chukchis, on the other hand as will be seen by a
+drawing given farther on, are lower, and thus more resemble our
+"kaelkar," or work-sledges.
+
+[Illustration: LAPP AKJA. After original in the Northern Museum,
+Stockholm. ]
+
+The neighbourhood of the tents swarmed with small black or white
+long-haired dogs, with pointed nose and pointed ears They are used
+exclusively for tending the herds of reindeer, and appear to be of
+the same race as the "renvallhund," the reindeer dog. At several
+places on the coast of the White Sea, however, dogs are also
+employed as beasts of draught, but according to information which I
+procured before my departure for Spitzbergen in 1872--it was then
+under discussion whether dogs should be used during the projected
+ice journey--these are of a different race, larger and stronger than
+the Lapp or Samoyed dogs proper.
+
+Immediately after the _Vega_ came to anchor, I went on land on this
+occasion also; in the first place with a view to take some solar
+altitudes, in order to ascertain the chronometer's rate of going;
+for during the voyage of 1875 I had had an opportunity of
+determining the position of this place as accurately as is possible
+with the common reflecting circle and chronometer, with the
+following result:--
+
+ The Church at Chabarova (Latitude 69 deg. 38' 50".
+ (Longitude 60 deg. 19' 49" E. from Greenwich.
+
+[Illustration: _Samoiedarum, trahis a rangiferis protractis infidentium
+Nec non Idolorum ab ysdem cultorum effigies._ ]
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED SLEIGH AND IDOLS. After an old Dutch engraving. ]
+
+When the observations were finished I hastened to renew my
+acquaintance with my old friends on the spot. I also endeavoured to
+purchase from the Samoyeds dresses and household articles; but as I
+had not then with me goods for barter, and ready money appeared to
+be of small account with them, prices were very high; for instance,
+for a lady's beautiful "pesk," twenty roubles; for a cap with brass
+ornaments, ten roubles; for a pair of boots of reindeer skin, two
+roubles; for copper ornaments for hoods, two roubles each; and so
+on.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED IDOLS. One-third of natural size. ]
+
+As I knew that the Samoyeds during their wanderings always carry
+idols with them, I asked them whether they could not sell me some.
+All at first answered in the negative. It was evident that they were
+hindered from complying with my requests partly by superstition,
+partly by being a little ashamed, before the West European, of the
+nature of their gods. The metallic lustre of some rouble pieces
+which I had procured in Stockholm, however, at last induced an old
+woman to set aside all fears. She went to one of the loaded sledges,
+which appeared to be used as magazines, and searched for a long time
+till she got hold of an old useless skin boot, from which she drew a
+fine skin stocking, out of which at last four idols appeared. After
+further negotiations they were sold to me at a very high price. They
+consisted of a miniature "pesk," with belt, without body; a skin
+doll thirteen centimetres long, with face of brass; another doll,
+with a bent piece of copper plate for a nose; and a stone, wrapped
+round with rags and hung with brass plates, a corner of the stone
+forming the countenance of the human figure it was intended to
+resemble.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED HAIR ORNAMENTS. One-third of natural size. ]
+
+More finely-formed gods, dolls pretty well made, with bows forged of
+iron, I have seen, but have not had the good fortune to get
+possession of. In the case now in question the traffic was
+facilitated by the circumstance that the old witch, Anna Petrovna,
+who sold her gods, was baptised, which was naturally taken advantage
+of by me to represent to her that it was wrong for her as a
+Christian to worship such trash as "bolvans," and the necessity of
+immediately getting rid of them. But my arguments, at once sophistic
+and egoistic, met with disapproval, both from the Russians and
+Samoyeds standing round, inasmuch as they declared that on the whole
+there was no great difference between the "bolvan" of the Samoyed
+and the sacred picture of the Christian. It would even appear as if
+the Russians themselves considered the "bolvans" as representatives
+of some sort of Samoyed saints in the other world.
+
+When the traffic in gods was finished, though not to my full
+satisfaction, because I thought I had got too little, we were
+invited by one of the Russians, as in 1875, to drink tea in his
+cabin. This consisted of a lobby, and a room about four metres
+square, and scarcely two metres and a half high. One corner was
+occupied by a large chimney, at the side of which was the very low
+door, and right opposite the window opening, under which were placed
+some chests, serving as tea-table for the occasion. Along the two
+remaining sides of the room there were fastened to the wall sleeping
+places of boards covered with reindeer skin. The window appeared to
+have been formerly filled with panes of glass, but most of these
+were now broken, and replaced by boards. It need scarcely surprise
+us if glass is a scarce article of luxury here.
+
+We had no sooner entered the cabin than preparations for tea
+commenced. Sugar, biscuits, teacups and saucers, and a brandy flask
+were produced from a common Russian travelling trunk. Fire was
+lighted, water boiled, and tea made in the common way, a thick smoke
+and strong fames from the burning fuel spreading in the upper part
+of the low room, which for the time was packed full of curious
+visitors. Excepting these trifling inconveniences the entertainment
+passed off very agreeably, with constant conversation, which was
+carried on with great liveliness, though the hosts and most of the
+guests could only with difficulty make themselves mutually
+intelligible.
+
+Hence we betook ourselves to the skin tents of the Samoyeds which
+stood apart from the wooden huts inhabited by the Russians. Here too
+we met with a friendly reception. Several of the inhabitants of the
+tents were now clad with somewhat greater care in a dress of
+reindeer skin, resembling that of the Lapps. The women's holiday
+dress was particularly showy. It consisted of a pretty long garment
+of reindeer skin, fitting closely at the waist, so thin that it hung
+from the middle in beautiful regular folds. The petticoat has two or
+three differently coloured fringes of dogskin, between which stripes
+of brightly coloured cloth are sewed on. The foot-covering consists
+of boots of reindeer skin beautifully and tastefully embroidered.
+During summer the men go bare-headed. The women then have their
+black straight hair divided behind into two tresses, which are
+braided with straps, variegated ribbons and beads, which are
+continued beyond the point where the hair ends as an artificial
+prolongation of the braids, so that, including the straps which form
+this continuation, loaded as they are with beads, buttons, and metal
+ornaments of all kinds, they nearly reach the ground. The whole is
+so skilfully done, that at first one is inclined to believe that the
+women here were gifted with a quite incredible growth of hair. A
+mass of other bands of beads ornamented with buttons was besides
+often intertwined with the hair in a very tasteful way, or fixed to
+the perforated ears. All this hair ornamentation is naturally very
+heavy, and the head is still more weighed down in winter, as it is
+protected from the cold by a thick and very warm cap of reindeer
+skin, bordered with dogskin, from the back part of which hang clown
+two straps set full of heavy plates of brass or copper.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED WOMAN'S DRESS. After a drawing by Hj Theel. ]
+
+The young woman also, even here as everywhere else, bedecks herself
+as best she can; but fair she certainly is not in our eyes. She
+competes with the man in dirt. Like the man she is small of stature,
+has black coarse hair resembling that of a horse's mane or tail,
+face of a yellow colour, often concealed by dirt, small, oblique,
+often running and sore eyes, a flat nose, broad projecting
+cheekbones, slender legs and small feet and hands.
+
+The dress of the man, which resembles that of the Lapps, consists of
+a plain, full and long "pesk," confined at the waist with a belt
+richly ornamented with buttons and brass mounting, from which the
+knife is suspended. The boots of reindeer skin commonly go above the
+knees, and the head covering consists of a closely fitting cap, also
+of reindeer skin.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED BELT WITH KNIFE. One-sixth of natural size. ]
+
+The summer tents, the only ones we saw, are conical, with a hole in
+the roof for carrying off the smoke from the fireplace, which is
+placed in the middle of the floor. The sleeping places in many of
+the tents are concealed by a curtain of variegated cotton cloth.
+Such cloth is also used, when there is a supply of it, for the inner
+parts of the dress. Skin, it would appear, is not a very comfortable
+material for dress, for the first thing, after fire-water and iron,
+which the skin-clad savage purchases from the European, is cotton,
+linen, or woollen cloth.
+
+Of the Polar races, whose acquaintance I have made, the reindeer Lapps
+undoubtedly stand highest; next to them come the Eskimo of Danish
+Greenland. Both these races are Christian and able to read, and have
+learned to use and require a large number of the products of
+agriculture, commerce, and the industrial arts of the present day, as
+cotton and woollen cloth, tools of forged and cast iron, firearms,
+coffee, sugar, bread, &c. They are still nomads and hunters, but cannot
+be called savages; and the educated European who has lived among them
+for a considerable time commonly acquires a liking for many points of
+their natural disposition and mode of life. Next to them in civilisation
+come the Eskimo of North-western America, on whose originally rough life
+contact with the American whale-fishers appears to have had a very
+beneficial influence. I form my judgment from the Eskimo tribe at Port
+Clarence. The members of this tribe were still heathens, but a few of
+them were far travelled, and had brought home from the Sandwich Islands
+not only cocoa-nuts and palm mats, but also a trace of the South Sea
+islander's greater love for ornament and order. Next come the Chukchis,
+who have as yet come in contact with men of European race to a limited
+extent, but whose resources appear to have seriously diminished in
+recent times, in consequence of which the vigour and vitality of the
+tribe have decreased to a noteworthy extent. Last of all come the
+Samoyeds, or at least the Samoyeds who inhabit regions bordering on
+countries inhabited by the Caucasian races; on them the influence of the
+higher race, with its regulations and ordinances, its merchants, and,
+above all, its fire-water, has had a distinctly deteriorating effect.
+
+[Illustration: SACRIFICIAL EMINENCE ON VAYGATS ISLAND. After a drawing
+by A. Hovgaard. ]
+
+When I once asked an Eskimo in North-western Greenland, known for
+his excessive self-esteem, whether he would not admit that the
+Danish Inspector (Governor) was superior to him, I got for answer:
+"That is not so certain: the Inspector has, it is true, more
+property, and appears to have more power, but there are people in
+Copenhagen whom he must obey. I receive orders from none." The same
+haughty self-esteem one meets with in his host in the "gamma" of the
+reindeer Lapp, and the skin tent of the Chukchi. In the Samoyed, on
+the other hand, it appears to have been expelled by a feeling of
+inferiority and timidity, which in that race has deprived the savage
+of his most striking characteristics.
+
+I knew from old travels and from my own experience on Yalmal, that
+another sort of gods, and one perhaps inferior to those which Anna
+Petrovna pulled out of her old boot, was to be found set up at
+various places on eminences strewn with the bones of animals that
+had been offered in sacrifice. Our Russian host informed us the
+Samoyeds from far distant regions are accustomed to make pilgrimages
+to these places in order to offer sacrifices and make vows. They eat
+the flesh of the animals they sacrifice, the bones are scattered
+over the sacrificial height, and the idols are besmeared with the
+blood of the sacrificed animal. I immediately declared that I wished
+to visit such a place. But for a long time none of the Russians who
+were present was willing to act as guide. At last however a young
+man offered to conduct me to a place on Vaygats Island, where I
+could see what I wished. Accordingly the following day, accompanied
+by Dr. Almquist, Lieutenant Hovgaard, Captain Nilsson, and my
+Russian guide, I made an excursion in one of the steam launches to
+the other shore of Yugor Straits.
+
+The sacrificial eminence was situated on the highest point of the
+south-western headland of Vaygats Island, and consisted of a natural
+hillock which rose a couple of metres above the surrounding plain.
+The plain terminated towards the sea with a steep escarpment. The
+land was even, but rose gradually to a height of eighteen metres
+above the sea. The country consisted of upright strata of Silurian
+limestone running from east to west, and at certain places
+containing fossils resembling those of Gotland. Here and there were
+shallow depressions in the plain, covered with a very rich and
+uniformly green growth of grass. The high-lying dry parts again made
+a gorgeous show, covered as they were with an exceedingly luxuriant
+carpet of yellow and white saxifrages, blue _Eritrichia_, _Polemonia_
+and _Parryoe_ and yellow _Chrysosplenia_, &c. The last named,
+commonly quite modest flowers, are here so luxuriant that they form
+an important part of the flower covering. Trees are wholly wanting.
+Even bushes are scarcely two feet high, and that only at sheltered
+places, in hollows and at the foot of steep slopes looking towards
+the south. The sacrificial mound consisted of a cairn of stones some
+few metres square, situated on a special elevation of the plain.
+Among the stones there were found:--
+
+1. Reindeer skulls, broken in pieces for the purpose of extracting
+the brains, but with the horns still fast to the coronal bone; these
+were now so arranged among the stones that they formed a close
+thicket of reindeer horns, which, gave to the sacrificial mound its
+peculiar character.
+
+2. Reindeer skulls with the coronal bone bored through, set up on
+sticks which were stuck in the mound. Sometimes there was carved on
+these sticks a number of faces, the one over the other.
+
+3. A large number of other bones of reindeer, among them marrow
+bones, broken for the purpose of extracting the marrow.
+
+4. Bones of the bear, among which were observed the paws and the
+head, only half flayed, of a bear which had been shot so recently
+that the flesh had not begun to decompose; alongside of this bear's
+head there were found two lead bullets placed on a stone.
+
+5. A quantity of pieces of iron, for instance, broken axes,
+fragments of iron pots, metal parts of a broken barmonicon, &c.; and
+finally,
+
+6. The mighty beings to which all this splendour was offered.
+
+They consisted of hundreds of small wooden sticks, the upper
+portions of which were carved very clumsily in the form of the human
+countenance, most of them from fifteen to twenty, but some of them
+370 centimetres in length. They were all stuck in the ground on the
+south-east part of the eminence. Near the place of sacrifice there
+were to be seen pieces of driftwood and remains of the fireplace at
+which the sacrificial meal was prepared. Our guide told us that at
+these meals the mouths of the idols were besmeared with blood and
+wetted with brandy, and the former statement was confirmed by the
+large spots of blood which were found on most of the large idols
+below the holes intended to represent the mouth.
+
+[Illustration: IDOLS FROM THE SACRIFICIAL CAIRN. One-twelfth of
+natural size. ]
+
+After a drawing had been made of the mound, we robbed it discreetly,
+and put some of the idols and the bones of the animals offered in
+sacrifice into a bag which I ordered to be carried down to the boat.
+My guide now became evidently uncomfortable, and said that I ought
+to propitiate the wrath of the "bolvans" by myself offering
+something. I immediately said that I was ready to do that, if he
+would only show me how to go to work. A little at a loss, and
+doubting whether he ought to be more afraid of the wrath of the
+"bolvans" or of the punishment which in another world would befal
+those who had sacrificed to false gods, he replied that it was only
+necessary to place some small coins among the stones. With a solemn
+countenance I now laid my gift upon the cairn. It was certainly the
+most precious thing that had ever been offered there, consisting as
+it did of two silver pieces. The Russian was now satisfied, but
+declared that I was too lavish, "a couple of copper coins had been
+quite enough."
+
+The following day the Samoyeds came to know that I had been shown their
+sacrificial mound. For their own part they appeared to attach little
+importance to this, but they declared that the guide would be punished
+by the offended "bolvans." He would perhaps come to repent of his deed
+by the following autumn, when his reindeer should return from Vaygats
+Island, where they for the present were tended by Samoyeds; indeed if
+punishment did not befall him now, it would reach him in the future and
+visit his children and grandchildren--certain it was that the gods would
+not leave him unpunished. In respect to God's wrath their religious
+ideas were thus in full accordance with the teaching of the Old
+Testament.
+
+This place of sacrifice was besides not particularly old, for there
+had been an older place situated 600 metres nearer the shore, beside
+a grotto which was regarded by the Samoyeds with superstitious
+veneration. A larger number of wooden idols had been set up there,
+but about thirty years ago a zealous, newly-appointed, and therefore
+clean-sweeping archimandrite visited the place, set fire to the
+sacrificial mound, and in its place erected a cross, which is still
+standing. The Samoyeds had not sought to retaliate by destroying in
+their turn the symbol of Christian worship. They left revenge to the
+gods themselves, certain that in a short time they would destroy all
+the archimandrite's reindeer, and merely removed their own place of
+sacrifice a little farther into the land. There no injudicious
+religious zeal has since attacked their worship of the "bolvans."
+
+[Illustration: SACRIFICIAL CAVITY ON VANGATA ISLAND. After a drawing
+by A. Hovgaard. ]
+
+The old place of sacrifice was still recognisable by the number of
+fragments of bones and rusted pieces of iron which lay strewed about
+on the ground, over a very extensive area, by the side of the
+Russian cross. Remains of the fireplace, on which the Schaman gods
+had been burned, were also visible. These had been much larger and
+finer than the gods on the present eminence, which is also confirmed
+by a comparison of the drawings here given of the latter with those
+from the time of the Dutch explorers. The race of the Schaman gods
+has evidently deteriorated in the course of the last three hundred
+years.
+
+After I had completed my examination and collected some
+contributions from the old sacrificial mound I ordered a little
+boat, which the steam-launch had taken in tow, to be carried over
+the sandy neck of land which separates the lake shown on the map
+from the sea, and rowed with Captain Nilsson and my Russian guide to
+a Samoyed burying-place farther inland by the shore of the lake.
+
+Only one person was found buried at the place. The grave was
+beautifully situated on the sloping beach of the lake, now gay with
+numberless Polar flowers. It consisted of a box carefully
+constructed of broad stout planks, fixed to the ground with
+earthfast stakes and cross-bars, so that neither beasts of prey nor
+lemmings could get through. The planks appeared not to have been
+hewn out of drift-wood, but were probably brought from the south,
+like the birch bark with which the bottom of the coffin was covered.
+As a "pesk," now fallen in pieces, lying round the skeleton, and
+various rotten rags showed, the dead body had been wrapped in the
+common Samoyed dress. In the grave were found besides the remains of
+an iron pot, an axe, knife, boring tool, bow, wooden arrow, some
+copper ornaments, &c. Rolled-up pieces of bark also lay in the
+coffin, which were doubtless intended to be used in lighting fires
+in another world. Beside the grave lay a sleigh turned upside down,
+evidently placed there in order that the dead man should not, away
+there, want a means of transport, and it is probable that reindeer
+for drawing it were slaughtered at the funeral banquet.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED GRAVE ON VAYGATS ISLAND. ]
+
+As it may be of interest to ascertain to what extent the Samoyeds
+have undergone any considerable changes in their mode of life since
+they first became known to West-Europeans, I shall here quote some
+of the sketches of them which we find in the accounts of the voyages
+of the English and Dutch travellers to the North-East.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYED-ARCHERS. After Linschoten. ]
+
+That changes have taken place in their weapons, in other words, that
+the Samoyeds have made progress in the art of war or the chase, is
+shown by the old drawings, some of which are here reproduced. For in
+these they are nearly always delineated with bows and arrows. Now
+the bow appears to have almost completely gone out of use, for we
+saw not a single Samoyed archer. They had, on the other hand, the
+wretched old flint firelocks, in which lost pieces of the lock were
+often replaced in a very ingenious way with pieces of bone and
+thongs. They also inquired eagerly for percussion guns, but
+breechloaders were still unknown to them. In this respect they had
+not kept abreast of the times so well as the Eskimo at Port
+Clarence.
+
+One of the oldest accounts of the Samoyeds which I know is that of
+Stephen Burrough from 1556. It is given in Hakluyt (1st edition,
+page 318). In the narrative of the voyage of the _Searchthrift_ we
+read:--
+
+ "On Saturday the 1st August 1556 I went ashore,[56] and
+ there saw three morses that they (Russian hunters) had
+ killed: they held one tooth of a morse, which was not
+ great, at a roble, and one white beare skin at three
+ robles and two robles: they further told me, that there
+ were people called Samoeds on the great Island, and that
+ they would not abide them nor us, who have no houses, but
+ only coverings made of Deerskins, set ouer them with
+ stakes: they are men expert in shooting, and have great
+ plenty of Deere. On Monday the 3rd we weyed and went roome
+ with another Island, which was five leagues (15')
+ East-north-east from us: and there I met againe with
+ Loshak,[57] and went on shore with him, and he brought me
+ to a heap of Samoeds idols, which were in number above
+ 300, the worst and the most unartificiall worke that ever
+ I saw: the eyes and mouthes of sundrie of them were
+ bloodie, they had the shape of men, women, and children,
+ very grosly wrought, and that which they had made for
+ other parts, was also sprinkled with blood. Some of their
+ idols were an olde sticke with two or three notches, made
+ with a knife in it. There was one of their sleds broken
+ and lay by the heape of idols, and there I saw a deers
+ skinne which the foules had spoyled: and before certaine
+ of their idols blocks were made as high as their mouthes,
+ being all bloody, I thought that to be the table whereon
+ they offered their sacrifice: I saw also the instruments
+ whereupon they had roasted flesh, and as farre as I could
+ perceiue, they make the fire directly under the spit.
+ Their boates are made of Deers skins, and when they come
+ on shoare they cary their boates with them upon their
+ backs: for their cariages they haue no other beastes to
+ serve them but Deere only. As for bread and corne they
+ have none, except the Russes bring it to them: their
+ knowledge is very base for they know no letter."
+
+Giles Fletcher, who in 1588 was Queen Elizabeth's ambassador to the
+Czar, writes in his account of Russia of the Samoyeds in the
+following way:--[58]
+
+ "The _Samoyt_ hath his name (as the _Russe_ saith) of
+ eating himselfe: as if in times past they lived as the
+ _Cannibals_, eating one another. Which they make more
+ probable, because at this time they eate all kind of raw
+ flesh, whatsoeuer it bee, euen the very carrion that lyeth
+ in the ditch. But as the _Samoits_ themselves will say,
+ they were called _Samoie_, that is, _of themselves_, as
+ though they were _Indigenae_, or people bred upon that
+ very soyle that never changed their seate from one place
+ to another, as most Nations have done. They are clad in
+ Seale-skinnes, with the hayrie side outwards downe as low
+ as the knees, with their Breeches and Netherstocks of the
+ same, both men and women. They are all Blacke hayred,
+ naturally beardless. And therefore the Men are hardly
+ discerned from the Women by their lookes: saue that the
+ Women weare a locke of hayre down along both their eares."
+
+In nearly the same way the Samoyeds are described by G. DE VEER in
+his account of Barents' second voyage in 1595. Barents got good
+information from the Samoyeds as to the navigable water to the
+eastward, and always stood on a good footing with them, excepting on
+one occasion when the Samoyeds went down to the Dutchmen's boats and
+took back an idol which had been carried off from a large
+sacrificial mound.
+
+[Illustration: SAMOYEDS. From Schleissing's Neu-entdecktes Sieweria,
+worinnen die Zobeln gefangen werden. Zittau 1693.[59] ]
+
+The Samoyeds have since formed the subject of a very extensive
+literature, of which however it is impossible for me to give any
+account here. Among other points their relations to other races have
+been much discussed. On this subject I have received from my learned
+friend, the renowned philologist Professor AHLQUIST of Helsingfors
+the following communication:--
+
+ The Samoyeds are reckoned, along with the Tungoose, the
+ Mongolian, the Turkish and the Finnish-Ugrian races, to
+ belong to the so-called Altaic or Ural-Altaic stem. What
+ is mainly characteristic of this stem, is that all the
+ languages occurring within it belong to the so-called
+ agglutinating type. For in these languages the relations
+ of ideas are expressed exclusively by terminations or
+ suffixes--inflections, prefixes and prepositions, as
+ expressive of relations, being completely unknown to them.
+ Other peculiarities characteristic of the Altaic languages
+ are the vocal harmony occurring in many of them, the
+ inability to have more than one consonant in the beginning
+ of a word, and the expression of the plural by a peculiar
+ affix, the case terminations being the same in the plural
+ as in the singular. The affinity between the different
+ branches of the Altaic stem is thus founded mainly on
+ analogy or resemblance in the construction of the
+ languages, while the different tongues in the material of
+ language (both in the words themselves and in the
+ expression of relations) show a very limited affinity or
+ none at all. The circumstance that the Samoyeds for the
+ present have as their nearest neighbours several
+ Finnish-Ugrian races (Lapps, Syrjaeni, Ostjaks, and
+ Voguls), and that these to a great extent carry on the
+ same modes of life as themselves, has led some authors to
+ assume a close affinity between the Samoyeds and the Fins
+ and the Finnish races in general. The speech of the two
+ neighbouring tribes however affords no ground for such a
+ supposition. Even the language of the Ostjak, which is the
+ most closely related to that of the Samoyeds, is separated
+ heaven-wide from it and has nothing in common with it,
+ except a small number of borrowed words (chiefly names of
+ articles from the Polar nomad's life), which the Ostjak
+ has taken from the language of his northern neighbour.
+ With respect to their language, however, the Samoyeds are
+ said to stand at a like distance from the other branches
+ of the stem in question. To what extent craniology or the
+ modern anthropology can more accurately determine the
+ affinity-relationship of the Samoyed to other tribes, is
+ still a question of the future.
+
+[Illustration: BREEDING-PLACE FOR LITTLE AUKS. Foul Bay, on the West
+Coast of Spitzbergen, after a photograph taken by A. Envall on the
+30th August, 1872. ]
+
+
+[Footnote 53: "Letter of Richard Finch to Sir Thomas Smith,
+Governor; and to the rest of the Worshipful Companie of English
+Merchants, trading into Russia." _Purchas_, iii. p. 534. ]
+
+[Footnote 54: Mr. Serebrenikoff writes _Samodin_ instead of
+_Samoyed_, considering the latter name incorrect. For _Samoyed_
+means "self-eater," while _Samodin_ denotes "an individual," "one
+who cannot be mistaken for any other," and, as the Samoyeds never
+were cannibals, Mr. Serebrenikoff gives a preference to the latter
+name, which is used by the Russians at Chabarova, and appears to be
+a literal translation of the name which the Samoyeds give
+themselves. I consider it probable, however, that the old tradition
+of man-eaters (_androphagi_) living in the north, which originated
+with Herodotus, and was afterwards universally adopted in the
+geographical literature of the middle ages, reappears in a
+Russianised form in the name "Samoyed." (Compare what is quoted
+further on from Giles Fletcher's narrative). ]
+
+[Footnote 55: This name, which properly denotes a coarse likeness,
+has passed into the Swedish, the word _bulvan_ being one of the few
+which that language has borrowed from the Russian. ]
+
+[Footnote 56: Probably on one of the small islands near Vaygats. ]
+
+[Footnote 57: A Russian hunter who had been serviceable to Stephen
+Burrough in many ways. ]
+
+[Footnote 58: _Treatise of Russia and the adjoining Regions_,
+written by Doctor Giles Fletcher, Lord Ambassador from the late
+Queen, Everglorious Elizabeth, to Theodore, then Emperor of Russia.
+A.D. 1588. _Purchas_, iii. p. 413. ]
+
+[Footnote 59: A still more extraordinary idea of the Samoyeds, than
+that which this woodcut gives us, we get from the way in which they
+are mentioned in the account of the journey which the Italian
+Minorite, Joannes de Plano Carpini, undertook in High Asia in the
+years 1245-47 as ambassador from the Pope to the mighty conqueror of
+the Mongolian hordes. In this book of travels it is said that
+Occodai Khan, Chingis Khan's son, after having been defeated by the
+Hungarians and Poles, turned towards the north, conquered the
+Bascarti, _i.e._ the Great Hungarians, then came into collision with
+the Parositi--who had wonderfully small stomachs and mouths, and did
+not eat flesh, but only boiled it and nourished themselves by
+inhaling the steam--and finally came to the _Samogedi_, who lived
+only by the chase and had houses and clothes of skin, and to a land
+by the ocean, where there were monsters with the bodies of men, the
+feet of oxen and the faces of dogs (_Relation des Mongols ou
+Tartares_, par le frere Jean du Plan de Carpin, publ. par M.
+d'Avezac, Paris 1838, p. 281. Compare Ramusio, _Delle navigationi e
+viaggi_, ii. 1583, leaf 236). At another place in the same work it
+is said that "the land Comania has on the north immediately after
+Russia, the Mordvini and Bileri, _i.e._ the Great Bulgarians, the
+Bascarti, _i.e._ the Great Hungarians, then the Parositi and
+_Samogedi_, who are said to have the faces of dogs" (_Relation des
+Mongols_, p. 351. Ramusio, ii., leaf 239). ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+ From the Animal World of Novaya Zemlya--The Fulmar Petrel--
+ The Rotge or Little Auk--Bruennich's Guillemot--The Black
+ Guillemot--The Arctic Puffin--The Gulls--Richardson's Skua--
+ the Tern--Ducks and Geese--The Swan--Waders--The Snow
+ Bunting--The Ptarmigan--The Snowy Owl--The Reindeer--The
+ Polar Bear--The Mountain Fox--The Lemming--Insects--
+ The Walrus--The Seal--Whales.
+
+
+If we do not take into account the few Samoyeds who of recent years
+have settled on Novaya Zemlya or wander about during summer on the
+plains of Vaygats Island, all the lands which in the old world have
+formed the field of research of the Polar explorer--Spitzbergen,
+Franz-Josef Land, Novaya Zemlya, Vaygats Island, the Taimur
+Peninsula, the New Siberian Islands, and perhaps Wrangel's Land
+also--are uninhabited. The pictures of life and variety, which the
+native, with his peculiar manners and customs, commonly offers to
+the foreigner in distant foreign lands, are not to be met with here.
+But, instead, the animal life, which he finds there in summer--for
+during winter almost all beings who live above the surface of the
+sea disappear from the highest North--is more vigorous and perhaps
+even more abundant, or, to speak more correctly, less concealed by
+the luxuriance of vegetation than in the south.
+
+It is not, however, the larger mammalia--whales, walruses, seals,
+bears and reindeer--that attract attention in the first place, but
+the innumerable flocks of birds that swarm around the Polar
+traveller during the long summer day of the North.
+
+Long before one enters the region of the Polar Sea proper, the
+vessel is surrounded by flocks of large grey birds which fly, or
+rather hover without moving their wings, close to the surface of the
+sea, rising and sinking with the swelling of the billows, eagerly
+searching for some eatable object on the surface of the water, or
+swim in the wake of the vessel in order to snap up any scraps that
+may be thrown overboard. It is the Arctic _stormfogel_[60] (Fulmar,
+"Mallemuck," "Hafhaest," _Procellaria glacialis_, L.). The fulmar is
+bold and voracious, and smells villanously, on which account it is
+only eaten in cases of necessity, although its flesh, if the bird
+has not recently devoured too much rotten blubber, is by no means
+without relish, at least for those who have become accustomed to the
+flavour of train oil, when not too strong. It is more common on Bear
+Island and Spitzbergen than on Novaya Zemlya, and scarcely appears
+to breed in any considerable numbers on the last-named place. I know
+three places north of Scandinavia where the fulmar breeds in large
+numbers: the first on Bear Island, on the slopes of some not very
+steep cliffs near the so-called south harbour of the island,[61] the
+second on the southern shore of Brandywine Bay on North-East Land,
+the third on ledges of the perpendicular rock-walls in the interior
+of Ice Fjord. At the two latter places the nests are inaccessible.
+On Bear Island, on the other hand, one can without very great
+difficulty plunder the whole colony of the dirty grey, short eggs,
+which are equally rounded at both ends. The eggs taste exceedingly
+well. The nest is very inconsiderable, smelling badly like the bird
+itself.
+
+When the navigator has gone a little further north and come to an
+ice-bestrewed sea, the swell ceases at once, the wind is hushed and
+the sea becomes bright as a mirror, rising and sinking with a slow
+gentle heaving. Flocks of little auks (_Mergulus alle_, L.)
+Bruennich's guillemots (_Uria Bruennichii_, Sabine), and black
+guillemots (_Uria grylle_, L.) now swarm in the air and swim among
+the ice floes. The _alke-kung_ (little auk), also called the "sea
+king," or rotge, occurs only sparingly off the southern part of
+Novaya Zemlya, and does not, so far as I know, breed there. The
+situation of the land is too southerly, the accumulations of stones
+along the sides of the mountains too inconsiderable, for the
+thriving of this little bird. But on Spitzbergen it occurs in
+incredible numbers, and breeds in the talus, 100 to 200 metres high,
+which frost and weathering have formed at several places on the
+steep slopes of the coast mountain sides; for instance, at Horn
+Sound, at Magdalena Bay, on the Norways (near 80 deg. N.L.), and
+other places. These stone heaps form the palace of the rotge, richer
+in rooms and halls than any other in the wide round world. If one
+climbs up among the stones, he sees at intervals actual clouds of
+fowl suddenly emerge from the ground either to swarm round in the
+air or else to fly out to sea, and at the same time those that
+remain make their presence underground known by an unceasing
+cackling and din, resembling, according to Friedrich Martens, the
+noise of a crowd of quarrelling women. Should this sound be
+stilled for a few moments, one need only attempt in some opening
+among the stones to imitate their cry (according to Martens:
+_rott-tet-tet-tet-tet_) to get immediately eager and sustained
+replies from all sides. The fowl circling in the air soon settle
+again on the stones of the mountain slopes, where, squabbling and
+fighting, they pack themselves so close together that from fifteen
+to thirty of them may be killed by a single shot. A portion of the
+flock now flies up again, others seek their safety like rats in
+concealment among the blocks of stone. But they soon creep out
+again, in order, as if by agreement, to fly out to sea and search
+for their food, which consists of crustacea and vermes. The rotge
+dives with ease. Its single blueish-white egg is laid on the bare
+ground without a nest, so deep down among the stones that it is only
+with difficulty that it can be got at. In the talus of the mountains
+north of Horn Sound I found on the 18th June, 1858, two eggs of this
+bird lying directly on the layer of ice between the stones. Probably
+the hatching season had not then begun. Where the main body of these
+flocks of birds passes the winter, is unknown,[62] but they return
+to the north early--sometimes too early. Thus in 1873 at the end of
+April I saw a large number of rotges frozen to death on the ice in
+the north part of Hinloopen Strait. When cooked the rotge tastes
+exceedingly well, and in consequence of the great development of the
+breast muscles it affords more food than could be expected from its
+small size.
+
+[Illustration: THE LITTLE AUK, OR ROTGE. Swedish, Alkekung. (_Mergulus
+Alle_, L.) ]
+
+Along with the rotge we find among the ice far out at sea flocks of
+_alkor_ (looms, or Bruennich's guillemots), and the nearer we come to
+the coast, the more do these increase in number, especially if the
+cliffs along the shore offer to this species of sea-fowl--the most
+common of the Polar lands--convenient hatching places. For this
+purpose are chosen the faces of cliffs which rise perpendicularly
+out of the sea, but yet by ledges and uneven places afford room for
+the hatching fowl. On the guillemot-fells proper, eggs lie beside
+eggs in close rows from the crown of the cliff to near the sea
+level, and the whole fell is also closely covered with seafowl,
+which besides in flocks of thousands and thousands fly to and from
+the cliffs, filling the air with their exceedingly unpleasant
+scream. The eggs are laid, without trace of a nest, on the rock,
+which is either bare or only covered with old birds' dung, so
+closely packed together, that in 1858 from a ledge of small extent,
+which I reached by means of a rope from the top of the fell, I
+collected more than half a barrel-full of eggs. Each bird has but
+one very large egg, grey pricked with brown, of very variable size
+and form. After it has been sat upon for some time, it is covered
+with a thick layer of birds' dung, and in this way the hunters are
+accustomed to distinguish uneatable eggs from fresh.
+
+[Illustration: THE LOOM OR BRUeNNICH'S GUILLEMOT. Swedish, Alka
+(_Uria Bruennichii_, Sabine). ]
+
+If a shot be fired at a "loomery," the fowl fly away in thousands
+from their hatching places, without the number of those that are not
+frightened away being apparently diminished. The clumsy and
+short-winged birds, when they cast themselves out of their places,
+fall down at first a good way before they get "sufficient air" under
+their wings to be able to fly. Before this takes place, many plump
+down into the water, sometimes even into the boat which may be rowed
+along the foot of the fell.
+
+An unceasing, unpleasant cackling noise indicates that a continual
+gossip goes on in the "loomery"; and that the unanimity there is not
+great, is proved by the passionate screams which are heard now and
+then. A bird squeezes forward in order to get a place on a ledge of
+rock already packed full, a couple of others quarrel about the
+ownership of an egg which has been laid on a corner of the rock only
+a few inches broad, and which now during the dispute is precipitated
+into the abyss. By the beginning of July most of the eggs are
+uneatable. I have seen the young of the size of a rotge accompany
+their mothers in the middle of August. The loom breeds on Walden
+Island and the north coast of North-East land, accordingly far north
+of 80 deg.. I found the largest "loomeries" on Spitzbergen south
+of Lomme Bay in Hinloopen Strait, at the southern entrance to Van
+Meyen Bay in Bell Sound, and at Alkornet in Ice Fjord. In respect to
+the large number of fowl, however, only the first of these can
+compete with the south shore of Besimannaja Bay (72 deg. 54' N.L.)
+and with the part of Novaya Zemlya that lies immediately to the
+south of this bay. The eggs of the loom are palatable, and the flesh
+is excellent, though not quite free from the flavour of train oil.
+In any case it tastes much better than that of the eider.
+
+Along with the rotge and the loom two nearly allied species of
+birds, _lunnefogeln_, the Arctic puffin (_Mormon arcticus_, L.)
+and _tejsten_ or _tobis-grisslan_, the black guillemot (_Uria
+grylle_, L.) are to be seen among the drift-ice. I do not know any
+puffin-fells on Spitzbergen. The bird appears to breed there only in
+small numbers, though it is still found on the most northerly part
+of the island. On Novaya Zemlya, too, it occurs rather sparingly.
+The black guillemot, on the other hand, is found everywhere, though
+never collected in large flocks, along the shores of Spitzbergen,
+and Novaya Zemlya, even as far north as Parry Island in 80 deg.
+40' N.L., where in 1861 I saw several of their nests. These are
+placed near the summits of steep cliffs along the shore. The black
+guillemots often swim out together in pairs in the fjords. Their
+flesh has about the same taste as Bruennich's guillemot, but is
+tougher and of inferior quality; the eggs, on the other hand, are
+excellent.
+
+[Illustration: THE ARCTIC PUFFIN. Swedish, Lunnefogel. (Mormon Arcticus,
+L.) THE BLACK GUILLEMOT. Swedish, Tejst. (Uria Grylle, L.) ]
+
+The sea fowl mentioned above are never met with inland.
+They never settle on a grassy sward or on a level sandy beach. The
+steep fowl-fell sides, the sea, ground-ice, pieces of drift-ice and
+small stones rising above the water, form their habitat. They swim
+with great skill both on, and under the water. The black guillemots
+and rotges fly swiftly and well; Bruennich's guillemots, on the
+contrary, heavily and ill. The latter therefore do not perhaps
+remove in winter farther from their hatching places than to the
+nearest open water, and it is probable that colonies of Bruennich's
+guillemots are not located at places where the sea freezes
+completely even far out from the coast. On this perhaps depends the
+scarcity of Bruennich's guillemot in the Kara Sea.
+
+While sailing in the Arctic Ocean, vessels are nearly always
+attended by two kinds of gulls, the greedy _stormaosen_ or
+_borgmaesteren_, glaucous gull (_Larus glaucus_, Bruenn.), and the
+gracefully formed, swiftly flying _kryckian_ or _tretaoiga maosen_,
+kittiwake (_Larus tridactylus_, L.), and if the hunter lies to at an
+ice-floe to flense upon it a seal which has been shot, it is not
+long till a large number of snow-white birds with dark blue bills
+and black legs settle down in the neighbourhood in order that they
+may get a portion of the spoil. They belong to the third kind of
+gull common in the north, _ismaosen_, the ivory gull (_Larus
+eburneus_, Gmel.).
+
+[Illustration: BREEDING-PLACE FOR GLAUCOUS GULLS. Borgmaestareport
+on Bear Island, after a midnight photograph taken by the Author
+on the 18th-19th June, 1864. ]
+
+In disposition and mode of life these gulls differ much from each
+other. The glaucous gull is sufficiently strong to be able to defend
+its eggs and young against the attack of the mountain fox. It
+therefore breeds commonly on the summits of easily accessible small
+cliffs, hillocks or heaps of stones, preferably in the neighbourhood
+of "loomeries" or on fowl-islands, where the young of the
+neighbouring birds offer an opportunity for prey and hunting during
+the season when its own young are being fed. Sometimes, as for
+instance at Brandywine Bay on Spitzbergen, the glaucous gull breeds
+in great flocks on the ledges of steep fell-sides, right in the
+midst of Bruennich's guillemots. On Bear Island I have seen it hatch
+on the very beach, at a place, for instance, under the arch of a
+waterfall leaping down from a precipitous cliff. The nests, which,
+to judge from the quantity of birds' dung in their neighbourhood,
+are used for a long succession of years, are placed in a depression
+in the rock or the ground, and lined with a little straw or a
+feather or two. The number of the eggs is three or four. After
+boiling they show a jellylike, half transparent white, and a reddish
+yellow, and are exceedingly delicious. The young birds have white
+flesh, resembling chicken. The burgomaster is common everywhere
+along the coasts of Novaya Zemlya and Spitzbergen. Yet I have not
+seen the nest of this gull on the north coast of North East Land or
+on the Seven Islands.
+
+[Illustration: A. THE KITTIWAKE B. THE IVORY GULL. Swedish, Kryckia.
+(Larus tridactylus, L.) Swedish, Ismaos (Larus eburneus, L.) ]
+
+Still more common than the glaucous gull in the lands of the High
+North is _kryckian_, the kittiwake. It is met with far out at sea,
+where it accompanies the vessel whole days, circling round the tops
+of the masts, and sometimes--according to the statements of the
+walrus-hunters, when a storm is approaching--pecking at the points
+of the pendant. When the vessel is in harbour, the kittiwakes
+commonly gather round it to pick out anything eatable in the refuse
+that may be thrown away. They breed in great flocks on the steep
+escarpments in some separate part of the fowl-fells, in connection
+with which, it is evident that the kittiwakes always endeavour to
+choose the best places of the fell--those that are most inaccessible
+to the fox and are best protected against bad weather. Among the
+birds of the north the kittiwake is the best builder; for its nest
+is walled with straw and mud, and is very firm. It juts out like a
+great swallow's nest from the little ledge to which it is fixed.
+Projecting ends of straw are mostly bent in, so that the nest, with
+its regularly rounded form, has a very tidy appearance. The interior
+is further lined with a soft, carefully arranged layer of moss,
+grass and seaweed, on which the bird lays three to four
+well-flavoured eggs. The soft warm underlayer is, however, not
+without its inconvenience; for Dr. Stuxberg during the voyage of
+1875 found in such a nest no fewer than twelve kinds of insects,
+among them _Pulex vagabundus_, Bohem. in nine specimens, a beetle,
+a fly, &c.
+
+The ivory gull, called by Fr. Martens "Rathsherr," the Councillor,
+is found, as its Swedish name indicates, principally out at sea in
+the _pack_, or in fjords filled with drift-ice. It is a true
+ice-bird, and, it may almost be said, scarcely a water-bird at all,
+for it is seldom seen swimming on the surface, and it can dive as
+little as its relatives, the glaucous gull and the kittiwake. In
+greed it competes with the fulmar. When any large animal has been
+killed among the drift-ice, the ivory gull seldom fails to put in an
+appearance in order to quench its hunger with flesh and blubber. It
+consumes at the same time the excrements of the seal and the walrus,
+on which account from three to five ivory gulls may often be seen
+sitting for a long time round a seal-hole, quiet and motionless,
+waiting patiently the arrival of the seal (Malmgren).
+
+[Illustration: RARE NORTHERN GULLS. A. Sabine's Gull
+(Larus Sabinii, Sabine) B. Ross's Gull. (Larus Rossii, Richaids.) ]
+
+The proper breeding places of this bird scarcely appear to be yet
+known. So common as it is both on the coasts of Spitzbergen from the
+Seven Islands to South Cape and on the north coast of Novaya Zemlya
+and America, its nest has only been found twice, once in 1853 by
+McClintock at Cape Krabbe in North America in 77 deg. 25' N.L.,
+the second time by Dr. Malmgren at Murchison Bay, in 82 deg. 2'
+N.L. The two nests that Malmgren found consisted of depressions,
+twenty-three to twenty-six centimetres in diameter, in a heap of
+loose gravel, on a ledge of a steeply-sloping limestone-rock wall.
+In each nest was found only one egg, which, on the 30th July,
+already contained a down-covered young bird. For all the ivory gulls
+which have their home on Spitzbergen there were doubtless required
+several hundred such breeding-places as that at Murchison Bay. When
+to this is added the fact that we never in autumn saw on Spitzbergen
+any full-grown young of this kind of gull, I assume that its proper
+breeding-place must be found farther north, on the shores of some
+still unknown Polar land, perhaps continually surrounded by ice. It
+deserves to be mentioned with reference to this, that Murchison Bay
+was covered with ice when Malmgren found the nests referred to
+above.
+
+Besides these varieties of the gull, two other species have been
+found, though very rarely, in the Polar regions, viz., _Larus
+Sabinii_, Sabine, and _Larus Rossii_, Richards. Although I have
+myself only seen the latter, and that but once (on the Chukchi
+Peninsula), I here give drawings of them both for the use of future
+Polar explorers. They are perhaps, if they be properly observed, not
+so rare as is commonly supposed.
+
+Often during summer in the Arctic regions one hears a penetrating
+shriek in the air. When one inquires into the reason of this, it is
+found to proceed from a kittiwake, more rarely from a glaucous gull,
+eagerly pursued by a bird as large as a crow, dark-brown, with white
+breast and long tail-feathers. It is _labben_, the common skua
+(_Lestris parasitica_, L.), known by the Norwegian walrus-hunters
+under the name of _tjufjo_, derived from the bird's cry, "_I-o
+i-o_," and its shameless thief-nature. When the "tjufjo" sees a
+kittiwake or a glaucous gull fly off with a shrimp, a fish, or a
+piece of blubber, it instantly attacks it. It flies with great
+swiftness backwards and forwards around its victim, striking it with
+its bill, until the attacked bird either drops what it has caught,
+which is then immediately snapped up by the skua, or else settles
+down upon the surface of the water, where it is protected against
+attack. The skua besides eats eggs of other birds, especially of
+eiders and geese. If the eggs are left but for a few moments
+unprotected in the nest, it is immediately to the front and shows
+itself so voracious that it is not afraid to attack nests from which
+the hatching birds have been frightened away by men engaged in
+gathering eggs only a few yards off. With incredible dexterity it
+pecks a hole in the eggs and sucks their contents. If speed is
+necessary, this takes place so quickly and out of so many eggs in
+succession that it sometimes has to stand without moving, unable to
+fly further until it has thrown up what it had swallowed. The skua
+in this way commonly takes part in the plundering of every eider
+island. The walrus-hunters are very much embittered against the bird
+on account of this intrusion on their industry, and kill it whenever
+they can. The whalers called it "struntjaeger"--refuse-hunter--because
+they believed that it hunted gulls in order to make them void their
+excrements which "struntjaegeren" was said to devour as a luxury.
+
+[Illustration:
+A. THE COMMON SKUA. Swedish, Labben, (Lestris parasitica, L.)
+B. BUFFON'S SKUA. Swedish, Fjellabben. (Lestris Buffonii, Boie.)
+C. THE POMARINE SKUA. Swedish, Bredstjertade Labben
+(Lestris pomarina. Tem.) ]
+
+The skua breeds upon low, unsheltered, often water-drenched
+headlands and islands, where it lays one or two eggs on the bare
+ground, often without trace of a nest. The eggs are so like the
+ground that it is only with difficulty that they can be found. The
+male remains in the neighbourhood of the nest during the hatching
+season. If a man, or an animal which the bird considers dangerous,
+approaches the eggs, the pair endeavour to draw attention from them
+by removing from the nest, creeping on the ground and flapping their
+wings in the most pitiful way. The bird thus acts with great skill a
+veritable comedy, but takes good care that it is not caught.
+
+As is well known, we know only two varieties of colour in this bird,
+a self-coloured brown, and a brown on the upper part of the body
+with white below. Of these I have only once in the Arctic regions
+seen the self-coloured variety, viz. at Bell Sound in 1858. All the
+hundreds of skuas which I have seen, besides, have had the throat
+and lower part of the body coloured white.
+
+This bird is very common on Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya. Yet
+perhaps it scarcely breeds on the north part of North-East Land.
+Along with the bird now described there occur, though sparingly, two
+others:--_bredstjertade labben_, the Pomarine skua (_Lestris
+pomarina_, Tem.) and _fjellalbben_, Buffon's skua (_Lestris
+Buffonii_, Boie). The latter is distinguished by its more slender
+build and two very long tail-feathers, and it is much more common
+farther to the east than on Spitzbergen. I have not had an
+opportunity of making any observations on the mode of life of these
+birds.
+
+As the skua pursues the kittiwake and the glaucous gull, it is in
+its turn pursued with extraordinary fierceness by the little
+swiftly-flying and daring bird _taernan_, the Arctic tern (_Sterna
+macroura_, Naum.). This beautiful bird is common everywhere on the
+coasts of Spitzbergen, but rather rare on Novaya Zemlya. It breeds
+in considerable flocks on low grass-free headlands or islands,
+covered with sand or pebbles. The eggs, which are laid on the bare
+ground without any trace of a nest, are so like lichen-covered
+pebbles in colour, that it is only with difficulty one can get eyes
+upon them; and this is the case in a yet higher degree with the
+newly-hatched young, which notwithstanding their thin dress of down
+have to lie without anything below them among the bare stones. From
+the shortness of their legs and the length of their wings it is only
+with difficulty that the tern can go on the ground. It is therefore
+impossible for it to protect its nest in the same way as the
+"tjufjo." Instead, this least of all the swimming birds of the Polar
+lands does not hesitate to attack any one, whoever he may be, that
+dares to approach its nest. The bird circles round the disturber of
+the peace with evident exasperation, and now and then goes whizzing
+past his head at such a furious rate that he must every moment fear
+that he will be wounded with its sharp beak.
+
+Along with the swimmers enumerated above, we find everywhere along
+these shores two species of eider, the _vanliga eidern_, common
+eider (_Somateria mollissima_, L.) and _praktejdern_, king-duck
+(_Somateria spectabilis_, L.). The former prefers to breed on low
+islands, which, at the season for laying eggs, are already
+surrounded by open water and are thus rendered inaccessible to the
+mountain foxes that wander about on the mainland. The richest eider
+islands I have seen in Spitzbergen are the Down Islands at Horn
+Sound. When I visited the place in 1858 the whole islands were so
+thickly covered with nests that it was necessary to proceed with
+great caution in order not to trample on eggs. Their number in every
+nest was five to six, sometimes larger, the latter case, according
+to the walrus-hunters, being accounted for by the female when she
+sits stealing eggs from her neighbours. I have myself seen an egg of
+_Anser bernicla_ in an eider's nest. The eggs are hatched by the
+female, but the beautifully coloured male watches in her
+neighbourhood and gives the signal of flight when danger approaches.
+The nest consists of a rich, soft, down bed. The best down is got by
+robbing the down-covered nest, an inferior kind by plucking the dead
+birds. When the female is driven from the nest she seeks in haste to
+scrape down over the eggs in order that they may not be visible. She
+besides squirts over them a very stinking fluid, whose disgusting
+smell adheres to the collected eggs and down. The stinking substance
+is however so volatile or so easily decomposed in the air that the
+smell completely disappears in a few hours. The eider, which some
+years ago was very numerous on Spitzbergen,[63] has of late years
+considerably diminished in numbers, and perhaps will soon be
+completely driven thence, if some restraint be not laid on the
+heedless way in which not only the Eider Islands are now plundered,
+but the birds too killed, often for the mere pleasure of slaughter.
+On Novaya Zemlya, too, the eider is common. It breeds, for instance,
+in not inconsiderable numbers on the high islands in Karmakul Bay.
+The eider's flesh has, it is true, but a slight flavour of train
+oil, but it is coarse and far inferior to that of Bruennich's
+guillemot. In particular, the flesh of the female while hatching is
+almost uneatable.
+
+[Illustration: HEADS OF THE
+ A. EIDER;
+ B. KING DUCK;
+ C. BARNACLE GOOSE;
+ D. WHITE-FRONTED GOOSE. ]
+
+The king-duck occurs more sparingly than the common eider. On
+Spitzbergen it is called the "Greenland eider," on Greenland the
+"Spitzbergen eider," which appears to indicate that in neither place
+is it quite at home. On Novaya Zemlya, on the other hand, it occurs
+in larger numbers. Only once have I seen the nest of this bird,
+namely, in 1873 on Axel's Islands in Bell Sound, where it bred in
+limited numbers together with the common eider. In the years 1858
+and 1864, when I visited the same place, it did not breed there.
+Possibly its proper breeding place is on Novaya Zemlya at the inland
+lakes a little way from the coast. The walrus-hunters say that its
+eggs taste better than those of the common eider. They are somewhat
+smaller and have a darker green colour.
+
+On the Down Islands hatches, along with the eiders, the long-necked
+_prutgaessen_, barnacle goose (_Anser bernicla_, L.) marked on the
+upper part of the body in black and brownish grey. It lays four to
+five white eggs in an artless nest without down, scattered here and
+there among the eiders' nests rich in down. This variety of goose is
+found in greatest numbers during the moulting season at small inland
+lakes along the coast, for instance on the line of coast between
+Bell Sound and Ice Fjord and on Gooseland. The walrus-hunters
+sometimes call them "rapphoens"--partridges--a misleading name,
+which in 1873 induced me to land on the open coast south of Ice
+Fjord, where "rapphoens" were to be found in great numbers. On
+landing I found only moulting barnacle geese. The barnacle goose
+finds its food more on land and inland lakes than in the sea. Its
+flesh accordingly is free from the flavour of train oil and tastes
+well, except that of the female during the hatching season, when it
+is poor and tough. The eggs are better than the eider's.
+
+On Spitzbergen besides the barnacle goose we meet with the closely
+allied species _Anser leucopsis_, Bechst. It is rather rare, but
+more common on Novaya Zemlya. Further there occurs at the last-named
+place a third species of goose, _vildgaosen_, the "grey goose" or
+"great goose" of the walrus-hunters; the bean goose (_Anser
+segetum_, Gmel.), which is replaced on Spitzbergen by a nearly allied
+type, the pink-footed goose (_Anser brachyrhynchus_, Baillon). These
+geese are much larger than both the eider and the barnacle goose,
+and appear to be sufficiently strong to defend themselves against
+the fox. They commonly breed high up on some mossy or grassy oasis,
+among the stone mounds of the coast mountains, or on the summit of a
+steep strand escarpment in the interior of the fjords. During the
+moulting season the grey geese collect in flocks at the small
+fresh-water lakes along the coast. The flesh of this species of
+goose is finer than that of the common tame goose and has no trace
+of any train flavour.
+
+Among the swimming birds that give the summer life on Novaya Zemlya
+its peculiar character, we may further reckon the scaup-duck and the
+swan. _Alfogel_ or _allan_, the long-tailed duck (_Fuligula
+glacialis_, L.) is rare on Spitzbergen, but occurs very generally on
+Novaya Zemlya, and especially in the Kara Sea, on whose coasts it is
+seen in summer collected in large flocks. _Mindre saongsvanen_,
+Bewick's swan (_Cygnus Bewickii_, Yarr.), is the most nobly formed
+and coloured bird of the north. I have already described its nest,
+which is found in considerable numbers in Gooseland. The bird is
+blinding white, resembling the common swan, but somewhat smaller and
+with a considerable difference in the formation of the windpipe and
+the "keel" of the breastbone. The flesh is said to be coarse and of
+inferior flavour.
+
+[Illustration: BEWICK'S SWAN. Swedish, Mindre Saongsvanen.
+(Cygnus Bewickii, Yarr) BREASTBONE of Cygnus Bewickii, showing the
+peculiar position of the windpipe. After Yarrell. ]
+
+The land-birds in the Arctic regions are less numerous both in
+species and individuals than the sea-birds. Some of them, however,
+also occur in large numbers. Almost wherever one lands, some small
+greyish brown waders are seen running quickly to and fro, sometimes
+in pairs, sometimes in flocks of ten to twenty. It is the most
+common wader of the north, the _fjaerplyt_ of the walrus-hunters,
+the purple sandpiper (_Tringa maritima_, Bruenn.). It lives on flies,
+gnats, and other land insects. Its well-filled crop shows how well
+the bird knows how to collect its food even in regions where the
+entomologist can only with difficulty get hold of a few of the
+animal forms belonging to his field of research. The purple
+sandpiper lays its four or five eggs in a pretty little nest of dry
+straw on open grassy or mossy plains a little distance from the sea.
+It also endeavours to protect its nest by acting a comedy like that
+of the _tjufjo_. Its flesh is delicious.
+
+In the company of the purple sandpiper there is often seen a
+somewhat larger wader, or, more correctly, a bird intermediate
+between the waders and the swimming birds. This is the beautiful
+_brednaebbade simsnaeppan_, the grey (or red) phalarope (_Phalaropus
+fulicarius_, Bonap.). It is not rare on Spitzbergen, and it is
+exceedingly common, perhaps even the commonest bird on the north
+coast of Asia. I imagine therefore that it is not absent from Novaya
+Zemlya, though there has hitherto been observed there only the
+nearly allied _smalnaebbade simsnaeppan_, the red-necked phalarope
+(_Phalaropus hyperboreus_, Lath.). This bird might be taken as the
+symbol of married love, so faithful are the male and female, being
+continually to be seen in each other's company. While they search
+for their food in pools of water along the coast, they nearly always
+bear each other company, swimming in zigzag, so that every now and
+then they brush past each other. If one of them is shot, the other
+flies away only for a short time until it observes that its mate is
+left behind. It then flies back, swims with evident distress round
+its dead friend, and pushes it with its bill to get it to rise. It
+does not, however, spend any special care on its nest or the rearing
+of its young, at least to judge by the nest which Duner found at
+Bell Sound in 1864. The position of the nest was indicated by three
+eggs laid without anything below them on the bare ground, consisting
+of stone splinters. The flesh of the phalarope is a great delicacy,
+like that of other waders which occur in the regions in question,
+but which I cannot now stay to describe.
+
+During excursions in the interior of the land along the coast, one
+often hears, near heaps of stones or shattered cliffs, a merry
+twitter. It comes from an old acquaintance from the home land, the
+_snoesparfven_ or _snoelaerkan_, the snow-bunting (_Emberiza
+nivalis_, L.). The name is well chosen, for in winter this pretty
+bird lives as far south as the snow goes on the Scandinavian
+peninsula, and in summer betakes itself to the snow limit in
+Lapland, the _tundra_ of North Siberia, or the coasts of Spitzbergen
+and Novaya Zemlya. It there builds its carefully-constructed nest of
+grass, feathers and down, deep in a stone heap, preferably
+surrounded by a grassy plain. The air resounds with the twitter of
+the little gay warbler, which makes the deeper impression because it
+is the only true bird's song one hears in the highest north.[64]
+
+On Spitzbergen there is sometimes to be met with in the interior of
+the country, on the mountain slopes, a game bird, _spetsbergsripan_,
+the rock ptarmigan (_Lagopus hyperboreus_, Sund.). A nearly allied
+type occurs on the Taimur peninsula, and along the whole north coast
+of Asia. It perhaps therefore can scarcely be doubted that it is
+also to be found on Novaya Zemlya, though we have not hitherto seen
+it there. On Spitzbergen this bird had only been found before 1872
+in single specimens, but in that year, to our glad surprise, we
+discovered an actual ptarmigan-fell in the neighbourhood of our
+winter colony, immediately south of the 80th degree of latitude. It
+formed the haunt of probably a thousand birds; at least a couple of
+hundred were shot there in the course of the winter. They probably
+breed there under stones in summer, and creeping in among the stones
+pass the winter there, at certain seasons doubtless in a kind of
+torpid state.
+
+[Illustration: PTARMIGAN FELL. Mussel Bay on Spitzbergen,
+after a photograph taken by A. Envall on the 21st June, 1872. ]
+
+The mode of life of the Spitzbergen ptarmigan is thus widely
+different from that of the Scandinavian ptarmigan, and its flesh
+also tastes differently. For the bird is exceedingly fat, and its
+flesh, as regards flavour, is intermediate between black-cock and
+fat goose.[65] We may infer from this that it is a great delicacy.
+
+[Illustration: THE SNOWY OWL. Swedish, Fjelluggla (Strix nyctea L.) ]
+
+When I was returning, in the autumn of 1872, from an excursion of
+some length along the shore of Wijde Bay, I fell in with one of our
+sportsmen, who had in his hand a white bird marked with black spots,
+which he showed me as a "very large ptarmigan." In doing so,
+however, he fell into a great ornithological mistake, for it was not
+a ptarmigan at all, but another kind of bird, similarly marked in
+winter, namely, _fjellugglan_, the walrus-hunter's _isoern_, the
+snowy owl (_Strix nyctea_, L.). It evidently breeds and winters at
+the ptarmigan-fell, which it appears to consider as its own
+poultry-yard. In fact, the marking of this bird of prey is so
+similar to that of its victim that the latter can scarcely perhaps
+know how to take care of itself. On Spitzbergen the snowy owl is
+very rare; but on Novaya Zemlya and the North coast of Asia--where
+the lemming, which is wanting on Spitzbergen, occurs in great
+crowds--it is common. It commonly sits immoveable on an open mountain
+slope, visible at a great distance, from the strong contrast of its
+white colour with the greyish-green ground. Even, in the brightest
+sunshine, unlike other owls, it sees exceedingly well. It is very
+shy, and therefore difficult to shoot. The snow ptarmigan and the
+snowy owl are the only birds of which we know with certainty that
+they winter on Spitzbergen, and both are, according to Hedenstroem,
+native to the New Siberian Islands (_Otrywki o Sibiri_, p. 112).
+
+
+In the cultivated regions of Europe the larger mammalia are so rare
+that most men in their whole lifetime have never seen a wild mammal
+so large as a dog. This is not the case in the high north. The
+number of the larger mammalia here is indeed no longer so large as
+in the seventeenth century, when their capture yielded an abundant
+living to from twenty to thirty thousand men; but sport on Novaya
+Zemlya and Spitzbergen still supports several hundred hunters, and
+during summer scarcely a day passes without a visitor of the coasts
+of these islands seeing a seal or a walrus, a reindeer or a Polar
+bear. In order to present a true picture of the Polar traveller's
+surroundings and mode of life, it is absolutely necessary to give a
+sketch of the occurrence and mode of life of the wild mammalia in
+the Polar lands.
+
+I shall make a beginning with the reindeer. This graminivorous
+animal goes nearly as far to the north as the land in the old world.
+It was not, indeed, observed by Payer on Franz Josef Land, but
+traces of the reindeer were seen by us on the clay beds at Cape
+Chelyuskin; remnants of reindeer were observed at Barents' winter
+harbour on the northernmost part of Novaya Zemlya; some very fat
+animals were killed by Norwegian walrus-hunters on King Karl's Land
+east of Spitzbergen, and for some years back the reindeer was very
+numerous even on the north coast of North East Land, and on
+Castren's, Parry's, Marten's, and Phipps' Islands, lying still
+farther to the north. Although these regions are situated between
+80 deg. and 81 deg. N.L., the reindeer evidently thrives there very
+well, and finds, even in winter, abundant food on the mountain
+slopes swept clear of snow by storms, as is shown by the good
+condition in which several of the animals shot by us were, and by
+the numerous reindeer traces and tracks which we saw on Castren's
+Island in the month of May, 1873. Nor does a winter temperature of
+-40 deg. to -50 deg. appear to agree particularly ill with these
+relatives of the deer of the south. Even the Norwegian reindeer can
+bear the climate of Spitzbergen, for some of the selected draught
+reindeer which I took with me to Spitzbergen in 1872, and which made
+their escape soon after they were landed, were shot by hunters in
+1875. They then pastured in company with wild reindeer, and were,
+like them, very fat. It is remarkable that the reindeer,
+notwithstanding the devastating pursuit to which it is exposed on
+Spitzbergen,[66] is found there in much larger numbers than on North
+Novaya Zemlya or the Taimur peninsula, where it is almost protected
+from the attacks of the hunter. Even on the low-lying part of South
+Novaya Zemlya, the reindeer, notwithstanding the abundance of the
+summer pasture, is so rare that, when one lands there, any
+reindeer-hunting is scarcely to be counted on. It first occurs in
+any considerable numbers farther to the north, on both sides of
+Matotschkin Schar.
+
+It deserves to be mentioned here that three hundred years ago, when
+the north part of Novaya Zemlya was for the first time visited by
+man, reindeer do not appear to have been more numerous there than
+now. In the narrative of Barents' third voyage (De Veer, _Diarium
+Nauticum_, 21st June, 1506) it is expressly stated: "Here it may be
+remarked that; although the land, which we consider as Groenland
+(the present Spitzbergen), lies under and over the 80th degree of
+latitude, there grow there abundant leaves and grass, and there are
+found there such animals as eat grass, as _reindeer_, while on the
+other hand, on Novaya Zemlya, under the 76th degree of latitude,
+there are neither leaves nor grass nor any grass-eating animal."
+After this, however, traces of reins were found even at the winter
+station; a bear, for instance, was killed that had devoured a
+reindeer.
+
+On Spitzbergen the reindeer have been considerably diminished in numbers
+by the hunting, first of the Dutch and English, and afterwards of the
+Russians and Norwegians. In the northwestern part of the island, where
+the Dutch had their train-boiling establishments, the animal has been
+completely extirpated.[67] It still, however, occurs on Ice Fjord in
+very great numbers, which, were the animal protected, would speedily
+increase.
+
+That so devastating a pursuit as that which goes on year after year
+on Spitzbergen can be carried on without the animal being
+extirpated, has even given rise to the hypothesis of an immigration
+from Novaya Zemlya. But since I have become better acquainted with
+the occurrence of the reindeer in the latter place, this mode of
+explanation does not appear to me to be correct. If, therefore, as
+several circumstances in fact indicate, an immigration of reindeer
+to Spitzbergen does take place, it must be from some still unknown
+Polar land situated to the north-north-east. In the opinion of some
+of the walrus-hunters there are indications that this unknown land
+is inhabited, for it has repeatedly been stated that _marked_
+reindeer have been taken on Spitzbergen. The first statement on this
+point is to be found in Witsen (_Noort ooster gedeelte van Asia en
+Europa_, 1705, ii. page 904), where the reins are said to have been
+marked on the horns and the ears; and I have myself heard hunters,
+who in Norway were well acquainted with the care of reindeer, state
+positively that the ears of some of the Spitzbergen reindeer they
+shot were clipped--probably, however, the whole has originated from
+the ears having been marked by frost. That no immigration to
+Spitzbergen of reindeer from Novaya Zemlya takes place, is shown
+besides by the fact that the Spitzbergen reindeer appears to belong
+to a race differing from the Novaya Zemlya reindeer, and
+distinguished by its smaller size, shorter head and legs, and
+plumper and fatter body.
+
+[Illustration: REINDEER PASTURE. Green Harbour on Spitzbergen,
+after a photograph taken by A. Envall on the 20th July, 1873. ]
+
+The life of the wild reindeer is best known from Spitzbergen. During
+summer it betakes itself to the grassy plains in the ice-free
+valleys of the island, in late autumn it withdraws--according to the
+walrus-hunters' statements--to the sea-coast, in order to eat the
+seaweed that is thrown up on the beach, and in winter it goes back
+to the lichen-clad mountain heights in the interior of the country,
+where it appears to thrive exceedingly well, though the cold during
+winter must be excessively severe; for when the reindeer in spring
+return to the coast they are still very fat, but some weeks
+afterwards, when the snow has frozen, on the surface, and a crust of
+ice makes it difficult for them to get at the mountain sides, they
+become so poor as scarcely to be eatable. In summer, however, they
+speedily eat themselves back into condition, and in autumn they are
+so fat that they would certainly take prizes at an exhibition of fat
+cattle. In the museum at Tromsoe there is preserved the backbone of
+a reindeer, shot on King Karl's Land, which had a layer of fat seven
+to eight centimetres in thickness on the loin.
+
+The reindeer, in regions where it has been much hunted, is very shy,
+but, if the ground is not quite even, one can creep within range, if
+the precaution be taken not to approach it from the windward. During
+the rutting season, which falls in late autumn, it sometimes happens
+that the reindeer attacks the hunter.
+
+The Spitzbergen reindeer is not tormented, like the reindeer in
+Lapland and on Novaya Zemlya, by "gorm" (inch-long larvae of a fly,
+which are developed under the animal's skin). Its flesh is also
+better than that of the Lapp reindeer. None of the contagious
+diseases which of late years have raged so dreadfully among the
+reindeer in northern Europe has ever, at least during the last fifty
+years, been common on Spitzbergen.
+
+The Polar bear occurs principally on coasts and islands which are
+surrounded by drift-ice, often even upon ice-fields far out at sea,
+for his best hunting is among the ice-floes. Now he is rather rare
+on the south-western coasts of Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya which
+are almost free of ice during summer, but more common on the
+northern parts of these islands, which are almost always surrounded
+by ice. Thus for instance during my many landings at Horn Sound,
+Bell Sound, Ice Fjord, Foreland Sound, and King's Bay, on the west
+coast of Spitzbergen, I have never seen a single bear. On the other
+hand, bears were seen at nearly every resting-place during the boat
+voyage I made in 1861 with Torell in Hinloopen Strait and along the
+shores of the most northerly islands on Spitzbergen, also during the
+sledge journey which Palander and I made in the spring of 1873
+round North East Land. The Polar bear is besides found everywhere
+along the north coast of Asia and America, apparently in greater
+numbers the farther north we go. Sometimes too, first on ice
+and then swimming, he has reached the north coast of Norway, for
+instance, in March 1853, when, according to a statement in _Tromsoe
+Stiftstidende_ (No. 4 for 1869), a Polar bear was killed in
+Kjoellefjord in East Einmark.
+
+The bear is not difficult to kill. When he observes a man he
+commonly approaches in hope of prey, with supple movements, and in a
+hundred zigzag bends, in order to conceal the direction he intends
+to take, and thus keep his prey from being frightened. During his
+approach he often climbs up on blocks of ice, or raises himself on
+his hind legs, in order to get a more extensive view, or else stands
+snuffing up the air with evident care in all directions, in order,
+by the aid of smell, which he seems to rely upon more than sight, to
+ascertain the true kind and nature of the surrounding objects. If he
+thinks he has to do with a seal, he creeps or trails himself forward
+along the ice, and is said then to conceal with the fore-paws the
+only part of his body that contrasts with the white colour of the
+snow--his large black nose. If one keeps quite still, the bear comes
+in this way so near that one can shoot him at the distance of two
+gun-lengths, or, what the hunters consider safer, kill him with the
+lance. If an unarmed man falls in with a Polar bear, some rapid
+movements and loud cries are generally sufficient to put him to
+flight, but if the man himself flies, he is certain to have the bear
+after him at full speed. If the bear is wounded, he always takes to
+flight. He often lays snow upon the wound with his fore-paws;
+sometimes in his death struggles he scrapes with his fore-feet a
+hole in the snow, in which he buries his head.
+
+When a vessel lies at anchor, the bear sometimes swims out to it,
+and if one encamps in distant regions one often finds on getting up
+in the morning a Polar bear in the neighbourhood, who during the
+night has gone and nosed round the tent, without daring to attack
+it. I remember only one case of a bear venturing to look into an
+inhabited tent; it was during Kane's journey. He was frightened on
+that occasion by the lighting of some lucifers. I have myself with
+my comrades encamped without a watch in regions where we were
+certain that our encampment would be visited, while we lay in deep
+sleep, by some bear, that seldom, when the cook rose to make coffee,
+failed to come within range of shot.
+
+[Illustration: POLAR BEARS. Drawn by G Muetzel of Berlin. ]
+
+The bear on the other hand has a special fancy for taking an
+inventory of depots of provisions, of abandoned vessels, or of boats
+that have been left drawn up on the beach. Most Arctic travellers
+have remarkable adventures to relate, which both men and bears have
+gone through on such occasions. During our expedition in 1864, for
+instance, a large bear came and closely examined the contents of a
+boat covered with a tent, which we had left unwatched for a few
+hours at the bottom of Stor Fjord. He ate up a carefully-cooked
+reindeer roast, tore the reserve clothes, scattered about the
+ship-biscuit, &c.; and after we had returned in the evening,
+gathered our things together in a heap, closed the tent and lain
+down to sleep, the same bear returned, and, while we slept,
+appropriated all the reindeer beef we had cooked to be used, in
+place of the roast we had lost, during the following day's journey.
+During one of the English expeditions in search of Franklin, there
+was killed on one occasion, a bear in whose stomach there was found,
+among many other articles, the stock of sticking-plaster from a
+neighbouring depot. The bear can also roll away very large stones,
+but a layer of frozen sand is too much for him.
+
+The Polar bear swims exceedingly well, but not so fast as that he
+can escape in this way, if he be pursued in a boat; if a boat and
+stout rowers are at hand he is accordingly done for, if, as often
+happens, he in attempting to escape seeks his deliverance in the
+sea. There, he is, as the hunters say, "as easy to kill as a sheep,"
+but one has to make haste to get hold of the killed animal with a
+harpoon or in some other way, for it speedily sinks, unless it is
+very fat.
+
+The walrus-hunting vessels from Tromsoe brought home in 1868 twenty,
+in 1869 fifty-three, in 1870 ninety-eight, in 1871 seventy-four, and
+in 1872 thirty-three bears. It may be inferred from this that the
+Norwegian walrus-hunters kill yearly on an average at least a
+hundred bears. It is remarkable that in this large number a pregnant
+female or one with newly-born young is never found.[68] The female
+bear appears to keep herself well concealed during the time she is
+pregnant; perhaps in some ice-hole in the interior of the country.
+
+Whether the Polar bear hibernates during winter is not quite
+settled; various facts, however, point in this direction. For
+instance, he disappears almost completely from wintering stations
+during the dark time, and holes have sometimes been met with in
+which bears were concealed. Thus it once happened to Tobiesen that
+he went down with one foot into such a hole, to the no small dismay
+not only of the experienced walrus-hunter, but also of the bear.
+
+It is also stated that the bear during the dark time goes to the
+edge of the ice to seek his food. I cannot say positively whether
+this is the case or not; but the fact points in an opposite
+direction, that while only a single bear was seen in the course of
+the winter in the open water in the neighbourhood of our winter
+station at Mussel Bay in 1872-73, Palander and I almost daily saw
+bears on the hard frozen sea north of North East Land. Tracks of
+bears were visible there in all directions on the ice, and along
+with them light, sinuous traces of the fox. There were, on the other
+hand, no seal holes to be found, and it was accordingly difficult to
+understand wherefore the bears had chosen just this desolate stretch
+of ice as their haunt. The bears that were killed were besides
+uncommonly lean, the fat which they yielded being scarcely available
+as fuel for the sledge-party's cooking apparatus.
+
+During their extended excursions after prey the male and the female,
+the latter generally attended by one or two large young ones, keep
+each other company. Larger numbers are seldom seen together, unless
+at places where a good many carcases of walruses, seals, or white
+fish are lying.
+
+In former times the sight of a bear created great dismay in Polar
+travellers, but now the walrus-hunters do not hesitate a moment to
+attack, lance in hand, a large number of bears. They have sometimes
+in this way killed as many as twelve within a short time. They
+depend less on the gun. During the expedition of 1861 Carl Chydenius
+shot three in a few minutes, close to his tent-covered boat.
+
+I do not know a single case in which any Norwegian walrus-hunter has
+been seriously wounded by a bear. It appears, however, as if this
+animal were bolder and more dangerous in regions where he has not
+made acquaintance with man's dangerous hunting implements. During
+the first English and Dutch voyages to Novaya Zemlya, bears were met
+with at nearly every place where a landing was effected, in regions
+where the Polar bear is now wholly absent, and the travellers were
+compelled to undertake actual combats--combats which cost several
+human lives. During Barents' second voyage some men on the 26th/16th
+September, 1593, landed on the mainland near the eastern mouth of
+Yugor Schar, in order to collect "a sort of diamonds occurring
+there" (valueless rock crystals), when a large white bear, according
+to De Veer, rushed forward and caught one of the stone collectors by
+the neck. On the man screaming "Who seizes me by the neck?" a
+comrade standing beside answered, "A bear," and ran off. The bear
+immediately bit asunder the head of his prey, and sucked the blood.
+The rest of the men who were on land now came to his relief,
+attacking the bear with levelled guns and lances. But the bear was
+not frightened, but rushed forward and laid hold of a man in the
+rank of the attacking party, and killed him too, whereupon all the
+rest took to flight. Assistance now came from the vessel, and the
+bear was surrounded by thirty men, but against their will, because
+they had to do with a "grim, undaunted, and greedy beast." Of these
+thirty men only three ventured to attack the bear, whom these
+"courageous" men finally killed, after a rather severe struggle.
+
+A large number of occurrences of a similar nature, though commonly
+attended with fortunate results, are to be found recorded in most of
+the narratives of Arctic travel. Thus a sailor was once carried off
+from a whaler caught in the ice in Davis' Straits, and in 1820,
+among the drift-ice in the sea between Greenland and Spitzbergen,
+the same fate was like to befall one of the crew of a Hull whaler;
+but he succeeded in effecting his escape by taking to flight, and
+throwing to the bear, first his only weapon of defence, a lance, and
+then his articles of clothing, one after the other.[69] On the 6th
+of March 1870, Dr. Boergen was attacked by a bear, and dragged a
+considerable distance.[70] It is remarkable that the bear did not
+this time either kill his prey, but that he had time to cry out, "A
+bear is dragging me away;" and that, after the bear had dragged him
+several hundred yards and he had got free, he could, though very
+badly scalped, himself make his way back to the vessel. The scalping
+had been done by the bear attempting to crush the skull in its
+mouth, as it is accustomed to do to the seals it catches. Scoresby
+considers it dangerous to hunt the Polar bear in deep snow. The
+well-known Dane, C. Petersen, guide to McClintock, Kane and others,
+on the other hand, considered it as little dangerous to attack a
+bear as to slaughter a sheep. The Siberian traveller, Hedenstroem,
+says that a man may venture to do so with a knife tied to a
+walking-stick, and the Norwegian hunters, or at least the
+Norwegian-Finnish harpooners, express themselves in much the same
+way regarding "this noble and dangerous" sport.
+
+The bear's principal food consists of the seal and walrus. It is
+said that with a single stroke of his powerful paw he can cast a
+walrus up on the ice. On the other hand he seldom succeeds in
+catching the reindeer, because it is fleeter than the bear. I have,
+however, in North East Land, on two occasions, seen blood and hair
+of reindeer which had been caught by bears. There is not the least
+doubt that, along with flesh, the bear also eats vegetable
+substances, as seaweed, grass, and lichens. I have several times, on
+examining the stomach of a bear that had been shot, found in it only
+remains of vegetable substances; and the walrus-hunters know this so
+well that they called a large old Polar bear, which Dr. Theel shot
+at Port Dickson in 1875, "an old Land-king" that was too fat to go a
+hunting, and therefore ate grass on land. He makes use besides of
+food of many different kinds; a bear, for instance, in the winter
+1865-66 consumed for Tobiesen the contents of two barrels of salt
+fish, which he had left behind in a deserted hut.
+
+The flesh of the bear, if he is not too old or has not recently
+eaten rotten seal-flesh, is very eatable, being intermediate in
+taste between pork and beef. The flesh of the young bear is white
+and resembles veal. The eating of the liver causes sudden illness.
+
+Although, as already mentioned, the Polar bear sometimes drifts to
+land and is killed in the northernmost part of Norway, his skin is
+not enumerated by Othere among the products of Finmark. It thus
+appears to have become known in Europe first after the Norwegians'
+discovery of Iceland and Greenland, and was at first considered an
+extraordinary rarity. A Norwegian of importance, who had emigrated
+to Iceland, and there succeeded in getting hold of a female bear
+with two young, sent them in 880 to the King of Norway, and got in
+return a small vessel laden with wood. This animal had not then been
+seen in Norway before. The old sagas of the north are said to relate
+further that the priest Isleif, in order to be nominated bishop of
+Iceland, in the year 1056 presented a white bear to Kejsar Henrik.
+In the year 1064 the King of Denmark gave in exchange for a white
+bear from Greenland a well-equipped, full rigged, trading vessel, a
+considerable sum of money, and a valuable gold ring.[71]
+
+[Illustration: POLAR BEARS. After Olaus Magnus (1555). ]
+
+Marco Polo also says in his account of the country of the
+peace-loving nomad Tatar tribes living in the north, that there are
+to be found there white bears most of them twenty hands long, large
+black foxes, wild asses (reindeer), and a little animal called
+"rondes," from which we get the sable fur.[72] As the Polar bear is
+only to be found on the coast of the Arctic Ocean, these statements
+prove that in the thirteenth century the northernmost part of Asia
+was inhabited or at least visited by hunters. Olaus Magnus even
+describes the bear's mode of life not incorrectly, with the addition
+that it was customary to present their skins to the altars of
+cathedrals and parish churches in order that the feet of the priest
+might not freeze during mass.[73] The Polar bear however first
+became more generally known in Western Europe by the Arctic voyages
+of the English and Dutch, and its price has now sunk so much that
+its skin, which was once considered an article of extraordinary
+value, is now, in adjusting accounts between the owners of a vessel
+and the walrus-hunters, reckoned at from twenty-five to fifty
+Scandinavian crowns (say twenty-eight to fifty-six shillings).
+
+In 1609 Stephen Bennet, during his seventh voyage to Bear Island,
+captured two young Polar bears, which were brought to England and
+kept at Paris Garden (Purchas, iii. p. 562). Now such animals are
+very frequently brought to Norway in order to be sent from thence to
+the zoological gardens of Europe, in which the Polar bear is seldom
+wanting. The capture is facilitated by the circumstance that the
+young bears seldom leave their mother when she is killed.
+
+Along with the reindeer and the bear there are found in the regions
+now in question only two other land-mammalia, the mountain fox
+(_Vulpes lagopus_ L.) and the lemming (_Myodes obensis_ Brants).[74]
+The fox is rather common both on Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya. Its
+abode sometimes consists of a number of passages excavated in the
+ground and connected together, with several openings. Such a nest I
+saw on Wahlberg's Island in Hinloopen Strait on the summit of a
+fowl-fell; it was abundantly provided with a stock of half-rotten
+guillemots, concealed in the passages. The old foxes were not
+visible while we were there, but several young ones, some black,
+some variegated red and white, ran hither and thither from out the
+openings and played with supple movements in the neighbourhood of
+the nest. A similar nest also, with young that ran between its
+openings, played and hunted each other, I have seen on the north
+shore of Matotschkin Schar, and uninhabited fox-holes and passages
+at several places on the west coast of Novaya Zemlya, commonly in
+the tops of dry sandy knolls.
+
+The lemming is not found on Spitzbergen, but must at certain seasons
+occur in incredible numbers on Novaya Zemlya. For at the
+commencement of summer, when the snow has recently melted away,
+there are to be seen, everywhere in the level fertile places in the
+very close grass of the meadows, footpaths about an inch and a half
+deep, which have been formed during winter by the trampling of these
+small animals, under the snow, in the bed of grass or lichens which
+lies immediately above the frozen ground. They have in this way
+united with each other the dwellings they had excavated in the
+ground, and constructed for themselves convenient ways, well
+protected against the severe cold of winter, to their fodder-places.
+Thousands and thousands of animals must be required in order to
+carry out this work even over a small area, and wonderfully keen
+must their sense of locality be, if, as seems probable, they can
+find their way with certainty in the endless labyrinth they have
+thus formed. During the snow-melting season these passages form
+channels for running off the water, small indeed, but everywhere to
+be met with, and contributing in a considerable degree to the drying
+of the ground. The ground besides is at certain places so thickly
+strewed with lemming dung, that it must have a considerable
+influence on the condition of the soil.
+
+
+In the Arctic regions proper one is not tormented by the
+mosquito,[75] and viewed as a whole the insect fauna of the entire
+Polar area is exceedingly scanty, although richer than was before
+supposed. Arachnids, acarids, and podurids occur most plentifully,
+Dr. Stuxberg having been able during the Yenisej expedition of 1875
+to collect a very large number of them, which were worked out after
+his return--the podurids by Dr. T. TULLBERG of Upsala, the arachnids
+by Dr. T. KOCH of Nurnberg. These small animals are found in very
+numerous individual specimens, among mouldering vegetable remains,
+under stones and pieces of wood on the beach, creeping about on
+grass, straws, &c.
+
+Of the insects proper there were brought home from Novaya Zemlya,
+during the same expedition, nine species of coleoptera, which were
+determined by Professor F.W. MAeKLIN, of Helsingfors.[76] Some few
+hemiptera and lepidoptera and orthoptera, and a large number of
+hymenoptera and diptera from the same expedition have been examined
+by Lector A.E. HOLMGREN of Stockholm. Dr. Stuxberg also collected a
+large number of land-worms, which have been described by our
+countryman Dr. G. EISEN, now settled in California. The occurrence
+of this animal group in a region where the ground at the depth of a
+few inches is continually frozen, appears to me exceedingly
+remarkable--and from a general point of view the occurrence of
+insects in a land which is exposed to a winter cold below the
+freezing-point of mercury, and where the animal cannot seek
+protection from it by creeping down to a stratum of earth which
+never freezes, presupposes that either the insect itself, its egg,
+larva, or pupa, may be frozen stiff without being killed. Only very
+few species of these small animals, however, appear to survive such
+a freezing test, and the actual land-evertebrate-fauna of the Polar
+countries is therefore exceedingly scanty in comparison with that of
+more southerly regions.
+
+[Illustration: WALRUSES. After a drawing by G von Yhlen (1861). ]
+
+It is quite otherwise as regards the sea. Here animal life is
+exceedingly abundant as far as man has succeeded in making his way to
+the farthest north. At nearly every sweep the dredge brings up from the
+sea-bottom masses of decapods, crustacea, mussels, asterids, echini,[77]
+&c., in varying forms, and the surface of the sea on a sunny day swarms
+with pteropods, beroids, surface-crustacea, &c. Dr. Stuxberg will give,
+farther on, a sketch of this department of animal life, which in the
+high north is so rich in variety. In the meantime I can but refer to the
+large number of papers on this subject which have been issued in the
+publications of the Swedish Academy of Sciences.
+
+
+Of the higher animal types a greater number within the Polar
+territory occur in the sea than on the land. Thus by far the greater
+number of the birds I have enumerated above belong to the sea, not
+to the land, and this is the case with nearly all the animals which
+for three or four hundred years back have been the objects of
+capture in the Arctic regions. This industry, which during the
+whale-fishing period yielded a return perhaps equal to that of the
+American oil-wells in our time, has not now in the most limited
+degree the importance it formerly had. For the animal whose capture
+yielded this rich return, the right whale (_Balaena mysticetus_ L.),
+is now so extirpated in these navigable waters, that the whalers
+were long ago compelled to seek new fishing-places in other parts of
+the Polar seas. It is therefore no longer the whale, but other
+species of animals which attract the hunter to the coasts of
+Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya.
+
+Of these animals the most important for the last fifty years has
+been the walrus, but it too is in course of being extirpated. It is
+now seldom found during summer on the west coast of Novaya Zemlya
+south of Matotschkin Schar. During our visits to that island in
+1875, 1876, and 1878 we did not see one of these animals. But in the
+Kara Gate, on the east coast of Novaya Zemlya, and at certain places
+in the Kara Sea, abundant hunting is still to be had. Earlier in the
+year the walrus is also to be met with among the drift-ice on the
+west coast, and to the south, off the mouth of the Petchora,
+although the number of the animals that are captured by the Samoyeds
+at Chabarova appears to be exceedingly small. On the other hand the
+Dutch, in their first voyages hither, saw a considerable number of
+these gregarious animals. The walrus, however, did not then occur
+here in such abundance as they did at the same time on Spitzbergen
+and Bear Island, which evidently formed their principal haunts.
+
+During Stephen Bennet's third voyage to Bear Island in 1606, 700 to
+800 walruses were killed there in six hours, and in 1608 nearly
+1,000 in seven hours. The carcases left lying on the beach attracted
+bears thither in such numbers that, for instance, in 1609 nearly
+fifty of them were killed by the crew of a single vessel. At one
+place eighteen bears were seen at once (Purchas, iii. p. 560). A
+Norwegian skipper was still able during a wintering in 1824-25 to
+kill 677 walruses. But when Tobiesen wintered there in 1865-66 he
+killed only a single walrus, and on the two occasions of my landing
+there I did not see one. Formerly the hunters almost every year,
+during late autumn when the drift-ice had disappeared, found "walrus
+on land," _i.e._ herds of several hundred walruses which had crept
+up on some low, even, sandy beach, to pass days and weeks there in
+an almost motionless state. During this period of rest most of them
+appear to be sunk in deep sleep, yet not all, for--according to the
+concurrent statements of all the walrus-hunters with whom I have
+conversed on this subject--they keep a watch to warn their comrades
+when danger is near. If necessary precautions are observed, _i.e._
+if the hunters approach the beach where the animals are assembled
+when the wind blows from the land, and kill with the lance those
+that lie nearest the water, the rest are slaughtered without
+difficulty, being prevented by the carcases of their dead comrades
+from reaching the sea. Now such an opportunity for the hunter
+happens exceedingly seldom; there are famous headlands on which in
+former times the walrus was found by hundreds, in whose
+neighbourhood now not a single one is to be seen.
+
+In the sea too there are certain places which the walrus principally
+haunts, and which are therefore known by the hunters as
+walrus-banks. Such a bank is to be found in the neighbourhood of
+Muffin Island, situated on the north coast of Spitzbergen in 80 deg.
+north latitude, and the animals that have been killed here
+must be reckoned by thousands. Another bank of the same kind is to
+be met with in 72 deg. 15' north latitude, on the coast of Yalmal.
+The reason why the walruses delight to haunt these places is
+doubtless that they find there abundant food, which does not
+consist, as has often been stated, of seaweed, but of various living
+mussels from the bottom of the sea, principally _Mya truncata_ and
+_Saxicava rugosa_. Their fleshy parts are freed, before they are
+swallowed, so remarkably well from the shells, and cleaned so
+thoroughly, that the contents of the stomach have the appearance of
+a dish of carefully-shelled oysters. In collecting its food the
+walrus probably uses its long tusks to dig up the mussels and worms
+which are deeply concealed in the clay.[78] Scoresby states that in
+the stomach of a walrus he found, along with small crabs, pieces of
+a young seal.
+
+The largest walrus tusks I have seen were two of a male walrus
+purchased in the summer of 1879 at St. Lawrence Island, in the north
+part of Behring's Sea. They measured 830 and 825 millimetres in
+length, their largest circumference was 227 and 230 millimetres, and
+they weighed together 6,680 gram. I have seen the tusks of females
+of nearly the same length, but they are distinguished from those of
+the male by being much more slender. The surface of the tusks is
+always full of cracks, but under it there is a layer of ivory free
+of cracks, which again incloses a grained kernel of bone which at
+some places is semi-transparent, as if drenched with oil.
+
+When the walrus ox gets very old, he swims about by himself as a
+solitary individual, but otherwise animals of the same age and sex keep
+together in large herds. The young walrus long follows its mother, and
+is protected by her with evident fondness and very conspicuous maternal
+affection. Her first care, when she is pursued, is accordingly to save
+her young even at the sacrifice of her own life. A female walrus with
+young is nearly always lost, if they be discovered from a hunting boat.
+However eagerly she may try by blows and cuffs to get her young under
+water or lead her pursuers astray by diving with it under her forepaw,
+she is generally overtaken and killed. Such a hunt is truly grim, but
+the walrus-hunter knows no mercy in following his occupation. The
+walrus, especially the old solitary male, sleeps and rests during
+autumn, when the drift-ice has disappeared, also in the water, with his
+head now above the surface, now under it, and with his lungs so strongly
+inflated that the body is kept floating, with part of the back
+projecting out of the water. The latter way of sleeping is indeed
+possible only for so long at once as the animal can keep below, but this
+is said to be a very long time. If a hunting boat meets a walrus
+sleeping in this way it is first wakened with a loud "strike up" before
+it is harpooned, "in order that in its fright it may not knock a hole in
+the boat with its tusks." The walrus sinks and is lost, if he is killed
+by a shot while in the water, or if he be shot while lying on a piece of
+ice, but without being killed so instantaneously that he cannot cast
+himself into the water in his death struggles. He is killed accordingly
+almost exclusively with the harpoon or lance.
+
+[Illustration: WALRUS TUSKS. A. Tusk of male, outside. B. Tusk of
+male, inside C. Tusks of female. One-tenth of natural size. ]
+
+The harpoon consists of a large and strong iron hook, very sharp on
+the outer edge, and provided with a barb. The hook is loosely fixed
+to the shaft, but securely fastened to the end of a slender line ten
+fathoms long, generally made of walrus hide. The line is fastened at
+its other end to the boat, in the forepart of which it lies in a
+carefully arranged coil. There are from five to ten such harpoon
+lines in every hunting boat. When the hunters see a herd of walrus,
+either on a piece of drift-ice or in the water, they endeavour
+silently and against the wind to approach sufficiently near to one
+of the animals to be able to harpoon it. If this is managed, the
+walrus first dives and then endeavours to swim under water all he
+can. But he is fixed with the line to the boat, and must draw it
+along with him. His comrades swim towards the boat, curious to
+ascertain the cause of the alarm. A new walrus is fixed with another
+harpoon, and so it goes on, one after another, until all the
+harpoons are in use. The boat is now drawn forward at a whizzing
+speed, although the rowers hold back with the oars; but there is no
+actual danger as long as all the animals draw in the same direction.
+If one of them seeks to take a different course from that of his
+comrades in misfortune, his line must be cut off, otherwise the boat
+capsizes. When the walruses get exhausted by their exertions and by
+loss of blood, the hunters begin to haul in the lines. One animal
+after the other is drawn to the stem of the boat, and there they
+commonly first get a blow on the head with the flat of a lance, and
+when they turn to guard against it, a lance is thrust into the
+heart. Since breechloaders have begun to be used by the
+walrus-hunters, they often prefer to kill the harpooned walruses
+with a ball instead of "lancing" them. To shoot an unharpooned
+walrus, on the other hand, the walrus hunters formerly considered an
+unpardonable piece of thoughtlessness, because the animal was in
+this way generally wounded or killed without any advantage accruing.
+They therefore expressed themselves with great irritation against
+the tourists who sometimes came to Spitzbergen, and in this way
+destroyed the hunting. It cannot however be denied that they
+themselves in recent times have often followed the bad example, and
+many consider that this is one of the main reasons of the great
+diminution in the numbers of the walrus of late years. Should an
+international code be established for hunting in the Polar sea, all
+shooting of unharpooned walruses ought to be forbidden in the first
+place.
+
+[Illustration: HUNTING IMPLEMENTS.
+(1) Harpoon, and (2) Lance for Walrus-hunting.
+(3) "Skottel" for the capture of the White Whale. One-fifteenth of
+natural size. ]
+
+Gregariousness and curiosity appear to be the main characteristics
+of the walrus. These qualities of theirs I had an opportunity of
+observing when once, on a glorious northern summer day, I rowed
+forward over a mirror-bright, drift-ice-bestrewn sea right into the
+midst of a considerable herd of these animals. Part followed the
+boat long distances quite peaceably, now and then emitting a
+grunting sound; others swam quite close, and raised themselves high
+out of the water in order to take a view of the foreigners; others,
+again, lay so closely packed on pieces of drift-ice as to sink them
+down to the water's edge, while their comrades swimming about in the
+sea endeavoured with violence to gain a place on the already
+overfilled resting-places, though a number of unoccupied pieces of
+ice floated up and down in the neighbourhood.
+
+When the hunters have killed a female walrus, it often happens that
+they take the young living. It is easily tamed, and soon regards its
+keeper with warm attachment. It seeks, as best it can--poorly
+equipped as it is for moving about on dry land--to follow the seamen
+on the deck, and gives itself no rest if it be left alone.
+Unfortunately, one does not succeed in keeping them long alive,
+probably because it is impossible to provide them with suitable
+food. There are instances, however, of the young of the walrus being
+brought to Europe alive. Thus it is said (Purchas, iii., p. 560),
+that Master Welden and Stephen Bennet, on the 22nd/12th July, 1608,
+caught two young walruses alive, one a male and the other a female.
+The female died before they reached England, but the male lived ten
+weeks. He was carried to court, shown to the king and many
+honourable gentlemen, and excited general admiration for his
+extraordinary form and great docility. A young walrus that was taken
+to St. Petersburg in 1829-30, also died in a short time. It gave
+occasion to K.E. von BAER'S famous treatise: "Anatomische und
+zoologische Untersuchungen ueber das Wallross," printed in _Memoires
+de l'Academie Imperiale des Sciences de St. Petersbourg_, ser. vi.,
+t. iv. 2, 1838, p. 97.
+
+The walrus is hunted for its skin, blubber, and oil. The value of a
+full-grown walrus was calculated at Tromsoe, in 1868, in settling
+accounts between the owners of hunting sloops and the hunters, at
+eighty Scandinavian crowns (say 4_l_. 10s.), but it sank in 1871 to
+only forty-eight crowns (say 2_l_. 15s.). The flesh of the walrus is
+coarse and train-flavoured, and is eaten by the hunters only in
+cases of necessity. From my own experience, however, I can certify
+that its comparatively small tongue is very delicious. By the Eskimo
+and the Chukchis the flesh of the walrus is considered a delicacy.
+
+[Illustration: WALRUS HUNTING. After Olaus Magnus (1555). ]
+
+The walrus was doubtless hunted by the Polar tribes long before the
+historic period,[79] but it is mentioned for the first time in
+writing in the sketch of Othere's Arctic journey. The narrative
+shows that it was then captured on the north coast of Scandinavia.
+This appears the less improbable, as a walrus now and then even in
+our days drifts to land on the Norwegian coast, and walruses are
+still annually killed off Swjatoinos on the Kola peninsula,[80] The
+walrus is very correctly described in the well-known Norse
+confession written in the end of the eleventh century, "Konungs
+skuggsja" (the King's Mirror), as an animal resembling the seal,[81]
+except that, besides several smaller teeth, it has two large tusks
+which project beyond the upper jaw. This clear and unexaggerated
+sketch is however replaced in the later writings of the middle ages
+by the most extraordinary accounts of the animal's appearance and
+mode of capture. Thus Albertus Magnus,[82] who died in 1280, says
+that the walrus is taken by the hunter, while the sleeping animal
+hangs by its large tusks to a cleft of the rock, cutting out a piece
+of its skin and fastening to it a strong rope whose other end is
+tied to trees, posts, or large rings fixed to rocks. The walrus is
+then wakened by throwing large stones at its head. In its attempts
+to escape it leaves its hide behind. It perishes soon after, or is
+thrown up half dead on the beach. He further states that walrus
+lines on account of their strength are suitable for lifting great
+weights, and that they are always on sale at Cologne. They were
+probably used at the building of the Cathedral there. Similar
+extraordinary representations of the appearance and mode of life of
+the walrus are repeated in a more or less altered form even by Olaus
+Magnus, whose representation of the walrus is shown by the
+accompanying woodcut.
+
+[Illustration: WALRUSES (female with young). Old Dutch drawing.[83] ]
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE DRAWING OF THE WALRUS.[84] ]
+
+The 11th/1st of August 1556, the year after the publication of the
+work of Olaus Magnus, a West European saw for the first time some
+actual walruses, which had been killed by Russian hunters at Vaygats
+Island. No description of the animal, however, is given, but from
+that period all the members of the English and Dutch north-east
+expeditions had opportunities of seeing walruses in hundreds and
+thousands. It was now first that man learned actually to know this
+remarkable animal which had been decked out in so many fables. To
+this period belongs the beautiful and natural delineation of the
+walrus which is given above.
+
+A peculiarity of the walrus may be mentioned here. The hide,
+especially in old males, is often full of wounds and scratches,
+which appear to be caused partly by combats and scraping against
+sharp pieces of ice, partly by some severe disease of the skin. Mr.
+H.W. Elliot has remarked this of the walrus in Behring's Sea[85].
+The walrus is also troubled with lice, which is not the case, so far
+as I know, with any kind of seal. Masses of intestinal worms are
+found instead in the stomach of the seal, while on the contrary none
+are found in that of the walrus.
+
+With reference to the other animals that are hunted in the Polar Sea
+I am compelled to be very brief, as I have scarcely any observations
+to make regarding them which are not already sufficiently known by
+numerous writings.
+
+There are three kinds of seals on Novaya Zemlya. _Storsaelen_, the
+bearded seal (_Phoca barbata_, Fabr.) occurs pretty generally even on
+the coasts of Spitzbergen, though never in large flocks. The pursuit
+of this animal is the most important part of the seal-fishing in
+these waters, and the bearded seal is still killed yearly by
+thousands. Their value is reckoned in settling accounts between
+owners and hunters at twenty to twenty-five Scandinavian crowns (say
+22s. to 27s. 6d.).
+
+[Illustration: YOUNG OF THE GREENLAND SEAL. After a drawing by
+A W. Quennerstedt (1864). ]
+
+_Groenlands_ or _Jan-Mayen-saelen_, the Greenland seal (_Phoca
+Groenlandica_ Muller), which at Jan Mayen gives occasion to so
+profitable a fishing, also is of general occurrence among the
+drift-ice in the Munnan and Kara seas.
+
+_Snadden_, the rough or bristled seal (_Phoca hispida_, Erxl.) is
+also common on the coast. These animals in particular are seen to
+lie, each at its hole, on the ice of fjords, which has not been
+broken up. It also many times follows with curiosity in the wake of
+a vessel for long distances, and can then be easily shot, because it
+is often so fat that, unlike the two other kinds of seals, it does
+not sink when it has been shot dead in the water.
+
+_Klapmytsen_, the bladdernose seal, (_Cystophora cristata_, Erxl.)
+the walrus-hunters say they have never seen on Novaya Zemlya, but it
+is stated to occur yearly in pretty large numbers among the ice
+W.S.W. of South Cape on Spitzbergen. Only once during our many
+voyages in the Polar Sea has a _Klapmyts_ been seen, viz, a young
+one that was killed in 1858 in the neighbourhood of Bear Island.
+
+Of the various species of whales, the narwhal, distinguished by its
+long and valuable horn projecting in the longitudinal direction of
+the body from the upper jaw, now occurs so seldom on the coast of
+Novaya Zemlya that it has never been seen there by the Norwegian
+walrus-hunters. It is more common at Hope Island, and Witsen states
+(p. 903) that large herds of narwhals have been seen between
+Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya.
+
+[Illustration: THE BEARDED SEAL. Swedish, Storsal (_Phoca barbata_,
+Fabr.) THE ROUGH SEAL. Swedish, Snadd. (_Phoca hispida_, Erxl.) ]
+
+The white whale or beluga, of equal size with the narwhal, on the
+other hand, occurs in large shoals on the coasts of Spitzbergen and
+Novaya Zemlya, especially near the mouths of fresh-water streams.
+These animals were formerly captured, but not with any great
+success, by means of a peculiar sort of harpoon, called by the
+hunters "skottel." Now they are caught with nets of extraordinary
+size and strength, which are laid out from the shore at places which
+the white whales are wont to frequent. In this way there were taken
+in the year 1871, when the fishing appears to have been most
+productive, by vessels belonging to Tromsoe alone, 2,167 white
+whales. Their value was estimated at fifty-four Scandinavian crowns
+each (about 3_l_.). The fishing, though tempting, is yet very
+uncertain; it sometimes falls out extraordinarily abundant, as in
+the spring of 1880, when a skipper immediately on arriving at
+Magdalena Bay caught 300 of these animals at a cast of the net. Of
+the whales thus killed not only the blubber and hide are taken away,
+but also, when possible, the carcases, which, when cheap freight can
+be had, are utilised at the guano manufactories in the north of
+Norway. After having lain a whole year on the beach at Spitzbergen
+they may be taken on board a vessel without any great inconvenience,
+a proof that putrefaction proceeds with extreme slowness in the
+Polar regions.
+
+[Illustration: THE WHITE WHALE. (_Delphinapterus leucas_, Pallas)
+After a drawing by A.W. Quennerstedt (1804). ]
+
+With its blinding milk-white hide, on which it is seldom possible to
+discover a spot, wrinkle, or scratch, the full-grown white whale is
+an animal of extraordinary beauty. The young whales are not white,
+but very light greyish brown. The white whale is taken in nets not
+only by the Norwegians at Spitzbergen, but also by the Russians and
+Samoyeds at Chabarova. In former times they appear to have been also
+caught at the mouth of the Yenisej, to judge by the large number of
+vertebrae that are found at the now deserted settlements there. The
+white whale there goes several hundred kilometres up the river. I
+have also seen large shoals of this small species of whale on the
+north coast of Spitzbergen and the Taimur peninsula.
+
+Other species of the whale occur seldom on Novaya Zemlya. Thus on
+this occasion only two small whales were seen during our passage
+from Tromsoe, and I do not remember having seen more than one in the
+sea round Novaya Zemlya in the course of my two previous voyages to
+the Yenisej. At the north part of the island, too, these animals
+occur so seldom, that a hunter told me, as something remarkable,
+that towards the end of July, 1873, W.N.W. of the western entrance
+to Matotschkin Schar 20' to 30' from land, he had seen a large
+number of whales, belonging to two species, of which one was a
+_slaethval_, and the other had as it were a top, instead of a fin,
+on the back.
+
+It is very remarkable that whales still occur in great abundance on
+the Norwegian coast, though they have been hunted there for a
+thousand years back, but, on the other hand, if we except the little
+white whale, only occasionally east of the White Sea. The whale
+fishing which was carried on on so grand a scale on the west coast
+of Spitzbergen, has therefore never been prosecuted to any great
+extent on Novaya Zemlya; and fragments of skeletons of the whale
+which are found thrown up in such quantities on the shores of
+Spitzbergen, are not to be found, so far as my experience reaches,
+either on the shores of Novaya Zemlya, on the coast of the Kara Sea,
+or at the places on the north coast of Siberia between the Yenisej
+and the Lena, at which we landed. The sacrifices which were so long
+made in vain in the endeavour to find a passage to China in this
+direction accordingly were not compensated, as on Spitzbergen, by
+the rise of a profitable whale fishery. Meeting with a whale is
+spoken of by the first seafarers in these regions as something very
+remarkable and dangerous; for instance, in the account of Stephen
+Burrough's voyage in 1556:--"On St. James his day, there was a
+monstrous whale aboord of us, so neere to our side that we might
+have thrust a sworde or any other weapon in him, which we durst not
+doe for feare lie should have over-throwen our shippe; and then I
+called my company together, and all of us shouted, and with the crie
+that we made he departed from us; there was as much above water of
+his back as the bredth of our pinnesse, and at his falling down he
+made such a terrible noise in the water, that a man would greatly
+have marvelled, except he had known the cause of it; but, God be
+thanked, we were quietly delivered of him."[86] When Nearchus sailed
+with the fleet of Alexander the Great from the Indus to the Red Sea,
+a whale also caused so great a panic that it was only with
+difficulty that the commander could restore order among the
+frightened seamen, and get the rowers to row to the place where the
+whale spouted water and caused a commotion in the sea like that of a
+whirlwind. All the men now shouted, struck the water with their
+oars, and sounded their trumpets, so that the large, and, in the
+judgment of the Macedonian heroes, terrible animal, was frightened.
+It seems to me that from these incidents we may draw the conclusion
+that great whales in Alexander's time were exceedingly rare in the
+sea which surrounds Greece, and in Burrough's time in that which
+washes the shores of England. Quite otherwise was the whale regarded
+on Spitzbergen some few years after Burrough's voyage by the Dutch
+and English whalers. At the sight of a whale all men were out of
+themselves with joy, and rushed down into the boats in order from
+them to attack and kill the valuable animal. The fishery was carried
+on with such success, that, as has already been stated, the right
+whale (_Balaena mysticetus_ L.), whose pursuit then gave full
+employment to ships by hundreds, and to men by tens of thousands, is
+now practically extirpated. Thus during our many voyages in these
+waters we have only seen one such whale, which happened on the 23rd
+June, 1864, among the drift-ice off the west coast of Spitzbergen in
+78 deg. N.L. As the right whale still occurs in no limited numbers
+in other parts of the Polar Sea, and as there has been no whale
+fishing on the coast of Spitzbergen for the last forty or fifty
+years, this state of things shows how difficult it is to get an
+animal type to return to a region where it has once been extirpated,
+or from which it has been driven away.
+
+The whale which Captain Svend Foeyn has almost exclusively hunted on
+the coast of Finmark since 1864 belongs to quite another species,
+_blaohvalen_ (_Balaenoptera Sibbaldii_ Gray); and there are likewise
+other species of the whale which still in pretty large numbers
+follow shoals of fish to the Norwegian coast, where they sometimes
+strand and are killed in considerable numbers. A _tandhval_, killer
+or sword-fish (_Orca gladiator_ Desm.) was even captured some years
+ago in the harbour of Tromsoe. This whale was already dying of
+suffocation, caused by an attempt to swallow an eider which entered
+the gullet, not, as the proper way is, with the head, but with the
+tail foremost. When the mouthful should have slidden down, it was
+prevented by the stiff feathers sticking out, and the bird stuck in
+the whale's throat, which, to judge by the extraordinary struggles
+it immediately began to make, must have caused it great
+inconvenience, which was increased still more when the inhabitants
+did not neglect to take advantage of its helpless condition to
+harpoon it.
+
+
+[Footnote 60: The name _stormfogel_ is also used for the Stormy
+Petrel (_Thalassidroma pelagica_, Vig.). This bird does not occur in
+the portions of the Polar Sea with which we are now concerned. ]
+
+[Footnote 61: At Bear Island, Tobiesen, on the 28th May, 1866, saw
+fulmars' eggs laid immediately on the ice which still covered the
+rock. At one place a bird sitting on its eggs was even frozen fast
+by one leg to the ice on the 31/21 August, 1596. Barents found on
+the north part of Novaya Zemlya that some fulmars had chosen as a
+hatching-place a piece of ice covered with a little earth. In both
+these cases the under part of the egg during hatching could never be
+warmed above the freezing-point. ]
+
+[Footnote 62: It deserves to be investigated whether some little
+auks do not, like the Spitzbergen ptarmigan, pass the winter in
+their stone mounds, flying out to sea only at pretty long intervals
+in order to collect their food. ]
+
+[Footnote 63: The quantity of eider-down which was brought from the
+Polar lands to Tromsoe amounted in 1868 to 540, in 1869 to 963, in
+1870 to 882, in 1871 to 630, and in 1872 to 306 kilograms. The total
+annual yield may be estimated at probably three times as much. ]
+
+[Footnote 64: There are, however, various other song-birds found
+already on south Novaya Zemlya, for instance, _lappsparfven_, the
+Lapland bunting (_Emberiza lapponica_, L.), and _berglaerkan_, the
+shore-lark (_Alauda alpestris_, L.). They hatch on the ground under
+bushes, tufts of grass, or stones, in very carefully constructed
+nests lined with cotton-grass and feathers, and are not uncommon. ]
+
+[Footnote 65: Hedenstroem also states (_Otrywki o Sibiri_, St.
+Petersburg, 1830, p. 130,) that the ptarmigan winters on the New
+Siberian Islands, and that there it is fatter and more savoury than
+on the mainland. ]
+
+[Footnote 66: The hunters from Tromsoe brought home, in 1868, 996;
+in 1869, 975; and in 1870, 837 reindeer. When to this we add the
+great number of reindeer which are shot in spring and are not
+included in these calculations, and when we consider that the number
+of walrus-hunting vessels which are fitted out from Tromsoe is less
+than that of those which go out from Hammerfest, and that the
+shooting of reindeer on Spitzbergen is also carried on by hunters
+from other towns, and by tourists, we must suppose that at least
+3,000 reindeer have been killed during each of those years. Formerly
+reindeer stalking was yet more productive, but since 1870 the number
+killed has considerably diminished. ]
+
+[Footnote 67: When Spitzbergen was first mapped, a great number of
+places were named after reindeer, which shows that the reindeer was
+found there in large numbers, and now just at these places it is
+completely absent. On the other hand, the Dutch and English
+explorers during the sixteenth century saw no reindeer on Novaya
+Zemlya. During the Swedish expedition of 1875 no reindeer were seen
+on the west coast of this island south of Karmakul Bay, while a
+number were shot at Besimannaja Bay and Matotschkin Schar. When some
+of the companions of the well-known walrus-hunting captain, Sievert
+Tobiesen, were compelled in 1872-73 to winter at North Goose Cape,
+they shot during winter and spring only eleven reindeer. Some
+Russians, who by an accident were obliged to pass six years in
+succession somewhere on the coast of Stans Foreland (Maloy Broun),
+and who, during this long time, were dependent for their food on
+what they could procure by hunting without the use of fire-arms
+(they had when they landed powder and ball for only twelve shots),
+when the three survivors were found and taken home in 1749, had
+killed two hundred and fifty reindeer (P.L. le Roy, _Relation des
+Aventures arrivees a quatre matelots Russes jettes par une tempete pres
+de l'Isle deserte d'Ost-Spitzbergen, sur laquelle ils ont
+passe six ans et trois mois_, 1766). ]
+
+[Footnote 68: During the wintering of 1869-70 on East Greenland, Dr.
+Punsch once saw a female bear with quite small young (_Die zweite
+deutsche Nordpolarfahrt_, Leipzig, 1873-74. Vol. II p. 157). ]
+
+[Footnote 69: W. Scoresby's des Juengern, _Tagebuch einer Reise auf
+dem Wallfischfang. Aus dem engl. ueebers_. Hamburg, 1825, p. 127. ]
+
+[Footnote 70: _Die zweite deutsche Nordpolarfahrt_, Vol. I. p. 465. ]
+
+[Footnote 71: _Groenlands historiske Mindesmaerker._ Kjoebenhavn, 1838,
+III. p. 384. ]
+
+[Footnote 72: Ramusio, Part II., Venice, 1583, p. 60. ]
+
+[Footnote 73: Ol. Magnus. Rome edition, 1555, p. 621. ]
+
+[Footnote 74: It is stated that wolves also occur on Novaya Zemlya
+as far up as to Matotschkin Sound. They are exceedingly common on
+the north coasts of Asia and Eastern Europe. ]
+
+[Footnote 75: That is to say, not on Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya,
+for it is otherwise on the coast of the mainland. In West Greenland
+the mosquito as far north as the southern part of Disco Island is
+still so terrible, especially to the new comer during the first
+days, that the face of any one who without a veil ventures into
+marshy ground overgrown with bushes, becomes in a few hours
+unrecognisable. The eyelids are closed with swelling and changed
+into water-filled bladders, suppurating tumours are formed in the
+head under the hair, &c. But when a man has once undergone this
+unpleasant and painful inoculation, the body appears, at least for
+one summer, to be less susceptible to the mosquito-poison. ]
+
+[Footnote 76: As the _only_ Chrysomela, which von Baer found at
+Matotschkin Schar, played so great a _role_ in Arctic-zoological
+literature, I shall here enumerate the species of coleoptera, now
+known--after Professor Maeklim's determination of the collections
+which we brought home with us--to exist on Novaya Zemlya. These
+are:--_Feronia borealis_ Menetr., _F. gelida_ Maekl., _Amara alpina_
+Fabr., _Agabus subquadratus_ Motsch., _Homalota sibirica_ Maekl.,
+_Homalium angustatum_ Maekl., _Cylletron (?) hyperboreum_ Maekl.,
+_Chrysomela septentrionalis_ (?) Menetr., _Prasocuris hannoverana_
+Fabr., v. _degenerata_. From Vaygats Island we brought home seven
+species more, which were not found on Novaya Zemlya. The insects
+occur partly under stones, especially at places where lemming dung
+is abundant, or in tracts where birds'-nests are numerous, partly in
+warm days on willow-bushes. ]
+
+[Footnote 77: Echini occur only very sparingly in the Kara Sea and
+the Siberian Polar Sea, but west of Novaya Zemlya at certain places
+in such numbers that they almost appear to cover the sea-bottom. ]
+
+[Footnote 78: Compare Malmgren's instructive papers in the
+publications of the Royal (Swedish) Academy of Sciences and
+Scoresby's _Arctic Regions_, Edinburgh, 1820, i., p. 502. That the
+walrus eats mussels is already indicated in the Dutch drawing from
+the beginning of the seventeenth century reproduced below, page 160. ]
+
+[Footnote 79: Implements of walrus-bone occur among the Northern
+grave _finds_. ]
+
+[Footnote 80: Compare note at page 48 above. ]
+
+[Footnote 81: I saw in 1858 a _Phoca barbata_ with tusks worn away by
+age, which in its reddish-brown colour very much resembled a walrus,
+and was little inferior to it in size. ]
+
+[Footnote 82: Albertus Magnus, _De animalibus_, Mantua, 1479, Lib.
+xxiv. At the same place however is given a description of the
+whale-fishery grounded on actual experience, but with the shrewd
+addition that what the old authors had written on the subject did
+not correspond with experience. ]
+
+[Footnote 83: This drawing is made after a facsimile by Frederick
+Mueller from Hessel Gerritz, _Descriptio et delineatio geographica
+detectionis freti, &c._ Amsterodami, 1613. The same drawing is
+reproduced coloured in Blavii _Atlas major_, Part I, 1665, p. 25,
+with the inscription: "Ad vivum delineatum ab Hesselo G.A." ]
+
+[Footnote 84: The drawing is taken from a Japanese manuscript book
+of travels--No. 360 of the Japanese library which I brought home.
+According to a communication by an attache of the Japanese embassy
+which visited Stockholm in the autumn of 1880, the book is entitled
+_Kau-kai-i-fun_, "Narrative of a remarkable voyage on distant seas."
+The manuscript, in four volumes, was written in 1830. In the
+introduction it is stated that when some Japanese, on the 21st
+November, 1793 (?), were proceeding with a cargo of rice to Yesso,
+they were thrown out of their course by a storm, and were driven far
+away on the sea, till in the beginning of the following June they
+came to some of the Aleutian islands, which had recently been taken
+by the Russians. They remained there ten months, and next year in
+the end of June they came to Ochotsk. The following year in autumn
+they were carried to Irkutsk, where they remained eight years, well
+treated by the Russians. They were then taken to St. Petersburg,
+where they had an audience of the Czar, and got furs and splendid
+food. Finally they were sent back by sea round Cape Horn to Japan in
+one of Captain von Krusenstern's vessels. They were handed over to
+the Japanese authorities in the spring of 1805, after having been
+absent from their native country about thirteen years. From Nagasaki
+they were carried to Yeddo, where they were subjected to an
+examination. One person put questions, another wrote the answers,
+and a third showed by drawings all the remarkable events they had
+survived. They were then sent to their native place. In the
+introduction it is further said that the shipwrecked were unskilful
+seamen, by whom little attention was often given to the most
+important matters. A warning accordingly is given against full
+reliance on their accounts and the drawings in the book. The latter
+occupy the fourth part of the work, consisting of more than 100
+quarto pages. It is remarkable that the first Russian circumnavigation
+of the globe, and the first journey of the Japanese round the world,
+happened at the same time. ]
+
+[Footnote 85: _A Report upon the Condition of Affairs in the
+Territory of Alaska._ Washington, 1875, p. 160. ]
+
+[Footnote 86: Hakluyt, first edition, p. 317. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+ The Origin of the names Yugor Schar and Kara Sea--Rules
+ for Sailing through Yugor Schar--The "Highest Mountain"
+ on Earth--Anchorages--Entering the Kara Sea--
+ Its Surroundings--The Inland-ice of Novaya Zemlya--True
+ Icebergs rare in certain parts of the Polar Sea--The Natural
+ Conditions of the Kara Sea--Animals, Plants, Bog Ore--
+ Passage across the Kara Sea--The Influence of the Ice on
+ the Sea-bottom--Fresh-water Diatoms on Sea-ice--Arrival at
+ Port Dickson--Animal Life there--Settlers and Settlements
+ at the Mouth of the Yenisej--The Flora at Port Dickson--
+ Evertebrates--Excursion to White Island--Yalmal--Previous
+ Visits--Nmmnelin's Wintering on the Briochov Islands.
+
+
+In crossing to Vaygats Island I met the _Lena_, which then first
+steamed to the rendezvous that had been fixed upon. I gave the
+captain orders to anchor without delay, to coal from the _Express_,
+and to be prepared immediately after my return from the excursion to
+weigh anchor and start along with the other vessels. I came on board
+the _Vega_ on the evening of the 31st July, much pleased and
+gratified with what I had seen and collected in the course of my
+excursion on Vaygats Island. The _Lena_, however, was not quite
+ready, and so the start was put off till the morning of the 1st
+August. All the vessels then weighed anchor, and sailed or steamed
+through Vaygats Sound or Yugor Schar into the Kara Sea.
+
+We do not meet with the name Yugor Schar in the oldest narratives of
+travel or on the oldest maps. But it is found in an account dating
+from 1611, of a Russian commercial route between "Pechorskoie
+Zauorot and Mongozei," which is annexed to the letter of Richard
+Finch to Sir Thomas Smith, already quoted (Purchas, iii. p. 539). The
+name is clearly derived from the old name, Jugaria, for the land
+lying south of the sound, and it is said, for instance, in the map
+to Herberstein's work, to have its name from the Hungarians, who are
+supposed to derive their origin from these regions. The first Dutch
+north-east explorers called it Vaygats Sound or Fretum Nassovicum.
+More recent geographers call it also Pet's Strait, which is
+incorrect, as Pet did not sail through it.
+
+There was at first no special name for the gulf between the Taimur
+peninsula and Novaya Zemlya. The name "Carska Bay" however is to be
+found already in the information about sailing to the north-east,
+communicated to the Muscovie Companie by its principal factor,
+Antonie Marsh (Purchas, iii. p. 805). At first this name was applied
+only to the estuary of the Kara river, but it was gradually
+transferred to the whole of the neighbouring sea, whose oldest
+Samoyed name, also derived from a river, was in a somewhat
+Russianised form, "Neremskoe" (compare Purchas, iii. p. 805, Witsen,
+p. 917). I shall in the following part of this work comprehend under
+the name "Kara Sea" the whole of that gulf which from 77 deg. N.L.
+between Cape Chelyuskin and the northern extremity of Novaya Zemlya
+extends towards the south to the north coast of Europe and Asia.
+
+Captain Palander gives the following directions for sailing through
+the sound between Vaygats Island and the mainland:--
+
+ "As Yugor Straits are difficult to discover far out at
+ sea, good solar observations ought to be taken on
+ approaching them, where such can be had, and after these
+ the course is to be shaped in the middle of the strait,
+ preferably about N.E. by the compass. On coming nearer
+ land (three to four English miles) one distinguishes the
+ straits with ease. Afterwards there is nothing else to
+ observe than on entering to keep right in the middle of
+ the fairway.
+
+ "If one wishes to anchor at the Samoyed village one ought
+ to keep about an English mile from the land on the
+ starboard, and steer N.E. by the compass, until the
+ Samoyed huts are seen, when one bends off from starboard,
+ keeping the church a little to starboard. For larger
+ vessels it is not advisable to go in shallower water than
+ eight to nine fathoms, because the depth then diminishes
+ rather suddenly to from three to four fathoms.
+
+ "From the Samoyed village the course is shaped right to
+ the south-east headland of Vaygats Island (Suchoi Nos),
+ which ought to be passed at the distance of half an
+ English mile. Immediately south-west of this headland lies
+ a very long shoal, which one ought to take care of.
+
+ "From this headland the vessel is to be steered N.-1/2E.
+ out into the Kara Sea. With this course there are two
+ shoals on starboard and two on port at the distance of
+ half an English mile.
+
+ "The depth is in general ten fathoms; at no place in the
+ fairway is it less than nine fathoms.
+
+ "Vessels of the greatest draught may thus sail through
+ Yugor Schar. In passing the straits it is recommended to
+ keep a good outlook from the top, whence in clear weather
+ the shoals may easily be seen."
+
+In the oldest narratives very high mountains, covered with ice and
+snow, are spoken of as occurring in the neighbourhood of the sound
+between Vaygats Island and the mainland. It is even said that here
+were to be found the highest mountains on earth, whose tops were
+said to raise themselves to a height of a hundred German miles.[87]
+The honour of having the highest mountains on earth has since been
+ascribed by the dwellers on the plains of Northern Russia to the
+neighbourhood of Matotschkin Schar, "where the mountains are even
+much higher than Bolschoj Kamen," a rocky eminence some hundreds of
+feet high at the mouth of the Petchora--an orographic idea which
+forms a new proof of the correctness of the old saying:--"In the
+kingdom of the blind the one-eyed is king." Matotschkin Schar indeed
+is surrounded by a wild Alpine tract with peaks that rise to a
+height of 1,000 to 1,200 metres. On the other hand there are to be
+seen around Yugor Straits only low level plains, terminating towards
+the sea with a steep escarpment. These plains are early free of
+snow, and are covered with a rich turf, which yields good pasture to
+the Samoyed reindeer herds.
+
+Most of the vessels that wish to sail into the Kara Sea through
+Yugor Schar require to anchor here some days to wait for favourable
+winds and state of the ice. There are no good harbours in the
+neighbourhood of the sound, but available anchorages occur, some in
+the bay at Chabarova, at the western entrance of the sound; some,
+according to the old Dutch maps, on the eastern side of the sound,
+between Mestni Island (Staten Eiland) and the mainland. I have,
+however, no experience of my own of the latter anchorages, nor have
+I heard that the Norwegian walrus-hunters have anchored there.
+Perhaps by this time they are become too shallow.
+
+When we sailed through Yugor Schar in 1878, the sound was completely
+free of ice. The weather was glorious, but the wind was so light
+that the sails did little service. In consequence of this we did not
+go very rapidly forward, especially as I wished to keep the three
+vessels together, and the sailing ship _Express_, not to be left
+behind, had to be towed by the _Fraser_. Time was lost besides in
+dredging and taking specimens of water. The dredgings gave at some
+places, for instance off Chabarova, a rich yield, especially of
+isopods and sponges. The samples of water showed that already at a
+limited depth from the surface it had a considerable salinity, and
+that therefore no notable portion of the mass of fresh water, which
+the rivers Kara, Obi, Tas, and Yenisej and others pour into the Kara
+Sea, flows through this sound into the Atlantic Ocean.
+
+In the afternoon of the 1st August we passed through the sound and
+steamed into the sea lying to the east of it, which had been the
+object of so many speculations, expectations, and conclusions of so
+many cautious governments, merchants eager for gain, and learned
+cosmographers, from the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries, and
+which even to the geographer and man of science of the present has
+been a _mare incognitum_ down to the most recent date. It is just
+this sea that formed the turning-point of all the foregoing
+north-east voyages, from Burrough's to Wood's and Vlamingh's, and it
+may therefore not be out of place here, before I proceed further
+with the sketch of our journey, to give some account of its
+surroundings and hydrography.
+
+If attention be not fixed on the little new-discovered island,
+"Ensamheten," the Kara Sea is open to the north-east. It is bounded on
+the west by Novaya Zemlya and Vaygats Island; on the east by the Taimur
+peninsula, the land between the Pjaesina and the Yenisej and Yalmal; and
+on the south by the northernmost portion of European Russia, Beli
+Ostrov, and the large estuaries of the Obi and the Yenisej. The coast
+between Cape Chelyuskin and the Yenisej consists of low rocky heights,
+formed of crystalline schists, gneiss, and eruptive rocks, from the
+Yenisej to beyond the most southerly part of the Kara Sea, of the Gyda
+and Yalmal _tundras_ beds of sand of equal fineness, and at Vaygats
+Island and the southern part of Novaya Zemlya (to 73 deg. N.L.) of limestone
+and beds of schist[88] which slope towards the sea with a steep
+escarpment three to fifteen metres high, but form, besides, the
+substratum of a level plain, full of small collections of water which is
+quite free of snow in summer. North of 73 deg. again the west coast of the
+Kara Sea is occupied by mountains, which near Matotschkin are very high,
+and distributed in a confused mass of isolated peaks, but farther north
+become lower and take the form of a plateau.
+
+Where the mountains begin, some few or only very inconsiderable
+collections of ice are to be seen, and the very mountain tops are in
+summer free of snow. Farther north glaciers commence, which increase
+towards the north in number and size, till they finally form a
+continuous inland-ice which, like those of Greenland and
+Spitzbergen, with its enormous ice-sheet, levels mountains and
+valleys, and converts the interior of the land into a wilderness of
+ice, and forms one of the fields for the formation of icebergs or
+glacier-iceblocks, which play so great a _role_ in sketches of
+voyages in the Polar seas. I have not myself visited the inland-ice
+on the northern part of Novaya Zemlya, but doubtless the experience
+I have previously gained during an excursion with Dr. Berggren on
+the inland-ice of Greenland in the month of July 1870, _after all
+the snow on it had melted_, and with Captain Palander on the
+inland-ice of North-East Land in the beginning of June 1873, _before
+any melting of snow had commenced_, is also applicable to the
+ice-wilderness of north Novaya Zemlya.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF INLAND-ICE.
+A. Open glacier-canal.
+B. Snow-filled canal.
+C. Canal concealed by a snow-vault.
+D. Glacier-clefts. ]
+
+As on Spitzbergen the ice-field here is doubtless interrupted by
+deep bottomless clefts, over which the snowstorms of winter throw
+fragile snow-bridges, which conceal the openings of the abysses so
+completely that one may stand close to their edge without having any
+suspicion that a step further is certain death to the man, who,
+without observing the usual precaution of being bound by a rope to
+his companions, seeks his way over the blinding-white, almost
+velvet-like, surface of this snow-field, hard packed indeed, but
+bound together by no firm crust. If a man, after taking necessary
+precautions against the danger of tumbling down into these
+crevasses, betakes himself farther into the country in the hope that
+the apparently even surface of the snow will allow of long day's
+marches, he is soon disappointed in his expectations; for he comes
+to regions where the ice is everywhere crossed by narrow
+depressions, _canals_, bounded by dangerous clefts, with
+perpendicular walls up to fifteen metres in height. One can cross
+these depressions only alter endless zigzag wanderings, at places
+where they have become filled with snow and thereby passable. In
+summer again, when the snow has melted, the surface of the
+ice-wilderness has quite a different appearance. The snow has
+disappeared and the ground is now formed of a blue ice, which
+however is not clean, but everywhere rendered dirty by a grey
+argillaceous dust, carried to the surface of the glacier by wind and
+rain, probably from distant mountain heights. Among this clay, and
+even directly on the ice itself, there is a scanty covering of low
+vegetable organisms. The ice-deserts of the Polar lands are thus the
+habitat of a peculiar flora, which, insignificant as it appears to
+be, forms however an important condition for the issue of the
+conflict which goes on here, year after year, century after century,
+between the sun and the ice. For the dark clay and the dark parts of
+plants absorb the warm rays of the sun better than the ice, and
+therefore powerfully promote its melting. They eat themselves down
+in perpendicular cylindrical holes thirty to sixty centimetres in
+depth, and from a few millimetres to a whole metre in diameter. The
+surface of the ice is thus destroyed and broken up.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW FROM THE INLAND-ICE OF GREENLAND. After a drawing
+by S. Berggren, 23rd July, 1870. ]
+
+[Illustration: GREENLAND ICE FJORD. After a design drawn and
+lithographed by a Greenland Eskimo. ]
+
+[Illustration: SLOWLY-ADVANCING GLACIER. At Foul Bay, on the west coast of
+Spitzbergen, after a photograph taken by A. Envall, 30th August, 1872. ]
+
+[Illustration: GLACIER WITH STATIONARY FRONT. Udde Bay, on Novaya
+Zemlya, after a drawing by Hj. Theel (1875). ]
+
+After the melting of the snow there appears besides a number of
+inequalities, and the clefts previously covered with a fragile
+snow-bridge now gape before the wanderer where he goes forward, with
+their bluish-black abysses, bottomless as far as we can depend on
+ocular evidence. At some places there are also to be found in the
+ice extensive shallow depressions, down whose sides innumerable
+rapid streams flow in beds of azure-blue ice, often of such a volume
+of water as to form actual rivers. They generally debouch in a lake
+situated in the middle of the depression. The lake has generally an
+underground outlet through a grotto-vault of ice several thousands
+of feet high. At other places a river is to be seen, which has bored
+itself a hole through the ice-sheet, down which it suddenly
+disappears with a roar and din which are heard far and wide, and at
+a little distance from it there is projected from the ice a column
+of water, which, like a geyser with a large intermittent jet in
+which the water is mixed with air, rises to a great height.
+
+Now and then a report is heard, resembling that of a cannon shot
+fired in the interior of the icy mass. It is a new crevasse that has
+been formed, or if one is near the border of the ice-desert, an
+ice-block that has fallen down into the sea. For, like, ordinary
+collections of water, an ice-lake also has its outlet into the sea.
+These outlets are of three kinds, viz., _ice-rapids_, in which the
+thick ice-sheet, split up and broken in pieces, is pressed forward
+at a comparatively high speed down a narrow steeply-sloping valley,
+where ice-blocks tumble on each other with a crashing noise and din,
+and from which true icebergs of giant-like dimensions are projected
+in hundreds and thousands; _broad; slowly-advancing glaciers_, which
+terminate towards the sea with an even perpendicular face, from
+which now and then considerable ice-blocks, but no true icebergs,
+fall down; and _smaller stationary glaciers_, which advance so slowly
+that the ice in the brim melts away about as fast as the whole mass
+of ice glides forward, and which thus terminate at the beach not
+with a perpendicular face but with a long ice-slope covered with
+clay, sand, and gravel.
+
+The inland-ice on Novaya Zemlya is of too inconsiderable extent to
+allow of any large icebergs being formed. There are none such
+accordingly in the Kara Sea[89], and it is seldom that even a large
+glacier ice-block is to be met with drifting about.
+
+The name ice-house, conferred on the Kara Sea by a famous Russian
+man of science, did not originate from the large number of
+icebergs[90], but from the fact that the covering of ice, which
+during winter, on account of the severity of the cold and the slight
+salinity of the surface-water, is immensely thick, cannot, though
+early broken up, be carried away by the marine currents and be
+scattered over a sea that is open even during winter[91]. Most of
+the ice formed during winter in the Kara Sea, and perhaps some of
+that which is drifted down from the Polar basin, is on the contrary
+heaped by the marine currents against the east coast of Novaya
+Zemlya, where during early summer it blocks the three sounds which
+unite the Kara Sea with the Atlantic. It was these ice-conditions
+which caused the failure of all the older north-east voyages and
+gave to the Kara Sea its bad report and name of ice-house. Now we
+know that it is not so dangerous in this respect as it was formerly
+believed to be--that the ice of the Kara Sea melts away for the
+most part, and that during autumn this sea is quite available for
+navigation.
+
+In general our knowledge of the Kara Sea some decades back was not
+only incomplete, but also erroneous. It was believed that its animal
+life was exceedingly scanty, and that algae were absolutely wanting;
+no soundings had been taken elsewhere than close to the coast; and
+much doubt was thrown, not without reason, on the correctness of the
+maps. Now all this is changed to a great extent. The coast line,
+bordering on the sea, is settled on the maps; the ice-conditions,
+currents and depth of water in different parts of the sea are
+ascertained, and we know that the old ideas of its poverty in
+animals and plants are quite erroneous.
+
+[Illustration: UMBELLULA FROM THE KARA SEA.
+A. Polype stem entire, one-half the natural size.
+B. Polype stem, upper part, one-and-a-half times the natural size. ]
+
+In respect to depth the Kara Sea is distinguished by a special
+regularity, and by the absence of sudden changes. Along the east
+coast of Novaya Zemlya and Vaygats Island there runs a channel, up
+to 500 metres in depth, filled with cold salt-water, which forms the
+haunt of a fauna rich not only in individuals, but also in a large
+number of remarkable and rare types, as Umbellula, Elpidia, Alecto,
+asterids of many kinds, &c. Towards the east the sea-bottom rises
+gradually and then forms a plain lying 30 to 90 metres below the
+surface of the sea, nearly as level as the surface of the
+superincumbent water. The bottom of the sea in the south and west
+parts of it consists of clay, in the regions of Beli Ostrov of sand,
+farther north of gravel. Shells of crustacea and pebbles are here
+often surrounded by bog-ore formations, resembling the figures on
+page 186. These also occur over an extensive area north-east of Port
+Dickson in such quantity that they might be used for the manufacture
+of iron, if the region were less inaccessible.
+
+Even in the shallower parts of the Kara Sea the water at the bottom is
+nearly as salt as in the Atlantic Ocean, and all the year round cooled
+to a temperature of -2 deg. to -2.7 deg.. The surface-water, on the contrary, is
+very variable in its composition, sometimes at certain places almost
+drinkable, and in summer often strongly heated. The remarkable
+circumstance takes place here that the surface water in consequence of
+its limited salinity freezes to ice if it be exposed to the temperature
+which prevails in the salt stratum of water next the bottom, and that it
+forms a deadly poison for many of the decapoda, worms, mussels,
+crustacea and asterids which crawl in myriads among the beds of clay or
+sand at the bottom.
+
+At many places the loose nature of the bottom does not permit the
+existence of any algae, but in the neighbourhood of Beli Ostrov,
+Johannesen discovered extensive banks covered with "sea-grass"
+(algae), and from the east coast of Novaya Zemlya Dr. Kjellman in
+1875 collected no small number of algae[92], being thereby enabled
+to take exception to the old erroneous statements as to the nature
+of the marine flora. He has drawn up for this work a full account of
+the marine vegetation in the Kara Sea, which will be found further
+on.
+
+[Illustration: ELPIDIA GLACIALIS (THEEL) FROM THE KARA SEA.
+Magnified three times. A. Belly. B. Back.
+MANGANIFEROUS IRON-ORE FORMATIONS FROM THE KARA SEA.
+Half the natural size. ]
+
+I shall now return to the account of our passage across this sea. On
+this subject my journal contains the following notes:
+
+_August 2nd._ Still glorious weather--no ice. The _Lena_ appears to
+wish to get away from the other vessels, and does not observe the
+flag which was hoisted as the signal agreed upon beforehand that her
+Captain should come on board, or at least bring his little vessel
+within hail. The _Fraser_ was therefore sent in pursuit, and
+succeeded in overtaking her towards night.
+
+_August 3rd._ In the morning Captain Johannesen came on board the
+_Vega_. I gave him orders to take on board Dr. Almquist and
+Lieutenants Hovgaard and Nordquist, and go with them to Beli Ostrov,
+where they should have freedom for thirty-six hours to study the
+people, animals, and plants, as they pleased; the _Lena_ was then,
+if possible, to pass through the Sound between the island and Yalmal
+to Port Dickson, where the three other vessels should be found.
+Almquist, Nordquist, and Hovgaard were already quite in order for
+the excursion; they went immediately on board the _Lena_, and were
+soon, thanks to the great power of the engine in proportion to the
+size of the vessel, far on their way.
+
+In the course of the day we met with very open and rotten ice, which
+would only have been of use to us by its moderating effect on the
+sea, if it had not been accompanied by the usual attendant of the
+border of the ice, a thick fog, which however sometimes lightened.
+Towards evening we came in sight of Beli Ostrov. This island, as
+seen from the sea, forms a quite level plain, which rises little
+above the surface of the water. The sea off the island is of an even
+depth, but so shallow, that at a distance of twenty to thirty
+kilometres from the shore there is only from seven to nine metres of
+water. According to a communication from Captain Schwanenberg, there
+is, however, a depth of three to four metres close to the north
+shore. Such a state of things, that is, a uniform depth, amounting
+near the shore to from four to ten metres, but afterwards increasing
+only gradually and remaining unchanged over very extensive areas, is
+very common in the Arctic regions, and is caused by the ice-mud-work
+which goes on there nearly all the year round. Another remarkable
+effect of the action of the ice is that all the blocks of stone to
+be found in the sea next the beach are forced up on land. The beach
+itself is formed accordingly at many places, for instance at several
+points in Matotschkin Sound, of a nearly continuous stone rampart
+going to the sea level, while in front of it there is a quite even
+sea bottom without a fragment of stone.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION FROM THE SOUTH COAST OF MATOTSCHKIN SOUND.
+Showing the origin of Stone-ramparts at the beach. ]
+
+_August 4th._ In the morning a gentle heaving indicated that the sea
+was again free of ice, at least over a considerable space to
+windward. Yesterday the salinity in the water was already diminished
+and the amount of clay increased; now the water after being filtered
+is almost drinkable. It has assumed a yellowish-grey colour and is
+nearly opaque, so that the vessel appears to sail in clay mud. We
+are evidently in the area of the Ob-Yenisej current. The ice we
+sailed through yesterday probably came from the Gulf of Obi, Yenisej
+or Pjaesina. Its surface was dirty, not clean and white like the
+surface of glacier-ice or the sea-ice that has never come in contact
+with land or with muddy river-water. Off the large rivers the ice,
+when the snow has melted, is generally covered with a yellow layer
+of clay. This clay evidently consists of mud, which has been washed
+down by the river-water and been afterwards thrown up by the swell
+on the snow-covered ice. The layer of snow acts as a filter and
+separates the mud from the water. The former, therefore, after the
+melting of the snow may form upon true sea-ice a layer of dirt,
+containing a large number of minute organisms which live only in
+fresh water.
+
+_August 5th._ Still under sail in the Kara Sea, in which a few
+pieces of ice are floating about. The ice completely disappeared
+when we came north-west of Beli Ostrov. We were several times in the
+course of the day in only nine metres of water, which, however, in
+consequence of the evenness of the bottom, is not dangerous. Fog, a
+heavy sea, and an intermittent but pretty fresh breeze delayed our
+progress.
+
+_August 6th._ At three o'clock in the morning we had land in sight.
+In the fog we had gone a little way up the Gulf of Yenisej, and so
+had to turn in order to reach our destination, Port Dickson. The
+mast-tops of the _Express_ were seen projecting over islands to the
+north, and both vessels soon anchored south of an island which was
+supposed to be Dickson's Island, but when the _Fraser_ soon after
+joined us we learned that this was a mistake. The shore, which, seen
+from our first anchorage, appeared to be that of the mainland,
+belonged in fact to the pretty extensive island, off which the haven
+itself is situated.
+
+After an excursion on land, in the course of which a covey of
+partridges was seen, and Dr. Kjellman on the diorite rocks of the
+island made a pretty abundant collection of plants, belonging partly
+to species which he had not before met with in the Arctic regions,
+we again weighed anchor in order to remove to the proper harbour.
+
+Captain Palander went before in the steam launch in order to examine
+the yet unsurveyed fairway. On the way he fell in with and killed a
+bear, an exceedingly fat and large male. Like the bear Dr. Theel
+shot here in 1875, he had only mosses and lichens in his stomach,
+and as it is scarcely probable that the bear in this region can
+catch a great many seals in summer, it is to be supposed that his
+food consists principally of vegetable substances, with the addition
+perhaps of a reindeer or two when he can succeed in getting hold of
+them. In the year 1875 we saw here an old male bear that appeared to
+pasture quite peaceably in company with some reindeer, probably with
+a view to get near enough to spring upon them. Bears must besides be
+very common in that part of the north coast of Siberia, for during
+the few days we now remained there, two more were shot, both of them
+very fat.
+
+The haven, which has now been surveyed by Lieutenant Bove, was
+discovered by me in 1875 and named Port Dickson. It is the best
+known haven on the whole north coast of Asia, and will certainly in
+the future be of great importance for the foreign commerce of
+Siberia. It is surrounded on all sides by rocky islands, and is thus
+completely sheltered. The anchorage is a good clay bottom. The haven
+may be entered both from the north and from the south-west; but in
+sailing in, caution should be used, because some rocky shoals may be
+met with which are not shown on Lieutenant Bove's sketch chart,
+which was made in the greatest haste. The water probably varies
+considerably as to its salinity with the season of the year and with
+ebb and flood tides, but is never, even at the surface, completely
+fresh. It can therefore be used in cooking only in case of the
+greatest necessity. But two streams on the mainland, one debouching
+north and the other south of the harbour, yield an abundant supply
+of good water, in case snow water cannot be obtained from any of the
+beds of snow which up to autumn are to be found at several places
+along the strand escarpments in the neighbourhood of the harbour.
+
+At our arrival six wild reindeer were seen pasturing on Dickson's
+Island; one of them was killed by Palander, the others were stalked
+unsuccessfully. Some bears, as has already been stated, were also
+seen, and everywhere among the heaps of stones there were numerous
+remains of the lemming and the fox. With these exceptions there were
+few of the higher animals. Of birds we thus saw only snow-buntings,
+which bred among the stone heaps both on the mainland and on the
+islands, a covey of ptarmigan, a large number of birds, principally
+species of Tringa and Phalaropus, but not further determined,
+eiders, black guillemots and burgomasters in limited numbers, and
+long-tailed ducks and loons in somewhat greater abundance. There are
+no "down islands," and as there are no precipitous shore cliffs
+neither are there any looneries. A shoal of fish was seen in Lena
+Sound, and fish are probably exceedingly abundant. Seals and white
+whales also perhaps occur here at certain seasons of the year in no
+small numbers. It was doubtless with a view to hunt these animals
+that a hut was occupied, the remains of which are visible on one of
+the small rocky islands at the north entrance into the harbour. The
+ruin, if we may apply the term to a wooden hut which has fallen in
+pieces, showed that the building had consisted of a room with a
+fireplace and a storehouse situated in front, and that it was only
+intended as a summer dwelling for the hunters and fishers who came
+hither during the hunting season from the now deserted _simovies_[93]
+lying farther south.
+
+I am convinced that the day will come when great warehouses and many
+dwellings inhabited all the year round will be found at Port Dickson.
+Now the region is entirely uninhabited as far as Goltschicha, although,
+as the map reproduced here shows, numerous dwelling-houses were to be
+found built along the river bank and sea-shore beyond the mouth of the
+Yenisej and as far as to the Pjaesina. They have long since been
+abandoned, in the first place in consequence of the hunting falling off,
+but probably also because even here, far away on the north coast of
+Siberia, the old simple and unpretentious habits have given way to new
+wants which were difficult to satisfy at the time when no steamers
+carried on traffic on the river Yenisej. Thus, for instance, the
+difficulty of procuring meal some decades back, accordingly before the
+commencement of steam communication on the Yenisej, led to the
+abandonment of a _simovie_ situated on the eastern bank of the river in
+latitude 72 deg. 25' north.
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF THE MOUTH OF THE YENISEJ FROM ATLAS RUSSICUS CURA
+ET OPERE ACADEMIAE IMPERIALIS SCIENTIARUM PETROPOLITANAE PETROPOLI 1745. ]
+
+The _simovies_ at the mouth of the Yenisej formed in their time the
+most northerly fixed dwelling-places of the European races.[94]
+Situated as they were at the foot of the cold _tundra_, exposed to
+continual snowstorms in winter and to close fogs during the greater
+part of summer, which here is extremely short, it seems as if they
+could not offer their inhabitants many opportunities for enjoyment,
+and the reason why this tract was chosen for a residence, especially
+in a country so rich in fertile soil as Siberia, appears to be
+difficult to find. The remains of an old _simovie_ (Krestovskoj),
+which I saw in 1875 while travelling up the river along with Dr.
+Lundstroem and Dr. Stuxberg, however, produced the impression that a
+true home life had once been led there. Three houses with
+turf-covered roofs then still remained in such a state that one
+could form an idea of their former arrangement and of the life which
+had been earned on in them. Each cabin contained a whole labyrinth
+of very small rooms; dwelling-rooms with sleeping places fixed to
+the walls, bake-rooms with immense fireplaces, bathing houses with
+furnaces for vapour-baths, storehouses for train-oil with large
+train-drenched blubber troughs hollowed out of enormous tree-stems,
+blubber tanks with remains of the white whale, &c., all witnessing
+that the place had had a flourishing period, when prosperity was
+found there, when the home was regarded with loyalty, and formed in
+all its loneliness the central point of a life richer perhaps in
+peace and well-being than one is inclined beforehand to suppose.
+
+[Illustration: RUINS OF A SIMOVIE AT KRESTOVSKOJ. After a drawing by A.
+Stuxberg. ]
+
+In 1875 a "prikaschik" (foreman) and three Russian labourers lived
+all the year round at Goltschicha. Sverevo was inhabited by one man
+and Priluschnoj by an old man and his son. All were poor; they dwelt
+in small turf-covered cabins, consisting of a lobby and a dirty
+room, smoked and sooty, with a large fireplace, wooden benches along
+the walls, and a sleeping place fixed to the wall, high above the
+floor. Of household furniture only the implements of fishing and the
+chase were numerously represented. There were in addition pots and
+pans, and occasionally a tea-urn. The houses were all situated near
+the river-bank, so high up that they could not be reached by the
+spring inundations. A disorderly midden was always to be found in
+the near neighbourhood, with a number of draught dogs wandering
+about on it seeking something to eat. Only one of the Russian
+settlers here was married, and we were informed that there was no
+great supply of the material for Russian housewives for the
+inhabitants of these legions. At least the Cossack Feodor, who in
+1875 and 1876 made several unsuccessful attempts to serve me as
+pilot, and who himself was a bachelor already grown old and
+wrinkled, complained that the fair or weaker sex was poorly
+represented among the Russians. He often talked of the advantages of
+mixed marriages, being of opinion, under the inspiration of memory
+or hope, I know not which, that a Dolgan woman was the most eligible
+_purti_ for a man disposed to marry in that part of the world.
+
+A little farther south, but still far north of the limit of trees,
+there are, however, very well-to-do peasants, who inhabit large
+_simovies_, consisting of a great number of houses and rooms, in
+which a certain luxury prevails, where one walks on floor-coverings
+of skins, where the windows are whole, the sacred pictures covered
+with plates of gold and silver, and the walls provided with mirrors
+and covered with finely coloured copper-plate portraits of Russian
+Czars and generals. This prosperity is won by traffic with the
+natives, who wander about as nomads on the _tundra_ with their
+reindeer herds.
+
+The cliffs around Port Dickson consist of diorite, hard and
+difficult to break in pieces, but weathering readily. The rocky
+hills are therefore so generally split up that they form enormous
+stone mounds. They were covered with a great abundance of lichens,
+and the plains between them yielded to Dr. Kjellman the following
+phanerogamous plants:
+
+ Cineraria frigida RICHARDS.
+ Erigeron uniflorus L.
+ Saussurea alpina DC.
+ Taraxacum phymatocarpum J. VAHL.
+ Gymnandra Stelleri CH. &c. SCHL.
+ Pedicularis sudetica WILLD.
+ Pedicularis hirsuta L.
+ Pedicularis Oederi VAHL.
+ Eritrichium villosum BUNGE.
+ Myosotis silvatica HOFFM.
+ Astragalus alpinus L.
+ Oxytropis campestris (L.) DC.
+ Dryas octopetala L.
+ Sieversia glacialis B. BR.
+ Potentilla emarginata PURSH.
+ Saxifraga oppositifolia L.
+ Saxifraga bronchialis L.
+ Saxifraga Hirculus L.
+ Saxifraga stellaris L.
+ Saxifraga nivalis L.
+ Saxifraga hieraciifolia WALDST. &c. KIT.
+ Saxifraga punctata L.
+ Saxifraga cernua L.
+ Saxifraga rivularis L.
+ Saxifraga caespitosa L.
+ Chrysosplenium alternifolium L.
+ Rhodiola rosea L.
+ Parrya macrocarpa R. BR.
+ Cardamine pratensis L.
+ Cardamine bellidifolia L.
+ Eutrema Edwardsii R. BR.
+ Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR.
+ Draba alpina L.
+ Draba oblongata (R. BR.) DC.
+ Draba corymbosa R. BR.
+ Draba Wahlenbergii HN.
+ Draba altaica (LEDEB.) BUNGE.
+ Papaver nudicaule L.
+ Banunculus pygmaeus WG.
+ Ranunculus hyperboreus ROTTB.
+ Ranunculus lapponicus L.
+ Ranunculus nivalis L.
+ Ranunculus sulphureus SOL.
+ Ranunculus affinis R. BR.
+ Caltha palustris L.
+ Wahlbergella apetala (L.) FR.
+ Stellaria Edwardsii R. BR.
+ Cerastium alpinum L.
+ Alsine arctica FENZL.
+ Alsine macrocarpa FENZL.
+ Alsine rubella WG.
+ Sagina nivalis FR.
+ Oxyria digyna (L.) HILL.
+ Rumex arcticus TRAUTV.
+ Polygonum viviparum L.
+ Polygonum Bistorta L.
+ Salix polaris WG.
+ Festuca rubra L.
+ Poa cenisea ALL.
+ Poa arctica R BR.
+ Glyceria angustata B. BR.
+ Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+ Catabrosa concinna TH. FR.
+ Colpodium latifolium E. BR.
+ Dupontia Fisheri E. BR.
+ Koeleria hirsuta GAUD.
+ Aira caespitosa L.
+ Alopecurus alpinus SM.
+ Eriophorum angustifolium ROTH.
+ Eriophorum vaginatum L.
+ Eriophorum Scheuchzeri HOPPE.
+ Carex rigida GOOD.
+ Carex aquatilis WG.
+ Juncus biglumis L.
+ Luzula hyperborea R BR.
+ Luzula arctica BL.
+ Lloydia serotina (L.) REICHENB.
+ Banunculus pygmaeus WG.
+
+[Illustration: SIEVERSIA GLACIALIS R. BR. From Port Dickson. ]
+
+Our botanists thus made on land a not inconsiderable collection,
+considering the northerly position of the region. On the other hand
+no large algae were met with in the sea, nor was it to be expected
+that there would, for the samples of water taken up with Ekman's
+instrument showed that the salinity at the bottom was as slight as
+at the surface, viz. only 0.3 per cent. The temperature of the water
+was also at the time of our visit about the same at the bottom as at
+the surface, viz. +9 deg. to +10 deg.. In spring, when the snow
+melts, the water here is probably quite fresh, in winter again cold,
+and as salt as at the bottom of the Kara Sea. Under so variable
+hydrographical conditions we might have expected an exceedingly
+scanty marine fauna, but this was by no means the case. For the
+dredgings in the harbour gave Dr. Stuxberg a not inconsiderable
+yield, consisting of the same types as those which are found in the
+salt water at the bottom of the Kara Sea. This circumstance appears
+to show that certain evertebrate types can endure a much greater
+variation in the temperature and salinity of the water than the
+algae, and that there is a number of species which, though as a rule
+they live in the strongly cooled layer of salt water at the bottom
+of the Kara Sea, can bear without injury a considerable diminution
+in the salinity of the water and an increase of temperature of about
+12 deg..
+
+For the science of our time, which so often places the origin
+of a northern form in the south, and _vice versa_, as the foundation
+of very wide theoretical conclusions, a knowledge of the types
+which can live by turns in nearly fresh water of a temperature
+of +10 deg., and in water cooled to -2.7 deg. and of nearly the same
+salinity as that of the Mediterranean, must have a certain
+interest. The most remarkable were, according to Dr. Stuxberg,
+the following: a species of Mysis, _Diastylis Rathkei_ KR.,
+_Idothea entomon_ LIN., _Idothea Sabinei_ KR., two species of
+Lysianassida, _Pontoporeia setosa_ STBRG., _Halimedon brevicalcar_
+GOES, an Annelid, a Molgula, _Yoldia intermedia_ M. SARS,
+_Yoldia_ (?) _arctica_ GRAY, and a Solecurtus.
+
+Driftwood in the form both of small branches and pieces of roots,
+and of whole trees with adhering portions of branches and roots,
+occurs in such quantities at the bottom of two well-protected coves
+at Port Dickson, that the seafarer may without difficulty provide
+himself with the necessary stock of fuel. The great mass of the
+driftwood which the river bears along, however, does not remain on
+its own banks, but floats out to sea to drift about with the marine
+currents until the wood has absorbed so much water that it sinks, or
+until it is thrown up on the shores of Novaya Zemlya, the north
+coast of Asia, Spitzbergen or perhaps Greenland.
+
+[Illustration: EVERTIBRATIS FROM PORT DICKSON.
+A. Yoldia arctica GRAY One and two-thirds of natural size.
+B. Diastylis Rathkei KR Magnified three times. ]
+
+Another portion of the wood sinks, before it reaches the sea,
+often in such a way that the stems stand upright in the river
+bottom, with one end, so to say, rooted in the sand. They may
+thus be inconvenient for the navigation, at least at the shallower
+places of the river. A bay immediately off Port Dickson
+was almost barred by a natural palisade-work of driftwood
+stems.
+
+_August 7th._ The _Vega_ coaled from the _Express_. In the evening
+the _Lena_ arrived, 36 hours after the _Vega_ had anchored, that is
+to say, precisely at the appointed time. Concerning this excursion.
+Dr. Almquist reports:
+
+ "On the 2nd August we--Horgaard, Nordquist and I--went on
+ board the _Lena_ to make an excursion to Beli Ostrov. We
+ were to land on the south-western headland and there
+ undertake botanical and zoological researches. Thereafter
+ we were to direct some attention to the opposite shore of
+ Yalmal and visit the Samoyeds living there.
+
+ "We left the _Vega_ at eleven o'clock forenoon. In the
+ course of the day we saw here and there in the south
+ scattered ice, and at half-past ten at night we ran into a
+ large belt, about 300 metres broad, of scattered ice,
+ which lay stretched out from N.E. to S.W. It was passed
+ without difficulty. In the course of the night we now and
+ then fell in with a little scattered ice, and in the
+ morning with a belt of masses of ice of considerable
+ dimensions; sounding constantly in 10 to 3-1/2 metres
+ water we succeeded, notwithstanding the fog and rain, in
+ finding the straits between Beli Ostrov and the mainland,
+ and on the 3rd August at eleven o'clock forenoon we
+ anchored a little to the east of the southern extremity of
+ the island. The _Lena_ lay in 3-1/2 metres water, about an
+ English mile out to sea. The water was shallow for so
+ great a distance from the beach that we had to leave our
+ boat about 300 metres out to sea and wade to land.
+
+ "Beli Ostrov consists entirely of fine sand, and only on
+ that part of the beach which is washed by the sea-water
+ did we see any stones as large as walnuts; higher up we
+ did not find a piece of stone even of the size of the
+ nail. The highest point of the island appears to be
+ scarcely three metres above the surface of the sea. That
+ part of the island over which the sea water washes, that
+ is, the beach and the deep bays which indent the land here
+ and there, shows the fine sand bare, without trace of
+ vegetation. Where the ground rises a little, it becomes
+ covered with a black and white variegated covering of
+ mosses and lichens; scattered among which at long
+ intervals are small tufts of grass. First somewhat higher
+ up, and properly only round the marshy margins of the
+ numerous small fresh-water lakes and in hollows and bogs,
+ is the ground slightly green. The higher plants are
+ represented by only 17 species, all small and stunted,[95]
+ most of them rising only some few lines above the sand.
+ Very few plants reached a height of 15 centimetres. No
+ kind of willow was found, nor any flower seen of any other
+ colour than green or white.
+
+ "The lichen-flora too was scanty. No species showed any
+ great luxuriance, and seldom did the black and white
+ lichen-crust produce any 'apothecium,' The
+ lichen-vegetation was most abundant on the driftwood of
+ the beach and on the tufts in the marshes. The larger
+ lichens, as the reindeer and Iceland lichens, occurred
+ very sparingly. About 80 species were found. The land
+ evertebrates were so sparingly represented, that only
+ three diptera, one species of hymenoptera, and some insect
+ larvae and spiders could be collected. Only podurae were
+ found in great abundance; they completely covered the
+ whole ground at the beach.
+
+ "Several herds of reindeer were seen, but we did not
+ succeed in getting within range of them. A little fish of
+ the Cottus family was caught by Nordquist in a ditch which
+ was in connection with the sea. Driftwood still fresh was
+ found in great abundance, and farther up on land here and
+ there lay a more rotten stem.
+
+ "Rain and fog rendered impossible any determination of
+ position. During night we went across the sound and
+ anchored about an English mile and a half from the shore
+ of Yalmal, right opposite some Samoyed tents which we
+ discovered a little inland. In the same unfavourable
+ weather as that of the day before we attempted to land
+ there, but found the water too shallow. First pretty far
+ to the east we succeeded in reaching the beach at a place
+ where the land rose out of the sea with a steep bank about
+ nine metres high. Above the bank, which consisted of loose
+ clay, we found a plain with the appearance of a rich
+ watered _tundra_, full of marshes and streams, and
+ therefore presenting a very green appearance. In order to
+ meet with the Samoyeds we now went westwards, passing
+ several rivulets which cut deeply into the land and had
+ high banks, until after half an hour's walking we came to
+ a broad but not very deep river, which it was impossible
+ to ford. We therefore returned to our boat with the view
+ of seeking a landing-place on the other side of the river;
+ but as the _Lena's_ distance from land was considerable
+ and the breeze was freshening, the captain considered that
+ the time at our disposal did not permit us to undertake so
+ long an excursion.
+
+ "So far as we may judge from our hasty visit, the
+ vegetation on this part of Yalmal struck us as being
+ remarkably abundant. The high banks especially were richly
+ covered by phanerogamous plants and lichens, and would
+ have deserved a closer examination. Our cursory
+ observations of the plants here may however be interesting
+ for comparison with the flora of Beli Ostrov; we collected
+ and noted the higher plants[96] and about 40 species of
+ lichens. Nordquist found that the fauna resembled that of
+ the neighbouring island, and collected besides two species
+ of Coleoptera.
+
+ "After lying 26 hours in the sound we weighed anchor again
+ and went westwards, following a channel with ten to
+ sixteen metres water. We could not find its course farther
+ to the east, and were compelled, although we were near the
+ eastern extremity of Beli Ostrov, to turn in order to pass
+ out through the western entrance of the sound. We saw a
+ quantity of stranded ice on the north coast of the island,
+ which, seen from the sea, did not present any
+ dissimilarity to the part which we had visited. On the 7th
+ August we arrived at Port Dickson."
+
+From Lieutenant Hovgaard's report on this excursion, a map is given
+here of Beli Ostrov and the neighbouring coast of Yalmal, in which I
+have named the sound between the island and the mainland after
+MALYGIN, one of the gallant Russian seamen who first sailed through
+it nearly a century and a half ago.
+
+Yalmal has been visited by Europeans so seldom, and their
+observations are scattered in printed papers so inaccessible, that
+it may perhaps not be out of place here to collect the most
+important facts which are known regarding this peninsula, along with
+the necessary bibliographical references.
+
+First as to its name, it is sometimes also written "Yelmert
+Land,"[97] but this is quite incorrect.
+
+"Yalmal" is of Samoyed origin, and has, according to a private
+communication from the well-known philologist Dr. E.D. EUROPAEUS,
+the distinctive meaning "land's-end." YELMERT again was a boatswain
+with the Dutch whale-fisher VLAMINGH, who in 1664 sailed round the
+northern extremity of Novaya Zemlya to Barents' winter haven, and
+thence farther to the south-east. Vlamingh himself at his
+turning-point saw no land, though all signs showed that land ought
+to be found in the neighbourhood; but several of the crew thought
+they saw land, and the report of this to a Dutch mapmaker, DICK
+REMBRANTSZ. VAN NIEROP, led to the introduction of the supposed land
+into a great many maps, commonly as a large island in the Kara Sea.
+This island was named Yelmert Land. The similarity between the names
+Yelmert Land and Yalmal, and the doubt as to the existence of the
+Yelmert Island first shown on the maps, have led to the transfer of
+the name Yelmert Land to the peninsula which separates the Gulf of
+Obi from the Kara Sea. It is to be remarked, however, that the name
+Yalmal is not found in the older accounts of voyages from the
+European waters to the Obi. The first time I met with it was in the
+narrative of Skuratov's journey in 1737, as the designation of the
+most north-easterly promontory of the peninsula which now bears that
+name.
+
+Yalmal's grassy plains offer the Samoyeds during summer reindeer
+pastures which are highly valued, and the land is said to have a
+very numerous population in comparison with other regions along the
+shores of the Polar Sea, the greater portion, however, drawing
+southward towards winter with their large herds of reindeer. But the
+land is, notwithstanding this, among the most imperfectly known
+parts of the great Russian empire. Some information regarding it we
+may obtain from sketches of the following journeys:
+
+SELIFONTOV, 1737. In the months of July and August the surveyor
+Selifontov travelled in a reindeer sledge along the coast of the
+Gulf of Obi as far as to Beli Ostrov. About this journey
+unfortunately nothing else has been published than is to be found in
+LITKE, _Viermalige Reise_, &c., Berlin, 1835, p. 66, and WRANGEL,
+_Sibirische Reise_, Berlin, 1839, p. 37.
+
+SUJEFF, in 1771, travelled under the direction of Pallas over the
+southern part of Yalmal from Obdorsk to the Kara Sea, and gives an
+instructive account of observations made during his journey in
+PALLAS, _Reise durch verschiedene Provinzen des russischen Reiches_,
+St. Petersburg, 1771--76, III. pp. 14--35.
+
+KRUSENSTERN, 1862. During his second voyage in the Kara Sea, which
+ended with the abandonment of the ship _Yermak_ on the coast of
+Yalmal in about 69 deg. 54' N.L., Krusenstern junior escaped with
+his crew to the shore, reaching it in a completely destitute
+condition. He had lost all, and would certainly have perished if he
+had not near the landing-place fallen in with a rich Samoyed, the
+owner of two thousand reindeer, who received the shipwrecked men in
+a very friendly way and conveyed them with his reindeer to Obdorsk,
+distant in a straight line 500, but, according to the Samoyed's
+reckoning, 1,000 versts. In the sketch of Krusenstern's travels, to
+which I have had access, there is unfortunately no information
+regarding the tribe with which he came in contact during this
+remarkable journey.[98]
+
+WALDBURG-ZEIL and FINSCH, 1876. A very full and exceedingly
+interesting description of the natural conditions in the
+southernmost part of the peninsula is to be found in the accounts of
+Count Waldburg-Zeil and Dr. Finsch's journey in the year 1876.[99]
+
+SCHWANENBERG, 1877. Captain Schwanenberg landed on the north part of
+Beli Ostrov during the remarkable voyage which he made in that year
+from the Yenisej to St. Petersburg. No traces of men, but some of
+reindeer and bears, were visible. The sea was sufficiently deep
+close to the shore for vessels of light draught, according to a
+private communication which I have received from Captain
+Schwanenberg.
+
+THE SWEDISH EXPEDITION, 1875. During this voyage we landed about the
+middle of the west coast of Yalmal. In order to give an idea of the
+nature of the country, I make the following extract from my
+narrative of the voyage,[100] which has had but a limited
+circulation:
+
+"In the afternoon of the 8th August I landed, along with Lundstroem and
+Stuxberg, on a headland projecting a little from Yalmal, on the north
+side of the mouth of a pretty large river. The landing place was
+situated in lat. 72 deg. 18', long. 68 deg. 42'. The land was bounded here by a
+low beach, from which at a distance of one hundred paces a steep bank
+rose to a height of from six to thirty metres. Beyond this bank there is
+an extensive, slightly undulating plain, covered with a vegetation which
+indeed was exceedingly monotonous, but much more luxuriant than that of
+Vaygats Island or Novaya Zemlya. The uniformity of the vegetation is
+perhaps caused, in a considerable degree, by the uniform nature of the
+terrain. There is no solid rock here. The ground everywhere consists of
+sand and sandy clay, in which I could not find a stone so large as a
+bullet or even as a pea, though I searched for a distance of several
+kilometres along the strand-bank. Nor did the dredge bring up any stones
+from the sea-bottom off the coast, a circumstance which, among other
+things, is remarkable, because it appears to show that the strand-ice
+from the Obi and Yenisej does not drift down to and melt in this part of
+the Kara Sea. Nor do the sand beds contain any sub-fossil shells, as is
+the case with the sand beds of the Yenisej _tundra_. 'Noah's wood' also
+appears to be absent here. To judge from our observations at this place,
+the peninsula between the Gulf of Obi and the Kara Sea thus differs very
+essentially from the _tundra_ lying east of the Yenisej.
+
+[Illustration: PLACE OF SACRIFICE ON YALMAL. After a drawing by A.N.
+Lundstroem. ]
+
+"We saw no inhabitants, but everywhere along the beach numerous
+traces of men--some of them barefoot--of reindeer, dogs and Samoyed
+sleighs, were visible. On the top of the strand-bank was found a
+place of sacrifice, consisting of forty-five bears' skulls of
+various ages placed in a heap, a large number of reindeer skulls,
+the lower jaw of a walrus, &c. From most of the bears' skulls the
+canine teeth were broken out, and the lower jaw was frequently
+entirely wanting. Some of the bones were overgrown with moss and lay
+sunk in the earth; others had, as the adhering flesh showed, been
+placed there during the present year. In the middle of the heap of
+bones stood four erect pieces of wood. Two consisted of sticks a
+metre in length with notches cut in them, serving to bear up the
+reindeer and bears' skulls, which were partly placed on the points
+of the sticks or hung up by means of the notches, or spitted on the
+sticks by four-cornered holes cut in the skulls. The two others,
+which clearly were the proper idols of this place of sacrifice,
+consisted of driftwood roots, on which some carvings had been made
+to distinguish the eyes, mouth, and nose. The parts of the pieces of
+wood, intended to represent the eyes and mouth, had recently been
+besmeared with blood, and there still lay at the heap of bones the
+entrails of a newly-killed reindeer. Close beside were found the
+remains of a fireplace, and of a midden, consisting of reindeer
+bones of various kinds and the lower jaws of bears.
+
+"As the sandy slopes of the beach offered no suitable breeding-place
+for looms, black guillemots, or other sea-fowl, and there were no
+islands along the coast which could serve as breeding-places for
+eiders and other species of geese which breed in colonies, the
+abundant bird-life of the Polar Sea was wanting here. At the mouth
+of the river, however, large flocks of eiders and long-tailed ducks
+flew about, and on the sandy banks along the shore, flocks of
+_Calidris arenaria_ and a Tringa or two ran about restlessly seeking
+their food. The solitude of the _tundra_ was broken only by a couple
+of larks and a pair of falcons (_Falco peregrinus_) with young.
+Traces of reindeer were also seen, and two fox-traps set on the
+strand-bank showed that foxes occur in these regions in sufficient
+numbers to be the object of capture.
+
+"Later in the afternoon, when some solar altitudes had been taken,
+in order to determine the geographical position of the place, we
+rowed back to our vessel and sailed on, keeping at some distance
+from the coast, and at one place passing between the shore and a
+long series of blocks of ground-ice, which had stranded along the
+coast in a depth of nine to sixteen metres. During night we passed a
+place where five Samoyed tents were pitched, in whose neighbourhood
+a large number of reindeer pastured. The land was now quite low, and
+the sea had become considerably shallower. The course was therefore
+shaped for the N.W., in which direction deeper water was soon met
+with. Notwithstanding the slight salinity and high temperature
+(+ 7.7 deg.) of the surface water a _Clio borealis_ and a large
+number of Copepoda were taken at the surface."
+
+The excursion now described and Almquist's and Hovgaard's landing in
+1878 were, as far as I am aware, the only occasions on which
+naturalists have visited the northern part of that peninsula which
+separates the Kara Sea from the Obi. The Norwegian hunters also
+visit the place seldom, the main reasons being the inaccessibility
+of the shallow east coast, and the want of harbours. They now,
+however, land occasionally to take in water, and perhaps to barter
+the tobacco they have saved from their rations, knives they have no
+use for, and old-fashioned guns, gunpowder, lead, &c., for the
+products of the Samoyeds' reindeer husbandry, hunting and fishing.
+At first the natives fled when they saw the Norwegians coming, and,
+when they could not make their escape, they saluted them with great
+humility, falling on their knees and bending their heads to the
+earth, and were unwilling to enter into any traffic with them or to
+show them their goods. But since the Samoyeds observed that the
+Norwegians never did them any harm, the mistrust and excessive
+humility have completely disappeared. Now a visit of Europeans is
+very agreeable to them, partly for the opportunity which it offers
+of obtaining by barter certain articles of necessity, luxury, or
+show, partly perhaps also for the interruption thereby caused in the
+monotony of the _tundra_ life. When the walrus-hunters row or sail
+along that open coast, it often happens that natives run backwards
+and forwards on the shore, and by signs eagerly invite the
+foreigners to land; if they do so, and there are any wealthy
+Samoyeds in the neighbourhood, there immediately begins a grand
+entertainment, according to the customs of the people, with more
+than one trait reminding us of the sketches from the traditionary
+periods of the civilised nations.
+
+What I have stated here is about all that we know of Yalmal, and we
+see from this that a very promising, yet untouched field for
+researches in ethnography and natural history here lies before
+future travellers to the Yenisej.
+
+
+What sort of winter is there at the mouth of the Yenisej? We have
+for the present no information on this point, as no scientific man
+has wintered there. But on the other hand we have a very exciting
+narrative of the wintering of the Fin, NUMMELIN, at the Briochov
+Islands in the Yenisej in lat. 70 deg. 48' north.
+
+[Illustration: "JORDGAMMOR" ON THE BRIOCHOV ISLANDS. After a sketch
+by the Author. ]
+
+I visited the place on the 27th August 1875. It consisted of a fishing
+post, occupied only in summer, and at that season of the year very
+attractive, surrounded as it is by luxuriant vegetation of grass and
+bushes. The houses were situated on a sound running between the Briochov
+Islands, which form the northernmost group of the labyrinth of islands
+which occupy the channel of the Yenisej between 69-1/2 deg. and 71 deg. N.L. At
+the time of our visit the fishing was over for the season and the
+place deserted. But two small houses and a number of earth-huts
+(_jordgammor_), all in good repair, stood on the river bank and gave
+evidence, along with a number of large boats drawn up on land, and
+wooden vessels intended for salting fish, of the industry which had
+been carried on there earlier in the summer. It was at this place that
+Nummelin passed one of the severest winters that Arctic literature has
+to record.[101]
+
+In 1876 M. Sidoroff, well known for the lively interest which he
+takes in navigation in the Siberian waters, had a ship _Severnoe
+Sianie_ (the _Aurora_) built and fitted out at Yeniseisk, in order
+to carry goods from the Yenisej to Europe. The vessel was placed
+under the command of a Russian sea-captain, Schwanenberg. Under him
+Nummelin served as mate, and the vessel had a crew of eighteen men,
+most of whom had been exiled to Siberia for crime. In consequence of
+various mishaps the vessel could not get farther the first year than
+to the neighbourhood of the mouth of the Yenisej, where it was left
+in winter quarters at the place which has been named above. Nummelin
+and four exiles remained on board, while Schwanenberg and the rest
+of the crew returned to Yeniseisk on the 28th September. Frost had
+already commenced. During the two following weeks the temperature
+kept in the neighbourhood of the freezing point; clear weather
+alternating with snow and rain.
+
+On the 5th of October the crew withdrew to their winter quarters,
+having previously collected driftwood and placed it in heaps in
+order that they might easily find it under the snow.
+
+On the 16th October the thermometer at eight o'clock in the morning
+showed -4.5 deg. and afterwards sank lower every day, until after the 21st
+October the mercury for some days was constantly under -10 deg.. On the 26th
+October the temperature was -18 deg., but in the beginning of November it
+rose again to -2 deg.. On the 6th November it sank again to -17 deg., but rose
+on the 11th to -3.5 deg.. On the 14th November the thermometer showed
+-23.5 deg., on the 21st -29.5 deg.. Next day in the morning it stood at -32 deg.,
+and in the evening at -37 deg., but these figures were arrived at _by
+guess_, the instrument not indicating so low temperatures. This
+temperature of -30 deg. to -32 deg., varying with frozen mercury, continued till
+the end of November, when it rose again to -11.5 deg.. At Christmas there
+was again a temperature of -31 deg. and the six following days the mercury
+was frozen, with which the new year came in. The temperature then rose
+again to -20 deg., but soon sank so that from the 16th January the mercury
+was frozen for five days. On the 22nd January the reading was -9 deg.. On
+the 26th the mercury froze again, and on the 29th the temperature was
+-6 deg.. During the month of February the temperature never rose above -24 deg.;
+the mercury was frozen on the 20th, 25th, 26th, and 28th. This was the
+case on the 1st, 3rd, 6th, 7th, 14th, 16th, and 18th March; on the 22nd
+March the reading was -7 deg., on the 30th -29 deg.. April began with -31 deg., but
+the temperature afterwards rose, so that on the 16th it reached -11 deg. and
+varied between -21 deg. and -6 deg. (the 25th). On the 2nd May the reading in
+the morning and evening was -12 deg., at mid-day -2 deg. to -5 deg.. On the 8th May
+it was +0, on the 17th -10.5 deg., on the 31st +0.5 deg.. June began with +1.5 deg..
+On the 8th the reading at mid-day was +11 deg., on the morning and evening
+of the same day +2 deg. to +3 deg.. During the remainder of June and the month
+of July the temperature varied between +2 deg. and +21 deg..
+
+It was in such circumstances that Nummelin and his four companions
+lived in the ill-provided house of planks on the Little Briochov
+Island. They removed to it, as has been already said, on the 5th
+October; on the 20th the ice was so hard frozen that they could walk
+upon it. On the 26th snowstorms commenced, so that it was impossible
+to go out of the house.
+
+The sun was visible for the last time on the 21st November, and it
+reappeared on the 19th January. On the 15th May the sun no longer
+set. The temperature was then under the freezing point of mercury.
+That the upper edge of the sun should be visible on the 19th January
+we must assume a horizontal refraction of nearly 1 deg.. The
+islands on the Yenisej are so low that there was probably a pretty
+open horizon towards the south.
+
+Soon after Christmas scurvy began to show itself. Nummelin's
+companions were condemned and punished criminals, in whom there was
+to be expected neither physical nor moral power of resistance to
+this disease. They all died, three of scurvy, and one in the attempt
+to cross from the Briochov Islands to a _simovie_ at Tolstoinos. In
+their stead Nummelin succeeded in procuring two men from Tolstoinos,
+and later on one from Goltschicha. On the 11th May a relief party
+arrived from the south. It consisted of three men under the mate
+Meyenwaldt, whom Sidoroff had sent to help to save the vessel. They
+had first to shovel away the snow which weighed it down. The snow
+lay nearly six metres deep on the river ice, which was three metres
+thick. When they at last had got the vessel nearly dug out, it was
+buried again by a new snowstorm.
+
+In the middle of June the ice began to move, and the river water
+rose so high that Nummelin, Meyenwaldt, and four men, along with two
+dogs, were compelled to betake themselves to the roof of the hut,
+where they had laid in a small stock of provisions and fuel. Here
+they passed six days in constant peril of their lives.
+
+The river had now risen five metres; the roof of the hut rose but a
+quarter of a metre above the surface of the swollen river, and was
+every instant in danger of being carried away by a floating piece of
+ice. In such a case a small boat tied to the roof was their only
+means of escape.
+
+The whole landscape was overflowed. The other houses and huts were
+carried away by the water and the drifting ice, which also
+constantly threatened the only remaining building. The men on its
+roof were compelled to work night and day to keep the pieces of ice
+at a distance with poles.
+
+The great inundation had even taken the migrating birds at unawares.
+For long stretches there was not a dry spot for them to rest upon,
+and thus it happened that exhausted ptarmigan alighted among the men
+on the roof; once a ptarmigan settled on Meyenwaldt's head, and a
+pair on the dogs.
+
+On the 23rd June the water began to fall, and by the 25th it had
+sunk so low that Nummelin and his companions could leave the roof
+and remove to the deserted interior of the house.
+
+The narrative of Nummelin's return to Europe by sea, in company with
+Schwanenberg, belongs to a following chapter.
+
+
+[Footnote 87: _Les moeurs et usages des Ostiackes_, par Jean Bernard
+Muller, Capitaine de dragon au service de la Suede, pendant sa
+captivite en Siberie (_Recueil de Voiages au Nord._ T. VIII.,
+Amsterdam, 1727, p. 389). ]
+
+[Footnote 88: I come to this conclusion from the appearance of the
+strata as seen from the sea, and from their nature on Vaygats Island
+and the west coast of Novaya Zemlya. So far as I know, no geologist
+has landed on this part of the east coast. ]
+
+[Footnote 89: Sometimes, however, icebergs are to be met with in the
+most northerly part of the Kara Sea and on the north coast of Novaya
+Zemlya, whither they may drive down from Franz Josef Land or from
+other yet unknown Polar lands lying farther north. ]
+
+[Footnote 90: In most of the literary narratives of Polar journeys
+colossal icebergs play a very prominent part in the author's
+delineations both with the pencil and the pen. The actual fact,
+however, is that icebergs occur in far greater numbers in the seas
+which are yearly accessible than in those in which the advance of
+the Polar travellers' vessel is hindered by impenetrable masses of
+ice. If we may borrow a term from the geography of plants to
+indicate the distribution of icebergs, they may be said to be more
+_boreal_ than _polar_ forms of ice. All the fishers on the coast of
+Newfoundland, and most of the captains on the steamers between New
+York and Liverpool, have some time or other seen true icebergs, but
+to most north-east voyagers this formation is unknown, though the
+name iceberg is often in their narratives given to glacier
+ice-blocks of somewhat considerable dimensions. This, however, takes
+place on the same ground and with the same justification as that on
+which the dwellers on the Petchora consider Bolschoj-Kamen a very
+high mountain. But although no true icebergs are ever formed at the
+glaciers so common on Spitzbergen and also on North Novaya Zemlya,
+it however often happens that large blocks of ice fall down from
+them and give rise to a swell, which may be very dangerous to
+vessels in their neighbourhood. Thus a wave caused by the falling of
+a piece of ice from a glacier on the 23rd (13th) of June, 1619,
+broke the masts of a vessel anchored at Bell Sound on Spitzbergen,
+threw a cannon overboard, killed three men, and wounded many more
+(Purchas, iii., p. 734). Several similar adventures, if on a smaller
+scale, I could relate from my own experience and that of the
+walrus-hunters. Care is taken on this account to avoid anchoring too
+near the perpendicular faces of glaciers. ]
+
+[Footnote 91: It may, however, be doubted whether the _whole_ of the
+Kara Sea is completely frozen over in winter. ]
+
+[Footnote 92: Already in 1771 one of Pallas' companions, the student
+Sujeff, found large algae in the Kara Sea (Pallas, _Reise_. St.
+Petersburg, 1771--1776, ii. p. 34). ]
+
+[Footnote 93: Dwellings intended both for winter and summer
+habitation. ]
+
+[Footnote 94: The most northerly fixed dwelling-place, which is at
+present inhabited by Europeans, is the Danish commercial post
+Tasiusak, in north-western Greenland, situated in 73 deg. 24' N.L.
+How little is known, even in Russia, of the former dwellings at the
+mouth of the Yenisej may be seen from _Neueste Nachrichten ueber die
+noerdlichste Gegend von Sibirien zwischen den Fluessen Pjassida und
+Chatanga in Fragen und Autworten abgefasst. Mit Einleitung und
+Anmerkungen vom Herausgeber_ (K.E. v. Baer und Gr. v. Helmersen,
+_Beitraege sur Kenntniss des russischen Reiches_, vol. iv. p. 269.
+St. Petersburg, 1841). ]
+
+[Footnote 95: The collections made here were after our return
+determined by Dr. Kjellman, who has communicated the following list:
+
+ Saxifraga stellaris L.
+ Saxifraga cernua L.
+ Saxifraga rivularis L.
+ Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR.
+ Stellaria humifusa ROTTB.
+ Sagina nivalis FR.
+ Arctophila pendulina (LAEST.) ANDS.
+ Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+ Dupontia Fisheri R. BR.
+ Aira caespitosa L.
+ Hierochloa pauciflora R. BR.
+ Eriophorum russeolum FR.
+ Eriophorum Scheuchzeri HOPPE.
+ Carex salina WG.
+ Carex ursina DESV.
+ Luzula hyperborea R. BR.
+ Luzula arctica BL. ]
+
+[Footnote 96: These according to Dr. Kjellman's determination are:
+
+ Saxifraga cernua L.
+ Saxifraga caespitosa L.
+ Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR.
+ Draba alpina L.
+ Ranunculus sulphureus SOL.
+ Ranunculus nivalis L.
+ Ranunculus pygmaeus WG.
+ Ranunculus lapponicus L.
+ Ranunculus borealis TRAUTV.
+ Stellaria Edwardsii R. BR.
+ Salix glauca L.
+ Arctophila pendulina (LAEST.) AND.
+ Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+ Catabrosa concinna TH. FR.
+ Dupontia Fisheri R. BR.
+ Calamagrostis lapponica L.
+ Carex salina WG.
+ Carex rigida GOOD.
+ Eriophorum russeolum FR.
+ Luzula arcuata SM. f. hyperborea R. BR.
+ Lloydia serotina (L.) REICHENB.
+ ]
+
+[Footnote 97: On the maps in Linschoten's work already quoted,
+printed in 1601, and in Blavii _Atlas Major_ (1665, t. i. pp. 24,
+25), this land is called "Nieu West Vrieslant" and "West Frisia
+Nova," names which indeed have priority _in print_, but yet cannot
+obtain a preference over the inhabitants' own beautiful name. ]
+
+[Footnote 98: Paul von Krusenstern, _Skizzen aus seinem Seemannsleben_.
+Hirschberg in Silesia. Farther on I intend to give a more detailed
+account of von Krusenstern's two voyages in the Kara Sea. ]
+
+[Footnote 99: _Deutsche Geogr. Blaetter_ von Lindemann Namens d.
+Geogr. Gesellsch., Bremen. I. 1877. II. 1878. O. Finsch, _Reise nach
+West-Sibirien im Jahre 1876_. Berlin, 1879. A bibliographical list
+has been drawn up by Count von Waldburg-Zeil under the title,
+_Litteratur-Nachweis fur das Gebiet des unteren, Ob_. ]
+
+[Footnote 100: Nordenskioeld, _Redogoerelse for en expedition till
+mynningen af Jenisej och Sibirien ar 1875_, Bih. till Kongl.
+Vet.-Ak. Handl, vol. iv., No. 1, p. 38-42. ]
+
+[Footnote 101: I give the particulars of this wintering partly after
+communications made to me in conversation by Nummelin, partly after
+_Goeteborgs Handelsoch Sjofartstidning_ for the 20th and 21st
+November, 1877. This _first_ and, as far as I know, only detailed
+narrative of the voyage in question, was dictated to the editor of
+that journal, _reference being made to the log_ by Schwanenberg and
+Nummelin. Schwanenberg had come to Gothenburg some days before with
+his Yeniseisk-built vessel. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+ The history of the North-east Passage from 1556 to 1878--
+ Burrough, 1556--Pet and Jackman, 1580--The first voyage of
+ the Dutch, 1594--Oliver Brunel--The second voyage, 1595--
+ The third voyage, 1596--Hudson, 1608--Gourdon, 1611--Bosman,
+ 1625--De la Martiniere, 1653--Vlamingh, 1664--Snobberger,
+ 1675--Roule reaches a land north of Novaya Zemlya--Wood
+ and Flawes, 1676--Discussion in England concerning the state
+ of the ice in the Polar Sea--Views of the condition of the
+ Polar Sea still divided--Payer and Weyprecht, 1872-74.
+
+
+The sea which washes the north coast of European Russia is named by
+King Alfred (_Orosius_, Book I. Chaps, i. ii.) the Quaen Sea (in
+Anglo-Saxon _Cwen Sae_),[102] a distinctive name, which
+unquestionably has the priority, and well deserves to be retained.
+To the inhabitants of Western Europe the islands, Novaya Zemlya and
+Vaygats, first became known through Stephen Burrough's voyage of
+discovery in 1556. Burrough therefore is often called the discoverer
+of Novaya Zemlya, but incorrectly. For when he came thither he found
+Russian vessels, manned by hunters well acquainted with the
+navigable waters and the land. It is clear from this that Novaya
+Zemlya had then already been known to the inhabitants of Northern
+Russia for such a length of time that a very actively prosecuted
+hunting could arise there. It is even probable that in the same way
+as the northernmost part of Norway was already known for a thousand
+years back, not only to wandering Lapps, but also to Norwegians and
+Quaens, the lands round Yugor Schar and Vaygats were known several
+centuries before Burrough's time, not only to the nomad Samoyeds on
+the mainland, but also to various Beorma or Finnish tribes. Probably
+the Samoyeds then, as now, drove their reindeer herds up thither to
+pasture on the grassy plains along the coast of the Polar Sea, where
+they were less troubled by the mosquito and the reindeer fly than
+further to the south, and probably the wild nomads were accompanied
+then, as now, by merchants from the more civilised races settled in
+Northern Russia. The name Novaya Zemlya (New Land), indicates that
+it was discovered at a later period, probably by Russians, but we
+know neither when nor how.[103] The narrative of Stephen Burrough's
+voyage, which, like so many others, has been preserved from oblivion
+by Hakluyt's famous collection, thus not only forms a sketch of the
+first expedition of West-Europeans to Novaya Zemlya, but is also the
+principal source of our knowledge of the earliest Russian voyages to
+these regions. I shall on this account go into greater detail in the
+case of this voyage than in those of the other voyages that will be
+referred to here.
+
+It is self-evident that the new important commercial treaties, to
+which Chancelor's discovery of the route from England to the White
+Sea led, would be hailed with great delight both in England and in
+Russia, and would give occasion to a number of new undertakings. At
+first, as early as 1555, there was formed in England a company of
+"merchant adventurers of England for the discoverie of landes,
+territories, isles, dominions, and seigniories unknowen," commonly
+called "the Muscovy Company," Sebastian Cabot, then almost an
+octogenarian, was appointed governor for the term of his natural
+life, and a number of privileges were conferred upon it by the
+rulers both of England and Russia. At the same time negotiators,
+merchants, and inquirers were sent by different ways from England to
+Russia in order to confirm the amity with that country, and more
+thoroughly examine the, at least to England, new world, which had
+now been discovered in the East. But a detailed account of these
+journeys does not enter into the plan of this work.
+
+With this, however, men were not content. They considered
+Chancelor's voyage as but the first step to something far more
+important, namely, the opening of the North-East Passage to China
+and India. While Chancelor himself the year after his return was
+sent along with several merchants to the White Sea, a further
+attempt was planned to reach the east coast of Asia by the same
+route. A small vessel, the _Searchthrift_, was fitted out for this
+purpose and placed under the command of Stephen Burrough.[104] The
+most important occurrences during the voyage were the following:--
+
+On the 3rd May/23rd April, 1556, the start was made from Ratcliffe
+to Blackwall and Grays. Here Sebastian Cabot came on board, together
+with some distinguished gentlemen and ladies. They were first
+entertained on board the vessel and gave liberal presents to the
+sailors, alms being given at the same time to a number of poor
+people, in order that they might pray for good luck and a good
+voyage; "then at the signe of the Christopher, Master Cabot and
+his friends banketted, and made them that were in the company
+great cheere; and for very joy that he had to see the towardness
+of our intended discovery, he entered into the dance himselfe,
+amongst the rest of the young and lusty company." At Orwell Burrough
+left his own vessel, in order, at the wish of the merchants,
+to make the passage to Vardoehus in the _Edward Bonaventure_.
+In the end of May he was off the North Cape, which name Burrough
+says he gave to this northernmost headland of Europe during his first
+voyage.[105] When Burrough left the _Edward Bonaventure_ and went
+on board his own vessel is not stated, but on the 17th/7th June he
+replied on the _Searchthrift_ to the parting salute of the
+_Edward Bonaventure_. On the 20th/10th June Kola was reached,
+and its latitude fixed at 63 deg. 48'.[106]
+
+ "On Thursday the 21st/11th June at 6 of the clocke in the
+ morning, there came aboord of vs one of the Russe Lodiaes,
+ rowing with twentie oares, and there were foure and
+ twentie men in her. The master of the boate presented me
+ with a great loafe of bread, and six rings of bread, which
+ they call Colaches, and foure dryed pikes, and a peck of
+ fine otemeale, and I gave vnto the Master of the boate a
+ combe, and a small glasse. He declared vnto me that he was
+ bound to Pechora, and after that I made to drinke, the
+ tide being somewhat broken, they gently departed. The
+ Master's name was Pheother (Feodor).... Thursday (the
+ 28th/18th June) we weyed our ankers in the Riuer Cola, and
+ went into the Sea seuen or eight leagues, where we met
+ with the winde farre Northerly, that of force it
+ constrained vs to goe againe backe into the sayd riuer,
+ where came aboord of vs sundry of their Boates, which
+ declared unto me that they were also bound to the
+ northwards, a fishing for Morse and Salmon, and gave me
+ liberally of their white and wheaten bread.
+
+ "As we roade in this riuer, wee saw dayly comming downe
+ the riuer many of their Lodias, and they that had least,
+ had foure and twentie men in them, and at the last they
+ grew to thirtie saile of them; and amongst the rest, there
+ was one of them whose name was Gabriel, who shewed me very
+ much friendshippe, and he declared vnto mee that all they
+ were bound to Pechora, a fishing for salmons, and morses:
+ insomuch that hee shewed mee by demonstrations, that with
+ a faire winde we had seuen or eight dayes sailing to the
+ riuer Pechora, so that I was glad of their company. This
+ Gabriel promised to giue mee warning of shoales, as he did
+ indeede.... Sunday being the one and twentieth day [of
+ June, 1st July new style], Gabriel gaue mee a barrell of
+ Meade, and one of his speciall friends gaue me a barrell
+ of beere, which was caryed upon mens backs at least 2
+ miles.
+
+ "Munday we departed from the riuer Cola, with all the rest
+ of the said Lodias, but sailing before the wind they were
+ all too good for vs:[107] but according to promise, this
+ Gabriel and his friend did often strike their sayles, and
+ taryed for us forsaking their owne company. Tuesday at an
+ Eastnortheast sunne we were thwart of Cape St. John.[108]
+ It is to be vnderstood, that from the Cape S. John vnto
+ the riuer or bay that goeth to Mezen, it is all sunke
+ land, and full of shoales and dangers, you shall haue
+ scant two fadome water and see no land. And this present
+ day wee came to an anker thwart of a creeke, which is 4 or
+ 5 leagues to the northwards of the sayd Cape, into which
+ creeke Gabriel and his fellow rowed, but we could not get
+ in: and before night there were aboue 20 saile that went
+ into the sayd creeke, the wind being at the Northeast. We
+ had indifferent good landfang. This afternoone Gabriel
+ came aboord with his skiffe, and then I rewarded him for
+ the good company that he kept with vs ouer the Shoales,
+ with two small iuory combes, and a steele glasse with two
+ or three trifles more, for which he was not ungratefull.
+ But notwithstanding, his first company had gotten further
+ to the Northwards. Wednesday being Midsummer day we sent
+ our skiffe aland to sound the creeke, where they found it
+ almost drie at a low water. And all the Lodias within were
+ on ground. (In consequence of the threatening appearance
+ of the weather Burrough determined to go into the bay at
+ high water. In doing so he ran aground, but got help from
+ his Russian friends.) Gabriel came out with his skiffe,
+ and so did sundry others also, shewing their good will to
+ help us, but all to no purpose, for they were likely to
+ have bene drowned for their labour, in so much that I
+ desired Gabriel to lend me his anker, because our owne
+ ankers were too big for our skiffe to lay out, who sent me
+ his owne, and borrowed another also and sent it vs."
+
+[Illustration: RUSSIAN "LODJA." After G. de Veer. ]
+
+After much trouble Burrough succeeded in getting his vessel off the
+shoal, and then sought for a better anchorage on the other side of
+Cape St. John.
+
+ "Friday (6th July/26th June) at afternoone we weyed, and
+ departed from thence, the wether being mostly faire, and
+ the winde at East-southeast, and plied for the place where
+ we left our cable and anker, and our hawser, and as soone
+ as we were at an anker the foresaid Gabriel came aboord of
+ vs, with 3 or foure more of their small boats, and brought
+ with them of their Aquauitae and Meade, professing unto me
+ very much friendship, and reioiced to see vs againe,
+ declaring that they earnestly thought that we had bene
+ lost. This Gabriel declared vnto me that they had saued
+ both the ankers and our hauser, and after we had thus
+ communed, I caused 4 or 5 of them to goe into my cabbin,
+ where I gaue them figs and made them such cheere as I
+ could. While I was banketing of them, there came another
+ of their Skiffes aboord with one who was a Kerill
+ (Karelian), whose name afterwards I learned, and that he
+ dwelt in Colmogro, and Gabriel dwelled in the towne of
+ Cola, which is not far from the river's mouth. This
+ foresaid Keril said vnto me that one of the ankers which I
+ borrowed was his. I gave him thanks for the lone of it,
+ thinking it had bene sufficient. And as I continued in our
+ accustomed maner, that if the present which they brought
+ were worth enterteinment, they had it accordingly, he
+ brought nothing with him, and therfore I regarded him but
+ litle. And thus we ended, and they took their leaue and
+ went ashore. At their comming ashore, Gabriel and Keril
+ were at vnconvenient words, and by the eares, as I
+ vnderstand; the cause was because the one had better
+ enterteinment than the other; but you shal vnderstand that
+ Gabriel was not able to make his party good, because there
+ were 17 lodias of the Kerils company who tooke his part,
+ and but 2 of Gabriel's company. The next high water
+ Gabriel and his company departed from thence, and rowed to
+ their former company and neighbours, which were in number
+ 28 at the least, and all of them belonging to the river
+ Cola. And as I vnderstood Keril made reckoning that the
+ hauser which was fast in his anker should have bene his
+ owne, and at first would not deliver it to our boat,
+ insomuch that I sent him worde that I would complain vpon
+ him, whereupon he deliuered the hauser to my company. The
+ next day being Saturday, I sent our boat on shore to fetch
+ fresh water and wood, and at their comming on shore this
+ Keril welcomed our men most gently, and also banketed
+ them, and in the meanetime caused some of his men to fill
+ our baricoes with water, and to help our men to beare wood
+ into their boat; and then he put on his best silke coate,
+ and his collar of pearles and came aboorde againe, and
+ brought his present with him: and thus having more respect
+ vnto his present than to his person, because I perceiued
+ him to be vain-glorious, I bade him welcome and gaue him a
+ dish of figs; and then he declared vnto me that his father
+ was a gentleman, and that he was able to shew me pleasure,
+ and not Gabriel, who was but a priest's sonne."
+
+After Burrough has given account of a storm, during which he lost a
+jolly boat, which he had purchased at Vardoehus, and by which they
+were detained some time in the neighbourhood of Cape St. John (whose
+latitude was fixed at 66 deg. 50') he continues:--
+
+ "Saturday (the 14/24th July) at a Northnorthwest sunne the
+ wind came at Eastnortheast, and then we weied, and plied
+ to the Northwards, and as we were two leagues shot past
+ the Cape, we saw a house standing in a valley, which is
+ dainty to be seene in those parts and by and by I saw
+ three men on the top of the hil. Then I iudged them, as it
+ afterwards proued, that they were men which came from some
+ other place to set traps to take vermin[109] for their
+ furres, which trappes we did perceiue very thicke alongst
+ the shore as we went."
+
+The 14th to the 19th July, new style, were passed on the coast of
+Kanin Nos.[110] On the 19th at noon Burrough was in lat. 68 deg.
+40' north. On Friday, the 10/20th July another storm appeared to
+threaten.
+
+ "And as I was musing what was best to be done, I saw a
+ sail come out of a creeke under the foresayd Caninoz,
+ which was my friend Gabriel, who forsook his harborough
+ and company, and came as neere us as he might, and pointed
+ vs to the Eastwards, and then we weyed and followed him.
+ Saturday we went eastsoutheast and followed Gabriel, and
+ he brought vs into an harborough called Morgiouets, which
+ is 30 leagues from Caninoz. This morning Gabriel saw a
+ smoke on ye way, who rowed vnto it with his skiffe, which
+ smoke was two leagues from the place where we road; and at
+ a Northwest sunne he came aboord again, and brought with
+ him a Samoed,[111] which was but a young man; his apparell
+ was then strange vnto vs, and he presented me with three
+ young wild geese, and one young barnacle."
+
+On the 24th/14th July Burrough sailed past Dolgoi Island, and the
+following day entered the mouth of the Petchora, the latitude of
+which was fixed at 69 deg. 10'.[112] On the 30th/20th they sailed
+out again over sandbanks in only five feet of water, and thanked God
+that their vessel was of so light draught. The day after ice was met
+with for the first time. On the 4th Aug./6th July in lat. 70 deg.
+20' north, they had the meeting already described with an enormous
+whale.[113] Somewhat later on the same day the _Searchthrift_
+anchored in a good haven between two islands, situated in 70 deg.
+42' N.L.[114] They were named by Burrough St. James's Islands.
+
+ "Tuesday, the 7th Aug./29th July we plyed to the Westwards
+ alongst the shoare, the wind being at Northwest, and as I
+ was about to come to anker, we saw a sail comming about
+ the point whereunder we thought to have ankered. Then I
+ sent a skiffe aboorde of him, and at their comming aboord,
+ they tooke acquaintance of them, and the chiefe man said
+ hee had bene in our company in the riuer Cola, and also
+ declared vnto them that we were past the way which should
+ bring vs to the Ob. This land, sayd he, is called Nova
+ Zembla, that is to say, the New Land; and then he came
+ aboord himselfe with his skiffe he told me the like ... he
+ made me also certaine demonstrations of the way to the Ob.
+ I gave him a steele glasse, two pewter spoons, and a paire
+ of veluet sheathed knives; and then he seemed somewhat the
+ more willing to tary and shewed me as much as he knew for
+ our purpose; he also gave me 17 wild geese.... This man's
+ name was Loshak. Wednesday, as we plied to Eastwards, we
+ espied another saile, which was one of this Loshak's
+ company, and we bare roome and spake with him, who in like
+ sort tolde us of the Ob, as the other had done.... Friday
+ (the 10th Aug./31st July) the gale of winde began to
+ increase, and came Westerly withall, so that by a
+ Northwest sunne we were at an anker among the Islands of
+ Waigats, where we saw two small lodias; the one of them
+ came aboord of us and presented me with a great loafe of
+ bread; and they told me they were all of Colmogro, except
+ one man that dwelt at Pechora, who seemed to be the
+ chiefest among them in killing of the Morse.[115] There
+ were some of their company on shoare which did chase a
+ white beare ouer the high clifs into the water, which
+ beare the lodia that was aboord of us killed in our sight.
+ This day there was a great gale of wind at North, and we
+ saw so much ice driving a seaboord that it was then no
+ going to sea."
+
+During the first days of August the vessel lay for the most part in
+company with or in the neighbourhood of Loshak, who gave them
+information about the Samoyeds, after which Burrough visited their
+sacrificial places.[116]
+
+ "Tuesday (the 14/4th) August we turned for the harborough
+ where Loshak's barke lay,[117] where, as before, we road
+ vnder an Island. And there he came aboord of vs and said
+ unto me: if God send wind and weather to serve, I will go
+ to the Ob with you, because the Morses were scant at these
+ Islands of Vaigats; but if he could not get to the riuer
+ of Ob, then he sayd hee would goe to the riuer of
+ Narainzay,[118] where the people were not altogether so
+ savage as the Samoyds of the Ob are: hee shewed me that
+ they will shoot at all men to the vttermost of their
+ power, that cannot speake their speech."
+
+On the 15/5th of August much ice was seen to drift towards the haven
+where the vessel lay, wherefore Burrough removed back to the place
+where he had lain a few days before, and whose latitude he now found
+to be 70 deg. 25'. Loshak left him unexpectedly the following day,
+while Burrough was taking solar altitudes, and on the 19/9th
+Burrough too weighed anchor to sail south along the coast of
+Vaygats. After sailing about in these waters for a time, and being
+exposed to a severe storm with an exceedingly heavy sea, Burrough,
+on the 3rd Sept./23rd Aug., determined to turn. On the 21st/11th
+September he arrived at Colmogro, where he wintered with a view to
+continue his voyage next year to the Obi. This voyage, however, was
+abandoned, because he instead went westwards in order to search for
+two of the ships which accompanied Chancelor, and which had been
+lost during the return voyage from Archangel.[119]
+
+From this narrative we see that a highly developed Russian or
+Russian-Finnish navigation was carried on as early as the middle of
+the fifteenth century between the White Sea, the Petchora, Vaygats,
+and Novaya Zemlya, and that at that time the Russians or Finns even
+sailed to the Obi. The sketch, which Burrough gives of the Russian
+or Russian-Finnish hunters, shows, besides, that they were brave and
+skilful seamen, with vessels which for the time were very good, and
+even superior to the English in sailing before the wind. With very
+few alterations this sketch might also be applied to the present
+state of things in these regions, which shows that they continue to
+stand at a point which was then high, but is now low. Taking a
+general view of matters, it appears as if these lands had rather
+fallen behind than advanced in well-being during the last three
+hundred years.
+
+To judge by a letter from the Russian Merchant Company, which was
+formed in London, it was at his own instance that Stephen Burrough
+in 1557 sailed from Colmogro, not to Obi, but to the coast of
+Russian Lapland to search for the lost vessels.[120] The following
+year the English were so occupied with their new commercial treaties
+with Russia and with the fitting out of Frobisher's three
+expeditions to the north-west, that it was long before a new attempt
+was made in the direction of the north-east, namely till ARTHUR
+PETS' voyage in 1580.[121] He was the first who penetrated from
+Western Europe into the Kara Sea, and thus brought the solution of
+the problem of the North-East Passage to the Pacific a good way
+forward. The principal incidents of this voyage too must therefore
+be briefly stated here.
+
+PET and JACKMAN, the former in the _George_, the latter in the
+_William_, sailed from Harwich on the 9th June/30th May, 1580. On
+the 2nd July/22nd June they doubled the North Cape, and on the
+12th/2nd July, Pet was separated from Jackman after appointing to
+meet with him at "Verove Ostrove or Waygats." On the 15/5th land was
+in sight, the latitude having the preceding day been ascertained to
+be 71 deg. 38'. Pet was thus at Gooseland, on the west coast of
+Novaya Zemlya. He now sailed E.S.E., and fell in with ice on the
+16/6th July. On the 20/10th July, land was seen, and the vessel
+anchored at an island, probably one of the many small islands in the
+Kara Port, where wood and water were taken on board.
+
+On the 24/14th July, Pet was in the neighbourhood of land in 70 deg. 26'. At
+first he thought that the land was an island, and endeavoured to sail
+round it, but as he did not succeed in doing so, he supposed it to be
+Novaya Zemlya. Hence he sailed in different directions between S.W. and
+S.E., and was on the 26/16th in 69 deg. 40' N.L. Next day there was
+lightning with showers of rain. Pet believed himself now to be in
+Petchora Bay, and after sighting, on the 28/18th July, the headland
+which bounds the mouth of the river on the north-east, he sailed, it
+would seem, between this headland and the Selenetz Islands into the
+great bay east of Medinski Savorot. Here he made soundings on the
+supposition that the sound between Vaygats Island and the mainland would
+open out at this place, but the water was found to be too shallow, even
+for a boat. Pet now sailed past Yugor Schar along the coast of Vaygats
+towards Novaya Zemlya, to a bay on the west coast of Vaygats Island,
+where he anchored between two small islands, which were supposed to be
+Woronski Ostrov. _The entrance to an excellent haven was indicated on
+both sides by two crosses._[122] On the islands there was abundance of
+driftwood, and on one of them was found a cross, at the foot of which a
+man was buried. Pet inscribed his name on the cross, and likewise on a
+stone at the foot of the cross, "in order that Jackman, if he came
+thither, might know that Pet had been there." In the afternoon Pet again
+weighed anchor, doubled the western extremity of Vaygats Island, and
+continued his voyage, following all along the coast of Vaygats, first to
+the north and north-east, then to the south, between an ice-field and
+the land, until the ice came so close to the shore that the vessel could
+make no headway, when he anchored in a good haven by an island which lay
+on the east side of Vaygats in the neighbourhood of the mainland. It was
+perhaps the island which in recent maps is called Mestni Island. Pet was
+thus now in the Kara Sea.[123] The latitude given--69 deg. 14'--shows even,
+if it is correct, that he went far into the bay at the mouth of the Kara
+river. Here Pet fell in with his comrade Jackman, from whom he had
+parted on the coast of Kola, and of whose voyage during the interval we
+know nothing. When the vessels met they were both damaged by ice. As,
+in addition, the sea to the north and east was barred by compact masses
+of ice, the captains, after deliberating with the inferior officers,
+determined to return. They had, also, during the return voyage, to
+contend with formidable ice obstacles, until, on the 25/15th August, in
+Lat. 69 deg. 49' north, near the southeastern extremity of Vaygats they met
+with open water. They sailed along the east coast of Vaygats through the
+Kara Port, which was passed on the 27/17th August. Hence the course was
+shaped for Kolgujev Island, on whose sandbanks both vessels ran aground,
+but were soon got off again without loss. The latitude of the sandbanks
+was correctly fixed at 68 deg. 48'.
+
+On the 1st Sept./22nd Aug. _William_ was again lost sight of.[124]
+On the 8th Sept./29th Aug. the _George_ anchored in Tana Fiord, on
+which there was a town named Hungon.[125] Two days afterwards the
+_George_ doubled the North Cape, and on the 5th Nov./26th Oct. again
+anchored at Ratcliffe.
+
+Pet and Jackman were the first north-east explorers who ventured
+themselves in earnest amongst the drift-ice. In navigating among ice
+they showed good judgment and readiness of resource, and in the
+history of navigation the honour falls to them of having commanded
+the first vessels from Western Europe that forced their way into the
+Kara Sea. It is therefore without justification that BARROW says of
+them that they were but indifferent navigators.[126]
+
+With Pet and Jackman's voyage the English North-east Passage expeditions
+were broken off for a long time. But the problem was, instead, taken up
+with great zeal in Holland. Through the fortunate issue of the war of
+freedom with Spain, and the incitement to enterprise which civil
+freedom always brings along with it, Holland, already a great industrial
+and commercial state, had begun, towards the close of the sixteenth
+century, to develop into a maritime power of the first rank. But
+navigation to India and China was then rendered impossible for the
+Dutch, as for the English, by the supremacy of Spain and Portugal at
+sea, and through the endeavours of these countries to retain the sole
+right to the commercial routes they had discovered. In order to become
+sharers in the great profits which commerce with the land of silks and
+perfumes brought with it, it therefore appeared to be indispensable to
+discover a new sea route north of Asia or America to the Eastern seas.
+If such a route had been actually found, it was clear that the position
+of Holland would have been specially favourable for undertaking this
+lucrative trade. In this state of things we have to seek for the reason
+of the delight with which the Dutch hailed the first proposal to force a
+passage by sea north of Asia to China or Japan. Three successive
+expeditions were at great expense fitted out for this purpose. These
+expeditions did not, indeed, attain the intended goal--the discovery of
+a north-eastern sea route to Eastern Asia, but they not only gained for
+themselves a prominent place in the history of geographical discovery,
+but also repaid a hundred fold the money that had been spent on them, in
+part directly through the whale-fishing to which they gave rise, and
+which was so profitable to Holland, and in part indirectly through the
+elevation they gave to the self-respect and national feeling of the
+people. They compared the achievements of their countrymen among the ice
+and snow of the Polar lands to the voyage of the Argonauts, to
+Hannibal's passage of the Alps, and to the campaign of the Macedonians
+in Asia and the deserts of Libya (see, for instance, BLAVIUS. _Atlas
+major_, Latin edition, t. i., pp. 24 and 31.) As these voyages together
+present the grandest attempts to solve the problem that lay before the
+_Vega_ expedition, I shall here give a somewhat detailed account of
+them.
+
+[Illustration: DUTCH SKIPPER. After G. de Veer. ]
+
+THE FIRST DUTCH EXPEDITION, 1594.--This was fitted out at the expense of
+private persons, mainly by the merchants BALTHASAR MUCHERON, JACOB
+VALCKE, and FRANCISCUS MAELSON. The first intention was to send out only
+two vessels with the view of forcing a passage through the sound at
+Vaygats towards the east, but on the famous geographer PLANCIUS
+representing that the route north of Novaya Zemlya was that which would
+lead most certainly to the desired goal, other two were fitted out, so
+that no fewer than four vessels went out in the year 1594 on an
+exploratory expedition towards the north. Of these, two, viz. a large
+vessel, specially equipped, it would appear, for the northern waters,
+called the _Mercurius_, and commanded by WILLEM BARENTS,[127] and a
+common fishing-sloop, attempted the way past the northern extremity of
+Novaya Zemlya. The two others, viz. the _Swan_ of Zeeland, commanded by
+CORNELIS CORNELISZ. NAY, and the _Mercurius_ of Enkhuizen, commanded by
+BRANDT YSBRADTSZ. TETGALES, were to pass through the sound at Vaygats
+Island.
+
+All the four vessels left the Texel on the 15/5th June, and eighteen
+days later arrived at Kilduin in Russian Lapland, a place where at
+that time vessels, bound for the White Sea, often called. Here the
+two divisions of the expedition parted company.
+
+Barents sailed to Novaya Zemlya, which was reached on the 14/4th
+July in 73 deg. 25'; the latitude was determined by measuring the
+altitude of the midnight sun at an island which was called Willem's
+Island. Barents sailed on along the coast in a northerly direction,
+and two days afterwards reached the latitude of 75 deg. 54' north.
+On the 19/9th July there was a remarkable chase of a Polar bear. The
+bear was fallen in with on land and was pierced by a bullet, but
+notwithstanding this he threw himself into the water, and swam with
+a vigour "that surpassed all that had been heard of the lion or
+other wild animal." Some of the crew pursued him in a boat, and
+succeeded in casting a noose round his neck in order to catch him
+living, with a view to carry him to Holland. But when the bear knew
+that he was caught "he roared and threw himself about so violently
+that it can scarcely be described in words." In order to tire him
+they gave him a little longer line, rowing forward slowly the while,
+and Barents at intervals struck him with a rope. Enraged at this
+treatment, the bear swam to the boat, and caught it with one of his
+forepaws, on which Barents said: "he wishes to rest himself a
+little." But the bear had another object in view, for he cast
+himself into the boat with such violence that half his body was soon
+within it. The sailors were so frightened that they rushed to the
+fore and thought that their last hour was come. Fortunately the bear
+could make no further advance, because the noose that was thrown
+round his neck had fastened in the rudder. A sailor taking courage,
+now went aft and killed the bear with the stroke of an axe. The skin
+was sent to Amsterdam. On account of this occurrence the place was
+called "Bear Cape."
+
+[Illustration: CAPTURE OF A POLAR BEAR. After G. de Veer. ]
+
+Barents sailed on towards the north and north-east, past the place
+which he called Cruys Eylandt (Cross Island)[128] and Cape Nassau, a
+name which has been retained in recent maps, to the latitude of 77 deg.
+55', which was reached on the 23rd/13th July. Here from the
+mast-top an ice-field was seen, which it was impossible to see
+beyond, which compelled Barents to turn. However, he still remained
+in these northern regions, waiting for a better state of the ice,
+till the 8th August/29th July, when the vessel was due west of a
+promontory situated in latitude 77 deg. north, which was named Ice
+Cape. Some gold-glittering stones were found here on the ground.
+Such _finds_ have played a not inconsiderable _role_ in the history
+of Arctic voyages, and shiploads of worthless ore have on several
+occasions been brought home. On the 16th August/31st July, while
+sailing among the Orange Islands, they saw 200 walruses on land. The
+sailors attacked them with axes and lances, without killing a single
+walrus, but they succeeded during the attempt to kill them in
+striking out several tusks, which they carried home with them.
+
+Convinced that he could not reach the intended goal by this northern
+route, Barents determined, after consulting with his men, to turn
+south and sail to Vaygats. While sailing down, Barents, in latitude
+71 deg. north, makes the remark that he was now probably at a
+place where OLIVER BRUNEL[129] had been before, and which had been
+named by him Costinsark, evidently the present Kostin Schar, a
+Russian name still in use for the sound which separates Meschduschar
+Island from the main island. It ought to be observed, however, that
+on old maps Matotschkin Schar is often marked with some perversion
+of the word Kostin Schar.
+
+South of "St. Laurens Bay,"[130] in 70-3/4 deg., Barents, on the
+21st/11th August, found upon a headland across erected, and in the
+neighbourhood of it three wooden buildings, the hull of a Russian
+vessel and several sacks of meal, and at the same place some graves,
+all clearly remains of some Russian salmon-fishers. On the 25/15th
+August he arrived at Dolgoi Island, where he fell in with the two
+other vessels from Zeeland and Enkhuizen that had come thither
+shortly before. All the four vessels sailed back thence to Holland,
+arriving there in the middle of September. The narrative of this
+voyage closes with the statement that Barents brought home with him
+a walrus, which had been fallen in with and killed on the drift-ice.
+Barents during this journey discovered and explored the northern
+part of Novaya Zemlya, never before visited by West-European
+seafarers.
+
+The two other vessels, that left the Texel at the same time as
+Barents, also made a remarkable voyage, specially sketched by the
+distinguished voyager JAN HUYGHEN VAN LINSCHOTEN.[131]
+
+The vessels were manned by fifty men, among them two interpreters--a
+Slav, CHRISTOFFEL SPLINDLER, and a Dutch merchant, who had lived
+long in Russia, FR. DE LA DALE. Provisions for eight months only
+were taken on board. At first Nay and Tetgales accompanied Barents
+to Kilduin, which island is delineated and described in considerable
+detail in Linschoten's work.
+
+[Illustration: JAN HUYGHEN VAN LINSCHOTEN. Born in 1563 at Haarlem,
+died in 1611 at Enkhuizen. After a portrait in his work,
+_Navigatio in Orientalem sive Lusitanorum Indiam_, Hagae Comitis, 1590. ]
+
+[Illustration: KILDUIN, IN RUSSIAN LAPLAND, IN 1504. After Linschoten. ]
+
+[Illustration: Russian Map of the North Polar Sea from the beginning of
+the 17th century, published in Holland in 1612 by Isaac Massa ]
+
+On the 12th/2nd July Nay and Tetgales sailed from Kilduin for
+Vaygats Island. Three days afterwards they fell in with much
+drift-ice. On the 20/10th they arrived at Toxar, according to
+Linschoten's map an island on the Timan coast, a little west of the
+entrance to Petchora. They there met with a Russian _lodja_, whose
+captain stated that he believed, after hearsay, that the Vaygats
+Sound[132] was continually covered with ice, and that, when it was
+passed, men came to a sea which lay to the south of, and was warmer
+than, the Polar Sea. Some other Russians added, the following day,
+that it was quite possible to sail through Vaygats Sound, if the
+whales and walruses, that destroy all vessels that seek to pass
+through, did not form an obstacle; that the great number of rocks
+and reefs scarcely permitted the passage of a vessel; and finally,
+that the Grand Duke had ordered three vessels to attempt the
+passage, but that they had all been crushed by ice.
+
+On the 22nd/12th July there came to Toxar hunters from the White
+Sea, who spoke another language than the Russians, and belonged to
+another race of men--they were evidently Finns or Karelians. A large
+number of whales were seen in the haven, which gave occasion to a
+remark by Linschoten that whale-fishing ought to be profitable
+there. After the ice had broken up, and crosses with inscriptions
+giving information of their movements had been erected on the shore,
+they sailed on. On the 31/21st July they sighted Vaygats. They
+landed at a headland marked with two crosses, and there fell in with
+a native, clad in much the same way as a Kilduin Lapp, who soon took
+to flight. Other headlands marked with crosses were afterwards
+visited, and places where idols were found set up by hundreds.
+Linschoten also landed on that Idol Cape which was visited during
+the voyage of the _Vega_. There were then from three to four hundred
+wooden idols, which, according to Lindschoten's description, were
+very similar in appearance to those we saw. They were so ill made,
+says he, that one could scarcely guess that they were intended to
+represent men. The visage was very broad, the nose projecting, there
+were two holes in place of the eyes, and another hole represented
+the mouth. Five, six, or seven faces were often found carved on one
+and the same stock "perhaps intended to represent a whole family."
+Many Russian crosses were also erected there. Some days later they
+found on the south shore of the sound a small house filled with
+idols, much better made than the former, with eyes and paps of
+metal. While the Dutch were employed in examining this collection of
+idols, a reindeer sledge was driven forward in which sat a man armed
+with a bow. When he saw the foreigners, he called loudly, on which a
+number of sledges with about thirty men drove out of a valley and
+endeavoured to surround the Dutch. They now fled in haste to their
+boat, and when it had left the beach the Samoyeds shot at it with
+their arrows, but without hitting it. This bloodless conflict is, so
+far as we know, the only one that took place between the natives and
+the north-east voyagers. The latter are thus free from the great
+bloodguiltiness which attaches to most of those, who in the
+fifteenth and sixteenth centuries made voyages of discovery in
+southern regions.
+
+Some days later, on the 10th August/31st July, the Dutch had a
+friendly meeting with the Samoyeds, who gave them very correct
+information concerning the state of the land and the sea, telling
+them that "after ten or twelve days they would meet with no more
+ice, and that summer would last six or seven weeks longer." After
+the Dutch had learned all they could from these "barbarians, who had
+greater skill in managing their bow than a nautical gnomon, and
+could give better information regarding their hunting than about the
+navigable water," they took their departure. When one of the sailors
+hereupon blew a horn, the savages were so frightened, that they
+begun to take to flight, but, quieted by the assurance that the
+blast of the horn was only a sign of friendship, they returned and
+on the beach saluted the departing strangers, bowing themselves to
+the earth with uncovered heads and crossed hands.
+
+On the 11th/1st August the Dutch, full of hope, sailed into the Kara
+Sea, or, as they called it, the "North Tartaric Ocean." They soon
+fell in with ice, on which account on the 13th/3rd they sought
+protection under Mestni Island (Staten Eiland). Here they found a
+sort of rock crystal resembling diamonds in all respects except
+hardness, a disappointing circumstance which was ascribed to the
+action of cold. Here also were seen images and sacrificial places,
+but no houses and no trees.
+
+When Nay and Tetgales sailed on, they came to an extensive open sea,
+and on the 20/10th August they believed that they were off the mouth
+of the Obi. Two of its principal mouth-arms they named, after the
+vessels, "Swan" and "Mercurius," names which have since been
+forgotten. It is quite evident that the river which the Dutch took
+for the Obi was the Kara, and that the mouth-arms, Swan and
+Mercurius, were two small coast rivers which debouch from Yalmal
+into the Kara Sea.
+
+On the 21st/11th August they determined to return home, taking it
+for proved that, from the point which had been reached, it would be
+easy to double "Promontorium Tabin," and thus get to China by the
+north-east passage. A large number of whales were seen raising half
+their bodies out of the sea and spouting jets of water from their
+nostrils in the common way, which was considered a further sign that
+they had an extensive ocean before them.
+
+On the 24/14th August, Nay and Tetgales sailed again through Yugor
+Schar (Fretum Nassovicum), and the day after at three small islands,
+which were called Mauritius, Orange, and New Walcheren, they fell in
+with Barents, and all sailed home to Holland, fully convinced that
+the question of the possibility of a north-east passage to China was
+now solved. It was shown indeed, in the following year, that this
+supposition rested on quite too slight a foundation, but the voyages
+of Nay and Tetgales deserve in any case an honoured place in the
+history of navigation, for they extended considerably the knowledge
+of the northern regions through the discovery, or at least through
+the first passage of, Yogor Schar, and, like Barents, these
+seafarers must get the credit of carrying out the task assigned to
+them with skill, insight, resolution, and resource.
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF FRETUM NASSOVICUM OR YUGOR SCHAR. After
+Linschoten. ]
+
+THE SECOND DUTCH EXPEDITION, 1595.[133] After the return of the
+first expedition a report of the discoveries which had been made was
+given in to Prince MAURICE of ORANGE, JAN VAN OLDENBARNEVELT,
+Advocate of Holland, and the other authorities at home. They were so
+convinced by this report that the sea route to China was actually
+discovered, that they immediately made arrangements to send out the
+following year a flotilla of seven vessels, two from Amsterdam, two
+from Zeeland, two from Enkhuizen, and one from Rotterdam, with a
+view to open the new commercial communication.
+
+The commanders of the vessels were CORNELIS NAY (Admiral), BRANDT
+TETGALES (Second in Command), BARENTS, LAMBERT GERRITSZ. OOM, THOMAS
+WILLEMSZ., HARMAN JANSZ., and HENDRIK HARTMAN. The lieutenants were
+LINSCHOTEN, JACOB HEEMSKERK, FRANCOYS DE LA DALE, JAN CORNELISZ.,
+RIJP, and N. BUYS. Six of the vessels were laden with goods and
+coin; the seventh was to return, home with news when the fleet had
+sailed through Vaygats Sound. The great preparations, however,
+occupied so much time that it was not until the 12th/2nd July that
+the voyage could be begun. On the 22nd/12th August, Kegor on the
+Ribatschni peninsula was sighted, and on the 29/19th August the
+fleet arrived at the Sound between Vaygats and the mainland, and
+found a great deal of ice there.
+
+On the 3rd Sep./24th Aug. the Dutch met with some Russians, who told
+them that the winter had been very severe, but that the ice would in
+a short time disappear, and that the summer would still last six
+weeks. They also stated that the land to the northward, which was
+called Vaygats, was an island, separated on its north side from
+Novaya Zemlya; that it was visited in summer by natives, who towards
+winter returned to the mainland; that Russian vessels, laden with
+goods, yearly sailed through Vaygats Sound past the Obi to the river
+Gillissy (Yenisej), where they passed the winter; that the dwellers
+on the Yenisej were of the Greek-Christian religion, &c.
+
+On the 10th Sept./31st Aug. the Dutch came in contact with the
+Samoyeds south of Vaygats Sound. Their "king" received the strangers
+in a very hospitable and friendly manner, and informed them that in
+three or four weeks the cold would begin; that in some years the
+drift-ice did not disappear; that during winter the whole sound and
+the bays and coves were frozen over, but that the sea on both sides
+did not freeze; that beyond the mouth of the river Ob there were the
+mouths of two other rivers, of which the more remote was called the
+"Molconsay," the nearer, which was often visited by Russian trading
+vessels, the Gillissy; that the land continued beyond the Ob to a
+cape which projected towards Novaya Zemlya, and that beyond this
+promontory there was a great sea, which extended along Tartary to
+warm regions.[134]
+
+When the Dutch sailed into the Kara Sea they fell in with much ice,
+on which account they anchored at the island, Staten Eiland, where
+during the preceding voyage rock crystal had been found. Here two
+men were killed in the way that has already been described.[135]
+Depressed by this unfortunate occurrence and afraid to expose their
+vessels, laden with valuable goods, too late in the season, to the
+large quantity of ice which drifted about in the Kara Sea, the
+commanders determined to turn. The fleet returned to Holland without
+further adventure, passing through Vaygats Sound on the 25/15th
+September.
+
+This expedition did not yield any new contribution to the knowledge
+of our globe. But it deserves to be noted that we can state with
+certainty, with the knowledge we now possess of the ice-conditions
+of the Kara Sea, that the Dutch during both their first and second
+voyages had the way open to the Obi and Yenisej. If they had availed
+themselves of this and continued their voyage till they came to
+inhabited regions on either of these rivers, a considerable commerce
+would certainly have arisen between Middle Asia and Europe by this
+route as early as the beginning of the seventeenth century.
+
+THE THIRD DUTCH EXPEDITION, 1596-97.[136] After the unfortunate
+issue of the expedition of 1595, which had been fitted out at so
+great an expense, and which had raised so great expectations, the
+States-General would not grant the necessary funds for a third
+voyage, but they offered instead a great prize to the states or
+merchants that at their own expense should send out a vessel that
+should by the route north of Asia force a passage to Asia and
+China.[137] Encouraged by this offer the merchants of Amsterdam sent
+out two vessels, one under the command of Willem Barents and Jacob
+van Heemskerk, the other under Jan Cornelisz. Rijp. The crew were
+chosen with care, unmarried men being preferred, with the idea that
+wife and children would detract from the bravery of the members of
+the expedition and lead them to return home prematurely.
+
+[Illustration: UNSUCCESSFUL FIGHT WITH A POLAR BEAR. During the
+Second Dutch Expedition. From De Veer. ]
+
+On the 20/10th May these vessels left Amsterdam. On the 14/4th June
+they saw in lat. 71 deg. North some beautiful parhelia, which are
+found delineated in De Veer's work, and Blavii _Atlas Major_.
+
+[Illustration: Map showing Barents' Third Voyage, from _J.L. Pontani
+Rerum et urbis Amstelodamensium historia_, Amst., 1611 ]
+
+On the 15/5th June one of the crew cried out from the deck that he
+saw white swans, but on a closer examination it appeared that they
+consisted of large pieces of ice, which drifted along the edge of
+the pack.[138] On the 19/9th they discovered, north of North Cape, a
+new island, situated in latitude 74 deg. 30' North. A large bear
+was killed here, and on this account the island was called Bear
+Island. On the 29/19th they came in the 80th degree of latitude to
+another formerly unknown land, which they believed to be connected
+with Greenland. It was in fact the large group of islands, which
+afterwards obtained the name Spitzbergen. There were found here on a
+small island the eggs of a species of goose--_rotgansen_[139] which
+comes yearly to Holland in great flocks, but whose breeding place
+was before unknown. With reference to this, De Veer says that it is
+finally proved that this goose is not, as has been hitherto
+supposed, propagated in Scotland by the goose laying her eggs from
+the branches of trees overhanging the water, the eggs being broken
+in pieces against the surface of the water, and the newly hatched
+young immediately swimming about.
+
+After an unsuccessful attempt had been made to sail to the north of
+Spitzbergen the vessels proceeded southwards along the west
+coast,[140] and on the 11th/1st July came again to Bear Island. Here
+the vessels parted company, Barents sailing eastwards towards Novaya
+Zemlya, Rijp northwards towards the east coast of Spitzbergen. On
+the 27/17th July, Barents reached the west coast of Novaya Zemlya in
+latitude 73 deg. 20' North. On the 30/20th July, no further
+advance could be made for ice, which still lay close to the shore.
+During the stay here there were several adventures with bears, all
+of which, came off successfully. In consequence of ice obstacles
+their progress was exceedingly slow, so that it was not until the
+25/15th August that they reached the Orange Islands. The following
+day several of the crew ascended a high mountain, from which they
+saw open water on the other side of an island. As glad at the sight
+of the sea as the ten thousand under Xenophon, they rushed back to
+the vessel to give Barents the important news. He now did all he
+could to pass the north extremity of Novaya Zemlya. He was
+successful in doing so, and on the 31/21st a haven, situated in
+about the latitude of 76 deg. North, was reached with great
+difficulty, but all attempts to sail eastwards from it were
+unsuccessful. Finally, on the 4th Sept./25th Aug. Barents determined
+to return to Holland.
+
+[Illustration: BARENTS' AND RIJP'S VESSELS. From De Veer. ]
+
+Now, however, it was too late. The haven was blocked with drift-ice,
+which was in constant motion, several times pressed the vessel high up
+between the pieces of ice, and finally broke the rudder in pieces. It
+was now evident that it would be necessary to winter, and for this
+purpose the requisite tools, household articles, and provisions were
+landed and men sent out to examine the neighbourhood. Reindeer tracks
+were seen, and, what was more important, there were found on the beach
+large tree-stems with their roots still adhering, and other wood which
+the marine currents had drifted to this otherwise completely woodless
+region. The drift-wood was collected in large heaps that it might not be
+buried under the snow in winter. A place was chosen for a house, and
+the Dutch began to draw timber to the place. The openings in the
+drift-ice were on the 25/15th September covered with a crust of ice two
+inches thick, but on the 5th Oct./15th Sept. the ice was again somewhat
+broken up, which however was of no advantage to the imprisoned, because
+their vessel was forced up so high on a block of ground ice that it
+could not be got off. Bears were hunted almost daily. They were very
+bold and sometimes came on board the vessel. On the 15/5th October all
+ice was driven off as far as the eye could see, but the vessel still lay
+motionless on the blocks of ground ice. Round these the ice closed in
+again, to break up anew at a greater or less distance from the beach. On
+the 4th March/22nd Feb. there was still much open water visible from the
+beach, and on the 16/6th and 18/8th March, the sea appears to have been
+in one direction completely free of ice.
+
+On the 31/21st October, the crew began to remove into the house,
+where they afterwards passed the winter 1596-97 with many
+sufferings, dangers, difficulties, and privations which are
+described in De Veer's work. The crew, however, never lost courage,
+which undoubtedly was a principal cause of most of them being saved.
+The house was built on the north-east side of Novaya Zemlya, on the
+shore of Barents' Ice Haven. It was situated far to the north of any
+other place where men had previously passed the winter. The land and
+its animal life was unknown, the hard frozen, almost rock-fast and
+yet continually moving ice-covering, with which the sea was bound,
+was something quite novel, as also were the effects which long
+continued and severe cold exerts on animate and inanimate objects.
+Before the attempt was made it was not considered at all certain
+that men could actually endure the severe cold of the highest north
+and the winter night three or four months long. No wonder therefore
+that the skill and undaunted resolution of the Dutch Polar explorers
+aroused unmingled admiration among all civilised nations, and that
+the narrative of their wintering was received with unbounded
+interest and formed the subject of innumerable writings and
+reproductions both in prose and verse in almost all civilised
+languages. Only a few facts from the journal of the wintering need
+therefore be given here.
+
+[Illustration: BARENTS' HOUSE, OUTSIDE. From De Veer. ]
+
+[Illustration: BARENTS' HOUSE, INSIDE. From De Bry. ]
+
+On the 14/4th November the sun disappeared, and was again visible on
+the 3rd Feb./24th Jan. These dates have caused scientific men much
+perplexity, because in latitude 76 deg. North, the upper edge of
+the sun ought to have ceased to be visible when the sun's south
+declination in autumn became greater than 13 deg.,[141] and to
+have again become visible when the declination again became less
+than that figure; that is so say, the sun ought to have been seen
+for the last time at Barents' Ice Haven on the 27/17th October, and
+it ought to have appeared again there on the 14/4th February. It has
+been supposed that the deviation arose from some considerable error
+in counting the days, but this was unanimously denied by the crew
+who wintered.[142] The bears disappeared and reappeared with the
+sun. Instead, foxes came during winter to the building, and were
+caught for food in numbers, many on the roof of the house. In order
+to pass the time and keep up their courage, the Dutch sometimes had
+entertainments, at which the cheerfulness of the partakers had to
+make up for the meagreness of the fare. After the return of the sun
+the bears again came very close, so that there was a number of
+hunting adventures with them, all of which came off successfully.
+Several bears made themselves at home in the vessel abandoned by the
+crew, casting everything about, and broke up the hatch of the
+kitchen, covered as it was with deep snow. An attempt to eat bear's
+liver resulted in those that ate of it becoming very ill, and after
+recovery renewing their skin over the whole body. Once during severe
+cold, when pitcoal was used to warm the building, all the men in it
+were like to have died of the fumes. On one or two occasions, for
+instance on the 25/15th February, so much snow had collected outside
+the door, that it was necessary to go out by the chimney. For the
+preservation of their health the Dutch often took a vapour bath in a
+barrel fitted up for the purpose.
+
+On the 7th May/27th April the first small birds were seen, and on
+the 25/15th May Barents declared that if the vessel were not got off
+before the end of the month, they should return in boats, which were
+therefore immediately got ready. This was, however, attended with
+great difficulty, because most of the crew had during the course of
+the winter become exceedingly weak, evidently from scurvy. After the
+equipment of the boats had been completed and they had been properly
+laden with provisions, the Dutch at last started on the 23rd/13th June.
+
+A man had died on the 6th Feb./27th Jan. At beginning of the boat
+voyage Barents himself was very ill, and six days after, on the
+30/20th June, he died, while resting with his companions on a large
+floe, being compelled to do so by the drift-ice. On the same day one
+of the crew died, and on the 15/5th July another.
+
+On the 7th Aug./28 July returning Arctic explorers at St. Lawrens'
+Bay fell in with two vessels manned by Russian hunters, whose
+acquaintance the Dutchmen had made the year before, and who now
+received them with great friendliness and pity for their sufferings.
+They continued their voyage in their small open boats, and all
+arrived in good health and spirits at Kola, where they were received
+with festivities by the inhabitants. It gave them still greater joy
+to meet here Jan Cornelisz. Rijp, from whom they had parted at Bear
+Island the preceding year, and of whose voyage we know only that he
+intended to sail up along the east coast of Spitzbergen, and that,
+when this was found to be impossible, he returned home the same
+autumn.
+
+After the two boats, in which Barents' companions had travelled with
+so many dangers and difficulties from their winter haven to Russian
+Lapland, had been left in the merchant's yard[143] at Kola, as a
+memorial of the journey--the first memorial of a Polar expedition
+was thus raised at Kola--they went on board Rijp's vessel, and
+sailed in it to Holland, arriving there the 8th November/29th
+October. Sixteen men had left Holland with Barents, twelve men
+returned in safety to their native land, and among them JACOB VAN
+HEEMSKERK, a man who during the whole voyage had played a prominent
+part, and afterwards lived long enough to see the time when the
+Dutch were a match at sea for the Spaniards. For he fell as
+commander of the Dutch fleet which defeated the Spanish at Gibraltar
+on April 25, 1607.
+
+[Illustration: JACOB VAN HEEMSKERK. Born in 1567 at Amsterdam,
+died in 1607 at Gibraltar After a contemporary engraving by N.
+de Clerck. ]
+
+During Barents' third voyage Bear Island and Spitzbergen were
+discovered, and the natural conditions of the high northern regions
+during winter first became known. On the other hand, the unfortunate
+issue of the maritime expeditions sent out from Holland appears to
+have completely deterred from farther attempts to find a
+north-eastern commercial route to China and Japan, and this route
+was also now less necessary, as Houtman returned with the first
+Dutch fleet from the East Indies the same year that Barents'
+companions came back from their wintering. The problem was therefore
+seriously taken up anew for the first time during the present
+century; though during the intervening period attempts to solve it
+were not wholly wanting.
+
+For the desire to extend the White Sea trade to Siberia, and
+jealousy of the companies that had known how to procure for
+themselves a monopoly of the lucrative commerce with eastern Asia,
+still led various merchants now and then during the seventeenth
+century to send out vessels to try whether it was possible to
+penetrate beyond Novaya Zemlya. I shall confine myself here to an
+enumeration of the most important of these undertakings, with the
+necessary bibliographical references.
+
+1608. HENRY HUDSON, during his second voyage, landed on Novaya
+Zemlya at Karmakul Bay and other places, but did not succeed in his
+attempt to sail further to the east, north of this island. He made
+the voyage on account of English merchants. A narrative of it is to
+be found in _Purchas_ (iii. p. 574), and an excellent critical
+collection of all the original documents relating to Hudson's life
+and voyages in G.M. Asher's _Henry Hudson the Navigator_, London,
+1860 (Works issued by the Hakluyt Society, No. 26). It was west of
+the Atlantic that Hudson earned the laurels which gave him for all
+time so prominent a place in the history of navigation, and the sea
+there also became his grave. Eastwards he did not penetrate so far
+as his predecessors. I cannot therefore here find room for any
+account of his voyage to Novaya Zemlya; it may only be mentioned
+that two of his crew on the morning of the 25/15th of June, 1608, in
+75 deg. N.L., saw a mermaid. The following statement is taken from
+his journal: "This morning one of the crew, as he looked over the
+side, saw a mermaid. Another of his comrades came up at his call.
+She was close to the vessel's side, looking steadily at the men.
+Soon after she was thrown down by a wave. From the middle upwards
+her back and breast were like a woman's. Her body was as large as a
+man's, her skin very white, and long dark hair hung down her back.
+When she dived, they saw her tail, which resembled that of a dolphin
+and was spotted like a mackerel's. The names of the men who saw her
+were Thomas Hiller and Robert Bayner." It was probably a curious
+seal that gave occasion to this version of the old yarn.
+
+1611. WILLIAM GOURDON, with the title "appointed chief pilote for
+discoverie to Ob," brought this year a cargo of goods to Pustosersk,
+and sailed thence to Novaya Zemlya. At the mouth of the Petchora he
+saw 24 _lodjas_, manned with ten to 16 men each, bound for
+"Mangansei" east of Ob (_Purchas_, iii. pp. 530, 534). While
+attempting to get further information regarding these voyages to
+Siberia, the Muscovy Company's envoy learned that, at least as a
+rule, the question was only of carrying goods by sea to the bottom
+of Kara Bay, whence they were transported overland to Ob, advantage
+being taken of two small rivers and a lake (_Purchas_, iii. p. 539).
+But other accounts lead us to infer that the Russian _lodjas_
+actually sailed to Ob, even through Matotschkin Schar, as appears
+from statements in _Purchas_ (iii. pp. 804, 805). At the same place
+we find the statement, already quoted, of a Russian, who in 1584
+offered for fifty roubles to act as guide overland from the Petchora
+to the Ob, that a West-European ship was wrecked at the mouth of the
+Ob, and its crew killed by the Samoyeds who lived there. The Russian
+also said that it was an easy matter to sail from Vaygats to the
+mouth of the Ob.
+
+1612. The whaling captain JAN CORNELISZ. VAN HOORN endeavoured to
+sail north of Novaya Zemlya towards the east, but met with ice in
+77 deg. N.L., which compelled him to return (_Witsen_, p. 906).
+
+1625. CORNELIS BOSMAN, at the instance of the Northern Company of
+the Netherlands, with a vessel of 90 tons, manned by 24 men, and
+provisioned for two and a half years, passed through Yugor Schar
+eastwards, but fell in with so much ice in the Kara Sea that he was
+compelled to seek for a harbour in that sound. There he waited for
+more favourable conditions, but was finally compelled by storm and
+ice to return with his object unaccomplished. (S. Muller,
+_Geschiedenis der Noordsche Compagnie_, Utrecht, 1874, p. 185.)
+
+1653.[144] This year a Danish expedition was sent out to the
+North-east. An account of the voyage was given by DE LA MARTINIERE,
+surgeon to the expedition, in a work published for the first time at
+Paris in 1671, with the following title: _Voyage des Pais
+Septentrionaux. Dans lequel se void les moeurs, maniere de vivre, &c.
+superstitions des Norweguiens, Lappons, Kiloppes, Borandiens,
+Syberiens, Samojedes, Zembliens, &c. Islandois, enrichi de plusieurs
+figures_.[145] This work afterwards attained a considerable
+circulation, doubtless in consequence of Martiniere's easy style,
+contrasting so strongly with the common dry ship's-log manner, and
+the large number of wonderful stories he narrates, without the least
+regard to truth or probability. He is the Munchhausen of the
+North-east voyages. The Norse peasants, for instance, are said to be
+all slaves to the nobles, who have sovereign power over their
+property, tyrannise over their inferiors, and are prone to
+insurrection. The elks are said to be liable to falling sickness,
+and therefore fall down in convulsions when they are hunted--hence
+their name "eleend." Sailors are said to have purchased on the
+north-west coast of Norway for ten crowns and a pound of tobacco
+three knots of wind from the Lapps living there, who were all
+magicians; when the first knot was loosed, a gentle breeze arose,
+the second gave a strong gale, the third a storm, during which the
+vessel was in danger of being wrecked.[146]. Novaya Zemlya is stated
+to be inhabited by a peculiar tribe, "the Zembliens," of whom two
+were taken prisoners and carried to Copenhagen. De la Martiniere
+also got the head of a walrus, which had been harpooned with great
+difficulty; the animal was drawn as a fish with a long horn
+projecting from its head. As a specimen of the birds of Novaya
+Zemlya a penguin was drawn and described, and finally the work
+closed with a rectification of the map of the Polar Regions, which
+according to the author's ideas ought to be as represented below. I
+refer to these absurdities, because the account of Martiniere's
+voyage exerted no little influence on the older writings relating to
+the Arctic Regions.
+
+1664 and 1668. A whaling captain, WILLEM DE VLAMINGH, sailed in 1664
+round the northern extremity of Novaya Zemlya to Barents' winter
+quarters, and thence eastwards, where one of his men thought he saw
+land ("Jelmert-landt," _Witsen_, p. 902).[147] The same Vlamingh
+says that in 1668 he discovered, twenty-five miles N.N.E. of
+Kolgujev, a new island three to four miles in circumference. This
+island, which was described in great detail, and named by the
+discoverer "Witsen's Island," has not since been seen again
+(_Witsen_, p. 923).
+
+1666. In this year some vessels were sent from the Netherlands to
+the north-east. There were Jews among the owners, and the seafarers
+were furnished with letters in Hebrew, because it was believed that
+they would come in contact with some of the lost tribes of Israel.
+Nothing farther appears to have been known of the voyage, which
+undoubtedly was without result. (_Witsen_, p. 962.)
+
+[Illustration: DE LA MARTINIERE'S MAP. ]
+
+1675. A Dutch whaling captain, CORNELIS PIERSZ. SNOB-BERGER, visited
+Novaya Zemlya, on whose coast he killed three whales and six hundred
+walruses. He would probably have got still more "fish," if he had
+not in 72-1/2 deg. found an ore, which appeared to contain silver,
+gold, and other metals. Instead of blubber the skipper now loaded
+ore, which in his opinion was precious, but afterwards on being
+tested at home was found to be valueless (_Witsen_, p. 918).
+
+17th Century, year not stated. Shipmaster CORNELIS ROULE is said to
+have sailed in the longitude of Novaya Zemlya to 84-1/2 deg. or 85 deg.
+N.L. and there discovered a fjord-land, along which he sailed
+ten miles. Beyond that a large open sea was seen. From a high
+mountain situated on a sound, in which he rode, it appeared that he
+might sail one or two watches further to the north. He found there
+large numbers of birds, which were exceedingly tame (_Witsen_, p.
+920). If we take some degrees from the latitude stated, which is
+perhaps not very unreasonable in dealing with the narratives of old
+whalers, which have passed through two or three hands, Roule may, as
+far back as two hundred years ago, have reached Franz-Josef's Land,
+and sailed along its coast to a very high latitude for those
+regions.
+
+1676. WOOD and FLAWES were sent out from England by Charles II. to
+sail by the north-east passage to the Pacific. For this purpose the
+English Admiralty fitted out a vessel, the _Speedwell_, while "as
+all exploratory voyages are exposed to the possibility of disaster,"
+another small ship, the _Prosperous_, was purchased and handed over
+to the expedition by private gentlemen.[148] The command of the
+first vessel was given to Captain Wood, the chief promoter of the
+undertaking, and the other vessel was commanded by Captain Flawes.
+The voyage was completely without result, as Wood did not penetrate
+so far, either to the north or east, as his predecessors or as the
+whalers, who appear to have at that time frequently visited North
+Novaya Zemlya. Wood had previously accompanied Sir John Narborough
+during a voyage through the dangerous Magellan Straits, in the
+course of which he became known as a bold and skilful seaman, but he
+not only wanted experience in sailing amongst ice, but also the
+endurance and the coolness that are required for voyages in the high
+north. He thereby showed himself to be quite unfit for the command
+which he undertook. Before his departure he was unreasonably certain
+of success; with the first encounter with ice his self-reliance gave
+way entirely; and when his vessel was wrecked on the coast of Novaya
+Zemlya, he knew no other way to keep up the courage of his men and
+prevent mutiny than to send the brandy bottle round.[149] Finally
+after his return he made Barents and other distinguished seafarers
+in the Arctic Regions answerable for all the skipper tales collected
+from quite other quarters, which he before his departure held to be
+proved undoubtedly true. This voyage would therefore not have been
+referred to here, if it had not been preceded and followed by lively
+discussions regarding the fitness of the Polar Sea for navigation,
+during which at least a portion of the experience which Dutch and
+English whalers had gained of the state of the ice between Greenland
+and Novaya Zemlya was rescued from oblivion, though unfortunately
+almost exclusively in the form of unconfirmed statements of very
+high latitudes, which had been occasionally reached. Three papers
+mainly led to Wood's voyage. These were:--
+
+1. A letter, inserted in the Transactions of the Royal Society,[150]
+on the state of Novaya Zemlya, said to be founded on discoveries
+which had been made at the express command of the Czar.
+The letter was accompanied by a map, drawn by an artist named
+Panelapoetski, who sent it from Moscow as a present to the writer.
+The Kara Sea is said to be a freshwater inland lake which freezes
+strongly in winter, and it is stated that according to the unanimous
+accounts of the Samoyeds and Tartars it is quite possible to sail
+north of Novaya Zemlya to Japan.
+
+2. Another letter was inserted in the _Transactions_ of the Royal
+Society,[151] in which the statement in the former letter on the
+connection of Novaya Zemlya with the mainland is repeated, and the
+difficulties which Barents met with ascribed to the circumstance
+that he sailed too near the land, along which the sea is often
+frozen; some miles from the shore, on the other hand, it never
+freezes, even at the Pole, unless occasionally. It is also said that
+some Amsterdam merchants sailed more than a hundred leagues eastward
+of Novaya Zemlya, and on that account petitioned the States-General
+for privileges.[152] However, in consequence of opposition from the
+Dutch East India Company, their petition was not granted, on which
+the merchants turned to Denmark. Here their proposal was immediately
+received with favour. Two vessels were fitted out, but instead of
+sailing to Japan, they went to Spitzbergen to the whale-fishing. It
+is further stated in the letter that it would not be unadvisable to
+let some persons live for a time with the Samoyeds, in order to find
+out what they knew of the matter, and that, when a more complete
+knowledge of the navigable waters was acquired, the whole voyage
+from England to Japan might be accomplished in five or six weeks.
+Were a wintering necessary, it would not be attended with any
+danger, if, instead of a house of thick planks standing by itself,
+earth huts were used.
+
+3. A pamphlet, whose contents are given in the long and peculiar
+title: "A brief Discourse of a Passage by the North-Pole to Japan,
+China, etc. Pleaded by Three Experiments: and Answers to all
+Objections that can be urged against a Passage that way. As: 1. By a
+Navigation from Amsterdam into the North-Pole, and two Degrees
+beyond it. 2. By a Navigation from Japan towards the North-Pole. 3.
+By an Experiment made by the Czar of Muscovy, whereby it appears,
+that to the Northwards of Nova Zembla is a free and open Sea as far
+as Japan, China, etc. With a Map of all the Discovered Lands neerest
+to the Pole. By Joseph Moxon, Hydrographer to the King's most
+Exellent Majesty. London, 1674."
+
+The most remarkable passage in this scarce little book is the
+following:--
+
+ "Being about twenty-two years ago in Amsterdam, I went
+ into a drinking-house to drink a cup of beer for my
+ thirst, and sitting by the public fire, among several
+ people, there happened a seaman to come in, who, seeing a
+ friend of his there, whom he knew went in the Greenland
+ voyage, wondered to see him, because it was not yet time
+ for the Greenland fleet to come home, and asked him what
+ accident brought him home so soon; his friend (who was the
+ steer-man aforsaid in a Greenland ship that summer) told
+ him, that their ship went not out to fish that summer, but
+ only to take in the lading of the whole fleet, to bring it
+ to an early market. But, said he, before the fleet had
+ caught fish enough to lade us, we, by order of the
+ Greenland Company, sailed unto the north pole and back
+ again. Whereupon (his relation being novel to me) I
+ entered into discourse with him, and seemed to question
+ the truth of what he said; but he did ensure me it was
+ true, and that the ship was then in Amsterdam, and many of
+ the seamen belonging to her to justify the truth of it;
+ and told me, moreover, that they had sailed two degrees
+ beyond the pole. I asked him if they found no land or
+ islands about the pole? He told me, No, they saw no ice; I
+ asked him what weather they had there? He told me fine
+ warm weather, such as was at Amsterdam in the summer time
+ and as hot."[153]
+
+In addition to these stories there were several contributions to a
+solution of the problem, which Wood himself collected, as a
+statement by Captain Goulden, who had made thirty voyages to
+Spitzbergen, that two Dutchmen had penetrated eastward of that group
+of islands to 89 deg. N.L.; the observation that on the coast of
+Corea whales had been caught with European harpoons in them;[154]
+and that driftwood eaten to the heart by the sea-worm was found on
+the coasts of the Polar lands, &c.[155]
+
+When Wood failed, he abandoned the views he had before maintained,
+declaring that the statements on which he had founded his plans were
+downright lies and delusions. But the belief in a polar sea that is
+occasionally navigable is not yet given up. It has since then been
+maintained by such men as DAINES BARRINGTON,[156] FERDINAND VON
+WRANGEL, AUGUSTUS PETERMANN,[157] and others. Along with nearly all
+Polar travellers of the present day, I had long been of an opposite
+opinion, believing the Polar Sea to be constantly covered with
+impenetrable masses of ice, continuous or broken up, but I have come
+to entertain other views since in the course of two winterings--the
+first in 79 deg.53', that is to say, nearer the Pole than any
+other has wintered in the old world, the second in the neighbourhood
+of the Asiatic Pole of cold--I have seen that the sea does not
+freeze completely, even in the immediate neighbourhood of land. From
+this I draw the conclusion that the sea scarcely anywhere
+permanently[158] freezes over where it is of any considerable depth,
+and far from land. If this be the case, there is nothing
+unreasonable in the old accounts, and what has happened once we may
+expect to happen another time.
+
+However this may be, it is certain that the ignominious result of
+Wood's voyage exerted so great a deterring influence from all new
+undertakings in the same direction, that nearly two hundred years
+elapsed before an expedition was again sent out with the distinctly
+declared intention, which was afterwards disavowed, of achieving a
+north-east passage. This was the famous Austrian expedition of PAYER
+and WEYPRECHT in 1872-74, which failed indeed in penetrating far to
+the eastward, but which in any case formed an epoch in the history
+of Arctic exploration by the discovery of Franz-Josef's Land and by
+many valuable researches on the natural conditions of the Polar
+lands. Considered as a North-east voyage, this expedition was the
+immediate predecessor of that of the _Vega_.
+
+It is so well known through numerous works recently published, and
+above all by Payer's spirited narrative, that I need not go into
+further detail regarding it.
+
+But if the North-east voyages proper thus almost entirely ceased
+during the long interval between Wood's and Payer's voyages, a large
+number of other journeys for the purpose of research and hunting
+were instead carried out during this period, through which we
+obtained the first knowledge founded on actual observations of the
+natural conditions of Novaya Zemlya and the Kara Sea. Of these
+voyages, mainly made by Russians and Scandinavians, I shall give an
+account in the next chapter. It was these that prepared the way for
+the success which we at last achieved.
+
+
+[Footnote 102: In Bosworth's translation this name is replaced by
+_White Sea_, an unnecessary modernising of the name, and incorrect
+besides, as the White Sea is only a bay of the ocean which bounds
+Europe on the north. ]
+
+[Footnote 103: The Russian chronicles state that the land between
+the Dwina and the Petchora (Savolotskaja Tchud) was made tributary
+under the Slavs in Novgorod during the first half of the ninth
+century. A monastery is spoken of in the beginning of the twelfth
+century at the mouth of the Dwina, whence we may conclude that the
+land was even then partly peopled by Russians, but we want
+trustworthy information as to the time when the Russian-Finnish
+Arctic voyages began (compare F. Litke, _Viermalige Reise durch das
+noerdliche Eismeer_. Berlin, 1835, p. 3). ]
+
+[Footnote 104: The voyage is described in _Hakluyt_, 1st Edition, p.
+311. It is inserted in the list of contents in the following terms:
+"The voyage of Steven Burrough towarde the river Ob, intending the
+discoverie of the north-east passage. An. 1556." It appears from the
+introduction to Hakluyt's work that the narrative was revised by
+Burrough himself. In the text Burrowe is written instead of
+Burrough. ]
+
+[Footnote 105: As I have already mentioned, von Herbertstein states
+that the Russians (Istoma and others) as early as 1496 sailed round
+the northern extremity of Norway in boats, which when necessary
+could be carried over land. North Cape, or rather Nordkyn, was
+called at that time Murmanski Nos (the Norman Cape). When Hulsius in
+his collection of travels gives von Herbertstein's account of
+Istoma's voyage, he considers Swjatoi Nos on the Kola peninsula to
+be North Cape (Harnel, _Tradescant_, St. Petersburg, 1847, p. 40). ]
+
+[Footnote 106: This must be a slip of the pen or an error of the
+press; it was probably intended to be 68 deg. 48'. Kola lies in 68 deg.
+51' N.L. ]
+
+[Footnote 107: This statement is very remarkable. For it shows that
+the vessels, that were then used by the Russians and Fins, were not
+very inferior as compared with those of the West-Europeans, which is
+confirmed by the fact, among others, that, nowhere in accounts of
+the voyages of the English or Dutch in former times to Novaya
+Zemlya, do we find it stated that in respect to navigation they were
+very superior to the Kola men. As the Russian-Finnish _lodjas_ of
+the time were probably beyond the influence of the shipbuilding art
+of Western Europe, it is of importance to collect all that is known
+about the way in which these vessels were built. Several drawings of
+them occur in the accounts of the Dutch voyages, but it is uncertain
+how far they are accurate. According to these the _lodja_ was
+klinker-built, with boards not riveted together but bound fast with
+willows, as is still occasionally practised in these regions. The
+form of the craft besides reminds us of that of the present
+walrus-hunting sloop. ]
+
+[Footnote 108: Cape Voronov, on the west side of the mouth of the
+river Mesen. ]
+
+[Footnote 109: Probably mountain foxes. Remains of these fox-traps
+are still frequently met with along the coast of the Polar Sea,
+where the Russians have carried on hunting. ]
+
+[Footnote 110: Kanin Nos is in 68 deg. 30' N.L. ]
+
+[Footnote 111: This was the first meeting between West-Europeans and
+Samoyeds. ]
+
+[Footnote 112: The capes which bound the mouth of the Petchora--Cape
+Ruski Savorot and Cape Medinski Savorot,--are very nearly in lat.
+69 deg.. ]
+
+[Footnote 113: See above, page 168. ]
+
+[Footnote 114: Evidently islands near the southern extremity of
+Novaya Zemlya. ]
+
+[Footnote 115: Probably he was of Finnish race. The Quaens in North
+Norway are still the most skilful harpooners. In recent times they
+have found rivals in skill with the harpoon and gun in the Lapps. ]
+
+[Footnote 116: The information Burrough obtained regarding the
+Samoyeds is given above at page 100. ]
+
+[Footnote 117: From the context, and the circumstance that "much ice
+was drifting in the sea," we may conclude that this haven was
+situated on the north side of the island at the entrance to the Kara
+Port. ]
+
+[Footnote 118: Probably the river which on Massa's map is called
+Narontza, and debouches on the west coast of Yalmal. ]
+
+[Footnote 119: All the three vessels that were employed in the first
+English expedition to the North-east had an unfortunate fate, viz.:
+
+The _Edward Bonaventure_, commanded by Chancelor and Burrough,
+sailed in 1553 from England to the White Sea, returned to England in
+1554 and was on the way plundered by the Dutch (_Purchas_, iii. p.
+250); started again with Chancelor for the Dwina in 1555, and
+returned the same year to England under Captain John Buckland;
+accompanied Burrough in 1556 to the Kola peninsula; went thence to
+the Dwina to convey to England Chancelor and a Russian embassy,
+consisting of the ambassador Ossip Gregorjevitsch Nepeja and a suite
+of sixteen men; the vessel besides being laden with goods to the
+value of 20,000_l_. It was wrecked in the neighbourhood of Aberdeen
+(Aberdour Bay) on the 20th (10th) November. Chancelor himself, his
+wife, and seven Russians were drowned, and most of the cargo lost.
+
+The _Bona Esperanza_, admiral of the fleet during the expedition of
+1553. Its commander and whole crew perished, as has been already
+stated, of disease at Arzina on the coast of Kola in the beginning
+of 1554. The vessel was saved and was to have been used in 1556 to
+carry to England the Russian embassy already mentioned. After having
+been driven by a storm into the North Sea, it reached a harbour in
+the neighbourhood of Trondhjem, but after leaving that harbour
+disappeared completely, nothing being known of its fate.
+
+The _Bona Confidentia_ was saved like the _Bona Esperanza_ after the
+disastrous wintering at Arzina; was also used in conveying the
+Russian embassy from Archangel in 1556, but stranded on the
+Norwegian coast, every man on board perishing and the whole cargo
+being lost.
+
+Of the four vessels that left the Dwina on the 2nd August, 1556,
+only the _Philip and Mary_ succeeded, after wintering at Trondhjem,
+in reaching the Thames on the 28th (18th) April, 1557. (A letter of
+Master Henrie Lane to the worshipfull Master William Sanderson,
+containing a brief discourse of that which passed in the north-east
+discoverie, for the space of three and thirtie yeeres, _Purchas_,
+iii. p. 249.) ]
+
+[Footnote 120: Hamel, _Tradescant der aeltere_, p. 106. Hakluyt, 1st
+Edition, p. 326. _The voiage of the foresaid M. Stephen Burrough
+An_. 1557 _from Colmogro to Wordhouse, &c._ This voyage of Burrough
+has attracted little attention; from it however we learn that the
+Dutch even at that time carried on an extensive commerce with
+Russian Lapland. In the same narrative there is also a list of words
+with statements of prices and suitable goods for trade with the
+inhabitants of the Kola peninsula. ]
+
+[Footnote 121: Two accounts of this voyage are to be found in
+Hakluyt's collection (pp. 466 and 476). A copy of Pet's own journal
+was discovered some years ago, along with other books, frozen in
+among the remains of Barents' wintering on the north-east side of
+Novaya Zemlya. It has not been published, but is in the possession
+of Consul Rein at Hammerfest. ]
+
+[Footnote 122: The Russians had thus landmarks on Novaya Zemlya 300
+years ago. ]
+
+[Footnote 123: It is commonly assumed that Pet sailed into the Kara
+Sea through Yugor Schar, but that this was not the case is shown
+partly by the fact that he never speaks of sailing through a long
+and narrow sound, partly by the account of the many islands which he
+saw in his voyage, and partly by the statement that coming from the
+south he sailed round the westernmost promontory of Vaygats Island.
+If we except small rocks near the shore, there are no islands off
+the southern part of Vaygats Island. In sailing east of Medinski
+Savorot, Pet took the land south of Yugor Schar for Vaygats, and the
+soundings on the 29th (19th) July were carried out undoubtedly in
+the mouth of some small river debouching there. ]
+
+[Footnote 124: Of Jackman Hakluyt says (2nd Edition, i. p. 453):
+"William with Charles Jackman came to a haven in Norway between
+Tronden and Rostock in October, 1580, and wintered there. Thence the
+following February he went with a vessel, belonging to the king of
+Denmark, to Iceland, and since then nothing has been heard of him."
+About that time an English ship stranded at the Ob, and the crew
+were killed by the Samoyeds. It has been conjectured that it
+possibly was Jackman (compare _Purchas_, iii. p. 546; _Hamel_, p.
+238). It is more probable that the vessel which suffered this fate
+was that which, two years before Pet and Jackman's voyage, appears
+to have been sent out by the Muscovy Company to penetrate eastwards
+from the Petchora. The members of this expedition were James
+Bassendine, James Woodcocke, and Richard Brown, but we know nothing
+concerning it except the very sensible and judicious rules that were
+drawn up for the expedition (_Hakluyt_, 1st Edition, p. 406). ]
+
+[Footnote 125: I have not been able to find any name resembling this
+on modern maps. ]
+
+[Footnote 126: _A Chronological History of Voyages into the Arctic
+Regions._ London, 1818, p. 99. ]
+
+[Footnote 127: His proper name was Willem Barentszoon; it was also
+written Barentz, Barendsz, Bernardsson, &c. Barents' three voyages
+formed the subject of a work by GERRIT DE VEER, which was published
+for the first time in 1598 at Amsterdam in a Dutch, a Latin, and a
+French edition. The last-mentioned has the following title: _Vray
+Description de Trois Voyages des Mer tres admirables faicis_ ...
+_par les navires d'Hollande &c. Zelande au nord_ ... _vers les
+Royaumes de China &c. Catay, etc._ Afterwards this work was
+frequently reprinted in different languages, both singly and in DE
+BEY'S, PURCHAS', and other collections of Travels. See on this point
+P.A. Tiele, _Memoire bibliographique sur les journaux des
+navigateurs Neerlandais_. Amsterdam, 1867. ]
+
+[Footnote 128: From two large crosses which were found erected on
+the island. This shows that the Russians had also explored the north
+part of Novaya Zemlya before the West-Europeans. ]
+
+[Footnote 129: The name Oliver Brunel occurs so often in accounts of
+the first voyages to Novaya Zemlya, and the man who bore it appears
+to have exercised so great an influence on the development of
+commercial communications with Russia, and the sending out of
+exploratory expeditions to the North Polar Sea, that I shall give a
+brief sketch of his life, mainly after S. Muller, _Geschiedenis der
+Noordsche Compagnie_, Utrecht, 1874, p. 26.
+
+Oliver Brunel was born in Brussels, and in 1565 went in a Russian
+vessel from Kola to Kolmogor in order to learn the Russian language
+and make himself acquainted with the trade of the region. But the
+English, who of course eagerly endeavoured to prevent any intrusion
+on their newly-discovered commercial territory, prevailed on the
+Russians to keep him in prison for several years. In the end he was
+set at liberty, or rather handed over to the rich merchants Jakov
+and Grigory Anikiev (Stroganov). In consequence of this, Brunel came
+to take part in the commercial expeditions sent out by this
+mercantile house, (which by the conquest of Siberia acquired a
+world-historical importance, both by land and sea,) to the parts of
+Asia bordering on Russia, whereby he became well acquainted with the
+Polar Sea and the Gulf of Obi. Brunel afterwards brought about
+direct communication between the Netherlands and the great
+commercial house, almost sovereign _de facto_ if not _de jure_ in
+extensive countries. In connection with this Brunel made strenuous
+exertions to open in earnest the navigation of the Netherlands to
+the White Sea, and there found a Netherlands factory, which was
+placed not on Rosen Island, which was occupied by the English, but
+on the spot where the present Archangel is situated. Brunel next
+took part in preparations for a Russian North-east expedition, for
+which Swedish shipbuilders were received into Stroganov's service.
+Brunei himself travelled by land to Holland to enlist men. A number
+of particulars regarding these undertakings of Brunel are contained
+in a letter of JOHN BALAK to GERARD MERCATOR, dated "Arusburgi ad
+Ossellam fluvium" the 20th February, 1581. The letter is printed in
+the second edition of _Hakluyt_, 1598, i. p. 509. Scarcely however
+had Brunel returned to his native country, before he altered his
+plan and wished to procure for his own fatherland the honour and
+advantage of the undertaking. The first attempt of the Dutch to
+reach China and Japan by the north-east thus came about. Of this
+voyage we know only that Brunel endeavoured without success to sail
+through Yugor Schar, and that his vessel, heavily laden with furs,
+plates of mica, and rock-crystal, was wrecked on the way home at the
+mouth of the Petchora (_Beschryvinghe vander Samoyeden Landt in
+Tartarien, &c._ Amsterdam, 1612. S. Muller's Photolithographic
+Reproduction, 1878). The mica and rock-crystal were undoubtedly
+brought from the Ural, as no useful plates of mica or large
+rock-crystals are found in the region of the Petchora. Brunel then
+entered the Danish service. For we know that an Oliver Brunel during
+the reign of King Fredrik II. in Denmark offered to explore
+Greenland, and for that purpose in 1583 obtained the right to settle
+in Bergen and there enjoy six years freedom from taxes (Cf.
+_Groenlands historiske Mindesmoerker_, Copenhagen, 1838, vol. iii.
+p. 666). ]
+
+[Footnote 130: Probably the Sachanich Bay of the Russians. ]
+
+[Footnote 131: _Voyagie, ofte Schip Vaert, van Jan Huyghen van
+Linschoten, van by Noorden, om langes Noorwegen de Noortcaep,
+Laplant, Vinlant, Ruslandt_ ... _tot voorby de revier Oby_, Franeker,
+1601. Another edition at Amsterdam in 1624, and in abstract in
+Saeghman's collection of travels in 1665. The voyage is also
+described in Blavii _Atlas Major_, 1665. Linschoten was "commis" on
+board, a post which included both the employment of supercargo and
+that of owners' commissioner. ]
+
+[Footnote 132: That is Yugor Schar. This name also occurs, though in
+a somewhat altered form, as "Wegorscoi tzar," on Isaac Massa's map
+of 1612, which, according to the statement of the publisher, is a
+copy of a Russian chart. ]
+
+[Footnote 133: Accounts of this expedition are given both by De Veer
+and Linschoten in the above-named works. ]
+
+[Footnote 134: These remarkable statements are found in Linschoten's
+above quoted work printed in 1601, and cannot therefore be spurious.
+They thus show that Taimur Land was inhabited by Samoyeds, and that
+the geography of this region was then well known. ]
+
+[Footnote 135: See above, page 142. ]
+
+[Footnote 136: The sketch of this voyage forms the main portion of
+the above mentioned work of De Veer. Undoubtedly the adventures
+during the wintering, the first in so high a latitude, in the first
+place procured for De Veer's work the enormous popularity it
+enjoyed, and led to its being translated into so many languages. ]
+
+[Footnote 137: The resolution regarding the offer of this prize is
+given below: Extract nit het Register der Resolutien van de Hoog
+Mogende Heeren Staten Generael der Vereenigde Nederlanden.
+
+Folio 158 vso 13 April 1596.
+
+De Gedeputeerde van de Heeren Staten van Holland verclaren dat heure
+principalen geadviseert hebbende op de hervattinge van het voyagie
+naer China en Japan, benoorden om, deselve voyage afgeslagen hebben,
+ten aenzien van de groote costen die nu twee Jaren achter den
+anderen om de reyse te verzoeken te vorgeefs angewent zijn, maer dat
+Hare E. goetgevonden ende geconsenteert hebben, mede tgevolgh van de
+andere provincien bij zoeverre datter eenige coopluijden aventuriers
+bij compagnie ofte anderssine de voerscreven reijse op heure costen
+ende risique, zonder te schepen ende tgelt van den lande, zonde
+begeren te verzoeken, dat men dezelve aventuriers de reijse gevonden
+ende gedaen hebbende, daervan brengende goet ende geloofflijck
+beschijt, tot haer luijder wedercomste, zal vereeren mette somme van
+vijff en twintich duysent gulden eens. Item daar enboven accorderen
+den vrijdom voor twee jaren van convoyen der goederen die zij uit
+dese landen naer China off Japan zullen transporteren, ende noch
+vrijdom voer den tyd van acht jaren van te goederen die zij uit
+China ofte Japan in dese landen sullen bringen. Waerop geadviseert
+wesende hebben de Gedeputeerde van d'andere provincien hen daarmede
+geconformeert, die van Seelant opt welbehagen van heure principalen,
+maer die van Utrecht hebben verclart niet te consenteren in de
+vereeringe van XXVm. ]
+
+[Footnote 138: Every Polar traveller has at one time or other made
+the same or a similar mistake. In 1861, for instance, a boat party,
+of whom I was one, thought that they saw clearly sailors in
+sou'-westers and with white shirtsleeves building a cairn on a point
+which appeared to be at no great distance. But the cairn was found
+to be a very distant mountain, the shirt-sleeves were formed of
+snow-fields, the sou'-westers of pointed cliffs, and the motion
+arose from oscillatory changes in the atmospheric strata. ]
+
+[Footnote 139: Undoubtedly _Anser bernicla_, which is common on the
+west coast of Spitzbergen. The Dutch name ought neither to be
+translated _red goose_, as some Englishmen have done, nor confounded
+with _rotges_. ]
+
+[Footnote 140: See the copy of Barents' own map with his course laid
+down upon it, which is to be found in Pontanus, _Rerum et urbis
+Amstelodamensium Historia_ (Amst. 1611), and is annexed to this work
+in photolithographic facsimile. ]
+
+[Footnote 141: On the assumption of a horizontal refraction of about
+45'. ]
+
+[Footnote 142: See on this point De Veer, leaf 25 and an unpaged
+leaf between pages 30 and 31 in Blavii _Atlas Major_, tom. i. That a
+mistake occurred in the date is not possible, because the latitude
+was determined by solar observations on the 29th (19th) February,
+the 21st (11th) and 31st (21st) March (see De Veer, I. 27). Besides,
+at the correct date, the 3rd February (24th January), a conjunction
+of Jupiter and the moon was observed, whereby the difference of
+longitude between Ice Haven and Venice was determined to be 75 deg..
+However erroneous this determination may be, it shows, however,
+that the date was correct. ]
+
+[Footnote 143: Built along with a weigh-house intended for the
+Norwegians in 1582 by the first vojvode in Kola (_Hamel_, p. 66).
+In Pontanus (_Rerum et urbis Amstelodamensium Historia_, Amsterodami,
+1611, p. 142), there is a drawing of the inner yard of this house,
+and of the reception of shipwrecked men there. ]
+
+[Footnote 144: The year is incorrectly given as 1647 by F. von
+Adelung (_Kritisch-Litteraerische Uebersicht_, &c.). ]
+
+[Footnote 145: The following editions are enumerated: four French,
+Paris, 1671, 1672, 1676, and Amsterdam, 1708; six German, Hamburg,
+1675, Leipzig, 1703, 1706, 1710, 1711, and 1718; one Latin,
+Glueckstadt, 1675; two Dutch, Amsterdam, 1681 and 1685; one Italian,
+printed in Conte Aurelio degli Anzi's _Il Genio Vagante_, Parma,
+1691; two English, one printed separately in 1706, the other in
+Harris, _Navigantium atque Itinerantium Bibl_., 3rd edition. London,
+1744-48, Vol. II. p. 457. ]
+
+[Footnote 146: The story of the wind knots is taken from Olaus
+Magnus, _De gentibus septentrionalibus_, Rome, 1555, p. 119. There a
+drawing of the appearance of the knots is also given. ]
+
+[Footnote 147: Compare page 203. ]
+
+[Footnote 148: These were James Duke of York, Lord Berkley, Sir John
+Williamson, Sir John Bankes, Mr. Samuel Peeps, Captain Herbert, Mr.
+Dupey, and Mr. Hoopgood (Harris, _Nav. Bibl._, vol. ii. p. 453). ]
+
+[Footnote 149: "All I could do in this exigency was to let the
+brandy-bottle go round, which kept them allways fox'd, till the 8th
+July Captain Flawes came so seasonably to our relief" (Barrow, _A
+Chronological History of Voyages into the Arctic Regions_. London,
+1818, p. 268). ]
+
+[Footnote 150: "A letter, not long since written to the Publisher by
+an Experienced person residing at Amsterdam," etc. (_Philosophical
+Transactions_, vol. IX. p. 3, London, 1674). ]
+
+[Footnote 151: "A summary Relation of what hath been hitherto
+discovered in the matter of the North-East passage; communicated by
+a good Hand" (_Phil. Trans._, vol. x. p. 417. London, 1675). ]
+
+[Footnote 152: The time when the voyage was made is not stated in
+the letter quoted. Harris says that he with great difficulty
+ascertained the year of the successful voyage to the eastward to be
+1670. He says further that the persons who gave him this information
+also stated that, at the time when this petition was given in to the
+States-General, it was also asserted that there was no difficulty in
+sailing northwards from Spitzbergen (Greenland), and that many Dutch
+vessels had actually done it. To confirm this statement the
+merchants proposed that the logs of the Spitzbergen fleet for the
+year 1655 should be examined. This was done. In seven of them it was
+found recorded that the vessels had sailed to 79 deg. N.L. Three
+other logs agreed in the point that on the 1st August, 1655, 88 deg.
+56' _was observed_. The sea here was open and the swell heavy
+(Harris, _Nav. Bibl._, ii. p. 453). J.R. Forster (_Geschichte der
+Entdeckungen und Schiffsfahrten im Norden_, Frankfurt a. d. Oder,
+1874) appears to place the voyage eastward of Novaya Zemlya in the
+period before 1614. It is, however, probable that the voyage in
+question is Vlamingh's remarkable one in 1664, or that in 1666, of
+which I have already given an account. ]
+
+[Footnote 153: In more recent times the whalers have been more
+modest in their statements about high northern latitudes reached.
+Thus a Dutchman who had gone whale-fishing for twenty-two years, at
+an accidental meeting with Tschitschagoff in Bell Sound in the
+year 1766, stated among other things that he himself had once been
+in 81 deg., but that he heard that other whalers had been in 83 deg.
+and had seen land over the ice. He had seen the east coast of
+Greenland (Spitzbergen) only once in 75 deg. N.L. (Herrn von
+Tschitschagoff Russisch-kaiserliehen Admirals _Reise nach dem
+Eissmeer_, St. Petersburg, 1793, p. 83). Dutch shipmasters too,
+who in the beginning of the seventeenth century penetrated north
+of Spitzbergen to 82 deg., said that they had thence seen land towards
+the north (Muller, _Geschiedenis der Noordsche Compagnie_. p. 180). ]
+
+[Footnote 154: Witsen states, p. 43, that he had conversed with a
+Dutch seaman, Benedictus Klerk, who had formerly served on board a
+whaler, and afterwards been a prisoner in Corea. He had asserted
+that in whales that were killed on the coast of that country he had
+found Dutch harpoons. The Dutch then carried on whale-fishing only
+in the north part of the Atlantic. The _find_ thus shows that whales
+can swim from one ocean to the other. As we know that these colossal
+inhabitants of the Polar Sea do not swim from one ice-ocean to the
+other across the equator, this observation must be considered very
+important, especially at a time when the question whether Asia and
+America are connected across the Pole was yet unsettled. Witsen also
+enumerates, at p. 900, several occasions on which stone harpoons were
+found in the skins of whales caught in the North Atlantic. These
+harpoons, however, may as well be derived from the wild races,
+unacquainted with iron, at Davis\ Strait, as from tribes living
+on the north part of the Pacific. At Kamschatka, too, long before
+whale-fishing by Europeans began in Behring's Sea, harpoons marked
+with Latin letters were found in whales (Steller, _Beschreibung von
+dem Lande Kamtschatka_, Frankfurt und Leipzig, 1774, p. 102). ]
+
+[Footnote 155: The account of Wood's voyage was printed in London in
+1694 by Smith and Walford, printers to the Royal Society (according
+to a statement by Barrington, _The possibility of approaching the
+North Pole asserted_, 2nd Edition, London, 1818, p. 34). I have only
+had an opportunity of seeing extracts from the account of this
+voyage in _Harris_ and others. ]
+
+[Footnote 156: Barrington published a number of papers on this
+question, which are collected in the work whose title is given
+above, of which there were two editions. ]
+
+[Footnote 157: At several places in his _Mittheilungen_, 1855-79. ]
+
+[Footnote 158: That thin sheets of ice are formed in clear and calm
+weather, even in the open sea and over great depths, was observed
+several times during the expedition of 1868. But when we consider
+that salt water has no maximum of density situated above the
+freezing-point, that ice is a bad conductor of heat, and that the
+clear, newly-formed ice is soon covered by a layer of snow which
+hinders radiation, it appears to me to be improbable that the
+ice-covering at deep, open places can become so thick that it is not
+broken up even by a moderate storm. Even the shallow harbour at
+Mussel Bay first froze permanently in the beginning of February, and
+in the end of January the swell in the harbour was so heavy, that
+all the three vessels of the Swedish Expedition were in danger of
+being wrecked--_in consequence of the tremendous sea in 80 deg.
+N.L. in the end of January!_ The sea must then have been open very
+far to the north-west On the west coast of Spitzbergen the sea in
+winter is seldom completely frozen within sight of land. Even at
+Barents' winter haven on the north-east coast of Novaya Zemlya, the
+sea during the coldest season of the year was often free of ice, and
+Hudson's statement, "that it is not surprising that the navigator
+falls in with so much ice in the North Atlantic, when there are so
+many sounds and bays on Spitzbergen," shows that even he did not
+believe in any ice being formed in the open sea. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+ The North-east Voyages of the Russians and Norwegians--
+ Rodivan Ivanov, 1690--The great Northern Expedition, 1734-37
+ --The supposed richness in metals of Novaya Zemlya--
+ Juschkov, 1757--Savva Loschkin, 1760--Rossmuislov, 1768--
+ Lasarev, 1819--Luetke, 1821-24--Ivanov, 1822-28--
+ Pachtussov, 1832-35--Von Baer, 1837--Zivolka and Moissejev,
+ 1838-39--Von Krusenstern, 1860-62--The Origin and History
+ of the Polar Sea Hunting--Carlsen, 1868--Ed. Johannesen,
+ 1869-70--Ulve, Mack, and Quale, 1870--Mack, 1871--
+ Discovery of the Relics of Barents' wintering--Tobiesen's
+ wintering, 1872-73--The Swedish Expeditions, 1875 and 1876
+ --Wiggins, 1876--Later Voyages to and from the Yenisej.
+
+
+From what I have stated above it follows that the coast population
+of North Russia earned on an active navigation on the Polar Sea long
+before the English and the Dutch, and that commercial expeditions
+were often undertaken from the White Sea and the Petchora to the Ob
+and the Yenisej, sometimes wholly by sea round Yalmal, but most
+frequently partly by sea and partly by land transport over that
+peninsula. In the latter case the Russians went to work in the
+following way; they first sailed through Yugor Straits, and over the
+southern part of the Kara Sea to the mouth of the Mutnaja, a river
+debouching on Yalmal; they then rowed or towed the boats up the
+river and over two lakes to a ridge about 350 metres broad, which
+forms the watershed on Yalmal between the rivers running west and
+those running east; over this ridge the boats and the goods were
+dragged to another lake, Selennoe, from which they were finally
+carried down the River Selennaja to the Gulf of Obi.[159]
+
+These and similar accounts were collected with great difficulty, and
+not without danger, by the Muscovy Company's envoys; but among the
+accounts that have been thus preserved we do not find a single
+sketch of any special voyage, on the ground of which we could place
+a Russian name beside that of Willoughby, Burrough, Pet and Barents
+in the older history of the North-East Passage. The historical
+sources of Russia too must be similarly incomplete in this respect,
+to judge from the otherwise instructive historical introduction to
+Luetke's voyage. Gallant seamen, but no Hakluyt, were born during the
+sixteenth and seventeenth century on the shores of the White Sea,
+and therefore the names of these seamen and the story of their
+voyages have long since fallen into complete obscurity, excepting
+some in comparatively recent times.
+
+In the second edition of Witsen's great work we find, at page 913,
+an account of an unsuccessful hunting voyage to the Kara Sea,
+undertaken in 1690, that is to say, at a time when voyages between
+the White Sea and the Obi and Yenisej were on the point of ceasing
+completely. The account was drawn up by Witsen from an oral
+communication by one of the shipwrecked men, Rodivan Ivanov, who was
+for several years mate on a Russian vessel, employed in seal-fishing
+on the coast of Novaya Zemlya and Vaygats Island.
+
+On the 11th/1st September this Rodivan Ivanov suffered shipwreck
+with two vessels on Serapoa Koska (Serapov's Bank), probably
+situated in the Southern part of the Kara Sea. The ice was thrown up
+here in winter into lofty ice-casts with such a crashing noise that
+"the world was believed to be coming to an end," and at high water
+with a strong breeze the whole island was submerged with the
+exception of some knolls. On one of these the winter house was
+erected. It was built of clay, which was kneaded with the blood and
+hair of the seal and walrus. This mixture hardened to a solid mass,
+of which the walls were built with the help of boards from the
+vessel. The house thus afforded good protection not only from cold
+and bad weather, but also from bears. A furnace was also built
+inside the house and fired with driftwood collected on the beach.
+Train oil from the captured animals was used for lighting. There
+wintered here fifteen men in all, of whom eleven died of scurvy.
+Want of exercise perhaps mainly conduced to bring on this disease.
+For most of them did not leave the house during the winter night,
+five weeks long. Those were most healthy who had most exercise, as,
+for instance, the mate, who was the youngest among the crew, and
+therefore had to go round the island to collect wood. Another cause
+of the great mortality was the total want of provisions brought from
+home. For the first eight days their food consisted of seaweed
+dredged up from the bottom of the sea, with which some meal was
+mixed. Afterwards they ate the flesh of the seal and walrus, and of
+the Polar bear and the fox. The flesh of the bear and the walrus,
+however, was considered _unclean_[160] on which account it was eaten
+only in case of necessity, and the flesh of the fox had an
+unpleasant flavour. Sometimes the want of food was so great that
+they were compelled to eat the leather of their boots and furs. The
+number of the seals and walruses which they caught was so great,
+"that the killed animals, laid together, would have formed a heap
+ninety fathoms in length, of the same breadth, and six feet
+high."[161] They found, besides, on the island a stranded whale.
+
+In spring Samoyeds came from the mainland, and plundered the
+Russians of part of their catch. Probably for fear of the Samoyeds,
+the surviving hunters did not go over the ice to the mainland, but
+remained on the desert island until by a fortunate accident they
+were rescued by some of their countrymen engaged in a hunting
+expedition. In connection with the account of this voyage Witsen
+states that the previous year a Russian hunting vessel stranded
+_east of the Ob_.
+
+It is probable that towards the close of the sixteenth century the
+Russian hunting voyages to Novaya Zemlya had already fallen off
+considerably. The commercial voyages perhaps had long before
+altogether ceased. It appears as if after the complete conquest of
+Siberia the land route over the Ural mountains, formerly regarded
+with such superstitious feelings, was preferred to the unsafe sea
+route across the Kara Sea, and as if the Government even put
+obstacles in the way of the latter by setting watches at Matvejev
+Island and at Yugor Straits.[162] These were to receive payments
+from the hunters and merchants, and the regulations and exactions
+connected with this arrangement deprived the Polar Sea voyages of
+just that charm which had hitherto induced the bravest and hardiest
+of the population to devote themselves to the dangerous traffic to
+the Ob, and to the employment of hunting, in which they were exposed
+to so many dangers, and subject to so great privations.
+
+The circumstance to which we have referred may also be the reason
+why we do not know of a single voyage in this part of the Polar Sea
+during the period which elapsed from the voyage of Rodivan Ivanov to
+"the great Northern Expedition." It examined, among other parts of
+the widely extended north coast of the Russian empire, the southern
+portion also of the navigable waters here in question, in the years
+1734, 35, under Muravjev and Paulov, and in 1736, 37 under Malygin,
+Skuratov, and Suchotin. Their main working field however did not lie
+here, but in Siberia itself; and I shall give an account of their
+voyages in the Kara Sea further on, when I come to treat of the
+development of our knowledge of the north coast of Asia. Here I will
+only state that they actually succeeded, after untold exertions, in
+penetrating from the White Sea to the Ob, and that the maps of the
+land between that river and the Petchora, which are still in use,
+are mainly grounded on the work of the great northern expedition,
+but that the bad repute of the Kara Sea also arose from the
+difficulties to which these explorers were exposed, difficulties
+owing in no small degree to the defective nature of the vessels, and
+a number of mistakes which were made in connection with their
+equipment, the choice of the time of sailing, &c.
+
+[Illustration: AMMONITE WITH GOLD LUSTRE. From Novaya Zemlya.
+_Ammonites alternans_. V. BUCH. ]
+
+Like all distant unknown regions, Novaya Zemlya was of old renowned
+for its richness in the noble metals. The report indeed has never
+been confirmed, and probably was occasioned only by the occurrence
+of traces of ore, and the beautiful gold-glancing film of pyrites
+with which a number of the fossils found here are covered; but it
+has, notwithstanding, given occasion to a number of voyages to
+Novaya Zemlya, of which the first known is that of the mate
+JUSCHKOV, in 1757. As the mate of a hunting-vessel he had observed
+the stones glittering with gold and silver, and he succeeded in
+convincing an Archangel tallow-merchant that they indicated great
+riches in the interior of the earth. In order to get possession of
+these treasures the tallow-merchant fitted out a vessel, promising
+Juschkov at the same time a reward of 250 roubles for the discovery.
+The whole undertaking, however, led to no result, because the
+discoverer of these treasures died during the passage to Novaya
+Zemlya (Luetke, p. 70).
+
+Three years after, in 1760,[163] a hunting mate, SAVVA LOSCHKIN, a
+native of Olonets, hit on the idea, which was certainly a correct
+one, that the east coast of Novaya Zemlya, which was never visited
+by hunters, ought to be richer in game than other parts of the
+island. Induced by this idea, and probably also by the wish to do
+something extraordinary, he undertook a hunting expedition thither.
+Of this expedition we know only that he actually succeeded in
+travelling round the whole island, thanks to the resolution which
+led him to spend on this self-imposed task two winters and three
+summers. It was proved by this journey that Novaya Zemlya is
+actually an island, a fact which in the middle of last century was
+still doubted by many geographers.[164]
+
+Even after the failure of Juschkov's expedition the report of the
+richness of Novaya Zemlya in metals still maintained itself, and
+accordingly Lieutenant[165] ROSSMUISLOV was sent out with second
+mate GUBIN, the Polar Sea pilot TSCHIRAKIN, and eleven men, to
+search for the supposed treasures, and at the same time to survey
+the unknown portions of the island. The vessel that was used in this
+Polar Sea voyage must have been a very remarkable one. For shortly
+before the start, leaks, which had to be stopped, were discovered at
+many different places in it, and of its power of sailing Rossmuislov
+himself says: "So long as the wind came from the stern the large
+sail helped us exceedingly well, but, as soon as it turned and
+became a head wind, we were compelled to hoist another smaller sail,
+in consequence of which we were driven back to the point from which
+we came." Rossmuislov appears to have been a very skilful man in his
+profession. Without meeting with any obstacle from ice, but at all
+events with difficulty enough in consequence of the unsuitableness
+of the vessel, he arrived at Matotschkin Sound, which he carefully
+surveyed and took soundings in. From a high mountain at its eastern
+mouth he saw on the 10th Sept./30th Aug. the Kara Sea completely
+free of ice--and the way to the Yenisej thus open; but his vessel
+was useless for further sailing. He therefore determined to winter
+at a bay named Tjulnaja Guba, near the eastern entrance to
+Matotschkin Sound. To this place he removed a house which some
+hunters had built on the sound farther to the west, and erected
+another house, the materials of which he had brought from home,
+on a headland jutting out into the sound a little more to the east.
+The latter I visited in 1876. The walls were then still standing,
+but the flat roof, loaded with earth and stones, had fallen in,
+as is often the case with deserted wooden houses in the Polar regions.
+The house was small, and had consisted of a lobby and a room with an
+immense fireplace, and sleeping places fixed to the walls.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW FROM MATOTSCHKIN SCHAR. (After a drawing by Hj
+Theel. 1875.) ]
+
+On the 1st Oct./20th Sept., Matotschkin Sound was frozen over, and
+some days after the Kara Sea was covered with ice as far as the eye
+could reach. Storms from the north-east, west, and north-west, with
+drifting snow of such violence prevailed during the course of the
+winter that one could scarcely go ten fathoms from the house. In its
+neighbourhood a man was overtaken by such a storm of drifting snow
+while hunting a reindeer. When he did not return after two days'
+absence it was determined to note him in the journal as having
+"perished without burial."
+
+On the 28/17th April, 1769, there was a storm from the south-west,
+with mist, rain, and hail as large as half a bullet. On the 2nd
+June/22nd May a dreadful wind raged from the north-west, bringing
+from the high mountains a "sharp smoke-like air,"--it was certainly
+a _foehn_ wind. The painful, depressing effect of this wind is
+generally known from Switzerland and from north-western Greenland.
+At the latter place it rushes right down with excessive violence
+from the ice-desert of the interior. But far from on that account
+bringing cold with it, the temperature suddenly rises above the
+freezing-point, the snow disappears as if by magic through melting
+and evaporation, and men and animals feel themselves suffering from
+the sudden change in the weather. Such winds besides occur
+everywhere in the Polar regions in the neighbourhood of high
+mountains, and it is probably on their account that a stay in the
+hill-enclosed kettle-valleys is in Greenland considered to be very
+unhealthy and to lead to attacks of scurvy among the inhabitants.
+
+The crew remained during the winter whole days, indeed whole weeks
+in succession, in their confined dwellings, carefully made tight,
+without taking any regular exercise in the open air. We can easily
+understand from this that they could not escape scurvy, by which
+most of them appear to have been attacked, and of which seven died,
+among them Tschirakin. It is surprising that any one of them could
+survive with such a mode of life during the dark Polar night. The
+brewing of _quass_, the daily baking of bread, and perhaps even the
+vapour-baths, mainly contributed to this.
+
+On the 29/18th July the ice on Matotschkin Schar broke up, and on
+the 13th/2nd August the sound was completely free of ice. An attempt
+was now made to continue the voyage across the Kara Sea, and an
+endeavour was made for this purpose to put the vessel, defective
+from the first, and now still further damaged by ice, in repair,
+by stopping the leaks, as far as possible, with a mixture of clay and
+decayed seaweed. "Floating coffins" have often been used in Arctic
+voyages, and many times with greater success than the stateliest
+man-of-war. This time, however, Rossmuislov, after having sailed
+some few miles eastward from Matotschkin Sound, in order to avoid
+certain loss, had to return to his winter quarters, where he
+fortunately fell in with a Russian hunter, with whom he commenced
+his return to Archangel. No precious metals were found, nor "any
+pearl-mussels," but Tschirakin confided to Rossmuislov the secret
+that at a certain place on the south coast he had found a block of
+stone of such extraordinary beauty that in the light of day it shone
+with the most splendid fire. After Tschirakin's death Rossmuislov
+sought for the stone, but without success, and he therefore broke
+out in violent reproaches of his deceased comrade. I can, however,
+free him from the blame of deception; for, during my voyage in 1875,
+I found in several of the blocks of schist in the region small veins
+of quartz, crossing the mass of stone. The walls of these veins were
+covered with hundreds of sharply-developed rock crystals with
+mirror-bright faces. Tschirakin's precious stone was doubtless
+nothing else than a druse of this shining but valueless mineral.
+
+Once more, nearly fifty years after Rossmuislov's voyage, in the
+year 1807, a miner, LUDLOW, was sent out to investigate more
+thoroughly the supposed richness of the island in metals.
+He returned without having found any ore, but with the first accounts
+of the geological formation of the country; and we have his
+companion POSPJELOV to thank for some careful surveys on the west
+coast of Novaya Zemlya.
+
+The next expedition to the island was equipped and sent out from the
+naval dockyard at Archangel in 1819 under Lieutenant LASAREV, and
+had, in comparison with its predecessors, very abundant resources.
+But Lasarev was clearly unfit for the task he had undertaken, of
+commanding an Arctic exploratory expedition. In the middle of summer
+many of his crew were attacked by scurvy. Some few weeks after his
+departure from Archangel, at a time when pools of excellent
+drinking-water are to be found on nearly every large piece of
+drift-ice, and rapid torrents of melted snow empty themselves
+everywhere along the coast into the sea, he complains of the
+difficulty of procuring fresh water, &c. The expedition accordingly
+was altogether fruitless.
+
+[Illustration: FRIEDRICH BENJAMIN VON LUeTKE. Born in 1797 in St.
+Petersburg. ]
+
+Of much greater importance were Captain-lieutenant (afterwards
+Admiral Count) LUeTKE's voyages to Novaya Zemlya in the summers of
+1821, 1822, 1823, and 1824, voyages conducted with special skill and
+scientific insight. The narrative of them form one of the richest
+sources of our knowledge of this part of the Polar Sea. But as he
+did not penetrate in any direction farther than his predecessors, an
+account of these voyages does not enter into the plan of the
+historical part of this work.
+
+Among Russian journeys the following may be noticed:--
+
+Those of the mate IVANOV in 1822-28, during which he surveyed the
+coast between the Kara river and the Petchora by overland travelling
+in Samoyed sleighs.
+
+PACHTUSSOV'S voyages in 1832-35.[166] W. BRANDT, merchant, and
+KLOKOV, chief of the civil service, at Archangel, sent out in 1832
+an expedition with very comprehensive aims from that town, for the
+purpose of re-establishing the sea-route to the Yenisej, of surveying
+the east coast of Novaya Zemlya, and of walrus-hunting there.
+Three vessels were employed, viz., a "carbasse" manned by ten men,
+including the Commander-lieutenant in the corps of mates Pachtussov,
+who in previous voyages with Ivanov had become well acquainted
+with land and people along the coasts of the Polar Sea;[167]
+the schooner _Yenisej_ under Lieutenat KROTOV with ten men;
+and a hunting _lodja_ commanded by the hunting mate GWOSDAREV.
+Pachtussov was to undertake the east coast of Novaya Zemlya, Krotov
+to sail through Matotschkin Sound and across the Kara Sea to the
+Yenisej, and Gwosdarev to carry on hunting in order to cover part of
+the costs of the expedition.
+
+Pachtussov could not penetrate into the Kara Sea, but wintered the first
+time on South Novaya Zemlya in 70 deg. 36' N.L. and 59 deg.32' E.L. (Greenwich),
+in an old house which lie found there, and which according to an
+inscription on a cross in its neighbourhood had been built in 1759. This
+ruinous house was repaired with driftwood, which was found in great
+abundance in that region. A separate bath-house was built, and was
+connected with the dwelling-house by a passage formed of empty barrels
+and covered with canvas. Eleven days were spent in putting the old house
+into such repair that it could be occupied. It was afterwards kept so
+warm that the inmates could stay there in their shirt-sleeves without
+freezing. The Commander, clear-headed and specially fit for his post as
+he was, did not permit his crew to fall into habits of idleness, dirt,
+and laziness, but kept them to regular work, bathing and change of linen
+twice a week. Every second hour meteorological observations were taken.
+During the whole winter the crew remained in good health, but in spring
+(March) scurvy broke out, notwithstanding the precautions that were
+taken, and two men died of it in May. Many times during winter the ice
+broke up, and at a short distance from the land the Kara Sea was open as
+far as the eye could reach. A herd of reindeer numbering about 500 head
+were seen in the end of September; a number of foxes were taken in
+traps, and two Polar hears were killed. Geese were seen for the first
+time in spring on the 27th/15th of May.
+
+Next summer Pachtussov rowed up along the east coast to 71 deg. 38' N.L.
+On the west bank of a river, called Savina, he found a very
+good harbour. He found there the remains of a hut, with a cross
+erected beside it, on which was the inscription "Savva Th----anov
+9th June 1742," which he considered to belong to the time of Savva
+Loschkin's voyage. After his return from this boat journey
+Pachtussov went on board his vessel and sailed along the east coast
+north of Matotschkin Sound from the 23rd/11th July to the 25th/13th
+August without meeting with any obstacle from ice. During this
+voyage he passed a very good harbour in 72 deg. 26' N.L., in a
+bay, called Luetke's Bay. Pachtussov then returned through
+Matotschkin Sound to the Petchora. Even along the east coast of
+North Novaya Zemlya the sea was open, but the stock of provisions,
+intended at their departure from Archangel for fourteen months, was
+now so low, that the gallant Polar explorer could not avail himself
+of this opportunity of perhaps circumnavigating the whole of Novaya
+Zemlya.
+
+Of the two other vessels that sailed from Archangel at the same time
+as Pachtussov's, the _lodja_ returned heavily laden with the spoils
+of the chase, but on the other hand nothing was ever heard of the
+_Yenisej_. A concern, not without justification, for its fate, and
+the desire to acquire as good knowledge of the east coast of the
+North Island as had been obtained of that of the South, gave
+occasion to Pachtussov's second voyage.
+
+For this the Government fitted out two vessels, a schooner and a
+"carbasse," which were named after the two officers of the
+_Yenisej_, Krotov and Kasakov. The command of the former was
+undertaken by Pachtussov, and of the latter by the mate ZIVOLKA.
+This time they wintered in 1834-35 on the south side of Matotschkin
+Sound at the mouth of the river Tschirakina, in a house built for
+the purpose, for which they used, besides materials brought with
+them, the remains of three old huts, found in the neighbourhood, and
+the wreck of Rossmuislov's vessel which still lay on the beach. The
+house was a palace in comparison with that in which Pachtussov
+wintered before. It consisted of two rooms, one 21 feet by 16 feet,
+intended for the crew (fourteen men), the other 12 feet by 10 feet,
+for the officers and surgeon, with a bath-house in addition.
+Matotschkin Sound was frozen over for the first time on the 28/16th
+November. The thermometer never sank below the freezing-point of
+mercury, and the cold of winter could be easily borne, because the
+crew wore the Samoyed dress. But the snowstorms were so severe, that
+sometimes it was impossible for eight days at a time to leave the
+house, which was so snowed up that the opening in the roof for smoke
+had several times to be used as a door. The house had no true
+chimney, but was built like a Lapp hut. Eleven of the bears, who
+came in large numbers to the hut, were killed, one of them on the
+roof and another in the porch. During winter the crew were kept in
+constant employment in killing foxes and at other work. Their state
+of health was also very good for the circumstances of the time. Only
+two men died. In spring Matotschkin Sound and part of the east coast
+of the North Island were surveyed by means of sledge journeys, after
+which an attempt was made during summer to circumnavigate the North
+Island, but without success. Lightning accompanied by heavy rain was
+observed on the 24/12th June. On the 15th/3rd September they sailed
+back to Archangel. Unfortunately soon after his arrival there
+Pachtussov fell ill of nervous fever and died on the 19/7th
+November, 1835. It was a great loss, for by his devotion to the task
+he had undertaken, by judgment, courage, and endurance, he takes one
+of the foremost places among the Polar explorers of all countries.
+Besides, few of the older Arctic expeditions have brought home such
+a series of valuable astronomical determinations of position,
+geodetical measurements, meteorological and tidal observations, &c.,
+as Pachtussov.[168]
+
+In 1837 the famous naturalist K.E. VON BAER undertook a voyage to Novaya
+Zemlya, accompanied by Lieutenant ZIVOLKA, LEHMANN the geologist, ROeDER
+the draughtsman, and PHILIPPOV the conservator.[169] They visited
+Matotschkin Schar, penetrated by boat to its eastern end and found the
+Kara Sea open, landing afterwards at Besimannaja Bay, Nechvatova, and on
+an island in Kostin Schar. The expedition thus nowhere penetrated so far
+as its predecessors, but it is of importance as the first examination of
+the natural history of the Polar Sea surrounding Novaya Zemlya carried
+out by actual men of science. With all the respect we must entertain for
+von Baer's great name as a scientific man, it cannot be denied that,
+through his papers on the natural history of the island, grounded on a
+cursory inspection, a number of erroneous ideas regarding the natural
+conditions of the eastern Polar Sea obtained a footing in scientific
+literature.
+
+In order to complete the survey of the island the Russian Government
+sent out in 1838 a new expedition under Lieutenants Zivolka and
+MOISSEJEV. They wintered in 1838-39 in Melkaja Guba on the west
+coast of Novaya Zemlya in 73 deg. 57' N.L.; but on this occasion
+Pachtussov's judgment and insight were wanting, and the wintering
+was very unfortunate. Of the twenty-five men belonging to the
+expedition most were attacked during winter by scurvy; nine died,
+among them Zivolka himself. During spring, excursions for the
+purpose of surveying the neighbouring coasts had to be broken off
+because they had not brought snow-glasses with them--a thing that
+Pachtussov did not neglect, being accustomed besides to blacken the
+under eyelid as a protection against the blinding brightness of the
+snow. By the expedition, however, considerable stretches of the west
+coast of Novaya Zemlya were surveyed, and valuable contributions to
+a knowledge of the climatic conditions of this region obtained.
+These turned out to be less severe than had been expected. During
+winter the thermometer never sank below -33 deg.; in July there
+were only two nights of frost, and on two occasions + 18 deg. was
+observed in the shade; in August there were only three hours of
+frost. All this depends of course on the neighbourhood of warm
+marine currents and of a sea open all the year round at a short
+distance from the coast.
+
+With this unfortunate and to all appearance ill-arranged expedition
+the Russian Novaya Zemlya voyages ceased for a long time. For before
+the beginning of the Norwegian hunting we have only two other
+Russian voyages to notice in our sketch of the history of the North
+East passage.
+
+[Illustration: AUGUST KARLOVITZ ZIVOLKA. Born in 1810 at Warsaw, died
+in 1839 on Novaya Zemlya. (After a pen-and-ink drawing communicated by
+Herr Paul Daschkoff.) ]
+
+The first of these owed its origin to the desire of the captain of a
+Russian man-of-war, PAUL VON KRUSENSTERN, to undertake a voyage in
+the Polar Sea in a schooner, the _Yermak_, which belonged to him and
+which was for the time lying at the Petchora, in order to survey the
+coasts lying to the eastward. He intended himself to undertake the
+command, and to take with him as second in command his son PAUL VON
+KRUSENSTERN. lieutenant in the Russian marine. The latter was sent
+before to equip the _Yermak_, which he did with wonderful judgment
+and skill, in the best way possible, in a region where at that time
+nearly every requisite for the equipment of a vessel was wanting.
+The elder Krusenstern was unable to reach the place of sailing in
+time, on which account the command was given to the son.
+
+[Illustration: PAUL VON KRUSENSTERN, JUNIOR. Born at Revel in 1834;
+died at Dorpat in 1871. ]
+
+He left the mouth of the Petchora on the 10th Sept/29th Aug, 1860. Three
+days after he reached the Kara port, which was completely free of ice,
+as was the sea to the eastward. But the late season of the year, the
+defective equipment of the _Yermak_, and, it would appear, the wording
+of the orders he had received, compelled him to turn after he had
+penetrated some distance into the Kara Sea. On the 19/7th September
+accordingly he was again at the Petchora, without having reached his
+goal. The attempt to penetrate eastwards from this river was resumed at
+the instance of MICHAEL SIDOROFF, afterwards so well known as the
+restless promoter of sea-communication between Siberia and Europe. The
+_Yermak_ was repaired, along with a decked Norwegian pilot-boat,
+which was named the _Embrio_. The command was undertaken by P. von
+Krusenstern, junior. He left the anchorage Kuya on the Petchora on the
+13th/1st August. On the 26th/14th August, the two small vessels sailed
+into Yugor Schar, after having been long detained during their course by
+storms and head-winds. Some huts erected by hunters were seen on the
+right shore of the sound, and on both sides of it Samoyed "chums"
+(tents of reindeer skin) and reindeer. The inhabitants had climbed up
+on the roofs and indicated their astonishment by gesticulations. Both
+vessels anchored in the neighbourhood of Vaygats Island. But a couple of
+hours afterwards large masses of ice drove with an altered current into
+the harbour, forced the _Yermak_ from its anchor and carried the vessel
+into the Kara Sea. It was only with great trouble that it was released
+from the ice and anchored in the eastern mouth of Yugor Schar.
+
+[Illustration: MICHAEL KONSTANTINOVITSCH SIDOROFF. Born in 1823 at
+Archangel. ]
+
+On the 27/15th von Krusenstern again weighed anchor, either to sail
+to the eastward or to search for a more secure anchorage than that
+which he had been compelled for the time to make use of. But the
+wind was so light that he could not hold a course independent of the
+currents. It was, therefore, necessary to moor the vessel to a large
+ice-field, and with this the _Yermak_ during the following days
+drifted farther and farther. Soon the vessel was completely enclosed
+by the ice, and thus rendered unmanageable. The weather was often
+fine, the thermometer showed +4 deg., a strong aerial reflection
+elevated images of the pieces of ice at the horizon, and gave them
+the most wonderful and beautiful forms. Everywhere there were upon
+the ice fresh-water pools, some of which were of great extent and of
+no inconsiderable depth. Thus, on the ice-field lying nearest the
+vessel there were different "lakes," one of which was used for
+drinking, another for filling the water-casks, a third to supply
+washing-water to the crew, and a fourth for washing their clothes.
+
+On the 3rd Sept./22nd Aug. the ice began to be pressed together by a
+light W.S.W. wind. Convinced that the vessel would soon be nipped, the
+men on board began to save the stock of provisions and the boats, by
+placing them on the ice, but the pressure soon ceased. There fell a
+heavy rain, which afterwards, when the wind changed to north-west,
+passed into snow. On the 7th Sept./26th Aug. the coast of Yalmal was
+sighted. A fathom-thick ice-floe shot under the vessel and caused it to
+heel over to starboard. The following day there was a storm from the
+S.S.W. with snow. The ice forcing itself forward shook the vessel
+several times so violently that the crew rushed up to save the
+provisions, &c., on the ice. They were now in the neighbourhood of 70 deg.
+N.L. and 65 deg. E.L. (Greenwich), almost right off the mouth of the Kara
+river. The crew worked the whole day with axes and iron bars hewing off
+the sharp projecting corners of the ice-blocks that were pressed against
+the vessel. On the 11th Sept./20 Aug. there was warm weather with rain.
+The ice was in so violent motion that it was impossible to walk upon it.
+On the afternoon of the same day the _Yermak_ sustained several violent
+concussions, and the hull was lifted one foot. On the 13th/1st
+September, a violent storm broke out, which drove the vessel to the
+north-east. It was expected every moment that the vessel would be
+nipped, and a tent was accordingly pitched on the ice, in order that
+part of the provisions from the hold might be placed in it. Wood even
+was carried to it. It was Russia's thousand-years' day, and it was
+celebrated with a festive ball and merry songs, although they every
+instant expected their vessel to be crushed by the masses of ice that
+were pressed together by the fearful storm. On the 14th/2nd September,
+the stem of the vessel was forced five feet above the water-line, and
+the whole night a continual cracking of timbers was heard in the hull.
+The water rose rapidly to a depth of two feet. Every man left the
+vessel and removed to the ice, but soon after the immense ice-field on
+which the tent was pitched went in pieces, while the leak in the vessel
+closed, and the crew in consequence went on board again. On the 15th/3rd
+September, the vessel was again pressed so, that the deck at times was
+bent to the form of a vault. On the 19th/7th September, von Krusenstern
+called the crew together that they might choose from their number three
+persons to advise with the commander on the best means of making their
+escape, and two days after the vessel was abandoned, after a meal at
+which the crew were literally offered all the house afforded. They then
+broke up for a journey to land, which was exceedingly difficult on
+account of the unevenness of the ice. They were soon obliged to leave
+the boat, which they had at first endeavoured to drag along with them
+over the ice, and take the most indispensable of the provisions on their
+own backs. On leaving the ship a sailor had secretly got possession of
+so much brandy, that during the first day's march he had the opportunity
+of drinking himself dead drunk. To carry him along was not possible, to
+wait was not advisable. He was left therefore to sleep off the drink;
+and in order that he might do so as soon as possible they took off his
+clothes and left him lying upon the ice with only his shirt on. Next
+day, however, he got up with his comrades after following their track in
+the darkness the whole night. Open places were often met with, which the
+travellers had to cross on pieces of drift-ice rowed forward by
+boat-hooks. Once when the shipwrecked men were ferrying themselves over
+upon a piece of ice which was already fully loaded, six walruses were
+seen in the neighbourhood. They showed a disposition to accompany the
+seafarers on the piece of ice, which in that case would certainly have
+sunk, and it was only after a ball had been sent through the leader's
+head that the animals gave up their plan for resting, which gave
+evidence of a gregariousness as great as their want of acquaintance with
+mankind. After Krusenstern and his companions had for several days in
+succession drifted backwards and forwards on a piece of ice in the
+neighbourhood of land, and traversed long stretches by jumping from one
+piece of ice to another, they at last reached the shore on the 28/16th
+September. In the immediate neighbourhood they found an encampment,
+whose inhabitants (Samoyeds) gave the shipwrecked men a friendly
+reception, and entertained them with the luxuries of the reindeer
+herd--raw and cooked reindeer flesh, reindeer tongues, reindeer
+marrow--raw fish and goose-fat. After the meal was finished the
+exhausted wanderers lay down to sleep in the Samoyed tents on the soft
+reindeer skins; "all sorrows and difficulties were forgotten; we felt a
+boundless enjoyment, as if we had come to paradise." Thence they
+travelled in reindeer sledges to Obdorsk, everywhere received in a
+friendly and hospitable manner by the wild tribes on the way, although
+the hospitality sometimes became troublesome; as for instance when an
+Ostyak compelled von Krusenstern to drink tea six times a day, and six
+cups each time, and offered him as a special luxury an extract of
+tobacco in brandy.[170]
+
+Krusenstern's adventurous journey across the Kara Sea is one of the
+many proofs that a Polar navigator ought above everything to avoid
+being beset. The very circumstance that the ice-field, in which he
+became fixed in the neighbourhood of Yugor Schar, could drift across
+to the east coast of the Kara Sea, shows that it was for the most
+part open, and that a steamer or a good sailing-vessel that year,
+and probably also the preceding, might very readily have reached the
+mouth of the Ob or the Yenisej. The narrative of von Krusenstern's
+journey is besides the first complete sketch we have of a passage
+from west to east over the Kara Sea. Little idea could any one then
+have that within a single decade a number of vessels should sail
+free and unhindered along this route.
+
+Soon after the two voyages I have described above, and before they
+became generally known in the geographical literature of Western
+Europe, a new era began in the navigation of the Kara Sea, which was
+brought about by the Norwegian hunters being compelled to seek for
+new fields of sport on and beyond Novaya Zemlya.
+
+The history of the Spitzbergen hunting has not yet been written in a
+satisfactory way, and is in many respects very obscure. It is
+supposed that after the discovery of Spitzbergen in 1596 by Barents,
+the hunting in the Polar Seas began during BENNET'S first voyage in
+1603, and that the whale-fishing was introduced by JONAS POOLE in
+1610. But already in the following year Poole, whose vessel was then
+wrecked on the west coast of Spitzbergen, found in Horn Sound a ship
+from Hull, to which he gave charge of saving his cargo, and two
+years after the English were compelled, in order to keep foreigners
+from the fishing field they wished to monopolise, to send out six
+men-of-war, which found there eight Spanish, and a number of Dutch
+and French vessels (_Purchas_, iii. pp. 462, 716, &c.). Even in our
+days the accounts of new sources of wealth do not spread so speedily
+as in this case, unless, along with the history of the discovery
+which was written by Hakluyt, Purchas, De Veer, &c., there had been
+an unknown history of discovery and the whale-fishing, of which it
+may still be possible to collect some particulars from the archives
+of San Sebastian, Dunkirk, Hull, and other ports.
+
+However this may be, it is certain that the English and Dutch
+North-east voyages gave origin to a whale-fishery in the sea round
+Spitzbergen, which increased by many millions the national wealth of
+these rich commercial states. The fishing went on at first
+immediately along the coasts, from which, however, the whales
+were soon driven, so that the whale-fishers had to seek new
+fishing-grounds, first farther out to sea between Spitzbergen and
+Greenland, then in Davis' Strait, and finally in the South Polar
+Sea, or in the sea on both sides of Behring's Straits.
+
+Spitzbergen, when the whale-fishing ceased in its neighbourhood, was
+mostly abandoned, until the Russians began to settle there,
+principally for the hunting of the mountain fox and the reindeer. Of
+their hunting voyages we know very little, but that they had been
+widely prosecuted is shown by the remains of their dwellings or huts
+on nearly all the fjords of Spitzbergen.
+
+[Illustration: NORWEGIAN HUNTING SLOOP. The _Proeven_,
+employed by the Swedish Expedition to the Yenisej in 1875. ]
+
+They seem to have often wintered, probably because the defective
+build of their vessels only permitted them to sail to and from
+Spitzbergen during the height of summer, and they could not thus
+take part without wintering in the autumn hunting, during which the
+fattest reindeer are got; nor could the thick and valuable fur of
+the winter-fox be obtained without wintering.[171] But the hunting
+voyages of the Russians to Spitzbergen have also long ceased. The
+last voyage thither took place in 1851-52, and had a very
+unfortunate issue for most of those who took part in it, twelve men
+dying out of twenty. On the other hand, the Norwegian voyages to
+Spitzbergen for the seal and walrus-hunting, begun in the end of
+last century, still go on. Their history, too, is, even here in the
+North, very incompletely known, at least to 1858, when the Swedish
+scientific expeditions began regularly to visit those regions, and
+to include in the narratives of their voyages more or less complete
+accounts of the Norwegian hunting, an example that has since been
+followed, though by no means very completely or systematically, by
+the editors of Norwegian and foreign journals, in the first place by
+Petermann's _Mittheilungen_.[172]
+
+Between 1860 and 1870 the game (walrus, seal, bear, and reindeer)
+began to diminish in such a degree that the hunters were compelled
+to seek for themselves new hunting-grounds. They turned to the north
+and east, the less accessible parts of Spitzbergen, afterwards still
+farther eastwards towards Novaya Zemlya, and beyond this island to
+the Kara Sea, and they penetrated farther than all their
+predecessors. In the history of the North-east Passage therefore
+some pages must always be devoted to the bold voyages to Novaya
+Zemlya of these small hunting sloops, provisioned only for the
+summer.
+
+[Illustration: ELLING CARLSEN. Born at Tromsoe in 1819. ]
+
+The Norwegian hunter who first visited Novaya Zemlya was ELLING
+CARLSEN, afterwards known as a member of the Austrian Polar
+expedition. In 1868 he sailed in a sloop from Hammerfest on a
+hunting voyage eastward, forced his way into the Kara Sea through
+the Kara Port, but soon returned through Yugor Schar, and then
+sailed northwards as far as Cape Nassau. Induced by the abundance of
+game, he returned next year to the same regions, and then succeeded
+in penetrating the Kara Sea as far as the neighbourhood of Beli
+Ostrov, whence he returned to Norway through Matotschkin Schar.
+Carlsen's lead was immediately followed by several Norwegian
+hunters, one of whom, EDWARD JOHANNESEN, made a very remarkable
+voyage, of which I will here give a brief account.
+
+[Illustration: EDWARD HOLM JOHANNESEN. Born in 1844, at Balsfjord
+Parsonage. ]
+
+Johannesen anchored on the 31st May, 1869, at Meschduschar Island,
+without having seen any drift-ice in the course of his voyage. He
+then sailed up along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya in nearly open
+water past Matotschkin Sound to Cape Nassau, which was reached on
+the 19th June. Hence he returned, following the coast toward the
+south, until, on the 29th June, he sailed through the Kara Port into
+the Kara Sea. This was passed in very open water, and after coming
+to its eastern side he followed the coast of Yalmal towards the
+north to Beli Ostrov. This island was reached on the 7th August, and
+from it he steered south along the east coast of Novaya Zemlya to
+the Kara Port, through which he returned to Norway.[173]
+
+The same year, the English sportsman, Mr. JOHN PALLISER[174] sailed
+across the Kara Sea, through Matotschkin Schar to Beli Ostrov. He
+returned through Yugor Schar with abundance of booty[175] from the
+hunting grounds where formerly the walruses tumbled undisturbed
+among the drift-ice, and where the white bear has not yet met his
+superior.[176]
+
+These voyages are amongst the most remarkable that the history of
+Arctic navigation can show. They at once overturned all the theories
+which, on the ground of an often superficial study of preceding
+unsuccessful voyages, had been set up regarding the state of the ice
+east of Novaya Zemlya, and they thus form the starting-point of a
+new era in the history of the North-east Passage.
+
+After his return to Norway Johannesen sent to the Academy of
+Sciences in Stockholm a paper on his voyage in 1869, and on his
+hydrographical observations in the Kara Sea, for which he received a
+silver medal. This I was commissioned to send him, and in the
+correspondence which took place regarding it I on one occasion said
+in jest that a circumnavigation of Novaya Zemlya would certainly
+entitle him to a gold medal from the same famous scientific
+institution that had given him the silver medal. I myself travelled
+the following summer, in 1870, to Greenland, and returned thence
+late in autumn. I then had the pleasure of receiving from Captain
+Johannesen a new paper, afterwards inserted in the _Oefcersigt_, of
+the transactions of the Royal Academy of Sciences for the year 1871,
+p. 157, "Hydro-grafiske Iakttagelser under en Fangsttour 1870 rundt
+om Novaja Zemlja." Johannesen now as on the first occasion sailed
+backwards and forwards along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya, then
+through the Kara Port, which was passed on the 12th July. He then
+followed the east coast of Vaygats to Mestni Island, where he came
+in contact with Samoyeds, in connection with which he makes the
+remark, certainly quite unexpected by philologists, that in the
+language of the Samoyeds "certain Norwegian words were recognised."
+Their exterior was not at all attractive. They had flat noses, their
+eyes were dreadfully oblique, and many had also oblique mouths. The
+men received the foreigners drawn up in a row, with the women in the
+second rank. All were very friendly. On the 11th August he was on
+the coast of Yalmal in 71 deg. 48' N.L., whence he sailed over to
+Novaya Zemlya in order to take on board wood and water. He anchored
+in the neighbourhood of Udde Bay in 73 deg. 48' N.L., and saw
+there twenty wild reindeer. Then he sailed again over the Kara Sea
+to Yalmal.
+
+During these cruisings in the Kara Sea the summer had passed.
+Johannesen's vessel was now full, but notwithstanding this he
+determined, at a season of the year when the walrus-hunters commonly
+return to Norway, to see whether the offered prize could not be won
+into the bargain. The course was shaped first to the north-east,
+then westward to the north coast of Novaya Zemlya, which was reached
+on the 3rd September. The whole sea here was open, which Johannesen,
+on the ground of finding Norwegian fishing-net floats among the
+driftwood, attributed to the action of the Gulf Stream. Hence he
+returned to Norway, after having completed a voyage which some years
+before all geographical authorities would have considered an
+impossibility. I need scarcely mention that the Academy in Stockholm
+redeemed the promise which one of its members had given without the
+necessary authority. Johannesen was then twenty-six years old. Son
+of a skilful hunter, he had from his childhood taken part in Arctic
+voyages, and thus grown up in the employment to which he had devoted
+himself.
+
+The same year several other walrus-hunters also made remarkable
+voyages in the Kara Sea. Captain E.A. ULVE first sailed along the
+west coast of Novaya Zemlya to 76 deg. 47' N.L., then back to
+Matotschkin Schar, through which he passed on the 7th and 8th August
+into the Kara Sea, which was completely free of ice, with the
+exception of some few very scattered pieces. After sailing backwards
+and forwards in different directions in the Kara Sea, he returned
+through the Kara Port on the 24th August. Captain F.E. MACK made a
+similar voyage. He sailed from the 28th June to the 8th July
+northwards along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya, which was free of
+ice between the Petchora and the Admiralty peninsula, where fast ice
+was found, and fourteen sailing vessels and two steamers were now
+assembled. On the 8th and 9th June thunder was heard here. From the
+Admiralty peninsula Mack sailed again, first to the south, and then,
+on the 18th July, through Matotschkin Sound into the Kara Sea, which
+was nearly free of ice. Captain P. QUALE, again, and A.O.
+NEDREVAAG, sailing master, penetrated through Yugor Sound into the
+Kara Sea, and sailed there to 75 deg. 22' N.L., and 74 deg. 35'
+E.L. (Greenwich).[177]
+
+Also in 1871 a number of walrus-hunters made remarkable voyages in
+the Kara Sea. Of these, however, only one, Mack, in the schooner
+_Pole Star_, penetrated eastwards farther than all his predecessors.
+On the 14th June he sailed into the Kara Sea through the Kara Port,
+but found the sea still covered with continuous fast ice, from 1.8
+to 2 metres in thickness. He therefore turned and sailed northwards
+along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya to the Gulf Stream Islands
+(76 deg. 10' N.L.), where he remained till the 3rd of August. The
+temperature of the air rose here to +10.5 deg.. The name, which
+the Norwegian walrus-hunters have given these islands, owes its
+origin to the large number of objects from southern seas which the
+Gulf Stream carries with it thither, as floats from the Norwegian
+fisheries, with their owner's marks frequently recognisable by the
+walrus-hunters--beans of _Entada gigalobium_ from the West Indies,
+pumice-stone from Iceland, fragments of wrecked vessels, &c. On the
+3rd of August Mack passed the northernmost promontory of Novaya
+Zemlya. Hence he sailed into the Kara Sea, where at first he fell
+in with ice. Farther on, however, the ice disappeared completely,
+and Mack on the 12th of September reached 75 deg. 25' N.L. and 82 deg.
+30' E.L. (Greenwich) according to Petermann, but 81 deg. 11' Long,
+according to the _Tromsoe Stiftstidende_. He returned through Yugor
+Schar, which was passed on the 26th September.[178] The same year E.
+Johannesen, after long endeavouring without success to make his way
+into the Kara Sea through the southern strait, sailed northwards
+along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya, and did not leave Cape Nassau
+until the 15th October.
+
+From the same year too Petermann also publishes very remarkable
+journals of the Norwegian walrus-hunting captains, S. TOBIESEN, H.
+CH. JOHANNESEN, J.N. ISAKSEN, SOeREN JOHANNESEN, DOERMA, SIMONSEN,
+and E. CARLSEN; but as none of these gallant seamen that year
+penetrated to the north or east beyond the points which their
+predecessors had reached, I may be allowed with regard to their
+voyages to refer to _Mittheilungen_ for 1872 (pp. 386-391 and 395),
+also to the maps which are inserted in the same volume of that
+journal (pl. 19 and 20), and which are grounded on the working out
+by Prof. H. MOHN, of Christiania, of his countrymen's observations.
+With respect to Captain E. Carlsen's voyage, however, it may be
+stated, that in the course of it a discovery was made, which has
+been represented as that of an Arctic Pompeii, remarkably well
+protected against the depredation of the tooth of Time, not indeed
+by lava and volcanic ashes, but by ice and snow. For when Carlsen on
+the 9th September landed on the north-east coast of Novaya Zemlya in
+76 deg. 7' N.L., he found there a house, 10 metres long and 6
+metres wide, with the roof fallen in, long since abandoned and
+filled with gravel and ice. From this frozen gravel were dug up a
+large number of household articles, books, boxes, &c., which showed
+that they were relics of Barents' winter dwelling, which now, almost
+three hundred years after the place had been abandoned, came to the
+light of day, so well preserved that they gave a lively idea of the
+way in which the European passed his first winter in the true Polar
+regions. When Carlsen had erected a cairn in which he placed a tin
+canister containing an account of the discovery, he took on board
+the most important of the articles which he had found and returned
+to Norway. There he sold them at first for 10,800 crowns to an
+Englishman, Mr. Ellis C. Lister Kay, who afterwards made them over
+for the price he had paid for them to the Dutch Government. They are
+now to be found arranged at the Marine Department at the Hague in a
+model room, which is an exact reproduction of the interior of
+Barents' house on Novaya Zemlya.[179]
+
+After Carlsen, Barents' winter haven was visited in the year 1875 by
+the Norwegian walrus-hunter, M. GUNDERSEN, who among other things
+found there a broken chest containing two maps and a Dutch
+translation of the narrative of Pet's and Jackman's voyages, and in
+the year 1876 by Mr. CHARLES GARDINER, who through more systematic
+excavations succeeded in collecting a considerable additional number
+of remarkable things, among which were the ink-horn and the pens
+which the Polar travellers had used nearly three centuries ago, and
+a powder-horn, containing a short account, signed by Heemskerk and
+Barents, of the most important incidents of the expedition.
+Gundersen's _find_ is still, as far as I know, at Hammerfest;
+Gardiner's has been handed over to the Dutch Government to be
+preserved along with the other Barents relics at the Hague.
+
+In 1872 the state of the ice both north of Spitzbergen and round
+Novaya Zemlya was exceedingly unfavourable,[180] and several of the
+scientific expeditions and hunting vessels, which that year visited
+the Arctic Ocean, there underwent severe calamities and misfortunes.
+Five of the best hunting vessels from Tromsoe were lost in the ice;
+the Swedish expedition, which that year started for the north, could
+not, as was intended, erect its winter dwelling on the Seven
+Islands, but was compelled to winter at the more southerly Mussel
+Bay; and the Austrian expedition under the leadership of Payer and
+Weyprecht was beset by ice a few hours after its campaign had
+commenced in earnest. It is well known how this carefully equipped
+expedition afterwards for two winters in succession drifted about in
+the Polar Sea, until it finally came to a standstill at a previously
+unknown land lying north of Novaya Zemlya, which was named after the
+Austrian Emperor, Franz Josef. These two expeditions, however, did
+not touch the territory of the _Vega's_ voyage, on which account I
+cannot here take any further notice of them.[181] But the same year
+a wintering took place on the west coast of Novaya Zemlya, of which
+I consider that I ought to give a somewhat more detailed account,
+both because in the course of it one of the most gallant Polar
+voyagers of Norway met his fate, and because it shows us various
+new, hitherto untouched sides of winter life in the High North.
+
+SIVERT TOBIESEN was one of the oldest and boldest of the Norwegian
+walrus-hunting skippers; he had with life and soul devoted himself
+to his calling, and in it was exposed to many dangers and
+difficulties, which he knew how to escape through courage and skill.
+In 1864 he had sailed round the northeastern part of North-east
+Land, and had been very successful in hunting; but as he was about
+to return home, his vessel was beset by ice near the southern
+entrance to Hinloopen Strait, where the same fate also overtook two
+other hunting sloops, one of them commanded by the old hunting
+skipper MATTILAS, who in the winter of 1872-73 died in a tent at
+Grey Hook, the other by the skipper J. ASTROM. They were compelled
+to save themselves in boats, in which they rowed through Hinloopen
+Strait to the mouth of Ice Fjord, where the shipwrecked crews were
+met and saved by the Swedish expedition of 1864. He passed the
+winter of 1865-66 happily, in a house built for the purpose on Bear
+Island, and communicated to the Swedish Academy of Sciences a series
+of valuable meteorological observations, made during the
+wintering.[182] After 1868 he had made several successful voyages to
+Novaya Zemlya, some of which were also remarkable from a
+geographical point of view, and in 1872 he was also on a hunting
+expedition to the same regions.
+
+[Illustration: SIVERT KRISTIAN TOBIESEN. Born at Tromsoe in 1821,
+died on Novaya Zemlya in 1873. ]
+
+As he could not enter the Kara Sea, he sailed up along the west
+coast, where in the middle of September he was beset in the
+neighbourhood of the Cross Islands. Hence seven of the crew
+travelled south in a boat to seek for a vessel, but Tobiesen
+himself, his son and two men, remained on board. Their stock of
+provisions consisted of only a small barrel of bread, a sack of
+corners and fragments of ship biscuit, a small quantity of coffee,
+tea, sugar, syrup, groats, salt meat, salt fish, a few pounds of
+pork, a couple of tin canisters of preserved vegetables, a little
+bad butter, &c. There was abundance of wood on board and on the
+land. Notwithstanding the defective equipment they went on bravely
+and hopefully with the preparations for wintering, gathered
+drift-wood in heaps on the beach, threw a tent of sails over the
+vessel, threw up snow about its sides, covered the deck with, the
+hides of the seals and walruses that had been captured during
+summer, did what could be done to bring about good ventilation on
+board, &c. A large number of bears came to the winter station at the
+commencement of the wintering, affording an abundant supply of fresh
+bears' flesh. So long as this lasted, the health of the party was
+good, but when it came to an end at the new year, their food for
+three weeks consisted mainly of ill-smelling salt bears' flesh.
+Tobiesen and one of the men were now taken ill. The cold sank to
+-39-1/2 deg. C.[183] On the 29th April, 1873, Tobiesen died of
+scurvy. In the month of May his son was also attacked, and died on
+the 5th July. The two men also suffered from scurvy, but recovered.
+They rowed south in the month of August, and were rescued by a
+Russian hunting-vessel.
+
+[Illustration: TOBIESEN'S WINTER HOUSE ON BEAR ISLAND. (After a sketch
+by the Author.) ]
+
+The seven men, the harpooner Henrik Nilsen, Ole Andreas Olsen, Axel
+Henriksen, Amandus Hansen, Nils Andreas Foxen, Johan Andersson and
+Lars Larsen, who rowed away in autumn, had an exceedingly remarkable
+fate. When they left the vessel they could only take with them
+fourteen ship biscuits, six boxes of lucifers, two guns, with
+ammunition, a spy-glass, a coffeepot and an iron pot, but no winter
+clothes to protect them from the cold. At first, in order to get to
+open water, they had to drag the boat about seven kilometres over
+the ice. They then steered southwards along the land. The journey
+was made under circumstances of great difficulty and privation. The
+darkness and cold increased, as did the storm, and what was worst of
+all their stock of provisions was very soon consumed. On the second
+day, however, they wore fortunate enough to shoot a bear; afterwards
+they also succeeded in killing a pair of seals. Finally, after
+having partly rowed and partly sailed about three weeks (they had no
+almanac with them), and travelled nearly 400 kilometres, they came
+to two small hunting or store houses, which the Russians had built
+on the north side of Gooseland. In order to have at least a roof
+over their heads the exhausted men settled there, though in the
+house they found neither food, clothes, nor hunting implements. They
+were all much enfeebled by hunger, thirst, cold, and the long boat
+journey; their feet were swollen and partly frost-bitten.
+
+They remained in the house three weeks, and during that time shot a
+seal, two white foxes, and four reindeer, with which they kept in
+their lives; but as it appeared that there were no more reindeer to
+be had, and there were no more opportunities of shooting seals or
+reindeer, they determined to leave the house and endeavour to get to
+Vaygats Island. When they broke up, Ole Andreas Olsen and Henrik
+Nilsen took the guns and ammunition, while the other five commenced
+the journey with some small sledges they had found at the house, on
+which they loaded what they had of clothes and other articles. The
+boat was left behind. Soon after they left the house Ole Andreas
+Olsen and Henrik Nilsen were separated in a snowstorm from the
+others who drew the sledges. The latter now agreed to determine by
+lot whether they should return to the house or continue their
+journey, and when the lot fell for the latter they allowed it to
+settle the matter, and so went south.[184]
+
+Their position was now desperate in the extreme. When they left the
+house they had about half a pound of reindeer flesh and a little
+blubber remaining. The weather was dreadful; they were badly
+clothed, and they wanted water. In consequence they could make only
+very short days' marches. At night they buried themselves in the
+snow, and while the rest slept, one man kept constant watch, to
+prevent the others from being snowed up and to keep the bears at a
+distance. They all held out till the sixth night. Then Amandus
+Hansen died. The rest were compelled to leave him in the snow and
+continue their journey as well as they could, but they had by
+degrees become so weak and exhausted that, after having traversed
+probably about 100 kilometres, for the most part along the coast,
+they had to leave even the sledges and the most of what they had
+with them. The seventh or eighth day they caught sight of a little
+pile of fuel, and the track of a sledge in the snow. By following
+this track for about ten kilometres they found a small house,
+inhabited by Samoyeds, who immediately gave them a friendly
+reception, and entertained them in the most hospitable way. In
+particular they showed much kindness to Nils Andreas Foxen, whose
+toes were frost-bitten, and who was in other respects much
+enfeebled.
+
+These Samoyeds, three men, three women, and a boy, spoke Russian.
+They had settled for the winter on the south part of Gooseland to
+shoot the seal and the walrus. They had with them a large barge,
+besides some small Samoyed boats, and were comparatively well
+provided with reindeer flesh, meal, tea, sugar, &c. Their guns were
+old flint-lock fowling-pieces, but they were good shots. With these
+Samoyeds the four shipwrecked men remained the whole winter, and
+were tolerably well off. When the weather permitted they assisted
+the Samoyeds in capturing seals, and when the weather was bad they
+passed the time as well as they could, the Samoyeds generally
+employing themselves in playing cards or draughts. In order to avoid
+scurvy the Samoyeds often took exercise in the open air, and ate
+reindeer flesh, partly cooked and partly raw, and drank the blood.
+They lived in the house until March was well advanced, when, for
+want of fuel, they were obliged to hew it down. Instead they removed
+into a tent of reindeer skin. These Samoyeds appear to have been
+Christians in name, though they must have had strange ideas of their
+new God. When, for instance, they saw a seal and missed shooting it,
+they shot at the sun, because they believed that God was angry with
+them. They lived in a sort of marriage, but if the man became
+unfriendly to the woman, or tired of her, he could take another;
+they had no clocks, but, notwithstanding, had a tolerably good idea
+of time by the help of the stars and the sun; instead of an almanac
+they used a piece of wood, in which for every day they cut a notch.
+Although they sometimes quarrelled with and threatened one another,
+they were, however, on the whole friendly, and reasonable, and
+showed much kindness to the four shipwrecked men, whom they provided
+with warm skin clothes, and during the whole time with food in
+abundance, according to their circumstances, so that they did not
+suffer any want.
+
+Ole Andreas Olsen and Henrik Nilsen had, when they were separated in
+the snowstorm from the sledge party, half a pound of flesh and their
+guns, and nothing more. They did not succeed in finding any game,
+and though they were not very far from the house, they required
+three days and a half to get back to it. In the meantime, also,
+these two comrades in misfortune had been separated. Henrik Nilsen
+found the house first, lighted a fire, roasted and ate some pieces
+of fox flesh that he found remaining. Ole Andreas Olsen, who in
+desperation had endeavoured to quench his thirst with sea-water, was
+so weak that, when late at night he came to the boat, he could not
+crawl up to the house. He had kept himself in life by eating snow
+and devouring large pieces of his "pesk," which was made of the raw
+hides of reindeer he had previously shot. After having lain a while
+in the boat he crept up to the house, where he found Henrik sleeping
+by the fire, which was not yet quite extinguished. The following day
+they both began to make arrangements for a lengthened stay in the
+house. But here they found nothing, neither food, household
+furniture, nor aught else. Nor did they succeed at first in getting
+any game; and for more then a fortnight they sustained life by
+boiling and gnawing the flesh from the bones of the reindeer, the
+seal, and the bear, that lay under the snow, remains from the
+Russian hunting excursions of the preceding year. Finally, before
+Christmas they succeeded in killing a reindeer. Their lucifers were
+now done, but they lighted a fire by loading their guns with a
+mixture of which gunpowder formed a part, and firing into old ropes,
+left behind by the Russians, which they picked asunder and dried.
+One of the Russian huts they tore down and used as fuel. They had
+neither axe nor saw, but they split up the fuel by means of a piece
+of iron, which they took from the keel of the boat, and of which
+they made, by hammering with stones, a sort of knife. Of some nails,
+which they also took from the boat, they likewise forged needles by
+means of stones; they used reindeer sinews for thread, and of the
+hides they sewed clothes for themselves. They lived in the hut until
+some time in April. During this time they shot eleven reindeer and a
+bear, so that they did not actually suffer hunger; but in the middle
+of April they had powder remaining for only three shots, and they
+now saw the impossibility of supporting themselves longer at that
+place, wherefore they determined to go farther south, in order, if
+possible, to reach Vaygats Island. They went by land along the
+sea-shore, leaving the boat behind. After the lapse of some days
+they came to the same Samoyeds with whom the other four of the crew
+were, and they now remained till the middle of June with the
+Samoyeds, who gave them the same hospitable treatment as their
+companions in misfortune. When at the time specified it was
+determined to fetch the boat from the Russian hut, in order that
+they might make their way southwards, Johan Andersson, a Swede by
+birth, declared that he wished to remain with the Samoyeds, and was
+not willing to accompany the other five on their homeward journey.
+
+The latter now dragged the boat for two days over the ice but when it
+became too heavy they had to cut it through the middle and leave a half
+behind. Of a large sealskin, which they got from the Samoyeds, they made
+a stern to the other half, which they continued to drag over the ice for
+three days, until they came to open water. Then they rowed in the
+truncated boat ten days, until they reached a fast ice-border at the
+Vaygats Island, where they again fell in with Samoyeds. Even by these,
+who could speak neither Russian nor Quaen, and by whom they could with
+difficulty make themselves understood, they were well received. They
+remained there eight days and got good entertainment. These Samoyeds had
+tame reindeer, with which they sent the shipwrecked men on their way
+southwards, till they fell in with a vessel, with which four returned to
+Norway. Lars Larsen now did not wish to go home, preferring to remain
+with the Samoyed family which he had last met with. Samoyed life,
+however, must not be so pleasant after all, for in a year or two both
+the men who had remained among the Samoyeds returned home. As a reward
+for the hospitality which the shipwrecked walrus-hunters had received
+from the Samoyeds on Gooseland, the Norwegian Government presented them
+with a number of gifts, consisting of clothes, pearls, breechloaders,
+with ammunition, &c., which were handed over to them with festive
+speeches and toasts on the 17th July, 1880. During the entertainment
+which took place on this occasion on the coast of Novaya Zemlya, toasts
+were drunk in champagne, and it is said that this liquor was very much
+relished by the Samoyeds.[185]
+
+As little as Tobiesen could any other walrus-hunter make his way,
+either in 1872 or 1873, into the Kara Sea, the entrances of which
+were during these summers blocked by a compact belt of ice, which
+extended along the east coast of Novaya Zemlya and Vaygats Island to
+the mainland. In the belief of a large number of experienced
+walrus-hunters, with whom I have conversed on the subject, this belt
+of ice was only some few nautical miles broad, and it is therefore
+probable that even in those years there would have been no obstacle
+to prevent a passage eastwards by this route in autumn.
+
+In 1874, on the contrary, the state of the ice became very
+favourable, and many walrus-hunters again as formerly sailed in all
+directions across the Kara Sea, which this year was also visited by
+an Englishman, Captain J. WIGGINS. None of them, however, penetrated
+farther to the east or north than Johannesen, Carlsen, Mack, and
+others had done during the years 1869-70.
+
+It was not until the following year that the North-east voyages took
+a step forward, important both in a purely geographical as well as a
+practical point of view, when I succeeded in a walrus-hunting sloop,
+the _Proeven_, commanded by the walrus-hunting Captain Isaksen, in
+sailing through Yugor Straits, which were passed on 2nd August, and
+over the nearly ice-free Kara Sea as far as to the mouth of the
+Yenisej. The _Proeven_ anchored there on the 15th August 1875, in,
+or more correctly immediately off, the same splendid haven where the
+_Vega_ expedition lay at anchor from the 6th to the 10th August,
+1878. Hence I sailed under various difficulties along with Dr.
+Stuxberg and Dr. Lundstroem and three men in a Nordland boat, up the
+river to Saostrovskoj, where we fell in with a steamer, in which we
+afterwards travelled to Yenisejsk. On leaving Port Dickson I handed
+over the command to Dr. Kjellman, who along with Dr. Theel returned
+by sea to Europe across the Kara Sea and through Matotschkin Schar,
+which was passed during the return voyage on the 4th to the 11th
+September.
+
+By this voyage of 1875 I was the first who succeeded in penetrating
+from the Atlantic Ocean in a vessel to the mouths of the great
+Siberian rivers. One of the objects which the old North-east
+voyagers had aimed at was thus at last accomplished, and that in a
+way that promised to be of immense practical importance for the
+whole of Siberia. The voyage was also regarded in that light by
+leading men in the great empire of the East, and our return journey
+from Yenisejsk by Krasnojarsk, Tomsk, Omsk, Yekaterinburg,
+Nischni-Novgorod, Moscow and St. Petersburg, became therefore a
+journey from _fete_ to _fete_. But a number of voices were
+simultaneously raised, which asserted that the success of the
+_Proeven_ depended on an accidental combination of fortunate
+circumstances, which would not soon occur again. In order to show
+that this was not the case, and that I might myself bring the first
+goods by sea to Siberia, I undertook my second voyage to the Yenisej
+in 1876, in which I penetrated with the steamer _Ymer_, not only to
+the mouth of the river, but also up the river to the neighbourhood
+of Yakovieva in 71 deg. N.L. Hence I returned the same year by sea
+to Europe.[186] In the gulf of Yenisej a large island was
+discovered, which I named after Mr. Alexander Sibiriakoff, who
+defrayed the principal expenses of the expedition. Before starting
+on this voyage, I visited the Philadelphia Exhibition, and it may
+perhaps deserve to be mentioned, that leaving New York on the 1st
+July by one of the ordinary steamers, and going on board my own
+vessel in Norway, I reached the mouth of the Yenisej on the 15th
+August, that is to say, in forty-six days.
+
+The same year Captain Wiggins also undertook a voyage to the
+Yenisej, in which he penetrated with a steamer up the river beyond
+the labyrinth of islands lying between 70 deg. and 71 deg. N.L.
+The vessel wintered there, but was lost the following spring at the
+breaking up of the ice.[187]
+
+The voyages of the _Proeven_ and the _Ymer_ led to several purely
+commercial voyages to the Yenisej and the Ob, of which however I can
+here with the greatest brevity mention only the following:
+
+[Illustration: JOSEPH WIGGINS ]
+
+The Swedish steamer _Fraser_, commanded by the German Captain
+DALLMANN, after having been fitted out at Gothenburg on
+Sibiriakoff's account, sailed in 1877 with a cargo from Bremen to
+the Yenisej and back. The vessel left Hammerfest on the 9th August,
+arrived at Goltschicha on the 21st August, commenced the return
+voyage on the 14th September, and on the 24th of the same month was
+back at Hammerfest.
+
+The steamer _Louise_ commanded by Captain DAHL, with a cargo of
+iron, olive oil, and sugar, the same year made the first voyage from
+England to Tobolsk, starting from Hull on the 18th July and arriving
+at Tobolsk on the 20th September.[188]
+
+Captain SCHWANENBERG sailed in a half-decked sloop, the _Utrennaja
+Saria_, from the Yenisej to Europe. To what has been already said of
+this voyage, I may here add a few words more.
+
+[Illustration: DAVID IVANOVITSCH SCHWANENBERG. Born in Courland in
+1831. ]
+
+During the inundation in the spring of 1877, which compelled the
+mate Nummelin to betake himself for eight days to the roof of the
+fragile dwelling in which he had passed the winter, the
+Yenisejsk-built vessel, the _Aurora_ (or _Sewernoe Sianie_) was
+lost. Schwanenberg, who soon afterwards came to the neighbourhood,
+succeeded in purchasing from an Englishman, Mr. SEEBOHM, another
+little vessel, which was also built at Yenisejsk by Mr. Boiling for
+the purpose of transporting thither the goods which I had carried in
+the _Ymer_ to Korepovskoj, a _simovie_ on the bank of the Yenisej in
+71 deg. 19' N.L. The goods however had been taken up the river by
+a steamer, on which account the vessel was sold by Boiling to Mr.
+Seebohm, who made an excursion in it to the lower courses of the
+Yenisej for ornithological researches. He named the vessel the
+_Ibis_. When Mr. Seebohm no longer required it, there was at first a
+proposal that it should be taken over by Captain Wiggins, who, as
+has been already stated, had the year before come to the Yenisej
+with a small steamer, which wintered at the islands in the river,
+and had now stranded during the breaking up of the ice. He wished to
+carry his men on the _Ibis_ either home or to the Ob, but the
+English seamen declared that they would not for all the world's
+honour and riches sail in that vessel. Schwanenberg had thus an
+opportunity of purchasing the vessel, whose name he altered to the
+_Utrennaja Saria_ (the _Dawn_), and to the surprise of all
+experienced seamen he actually made a successful passage to Norway.
+The vessel was then towed along the coast to Gothenburg, and through
+the Goeta Canal to Stockholm, and finally crossed the Baltic to St.
+Petersburg.
+
+On the 13th August Schwanenberg hoisted the Russian flag on his
+little vessel. During his outward passage he met, in the mouth of
+the Yenisej, Sibiriakoff's steamer the _Fraser_, Captain Dallmann,
+who in vain endeavoured to dissuade him from prosecuting the
+adventurous voyage. He anchored at Beli Ostrov on the 24th August,
+passed the Kara Port on the 30th August, and reached Vardoe on the
+11th September. The _Utrennaja Saria_ arrived at Christiania on the
+31st October, at Gothenburg on the 15th November, passed Motala on
+the 20th, reached Stockholm on the 23rd November and St. Petersburg
+on the 3rd December. Everywhere in Scandinavia the gallant seamen
+met with the heartiest reception. Their vessel was the first that
+sailed from the town of Yenisejsk to Europe, and is still, when this
+is being written, the only one.
+
+[Illustration: GUSTAF ADOLF NUMMELIN. Born at Viborg in 1853. ]
+
+The _Dawn_ is 56 feet long, 14 feet beam, and draws 6 feet of water.
+Aft there is a little cabin in which there is scant space for three
+men. Cooking is done in the fore. The cargo consisted of a small
+quantity of graphite, fish, furs, and other samples of the products
+of Siberia.
+
+The vessel was manned by Captain Schwanenberg, the mates Nummelin
+and Meyenwaldt, and two exiled criminals, who in this unexpected way
+returned to their native country. I take it for granted that by the
+rare nautical exploit they took part in, they there won forgiveness
+for former offences.
+
+[Illustration: THE SLOOP UTRENNAJA SARIA. ]
+
+
+[Footnote 159: Compare: "The names of the places that the Russes
+sayle by, from Pechorskoie Zauorot to Mongozey" (_Purchas_, III. p.
+539): "The voyage of Master Josias Logan to Pechora, and his
+wintering there with Master William Pursglove and Marmaduke Wilson,
+Anno 1611" (_loc. cit._ p. 541): "Extracts taken out of two letters
+of Josias Logan from Pechora, to Master Hakluyt, Prebend of
+Westminster" (_loc. cit._ p. 546): "Other obseruations of the sayd
+William Pursglove" (_loc. cit._ p. 550). The last paper contains
+good information regarding the Obi, Tas, Yenisej, Pjaesina, Chatanga,
+and Lena. ]
+
+[Footnote 160: The stringent regulations regarding fasting of the
+Russians, especially the Old Believers, if they be literally
+observed, form an insuperable obstacle to the colonisation of
+high-northern regions, in which, to avoid scurvy, man requires an
+abundant supply of fresh flesh. Thus, undoubtedly, religious
+prejudices against certain kinds of food caused the failure of the
+colony of Old Believers which was founded in 1767 on Kolgujev
+Island, in order that its members might undisturbed use their old
+church books and cross themselves in the way they considered most
+proper. The same cause also perhaps conduced to the failure of the
+attempts which are said to have been made after the destruction of
+Novgorod by Ivan the Terrible in 1570 by fugitives from that town to
+found a colony on Novaya Zemlya (_Historische Nachrichten von den
+Samojeden und den Lapplaendern_, Riga und Mietau, 1769, p. 28). This
+book was first printed in French at Koenigsberg in 1762. The author
+was Klingstedt, a Swede in the Russian service, who long lived at
+Archangel. ]
+
+[Footnote 161: The statement is incredible, and probably originated
+in some mistake. To form such a heap of walruses at least 50,000
+animals would have been required, and it is certain that fifteen men
+could not have killed so many. If we assume that in the statement of
+the length and breadth, feet ought to stand in place of fathoms, we
+get the still excessive number of 1,500 to 3,000 killed animals.
+Probably instead of 90 we should have 9, in which case the heap
+would correspond to about 500 walruses and seals killed. The walrus
+tusks collected weighed 40 pood, which again indicates the capture
+of 150 to 200 animals. ]
+
+[Footnote 162: _Witsen_, p. 915. Klingstedt states that fifty
+soldiers with their wives and children were removed in 1648 to
+Pustosersk, and that the vojvode there had so large an income that
+in three or four years he could accumulate 12,000 to 15,000 roubles
+(_Historische Nachrichten von den Samojeden_, &c., p. 53). ]
+
+[Footnote 163: According to Luetke, p. 70. Hamel, _Tradescant d.
+aeltere_, gives the date 1742-44. ]
+
+[Footnote 164: Thus on the first map in an atlas published in 1737
+by the St. Petersburg Academy, Novaya Zemlya is delineated as a
+peninsula projecting from Taimur Land north of the Pjaesina. ]
+
+[Footnote 165: Properly "Mate, with the rank of Lieutenant," from
+which we may conclude that Rossmuislov wanted the usual education of
+an officer. ]
+
+[Footnote 166: These remarkable voyages were described for the first
+time, after the accounts of Zivolka, by the academician K.E. v. Baer
+in _Bulletin scientifique publ. par l'Acad. Imp. des Sciences de St.
+Petersburg_, t. ii. No. 9, 10, 11 (1837). Before this there does not
+appear to have been in St. Petersburg any knowledge of Pachtussov's
+voyages, the most remarkable which the history of Russian Polar Sea
+exploration has to show. ]
+
+[Footnote 167: The carbasse was named, like the vessels of Lasarev
+and Luetke, the _Novaya Zemlya_. It was forty-two feet long, fourteen
+feet beam, and six feet deep, decked fore and aft, and with the open
+space between protected by canvas from breakers. ]
+
+[Footnote 168: The details of Pachtussov's voyages are taken partly
+from von Baer's work already quoted, partly from Carl Svenske,
+_Novaya Zemlya_, &c., St. Petersburg, 1866 (in Russian, published at
+the expense of M.K. Sidoroff), and J. Spoerer, _Nowaja Semlae in
+geographischer, naturhistorischer und volkswirthschaftlicher
+Beziehung, nach den Quellen bearbsitet_. Ergaenz-Heft. No. 21 zu
+Peterm. _Geogr. Mittheilungen_, Gotha, 1867. ]
+
+[Footnote 169: _Bulletin scientifique publie par l'Academie Imp. de
+St. Petersburg_, t. ii. (1837), p. 315; iii. (1838), p. 96, and
+other places. ]
+
+[Footnote 170: Paul von Krusenstern, _Skizzen aus sienem
+Seemannsleben. Seinen Freunden gewidmet_. Hirschberg in Silesia,
+without date. ]
+
+[Footnote 171: Information regarding the mode of life of the Russian
+hunters on the coasts of Spitzbergen is to be found in P.A. le Roy,
+_Relation des avantures arrivees a quatre matelots Russes, &c._
+1766; Tschitschagov's _Reise nach dem Eismeer_, St. Petersburg,
+1793; John Bacstrom, _Account of a voyage to Spitzbergen_, 1780,
+London, 1808 (as stated; I have not seen this work); B.M. Keilhau,
+_Reise i Oest og Vest Finmarken, samt til Beeren-Eiland og
+Spetsbergen i Aarene 1827 og 1828_, Christiania, 1831; A. Erman,
+_Archiv fuer wissenschastliche Kunde von Russland_, Part 13 (1854),
+p. 260; K. Chydenius, _Svenska expeditionen till Spetsbergen 1861_
+(p. 435); Duner and Nordenskioeld, _Svenska Expeditioner till
+Spetsbergen och Jan Mayen 1863 och 1864_ (p. 101). ]
+
+[Footnote 172: Before 1858 there is to be found in Petermann's
+_Mittheilungen_ only a single notice of the Norwegian Spitzbergen
+hunting, the existence of which was at the time probably known to no
+great number of European geographers. ]
+
+[Footnote 173: The first account of this voyage was published in
+_Oefversigt af Svenska Vetenskaps-akademiens forhandlingar_, 1870,
+p. 111. ]
+
+[Footnote 174: _Athenoeum_, 1869, p. 498. Petermann's
+_Mittheilungen_, 1869, p. 391. ]
+
+[Footnote 175: Palliser's game consisted of 49 walruses, 14 Polar
+bears and 25 seals; that of the working hunters was many times
+greater. All the vessels which went from Tromsoe that year captured
+805 walruses, 2,302 seals, 53 bears, &c. ]
+
+[Footnote 176: Sidoroff too started in 1869 on a north-east voyage
+in a steamer of his own, the _George_. However, he only reached the
+Petchora, and the statement that went the round of the press, that
+the _George_ actually reached the Ob, is thus one of the many
+mistakes which so readily find their way into the news of the day. ]
+
+[Footnote 177: Petermann's _Mittheilungen_, 1871, p. 97. Along with
+Ulve's, Mack's, and Quale's voyages, Petermann refers to a voyage
+round Novaya Zemlya by T. Torkildsen. In this case, however,
+Petermann was exposed to a possibly unintended deception.
+Torkildsen, who visited the Polar Sea for the first time in 1870,
+indeed made the voyage round Novaya Zemlya, but only as a rescued
+man on Johannesen's vessel. Torkildsen's own vessel, the _Alfa_, had
+been wrecked on the 13th July at the bottom of Kara Bay, after which
+the skipper and six men were saved by Johannesen, yet by no means so
+that Torkildsen, as is stated by Petermann, had the least command of
+the vessel that saved him. (Cf. _Tromsoe Stiftstidende_, 1871, No. 23.) ]
+
+[Footnote 178: _Tromsoe Stiftstidende_, 1871, No. 83; Petermann's
+_Mittheilungen_, 1872, p. 384. ]
+
+[Footnote 179: Cf. _The Three Voyages of William Barents_, by Gerrit
+de Veer, 2nd Edition, with an Introduction by Lieutenant Koolemaens
+Beynen. London, 1876 (Works issued by the Hakluyt Society, No. 54). ]
+
+[Footnote 180: The sea in the neighbourhood of Spitzbergen on the
+east was on the other hand very open that year, so that it was
+possible for the same time to reach and circumnavigate the large
+island situated to the east of Spitzbergen, which had been seen in
+1864 by Duner and me from the top of White Mount in the interior of
+Stor Fjord. ]
+
+[Footnote 181: Nor does space permit me to give an account of
+various expeditions, which indeed concerned Novaya Zemlya, but did
+not penetrate farther eastward than their predecessors; for
+instance, the Rosenthal expedition of 1871, in which the well-known
+African traveller and Spitzbergen voyager Baron von Heuglin, and the
+Norwegian botanist Aage Aagaard, took part as naturalists; Payer and
+Weyprecht's voyage of reconnaissance in the sea between Spitzbergen
+and Novaya Zemlya in 1871, &c. ]
+
+[Footnote 182: Kongl. _Svenska Vetenskaps-akademiens
+handlingar_, 1869. ]
+
+[Footnote 183: At Mussel Bay, too, during the winter of 1872-73, the
+greatest deg. of cold was the same; that is to say, at neither
+place did it reach the freezing-point of mercury. At the _Vega's_
+winter station, on the contrary, it was considerably greater. ]
+
+[Footnote 184: It is very common that the hunters in cases of
+importance and danger when it is difficult to settle what course
+ought to be taken, permit the drawing of lots to determine the
+choice. ]
+
+[Footnote 185: The statements made here regarding the wintering of
+Tobiesen and his companions are taken partly from a copy which I
+caused to be made of his journal, partly from an account of the
+adventures of the seven hunters, copied from _Finmarksposten_ into
+_Aftonbladet_ for 1873, No. 220. Finally, the account of the
+distribution of presents to the Samoyeds is copied from Norwegian
+journals into _Aftonbladet_ for 1880, No. 197. ]
+
+[Footnote 186: The dates of the _Ymer's_ voyage are as
+follows:--Left the coast of Norway on the 26th July; stay at
+Matotschkin Sound, through which I, on this occasion, steamed into
+the Kara Sea from the 30th July to the 5th August; arrival at the
+Yenisej on the 15th August; arrival at the anchorage at Goltschicha
+on the 16th August; commenced the return voyage on the 1st
+September, in the course of it passed Matotschkin Schar on the 7th
+September. ]
+
+[Footnote 187: Of Captain Wiggins' voyage I know only that his
+original destination was the Ob, but that on account of currents and
+shoals which, he encountered at the mouth of this river, he altered
+his plan, and reached the Yenisej in the beginning of September. ]
+
+[Footnote 188: _Deutsche Geographische Blaetter_, Bremen, 1870, i. p.
+216, and ii. p. 35. ]
+
+[Illustration: Map of Port Dickson, by G. Bove. Map of Cape Bolvan on
+Vaygats Island, by the author. The _Lena's_ cruise in Malygin Sound,
+by A. Hovgaard. Map of Cape Chelyuskin, by G. Bove ]
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+ Departure from Port Dickson--Landing on a rocky island
+ east of the Yenisej--Self-dead animals--Discovery of
+ crystals on the surface of the drift-ice--Cosmic dust--
+ Stay in Actinia Bay--Johannesen's discovery of the island
+ Ensamheten--Arrival at Cape Chelyuskin--The natural state
+ of the land and sea there--Attempt to penetrate right
+ eastwards to the New Siberian Islands--The effect of the
+ mist--Abundant dredging-yield--Preobraschenie Island--
+ Separation from the _Lena_ at the mouth of the river Lena.
+
+
+When on the morning of the 9th August the _Fraser_ and _Express_
+sailed for the point higher up the river where their cargo was
+lying, the _Vega_ and the _Lena_ were also ready to sail. I,
+however, permitted the vessels to remain at Port Dickson a day
+longer, in order to allow Lieutenant Bove to finish his survey, and
+for the purpose of determining astronomically, if possible, the
+position of this important place. In consequence of a continuous
+fog, however, I had as little opportunity of doing so on this
+occasion as during the voyage of 1875, which serves to show of what
+sort the weather is during summer at the place where the warm water
+of the Yenisej is poured into the Arctic Ocean. It was thus not
+until the morning of the 10th August that the _Vega_ and the _Lena_
+weighed anchor in order to continue their voyage. The course was
+shaped for the most westerly of the islands, which old maps place
+off the estuary-bay of the Pjaesina, and name Kammenni Ostrova (Stone
+Islands), a name which seems to indicate that in their natural state
+they correspond to the rocky islands about Port Dickson. The sky was
+hid by mist, the temperature of the air rose to +10.4 deg. C.;
+that of the water was at first +10 deg., afterwards +8 deg.; its
+salinity at the surface of the sea was inconsiderable. No ice was
+seen during the course of the day. Favoured by a fresh breeze from
+the south-east, the _Vega_ could thus begin her voyage with all sail
+set. Small rocky islands, which are not to be found on the chart,
+soon reminded us of the untrustworthiness of the maps. This,
+together with the prevailing fog, compelled Captain Palander to sail
+forward with great caution, keeping a good outlook and sounding
+constantly. Warm weather and an open sea were also favourable for
+the next day's voyage. But the fog now became so dense, that the
+_Vega_ had to lie-to in the morning at one of the many small islands
+which we still met with on our way.
+
+Dr. Kjellman, Dr. Almquist, Lieutenant Nordquist, and I, landed
+here. The bare and utterly desolate island consisted of a low gneiss
+rock, rising here and there into cliffs, which were shattered by the
+frost and rather richly clothed with lichens. On the more low-lying
+places the rock was covered with a layer of gravel, which, through
+drying and consequent contraction, had burst into six-sided figures,
+mostly from 0.3 to 0.5 metre in diameter. The interior of the
+figures was completely bare of vegetation, only in the cracks there
+was to be seen an exceedingly scanty growth of stunted mosses,
+lichens, and flowering plants. Of the last-named group there were
+found fifteen species,[189] which could with success, or more
+correctly without succumbing, survive the struggle for existence on
+the little poor archipelago, protected by no mountain heights, from
+the storms of the Polar Sea; but of these species, perhaps a couple
+seldom develop any flowers. The mosses, too, were in great part
+without fruit, with the exception of those which grew on the margin,
+formed of hard clay covered with mud, of a pool, filled with
+brackish water and lying close to the sea-margin. A large number of
+pieces of driftwood scattered round this pool showed that the place
+was occasionally overflowed with sea-water, which thus appears to
+have been favourable to the development of the mosses. Of lichens
+Dr. Almquist found a number of species, well developed, and
+occurring in comparative abundance. On the contrary, the sea,
+although the surrounding rocky islands indicated a good bottom for
+algae, was so completely destitute of the higher algae, that only a
+single microscopic species was found by Dr. Kjellman. No mammalia
+were seen, not even the usual inhabitant of the desolate rocky
+islands of the Polar Sea, the Polar bear, who, in regions where he
+has not made acquaintance with the hunter's ball or lance, in secure
+reliance on his hitherto unvanquished might, seldom neglects to
+scrutinise the newly arrived guests from the tops of high rocks or
+ice-blocks. We saw here only six species of birds. The first of
+these that attracted our attention was the snow-bunting, which had
+left the more fertile mountain heights of the south to choose this
+bare and desolate island in the Arctic Ocean for its breeding-place,
+and now fluttered round the stone mounds, where it had its nest,
+with unceasing twitter, as if to express its satisfaction with its
+choice. Further, two species of waders, _Tringa maritima_ and
+_Phalaropus fulicarius_, were observed running restlessly about the
+beach to collect their food, which consists of insects. The birds
+that were killed often had their crops full of the remains of
+insects, although living at a place where the naturalist has to
+search for hours to find a dozen gnats or their equals in size, a
+circumstance that tells very favourably for these birds' powers of
+vision, of locomotion, and of apprehension. It is difficult in any
+case to understand what it is that attracts this insectivorous bird
+to one of the regions that is poorest in insect life in the whole
+world. The glaucous gulls' plunderer, the skua, and its chastiser
+the bold tern, were also observed, as were a few barnacle geese. On
+the other hand, no eiders were met with. All the birds named
+occurred only in inconsiderable numbers, and there was nothing found
+here resembling the life which prevails on a Spitzbergen
+fowl-island. Finally, it may be mentioned that Lieutenant Nordquist
+found under stones and pieces of drift-wood a few insects, among
+them a beetle (a _staphylinid_). Dr. Stuxberg afterwards found a
+specimen of the same insect species at Cape Chelyuskin itself. No
+beetle is found on Spitzbergen, though the greater portion of that
+group of islands is, in respect of climate, soil, and vegetation,
+much better favoured than the region now in question. This seems to
+me to show that the insect fauna of Spitzbergen, exceedingly
+inconsiderable and limited in numbers as it is, has migrated thither
+in comparatively recent times, and in how high a degree the
+migration of beetles is rendered difficult by their inability to
+pass broad expanses of water.
+
+[Illustration: THE VEGA AND LENA MOORED TO AN ICE-FLOE. On the morning
+of the 12th August, 1878. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+By afternoon the air had again cleared somewhat, so that we could
+sail on. A piece of ice was seen here and there, and at night the
+ice increased for a little to an unpleasant extent. Now, however, it
+did not occur in such quantity as to prove an obstacle to navigation
+in clear weather or in known waters.
+
+On the 12th August we still sailed through considerable fields of
+scattered drift-ice, consisting partly of old ice of large
+dimensions, partly of very rotten year's ice. It formed, however, no
+serious obstacle to our advance, and nearer the shore we would
+probably have had quite open water, but of course it was not
+advisable to go too near land in the fog and unknown waters, without
+being obliged. A large number of fish (_Gadus polaris_) were seen
+above the foot of a large block of ground ice, near which we lay-to
+for some hours. Next day we saw near one of the islands, where the
+water was very clear, the sea-bottom bestrewed with innumerable fish
+of the same species. They had probably perished from the same cause,
+which often kills fish in the river Ob in so great numbers that the
+water is infected, namely, from a large shoal of fish having been
+enclosed by ice in a small hole, where the water, when its surface
+has frozen, could no longer by absorption from the air replace the
+oxygen consumed, and where the fish have thus been literally
+drowned. I mention this inconsiderable _find_ of some self-dead
+fish, because self-dead vertebrate animals, even fish, are found
+exceedingly seldom. Such _finds_ therefore deserve to be noted with
+much greater care than, for instance, the occurrence of animal
+species in the neighbourhood of places where they have been seen a
+thousand times before. During my nine expeditions in the Arctic
+regions, where animal life during summer is so exceedingly abundant,
+the case just mentioned has been one of the few in which I have
+found remains of recent vertebrate animals which could be proved to
+have died a natural death. Near hunting-grounds there are to be seen
+often enough the remains of reindeer, seals, foxes, or birds that
+have died from gunshot wounds, but no self-dead Polar bear, seal,
+walrus, white whale, fox, goose, auk, lemming or other vertebrate.
+The Polar bear and the reindeer are found there in hundreds, the
+seal, walrus, and white whale in thousands, and birds in
+millions.[190] These animals must die a "natural" death in untold
+numbers. What becomes of their bodies? Of this we have for the
+present no idea, and yet we have here a problem of immense
+importance for the answering of a large number of questions
+concerning the formation of fossiliferous strata. It is strange in
+any case that on Spitzbergen it is easier to find vertebrae of a
+gigantic lizard of the Trias, than bones of a self-dead seal,
+walrus, or bird, and the same also holds good of more southerly
+inhabited lands.
+
+On the 13th August we again sailed past a large number of small
+rocks or islands. The sea was at first pretty free of ice, but was
+afterwards bestrewed with even, thin pieces of drift-ice, which were
+not forced up on each other, and thus had not been exposed in winter
+to any ice-pressure. This ice did not cause any inconvenience to the
+navigation, but at the same time all was wrapt in a very close mist,
+which soon compelled us to anchor near the shore in a little bay. I
+endeavoured without success to determine the position of the place
+by astronomical observations. Along the shore there still remained
+nearly everywhere a pretty high snow and ice-foot, which in the fog
+presented the appearance of immense glaciers. The land besides was
+free of ice. In respect of its geological formation and its animals
+and plants it resembled completely the island I have just described.
+But the sea-water here was clear and salt, and the dredging
+therefore yielded to Dr. Kjellman some large algae, and to Dr.
+Stuxberg a large number of marine evertebrates.
+
+When the fog lightened, we immediately steamed on, but we had
+scarcely got to sea before we were again wrapped in so close a fog
+that we were compelled to lie-to for the night beside a large piece
+of drift-ice. The hempen tangles were used, and brought up a very
+abundant yield of large, beautiful animal forms, a large number of
+asterids, Astrophyton, Antedon, &c. There was besides made here an
+exceedingly remarkable, and to me still, while I write, a very
+enigmatical _find_.
+
+For several years back I have been zealous for the examination of
+all substances of the nature of dust which fall to the surface of
+the earth with rain or snow, and I have proved that a portion of
+them is of cosmic origin. This inconsiderable fall of dust is thus
+of immense importance for the history of the development of our
+globe, and we regard it, besides, with the intense interest which we
+inevitably cherish for all that brings us an actual experience
+regarding the material world beyond our globe. The inhabited
+countries of the earth, however, are less suitable for such
+investigations, as the particles of cosmic dust falling down here in
+very limited quantity can only with difficulty be distinguished from
+the dust of civilization, arising from human dwellings, from the
+offal of industry, from furnaces and the chimneys of steam-engines.
+The case is quite different on the snow and ice-fields of the High
+North, remote from human habitations and the tracks of steamers.
+Every foreign grain of dust can here he easily distinguished and
+removed, and there is a strong probability that the offal of
+civilization is here nearly wholly wanting. It is self-evident from
+this that I would not be disposed to neglect the first opportunity
+for renewed investigations in the direction indicated, our
+involuntary rest at the drift-ice field offered.
+
+[Illustration: HAIRSTAR FROM THE TAIMUR COAST. _Antedon Eschrichtii_,
+J. MUeLLER. Three-fifths of the natural size. ]
+
+Immediately after the _Vega_ lay-to, I therefore went down on the
+ice in order to see whether here too some such metalliferous dust,
+as I had before found north of Spitzbergen, was not to be found on
+the surface of the ice. Nothing of the kind, however, was to be
+seen. On the other hand, Lieutenant Nordquist observed small yellow
+specks in the snow, which I asked him to collect and hand over for
+investigation to Dr. Kjellman. For I supposed that the specks
+consisted of diatom ooze. After examining them Dr. Kjellman however
+declared that they did not consist of any organic substance, but of
+crystallised grains of sand. I too now examined them more closely,
+but unfortunately not until the morning after we had left the
+ice-field, and then found that the supposed ooze consisted of pale
+yellow crystals (not fragments of crystals) without mixture of
+foreign matter. The quantity of crystals, which were obtained from
+about three litres of snow, skimmed from the surface of the snow on
+an area of at most 10 square metres, amounted to nearly 0.2 gram.
+The crystals were found only near the surface of the snow, not in
+the deeper layers. They were up to 1 mm. in diameter, had the
+appearance shown in the accompanying woodcut, and appeared to belong
+to the rhombic system, as they had one perfect cleavage and formed
+striated prisms terminated at either end by truncated pyramids.
+Unfortunately I could not make any actual measurements of them,
+because after being kept for some time in the air they weathered to
+a white non-crystalline powder. They lay, without being sensibly
+dissolved, for a whole night in the water formed by the melting of
+the snow. On being heated, too, they fell asunder into a tasteless
+white powder. The white powder, that was formed by the weathering of
+the crystals, was analysed after our return--21 months after the
+discovery of the crystals--and was found to contain only carbonate
+of lime.
+
+[Illustration: FORM OF THE CRYSTALS. Found on the ice off the
+Taimur coast. Magnified thirty to forty times. ]
+
+The original composition and origin of this substance appears to me
+exceedingly enigmatical. It was not common carbonate of lime, for the
+crystals were rhombohedral and did not show the cleavage of calcite. Nor
+can there be a question of its being arragonite, because this mineral
+might indeed fall asunder "of itself," but in that case the newly-formed
+powder ought to be crystalline. Have the crystals originally been a new
+hydrated carbonate of lime, formed by crystallising out of the sea-water
+in intense cold, and then losing its water at a temperature of 10 deg. or
+20 deg. above the freezing-point? In such a case they ought not to have been
+found on the surface of the _snow_, but lower down on the surface of the
+_ice_. Or have they fallen down from the inter-planetary spaces to the
+surface of the earth, and before crumbling down have had a composition
+differing from terrestrial substances in the same way as various
+chemical compounds found in recent times in meteoric stones? The
+occurrence of the crystals in the uppermost layer of snow and their
+felling asunder in the air, tell in favour of this view. Unfortunately
+there is now no possibility of settling these questions, but at all
+events this discovery is a further incitement to those who travel in the
+High North to collect with extreme care, from snow-fields lying far from
+the ordinary routes of communication, all foreign substances, though
+apparently of trifling importance.
+
+As this question can be answered with the greatest ease and
+certainty by investigations in the Polar regions, I shall here, for
+the guidance of future travellers, enumerate some discoveries of a
+like nature which have been made by me, or at my instance.
+
+1. In the beginning of December, 1871, there happened at Stockholm
+an exceedingly heavy fall of snow, perhaps the heaviest which has
+taken place in the memory of man. Several persons perished in the
+snow in the immediate neighbourhood of Stockholm. During the last
+days of the snowfall I had about a cubic metre of snow collected and
+melted in a vessel. It left a residue of black powder, which
+contained grains of metallic iron that were attracted by the magnet.
+
+2. In the middle of March, 1872, a similar investigation was made by
+my brother, KARL NORDENSKIOeLD, in a remote forest settlement, Evois,
+in Finland. Here, too, was obtained, on the melting of the snow, a
+small residuum, consisting of a black powder containing metallic
+iron.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF THE UPPER PART OF THE SNOW ON A DRIFT-ICE
+FIELD IN 60 deg. N.L. One-half the natural size. ]
+
+3. On the 8th August and 2nd September of the same year, I examined,
+north of Spitzbergen, in 80 deg. N.L., and 13 deg. to 15 deg. E.L., the layer of
+snow that there covered the ice. The nature of this layer is shown by
+the accompanying woodcut, in which 1, is new-fallen snow; 2, a layer of
+hardened old snow, eight mm. in thickness; 3, a layer of snow
+conglomerated to a crystalline granular mass; and 4, common granular
+hardened snow. Layer 3 was full of small black grains, among which were
+found numerous metallic particles that were attracted by the magnet, and
+were found to contain iron, cobalt, and possibly nickel also.
+
+4. On the melting of 500 gram. hail, which fell in Stockholm in the
+autumn of 1873, similar metallic particles containing cobalt
+(nickel) were obtained, which, in this case, might possibly have
+come from the neighbouring roofs, because the hail was collected in
+a yard surrounded by houses roofed with sheet-iron painted red. The
+black colour of the metallic particles enclosed in the hail, their
+position in the hail, and finally, the cobalt they contained,
+however, indicate in this case too, a quite different origin.
+
+5. In a dust (kryokonite), collected on the inland ice of Greenland
+in the month of July, 1870, there were also found mixed with it
+grains of metallic iron, containing cobalt. The main mass consisted
+of a crystalline, double-refracting silicate, drenched through with
+an ill-smelling organic substance. The dust was found in large
+quantities at the bottom of innumerable small holes in the surface
+of the inland ice. This dust could scarcely be of volcanic origin,
+because by its crystalline structure it differs completely from the
+glass-dust that is commonly thrown out of volcanoes, and is often
+carried by the wind to very remote regions, as also from the dust
+which, on the 30th March, 1875, fell at many places in the middle of
+Scandinavia, and which was proved to have been thrown out by
+volcanoes on Iceland. For, while kryokonite consists of small
+angular double-refracting crystal-fragments without any mixture of
+particles of glass, the volcanic Haga-dust[191] consists almost
+wholly of small microscopic glass bubbles that have no action on the
+polarisation-planes of the light that passes through them.
+
+Similar investigations have since been made, among others, by M.
+TISSANDIER in Paris, and during NARES' English Polar Expedition.
+
+It may appear to many that it is below the dignity of science to
+concern one's self with so trifling an affair as the fall of a small
+quantity of dust. But this is by no means the case. For I estimate
+the quantity of the dust that was found on the ice north of
+Spitzbergen at from 0.1 to 1 milligram per square metre, and
+probably the whole fall of dust for the year far exceeded the latter
+figure. But a milligram on every square metre of the surface of the
+earth amounts for the whole globe to five hundred million kilograms
+(say half a million tons)! Such a mass collected year by year during
+the geological ages, of a duration probably incomprehensible by us,
+forms too important a factor to be neglected, when the fundamental
+facts of the geological history of our planet are enumerated. A
+continuation of these investigations will perhaps show, that our
+globe has increased gradually from a small beginning to the
+dimensions it now possesses; that a considerable quantity of the
+constituents of our sedimentary strata, especially of those that
+have been deposited in the open sea far from land, are of cosmic
+origin; and will throw an unexpected light on the origin of the
+fire-hearths of the volcanoes, and afford a simple explanation of
+the remarkable resemblance which unmistakably exists between
+plutonic rocks and meteoric stones.[192]
+
+
+On the 14th August, when the fog had lightened a little, we got up
+steam, but were soon compelled to anchor again in a bay running into
+Taimur Island from the north side of Taimur Sound, which I named
+Actinia Bay, from the large number of actinia which the dredge
+brought up there. It is, besides, not the only place in the Kara Sea
+which might be named from the evertebrate life prevailing there, so
+unexpectedly abundant.
+
+[Illustration: GRASS FROM ACTINIA BAY. _Pleuropogon Sabini_, R. BR. ]
+
+Unfavourable weather detained us in Actinia Bay, which is a good and
+well-protected haven, till the 18th August, during which time
+excursions were made in various directions, among others farther
+into Taimur Sound, where a variable strong current was found to
+prevail. The Sound is too shallow to be passed through by large
+vessels. The rocks round Taimur Sound consist of gneiss strata,
+which form low ridges that have been so shattered by the frost that
+they have been converted into immense lichen-clad stone mounds.
+Between these stretch extensive valleys and plains, now free of
+snow, if we except a snow-drift remaining here and there in the
+hollows. The plains were all covered with a very green continuous
+vegetation, which however on a closer examination was found to be
+not a true turf, but a mixture of grasses, allied plants, and a
+large number of different kinds of mosses and lichens. Actual
+flowers were found here only sparingly.[193] In this respect the
+coast _tundra_ shows a remarkable difference from the coast lands on
+Vaygats Island and Novaya Zemlya. On the other hand, the abundance
+of luxuriant lichens and mosses was striking. The mosses along the
+beach and the borders of the snow-drifts remaining here and there
+bore fruit in abundance. Animal life on land was scanty; some few
+reindeer were seen, a mountain fox was killed, and a lemming caught.
+
+[Illustration: Sketch-Map of Taimur Sound; Map of Actinia Bay,
+both by G. Bove. ]
+
+Only the following birds were seen: owls (_Strix nyctea_) rather
+numerous, of which one was killed; a species of falcon, which was
+hunted unsuccessfully; snow buntings, breeding very generally in the
+stone mounds; a covey of snow ptarmigan, of which some young birds
+were shot; six species of waders, the most common birds of the
+region, of which a large number were shot; two kinds of gulls
+(_Larus glaucus_ and _tridactylus_); _Lestris parasitica_ and
+_Buffonii_, the latter the more common of the two; _Anser bernicla_,
+very common; and finally the long-tailed duck (_Harelda glacialis_)
+in great flocks swimming in the Sound. Bird life, viewed as a whole,
+was still scanty here, in comparison with that which we were
+accustomed to see in the northern regions west of Novaya Zemlya.
+
+In the sea the higher animal life was somewhat more abundant. A
+walrus had been seen during the passage from the Yenisej, and on the
+ice drifting about in the Sound a number of seals, both _Phoca
+barbata_ and _Phoca hispida_, were observed. This gave rise to the
+supposition that at the sea-bottom animal life was richer, which was
+also confirmed by the dredging yield. Nowhere was seen on our
+arrival any trace of man, but a cairn now indicates the place, off
+which the _Vega_ and the _Lena_ were anchored.
+
+In this sea never before visited by any vessel, however, we were nearly
+coming in contact with a countryman. For while we lay at anchor in
+Taimur Sound, Captain Edward Johannesen came into the neighbourhood of
+the same place with his sailing vessel _Nordland_ from Tromsoe. He had
+left Norway on the 22nd May 1878, had come to Gooseland in Novaya Zemlya
+on the 6th June, and had reached the northernmost point of that island
+on the 22nd July. Here loud thunder was heard on the 26th July. On the
+10th August he steered eastwards from Novaya Zemlya across the Kara Sea
+between 76 deg. and 77 deg. N.L. in open water. On the 16th he had the Taimur
+country in sight. Here he turned, and steered first to the west, then to
+the north. In 77 deg. 31' N.L. and 86 deg. E.L. from Greenwich he discovered and
+circumnavigated a new island, which was named "Ensamheten" (Solitude).
+The island was free of snow, but not overgrown with grass. The animals
+that were seen were some bears and bearded seals, terns, fulmars, ivory
+gulls, flocks of black guillemots, and a "bird with a rounded tail and
+long bill," probably some wader. On the north-east side of the island a
+strong northerly current prevailed. The remote position and desolate
+appearance of the island gave occasion to the name proposed by
+Johannesen. Hence Johannesen sailed with a great bend to the north,
+which brought him to 78 deg. N.L., back to the northern extremity of Novaya
+Zemlya, and thence on the 12th September to Norway. During the return
+voyage across the Kara Sea also scarcely any ice was met with.[194]
+
+An exceedingly persistent fog prevailed during the whole of the time
+we remained here, but at last on the 18th it lightened a little. We
+immediately weighed anchor and steamed along the western shore of
+Taimur Island. It is surrounded by a large number of islands that
+are not given on the map, and possibly Taimur Island itself is
+divided by sounds into several parts. During our voyage, however,
+the fog that was still very close hindered us from mapping,
+otherwise than in a very loose way, the islands, large and small,
+between and past which the _Vega_ searched for a passage. So much we
+could in any case see, that the northern extremity of Taimur Island
+does not run so far north as the common maps show.
+
+Ice we met with only in small quantity, and what we saw was very
+rotten fjord or river ice. I scarcely believe that in the course of
+the day we met with a single piece of ice large enough to flense a
+seal upon. We had as yet seen no true old drift-ice such as is to be
+met with north of Spitzbergen. In respect to the nature of the ice,
+there is a complete dissimilarity between the Kara Sea and the sea
+north and east of Spitzbergen. Another striking difference is the
+scarcity of warm-blooded animals which prevails in this region,
+hitherto exempted from all hunting. In the course of the day we had
+not seen a single bird--something which never before happened to me
+during a summer journey in the Arctic regions--and scarcely any
+seals.
+
+On the 19th August we continued to sail and steam along the coast,
+mostly in a very close fog, which only at intervals dispersed so
+much that the lie of the coast could be made out. In order that they
+might not be separated, both vessels had often to signal to each
+other with the steam-whistle. The sea was bright as a mirror.
+Drift-ice was seen now and then, but only in small quantity and very
+rotten; but in the course of the day we steamed past an extensive
+unbroken ice-field, fast to the land, which occupied a bay on the
+west side of the Chelyuskin peninsula. The ice, of which it
+consisted, appeared in the mist immensely rough and high, although
+in fact it was nearly as rotten as that of which the narrow belts of
+ice were formed which we now and then met with out at sea.
+
+The fog prevented all view far across the ice, and I already feared
+that the northernmost promontory of Asia would be so surrounded with
+ice that we could not land upon it. But soon a dark, ice-free cape
+peeped out of the mist in the north-east. A bay open to the north
+here cuts into the land, and in this bay both the vessels anchored
+on the 19th August at 6 o'clock p.m.
+
+We had now reached a great goal, which for centuries had been the
+object of unsuccessful struggles. For the first time a vessel lay at
+anchor off the northernmost cape of the old world. No wonder then
+that the occurrence was celebrated by a display of flags and the
+firing of salutes, and, when we returned from our excursion on land,
+by festivities on board, by wine and toasts.
+
+[Illustration: THE VEGA AND LENA SALUTING CAPE CHELYUSKIN.
+(After a drawing by A. Hovgaard.) ]
+
+As on our arrival at the Yenisej, we were received here too by a
+large Polar bear, who, even before the vessel anchored, was seen to
+go backwards and forwards on the beach, now and then turning his
+glance and his nose uneasily out to sea in order to investigate what
+remarkable guests had now for the first time come to his kingdom. A
+boat was put off to kill him. Brusewitz was the chosen shot; but on
+this occasion the bear took care not to form any closer acquaintance
+with our guns. The firing of the salute put him so thoroughly to
+flight, that he did not, as bears are wont, return the following
+day.
+
+[Illustration: VIEW AT CAPE CHELYUSKIN DURING THE STAY OF THE
+EXPEDITION. (After a drawing by A. Hovgaard.) ]
+
+The north point of Asia forms a low promontory, which a bay divides
+into two, the eastern arm projecting a little farther to the north
+than the western. A ridge of hills with gently sloping sides runs
+into the land from the eastern point, and appears within sight of
+the western to reach a height of 300 metres. Like the plains lying
+below, the summits of this range were nearly free of snow. Only on
+the hill-sides or in deep furrows excavated by the streams of melted
+snow, and in dales in the plains, were large white snow-fields to be
+seen. A low ice-foot still remained at most places along the shore.
+But no glacier rolled its bluish-white ice-masses down the mountain
+sides, and no inland lakes, no perpendicular cliffs, no high
+mountain summits, gave any natural beauty to the landscape, which
+was the most monotonous and the most desolate I have seen in the
+High North.
+
+As on the island off which we lay at anchor on the 11th August, the
+ground was everywhere burst asunder into more or less regular
+six-sided figures, the interior of which was usually bare of
+vegetation, while stunted flowering-plants, lichens and mosses, rose
+out of the cracks. At some few places, however, the ground was
+covered with a carpet of mosses, lichens, grasses and allied plants,
+resembling that which I previously found at Actinia Bay. Yet the
+flowering-plants were less numerous here, and the mosses more
+stunted and bearing fruit less abundantly. The lichen flora was
+also, according to Dr. Almquist's examination, monotonous, though
+very luxuriant. The plants were most abundant on the farthest
+extremity of the Cape. It almost appeared as if many of the plants
+of the Taimur country had attempted to migrate hence farther to the
+north, but meeting the sea, had stood still, unable to go farther
+and unwilling to turn. For here Dr. Kjellman found on a very limited
+area nearly all the plants of the region. The species which were
+distinctive of the vegetation here were the following: _Saxifraga
+oppositifolia_ L., _Papaver nudicaule_ L., _Draba alpina_ L.,
+_Cerastium alpinum_ L., _Stellaria Edwardsii_ R. BR., _Alsine
+macrocarpa_ FENZL., _Aira coespitosa_ L., _Catabrosa algida_ (SOL.)
+FR., and _Alopecurus alpinus_ SM. The following plants occurred less
+frequently: _Eritrichium villosum_ BUNGE, _Saxifraga nivalis_ L.,
+_S cernua_ L., _S. rivularis_ L., _S. stellaris_ L., _S. caspitesa_
+L., _S. flagellaris_ WILLD., _S. serpyllifolia_ PURSH., _Cardamine
+bellidifolia_ L., _Cochlearia fenestrata_ R. BR., _Oxyria digyna_
+(L.) HILL., _Salix polaris_ WG, _Poa flexuosa_ WG., and _Lucula
+hyperborea_ R. BR. There were thus found in all only twenty-three
+species of inconsiderable flowering-plants, among them eight species
+belonging to the Saxifrage family, a sulphur-yellow poppy, commonly
+cultivated in our gardens, and the exceedingly beautiful,
+forget-me-not-like Eritrichium. That the vegetation here on the
+northernmost point of Asia has to contend with a severe climate is
+shown, among other things, as Dr. Kjellman has pointed out, by most
+of the flowering-plants there having a special tendency to form
+exceedingly compact half-globular tufts.
+
+[Illustration: DRABA ALPINA L. FROM CAPE CHELYUSKIN. Natural size. ]
+
+[Illustration: THE BEETLE LIVING FARTHEST TO THE NORTH.
+Micralymma Dicksoni MAKL. Magnified twelve times. ]
+
+The only insects which occurred here in any large number were
+podurae, but some flies were also seen, and even a beetle, the
+before-mentioned Staphylinid. Of birds, there were seen a large
+number of sandpipers, an exceedingly numerous flock of barnacle
+geese--evidently migrating to more southerly regions, perhaps from
+some Polar land lying to the north of Cape Chelyuskin--a loom, some
+kittiwakes and ivory gulls, and remains of owls. Mammalia were
+represented by the bear already mentioned, and by the reindeer and
+the lemming, whose traces and dung were seen on the plains. In the
+sea, a walrus, several rough seals (_Phoca hispida_), and two shoals
+of white whales were seen.
+
+All rivers were now dried up, but wide, shallow river-beds indicated
+that during the snow-melting season there was an abundant flow of
+water. The rush of snow rivulets and the cry of birds then certainly
+cause an interruption in the desolation and silence which were now
+spread over the clay beds of the plains, nearly bare of all
+vegetation. Probably, however, a little farther into the country, in
+some valley protected from the winds of the Polar Sea, we might find
+quite different natural conditions, a more abundant animal life, and
+a vegetable world, in summer, as rich in flowers as that which we
+meet with in the valleys of Ice Fjord or the "Nameless Bay"
+(Besimannaja Bay). We saw no trace of man here. The accounts, which
+were current as early as the sixteenth century, relating to the
+nature of the north point of Asia, however, make it probable that
+the Siberian nomads at one time drove their reindeer herds up
+hither. It is even not impossible that Russian hunters from Chatanga
+may have prosecuted the chase here, and that Chelyuskin actually was
+here, of which we have evidence in the very correct way in which the
+Cape, that now rightly bears his name, is laid down on the Russian
+maps.[195]
+
+The rocks consist of a clay-slate, with crystals resembling
+chiastolite and crystals of sulphide of iron interspersed. At the
+Cape itself the clay-slate is crossed by a thick vein of pure white
+quartz. Here, according to an old custom of Polar travellers, a
+stately cairn was erected.
+
+[Illustration: OPHIURID FROM THE SEA NORTH OF CAPE CHELYUSKIN.
+_Ophlacantha bidentata_, RETZ. One and one-third of the natural size. ]
+
+In order to get a good astronomical determination of the position of
+this important point I remained there until the 20th August at noon.
+The _Lena_ was ordered to steam out to dredge during this time.
+Eight minutes north of the bay, where we lay at anchor, heavy and
+very close ice was met with. There the depth of the sea increased
+rapidly. Animal life at the sea-bottom was very abundant, among
+other things in large asterids and ophiurids.
+
+
+According to the plan of the voyage I now wished to steam from this
+point right eastwards towards the New Siberian Islands, in order to
+see if we should fall in with land on the way. On the 20th and 21st
+we went forward in this direction among scattered drift-ice, which
+was heavier and less broken up than that which we had met with on
+the other side of Taimur Land, but without meeting with any serious
+obstacles. We fell in also with some very large ice-floes, but not
+with any icebergs. We were besides again attended by so close a mist
+that we could only see ice-fields and pieces of ice in the immediate
+neighbourhood of the vessel. Besides species of Lestris and
+kittiwakes we now also saw looms, birds that are almost wanting in
+the Kara Sea. Johannesen was of opinion that the presence of these
+birds showed that the sea is not completely frozen over in winter,
+because it is not probable that the loom in autumn and spring would
+fly across the frozen Kara Sea to seek in this distant region their
+food and their breeding-haunts.
+
+The night before the 22nd we steamed through pretty close ice. The
+whole day so thick a fog still prevailed that we could not see the
+extent of the ice-fields in the neighbourhood of the vessel. Towards
+noon we were, therefore, compelled to take a more southerly course.
+When we found that we could not advance in this direction, we lay-to
+at a large ice-floe, waiting for clear weather, until in the
+afternoon the fog again lightened somewhat, so that we could
+continue our voyage. But it was not long before the fog again became
+so thick that, as the sailors say, you could cut it with a knife.
+There was now evidently a risk that the _Vega_, while thus
+continuing to "box the compass" in the ice-labyrinth, in which we
+had entangled ourselves, would meet with the same fate that befell
+the _Tegetthoff_. In order to avoid this, it became necessary to
+abandon our attempt to sail from Cape Chelyuskin straight to the New
+Siberian Islands, and to endeavour to reach as soon as possible the
+open water at the coast.
+
+When it cleared on the morning of the 23rd, we therefore began again
+to steam forward among the fields of drift-ice, but now not with the
+intention of advancing in a given direction, but only of getting to
+open water. The ice-fields we now met with were very much broken up,
+which was an indication that we could not be very far from the edge
+of the _pack_. But notwithstanding this, all our attempts to find
+penetrable ice in an easterly, westerly, or southerly direction were
+unsuccessful. We had thus to search in a northerly direction for the
+opening by which we had sailed in. This was so much the more
+unpleasant as the wind had changed to a pretty fresh N.W. breeze, on
+which account, with the _Vega's_ weak steam-power, we could make way
+only slowly. It was not until 6.30 p.m. that we at last came to the
+sack-formed opening in the ice through which we had sailed in at
+noon of the previous day.
+
+One can scarcely, without having experienced it, form any idea of
+the optical illusions, which are produced by mist, in regions where
+the size of the objects which are visible through the fog is not
+known beforehand, and thus does not give the spectator an idea of
+the distance. Our estimate of distance and size in such cases depend
+wholly on accident. The obscure contours of the fog-concealed
+objects themselves, besides, are often by the ignorance of the
+spectator converted into whimsical fantastic forms. During a boat
+journey in Hinloopen Strait I once intended to row among drift-ice
+to an island at a distance of some few kilometres. When the boat
+started the air was clear, but while we were employed, as best we
+could, in shooting sea-fowl for dinner, all was wrapt in a thick
+mist, and that so unexpectedly, that we had not time to take the
+bearings of the island. This led to a not altogether pleasant row by
+guess among the pieces of ice that were drifting about in rapid
+motion in the sound. All exerted themselves as much as possible to
+get sight of the island, whose beach would afford us a safe
+resting-place. While thus occupied, a dark border was seen through
+the mist at the horizon. It was taken for the island which we were
+bound for, and it was not at first considered remarkable that the
+dark border rose rapidly, for we thought that the mist was
+dispersing and in consequence of that more of the land was visible.
+Soon two white snow-fields, that we had not observed before, were
+seen on both sides of the land, and immediately after this was
+changed to a sea-monster, resembling a walrus-head, as large as a
+mountain. This got life and motion, and finally sank all at once to
+the head of a common walrus, which lay on a piece of ice in the
+neighbourhood of the boat; the white tusks formed the snow-fields
+and the dark-brown round head the mountain. Scarce was this illusion
+gone when one of the men cried out "Land right a head--high land!"
+We now all saw before us a high Alpine region, with mountain peaks
+and glaciers, but this too sank a moment afterwards all at once to a
+common ice-border, blackened with earth. In the spring of 1873
+Palander and I with nine men made a sledge journey round North-east
+Land. In the course of this journey a great many bears were seen and
+killed. When a bear was seen while we were dragging our sledges
+forward, the train commonly stood still, and, not to frighten the
+bear, all the men concealed themselves behind the sledges, with the
+exception of the marksman, who, squatting down in some convenient
+place, waited till his prey should come sufficiently within range to
+be killed with certainty. It happened once during foggy weather on
+the ice at Wahlenberg Bay that the bear that was expected and had
+been clearly seen by all of us, instead of approaching with his
+usual supple zigzag movements, and with his ordinary attempts to
+nose himself to a sure insight into the fitness of the foreigners
+for food, just as the marksman took aim, spread out gigantic wings
+and flew away in the form of a small ivory gull. Another time during
+the same sledge journey we heard from the tent in which we rested
+the cook, who was employed outside, cry out: "A bear! a great bear!
+No! a reindeer, a very little reindeer!" The same instant a
+well-directed shot was fired, and the bear-reindeer was found to be
+a very small fox, which thus paid with its life for the honour of
+having for some moments played the part of a big animal. From these
+accounts it may be seen how difficult navigation among drift-ice
+must be in unknown waters.
+
+On the two occasions on which the vessel was anchored to ice-floes
+the trawl-net was used, and the hempen tangles. The net was drawn
+forward slowly with the ice which was drifting to the north-west
+before a fresh S.E. breeze which was blowing at the time. The yield
+of the trawling was extraordinarily abundant; large asterids,
+crinoids, sponges, holothuria, a gigantic sea-spider (Pycnogonid),
+masses of worms, crustacea, &c. _It was the most abundant yield that
+the trawl-net at any one time brought up during the whole of our
+voyage round the coast of Asia_, and this from the sea off the
+northern extremity of that continent.
+
+[Illustration: SEA SPIDER (PYCNOGONID) FROM THE SEA EAST OF
+CAPE CHELYUSKIN. Half the normal size. ]
+
+Among the forms collected here we may specially refer to the large
+sea-spider, of which a drawing is given (p. 349); and three specimens of
+small stalked crinoids. The depth varied between 60 and 100 metres. The
+temperature of the water was at the surface +0 deg. to--0.6 deg.; at the
+bottom--1.4 deg. to 1.6 deg.; its salinity was considerable, both at the bottom,
+where it was very nearly equal to that of the other great oceans, and at
+the surface, where it was indeed about a fifth-part less, but yet much
+greater than that of the surface-water in the Kara Sea.
+
+It is singular that a temperature under the freezing-point of pure
+water should be advantageous for the development of an animal life
+so extremely rich as that which is found here, and that this animal
+life should not suffer any harm from the complete darkness, which
+during the greater portion of the year prevails at the bottom of the
+ice-covered sea.
+
+When we got out of the ice we steamed towards the land, which was
+sighted on the 23rd at 8.45 p.m. The land was low and free from
+snow; the depth of the sea at a distance of ten kilometres from the
+coast varied between thirteen and fifteen metres. The coast here
+stretched from north to south. We followed it at a distance of seven
+to ten kilometres. A north-westerly breeze here carried the vessel,
+without the help of steam, rapidly forward over a completely smooth
+sea.
+
+On the 24th August we still sailed along the land towards the south.
+The depth of the sea now increased to thirty-three metres at a
+distance of ten kilometres from land. The land rose gradually, and
+some distance from the coast beautiful mountain chains were seen,
+which, judging by the eye, rose to a height of from 600 to 900
+metres. They were, like the plains along the coast, quite free from
+snow. Only in the clefts of the mountains there remained some few
+collections of snow or ice, which at two places appeared to form
+true glaciers, which however terminated at a considerable height
+above the sea. The snow-free slopes between the foot of the mountain
+and the shore bank, thirty to sixty metres high, formed an even
+plain, covered by a brownish-green turf, probably of the same nature
+as that we saw on Taimur Island.
+
+During the forenoon we had splendid clear weather, and often we
+could see from the vessel no trace of ice. We saw a large number of
+walruses, and to judge by the fire which this sight kindled in the
+eyes of our hunters, it will not be long till the Norwegian hunting
+voyages are extended to the sea north and east of the north point of
+Asia. We saw besides a large number of looms and black guillemots,
+the former accompanied by young of the year, as large as rotges.
+About noon we sighted "land ahead to larboard." It was evidently
+Preobraschenie Island. I determined to land on it for a few hours to
+carry on researches in natural history, and to fix the position of
+the place by astronomical observations, if the weather should
+permit. The distance of this high-lying island was however greater
+than we expected. So that it was not until six o'clock in the
+evening that we could anchor off its south-west side, near the
+almost perpendicular face of cliffs abounding in sea-fowl.
+
+During the last two days we had been sailing over a region, which on
+recent maps is marked as land. This shows that a considerable change
+must be made on the map of North Siberia, and I shall therefore
+quote here the observations on which the determination of our course
+is grounded.
+
+ Latitude. Longitude
+ Cape Chelyuskin[196]................. 77 deg. 36.8' 103 deg. 17.2'
+ On board the _Vega_[197] at noon of the
+ 21st Aug. 77 deg. 25' 109 deg. 12'
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, 22nd Aug. 76 deg. 33' 116 deg. 9'
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, 23rd Aug. 76 deg. 48' 115 deg. 0'
+ ,, ,, ,, ,, ,, 24th Aug. 73 deg. 0' 113 deg. 33'
+
+At the last mentioned point we had laud to starboard of us at an
+estimated distance of 4'. Preobraschenie Island lay S. 21 deg. W.
+17.5' off. It is on the ground of these data and of the courses
+recorded in the log, that the track of the _Vega_ has been laid down
+on the map, and no doubt can arise that the position of the east
+coast of Taimur peninsula, as indicated by us, is in the main
+correct.
+
+Preobraschenie Island forms a pretty even grassy plain, lying from
+thirty to sixty metres above the sea-level, which in the north-west
+terminates towards the sea with an almost perpendicular rocky wall,
+but to the south-east sinks gradually down to two sand-banks which
+run far out to sea. At the time of our visit the island was free of
+snow and covered with a carpet of mosses mixed with grass, which was
+exceedingly abundant, especially on the south-west slopes of the
+island, protected as they were from the north winds. Here we
+encountered anew the Arctic animal world in all its profusion. The
+ledges of the perpendicular shore-cliffs of the island formed the
+breeding-place of numberless looms and kittiwakes, to which a few
+black guillemots attached themselves. Along the farthest margin of
+the beach waders ran busily backwards and forwards in order to
+collect their food. At the summits of the cliffs a flock of glaucous
+gulls were breeding, and on the slopes of the low land the white
+mountain owl was seen lying in wait for its prey, quiet and
+motionless for hours, but as usual it was wary and shy, so that it
+was only with difficulty that the hunter could get within range of
+it. At some places there extended between the foot of the "loomery"
+and the sea a stone-bestrewn beach, which at high water was mostly
+covered by the sea, and at low water was full of shallow salt-water
+pools. Here had settled two Polar bears that were soon killed, one
+by Lieutenant Brusewitz, the other by Captain Johannesen. The bears
+had evidently been on the hunt for looms, which along with their
+young, large as rotges and already able to swim, were swimming in
+the pools of water at the foot of the "loomery," and above all
+perhaps they were lying in wait for birds which by some accident
+happened to fall down from the breeding-place. In the sea no small
+number of seals were seen, and but a few hours before our arrival at
+the island we had sailed past herds of walrus.
+
+[Illustration: PREOBRASCHENIE ISLAND. (After a sketch by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+Vegetation was much more luxuriant and richer in species than at
+Cape Chelyuskin, and naturally bore a more southern stamp, not only
+in consequence of the more southerly position of the island, but
+also on account of its shores being washed by the water of the
+Chatanga river, which is warm during summer.[198]
+
+Unfortunately, on account of the advanced season of the year I could
+only allow the _Vega_ to remain a few hours off this interesting
+island, and at 10.30 p.m. accordingly the anchor was weighed and our
+voyage along the coast resumed.
+
+On the 25th, 26th and 27th August we had for the most part calm,
+fine weather, and the sea was completely free of ice. The
+temperature of the water again rose to +5.8 deg., and its salinity
+diminished considerably. But the depth now decreased so much, that,
+for instance, on the night before the 26th we had great difficulty
+in getting past some shoals lying west of the delta of the Lena, off
+the mouth of the Olonek.
+
+It had originally been my intention to let the _Vega_ separate from
+the _Lena_ at some anchorage in one of the mouth-arms of the Lena
+river. But on account of the shallowness of the water, the
+favourable wind and the ice-free sea, that now lay before us to the
+eastward, I determined to part from the _Lena_ in the open sea off
+Tumat Island. This parting took place on the night between the 27th
+and 28th August, after Captain Johannesen had been signalled to come
+on board the _Vega_, to receive orders, passport,[199] and letters
+for home. As a parting salute to our trusty little attendant during
+our voyage round the north point of Asia some rockets were fired, on
+which we steamed or sailed on, each to his destination.
+
+During our passage from Norway to the Lena we had been much troubled
+with fog, but it was only when we left the navigable water along the
+coast to the east of Cape Chelyuskin that we fell in with ice in
+such quantity that it was an obstacle to our voyage. If the coast
+had been followed the whole time, if the weather had been clear and
+the navigable water sufficiently surveyed, so that it had been
+possible to keep the course of the vessel near the land, the voyage
+of the _Vega_ to the mouth of the Lena _would never have been
+obstructed by ice_, and I am convinced that this will happen year
+after year during the close of August, at least between the Yenisej
+and the Lena. For I believe that the place where ice-obstacles will
+perhaps be met with most frequently will not be the north point of
+Asia, but the region east of the entrance to the Kara Sea.
+
+
+[Footnote 189: Namely, according to Dr. Kjellman's determination,
+the following:
+
+ Saxifraga oppositifolia L.
+ Saxifraga rivularis L.
+ Saxifraga caespitosa L.
+ Cardamine bellidifolia L.
+ Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR.
+ Ranunculus hyperboreus ROTTB.
+ Stellaria Edwardsii R. BR.
+ Cerastium alpinum L.
+ Alsine macrocarpa FENZL.
+ Sagina nivalis FR.
+ Salix polaris WG.
+ Glyceria vilfoidea (ANDS.) TH. FR.
+ Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+ Aira caespitosa L.
+ Juncus biglumis L. ]
+
+[Footnote 190: I can remember only one other instance of finding
+self-dead vertebrate animals, viz. when in 1873, as has already been
+stated (p. 110), I found a large number of dead rotges on the
+ice at the mouth of Hinloopen Strait. ]
+
+[Footnote 191: I use this name because the ash-rain of March 1875
+was first observed at Haga palace near Stockholm, and thus at the
+outer limit of the known area of distribution of the dust. It was
+first through the request which in consequence of this observation
+was published in the newspapers, that communications regarding
+singular observations in other quarters should be sent to the
+Swedish Academy of Sciences, that it became known that a similar
+rain had about the same time taken place over a very large part of
+middle Sweden and Norway. The dust however did not fall evenly, but
+distributed in spots, and at several different times. The distance
+from Stockholm of the volcanoes, where the outbreak took place, is
+nearly 2000 kilometres. ]
+
+[Footnote 192: Namely, by showing that the principal material of the
+plutonic and volcanic rocks is of cosmic origin, and that the
+phenomena of heat, which occur in these layers, depend on chemical
+changes to which the cosmic sediment, after being covered by thick
+terrestrial formations, is subjected. ]
+
+[Footnote 193: Dr. Kjellman has given the following list of the
+flowering plants collected by him in this region:--
+
+ Cineraria frigida RICHARDS.
+ Potentilla emarginata PURSH.
+ Saxifraga stellaris L. f. comosa.
+ Saxifraga nivalis L.
+ Saxifraga cernua L.
+ Saxifraga rivularis L.
+ Chrysosplenium alternifolium L.
+ Cardamine bellidifolia L.
+ Draba corymbosa R. BR.
+ Papaver nudicaule L.
+ Ranunculus pygmaeus WG.
+ Ranunculus hyperboreus ROTTB.
+ Ranunculus sulphureus SOL.
+ Stellaria Edwardsii R. BR.
+ Cerastium alpinum L.
+ Alsine macrocarpa FENZL.
+ Salix polaris WG.
+ Poa arctica R. BR.
+ Arctophila peudulina (LAEST.) ANDS.
+ Catabrosa algida (Sol.) FR.
+ Colpodium latifolium R. BR.
+ Dupontia Fisheri R. BR.
+ Pleuropogon Sabini R. BR.
+ Aira caespitosa L.
+ Hierochloa pauciflora R. BR.
+ Calamagrostis lapponica (WG.) HN.
+ Alopecurus alpinus SM.
+ Eriophorum angustifolium ROTH.
+ Eriophorum Scheuchzeri HOPPE.
+ Carex aquatilis WG.
+ Carex rigida GOOD.
+ Juncus biglumis L.
+ Luzula hyperborea R. BR.
+ Luzula arctica BL. ]
+
+[Footnote 194: _H. Mohn._ Die Insel Einsamkeit, &c., with a map
+(Petermann's _Mittheilungen_, 1879, p. 57). ]
+
+[Footnote 195: This has been doubted by Russian geographers. Von
+Baer for instance says:--
+
+"Daruber ist gar kein Zweifel, dass dieses Vorgebirge nie umsegelt
+ist, und dass es auf einem Irrthum beruhte, wenn Laptew auf einer
+Seefahrt die Bucht, in welche der Taimur sich muendet, erreicht zu
+haben glaubte. Seine eigenen spaeteren Fahrten erwiesen diesen
+Irrthum. Die Vergleichung der Berichte und Verhaeltnisse laesst mich
+aber auch glauben, dass selbst zu Lande man das Ende dieses
+Vorgebirges nie erreicht habe; sondern Tscheljuskin, um dieser, man
+kann wohl sagen, graesslichen Versuche endlich ueberhoben zu seyr,
+sich zu der ungegruendeten Behauptung entschloss, er habe das Ende
+gesehen, und sich ueberzeugt, Sibirien sei nach Norden ueberall vom
+Meere umgraenzt," [statement by von Baer in _Neueste Nachrichten ueber
+die noerdlichste Gegend von Siberien_; von Baer and von Helmersen,
+_Beitraege zur Kenntniss des Russischen Reiches_. IV. St. Petersburg,
+1841, p. 275]. In the following page in the same paper von Baer
+indeed says that he will not lay any special weight on Strahlenberg's
+statement that Siberia and Novaya Zemlya hang together, but he appears
+to believe that they are connected by a bridge of perpetual ice. ]
+
+[Footnote 196: According to an observation with an artificial
+horizon on land. ]
+
+[Footnote 197: According to an observation on board. The
+observations for longitude that were made some hours before or after
+noon, are reduced to noon. ]
+
+[Footnote 198: The following 65 species were collected here by Dr.
+Kjellman.--Saussurea alpina DC. Gymnandra Stelleri CHAM. &c.
+SCHLECHT. Pedicularis hirsuta L. Eritrichium villosum BUNGE.
+Myosotis silvatica HOFFM. Phaca frigida L. Dryas octopetala L.
+Sieversia glacialis R. BR. Potentilla emarginata PURSH. Saxifraga
+oppositifolia L. Saxifraga bronchialis L. Saxifraga flagellaris
+WILLD. Saxifraga Hirculus L. Saxifraga serpyllifolia PURSH.
+Saxifraga stellaris L.f. comosa. Saxifraga nivalis L. Saxifraga
+hieraciifolia WALDST. &c. KIT. Saxifraga punctata L. Saxifraga cernua
+L. Saxifraga rivularis L. Saxifraga caespitosa L. Chrysosplenium
+alternifolium L. Eutrema Edwardsii R. BR. Parrya macrocarpa R. BR.
+Cardamine bellidifolia L. Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR. Draba alpina
+L. Papaver nudicaule L. Ranunculus pygmaeus WG. Ranunculus
+hyperboreus ROTTB. Ranunculus nivalis L. Ranunculus sulphurous SOL.
+Caltha palustris L. Wahlbergella apetala (L.) FR. Stellaria humifusa
+ROTTB. Stellaria Edwardsii R. BR. Cerastium alpinum L. Alsine
+macrocarpa FENZL. Alsine rubella WG. Sagina nivalis FR. Oxyria
+digyna (L.) HILL. Polygonum viviparum L. Salix arctica PALL. Salix
+reticulata L. Salix polaris WG. Poa arctica R. BR. Poa pratensis L.
+Glyceria angustata R. BR. Glyceria vilfoidea (ANDS.) TH. FR.
+Arctophila pendulina (LAEST.) AND. Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+Colpodium latifolium R. BR. Dupontia Fisheri R. BR. Aira caespitosa
+L. Hierochloa pauciflora R. BR. Alopecurus alpinus SM. Eriophorum
+angustifolium ROTH. Eriophorum russeolum FR. Eriophorum Scheuchzeri
+HOPPE. Carex ursina DESV. Carex aquatilis WG. Juncus biglumis L.
+Luzula hyperborea R. BR. Luzula arctica BL. Lloydia serotina (L.)
+REICHENB. ]
+
+[Footnote 199: Before our departure, I had through the Swedish
+Foreign Office obtained from the Russian Government letters patent
+in which the Russian authorities with whom we might come in contact
+were instructed to give us all the assistance that circumstances
+might call for. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+ The voyage of the _Fraser_ and the _Express_ up the Yenisej
+ and their return to Norway--Contract for the piloting of
+ the _Lena_ up the Lena river--The voyage of the _Lena_
+ through the delta and up the river to Yakutsk--The natural
+ state of Siberia in general--The river territories--The
+ fitness of the land for cultivation and the necessity for
+ improved communications--The great rivers, the future
+ commercial highways of Siberia--Voyage up the Yenisej in
+ 1875--Sibiriakoff's Island--The _tundra_--The primeval
+ Siberian forest--The inhabitants of Western Siberia:
+ the Russians, the Exiles, the "Asiatics"--Ways of travelling
+ on the Yenisej: dog-boats, floating trading stores propelled
+ by steam--New prospects for Siberia.
+
+
+I have mentioned in the Introduction that the _Vega_ during the
+first part of the voyage was accompanied by three other vessels,
+which together with the principal vessel of the Expedition stood at
+my disposal and under my orders, and I have stated in passing that
+their voyages too deserve a place in the history of navigation. Now,
+when we were parted from the vessel which had accompanied the _Vega_
+farthest in her route eastwards, it may be the proper place to give
+a brief account of the close of the voyages of the _Fraser_, the
+_Express_, and the _Lena_ and give reasons for what I have said of
+the importance of these voyages.
+
+[Illustration: THE STEAMER "FRASER." ]
+
+On the 9th August at 10 a.m., after Mr. Serebrenikoff had gone on
+board the _Express_ to take command, as Sibiriakoff's commissioner,
+of the two vessels bound for the Yenisej, the _Fraser_, with the
+_Express_ in tow, started from Port Dickson for the river. The
+voyage passed without other adventures than that in consequence of
+unacquaintance with the navigable waters the vessel sometimes gently
+grounded. On the 11th August Korepovskoj was reached, the same place
+where I laid up in 1876 the goods which I had brought with me in the
+_Ymer_. Here my old friend from my voyages of 1875 and 1876, the
+Cossack Feodor, was taken on board. He however proved now as
+unskilful a pilot as before. Notwithstanding his experience in 1876,
+when, he several times ran the _Ymer_ aground, he had not yet got a
+clear idea of the difference between the build of an ocean vessel
+and of the common flat-bottomed Yenisej lighters, and his conception
+of the responsibility of a pilot was expressed by his seeking, when
+he was allowed to take his own course, to forget in the arms of
+sleep all dangers and difficulties. Mr. Serebrenikoff and the
+captains of the vessels were therefore themselves compelled by means
+of frequent soundings, which were commonly made from a steam launch
+in advance, to endeavour to find out the proper course. The
+navigable water between the level islands covered with bushy
+thickets and rich grassy meadows was often very narrow, but appears
+to have been pretty deep, as, even when the vessels went forward
+without the guidance of a skilful pilot, there was a depth of from 5
+to 30 metres; and after a fisher, who knew the river better than
+Feodor, had been taken on board, it was found possible to go at full
+speed between the more southerly of the Briochov Islands[200] in a
+depth of 30 to 50 metres. On 14th August the vessels reached
+Tolstojnos, where a very well preserved _simovie_ is situated about
+70 deg. 10' N.L., 370 kilometres south of Port Dickson. On the
+15th August they anchored in a good haven at Saostrovskoj, a
+_simovie_ lying 100 kilometres farther up the river at the limit of
+trees, where the goods were to be discharged and another cargo taken
+on board. After a jetty had been constructed on the 16th, the
+landing of the goods began on the 17th, and was finished on the
+20th. The _Fraser_ went still farther up the river to Dudino, in
+order to load various goods laid up there--tallow, wheat, rye, and
+oats. On the 2nd September the steamer returned to Saostrovskoj,
+where in the meantime the _Express_ had taken on board her cargo.
+
+Dudino is a church village, situated at the point where the river
+Dudinka flows into the Yenisej. Here live two priests, a _smotritel_ (a
+police official), a couple of exiles, some Russian workmen, and a number
+of natives, as well as the owner of the place, the influential merchant
+SOTNIKOFF. This active and able man is in an economical point of view
+ruler over the whole of the surrounding region, all whose inhabitants
+are in one way or other dependent upon him. He exchanges grain, brandy,
+sugar, tea, iron goods, powder and lead, cloth and leather, for furs,
+fish, mammoth-ivory, &c.; and these goods are sent by steamer to
+Yenisejsk to be forwarded from thence to China, Moscow, St. Petersburg,
+&c. Among other things he is also the owner of very thick coal-seams in
+the Noril Mountains lying about 60 kilometres from Dudino. This simple
+and unostentatious man has been very obliging to all the scientific men
+who have visited the region. His dwelling, situated in the neighbourhood
+of the limit of trees, is probably the stateliest palace of the Siberian
+_tundra_, admired by natives from far and near. It is built of large
+logs, consists of two stories, has a roof painted green, many windows
+with decorated frames painted white and blue; the rooms are warm,
+provided with carpets of furs, pot-flowers in the windows, numerous
+sacred pictures, photographs, and copper engravings.
+
+On the 7th September all was ready for departure. The _Fraser_ and
+_Express_ weighed anchor to commence the return voyage down the
+river. At Tolstojnos two days after they met the steamer
+_Moskwa_[201] of Bremen, Captain Dallmann, having on board the crew
+of the Norwegian steamer _Zaritza_, Captain Brun, which had stranded
+at the mouth of the Yenisej and been abandoned by the crew. In the
+case of this stranding, however, the damage done had not been
+greater than that, when the _Fraser_ fell in with the stranded
+_Zaritza_, it could be pumped dry, taken off the shoal, and, the
+engine having first been put in order, carried back to Norway. On
+the 19th September all the three vessels arrived at Matotschkin
+Sound, where they lay some days in Beluga Bay in order to take in
+water and trim the cargo and coal; after which on the 22nd of the
+same month they sailed through the sound to the west, and on the
+26th anchored at Hammerfest in good condition and with full
+cargoes.[202] The goods, which now for the first time were carried
+from the Yenisej to Europe, consisted of about 600 tons--tallow,
+wheat, rye and oats. The goods imported into Siberia consisted
+mainly of 16 tons nails, 8 tons horseshoes, 4 tons horsenails,
+16-1/2 tons bar iron, 33 tons tobacco, 60 tons salt, 24 casks
+petroleum, an iron lighter in pieces with the necessary adjuncts of
+anchors, &c.[203]
+
+
+Before I begin to give an account of the voyage of the _Lena_ I must
+briefly mention the steps which Mr. Sibiriakoff took for her safety
+during her voyage from the mouth of the river, where she was to part
+from the _Vega_, to her proper destination, the town of Yakutsk. It
+is naturally very difficult for a vessel to seek her way without a
+pilot through an extensive delta completely unknown in a
+hydrographic respect, and crossed by a large number of deeper or
+shallower river arms. Mr. Sibiriakoff had therefore arranged that a
+river pilot should meet the _Lena_ at the north point of the delta,
+and had through Mr. Kolesoff negotiated with him the following
+contract, which I reproduce here in full, because it gives in
+several respects a very graphic picture of various social relations
+in these remote regions. The copy of the contract which has been
+communicated to me when translated runs thus:--
+
+ At Yakutsk, in the year one thousand eight hundred and
+ seventy-eight on the 18th February, I, the undersigned
+ Yakut AFONASII FEODOROFF WINOKUROFF, have concluded the
+ following contract with IVAN PLATONOWITSCH KOLESOFF,
+ merchant of the second guild in the town of Yakutsk.
+
+ 1. I, Winokuroff bind myself as pilot to carry the vessel
+ of Professor Nordenskioeld's expedition up the river Lena
+ from the village Tas-Ary, which lies about 150 versts
+ below the village Bulun. From Tumat Island, which is
+ situated in the northeastern part of the Lena delta, I
+ bind myself for the piloting of the same vessel to procure
+ at my own cost among the inhabitants of the place a pilot
+ who knows well the deepest channel of the Lena river as
+ far as the village Tas-Ary. This pilot the chief of the
+ expedition shall discharge at the village Tas-Ary.
+
+ 2. As I am not master of the Russian language I bind
+ myself to bring along with me a Yakut interpreter, who
+ knows the Russian language and is able to write. In May of
+ this year, I, Winokuroff, with the interpreter shall
+ travel from the town of Yakutsk down the Lena river to
+ Tumat Island and there along with the interpreter wait for
+ the expedition.
+
+ 3. During the passage down the river I am bound to hire
+ among the inhabitants of the regions a competent guide,
+ who shall accompany us in my own boats to the island by
+ the deepest channel in the Lena delta. During the passage
+ from the village Tas-Ary I shall take soundings and record
+ the depth of the fairway.
+
+ 4. Between the village Bulun and Tumat Island, I bind
+ myself to seek for two places for the wintering of the
+ vessel, which are quite suitable for the purpose, and
+ protected from ice. I shall further lay before the
+ commander of the expedition a journal containing
+ everything which I can find that it would be advantageous
+ to know for the safety of navigation and for the wintering
+ of the vessels, also accounts of the places which are
+ dangerous or unsuitable for navigation.
+
+ 5. On my arrival at Tumat Island I shall make it my first
+ duty to find a deep and convenient haven for the seagoing
+ vessels on the western side of the island. For this
+ purpose I bind myself to have with me two boats, which, if
+ necessary, shall be given over to the expedition. At the
+ haven when found I bind myself to erect on some eminence
+ near the shore of the island, which can be seen from Cape
+ Olonek, a signal tower of driftwood or earth, like a
+ Cossack mound, not lower than seven feet. On this
+ foundation I shall raise a pyramidal frame of three or
+ more thick logs, on the top of which I shall fix a
+ flagstaff with a pulley block for the flag. The flag is to
+ be flown at least 42 feet from the ground. I shall guard
+ the landmark thus erected until the river freezes. For
+ this purpose Herr Kolesoff has provided me with a
+ ready-made flag, a pulley block and a line. And when the
+ nights become dark I shall light two or three large fires
+ or hang up lanterns on the landmark itself, so that these
+ fires or lanterns may be seen from the sea.
+
+ 6. From the village Tas-Ary I shall carry the vessel of
+ the expedition to the town of Yakutsk, inasmuch as I shall
+ show the proper fairway on the Lena river. The interpreter
+ shall be at my side during the whole journey.
+
+ 7. During the whole time from the day when I start from
+ Yakutsk, up to the close of my time of service in
+ Nordenskioeld's expedition we, I, Winokuroff, and my
+ interpreter, must be always sober (never intoxicated),
+ behave faithfully and courteously, and punctually comply
+ with the captain's orders.
+
+ 8. For all these obligations Herr Kolesoff has to pay me
+ 900 roubles.
+
+ 9. After the arrival of the expedition at Yakutsk I will
+ not be allowed to leave the ship without the permission of
+ the chief, but shall still remain on board. If the captain
+ finds it necessary that I accompany him back to the mouth
+ of the Lena, I shall conform to his wish in consideration
+ of an extra fee of 300 roubles. During this latter passage
+ I am not bound to have with me any interpreter.
+
+ 10. If the arrival of the expedition at Tumat Island is
+ delayed by any circumstance to the month of November, I
+ have the right to betake myself along with my interpreter
+ to Yakutsk and here to produce to Herr Kolesoff an
+ official certificate given by Commandant Baschleff or any
+ other local official that I had erected a landmark on
+ Tumat Island and remained there until the river was frozen
+ over, and that I did not leave until the expedition was no
+ longer to be expected. Then Herr Kolesoff on the ground of
+ this contract must settle with me by paying me the whole
+ sum of 900 roubles, together with 200 roubles for my
+ return journey.
+
+ 11. If the vessel of the expedition arrive at Tumat Island
+ so late that the voyage becomes impossible, we, I and my
+ interpreter, shall winter with the expedition until the
+ river becomes open in 1879. And in this case we, I and my
+ interpreter, shall live at our own expense, and serve the
+ expedition as belonging to its crew. After the
+ commencement of navigation in 1879 I shall conduct the
+ vessel from the wintering station to the town of Yakutsk.
+ On this account I have to receive, besides the 900 roubles
+ coming to me, 800 roubles more. If during this voyage too
+ it should be necessary to accompany the vessels from
+ Yakutsk back to the mouth of the Lena, I shall do that,
+ and receive on that account 300 roubles. But if the
+ vessels winter at Yakutsk, I shall be free during winter,
+ and only during next year's voyage, if so required,
+ accompany them to the mouth of the Lena. In that case I
+ have to receive 300 roubles.
+
+ 12. Of this sum agreed upon Herr Kolesoff shall pay me in
+ advance on the conclusion of this contract 300 roubles, in
+ the month of May at my departure 150 roubles, and at the
+ village Bulun 250 roubles, for my payment to my companions
+ and pilot and other expenses. The balance shall be paid to
+ me after my return to Yakutsk.
+
+ 13. In the month of May, at the time for starting, if I be
+ prevented by illness from betaking myself to Tumat Island,
+ I shall repay to Herr Kolesoff the sum paid to me at the
+ conclusion of this contract, with the exception of the
+ money I have paid to the interpreter as pocket-money and
+ for the boats. Should I not be able to repay the sum, I,
+ Winokuroff, shall work out the amount not repaid at Herr
+ Sibiriakoff's gold mines.
+
+ 14. All this are we, the two contracting parties, bound to
+ observe in full and without infringement.
+
+A note to the copy further informs us that to this contract the Yakut
+Afonasii Feodoroff Winokuroff had, in place of his signature, attached
+his own seal, which the Yakut Alexii Zassimoff Mironoff had engraved,
+and that the conditions had been approved by the merchant Ivan Kolesoff,
+and the whole registered at the police-office of the Yakutsk circle.
+
+The contract had been entered into with the friendly co-operation of the
+Governor and Bishop of Yakutsk, who were much interested in the proposed
+voyage. The latter knew the coast of the Polar Sea from his own
+experience. But notwithstanding all this, the affair was attended with
+no better success than that the pilot celebrated the receipt of the
+large sum of money by getting thoroughly intoxicated, and while in that
+state he broke one of the bones of the fore-arm. He was thus unable ever
+to reach the appointed rendezvous, and Johannesen was allowed to manage
+by his own hand, as best he could, his little steamer.
+
+[Illustration: THE STEAMER "LENA." ]
+
+After the _Lena_ had parted with the _Vega_ during the night between
+the 27th and 28th August, she steamed towards land, and came the
+same day to the northernmost cape of the Lena delta, situated in 73 deg.
+47' N.L.[204] It was here that the pilot's landmark was to
+have been erected, but there was no pilot here, and no flagstaff was
+visible. In order to fall in with this landmark Johannesen sailed
+forty kilometres westward along the shore, but as his search in this
+direction was not attended with success, he turned back to the
+first-mentioned place and landed there. On the shore stood a very
+old hut, already completely filled with earth. It probably dated
+from some of the expeditions which visited the region in the
+beginning of the century. Wild reindeer were seen in large numbers.
+As according to the contract which has been quoted the landmark was
+to be visible from Cape Olonek, Johannesen steamed once more to the
+west, running as close to the land as possible. But as the water
+here became shallower and shallower without any signal-tower being
+visible, Johannesen had to find his way himself through the delta;
+and for this purpose he determined to search for the easternmost arm
+of the river, which, on the maps, is drawn as being very broad,
+and also appears to have been made use of by the vessels of
+"the great northern expeditions."[205]
+
+[Illustration: HANS CHRISTIAN JOHANNESEN.
+Captain of the "Lena." Born in 1846. ]
+
+Forty kilometres east of the northern extremity of the Lena delta
+Johannesen encountered three sandbanks, which he sailed round. After
+passing these the water became deeper, so that he could advance at a
+distance of five kilometres from land. On the 1st September Johannesen
+anchored in a bay on the mainland in the neighbourhood of the Bychov
+mouth, whence on the 3rd September, at 2.30 a.m., he continued his
+course up the river, but by 10 o'clock the _Lena_ was aground. The water
+was falling, and did not begin to rise until an hour after midnight. It
+was not, therefore, until 8 a.m. the following day that the _Lena_ was
+got off, and that with great difficulty. The sailing through the delta
+was rendered difficult by the maps, which were made 140 years ago, being
+now useless. For the delta has undergone great alterations since then.
+Where at that time there were sandbanks, there are now large islands,
+overgrown with wood and grass. At other places again whole islands have
+been washed away by the river.
+
+While the vessel was aground nine Tunguses came on board. They rowed in
+small boats, which were made of a single tree stem, hollowed out, and
+could just carry a man each. Johannesen endeavoured in vain to induce
+some of the Tunguses to pilot the steamer; he did not succeed in
+explaining his wish to them, notwithstanding all the attempts of the
+Russian interpreter, a proof of the slight contact these Tunguses had
+had with the rulers of Siberia, and also of the difficulty and
+unwillingness with which the savage learns the language of the civilised
+nations.
+
+It was not until the 7th September that the delta was finally
+passed, and the _Lena_ steamed in the river proper, where the
+fairway became considerably better. Johannesen says in his
+account of the voyage that it is improbable that any of the
+western arms of the Lena are of importance, partly because the
+mass of water which flows in an easterly direction is very
+considerable in comparison with the whole quantity of water in
+the river, partly because the western and northern arms which
+Johannesen visited contained only salt water, while the water
+in the eastern arm was completely free from any salt taste. On
+the 8th, early in the morning, the first fixed dwelling-place on
+the Lena, Tas-Ary, was reached. Here the voyagers landed to
+get information about the fairway, but could not enter into
+communication with the natives, because they were Tunguses.
+In the afternoon of the same day they came to another river
+village, Bulun. Impatient to proceed, and supposing that it
+too was inhabited wholly by "Asiatics,"[206] Johannesen intended
+to pass it without stopping. But when the inhabitants saw the
+steamer they welcomed it with a salute from all the guns that
+could be got hold of in haste.[207] The _Lena_ then anchored. Two
+Crown officials and a priest came on board, and the latter
+performed a thanksgiving service.
+
+Even at that remote spot on the border of the _tundra_ the Asiatic
+comprehended very well the importance of vessels from the great oceans
+being able to reach the large rivers of Siberia. I too had a proof of
+this in the year 1875. While still rowing up the river in my own
+Nordland boat with two scientific men and three hunters, before we got
+up with the steamer _Alexander_ we landed, among others, at a place
+where a number of Dolgans were collected. When they understood clearly
+that we had come to them, not as brandy-sellers or fish-buyers from the
+south, but from the north, _from the ocean_, they went into complete
+ecstasies. We were exposed to unpleasant embraces from our skin-clad
+admirers, and finally one of us had the misfortune to get a bath in the
+river in the course of an attempt which the Dolgans in their excitement
+made to carry him almost with violence to the boat, which was lying in
+the shallow water some distance from the shore. At Dudino, also, the
+priests living there held a thanksgiving service for our happy arrival
+thither. Two of them said mass, while the clerk, clad in a sheepskin
+caftan reaching to his feet, zealously and devoutly swung an immense
+censer. The odour from it was at first not particularly pleasant, but it
+soon became so strong and disagreeable that I, who had my place in front
+of the audience, was like to choke, though the ceremony was performed in
+the open air. Soon the clerk was completely concealed in a dense cloud
+of smoke, and it was now observed that his skin cloak had been set fire
+to at the same time as the incense. The service, however, was not
+interrupted by this incident, but the fire was merely extinguished by a
+bucket of water being thrown, to the amusement of all, over the clerk.
+
+At nine in the morning the _Lena_ continued her voyage up the river with
+the priest and the Crown officials on board, but they had soon to be
+landed, because in their joy they had become dead drunk. On the 13th
+September Schigansk was reached, and samples of the coal found there
+were taken on board, but these proved unserviceable,[208] and on the
+21st September the _Lena_ reached Yakutsk. The first vessel which,
+coming from the ocean, reached the heart of Siberia was received with
+great goodwill and hospitality, both by the authorities and the common
+people. But when Johannesen did not find here Sibiriakoff's
+representative, Kolesoff, he continued his voyage up the river, until,
+on the 8th October, he came to the village Njaskaja, 220 versts from
+Vitim, in about 60 deg. N.L. Here he turned back to Yakutsk and laid up the
+steamer in winter quarters a little to the south of that town.
+
+[Illustration: YAKUTSK IN THE SEVENTEENTH CENTURY. (After Witsen.) ]
+
+Both the _Fraser_ and _Express_ and the _Lena_ had thus fully
+answered the purposes intended before the departure of the
+expedition, and their voyages will always form an important
+link in the chain of the attempts through which navigation in
+the Siberian Polar Sea has been opened.
+
+In order to give an idea of the influence which this sea-route
+may have on the commerce of the world, and the new source of
+fortune and prosperity which thereby maybe rendered accessible
+to millions, I shall in a few words give an account of the nature
+of the territory which by means of this sea-communication
+will be brought into contact with the old civilised countries
+of Europe.
+
+[Illustration: YAKUTSK IN OUR DAYS. (After a recent Russian drawing.) ]
+
+If we take Siberia in its widest sense, that is to say, if we
+include under that name not only Siberia proper, but also the parts
+of High Asia which lie round the sources of the great Siberian
+rivers, this land may very well be compared in extent, climate,
+fertility, and the possibility of supporting a dense population,
+with America north of 40 deg. N.L. Like America, Siberia is
+occupied in the north by woodless plains. South of this region,
+where only the hunter, the fisher, and the reindeer nomad can find a
+scanty livelihood, there lies a widely extended forest territory,
+difficult of cultivation, and in its natural conditions, perhaps,
+somewhat resembling Sweden and Finland north of 60 deg. or 61 deg.
+N.L. South of this wooded belt, again, we have, both in
+Siberia and America, immeasurable stretches of an exceedingly
+fertile soil, of whose power to repay the toil of the cultivator the
+grain exports during recent years from the frontier lands between
+the United States and Canada have afforded so striking evidence.
+There is, however, this dissimilarity between Siberia and America,
+that while the products of the soil in America may be carried easily
+and cheaply to the harbours of the Atlantic and the Pacific, the
+best part of Siberia, that which lies round the upper part of the
+courses of the Irtisch-Ob and the Yenisej, is shut out from the
+great oceans of the world by immense tracts lying in front of it,
+and the great rivers which in Siberia cross the country and appear
+to be intended by nature to form not only the arteries for its inner
+life, but also channels of communication with the rest of the world,
+all flow towards the north and fall into a sea which, down to the
+most recent times, has been considered completely inaccessible.
+
+[Illustration: Map of the River System of Siberia. ]
+
+Of these rivers the double river, Ob-Irtisch, with its numerous
+affluents, occupies an area of more than 60,000 geographical square
+miles, the Yenisej-Angara, not quite 50,000, and the Lena, somewhat
+over 40,000.[209] As the map of the river system of Siberia, which
+accompanies this work, shows, but a small part of these enormous
+territories lies north of the Arctic Circle, and only very
+inconsiderable portions of it are occupied by woodless _tundra_,
+which is explained by the fact that the greater part of the
+coast-land bordering on the Arctic Ocean is drained by small rivers
+of its own, and therefore cannot be considered to belong to the
+river territories now in question. If we draw the northern boundary
+of the land that may be cultivated with advantage at 60 deg. N.L.,
+there remains a cultivable area of 90,000 geographical square miles.
+Perhaps a third part of this is occupied by rocky country which is
+wooded, and probably capable of being cultivated only with
+considerable difficulty, but the rest consists for the most part of
+easily cultivated grassy plains, with little wood, and covered with
+the most luxuriant vegetation. The soil, in many places resembling
+the black earth or _tscherno-sem_ of Russia, recompenses with
+abundant harvests even the slightest labour of cultivation.
+Notwithstanding this, these regions now support only an exceedingly
+sparse population, but many, many millions may without difficulty
+find their subsistence there when once cultivation has developed the
+rich natural resources of the country.
+
+It is a circumstance specially fortunate for the future development
+of Siberia that its three great rivers are already navigable for the
+greater part of their course. The Ob is navigable from Biisk (52-1/2 deg.
+N.L.), and the Irtisch at least from Semipalitinsk (50 deg.
+18' N.L.). The Yenesej, again, which, after leaving the region of
+its sources in China, crosses with its two main arms the whole of
+Siberia from north to south, from the forty-sixth to the
+seventy-third degree of latitude, and thus traverses a territory
+which corresponds in length to the distance between Venice and the
+North Cape, or between the mouth of the Mississippi and the north
+part of Lake Winnipeg, and is already navigable by nature from the
+sea to Yenisejsk. To this town goods are already transported _down_
+both the main arms from Minusinsk and the region of Lake Baikal. It
+is said that the Angara might be made quite navigable during its
+whole course at an expenditure trifling in comparison with the
+advantages that would thus be gained, as well as its continuation,
+the Selenga, in its lower part between the Chinese frontier and Lake
+Baikal. In this way a river route would be opened for the conveyance
+of the products of North China and South Siberia to a sea which an
+ordinary steamer would cross in five or six days to the White Sea or
+the North Cape. A similar communication with the Atlantic may be
+opened on the double river Ob-Irtisch with Western Siberia and High
+Asia as far as to Chinese Dsungaria, where the Irtisch begins its
+course as a small river, the Black Irtisch, which falls into Lake
+Saisan, and rises south of the Altai Mountains in the neighbourhood
+of the Selenga, the source-river of the Yenisej. At several places
+the river territories of the Ob and the Yenesej nearly reach hands
+to one another through affluents, which rise so close to each other
+that the two river systems might easily be connected by canals. This
+is also the case with the affluents of the Yenesej and the Lena,
+which at many places almost meet, and the Lena itself is, according
+to Latkin's statement, navigable from the village of Kotschuga to
+the sea. We see from this how extraordinarily advantageous is the
+natural system of interior communication which Siberia possesses,
+and at the same time that a communication by sea between this
+country and the rest of the world is possible only by the Arctic
+Ocean. It is on this that the enormous importance of the navigation
+of the Siberian Polar Sea depends. If this can be brought about,
+Siberia, with an inconsiderable expenditure in making canals, will
+not only become one of the most fortunate countries of the globe in
+respect of the possibility of the cheap transport of goods, but the
+old proposal of a north-eastern commercial route to China may even
+become a reality. If, on the other hand, navigation on the Polar Sea
+be not brought about, Siberia will still long remain what it is at
+present--a land rich in raw materials, but poor in all that is
+required for the convenience and comfort with which the civilised
+man in our days can with difficulty dispense.
+
+Many perhaps believe that the present want of commercial
+communication may be removed by a railway running across Russia and
+Southern Siberia. But this is by no means the case. On the contrary,
+communication by sea is an indispensable condition of such a railway
+being profitable. For it can never come in question to carry on a
+railway the products of the forest or the field over the stretch of
+three to five thousand kilometres which separates the fertile river
+territory of the Ob-Irtisch from the nearest European port. Even if
+we suppose that the railway freight, inclusive of all costs, could
+be reduced to a farthing the kilometre-ton, it would in any case
+rise, from the grain regions of Siberia to a harbour on the Baltic,
+to from 4_l_. to nearly 7_l_. per ton. So high a freight, with the
+costs of loading in addition, none of the common products of
+agriculture or forestry can stand, as may easily be seen if we
+compare this amount with the prices current in the markets of the
+world for wheat, rye, oats, barley, timber, &c. But if the Siberian
+countryman cannot sell his raw products, the land will continue to
+be as thinly peopled as it is at present, nor can the sparse
+population which will be found there procure themselves means to
+purchase such products of the industry of the present day as are
+able to bear long railway carriage. In the absence of contemporaneous
+sea-communication the railway will therefore be without traffic, the
+land such as it is at present, and the unprosperous condition of the
+European population undiminished.
+
+In order to give the reader an idea of the present natural
+conditions, and the present communication on a Siberian river, I
+shall, before returning to the sketch of the voyage of the _Vega_,
+give some extracts from notes made during my journey up the Yenesej
+in 1875, reminding the reader, however, that the natural conditions
+of the Ob-Irtisch and the Lena differ considerably from those of the
+Yenisej, the Ob-Irtisch flowing through lower, more fertile, and
+more thickly peopled regions, the Lena again through a wilder, more
+beautiful, but less cultivated country.
+
+When one travels up the river from Port Dickson, the broad sound
+between Sibiriakoff's Island and the mainland is first passed, but
+the island is so low that it is not visible from the eastern bank of
+the river and which is usually followed in sailing up or down the
+river. The mainland, on the other hand, is at first high-lying, and
+in sailing along the coast it is possible to distinguish various
+spurs of the range of hills, estimated to be from 150 to 200 metres
+high, in the interior. These are free of snow in summer. A little
+south of Port Dickson they run to the river bank, where they form a
+low rock and rocky island projecting into the river, named after
+some otherwise unknown Siberian Polar trapper, Yefremov Kamen.
+
+Sibiriakoff's Island has never, so far as we know, been visited by
+man, not even during the time when numerous _simovies_ were found at
+the mouth of the Yenesej. For no indication of this island is found
+in the older maps of Siberia, although these, as appears from the
+fac-simile reproduced at page 192, give the names of a number of
+_simovies_ at the mouth of the Yenisej, now abandoned. Nor is it
+mentioned in the accounts of the voyages of the great northern
+expeditions. The western strand of the island, the only one I have
+seen, completely bore the stamp of the _tundra_ described below.
+Several reindeer were seen pasturing on the low grassy eminences of
+the island, giving promise of abundant sport to the hunter who first
+lands there.
+
+Still at Yefremov Kamen we saw in 1875 three Polar bears who
+appeared to pasture in all peacefulness among the rocks, and did not
+allow themselves to be disturbed by the enormous log-fire of
+driftwood we lighted on the strand to make our coffee. Here were
+found for the last time during our journey up the river actual
+marine animals: Appendicularia, Olio, medusae, large beroids, &c.
+Large bushy plants were still completely wanting, but the vegetable
+world already began to assume a stamp differing from the Arctic
+Ocean flora proper. A short distance south of Yefremov Kamen begins
+the veritable _tundra_, a woodless plain, interrupted by no mountain
+heights, with small lakes scattered over it, and narrow valleys
+crossing it, which often make an excursion on the apparently level
+plain exceedingly tiresome.
+
+[Illustration: RIVER VIEW ON THE YENISEJ. (From a drawing by A.N.
+Lundstroem.) ]
+
+As is the case with all the other Siberian rivers running from south
+to north,[210] the western strand of the Yenisej, wherever it is
+formed of loose, earthy layers, is also quite low and often marshy,
+while on the other hand the eastern strand consists of a steep bank,
+ten to twenty metres high, which north of the limit of trees is
+distributed in a very remarkable way into pyramidal pointed mounds.
+Numerous shells of crustacea found here, belonging to species which
+still live in the Polar Sea, show that at least the upper earthy
+layer of the _tundra_ was deposited in a sea resembling that which
+now washes the north coast of Siberia.[211]
+
+The _tundra_ itself is in summer completely free of snow, but at a
+limited depth from the surface the ground is continually frozen. At
+some places the earthy strata alternate with strata of pure, clear
+ice. It is in these frozen strata that complete carcases of
+elephants and rhinoceroses have been found, which have been
+protected from putrefaction for hundreds of thousands of years. Such
+_finds_, however, are uncommon, but on the other hand single bones
+from this primeval animal world occur in rich, abundance, and along
+with them masses of old driftwood, originating from the Mammoth
+period, known by the Russian natives of Siberia under the
+distinctive name of "Noah's wood." Besides there are to be seen in
+the most recent layer of the Yenesej _tundra_, considerably north of
+the present limit of actual trees, large tree-stems with their roots
+fast in the soil, which show that the limit of trees in the Yenesej
+region, even during our geological period, went further north than
+now, perhaps as far as, in consequence of favourable local
+circumstances, it now goes on the Lena.
+
+[Illustration: SUB-FOSSIL MARINE CRUSTACEA FROM THE TUNDRA. ]
+
+On the slopes of the steep _tundra_ bank and in several of the _tundra_
+valleys there is an exceedingly rich vegetation, which already, only 100
+kilometres south of Yefremov Kamen, forms actual thickets of flowering
+plants, while the _tundra_ itself is overgrown with an exceedingly
+scanty carpet, consisting more of mosses than of grasses. Salices of
+little height go as far north as Port Dickson (73 deg. 30' N.L.), the dwarf
+birch (_Betula nana_, L.) is met with, though only as a bush creeping
+along the ground, at Cape Schaitanskoj (72 deg. 8' N.L.); and here in 1875,
+on the ice-mixed soil of the _tundra_, we gathered ripe cloudberries.
+Very luxuriant alders (_Alnaster fruticosus_, LEDEB.) occur already at
+Mesenkin (71 deg. 28' N.L.), and the Briochov Islands (70 deg. to 71 deg. N.L.), are
+in several places covered with rich and luxuriant thickets of bushes.
+But the limit of trees proper is considered to begin first at the great
+bend which the river makes in 69 deg. 40' N.L., a little north of Dudino.
+Here the hills are covered with a sort of wood consisting of
+half-withered, grey, moss-grown larches (_Larix sibirica_), which seldom
+reach a height of more than seven to ten metres, and which much less
+deserve the name of trees than the luxuriant alder bushes which grow
+nearly 2 deg. farther north. But some few miles south of this place, and
+still far north of the Arctic Circle, the pine forest becomes tall. Here
+begins a veritable forest, the greatest the earth has to show, extending
+with little interruption from the Ural to the neighbourhood of the Sea
+of Ochotsk, and from the fifty-eighth or fifty-ninth degree of latitude
+to far north of the Arctic Circle, that is to say, about one thousand
+kilometres from north to south, and perhaps four times as much from east
+to west. It is a primeval forest of enormous extent, nearly untouched by
+the axe of the cultivator, but at many places devastated by extensive
+forest fires.
+
+On the high eastern bank of the Yenisej the forest begins
+immediately at the river bank. It consists principally of pines: the
+cembra pine (_Pinus Cembra_, L.), valued for its seeds, enormous
+larches, the nearly awl-formed Siberian pine (_Pinus sibirica_,
+LEDEB.), the fir (_Pinus obovata_, TURCZ.), and scattered trees of
+the common pine (_Pinus sylvestris_, L.). Most of these already
+north of the Arctic Circle reach a colossal size, but in such a case
+are often here, far from all forestry, grey and half-dried up with
+age. Between the trees the ground is so covered with fallen branches
+and stems, only some of which are fresh, the others converted into a
+mass of wood-mould held together only by the bark, that there one
+willingly avoids going forward on an unbroken path. If that must be
+done, the progress made is small, and there is constant danger of
+breaking one's bones in the labyrinth of stems. Nearly everywhere
+the fallen stems are covered, often concealed, by an exceedingly
+luxuriant bed of mosses, while on the other hand tree-lichens,
+probably in consequence of the dry inland climate of Siberia, occur
+sparingly. The pines, therefore, want the shaggy covering common in
+Sweden, and the bark of the birches which are seen here and there
+among the pines is distinguished by an uncommon blinding whiteness.
+
+The western bank of the Yenesej consists, like the innumerable
+islands of the river, for the most part of lowlying and marshy
+stretches of land, which at the season of the spring floods are
+overflowed by the river and abundantly manured with its mud. In this
+way there is formed here a fertile tract of meadow covered partly
+with a grassy turf untouched by the scythe, partly with a very
+peculiar bush vegetation, rising to a height of eight metres, among
+which there are to be found a number of families of plants well
+known by us in Sweden, as Impatiens, Urtica, Sonchus, Heracleum,
+&c., but in gigantic forms unknown at home. Often a dense thicket of
+a willow (_Salix vitellenia_, L.), whose straight, branchless stems
+resemble at a distance the bamboo woods of the south, alternates
+with level, grassy carpets of a lively green and small streams in
+such a way as gives the whole the appearance of the most smiling
+park carefully kept free of fallen branches and dry grass. It is the
+river water which in spring has played the gardener's part in these
+parks, seldom trodden by the foot of man and endlessly rich in the
+most splendid greenery. Near the river there are also to be found
+carpets of a uniform green, consisting of a short kind of Equisetum,
+unmixed with any other plants, which forms a "gazon," to which no
+nobleman's country seat can show a match. The drawback is, that a
+stay in these regions during summer is nearly rendered impossible by
+the enormous number of mosquitoes with which the air is infested.
+
+A table drawn up by Dr. Arnell, to be found in _Redogoerelse foer de
+svenska expeditionerna till mynningen of Jenisej ar 1876_,[212]
+shows the distribution of the most important varieties of trees.
+From it we see that on the Yenesej the birch (_Betula odorata_,
+BECHST.), the fir (_Pinus obovata_, TURCZ.), the larch (_Pinus
+larix_, L.), and the juniper (_Juniperus communis_, L.), go to 69 deg.
+35' N.L. (that is to say to the latitude of Tromsoe); the
+sallow (_Salix caprea_, L.) to 68 deg. 55'; the bird's cherry
+(_Prunus padus_, L.), and the Siberian pine (_Pinus sibirica_,
+LEDEB.), to 66 deg. 30'; the aspen (_Populus tremula_, L.) to 65 deg. 55'
+(the latitude of Haparanda); the pine (_Pinus sylvatica_,
+L.) to 65 deg. 50', &c.
+
+In the middle of the forest belt the wood appears to cover the whole
+land without interruption, there being, unless exceptionally, no
+open places. But towards the north the forest passes into the
+treeless _tundra_ through bare spots occurring here and there, which
+gradually increase, until trees grow only in valleys and sheltered
+places, and finally disappear completely. Similar is the passage of
+the forest to treeless regions (steppes), which at first are here
+and there bestrewed with more or less detached groups of
+broad-leaved trees, until they wholly disappear, and the land forms
+an endless plain, out of whose fertile soil the warm summer sun
+calls forth a great variety of luxuriant vegetable forms, whose
+many-hued flowers, often large and splendid, clothe the fields with
+the richest splendour of colour. Here is the true homeland of many
+of the show-plants in the flower-gardens of Europe, as, for
+instance, the peony, the Siberian robinia, the blue iris, &c.
+
+If the Siberian wooded belt forms the most extensive forest in the
+world, this flower-steppe forms the world's greatest cultivable
+field, in all probability unequalled in extent and fertility.
+Without manure and with an exceedingly small amount of labour
+expended on cultivation, man will year by year draw forth from its
+black soil the most abundant harvests. For the present, however,
+this land, with its splendid capabilities for cultivation, has an
+exceedingly scanty population; and this holds good in a yet higher
+degree of the forest belt, which is less susceptible of cultivation.
+At a considerable distance from the rivers it is for the most part
+an unknown land, where the European seldom or never sets his foot,
+and where only the native nomad or hunter wanders about. These
+forests, however, are by no means so rich in game as might be
+expected, perhaps because the mosquitoes in summer are unendurable
+by warm-blooded animals.
+
+The main population in the forest belt consists of native nomad or
+hunting tribes, of which Samoyeds, Ostyaks, Tunguses, and Yakuts are
+the most numerous. Only along the rivers do we find Russian villages
+and peasant settlements, placed there for trading with the natives,
+for fishing, and at some places for washing gold. Not till we come
+to the middle of the country is the Russian population more
+numerous, here it spreads out in a broad belt over the whole of the
+immense expanse between the Ural and the Angara.
+
+[Illustration: SIBERIAN RIVER BOAT. Used by the Norwegian traveller
+Chr. Hansteen on the river Angara. ]
+
+In the farthest north the Russian dwelling-places consist of single
+cabins built of logs or planks from broken-up lighters,[213] and
+having flat, turf-covered roofs. Such carvings and ornaments as are
+commonly found on the houses of the well-to-do Russian peasant, and
+whose artistic outlines indicate that the inhabitants have had time
+to think of something else than the satisfaction of the wants of the
+moment, are here completely wanting; but further south the villages
+are larger, and the houses finer, with raised roofs and high gables
+richly ornamented with wood-carvings. A church, painted in bright
+colours, generally shows that one of the inhabitants of the village
+has become rich enough to be at the expense of this ornament to his
+native place. The whole indicates a degree of prosperity, and the
+interiors of the houses, if we except the cockroaches, which swarm
+everywhere, are very clean. The walls are ornamented with numerous,
+if not very artistic, photographs and lithographs. Sacred pictures,
+richly ornamented, are placed in a corner, and before them hang
+several small oil-lamps, or small wax-lights, which are lighted on
+festive occasions. The sleeping place is formed of a bedstead near
+the roof, so large that it occupies a half or a third of the room,
+and at such a height from the floor that one can stand upright under
+it. There a tropical heat commonly prevails, the occupant of the bed
+accordingly enjoying an almost constant sweat-bath, which does not
+prevent him from going out immediately into the open air at a
+temperature at which mercury freezes. Food is cooked in large baking
+ovens, which are fired daily for that purpose, and at the same time
+heat the cabin. Fresh bread is baked every day, and even for the
+poor a large tea-urn (_samovar_) is an almost indispensable
+household article. The foreigner is certain to receive a hearty and
+friendly welcome when he crosses the threshold, and if he stays a
+short time in the cabin he will generally, whatever time of the day
+it be, find himself drinking a glass of tea with his host. The dress
+everywhere closely resembles the Russian: for the rich, wide velvet
+trousers stuck into the boots, a shirt showily embroidered with
+silver thread, and a large caftan often lined with fur; for the
+poor, if not too ragged, the same cut, but the cloth inferior,
+dirty, and torn. During winter, however, for going out of doors, the
+Samoyed _pesk_ is said to be common to high and low, Russian and
+native, settled and nomad.
+
+In my journey up the Yenesej in 1875 I met with only a few persons
+in these regions who had been exiled thither for political reasons,
+but on the other hand very many exiled criminals of the deepest
+dye--murderers, thieves, forgers, incendiaries, &c. Among them were
+also some few Fins and even a Swede, or at least one who, according
+to his own statement in broken Swedish, had formerly served in the
+King's Guard at Stockholm. Security of person and property was in
+any case complete, and it was remarkable that there did not appear
+to be any proper distinction of caste between the Russian-Siberian
+natives and those who had been exiled for crime. There appeared even
+to be little interest in ascertaining the crime--or, as the
+customary phrase appears to be here, the "misfortune"--which caused
+the exile. On making inquiry on this point I commonly got the
+answer, susceptible of many interpretations, "for bad behaviour." We
+found a peculiar sort of criminal colony at Selivaninskoj, a very
+large village situated on the eastern bank of the Yenesej in about
+the latitude of Aavasaksa. My journal of the expedition of 1875
+contains the following notes of my visit to this colony.
+
+The orthodox Russian church, as is well known, is tolerant towards
+the professors of foreign religions--Lutherans, Catholics, Jews,
+Mohammedans, Buddhists, Shamans, &c.; but, on the other hand, in
+complete correspondence with what took place in former times within
+the Protestant world, persecutes sectaries within its own pale, with
+temporal punishments here upon earth and with threatenings of
+eternal in another world. Especially in former times a great many
+sectaries have been sent to Siberia, and therefore there are
+sometimes to be found there peculiar colonies enjoying great
+prosperity, exclusively inhabited by the members of a certain sect.
+Such is the Skopt colony at Selivaninskoj, in connection with which,
+however, it may be remarked that the nature of the religious
+delusion in this case accounts for the severity of the law or the
+authorities. For, on the ground of a text in the Gospel of Matthew
+interpreted in a very peculiar way, all Skoptzi subject themselves
+to a mutilation, in consequence of which the sect can only exist by
+new proselytes; and remarkably enough, these madmen, notwithstanding
+all persecution, or perhaps just on that account, actually still
+gain followers. A large number of the Skoptzi were Fins from
+Ingermanland, with whom I could converse without difficulty. They
+had, through industry and perseverance, succeeded in creating for
+themselves a certain prosperity, were hospitable and friendly, and
+bore their hard fate with resignation. They would not themselves
+kill any warm-blooded animal, for it was "a sin to kill what God had
+created;" which did not hinder them from catching and eating fish,
+and from selling to us, who in any case were lost beings, a fine fat
+ox, on condition that our own people should slaughter it. Their
+abstinence from some kinds of animal food had besides the good
+result of inducing them to devote themselves to the cultivation of
+the soil. Round about their cabins accordingly there were patches of
+land growing potatoes, turnips, and cabbage, which at least that
+year yielded an abundant crop, though lying under the Arctic circle.
+Farther south such plots increase in size, and yield rich crops, at
+least, of a very large potato. There is no proper cultivation of
+grain till we come to Sykobatka, situated in 60 deg. N.L., but in
+a future, when forests and mosses are diminished, a profitable
+agriculture will be carried on far to the northward.
+
+[Illustration: OSTYAK TENT. (After a Photograph.) ]
+
+[Illustration: TOWING WITH DOGS ON THE YENISEJ. The boat _Luna_
+with the Swedish Land Expedition of 1876 on board. (After a
+drawing by Hj Theel.) ]
+
+Along with the dwellings of the Russians, the tents of the natives,
+or, as the Russians call them, "the Asiatics," are often to be met
+with. They have the same shape as the Lapp "kota." The Samoyed tent
+is commonly covered with reindeer skins, the Ostyak tent with birch
+bark. In the neighbourhood of the tent there are always large
+numbers of dogs, which during winter are employed for general
+carrying purposes, and in summer for towing boats up the river--a
+means of water transport which greatly astonished the Norwegian
+sailors with whom I travelled up the river in 1875. To see people
+travelling in a boat drawn by dogs appeared to them more remarkable
+than the Kremlin of Moscow, or the bells of Kiev. For such a journey
+a sufficient number of dogs are harnessed to a long line, one end of
+which is fastened to the stem of the boat. The dogs then go along
+the level bank, where they make actual footpaths. The boat being of
+light draught is kept afloat at a sufficient distance from land
+partly by means of the rudder which is managed by a person sitting
+in the stern of the boat, and partly by poling from the fore. Small
+boats are often hollowed out of a single tree-stem, and may
+notwithstanding, thanks to the size which some of the pines attain
+in those regions, be very roomy, and of a very beautiful shape. The
+dogs strongly resemble the Eskimo dogs in Greenland, which are also
+used as draught animals.
+
+[Illustration: FISHING BOATS ON THE OB. (After a Photograph.) ]
+
+Most of the natives who have come into close contact with the
+Russians are said to profess the Christian religion. That many
+heathen customs, however, still adhere to them is shown, among other
+things, by the following incident: At a _simovie_ where we landed
+for some hours on the 16th Sept. we found, as is common, a
+burying-place in the forest near the dwelling houses. The corpses
+were placed in large coffins above ground, at which almost always a
+cross was erected. In one of the crosses a sacred picture was
+inserted, which must be considered a further proof that a Christian
+rested in the coffin. Notwithstanding this, we found some clothes,
+which had belonged to the departed, hanging on a bush beside the
+grave, together with a bundle containing food, principally dried
+fish. At the graves of the richer natives the survivors are even
+said to place along with food some rouble notes, in order that the
+departed may not be altogether without ready money on his entrance
+into the other world.
+
+[Illustration: GRAVES IN THE PRIMEVAL FOREST OF SIBERIA. (After a
+drawing by Hj. Theel.) ]
+
+Right opposite the village Nasimovskoj is a gold-digger's deserted
+"residence," named Yermakova after the first conqueror of Siberia.
+The building owed its origin to the discovery of sand-beds rich in
+gold, occupying a pretty extensive area east of the Yenisej, which
+for a time had the repute of being the richest gold territory in the
+world. Here in a short time enormous fortunes were made; and
+accounts of the hundreds of poods which one or another yearly reaped
+from the sand-beds, and the fast reckless life led by those to whom
+fortune dealt out the great prizes in the gold-digging lottery,
+still form a favourite topic of conversation in the region. A rise
+in the value of labour and a diminished production of the noble
+metal have, however, since led to the abandonment of a large number
+of the diggings that formerly were most productive; others now
+scarcely pay the expense of the working. Many of the gold-diggers
+who were formerly rich, in the attempt to win more have been
+impoverished, and have disappeared; others who have succeeded in
+retaining their "pood of gold"--that is the mint unit which the
+gold-diggers prefer to use in their conversation--have removed to
+Omsk, Krasnojarsk, Moscow, Petersburg, Paris, &c. The gold-diggers'
+residences stand, therefore, now deserted, and form on the eastern
+bank of the river a row of half-decayed wooden ruins surrounded by
+young trees, after which in no long time only the tradition of the
+former period of prosperity will be found remaining. In one respect
+indeed the gold-diggers have exerted a powerful influence on the
+future of the country. For it was through them that the first
+pioneers were scattered in the wilderness, the first seed sown of
+the cultivation of the region.
+
+In 1875 there were only two steamers on the Yenisej. These were
+neither passenger nor cargo boats, but rather movable commercial
+stores, propelled by steam. The fore-saloon formed a shop provided
+with a desk, and shelves on which were to be seen cloths, iron
+wares, guns, ammunition, tobacco, tea, matches, sugar, brightly
+coloured copper engravings or lithographs, &c. In the after-saloon
+was enthroned, among brandy casks, purchased furs, and other
+precious or delicate wares, he who had the command on board, a kind
+and friendly merchant, who evidently did not concern himself much
+with the work of the sailors, but rather with trade and the making
+of bargains, and who was seldom called by the crew captain
+(_kapitan_), but generally master (_hosain_). After the steamer, or
+floating commercial store, there was towed one or two _lodjas_,
+which served as magazines, in which meal and salt and other heavy
+goods were stored, the purchased fish were salted and looked after,
+fresh bread baked for the numerous crew, &c. And as there was not a
+single jetty to be found the whole way between Yenisejsk and the
+sea, both the steamer and the _lodjas_, in order to be able to load
+and deliver goods at any point, had a large number of boats and
+lighters in tow. No place was set apart for passengers, but
+travellers were received in a friendly and hospitable manner when
+they came on board, where they were then allowed to look out for
+themselves as best they could. The nautical command was held by two
+mates or pilots of a stately and original appearance, who, clad in
+long caftans, sat each in his watch on a chair at the wheel,
+generally without steering, mostly smoking a cigarette made of
+coarse paper and, with the most careless appearance in the world,
+exchanging jests with those who were going down the river. The
+prohibition of taking away the attention of the steersman from his
+work by conversation was thus not in force hereabouts. A man stood
+constantly in the fore, uninterruptedly testing the depth with a
+long pole. For in order to avoid the strong current of the main
+stream the course was always shaped as near the shore as possible,
+often so near that one could almost jump ashore, and my own Nordland
+boat, which was towed by the side of the steamer, was occasionally
+drawn over land. It will be seen from this of how light draught the
+steamer was.
+
+Siberia, especially the river territory of the Yenisej and the Lena,
+possesses rich coal seams, which probably extend under considerable
+portions of the Siberian plain, but are yet unworked and have
+attracted little attention. The river steamers accordingly are
+fired, not with coal, but with wood, of which, if I remember right,
+180 fathoms went to the voyage of the steamer _Alexander_ up the
+river. As the vessel could carry only a small portion of this
+quantity of wood at one time, frequent halts were necessary, not
+only for trading with the natives, but also for taking fuel on
+board. In addition to this, the weak engine, _although the safety
+valves were overloaded when necessary with lead weights_, was
+sometimes unable to make head with all the vessels in tow against a
+current which at some places was very rapid, and often, in the
+attempt to find still water near the river bank, the steamer ran
+aground, notwithstanding the continual "ladno" cry of the poling
+pilot standing in the fore. It made so slow progress on this account
+that the passage from Saostrovskoj to Yenisejsk occupied a whole
+month.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH VILLAGE ON A SIBERIAN RIVER. (After a
+Photograph.) ]
+
+The two main arms into which the Yenisej is divided south of
+Yenisejsk are too rapid for the present Yenisej steamers to ascend
+them, while, as has been already stated, there is no difficulty in
+descending these rivers from the Selenga and the Baikal Lake on the
+one hand, and from the Minusinsk region abounding in grain on the
+other. The banks here consist, in many places, of high rocky ridges
+covered with fine forests, with wonderfully beautiful valleys
+between them, covered with luxuriant vegetation.
+
+What I have said regarding the mode of travelling up the Yenisej
+refers to the year 1875, in which I went up the river accompanied by
+two Swedish naturalists and three Norwegian seamen. It was then by
+no means unknown, for scientific men such as HANSTEEN (1829),
+CASTREN (1846), MIDDENDORFF (winter journeys in 1843 and 1844), and
+SCHMIDT (1866), had travelled hither and communicated their
+observations to the scientific world in valuable works on the nature
+and people of the region. But the visits of the West-European still
+formed rare exceptions; no West-European commercial traveller had
+yet wandered to those regions, and into the calculations of the
+friendly masters of the Yenisej river steamers no import of goods
+from, or export of goods to, Europe had ever entered. All at once a
+new period seemed to begin. If the change has not gone on so fast as
+many expected, life here, however, is more than it was at one time,
+and every year the change is more and more noticeable. It is on this
+account that I consider these notes from the journey of 1875 worthy
+of being preserved.
+
+
+[Footnote 200: With this name, for want of another, I denote all the
+innumerable islands which lie in the Yenisej between 69 deg. 45'
+and 71 deg. N.L. ]
+
+[Footnote 201: The _Moskwa_ was the first steamer which penetrated
+from the Atlantic to the town of Yenisejsk. The principal dates of
+this voyage may therefore be quoted here.
+
+Baron Knoop, along with several Russian merchants, had chartered in
+1878 a steamer, the _Louise_; but this vessel stranded on the coast
+of Norway. The _Zaritza_, another Norwegian steamer, was chartered
+instead to carry the _Louise's_ goods to their destination. But this
+vessel too stranded at the mouth of the Yenisej, and was abandoned
+by the crew, who were rescued by a small steamer, the _Moskwa_,
+which accompanied the _Zaritza_. In this steamer Captain Dallmann,
+the Bremen merchant Helwig Schmidt, and Ehlertz, an official in the
+Russian finance office, now travelled up the river. The _Moskwa_ had
+a successful voyage, arriving on the 4th September at Goltschicha,
+passing Turuchansk in consequence of a number of delays only on the
+24th September, reaching Podkamenaja Tunguska on the 1st October,
+and on the 14th of the same month its destination, a winter harbour
+on the Tschorna river, some miles north of Yenisejsk. (Fahrt auf dem
+Yenisse; von der Muendung bis Yenisejsk im Sommer 1878; Petermann's
+_Mittheilungen_, 1879, p 81.) ]
+
+[Footnote 202: The particulars of the voyages of these vessels are
+taken from a copy which I have received of Captain Emil Nilsson's
+log. ]
+
+[Footnote 203: The goods carried by me and by Wiggins to the
+Yenisej; in 1876, and those which Schwanenberg carried thence in
+1877, were properly only samples on a somewhat large scale. I have
+no knowledge of the goods which the _Zaritza_ had on board when she
+ran aground at the mouth of the Yenisej. ]
+
+[Footnote 204: According to Johannesen's determination. On Wrangel's
+map the latitude of this cape is given as 73 deg. 30'. Johannesen
+found the longitude to be 125 deg. 31' instead of 127 deg.. ]
+
+[Footnote 205: According to Latkin (Petermann's _Mittheilungen_,
+1879, p. 92), the Lena delta is crossed by seven main arms, the
+westernmost of which is called Anatartisch. It debouches into the
+sea at a cape 58 feet high named Ice Cape (Ledjanoi). Next come the
+river arm Bjelkoj, then Tumat, at whose mouth a landmark erected by
+Laptev in 1739 is still in existence. Then come the other three main
+arms, Kychistach, Trofimov, and Kischlach, and finally the very
+broad eastmost arm, Bychov. Probably some of the smaller river arms
+are to be preferred for sailing up the river to this broad arm,
+which is fouled by shoals. ]
+
+[Footnote 206: A common name used in Siberia for all the native
+races. ]
+
+[Footnote 207: This has been incorrectly interpreted as if they shot
+at the vessel. ]
+
+[Footnote 208: A coal seam is often unfit for use near the surface,
+where for centuries it has been uncovered and exposed to the action
+of the atmosphere, while farther down it may yield very good coal.
+It is probable besides that the layers of shale, which often
+surround the coal seams, have in this case been mistaken for the
+true coal. For those who are inexperienced in coal-mining to make
+such a mistake is the rule and not the exception. ]
+
+[Footnote 209: In order not to write without due examination about
+figures which have been written about a thousand times before, I
+have, with the help of Petermann's map of North and Middle Asia in
+Stieler's Hand-Atlas, calculated the extent of the areas of the
+Siberian rivers, and found them to be:--
+
+ Square Geographical
+ kilometres. square miles.
+ River area of the Ob (with the Tas) 3,445,000 62,560
+ River area of the Yenisej 2,712,000 49,250
+ River area of the Lena 2,395,000 43,500
+
+Of these areas 4,966,000 square kilometres, or about 90,000
+geographical square miles, lie south of 60 deg. N.L. ]
+
+[Footnote 210: For the northern hemisphere it is the general rule
+that where rivers flow through loose, earthy strata in a direction
+deviating considerably from that of the parallels of latitude, the
+right bank, when one stands facing the mouth of the river, is high,
+and the left low. The cause of this is the globular form of the
+earth and its rotation, which gives rivers flowing north a tendency
+towards the east, and to rivers flowing south a tendency to the west
+This tendency is resisted by the bank, but it is gradually eaten
+into and washed away by degrees, so that the river bed, in the
+course of thousands of years, is shifted in the direction indicated. ]
+
+[Footnote 211: As specimens of the sub-fossil mollusc fauna of the
+_tundra_ some of the common species are delineated on the opposite
+page. These are:--1. _Mya arenaria_, Lin. 2/3 of natural size. 2.
+_Mya truncata_, Lin. var. _Uddevallensis_, Forbes. 2/3 3. _Saxicava
+pholadis_, Lin. 2/3. 4. _Tellina lata_, Gmel. 2/3 5. _Cardium
+ciliatum_, Fabr. 2/3. 6. _Leda pernula_, Muell. var. _buccata_,
+Steenstr. Natural size. 7. _Nucula expansa_, Reeve. Nat. size. 8.
+_Fusus Kroyeri_, Moell. 2/3. 9. _Fusus fornicatus_, Reeve. 1/2. 10.
+_Fusus tornatus_, Gould. 2/3. 11. _Margarita elegantissima_, Bean.
+Natural size. 12. _Pleurotoma plicifera_, Wood. Natural size. 13.
+_Pleurotoma pyramidalis_, Stroem. 1-1/2. 14. _Trichotropis borealis_,
+Brod. 1-1/2. 15. _Natica helicoides_, Johnst. Nat. size. ]
+
+[Footnote 212: _Bihang till Vet. Akad. Handl._ Bd. iv. No. 11,
+p. 42. ]
+
+[Footnote 213: Provisions and wares intended for trade with the
+natives are transported on the Yenisej, as on many other Siberian
+rivers, down the stream in colossal lighters, built of planks like
+logs. It does not pay to take them up the river again, on which
+account, after their lading has been taken out of them, they are
+either left on the bank to rot or broken up for the timber. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+ The New Siberian Islands--The Mammoth--Discovery of Mammoth
+ and Rhinoceros mummies--Fossil Rhinoceros horns--Stolbovoj
+ Island--Liachoff's Island--First discovery of this island--
+ Passage through the sound between this island and the
+ mainland--Animal life there--Formation of ice in water above
+ the freezing point--The Bear Islands--The quantity and
+ dimensions of the ice begin to increase--Different kinds of
+ sea-ice--Renewed attempt to leave the open channel along
+ the coast--Lighthouse Island--Voyage along the coast to
+ Cape Schelagskoj--Advance delayed by ice, shoals, and fog--
+ First meeting with the Chukches--Landing and visits to Chukch
+ villages--Discovery of abandoned encampments--Trade with
+ the natives rendered difficult by the want of means of
+ exchange--Stay at Irkaipij--Onkilon graves--Information
+ regarding the Onkilon race--Renewed contact with the Chukches
+ --Kolyutschin Bay--American statements regarding the state
+ of the ice north of Behring's Straits--The _Vega_ beset.
+
+
+After the parting the _Lena_ shaped her course towards the land; the
+_Vega_ continued her voyage in a north-easterly direction towards
+the new Siberian Islands.
+
+These have, from the time of their discovery, been renowned among
+the Russian ivory collectors for their extraordinary richness in
+tusks and portions of skeletons of the extinct northern species of
+elephant known by the name of _mammoth_.
+
+We know by the careful researches of the academicians PALLAS, VON
+BAER, BRANDT, VON MIDDENDORFF, FR. SCHMIDT, &c., that the mammoth
+was a peculiar northern species of elephant with a covering of hair,
+which, at least during certain seasons of the year, lived under
+natural conditions closely resembling those which now prevail in
+middle and even in northern Siberia. The widely extended grassy
+plains and forests of North Asia were the proper homeland of this
+animal, and there it must at one time have wandered about in large
+herds.
+
+The same, or a closely allied species of elephant, also occurred in
+North America, in England, France, Switzerland, Germany, and North
+Russia. Indeed, even in Sweden and Finland inconsiderable mammoth
+remains have sometimes been found.[214] But while in Europe only some
+more or less inconsiderable remains of bones are commonly to be found,
+in Siberia we meet not only with whole skeletons, but also whole animals
+frozen in the earth, with solidified blood, flesh, hide, and hair. Hence
+we may draw the conclusion that the mammoth died out, speaking
+geologically, not so very long ago. This is besides confirmed by a
+remarkable antiquarian discovery made in France. Along with a number of
+roughly worked flint flakes, pieces of ivory were found, on which, among
+other things, a mammoth with trunk, tusks, and hair was engraved in
+rough but unmistakable lineaments, and in a style resembling that which
+distinguishes the Chukch drawings, copies of which will be found further
+on in this work. This drawing, whose genuineness appears to be proved,
+surpasses in age, perhaps a hundredfold, the oldest monuments that Egypt
+has to show, and forms a remarkable proof that the mammoth, the original
+of the drawing, lived in Western Europe contemporaneously with man. The
+mammoth remains are thus derived from a gigantic animal form, living in
+former times in nearly all the lands now civilized, and whose carcase is
+not yet everywhere completely decomposed. Hence the great and intense
+interest which attaches to all that concerns this wonderful animal.
+
+If the interpretation of an obscure passage in Pliny be correct,
+mammoth ivory has, from the most ancient times, formed a valued
+article of commerce, which, however, was often mistaken for the
+ivory of living elephants and of the walrus. But portions of the
+skeleton of the mammoth itself are first described in detail by
+WITSEN, who during his stay in Russia in 1686 collected a large
+number of statements regarding it, and at least in the second
+edition of his work gives good drawings of the under jaw of a
+mammoth and the cranium of a fossil species of ox, whose bones are
+found along with the remains of the mammoth (WITSEN, 2nd. edit. p.
+746). But it appears to have escaped Witsen, who himself considered
+mammoth bones to be the remains of ancient elephants, and who well
+knew the walrus, that in a number of the accounts which he quotes,
+the mammoth and the walrus are clearly mixed up together, which is
+not so wonderful, as both are found on the coast of the Polar Sea,
+and both yielded ivory to the stocks of the Siberian merchants. In
+the same way all the statements which the French Jesuit, AVRIL,
+during his stay in Moscow in 1686, collected regarding the
+amphibious animal, _Behemoth_, occurring on the coast of the
+Tartarian Sea, (Polar Sea) refer not to the mammoth, as some
+writers, HOWORTH[215] for example, have supposed, but to the walrus.
+The name mammoth, which is probably of Tartar origin, Witsen appears
+to wish to derive from Behemoth, spoken of in the fortieth chapter
+of the Book of Job. The first mammoth tusk was brought to England in
+1611, by JOSIAS LOGAN. It was purchased in the region of the
+Petchora, and attracted great attention, as appears from Logan's
+remark in a letter to Hakluyt, that one would not have dreamed to
+find such wares in the region of the Petchora (_Purchas_, iii p.
+546). As Englishmen at that time visited Moscow frequently, and for
+long periods, this remark appears to indicate that fossil ivory
+first became known in the capital of Russia some time after the
+conquest of Siberia.
+
+[Illustration: MAMMOTH SKELETON IN THE IMPERIAL MUSEUM OF THE
+ACADEMY OF SCIENCES IN ST PETERSBURG. After a Photograph communicated
+by the Academician Friedrich Schmidt in St. Petersburg. ]
+
+[Illustration: RESTORED FORM OF THE MAMMOTH After JUKES,
+_The Student's Manual of Geology_, Edinburgh, 1862. ]
+
+I have not, indeed, been successful during the voyage of the _Vega_
+in making any remarkable discovery that would throw light on the
+mode of life of the mammoth,[216] but as we now sail forward between
+shores probably richer in such remains than any other on the surface
+of the globe, and over a sea, from whose bottom our dredge brought
+up, along with pieces of driftwood, half-decayed portions of mammoth
+tusks, and as the savages with whom we came in contact, several
+times offered us very fine mammoth tusks or tools made of mammoth
+ivory, it may not perhaps be out of place here to give a brief
+account of some of the most important mammoth _finds_ which have
+been preserved for science. We can only refer to the discovery of
+mammoth _mummies_,[217] for the _finds_ of mammoth tusks
+sufficiently well preserved to be used for carving are so frequent
+as to defy enumeration. Middendorff reckons the number of the tusks,
+which yearly come into the market, as at least a hundred pairs,[218]
+whence we may infer, that during the years that have elapsed since
+the conquest of Siberia useful tusks from more than 20,000 animals
+have been collected.
+
+The discovery of a mammoth-_mummy_ is mentioned for the first time
+in detail in the sketch of a journey which the Russian ambassador
+EVERT YSSBRANTS IDES, a Dutchman by birth, made in 1692 through
+Siberia to China. A person whom Yssbrants Ides had with him during
+his journey through Siberia, and who travelled every year to collect
+mammoth ivory, assured him that he had once found a head of this
+animal in a piece of frozen earth which had tumbled down. The flesh
+was putrefied, the neck-bone was still coloured by blood, and some
+distance from the head a frozen foot was found.[219] The foot was
+taken to Turuchansk, whence we may infer that the _find_ was made on
+the Yenisej. Another time the same man found a pair of tusks
+weighing together twelve poods or nearly 200 kilogram. Ides'
+informant further stated, that while the heathen Yakuts, Tunguses,
+and Ostyaks, supposed that the mammoth always lived in the earth and
+went about in it, however hard the ground might be frozen, also that
+the large animal died when it came so far up that it saw or smelled
+the air; the old Russians living in Siberia were of opinion that the
+mammoth was an animal of the same kind as the elephant, though with
+tusks somewhat more bent and closer together; that before the Flood
+Siberia had been warmer than now, and elephants had then lived in
+numbers there; that they had been drowned in the Flood, and
+afterwards, when the climate became colder, had frozen in the river
+mud.[220]
+
+The folk-lore of the natives regarding the mode of life of the
+mammoth under ground is given in still greater detail in J.B.
+MUeLLER'S _Leben und Gewonheiten der Ostiaken unter dem Polo arctico
+wohnende_, &c. Berlin, 1720 (in French in _Recueil de Voiages au
+Nord_, Amsterdam, 1731-38, Vol. VIII. p. 373). According to the
+accounts given by Muller, who lived in Siberia as a Swedish prisoner
+of war,[221] the tusks formed the animal's horns. With these, which
+were fastened above the eyes and were movable, the animal dug a way
+for itself through the clay and mud, but when it came to sandy soil,
+the sand ran together so that the mammoth stuck fast and perished.
+Muller further states, that many assured him that they themselves
+had seen such animals on the other side of Beresovsk in large
+grottos in the Ural mountains (_loc. cit._ p. 382).
+
+KLAPROTH received a similar account of the mammoth's way of life
+from the Chinese in the Russo-Chinese frontier and trading town
+Kyachta. For mammoth ivory was considered to be tusks of the giant
+rat _tien-shu_, which is only found in the cold regions along the
+coast of the Polar Sea, avoids the light, and lives in dark holes in
+the interior of the earth. Its flesh is said to be cooling and
+wholesome. Some Chinese literati considered that the discovery of
+these immense earth rats might even explain the origin of
+earthquakes.[222]
+
+It was not until the latter half of the last century that a European
+scientific man had an opportunity of examining a similar _find_. In
+the year 1771 a complete rhinoceros, with flesh and hide, was
+uncovered by a landslip on the river Wilui in 64 deg. N.L. Its
+head and feet are still preserved at St. Petersburg. All the other
+parts were allowed to be destroyed for want of means of transport
+and preservation.[223] What was taken away showed that this primeval
+rhinoceros (_Rhinoceros antiquitatis_ Blumenbach) had been covered
+with hair and differed from all now living species of the same
+family, though strongly resembling them in shape and size. Already,
+long before the horns of the fossil rhinoceros had attracted the
+attention of the natives, pieces of these horns were used for the
+same purposes for which the Chukches employ strips of whalebone,
+viz. to increase the elasticity of their bows. They were considered
+at the same time to exert a like beneficial influence on the arrow,
+tending to make it hit the mark, as, according to the hunter's
+superstition among ourselves in former days, some cat's claws and
+owl's eyes placed in the bullet mould had on the ball. The natives
+believed that the crania and horns of the rhinoceros found along
+with the remains of the mammoth belonged to gigantic birds,
+regarding which there were told in the tents of the Yakut, the
+Ostyak and the Tunguse many tales resembling that of the bird Roc in
+the _Thousand and One Nights_. Ermann and Middendorff even suppose
+that such _finds_ two thousand years ago gave occasion to Herodotus'
+account of the Arimaspi and the gold-guarding dragons (_Herodotus_,
+Book IV. chap. 27). Certain it is that during the middle ages such
+"grip-claws" were preserved, as of great value, in the treasuries
+and art collections of that time, and that they gave rise to many a
+romantic story in the folk-lore both of the West and East. Even in
+this century Hedenstroem, the otherwise sagacious traveller on the
+Siberian Polar Sea, believed that the fossil rhinoceros' horns were
+actual, "grip-claws." For he mentions in his oft-quoted work, that
+he had seen such a claw 20 verschoks (0.9 metre) in length, and when
+he visited St. Petersburg in 1830, the scientific men there did not
+succeed in convincing him that his ideas on this subject were
+incorrect.[224]
+
+[Illustration: SIBERIAN RHINOCEROS HORN. Preserved in the Museum
+at St. Petersburg. ]
+
+A new _find_ of a mammoth _mummy_ was made in 1787, when the natives
+informed the Russian travellers SARYTSCHEV and MERK, that about 100
+versts below the village Alasejsk, situated on the river Alasej
+running into the Polar Sea, a gigantic animal had been washed out of
+the sand beds of the beach in an upright posture, undamaged, with
+hide and hair. The _find_, however, does not appear to have been
+thoroughly examined.[225]
+
+In 1799 a Tunguse found on the Tamut Peninsula, which juts out into
+the sea immediately south-east of the river-arm by which the _Lena_,
+steamed up the river, another frozen-in mammoth. He waited patiently
+five years for the ground thawing so much as that the precious tusks
+should be uncovered. The softer parts of the animal accordingly were
+partly torn in pieces and destroyed by beasts of prey and dogs, when
+the place was closely examined in 1806 by ADAMS the Academician.
+Only the head and two of the feet were then almost undamaged. The
+skeleton, part of the hide, a large quantity of long hair and woolly
+hair a foot and a half long were taken away. How fresh the carcase
+was may be seen from the fact that parts of the eye could still be
+clearly distinguished. Similar remains had been found two years
+before, a little further beyond the mouth of the Lena, but they were
+neither examined nor removed.[226]
+
+A new _find_ was made in 1839, when a complete mammoth was uncovered
+by a landslip on the shore of a large lake to the west of the mouth
+of the Yenisej, seventy versts from the Polar Sea. It was originally
+almost entire, so that even the trunk appears to have been
+preserved, to judge by the statement of the natives that a black
+tongue as long as a month-old reindeer calf was hanging out of the
+mouth; but it had, when it was removed in 1842, by the care of the
+merchant TROFIMOV, been already much destroyed.[227]
+
+Next after Trofimov's mammoth come the mammoth-_finds_ of
+Middendorff and Schmidt. The former was made in 1843 on the bank of
+the river Tajmur, under 75 deg. N.L.; the latter in 1866 or the
+Gyda _tundra_, west of the mouth of the Yenisej in 70 deg. 13'
+N.L. The soft parts of these _finds_ were not so well preserved as
+those just mentioned. But the _finds_ at all events had a greater
+importance for science, from the localities having been thoroughly
+examined by competent scientific men. Middendorff arrived at the
+result that the animal found by him had floated from more southerly
+regions to the place where it was found. Schmidt on the other hand
+found that the stratum which contained the mammoth rested on a bed
+of marine clay, containing shells of high northern species of
+crustacea which still live in the Polar Sea, and that it was covered
+with strata of sand alternating with beds, from a quarter to half a
+foot thick, of decayed remains of plants, which completely
+correspond with the turf beds which are still formed in the lakes of
+the _tundra_. Even the very beds of earth and clay in which the
+bones, pieces of hide, and hair of the mammoth _mummy_ were
+enclosed, contained pieces of larch, branches and leaves of the
+dwarf birch (_Betulct nana_), and of two northern species of willow
+(_Salie glauca_, and _herbacea_).[228] It appears from this that the
+climate of Siberia at the time when these mammoth-carcases were
+imbedded, was very nearly the same as the present, and as the stream
+in whose neighbourhood the find was made is a comparatively
+inconsiderable _tundra_ river, lying wholly to the north of the
+limit of trees, there is no probability that the carcase drifted
+with the spring ice from the wooded region of Siberia towards the
+north. Schmidt, therefore, supposes that the Siberian elephant, if
+it did not always live in the northernmost parts of Asia,
+occasionally wandered thither, in the same way that the reindeer now
+betakes itself to the coast of the Polar Sea. VON BRANDT, VON
+SCHMALHAUSEN, and others, had besides already shown that the remains
+of food which were found in the hollows of the teeth of the Wilui
+rhinoceros consisted of portions of leaves and needles of species of
+trees which still grow in Siberia.[229]
+
+Soon after the mammoth found on the Gyda _tundra_ had been examined
+by Schmidt, similar _finds_ were examined by GERHARD VON MAYDELL, at
+three different places between the rivers Kolyma and Indigirka,
+about a hundred kilometres from the Polar Sea. With respect to these
+_finds_ I can only refer to a paper by L. VON SCHRENCK in the
+_Bulletin_ of the St. Petersburg Academy, T. XVI. 1871, p. 147.
+
+Under the guidance of natives I collected in 1876 at the confluence
+of the river Mesenkin with, the Yenisej, in 71 deg. 28' N.L., some
+fragments of bones and pieces of the hide of a mammoth. The hide was
+20 to 25 millimetres thick and nearly tanned by age, which ought not
+to appear wonderful, when we consider that, though the mammoth lived
+in one of the latest periods of the history of our globe, hundreds
+of thousands, perhaps millions of years have, however, passed since
+the animal died to which these pieces of skin once belonged. It was
+clear that they had been washed by the neighbouring river Mesenkin
+out of the tundra-bank, but I endeavoured, without success, to
+discover the original locality, which was probably already concealed
+by river mud. In the neighbourhood was found a very fine cranium of
+the musk ox.
+
+A new and important _find_ was made in 1877 on a tributary of the
+Lena, in the circle Werchojansk, in 69 deg. N.L. For there was
+found there an exceedingly well preserved carcase of a rhinoceros
+(_Rhinoceros Merckii_, Jaeg.), a different species from the Wilui
+rhinoceros examined by Pallas. However, before the carcase was
+washed away by the river, there had only been removed the
+hair-covered head and one foot.[230] From the _find_ Schrenck draws
+the conclusion that this rhinoceros belonged to a high-northern
+species, adapted to a cold climate, and living in, or at least
+occasionally wandering to, the regions where the carcase was found.
+There the mean temperature of the year is now very low,[231] the
+winter exceedingly cold (-63.3 deg. has been registered) and the
+short summer exceedingly warm. Nowhere on earth does the temperature
+show extremes so widely separated as here. Although the trees in
+winter often split with tremendous noise, and the ground is rent
+with the cold, the wood is luxuriant and extends to the
+neighbourhood of the Polar Sea, where besides, the winter is much
+milder than farther in the interior. With respect to the possibility
+of these large animals finding sufficient pasture in the regions in
+question, it ought not to be overlooked that in sheltered places
+overflowed by the spring inundations there are found, still far
+north of the limit of trees, luxuriant bushy thickets, whose
+newly-expanded juicy leaves, burned up by no tropical sun, perhaps
+form a special luxury for grass-eating animals, and that _even the
+bleakest stretches of land in the high north are fertile in
+comparison with many regions where at least the camel can find
+nourishment, for instance the east coast of the Red Sea_.
+
+The nearer we come to the coast of the Polar Sea, the more common
+are the remains of the mammoth, especially at places where there
+have been great landslips at the river banks when the ice breaks up
+in spring. Nowhere, however, are they found in such numbers as on
+the New Siberian Islands. Here Hedenstroem in the space of a verst
+saw ten tusks sticking out of the ground, and from a single sandbank
+on the west side of Liachoff's Island the ivory collectors had, when
+this traveller visited the spot, for eighty years made their best
+tusk harvest. That new _finds_ may be made there year by year
+depends on the bones and tusks being washed by the waves out of the
+sandbeds on the shore, so that after an east wind which has lasted
+some time they may be collected at low water on the banks then laid
+dry. The tusks which are found on the coast of the Polar Sea are
+said to be smaller than those that are found farther south, a
+circumstance which possibly may be explained by supposing that,
+while the mammoth wandered about on the plains of Siberia, animals
+of different ages pastured in company, and that the younger of them,
+as being more agile and perhaps more troubled by flies than the
+older, went farther north than these.
+
+Along with bones of the mammoth there are found on the New Siberian
+Islands, in not inconsiderable numbers, portions of the skeletons of
+other animal forms, little known, but naturally of immense
+importance for ascertaining the vertebrate fauna which lived at the
+same time with the mammoth on the plains of Siberia, and the New
+Siberian group of islands is not less remarkable for the
+"wood-hills," highly enigmatical as to their mode of formation,
+which Hedenstroem found on the south coast of the northernmost
+island. These hills are sixty-four metres high, and consist of thick
+horizontal sandstone beds alternating with strata of fissile
+bituminous tree stems, heaped on each other to the top of the hill.
+In the lower part of the hill the tree stems lie horizontally, but
+in the upper strata they stand upright, though perhaps not
+rootfast.[232] The flora and fauna of the island group besides are
+still completely unknown, and the fossils, among them ammonites with
+exquisite pearly lustre, which Hedenstroem brought home from the rock
+strata on Kotelnoj Island, hold out inducement to further
+researches, which ought to yield the geologist valuable information
+as to the former climate and the former distribution of land and sea
+on the surface of the globe. The knowledge of the hydrography of
+this region is besides an indispensable condition for judging of the
+state of the ice in the sea which washes the north coast of Asia.
+Here lies the single available starting-point for the exploration of
+the yet altogether unknown sea farther to the north, and from hills
+on the two northernmost islands Hedenstroem thought that across the
+sea to the north-west and north-east he saw obscure outlines of new
+land, on which no man had yet set his foot. All these circumstances
+confer on this group of islands an uncommon interest in a scientific
+and geographical respect, and therefore no long time can elapse
+until a scientific expedition be sent to these regions. Just for
+this reason I now desired, as a preparation for a future voyage, to
+wander about here for a couple of days, partly on foot, partly by
+boat.
+
+[Illustration: STOLBOVOJ ISLAND. After a drawing by O. Nordquist. ]
+
+The air was calm, but for the most part clouded, the temperature as
+high as +4 deg., the sea clear of ice, the salinity of the water
+1.8 per cent, with a temperature of +2 deg. to +3 deg.. At first
+we made rapid progress, but after having in the afternoon of the
+28th August sighted the westernmost islands, Semenoffskoj and
+Stolbovoj, the sea became so shallow that for long stretches we were
+compelled to sail in six to seven metres water. Some very rotten
+ice, or rather ice sludge, was also met with, which compelled us to
+make tedious _detours_, and prevented the _Vega_ from going at full
+speed.
+
+The animal life was among the scantiest I had seen during my many
+travels in the Polar Seas. A few seals were visible. Of birds we saw
+some terns and gulls, and even far out at sea a pretty large number
+of phalaropes--the most common kind of bird on the coast of the
+Asiatic Polar Sea, at least in autumn. Stolbovoj Island was,
+especially on the north side, high with precipitous shore-cliffs
+which afforded splendid breeding-places for looms, black guillemots
+and gulls. At all such cliffs there breed on Spitzbergen millions of
+sea fowl, which are met with out on the surrounding sea in great
+flocks searching for their food. Here not a single loom was seen,
+and even the number of the gulls was small, which indeed in some
+degree was to be accounted for by the late season of the year, but
+also by the circumstance that no colony of birds had settled on the
+rocky shores of the island.
+
+The sea bottom consisted at certain places of hard packed sand, or
+rather, as I shall endeavour to show farther on, of _frozen_ sand,
+from which the trawl net brought up no animals. At other places
+there was found a clay, exceedingly rich in _Idothea entomon_ and
+_Sabinei_ and an extraordinary mass of bryozoa, resembling
+collections of the eggs of mollusca.
+
+It was not until the 30th of August that we were off the west side
+of Ljachoff's Island, on which I intended to land. The north coast,
+and, as it appeared the day after, the east coast was clear, of ice,
+but the winds recently prevailing had heaped a mass of rotten ice on
+the west coast. The sea besides was so shallow here, that already at
+a distance 15' from land we had a depth of only eight metres. The
+ice heaped against the west coast of the island did not indeed form
+any very serious obstacle to the advance of the _Vega_, but in case
+we had attempted to land there it might have been inconvenient
+enough, when the considerable distance between the vessel and the
+land was to be traversed in a boat or the steam launch, and it might
+even, if a sudden frost had occurred, have become a fetter, which
+would have confined us to that spot for the winter. Even a storm
+arising hastily might in this shallow water have been actually
+dangerous to the vessel anchored in an open road. The prospect of
+wandering about for some days on the island did not appear to me to
+outweigh the danger of the possible failure of the main object of
+the expedition. I therefore gave up for the time my intention of
+landing. The course was shaped southwards towards the sound, of so
+bad repute in the history of the Siberian Polar Sea, which separates
+Ljachoff's Island from the mainland.
+
+[Illustration: IDOTHEA ESTOMON, LIN. From the sea north of the
+mouth of the Lena. (Natural size.) ]
+
+[Illustration: IDOTHEA SABINEI, KROeYER. From the sea off the
+mouth of the Lena. (Natural size.) ]
+
+So far as we could judge at a distance from the appearance of the rocks,
+Stolbovoj consisted of stratified rocks, Ljachoff's Island, on the
+contrary, like the mainland opposite, of high hills, much shattered,
+probably formed of Plutonic stone-masses. Between these there are
+extensive plains, which, according to a statement by the land surveyor
+CHVOINOFF, who by order of the Czar visited the island in 1775, are
+formed of ice and sand, in which lie imbedded enormous masses of the
+bones and tusks of the mammoth, mixed with the horns and skulls of some
+kind of ox and with rhinoceros' horns. Bones of the whale and walrus are
+not mentioned as occurring there, but "long small screw-formed bones,"
+by which are probably meant the tusks of the narwhal.[233]
+
+All was now clear of snow, with the exception of a few of the deeper
+clefts between the mountains. No traces of glaciers were visible,
+not even such small collections of ice as are to be found everywhere
+on Spitzbergen where the land rises a few hundred feet above the
+surface of the sea. Nor, to judge by the appearance of the hills,
+have there been any glaciers in former times, and this is certainly
+the case on the mainland. The northernmost part of Asia in that case
+has never been covered by such an ice-sheet as is assumed by the
+supporters of a general ice age embracing the whole globe.
+
+The large island right opposite to Svjatoinos was discovered in 1770
+by LJACHOFF, whose name the island now bears. In 1788 Billings'
+private secretary, MARTIN SAUER, met with Ljachoff at Yakutsk, but
+he was then old and infirm, on which account, when Sauer requested
+information regarding the islands in the Polar Sea, he referred him
+to one of his companions, ZAITAI PROTODIAKONOFF. He informed him
+that the discovery was occasioned by an enormous herd of reindeer
+which Ljachoff, in the month of April 1770, saw going from
+Svjatoinos towards the south, and whose track came over the ice from
+the north. On the correct supposition that the reindeer came from
+some land lying to the north, Ljachoff followed the track in a
+dog-sledge, and thus discovered the two most southerly of the New
+Siberian Islands, a discovery which was rewarded by the Czarina
+Catherine II. with the exclusive right to hunt and collect ivory on
+them.[234]
+
+[Illustration: LJACHOFF'S ISLAND. After a drawing by O. Nordquist. ]
+
+Ljachoff states the breadth of the sound between the mainland and
+the nearest large island at 70 versts or 40'. On Wrangel's map again
+the breadth is not quite 30'. On the mainland side it is bounded by
+a rocky headland projecting far into the sea, which often formed the
+turning point in attempts to penetrate eastwards from the mouth of
+the river Lena, and perhaps just on that account, like many other
+headlands dangerous to the navigator on the north coast of Russia,
+was called _Svjatoinos_ (the holy cape), a name which for the oldest
+Russian Polar Sea navigators appears to have had the same
+signification as "the cape that can be passed with difficulty." No
+one however now thinks with any apprehension of the two "holy
+capes," which in former times limited the voyages of the Russians
+and Fins living on the White Sea to the east and west, and this, I
+am quite convinced, will some time be the case with this and all
+other holy capes in the Siberian Polar Sea.
+
+The sea water in the sound was much mixed with river water and had a
+comparatively high temperature, even at a depth of nine to eleven
+metres. The animal life at the sea bottom was poor in species but
+rich in individuals, consisting principally of _Idothea entomon_, of
+which Dr. Stuxberg counted 800 specimens from a single sweep of the
+dredge. There were obtained at the same time, besides a few
+specimens of _Idothea Sabinei_, sponges and bryozoa in great
+abundance, and small mussels, crustacea, vermes, &c. Various fishes
+were also caught, and some small algae collected. The trawl-net
+besides brought up from the bottom some fragments of mammoth tusks,
+and a large number of pieces of wood, for the most part sticks or
+branches, which appear to have stood upright in the clay, to judge
+from the fact that one of their ends was often covered with living
+bryozoa. These sticks often caused great inconvenience to the
+dredgers, by tearing the net that was being dragged along the
+bottom.
+
+On the night preceding the 31st of August, as we steamed past
+Svjatoinos, a peculiar phenomenon was observed. The sky was clear in
+the zenith and in the east; in the west, on the other hand, there was a
+bluish-grey bank of cloud. The temperature of the water near the surface
+varied between +1 deg. and +1.6 deg., that of the air on the vessel between
++1.5 deg. and +1.8 deg.. Although thus both the air and the water had a
+temperature somewhat above the freezing-point, ice was seen to form on
+the calm, mirror-bright surface of the sea. This ice consisted partly of
+needles, partly of a thin sheet. I have previously on several occasions
+observed in the Arctic seas a similar phenomenon, that is to say, have
+observed the formation of ice when the temperature of the air was above
+the freezing-point. On this occasion, when the temperature of the
+uppermost stratum of water was also above the freezing-point, the
+formation of ice was clearly a sort of hoar-frost phenomenon, caused by
+radiation of heat, perhaps both upwards towards the atmosphere and
+downwards towards the bottom layer of water, cooled below the
+freezing-point.
+
+The whole day we continued our voyage eastwards with glorious
+weather over a smooth ice-free sea, and in the same way on the 1st
+September, with a gentle southerly wind, the temperature of the air
+at noon in the shade being +5.6 deg.. On the night before the 2nd
+September the wind became northerly and the temperature of the air
+sank to -1 deg.. Little land was seen, though we were still not
+very far from the coast. Near to it there was a broad ice-free, or
+nearly ice-free, channel, but farther out to sea ice commenced. The
+following night snow fell, so that the whole of the deck and the
+Bear Islands, which we reached on the 3rd September, were sprinkled
+with it.
+
+Hitherto, during the whole time we sailed _along the coast_, we had
+scarcely met with any fields of drift-ice but such as were formed of
+rotten, even, thin and scattered pieces of ice, in many places
+almost converted into ice-sludge, without an "ice-foot" and often
+dirty on the surface. No iceberg had been seen, nor any large
+glacier ice-blocks, such as on the coasts of Spitzbergen replace the
+Greenland icebergs. But east of Svjatoinos the ice began to increase
+in size and assume the same appearance as the ice north of
+Spitzbergen. It was here, besides, less dirty, and rested on a hard
+ice-foot projecting deep under water and treacherous for the
+navigator.
+
+The ice of the Polar Sea may be divided into the following
+varieties:--
+
+1. _Icebergs._ The true icebergs have a height above the surface of
+the water rising to 100 metres. They often ground in a depth of 200
+to 300 metres, and have thus sometimes a cross section of up to 400,
+perhaps 500 metres. Their area may amount to several square
+kilometres. Such enormous blocks of ice are projected into the North
+Polar Sea only from the glaciers of Greenland, and according to
+Payer's statement, from those of Franz-Josef Land also; but not, as
+some authors (GEIKIE, BROWN, and others) appear to assume and have
+shown by incorrect ideal drawings, from glaciers which project into
+the sea and there terminate with a perpendicular evenly-cut border,
+but from very uneven glaciers which always enter the sea in the
+bottoms of deep fjords, and are split up into icebergs long before
+they reach it. It is desirable that those who write on the origin of
+icebergs, should take into consideration the fact that icebergs are
+only formed at places where a violent motion takes place in the mass
+of the ice, which again within a comparatively short time results in
+the excavation of the deep ice-fjord. The largest iceberg, which, so
+far as I know, has been _measured_ in that part of the Polar Sea
+which lies between Spitzbergen and Wrangel Land, is one which
+Barents saw at Cape Nassau on the 17/7th August 1596. It was sixteen
+fathoms high, and had grounded in a depth of thirty-six fathoms. In
+the South Polar Sea icebergs occur in great numbers and of enormous
+size. If we may assume that they have an origin similar to those of
+Greenland, it is probable that round the South Pole there is an
+extensive continent indented by deep fjords.
+
+2. _Glacier Ice-blocks._ These, which indeed have often been
+called icebergs, are distinguished from true icebergs not only
+by their size, but also by the way in which they are formed.
+They have seldom a cross section of more than thirty or forty
+metres, and it is only exceptionally that they are more than ten
+metres high above the surface of the water. They originate from the
+"calving" of glaciers which project into the sea with a straight and
+evenly high precipitous border. Such glaciers occur in large numbers
+on the coasts of Spitzbergen, and they are there of the same height
+as similar evenly-cut glaciers on Greenland. According to the
+statement of the Dane PETERSEN, who took part both in KANE'S
+expedition in 1853-55 and in Torell's in 1861, the glaciers, for
+instance, at Hinloopen Strait in Spitzbergen, are fully equal, with
+respect to their size and the height of their borders above the
+sea-level, to the enormous and much bewritten Humboldt glacier in
+Greenland. In Spitzbergen too we find at two places miniatures of
+the Greenland ice-currents, for instance the glacier which filled
+the North Haven in Bell Sound, another glacier which filled an old
+Dutch whaling haven between Recherche Bay and Van Keulen Bay, a
+glacier on the north side of Wablenberg Bay and perhaps at that part
+of the inland ice marked in my map of the expedition of 1872 as a
+bay on the east coast of North-east Land. It is even possible that
+small icebergs may be projected from the last-mentioned place, and
+thence drift out into the sea on the east coast of Spitzbergen.
+
+Glacier-ice shows a great disposition to fall asunder into smaller
+pieces without any perceptible cause. It is full of cavities,
+containing compressed air, which, when the ice melts, bursts its
+attenuated envelope with a crackling sound like that of the electric
+spark. It thus behaves in this respect in the same way as some
+mineral salts which dissolve in water with slight explosions.
+Barents relates that on the 20/10th August 1596 he anchored his
+vessel to a block of ice which was aground on the coast of Novaya
+Zemlya. Suddenly, and without any perceptible cause, the rock of ice
+burst asunder into hundreds of smaller pieces with a tremendous
+noise, and to the great terror of all the men on board. Similar
+occurrences on a smaller scale I have myself witnessed. The cause to
+which they are due appears to me to be the following. The ice-block
+while part of the glacier is exposed to very severe pressure, which
+ceases when it falls into the sea. The pressure now in most cases
+equalises itself without any bursting asunder, but it sometimes
+happens that the inner strongly compressed portions of the ice-block
+cannot, although the pressure has ceased, expand freely in
+consequence of the continuous ice-envelope by which they are still
+surrounded. A powerful internal tension must thereby arise in the
+whole mass, which finally leads to its bursting into a thousand
+pieces. We have here a Prince Rupert's drop, but one whose diameter
+may rise to fifty metres, and which consists not of glass but of
+ice.
+
+Glacier ice-blocks occur abundantly on the coasts of Spitzbergen and
+north Novaya Zemlya, but appear to be wanting or exceedingly rare
+along the whole north coast of Asia, between Yugor Schar and Wrangel
+Land. East of this they again occur, but not in any great numbers.
+This appears to show that the Western Siberian Polar Sea is not
+surrounded by any glacial lands. The glacier ice is commonly of a
+blue colour. When melted it yields a pure water, free of salt.
+Sometimes however it gives traces of salt, which are derived from
+the spray which the storms have carried high up on the surface of
+the glacier.
+
+3. Pieces of ice from the ice-foot formed along the sea beach or the
+banks of rivers. They rise sometimes five or six metres above the
+surface of the water. They consist commonly of dirty ice, mixed with
+earth.
+
+4. _River Ice_, level, comparatively small ice fields, which, when
+they reach the sea, are already so rotten that they soon melt away
+and disappear.
+
+5. The walrus-hunters' _Bay Ice_; by which we understand level
+ice-fields formed in fjords and bays along the coast, and which have
+there been exposed to a comparatively early summer heat. The bay ice
+therefore melts away completely during summer, and it is not
+commonly much pressed together. When all the snow upon it has
+disappeared, there is to be seen above the surface of the water a
+little ice of the same colour as the water, while under water very
+considerable portions of unmelted hard ice are still remaining. This
+has given rise to the walrus-hunters' statement, which has been
+warmly maintained, that the ice in autumn finally disappears by
+sinking. Nearly all the ice we met with in the course of our voyage
+belonged to this variety.
+
+6. _Sea Ice_, or heavy ice, which often exhibits traces of having
+been much pressed together, but has not been exposed to any early
+summer heat. The walrus-hunters call it sea ice, wishing, I imagine,
+to indicate thereby that it is formed in the sea farther up towards
+the north. That it has drifted down from the north is indeed
+correct, but that it has been formed far from land over a
+considerable depth in the open sea is perhaps uncertain, as the ice
+that is formed there cannot, we think, be very thick. It has rather
+perhaps drifted down from the neighbourhood of some yet unknown
+Polar continent. Of this ice are formed most of the ice-fields in
+the seas east of Greenland, north of Spitzbergen, between
+Spitzbergen and the north island of Novaya Zemlya, and north of
+Behring's Straits. In the northern seas it does not melt completely
+during the summer, and remains of sea ice therefore often enter as
+component parts into the bay ice formed during the following winter.
+The latter then becomes rough and uneven, from remnants of old sea
+ice being frozen into the newly formed ice. Sea ice is often pressed
+together so as to form great _torosses_ or ice-casts, formed of
+pieces of ice which at first are angular and piled loose on each
+other, but gradually become rounded, and freeze together into
+enormous blocks of ice, which, together with the glacier ice-blocks,
+form the principal mass of the ground ice found on the coasts of the
+Polar lands. The water which is obtained by melting sea-ice is not
+completely free from salt, but the older it is the less salt does it
+contain.
+
+
+East of the Bear Islands heavy sea-ice in pretty compact masses had
+drifted down towards the coast, but still left an open ice-free
+channel along the land. Here the higher animal world was exceedingly
+poor, which, as far as the avi-fauna was concerned, must be in some
+degree ascribed to the late season of the year. For Wrangel mentions
+a cliff at the Bear Islands which was covered with numberless birds'
+nests. He saw besides, on the largest of these islands, traces of
+the bear, wolf, fox, lemming, and reindeer (Wrangel's _Reise_, i.
+pp. 304 and 327). Now the surrounding sea was completely deserted.
+No Polar bear saluted us from the ice-floes, no walruses, and only
+very few seals were visible. During many watches not a single
+natatory bird was seen. Only the phalarope was still met with in
+large numbers, even pretty far out at sea. Perhaps it was then
+migrating from the north. The lower animal world was more abundant.
+From the surface of the sea the drag-net brought up various small
+surface crustacea, inconsiderable in themselves, but important as
+food for larger animals; and from the sea-bottom were obtained a
+large number of the same animal forms as from the sound at
+Svjatoinos, and in addition some beautiful asterids and a multitude
+of very large beaker sponges.
+
+On the 3rd September, after we had sailed past the Bear Islands, the
+course was shaped right for Cape Chelagskoj. This course, as will be
+seen by a glance at the map, carried us far from the coast, and thus out
+of the channel next the land, in which we had hitherto sailed. The ice
+was heavy and close, although at first so distributed that it was
+navigable. But with a north wind, which began to blow on the night
+before the 1st September, the temperature fell below the freezing-point,
+and the water between the pieces of drift-ice was covered with a very
+thick crust of ice, and the drift-ice came closer and closer together.
+It thus became impossible to continue the course which we had taken. We
+therefore turned towards the land, and at 6 o'clock P.M., after various
+bends in the ice and a few concussions against the pieces of ice that
+barred our way, again reached the ice-free channel, eight to twelve
+kilometres broad, next the land. While we lay a little way in among the
+drift-ice fields we could see no sign of open water, but it appeared as
+if the compact ice extended all the way to land, a circumstance which
+shows how careful the navigator ought to be in expressing an opinion as
+to the nature of the _pack_ beyond the immediate neighbourhood of the
+vessel. The temperature of the air, which in the ice-field had sunk to
+-3 deg., now rose at once to + 4.1 deg., while that of the water rose from -1 deg..2
+to +3.5 deg., and its salinity fell from 2.4 to 13 per cent. All showed that
+we had now come into the current of the Kolyma, which from causes which
+have been already stated, runs from the mouth of the river along the
+land in an easterly direction.
+
+[Illustration: BEAKER SPONGES. From the sea off the mouth of the Kolyma. ]
+
+[Illustration: LIGHTHOUSE ISLAND. After a drawing by O. Nordquist. ]
+
+The Bear Islands lying off the mouth of the Kolyma are, for the most
+part, formed of a plutonic rock, whose upper part has weathered
+away, leaving gigantic isolated pillars. Four such pillars have
+given to the easternmost of the islands the name Lighthouse Island
+(Fyrpelaroen). Similar ruin-like formations are found not only on
+Cape Baranov, which lies right opposite, but also at a great number
+of other places in that portion of the north coast of Siberia which
+lies farther to the east. Generally these cliff-ruins are collected
+together over considerable areas in groups or regular rows. They
+have thus, when seen from the sea, so bewildering a resemblance to
+the ruins of a gigantic city which had once been surrounded by
+strong walls and been full of temples and splendid buildings, that
+one is almost tempted to see in them memorials of the exploits of a
+Tamerlane or a Chingis Khan, up here in the high north.
+
+The north side of the hill-tops was powdered with new-fallen snow,
+but the rest of the land was clear of snow. The distance between the
+south point of Ljachoff's Island and the Bear Islands is 360'. This
+distance we had traversed in three days, having thus made 120' in
+the twenty-four hours, or 5' per hour. If we consider the time lost
+in dredging, sounding, and determining the temperature and salinity
+of the water, and the caution which the navigator must observe
+during a voyage in quite unknown waters, this speed shows that
+during this part of our voyage we were hindered by ice only to a
+slight extent. Cape Baranov was passed on the night before the 5th
+September, the mouth of Chaun Bay on the night before the 6th
+September, and Cape Chelagskoj was reached on the 6th at 4 o'clock
+P.M. The distance in a right line between this headland and the Bear
+Islands is 180'. In consequence of the many _detours_ in the ice we
+had required 2-1/2 days to traverse this distance, which corresponds
+to 72' per day, or 3' per hour, a speed which in a voyage in
+unknown, and for the most part ice-bestrewed waters, must yet be
+considered very satisfactory. But after this our progress began to
+be much slower. At midnight the sun was already 12 deg. to 13
+degree below the horizon, and the nights were now so dark that at
+that time of day we were compelled to lie still anchored to some
+large ground-ice. A farther loss of time was caused by the dense fog
+which often prevailed by day, and which in the unknown shallow water
+next the land compelled Captain Palander to advance with extreme
+caution. The navigation along the north coast of Asia began to get
+somewhat monotonous. Even the most zealous Polar traveller may tire
+at last of mere ice, shallow water and fog; and mere fog, shallow
+water and ice.
+
+Now, however, a pleasant change began, by our coming at last in
+contact with natives. In the whole stretch from Yugor Schar to Cape
+Chelagskoj we had seen neither men nor human habitations, if I
+except the old uninhabited hut between Cape Chelyuskin and the
+Chatanga. But on the 6th September, when we were a little way off
+Cape Chelagskoj, two boats were sighted. Every man, with the
+exception of the cook, who could be induced by no catastrophe to
+leave his pots and pans, and who had circumnavigated Asia and Europe
+perhaps without having been once on land, rushed on deck. The boats
+were of skin, built in the same way as the "umiaks" or women's boats
+of the Eskimo. They were fully laden with laughing and chattering
+natives, men, women, and children, who indicated by cries and
+gesticulations that they wished to come on board. The engine was
+stopped, the boats lay to, and a large number of skin-clad,
+bare-headed beings climbed up over the gunwale in a way that clearly
+indicated that they had seen vessels before. A lively talk began,
+but we soon became aware that none of the crew of the boats or the
+vessel knew any language common to both. It was an unfortunate
+circumstance, but signs were employed as far as possible. This did
+not prevent the chatter from going on, and great gladness soon came
+to prevail, especially when some presents began to be distributed,
+mainly consisting of tobacco and Dutch clay pipes. It was remarkable
+that none of them could speak a single word of Russian, while a boy
+could count tolerably well up to ten in English, which shows that
+the natives here come into closer contact with American whalers than
+with Russian traders. They acknowledged the name _chukch_ or
+_chautchu_.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BOATS. ]
+
+Many of them were tall, well-grown men. They were clothed in close
+fitting skin trousers and "pesks" of reindeer skin. The head was
+bare, the hair always clipped short, with the exception of a small
+fringe in front, where the hair had a length of four centimetres and
+was combed down over the brow. Some had a cap of the sort used by
+the Russians at Chabarova, stuck into the belt behind, but they
+appeared to consider the weather still too warm for the use of this
+head-covering. The hair of most of them was bluish-black and
+exceedingly thick. The women were tattooed with black or
+bluish-black lines on the brow and nose, a number of similar lines
+on the chin, and finally some embellishments on the cheeks. The type
+of face did not strike one as so unpleasant as that of the Samoyeds
+or Eskimo. Some of the young girls were even not absolutely ugly. In
+comparison with the Samoyeds they were even rather cleanly, and had
+a beautiful, almost reddish-white complexion. Two of the men were
+quite fair. Probably they were descendants of Russians, who for some
+reason or other, as prisoners of war or fugitives, had come to live
+among the Chukches and had been nationalised by them.
+
+In a little we continued our voyage, after the Chukches had returned
+to their boats, evidently well pleased with the gifts they had
+received and the leaf tobacco I had dealt out in bundles,--along
+with the clay pipes, of which every one got as many as he could
+carry between his fingers,--with the finery and old clothes which my
+comrades and the crew strewed around them with generous hand. For we
+were all convinced that after some days we should come to waters
+where winter clothes would be altogether unnecessary, where our want
+of any article could easily be supplied at the nearest port, and
+where the means of exchange would not consist of goods, but of
+stamped pieces of metal and slips of paper.
+
+[Illustration: A CHUKCH IN SEAL-GUT GREAT COAT. After a photograph
+by L. Palander. ]
+
+On the 7th September, we steamed the whole day along the coast in
+pretty open ice. At night we lay to at a floe. The hempen tangles
+and the trawl-net were put out and yielded a very rich harvest. But
+in the morning we found ourselves again so surrounded by ice and
+fog, that, after several unsuccessful attempts to make an immediate
+advance, we were compelled to lie-to at a large piece of drift-ice
+near the shore. When the fog had lightened so much that the vessel
+could be seen from the land, we were again visited by a large number
+of natives, whom as before we entertained as best we could. They
+invited us by evident signs to land and visit their tents. As it was
+in any case impossible immediately to continue our voyage, I
+accepted the invitation, ordered a boat to be put out, and landed
+along with most of my comrades.
+
+The beach here is formed of a low bank of sand which runs between
+the sea and a small shallow lagoon or fresh-water lake, whose
+surface is nearly on a level with that of the sea. Farther into the
+interior the land rises gradually to bare hills, clear of snow or
+only covered with a thin coating of powdered snow from the fall of
+the last few days. Lagoon formations, with either fresh or salt
+water, of the same kind as those which we saw here for the first
+time, are distinctive of the north-eastern coast of Siberia. It is
+these formations which gave rise to the statement that on the north
+coast of Siberia it is difficult to settle the boundaries between
+sea and land. In winter this may be difficult enough, for the low
+bank which separates the lagoon from the sea is not easily
+distinguished when it has become covered with snow, and it may
+therefore readily happen in winter journeys along the coast that one
+is far into the land while he still believes himself to be out on
+the sea-ice. But when the snow has melted, the boundary is sharp
+enough, and the sea by no means shallow for such a distance as old
+accounts would indicate. A continual ice-mud-work also goes on here
+during the whole summer. Quite close to the beach accordingly the
+depth of water is two metres, and a kilometre farther out ten to
+eleven metres. Off the high rocky promontories the water is commonly
+navigable even for vessels of considerable draught close to the foot
+of the cliffs.
+
+The villages of the Chukches commonly stand on the bank of sand
+which separates the lagoon from the sea. The dwellings consist of
+roomy skin tents, which enclose a sleeping chamber of the form of a
+parallelepiped surrounded by warm well-prepared reindeer skins, and
+lighted and warmed by one or more train-oil lamps. It is here that
+the family sleep during summer, and here most of them live day and
+night during winter. In summer, less frequently in winter, a fire is
+lighted besides in the outer tent with wood, for which purpose a
+hole is opened in the top of the raised tent-roof. But to be
+compelled to use wood for heating the inner tent the Chukches
+consider the extremity of scarcity of fuel.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH TENT. (After a photograph by L. Palander.) ]
+
+We were received everywhere in a very friendly way, and were offered
+whatever the house afforded. At the time the supply of food was
+abundant. In one tent reindeer beef was being boiled in a large
+cast-iron pot. At another two recently shot or slaughtered reindeer
+were being cut in pieces. At a third an old woman was employed in
+taking out of the paunch of the reindeer the green spinage-like
+contents and cramming them into a sealskin bag, evidently to be
+preserved for green food during winter. The hand was used in this
+case as a scoop, and the naked arms were coloured high up with the
+certainly unappetising spinage, which however, according to the
+statements of Danish colonists in Greenland, has no unpleasant
+taste. Other skin sacks filled with train-oil stood in rows along
+the walls of the tent.
+
+The Chukches offered train-oil for sale, and appeared to be
+surprised that we would not purchase any. In all the tents were
+found seals cut in pieces, a proof that the catch of seals had
+recently been abundant. At one tent lay two fresh walrus heads with
+large beautiful tusks. I tried without success to purchase these
+heads, but next day the tusks were offered to us. The Chukches
+appear to have a prejudice against disposing of the heads of slain
+animals. According to older travellers they even pay the walrus-head
+a sort of worship.
+
+Children were met with in great numbers, healthy and thriving. In
+the inner tent the older children went nearly naked, and I saw them
+go out from it without shoes or other covering and run between the
+tents on the hoarfrost-covered ground. The younger were carried on
+the shoulders both of men and women, and were then so wrapped up
+that they resembled balls of skin. The children were treated with
+marked friendliness, and the older ones were never heard to utter an
+angry word. I purchased here a large number of household articles
+and dresses, which I shall describe further on.
+
+On the morning of the 9th September we endeavoured to steam on, but
+were soon compelled by the dense fog to lie-to again at a
+ground-ice, which, when the fog lightened, was found to have
+stranded quite close to land. The depth here was eleven metres. At
+this place we lay till the morning of the 10th. The beach, was
+formed of a sandbank,[235] which immediately above high-water mark
+was covered with a close grassy turf, a proof that the climate here,
+notwithstanding the neighbourhood of the pole of cold, is much more
+favourable to the development of vegetation than even the most
+favoured parts of the west coast of Spitzbergen. Farther inland was
+seen a very high, but snow-free, range of hills, and far beyond them
+some high snow-covered mountain summits. No glaciers were found
+here, though I consider it probable that small ones may be found in
+the valleys between the high fells in the interior. Nor were any
+erratic blocks found either in the interior of the coast country or
+along the strand bank. Thus it is probable that no such ice-covered
+land as Greenland for the present bounds the Siberian Polar Sea
+towards the north. At two places at the level of the sea in the
+neighbourhood of our anchorage the solid rock was bare. There it
+formed perpendicular shore cliffs, nine to twelve metres high,
+consisting of magnesian slate, limestone more or less mixed with
+quartz, and silicious slate. The strata were nearly perpendicular,
+ran from north to south, and did not contain any fossils. From a
+geological point of view therefore these rocks were of little
+interest. But they were abundantly covered with lichens, and yielded
+to Dr. Almquist important contributions to a knowledge of the
+previously quite unknown lichen flora of this region.
+
+The harvest of the higher land plants on the other hand was, in
+consequence of the far advanced season of the year, inconsiderable,
+if also of great scientific interest, as coming from a region never
+before visited by any botanist. In the sea Dr. Kjellman dredged
+without success for algae. Of the higher animals we saw only a
+walrus and some few seals, but no land mammalia. Lemmings must
+however occasionally occur in incredible numbers, to judge by the
+holes and passages, excavated by these animals, by which the ground
+is crossed in all directions. Of birds the phalarope was still the
+most common species, especially at sea, where in flocks of six or
+seven it swam incessantly backwards and forwards between the pieces
+of ice.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A CHURCH GRAVE.[236]
+ (After a drawing by A. Stuxberg.)
+ _a._ Layer of burned bones, much weathered.
+ _b._ Layer of turf and twigs.
+ _c._ Stones. ]
+
+No tents were met with in the neighbourhood of the vessel's
+anchorage, but at many places along the beach there were seen marks
+of old encampments, sooty rolled stones which had been used in the
+erection of the tents, broken household articles, and above all
+remains of the bones of the seal, reindeer, and walrus. At one
+place, a large number of walrus skulls lay in a ring, possibly
+remains from an entertainment following a large catch. Near the
+place where the tents had stood, at the mouth of a small stream not
+yet dried up or frozen, Dr. Stuxberg discovered some small mounds
+containing burnt bones. The cremation had been so complete that only
+one of the pieces of bone that were found could be determined by Dr.
+Almquist. It was a human tooth. After cremation the remains of the
+bones and the ash had been collected in an excavation, and covered
+first with turf and then with small flat stones. The encampments
+struck me as having been abandoned only a few years ago, and even
+the collections of bones did not appear to me to be old. But we
+ought to be very cautious when we endeavour in the Arctic regions to
+estimate the age of an old encampment, because in judging of the
+changes which the surface of the earth undergoes with time we are
+apt to be guided by our experience from more southerly regions. To
+how limited an extent this experience may be utilised in the high
+north is shown by RINK'S assertion that on Greenland at some of the
+huts of the Norwegian colonists, which have been deserted for
+centuries, footpaths can still be distinguished,[237] an observation
+to which I would scarcely give credence, until I had myself seen
+something similar at the site of a house in the bottom of
+Jacobshaven ice-fjord in northwestern Greenland, which had been
+abandoned for one or two centuries. Here footpaths as sharply
+defined as if they had been trampled yesterday ran from the ruin in
+different directions. It may therefore very readily happen that the
+encampments in the neighbourhood of our present anchorage were older
+than we would be inclined at first sight to suppose. No refuse heaps
+of any importance were seen here.
+
+This was the first time that any vessel had lain-to on this coast.
+Our arrival was therefore evidently considered by the natives a very
+remarkable occurrence, and the report of it appears to have spread
+very rapidly. For though there were no tents in the neighbourhood,
+we had many visitors. I still availed myself of the opportunity of
+procuring by barter a large number of articles distinctive of the
+Chukches' mode of life. Eight years before I had collected and
+purchased a large number of ethnographical articles, and I was now
+surprised at the close correspondence there was between the
+household articles purchased from the Chukches, and those found in
+Greenland in old Eskimo graves.
+
+My traffic with the natives was on this occasion attended with great
+difficulty. For I suffered from a sensible want of the first
+condition for the successful prosecution of a commercial
+undertaking, goods in demand. Because, during the expeditions of
+1875 and 1876, I found myself unable to make use of the small wares
+I carried with me for barter with the natives, and found that
+Russian paper-money was readily taken. I had, at the departure of
+the _Vega_ from Sweden, taken with me only money, not wares intended
+for barter. But money was of little use here. A twenty-five rouble
+note was less valued by the Chukches than a showy soap-box, and a
+gold or silver coin less than tin or brass buttons. I could, indeed,
+get rid of a few fifty-oere pieces, but only after I had first
+adapted them by boring to take the place of earrings.
+
+The only proper wares for barter I now had were tobacco and Dutch
+clay pipes. Of tobacco I had only some dozen bundles, taken from a
+parcel which Mr. Sibiriakoff intended to import into Siberia by the
+Yenisej. Certain as I was of reaching the Pacific this autumn, I
+scattered my stock of tobacco around me with so liberal a hand that
+it was soon exhausted, and my Chukch friends' wants satisfied for
+several weeks. I therefore, as far as this currency was concerned,
+already when-the _Vega_ was beset, suffered the prodigal's fate of
+being soon left with an empty purse. Dutch clay pipes, again, I had
+in great abundance, from the accident that two boxes of these pipes,
+which were to have been imported into Siberia with the expedition of
+1876, did not reach Trondhjem until the _Ymer_ had sailed from that
+town. They were instead taken on the _Vega_, and now, though quite too
+fragile for the hard fingers of Chukches, answered well for smaller
+bargains, as gifts of welcome to a large number of natives collected
+at the vessel, and as gifts to children in order to gain the favour
+of their parents. I besides distributed a large quantity of silver
+coin with King Oscar's effigy, in order, if any misfortune overtook
+us, to afford a means of ascertaining the places we had visited.
+
+For the benefit of future travellers I may state that the wares most
+in demand are large sewing and darning needles, pots, knives
+(preferably large), axes, saws, boring tools and other iron tools,
+linen and woollen shirts (preferably of bright colours, but also
+white), neckerchiefs, tobacco and sugar. To these may be added the
+spirits which are in so great request among all savages; a currency
+of which, indeed, there was great abundance on the _Vega_, but which
+I considered myself prevented from making use of. In exchange for
+this it is possible to obtain, in short, anything whatever from many
+of the natives, but by no means from all, for even here there are
+men who will not taste spirits, but with a gesture of disdain refuse
+the glass that is offered them. The Chukches are otherwise shrewd
+and calculating men of business, accustomed to study their own
+advantage. They have been brought up to this from childhood through
+the barter which they carry on between America and Siberia. Many a
+beaver-skin that comes to the market at Irbit belongs to an animal
+that has been caught in America, whose skin has passed from hand to
+hand among the wild men of America and Siberia, until it finally
+reaches the Russian merchant. For this barter a sort of market is
+held on an island in Behring's Straits. At the most remote markets
+in Polar America, a beaver-skin is said some years ago to have been
+occasionally exchanged for a leaf of tobacco.[238] An exceedingly
+beautiful black fox-skin was offered to me by a Chukch for a pot.
+Unfortunately I had none that I could dispense with. Here, too,
+prices have risen. When the Russians first came to Kamchatka, they
+got eight sable-skins for a knife, and eighteen for an axe, and yet
+the Kamchadales laughed at the credulous foreigners who were so
+easily deceived. At Yakutsk, when the Russians first settled there,
+a pot was even sold for as many sable-skins as it could hold.[239]
+
+During the night before the 10th September, the surface of the sea
+was covered with a very thick sheet of newly-frozen ice, which was
+broken up again in the neighbourhood of the vessel by blocks of old
+ice drifting about. The _pack_ itself appeared to have scattered a
+little. We therefore weighed anchor to continue our voyage. At first
+a _detour_ towards the west was necessary to get round a field of
+drift-ice. Here too, however, our way was barred by a belt of old
+ice, which was bound together so firmly by the ice that had been
+formed in the course of the night, that a couple of hours' work with
+axes and ice-hatchets was required to open a channel through it. On
+the other side of this belt of ice we came again into pretty open
+water, but the fog, instead, became so dense that we had again to
+lie-to at a ground-ice, lying farther out to the sea but more to the
+west than our former resting-place. On the night before the 11th
+there was a violent motion among the ice. Fortunately the air
+cleared in the morning, so that we could hold on our course among
+pretty open ice, until on the approach of night we were obliged as
+usual to lie-to at a ground-ice.
+
+The following day, the 12th September, when we had passed Irkaipij,
+or Cape North, a good way, we fell in with so close ice that there
+was no possibility of penetrating farther. We were therefore
+compelled to return, and were able to make our way with great
+difficulty among the closely packed masses of drift ice. Here the
+vessel was anchored in the lee of a ground-ice, which had stranded
+near the northernmost spur of Irkaipij, until a strong tidal current
+began to carry large pieces of drift-ice past the vessel's
+anchorage. She was now removed and anchored anew in a little bay
+open to the north, which was formed by two rocky points jutting out
+from the mainland. Unfortunately we were detained here, waiting for
+a better state of the ice, until the 18th September. It was this
+involuntary delay which must be considered the main cause of our
+wintering.
+
+[Illustration: IRKAIPIJ. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+Irkaipij is the northernmost promontory in that part of Asia, which
+was seen by Cook in 1778. It was, therefore, called by him Cape
+North, a name which has since been adopted in most maps, although it
+is apt to lead to confusion from capes similarly named being found
+in most countries. It is also incorrect, because the cape does not
+form the northernmost promontory either of the whole of Siberia, or
+of any considerable portion of it. For the northernmost point of the
+mainland of Siberia is Cape Chelyuskin, the northernmost in the land
+east of the Lena Svjatoinos, the northernmost in the stretch of
+coast east of Chaun Bay, Cape Chelagskoj, and so on. Cape North
+ought, therefore, to be replaced by the original name Irkaipij,
+which is well known to all the natives between Chaun Bay and
+Behring's Straits.
+
+[Illustration: REMAINS OF AN ONKILON HOUSE.
+ _a._ Seen from the side.
+ _b._ From above. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+On the neck of land which connects Irkaipij with the mainland, there
+was at the time of our visit a village consisting of sixteen tents.
+We saw here also _ruins_, viz. the remains of a large number of old
+house-sites, which belonged to a race called _Onkilon_[240] who
+formerly inhabited these regions, and some centuries ago were driven
+by the Chukches, according to tradition, to some remote islands in
+the Polar Sea. At these old house-sites Dr. Almquist and Lieutenant
+Nordquist set on foot excavations in order to collect contributions
+to the ethnography of this traditional race. The houses appear to
+have been built, at least partly, of the bones of the whale, and
+half sunk in the earth. The refuse heaps in the neighbourhood
+contained bones of several species of the whale, among them the
+white whale, and of the seal, walrus, reindeer, bear, dog, fox, and
+various kinds of birds. Besides these remains of the produce of the
+chase, there were found implements of stone and bone, among which
+were stone axes, which, after lying 250 years in the earth, were
+still fixed to their handles of wood or bone. Even the thongs with
+which the axe had been bound fast to, or _wedged into_, the handle,
+were still remaining. The tusks of the walrus[241] had to the former
+inhabitants of the place, as to the Chukches of the present, yielded
+a material which in many cases may be used with greater advantage
+than flint for spear-heads, bird-arrows, fishhooks, ice-axes, &c.
+Walrus tusks, more or less worked, accordingly were found in the
+excavations in great abundance. The bones of the whale had also been
+employed on a great scale, but we did not find any large pieces of
+mammoth tusks, an indication that the race was not in any intimate
+contact with the inhabitants of the regions to the westward, so rich
+in the remains of the mammoth.[242] At many places the old Onkilon
+houses were used by the Chukches as stores for blubber; and at
+others, excavations had been made in the refuse heaps in search of
+walrus tusks. Our researches were regarded by the Chukches with
+mistrust. An old man who came, as it were by chance, from the
+interior of the country past the place where we worked, remained
+there a while, regarding our labours with apparent indifference,
+until he convinced himself that from simplicity, or some other
+reason unintelligible to him, we avoided touching the blubber-stores,
+but instead rooted up in search of old fragments of bone or
+stone-flakes.
+
+[Illustration: IMPLEMENTS FOUND IN THE RUINS OF AN ONKILON HOUSE.
+ 1. Stone chisel-with bone handle, one-half the natural size.
+ 2., 4. Knives of slate, one-third.
+ 3., 7. Spear heads of slate, one-third.
+ 5. Spear-head of bone, one-third.
+ 6. Bone spoon, one-third. ]
+
+Remains of old dwellings were found even at the highest points among
+the stone mounds of Irkaipij, and here perhaps was the last asylum
+of the Onkilon race. At many places on the mountain slopes were seen
+large collections of bones, consisting partly of a large number (at
+one place up to fifty) of bears' skulls overgrown with lichens, laid
+in circles, with the nose inwards, partly of the skulls of the
+reindeer, Polar bear,[243] and walrus, mixed together in a less
+regular circle, in the midst of which reindeer horns were found set
+up. Along with the reindeer horns there was found the coronal bone
+of an elk with portions of the horns still attached. Beside the
+other bones lay innumerable temple-bones of the seal, for the most
+part fresh and not lichen-covered. Other seal bones were almost
+completely absent, which shows that temple-bones were not remains of
+weathered seal skulls, but had been gathered to the place for one
+reason or another in recent times. No portions of human skeletons
+were found in the neighbourhood. These places are sacrificial
+places, which the one race has inherited from the other.
+
+Wrangel gives the following account of the tribe which lived here in
+former times:--
+
+ "As is well known the sea-coast at Anadyr Bay is inhabited
+ by a race of men, who, by their bodily formation, dress,
+ language, differ manifestly from the Chukches, and call
+ themselves Onkilon--seafolk. In the account of Captain
+ Billing's journey through the country of the Chukches, he
+ shows the near relationship the language of this coast
+ tribe has to that of the Aleutians at Kadyak, who are of
+ the same primitive stem as the Greenlanders. Tradition
+ relates that upwards of two hundred years ago these
+ Onkilon occupied the whole of the Chukch coast, from Cape
+ Chelagskoj to Behring's Straits, and indeed we still find
+ along the whole of this stretch remains of their earth
+ huts, which must have been very unlike the present
+ dwellings of the Chukches; they have the form of small
+ mounds, are half sunk in the ground and closed above with
+ whale ribs, which are covered with a thick layer of earth.
+ A violent quarrel between Kraechoj, the chief of these
+ North-Asiatic Eskimo, and an _errim_ or chief of the
+ reindeer Chukches, broke out into open feud. Kraechoj drew
+ the shorter straw, and found himself compelled to fly, and
+ leave the country with his people; since then the whole
+ coast has been desolate and uninhabited. Of the emigration
+ of these Onkilon, the inhabitants of the village Irkaipij,
+ where Kraechoj appears to have lived, narrated the
+ following story. He had killed a Ohukch _errim_, and was
+ therefore eagerly pursued by the son of the murdered man,
+ whose pursuit he for a considerable time escaped. Finally
+ Kraechoj believed that he had found a secure asylum on the
+ rock at Irkaipij, where he fortified himself behind a sort
+ of natural wall, which can still be seen. But the young
+ Chukch _errim_, driven by desire to avenge his father's
+ death, finds means to make his way within the
+ fortification and kills Kraechoj's son. Although the
+ blood-revenge was now probably complete according to the
+ prevailing ideas, Kraechoj must have feared a further
+ pursuit by his unrelenting enemy, for during night he
+ lowers himself with thongs from his lofty asylum, nearly
+ overhanging the sea, enters a boat, which waits for him at
+ the foot of the cliff, and, in order to lead his pursuers
+ astray, steers first towards the east, but at nightfall
+ turns to the west, reaches Schalaurov Island, and there
+ fortifies himself in an earth hut, whose remains we
+ (Wrangel's expedition) have still seen. Here he then
+ collected all the members of his tribe, and fled with them
+ in 15 "baydars" to the land whose mountains the Chukches
+ assure themselves they can in clear sunshine see from Cape
+ Yakan. During the following winter a Chukch related to
+ Kraechoj disappeared in addition with his family and
+ reindeer, and it is supposed that he too betook himself to
+ the land beyond the sea. With this another tradition
+ agrees, which was communicated to us by the inhabitants of
+ Kolyutschin Island. For an old man informed me (Wrangel)
+ that during his grandfather's lifetime a "baydar" with
+ seven Chukches, among them a woman, had ventured too far
+ out to sea. After they had long been driven hither and
+ thither by the wind, they stranded on a country unknown to
+ them, whose inhabitants struck the Chukches themselves as
+ coarse and brutish. The shipwrecked men were all murdered.
+ Only the woman was saved, was very well treated, and taken
+ round the whole country, and shown to the natives as
+ something rare and remarkable. So she came at last to the
+ Kargauts, a race living on the American coast at Behring's
+ Straits, whence she found means to escape to her own
+ tribe. This woman told her countrymen much about her
+ travels and adventures; among other things she said that
+ she had been in a great land which lay north of
+ Kolyutschin Island, stretched far to the _west_, and was
+ probably connected with America. This land was inhabited
+ by several races of men; those living in the west
+ resembled the Chukches in every respect, but those living
+ in the east were so wild and brutish, that they scarcely
+ deserved to be called men. The whole account, both of the
+ woman herself and of the narrators of the tradition, is
+ mixed up with so many improbable adventures, that it would
+ scarcely be deserving of any attention were it not
+ remarkable for its correspondence with the history of
+ Kraechoj."[244]
+
+When Wrangel wrote that, he did not believe in the existence of the
+land which is to be found set out on his map in 177 deg. E.L. and
+71 deg. N.L., and which, afterwards discovered by the Englishman
+Kellet, according to the saying, _lucus a non lucendo_, obtained the
+name of Wrangel Land. Now we know that the land spoken of by
+tradition actually exists, and therefore there is much that even
+tells in favour of its extending as far as to the archipelago on the
+north coast of America.
+
+With this fresh light thrown upon it, the old Chukch woman's story ought
+to furnish a valuable hint for future exploratory voyages in the sea
+north of Behring's Straits, and an important contribution towards
+forming a judgment of the fate which has befallen the American
+_Jeannette_ expedition, of which, while this is being written, accounts
+are still wanting.[245] Between us and the inhabitants of the present
+Chukch village at Irkaipij there soon arose very friendly relations. A
+somewhat stout, well-grown, tall and handsome man named Chepurin, we
+took at first to be chief. He was therefore repeatedly entertained in
+the gunroom, on which occasions small gifts were given him to secure his
+friendship. Chepurin had clearly a weakness for gentility and grandeur,
+and could now, by means of the barter he carried on with us and the
+presents he received, gratify his love of show to a degree of which he
+probably had never before dreamed. When during the last days of our stay
+he paid a visit to the _Vega_ he was clad in a red woollen shirt drawn
+over his "pesk," and from either ear hung a gilt watch-chain, to the
+lower end of which a perforated ten-oere piece was fastened. Already on
+our arrival he was better clothed than the others, his tent was larger
+and provided with two sleeping apartments, one for each of his wives.
+But notwithstanding all this we soon found that we had made a mistake,
+when, thinking that a society could not exist without government, we
+assigned to him so exalted a position. Here, as in all Chukch villages
+which we afterwards visited, absolute anarchy prevailed.
+
+At the same time the greatest unanimity reigned in the little
+headless community. Children, healthy and thriving, tenderly cared
+for by the inhabitants, were found in large numbers. A good word to
+them was sufficient to pave the way for a friendly reception in the
+tent. The women were treated as the equals of the men, and the wife
+was always consulted by the husband when a more important bargain
+than usual was to be made; many times it was carried through only
+after the giver of advice had been bribed with a neckerchief or a
+variegated handkerchief. The articles which the man purchased were
+immediately committed to the wife's keeping. One of the children had
+round his neck a band of pearls with a Chinese coin having a square
+hole in the middle, suspended from it; another bore a perforated
+American cent piece. None knew a word of Russian, but here too a
+youngster could count ten in English. They also knew the word
+"ship." In all the tents, reindeer stomachs were seen with their
+contents, or sacks stuffed full of other green herbs. Several times
+we were offered in return for the bits of sugar and pieces of
+tobacco which we distributed, wrinkled root-bulbs somewhat larger
+than a hazel nut, which had an exceedingly pleasant taste,
+resembling that of fresh nuts. A seal caught in a net among the ice
+during our visit was cut up in the tent by the women. On this
+occasion they were surrounded by a large number of children, who
+were now and then treated to bloody strips of flesh. The youngsters
+carried on the work of cutting up _con amore_, coquetting a little
+with their bloody arms and faces.
+
+The rock which prevails in this region consists mainly of gabbro,
+which in the interior forms several isolated, black, plateau-formed
+hills, 100 to 150 metres high, between which an even, grassy, but
+treeless plain extends. It probably rests on sedimentary strata. For
+on the western side of Irkaipij the plutonic rock is seen to rest on
+a black slate with traces of fossils, for the most part obscure
+vegetable impressions, probably belonging to the Permian
+Carboniferous formation.
+
+Uneasy at the protracted delay here I made an excursion to a hill in
+the neighbourhood of our anchorage, which, according to a
+barometrical measurement, was 129 metres high, in order, from a
+considerable height, to get a better view of the ice than was
+possible by a boat reconnaisance. The hill was called by the
+Chukches Hammong-Ommang. From it we had an extensive view of the
+sea. It was everywhere covered with closely packed drift-ice. Only
+next the land was seen an open channel, which, however, was
+interrupted in an ominous way by belts of ice.
+
+The plutonic rock, of which the hill was formed, was almost
+everywhere broken up by the action of the frost into angular blocks
+of stone, so that its surface was converted into an enormous stone
+mound. The stones were on the wind side covered with a translucent
+glassy ice-crust, which readily fell away, and added considerably to
+the difficulty of the ascent. I had previously observed the
+formation of such an ice-crust on the northernmost mountain summits
+of Spitzbergen.[246] It arises undoubtedly from the fall of
+super-cooled mist, that is to say of mist whose vesicles have been
+cooled considerably below the freezing-point without being changed
+to ice, which first takes place when, after falling, they come in
+contact with ice or snow, or some angular hard object. It is such a
+mist that causes the icing down of the rigging of vessels, a very
+unpleasant phenomenon for the navigator, which we experienced during
+the following days, when the tackling of the _Vega_ was covered with
+pieces of ice so large, and layers so thick, that accidents might
+have happened by the falling of the ice on the deck.[247]
+
+The dredgings here yielded to Dr. Kjellman some algae, and to Dr.
+Stuxberg masses of a species of cumacea, _Diastylis Rathkei_ Kr., of
+_Acanthostephia Malmgreni_ Goes, and _Liparis gelatinosus_ Pallas,
+but little else. On the steep slopes of the north side of Irkaipij a
+species of cormorant had settled in so large numbers that the cliff
+there might be called a true fowl-fell. A large number of seals were
+visible among the ice, and along with the cormorant a few other
+birds, principally phalaropes. Fish were now seen only in
+exceedingly small numbers.
+
+[Illustration: ALGA FROM IRKAIPIJ. _Laminaria solidungula_ (J G. Ag.). ]
+
+Even in the summer, fishing here does not appear to be specially
+abundant, to judge from the fact that the Chukches had not collected
+any stock for the winter. We were offered, however, a salmon or two
+of small size.
+
+[Illustration: CORMORANT FROM IRKAIPIJ. _Graculus bicristatus_
+(Pallas). ]
+
+On the 18th September[248] the state of the ice was quite unchanged.
+If a wintering was to be avoided, it was, however, not advisable to
+remain longer here. It had besides appeared from the hill-top which
+I visited the day before that an open water channel, only
+interrupted at two places by ice, was still to be found along the
+coast. The anchor accordingly was weighed, and the _Vega_ steamed
+on, but in a depth of only 6 to 8 metres. As the _Vegas_ draught is
+from 4.8 to 5 metres, we had only a little water under the keel, and
+that among ice in quite unknown waters. About twenty kilometres from
+the anchorage, we met with a belt of ice through which we could make
+our way though only with great difficulty, thanks to the _Vega's_
+strong bow enabling her to withstand the violent concussions. Our
+voyage was then continued, often in yet shallower water than before,
+until the vessel, at 8 o'clock in the morning, struck on a ground
+ice foot. The tide was falling, and on that account it was not until
+next morning that we could get off, after a considerable portion of
+the ground-ice, on whose foot the _Vega_ had run up, had been hewn
+away with axes and ice-hatchets. Some attempts were made to blast
+the ice with gunpowder, but they were unsuccessful. For this purpose
+dynamite is much more efficacious, and this explosive ought
+therefore always to form part of the equipment in voyages in which
+belts of ice have to be broken through.
+
+On the 19th we continued our voyage in the same way as before, in
+still and for the most part shallow water near the coast, between
+high masses of ground-ice, which frequently had the most picturesque
+forms. Later in the day we again fell in with very low ice formed in
+rivers and shut-in inlets of the sea, and came into slightly salt
+water having a temperature above the freezing-point.
+
+After having been moored during the night to a large ground-ice, the
+_Vega_ continued her course on the 20th September almost exclusively
+among low, dirty ice, which had not been much pressed together
+during the preceding winter. This ice was not so deep in the water
+as the blue ground-ice, and could therefore drift nearer the coast,
+a great inconvenience for our vessel, which drew so much water. We
+soon came to a place where the ice was packed so close to land that
+an open channel only 3-1/2 to 4-1/2 metres deep remained close to
+the shore. We were therefore compelled after some hours' sailing to
+lie-to at a ground-ice to await more favourable circumstances. The
+wind had now gone from west to north and north-west. Notwithstanding
+this the temperature became milder and the weather rainy, a sign
+that great open stretches of water lay to the north and north-west
+of us. During the night before the 21st it rained heavily, the wind
+being N.N.W. and the temperature +2 deg.. An attempt was made on
+that day to find some place where the belt of drift-ice that was
+pressed against the land could be broken through, but it was
+unsuccessful, probably in consequence of the exceedingly dense fog
+which prevailed.
+
+[Illustration: PIECES OF ICE FROM THE COAST OF THE CHUKCH PENINSULA.
+(After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+Dredging gave but a scanty yield here, probably because the animal
+life in water so shallow as that in which we were anchored, is
+destroyed by the ground-ices, which drift about here for the greater
+part of the year. Excursions to the neighbouring coast on the other
+hand, notwithstanding the late season of the year, afforded to the
+botanists of the _Vega_ valuable information regarding the flora of
+the region.
+
+On the 22nd I made, along with Captain Palander, an excursion in the
+steam launch to take soundings farther to the east. We soon
+succeeded in discovering a channel of sufficient depth and not too
+much blocked with ice, and on the 23rd the _Vega_ was able to resume
+her voyage among very closely packed drift-ice, often so near the
+land that she had only a fourth of a metre of water under her keel.
+We went forward however, if slowly.
+
+The land here formed a grassy plain, still clear of snow, rising
+inland to gently sloping hills or earthy heights. The beach was
+strewn with a not inconsiderable quantity of driftwood, and here and
+there were seen the remains of old dwelling-places. On the evening
+of the 23rd September we lay-to at a ground-ice in a pretty large
+opening of the ice-field. This opening closed in the course of the
+night, so that on the 24th and 25th we could make only very little
+progress, but on the 26th we continued our course, at first with
+difficulty, but afterwards in pretty open water to the headland
+which on the maps is called Cape Onman. The natives too, who came on
+board here, gave the place that name. The ice we met with on that
+day was heavier than before, and bluish-white, not dirty. It was
+accordingly formed farther out at sea.
+
+On the 27th we continued our course in somewhat open water to
+Kolyutschin Bay. No large river debouches in the bottom of this
+great fjord, the only one on the north coast of Asia which, by its
+long narrow form, the configuration of the neighbouring shores, and
+its division into two at the bottom, reminds us of the Spitzbergen
+fjords which have been excavated by glaciers. The mouth of the bay
+was filled with very closely packed drift-ice that had gathered
+round the island situated there, which was inhabited by a large
+number of Chukch families. In order to avoid this ice the _Vega_
+made a considerable _detour_ up the fjord. The weather was calm and
+fine, but new ice was formed everywhere among the old drift-ice
+where it was closely packed. Small seals swarmed by hundreds among
+the ice, following the wake of the vessel with curiosity. Birds on
+the contrary were seen in limited numbers. Host of them had
+evidently already migrated to more southerly seas. At 4.45 P.M. the
+vessel was anchored to an ice-floe near the eastern shore of the
+fjord. It could be seen from this point that the ice at the
+headland, which bounded the mouth of the fjord to the east, lay so
+near land that there was a risk that the open water next the shore
+would not be deep enough for the _Vega_.
+
+Lieutenant Hovgaard was therefore sent with the steam launch to take
+soundings. He returned with the report that the water off the
+headland was sufficiently deep. At the same time, accompanied by
+several of the naturalists, I made an excursion on land. In the
+course of this excursion the hunter Johnsen was sent to the top of
+the range of heights which occupied the interior of the promontory,
+in order to get a view of the state of the ice farther to the east.
+Johnsen too returned with the very comforting news that a very broad
+open channel extended beyond the headland along the coast to the
+south-east. I was wandering about along with my comrades on the
+slopes near the beach in order, so far as the falling darkness
+permitted, to examine its natural conditions, when Johnsen came
+down; he informed us that from the top of the height one could hear
+bustle and noise and see fires at an encampment on the other side of
+the headland. He supposed that the natives were celebrating some
+festival. I had a strong inclination to go thither in order, as I
+thought, "to take farewell of the Chukches," for I was quite certain
+that on some of the following days we should sail into the Pacific.
+But it was already late in the evening and dark, and we were not yet
+sufficiently acquainted with the disposition of the Chukches to go
+by night, without any serious occasion, in small numbers and
+provided only with the weapons of the chase, to an encampment with
+which we were not acquainted. It was not until afterwards that we
+learned that such a visit was not attended with any danger. Instead
+of going to the encampment, as the vessel in any case could not
+weigh anchor this evening, we remained some hours longer on the
+beach and lighted there an immense log fire of drift-wood, round
+which we were soon all collected, chatting merrily about the
+remaining part of the voyage in seas where not cold but heat would
+trouble us, and where our progress at least would not be obstructed
+by ice, continual fog, and unknown shallows. None of us then had any
+idea that, instead of the heat of the tropics, we would for the next
+ten months be experiencing a winter at the pole of cold, frozen in
+on an unprotected road, under almost continual snow-storms, and with
+a temperature which often sank below the freezing-point of mercury.
+
+The evening was glorious, the sky clear, and the air so calm that the
+flames and smoke of the log fire rose high against the sky. The dark
+surface of the water, covered as it was with a thin film of ice,
+reflected its light as a fire-way straight as a line, bounded far away
+at the horizon by a belt of ice, whose inequalities appeared in the
+darkness as the summits of a distant high mountain chain. The
+temperature in the quite draught-free air was felt to be mild, and the
+thermometer showed only 2 deg. under the freezing-point. This slight degree
+of cold was however sufficient to cover the sea in the course of the
+night with a sheet of newly-frozen ice, which, as the following days'
+experience showed, at the opener places could indeed only delay, not
+obstruct the advance of the _Vega_, but which however bound together the
+fields of drift-ice collected off the coast so firmly that a vessel,
+even with the help of steam, could with difficulty force her way
+through.
+
+When on the following day, the 28th September, we had sailed past
+the headland which bounds Kolyutschin Bay on the east, the channel
+next the coast, clear of drift-ice, but covered with newly formed
+ice, became suddenly shallow. The depth was too small for the
+_Vega_, for which we had now to seek a course among the blocks of
+ground-ice and fields of drift-ice in the offing. The night's frost
+had bound these so firmly together that the attempt failed. We were
+thus compelled to lie-to at a ground-ice so much the more certain of
+getting off with the first shift of the wind, and of being able to
+traverse the few miles that separated us from the open water at
+Behring's Straits, as whalers on several occasions had not left this
+region until the middle of October.
+
+As American whalers had during the last decades extended their
+whale-fishing to the North Behring Sea, I applied before my
+departure from home both directly and through the Foreign Office to
+several American scientific men and authorities with a request for
+information as to the state of the ice in that sea. In all quarters
+my request was received with special good-will and best wishes for
+the projected journey. I thus obtained both a large quantity of
+printed matter otherwise difficult of access, and maps of the sea
+between North America and North Asia, and oral and written
+communications from several persons: among whom may be mentioned the
+distinguished naturalist, Prof. W.H. DALL of Washington, who lived
+for a long time in the Territory of Alaska and the north part of the
+Pacific; Admiral JOHN RODGERS, who was commander of the American
+man-of-war, _Vincennes_, when cruising north of Behring's Straits in
+1855; and WASHBURN MAYNOD, lieutenant in the American Navy. I had
+besides obtained important information from the German sea-captain
+E. DALLMANN, who for several years commanded a vessel in these
+waters for coast traffic with the natives. Space does not permit me
+to insert all these writings here. But to show that there were good
+grounds for not considering the season of navigation in the sea
+between Kolyutschin Bay and Behring's Straits closed at the end of
+September, I shall make some extracts from a letter sent to me,
+through the American Consul-General in Stockholm, N.A. ELVING, from
+Mr. MILLER, the president of the Alaska Commercial Company.
+
+ "The following is an epitome of the information we have
+ received regarding the subject of your inquiry.
+
+ "The bark _Massachusetts_, Captain O. WILLIAMS, was in 74 deg.
+ 30' N.L. and 173 deg. W.L. on the 21st Sept.
+ 1807. No ice in sight in the north, but to the east saw
+ ice. Saw high peaks bearing W.N.W. about 60'. Captain
+ Williams is of opinion that Plover Island, so-called by
+ Kellet, is a headland of Wrangel Land. Captain Williams
+ says that he is of opinion from his observations, that
+ usually after the middle of August there is no ice south
+ of 70 deg.--west of 175 deg., until the 1st of
+ October. There is hardly a year but that you could go as
+ far as Cape North (Irkaipij), which is 180 deg., during
+ the month of September. If the winds through July and
+ August have prevailed from the S.W., as is usual, the
+ north shore will be found clear of ice. The season of 1877
+ was regarded as an 'icy season,' a good deal of ice to
+ southward. 1876 was an open season; as was 1875. Our
+ captain, GUSTAV NIEBAUM, states that the east side of
+ Behring's Straits is open till November; he passed through
+ the Straits as late as October 22nd two different seasons.
+ The north shore was clear of all danger within reasonable
+ distance. In 1869 the bark _Navy_ anchored under
+ Kolyutschin Island from the 8th to the 10th October. On
+ the 10th October of that year there was no ice south and
+ east of Wrangel Land."
+
+These accounts show that I indeed might have reason to be uneasy at
+my ill luck in again losing some days at a place at whose bare
+coast, exposed to the winds of the Polar Sea, there was little of
+scientific interest to employ ourselves with, little at least in
+comparison with what one could do in a few days, for instance, at
+the islands in Behring's Straits or in St. Lawrence Bay, lying as it
+does south of the easternmost promontory of Asia and therefore
+sheltered from the winds of the Arctic Ocean, but that there were no
+grounds for fearing that it would be necessary to winter there. I
+also thought that I could come to the same conclusion from the
+experience gained in my wintering on Spitzbergen in 1872-73, when
+permanent ice was first formed in our haven, in the 80th degree of
+latitude, during the month of February. Now, however, the case was
+quite different. The fragile ice-sheet, which on the 28th September
+bound together the ground-ices and hindered our progress, increased
+daily in strength under the influence of severer and severer cold
+until it was melted by the summer heat of the following year. Long
+after we were beset, however, there was still open water on the
+coast four or five kilometres from our winter haven, and after our
+return home I was informed that, on the day on which we were frozen
+in, an American whaler was anchored at that place.
+
+Whether our sailing along the north coast of Asia to Kolyutschin Bay
+was a fortunate accident or not, the future will show. I for my part
+believe that it was a fortunate accident, which will often happen.
+Certain it is, in any case, that when we had come so far as to this
+point, our being frozen in was a quite accidental misfortune brought
+about by an unusual state of the ice in the autumn of 1878 in the
+North Behring Sea.
+
+
+[Footnote 214: Further information on this point is given by A.J.
+Malmgren in a paper on the occurrence and extent of mammoth-finds,
+and on the conditions of this animal's existence in former times
+(_Finska Vet.-Soc. Foerhandl_ 1874-5). ]
+
+[Footnote 215: Compare Ph. Avril, _Voyage en divers etats d'Europe
+et d'Asie entrepris pour decouvrir un nouveau chemin a la Chine_,
+etc., Paris, 1692, p. 209. Henry H. Howorth, "The Mammoth in
+Siberia" (_Geolog. Mag._ 1880, p. 408). ]
+
+[Footnote 216: As will be stated in detail further on, there were
+found during the _Vega_ expedition very remarkable sub-fossil animal
+remains, not of the mammoth, however, but of various different
+species of the whale. ]
+
+[Footnote 217: The word _mummies_ is used by Von Middendorff to
+designate carcases of ancient animals found in the frozen soil of
+Siberia. ]
+
+[Footnote 218: The calculation is probably rather too low than too
+high. The steamer alone, in which I travelled up the Yenisej in
+1875, carried over a hundred tusks, of which however the most were
+blackened, and many were so decayed that I cannot comprehend how the
+great expense of transport from the _tundra_ of the Yenisej could be
+covered by the value of this article. According to the statement of
+the ivory dealers the whole parcel, good and bad together, was paid
+for at a common average price. ]
+
+[Footnote 219: Notices of yet other _finds_ of mammoth carcases
+occur, according to Middendorff (_Sib. Reise_, IV. i. p. 274) in the
+scarce and to me inaccessible first edition of Witsen's _Noord en
+Oost Tartarye_ (1692, Vol. II. p. 473). ]
+
+[Footnote 220: E. Yssbrants Ides, _Dreyjarige Reise nach China_,
+etc., Frankfort, 1707, p. 55. The first edition was published in
+Amsterdam, in Dutch, in 1704. ]
+
+[Footnote 221: Strahlenberg in _Das Nord- und Ostliche Theil von
+Europa und Asia_, Stockholm, 1730, p. 393, also gives a large number
+of statements regarding the fossil Siberian ivory, and mentions that
+the distinguished Siberian traveller Messerschmidt found a complete
+skeleton on the river Tom. ]
+
+[Footnote 222: Tilesius, _De skeleto mammonteo Sibirico (Mem. de
+l'Acad. de St. Petersbourg, T.V. pour l'annee 1812_, p. 409).
+Middendorff, _Sib. Reise_, IV. i. p. 274. Von Olfers, _Die Ueberreste
+vorweltlicher Riesenthiere in Beziehung zu Ostasia-tischen Sagen und
+Chinesischen Schriften (Abhandl. der Akad. d. Wissensch. zu Berlin
+aus dem Jahre 1839_, p 51). ]
+
+[Footnote 223: P.S. Pallas, _De reliquiis animalium exoticorum per
+Asiam borealem repertis complementum (Novi commentarii Acad. Sc.
+Petropolitanae_, XVII. pro anno 1772, p. 576), and _Reise durch
+verschiedene Provinzen des Russischen Reichs_, Th. III. St.
+Petersburg, 1776, p. 97. ]
+
+[Footnote 224: Hedenstroem, _Otrywki o Sibiri_, St. Petersburg, 1830,
+p. 125. Ermann's _Archiv_, Part 24, p. 140. ]
+
+[Footnote 225: Compare K.E. v. Baer's paper in _Melanges
+Biologiques_, T.V. St. Petersbourg, 1866, p. 691; Middendorff, IV.
+i. p. 277; Gavrila Sarytschev's _Achtjaehrige Reise in nordoestlichen
+Sibirien_, etc., translated by J.H. Busse, Th. 1, Leipzig, 1806,
+p. 106. ]
+
+[Footnote 226: Adams' account is inserted at p. 431 in the work of
+Tilesius already quoted. Von Baer gives a detailed account of this
+and other important _finds_ of the same nature in the above-quoted
+paper in Tome V. of _Melanges Biologiques_; St. Petersbourg,
+pp. 645-740. ]
+
+[Footnote 227: Middendorff, IV. 1, p. 272. ]
+
+[Footnote 228: Friedrich Schmidt, _Wissenschastliche Resultate der
+sur Aussuchung eines Mammuthcadavers ausgesandten Expedition (Mem.
+de l'Acad. de St. Petersbourg_, Ser. VII. T. XVIII. No. 1, 1872). ]
+
+[Footnote 229: Brandt, _Berichte der preussischen Akad. der
+Wissenchasten_, 1846, p. 224. Von Schmalhausen, _Bull de l'Acad. de
+St. Petersbourg_, T. XXII. p. 291. ]
+
+[Footnote 230: The _find_ is described by Heir Czersky in the
+Transactions published by the East Siberian division of the St.
+Petersburg Geographical Society; and subsequently by Dr. Leopold von
+Schrenck in _Mem. de l'Acad. de St. Petersbourg_, Ser. VII. T.
+XXVII. No. 7, 1880. ]
+
+[Footnote 231: The mean temperature of the different months is shown
+in the following table:--
+
+ JAN. -48 deg. 9
+ FEB. -47 deg. 2
+ MARCH -33 deg. 9
+ APRIL -14 deg. 9
+ MAY -0 deg. 40
+ JUNE +13 deg. 4
+ JULY +15 deg. 4
+ AUG. +11 deg. 9
+ SEPT. +2 deg. 3
+ OCT. -13 deg. 9
+ NOV. -39 deg. 1
+ DEC. -45 deg. 7
+ Of the Year. -16 deg. 7 ]
+
+[Footnote 232: Hedenstroem, _loc. cit._ p. 128. To find stranded
+driftwood in an upright position is nothing uncommon. ]
+
+[Footnote 233: Martin Sauer, _An account of a Geographical and
+Astronomical Expedition the Northern parts of Russia by Commodore
+Joseph Billings_, London, 1802, p. 105. The walrus does not occur in
+the sea between the mouth of the Chatanga and Wrangel Land, and
+large whales are never seen at the New Siberian Islands, but during
+Hedenstroem's stay in these regions three narwhals were enclosed in
+the ice near the shore at the mouth of the Yana (_Otrywki o
+Sibiri_, p. 131). ]
+
+[Footnote 234: Martin Sauer, _An account of a Geographical and
+Astronomical Expedition to the Northern parts of Russia by Commodore
+Joseph Billings_, London, 1802, p. 103. A. Ermann, _Reise um die
+Erde_, Berlin, 1833-48, D. 1, B. 2, p. 258. Ermann's statement, that
+the knowledge of the existence of these islands was concealed from
+the government up to the year 1806, is clearly incorrect. ]
+
+[Footnote 235: Of course the earth here at an inconsiderable depth
+under the surface is constantly frozen, but I have nowhere seen such
+alternating layers of earth and ice, crossed by veins of ice, as
+Hedenstroem in his oft-quoted work (_Otrywki o Sibiri_, p. 119) says
+he found at the sea-coast. Probably such a peculiar formation arises
+only at places where the spring floods bring down thick layers of
+mud, which cover the beds of ice formed during the winter and
+protect them for thousands of years from melting. I shall have an
+opportunity of returning to the interesting questions relating to
+this point. ]
+
+[Footnote 236: Since we discovered the Chukches also bury their dead
+by laying them out on the _tundra_, we have begun to entertain
+doubts whether the collection of bones delineated here was actually
+a grave. Possibly these mounds were only the remains of fireplaces,
+where the Chukches had used as fuel train-drenched bones, and which
+they bad afterwards for some reason or other endeavoured to protect
+from the action of the atmosphere. ]
+
+[Footnote 237: H. Rink, _Groenland geographisk og statistisk
+beskrevet_, Bd. 2, Copenhagen, 1857, p. 344. ]
+
+[Footnote 238: C. von Dittmar, _Bulletin hist.-philolog, de l'acad.
+de St. Petersbourg_, XIII. 1856, p. 130. ]
+
+[Footnote 239: Krascheninnikov, _Histoire et Description du
+Kamtschatka_, Amsterdam 1770, II. p. 95. A. Ennan, _Reise urn die
+Erde_, D.1, B.2, p. 255. ]
+
+[Footnote 240: _Ankali_ signifies in Chukch dwellers on the coast,
+and is now used to denote the Chukches living on the coast. A
+similar word, Onkilon, was formerly used as the name of the Eskimo
+tribe that lived on the coast of the Polar Sea when the Chukch
+migration reached that point. ]
+
+[Footnote 241: The walrus now appears to be very rare in the sea
+north of Behring's Straits, but formerly it must have been found
+there in large numbers, and made that region a veritable paradise
+for every hunting tribe. While we during our long stay there saw
+only a few walruses, Cook, in 1778, saw an enormous number, and an
+interesting drawing of walruses is to be found in the account of his
+third voyage. _A Voyage to the Pacific Ocean, etc._ Vol. III. (by
+James King), London, 1784, p. 259, pl. 52. ]
+
+[Footnote 242: The greatest number of mammoth tusks is obtained from
+the stretches of land and the islands between the Chatanga and Chaum
+Bay. Here the walrus is wanting. The inhabitants of North Siberia
+therefore praise the wisdom of the Creator, who lets the walrus live
+in the regions where the mammoth is wanting, and has scattered
+mammoth ivory in the earthy layers of the coasts where the walrus
+does not occur (A. Erman, _Reise um die Erde_, Berlin, 1833--48,
+D.1, B.2, p. 264). ]
+
+[Footnote 243: Among the bears' skulls brought home from this place
+Lieut. Nordquist found after his return home the skull of a sea-lion
+(_Otaria Stelleri_). It is, however, uncertain whether the animal
+was captured in the region, or whether the cranium was brought
+hither from Kamchatka. ]
+
+[Footnote 244: Wrangel's _Reise_, Th. 2, Berlin, 1839, p. 220. ]
+
+[Footnote 245: According to a paper in _Deutsche Geografische
+Blaetter_, B. IV. p. 54, Captain E. Dallmann, in 1866, as commander of
+the Havai schooner _W.C. Talbot_, not only saw but landed on Wrangel
+Land. As Captain Dallmann of recent years has been in pretty close
+contact with a large number of geographers, and communications from
+him have been previously inserted in geographical journals, it
+appears strange that he has now for the first time made public this
+important voyage. At all events, Dallmann's statement that the
+musk-ox occurs on the coast of the Polar Sea and on Wrangel Land is
+erroneous. He has here confused the musk-ox with the reindeer. ]
+
+[Footnote 246: Cf. _Redogoerelse foer den svenska polarexpeditionen ar
+1872-73_ (Bihang till Vet Ak. handl. Bd. 2, No. 18, p. 91). ]
+
+[Footnote 247: A more dangerous kind of icing down threatens the
+navigator in severe weather not only in the Polar Seas but also in
+the Baltic and the North Sea. For it happens at that season that the
+sea-water at the surface is over-cooled, that is, cooled below the
+freezing-point without being frozen. Every wave which strikes the
+vessel is then converted by the concussion into ice-sludge, which
+increases and freezes together to hard ice so speedily that all
+attempts to remove it from the deck are in vain. In a few hours the
+vessel may be changed into an unmanageable floating block of ice
+which the sailors, exhausted by hard labour, must in despair abandon
+to its fate. Such an icing down, though with a fortunate issue,
+befell the steamer _Sofia_ in the month of October off Bear Island,
+during the Swedish Polar Expedition of 1868. ]
+
+[Footnote 248: Irkaipij lies in 180 deg. long. from Greenwich. To
+bring our day-reckoning into agreement with that of the New World,
+we ought thus to have here lessened our date by one day, and have
+written the 17th for the 18th September. But as, with the exception
+of the short excursion to Port Clarence and St. Edward Island, we
+always followed the coasts of the Old World, and during our stay in
+the new hemisphere did not visit any place inhabited by Europeans,
+we retained during the whole of our voyage our European
+day-reckoning unaltered. If we had met with an American whaler, we
+would have been before him one day, our 27th September would thus
+have corresponded to his 26th. The same would have been the case on
+our coming to an American port. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+ Wintering becomes necessary--The position of the _Vega_--
+ The ice round the vessel--American ship in the neighbourhood
+ of the _Vega_ when frozen in--The nature of the neighbouring
+ country--The _Vega_ is prepared for wintering--Provision-depot
+ and observatories established on land--The winter dress--
+ Temperature on board--Health and dietary--Cold, wind, and snow
+ --The Chukches on board--Menka's visit--Letters sent home--
+ Nordquist and Hovgaard's excursion to Menka's encampment--
+ Another visit of Menka--The fate of the letters--Nordquist's
+ journey to Pidlin--_Find_ of a Chukch grave--Hunting--
+ Scientific work--Life on board--Christmas Eve.
+
+
+Assured that a few hours' southerly wind would be sufficient to
+break up the belt of ice, scarcely a Swedish mile[249] in breadth,
+that barred our way, and rendered confident by the above-quoted
+communications from experts in America concerning the state of the
+ice in the sea north of Behring's Straits, I was not at first very
+uneasy at the delay, of which we took advantage by making short
+excursions on land and holding converse with the inhabitants. First,
+when day after day passed without any change taking place, it became
+clear to me that we must make preparations for wintering just on the
+threshold between the Arctic and the Pacific Oceans. It was an
+unexpected disappointment, which it was more difficult to bear with
+equanimity, as it was evident that we would have avoided it if we
+had come some hours earlier to the eastern side of Kolyutschin Bay.
+There were numerous occasions during the preceding part of our
+voyage on which these hours might have been saved: the _Vega_
+did not require to stay so long at Port Dickson, we might have saved
+a day at Taimur Island, have dredged somewhat less west of the New
+Siberian Islands, and so on; and above all, our long stay at
+Irkaipij waiting for an improvement in the state of the ice, was
+fatal, because at least three days were lost there without any
+change for the better taking place.
+
+The position of the vessel was by no means very secure. For the
+_Vega_, when frozen in, as appears from the sketch map to be found
+further on, did not lie at anchor in any haven, but was only, in the
+expectation of finding a favourable opportunity to steam on,
+anchored behind a ground-ice, which had stranded in a depth of 9-1/2
+metres, 1,400 metres from land, in a road which was quite open from
+true N. 74 deg. W. by north to east. The vessel had here no other
+protection against the violent ice-pressure which winter storms are
+wont to cause in the Polar seas, than a rock of ice stranded at high
+water, and therefore also at high water not very securely fixed.
+Fortunately the tide just on the occasion of our being frozen in,
+appears to have been higher than at any other time during the course
+of the winter. The ice-rocks, therefore, first floated again far
+into the summer of 1879, when their parts that projected above the
+water had diminished by melting. Little was wanting besides to make
+our winter haven still worse than it was in reality. For the _Vega_
+was anchored the first time on the 28th September at some small
+ice-blocks which had stranded 200 metres nearer the land, but was
+removed the following day from that place, because there were only a
+few inches of water under her keel. Had the vessel remained at her
+first anchorage, it had gone ill with us. For the newly formed ice,
+during the furious autumn storms, especially during the night
+between the 14th and 15th December, was pressed over these
+ice-blocks. The sheet of ice, about half a metre thick, was thereby
+broken up with loud noise into thousands of pieces, which were
+thrown up on the underlying ground-ices so as to form an enormous
+_toross_, or rampart of loose, angular blocks of ice. A vessel
+anchored there would have been buried under pieces of ice, pressed
+aground, and crushed very early in the winter.
+
+[Illustration: TOROSS. From the neighbourhood of the _Vega's_ winter
+quarters. ]
+
+When the _Vega_ was beset, the sea near the coast, as has been
+already stated, was covered with newly formed ice, too thin to carry
+a foot passenger, but thick enough to prevent the passage of a boat.
+In the offing lay, as far as the eye could see, closely packed
+drift-ice, which was bound together so firmly by the newly formed
+ice, that it was vain to endeavour to force a passage. Already, by
+the 2nd October, it was possible, by observing the necessary
+precautions, to walk upon the newly formed ice nearest the vessel,
+and on the 3rd October, the Chukches came on board on foot. On the
+10th there were still weak places here and there between the vessel
+and the land, and a blue sky to the eastward indicated that there
+was still open water in that direction. That this "clearing" was at
+a considerable distance from the vessel was seen from an excursion
+which Dr. Almquist undertook in a north-easterly direction on the
+13th October, when, after walking about twenty kilometres over
+closely packed drift-ice, he was compelled to turn without having
+reached the open water. It was clear that the _Vega_ was surrounded
+by a band, at least thirty kilometres broad, of drift-ice fields,
+united by newly formed ice, which in the course of the winter
+reached a considerable thickness.[250]
+
+In this immense ice-sheet there often arose in the course of the
+winter cracks of great length. They ran uninterruptedly across newly
+formed ice-fields, and old, high ground-ices. One of the largest of
+these cracks was formed on the night before the 15th December right
+under the bow of the vessel. It was nearly a metre broad, and very
+long. Commonly the cracks were only some centimetres broad, but,
+notwithstanding this, they were troublesome enough, because the
+sea-water forced itself up through them to the surface of the ice
+and drenched the snow lying next to it.
+
+The causes of the formation of the cracks were twofold. Either they
+arose from a violent wind disturbing somewhat the position of the
+newly formed ice, or through the contraction of the ice in severe
+cold. The formation of the cracks took place with a more or less
+loud report, and, to judge from the number of these reports, more
+frequently than could be observed from the appearance of the
+snow-covered ice. Thus even during severe cold the apparently
+continuous ice-sheet was divided into innumerable pieces lying in
+the close proximity of each other, which either were completely
+loose or bound together only by the weak ice-band which was
+gradually formed under the snow on the surface of the water which
+had forced its way into the crack. Up to a distance of about six
+kilometres from the shore the ice in any case lay during the course
+of the whole winter nearly undisturbed, with the exception of the
+small cracks just mentioned. Farther out to sea, on the other hand,
+it was in constant motion. So-called _polynias_ or open places
+probably occur here all the year round, and when the weather was
+favourable we could therefore nearly always see a blue water sky at
+the horizon from true N.W. to E. A southerly wind after some days
+brought the open water channel so near the vessel that it was
+possible to walk to it in a few hours. It then swarmed with
+seals--an indication that it was in connection with a sea that was
+constantly open. The neighbourhood of such a sea perhaps also
+accounts for the circumstance that we did not see a single seal-hole
+in the ice-fields that surrounded the vessel.
+
+The ground-ice, to which the _Vega_ was moored on the 29th
+September, and under which she lay during the course of the winter,
+was about forty metres long and twenty-five metres broad; its
+highest point lay six metres above the surface of the water. It was
+thus not very large, but gave the vessel good shelter. This
+ground-ice, along with the vessel and the newly formed ice-field
+lying between it and the shore, was indeed moved considerably nearer
+land during the violent autumn storms. A groan or two and a knocking
+sound in the hull of the vessel indicated that it did not escape
+very severe pressure; but the _Vega_ did not during the course of
+the winter suffer any damage, either from this or from the severe
+cold, during which sharp reports often indicated that some crack in
+the woodwork had widened through the freezing of the water that had
+made its way into the vessel. "Cold so that the walls crack" is a
+well-known expression, with which we inhabitants of the North often
+connect memories from some stormy winter evening, passed by the home
+hearth; but here these reports heard in our cabins, especially at
+night, were unpleasant enough, giving rise to fears that the newly
+formed or widened cracks would cause dangerous leaks in the vessel's
+hull. In consequence of iron contracting more than wood under the
+influence of cold, the heads of the iron bolts, with which the
+ship's timbers were fastened together, in the course of the winter
+sank deep into the outside planking. But no serious leak arose in
+this way, perhaps because the cold only acted on that part of the
+vessel which lay above the surface of the water.
+
+Already during the first days of our wintering we interpreted
+various lively accounts of the natives, which they illustrated by
+signs, to mean that a whaler would be found at Serdze Kamen, in the
+neighbourhood of the _Vega's_ winter haven. On this account
+Lieutenant Brusewitz was sent out on the 4th October with two men
+and the little boat, _Louise_, built in Copenhagen for the
+expedition of 1872-73, and intended for sledge-journeys, with
+instructions to ascertain, if possible, if such was the case. He
+returned late at night the same day without having got sight of any
+vessel. We now supposed that the whole depended on our having
+misunderstood the accounts of the Chukches. But a letter which I
+received after our return, from Mr. W. BARTLETT, dated New Bedford,
+6th January, 1880, shows that this had not been the case. For he
+writes, among other things:--
+
+ "The writer's son, GIDEON W. BAKTLETT, left San Francisco
+ 1st June, 1878, in our freighter ship _Syren_, of 875
+ tons, for St. Lawrence Bay, arriving there July 8th, and,
+ after loading 6,100 barrels of oil and 37,000 lbs. of bone
+ from our whalers, she sailed for New Bedford direct,
+ touching at Honolulu to land her bone, to come here _via_
+ San Francisco, and he joined our whaler bark, _Rainbow_,
+ at St. Lawrence Bay, and went on a tour of observation and
+ pleasure, visiting Point Barrow and going as far east as
+ Lion Reefs, near Camden Bay, and then returning to Point
+ Barrow, and going over to Herald Island, and while there
+ visiting our different whalers, seeing one "bow-head"
+ caught and cut in, and September 25th he came down in the
+ schooner _W.M. Meyer_ to San Francisco, arriving there
+ October 22nd. By a comparison of dates we find he passed
+ near Cape Serdze September 29th, or one day after you
+ anchored near Kolyutschin Bay."
+
+The 29th September according to the American day-reckoning
+corresponds to the 30th according to that of the old world, which
+was still followed on board the _Vega_. The schooner _W.M.
+Meyer_ thus lay at Serdze Kamen two days after we anchored in our
+winter haven. The distance between the two places is only about 70
+kilometres.
+
+The winter haven was situated in 67 deg. 4' 49" north latitude,
+and 173 deg. 23' 2" longitude west from Greenwich, 1.4 kilometres
+from land. The distance from East Cape was 120', and from Point Hope
+near Cape Lisburn on the American side, 180'.
+
+The neighbouring land formed a plain rising gradually from the sea,
+slightly undulating and crossed by river valleys, which indeed when
+the _Vega_ was frozen in was covered with hoarfrost and frozen, but
+still clear of snow, so that our botanists could form an idea of the
+flora of the region, previously quite unknown. Next the shore were
+found close beds of Elymus, alternating with carpets of _Halianthus
+peploides_, and further up a poor, even, gravelly soil, covered with
+water in spring, on which grew only a slate-like lichen, _Gyrophora
+proboscidea_, and a few flowering plants, of which _Armeria sibirica_
+was the most common. Within the beach were extensive salt and
+fresh-water lagoons, separated by low land, whose banks were covered
+with a pretty luxuriant carpet, formed of mosses, grasses, and
+Carices. But first on the neighbouring high land, where the
+weathered gneiss strata yielded a more fertile soil than the sterile
+sand thrown up out of the sea, did the vegetation assume a more
+variegated stamp. No trace of trees[251] was indeed found there, but
+low willow bushes, entensive carpets of _Empetrum nigrum_ and
+_Andromeda tetragona_ were seen, along with large tufts of a species
+of Artemisia. Between these shoot forth in summer, to judge partly
+from the dried and frozen remains of plants which Dr. Kjellman
+collected in autumn, partly from collections made in spring, a
+limited number of flowering plants, some of which are well known at
+home, as the red whortleberry, the cloudberry, and the dandelion.
+
+Although experience from preceding Polar journeys and specially from
+the Swedish expedition of 1872-73, showed that even at the 80th
+degree of latitude the sea may suddenly break up in the middle of
+winter, we however soon found, as has been already stated, that we
+must make preparations for wintering. The necessary arrangements
+were accordingly made. The snow which collected on deck, and which
+at first was daily swept away, was allowed to remain, so that it
+finally formed a layer 30 centimetres thick, of hard tramped snow or
+ice, which in no inconsiderable degree contributed to increase the
+resistance of the deck to cold, and for the same purpose snowdrifts
+were thrown up along the vessel's sides. A stately ice stair was
+carried up from the ice to the starboard gunwale. A large tent made
+for the purpose at Karlskrona was pitched from the bridge to the
+fore, so that only the poop was open. Aft the tent was quite open,
+the blast and drifting snow having also free entrance from the sides
+and from an incompletely closed opening in the fore. The protection
+it yielded against the cold was indeed greatly diminished in this
+way, but instead it did not have the least injurious action on the
+air on the vessel, a circumstance specially deserving of attention
+for its influence on the state of health on board. Often under this
+tent in the dark days of winter there blazed a brisk smithy fire,
+round which the Chukches crowded in curious wonder at the skill with
+which the smith fashioned the glowing iron. Here the cook dealt out
+to the Chukches the soup and meat that were left over, and the
+loaves of bread which at every baking were baked for them. Here was
+our reception saloon, where tobacco and sugar were distributed to
+the women and children, and where sometimes, if seldom, a frozen
+hunter or fisherman was treated to a little spirits. Here pieces of
+wood and vertebrae of the whale were valued and purchased, and here
+tedious negotiations were carried on regarding journeys in
+dog-sledges in different directions.
+
+
+The violent motion which took place in the ice during the night
+before the 15th December, gave us a sharp warning that our position
+in the open road was by no means so secure as was desirable, but
+that there was a possibility that the vessel might be nipped
+suddenly and without any previous warning. If such a misfortune had
+happened, the crew of the _Vega_ would certainly have had no
+difficulty in getting to land over the ice. But the yield of hunting
+appeared to be so scanty, and the Chukches were, as almost always,
+so destitute of all stock of provisions--for they literally obey
+the command to take no thought for to-morrow--that there was every
+probability that we, having come safe ashore, would die of hunger,
+if no provisions were saved from the vessel. This again, as the
+principal part of the provisions was of course down in the hold,
+would have been attended with great difficulty, if the _Vega_ had
+been suddenly in the night cut into by the ice at the water-line. In
+order as far as possible to secure ourselves against the
+consequences of such a misfortune, a depot of provisions, guns,
+ammunition, &c., reckoned for 30 men and 100 days, was formed on
+land. Fortunately we did not require to depend upon it. The stores
+were laid up on the beach without the protection of lock or bolt,
+covered only with sails and oars, and no watch was kept at the
+place. Notwithstanding this, and the want of food which occasionally
+prevailed among the natives, it remained untouched both by the
+Chukches who lived in the neighbourhood, and by those who daily
+drove past the place from distant regions. All however knew very
+well the contents of the sail-covered heap, and they undoubtedly
+supposed that there were to be found there treasures of immense
+value, and provisions enough for the whole population of the Chukch
+peninsula for a whole year.
+
+[Illustration: THE "VEGA" IN WINTER QUARTERS. (After a photograph,
+taken in the spring of 1879 by L. Palander.) ]
+
+The Magnetical Observatory was erected, as will be told in greater
+detail further on, upon the beach a kilometre and a half from the
+vessel. To this house the observers had to walk to and fro at least
+four times in the twenty-four hours over an ice-field, covered with
+loose snow, as fine as dust, that was set in motion by the least
+puff of wind, and then in a few moments completely obliterated every
+footprint. When the moon did not shine, the winter nights were so
+dark, that it was impossible to distinguish the very nearest
+objects, and day after day during the course of the winter we had,
+besides, drifting snow so thick that the high dark hull of the
+vessel itself could be distinguished only when one was in its
+immediate neighbourhood! In walking from land during the darkness of
+the night and in drifting snow it would have been very difficult to
+find one's way to the vessel without guidance, and he would have
+been helplessly lost who went astray. To prevent such an accident,
+the precaution was taken of running a line over high ice-pillars
+between the Observatory and the vessel. Even with the help of the
+guideline it was often difficult enough to find our way.
+
+The attempt to keep open a channel in the ice round the vessel
+during the whole winter had soon to be given up, but two holes were
+kept constantly open, one by the side of the vessel in case of fire,
+and the other for the tidal observations which Captain Palander set
+on foot during the winter. The latter hole was chosen by a little
+seal as its haunt for a long time, until one day we entertained
+ourselves by catching him with the necessary care, and making him
+pay an involuntary visit on board, where he was offered various
+delicacies, which however were disregarded. The seal was let loose
+again in his hole, but notwithstanding the friendliness we showed
+him, he never more returned.
+
+[Illustration: THE WINTER DRESS OF THE "VEGA" MEN. ]
+
+From the meteorological observations it appears that the winter was
+not so cold as the winters in the Franklin archipelago or in the
+coldest parts of the mainland of Siberia.[252] On the other hand, it
+was exceedingly stormy at the _Vega's_ winter station, and day
+after day, night after night, we have gone to and from the
+Observatory in a high wind and a cold of -30 deg. to -46 deg. C.
+In calm weather a cold of -40 deg. is scarcely very troublesome,
+but with only a slight draught a degree of cold of for instance -35 deg.
+is actually dangerous for one who goes against the wind, and
+without the necessary precautions exposes uncovered parts of the
+face, the hands, or the wrists, to the cold current of air. Without
+one's being warned by any severe pain frostbite arises, which, if it
+be not in time thawed by rubbing the injured part with the hand, or
+with melting snow, may readily become very serious. Most of those
+who for the first time took part in a wintering in the high north,
+were, when the first cold occurred, more or less frostbitten, on
+several occasions so that there arose high frost-blisters filled
+with bloody water, several square centimetres in extent, but
+fortunately never to such a degree that any serious bad results
+followed. After we, newcomers to the Polar regions, warned by
+experience, became more careful, such frostbites occurred but
+seldom. Nor did there occur a single case of frostbite in the feet.
+To this conduced our clothing, which was adapted to the climate,
+and, besides good winter clothes of the sort commonly used in
+Sweden, consisted of the following articles of dress brought with us
+specially for use in the high north:--
+
+1. An abundant stock of good _woollen under-clothing_.
+
+2. A carefully made _blouse of sailcloth_, provided with many
+pockets, intended to be drawn over the ordinary seaman's dress as a
+protection against wind and drifting snow. This proved to be very
+suitable for the purpose for which it was intended, and was much
+liked by the crew.
+
+3. A Lapp _"pesk" with leggings_ was not so often used, because it
+was so warm that it was only with difficulty one could walk with it
+any considerable distance. On the other hand, in the case of winter
+journeys with dogs or reindeer it was indispensable.
+
+4. A pair of very large _canvas boots_ with leather soles. Inside
+these was put hay of _Carex vesicaria_ L. The foot itself was
+covered with one or two pairs of stockings, above which there was a
+foot-strip of felt. Our boots were thus intermediate between the
+foot-covering introduced by Parry for Arctic journeys, and the
+hay-filled _komager_ of the Lapps. All who used these canvas boots
+are unanimous in thinking that they left nothing to desire. Even in
+the case of extended excursions in wet snow they are to be preferred
+to leather shoes; for the latter become heavy and drenched with
+water, and can with difficulty be dried in the open air in the
+course of a night's rest. Canvas boots and the long hay in them on
+the other hand are easily dried in a single night. They are also
+light when wet, and in that state little prejudicial to health on
+account of the change of air which the hay under the foot renders
+possible. I therefore am of opinion that we are warranted in giving
+such boots the highest recommendation for winter journeys and winter
+hunting excursions, even in our own land.
+
+5. An _Oeresund cap_ and a loose _felt hood_ (baschlik) of the same
+sort as those which are used in the Russian army. I had bought the
+baschliks in St. Petersburg on account of the Expedition.
+
+6. _Fingerless gloves_ of sealskin and chamois, with an inside
+lining of sheepskin and at the wrists bordered with long-haired fur.
+They were commonly carried with a band from the neck, as children
+are wont to carry their gloves. For outside work these thick gloves
+were too inconvenient; then fingerless woollen mittens were used.
+
+7. _Coloured spectacles_, which were distributed to all the men in
+the beginning of February. One must himself have lived in the Polar
+regions during winter and spring, "after the return of the sun," to
+understand how indispensable is such a protection from the
+monotonous white light which then surrounds the eye in every
+direction. The inexperienced, though warned, seldom observe the
+necessary precautions, and commonly pay the penalty by a more or
+less complete snowblindness, which indeed is not very dangerous, but
+is always exceedingly painful, and which lasts several days.
+
+
+On board the vessel in our cabins and collection-rooms it was
+besides by no means so cold as many would suppose. The sides of the
+vessel in several places indeed, especially in the cabins, were
+covered with a thick sheet of ice, and so was the skylight in the
+gun-room. But in the inhabited parts of the vessel we had, a little
+from the sides, commonly a temperature of +12 deg. to +17 deg.,
+that is to say about the same as we in the north are wont to have
+indoors in winter, and certainly higher than the temperature of
+rooms during the coldest days of the year in many cities in the
+south, as for instance in Paris and Vienna. By night however the
+temperature in the cabins sank sometimes to +5 deg. and +10 deg.,
+and the boarding at the side of the berth became covered
+with ice. In the work-room 'tweendecks the thermometer generally
+stood about +10 deg., and even in the underhold, which was not
+heated, but lay under the water-line, the temperature was never
+under, commonly 1 deg. or 2 deg. above, the freezing-point.
+
+Much greater inconvenience than from cold did we in the cabins suffer
+from the excessive heat and the fumes, which firing in large cast-iron
+stoves is wont to cause in small close rooms. When in the morning after
+a cold night the watch all too willingly obeyed the direction, which
+sounded from different quarters, to fire well, one had often his wish so
+thoroughly satisfied, that, in half an hour after, every man lay bathed
+in perspiration. There was no other help for it than to leave the cabin,
+take a cold bath and a good rub down, dress rapidly, rush on deck for
+fresh air, and cool in the temperature of -30 deg. to -40 deg. prevailing there.
+Other opportunities for bathing were also given both to the officers and
+crew, and the necessary care was taken to secure cleanliness, a sanitary
+measure which ought never to be neglected in Arctic winterings.
+
+The state of health on board during the course of the winter was
+exceedingly good. Dr. Almquist's report enumerates only a few
+serious maladies, all successfully cured, among which may be
+mentioned stomach colds and slight cases of inflammation of the
+lungs, but not a single case of that insidious disease, scurvy,
+which formerly raged in such a frightful way among the crews in all
+long voyages, and which is still wont to gather so many victims from
+among Polar travellers.
+
+This good state of health depended in the first place on the
+excellent spirit which inspired the scientific men, the officers and
+the crew of the Expedition, but it ought also to be ascribed to the
+suitable equipment of the _Vega_, arranged by Captain Palander at
+Karlskrona, and above all to adjustment to the climate of our
+dietary, which was settled on the ground of the experience gained in
+the expedition of 1872-73, and after taking the advice of its
+distinguished physician Dr. Envall. The dietary is shown in the
+following table:--
+
+
+No. 1. SUNDAY.
+
+_Breakfast_: butter 6 ort, coffee 10 ort, sugar 7.5 ort.[253]
+
+_Dinner_: salt pork or dried fish 75 ort, sourkrout 75 ort,
+preserved or fresh potatoes 12 ort, preserved vegetables 5.5 ort,
+extract of meat 1.5 ort, raisins 5 ort, rice 50 ort, brandy or rum 2
+cubic inches.
+
+_Supper_: butter 6 ort, tea 1.5 ort, sugar 7.5 ort, barley-groats 10
+cubic inches, cheese 12 ort.
+
+
+No. 2. MONDAY, WEDNESDAY, and FRIDAY.
+
+_Breakfast_ same as No. 1.
+
+_Dinner_: preserved meat or fish 1 portion, preserved potatoes 12
+ort, preserved vegetables 5.5 ort, preserved leeks 1 portion,
+extract of meat 1.5 ort, brandy or rum 2 cubic inches.
+
+_Supper_ same as No. 1 without cheese.
+
+
+No. 3. THURSDAY.
+
+_Breakfast_ same as No. 1.
+
+_Dinner_: salt pork 1 lb., peas 10 cubic inches, extract of meat 1.5
+ort, barley-groats 2 cubic inches, brandy or rum 2 cubic inches.
+
+_Supper_ same as No. 2.
+
+
+No. 4. TUESDAY.
+
+_Breakfast_: butter 6 ort, chocolate 10 ort, sugar 7.5 ort.
+
+_Dinner_: salt meat 1 lb., maccaroni 15 ort (or brown beans 10 cubic
+inches or green peas 1 portion), fruit soup 1 portion, brandy or rum
+2 cubic inches.
+
+_Supper_ same as No. 2.
+
+
+No. 5. SATURDAY.
+
+_Breakfast_ same as No. 4.
+
+_Dinner_: preserved beeksteak or stewed beef 1 portion, preserved or
+fresh, potatoes 12 ort, preserved leeks 1 portion, fruit soup 1
+portion, brandy or rum 2 cubic inches.
+
+_Supper_ same as No. 2.
+
+Every man besides had served out to him daily 1-1/4 lb. dried bread
+or flour (2/3 wheat and 1/3 rye), 3 ort tobacco and 2 cubic inches
+vinegar; and weekly 1 lb. wheat-flour, 30 ort butter, 21 ort salt, 7
+ort mustard, 3 ort pepper, and two cubic inches vinegar.
+
+Besides what is included in the above list, "multegroet" (preserved
+cloudberries), mixed with rum, was served out twice a week from the
+15th February to the 1st April. I would willingly have had a larger
+quantity of this, according to northern experience, excellent
+antidote to scurvy, but as the cloudberry harvest completely failed
+in 1877, I could not, at any price, procure for the Expedition the
+quantity that was required. There was purchased in Finland instead,
+a large quantity of cranberry-juice, which was regularly served out
+to the crew and much liked by them. We carried with us besides a
+pair of living swine, which were slaughtered for the Christmas
+festivities.[254] All the men at that time had an opportunity of
+eating fresh pork twice a week, an invaluable interruption to the
+monotonous preserved provisions, which in its proportion conduced,
+during this festival, to which we inhabitants of the North are
+attached by so many memories, to enliven and cheer us.
+
+The produce of hunting was confined during the course of the winter
+to some ptarmigan and hares, and thus did not yield any contribution
+worth mentioning to the provisioning of the vessel. On the other
+hand, I was able by barter with the natives to procure fish in
+considerable abundance, so that at certain seasons the quantity was
+sufficient to allow of fresh fish being served out once a week. The
+kind of fish which was principally obtained during the winter, a
+sort of cod with greyish-green vertebrae, could however at first
+only be served in the gun-room, because the crew, on account of the
+colour of its bones, for a long time had an invincible dislike to
+it.
+
+On many of the ground-ices in the neighbourhood of the vessel there
+were fresh-water collections of considerable depth, which indeed
+were already hard frozen on the surface, but long yielded us
+splendid water for drinking and washing. After the 14th of December,
+when all the smaller fresh-water collections were almost frozen to
+the bottom, and salt-water had made its way into the largest ones
+and those on which we most depended, it became necessary to procure
+water by melting ice.
+
+The meteorological observations were made every fourth hour up to the
+1st November; after that to the 1st April every hour; after that
+again six times in the twenty-four hours. From the 27th November to
+the 1st April the thermometers were set up on land at the magnetical
+observatory; before and after that time in the immediate neighbourhood
+of the vessel. During winter the charge of the meteorological
+observations was intrusted to Dr. Stuxberg, who at that season, when all
+around us was covered with ice, was compelled to let his own zoological
+researches rest.
+
+[Illustration: COD FROM PITLEKAJ. _Gadus navaga_, Kolreuter one-third
+the natural size. ]
+
+The state of the weather of course had a very sensible influence on our
+daily life, and formed the touchstone by which our equipment was tested.
+Space does not permit me to give in this work the detailed results of
+the meteorological observations. I shall therefore only state the
+following facts.
+
+The greatest cold which was observed during the different
+months was in
+
+ October the 24th--20.8 deg. March the 29th--39.8 deg.
+ November the 30th--27.2 deg. April the 15th--38.0 deg.
+ December the 23rd--37.1 deg. May the 3rd--26.8 deg.
+ January the 25th--45.7 deg. June the 3rd--14.3 deg.
+ February the 2nd--43.8 deg. July the 2nd--1.0 deg.
+
+Twice we had the barometer uncommonly high, viz.:
+
+ On the 22nd December 6 A.M. 782.0 (0 deg.) mm.
+ On the 17th February 6 A.M. 788.1 (0 deg.) mm.
+
+The lowest atmospheric pressure, 728.8 (0 deg.) mm., occurred on
+the 31st December at two o'clock P.M.
+
+The weather during the winter was very stormy, and the direction of
+the wind nearest the surface of the earth almost constantly between
+north-west and north-north-west. But already in atmospheric strata
+of inconsiderable height there prevailed, to judge by the direction
+of the clouds, a similar uninterrupted atmospheric current from the
+south-east, which when it occasionally sank to the surface of the
+earth brought with it air that was warmer and less saturated with
+moisture. The reason of this is easy to see, if we consider that
+Behring's Straits form a gate surrounded by pretty high mountains
+between the warm atmospheric area of the Pacific and the cold one of
+the Arctic Ocean. The winds must be arranged here approximately
+after the same laws as the draught in the door-opening between a
+warm and a cold room, that is to say, the cold current of air must
+go below from the cold room to the warm, the warm above from the
+warm room to the cold. The mountain heights which, according to the
+statement of the natives, are to be found in the interior of the
+Chukch peninsula besides conduce to the heat and dryness of the
+southerly and south-easterly winds. For they confer on the sea winds
+that pass over their summits the properties of the _foehn_ winds. Our
+coldest winds have come from S.W. to W., that is to say, from the
+Old World's pole of cold, situated in the region of Werchojansk. On
+the existence of two currents of air, which at a certain height
+above the surface of the earth contend for the mastery, depends also
+the surprising rapidity with which the vault of heaven in the region
+of Behring's Straits becomes suddenly clouded over and again
+completely clear. Already the famous Behring's Straits' navigator,
+RODGERS, now Admiral in the American Navy, had noticed this
+circumstance, and likened it very strikingly to the drawing up and
+dropping of the curtain of a theatre.
+
+In our notes on the weather a difference was always made between
+_snoeyra_ (fall of snow in wind) and _yrsnoe_ (snow-storm without
+snow-fall). The fall of snow was not very great, but as there was in
+the course of the winter no thaw of such continuance that the snow
+was at any time covered with a coherent melted crust, a considerable
+portion of the snow that fell remained so loose that with the least
+puff of wind it was whirled backwards and forwards. In a storm or
+strong breeze the snow was carried to higher strata of the
+atmosphere, which was speedily filled with so close and fine
+snow-dust, that objects at the distance of a few metres could no
+longer be distinguished. There was no possibility in such weather of
+keeping the way open, and the man that lost his way was helplessly
+lost, if he could not, like the Chukch snowed up in a drift, await
+the ceasing of the storm. But even when the wind was slight and the
+sky clear there ran a stream of snow some centimetres in height
+along the ground in the direction of the wind, and thus principally
+from N.W. to S.E. Even this shallow stream heaped snowdrifts
+everywhere where there was any protection from the wind, and buried
+more certainly, if less rapidly, than the drifting snow of the
+storm, exposed objects and trampled footpaths. The quantity of
+water, which in a frozen form is removed in this certainly not deep,
+but uninterrupted and rapid current over the north coast of Siberia
+to more southerly regions, must be equal to the mass of water in the
+giant rivers of our globe, and play a sufficiently great _role_,
+among others as a carrier of cold to the most northerly forest
+regions, to receive the attention of meteorologists.
+
+The humidity of the air was observed both by August's psychrometer
+and Saussure's hygrometer. But I do not believe that these
+instruments give trustworthy results at a temperature considerably
+under the freezing-point. Moreover the degree of humidity at the
+place where there can be a question of setting up a psychrometer and
+hygrometer during a wintering in the high north, has not the
+meteorological importance which has often been ascribed to it. For
+the instruments are as a rule set up in an isolated louvre case,
+standing at a height above the surface convenient for reading. While
+the snow is drifting almost uninterruptedly it is impossible to keep
+this case clear of snow. Even the air, which was originally quite
+dry, must here be saturated with moisture through evaporation from
+the surrounding layers of snow and from the snow dust which whirls
+about next the surface of the earth. In order to determine the true
+degree of humidity in the air, I would accordingly advise future
+travellers to these regions to weigh directly the water which a
+given measure of air contains by absorbing it in tubes with chloride
+of calcium, calcined sulphate of copper, or sulphuric acid. It would
+be easy to arrange an instrument for this purpose so that the whole
+work could be done under deck, the air from any stratum under the
+mast-top being examined at will. If I had had the means to make such
+an examination at the _Vega's_ winter quarters, it would certainly
+have appeared that the relative humidity of the air at a height of
+some few metres above the surface of the earth was for the most part
+exceedingly small.
+
+The sandy neck of land which on the side next the vessel divided the
+lagoons from the sea, was bestrewn with colossal bones of the whale,
+and with the refuse of the Chukches, who had lived and wandered
+about there for centuries, and besides with portions of the skeleton
+of the seal and walrus, with the excreta of men, dogs, birds, &c.
+The region was among the most disagreeable I have seen in any of the
+parts inhabited by fishing Lapps, Samoyeds, Chukches, or Eskimo.
+When the _Vega_ was beset there were two Chukch villages on the
+neighbouring beach, of which the one that lay nearest our winter
+haven was called Pitlekaj. It consisted at first of seven tents,
+which in consequence of want of food their inhabitants removed
+gradually in the course of the winter to a region near Behring's
+Straits, where fish were more abundant. At the removal only the most
+indispensable articles were taken along, because there was an
+intention of returning at that season of the year when the chase
+again became more productive. The other encampment, Yinretlen, lay
+nearer the cape towards Kolyutschin Bay, and reckoned at the
+beginning of our wintering likewise seven tents, whose inhabitants
+appeared to be in better circumstances than those of Pitlekaj. They
+had during the autumn made a better catch and collected a greater
+stock. Only some of them accordingly removed during winter.
+
+The following encampments lay at a somewhat greater distance from
+our winter quarters, but so near, however, that we were often
+visited by their inhabitants:
+
+Pidlin, on the eastern shore of Kolyutschin Bay, four tents.
+
+Kolyutschin, on the island of the same name, twenty-five tents. This
+village was not visited by any of the members of the _Vega_
+Expedition.
+
+Rirajtinop, situated six kilometres east of Pitlekaj, three tents.
+
+Irgunnuk, seven kilometres east of Pitlekaj, ten tents, of which,
+however, in February only four remained. The inhabitants of the
+others had for the winter sought a better fishing place farther
+eastward.
+
+The number of the persons who belonged to each tent was difficult to
+make out, because the Chukches were constantly visiting each other
+for the purpose of gossip and talk. On an average it may perhaps be
+put at five or six persons. Including the inhabitants of Kolyutschin
+Island, there thus lived about 300 natives in the neighbourhood of
+our winter quarters.
+
+When we were beset, the ice next the shore, as has been already
+stated, was too weak to carry a foot passenger, and the difficulty
+of reaching the vessel from the land with the means which the
+Chukches had at their disposal was thus very great. When the natives
+observed us, there was in any case immediately a great commotion
+among them. Men, women, children, and dogs were seen running up and
+down the beach in eager confusion; some were seen driving in
+dog-sledges on the ice street next the sea. They evidently feared
+that the splendid opportunity which here lay before them of
+purchasing brandy and tobacco, would be lost. From the vessel we
+could see with glasses how several attempts were made to put out
+boats, but they were again given up, until at last a boat was got to
+a lane, clear of ice or only covered with a thin sheet, that ran
+from the shore to the neighbourhood of the vessel. In this a large
+skin boat was put out, which was filled brimful of men and women,
+regardless of the evident danger of navigating such a boat, heavily
+laden, through sharp, newly formed ice. They rowed immediately to
+the vessel, and on reaching it most of them climbed without the
+least hesitation over the gunwale with jests and laughter, and the
+cry _anoaj anoaj_ (good day, good day). Our first meeting with the
+inhabitants of this region, where we afterwards passed ten long
+months, was on both sides very hearty, and formed the starting-point
+of a very friendly relation between the Chukches and ourselves,
+which remained unaltered during the whole of our stay.
+
+[Illustration: KALTIJKAI, A CHUKCH GIRL FROM IRGUNNUK. Front face
+and Profile. (After photographs by L. Palander.) ]
+
+Regard for cleanliness compelled us to allow the Chukches to come
+below deck only exceptionally, which at first annoyed them much, so
+that one of them even showed a disposition to retaliate by keeping
+us out of the bedchamber in his tent. Our firmness on this point,
+however, combined with friendliness and generosity, soon calmed
+them, and it was not so easy for the men to exclude us from the
+inner tent, for in such visits we always had confections and tobacco
+with us, both for themselves and for the women and children. On
+board the vessel's tent-covered deck soon became a veritable
+reception saloon for the whole population of the neighbourhood.
+Dog-team after dog-team stood all day in rows, or more correctly lay
+snowed up before the ice-built flight of steps to the deck of the
+_Vega_, patiently waiting for the return of the visitors, or for the
+pemmican I now and then from pity ordered to be given to the
+hungered animals. The report of the arrival of the remarkable
+foreigners must besides have spread with great rapidity. For we soon
+had visits even from distant settlements, and the _Vega_ finally
+became a resting-place at which every passer-by stopped with his
+dog-team for some hours in order to satisfy his curiosity, or to
+obtain in exchange for good words or some more acceptable wares a
+little warm food, a bit of tobacco, and sometimes when the weather
+was very stormy, a little drop of spirits, by the Chukches called
+_ram_, a word whose origin is not to be sought for in the
+Swedish-Norwegian _dram_, but in the English word _rum_.
+
+All who came on board were allowed to go about without let or
+hindrance on our deck, which was encumbered with a great many
+things. We had not however to lament the loss of the merest trifle.
+Honesty was as much at home here as in the huts of the reindeer
+Lapps. On the other hand, they soon became very troublesome by their
+beggary, which was kept in bounds by no feeling of self-respect. Nor
+did they fail to take all possible advantage of what they doubtless
+considered the great inexperience of the Europeans. Small deceptions
+in this way were evidently not looked upon as blameworthy, but as
+meritorious. Sometimes, for instance, they sold us the same thing
+twice over, they were always liberal in promises which they never
+intended to keep, and often gave deceptive accounts of articles
+which were exposed for sale. Thus the carcases of foxes were
+offered, after having been flayed and the head and feet cut off, on
+several occasions as hares, and it was laughable to see their
+astonishment at our immediately discovering the fraud. The Chukches'
+complete want of acquaintance with money and our small supply of
+articles for barter for which they had a liking besides compelled
+even me to hold at least a portion of our wares at a high price.
+Skins and blubber, the common products of the Polar lands, to the
+great surprise of the natives, were not purchased on the _Vega_. On
+the other hand a complete collection of weapons, dresses, and
+household articles was procured by barter. All such purchases were
+made exclusively on account of the Expedition, and in general the
+collection of natural and ethnographical objects for private account
+was wholly forbidden, a regulation which ought to be in force in
+every scientific expedition to remote regions.
+
+As the Chukches began to acquire a taste for our food, they never
+neglected, especially during the time when their hunting failed, to
+bring daily on board driftwood and the vertebrae and other bones of
+the whale. They bartered these for bread. A load of five bits of
+wood, from four to five inches in diameter and six feet long, was
+commonly paid for with two or three ship biscuits, that is to say
+with about 250 gram bread, the vertebra of a whale with two ship
+biscuits, &c. By degrees two young natives got into the habit of
+coming on board daily for the purpose of performing, quite at their
+leisure, the office of servant. The cook was their patron, and they
+obtained from him in compensation for their services the larger
+share of the left victuals. So considerable a quantity of food was
+distributed partly as payment for services rendered or for goods
+purchased, partly as gifts, that we contributed in a very great
+degree to mitigate the famine which during midwinter threatened to
+break out among the population.
+
+None of the natives in the neighbourhood of the _Vega's_ winter station
+professed the Christian religion. None of them spoke any European
+language, though one or two knew a couple of English words and a Russian
+word of salutation. This was a very unfortunate circumstance, which
+caused us much trouble. But it was soon remedied by Lieut. Nordquist
+specially devoting himself to the study of their language, and that with
+such zeal and success that in a fortnight he could make himself pretty
+well understood. The natives stated to DE LONG in the autumn of 1879
+that a person on the "man of war" which wintered on the north coast,
+spoke Chukch exceedingly well. The difficulty of studying the language
+was increased, to a not inconsiderable degree, by the Chukches in their
+wish to co-operate with us in finding a common speech being so courteous
+as not to correct, but to adopt the mistakes, in the pronunciation or
+meaning of words that were made on the _Vega_. As a fruit of his studies
+Lieut. Nordquist has drawn up an extensive vocabulary of this little
+known language, and given a sketch of its grammatical structure.[255]
+The knowledge of the Chukch language, which the other members of the
+Expedition acquired, was confined to a larger or smaller number of
+words; the natives also learned a word or two of our language, so that a
+_lingua franca_ somewhat intelligible to both parties gradually arose,
+in which several of the crew soon became very much at home, and with
+which in case of necessity one could get along very well, although in
+this newly formed dialect all grammatical inflections were totally
+wanting. Besides, I set one of the crew, the walrus-hunter Johnsen, free
+for a consideral time from all work on board, in order that he might
+wander about the country daily, partly for hunting, partly for
+conversing with the natives. He succeeded in the beginning of winter in
+killing some ptarmigan and hares, got for me a great deal of important
+information regarding the mode of life of the Chukches, and procured
+several valuable ethnographical objects. But after a time, for what
+reason I could never make out, he took an invincible dislike to visit
+the Chukch tents more, without however having come to any disagreement
+with their inhabitants.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCHES ANGLING. ]
+
+[Illustration: ICE-SEIVE. One-eighth of the natural size. ]
+
+
+On the 5th October the openings between the drift-ice fields next
+the vessel were covered with splendid skating ice, of which we
+availed ourselves by celebrating a gay and joyous skating festival.
+The Chukch women and children were now seen fishing for winter roach
+along the shore. In this sort of fishing a man, who always
+accompanies the fishing women, with an iron-shod lance cuts a hole
+in the ice so near the shore that the distance between the under
+corner of the hole and the bottom is only half a metre. Each hole is
+used only by one woman, and that only for a short time. Stooping
+down at the hole, in which the surface of the water is kept quite
+clear of pieces of ice by means of an ice-sieve, she endeavours to
+attract the fish by means of a peculiar wonderfully clattering cry.
+First when a fish is seen in seen in the water an angling line,
+provided with a hook of bone, iron or copper, is thrown down, strips
+of the entrails of fish being employed as bait. A small metre-long
+staff with a single or double crook in the end was also used as a
+fishing implement. With this little leister the men cast up fish on
+the ice with incredible dexterity. When the ice became thicker, this
+fishing was entirely given up, while during the whole winter a
+species of cod and another of grayling were taken in great quantity
+in a lagoon situated nearer Behring's Straits. The coregonus is also
+caught in the inland lakes, although, at least at this season of the
+year, only in limited quantity.
+
+[Illustration: SMELT FROM THE CHUKCH PENINSULA. _Osmerus eperlanus_,
+Lin. one-third the natural size. ]
+
+On the morning of the 6th October, we saw from the vessel an
+extraordinary procession moving forward on the ice. A number of
+Chukches drew a dog-sledge on which lay a man. At first we supposed
+it was a man who was very ill, and who came to seek the help of the
+physician, but when the procession reached the vessel's side, the
+supposed invalid climbed very nimbly up the ice-covered rope-ladder
+(our ice-stair was not yet in order), stepped immediately with a
+confident air, giving evidence of high rank, upon the half-deck,
+crossed himself, saluted graciously, and gave us to know in broken
+Russian that he was a man of importance in that part of the country.
+It now appeared that we were honoured with a visit from the
+representative of the Russian empire, WASSILI MENKA, the starost
+among the reindeer-Chukches. He was a little dark man, with a pretty
+worn appearance, clad in a white variegated "pesk" of reindeer skin,
+under which a blue flannel shirt was visible. In order immediately
+on his arrival to inspire us with respect, and perhaps also in order
+not to expose his precious life to the false Ran's treachery, he
+came to the vessel over the yet not quite trustworthy ice, riding in
+a sledge that was drawn not by dogs but by his men. On his arrival
+he immediately showed us credentials of his rank, and various
+evidences of the payment of tribute (or market tolls), consisting of
+some few red and some white fox-skins, reckoning the former at 1
+rouble 80 copecks, the latter at 40 copecks each.
+
+[Illustration: WASSILI MENKA. Starost among the Reindeer Chukches.
+(After a photograph by L. Palander.) ]
+
+He was immediately invited down to the gunroom, entertained after
+the best of our ability, and bothered with a number of questions
+which he evidently understood with difficulty, and answered in very
+unintelligible Russian. He was in any case the first with whom some
+of us could communicate, at least in a way. He could neither read
+nor write. On the other hand, he could quickly comprehend a map
+which was shown him, and point out with great accuracy a number of
+the more remarkable places in north-eastern Siberia. Of the
+existence of the Russian emperor the first official of the region
+had no idea; on the other hand, he knew that a very powerful person
+had his home at Irkutsk. On us he conferred the rank of "Ispravnik"
+in the neighbouring towns. At first he crossed himself with much
+zeal before some photographs and copper-plate engravings in the
+gunroom, but he soon ceased when he observed that we did not do
+likewise. Menka was accompanied by two badly-clad natives with very
+oblique eyes, whom we took at first for his servants or slaves.
+Afterwards we found that they were owners of reindeer, who
+considered themselves quite as good as Menka himself, and further on
+we even heard one of them speak of Menka's claim to be a chief with
+a compassionate smile. Now, however, they were exceedingly
+respectful, and it was by them that Menka's gift of welcome, two
+reindeer roasts, was carried forward with a certain stateliness. As
+a return present we gave him a woollen shirt and some parcels of
+tobacco. Menka said that he should travel in a few days to Markova,
+a place inhabited by Russians on the river Anadyr, in the
+neighbourhood of the old Anadyrsk. Although I had not yet given up
+hope of getting free before winter, I wished to endeavour to utilize
+this opportunity of sending home accounts of the _Vega's_ position,
+the state of matters on board, &c. An open letter was therefore
+written in Russian, and addressed to his Excellency the
+Governor-General at Irkutsk, with the request that he would
+communicate its contents to his Majesty, King Oscar. This was
+placed, along with several private sealed letters between a couple
+of pieces of board, and handed over to Menka with a request to give
+them to the Russian authorities at Markova. At first it appeared as
+if Menka understood the letter as some sort of farther credentials
+for himself. For when he landed he assembled, in the presence of
+some of us, a circle of Chukches round himself, placed himself with
+dignity in their midst, opened out the paper, but so that he had it
+upside down, and read from it long sentences in Chukch to an
+attentive audience, astonished at his learning. Next forenoon we had
+another visit of the great and learned chief. New presents were
+exchanged, and he was entertained after our best ability. Finally he
+danced to the chamber-organ, both alone and together with some of
+his hosts, to the great entertainment of the Europeans and Asiatics
+present.
+
+As the state of the ice was still unaltered, I did not neglect the
+opportunity that now offered of making acquaintance with the
+interior of the country. With pleasure, accordingly, I gave
+Lieutenants Nordquist and Hovgaard permission to pay a visit to
+Menka's encampment. They started on the morning of the 8th October.
+Lieut. Nordquist has given me the following account of their
+excursion:--
+
+ "On Tuesday, the 8th October, at 10 o'clock A.M. Lieut
+ Hovgaard and I travelled from Pitlekaj in dog-sledges into
+ the interior in a S.S.E. direction. Hovgaard and I had
+ each a Chukch as driver. Menka had with him a servant, who
+ almost all the time ran before as guide. My comrade's
+ sledge, which was heaviest, was drawn by ten dogs, mine by
+ eight, and Menka's, which was the smallest and in which he
+ sat alone, by five. In general the Chukches appear to
+ reckon four or five dogs sufficient for a sledge with one
+ person.
+
+ "The _tundra_, with marshes and streams scattered over it,
+ was during the first part of our way only gently
+ undulating, but the farther we went into the interior of
+ the country the more uneven it became, and when, at 8
+ o'clock next morning, we reached the goal of our
+ journey--Menka's brother's camp--we found ourselves in a
+ valley, surrounded by hills, some of which rose about 300
+ metres above their bases. A portion of the vegetable
+ covering the _tundra_ could still be distinguished through
+ the thin layer of snow. The most common plants on the
+ drier places were _Aira alpina_ and _Poa alpina_; on the
+ more low-lying places there grew Glyceria, Pedicularis,
+ and _Ledum palustre_; everywhere we found _Petasites
+ frigida_ and a species of Salix. The latter grew
+ especially on the slopes in great masses, which covered
+ spots having an area of twenty to thirty square metres. At
+ some places this bush rose to a height of about a metre
+ above the ground. The prevailing rock appeared to be
+ granite. The bottoms of the valleys were formed of
+ post-Tertiary formations, which most frequently consisted
+ of sand and rolled stones, as, for instance, was the case
+ in the great valley in which ilenka's brother's camp was
+ pitched.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH DOG-SLEDGE. ]
+
+ "When, on the morning of the 9th, we came to the camp
+ there met us some of the principal Chukches. They saluted
+ Menka in the Russian way, by kissing him first on both
+ cheeks and then on the mouth. The Chukches however, appear
+ to be very averse to this ceremony, and scarcely ever
+ touched each other with the mouth. Us they saluted in the
+ common way, by stretching out the hand and bowing
+ themselves. We then went into Menka's brother's tent, in
+ front of which the whole inhabitants of the encampment
+ were speedily assembled to look at us. The camp consisted
+ of eighteen tents, pitched on both sides of a river which
+ ran through the valley. The tents were inhabited by
+ reindeer-Chukches, who carry on traffic between the
+ Russians and a tribe living on the other side of Behring's
+ Straits, whom they call _Yekargaules_. Between the tents
+ we saw a great number of sledges, both empty and loaded.
+ Some of these were light and low sledges for driving in,
+ with runners bent upwards and backwards, others were
+ heavier pack-sledges, made of stronger wood, with the
+ runners not bent back. Some of the light sledges were
+ provided with tilts of splints covered with reindeer
+ skins; others were completely covered, having an entrance
+ only in front.
+
+ "The knives, axes, boring tools, &c., which I saw were of
+ iron and steel, and had evidently been obtained from
+ Americans or Russians. The household articles in Menka's
+ brother's tent consisted of some copper coffee-pots, which
+ were used for boiling water, a german-silver beaker with
+ an English inscription, two teacups with saucers, flat
+ wooden trays, and barrels. The dress of the
+ reindeer-Chukches is similar to that of the
+ coast-Chukches, only with this difference, that the former
+ use reindeer-skins exclusively, while the latter employ
+ seal-skin in addition. Some, on our arrival, put on
+ blouses of variegated cloth, probably of Russian
+ manufacture. Among ornaments may be mentioned glass-beads,
+ strung on sinews, which were worn in the ears or on the
+ neck, chiefly by the women. These were tattooed in the
+ same way as those of the coast-Chukches. I saw here,
+ however, an old woman, who, besides the common tattooing
+ of the face, was tattooed on the shoulders, and another,
+ who, on the outside of the hands, had two parallel lines
+ running along the hand and an oblique line connecting
+ them. The men were not tattooed. Two of them carried
+ crosses, with Slavonic inscriptions, at the neck, others
+ carried in the same way forked pieces of wood. Whether
+ these latter are to be considered as their gods or as
+ amulets I know not.
+
+ "As we could not obtain here the reindeer that we wished
+ to purchase on account of the expedition, we betook
+ ourselves with our dogs on the afternoon of the same day
+ along with Menka to his son-in-law's encampment, which we
+ reached at 8 o'clock in the evening. We were received in a
+ very friendly way, and remained here over night. All the
+ inhabitants of the tent sleep together in the bedchamber
+ of it, which is not more than 2 to 2.4 metres long, 1.8 to
+ 2 metres broad, and 1.2 to 1.5 metres high. Before they
+ lie down they take supper. Men and women wear during the
+ night only a _cingulum pudicitiae_, about fifteen
+ centimetres broad, and are otherwise completely naked. In
+ the morning the housewife rose first and boiled a little
+ flesh, which was then served in the bedchamber, before its
+ inmates had put on their clothes. She cut the meat in
+ slices in a tray, and distributed them afterwards. In the
+ morning we saw the Chukches catch and slaughter their
+ reindeer. Two men go into the herd, and when they have got
+ sight of a reindeer which they wish to have, they cast, at
+ a distance of nine or ten metres, a running noose over the
+ animal's horns. It now throws itself backwards and
+ forwards in its attempts to escape, and drags after it for
+ some moments the man who holds the noose. The other man in
+ the meantime endeavours to approach the reindeer, catches
+ the animal by the horns and throws it to the ground,
+ killing it afterwards by a knife-stab behind the shoulder.
+ The reindeer is then handed over to the women, who, by an
+ incision in the side of the belly, take out the entrails.
+ The stomach is emptied of its contents, and is then used
+ to hold the blood. Finally th skin is taken off.
+
+ "About 10 o'clock A.M. we commenced our homeward journey.
+ At nightfall we sought to have a roof over our head in a
+ wretched Chukch tent on the shore of Lake Utschunutsch. It
+ was partly sunk in one of the small mounds which are found
+ here along the shore, and which are probably the remains
+ of old Onkilon dwellings. The present inhabitants, two old
+ men and an old woman, had their habitation arranged in the
+ following way:--In the bottom of a cylindrical pit, one
+ metre deep and three and a half to four and a half metres
+ in diameter, a vertical pole was erected, against the
+ upper end of which rested a number of obliquely placed
+ bars, rising from the edge of the pit, which were covered
+ with skins. The enclosure or bedchamber, peculiar to the
+ Chukch tent, was not wanting here. Otherwise the whole
+ dwelling bore the stamp of poverty and dirt. The food of
+ the inmates appeared to be fish. Of this, besides the fish
+ we obtained here, the nets hanging in front of the tent
+ afforded evidence. Some clothes, an iron pot, two wooden
+ vessels, and a Shaman drum were the only things I could
+ discover in the tent.
+
+ "Next morning we continued our journey. On the other side
+ of Lake Utschunutsch we saw two dwellings, which only
+ consisted of boats turned upside down with some hides
+ drawn over them. The rest of the way we came past Najtskaj
+ and through Irgunnuk, where we were received in an
+ exceedingly friendly fashion. By 7 o'clock in the evening
+ of the 11th October we were again on board the _Vega_."
+
+From Lieutenant Hovgaard's report, which principally relates to the
+topography of the region passed through, we make the following
+extract relating to the endurance which the Chukches and their dogs
+showed:--
+
+ "During our outward journey, which lasted twenty-one and a
+ half hours, Menka's attendant, the before-mentioned
+ reindeer owner, whom we at first took to be Menka's slave
+ or servant, ran without interruption before the sledges,
+ and even when we rested he was actively searching for the
+ track, looking after the dogs, &c. When we came to the
+ camp he did not sleep, and, notwithstanding, was as fresh
+ during the following day's journey. During the time he got
+ no spirituous liquor, by express order of Menka, who said
+ that if he did he would not be able to continue to run.
+ Instead he chewed a surprising quantity of tobacco. The
+ dogs, during the whole time, were not an instant unyoked;
+ in the mornings they lay half snowed up, and slept in
+ front of the sledges. We never saw the Chukches give them
+ any food: the only food they got was the frozen excrements
+ of the fox and other animals, which they themselves
+ snapped up in passing. Yet even on the last day no
+ diminution in their power of draught was observable."
+
+Nordquist brought with him, among other things, two reindeer, bought
+for a rouble and a half each. They were still very serviceable,
+though badly slaughtered. But the reindeer we purchased farther on
+in the winter were so poor that no one on board could persuade
+himself to eat them.
+
+On the 18th October, by which time we believed that Menka would be
+already at Markova, we were again visited by him and his son-in-law.
+He said he had no _akmimil_ (fire-water) to keep holiday with, and
+now came to us to exchange three slaughtered reindeer for it. Our
+miscalculation with respect to the letters, which we hoped were long
+ago on their way to their destination, and my dislike to the mode of
+payment in question--I offered him, without success, half-imperials
+and metal rouble pieces instead of brandy--made his reception on
+this occasion less hearty, and he therefore left us soon. It was not
+until the 9th. February, 1879, that we again got news from Menka by
+one of the Chukches, who had attended him the time before. The
+Chukch said that in ten days he had traversed the way between the
+_Vega's_ winter haven and Markova, which would run to about ninety
+kilometres a day. According to his statement Menka had travelled
+with the letters to Yakutsk. The statement seemed very suspicious,
+and appeared afterwards to have been partly fabricated, or perhaps
+to have been misunderstood by us. But after our return to the world
+of newspapers we found that Menka had actually executed his
+commission. He, however, did not reach Anadyrsk until the 7th
+March/23rd February. Thence the packet was sent to Irkutsk, arriving
+there on the 10th May/28th April. The news reached Sweden by
+telegraph six days after, on the 16th May, just at a time when
+concern for the fate of the _Vega_, was beginning to be very great,
+and the question of relief expeditions was seriously entertained.[256]
+
+In order to relieve the apprehensions of our friends at home, it
+was, however, exceedingly important to give them some accounts of
+the position of the _Vega_ during winter, and I therefore offered
+all the purchasing power which the treasures of guns, powder, ball,
+food, fine shirts, and even spirits, collected on board, could
+exert, in order to induce some natives to convey Lieutenants
+Nordquist and Bove to Markova or Nischni Kolymsk. The negotiations
+seemed at first to go on very well, an advance was demanded and
+given, but when the journey should have commenced the Chukches
+always refused to start on some pretext or other--now it was too
+cold, now too dark, now there was no food for the dogs. The
+negotiations had thus no other result than to make us acquainted
+with one of the few less agreeable sides of the Chukches'
+disposition, namely the complete untrustworthiness of these
+otherwise excellent savages, and their peculiar idea of the binding
+force of an agreement.
+
+The plans of travel just mentioned, however, led to Lieutenant
+Nordquist making an excursion with dog-sledges in order to be even
+with one of the natives, who had received an advance for driving him
+to Markova, but had not kept his promise. Of this journey Lieutenant
+Nordquist gives the following account:--
+
+ "On the 5th December, at 7.50 A.M., I started with a
+ dog-sledge for the village Pidlin, lying on Kolyutschin
+ Bay. I was driven by the Chukch Auango from Irgunnuk. He
+ had a small, light sledge, provided with runners of
+ whalebone, drawn by six dogs, of which the leader was
+ harnessed before the other five, which were fastened
+ abreast in front of the sledge, each with its draught
+ belt. The dogs were weak and ill managed, and therefore
+ went so slowly that I cannot estimate their speed at more
+ than two or three English miles an hour. As the journey
+ both thither and back lasted eight to nine hours, the
+ distance between Pitlekaj and Pidlin may be about
+ twenty-five English miles.
+
+ "Pidlin and Kolyutschin Island are the only inhabited
+ places on Kolyutschin Bay. At the former place there are
+ four tents, pitched on the eastern shore of the bay, the
+ number of the inhabitants being a little over twenty
+ persons. I was received in front of the tents by the
+ population of the village and carried to the tent, which
+ was inhabited by Chepcho, who now promised to go with me
+ in February to Anadyrsk. My host had a wife and three
+ children. At night the children were completely undressed;
+ the adults had short trousers on, the man of tanned skin,
+ the woman of cloth. In the oppressive heat, which was kept
+ up by two train-oil lamps burning the whole night, it was
+ difficult to sleep even in the heavy reindeer-skin
+ dresses. Yet they covered themselves with reindeer skins.
+ Besides the heat there was a fearful stench--the Chukches
+ obeyed the calls of nature within the bedchamber--which I
+ could not stand without going out twice to get fresh air.
+ When we got up next morning our hostess served breakfast
+ in a flat tray, containing first seals' flesh and fat,
+ with a sort of sourkrout of fermented willow-leaves, then
+ seals' liver, and finally seals' blood--all frozen.
+
+ "Among objects of ethnographical interest I saw, besides
+ the Shaman drum which was found in every tent, and was not
+ regarded with the superstitious dread which I have often
+ observed elsewhere, a bundle of amulets fastened with a
+ small thong, a wolf's skull, which was also hung up by a
+ thong, the skin together with the whole cartilaginous
+ portion of a wolf's nose and a flat stone. The amulets
+ consisted of wooden forks, four to five centimetres long,
+ of the sort which we often see the Chukches wear on the
+ breast. My host said that such an amulet worn round the
+ neck was a powerful means of preventing disease. The
+ wolf's skull which I had already got, he took back,
+ because his four- or five-year-old son would need it in
+ making choice of a wife. What part it played in this I did
+ not however ascertain.
+
+ "While my driver harnessed the dogs for the journey home,
+ I had an opportunity of seeing some little girls dance,
+ which they did in the same way as that in which I had seen
+ girls dance at Pitlekaj and Yinretlen. Two girls then
+ place themselves either right opposite to or alongside of
+ each other. In the former case they often lay their hands
+ on each other's shoulders, bend by turns to either side,
+ sometimes leap with the feet held together and wheel
+ round, while they sing or rather grunt the measure.
+
+ "The journey home was commenced at eight o'clock in the
+ morning. In the course of it my driver sang Chukch songs.
+ These are often only imitations of the cries of animals or
+ improvisations without any distinct metre or rhythm, and
+ very little variation in the notes; only twice I thought I
+ could distinguish a distinct melody. In the afternoon my
+ driver told me the Chukch names of several stars. At five
+ o'clock in the afternoon I reached the _Vega_."
+
+On the 10th October, the new ice at many places in the neighbourhood
+of the vessel was still so weak that it was impossible to walk upon
+it, and blue water-skies at the horizon indicated, that there were
+still considerable stretches of open water in the neighbourhood. But
+the drift-ice round about us lay so rock-fast, that I could already
+take solar altitudes from the deck of the vessel with a mercurial
+horizon. In order to ascertain the actual state of the case with
+reference to the open water, excursions were undertaken on the 13th
+October, in different directions. Dr. Kjellman could then, from the
+rocky promontory at Yinretlen, forty-two metres high, see large open
+spaces in the sea to the northward. Dr. Almquist went right out over
+the ice, following the track of Chukches, who had gone to catch
+seals. He travelled about twenty kilometres over closely packed
+drift-ice fields, without reaching open water, and found the newly
+frozen ice, with which the pieces of drift-ice were bound together,
+still everywhere unbroken. The Chukches, who visited the vessel in
+dog-sledges on the 28th October, informed us, however, that the sea
+a little to the east of us was still completely open.
+
+On the 15th October the hunter Johnsen returned from a hunting
+expedition quite terrified. He informed us that during his
+wanderings on the _tundra_, he had found a murdered man and brought
+with him, with the idea that, away here in the land of the Chukches,
+similar steps ought to be taken as in those lands which are blessed
+by a well-ordered judiciary, as _species facti_, some implements
+lying beside the dead man, among which was a very beautiful lance,
+on whose blade traces of having been inlaid in gold could still be
+discovered. Fortunately he had come with these things through the
+Chukch camp unobserved. From the description which was given me,
+however, I was able immediately to come to the conclusion that the
+question here was not of any murder, but of a dead man laid out on
+the _tundra_. I requested Dr. Almquist to visit the place, in order
+that he might make a more detailed examination. He confirmed my
+conjecture. As wolves, foxes, and ravens had already torn the corpse
+to pieces, the doctor considered that he, too, might take his share,
+and therefore brought home with him from his excursion, an object
+carefully wrapped up and concealed among the hunting equipment,
+namely, the Chukch's head. It was immediately sunk to the
+sea-bottom, where it remained for a couple of weeks to be
+skeletonised by the crustacea swarming there, and it now has its
+number in the collections brought home by the _Vega_. This sacrilege
+was never detected by the Chukches, and probably the wolves got the
+blame of it, as nearly every spring it was seen that the corpse,
+which had been laid out during autumn, lost its head during winter.
+It was, perhaps, more difficult to explain the disappearance of the
+lance, but of this, too, the maws of the wolves might well bear the
+blame.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BONE-CARVINGS. (The two largest figures represent
+bears.) ]
+
+Our hunters now made hunting excursions in different directions, but
+the supply of game was scanty. The openings in the ice probably
+swarmed with seals, but they were too distant, and without a boat it
+was impossible to carry on any hunting there. Not a single Polar
+bear now appeared to be visible in the neighbourhood, although
+bears' skulls are found at several places on the beach, and this
+animal appears to play a great part in the imagination of the
+natives, to judge of the many figures of bears among the bone
+carvings I purchased from the Chukches. The natives often have a
+small strip of bear's skin on the seat of their sledges, but I have
+not seen any whole bear's skin here; perhaps the animal is being
+exterminated on the north coast of Siberia. Our wintering,
+therefore, will not enrich Arctic literature with any new bear
+stories--a very sensible difficulty for the writer himself. Wolves,
+on the other hand, occur on the _tundra_ in sufficient abundance,
+even if one or other of the wolves found in mist and drifting snow,
+and saluted with shot, turned out, on a critical determination of
+species, to be our own dogs. At least, this was the case with the
+"wolf," that inveigled one of the crew into shooting a ball one dark
+night right through the thermometer case, fortunately without
+injuring the instruments, and with no other result than that he had
+afterwards to bear an endless number of jokes from his comrades on
+account of his wolf-hunt. Foxes, white, red and black, also occurred
+here in great numbers, but they were at that season difficult to get
+at, and besides they had perhaps withdrawn from the coast. Hares, on
+the other hand, maintained themselves during the whole winter at
+Yinretlen, by day partly out on the ice partly on the cape, by night
+in the neighbourhood of the tents. Sweepings and offal from the
+proceeds of the chase had there produced a vegetation, which, though
+concealed by snow, yielded to the hares in winter a more abundant
+supply of food than the barren _tundra_. It was remarkable that the
+hares were allowed to live between the tents and in their
+neighbourhood without being disturbed by the score of lean and
+hungry dogs belonging to the village. When farther into the winter
+for the sake of facilitating the hare-hunting I had a hut erected
+for Johnsen the hunter, he chose as the place for it the immediate
+neighbourhood of the village, declaring that the richest
+hunting-ground in the whole neighbourhood was just there. The
+shooters stated that part of the hares became snow-blind in spring.
+The hares here are larger than with us, and have exceedingly
+delicious flesh.
+
+[Illustration: HARES FROM CHUKCH LAND. ]
+
+On our arrival most of the birds had already left these regions, so
+inhospitable in winter, or were seen high up in the air in collected
+flocks, flying towards the south entrance of Behring's Straits.
+Still on the 19th October an endless procession of birds was seen
+drawing towards this region, but by the 3rd November it was noted,
+as something uncommon, that a gull settled on the refuse heaps in
+the neighbourhood of the vessel. It resembled the ivory gull, but
+had a black head. Perhaps it was the rare _Larus Sabinii_, of which
+a drawing has been given above.[257] All the birds which passed us
+came from the north-west, that is, from the north coast of Siberia,
+the New Siberian Islands or Wrangel Land. Only the mountain owl, a
+species of raven and the ptarmigan wintered in the region, the last
+named being occasionally snowed up.
+
+The ptarmigan here is not indeed so plump and good as the
+Spitzbergen ptarmigan during winter, but in any case provided us
+with an always welcome, if scanty change from the tiresome preserved
+meat. When some ptarmigan were shot, they were therefore willingly
+saved up by the cook, along with the hares, for festivals. For in
+order to break the monotony on board an opportunity was seldom
+neglected that offered itself for holding festivities. Away there on
+the coast of the Chukch peninsula there were thus celebrated with
+great conscientiousness during the winter of 1878-9, not only our
+own birthdays but also those of King Oscar, King Christian and King
+Humbert, and of the Emperor Alexander. Every day a newspaper was
+distributed, for the day indeed, but for a past year. In addition we
+numbered among our diversions constant intercourse with the natives,
+and frequent visits to the neighbouring villages, driving in
+dog-sledges, a sport which would have been very enjoyable if the
+dogs of the natives had not been so exceedingly poor and bad, and
+finally industrious reading and zealous studies, for which I had
+provided the expedition with an extensive library, intended both for
+the scientific men and officers, and for the crew, numbering with
+the private stock of books nearly a thousand volumes.
+
+All this time of course the purely scientific work was not
+neglected. In the first rank among these stood the meteorological
+and magnetical observations, which from the 1st November were made
+on land every hour. However fast the ice lay around the vessel it
+was impossible to get on it a sufficiently stable base for the
+magnetical variation instrument. The magnetical observatory was
+therefore erected on land of the finest building material any
+architect has had at his disposal, namely, large parallelopipeds of
+beautiful blue-coloured ice-blocks. The building was therefore
+called by the Chukches _Tintinyaranga_ (the ice-house), a name which
+was soon adopted by the _Vega_ men too. As mortar the builder,
+Palander, used snow mixed with water, and the whole was covered with
+a roof of boards. But as after a time it appeared that the storm
+made its way through the joints and that these were gradually
+growing larger in consequence of the evaporation of the ice so that
+the drifting snow could find an entrance, the whole house had a sail
+drawn over it. As supports of the three variation instruments large
+blocks of wood were used, whose lower ends were sunk in pits, which,
+with great trouble, were excavated in the frozen ground, and then,
+when the block supports were placed, were filled with sand mixed
+with water.
+
+The ice-house was a spacious observatory, well-fitted for its
+purpose in every respect. It had but one defect, the temperature was
+always at an uncomfortably low point. As no iron could be used in
+the building, and we had no copper-stove with us, we could not have
+any fireplace there. We endeavoured, indeed, to use a copper
+fireplace, that had been intended for sledge journeys, for heating,
+but only with the result that the observatory was like to have gone
+to pieces. We succeeded little better when we discovered farther on
+in the winter, while trimming the hold, a forgotten cask of bear's
+oil. We considered this _find_ a clear indication that instead of a
+stove fired with wood we should, according to the custom of the
+Polar races, use oil-lamps to mitigate the severe cold which
+deprived our stay in Tintinyaranga of part of its pleasure. But this
+mode of firing proved altogether impracticable. The fumes of the oil
+smelled worse than those of the charcoal, and the result of this
+experiment was none other than that the splendid crystals of ice,
+with which the roof and walls of the ice-house were gradually
+clothed, were covered with black soot. Firing with oil was
+abandoned, and the oil presented to our friends at Yinretlen, who
+just then were complaining loudly that they had no other fuel than
+wood.
+
+Besides the nine scientific men and officers of the _Vega_, the
+engineer Nordstroem and the seaman Lundgren took part in the
+magnetical and meteorological observations. Every one had his watch
+of six hours, five of which were commonly passed in the ice-house.
+To walk from the vessel to the observatory, distant a kilometre and
+a half, with the temperature under the freezing point of mercury,
+or, what was much worse, during storm, with the temperature at -36 deg.,
+remain in the observatory for five hours in a temperature of
+-17 deg., and then return to the vessel, commonly against the
+wind--for it came nearly always from the north or north-west--was
+dismal enough. None of us, however, suffered any harm from it. On
+the contrary, it struck me as if this compulsory interruption to our
+monotonous life on board and the long-continued stay in the open air
+had a refreshing influence both on body and soul.
+
+[Illustration: THE OBSERVATORY AT PITLEKAJ. (After a drawing by
+O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+In the neighbourhood of the ice-house the thermometer case was
+erected, and farther on in the winter there were built in the
+surrounding snowdrifts, two other observatories, not however of ice,
+but of snow, in the Greenland snow-building style. Our depot of
+provisions was also placed in the neighbourhood, and at a sufficient
+distance from the magnetical observatory there was a large wooden
+chest, in which the Remington guns, which were carried for safety in
+excursions from the vessel, and other iron articles which the
+observer had with him, were placed before he entered the
+observatory.
+
+The building of Tintinyaranga was followed by the Chukches with
+great interest. When they saw that we did not intend to live there,
+but that rare, glancing metal instruments were set up in it, and
+that a wonderfully abundant flood of light in comparison with their
+tent illumination was constantly maintained inside with a kind of
+light quite unknown to them (stearine candles and photogen lamps) a
+curious uneasiness began to prevail among them, which we could not
+quiet with the language of signs mixed with a Chukch word or two, to
+which our communications with the natives were at that time
+confined. Even farther on in the year, when an efficient though
+word-poor international language had gradually been formed between
+us, they made inquiries on this point, yet with considerable
+indifference. All sensible people among them had evidently already
+come to the conclusion that it was profitless trouble to seek a
+reasonable explanation of all the follies which the strange
+foreigners, richly provided with many earthly gifts but by no means
+with practical sense, perpetrated. In any case it was with a certain
+amazement and awe that they, when they exceptionally obtained
+permission, entered one by one through the doors in order to see the
+lamps burn and to peep into the tubes. Many times even a dog-team
+that had come a long way stopped for a few moments at the ice-house
+to satisfy the owner's curiosity, and on two occasions in very bad
+drifting weather we were compelled to give shelter to a wanderer who
+had gone astray.
+
+When this ice-house was ready and hourly observations began in it,
+life on board took the stamp which it afterwards retained in the
+course of the winter. In order to give the reader an idea of our
+every-day life, I shall reproduce here the spirited sketch of a day
+on the _Vega_, which Dr. Kjellman gave in one of his home letters:--
+
+ "It is about half-past eight in the morning. He whose
+ watch has expired has returned after five hours' stay in
+ the ice-house, where the temperature during the night has
+ been about -16 deg.. His account of the weather is good
+ enough. There are only thirty-two degrees of cold, it is
+ half-clear, and, to be out of the ordinary, there is no
+ wind. Breakfast is over. Cigars, cigarettes, and pipes are
+ lighted, and the gunroom _personnel_ go up on deck for a
+ little exercise and fresh air, for below it is confined
+ and close. The eye rests on the desolate, still
+ faintly-lighted landscape, which is exactly the same as it
+ was yesterday; a white plain in all directions, across
+ which a low, likewise white, chain of hillocks or
+ _torosses_ here and there raises itself, and over which
+ some ravens, with feeble wing-strokes, fly forward,
+ searching for something to support life with. 'Metschinko
+ Orpist,' 'metschinko Okerpist,' 'metschinko Kellman,' &c.,
+ now sounds everywhere on the vessel and from the ice in
+ its neighbourhood. 'Orpist' represents Nordquist,
+ 'Okerpist' again Stuxberg. It is the Chukches' morning
+ salutation to us. To-day the comparatively fine weather
+ has drawn out a larger crowd than usual, thirty to forty
+ human beings, from tender sucking babes to grey old folks,
+ men as well as women; the latter in the word of salutation
+ replacing the _tsch_-sound with an exceedingly soft
+ caressing _ts_-sound. That most of them have come driving
+ is shown by the equipages standing in the neighbourhood of
+ the vessel. They consist of small, low, narrow, light
+ sledges, drawn by four to ten or twelve dogs. The sledges
+ are made of small pieces of wood and bits of
+ reindeer-horn, held together by sealskin straps. As
+ runner-shoes thin plates of the ribs of the whale are
+ used. The dogs, sharp-nosed, long-backed, and excessively
+ dirty, have laid themselves to rest, curled together in
+ the snow.
+
+ "The salutation is followed almost immediately to-day as
+ on preceding days by some other words: 'Ouinga mouri
+ kauka,' which may be translated thus: 'I am so hungry; I
+ have no food; give me a little bread!' They suffer hunger
+ now, the poor beings. Seal flesh, their main food, they
+ cannot with the best will procure for the time. The only
+ food they can get consists of fish (two kinds of cod), but
+ this is quite too poor diet for them, they have fallen off
+ since we first met with them.
+
+ "Soon we are all surrounded by our Chukch acquaintances.
+ The daily market begins. They have various things to
+ offer, which they know to be of value to us, as weapons,
+ furs, ornaments, playthings, fish, bones of the whale,
+ algae, vegetables, &c. For all this only 'kauka' is now
+ asked. To-day the supply of whales' bones is large, in
+ consequence of our desire, expressed on previous days, to
+ obtain them. One has come with two vertebrae, one with a
+ rib or some fragments of it, one with a shoulder-blade.
+ They are not shy in laying heavy loads on their dogs.
+
+ "After the close of the promenade and the traffic with the
+ natives, the gunroom _personnel_ have begun their labours.
+ Some keep in their cabins, others in the gunroom itself.
+ The magnetical and meteorological observations made the
+ day before are transcribed and subjected to a preliminary
+ working-out, the natural history collections are examined
+ and looked over, studies and authorship are prosecuted.
+ The work is now and then interrupted by conversation
+ partly serious, partly jocular. From the engine-room in
+ the neighbourhood we hear the blows of hammers and the
+ rasping of files. In the 'tweendecks, pretty well heated,
+ but not very well lighted, some of the crew are employed
+ at ordinary ship's work; and in the region of the kitchen
+ the cook is just in the midst of his preparations for
+ dinner. He is in good humour as usual, but perhaps
+ grumbles a little at the 'mosucks' (a common name on board
+ for the Chukches), who will not give him any peace by
+ their continual cries for 'mimil' (water.)
+
+ "The forenoon passes in all quietness and stillness.
+ Immediately after noon nearly all the gunroom people are
+ again on deck, promenading backwards and forwards. It is
+ now very lively. It is the crew's meal-time. The whole
+ crowd of Chukches are collected at the descent to their
+ apartment, the lower deck. One soup basin after the other
+ comes up; they are immediately emptied of their contents
+ by those who in the crowd and confusion are fortunate
+ enough to get at them. Bread and pieces of meat and bits
+ of sugar are distributed assiduously, and disappear with
+ equal speed. Finally, the cook himself appears with a
+ large kettle, containing a very large quantity of meat
+ soup, which the Chukches like starving animals throw
+ themselves upon, baling into them with spoons, empty
+ preserve tins, and above all with the hands.
+ Notwithstanding the exceedingly severe cold a woman here
+ and there has uncovered one arm and half her breast in
+ order not to be embarrassed by the wide reindeer-skin
+ sleeve in her attempts to get at the contents of the
+ kettle. The spectacle is by no means a pleasant one.
+
+[Illustration: AN EVENING IN THE GUNROOM OF THE "VEGA" DURING
+THE WINTERING. ]
+
+ "By three o'clock it begins to grow dark, and one after
+ the other of our guests depart, to return, the most of
+ them, in the morning. Now it is quiet and still. About six
+ the crew have finished their labours and dispose of the
+ rest of the day as they please. Most of them are occupied
+ with reading during the evening hours. When supper has
+ been served at half-past seven in the gunroom, he who has
+ the watch in the ice-house from nine to two next morning
+ prepares for the performance of his disagreeable duty; the
+ rest of the gunroom _personnel_ are assembled there, and
+ pass the evening in conversation, play, light reading, &c.
+ At ten every one retires, and the lamps are extinguished.
+ In many cabins, however, lights burn till after midnight.
+
+ "Such was in general our life on the _Vega_. One day was
+ very like another. When the storm howled, the snow
+ drifted, and the cold became too severe, we kept more
+ below deck; when the weather was finer we lived more in
+ the open air, often paying visits to the observatory in
+ the ice-house, and among the Chukches living in the
+ neighbourhood, or wandering about to come upon, if
+ possible, some game."
+
+The snow which fell during winter consisted more generally of small
+simple snow-crystals or ice-needles, than of the beautiful
+snow-flakes whose grand kaleidoscopic forms the inhabitants of the
+north so often have an opportunity of admiring. Already with a
+gentle wind and with a pretty clear atmosphere the lower strata of
+the atmosphere were full of these regular ice-needles, which
+refracted the rays of the sun, so as to produce parhelia and halos.
+Unfortunately however these were never so completely developed as
+the halos which I saw in 1873 during the sledge-journey round
+North-east Land on Spitzbergen; but I believed that even now I could
+confirm the correctness of the observation I then made, that the
+representation which is generally given of this beautiful
+phenomenon, in which the halo is delineated as a collection of
+regular circles, is not correct, but that it forms a very involved
+system of lines, extended over the whole vault of heaven, for the
+most part coloured on the sun-side and uncoloured on the opposite
+side, of the sort shown in the accompanying drawings taken from the
+account of the Spitzbergen Expedition of 1872-73.
+
+[Illustration: REFRACTION-HALO. Seen on Spitzbergen in May 1873,
+simultaneously with the Reflection-halo delineated on the
+following page. ]
+
+Another very beautiful phenomenon, produced by the refraction of the
+solar rays by the ice-needles, which during winter were constantly
+mixed with the atmospheric strata lying nearest the surface of the
+earth, was that the mountain heights to the south of the _Vega_ in a
+certain light appeared as if feathered with fire-clouds. In clear
+sunshine and a high wind we frequently saw, as it were, a glowing
+pillar of vapour arise obliquely from the summits of the mountains,
+giving them the appearance of volcanos, which throw out enormous
+columns of smoke, flame-coloured by the reflection from the glowing
+lava streams in the depths of the crater.
+
+A blue water-sky was still visible out to sea, indicating that open
+water was to be found there. I therefore sent Johnsen the hunter
+over the ice on the 18th December to see how it was. In
+three-quarters of an hour's walking from the vessel he found an
+extensive opening, recently covered with thin, blue, newly frozen
+ice. A fresh northerly breeze blew at the time, and by it the
+drift-ice fields were forced together with such speed, that Johnsen
+supposed that in a couple of hours the whole lead would be
+completely closed.
+
+[Illustration: REFLECTION-HALO. Seen simultaneously with the
+Retraction-halo delineated on the preceding page, in the part of
+the sky opposite the sun. ]
+
+In such openings in Greenland white whales and other small whales are
+often enclosed by hundreds, the natives thus having an opportunity of
+making in a few hours a catch which would be sufficient for their
+support during the whole winter, indeed for years, if the idea of
+_saving_ ever entered into the imagination of the savage. But here in a
+region where the pursuit of the whale is more productive than in any
+other sea, no such occurrence has happened. During the whole of our stay
+on the coast of the Chukch country we did not see a single whale. On the
+other hand, masses of whales' bones were found thrown up on the beach.
+At first I did not bestow much attention upon them, thinking they were
+the bones of whales that had been killed during the recent whale-fishing
+period. I soon found however that this could not have been the case. For
+the bones had evidently been washed out of the sandy dune running along
+the beach, which had been deposited at a time when the present coast lay
+ten to twenty metres below the surface of the sea, thus hundreds or
+thousands of years ago, undoubtedly before the time when the north coast
+of Asia was first inhabited by man. The dune sand is, as recently
+exposed profiles show, quite free from other kitchen-midden remains than
+those which occur upon its surface. The whales' bones in question were
+thus _subfossil_. Their number was so great, that in the systematic
+examination of the beach in the immediate neighbourhood of the vessel,
+which I undertook during spring with the assistance of Dr. Kjellman and
+half a dozen of the sailors, thirty neck-bones and innumerable other
+bones of the whale were found in a stretch of from four to five
+kilometres. Of course masses of bones are still concealed in the sand;
+and a large number of lower jaw-bones, ribs, shoulder-blades, and
+vertebrae had been used for runner-shoes, tent-frames, spades, picks and
+other implements. A portion, after being exposed for several years to
+the action of the air, had undergone decay. The bones are therefore
+found in greatest number at those places where the sand of the dune has
+been recently carried away by the spring floods or by the furious winds
+which prevail here, and which easily gain the ascendency over the dry
+sand, bound together only by widely scattered Elymus-stalks. The largest
+crania belonged to a species nearly allied to the _Balaena mysticetus_.
+Crania of a species of Rachianectes are also found along with some bones
+of smaller varieties of the whale. No complete skeleton however has been
+found, but we brought home with us so large a quantity of the loose
+bones that the collection of whales' bones alone would have formed a
+full cargo for a small vessel. These bones will be delineated and
+described by Professor. A.W. MALM in _The Scientific Work of the Vega
+Expedition_. Special attention was drawn to a skeleton, belonging to the
+_Balaena mysticetus_, by its being still partially covered with skin, and
+by deep red, almost fresh, flesh adhering to those parts of it which
+were frozen fast in the ground. This skeleton lay at a place where the
+dune sand had recently been washed away and the coarse underlying sand
+uncovered, the whale-_mummy_ also I suppose coming to light at the same
+time. That the whale in question had not stranded in the memory of man
+the Chukches assured me unanimously. In such a case we have here a proof
+that even portions of the flesh of gigantic sea-animals have been
+protected against putrefaction in the frozen soil of Siberia--a
+parallel to the mammoth-_mummies_, though from a considerably more
+recent period.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF THE BEACH STRATA AT PITLEKAJ.
+1. Hard frozen coarse sand.
+2. The sea.
+3. Beach of fine dry sand with masses of bones of the whale.
+4. Coast-lagoon. ]
+
+[Illustration: CHRISTMAS EVE ON THE "VEGA." ]
+
+Christmas Eve was celebrated in the usual northern fashion. We had
+indeed neglected, as in the Expedition of 1872-73, to take with us
+any Christmas tree. But instead of it Dr. Kjellman prevailed on our
+Chukch friends to bring with dog-sledges willow-bushes from the
+valleys lying beyond the mountains to the south. By means of these a
+bare driftwood stem was converted into a luxuriant, branchy tree
+which, to replace the verdure, was clothed with variegated strips of
+paper, and planted in the 'tweendecks, which after our enclosure in
+the ice had been arranged as a working room, and was now set in
+order for the Christmas festivities, and richly and tastefully
+ornamented with flags. A large number of small wax-lights, which we
+had brought with us for the special purpose, were fixed in the
+Christmas tree, together with about two hundred Christmas boxes
+purchased or presented to us before our departure. At six o'clock in
+the afternoon all the officers and crew assembled in the
+'tweendecks, and the drawing of lots began, now and then interrupted
+by a thundering polka round the peculiar Christmas tree. At supper
+neither Christmas ale nor ham was wanting. And later in the evening
+there made their appearance in the 'tweendecks five punchbowls,
+which were emptied with songs and toasts for King and Fatherland,
+for the objects of the Expedition, for its officers and men, for the
+families at home, for relatives and friends, and finally for those
+who decked and arranged the Christmas tree, who were the sailors C.
+Lundgren and O. Hansson, and the firemen O. Ingelsson and C.
+Carlstroem.
+
+The other festivals were also celebrated in the best way, and at
+midnight before New Year's Day the new year was shot in with sharp
+explosive-shell firing from the rifled cannon of the _Vega_, and a
+number of rockets thrown up from the deck.
+
+
+[Footnote 249: Equal to 6.64 English miles. ]
+
+[Footnote 250: When it had become evident that we could make no
+further advance before next year, Lieut Brusewitz occasionally
+measured the thickness of the newly formed ice, with the following
+results:--
+
+
+ THICKNESS OF THE ICE.
+ 1 December, 56 centimetres. 1 May. 154 centimetres
+ 1 January, 92 ,, 15 ,, 162 ,,
+ 1 February, 108 ,, 1 June, 154 ,,
+ 15 ,, 120 ,, 15 ,, 151 ,,
+ 1 March, 123 ,, 1 July, 104 ,,
+ 1 April, 128 ,, 15 67 ,, (full of holes).
+ 15 ,, 139 ,, 18 ,, The ice broke up. ]
+
+
+[Footnote 251: Low brush is probably to be met with in the interior
+of the Chukch peninsula at places which are protected from the cold
+north winds. ]
+
+[Footnote 252: According to H. Wild's newly-published large work,
+"_Die Temperatur Verhaeltnisse des Russischen Reiches_, 2e Halfte,
+St. Petersburg, 1881," the Old World's cold-pole lies in the
+neighbourhood of the town Werchojansk (67 deg. 34' N.L. 133 deg.
+51' E.L. from Greenwich). The mean temperature of the different
+months and of the whole year is given in the note at page 411. If
+the data on which these figures rest are correct, the winter at
+Werchojansk is immensely colder than at the _Vega's_ winter station. ]
+
+[Footnote 253: 1 lb.=100 ort=425.05 gram. 1 kanna=100 cubic
+inches=2.617 litres. ]
+
+[Footnote 254: To carry animals for slaughter on vessels during
+Polar expeditions cannot be sufficiently recommended. Their flesh
+acts beneficially by forming a change from the preserved provisions,
+which in course of time become exceedingly disagreeable, and their
+care a not less important interruption to the monotony of the winter
+life. ]
+
+[Footnote 255: I give here an extract from the Vocabulary, that the
+reader may form some idea of the language of the north-east point of
+Asia:--
+
+ _Tnaergin_, heaven.
+ _Tirkir_, the sun.
+ _Yedlin_, the moon.
+ _Angatlingan_, a star.
+ _Nutatschka_, land.
+ _Angka_, sea.
+ _Ljedljenki_, winter.
+ _Edljek_, summer.
+ _Edljongat_, day.
+ _Nekita_, night.
+ _Ayguon_, yesterday.
+ _Ietkin_, to-day.
+ _Ergatti_, to-morrow.
+ _Gnunian_, north.
+ _Emnungku_, south.
+ _Nikayan_, east.
+ _Kayradljgin_, west.
+ _Tintin_, ice.
+ _Atljatlj_, snow.
+ _Yeetedli_, the aurora.
+ _Yengeen_, mist.
+ _Tedljgio_, storm.
+ _Eek_, fire.
+ _Kljautlj_, a man, a human being.
+ _Oraedlja_, men.
+ _Neairen_, a woman.
+ _Nenena_, a child.
+ _Empenatschyo_, father.
+ _Empengau_, mother.
+ _Ljeut_, head.
+ _Ljeutljka_, face.
+ _Dljedljadlin_, eye.
+ _Liljaptkourgin_, to see.
+ _Huedljodlin_, ear.
+ _Huedljokodljaurgin_, to hear.
+ _Huadljomerkin_, to understand.
+ _Huedljountakurgin_, not to understand.
+ _Yeka_, nose.
+ _Yekergin_, mouth.
+ _Kametkuaurgin_, to eat.
+ _Yedlinedljourgin_, to speak.
+ _Mammah_, a woman's breast.
+ _Mammatkourgin_, to give suck.
+ _Yeet_, foot.
+ _Retschaurgin_, to stand.
+ _Yetkatjergin_, to lie.
+ _Tschipiska_, to sleep.
+ _Kadljetschetuetjakurgin_, to learn.
+ _Pintekatkourgin_, to be born.
+ _Kaertraljirgin_, to die.
+ _Kamakatan_, to be sick.
+ _Kamak_, the Deity, a guardian Spirit.
+ _Yaranga_, tent.
+ _Etschengeratlin_, lamp.
+ _Orguor_, sledge.
+ _Atkuat_, boat.
+ _Anetljkatlj_, fishing-hook.
+ _Anedljourgin_, to angle.
+ _Uadlin_, knife.
+ _Tschupak_, _Kameak_, dog.
+ _Umku_, Polar bear.
+ _Rerka_, walrus.
+ _Memetlj_, seal.
+ _Korang_, reindeer.
+ _Gatlje_, bird.
+ _Enne_, fish.
+ _Gurgur_, dwarf-birch.
+ _Kukatkokongadlin_, willow-bush.
+ _Gem_, I.
+ _Gemnin_, mine.
+ _Get_, you.
+ _Genin_, yours.
+ _Enkan_, he.
+ _Muri_, we.
+ _Turi_, you.
+ _Mayngin_, much.
+ _Pljukin_, little.
+ _Konjpong_, all.
+ _I_, yes.
+ _Etlje_, no.
+ _Metschinka_, thanks.
+ _Ennen_, one.
+ _Nirak_, two.
+ _Nrok_, three.
+ _Nrak_, four.
+ _Metljingan_, five. ]
+
+
+[Footnote 256: The King of Sweden has since ordered a gold medal to
+be given to Wassili Menka in recognition of the fidelity with which
+he executed the commission of carrying our letters to a Russian post
+station. ]
+
+[Footnote 257: See page 119. ]
+
+
+
+
+END OF VOL. I.
+
+
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ROUND ASIA AND EUROPE. VOL II
+
+
+[Illustration: Adolf Erik Nordenskioeld ]
+
+[Illustration: His signature ]
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ROUND ASIA AND EUROPE
+WITH A HISTORICAL REVIEW
+OF PREVIOUS JOURNEYS ALONG THE NORTH COAST OF THE OLD WORLD
+
+BY A.E. NORDENSKIOeLD
+
+TRANSLATED BY ALEXANDER LESLIE
+
+_WITH FIVE STEEL PORTRAITS, NUMEROUS MAPS, AND ILLUSTRATIONS_
+
+IN TWO VOLUMES--VOL II
+
+London
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+1881
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS OF VOL II
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+Hope of release at the new year--Bove's excursion to the open
+water--Mild weather and renewed severe cold--Mercury frozen--Popular
+lectures--Brusewitz's excursion to Najtskaj--Another despatch of
+letters home--The natives' accounts of the state of the ice on the
+coast of Chukch Land--The Chukches carry on traffic between Arctic
+America and Siberia--Excursions in the neighborhood of winter
+quarters--The weather during spring--The melting of the snow--The
+aurora--The arrival of the migratory birds--The animal world of
+Chukch Land--Noah Elisej's relief expedition--A remarkable fish--The
+country clean of snow--Release--The North-East Passage achieved.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+The history, _physique_, disposition, and manners of the Chukches.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+The development of our knowledge of the north coast of
+Asia--Herodotus--Strabo--Pliny--Marco Polo--Herbertstein's
+map--The conquest of Siberia by the Russians--Deschnev's
+voyages--Coast navigation between the Lena and the Kolyma--Accounts
+of islands in the Polar Sea and old voyages to them--The
+discovery of Kamchatka--The navigation of the Sea of Okotsk is
+opened by Swedish prisoners of war--The Great Northern
+Expedition--Behring--Schalaurov--Andrejev's Land--The New
+Siberian islands--Hedenstroem's expeditions--Anjou and
+Wrangel--Voyages from Behring's Straits westward--Fictitious
+Polar voyages.
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+Passage through Behring's Straits--Arrival at Nunamo--Scarce species
+of seal--Rich vegetation--Passage to America--State of the
+ice--Port Clarence--The Eskimo--Return to Asia--Konyam Bay--Natural
+conditions there--The ice breaks up in the interior of Konyam
+Bay--St. Lawrence Island--Preceding visits to the Island--Departure
+to Behring Island
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+The position of Behring Island--Its inhabitants--The discovery of
+the Island by Behring--Behring's death--Steller--The former and
+present fauna of the Island: foxes, sea otters, sea cows, sea lions,
+and sea bears--Collection of bones of the Rhytina--Visit to a
+"rookery"--Torporkoff Island--Alexander Dubovski--Voyage to
+Yokohama--Lightning stroke
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+Arrival at Yokohama--A Telegram sent to Europe--The stranding of the
+Steamer _A.E. Nordenskioeld_--_Fetes_ in Japan--The Minister of Marine,
+Kawamura--Prince Kito-Shira Kava--Audience of the Mikado--Graves of
+the Shoguns--Imperial Garden at Tokio--The Exhibition there--Visit
+to Enoshima--Japanese Manners and Customs--Thunberg and Kaempfer.
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+Excursion to Asamayama--The Nakasendo road--Takasaki--Difficulty
+of obtaining Quarters for the Night--The Baths at Ikaho--Massage
+in Japan--Swedish matches--Traveling in
+_Kago_--Savavatari--Criminals--Kusatsu--The Hot Springs and their
+healing power--Rest at Rokurigahara--The Summit of Asamayama--The
+Descent--Journey over Usui-toge--Japanese Actors--Pictures of
+Japanese Folk life--Return to Yokohama
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+Farewell dinner at Yokohama--The Chinese in Japan--Voyage to
+Kobe--Purchase of Japanese Books--Journey by sail to Kioto--Biwa
+Lake and the Legend of its Origin--Dredging there--Japanese Dancing
+Girls--Kioto--The Imperial Palace--Temples--Swords and Sword
+bearers--Shintoism and Buddhism--The Porcelain Manufacture--Japanese
+Poetry--Feast in a Buddhist Temple--Sailing across the Inland Sea
+of Japan--Landing at Hirosami and Shimonoseki--Nagasaki--Excursion
+to Mogi--Collection of Fossil Plants--Departure from Japan
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+Hong Kong and Canton--Stone polishing Establishments at
+Canton--Political Relations in an English Colony--Treatment of the
+Natives--Voyage to Labuan--Coal Mines there--Excursion to the shore
+of Borneo--Malay Villages--Singapore--Voyage to Ceylon--Point de
+Galle--The Gem Mines at Ratnapoora--Visit to a Temple--Purchase of
+Manuscripts--The Population of Ceylon--Dr. Almquist's Excursion to
+the Interior of the Island
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+The Journey Home--Christmas, 1879--Aden--Suez--Cairo--Excursion to
+the Pyramids and the Mokattam Mountains--Petrified Tree stems--The
+Suez Canal--Landing on Sicily by night--Naples--Rome--The Members of
+the Expedition separate--Lisbon--England--Paris--Copenhagen--Festive
+Entry into Stockholm--_Fetes_ there--Conclusion
+
+
+
+
+PORTRAITS
+
+
+Engraved on Steel by G.J. Stodart, of London.
+
+
+Adolf Erik Nordenskioeld To face Title page
+Louis Palander ,, Page 68
+
+
+
+
+LITHOGRAPHED MAPS
+
+
+9. Herbertstern's Map of Russia, 1550 (photo-lithographic facsimile)
+
+10. Map of the North Coast of the Old World from Norway to Behring's
+ Straits, with the track of the _Vega_, constructed from old and
+ recent sources, and from observations made during the Voyage of
+ the _Vega_, by N. Selander, Captain in the General Staff
+
+
+
+
+LIST OF WOOD-CUTS IN VOL II
+
+
+_The Wood-cuts, when not otherwise stated below, were engraved at
+Herr Wilhelm Meyer's Xylographic Institute, in Stockholm_
+
+ 1. Chukches
+
+ 2. The Encampment Pitlekaj abandoned by its Inhabitants on the
+ 18th February, 1879
+
+ 3. Notti and Wife Aitanga
+
+ 4. Map of the Region round the _Vega's_ Winter Quarters
+
+ 5. The Sleeping Chamber in a Chukch Tent
+
+ 6. Chukch Lamps
+
+ 7. Section of a Chukch Lamp
+
+ 8. Chukch Shaman Drum
+
+ 9. The Coast between Padljonna and Enjurmi
+
+ 10. Bracelet of Copper
+
+ 11. The North End of Idlidlja Island
+
+ 12. The Common Aurora Arc at the _Vega's_ Winter Quarters
+
+ 13. Aurora at the _Vega's_ Winter Quarters, 3rd March, 1879, at 9 PM
+
+ 14. Double Aurora-Arcs seen 20th March, 1879, at 9 30 PM
+
+ 15. Elliptic Aurora, seen 21st March, 1879, at 2 15 AM
+
+ 16. Elliptic Aurora seen 21st March, 1879, at 3 AM
+
+ 17. Song Birds in the Rigging of the Vega, June, 1879
+
+ 18. Spoon-billed Sand piper from Chukch Land
+ (_Eurynorhynchus pygmaeus_, L.)
+
+ 19. Marmots from Chukch Land
+
+ 20. _Stegocephalus Kessleri_ Stuxb
+
+ 21. _Sabinea septemcarinata_, Sabine
+
+ 22. _Acanthostephia Malmgreni_, Goes
+
+ 23. _Ophioglypha nodosa_, Luetken
+
+ 24. Noah Elisej
+
+ 25. Beetles from Pitlekaj
+
+ 26. Phosphorescent Crustacea from Mussel Bay
+
+ 27. Reitinacka
+
+ 28. Dog Fish from the Chukch Peninsula (_Dallia delicatissima_, Smith)
+
+ 29. Crab from the Sea North of Behring's Straits
+ (Chionoecetes _opilio_, Kroeyer)
+
+ 30. Tree from Pitlekaj (_Salix Arctica_, Pallas)
+
+ 31. Typical Chukch Faces
+
+ 32. ,, ,,
+
+ 33. Plan of a Chukch Grave
+
+ 34. Tent Frame at Pitlekaj
+
+ 35. Chukch Oar
+
+ 36. Dog Shoe
+
+ 37. Chukch Face Tattooing
+
+ 38. Chukch Children
+
+ 39. Snow Shoes
+
+ 40. An Aino Man skating after a Reindeer
+
+ 41. Hunting Cup and Snow scraper
+
+ 42. Chukch Weapons and Hunting Implements
+
+ 43. Chukch Bow and Quiver
+
+ 44. Chukch Arrows
+
+ 45. Stone Hammers and Anvil for Crushing Bones
+
+ 46. Chukch Implements
+
+ 47. Fire Drill
+
+ 48. Ice Mattocks
+
+ 49. Human Figures
+
+ 50. Musical Instruments
+
+ 51. Drawings made by the Chukches--
+
+ 52. Chukch Buckles and Hooks of Ivory
+
+ 53. Chukch Bone Carvings
+
+ 54. Chukch Doll
+
+ 55. Chukch Bone Carvings--
+
+ 56. Chukch Bone Carvings of Birds
+
+ 57. Map of the World, said to be of the Tenth Century
+
+ 58. Map of the World showing Asia to be continuous with Africa
+
+ 59. Map of the World after Fra Mauro, from the middle of the
+ Fifteenth Century
+
+ 60. Map of Asia from an Atlas published by the Russian Academy of
+ Sciences in 1737
+
+ 61. Peter Feodorovitsch Anjou
+
+ 62. Ferdinand von Wrangel
+
+ 63. Seal from the Behring Sea, _Histriophoca fasciata_, Zimm
+
+ 64. _Draba Alpina_, L., from St. Lawrence Bay
+
+ 65. Hunting Implements at Port Clarence
+
+ 66. Eskimo Family at Port Clarence
+
+ 67. Eskimo from Port Clarence
+
+ 68. Eskimo from Port Clarence
+
+ 69. Eskimo Fishing Implements, &c.
+
+ 70. Eskimo Bone Carvings &c.
+
+ 71. Eskimo Grave
+
+ 72. Animal Figure from an Eskimo Grave
+
+ 73. Ethnographical Objects from Port Clarence
+
+ 74. Shell from Behring's Straits, _Fusus deformis_, Reeve
+
+ 75. Diagram showing the temperature and depth of the water at
+ Behring's Straits between Port Clarence and Senjavin Sound, by
+ G. Bove
+
+ 76. Konyam Bay
+
+ 77. Tattooing Patterns from St. Lawrence Island
+
+ 78. Tattooed Woman from St. Lawrence Island
+
+ 79. The Colony on Behring Island
+
+ 80. The Colony on Copper Island
+
+ 81. Natives of Behring Island
+
+ 82. Skeleton of Rhytina, shown at the _Vega_ Exhibition
+ at the Royal Palace, Stockholm
+
+ 83. Original Drawings of the Rhytina
+
+ 84. Reconstructed Form of the Sea-Cow
+
+ 85. Sea Bears, Male, Female, and Young
+
+ 86. "Seal Rookery" on St. Paul's Island, one of the Pribylov Islands
+
+ 87. Slaughter of Sea-Bears
+
+ 88. Sea-Bears on their way to "the Rookeries"
+
+ 89. Alga from the shore of Behring Island,
+ _Thalassiophyllum Clathrus_, Post. and Rupr.
+
+ 90. Fusugama
+
+ 91. The steamer _A.E. Nordenskioeld_ stranded on the East Coast of Yezo
+
+ 92. Kawamura Sumiyashi, Japanese Minister of Marine
+
+ 93. The First Medal which was struck as a Memorial
+ of the Voyage of the _Vega_
+
+ 94. The First Medal which was struck as a Memorial
+ of the Voyage of the _Vega_
+
+ 95. Stone Lantern and Stone Monument in a Japanese Temple Court
+
+ 96. Japanese House in Tokio
+
+ 97. Japanese Lady at her Toilet
+
+ 98. A Jinrikisha
+
+ 99. Japanese Bedroom
+
+ 100. Tobacco-Smokers, Japanese Drawing
+
+ 101. Ito-Keske, a Japanese Editor of Thunberg's Writings
+
+ 102. Monument to Thunberg and Kaempfer at Nagasaki
+
+ 103. Japanese Kago
+
+ 104. Japanese Wrestlers
+
+ 105. Japanese Bridge, after a Japanese drawing
+
+ 106. Japanese Mountain Landscape, drawn by Prof. P.D. Holm
+
+ 107. Inn at Kusatsu, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+ 108. Bath at Kusatsu, Japanese drawing, drawn by O. Soerling
+
+ 109. Japanese Landscape, drawn by Prof. P.D. Holm
+
+ 110. Burden-bearers on a Japanese Road, Japanese drawing,
+ drawn by O. Soerling
+
+ 111. Japanese Shop, drawn by V. Andren
+
+ 112. Japanese Court Dress, drawn by ditto
+
+ 113. Noble in Antique Dress, drawn by ditto
+
+ 114. Buddhist Priest, drawn by ditto
+
+ 115. A Samurai, drawn by ditto
+
+ 116. Gate across the Road to a Shinto Temple, drawn by Prof. P.D. Holm
+
+ 117. Buddhist Temple at Kobe, drawn by ditto
+
+ 118. Rio-San's Seal
+
+ 119. Burying-Place at Kioto, drawn by Prof. P.D. Holm
+
+ 120. Entrance to Nagasaki, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+ 121. Fossil Plants from Mogi--1, 2, Beech Leaves
+ (_Fagus ferruginea_, Ait., var. _pliocena_, Nath.),
+ drawn by M. Westergren
+
+ 122. Fossil Plant from Mogi--3, Maple Leaf
+ (_Acer Mono_, Max., var. _pliocena_, Nath.)
+
+ 123. Fossil Plant from Mogi--Leaf of _Zelkova Keakii_,
+ Sieb., var. _pliocena_, Nath., drawn by M. Westergren
+
+ 124. Gem Diggings at Ratnapoora, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+ 125. Statues in a Temple in Ceylon, drawn by ditto
+
+ 126. A Country Place in Ceylon, drawn by V. Andren
+
+ 127. Highland View from the Interior of Ceylon, drawn by R. Haglund
+
+ 128. The Scientific Men of the _Vega_
+
+ 129. The Officers of the _Vega_
+
+ 130. The Crew of the _Vega_, drawn by R. Widing
+
+ 131. The Entrance of the _Vega_ into Stockholm on the 24th April, 1880,
+ drawn by R. Haglund
+
+ 132. The _Vega_ moored off the Royal Palace, Stockholm, drawn by ditto
+
+
+
+
+ERRATA [ Transcriber's note: these have been applied to the text ]
+
+ Page 22, under wood-cut, _for_ "_a._ Of wood _b._ Of stone,"
+ _read_ "_a._ Wooden cup to place under the lamp
+ _b._ Lamp of burned clay."
+ Page 41, line 6 from foot, _for_ "beginning of May"
+ _read_ "middle of June."
+ Page 41, under wood-cut, _for_ "May," _read_ "June."
+ Page 44, line 19 _for_ "mountain," _read_ "Arctic."
+ Page 54, last line _for_ "contracteta" _read_ "contracta."
+ Page 63, last line _for_ "Natural size," _read_ "Half the natural size."
+ Page 98, lines 9 and 12 from foot, _for_ "moccassin" _read_ "moccasin."
+ Page 100, line 2 from foot, _for_ "moccassin" _read_ "moccasin."
+ Page 227, line 11 from foot, _for_ "American," _read_ "Asiatic."
+
+
+
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ROUND ASIA AND EUROPE, VOL II
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+ Hope of release at the new year--Bove's excursion to the
+ open water--Mild weather and renewed severe cold--Mercury
+ frozen--Popular lectures--Brusewitz's excursion to Najtskaj
+ --Another despatch of letters home--The natives' accounts
+ of the state of the ice on the coast of Chukch Land--
+ The Chukches carry on traffic between Arctic America and
+ Siberia--Excursions in the neighbourhood of winter quarters
+ --The weather during spring--The melting of the snow--
+ The aurora--The arrival of the migratory birds--The animal
+ world of Chukch Land--Noah Elisej's relief expedition--
+ A remarkable fish--The country clear of snow--Release--
+ The North-East Passage achieved.
+
+
+The new year came in with a faint hope of release. For since the
+north and north-west winds that had prevailed almost constantly
+towards the close of December had given place to winds from the east
+and south, considerable "clearings" were again formed out at sea,
+and the Chukches again began to say that the ice would drift away,
+so that the vessel would be able to continue her voyage; a
+prediction which they always ended with a declaration, expressed
+both by words and gestures, that they would then bitterly lament,
+which they would also have had sufficient reason to do, considering
+the very friendly way in which they were treated by all on board the
+_Vega_, both officers and men.
+
+On New Year's Day, in order to see the state of the ice farther out
+to sea, Lieut Bove, accompanied by the hunter Johnsen, again made an
+excursion to the open water. Of this he gave the following
+account:--
+
+ "I left the vessel on the forenoon of 1st January and
+ reached the open water after four hours' steady walking.
+ The deep loose snow made walking very fatiguing, and three
+ rows of _torosses_ also contributed to this, mainly in
+ consequence of the often snow-covered cracks, which
+ crossed the ice-sheet in their neighbourhood. One of the
+ _torosses_ was ten metres high. The size of the blocks of
+ ice, which were here heaped on each other, showed how
+ powerful the forces were which had caused the formation of
+ the _torosses_. These ice ramparts now afford a much
+ needed protection to the _Vegas_ winter haven. About
+ halfway between the open water and the vessel the way was
+ crossed by cracks running from east to west, and clearly
+ indicating that the opening in the ice would have extended
+ to the distance of a kilometre from the vessel, if the
+ violent storm in December had lasted twelve hours longer.
+ The _Vega_ would thereby have been in great danger. The
+ edge of the ice towards the open water was evenly cut, as
+ with an immense knife, and was so strong that one could
+ walk along it as on a rock. Even from the top of a
+ five-metre-high ice-rampart no boundary of the open water
+ could be seen to the north-east or north. Partly from
+ this, partly from the extension of the water-sky in this
+ direction, I draw the conclusion that the breadth of the
+ open water was at least thirty-five kilometres. The
+ "clearing" was bounded on the east by an ice-rampart
+ running north, which at a distance of nine or ten
+ kilometres appeared to bend to the east. Possibly farther
+ to the east beyond this ice-rampart there was another open
+ water basin. The depth at the edge of the ice was
+ twenty-one metres, the temperature of the water 2 deg.
+ C. The water ran at a considerable speed right out from
+ the coast (_i.e._ from S.S.E.) As it ran here nearly in a
+ straight line, the current may have been a tidal one. The
+ open water swarmed with seals, according to Johnsen both
+ bearded and rough. Neither Polar bears, walrusses, nor
+ birds were seen."
+
+Lieut. Bove's report confirmed me in my supposition that the open
+water, as towards the end of January 1873 at Mussel Bay, might
+possibly extend as far as our anchorage and open for us the way to
+Behring's Straits, in which case we could not refrain from
+continuing our voyage, however unpleasant and dangerous it might be
+at this season of the year. The Chukches also declared repeatedly
+that the open water in January would continue for a considerable
+time, and in expectation of this got their simple fishing implements
+ready. But both they and we were disappointed in our expectation.
+The _Vega's_ ice-fetters remained undisturbed, and the blue border
+at the horizon grew less and again disappeared. This caused so great
+a want of food, and above all of train oil, among the natives, that
+all the inhabitants of Pitlekaj, the village nearest to us, were
+compelled to remove to the eastward, notwithstanding that in order
+to mitigate the scarcity a considerable quantity of food was served
+out daily at the vessel.
+
+It appeals, however, as if an actual experience from the preceding
+year had been the ground of the Chukches' weather prediction. For on
+the 6th February a south-east wind began to blow, and the severe
+cold at once ceased. The temperature rose for a few hours to and
+even above the freezing-point. A water-sky was again formed along
+the horizon of the ice from north-east to north, and from the
+heights at the coast there was seen an extensive opening in the
+ice-fields, which a little east of Irgunnuk nearly reached the
+shore. Some kilometres farther east even the shore itself was free
+of ice, and from the hills our sailors thought they saw a heavy sea
+in the blue water border which bounded the circle of vision. If this
+was not an illusion, caused by the unequal heating and oscillatory
+motion of the lower stratum of the atmosphere, the open water may
+have been of great extent. Perhaps the statement of the natives was
+correct, that it extended as far as Behring's Straits. But we could
+not now place complete reliance on their statements, since we had
+rewarded with extra treating some predictions, relating to ice and
+weather, that were favourable to us. Even between the vessel's
+anchorage and the land various cracks had been formed, through which
+the sea water had forced its way under the snow, and in which some
+of us got cold feet or leg baths during our walks to and from the
+land.
+
+[Illustration: THE ENCAMPMENT PITLEKAJ ABANDONED BY ITS INHABITANTS
+ON THE 18TH FEBRUARY, 1879. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+The Chukches at Irgunnuk were now successful in killing a Polar bear
+and seventy seals, of which some were ostentatiously set up in rows,
+along with frozen slices of blubber, along the outer walls of the
+tents, and others were laid down in the blubber cellars, which were
+soon filled to overflowing. At Yinretlen, the encampment nearer us,
+the hunters on the other hand had obtained only eight seals.
+Gladness and want of care for the morrow at all events prevailed
+here also, and our skin-clad friends availed themselves of the
+opportunity to exhibit a self-satisfied disdain of the simple
+provisions from the _Vega_ which the day before they had begged for
+with gestures so pitiful, and on which they must, in a day or two,
+again depend. The children, who had fallen off during recent weeks,
+if not in comparison with European children, at least with well-fed
+Chukch ones, began speedily to regain their former condition, and
+likewise the older people. Begging ceased for some days, but the
+vessel's deck still formed a favourite rendezvous for crowds of men,
+women, and children. Many passed here the greater part of the day,
+cheerful and gay in a temperature of -40 deg. C, gossiped, helped
+a little, but always only a little, at the work on board and so on.
+The mild weather, the prospect of our getting free, and of an
+abundant fishing for the Chukches, however, soon ceased. The
+temperature again sank below the freezing-point, that is _of
+mercury_, and the sea froze so far out from the shore that the
+Chukches could no longer carry on any fishing. Instead we saw them
+one morning come marching, like prisoners on an Egyptian or Assyrian
+monument, in goose-march over the ice toward the vessel, each with a
+burden on his shoulder, of whose true nature, while they were at a
+distance, we endeavoured in vain to form a guess. It was pieces of
+ice, not particularly large, which they, self-satisfied, cheerful
+and happy at their new bit, handed over to the cook to get from him
+in return some of the _kauka_ (food) they some days before had
+despised.
+
+
+The first time the temperature of the air sank under the
+freezing-point of mercury, was in January. It now became necessary
+to use instead of the mercury the spirit thermometers, which in
+expectation of the severe cold had been long ago hung up in the
+thermometer case. When mercury freezes in a common thermometer, it
+contracts so much that the column of mercury suddenly sinks in the
+tube; or if it is short, goes wholly into the ball. The position of
+the column is therefore no measure of the actual degree of cold when
+the freezing takes place. The reading of -89 deg., or even of -150 deg.,
+which at a time when it was not yet known that mercury could
+at a low temperature assume the solid form, was made on a mercurial
+thermometer in the north of Sweden,[258] and which at the time
+occasioned various discussions and doubts as to the trustworthiness
+of the observer, was certainly quite correct, and may be repeated at
+any time by cooling mercury under its freezing-point in a
+thermometer of sufficient length divided into degrees under 0 deg..
+The freezing of mercury[259] takes place from below upwards,
+the frozen metal as being heavier sinking down in that portion which
+is still fluid. If when it is half frozen the fluid be poured away
+from the frozen portion, we obtain groups of crystals, composed of
+small octohedrons, grouped together by the edges of the cube. None
+of our mercurial thermometers suffered any damage, nor was there any
+alteration of the position of the freezing-point in them from the
+mercury having frozen in them and again become fluid.
+
+During the severe cold the ice naturally became thicker and thicker,
+and by the continual northerly winds still higher _torosses_ were
+heaped up round the vessel, and larger and larger snow masses were
+collected between it and the land, and on the heights along the
+coast. All hopes or fears of an early release were again given up,
+and a perceptible dullness began to make itself felt after the
+bustle and festrvities of the Christmas holidays. Instead there was
+now arranged a series of popular lectures which were held in the
+lower deck, and treated of the history of the North-East Passage,
+the first circumnavigations of the globe, the Austrian-Hungarian
+Expedition, the changes of the earth's surface, the origin of man,
+the importance of the leaf to the plants, &c. It became both for the
+officers and scientific men and the crew a little interruption to
+the monotony of the Arctic winter life, and the lecturer could
+always be certain of finding his little auditory all present and
+highly interested. Some slight attempts at musical evening
+entertainments were also made, but these failed for want of musical
+instruments and musical gifts among the _Vega_ men. We had among us
+no suitable director of theatrical representations after the
+English-Arctic pattern, and even if we had had, I fear that the
+director would have found it very difficult to gather together the
+dramatic talents requisite for his entertainment.
+
+On the 17th February Lieutenant Brusewitz made an excursion to
+Najtskaj, of which he gives the following account:--
+
+ "I and Notti left the vessel in the afternoon, and after
+ two hours came to Rirajtinop, Notti's home, where we
+ passed the night, together with his three younger brothers
+ and an invalid sister, who all lived in the same
+ tent-chamber. Immediately after our arrival one of the
+ brothers began to get the dog-harness and sleigh ready for
+ the following day's journey, while the rest of us went
+ into the interior of the tent, where the invalid sister
+ lay with her clothes off, but wrapt in reindeer skins. She
+ took charge of two train-oil lumps over which hung two
+ cooking vessels, one formerly a preserve tin, and the
+ other a bucket of tinned iron. One of the brothers came in
+ with a tray, on which was placed a piece of seal blubber,
+ together with frozen vegetables, principally willow
+ leaves. The blubber was cut into small square pieces about
+ the size of the thumb, after which one of the brothers
+ gave the sister a large portion both of the blubber and
+ vegetables. The food was thus served out to the others.
+ Every piece of blubber was carefully imbedded in vegetable
+ before it was eaten. When the vegetables were finished
+ there was still some blubber, which was given to the dogs
+ that lay in the outer tent. After this the boiled
+ spare-rib of a seal were partaken of, and finally a sort
+ of soup, probably made from seal's blood. The sister had a
+ first and special helping of these dishes. I also got an
+ offer of every dish, and it did not appear to cause any
+ offence that I did not accept the offer. After the close
+ of the meal the cooking vessels were set down, the "pesks"
+ taken off, and some reindeer skins taken down from the
+ roof and spread out. The older brothers lighted their
+ pipes, and the younger lay down to sleep. I was shown to
+ one of the side places in the tent, evidently Notti's own.
+ One of the lamps was extinguished, after which all slept.
+ During the night the girl complained several times, when
+ one of the brothers always rose and attended to her. At
+ six in the morning I wakened the party and reminded them
+ of our journey. All rose immediately. Dressing proceeded
+ slowly, because much attention was given to the foot
+ covering. No food was produced, but all appeared quite
+ pleased when I gave them of my stock, which consisted of
+ bread and some preserved beef-steaks. Immediately after
+ breakfast four dogs were harnessed to the sleigh, with
+ which Notti and I continued our journey to Najtskaj, I
+ riding and he running alongside the sleigh. At Irgunnuk, a
+ Chukch village about an English mile east of Rirajtinop, a
+ short stay was made in order to try to borrow some dogs,
+ but without success. We continued our journey along the
+ shore, and at 10 o'clock A.M. arrived at Najtskaj, which
+ is from fifteen to eighteen kilometres E.S.E. from
+ Irgunnuk. Here we were received by most of our former
+ neighbours, the inhabitants of Pitlekaj. Of the thirteen
+ tents of the village the five westernmost were occupied by
+ the former population of Pitlekaj, while the eight lying
+ more to the eastward were inhabited by other Chukches. The
+ Pitlekaj people had not pitched their common large tents,
+ but such as were of inconsiderable size or small ones
+ fastened close together. In all the tents here, as at
+ Rirajtinop and Irgunnuk, there was much blubber laid up,
+ we saw pieces of seal and whole seals piled up before the
+ tents, and on the way to Najtskaj we met several sledges
+ loaded with seals, on their way to Pidlin. At Najtskaj I
+ went out hunting accompanied by a Chukch. We started eight
+ hares, but did not succeed in getting within range of
+ them. A red fox was seen at a great distance but neither
+ ptarmigan nor traces of them could be discovered. At two
+ in the afternoon I returned to Irgunnuk and there got
+ another sleigh drawn by ten dogs, with which I soon
+ reached the vessel."
+
+[Illustration: NOTTI AND HIS WIFE AITANGA. (After photographs by L.
+Palander.) ]
+
+On the 20th February three large Chukch sledges laden with goods and
+drawn by sixteen to twenty dogs stopped at the _Vega_. They said
+they came from the eastward, and were on their way to the market in
+the neighbourhood of Nischni Kolymsk. I again by way of experiment
+sent with them home-letters, for which, as they declined to take
+money, I gave them as postage three bottles of rum and abundant
+entertainment for men and dogs. In consideration of this payment
+they bound themselves faithfully to execute their commission and
+promised to return in May. And they kept then word. For on the 8th
+and 9th May a large number of sledges heavily laden with reindeer
+skins and drawn by many dogs, passed along the coast from west to
+east. Of course all rested at the _Vega_, the only house of
+entertainment on the coast of the Asiatic Polar Sea, considering it
+as a matter of indisputable right, that they should in return for a
+little talk and gossip obtain food and "ram." Very eagerly they now
+informed us that a letter would come with another dog train that
+might be expected in a few hours. This was for us a very great piece
+of news, the importance of which none can understand who has never
+hungered for months for news from home, from the home-land and the
+home-world. Eager to know if we had actually to expect _a post_ from
+Europe, we asked them how large the packet was "Very large" was the
+answer, and the "ram" was of course measured accordingly. But when
+at last the letter came it was found to be only an exceedingly short
+note from some of the Russian officials at Kolyma, informing me that
+our letters had reached him on the 4th April/23rd March and had been
+immediately sent by express to Yakutsk. Thence they were sent on by
+post, reaching Irkutsk on the 20th/14th May, and Sweden on the 2nd
+August.
+
+During autumn and midwinter the sunshine was not of course strong
+and continuous enough to be painful to the eyes, but in February the
+light from the snow-clouds and the snow-drifts began to be
+troublesome enough. On the 22nd February accordingly snow-spectacles
+were distributed to all the men, an indispensable precaution, as I
+have before stated, in Arctic journeys. Many of the Chukches were
+also attacked with snow-blindness somewhat later in the season, and
+were very desirous of obtaining from us blue-coloured spectacles.
+Johnsen even stated that one of the hares he shot was evidently
+snow-blind.
+
+On the evening of the 22th February there burst upon us a storm with
+drifting snow and a cold of -36 deg.. To be out in such weather is
+not good even for a Chukch dog. Of this we had confirmation the next
+day, when a Chukch who had lost his way came on board, carrying a
+dog, frozen stiff, by the backbone, like a dead hare. He had with
+his dog gone astray on the ice and lain out, without eating
+anything, in a snow-drift for the night. The master himself had
+suffered nothing, he was only hungry, the dog on the other hand
+scarcely showed any sign of life. Both were naturally treated on
+board the _Vega_ with great commiseration and kindness. They were
+taken to the 'tweendecks, where neither Chukches nor Chukch dogs
+were otherwise admitted, for the man an abundant meal was served of
+what we believed he would relish best, and he was then allowed,
+probably for the first time in his life, to sleep if not under a
+sooty, at least under a wooden roof. The dog was for hours carefully
+subjected to massage, with the result that he came to life again,
+which struck us, and, as it appeared, not least the Chukch himself,
+as something wonderful.
+
+In the beginning of March there passed us a large number of sledges
+laden with reindeer skins, and drawn by eight to ten dogs each.
+Every sledge had a driver, and as usual the women took no part in
+the journey. These trains were on a commercial journey from Irkaipij
+to Paek at Behring's Straits. We found among the foremen many of our
+acquaintances from the preceding autumn, and I need not say that
+this gave occasion to a special entertainment, for the people,
+bread, a little spirits, soup, some sugar, and tobacco, for the
+dogs, pemmican. Conversation during such visits became very lively,
+and went on with little hindrance, since two of us were now somewhat
+at home in the Chukch language. For if I except two men, Menka and
+Noah Elisej, who could talk exceedingly defective Russian, there was
+not one of the reindeer or dog-foremen travelling past who could
+speak any European language, and notwithstanding this they all carry
+on an active commerce with the Russians. But the Chukch is proud
+enough to require that his own language shall prevail in all
+international commerce in the north-east of Asia, and his neighbours
+find their advantage in this.
+
+During the course of the winter, Lieutenant Nordquist collected from
+the Chukch foremen coming from a distance who travelled past,
+information regarding the state of the ice between Chaun Bay and
+Behring's Straits at different seasons of the year. Considering the
+immense importance of the question, even in a purely practical point
+of view, I shall quote verbatim the statements which he thus
+collected.
+
+_Statements regarding the state of the ice on the coast between
+Cape Yakan and Behring's Straits by Chukches living there._
+
+"1. A Chukch from Yekanenmitschikan, near Cape Yakan, said that it
+is usual for open water to be there the whole summer.
+
+"2. A Chukch from Kinmankau, which lies a little to the west of Cape
+Yakan, said the same.
+
+"3. A Chukch from Yakan stated that the sea there becomes free of
+ice in the end of May or beginning of June. On the other hand it is
+never open in winter.
+
+"4. Tatan from Yakan stated that the sea there is open from the end
+of May or beginning of June to the latter part of September or
+beginning of October, when the ice begins to drift towards the land.
+
+"5. Rikkion from Vankarema said that the sea there is covered with
+ice in winter, but open in summer.
+
+"6. A reindeer Chukch, Rotschitlen, who lives about twelve English
+miles from the _Vega's_ winter quarters, said that Kolyutschin Bay,
+by the Chukches called Pidlin, is clear of ice the whole summer.
+
+"7. Urtridlin from Kolyutschin said that neither at that island nor
+in Kolyutschin Bay is there any ice in summer.
+
+"8. Ranau, from Yinretlen, also said that Kolyutschin Bay is always
+open in summer.
+
+"9. Ettiu, from the village Nettej, between Irgunnuk and Behring's
+Straits, stated that the sea at Nettej is open in summer,
+independently of the wind, in winter only when the wind is
+southerly.
+
+"10. Vankatte, from Nettej, stated that the sea there becomes open
+during the month "Tautinyadlin," that is, the latter part of May and
+the beginning of June, and is again covered with ice during the
+month "Kutscshkau," or October and November.
+
+"11. Kepljeplja, from the village Irgunnuk, lying five English miles
+east of the _Vega's_ winter quarters at Pitlekaj, said that the sea
+off these villages is open all summer, except when northerly winds
+prevail. On the other hand, he said that farther westward, as at
+Irkaipij, ice could nearly always be seen from the land.
+
+"12. Kapatljin, from Kingetschkun, a village between Irgunnuk and
+Behring's Straits, stated on the 11th January that there was then open
+water at that village. He said further, that Behring's Straits in winter
+are filled with ice when the wind is southerly, but open when the wind
+is northerly. The same day a Chukch from Nettej-Kengitschkau, also
+between Irgunnuk and Behring's Straits, stated that ice then lay off
+that village. He confirmed Kapatljin's statement regarding Behring's
+Straits.
+
+"13. Kvano, from Uedlje, near Behring's Straits, said that there the
+sea is always open from May to the end of September."
+
+
+On the 13th March we came to know that spirits, too, form an article
+of commerce here. For, without having obtained any liquor from the
+_Vega_, the Chukches at Yinretlen had the means of indulging in a
+general fuddle, and that even their friendly disposition gives way
+under the effects of the intoxication we had a manifest proof, when
+the day after they came on board with blue and yellow eyes, not a
+little seedy and ashamed. In autumn a tall and stout Chukch
+giantess, who then paid us a visit, informed us that her husband had
+been murdered in a drunken quarrel.
+
+Sledges of considerable size, drawn by reindeer, began after the
+middle of March to pass the _Vega_ in pretty large numbers. They
+were laden with reindeer skins and goods bought at the Russian
+market-places, and intended for barter at Behring's Straits.
+
+The reindeer Chukches are better clothed, and appear to be in better
+circumstances and more independent than the coast Chukches, or, as
+they ought to be called in correspondence with the former name, the
+dog Chukches. As every one owns a reindeer herd, all must follow the
+nomad mode of living, but at the same time they carry on traffic
+between the savages in the northernmost parts of America and the
+Russian fur-dealers in Siberia, and many pass their whole lives in
+commercial journeys. The principal market is held annually during
+the mouth of March, on an island in the river Little Anjui, 250
+versts from Nischni Kolymsk. The barter goes on in accordance with a
+normal price-list, mutually agreed upon by the Russian merchants and
+the oldest of the Chukches. The market is inaugurated on the part of
+the Russians by a mass performed by the priest,[260] who always
+accompanies the Russian crown commissioner, and in the Chukches'
+camp with buffoonery by one of the Chukch Shamans. At such a market
+there is said to be considerable confusion, to judge by the spirited
+description which Wrangel gives of it (_Reise_, i. p. 269).
+We ought, however, to remember that this description refers to the
+customs that prevailed sixty years ago. Now, perhaps, there is a
+great change there. In the commercial relations in north-eastern
+Asia in the beginning of this century, we have probably a faithful
+picture of the commerce of the Beormas in former days in
+north-eastern Europe. Even the goods were probably of the same sort
+at both places, perhaps, also, the stand-points of the culture of
+the two races.
+
+Besides the traders, a large number of Chukches from Kolyutschin
+Island and other villages to the west, travelled past us with empty
+sledges, to which were harnessed only a few dogs. They returned in
+the course of a few days with their sledges fully laden with fish
+which they said they had caught in a lagoon situated to the
+eastward. They also sometimes sold a delicious variety of the
+Coregonus taken in a lake in the interior some distance from the
+coast.
+
+Further on in winter a number of excursions were undertaken in
+different directions, partly to find out these fishing places,
+partly to get an idea of the mode of life of the reindeer Chukches.
+I, however, never ventured to give permission for any long absence
+from the vessel, because I was quite convinced that the sea round
+the _Vega_ after a few days' constant southerly storm might become
+open under circumstances which would not permit us to remain in the
+open road where we lay moored, my comrades' desire to penetrate far
+into the Chukch peninsula could not on that account be satisfied.
+But short as these excursions were, they give us, however, much
+information regarding our winter life, and our contact with the
+little-known tribe, on the coast of whose homeland the _Vega_ had
+been beset, and on that account, perhaps, there may be reasons for
+making extracts from some of the reports given in to me with
+reference to these journeys.
+
+_Palander's and Kjellman's excursion to a reindeer Chukch camp
+south-west of Pitlekaj_, is sketched by the former thus:--
+
+ "On the 17th March, 1879, accompanied by Dr. Kjellman, I
+ went out with a sledge and five men, among them a native
+ as guide, to the reindeer Chukch camp in the neighbourhood
+ of Taffelberg (Table Mountain), with a view to obtain
+ fresh reindeer flesh. The expedition was fitted out with
+ two days' provisions, tent, mattrasses, and _pesks_. The
+ reindeer Chukches were met with eleven English miles from
+ the vessel. On an eminence here were found two tents, of
+ which one at the time was uninhabited. The other was
+ occupied by the Chukch, Rotschitlen, his young wife, and
+ another young pair, the latter, if I understood them
+ right, being on a visit, and properly having their home at
+ Irgunnuk.
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF THE REGION ROUND THE "VEGA'S" WINTER QUARTERS.
+Mainly after G. Bove 1. Rotschitlen's tent 2. Yettugin's tent. ]
+
+ "Round the tent, which was considerably smaller than those
+ we daily saw at the coast, lay a number of sledges piled
+ up on one another. These sledges differed from the common
+ dog-sledges in being considerably larger and wider in the
+ gauge. The runners were clumsy and axed from large wood.
+
+ "Our proposal to purchase reindeer was immediately
+ declined, although we offered in exchange bread, tobacco,
+ rum, and even guns. As a reason for this refusal they
+ stated that the reindeer at this season of the year are
+ too lean to be slaughtered. We saw about fifty reindeer
+ pasturing on an eminence at a distance of several thousand
+ feet from us.
+
+ "In the afternoon Kjellman and I were invited into the
+ tent, where we passed an hour in their sleeping chamber.
+ On our entrance the lamp, which was filled with seal oil,
+ was lighted, a sort of moss (sphagnum) was used as a wick.
+ Our hostess endeavoured to make our stay in the tent as
+ agreeable as possible, she rolled together reindeer skins
+ for pillows and made ready for us a place where, stretched
+ at full length, we might enjoy much needed repose. In the
+ outer tent the other women prepared supper, which
+ consisted of boiled seal's-flesh. We received a friendly
+ invitation to share their meal, but as we had no taste for
+ seal's-flesh, we declined their offer under the pretext
+ that we had just had dinner. They took their meal lying
+ with the body in the inner tent, but with the head under
+ the reindeer-skin curtain in the outer, where the food
+ was. After the meal was partaken of, their heads were
+ drawn within the curtain, our host divested himself of all
+ his clothes, the trousers excepted, which were allowed to
+ remain. Our hostess let her _pesk_ fall down from her
+ shoulders, so that the whole upper part of the body thus
+ became bare. The reindeer-skin boots were taken off, and
+ turned outside in, they were carefully dried and hung up
+ in the roof over the lamp to dry during the night. We
+ treated the women to some sugar, which, in consequence of
+ their want of acquaintance with it, they at first examined
+ with a certain caution, finding afterwards that it tasted
+ exceeding well. After the meal our host appeared to become
+ sleepy, we accordingly said good-night, and went to our
+ own tent, where it was quite otherwise than warm, the
+ temperature during the night being about -11 deg. C.
+
+ "After for the most part a sleepless night, we rose at
+ half-past six next morning. When we came out of the tent
+ we saw all the reindeer advancing in a compact troop. At
+ the head was an old reindeer with large horns, that went
+ forward to his master, who had in the meantime gone to
+ meet the herd, and bade him good-morning by gently rubbing
+ his nose against his master's hands. While this was going
+ on the other reindeer stood drawn up in well-ordered
+ ranks, like the crew in divisions on board a man-of-war.
+ The owner then went forward and saluted every reindeer,
+ they were allowed to stroke his hands with their noses. He
+ on his part took every reindeer by the horn and examined
+ it in the most careful way. After the inspection was ended
+ at a sign given by the master the whole herd wheeled round
+ and returned in closed ranks, with the old reindeer in
+ front, to the previous day's pasture.
+
+ "The whole scene made a very favourable impression on us,
+ it was not the grim hard savage showing in a coarse and
+ barbarous way his superiority over the animals, but the
+ good master treating his inferiors kindly, and having a
+ friendly word for each of them. Here good relations
+ prevailed between man and the animals. Rotschitlen himself
+ was a stately young man, with an intelligent appearance
+ and a supple handsome figure. His dress, of exceedingly
+ good cut and of uncommonly fine reindeer skin, sat close
+ to his well-grown frame, and gave us an opportunity of
+ seeing his graceful and noble bearing, which was most
+ observable when he was in motion.
+
+ "On our repeating our proposal to purchase reindeer we
+ again met with a refusal, on which we struck our tent and
+ commenced our return journey. We came on board on the 18th
+ March at 3 o'clock P.M., after a march of four hours and
+ three-quarters.
+
+ "The way to the reindeer camp rose and fell gently. The
+ snow was hard and even, so that we could go forward
+ rapidly. On the way out four foxes and some ravens were
+ seen. At one place we found a large number of lemming
+ passages excavated through the snow in an oblique
+ direction towards the ground. Most of them were scratched
+ up by foxes. The descent to an untouched lemming nest was
+ cylindrical, and four and a half centimetres in diameter.
+ During both days we had snow, and a thick and foggy
+ atmosphere, so that we could see only a short distance
+ before us, we did not however go astray, thanks to the
+ good eyes and strongly developed sense of locality of our
+ guide, the native."
+
+_Brusewitz's and Nordquist's Excursion to Nutschoitjin_
+
+Of this Nordquist gives the following account:--
+
+ "On the 20th March, at 9 o'clock A.M. Lieut Brusewitz,
+ boatswain Lustig, the Norwegian hunters Johnsen and
+ Sievertsen, the Chukch Notti, and I, left the _Vega_. Our
+ equipment, which consisted of provisions for eight days,
+ cooking apparatus, canvas tent, india-rubber mattrasses,
+ reindeer-skin _pesks_, &c., we drew after us on a sledge.
+ At 2.45 P.M. we came to Nutschoitjin (Coregonus Lake).
+ During our journey we passed a river which flows between
+ Nutschoitjin and the mountain Hotschkeanranga, about ten
+ English miles south of this lake and falls into the great
+ lagoon south of Prtlekaj. Farther into the interior this
+ river, according to Notti's statement, flows through
+ several lakes: he also informed us that in summer it
+ abounds very much in salmon (_lienne_). Some sandy hills
+ formed the watershed between it and Nutschoitjin. The only
+ animal we saw during our outward journey was a fox. On the
+ other hand we found traces of hares, ptarmigan, and a
+ couple of lemmings. After we had found a suitable
+ camping-place, we began to build a snow-house, which,
+ however, we could not get ready till next day.
+
+ "On the 21st Brusewitz and I went out to view our nearest
+ surroundings. On a hill north of the lake, where
+ Potentilla, Carex, and Poa stuck up through the
+ snow-covering, we saw a large number of traces of the fox,
+ the hare, and the ptarmigan. We employed the 22nd in
+ cutting some holes in the ice, which was about one and a
+ half metres thick, and in setting a net. For I wished to
+ ascertain what species of Coregonus it is which, according
+ to Notti's statement, occurs in abundance in this lake. At
+ the place where the net was set there was something more
+ than a metre of water under the ice The bottom consisted
+ of mud. When we cut a hole in the middle of the lake in
+ order to get deeper water we found that the ice, one and a
+ half metres thick there, reached to the bottom.
+
+ "Next morning we got in the net eleven Coregoni, of which
+ the largest were about thirty-five centimetres long.
+ Although the weather was grey and we could not see very
+ far, we went the same day to the hill Hotschkeanranga;
+ partly to determine its height, and partly from its
+ summit, which is visible for a great distance, to get a
+ view of the appearance of the surrounding country. After
+ crossing the river which flows between Nutschoitjin and
+ Hotchkeanranga, we began to ascend the long slope on whose
+ summit Hotchkanrakenljeut (Hotchkeanranga's head) rises
+ with steep sides above the surrounding country. Over the
+ slope were scattered loose blocks of stone of an eruptive
+ rock. The crest of "the head" was also closely covered
+ with loose stones. On the north of wind side these stones
+ were covered with a hard beaten crust of snow nearly two
+ feet thick, on the south side most of them were bare.
+ According to Brusewitz the southern slopes are still
+ steeper than the northern. South of the hill he saw a
+ large valley--probably a lake--through which flows the
+ river which we crossed.
+
+ "As on the outward journey I went with Notti, he advised
+ me to offer a little food and brandy to the Spirit of the
+ Lake, _itjaken kamak_, in order to get good net fishing.
+ On my inquiring what appearance he had, Notti replied
+ "_uinga lilapen_," "I have never seen him." Besides this
+ spirit there are in his view others also in streams, in
+ the earth, and in some mountains. The Chukches also
+ sacrifice to the sun and moon. On the other hand they do
+ not appear, as some other races, to pay any sort of
+ worship to their departed friends. When I gave him a
+ biscuit and bade him offer it, he made with the heel a
+ little depression in the snow on Nutschoitjin, crumbled a
+ little bit of the biscuit in pieces, and threw the crumbs
+ into the hollow. The rest of the biscuit he gave back,
+ declaring that _kamak_ did not require more, and that we
+ should now have more fish in the net than the first time.
+ Notti said also that the Chukches are wont to sacrifice
+ something for every catch. Thus have probably arisen all
+ the collections of bear and seal skulls and reindeer
+ horns, which we often saw on the Chukch coast, especially
+ on eminences.
+
+ "After we had read off the aneroid, we speedily made our
+ way to the snow-house, because during the interval a
+ violent storm of drifting snow had arisen, so that we
+ could not see more than half a score of paces before us.
+ On the slope below "the head" we had already on our way
+ thither seen traces of two wild reindeer. Notti said that
+ there are a few of them on the hill the whole winter. The
+ greater number, however, draw farther southward, and
+ approach the coast only during summer. Johnson had wounded
+ an owl (_Strix nyctea_), which however made its escape. On
+ the 24th snow fell and drifted during the whole day, so
+ that we could not go out to shoot. On the 25th we came on
+ board again.
+
+ "According to the aneroid observations made during the
+ journey, the highest summit we visited had a height of 197
+ metres."
+
+_Lieutenant Bove's Account of an Excursion to Najtskaj and Tjapka._
+
+ "On the 19th April, at 4 o'clock A.M. the hunter Johnsen
+ and I started on a short excursion eastward along the
+ coast, with a view to pay a visit to the much frequented
+ fishing station Najtskaj, where our old friends from
+ Pitlekaj had settled. We had a little sledge which we
+ ourselves drew, and which was laden with provisions for
+ three days and some meteorological and hydrographical
+ instruments.
+
+ "At 6 o'clock A.M. we reached Rirajtinop, where we found
+ Notti, a serviceable, talented, and agreeable youth. The
+ village Rirajtinop, which formerly consisted of a great
+ many tents, now had only one tent, Notti's, and it was
+ poor enough. It gave the inhabitants only a slight
+ protection against wind and cold. Among household articles
+ in the tent I noticed a face-mask of wood, less shapeless
+ than those which according to Whymper's drawings are found
+ among the natives along the river Youcon, in the territory
+ of Alaska, and according to Dr. Simpson among the
+ West-Eskimo. I learned afterwards that this mask came from
+ Paek, Behring's Straits, whither it was probably carried
+ from the opposite American shore.
+
+[Illustration: THE SLEEPING CHAMBER IN A CHUKCH TENT.
+(After a drawing by the seaman Hansson.) ]
+
+ "The village Irgunnuk lies from three to four hundred
+ metres from Rirajtinop, and consists of five tents, one of
+ which two days before had been removed from Yinretlen. The
+ tents are as usual placed on earthy eminences, and have if
+ possible the entrance a couple of paces from some steep
+ escarpment, manifestly in order that the door opening may
+ not be too much obstructed with snow. I reckon the
+ population of Irgunnuk at forty persons.
+
+ "Off this village the ice is broken up even close to the
+ land into _torosses_, five to six metres high, which form
+ a chain which closely follows the shore for a distance of
+ five to six hundred metres to the eastward. The coast from
+ Irgunnuk to Najtskaj runs in a straight line, is low, and
+ only now and then interrupted by small earthy eminences,
+ which all bear traces of old dwellings. Each of these
+ heights has its special name: first Uelkantinop, then
+ Tiumgatti, and lastly Tiungo, two miles west of Najtskaj.
+ In the neighbourhood of Uelkantinop we were overtaken by a
+ reindeer-Chukch, who accompanied us to Najtskaj in order
+ there to purchase fish and seal-blubber. At noon we
+ reached Najtskaj, where our arrival had been announced by
+ a native, who, with his dog-team, had driven past us on
+ the way. Accordingly on our entrance we were surrounded by
+ the youth of the village, who deafened us with then
+ unceasing cries for bread (_kauka_), tobacco, _ram_, &c.
+ After some moments the begging urchins were joined both by
+ women and full-grown men. We entered a tent, which
+ belonged to a friend or perhaps relation of Notti. There
+ we were very well received. In the same tent the
+ reindeer-Chukch also lodged who had given us his company
+ on the way. He went into the sleeping chamber, threw
+ himself down there, took part in the family's evening
+ meal, all almost without uttering a word to the hostess,
+ and the next morning he started without having saluted the
+ host. Hospitality is here of a peculiar kind. It may
+ perhaps be expressed thus _To-day I eat and sleep in your
+ tent, to-morrow you eat and sleep in mine_; and
+ accordingly, as far as I saw, all, both rich and poor,
+ both those who travelled with large sledges, and those who
+ walked on foot, were received in the same way. All are
+ sure to find a corner in the tent-chamber.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH LAMPS.
+ _a._ Wooden cup to place under the lamp.
+ _b._ Lamp of burned clay. One-fifth of the natural size. ]
+
+ "The tent-chamber, or _yaranga_, as this part of the tent
+ is called by the natives, takes up fully a third-part of
+ the whole tent, and is at the same time work-room,
+ dining-room, and sleeping chamber. Its form is that of a
+ parallelepiped; and a moderately large sleeping chamber
+ has a height of 1.80 metre, a length of 3.50, and a
+ breadth of 2.20 metres. The walls are formed of reindeer
+ skin with the hair inwards, which are supported by a
+ framework of posts and cross-bars. The floor consists of a
+ layer of grass undermost, on which a walrus skin is
+ spread. The grass and the skin do not form a very soft
+ bed, yet one on which even a tried European wanderer may
+ find rest. The interior of the sleeping-chamber is lighted
+ and warmed by lamps, whose number varies according to the
+ size of the room. A moderately large chamber has three
+ lamps, the largest right opposite the entrance, the two
+ others on the cross walls. The lamps are often made of a
+ sort of stone, which is called by the natives _ukulschi_.
+ They have the form of a large ladle. The fuel consists of
+ train-oil, and moss is used for the wick. These lamps
+ besides require constant attention, because half-an-hour's
+ neglect is sufficient to make them smoke or go out. The
+ flame is at one corner of the lamp, whose moss wick is
+ trimmed with a piece of wood of the shape shown in the
+ drawing. The lamp rests on a foot, and it in its turn in a
+ basin. In this way every drop of oil that may be possibly
+ spilled is collected. If there is anything that this
+ people ought to save, it is certainly oil, for this
+ signifies to them both light and heat. In the roof of the
+ bedchamber some bars are fixed over the lamps on which
+ clothes and shoes are hung to dry. The lamps are kept
+ alight the whole day, during night they are commonly
+ extinguished, as otherwise they would require continual
+ attention. Some clothes and fishing implements, two or
+ three reindeer skins to rest upon--these are the whole
+ furniture of a Chukch tent.
+
+[Illustration: SECTION OF A CHUKCH LAMP. (After a drawing by G. Bove.)
+ _a._ The oil.
+ _b._ The wick.
+ _c._ The foot.
+ _d._ The basin under it.
+ _e._ Stick for trimming the wick. ]
+
+ "Every tent is besides provided with some drums (_yarar_).
+ These are made of a wooden ring, about seventy centimetres
+ in diameter, on which is stretched a skin of seal or
+ walrus gut. The drum is beaten with a light stick of
+ whalebone. The sound thus produced is melancholy, and is
+ so in a yet higher degree when it is accompanied by the
+ natives' monotonous, commonly rhythmical songs, which
+ appear to me to have a strong resemblance to those we hear
+ in Japan and China. A still greater resemblance I thought
+ I observed in the dances of these peoples. Notti is a
+ splendid _yarar_-player. After some pressing he played
+ several of their songs with a feeling for which I had not
+ given him credit. The auditors were numerous, and by their
+ smiles and merry eyes one could see that they were
+ transported by the sounds which Notti knew how to call
+ from the drum. Notti was also listened to in deep silence,
+ with an admiration like that with which in a large room we
+ listen to a distinguished pianist. I saw in the tent no
+ other musical instrument than that just mentioned.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH SHAMAN DRUM. One eighth the natural size. ]
+
+ "The day we arrived at Najtskaj we employed in viewing the
+ neighbourhood of the village. We accordingly ascended a
+ hill about thirty metres high to the south of the village
+ in order to get a clear idea of the region. From the
+ summit of the hill we had a view of the two lagoons west
+ and east of Najtskaj. The western appeared, with the
+ exception of some earthy heights, to embrace the whole
+ stretch of coast between Najtskaj, the hill at Yinretlen,
+ and the mountains which are visible in the south from the
+ Observatory. The lagoon east of Najtskaj is separated from
+ the sea by a high rampart of sand, and extends about
+ thirty kilometres into the interior, to the foot of the
+ chain of hills which runs along there. To the eastward the
+ lagoon extends along the coast to the neighbourhood of
+ Serdze Kamen. This cape was clearly seen and, according to
+ an estimate which I do not think was far from the truth,
+ was situated at a distance of from twenty-five to twenty-six
+ kilometres from Najtskaj. It sinks terracewise towards the
+ sea, and its sides are covered with stone pillars, like
+ those we saw in the neighbourhood of Cape Great Baranoff.
+ Serdze Kamen to the south is connected with mountain heights
+ which are the higher the farther they are from the sea.
+ Some of these have a conical form, others are table-shaped,
+ reminding us of the Ambas of Abyssinia. Ten or twelve miles
+ into the interior they appear to reach a height of
+ six hundred to nine hundred metres.
+
+ "The fishing in the eastern lagoon takes place mainly in
+ the neighbourhood of Najtskaj, at a distance of about five
+ kilometres from the village. Hooks are exclusively used,
+ and no nets or other fishing implements. In a few minutes
+ I saw twenty cod (_urokadlin_) caught, and about as many
+ small fish, called by the natives _nukionukio_. For the
+ fishing the natives make a hole in the ice, a decimetre in
+ diameter. Round the hole they build, as a protection
+ against wind and drifting snow, a snow wall eighty
+ centimetres high, forming a circle with an inner diameter
+ of a metre and a half. The fish-hooks are of iron and are
+ not barbed. The line is about five metres long, and is
+ fixed to a rod nearly a metre in length. At the end of the
+ angling line hangs a weight of bone, and beside it the
+ hook. It is generally the women who fish, yet there are
+ generally two or three men about to open the holes, build
+ the walls, and keep the fishing-places clear. All the
+ holes with their shelter-walls lie in an arc, about a
+ kilometre in length, whose convex side is turned to the
+ east. The ice in the lagoon was 1.7 metre thick, the water
+ 3.2 metres deep, and the thickness of snow on the ice 0.3
+ metre.
+
+[Illustration: THE COAST BETWEEN PADLJONNA AND ENJURMI.
+To the west Idlidlja Island, in the background the village Tjapka,
+to the right the great lagoon. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+ "The day after our arrival at Najtskaj we visited the
+ village Tjapka, which lies at a distance of six
+ kilometres. This village contains thirteen tents, some of
+ which are more roomy and better built than any Chukch tent
+ I have previously seen. We lodged in a tent which belonged
+ to Erere, a friendly man with a face that was always
+ cheerful. His sleeping-chamber was so large that it could
+ hold more than one family. We found the inmates there
+ completely naked, Erere's wife, Kedlanga, not excepted.
+ Kedlanga was well formed, her bosom full, her stomach
+ somewhat projecting, the thighs poor, the legs slender,
+ the feet small. The men appeared to have a greater
+ disposition to stoutness than the women. Some of the
+ children had disproportionately large stomachs. Both men
+ and women wore copper rings on the legs, the wrists, and
+ the upper arms. On festivals they decorate themselves with
+ iron rings, with which some reminiscence appears to be
+ connected, to judge by the fact that they will not part
+ with them.
+
+ "Erere's family was very numerous, according to the
+ prevailing state of matters here. He had five children,
+ whose names, according to their age, were, Hatanga,
+ Etughi, Vedlat, Uai, and Umonga. In all the tents which I
+ visited I have inquired the number of children. Only two
+ or three wives had more than three; the average may be
+ estimated at two.
+
+[Illustration: BRACELET OF COPPER. Half the natural size. ]
+
+ "The children are from their tenderest years set apart for
+ each other, thus Etughi, Erere's second son, who was
+ little more than eight, was set apart for Keipteka, a girl
+ of six or seven. Etughi and Keipteka slept under the same
+ roof, though apart. "When they grow bigger," said Erere to
+ me, "then sleeping-places will be put alongside each
+ other". At what age this takes place I have not
+ ascertained, but I suppose that it is very early, as is
+ common with all Oriental races.
+
+ "Right opposite Tjapka lies a small island, by the natives
+ called Idlidlja, which is about 800 metres in
+ circumference. Its shores rise perpendicularly on all
+ sides except that which is opposite Tjapka, in which
+ direction it sinks with a steep slope. On the north end of
+ it we found three or four whales' bones and some pieces of
+ driftwood, but nothing to indicate that there had been any
+ Onkilon dwellings there. The island swarmed with hares,
+ which the inhabitants of Tjapka hunt with the bow. For
+ this hunting they are accustomed to build circular walls
+ of snow, pierced with loopholes, through which they shoot
+ the unsuspecting animals.
+
+ "Regarding life in the tent I have still the following
+ notes. The most troublesome work is given to the older
+ women. They rise early to light and attend to the lamps,
+ yoke the dogs, and go fishing. The young women, on the
+ other hand, sleep far into the day. The housewives return
+ at noon, then work is then finished, if we do not consider
+ as work the constant motion of the tongue in talk and
+ gossip. The younger people have it assigned to them to sew
+ clothes, arrange the fishing-lines and nets, prepare
+ skins, &c. Sewing-thread is made from the back sinews of
+ the reindeer, which they procure by barter from the
+ reindeer-Chukches, giving for them fish and seal-blubber.
+
+[Illustration: THE NORTH END OF IDLIDLJA ISLAND. (After a drawing by
+O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+ "One cannot, without having seen it, form any idea of the
+ large quantity of food they can consume. One evening I saw
+ eight persons, including one child, eat about 30 lbs. of
+ food. The bill of fare was: 1, raw fish; 2, soup; 3,
+ boiled fish; 4, seal-blubber; 5, seal-flesh. The raw fish
+ commonly consists of frozen cod. The soup is made partly
+ of vegetables, partly of seal-blood; I saw both kinds.
+ Vegetable soup was prepared by boiling equal quantities of
+ water and vegetables, till the mixture formed a thick pap.
+ The blood soup is cooked by boiling the blood together
+ with water, fish, and fat. They are very fond of this
+ soup. The seal-blubber they eat by stuffing into the mouth
+ the piece which has been served to them, and then cutting
+ a suitable mouthful with the knife, which they bring close
+ to the lips. In the same way they do with the flesh.
+
+ "With the exception of the old women's gossip the greatest
+ quietness prevails in the sleeping-chamber. It is not
+ uncommon for men to visit each other. Thus the first night
+ we spent at Najtskaj the tent where we lodged was full of
+ people, but without the least disturbance arising. If one
+ had anything to say he talked in quite a low tone, as if
+ he were shy. He was listened to attentively, without any
+ interruption. First when he had finished another began.
+
+ "Affection between spouses and parents and children is
+ particularly strong. I have seen fathers kiss and caress
+ their children before they went to rest, and what I found
+ most remarkable was that the children never abused this
+ tender treatment. Whatever one gave them, it was their
+ first thought to divide it with their parents. In this
+ respect and in many others they were far in advance of a
+ large number of European children."
+
+_Lieutenant Bove's Report on an Excursion along with Dr. Almquist to
+the Interior of the Chukch Peninsula, from the 13th to the 17th
+June, 1879._
+
+ "We started from the vessel on the morning of the 13th June
+ with a view to penetrate as far as possible into the
+ interior of the Chukch peninsula. For the journey we had
+ hired, for a liberal payment, two sledges drawn by dogs
+ from Rotschitlen, a Chukch at Irgunnuk. The dogs and
+ sledges surpassed our expectation. In fourteen hours we
+ traversed a distance of nearly forty minutes, including
+ bends, which corresponds to a speed of three, perhaps four,
+ English miles an hour, if we deduct the rests which were
+ caused by the objects of the journey--scientific
+ researches. This speed strikes me as not inconsiderable,
+ if we consider the weight which the dogs must draw, and
+ the badness and unevenness of the way. For the ground was
+ undulating, like a sea agitated by a storm. But pleased as
+ we were with our sledges and dogs, we were as dissatisfied
+ with Rotschitlen, a faint-hearted youth, without activity
+ or experience. With another driver we might have been able
+ in a few days to penetrate as far as the bottom of
+ Kolyutschin Bay, which differs greatly in its form, from
+ that which Russian, English, and German maps give to it.
+ It is not improbable that it is almost connected by lakes,
+ lagoons, and rivers with St. Lawrence Bay or Metschigme
+ Bay, whose inner parts are not yet investigated.
+
+ "After we left the lagoons at Pitlekaj and Yinretlen, the
+ coast began gradually to rise by escarpments, each about
+ five metres in height. The plains between the escarpments
+ are full of lagoons or marshes. Such a terrain continued
+ until, about five hours' way from the vessel, we came to a
+ height of twenty-seven metres. From this point the
+ terrace-formations cease, and the terrain then consists of
+ a large number of ranges of heights, intersected by
+ rivulets, which during the snow-melting season must be very
+ much flooded. Seven or eight hours' way from the vessel we
+ met with such a rivulet, which farther to the S.S.E. unites
+ with another which runs between two rocky escarpments
+ twenty metres high. On one of these we pitched our tent, in
+ order to draw and examine some hills which were already
+ divested of the winter dress they had worn for nine long
+ months. On the top of one of the hills we found marks of
+ two recently-struck tents, which probably belonged to a
+ reindeer Chukch, who had now settled halfway between
+ Pitlekaj and Table Mount upon a chain of heights which
+ appears to separate the Irgunnuk lagoon from the rocky
+ eastern shore of Kolyutschin Bay. At our resting place we
+ found a large number of reindeer horns and a heap of broken
+ bones.
+
+ "After resuming our journey we came in a short time to the
+ foot of Table Mount, whose height I reckoned at 180 meters.
+ It slopes gently to the west and south (about 10 deg.),
+ but more steeply to the east and north (about 15 deg.).
+ The animal world there showed great activity. In less than
+ an hour we saw more than a dozen foxes that ran up and down
+ the hills and circled round us, as if they ran with a line.
+ Fortunately for them they kept at a respectful distance from
+ our doctor's sure gun.
+
+ "On the other side of Table Mount the ground sinks
+ regularly towards Kolyutschin Bay. Here for a while we
+ sought in vain for Yettugin's tent, in which we intended to
+ pass the night, and which had been fixed upon as the
+ starting-point of future excursions, till at last reindeer
+ traces and afterwards the sight of some of these friendly
+ animals brought us to the right way, so that about 9
+ o'clock P.M. we got sight of the longed-for dwelling in the
+ middle of a snow-desert. At the word _yaranga_ (tent) the
+ dogs pointed their ears, uttered a bark of joy, and ran at
+ full speed towards the goal. We arrived at 10.30 P.M. In
+ the tent we were hospitably received by its mistress, who
+ immediately made the necessary preparations for our
+ obtaining food and rest. Yettugin himself was not at home,
+ but he soon returned with a sledge drawn by reindeer. These
+ animals had scarcely been unharnessed when they ran back to
+ the herd, which according to Yettugin's statement was six
+ kilometres east of the tent.
+
+ "I have never seen a family so afflicted with ailments as
+ Yettugin's. The sexagenarian father united in himself
+ almost all the bodily ailments which could fall to the lot
+ of a mortal. He was blind, leprous (?), and had no use of
+ the left hand, the right side of the face, and probably of
+ the legs. His body was nearly everywhere covered with the
+ scars of old sores from four to five centimetres in
+ diameter. As Dr. Almquist and I were compelled to pass the
+ night in the same confined sleeping-chamber with him, it
+ was therefore not to be wondered at that we drew ourselves
+ as much as possible into our corner. The sleeping-chamber
+ or inner tent of a reindeer-Chukch is besides much more
+ habitable than that of a coast-Chukch, the air, if not
+ exactly pure, may at least be breathed, and the thick layer
+ of reindeer skins which covers the tent floor may well
+ compare in softness with our beds on board. Yettugin, his
+ wife Tengaech, and his brother Keuto, slept out of doors in
+ order to give us more room and not to disturb us when
+ rising. Keuto had inherited no small portion of his
+ father's calamity. He was deaf, half idiotic, and on his
+ body there were already traces of such spots as on the old
+ man's. Keuto was however an obliging youth, who during our
+ stay in the tent did all that he could to be of use to us,
+ and constantly wandered about to get buds and plants for
+ us. He was a skilful archer; I saw him at a distance of
+ twenty or twenty-five paces kill a small bird with a blunt
+ arrow, and when I placed myself as a target he hit me right
+ in the middle of the breast at a distance of perhaps thirty
+ metres.
+
+ "The 14th was employed by me in astronomical and geodetical
+ observations, and by Dr. Almquist in excursions in the
+ neighbourhood of Yettugin's tent in order to investigate
+ the fauna and flora of the neighbourhood. About 10 o'clock
+ P.M. he returned, quite exhausted after eight hours'
+ walking in deep water-drenched snow under a perceptible
+ solar heat. The results of the excursion were in all
+ respects exceedingly good, not only in consequence of a
+ number of _finds_ in natural history, but also through the
+ discovery that the shore of Kolyutschin Bay runs
+ three-quarters of a mile south-west of Yettugin's tent,
+ which was situated in 66 deg. 42' 4" North Lat, and 186 deg.
+ 24' 0" Long, east from Greenwich. Dr. Almquist had
+ walked four or five miles along the eastern shore of the
+ bay, which at most places is perpendicular with a height of
+ fifteen metres. In consequence of this discovery we
+ determined to continue our hydrographical observations as
+ far as the bottom of the bay, which, according to
+ Yettugin's account, was two days' march from the tent.
+ But we could not carry out our plan in consequence of our
+ guide's laziness, for he declared that on no conditions
+ would he accompany us farther. Neither entreaties nor
+ threats availed to disturb this his resolution. I
+ endeavoured myself to drive the sledges, but the dogs would
+ not move out of the spot, though, following Rotschitlen's
+ system, I thrashed them very soundly.
+
+ "The place where Yettugin's tent was pitched offered us a
+ view of an extensive snow-plain, which was enclosed on all
+ sides by high hills. In the north and north-east Table
+ Mount and the Tenen hill keep off the north winds, and to
+ the south the encampment is protected by a long and high
+ mountain chain from the winds coming from that quarter. I
+ calculated the height of some of the mountains at from 1200
+ to 1500 metres, and their azure-blue colour furrowed by
+ dark lines appeals to me to indicate the presence of ice on
+ the slopes. One of the summits of this mountain chain was
+ easily recognisable. It was a truncated cone, perhaps 1500
+ metres high. Kolyutschin Bay lies between these mountains
+ and Yettugin's tent. Its western shore also appears to rise
+ perpendicularly from the sea, and it is higher than the
+ eastern. The bay, which appears to be much larger than it
+ is represented on the maps, was covered with level ice,
+ only here and there a piece of ice covered with snow was
+ seen sticking up.
+
+ "As we were forced to desist from visiting the interior of
+ Kolyutschin Bay, we determined to go to the ground where
+ Yettugin's reindeer pastured. We therefore left the tent on
+ the evening of the 15th and travelled E.N.E. The warmth,
+ which had now commenced, began to make travelling over snow
+ fields difficult, the dogs sank to the stomach, and not
+ unfrequently we had to alight in order to help the poor
+ animals to climb the hills we were obliged to ascend.
+ Scarcely however had they come to the reindeer tracks
+ before even the most exhausted of them rushed along at the
+ top of their speed, which might be pleasant enough uphill,
+ but when they were coming down it was very dangerous,
+ because the slope nearly always ends with a steep
+ escarpment. We came once, without observing it, to the edge
+ of such a precipice, and if we had not succeeded in time in
+ slackening our speed a nice confused mass of men, dogs,
+ and sledges would have tumbled over it. In order to excite
+ their draught animals the Chukches avail themselves of
+ their dogs' inclination to run after the reindeer, and
+ during their journeys they endeavour to spur them on yet
+ more by now and then imitating the reindeer's cry. After
+ two or three hours travelling we fell in with the first
+ reindeer, and then by degrees with more and more, until
+ finally about 11 o'clock P.M. we came to a numerous herd,
+ tended by Yettugin. I applied to him, asking him to barter
+ a reindeer in good condition for a gun which I had brought
+ along with me. After various evasions Yettugin at length
+ promised to give us next day the reindeer for the gun. He
+ would not however himself, or with his own knife, kill the
+ reindeer, on which account I requested Dr. Almquist to give
+ it the _coup de grace_.
+
+ "In consequence of the soft state of the snow we were
+ obliged to defer the commencement of our return journey to
+ the evening of the 16th. We now travelled over the chain of
+ hills which unites Table Mount with Tenen, and descended
+ their northern steep slope towards an extensive plain,
+ studded for the most part with bogs and marshes. The 17th
+ came in with mist and considerable warmth. The mist limited
+ the circle of vision to a distance of some few metres, and
+ the high temperature in a short time destroyed the crust
+ which had been formed in the course of the preceding night
+ on the surface of the snow, and melted the layers of snow
+ which still covered the northern slopes of these two hills.
+ The southern slopes on the other hand were almost quite
+ bare, and the valleys began to be filled with water. Four
+ or five days as warm as these and I believe there scarcely
+ would be any snow remaining round Kolyutschin Bay. The
+ illusions caused by the white fog illuminated by the
+ sunlight were very astonishing. Every small spot of ground
+ appeared as an extensive snow-free field, every tuft of
+ grass as a bush, and a fox in our immediate neighbourhood
+ was for a moment taken for a gigantic bear. Besides, during
+ such a fog the action of the sunlight on the eyes was
+ exceedingly painful even in the case of those who carried
+ preservers. During the return Rotschitlen lost his way in
+ consequence of the numerous different tracks. Fortunately I
+ had observed how we travelled, and could with the help of
+ the compass pilot our two small craft to a good haven. On
+ the 17th of June at 1.30 P.M. we were again in good
+ condition on board the _Vega_."
+
+In the society on board the prospects of an alteration in the
+constant north winds, the perpetual snow-storms and the unceasing
+cold, and the hope of a speedy release from the fetters of the ice,
+were naturally constantly recurring topics of conversation. During
+this time many lively word-battles were fought between the weather
+prophets in the gunroom, and many bets made in jest between the
+optimists and pessimists. The former won a great victory, when at
+noon on the 8th February the temperature lose to + 0.1 deg. C.,
+but with the exception of this success fortune always went against
+them. The north wind, the drifting snow and the cold, would never
+cease. A blue water-sky indeed was often visible at the horizon to
+the north and north-east, but the "clearing" first reached our
+vessel a couple of hours before we left our winter haven for ever,
+and up to the 15th June the thickness of the ice was almost
+undiminished (1-1/2 metre) The sun rose higher and higher, but
+without forming any crust upon the snow, although upon the black
+hull of the _Vega_, perhaps with the help of the heat in the
+interior, it had by the 14th March melted so much snow that small
+icicles were formed at the gunwale. It was one of the many deceptive
+prognostications of spring which were hailed with delight. However,
+immediately after severe cold recommenced and continued during the
+whole of the month of April, during which the temperature of the an
+never rose above -4.6 deg., the mean temperature being -18.9 deg..
+
+May began with a temperature of -20.1 deg.. On the 3rd the
+thermometer showed -26.8 deg., and in the "flower-month" we had
+only for a few hours mild weather with an air temperature +1.8 deg..
+Even the beginning of June was very cold, on the 3rd we
+had -14.3 deg., with a mean temperature for the twenty-four hours
+of -9.4 deg.. Still on the 13th the thermometer at midnight showed
+-8.0 deg., but the same day at noon with a gentle southerly wind a
+sudden change took place, and after that date it was only
+exceptionally that the thermometer in the open air sank below the
+freezing-point. The melting and evaporation of snow now began, and
+went on so rapidly that the land in the end of the month was almost
+free of snow.
+
+Under what circumstances this took place is shown by the following
+abstract of the observations of temperature at Pitlekaj from the
+13th June to the 18th July, 1879:--
+
+ Max Min Mean Max Min Mean
+ deg. deg. deg. deg. deg. deg.
+June 13 +3.6 -8.0 -1.95 July 1 +0.8 -0.6 +0.07
+ 14 +2.6 +0.2 +1.47 2 +1.1 -1.0 +0.40
+ 15 +3.1 +1.7 +2.28 3 +5.0 +1.0 +2.28
+ 16 +1.6 -0.6 +0.90 4 +3.8 +1.4 +2.68
+ 17 +3.0 +0.2 +1.22 5 +5.2 +2.0 +3.60
+ 18 +2.4 -0.6 +1.23 6 +8.6 +1.0 +2.28
+ 19 +3.6 +1.4 +2.43 7 +5.0 +1.4 +2.68
+ 20 +3.5 +1.7 +2.50 8 +8.6 +0.6 +4.82
+ 21 +2.6 +1.5 +2.07 9 +1.8 +0.4 +0.97
+ 22 +3.0 +1.5 +2.28 10 +1.4 +0.5 +0.90
+ 23 +4.1 +1.8 +3.00 11 +1.4 +0.6 +1.00
+ 24 +6.8 +0.9 +3.18 12 +9.0 +0.5 +4.73
+ 25 +4.4 +0.4 +2.30 13 +6.5 +3.7 +5.03
+ 26 +3.8 +0.6 +1.77 14 +5.4 +1.8 +3.68
+ 27 +1.4 +0.7 +1.02 15 +1.6 +0.6 +1.13
+ 28 +2.1 +0.2 +0.92 16 +3.0 +0.6 +1.52
+ 29 +0.9 -1.0 +0.12 17 +11.5 +8.8 +7.80
+ 30 +1.0 -1.8 -0.27 18 +9.2 +6.2 +7.52
+
+
+The figures in the maximum column, it will be seen, are by no means
+very high. That the enormous covering of snow, which the north winds
+had heaped on the beach, could disappear so rapidly notwithstanding
+this low temperature probably depends on this, that a large portion
+of the heat which the solar rays bring with them acts directly in
+melting the snow without sun-warmed air being used as an
+intermediate agent or heat-carrier, partly also on the circumstance
+that the winds prevailing in spring come from the sea to the
+southward, and before they reach the north coast pass over
+considerable mountain heights in the interior of the country. They
+have therefore the nature of _foehn_ winds, that is to say, the whole
+mass of air, which the wind carries with it, is heated, and its
+relative humidity is slight, because a large portion of the water
+which it originally contained has been condensed in passing over the
+mountain heights. Accordingly when the dry _foehn_ winds prevail, a
+considerable evaporation of the snow takes place. The slight content
+of watery vapour in the atmosphere diminishes its power of absorbing
+the solar heat, and instead increases that portion of it which is
+found remaining when the sun's rays penetrate to the snowdrifts, and
+there conduce, not to raise the temperature, but to convert the snow
+into water. [261]
+
+
+The aurora is, as is well-known, a phenomenon at the same time
+cosmic and terrestrial, which on the one hand is confined within the
+atmosphere of our globe and stands in close connection with
+terrestrial magnetism, and on the other side is dependent on certain
+changes in the envelope of the sun, the nature of which is as yet
+little known, and which are indicated by the formation of spots on
+the sun; the distinguished Dutch physicist, VON BAUMHAUER, has even
+placed the occurrence of the aurora in connection with cosmic
+substances which fall in the form of dust from the interstellar
+spaces to the surface of the earth. Thus splendid natural phenomenon
+besides plays, though unjustifiably, a great _role_ in imaginative
+sketches of winter life in the high north, and it is in the popular
+idea so connected with the ice and snow of the Polar lands, that
+most of the readers of sketches of Arctic travel would certainly
+consider it an indefensible omission if the author did not give an
+account of the aurora as seen from his winter station. The
+scientific man indeed knows that this neglect has, in most cases,
+been occasioned by the great infrequency of the strongly luminous
+aurora just in the Franklin archipelago on the north coast of
+America, where most of the Arctic winterings of this century have
+taken place, but scarcely any journey of exploration has at all
+events been undertaken to the uninhabited regions of the high north,
+which has not in its working plan included the collection of new
+contributions towards dealing up the true nature of the aurora and
+its position in the heavens. But the scientific results have seldom
+corresponded to the expectations which had been entertained. Of
+purely Arctic expeditions, so far as I know, only two, the
+Austrian-Hungarian to Franz Josef Land (1872-74) and the Swedish to
+Mussel Bay (1872-73), have returned with full and instructive lists
+of auroras[262] Ross, PARRY, KANE, McCLINTOCK, HAYES, NARES, and
+others, have on the other hand only had opportunities of registering
+single auroras; the phenomenon in the case of their winterings has
+not formed any distinctive trait of the Polar winter night. It was
+the less to be expected that the _Vega_ expedition would form an
+exception in this respect, as its voyage happened during one of the
+years of which we knew beforehand that it would be a minimum aurora
+year. It was just this circumstance, however, which permitted me to
+study, in a region admirably suited for the purpose, a portion of
+this natural phenomenon under uncommonly favourable circumstances.
+For the luminous arcs, which even in Scandinavia generally form
+starting-points for the radiant auroras, have here exhibited
+themselves undreamed by the more splendid forms of the aurora I have
+thus, undisturbed by subsidiary phenomena, been able to devote
+myself to the collection of contributions towards the ascertaining
+of the position of these luminous arcs, and I believe that I have in
+this way come to some very remarkable conclusions, which have been
+developed in detail in a separate paper printed in _The Scientific
+Work of the Vega Expedition_ (Part I. p. 400). Here space permits me
+only to make the following statement.
+
+The appearance of the aurora at Behring's Straits in 1878-79 is shown in
+the accompanying woodcuts. We never saw here the magnificent bands or
+draperies of rays which we are so accustomed to in Scandinavia, but only
+halo-like luminous arcs, which hour after hour, day after day, were
+unaltered in position. When the sky was not clouded over and the faint
+light of the aurora was not dimmed by the rays of the sun or the full
+moon, these arcs commonly began to show themselves between eight and
+nine o'clock P.M., and were then seen without interruption during
+midwinter till six, and farther on in the year to three o'clock in
+the morning. It follows from this that the aurora even during a minimum
+year is a permanent natural phenomenon. The nearly unalterable position
+of the arcs has further rendered possible a number of measurements of
+its height, extent, and position from which I believe I may draw the
+following inferences that our globe even during a minimum aurora year is
+adorned with an almost constant, single, double, or multiple luminous
+crown, whose inner edge is situated at a height of about 200 kilometres
+or 0.03 radius of the earth above its surface, whose centre, "the
+aurora-pole," lies somewhat under the earth's surface, a little north of
+the magnetic-pole, and which, with a diameter of 2,000 kilometres or 0.3
+radius of the earth, extends in a plane perpendicular to the radius of
+the earth, which touches the centre of the circle.
+
+[Illustration: THE COMMON AURORA ARC AT THE "VEGA'S" WINTER
+QUARTERS. ]
+
+[Illustration: AURORA AT THE "VEGA'S" WINTERER QUARTERS, 3RD MARCH
+1879, AT 9 P.M. ]
+
+[Illustration: DOUBLE AURORA ARCS SEEN 20TH MARCH 1879,
+AT 9.30 P.M. ]
+
+[Illustration: ELLIPTIC AURORA SEEN 21ST MARCH, 1879, AT 2.15 A.M. ]
+
+[Illustration: ELLIPTIC AURORA SEEN 21ST MARCH, 1879, AT 3 A.M. ]
+
+I have named this luminous crown _the aurora glory_ on account of
+its form and its resemblance to the crown of rays round the head of
+a saint. It stands in the same relation to the ray and drapery
+auroras of Scandinavia as the trade and monsoon winds in the south
+to the irregular winds and storms of the north. The light of the
+crown itself is never distributed into rays, but resembles the light
+which passes through obscured glass. When the aurora is stronger,
+the extent of the light-crown is altered double or multiple arcs are
+seen, generally lying in about the same plane and with a common
+centre, and rays are cast between the different arcs. Arcs are
+seldom seen which lie irregularly to or cross each other.
+
+The area in which the common arc is visible is bounded by two circles
+drawn upon the earth's surface, with the aurora-pole for a centre and
+radii of 8 deg. and 28 deg. measured on the circumference of the globe. It
+touches only to a limited extent countries inhabited by races of
+European origin (the northernmost part of Scandinavia, Iceland, Danish
+Greenland), and even in the middle of this area there is a belt passing
+over middle Greenland, South Spitzbergen, and Franz Josef Land, where
+_the common arc_ forms only a faint, very widely extended, luminous veil
+in the zenith, which perhaps is only perceptible by the winter darkness
+being there considerably diminished. This belt divides the regions where
+these luminous arcs are seen principally to the south from those in
+which they mainly appear on the northern horizon. In the area next the
+aurora-pole only the smaller, in middle Scandinavia only the larger,
+more irregularly formed luminous crowns are seen. But in the latter
+region, as in southern British America, aurora storms and ray and
+drapery auroras are instead common, and these appear to be nearer the
+surface of the earth than the arc aurora. Most of the Polar expeditions
+have wintered so near the aurora-pole that _the common aurora arc_ there
+lay under or quite near the horizon, and as the ray aurora appears to
+occur seldom within this circle, the reason is easily explained why the
+winter night was so seldom illuminated by the aurora at the winter
+quarters of these expeditions, and why the description of this
+phenomenon plays so small a part in their sketches of travel.
+
+[Illustration: SONG BIRDS IN THE RIGGING OF THE "VEGA." May 1879. ]
+
+
+Long before the ground became bare and mild weather commenced,
+migratory birds began to arrive, first the snow-bunting on the 23rd
+April, then large flocks of geese, eiders, long-tailed ducks,
+gulls, and several kinds of waders and song-birds. First among the
+latter was the little elegant _Sylvia Ewersmanni_, which in the
+middle of June settled in great flocks on the only dark spot which
+was yet to be seen in the quarter--the black deck of the _Vega_.
+All were evidently much exhausted, and the first the poor things did
+was to look out convenient sleeping places, of which there is
+abundance in the rigging of a vessel when small birds are concerned.
+I need scarcely add that our new guests, the forerunners of spring,
+were disturbed on board as little as possible.
+
+We now began industriously to collect material for a knowledge of
+the avi- and mammal-fauna of the region. The collections, when this
+is being written, are not yet worked out, and I can therefore only
+make the following statement on this point:
+
+From the acquaintance I had made during my own preceding journeys and
+the study of others', with the bird-world of the high north, I had got
+the erroneous idea that about the same species of birds are to be met
+with everywhere in the Polar lands of Europe, Asia, and America.
+Experience gained during the expedition of the _Vega_ shows that this is
+by no means the case, but that the north-eastern promontory of Asia, the
+Chukch peninsula, forms in this respect a complete exception. Birds
+occur here in much fewer numbers, but with a very much greater variety
+of types than on Novaya Zemlya, Spitzbergen, and Greenland, in
+consequence of which the bird-world on the Chukch peninsula has in its
+entirety a character differing wholly from that of the Atlantic Polar
+lands. We indeed meet here with types closely allied to the glaucous
+gull (_Larus glaucus_, Bruenn), the ivory gull (_L. eburneus_, Gmel.),
+the kittiwake (_L. tridactylus_, L.), the long-tailed duck (_Harelda
+glacialis_, L.), the king duck (_Somateria spectabilis_, L.),[263] the
+phalarope (_Phalaropus fulicarius_, Bonap.), the purple sandpiper
+(_Tringa maritima_, Bruenn.), &c., of Spitzbergen and Novaya Zemlya, but
+along with these are found here many peculiar species, for instance the
+American eider (_Somateria V-nigrum_, Gray), a swanlike goose, wholly
+white with black wing points (_Anser hyperboreus_, Pall.), a
+greyish-brown goose with bushy yellowish-white feather-covering on the
+head (_Anser pictus_, Pall), a species of Fuligula, elegantly coloured
+on the head in velvet-black, white, and green, (_Fuligula Stelleri_,
+Pall), the beautifully marked, scarce _Larus Rossii_, Richards, of
+which Dr. Almquist on the 1st July, 1879, shot a specimen from the
+vessel, a little brown sandpiper with a spoonlike widened bill-point
+(_Eurynorhynchus pygmaeus_, L.) and various song-birds not found in
+Sweden, &c. Besides, a number of the Scandinavian types living here
+also, according to Lieutenant Nordquist, are distinguished by less
+considerable differences in colour-marking and size. The singular
+spoon-billed sandpiper was at one time in spring so common that it was
+twice served at the gunroom table, for which after our return home we
+had to endure severe reproaches from animal collectors. This bird is
+found only in some few museums. It was first described by LINNAEUS in
+_Museum Adolphi Friderici, Tomi secundi predromus_, Holmiae 1764, and
+then by C.P. THUNBERG in the _Transactions_ of the Swedish Academy of
+Sciences for 1816 (p. 194), where it is stated that the homeland of this
+bird is tropical America. It has since been caught a few times in
+south-eastern Asia. Probably, like _Sylvia Ewersmanni_, it passes the
+winter in the Philippine group of islands, but in summer visits the high
+north. Like several other birds which appeared in spring with the first
+bare spots it disappeared in July. Perhaps it retired to the interior to
+breed in the bush, or, which is more probable, went farther north to the
+islands or continents not yet discovered by Europeans, which in all
+probability connect Wrangel Land with the Franklin Archipelago.
+
+[Illustration: SPOON BILLED SANDPIPER FROM CHURCH LAND.
+_Eurynorhynchus pygmaeus_, L. At the side the bird's bill seen from
+above, of the natural size. ]
+
+The higher animal forms which, along with the Polar traveller, dare
+to brave the cold and darkness of the Arctic night, exert on him a
+peculiar attraction. Regarding these, Lieutenant Nordquist has given
+me the following notes:--
+
+ "The mammal most common in winter on the north coast of the
+ Chukch peninsula is the _hare_. It differs from the fell
+ hare (_Lepus borealis_, Lillj.) by its larger size, and by
+ the bones of its nose not tapering so rapidly. It is
+ generally met with in flocks of five or six on the hills in
+ the neighbourhood of the tents, which are covered only with
+ a thin layer of snow, notwithstanding the large number of
+ hungry dogs which wander about there.
+
+ "The _Arctic foxes_ (_Vulpes lagopus_, L.) are very
+ numerous. The common _fox_ (_Vulpes vulgaris_, Gray)
+ appears also to be common. A red fox, which Lieutenant
+ Brusewitz shot from the vessel in October, differed
+ considerably from the common fox, and approached the Arctic
+ fox. The food of the fox appears in winter to consist of
+ hares, ptarmigan, and lemmings. I have twice seen holes in
+ the snow about a metre deep and at the mouth not more than
+ thirty centimetres wide, which the Chukches said were
+ excavated by foxes searching for lemmings.
+
+ "Of the _lemming_ I have seen three varieties, viz. _Myodes
+ obensis, M. torquatus_, and _Arvicola obscurus_. There is
+ found here, also, according to the statements of the
+ Chukches, a little mouse, in all probability a Sorex.
+ _Myodes torquatus_ were got the first time on the 12th
+ January, _Myodes obensis_ on the 13th February. Both
+ species were afterwards frequently brought on board by
+ Chukches, and during the winter lemmings were seen not
+ unfrequently running on the snow. _Myodes obensis_ appeared
+ to be more numerous than the other species. It is singular
+ that all the nine specimen of _Myodes torquatus_ I obtained
+ during the winter were males. Differing from both these
+ species, _Arvicola obscurus_ does not appear to show itself
+ above the snow during winter. Of the latter I got eight
+ specimens from the village Tjapka, lying between Yinretlen
+ and Behring's Straits. I afterwards got another from the
+ village Irgunnuk, situated five English miles east of
+ Yinretlen.
+
+[Illustration: MARMOTS FROM CHUKCH LAND. ]
+
+ "The more uncommon land mammals wintering in these regions
+ are the _wolf_ and the _wild reindeer_. Footprints of the
+ latter were seen on the 23nd March, in the mountain region,
+ fifteen to twenty miles south of Yinretlen. According to
+ the Chukches' account some few reindeer remain on the hills
+ along the coast, while the greater number migrate
+ southwards towards winter. Besides these, two other mammals
+ live here during winter, though they are only seen during
+ summer and autumn, because they hibernate the rest of the
+ time. These are the _land bear_ and the _marmot_ (_Arctomys
+ sp._). We saw no land bear, but on the 8th October
+ Lieutenant Hovgaard and I found traces of this animal two
+ or three English miles from the coast. The Chukches say
+ that the land bear is not uncommon in summer. The marmot
+ occurs in large numbers. It was brought on board for the
+ first time by a Chukch, and the following day I myself saw
+ it sitting on the top of a little hill, where it had its
+ dwelling.
+
+ "Besides the animals enumerated above the natives talked of
+ another, which is called by them _nennet_, and is said to
+ live by the banks of rivers. According to their description
+ it appears to be the common _otter_. As at most places
+ where the lemming is common the _weasel_ (_Mustela
+ vulgaris_, Briss.) is also found here. I got from the
+ Chukches two skins of this animal. Whether the beaver
+ occurs in the part of Chukch Land which we visited I cannot
+ say with certainty. It is probable, because the Chukches
+ informed me that there was found here a weasel which has
+ the point of the tail black.
+
+ "Only two sea mammals have been seen in this region in the
+ course of the winter, viz. the _rough_ or _bristled seal_
+ and the _Polar bear_. On two occasions traces of the latter
+ have been observed in the neighbourhood of land. They
+ appear, however, for the most part to keep by openings in
+ the ice farther out to sea, where during our stay two of
+ them were killed by Chukches from the neighbouring
+ villages. The rough seal is probably the only species that
+ occurs near the coast during winter. It is caught in great
+ numbers, and forms, along with fish and various vegetable
+ substances, the main food of the Chukches.
+
+ "Of land birds there winter in the region only three
+ species, viz. an _owl_ (_Strix nyctea_, L.), a _raven_
+ (_Corvus sp._), and a _ptarmigan_ (_Lagopus subalpina_,
+ Nilss.); the last-named is the most common. On the 14th
+ December, during a sledge journey into the country I saw,
+ about ten or twelve English miles from the coast, two large
+ coveys of ptarmigan, one of which probably numbered over
+ fifty. Nearer the coast, on the other hand, there were
+ found, especially during spring, for the most part only
+ single birds. The raven is common at the Chukch villages,
+ and builds its nest in the neighbouring cliffs. The first
+ egg was got on the 31st May. The mountain owl was seen for
+ the first time on the 11th March, but, according to the
+ statements of the Chukches, it is to be met with during the
+ whole winter. In April and May we also saw some mountain
+ owls, on the 21st May I saw two.
+
+ "At open places in the sea there are found here in winter,
+ the Chukches say, two swimming birds, the _loom_ (_Uria
+ Bruennichii_, Sabine) and the _Black guillemot_ (_Uria
+ grylle_, L.) Of the former we obtained two specimens for
+ the first time on the 1st May, of the latter on the 19th of
+ the same month. Possibly there winter in open places of the
+ sea besides these birds a species of Mergulus, one of which
+ came to the winter quarters of the _Vega_ on the 3rd
+ November, and a Fuligula, a specimen of which was sold to
+ us on the 9th March by a Chukch, who said he had killed it
+ at a clearing off the coast."
+
+After the arrival of the migratory birds hunting excursions began to
+form a welcome interruption in our monotonous winter life, and the
+produce of the hunting a no less agreeable change from the preserved
+provisions. The Chukches besides offered us daily a large number of
+different kinds of birds, especially when they observed that we paid
+a higher price for many rare kinds of birds, though small and of
+little use for food, than for a big, fat goose. The Chukches killed
+small birds either by throwing stones, or by shooting them with bow
+and arrows, in connection with which it may be observed that most of
+them were very poor archers. They also caught them with whalebone
+snares set on bare spots on the beach, generally between two
+vertebrae of the whale. For pebbles are very scarce, but the bones
+of the whale are found, as has been already stated, at most places
+in large numbers on the strand-banks where the tents are pitched. In
+June we began to get eggs of the gull, eider, long-tailed duck,
+goose, and loom, in sufficient number for table use. The supply,
+however, was by no means so abundant as during the hatching season
+on Greenland, Spitzbergen, or Novaya Zemlya.
+
+
+A little way from the vessel there were formed, in the end of May,
+two "leads," a few fathoms in breadth. On the 31st May I sent some
+men to dredge at these places. They returned with an abundant yield,
+but unfortunately the openings closed again the next day, and when I
+and Lieutenant Bove visited the place there was a large,
+newly-formed _toross_ thrown up along the edge of the former
+channel. Another "lead" was formed some days after, but closed again
+through a new disturbance of the position of the ice, a high
+ice-rampart, formed of loose blocks, heaped one over another,
+indicating the position of the former opening. Even the strongest
+vessel would have been crushed in such a channel by the forcing
+together of the ice. Of a different sort from both these occasional
+leads was an extensive opening, which showed itself a kilometre or
+two north of the vessel. It is probable that with few interruptions,
+which, however, might have been difficult to pass, it extended as
+far as Behring's Straits, where, according to the statements of the
+Chukches, several whalers had already made their appearance. Round
+the vessel itself, however, the ice still lay fast and unbroken. Nor
+did the Chukches appear to expect that it would break up very soon,
+to judge by the number of vehicles drawn by dogs or reindeer which
+still passed us, both to the east and west. One of these travellers
+must here be specially mentioned, as his journey has been talked
+about as an expedition sent to our relief.
+
+[Illustration: STEGOCEPHALUS KESSLERI (STUXB). Natural size. ]
+
+[Illustration: SABINEA SEPTEMCARINATA (SABINE). Natural size.
+EVERTEBRATES FROM THE SEA AT THE "VEGA'S" WINTER QUARTERS. ]
+
+[Illustration: ACANTHOSTEPHIA MALMGRENI, (GOES). Magnified twice. ]
+
+[Illustration: OPHIOGLYPHA NODOSA, (LUeTKEN). Magnified twice
+EVERTEBRATES FROM THE SEA AT THE "VEGA'S" WINTER QUARTERS. ]
+
+It was the 19th June. A large number of Chukches travelling past us
+as usual came on board, partly to receive the tribute of hospitality
+to which they considered themselves entitled, partly to satisfy an
+easily understood curiosity and gossip a little about the most
+important occurrences of the preceding day. One of them, a
+middle-aged man, whom we had not seen before, with a friendly and
+self-satisfied bearing, whose face was a mere collection of
+wrinkles, and over whose _pesk_ was drawn an old velvet shirt,
+presented himself with a certain pretentiousness as the chief NOAH
+ELISEJ. Since the mistake with the stately Chepurin, and since even
+Menka's supposed slave declared himself to be at least as good as
+Menka, we had begun to be rather indifferent to the rank of chief
+among the Chukches. Noah Elisej however, notwithstanding he thus
+brought forward his pretensions, was received like a common man, at
+which he appeared to be a little offended. But our behaviour soon
+changed, when Notti, or some other of our daily guests, who had
+become quite familiar with our fancies, tastes weaknesses, informed
+us that Noah Elisej had with him a large, a very large letter. Old
+Noah thus carried a mail, perhaps a European mail. At once he became
+in our eyes a man of importance. After being stormed for a time with
+questions, he took from a bag which hung from his neck the ordinary
+pieces of board fastened together, which here serve as a postbag.
+They were found however to contain only a letter of a couple of
+lines from a Russian official at Nischm Kolymsk, without any news
+from Europe, but informing us that chief Noah Elisej was sent to us
+to assist us, if necessary. Noah first patted his stomach to
+indicate that he was hungry and wanted food, and hawked and pointed
+with his finger at his throat to let us know that a _ram_ would
+taste well. He then told us something which we did not then exactly
+understand, but which we now have reason to interpret as a statement
+that Noah was the leader of an expedition sent by the Siberian
+authorities to our relief, and that he was therefore willing in
+return for suitable compensation to give us some reindeer I availed
+myself of the offer, and purchased three animals for sugar, tea, and
+a little tobacco. Noah besides was a friendly and easy-going man,
+who, Christian though he was, travelled about with two wives and a
+large number of children, who all of course would see the vessel and
+get their treat of tobacco, clay pipes, sugar, _ram_, &c.
+
+[Illustration: NOAH ELISEJ. (After a photograph by L. Palander.) ]
+
+So much flood water had now begun to collect on the ice, especially
+near the land, that it was exceedingly difficult to walk from the
+vessel to the shore and back. Many a proposed land excursion was
+broken off by somebody, immediately after leaving the vessel,
+sinking into some deep hole in the ice and thus getting a cold bath.
+Excursions on land however began to be exceedingly interesting to
+the botanists and zoologists, and therefore to avoid the
+inconveniences mentioned I caused a tent to be pitched by the side
+of the large lagoon between Pitlekaj and Yinretlen, and a light boat
+to be carried thither. The bottom of the lagoon was still filled
+with ice, above which however the water stood so high that the boat
+floated in it. The naturalists settled by turns in the tent, and
+from it made excursions in different directions, as I hope with the
+result that the neighbourhood of Pitlekaj is now the best known
+tract on the north of Asia, which after all is not saying much. The
+first plant in flower (_Cochlearia fenestrata_, R. Br.) was seen on
+the 23rd June.[264] A week after the ground began to grow green and
+flowers of different kinds to show themselves in greater and greater
+numbers.[265] Some flies were seen on a sunshiny day in May (the 27th)
+in motion on the surface of the snow, but it was not until the end
+of June that insects began to show themselves in any large numbers,
+among them many Harpalids, two large species of Carabus, and a large
+Curculionid. The insects occurring here however are not very
+numerous either in respect of species or individuals, which is not
+strange when we consider that the earth at a limited depth from the
+surface is constantly frozen. As even the shallow layer, which thaws
+in summer, is hard frozen in winter, all the insects which occur
+here must in one or other phase of their development endure being
+frozen solid for some time. But it may be remarked with reason with
+reference to this, that if life in an organism may so to speak be
+suspended for months by freezing stiff without being destroyed, what
+is there to prevent this suspension being extended over years,
+decades, or centuries?
+
+The common idea, that all animal life ceases, when the interior
+animal heat sinks under the freezing-point of water, is besides not
+quite correct. This is proved by the abundant evertebrate life which
+is found at the bottom of the Polar Sea, even where the water all
+the year round has a temperature of -2 deg. to -2.7 deg. C, and
+by the remarkable observation made during the wintering at Mussel
+Bay in 1872-73, that small Crustacea can live by millions in
+water-drenched snow at a temperature of from -2 deg. to -10.2 deg. C.
+On this point I say in my account of the expedition of 1872-73:--[266]
+
+ [Illustration: BEETLES FROM PITLEKAJ.
+ _a._ _Carabus truncaticollis_ ESCHSCHOLTZ.
+ (One and a half the natural size.)
+ _b._ _Alophus sp._ (One find two-thirds the natural size.) ]
+
+ "If during winter one walks along the beach on the snow
+ which at ebb is dry, but at flood tide is more or less
+ drenched through by sea-water, there rises at every step
+ one takes, an exceedingly intense, beautiful, bluish-white
+ flash of light, which in the spectroscope gives a
+ one-coloured labrador-blue spectrum. This beautiful flash
+ of light arises from the snow, before completely dark, when
+ it is touched. The flash lasts only a few moments after the
+ snow is left untouched, and is so intense, that it appears
+ as if a sea of fire would open at every step a man takes.
+ It produces indeed a peculiar impression on a dark and
+ stormy winter day (the temperature of the air was sometimes
+ in the neighbourhood of the freezing-point of mercury) to
+ walk along in this mixture of snow and flame, which at
+ every step one takes splashes about in all directions,
+ shining with a light so intense that one is ready to fear
+ that his shoes or clothes will take fire."
+
+[Illustration: PHOSPHORESCENT CRUSTACEAN FROM MUSSEL BAY.
+_Metridia armata_, A. Boeck.
+ 1. A male magnified twelve times.
+ 2. A foot of the second pair. ]
+
+On a closer examination it appeared that this light-phenomenon proceeded
+from a minute crustacean, which according to the determination of Prof
+W. LILLJEBORG belongs to the species _Metridia armata_, A. Boeck, and
+whose proper element appears to be snow-sludge drenched with salt water
+cooled considerably under 0 deg. C. First when the temperature sinks below
+-10 deg. does the power of this small animal to emit light appear to cease.
+But as the element in which they live, the surface of the snow nearest
+the beach, is in the course of the winter innumerable times cooled
+twenty degrees more, it appears improbable that these minute animals
+suffer any harm by being exposed to a cold of from -20 deg. to -30 deg., a very
+remarkable circumstance, as they certainly do not possess in their
+organism any means of raising the internal animal heat in any noteworthy
+degree above the temperature of the surrounding medium.
+
+We did not see these animals at Pitlekaj, but a similar phenomenon,
+though on a smaller scale, was observed by Lieut. BELLOT[267] during
+a sledge-journey in Polar America. He believed that the light arose
+from decaying organic matter.
+
+[Illustration: REITINACKA. (After a photograph by L. Palander.) ]
+
+After the Chukches had told us that an exceedingly delicious black
+fish was to be found in the fresh-water lagoon at Yinretlen, which
+is wholly shut off from the sea and in winter freezes to the bottom,
+we made an excursion thither on the 8th July. Our friends at the
+encampment were immediately ready to help us, especially the women,
+Artanga, and the twelve-year-old, somewhat spoiled _Vega_-favourite
+Reitinacka. They ran hither and thither like light-hearted and
+playful children, to put the net in order and procure all that was
+needed for the fishing. We had carried with us from the vessel a net
+nine metres long and one deep. Along its upper border floats were
+fixed, to the lower was bound a long pole, to which were fastened
+five sticks, by which the pole was sunk to the bottom of the lagoon,
+a little way from the shore. Some natives wading in the cold water
+then pushed the net towards the land with sticks and the pole, which
+glided easily forward over the bottom of the lake, overgrown as it
+was with grass. In order to keep the fish from swimming away, the
+women waded at the sides of the net with their _pesks_ much tucked
+up, screaming and making noise, and now and then standing in order
+to indicate by a violent shaking that the water was very cold. The
+catch was abundant. We caught by hundreds a sort of fish altogether
+new to us, of a type which we should rather have expected to find in
+the marshes of the Equatorial regions than up here in the north. The
+fish were transported in a dog sledge to the vessel, where part of
+them was placed in spirits for the zoologists and the rest fried,
+not without a protest from our old cook, who thought that the black
+slimy fish looked remarkably nasty and ugly. But the Chukches were
+right it was a veritable delicacy, in taste somewhat resembling eel,
+but finer and more fleshy. These fish were besides as tough to kill
+as eels, for after lying an hour and a half in the air they swam, if
+replaced in the water, about as fast as before. How this species of
+fish passes the winter is still more enigmatical than the winter
+life of the insects. For the lagoon has no outlet and appears to
+freeze completely to the bottom. The mass of water which was found
+in autumn in the lagoon therefore still lay there as an unmelted
+layer of ice not yet broken up, which was covered with a stratum of
+flood water several feet deep, by which the neighbouring grassy
+plains were inundated. It was in this flood water that the fishing
+took place.
+
+After our return home the Yinretlen fish was examined by Professor F.A.
+SMITT in Stockholm, who stated, in an address which he gave on it before
+the Swedish Academy of Sciences, that it belongs to a new species to
+which Professor Smitt gave the name _Dallia delicatissima_. A closely
+allied form occurs in Alaska, and has been named _Dallia pectoralis_,
+Bean. These fishes are besides nearly allied to the dog-fish (_Umbra
+Krameri_, Fitzing), which is found in the Neusidler and Platten Lakes,
+and in grottos and other water-filled subterranean cavities in southern
+Europe. It is remarkable that the European species are considered
+uneatable, and even regarded with such loathing that the fishermen throw
+them away as soon as caught because they consider them poisonous, and
+fear that their other fish would be destroyed by contact with it. They
+also consider it an affront if one asks them for dog-fish.[268] If we
+had known thus we should not now have been able to certify that _Dallia
+delicatissima_, SMITT, truly deserves its name.
+
+[Illustration: DOG FISH FROM THE CHUKCH PENINSULA. _Dallia
+delicatissima_, Smitt. Half the natural size. ]
+
+In the beginning of July the ground became free of snow, and we
+could now form an idea of how the region looked in summer in which
+we had passed the winter. It was not just attractive. Far away in
+the south the land rose with terrace-formed escarpments to a hill,
+called by us Table Mount, which indeed was pretty high, but did not
+by any steep or bold cliffs yield any contribution to such a
+picturesque landscape border as is seldom wanting on the portions of
+Spitzbergen, Greenland, and the north part of Novaya Zemlya which I
+have visited, south Novaya Zemlya has at least at most places bold
+picturesque shore-cliffs. If I except the rocky promontory at
+Yinretlen, where a cliff inhabited by ravens rises boldly out of the
+sea, and some cliffs situated farther in along the beach of
+Kolyutschin Bay, the shore in the immediate neighbourhood of our
+wintering station consisted everywhere only of a low beach formed of
+coarse sand. Upon this sand, which was always frozen, there ran
+parallel with the shore a broad bank or dune, 50 to 100 metres
+broad, of fine sand, not water-drenched in summer, and accordingly
+not bound together by ice in winter. It is upon this dune that the
+Chukches erect their tents. Marks of them are therefore met with
+nearly everywhere, and the dune accordingly is everywhere bestrewed
+with broken implements or refuse from the chase. Indeed it may be
+said without exaggeration that the whole north-eastern coast of the
+Siberian Polar Sea is bordered with a belt of sweepings and refuse
+of various kinds.
+
+The coarse sand which underlies the dune is, as has been stated,
+continually frozen, excepting the shallow layer which is thawed in
+summer. It is here that the "frost formation" of Siberia begins,
+that is to say, the continually frozen layer of earth, which, with
+certain interruptions, extends from the Polar Sea far to the south,
+not only under the treeless _tundra_, but also under splendid
+forests and cultivated corn-fields.[269] To speak correctly, however,
+the frozen earth begins a little from the shore _under the sea_.[270]
+For on the coast the bottom often consists of hard frozen
+sand--"rock-hard sand," as the dredgers were accustomed to report.
+The frost formation in Siberia thus embraces not only terrestrial
+but also marine deposits, together with pure clear layers of ice,
+these last being formed in the mouths of rivers or small lakes by
+the ice of the river or lake frozen to the bottom being in spring
+covered with a layer of mud sufficiently thick to protect the ice
+from melting during summer. The frozen sea-bottom again appears to
+have been formed by the sand washed down by the rivers having
+carried with it when it sank some adhering water from the warm and
+almost fresh surface strata. At the sea-bottom the sand surrounded
+by _fresh_ water freezing at 0 deg. C thus met a stratum of _salt_
+water whose temperature was two or three degrees under 0 deg., in
+consequence of which the grains of sand froze fast together. That it
+may go on thus we had a direct proof when in spring we sank from the
+_Vega_ the bodies of animals to be skeletonised by the crustacea
+that swarmed at the sea-bottom. If the sack, pierced at several
+places, in which the skeleton was sunk was first allowed to fill
+with the slightly salt water from the surface and then sink rapidly
+to the bottom, it was found to be so filled with ice, when it was
+taken up a day or two afterwards, that the crustacea were prevented
+from getting at the flesh. We had already determined to abandon the
+convenient cleansing process, when I succeeded in finding means to
+avoid the inconvenience, this was attained by drawing the sack,
+while some distance under the surface, violently hither and thither
+so that the surface water carried down with it was got rid of.
+Frozen clay and ooze do not appear to occur at the bottom of the
+Polar Sea. Animal life on the frozen sand was rather scanty, but
+algae were met with there though in limited numbers.
+
+From the shore a plain commences, which is studded with extensive
+lagoons and a large number of small lakes. In spring this plain is
+so water-drenched and so crossed by deep rapid snow-rivulets, that
+it is difficult, often impossible, to traverse it. Immediately after
+the disappearance of the snow a large number of birds at all events
+had settled there. The Lapp sparrow had chosen a tuft projecting
+from the marshy ground on which to place its beautiful roofed
+dwelling, the waders in the neighbourhood had laid their eggs in
+most cases directly on the water-drenched moss without trace of a
+nest, and on tufts completely surrounded by the spring floods we met
+with the eggs of the loom, the long-tailed duck, the eider and the
+goose. Already during our stay, the water ran away so rapidly, that
+places, which one day were covered with a watery mirror, over which
+a boat of light draught could be rowed forward, were changed the
+next day to wet marshy ground, covered with yellow grass-straws from
+the preceding year. At many places the grassy sward had been torn up
+by the ice and carried away, leaving openings sharply defined by
+right lines in the meadows, resembling a newly worked off place in a
+peat moss.
+
+In summer there must be found here green meadows covered with pretty
+tall grass, but at the time of our departure vegetation had not
+attained any great development, and the flowers that could be
+discovered were few. I presume however that a beautiful Arctic
+flower-world grows up here, although, in consequence of the exposure
+of the coast-country to the north winds, poor in comparison with the
+vegetation in sheltered valleys in the interior of the country.
+There are found there too pretty high bushes, but on the other hand
+trees are represented at Pitlekaj only by a low species of willow
+which creeps along the ground.
+
+[Illustration: CRAB FROM THE SEA NORTH OF BEHRING'S STRAITS.
+_Chionoecetes opilio_ Kroeyer. Half the natural size. ]
+
+[Illustration: TREE FROM PITLEKAJ. _Salix arctica_, PALLAS.
+(Natural size.) ]
+
+We did not, however, see even this "wood" in full leaf. For in order
+that full summer heat may begin it is necessary, even here, that the
+ice break up, and this longed-for moment appeared to be yet far
+distant. The ice indeed became clear of snow in the beginning of
+July, and thus the slush and the flood water were lessened, which
+during the preceding weeks had collected on its surface and made it
+very difficult to walk from the vessel to land. Now, again pretty
+dry-shod and on a hard blue ice-surface, we could make excursions in
+the neighbourhood of the vessel. We had however to be cautious. The
+former cracks had in many places been widened to greater or smaller
+openings by the flood water running down, and where a thin black
+object--a little gravel, a piece of tin from the preserved
+provision-cases, &c.--had lain on the ice there were formed round
+holes, resembling the seal-holes which I saw in spring laid bare
+after the melting of the snow on the ice in the fjords of
+Spitzbergen. The strength of the ice besides was nearly unaltered,
+and on the 16th July a heavily loaded double sledge could still be
+driven from the vessel to the shore.
+
+On the 17th the "year's ice" next the land at last broke up, so that
+an extensive land clearing arose. But the ground-ices were still
+undisturbed, and between these the "year's ice" even lay so fast,
+that all were agreed that at least fourteen days must still pass
+before there was any prospect of getting free.
+
+When on the 16th the reindeer-Chukch Yettugin came on board, and,
+talking of the collection of whale-bones in which we had been
+engaged some days before, informed us that there was a mammoth bone
+at his tent, and that a mammoth tusk stuck out at a place where the
+spring floods had cut into the bank of a river which flows from
+Table Mount to Riraitinop, I therefore did not hesitate to undertake
+an excursion to the place. Our absence from the vessel was reckoned
+at five or six days. It was my intention to go up the river in a
+skin boat belonging to Notti to the place where the mammoth tusk
+was, and thence to proceed on foot to Yettugin's tent. Yettugin
+assured us that the river was sufficiently deep for the
+flat-bottomed boat. But when we had travelled a little way into the
+country it appeared that the river had fallen considerably during
+the day that Yettugin passed on the vessel. So certain was I however
+that the ice-barrier would not yet for a long time be broken up,
+that I immediately after my return from the excursion, which had
+thus been rendered unsuccessful, made arrangements for a new journey
+in order with other means of transport to reach the goal.
+
+While we were thus employed the forenoon of the 18th passed. We sat
+down to dinner at the usual time, without any suspicion that the
+time of our release was now at hand. During dinner it was suddenly
+observed that the vessel was moving slightly Palander rushed on
+deck, saw that the ice was in motion, ordered the boiler fires to be
+lighted, the engine having long ago been put in order in expectation
+of this moment, and in two hours, by 3:30 P.M. on the 18th July, the
+_Vega_, decked with flags, was under steam and sail again on the way
+to her destination.
+
+We now found that a quite ice-free "lead" had arisen between the
+vessel and the open water next the shore, the ice-fields west of our
+ground-ices having at the same time drifted farther out to sea, so that
+the clearing along the shore had widened enough to give the _Vega_ a
+sufficient depth of water. The course was shaped at first for the N.W.
+in order to make a _detour_ round the drift-ice fields lying nearest us,
+then along the coast for Behring's Straits. On the height at Yinretlen
+there stood as we passed, the men, women, and children of the village
+all assembled, looking out to sea at the fire-horse--the Chukches would
+perhaps say fire-dog or fire-reindeer--which carried their friends of
+the long winter months for ever away from their cold, bleak shores.
+Whether they shed tears, as they often said they would we could not see
+from the distance which now parted us from them. But it may readily have
+happened that the easily moved disposition of the savage led them to do
+this. Certain it is that in many of us the sadness of separation mingled
+with the feelings of tempestuous joy which now rushed through the breast
+of every _Vega_ man.
+
+The _Vega_ met no more ice-obstacles on her course to the Pacific.
+Serdze Kamen was passed at 1:30 A.M. of the 19th, but the fog was so
+dense that we could not clearly distinguish the contours of the
+land. Above the bank of mist at the horizon we could only see that
+this cape, so famous in the history of the navigation of the
+Siberian Polar Sea, is occupied by high mountains, split up, like
+those east of the Bear Islands, into ruin-like gigantic walls or
+columns. The sea was mirror-bright and nearly clear of ice, a walrus
+or two stuck up his head strangely magnified by the fog in our
+neighbourhood, seals swam round us in large numbers, and flocks of
+birds, which probably breed on the steep cliffs of Serdze Kamen,
+swarmed round the vessel. The trawl net repeatedly brought up from
+the sea bottom a very abundant yield of worms, molluscs, crustacea,
+&c. A zoologist would here have had a rich working field.
+
+The fog continued, so that on the other side of Serdze Kamen we lost
+all sight of land, until on the morning of the 20th dark heights
+again began to peep out. These were the mountain summits of the
+easternmost promontory of Asia, East Cape, an unsuitable name, for
+which I have substituted on the map that of Cape Deschnev after the
+gallant Cossack who for the first time 230 years ago circumnavigated
+it.
+
+By 11 A.M. we were in the middle of the sound which unites the North
+Polar Sea with the Pacific, and from this point the _Vega_ greeted
+the old and new worlds by a display of flags and the firing of a
+Swedish salute.
+
+[Illustration: A.L. PALANDER. ]
+
+Thus finally was reached the goal towards which so many nations had
+struggled, all along from the time when Sir Hugh Willoughby, with
+the firing of salutes from cannon and with hurrahs from the
+festive-clad seamen, in the presence of an innumerable crowd of
+jubilant men certain of success, ushered in the long series of
+North-East voyages. But, as I have before related, then hopes were
+grimly disappointed. Sir Hugh and all his men perished as pioneers
+of England's navigation and of voyages to the ice-encumbered sea
+which bounds Europe and Asia on the north. Innumerable other marine
+expeditions have since then trodden the same path, always without
+success, and generally with the sacrifice of the vessel and of the
+life and health of many brave seamen. Now for the first time, after
+the lapse of 336 years, and when most men experienced in sea matters
+had declared the undertaking impossible, was the North-East Passage
+at last achieved. This has taken place, thanks to the discipline,
+zeal, and ability of our man-of-war's-men and their officers,
+without the sacrifice of a single human life, without sickness among
+those who took part in the undertaking, without the slightest damage
+to the vessel, and under circumstances which show that the same
+thing may be done again in most, perhaps in all years, in the course
+of a few weeks. It may be permitted us to say, that under such
+circumstances it was with pride we saw the blue-yellow flag rise to
+the mast-head and heard the Swedish salute in the sound where the
+old and the new worlds reach hands to each other. The course along
+which we sailed is indeed no longer required as a commercial route
+between Europe and China. But it has been granted to this and the
+preceding Swedish expeditions to open a sea to navigation, and to
+confer on half a continent the possibility of communicating by sea
+with the oceans of the world.
+
+
+[Footnote 258: And Hellant, _Anmaerkningar om en helt ovanlig koeld i
+Torne (Remarks on a Quite Unusual Cold in Torne_), Vet.-akad. Handl.
+1759, p. 314, and 1760, p. 312. In the latter paper Hellant himself
+shows that the column of mercury in a strongly cooled thermometer
+for a few moments _sinks farther_ when the ball is rapidly heated.
+This is caused by the expansion of the glass when it is warmed
+before the heat has had time to communicate itself to the
+quicksilver in the ball, and therefore of course can happen only at
+a temperature above the freezing-point of mercury. ]
+
+[Footnote 259: That mercury solidifies in cold was discovered by some
+academicians in St. Petersburg on the 25th December, 1759, and caused
+at the time a great sensation, because by this discovery various
+erroneous ideas were rooted out which the chemists had inherited
+from the alchemists, and which were based on the supposed property
+of mercury of being at the same time a metal and a fluid. ]
+
+[Footnote 260: During the market the Russian priest endeavours to make
+proselytes, he succeeds, too, by distributing tobacco to induce one
+or two to subject themselves to the ceremony of baptism. No true
+conversion, however, can scarcely come in question on account of the
+difference of language. As an example of how this goes on, the
+following story of Wrangel's may be quoted. At the market a young
+Chukch had been prevailed upon, by a gift of some pounds of tobacco,
+to allow himself to be baptised. The ceremony began in presence of a
+number of spectators. The new convert stood quiet and pretty decent
+in his place till he should step down into the baptismal font, a
+large wooden tub filled with ice-cold water. In this, according to
+the baptismal ritual, he ought to dip three times. But to this he
+would consent on no condition. He shook his head constantly, and
+brought forward a large number of reasons against it, which none
+understood. After long exhortations by the interpreter, in which
+promises of tobacco probably again played the principal part, he
+finally gave way and sprang courageously down into the ice-cold
+water, but immediately jumped up again trembling with cold; crying,
+"My tobacco! my tobacco!" All attempts to induce him to renew the
+bath were fruitless, the ceremony was incomplete, and the Chukch
+only half baptised. ]
+
+[Footnote 261: In Lapland, too, the melting of the snow in spring is
+brought about in no inconsiderable degree by similar causes, _i.e._
+by dry warm winds which come from the fells. On this point the
+governor of Norbotten laen, H.A. Widmark, has sent me the following
+interesting letter--"However warm easterly and southerly winds may
+be in the parts of Swedish Lapland lying next the Joleen mountains,
+they are not able in any noteworthy degree to melt the masses of
+snow which fall in those regions during the winter months. On the
+other hand there comes every year, if we may rely on the statements
+of the Lapps, in the end of April or beginning of May, from the west
+(_i.e._ from the fells), a wind so strong and at the same time so
+warm, that in quite a short time--six to ten hours--it breaks up the
+snow-masses, makes them shrink together, forces the mountain sides
+from their snow covering, and changes the snow which lies on the ice
+of the great fell lakes to water. I have myself been out on the
+fells making measurements on two occasions when this wind came. On
+one occasion I was on the Great Lule water in the neighbourhood of
+the so-called Great Lake Fall. The night had been cold but the day
+became warm. Up to 1 o'clock P.M. it was calm, but immediately after
+the warm westerly wind began to blow, and by 6 o'clock P.M. all the
+snow on the ice was changed to water, in which we went wading to the
+knees. The Lapps in general await these warm westerly winds before
+they go to the fells in spring. Until these winds begin there is no
+pasture there for their reindeer herds." ]
+
+[Footnote 262: I do not include _La Recherche's_ wintering in 1838-39
+at Bosekop, in the northernmost part of Norway, as it took place in
+a region which is all the year round inhabited by hundreds of
+Europeans. During this expedition very splendid auroras were seen,
+and the studies of them by LOITIN, BRAVAIS, LILLIEHOeOeK, and
+SILJESTROeOeM, are among the most important contributions to a
+knowledge of the aurora we possess, while we have to thank the
+draughtsmen of the expedition for exceedingly faithful and masterly
+representations of the phenomenon. ]
+
+[Footnote 263: The common eider (_S. mollissima_, L.) is absent
+here, or at least exceedingly rare. ]
+
+[Footnote 264: During the expedition of 1861, when we were shut up by
+ice in Treurenberg Bay on Spitzbergen (79 deg. 57' N.L.) the
+first flower (_Saxifraga oppositifolia_, L.), was pulled on the 22nd
+June. After the wintering in 1872-73, Palander and I during our
+journey round North-east Land, saw the first flower on the same
+species of saxifrage as early as the 15th June, in the bottom of
+Wahlenberg Bay (79 deg. 46' N.L.) ]
+
+[Footnote 265: For the sake of completeness, I shall here also
+enumerate the plants which Dr. Kjellman found at Pitlekaj. Those
+marked with an * either themselves occur in Scandinavia or are
+represented by nearly allied forms.
+
+ Leucanthemum arcticum (L.) DC.
+ Artemisia arctica LESS.
+ * ,, vulgaris L. f. Tilesii LEDEB.
+ Cineraria frigida RICHARDS.
+ * ,, palustris L. f. congesta HOOK.
+ * Antennaria alpina (L.) R. BR. f. Friesiana TRAUTV.
+ * Petasites frigida.
+ * Saussurea alpina (L.) DC. f. angustifolia (DC.)
+ * Taraxacum officinale WEB.
+ Valeriana capitata PALL.
+ Gentiana glauca PALL.
+ Pedicularis sudetica WILLD.
+ ,, Langsdorffii FISCH.
+ ,, lanata WILLD. f. leiantha TRAUTV.
+ ,, capitata ADAMS.
+ * Polemonium coeruleum L.
+ * Diapensia lapponica L.
+ * Armeria sibirica TURCZ.
+ Primula nivalis PALL. f. pygmaea LEDEB.
+ ,, borealis DUBY.
+ * Loiseleuria procumbens (L.) DESV.
+ * Ledum palustre L. f. decumbens AIT.
+ * Vaccinium vitis idaea L.
+ * Arctostaphylos alpina (L.) SPRENG.
+ * Cassiope tetragona (L.) DON.
+ Hedysarum obscurum L.
+ Oxytropis nigrescens (PALL.) FISCH. f. pygmaea CHAM.
+ ,, species?
+ * Rubus Chamaemorus L.
+ * Comarum palustre L.
+ Potentilla fragiformis L. f. parviflora TRAUTV. f. villosa (PALL.)
+ * Sibbaldia procumbens L.
+ * Dryas octopetala L.
+ Spiraea betulaefolia PALL. f. typica MAXIM.
+ * Hippuris vulgaris L.
+ * Saxifraga stellaris L f. comosa POIR.
+ ,, punctata L.
+ * ,, cernua L.
+ * ,, rivularis L.
+ * Rhodiola rosea L.
+ * Empetrum nigrum L.
+ * Cardamine bellidifolia L.
+ Cochlearia fenestrata R. BR. f. typica MALMGR. f. prostrata MALMGR.
+ Ranunculus Pallasii SEHLECHT.
+ * ,, nivalis L.
+ * ,, pygmaeus WG.
+ * ,, hyperboreus ROTTB.
+ * Aconitum Napellus L. f. delphinifolia REICHENB.
+ Claytonia acutifolia WILLD.
+ * Wahlbergella apetala (L.) FR.
+ * Stellaria longipes GOLDIE. f. humilis FENZL.
+ * ,, humifusa ROTTB.
+ Cerastium maximum L.
+ * ,, alpinum L. f. hirsuta KOCH.
+ * Halianthus peploides (STEV.) FENZL.
+ Alsine artica (STEV.) FENZL.
+ * Sagina nivalis (LINDBL.) FR.
+ * Polygonum Bistorta L.
+ * ,, viviparum L.
+ * polymorphum L. f. frigida CHAM.
+ Rumex arcticus TRAUTV.
+ * Oxyria digyna (L.) HILL.
+ Salix boganidensis TRAUTV. f. latifolia.
+ Salix Chamissonis ANDERS.
+ ,, arctica PALL.
+ ,, euneata TURCZ.
+ * ,, reticulata L.
+ ,, species?
+ Betula glandulosa MICHX. f. rotundifolia REGEL.
+ Elymus mollis TRIN.
+ * Festuca rubra L. f. arenaria OSB.
+ * Poa flexuosa WG.
+ Arctophila effusa J. LGE.
+ Glyceria vilfoidea (ANDS.) TH. FR.
+ ,, vaginata J. LGE. f. contracta J. LGE.
+ * Catabrosa algida (SOL.) FR.
+ * Colpodium latifolium R. BR.
+ Dupontia Fischeri R. BR.
+ * Trisetum subspicatum (L.) P.B.
+ * Aira caespitosa L. f. borealis TRAUTV.
+ Alopecurus alpinus SM.
+ * Hierochloa alpina (LILJEBL.) ROEM. and SCH.
+ * Carex rariflora (WG.) SM.
+ * ,, aqvatilis f. epijegos LAEST.
+ * ,, glareosa WG.
+ * ,, lagopina WG.
+ * Eriophorum angustifolium ROTH.
+ * ,, vaginatum L.
+ * ,, russeolum FR.
+ * Luzula parviflora (EHRH.) DESV.
+ * ,, Wahlenbergii RUPR.
+ * ,, arcuata (WG.) SW. f. confusa LINDEB.
+ * Juncus biglumis L.
+ Lloydia serotina (L.) REICHENB.
+ ]
+
+[Footnote 266: _Redogoerelse foer den svenska polarexpeditionen ar_
+1872-73. Bihang till Vet.-Akad. Handl. Bd. 2, No. 18, p. 52. ]
+
+[Footnote 267: _Journal d'un Voyage aux Mers Polaires._ Paris, 1854.
+Pp. 177 and 223. ]
+
+[Footnote 268: Heckel and Kner, _Die Suesswasserfische Oesterreichs_,
+p. 295. ]
+
+[Footnote 269: Even pretty far south, in Scandinavia, there occur
+places with frozen earth which seldom thaws. Thus in Egyptinkorpi
+mosses in Nurmi and Pjeli parishes in Finland pinewoods are found
+growing over layers or "tufts" of frozen sand, but also, in other
+places in Eastern Finland, we find layers containing stumps, roots,
+&c., of different generations of trees, alternating with layers of
+frozen mould, according to a communication from the agronomic Axel
+Asplund. A contribution to the knowledge of the way, or one of the
+ways, in which such formations arise, we obtain from the known fact
+that mines with an opening to the air, so far south as the middle of
+Sweden, are filled in a few years with a coherent mass of ice if the
+opening is allowed to remain open. If it is shut the ice melts
+again, but for this decades are required. ]
+
+[Footnote 270: Middendorff already states that the bottom of the sea
+of Okotsk is frozen (_Sibirische Reise_, Bd. 4, 1, p. 502). ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+ The history, physique, disposition, and manners of the Chukches.
+
+
+The north coast of Siberia is now, with the exception of its
+westernmost and easternmost parts, literally a desert. In the west
+there projects between the mouth of the Ob and the southern portion
+of the Kara Sea the peninsula of Yalmal, which by its remote
+position, its grassy plains, and rivers abounding in fish, appears
+to form the earthly paradise of the Samoyed of the present day. Some
+hundred families belonging to this race wander about here with their
+numerous reindeer herds. During winter they withdraw to the interior
+of the country or southwards, and the coast is said then to be
+uninhabited. This is the case both summer and winter, not only with
+Beli Ostrov and the farthest portion of the peninsula between the Ob
+and the Yenisej (Mattesol), but also with the long stretch of coast
+between the mouth of the Yenisej and Chaun Bay. During the voyage of
+the _Vega_ in 1878 we did not see a single native. No trace of man
+could be discovered at the places where we landed, and though for a
+long time we sailed quite near land, we saw from the sea only a
+single house on the shore, viz, the before-mentioned wooden hut on
+the east side of Chelyuskin peninsula. Russian _simovies_ and native
+encampments are indeed still found on the rivers some distance from
+their mouths, but the former coast population has withdrawn to the
+interior of the country or died out,[271] and the north coast of Asia
+first begins again to be inhabited at Chaun Bay, namely, by the
+tribe with whom we came in contact during the latter part of the
+coast voyage of the _Vega_ in 1878 and during the wintering.
+
+I have already, it is true, given an account of various traits of
+the Chukches' disposition and mode of life, but I believe at all
+events that a more exhaustive statement of what the _Vega_ men
+experienced in this region will be interesting to my readers, even
+if in the course of it I am sometimes compelled to return to
+subjects of which I have already treated.
+
+In West-European writings the race, which inhabits the
+north-easternmost portion of Asia, is mentioned for the first time,
+so far as I know, by WITSEN, who in the second edition of his work
+(1705, p. 671) quotes a statement by VOLODOMIR ATLASSOV, that the
+inhabitants of the northernmost portions of Siberia are called
+_Tsjuktsi_, without, however, giving any detailed description of the
+people themselves. In maps from the end of the seventeenth century
+names are still inscribed on this portion of land which were
+borrowed from the history of High Asia, as "Tenduc," "Quinsai,"
+"Catacora," &c., but these are left out in VAN KEULEN'S atlas of
+1709, and instead there stands here _Zuczari_. From about the same
+time we fall in with some accounts of the Chukches in the narrative
+of the distinguished painter CORNELIS DE BRUIN'S travels in Russia.
+A Russian merchant, MICHAEL OSTATIOF, who passed fourteen years in
+travelling in Siberia, gave de Bruin some information regarding the
+countries he had travelled through; among others he spoke of
+_Korakie_ and _Socgtsie_ The latter were sketched as a godless pack,
+who worship the devil and carry with them then fathers' bones to be
+used in their magical arts. The same Russian who made these
+statements had also come in contact with "stationary" (settled)
+Soegtsi, so called "because they pass the whole winter hibernating,
+lying or sitting in their tents."[272] I have found the first
+somewhat detailed accounts of the race in the note on p. 110 of the
+under-quoted work, _Histoire genealogique des Tartares_, Leyden,
+1726. They are founded on the statements of Swedish prisoners of
+war in Siberia.
+
+The Russians, however, had made a much earlier acquaintance with the
+Chukches; for during their conquest of Siberia they came in contact
+with this race before the middle of the seventeenth century. A
+company of hunters in 1646 sailed down the Kolyma river to the Polar
+Sea. East of the Kolyma they fell in with the Chukches, with whom
+they dealt in this way they laid down their goods on the beach and
+then retired, on which the Chukches came thither, took the goods,
+and laid furs, walrus tusks, or carvings in walrus ivory, in their
+place.[273] How such journeys were repeated and finally led to the
+circumnavigation of the north-easternmost promontory of Asia belongs
+to a following chapter.
+
+During these journeys the Russians often came in contact with the
+tribe which inhabited the north-eastern part of Asia, a contact
+which in general was not of a friendly nature. The bold hunters who
+contributed powerfully to the conquest of Siberia, and who even at
+their own hand entered into conflicts with whole armies from the
+heavenly empire, appear not to have behaved well when confronted
+with the warriors of the Chukch race. Even the attempts that were
+made with professional soldiers to conquer the land of the Chukches
+were without result, less however, perhaps, on account of the armed
+opposition which the Chukches made than from the nature of the
+country and the impossibility of even a small body of troops
+supporting themselves. The following may be quoted as examples of
+these campaigns which throw light upon the former disposition and
+mode of life of this tribe.
+
+In 1701 some Yukagires who were tributary to Russia determined to
+make an attack on the Chukches, and requested from the commandant at
+Anadyrsk assistance against these enemies. A body of troops
+numbering twenty-four Russians and 110 Yukagires, was accordingly
+sent on a campaign along the coast from Anadyrsk to Chukotskojnos.
+By the way they fell in with thirteen tents, inhabited by Chukches
+who owned no reindeer. The inhabitants were required to submit and
+pay tribute. This the Chukches refused to do, on which the Russians
+killed most of the men and took the women and children prisoners.
+The men who were not cut down killed one another, preferring death
+to the loss of freedom. Some days after there was another fight with
+300 Chukches, which, however, was so unfortunate for the latter that
+200 are said to have fallen. The rest fled, but returned next day
+with a force ten times as strong, which finally compelled the
+Russo-Yukagnean troop to return with their object unaccomplished.
+
+A similar campaign on a small scale was undertaken in 1711, but with
+the same issue. On a demand for tribute the Chukches answered: "the
+Russians have before come to us to demand tribute and hostages, but
+this we have refused to give, and thus we also intend to do in
+future."[274]
+
+About fifteen years after this resultless campaign the Cossack
+colonel AFFANASSEJ SCHESTAKOV proposed to the Government again to
+subdue this obstinate race, intending also to go over to the
+American side, yet known only by report, in order to render the
+races living there tributary to the Russians. The proposal was
+accepted. A mate, JACOB HENS, a land-measurer, MICHAEL GVOSDEV, an
+ore-tester, HERDEBOL, and ten sailors were ordered by the Admiralty
+to accompany the expedition. At Yekaterinenburg Schestakov was
+provided with some small cannon and mortars with ammunition, and at
+Tobolsk with 400 Cossacks. In consequence of a great number of
+misfortunes, among them shipwreck in the sea of Okotsk, there stood
+however but a small portion of this force at his disposal when he
+began his campaign by marching into the country from the bottom of
+Penschina Bay. This campaign too was exceedingly unfortunate. After
+only a few days' march he came unexpectedly on a large body of
+Chukches, who themselves had gone to war with the Koryaeks. A fight
+took place on the 25th/14th March, 1730, in which Schestakov himself
+fell, hit by an arrow, and his followers were killed or put to
+flight.
+
+Among those who were ordered to accompany Schestakov in this
+unfortunate campaign was Captain DMITRI PAULUTSKI. Under his command
+a new campaign was undertaken against the Chukches With a force of
+215 Russians, 160 Cossacks and 60 Yukagires, Paulutski left Anadyrsk
+on the 23rd/12th March, 1731, and marched east of the sources of the
+Anadyr to the Polar Sea, which was only reached after two mouths'
+march. Then he went along the coast, partly by land, partly on the
+ice, to the eastward. After fourteen days he fell in with a large
+Chukch army, and having in vain summoned it to surrender, he
+delivered a blow on the 18/7th June, and obtained a complete victory
+over the enemy. During the continuation of the campaign along the
+coast he was compelled to fight on two other occasions, one on the
+11th July/30th June and the other on the 26/11th July, at
+Chukotskojnos itself, over which promontory he wished to march to
+the mouth of the Anadyr. In both cases the victory lay with the
+Russians, who, according to Mueller's account based on the official
+documents, in all three engagements lost only three Cossacks, one
+Yukagire and five Koryaeks. But notwithstanding all these defeats the
+Chukches refused to submit and pay tribute to the Russians, on which
+account the only gain of the campaign was the honour of avenging
+Schestakov's defeat and of marching in triumph over Chukotskojnos.
+For this, ten days were required. On the promontory, hills of
+considerable height had to be passed. It appears as if Paulutski
+followed the shore of Kolyutschin Bay to the south, and then marched
+over the tongue of land which separates this bay from Anadyr Bay, or
+to express it otherwise, which unites the Chukch peninsula to the
+mainland of Siberia.
+
+Many mistakes in comprehending the accounts of old travels to these
+regions have arisen from our ignorance of the great southern
+extension of Kolyutschin Bay, and from the same name being
+frequently used to distinguish different places on the coasts of
+Siberia. Thus we find on the map by A. ARROW-SMITH annexed to
+Sauer's account of Billings' travels a Seidze Kamen on the south
+side of Chukch peninsula, and it was perhaps just this Seidze Kamen,
+known and so named by the dwellers on the Anadyr, that is mentioned
+in Mueller's account of Paulutski's campaign.
+
+On the 1st Nov./21st Oct. Paulutski returned to Anadyrsk, crowned
+with victory indeed, but without having brought his adversaries to
+lasting submission. No new attempt was made to induce the Chukches
+to submit, perhaps because Paulutski's campaign had rendered it
+evident that it was easier to win victories over the Chukches than
+to subdue them, and that the whole treasures of walrus tusks and
+skins belonging to the tribe would scarcely suffice to pay the
+expenses of the most inconsiderable campaign.
+
+Perhaps too the accounts of Paulutski's victories may not be quite
+correct, at least the old repute of Chukches as a brave and savage
+race remained undiminished. Thus we read in a note already quoted at
+page 110 of the _Histoire genealogique des Tartares_ [275] "The
+north-eastern part of Asia is inhabited by two allied races,
+_Tzuktzchi_ and _Tzchalatzki_, and south of them on the Eastern
+Ocean by a third, called _Olutorski_. They are the most savage tribe
+in the whole north of Asia, and will have nothing to do with the
+Russians, whom they inhumanly kill when they fall in with them, and
+when any of them fall into the hands of the Russians they kill
+themselves". On the map of LOTTERUS (1765) the Chukch Peninsula is
+coloured in a way differing from Russian Siberia, and there is the
+following inscription _Tjukzchi natio ferocissima et bellicosa
+Russorum inimica, qui capti se invicem interficiunt_. In 1777
+GEORGIUS says in his _Beschreibung aller Nationen des Russischen
+Reichs_ (part ii., p. 350) of the Chukches "They are more savage,
+coarse, proud, refractory, thievish, false, and revengeful, than the
+neighbouring nomads the Koryaeks. They are as bad and dangerous as
+the Tunguses are friendly. Twenty Chukches will beat fifty Koryaeks.
+The _Ostrogs_ (fortified places) lying in the neighbourhood of their
+country are even in continual fear of them, and cost so much that
+the Government has recently withdrawn the oldest Russian settlement
+in those regions, Anadyrsk". Other statements to the same effect
+might be quoted, and even in our day the Chukches are, with or
+without justification, known in Siberia for stubbornness, courage,
+and love of freedom.
+
+But what violence could not effect has been completely accomplished
+in a peaceful way.[276] The Chukches indeed do not pay any other
+taxes than some small market tolls, but a very active traffic is now
+carried on between them and the Russians, and many travellers have
+without inconvenience traversed their country, or have sailed along
+its pretty thickly inhabited coast.
+
+Among former travellers on the Chukch peninsula, who visited the
+encampments of the coast Chukches, besides Behring, Cook, and other
+seafarers, the following may be mentioned:--
+
+The Cossack, PETER ILIIN SIN POPOV, was sent in 1711 with two
+interpreters to examine the country of the Chukches, and has left
+some interesting accounts of his observations there (MUeLLER,
+_Sammlung Russischer Geschichten_, iii. p. 56).[277]
+
+BILLINGS, with his companions SAUER, SARYTSCHEV, &c., visited
+Chukch-land in 1791. Among other things, accompanied by Dr. MERK,
+two interpreters and eight men, he made a journey from Metschigme
+Bay over the interior of Chukch-land to Yakutsk. Unfortunately the
+account we have of this remarkable journey is exceedingly
+incomplete.[278]
+
+FERDINAND VON WRANGEL during his famous Siberian travels was much in
+contact with the Chukches, and among his other journeys travelled in
+the winter of 1823 in dog sledges along the coast of the Polar Sea
+from the Kolyma to Kolyutschin Island (Wrangel, _Reise_, ii. pp.
+176-231). There are besides many notices of the Chukches at other
+places in the same work (i. pp. 267-293, ii. pp. 156, 168, &c.).
+
+FRIEDRICH VON LUeTKE in the course of his circumnavigation of the
+globe in 1826-29, came in contact with the population of the Chukch
+peninsula, whom he described in detail in Erman's _Archiv_ (iii. pp.
+446-464). Here it ought to be noted that, while the population on
+the North coast consists of true Chukches, the coast population of
+the region which Luetke visited, the stretch between the Anadyr and
+Cape Deschnev consists of a tribe, _Namollo_, which differs from the
+Chukches, and is nearly allied to the Eskimo on the American side of
+Behring's Straits.
+
+The English Franklin Expedition in the _Plover_, commanded by
+Captain MOORE, wintered in 1848-49 at Chukotskojnos, and, both at
+the winter station and in the course of extensive excursions with
+dogs along the coast and to the interior of the country, came much
+into contact with the natives. The observations made during the
+wintering were published in a work of great importance for a
+knowledge of the tribes in question by Lieutenant W.H. HOOPER, _Ten
+Months among the Tents of the Tuski_, London, 1853.
+
+C VON DITTMAR[279] travelled in 1853 in the north part of Kamchatka,
+and there came in contact with the reindeer nomads, especially with
+the Koryaeks. The information he gives us about the Chukches (p. 126)
+he had obtained from the Nischni-Kolymsk merchant, TRIFONOV, who had
+traded with them for twenty-eight years, and had repeatedly
+travelled in the interior of the country.
+
+Interesting contributions to a knowledge of the mode of living of
+the reindeer-Chukches were also collected by Baron G. VON MAYDELL,
+who, in 1868 and 1869, along with Dr. CARL VON NEUMANN and others,
+made a journey from Yakutsk by Sredni-Kolymsk and Anjui to
+Kolyutschin Bay. Unfortunately, with regard to this expedition, I
+have only had access to some notices in the _Proceedings of the
+Royal Geographical Society_ (vol. 21, London 1877, p. 213), and _Das
+Ausland_ (1880, p. 861). The proper sketch of the journey is to be
+found in _Isvestija_, published by the Siberian division of the
+Russian Geographical Society, parts 1 and 2.
+
+With reference to the other travellers whose writings are usually
+quoted as sources for a knowledge of the Chukches, it may be
+mentioned that STELLER and KRASCHENINNIKOV only touch in passing on
+the true Chukches, but instead give very instructive and detailed
+accounts of the Koryaeks, who are as nearly allied to the Chukches as
+the Spaniards to the Portuguese, but yet differ considerably in
+their mode of life, also that a part of these authors' statements
+regarding the Chukches do not at all refer to that tribe, but to the
+Eskimo. It appears indeed that recently, after the former national
+enmity had ceased, mixed races have arisen among these tribes. But
+it ought not to be forgotten that they differ widely in origin,
+although the Chukches as coming at a later date to the coast of the
+Polar Sea have adopted almost completely the hunting implements and
+household furniture of the Eskimo; and the Eskimo again, in the
+districts where they come in contact with the Chukches, have adopted
+various things from their language.
+
+Like the Lapps and most other European and Asiatic Polar races, the
+Chukches fall into two divisions speaking the same language and
+belonging to the same race, but differing considerably in their mode
+of life. One division consists of reindeer nomads, who, with their
+often very numerous reindeer herds, wander about between Behring's
+Straits, and the Indigirka and the Penschina Bays. They live by
+tending reindeer and by trade, and consider themselves the chief
+part of the Chukch tribe. The other division of the race are the
+coast Chukches, who do not own any reindeer, but live in fixed but
+easily moveable and frequently moved tents along the coast between
+Chaun Bay and Behring's Status. But beyond East Cape there is found
+along the coast of Behring's Sea another tribe, nearly allied to the
+Eskimo. This is Wrangel's _Onkilon_, Luetke's _Namollo_. Now,
+however, Chukches also have settled at several points on this line
+of coast, and a portion of the Eskimo have adopted the language of
+the superior Chukch race. Thus the inhabitants at St. Lawrence Bay
+spoke Chukch, with little mixture of foreign words, and differed in
+their mode of life and appearance only inconsiderably from the
+Chukches, whom during the course of the winter we learned to know
+from nearly all parts of the Chukch peninsula. The same was the case
+with the natives who came on board the _Vega_ while we sailed past
+East Cape, and with the two families we visited in Konyam Bay. But
+the natives in the north-west part of St. Lawrence Island talked an
+Eskimo dialect, quite different from Chukch. There were, however,
+many Chukch words incorporated with it. At Port Clarence on the
+contrary there lived pure Eskimo. Among them we found a Chukch woman
+who informed us that there were Chukch villages also on the American
+side of Behring's Strait, north of Prince of Wales Cape. These
+cannot, however, be very numerous or populous, as they are not
+mentioned in the accounts of the various English expeditions to
+those regions, they die not noticed for instance in Dr. JOHN
+SIMPSON'S instructive memoir on the Eskimo at Behring's Straits.
+
+We were unable during the voyage of the _Vega_ to obtain any data
+for estimating the number of the reindeer-Chukches. But the number
+of the coast Chukches may be arrived at in the following way.
+Lieutenant Nordquist collected from the numerous foremen who rested
+at the _Vega_ information as to the names of the encampments which
+are to be found at present on the coast between Chaun Bay and
+Behring's Straits, and the number of tents at each village. He thus
+ascertained that the number of the tents in the coast villages
+amounts to about 400. The number of inhabitants in every tent may
+be, according to our experience, averaged at five. The population on
+the line of coast in question may thus amount to about 2,000, at
+most to 2,500, men, women, and children. The number of the
+reindeer-Chukches appears to be about the same. The whole population
+of Chukch Land may thus now amount to 4,000 or 5,000 persons. The
+Cossack Popov already mentioned, reckoned in 1711 that all the
+Chukches, both reindeer-owning and those with fixed dwellings,
+numbered 2,000 persons. Thus during the last two centuries, if these
+estimates are correct, this Polar race has doubled its numbers.
+
+In order to give the reader an idea of the language of the Chukches,
+I have in a preceding chapter given an extract from the large
+vocabulary which Nordquist has collected. There appear to be no
+dialects differing very much from each other. Whether foreign words
+borrowed from other Asiatic languages have been adopted in Chukch we
+have not been able to make out. It is certain that no Russian words
+are used. The language strikes me as articulate and euphonious. It
+is nearly allied to the Koryaek, but so different from other, both
+East-Asiatic and American, tongues, that philologists have not yet
+succeeded in clearing up the relationship of the Chukches to other
+races.
+
+Like most other Polar tribes, the Chukches now do not belong to any
+unmixed race. This one is soon convinced of, if he considers
+attentively the inhabitants of a large tent-village. Some are tall,
+with tallowlike, raven-black hair, brown complexion, high aquiline
+nose--in short, with an exterior that reminds us of the descriptions
+we read of the North American Indians. Others again by their dark
+hair, slight beard, sunk nose or rather projecting cheek-bones and
+oblique eyes, remind us distinctly of the Mongolian race, and
+finally we meet among them with very fair faces, with features and
+complexion which lead us to suspect that they are descendants of
+runaways or prisoners of war of purely Russian origin. The most
+common type is--straight, coarse, black hair of moderate length, the
+brow tapering upwards, the nose finely formed, but with its root
+often flattened eyes by no means small, well-developed black
+eyebrows, projecting cheeks often swollen by frostbite, which is
+specially observable when the face is looked at from the side,
+light, slightly brown complexion, which in the young women is often
+nearly as red and white as in Europeans. The beard is always scanty.
+Nearly all are stout and well grown, we saw no cripples among them.
+The young women often strike one as very pretty if one can rid
+oneself of the unpleasant impression of the dirt, which is never
+washed away but by the drifting snow of winter, and of the nauseous
+train-oil odour which in winter they carry with them from the close
+tent-chamber. The children nearly always make a pleasant impression
+by their healthy appearance, and their friendly and becoming
+behaviour.
+
+[Illustration: TYPICAL CHUKCH FACES.
+ 1. Manschetsko a man from Pitlekaj.
+ 2. Young man from Irgunnuk.
+ 3. Chajdodlin a man from Irgunnuk.
+ 4. Reindeer Chukch.
+ 5. Old man from Irgunnuk.
+ 6. Man from Yinretlen. (After photographs by L. Palander.) ]
+
+[Illustration: TYPICAL CHUKCH FACES.
+ 1., 2. Nautsing, a woman from Pitlekaj.
+ 3., 4. Rotschitlen 5. Young man from Vankarema.
+ 6. Young man from Irgunnuk. (After photographs by L. Palander.) ]
+
+The Chukches are a hardy race, but exceedingly indolent when want of
+food does not force them to exertion. The men during their hunting
+excursions pass whole days in a cold of -30 deg. to -40 deg. out
+upon the ice, without protection and without carrying with them food
+or fuel. In such cases they slake their thirst with snow, and
+assuage their hunger, if they have been successful in hunting, with
+the blood and flesh of the animals they have killed. Women nearly
+naked often during severe cold leave for a while the inner tent, or
+tent-chamber, where the train-oil lamp maintains a heat that is at
+times oppressive. A foreigner's visit induces the completely naked
+children to half creep out from under the curtain of reindeer skin
+which separates the sleeping chamber from the exterior tent, in
+which, as it is not heated, the temperature is generally little
+higher than that of the air outside. In this temperature the mothers
+do not hesitate to show their naked children, one or two years of
+age, to visitors for some moments.
+
+Diseases are notwithstanding uncommon, with the exception that in
+autumn, before the severe cold commences, nearly all suffer from a
+cough and cold. Very bad skin eruptions and sores also occur so
+frequently that a stay in the inner tent is thereby commonly
+rendered disgusting to Europeans. Some of the sores however are
+merely frostbites, which most Chukches bring on themselves by the
+carelessness with which during high winds they expose the bare neck,
+breast and wrists to the lowest temperature. When frostbite has
+happened it is treated, even though of considerable extent, with
+extreme carelessness. They endeavour merely to thaw the frozen place
+as fast as possible partly by chafing, partly by heating. On the
+other hand we never saw anyone who had had a deep frostbite on the
+hands or feet, a circumstance which must be ascribed to the
+serviceable nature of their shoes and gloves. From the beginning of
+October 1878 to the middle of July 1879 no death appears to have
+happened at any of the encampments near us. During the same time the
+number of the inhabitants was increased by two or three births.
+During the wife's pregnancy the husband was very affectionate to
+her, gave her his constant company in the tent, kissed and fondled
+her frequently in the presence of strangers, and appeared to take a
+pride in showing her to visitors.
+
+We had no opportunity of witnessing any burial or marriage. It
+appears as if the Chukches sometimes burn their dead, sometimes
+expose them on the _tundra_ as food for beasts of prey, with
+weapons, sledges, and household articles. They have perhaps begun to
+abandon the old custom of burning the dead, since the hunting has
+fallen off so that the supply of blubber for burning has diminished.
+I have before described the pits filled with burned bones which Dr.
+Stuxberg found on the 9th September, 1878, by the bank of a dried-up
+rivulet. We took them for graves, but not having seen any more at
+our winter station, we began to entertain doubts as to the
+correctness of our observation[280]. It is at least certain that the
+inhabitants of Pitlekaj exclusively bury their dead by laying them
+out on the _tundra_.
+
+Regarding the man, buried or exposed in this way, whom Johnsen found
+on the 15th October, Dr. Almquist, who himself visited the place the
+next day, makes the following statement--
+
+[Illustration: PLAN OF A CHUKCH GRAVE. (After a drawing by A.
+Stuxberg.) ]
+
+ "The place was situated five to seven kilometres from the
+ village Yinretlen, near the bottom of the little valley
+ which runs from this village in a southerly direction into
+ the interior. The body was exposed on a little low knoll
+ only two fathoms across. It was covered with loose snow,
+ and was not frozen very hard. When it was loosened there
+ was no proper pit to be seen in the underlying snow and
+ ice. The corpse lay from true N.N.W. to S.S.E., with the
+ head to the former quarter. Under the head lay two black
+ rounded stones, such as the Chukches use in housekeeping.
+ Besides these there was no trace of anything underlying or
+ covering the corpse. The clothes had been torn by beasts of
+ prey from the body, the back was quite untouched, but the
+ face and breast were much wasted, and the arms and legs
+ almost wholly eaten up. On the knoll evident traces of the
+ wolf, the fox, and the raven were visible. Close to the
+ right side of the corpse had lain the weapons which Johnson
+ had brought home the day before. Near the feet was found a
+ sledge completely broken in pieces, evidently new and
+ smashed on the spot. Not far off, we found lying on the
+ snow pieces of a _pesk_ and of foot-coverings, both new and
+ of the finest quality. Beasts of prey had undoubtedly torn
+ them off and pulled them about. On the knoll there were
+ found besides five or six other graves, distinguished by
+ small stones or a wooden block lying on the even ground.
+ Two of the graves were ornamented by a collection of
+ reindeer horns. The severe cold prevented me from
+ ascertaining whether these stones concealed the remains of
+ buried corpses. I considered that I might take the Chukch's
+ head, as otherwise the wolves would doubtless have eaten it
+ up. It was taken on board and skeletonised."
+
+
+ In the spring of 1879, after the snow was melted, we had
+ further opportunities of seeing a large number of
+ burying-places, or more correctly of places where dead
+ Chukches had been laid out. They were marked by stones
+ placed in a peculiar way, and were measured and examined in
+ detail by Dr. Stuxberg, who gives the following description
+ of them:--
+
+[Illustration: TENT FRAME AT PITLEKAJ. (After a drawing by G. Bove.) ]
+
+ "The Chukch graves on the heights south of Pitlekaj and
+ Yinretlen, which were examined by me on the 4th and 7th
+ July, 1879, were nearly fifty in number. Every grave
+ consisted of an oval formed of large lying stones. At one
+ end there was generally a large stone raised on its edge,
+ and from the opposite end there went out one or two pieces
+ of wood lying on the ground. The area within the stone
+ circle was sometimes over-laid with small stones, sometimes
+ free and overgrown with grass. At all the graves, at a
+ distance of four to seven paces from the stone standing on
+ its edge in the longitudinal axis of the grave or a little
+ to the side of it, there was another smaller circle of
+ stones inclosing a heap of reindeer horns, commonly
+ containing also broken seals' skulls and other fragments of
+ bones. Only in one grave were found pieces of human bones.
+ The graves were evidently very old, for the bits of wood at
+ the ends were generally much decayed and almost wholly
+ covered with earth, and the stones were completely
+ overgrown with lichens on the upper side. I estimate the
+ age of these graves at about two hundred years."
+
+The Chukches do not dwell in snow huts, nor in wooden houses,
+because wood for building is not to be found in the country of the
+coast Chukches, and because wooden houses are unsuitable for the
+reindeer nomad. They live summer and winter in tents of a peculiar
+construction, not used by any other race. For in order to afford
+protection from the cold the tent is double, the outer envelope
+inclosing an inner tent or sleeping chamber. This has the form of a
+parallelopiped, about 3.5 metres long, 2.2 metres broad, and 1.8
+metre high. It is surrounded by thick, warm, reindeer skins, and is
+further covered with a layer of grass. The floor consists of a
+walrus skin stretched over a foundation of twigs and straw. At night
+the floor is covered with a carpet of reindeer skins, which is
+taken away during the day. The rooms at the sides of the inner tent
+are also shut off by curtains, and serve as pantries. The inner tent
+is warmed by three train-oil lamps, which together with the heat
+given off by the numerous human beings packed together in the tent,
+raise the temperature to such a height that the inhabitants even
+during the severest winter cold may be completely naked. The work of
+the women and the cooking are carried on in winter in this
+tent-chamber, very often also the calls of nature are obeyed in it.
+All this conduces to make the atmosphere prevailing there
+unendurable. There are also, however, cleanlier families, in whose
+sleeping chamber the air is not so disgusting.
+
+In summer they live during the day, and cook and work, in the outer
+tent. This consists of seal and walrus skins sewed together, which
+however are generally so old, hairless, and full of holes, that they
+appear to have been used by several generations. The skins of the
+outer tent are stretched over wooden ribs, which are carefully bound
+together by thongs of skin. The ribs rest partly on posts, partly on
+tripods of driftwood. The posts are driven into the ground, and the
+tripods get the necessary steadiness by a heavy stone or a seal-skin
+sack filled with sand being suspended from the middle of them.
+In order further to steady the tent a yet heavier stone is in the
+same way suspended by a strap from the top of the tent-roof, or the
+summit of the roof is made fast to the ground by thick thongs.
+At one place a tackle from a wrecked vessel was used for this purpose,
+being tightened with a block between the top of the roof and an
+iron hook frozen into the ground. The ribs in every tent are besides
+supported by T-formed cross stays.
+
+The entrance consists of a low door, which, when necessary, may be
+closed with a reindeer skin. The floor of the outer tent consists of
+the bare ground. This is kept very clean, and the few household
+articles are hung up carefully and in an orderly manner along the
+walls on the inner and outer sides of the tent. Near the tent are
+some posts, as high as a man, driven into the ground, with cross
+pieces on which skin boats, oars, javelins, &c., are laid, and from
+which fishing and seal nets are suspended.
+
+In the neighbourhood of the dwellings the storehouse is placed. It
+consists of a cellar excavated at some suitable place. The sites of
+old Onkilon dwellings are often used for this purpose. The descent
+is commonly covered with pieces of driftwood which are loaded with
+stones, at one place the door, or rather the hatch, of the cellar
+consisted of a whale's shoulder-blade. In consequence of the
+unlimited confidence which otherwise was wont to prevail between the
+natives and us, we were surprised to find them unwilling to give the
+_Vega_ men admittance to their storehouses. Possibly the report of
+our excavations for old implements at the sites of Onkilon dwellings
+at Irkaipij had spread to Kolyutschin, and been interpreted as
+attempts at plunder.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH OAR. One-sixteenth of the natural size. ]
+
+The tents were always situated on the sea shore, generally on the
+small neck of land which separates the strand lagoons from the sea.
+They are erected and taken down in a few hours. A Chukch family can
+therefore easily change its place of residence, and does remove very
+often from one village to another. Sometimes it appears to own the
+wooden frame of a tent at several places, and in such cases at
+removal there are taken along only the tent covering, the dogs, and
+the most necessary skin and household articles. The others are left
+without inclosure, lock, or watch, at the former dwelling-place, and
+one is certain to find all untouched on his return. During short
+stays at a place there are used, even when the temperature of the
+air is considerably under the freezing-point, exceedingly defective
+tents or huts made with the skin boats that may happen to be
+available. Thus a young couple who returned in spring to Pitlekaj
+lived happy and content in a single thin and ragged tent or conical
+skin hut which below where it was broadest was only two and a half
+metres across. An accurate inventory, which I took during the
+absence of the newly married pair, showed that their whole household
+furniture consisted of a bad lamp, a good American axe, some
+reindeer skins, a small piece of mirror, a great many empty preserve
+tins from the _Vega_, which among other things were used for
+cooking, a fire-drill, a comb, leather for a pair of moccassins,
+some sewing implements, and some very incomplete and defective
+tools.
+
+The boats are made of walrus skin, sewed together and stretched over
+a light frame-work of wood and pieces of bone. The different parts
+of the frame-work are bound together with thongs of skin or strings
+of whalebone. In form and size the Chukches' large boat, _atkuat_,
+called by the Russians _baydar_, corresponds completely with the
+Greenlander's _umiak_ or woman's boat. It is so light that four men
+can take it upon their shoulders, and yet so roomy that thirty men
+can be conveyed in it. One seldom sees _anatkuat_, or boats intended
+for only one man; they are much worse built and uglier than the
+Greenlander's _kayak_. The large boats are rowed with broad-bladed
+oars, of which every man or woman manages only one. By means of
+these oars a sufficient number of rowers can for a little raise the
+speed of the boat to ten kilometres per hour. Like the Greenlanders,
+however, they often cease rowing in order to rest, laugh, and
+chatter, then row furiously for some minutes rest themselves again,
+row rapidly, and so on. When the sea is covered with thin newly
+formed ice they put two men in the fore of the boat with one leg
+over in order to trample the ice in pieces.
+
+During winter the boats are laid up, and instead the dog-sledges are
+put in order. These are of a different construction from the
+Greenland sledges, commonly very light and narrow, made of some
+flexible kind of wood, and shod with plates of whales' jawbones,
+whales' ribs, or whalebone. In order to improve the running, the
+runners before the start are carefully covered with a layer of ice
+from two or three millimetres in thickness by repeatedly pouring
+water over them.[281] The different parts of the sledge are not
+fastened together by nails, but are bound together by strips of skin
+or strings of whalebone. On the low uncomfortable seat there
+commonly lies a piece of skin, generally of the Polar bear. The
+number of dogs that are harnessed to each sledge is variable. I have
+seen a Chukch riding behind two small lean dogs, who however
+appeared to draw their heavy load over even hard snow without any
+extraordinary exertion. At other sledges I have seen ten or twelve
+dogs, and a sledge laden with goods was drawn by a team of
+twenty-eight. The dogs are generally harnessed one pair before
+another to a long line common to all,[282] sometimes in the case of
+short excursions more than two abreast, or so irregularly that their
+position in relation to the sledge appears to have depended merely
+on the accidental length of the draught-line and the caprice of the
+driver. The dogs are guided not by reins but by continual crying and
+shouting, accompanied by lashes from a long whip. There is, besides,
+in every properly equipped sledge a short and thick staff mounted
+with iron, with a number of iron rings attached to the upper end.
+When nothing else will do, this staff is thrown at the offending
+animal. The staff is so heavy that the animal may readily get its
+death by such a throw. The dogs know this, and in consequence are so
+afraid of this grim implement that the rattling of the rings is
+sufficient to induce them to put forth extreme efforts. During rests
+the team is tied to the staff, which is driven into the snow.
+
+The dog harness is made of inch-wide straps of skin, forming a neck
+or shoulder band, united on both sides by a strap to a girth, to one
+side of which the draught strap is fastened. Thanks to the excellent
+protection against the harness galling which the bushy coat of the
+dogs affords, little attention is needed for the harness, and I have
+never seen a single dog that was idle in consequence of sores from
+the harness. On the other hand, their feet are often hurt by the
+sharp snow. On this account the equipment of every sledge embraces a
+number of dog shoes of the appearance shown in the accompanying
+woodcut. They are used only in case of need.
+
+[Illustration: DOG SHOE. One-third of natural size. ]
+
+The Chukch dogs are of the same breed, but smaller, than the Eskimo
+dogs in Danish Greenland. They resemble wolves, are long-legged,
+long-haired, and shaggy. The ears are short, commonly upright, their
+colour very variable, from black or white, and black or white
+spotted, to grey or yellowish-brown. For innumerable generations
+they have been used as draught animals, while as watch dogs they
+have not been required in a country where theft or robbery appears
+never to take place. The power of barking they have therefore
+completely lost, or perhaps they never possessed it. Even a European
+may come into the outer tent without any of the dogs there informing
+their owners sleeping in the inner tent by a sound of the
+foreigner's arrival.
+
+On the other hand, they are good though slow draught animals, being
+capable of long-continued exertion. They are as dirty and as
+peaceable as their owners. There are no fights made between
+dog-teams belonging to different tents, and they are rare between
+the dogs of an encampment and those of strangers. In Europe dogs are
+the friends of their masters and the enemies of each other, here
+they are the friends of each other and the slaves of their masters.
+In winter they appear in case of necessity to get along with very
+little food, they are then exceedingly lean, and for the most part
+are motionless in some snow-drift. They seldom leave the
+neighbourhood of the tent alone, not even to search for food or hunt
+at their own hand and for their own account. This appears to me so
+much the more remarkable, as they are often several days, I am
+inclined to say weeks, in succession without getting any food from
+their masters. A piece of a whale, with the skin and part of the
+flesh adhering, washed out of frozen sandy strata thus lay untouched
+some thousand paces from Pitlekaj, and the neighbourhood of the
+tents, where the hungry dogs were constantly wandering about,
+formed, as has been already stated, a favourite haunt for ptarmigan
+and hares during winter. Young dogs some months old are already
+harnessed along with the team in order that they may in time become
+accustomed to the draught tackle. During the cold season the dogs
+are permitted to live in the outer tent, the females with their
+young even in the inner. We had two Scotch collies with us on the
+_Vega_. They at first frightened the natives very much with their
+bark. To the dogs of Chukches they soon took the same superior
+standing as the European claims for himself in relation to the
+savage. The dog was distinctly preferred by the female Chukch canine
+population, and that too without the fights to which such favour on
+the part of the fair commonly gives rise. A numerous canine progeny
+of mixed Scotch-Chukch breed has thus arisen at Pitlekaj. The young
+dogs had a complete resemblance to their father, and the natives
+were quite charmed with them.
+
+When a dog is to be killed the Chukch stabs it with his spear, and
+then lets it bleed to death. Even when the scarcity was so great
+that the natives at Pitlekaj and Yinretlen lived mainly on the food
+we gave them, they did not eat the dogs they killed. On the other
+hand they had no objection to eating a shot crow.
+
+When the Chukch goes out on the ice to hunt seals he takes his dogs
+with him, and it is these which take home the catch, commonly with
+the draught-line fastened directly to the head of the killed seal,
+which is then turned on its back and dragged over the ice without
+anything under it. One of the inhabitants of Yinretlen returned from
+the open water off the coast after a successful hunting expedition
+with five seals, of which the smallest was laid on the sledge, the
+others being fastened one behind the other in a long row. After the
+last was drawn a long pole, which was used in setting the net.
+
+The dress of the Chukches is made of reindeer or seal-skin. The
+former, because it is warmer, is preferred as material for the
+winter dress. The men in winter are clad in two _pesks_, that which
+is worn next the body is of thin skin with the hair inwards, the
+outer is of thick skin with the hair outwards. Besides, they wear,
+when it rains or wet snow falls, a great coat of gut or of cotton
+cloth, which they call _calico_. On one occasion I saw such an
+overcoat made of a kind of reindeer-chamois leather, which was of
+excellent quality and evidently of home manufacture. It had been
+originally white, but was ornamented with broad brown painted
+borders. Some red and blue woollen shirts which we gave them were
+also worn above the skin clothes, and by then showy colours awakened
+great satisfaction in the owners. The Chukch _pesk_ is shorter than
+the Lapp one. It does not reach quite to the knees, and is confined
+at the waist with a belt. Under the _pesk_ are worn two pairs of
+trousers, the inner pair with the hair inwards, and the outer with
+the hair outwards. The trousers are well made, close fitting, and
+terminate above the foot. The foot-covering consists of reindeer or
+seal-skin moccasins, which above the foot are fastened to the
+trousers in the way common among the Lapps. The soles are of
+walrus-skin or bear-skin, and have the hair side inwards. On the
+other parts of the moccasin the hair is outwards. Within the shoes
+are seal-skin stockings and hay. The head covering consists of a
+hood embroidered with beads, over which in severe cold is drawn an
+outer hood bordered with dog-skin. The outer hood is often quite
+close under the chin, and extends in a very well-fitting way over
+the shoulders. To a complete dress there also belong a skin
+neckerchief or boa, and a neck covering of multiple reindeer-skins,
+or of different kinds of skins sewn together in chess-board-like
+squares. In summer and far into the autumn the men go bareheaded,
+although they clip the hair on the crown of the head close to the
+root.
+
+During the warm season of the year a number of the winter wraps are
+laid off in proportion to the increase of the heat, so that the
+dress finally consists merely of a _pesk_, an overcoat, and a pair
+of trousers. The summer moccassins are often as long in the leg as
+our sea-boots. In the tent the men wear only short trousers reaching
+to the hip, together with leather belts (health-belts) at the waist
+and on the arms. The man's dress is not much ornamented. On the
+other hand the men often wear strings of beads in the ears, or a
+skin band set with large, tastefully arranged beads or a leather
+band with some large beads on the brow. The leather band they will
+not willingly part with, and a woman told us that the beads in it
+indicate the number of enemies the wearer has killed. I am, however,
+quite certain that this was only an empty boast. Probably our
+informant referred to a tradition handed down from former warlike
+periods to the present time, and thus we have here only a Chukch
+form of the boasting about martial feats common even among civilised
+nations.
+
+To the dress of the men there belongs further a screen for the eyes,
+which is often beautifully ornamented with beads and silver mounting.
+This screen is worn especially in spring as a protection from the strong
+sunlight reflected from the snow-plains. At this season of the year
+snow-blindness is very common, but notwithstanding this snow-spectacles
+of the kind which the Eskimo and even the Samoyeds use are unknown here.
+
+The men are not tattooed, but have sometimes a black or red cross
+painted on the cheek. They wear the hair cut close to the root, with
+the exception of a short tuft right on the crown of the head and a
+short fringe above the brow. The women have long hair, parted right
+in the middle, and plaited along with strings of beads into plaits
+which hang down by the ears. They are generally tattooed on the
+face, sometimes also on the arms or other parts of the body. The
+tattooing is done by degrees, possibly certain lines are first made
+at marriage.
+
+The dress of the women, like that of the men, is double during winter.
+The outer _pesk_, which is longer and wider than the man's, passes
+downwards into a sort of very wide trousers. The sleeves too are
+exceedingly wide, so that the arm may easily be drawn in and stuck out.
+Under the outer _pesk_ there is an inner _pesk_, or skin-shirt, and
+under them a pair of very short trousers is worn. Where the outer _pesk_
+ends the _moccassins_ begin. At the neck the _pesk_ is much cut away, so
+that a part of the back is bare. I have seen girls go with the upper
+part of the back exposed in this way even in a cold of -30 deg. or -40 deg.. The
+stockings have the hair inwards, they are bordered with dog-skin, and go
+to the knees. The moccasins, chin-covers, hoods, and neckerchiefs differ
+little from the corresponding articles of men's dress The woman's dress
+is in general more ornamented than the man's, and the skins used for it
+appear to be more carefully chosen and prepared. In the inner tent the
+women go nearly naked, only with quite short under-trousers of skin or
+_calico_ or a narrow _cingulum pudicitiae_ On the naked body there are
+worn besides one or two leather bands on one arm, a leather band on the
+throat, another round the waist, and some bracelets of iron or less
+frequently of copper on the wrists. The younger women however do not
+like to show themselves in this dress to foreigners, and they therefore
+hasten at their entrance to cover the lower part of the body with the
+_pesk_, or some other piece of dress that may be at hand.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH FACE TATTOOING. (After a drawing by A.
+Stuxberg.) ]
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH CHILDREN.
+ _a._ Girl from Irgunnuk. (After a photograph by L. Palander.)
+ _b._ Boy from Pitlekaj, with his mother's hood on.
+ (After a drawing by the seaman Hansson.) ]
+
+When the children are some years old they get the same dress as
+their parents, different for boys and girls. While small they are
+put into a wide skin covering with the legs and arms sewed together
+downwards. Behind there is a four-cornered opening through which
+moss (the white, dead part of Sphagnum), intended to absorb the
+excreta, is put in and changed. At the ends of the arms two loops
+are fastened, through which the child's legs are passed when the
+mother wishes to put it away in some corner of the tent. The dress
+itself appears not to be changed until it has become too small. In
+the inner tent the children go completely naked.
+
+[Illustration: SNOW SHOES.
+ _a._ The common kind.
+ _b._ Intended to be used in the way shown in the drawing on the
+ opposite page. (One-thirteenth of the natural size.) ]
+
+Both men and women use snow-shoes during winter. Without them they
+will not willingly undertake any long walk in loose snow. They
+consider such a walk so tiresome, that they loudly commiserated one
+of my crew, who had to walk without snow-shoes after drifting
+weather from the village Yinretlen to the vessel, about three
+kilometres distant. Finally a woman's compassion went so far that
+she presented him with a pair, an instance of generosity on the part
+of our Chukch friends which otherwise was exceedingly rare. The
+frame of the snow-shoes is made of wood, the cross-pieces are of
+strong and well-stretched thongs. This snow-shoe corresponds
+completely with that of the Indians, and is exceedingly serviceable
+and easy to get accustomed to. Another implement for travelling over
+snow was offered by a Chukch who drove past the vessel in the
+beginning of February. It consisted of a pair of immensely wide
+skates of thin wood, covered with seal-skin, and raised at both
+sides. I had difficulty in understanding how these broad shapeless
+articles could be used with advantage until I learned from the
+accompanying drawing that they may be employed as a sort of sledges.
+The drawing is taken from a Japanese work, whose title when
+translated runs thus: A Journey to the north part of Japan (Yezo),
+1804 (No. 565 of the Japanese library I brought home with me).
+
+[Illustration: AN AINO MAN SKATING AFTER A REINDEER. (Japanese
+drawing.) ]
+
+In consequence of the difficulty which the Chukch has during winter
+in procuring water by melting snow over the train-oil lamp, there
+can be no washing of the body at that season of the year. Faces are
+however whipped clean by the drifting snow, but at the same time are
+generally swollen or sore from frostbite. On the whole, the
+disposition of the Chukches to cleanliness is slight, and above all,
+their ideas of what is clean or unclean differs considerably from
+ours. Thus the women use urine as a wash for the face. At a common
+meal the hand is often used as a spoon, and after it is finished, a
+bowl filled with newly-passed urine instead of water is handed round
+the company for washing the hands. Change of clothes takes place
+seldom, and even when the outer dress is clean, new and well cut, of
+carefully-chosen beautiful skins, the under-dress is very dirty, and
+vermin numerous enough, though less so than might have been
+expected. Food is often eaten in a way which we consider disgusting,
+a titbit, for instance, is passed from mouth to mouth. The vessels
+in which food is served are used in many ways and seldom cleaned. On
+the other hand it may be stated that, in order not to make a stay in
+the confined tent-chamber too uncomfortable, certain rules are
+strictly observed. Thus, for instance, it is not permitted in the
+interior of the tent to spit on the floor, but this must be done
+into a vessel which in case of necessity is used as a night-utensil.
+In every outer tent there lies a specially carved reindeer horn,
+with which snow is removed from the clothes, the outer _pesk_ is
+usually put off before one goes into the inner tent and the shoes
+are carefully freed from snow. The carpet of walrus-skin, which
+covers the floor of the inner tent, is accordingly dry and clean.
+Even the outer tent is swept clean and free from loose snow, and the
+snow is daily shovelled away from the tent doors with a spade of
+whalebone. Every article both in the outer and inner tent is laid in
+its proper place, and so on.
+
+[Illustration: _a._ HUNTING CUP (sucking tube)
+ (One-fourth of the natural size.)
+ _b._ SNOW SCRAPER. (One-eighth of the natural size.) ]
+
+As ornaments glass beads are principally used, some of them being
+suspended from the neck and ears, others sewed upon the hood and
+other articles of dress, or plaited into the hair embroidery of very
+pleasing patterns is also employed. In order to embellish the
+_pesks_ strips of skin or marmots' and squirrels' tails, &c., are
+sewed upon them. Often a variegated artificial tail of different
+skins is fixed to the hood behind, or the skin of the hood is so
+chosen that the ears of the animal project on both sides of the
+head. Along with the beads are fixed amulets, wooden tongs, small
+bone heads or bone figures, pieces of metal, coins, &c. One child
+had suspended from its neck an old Chinese coin with a square hole
+in the middle, together with a new American five-cent piece.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH WEAPONS AND HUNTING IMPLEMENTS.
+ 1. Harpoon (one-fifteenth of the natural size).
+ 2. Spear found at a grave (one-fourth).
+ 3. Bird sling (one-eighth).
+ 4. Darts with whipsling for casting them (one-seventh).
+ 5. Bird Dart with wooden handle for throwing (one-twelfth).
+ 6. Leister of bone (one-fourth).
+ 7. Ivory coat of mail (one-ninth). ]
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BOW AND QUIVER.
+(One-eighth of the natural size.) ]
+
+In former times beautiful and good weapons were probably highly
+prized by so warlike a people as the Chukches, but now weapons are
+properly scarce antiquities, which, however, are still regarded with
+a certain respect, and therefore are not readily parted with. The
+lance which was found beside the corpse (fig. 2 on p. 105) shows by
+its still partially preserved gold decorations that it had been
+forged by the hand of an artist. Probably it has formed part of the
+booty won long ago in the fights with the Cossacks. I procured by
+barter an ivory coat of mail (fig. 7 on p. 105), and remains of
+another. The ivory plates of the coat of mail are twelve centimetres
+in length, four in breadth, and nearly one in thickness, holes being
+bored at their edges for the leather thongs by which the plates are
+bound together. This binding has been so arranged that the whole coat
+of mail, when not in use, may be rolled together.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH ARROWS. (One-ninth of the natural size.)
+_a._ An arrowhead (one-half the natural size.) ]
+
+Along with the spear and the coat of mail the old Chukches used the
+bow for martial purposes. Now this weapon is employed only for
+hunting, but it appears as if even for this purpose it would soon go
+out of use. Some of the natives, however, use the bow with great
+accuracy of aim. The bows which I procured commonly consisted of a
+badly worked, slightly bent, elastic piece of wood, with the ends
+drawn together by a skin thong. Only some old bows had a finer form.
+They were larger, and made with care, for instance, they were
+covered with birch-bark, and strengthened by an artistic plaiting of
+sinews on the outer side. The arrows are of many kinds, partly with
+bone or wooden, and partly with iron, points. Feathers are generally
+wanting. The shaft is a clumsily worked piece of wood. Crossbows are
+occasionally used. We have even seen bows for playthings, with
+carefully made, non-pointed arrows. At the encampments near the
+winter station we found a couple of percussion-lock guns, with caps,
+powder and lead. They were evidently little used, and my attempt to
+induce the Chukches to undertake long journeys by promises of a gun
+with the necessary supply of powder and lead completely failed. When
+the Chukch, who carried our letters to Nischni Kolymsk, was after
+his return rewarded with a red shirt, a gun, caps, powder and ball,
+he wished to exchange the gun and ammunition for an axe.
+
+The principal livelihood of the Chukches is derived from hunting and
+fishing. Both are very abundant at certain seasons of the year, but
+are less productive during the cold season, in which case, in
+consequence of the little forethought of the savage, there arises
+great scarcity both of food and fuel and the means of melting snow.
+Of their hunting and fishing implements I cannot give so complete
+accounts as I should wish, because they very carefully avoided
+taking any of the _Vega's_ hunters with them on their hunting
+excursions.
+
+The rough seal is taken with nets, made of strong seal-skin thongs.
+The nets are set in summer among the ground-ices along the shore.
+The animal gets entangled in the net and is suffocated, as it can no
+longer come to the surface to breathe. In winter the seal is taken
+partly with nets in "leads" among the ice, partly with the harpoon
+when it crawls out of its hole, it is also taken by means of a noose
+of thongs placed over its hole. In order to avoid the loss of the
+valuable seal-blood, which is considered an extraordinary delicacy
+by the Chukches, the animal is never killed by an edged tool, if
+that can be avoided, but by repeated blows on the head. The bear is
+killed by the lance or knife, the latter, according to the statement
+of a Chukch, being the surest weapon, the walrus and the largest
+kind of seals with the harpoon (fig. 1, p. 105), or a lance
+resembling the Greenlander's. Even the whale is harpooned, but with
+a harpoon considerably larger than the common, and to which as many
+as six inflated seal-skins are fastened. In order to kill a whale a
+great many such harpoons must be struck into it. Birds are taken in
+snares, or killed with bird-javelins, arrows, and slings. The last
+mentioned (fig. 3, p. 105) consist of a number of round balls of
+bone fastened to leather thongs, which are knotted together. Some
+feathers are often fixed to the knot in order to increase the
+resistance of the air to this part of the sling. When the sling is
+thrown the bone balls are thereby scattered in all directions, and
+the probability of hitting becomes greater. Every man and boy in
+summer carries with him such a sling, often bound round his head,
+and is immediately prepared to cast it at flocks of birds flying
+past. Common slings are also used, consisting of two thongs and a
+piece of skin fastened to them. The bird-dart (fig. 5, p. 105)
+completely resembles that used by the Eskimo. A kind of snare was
+used by the boys at Yinretlen to catch small birds for our
+zoologist. They were made of whalebone fibres.
+
+Fish are caught partly with nets, partly with the hook or with a
+sort of leister (fig. 6, p. 105). The nets are made of sinew-thread.
+I procured several of these, and was surprised at the small value
+which the natives set upon them, notwithstanding the hard labour
+which must have been required for preparing the thread and making
+the net. The nets are also sometimes used as drift-nets. The
+fishing-rod consists of a shaft only thirty centimetres long, to
+which is fixed a short line made of sinews. The extreme end of the
+line passes through a large sinker of ivory, to which are attached
+two or three tufts each with its hook of bone only, or of bone and
+copper, or bone and iron. The hook has three or four points
+projecting in different directions. I have before described how the
+hook is used in autumn in fishing for roach, also how the productive
+fishing goes on in the neighbourhood of Tjapka.
+
+Even for the coast Chukch reindeer flesh appears to form an
+important article of food. He probably purchases his stock of it
+from the reindeer-Chukches for train-oil, skin straps, walrus tusks,
+and perhaps fish. I suppose that part of the frozen reindeer blood,
+which the inhabitants of the villages at our winter station used for
+soup, had been obtained in the same way. Wild reindeer, or reindeer
+that had run wild, were hunted with the lasso. Such animals,
+however, do not appear now to be found in any large numbers on the
+Chukch peninsula.
+
+Besides fish and flesh the Chukches consume immense quantities of
+herbs and other substances from the vegetable kingdom.[283] The most
+important of these are the leaves and young branches of a great many
+different plants (for instance Salix, Rhodiola, &c.) which are
+collected and after being cleaned are preserved in seal-skin sacks.
+Intentionally or unintentionally the contents of the sacks sour
+during the course of the summer. In autumn they freeze together to a
+lump of the form of the stretched seal-skin. The frozen mass is cut
+in pieces and used with flesh, much in the same way as we eat bread.
+Occasionally a vegetable soup is made from the pieces along with
+water, and is eaten warm. In the same way the contents of the
+reindeer stomach is used. Algae and different kinds of roots are
+also eaten, among the latter a kind of wrinkled tubers, which, as
+already stated (Vol. I., p. 450) have a very agreeable taste.
+
+In summer the Chukches eat cloud-berries, red bilberries, and other
+berries, which are said to be found in great abundance in the
+interior of the country. The quantity of vegetable matter which is
+collected for food at that season of the year is very considerable,
+and the natives do not appear to be very particular in their choice,
+if the leaves are only green, juicy, and free from any bitter taste.
+When the inhabitants, in consequence of scarcity of food, removed in
+the beginning of February from Pitlekaj, they carried with them
+several sacks of frozen vegetables, and there were still some left
+in the cellars to be taken away as required. In the tents at St.
+Lawrence Bay there lay heaps of leaf-clad willow-twigs and sacks
+filled with leaves and stalks of Rhodiola. The writers who quote the
+Chukches as an example of a race living exclusively on substances
+derived from the animal kingdom thus commit a complete mistake. On
+the contrary, they appear at certain seasons of the year to be more
+"graminivorous" than any other people I know, and with respect to
+this their taste appears to me to give the anthropologist a hint of
+certain traits of the mode of life of the people of the Stone Age
+which have been completely overlooked. To judge from the Chukches
+our primitive ancestors by no means so much resembled beasts of prey
+as they are commonly imagined to have done, and it may, perhaps,
+have been the case that "bellum omnium inter omnes" was first
+brought in with the higher culture of the Bronze or Iron Age.
+
+The cooking of the Chukches, like that of most wild races, is very
+simple. After a successful catch all the dwellers in the tent
+gormandise on the killed animal, and appear to find a special
+pleasure in making their faces and hands as bloody as possible.
+Alternately with the raw flesh are eaten pieces of blubber and
+marrow, and bits of the intestines which have been freed from their
+contents merely by pressing between the fingers. Fish is eaten not
+only in a raw state, but also frozen so hard that it can be broken
+in pieces. When opportunity offers the Chukches do not, however,
+neglect to boil their food, or to roast pieces of flesh over the
+train-oil lamp--the word _roast_ ought however in this case to be
+exchanged for _soot_. At a visit which Lieutenant Hovgaard made at
+Najtskaj, the natives in the tent where he was a guest ate for
+supper first seal-flesh soup, then boiled fish, and lastly, boiled
+seal-flesh. They thus observed completely the order of eating
+approved in Europe. The Chukches are unacquainted with other forks
+than their fingers, and even the use of the spoon is not common.
+Many carry about with them a spoon of copper, tinned iron, or bone
+(fig. 8, p. 117). The soup is often drunk directly out of the
+cooking vessel, or sucked up through hollow bones (see the figure on
+p. 104). Those are used as dunking cups, and like the spoons
+are worn in the belt. As examples of Chukch dishes I may further
+mention, vegetable soup, boiled seal-flesh, boiled fish, blood soup,
+soup of seal-blood and blubber. To these we may add soup from finely
+crushed bones, or from seal-flesh, blubber, and bones. For crushing
+the bones there is in every tent a hammer, consisting of an oval
+stone with a hollow round it for a skin thong, with which the stone
+is fastened to the short shaft of wood or bone. The bones which are
+used for food are finely crushed with this implement against a stone
+anvil or a whale's vertebra, and then boiled with water and blood,
+before being eaten. At first we believed that this dish was intended
+for the dogs, but afterwards I had an opportunity of convincing
+myself that the natives themselves ate it, and that long before the
+time when they suffered from scarcity of provisions. The hammer is
+further of interest as forming one of the stone implements which are
+most frequently found in graves from the Stone Age. That the hammer
+was mainly intended for kitchen purposes appears from the
+circumstance that the women alone had it at their disposal, and were
+consulted when it was parted with. Along with such hammers there was
+to be found in every tent an anvil, consisting of a whale's vertebra
+or a large round stone with a bowl-formed depression worn or cut out
+in the middle of it.
+
+[Illustration: STONE HAMMERS AND ANVIL FOR CRUSHING BONES.
+(One-sixth of the natural size.) ]
+
+During winter a great portion of the inhabitants of Yinretlen,
+Pitlekaj, and as far as from Irgunnuk, came daily on board to beg or
+buy themselves provisions, and during this period they were fed
+mainly by us. They soon accustomed themselves to our food. They
+appeared specially fond of pea-soup and porridge. The latter they
+generally laid out on a snow-drift to freeze, and then took it in
+the frozen form to the tents. Coffee they did not care for unless it
+was well sugared. Salt they did not use, but with sugar they were
+all highly delighted. They also drank tea with pleasure. Otherwise
+water forms their principal drink. They were, however, often
+compelled in winter, in consequence of the difficulty of melting
+over the train-oil lamps a sufficient quantity of snow, to quench
+their thirst with snow. On board they often asked for water, and
+drank at once large quantities of it.
+
+Spirits, to which they are exceedingly addicted, they call, as has
+been already stated, in conversation with Europeans, "ram," the
+pronouncing of the word being often accompanied by a hawking noise,
+a happy expression, and a distinctive gesture, which consisted in
+carrying the open right hand from the mouth to the waist, or in
+counterfeiting the unintelligible talk of a drunken man. Among
+themselves they call it fire-water (_akmimil_). The promise of it
+was the most efficient means of getting an obstinate Chukch to
+comply with one's wishes. In case they undertook to drive us with
+their dog-teams, they were never desirous of finding out whether any
+stock of provisions was taken along, but warned by our parsimony in
+dealing out spirituous liquor, they were unwilling to start until
+they had examined the stock of "ram." That drunkenness, not the
+satisfying of the taste, was in this case the main object, is shown
+by the circumstance that they often fixed, as price for the articles
+they saw we were anxious to have, such a quantity of brandy as would
+make them completely intoxicated. When on one occasion I appeared
+very desirous of purchasing a fire-drill, which was found in a tent
+inhabited by a newly-wedded pair, the young and very pretty
+housewife undertook the negotiation, and immediately began by
+declaring that her husband could not part with the fire-producing
+implement unless I gave him the means of getting quite drunk, for
+which, according to her statement, which was illustrated by lively
+gesticulations representing the different degrees of intoxication,
+eight glasses were required. Not until the man had got so many would
+he be content, that is, dead drunk. I have myself observed, however,
+on several occasions that two small glasses are sufficient to make
+them unsteady on the legs. Under the influence of liquor they are
+cheerful, merry, and friendly, but troublesome by their excessive
+caressing. When in the company of intoxicated natives, one must take
+good care that he does not unexpectedly get a kiss from some old
+greasy seal-hunter. Even the women readily took a glass, though
+evidently less addicted to intoxicants than the men. They however
+got their share, as did even the youngest of the children. When, as
+happened twice in the course of the winter, an encampment was
+fortunate enough to get a large stock of brandy sent it from
+Behring's Straits, the intoxication was general, and, as I have
+already stated, the bluish-yellow eyes the next day showed that
+quarrelsomeness had been called forth even among this peace-loving
+people by their dear _akmimil_. During our stay at the villages
+nearer Behring's Straits two murders even took place, of which one
+at least was committed by an intoxicated man.
+
+However slight the contact the Chukches have with the world that has
+reached the standpoint of the brandy industry is, this means of
+enjoyment, however, appears to be the object of regular barter. Many
+of the Chukches who travelled past us were intoxicated, and shook
+with pride a not quite empty keg or seal-skin sack, to let us hear
+by the dashing that it contained liquid. One of the crew, whom I
+asked to ascertain what sort of spirit it was, made friends with the
+owner, and induced him at last to part with about a thimbleful of
+it, more could not be given. According to the sailor's statement it
+was without colour and flavour, clear as crystal, but weak. It was
+thus probably Russian corn brandy, not gin.
+
+During a visit which Lieutenants Hovgaard and Nordquist made in the
+autumn of 1878 to the reindeer-Chukches in the interior of the
+country, much diluted American gin was on the contrary presented,
+and the tent-owner showed his guests a tin drinking-cup with the
+inscription, "Capt. Ravens, Brig _Timandra_, 1878". Some of the
+natives stated distinctly that they could purchase brandy at
+Behring's Straits all the year round. All the men in the tent
+village, and most of the women, but not the children, had at the
+time got completely intoxicated in order to celebrate the arrival of
+the foreigners, or perhaps rather that of the stock of brandy. As
+there are no Europeans settled at Behring's Straits, at least on the
+Asiatic side, we learn from the traffic in brandy that there are
+actually natives abstemious enough to be able to deal in it.
+
+Tobacco is in common use, both for smoking and chewing.[284] Every
+native carries with him a pipe resembling that of the Tunguse, and a
+tobacco-pouch (fig 7, p. 117). The tobacco is of many kinds, both
+Russian and American, and when the stock of it is finished native
+substitutes are used. Preference is given to the sweet, strong
+chewing tobacco, which sailors generally use. In order to make the
+tobacco sweet which has not before been drenched with molasses, the
+men are accustomed, when they get a piece of sugar, to break it down
+and place it in the tobacco-pouch. The tobacco is often first
+chewed, then dried behind the ear, and kept in a separate pouch
+suspended from the neck, to be afterwards smoked. The pipes are so
+small that, like those of the Japanese, they may be smoked out with
+a few strong whiffs. The smoke is swallowed. Even the women and
+children smoke and chew, and they begin to do so at so tender an age
+that we have seen a child, who could indeed walk, but still sucked
+his mother, both chew tobacco, smoke, and take a "ram".
+
+Some bundles of Ukraine tobacco, which I took with me for barter
+with the natives, put it into my power to procure a large number of
+contributions to the ethnological collection, which in the absence
+of other wares for barter I would otherwise have been unable to
+obtain. For the Chukches do not understand money. This is so much
+the more remarkable as they carry on a very extensive trade, and
+evidently are good mercantile men. According to von Dittmar (_loc.
+cit._ p. 129) there exists, or still existed in 1856, a steady,
+slow, but regular transport of goods along the whole north coast of
+Asia and America, by which Russian goods were conveyed to the
+innermost parts of Polar America, and furs instead found their way
+to the bazaars of Moscow and St. Petersburg. This traffic is carried
+on at five market places, of which three are situated in America,
+one on the islands at Behring's Straits, and one at Anjui near
+Kolyma The last-mentioned is called by the Chukches "the fifth
+beaver market."[285]
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH IMPLEMENTS.
+ 1. Scraper for currying (one-seventh of the natural size).
+ 2. Awls (one-half).
+ 3. Ice-scraper intended for decoying the seal from its hole,
+ with bone amulet affixed (one-half).
+ 4. Bone knife (one-half).
+ 5., 6. Amulets of bone (natural size).
+ 7. Pipe and tobacco pouch (one-third).
+ 8. Metal spoons (one-third). ]
+
+The Chukches' principal articles of commerce consist of seal-skin,
+train-oil, fox-skins and other furs, walrus tusks, whalebone, &c.
+Instead they purchase tobacco, articles of iron, reindeer skin and
+reindeer flesh, and, when it can be had, spirit. A bargain is
+concluded very cautiously after long-continued consultation in a
+whispering tone between those present. I employed spirit as an
+article for barter only in the last necessity, but they soon
+observed that the desire to become owner of an uncommon article of
+art or antiquity overcame my determination, and they soon learned to
+avail themselves of this, especially as in all cases I made full
+payment for the article and gave the fire-water into the bargain.
+
+The lamp (see the figures at pp. 22, 23), with which light is
+maintained in the tent, consists of a flat trough of wood, bone of
+the whale, soap-stone or burned clay, broader behind than before,
+and divided by an isolated toothed comb into two divisions. In the
+front division wicks of moss (Sphagnum sp.) are laid in a long thin
+row along the whole edge. Under the lamp there is always another
+vessel intended to receive the train-oil which may possibly be
+spilled.
+
+In summer the natives also cook with wood in the open air or in the
+outer tent, in winter only in the greatest necessity in the latter.
+For they find the smoke, which the wood gives off in the close tent,
+unendurable. Although driftwood is to be found in great abundance on
+the beach, scarcity of train-oil was evidently considered by the
+natives as great a misfortune as scarcity of food. _Uinqa eek_, no
+fuel (properly, no fire), was the constant cry even of those who
+drew loads of driftwood on board to earn bread for themselves. The
+circumstance that their fuel does not give off any smoke has the
+advantage that the eyes of the Chukches are not usually nearly so
+much attacked as those of the Lapps.
+
+In the tent the women have always a watchful eye over the trimming
+of the lamp and the keeping up of the fire. The wooden pins she uses
+to trim the wick, and which naturally are drenched with train-oil,
+are used when required as a light or torch in the outer tent, to
+light pipes, &c. In the same way other pins dipped in train-oil are
+used.[286] Clay lamps are made by the Chukches themselves, the clay
+being well kneaded and moistened with urine. The burning is
+incomplete, and is indeed often wholly omitted.
+
+Train-oil and other liquid wares are often kept in sacks of
+seal-skin, consisting of whole hides, out of which the body has been
+taken through the opening made by cutting off the head, and in which
+all holes, either natural or caused by the killing of the animal,
+have been firmly closed. In one of the forepaws there is then
+inserted with great skill a wooden air- and water-tight cock with
+spigot and faucet. In sacks intended for dry wares the paws are also
+cut off, and the opening through which the contents are put in and
+taken out is made right across the breast immediately below the
+forepaws.
+
+Fire is lighted partly in the way common in Sweden some decades ago
+by means of flint and steel, partly by means of a drill implement.
+In the former case the steel generally consists of a piece of a file
+or some other old steel tool, or of pieces of iron or steel which
+have been specially forged for the purpose. Commonly the form of
+this tool indicates a European or Russian-Siberian origin, but I
+also acquired clumsily hammered pieces of iron, which appeared to
+form specimens of native skill in forging. A Chukch showed me a
+large fire-steel of the last mentioned kind, provided with a special
+handle of copper beautifully polished by long-continued use. He
+evidently regarded it as a very precious thing, and I could not
+persuade him to part with it. On the supposition that the metal of
+the clumsily hammered pieces of iron might possibly be of meteoric
+origin I purchased as many of them as I could. But the examination,
+to which they were subjected after our return, showed that they
+contain no traces of nickel. The iron was thus not meteoric.
+
+The flint consists of a beautiful chalcedony or agate, which has
+been formed in cavities in the volcanic rocks which occur so
+abundantly in north-eastern Asia, and which probably are also found
+here and there as pebbles in the beds of the _tundra_ rivers. As
+tinder, are used partly the woolly hair of various animals, partly
+dry fragments of different kinds of plants. The steel and a large
+number of pieces of flint are kept in a skin pouch suspended from
+the neck. Within this pouch there is a smaller one, containing the
+tinder. It is thus kept warm by the heat of the body, and protected
+from wet by its double envelope. Along with it the men often carry
+on their persons a sort of match of white, well-dried, and crushed
+willows, which are plaited together and placed in even rolls. This
+match burns slowly, evenly, and well.
+
+The other sort of fire-implement consists of a dry wooden pin, which
+by a common bow-drill is made to rub against a block of dry
+half-blackened wood. The upper part of this pin runs in a drill
+block of wood or bone. In one of the tools which I purchased, the
+astragalus of a reindeer was used for this purpose. In the
+light-stock holes have been made to give support to the pin, and
+perhaps to facilitate the formation of the half-carbonised wood-meal
+which the drilling loosens from the light-stock and in which the red
+heat arises. When fire is to be lighted by means of this implement,
+the lower part of the drill pin is daubed over with a little
+train-oil, one foot holds the light-stock firm against the ground,
+the bowstring is put round the drill pin, the left hand presses the
+pin with the drill block against the light-stock, and the bow is
+carried backwards and forwards, not very rapidly, but evenly,
+steadily, and uninterruptedly, until fire appears. A couple of
+minutes are generally required to complete the process The women
+appear to be more accustomed than the men to the use of this
+implement. An improved form of it consisted of a wooden pin on whose
+lower part a lense-formed and perforated block of wood was fixed.
+This block served as fly-wheel and weight. Across the wooden pin ran
+a perforated cross-bar which was fastened with two sinews to its
+upper end. By carrying this cross-bar backwards and forwards the pin
+could be turned round with great rapidity. The implement appears to
+me the more remarkable as it shows a new way of using the stone or
+brick lenses, which are often found in graves or old house-sites
+from the Stone Age.
+
+[Illustration: FIRE DRILL. One-eighth of the natural size. ]
+
+Among the Chukches, as among many other wild races, lucifer matches
+have obtained the honour of being the first of the inventions of the
+civilised races that have been recognised as indisputably superior
+to their own. A request for lucifer matches was therefore one of the
+most common of those with which our friends at Behring's Straits
+tormented us during winter, and they were willing for a single box
+to offer things that in comparison were very valuable. Unfortunately
+we had no superfluous supply of this necessary article, or perhaps I
+ought to say fortunately, for if the Chukches for some years were
+able to get a couple of boxes of matches for a walrus tusk, I
+believe that with their usual carelessness they would soon
+completely forget the use of their own fire-implements.
+
+Among household articles I may further mention the following:--
+
+The _hide-scraper_ (fig. 1, p. 117) is of stone or iron and fastened
+to a wooden handle. With this tool the moistened hide is cleaned
+very particularly, and is then rubbed, stretched, and kneaded so
+carefully that several days go to the preparation of a single
+reindeer skin. That this is hard work is also shown by the woman who
+is employed at it in the tent dripping with perspiration. While thus
+employed she sits on a part of the skin and stretches out the other
+part with the united help of the hands and the bare feet. When the
+skin has been sufficiently worked, she fills a vessel with her own
+urine, mixes this with comminuted willow bark, which has been dried
+over the lamp, and rubs the blood-warm liquid into the reindeer
+skin. In order to give this a red colour on one side, the bark of a
+species of Pinus (?) is mixed with the tanning liquid. The skins are
+made very soft by this process, and on the inner side almost
+resemble chamois leather. Sometimes too the reindeer skin is tanned
+to real chamois of very excellent quality.
+
+[Illustration: ICE MATTOCKS. One-ninth of the natural size. ]
+
+Two sorts of _ice mattocks_, the shaft is of wood, the blade of the
+spade-formed one of whalebone, of the others of a walrus tusk, it is
+fixed to the shaft by skin thongs with great skill.
+
+Sometimes both the shaft and blade are of bone, fastened together in
+a somewhat different way.
+
+_Hones_ of native clay-slate. These are often perforated at one end
+and carried along with the knife, the spoon, and the sucking-tube,
+fastened with an ivory tongs in the belt.
+
+Home-made _vessels of wood, bone of the whale, whalebone, and skin_
+of different kinds.
+
+_Knives, boring tools, axes and pots_ of European, American, or
+Siberian origin, and in addition casks, pieces of cable, iron scrap,
+preserved-meat tins, glasses, bottles, &c., obtained from ships which
+have anchored along the coast. Vessels have regularly visited the
+sea north of Behring's Straits only during the latest decades, and
+the contact between the sailors and the Chukches has not yet exerted
+any considerable influence on the mode of life of the latter. The
+natives, however, complain that the whalers destroy the
+walrus-hunting, while on the other hand they see with pleasure
+trading vessels occasionally visiting their coasts.
+
+During our stay off the considerable encampment, Irkaipij, we
+believed, as I have already stated, that we had found a chief in a
+native named Chepurin, who, to judge by his dress, appeared to be
+somewhat better off than the others, had two wives and a stately
+exterior. He was accordingly entertained in the gunroom, got the
+finest presents, and was in many ways the object of special
+attention. Chepurin took his elevation easily, and showed himself
+worthy of it by a grave and serious, perhaps somewhat condescending
+behaviour, which further confirmed our supposition and naturally
+increased the number of our presents. Afterwards, however, we were
+quite convinced that we had in this case committed a complete
+mistake, and that now there are to be found among the Chukches
+living at the coast neither any recognised chiefs nor any trace of
+social organisation. During the former martial period of the history
+of the race the state of things here was perhaps different, but now
+the most complete anarchy prevails here, if by that word we may
+denote a state of society in which disputes, crimes, and punishments
+are unknown, or at least exceedingly rare. [287] A sort of
+chieftainship appears, at all events, to be found among the
+reindeer-Chukches living in the interior of the country. At least
+there are among them men who can show commmissions from the Russian
+authorities. Such a man was the starost Menka, of whose visit I have
+already given an account. Everything, however, indicated that his
+influence was exceedingly small. He could neither read, write, nor
+speak Russian, and he had no idea of the existence of a Russian
+Czar. All the tribute he had delivered for several years, according
+to receipts which he showed to us, consisted of some few fox-skins,
+which he had probably received as market-tolls at Anjui and Markova.
+Menka was attended on his visit to the vessel by two ill-clad men
+with a type of face differing considerably from that common among
+the Chukches. Their standing appeared to be so inferior that we took
+them for slaves, although mistakenly, at least with respect to one
+of them--Yettugin. He afterwards boasted that he owned a much
+larger reindeer-herd than Menka's, and talked readily, with a
+certain scorn, of Menka's chieftain pretensions. According to
+Russian authors there are actual slaves, probably the descendants of
+former prisoners of war, among the Chukches in the interior of the
+country. Among the dwellers on the coast, on the contrary, there is
+the most complete equality. We could never discover the smallest
+trace of any man exercising the least authority beyond his own
+family or his own tent.
+
+The coast Chukches are not only heathens, but are also, so far as we
+could observe, devoid of every conception of higher beings. There
+are, however, superstitions. Thus most of them wear round the neck
+leather straps, to which small wooden tongs, of wooden carvings, are
+fixed. These are not parted with, and are not readily shown to
+foreigners. A boy had a band of beads sewed to his hood, and in
+front there was fastened an ivory carving, probably intended to
+represent a bear's head (fig. 6, on p. 117). It was so small, and so
+inartistically cut, that a man could undoubtedly make a dozen of
+them in a day. I, however, offered the father unsuccessfully a
+clasp-knife and tobacco for it, but the boy himself, having heard
+our bargaining, exchanged it soon after for a piece of sugar. When
+the father knew this he laughed good-naturedly, without making any
+attempt to get the bargain undone.
+
+To certain tools small wooden images are affixed, as to the scraper
+figured above (fig. 3, p. 117), and similar images are found in
+large numbers in the lumber-room of the tent, where pieces of ivory,
+bits of agate and scrap iron, are preserved. A selection from the
+large collection of such images which I made is here reproduced in
+woodcuts. If, also, these carvings may, in fact, be considered as
+representations of higher beings, the religious ideas which are
+connected with them, even judged from the Shaman standpoint, are
+exceedingly indistinct, less a consciousness, which still lives
+among the people, than a reminiscence from former times. Most of the
+figures bear an evident stamp of the present dress and mode of life
+of the people. It appears to me to be remarkable, that in all the
+bone or wood carvings I have met with, the face has been cut flatter
+than it is in reality in this race of men. Some of the carvings
+appear to remind me of an ancient Buddhist image.
+
+
+[Illustration: HUMAN FIGURES.
+ Nos. 1, 3 and 5, represent women with tattooed faces.
+ No. 4 is of wood.
+ No. 6 of wood with eyes of tin; the rest are of ivory. ]
+
+The drum, or more correctly, tambourine, so common among most of the
+Polar peoples, European, Asiatic, and American, among the Lapps, the
+Samoyeds, the Tunguses, and the Eskimo (see drawing on p. 24), is
+found in every Chukch tent. A certain superstition is also attached
+to it. They did not willingly play it in our presence, and they were
+unwilling to part with it. If time permitted it was concealed on our
+entrance into the tent. The drum consists of the peritoneum of a
+seal, stretched over a narrow wooden ring fixed to a short handle.
+The drumstick consists of a splinter of whalebone 300 to 400
+millimetres long, which towards the end runs into a point so fine
+and flexible, that it forms a sort of whipcord. When the thicker
+part of the piece of whalebone is struck against the edge of the
+drum-skin, the other end whips against the middle, and the skin is
+thus struck twice at the same time. The drum is commonly played by
+the man, and the playing is accompanied by a very monotonous song.
+We have not seen it accompanied by dancing, twisting of the
+countenance, or any other Shaman trick.
+
+We did not see among the Chukches we met with any Shamans. They are
+described by Wrangel, Hooper, and other travellers. Wrangel states
+(vol. i. p. 284) that the Shamans in the year 1814, when a severe
+epidemic broke out among the Chukches and their reindeer at Anjui,
+declared that in order to propitiate the spirits they must sacrifice
+Kotschen, one of the most highly esteemed men of the tribe. He was
+so much respected that no one would execute the sentence, but
+attempts were made to get it altered, first by presents to the
+prophets, and then by flogging them. But when this did not succeed,
+as the disease continued to ravage, and no one would execute the
+doom, Kotschen ordered his own son to do it. He was thus compelled
+to stab his own father to death and give up the corpse to the
+Shamans. The whole narrative conflicts absolutely with the
+disposition and manners of the people with whom we made acquaintance
+at Behring's Straits sixty-five years after this occurrence, and I
+would be disposed to dispute entirely the truthfulness of the
+statement, had not the history of our own part of the world taught
+us that blood has flowed in streams for dogmatic hair-splittings,
+which no one now troubles himself about. Perhaps the breath of
+indifferentism has reached even the ice-deserts of the Polar lands.
+
+The drum has besides also another use, which appears to have little
+connection with its property of Shaman psychograph or church bell.
+When the ladies unravel and comb their long black hair, this is done
+carefully over the drum, on whose bottom the numerous beings which
+the comb brings with it from the warm hearth of home out into the
+cold wide world, are collected and cracked--in case they are not
+eaten up. They taste well according to the Chukch opinion, and are
+exceedingly good for the breast. Even _gorm_ (the large, fully
+developed, fat larva of the reindeer fly, _Oestrus tarandi_) is
+pressed out of the skin of the reindeer and eaten, as well as the
+full-grown reindeer fly.
+
+Some more of the superstitious traits which we observed among the
+Chukches may here be stated. After the good hunting in February we
+endeavoured without success to induce the Chukches to give us a head
+or a skull of some of the seals they had killed. Even brandy was
+unsuccessfully offered for it, and it was only in the greatest
+secrecy that Notti, one of our best friends from Irgunnuk, dared to
+give us the foetus of a seal. A raven was once shot in the
+neighbourhood of the ice-house. The shot then went to the magnetical
+observatory, but before he entered, laid down the shot bird, the
+gun, and other articles in the before-mentioned implement chest
+placed in front of the observatory. A short time after there was
+great excitement before the tent. Some men, women, and children
+among the natives crowded round the chest screaming and shouting.
+For the Chukches had observed that the raven, having been only
+stunned by the shot, had begun to scream and flutter in the chest,
+and they now indicated by word and gesture that a great misfortune
+was about to happen. Pity is not, as is well known, one of the good
+qualities of the savage. It was clear that in this case too it was
+not this feeling, but fear of the evil which the wounded crow could
+bring about, that caused this scene, and when a sailor immediately
+after twisted the neck of the bird, the Chukches had no objection to
+receive and eat it.
+
+The winter of 1878-1879 appears to have been uncommonly severe, and
+hunting less productive than usual. This was ascribed to our
+presence. The Chukches asked us anxiously several times, whether we
+intended to raise the water so high that the sea would reach their
+tents. When on the 11th February, after the hunting had failed for a
+long time, they succeeded at last in catching a number of seals,
+they threw water in their mouths before they were carried into the
+tents. This was done, they said, in order that the open "leads" in
+the ice should not close too soon.
+
+[Illustration: MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS.
+ 1. Whistle-pipe, natural size.
+ 2. Whistle-instrument, one-eighth of natural size;
+ _a._ mouth-hole. ]
+
+Besides the drum the Chukches also use as a musical instrument a
+piece of wood, cloven into two halves, and again united after the
+crack has been somewhat widened in the middle, with a piece of
+whalebone inserted between the two halves. They also during the
+course of the winter made several attempts to make violins after
+patterns seen on board, and actually succeeded in making a better
+sounding-box than could have been expected beforehand. On the
+draught-strap of the dog sledge there was often a small bell bought
+from the Russians, and the reindeer-Chukches are said sometimes to
+wear bells in the belt.
+
+The dance I saw consisted in two women or children taking each other
+by the shoulders, and then hopping now on the one foot now on the
+other. When many took part in the dance, they placed themselves in
+rows, sang a monotonous, meaningless song, hopped in time, turned
+the eyes out and in, and threw themselves with spasmodic movements,
+clearly denoting pleasure and pain, now to the right, now to the
+left "La saison" for dance and song, the time of slaughtering
+reindeer, however, did not happen during our stay, on which account
+our experience of the Chukches' abilities in this way is exceedingly
+limited.
+
+All sport they entered into with special delight, for instance, some
+trial shooting which Palander set on foot on New Year's Day
+afternoon, with a small rifled cannon on the _Vega_. At first the
+women sat aft with the children, far from the dreadful shooting
+weapon, and indicated their feelings by almost the same gestures as
+on such occasions are wont to distinguish the weaker and fairer sex
+of European race. But soon curiosity took the upper hand. They
+pressed forward where they could see best, and broke out in a loud
+"Ho, ho, ho!" when the shot was fired and the shells exploded in the
+air.
+
+Of what sort is the art-sense of the Chukches? As they still almost
+belong to the Stone Age, and as their contact with Europeans has
+been so limited that it has not perhaps conduced to alter their
+taste and skill in art, this question appears to me to have a great
+interest both for the historian of art, who here obtains information
+as to the nature of the seed from which at last the skill of the
+master has been developed in the course of ages and millenniums, and
+for the archaeologist, who finds here a starting point for forming a
+judgment both of the Scandinavian rock-etchings and the palaeolithic
+drawings, which in recent times have played so great a part in
+enabling us to understand the oldest history of the human race. We
+have therefore zealously collected all that we could of Chukch
+carvings, drawings, and patterns. The most remarkable of these in
+one respect or another are to be found delineated in the woodcuts on
+the preceding pages.[288]
+
+[Illustration: DRAWINGS MADE BY CHUKCHES. ]
+
+[Illustration: DRAWINGS MADE BY CHUKCHES. ]
+
+Many of the ivory carvings are old and worn, showing that they have
+been long in use, probably as amulets. Various of the animal images
+are the fruit of the imagination, and as such may be instructive. In
+general the carvings are clumsy, though showing a distinctive style.
+If we compare them with the Samoyed images we brought home with us,
+it appears that the genius of the Chukches for art has reached an
+incomparably higher development than that of the Polar race which
+inhabits the western portion of the north coast of Asia, on the
+other hand, they are in this respect evidently inferior to the
+Eskimo at Port Clarence. The Chukch drawings too are roughly and
+clumsily executed, but many of them exhibit a certain power of
+hitting off the object. These figures appear to me to show that the
+objections which have been raised to the genuineness of various
+palaeolithic etchings, just on the ground of the artist's
+comparatively sure hand, are not justified. Even patterns and ivory
+buckles show a certain taste. Embroidery is done commonly on
+red-coloured strips of skin partly with white reindeer hair, partly
+with red and black wool, obtained in small quantity by barter from
+Behring's Straits. The supply of colouring material is not
+particularly abundant. It is obtained partly from the mineral
+kingdom (limonite of different colours, and graphite), partly from
+the vegetable kingdom (bark of various trees). The mineral colours
+are ground with water between flat stones. Bark is probably treated
+with urine. Red is the Chukches' favourite colour.
+
+In order to make a contribution towards an answer to the disputed
+question, in what degree is the colour-sense developed among
+savages, Dr. Almquist during the course of the winter instituted
+comprehensive researches according to the method worked out by
+Professor FR. HOLMGREN. A detailed account of these is to be found
+in _The Scientific Work of the Vega Expedition_, and in various
+scientific journals. Here I shall only state that Dr. Almquist gives
+the following as the final result of his investigation. "That the
+Chukches in general possess as good an organ for distinguishing
+colours as we Swedes. On the other hand, they appear not to be
+accustomed to observe colours, and to distinguish sharply any other
+colour than red. They bring together all reds as something special,
+but consider that green of a moderate brightness corresponds less
+with a green of less brightness than with a blue of the same
+brightness. In order to bring all greens together the Chukches thus
+require to learn a new abstraction". Of 300 persons who were
+examined, 273 had a fully developed colour-sense, nine were
+completely colour-blind, and eighteen incompletely colour-blind, or
+gave uncertain indications.
+
+
+From what has been stated above it appears that the coast Chukches
+are without noteworthy religion, social organisation, or government.
+Had not experience from the Polar races of America taught us
+differently we should have believed that with such a literally
+anarchic and godless crew there would be no security for life and
+property, immorality would be boundless, and the weaker without any
+protection from the violence of the stronger sex. This, however, is
+so far from being the case that criminal statistics have been
+rendered impossible for want of crimes, if we except acts of
+violence committed under the influence of liquor.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BUCKLES AND HOOKS OF IVORY. Half the natural
+size. ]
+
+During the winter the _Vega_ was visited daily, as has been stated
+in the account of the wintering, by the people from the neighbouring
+villages, while our vessel at the same time formed a resting-place
+for all the equipages which travelled from the western tent-villages
+to the islands in Behring's Straits, and _vice versa_. Not only our
+neighbours, but people from a distance whom we had never seen
+before, and probably would not see again, came and went without
+hindrance among a great number of objects which in their hands would
+have been precious indeed. We had never any cause to regret the
+confidence we placed in them. Even during the very hard time, when
+hunting completely failed, and when most of them lived on the food
+which was served out on board, the large _depot_ of provisions,
+which we had placed on land without special watch, in case any
+misfortune should befall our vessel, was untouched. On the other
+hand, there were two instances in which they secretly repossessed
+themselves of fish they had already sold, and which were kept in a
+place on deck accessible to them. And with the most innocent
+countenance in the world they then sold them over again. This sort
+of dishonesty they evidently did not regard as theft but as a
+permissible commercial trick.
+
+This was not the only proof that the Chukches consider deception in
+trade not only quite justifiable, but almost creditable. While their
+own things were always made with the greatest care, all that they
+did specially for us was done with extreme carelessness, and they
+were seldom pleased with the price that was offered, until they
+became convinced that they could not get more. When they saw that we
+were anxious to get ptarmigan, they offered us from their winter
+stock under this name the young of _Larus eburneus_, which is marked
+in the same way, but of little use as food. When I with delight
+purchased this bird, which in its youthful dress is rare, and
+therefore valuable to the ornithologist, a self-satisfied smile
+passed over the countenance of the seller. He was evidently proud of
+his successful trick. Some prejudice, as has been already stated,
+prevented the Chukches from parting with the heads of the seal,
+though, in order to ascertain the species existing here, we offered
+a high price for them "Irgatti" (to-morrow), or "Isgatti," if the
+promise was given by a woman, was the usual answer. But the promise
+was never kept. At last a boy came and gave us a skull, which he
+said belonged to a seal. On a more minute examination, however, it
+was found not to have belonged to a seal, but to an old dog, whose
+head it was evidently thought might, without any damage to the
+hunting, be handed over to the white magicians. This time it went
+worse with the counterfeitor than in the case of the ptarmigan
+bargain. For a couple of my comrades undertook to make the boy
+ashamed in the presence of the other Chukches, saying with a laugh
+"that he, a Chukch, must have been very stupid to commit such a
+mistake," and it actually appeared as if the scoff had in this case
+fallen into good ground. Another time, while I was in my watch in
+the ice-house, there came a native to me and informed me that he had
+driven a man from Irgunnuk to the vessel, but that the man had not
+paid him, and asked me on that account to give him a box of matches.
+When I replied that he must have been already well paid on the
+vessel for his drive, he said in a whining tone, "only a very little
+piece of bread." He was not the least embarrassed when I only
+laughed at the, as I well knew, untruthful statement, and did not
+give him what he asked.
+
+The Chukches commonly live in monogamy; it is only exceptionally
+that they have two wives, as was the case with Chepurin, who has
+been already mentioned. It appeared as if the wives were faithful to
+their husbands. It was only seldom that cases occurred in which
+women, either in jest or earnest, gave out that they wished a white
+man as a lover. A woman not exactly eminent for beauty or
+cleanliness said, for instance, on one occasion, that she had had
+two children by Chukches, and now she wished to have a third by one
+of the ship's folk. The young women were modest, often very pretty,
+and evidently felt the same necessity of attracting attention by
+small coquettish artifices as Eve's daughters of European race. We
+may also understand their peculiar pronunciation of the language as
+an expression of feminine coquetry. For when they wish to be
+attractive they replace the man's _r_-sound with a soft _s_; thus,
+_korang_ (reindeer) is pronounced by the women _kosang_, _tirkir_ (the
+sun) _tiskis_, and so on.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BONE CARVINGS.
+ 1. Dog, natural size.
+ 2., 3. Hares, natural size.
+ 4. Woman carrying her child on her shoulders, two-thirds.
+ 5. Mollusc from the inland lakes (Branchypus?) natural size.
+ 6. Monster, natural size.
+ 7. Fox, natural size.
+ 8. Animal with three heads, two-thirds.
+ 9. Asterid, natural size,
+ 10. Fish, natural size. ]
+
+The women work very hard. Not only the management of the children,
+the cooking, the melting of the ice, the putting the tent in order,
+the sewing, and other "woman's work," lie to their hand, but they
+receive the catch, in winter in the tent, in summer at the beach,
+cut it in pieces, help with the fishing, at least when it is in the
+neighbourhood of the tent, and carry out the exceedingly laborious
+tanning of the hides, and prepare thread from sinews. In summer they
+collect green plants in the meadows and hill-slopes in the
+neighbourhood of the tents. They are therefore generally at home,
+and always busy. The men have it for their share to procure for
+their family food from the animal kingdom by hunting and fishing.
+With this purpose in view they are often out on long excursions. In
+the tent the man is for the most part without occupation, sleeps,
+eats, gossips, chats with his children, and so on, if he does not
+pass the time in putting his hunting implements in order in a quite
+leisurely manner.
+
+Within the family the most remarkable unanimity prevails, so that we
+never heard a hard word exchanged, either between man and wife,
+parents and children, or between the married pair who own the tent
+and the unmarried who occasionally live in it. The power of the woman
+appears to be very great. In making the more important bargains,
+even about weapons and hunting implements, she is, as a rule,
+consulted, and her advice is taken. A number of things which form
+women's tools she can barter away on her own responsibility, or in
+any other way employ as she pleases. When the man has by barter
+procured a piece of cloth, tobacco, sugar, or such like, he
+generally hands it over to his wife to keep.
+
+The children are neither chastised nor scolded, they are, however,
+the best behaved I have ever seen. Their behaviour in the tent is
+equal to that of the best-brought-up European children in the
+parlour. They are not, perhaps, so wild as ours, but are addicted to
+games which closely resemble those common among us in the country.
+Playthings are also in use, for instance, dolls, bows, windmills
+with two sails, &c. If the parents get any delicacy they always give
+each of their children a bit, and there is never any quarrel as to
+the size of each child's portion. If a piece of sugar is given to
+one of the children in a crowd it goes from mouth to mouth round the
+whole company. In the same way the child offers its father and
+mother a taste of the bit of sugar or piece of bread it has got.
+Even in childhood the Chukches are exceedingly patient. A girl who
+fell down from the ship's stair, head foremost, and thus got so
+violent a blow that she was almost deprived of hearing, scarcely
+uttered a cry. A boy, three or four years of age, much rolled up in
+furs, who fell down into a ditch cut in the ice on the ship's deck,
+and in consequence of his inconvenient dress could not get up, lay
+quietly still until he was observed and helped up by one of the
+crew.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH DOLL. One-eighth of the natural size. ]
+
+The Chukches' most troublesome fault is a disposition to begging
+that is limited by no feeling of self-respect. This is probably
+counterbalanced by their unbounded hospitality and great kindness to
+each other, and is, perhaps, often caused by actual necessity. But
+they thus became veritable torments, putting to a hard test the
+patience, not only of the scientific men and officers, but also of
+the crew. The good nature with which our sailors met their demands
+was above all praise.
+
+There was never any trace of disagreement between the natives and
+us, and I have every reason to suppose that our wintering will long
+be held in grateful remembrance by them, especially as, in order not
+to spoil their seal-hunting, I strictly forbade all unnecessary
+interference with it.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BONE CARVINGS. Seals, walrusses, a sea-bear
+(the lowest figure to the left). The four lowest are of the natural
+size, the others two-thirds of the natural size. ]
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BONE CARVINGS. Fishes, larvae of flies (_gorm_),
+molluscs and whales. Nos. 1 to 9 and 14, natural size. Nos. 10 to 13,
+two-thirds of the natural size. ]
+
+It is probably impossible for a Chukch to take the place of a
+European workman. It has, however, happened that Chukches have gone
+with whalers to the Sandwich Islands, and have become serviceable
+seamen. During our wintering two young men got accustomed to come on
+board and there to take a hand, in quite a leisurely way, at work of
+various kinds, as sawing wood, shovelling snow, getting ice on
+board, &c. In return they got food that had been left over, and
+thus, for the most part, maintained not only themselves, but also
+their families, during the time we remained in their neighbourhood.
+
+If what I have here stated be compared with Sir EDWARD PARRY'S
+masterly sketches of the Eskimo at Winter Island and Iglolik, and
+Dr. SIMPSON'S of the Eskimo in North-western America, or with the
+numerous accounts we possess of the Eskimo in Danish Greenland, a
+great resemblance will be found to exist between the natural
+disposition, mode of life, failings and good qualities of the
+Chukches, the savage Eskimo, and the Greenlanders. This resemblance
+is so much more striking, as the Chukch and the Eskimo belong to
+different races, and speak quite different languages, and, as the
+former, to judge by old accounts of this people, did not, until the
+most recent generations, sink to the unwarlike, peace-loving,
+harmless, anarchic, and non-religious standpoint which they have now
+reached. It ought to be observed, however, that in the Eskimo of
+Danish Greenland no considerable alteration has been brought about
+by them all having learned to read and write and profess the
+Christian religion--although with an indifference to the
+consequences of original sin, the mysteries of redemption, and the
+punishments of hell, which all imaginable missionary zeal has not
+succeeded in overcoming. Their innocent natural state has not been
+altered in any considerable degree by being subjected to these
+conditions of culture. It is certain besides, that the blood which
+flows in the veins of the Greenlander is not pure Eskimo blood, but
+is mingled with the blood of some of the proudest martial races in
+the world. When we consider how rapidly, even now, when Greenland is
+in constant communication with the European mother-country, all
+descendants of mixed blood become complete Eskimo in language and
+mode of life, how difficult it often is, even for parents of pure
+European descent, to get their children to speak any other language
+than that of the natives, and how they, on their part, seldom borrow
+a word from the Europeans, how common mixed marriages and natives of
+mixed blood are even now--in view of all this it appears to me much
+more probable that Erik the Red's colonists were quietly and
+peacefully converted into Eskimo, than that they were killed by the
+Eskimo. A single century's complete separation from Europe would be
+sufficient to carry out thoroughly this alteration of the present
+European population of Greenland, and by the end of that period the
+traditions of Danish rule would be very obscure in that land.
+Perhaps some trifling quarrel between a ruler of the colony and a
+native would take the foremost place among the surviving traditions,
+and be interpreted as a reminiscence from a war of extermination.
+
+[Illustration: CHUKCH BONE CARVINGS OF BIRDS. Size of the originals. ]
+
+Even the present Chukches form, without doubt, a mixture of several
+races, formerly savage and warlike, who have been driven by foreign
+invaders from south to north, where they have adopted a common
+language, and on whom the food-conditions of the shore of the Polar
+Sea, the cold, snow, and darkness of the Arctic night, the pure,
+light atmosphere of the Polar summer, have impressed their
+ineffaceable stamp, a stamp which meets us with little variation,
+not only among the people now in question, but also--with the
+necessary allowance for the changes, not always favourable, caused
+by constant intercourse with Europeans--among the Lapps of
+Scandinavia and the Samoyeds of Russia.
+
+It would be of great psychological interest to ascertain whether the
+change which has taken place in a peaceful direction is progress or
+decadence. Notwithstanding all the interest which the honesty,
+peaceableness, and innocent friendliness of the Polar tribes have
+for us, it is my belief that the answer must be--_decadence_. For it
+strikes us as if we witness here the conversion of a savage, coarse,
+and cruel man into a being, nobler, indeed, but one in whom just
+those qualities which distinguish man from the animals, and to which
+at once the great deeds and the crimes of humanity have been due,
+have been more and more effaced, and who, if special protection or
+specially favourable circumstances be absent, will not be able to
+maintain the struggle for existence with new races that may seek to
+force their way into the country.
+
+
+[Footnote 271: The north coast of America still forms the haunt of a
+not inconsiderable Eskimo population which, for a couple of
+centuries, has extended to the 80th degree of latitude. As the
+climate in the north part of the Old World differs little from that
+which prevails in corresponding regions of the New, as at both
+places there is an abundant supply of fish, and as the seal and
+walrus hunting--at least between the Yenisej and the Chatanga--ought
+to be as productive as on the north coast of America, this
+difference, which has arisen only recently, is very striking. It
+appears to me to be capable of explanation in the following way.
+Down to our days a large number of small savage tribes in America
+have carried on war with each other, the weaker, to escape
+extermination by the more powerful races, being compelled to flee to
+the ice deserts of the north, deeming themselves fortunate if they
+could there, in peace from their enemies, earn a living by adopting
+the mode of life of the Polar races, suitable as it is to the
+climate and resources of the land. The case was once the same in
+Siberia, and there are many indications that fragments of conquered
+tribes have been in former times driven up from the south, not only
+to the north coast of the mainland, but also beyond it to the
+islands lying off it. In Siberia, however, for the last 250 years,
+the case has been completely changed by the Russian conquest of the
+country. The pressure of the new government has, notwithstanding
+many single acts of violence, been on the whole less destructive to
+the original population than the influence which the Europeans have
+exerted in America. The Russian power has at least held a wholly
+beneficial influence, inasmuch as it has prevented the continual
+feuds between the native races. The tribes driven to the
+inhospitable North have been enabled to return to milder regions,
+and where this has not taken place they have, in the absence of new
+migrations from the South, succumbed in the fight with cold, hunger,
+and small-pox, or other diseases introduced by their new masters. ]
+
+[Footnote 272: Cornelis de Bruin, _Reizen over Moskovie, door Persie
+en Indie_, &c., Amsterdam, 1711, p. 12. The author's name is also
+written De Bruyn and Le Brun. ]
+
+[Footnote 273: Herodotus already states in book iv. chapter 196, that
+the Carthagenians bartered goods in the same way with a tribe living
+on the coast of Africa beyond the Gates of Hercules. The same mode
+of barter was still in use nearly two thousand years later, when the
+west coast of Africa was visited by the Venetian Cadamosto, in 1454
+(_Ramusio_, i., 1588, leaf 100). ]
+
+[Footnote 274: As security for the subjection of the conquered races,
+the Russians were accustomed to take a number of men and women from
+their principal families as hostages. These persons were called
+_amanates_, and were kept in a sort of slavery at the fixed winter
+dwellings of the Russians. ]
+
+[Footnote 275: The work is a translation made at Tobolsk by Swedish
+officers, prisoners of war from the battle of Pultava, from a Tartan
+manuscript by Abulgasi Bayadur Chan. The original manuscript (?) is
+in the library at Upsala, to which it was presented in 1722 by
+Lieutenant-Colonel Schoenstroem. The translation has notes by
+Bentinck, a Dutchman by birth, who was also taken prisoner in the
+Swedish service at Pultava. ]
+
+[Footnote 276: Luetke says (Erman's _Archiv_, iii. p. 464) that the
+peaceful relations with the Chukches begin after the conclusion of a
+peace which was brought about ten years after the abandonment of
+Anadyrsk, where for thirty-six years there had been a garrison of
+600 men, costing over a million roubles. This peace this formerly so
+quarrelsome people has kept conscientiously down to our days with
+the exception of some market brawls, which induced Treskin,
+Governor-General of Eastern Siberia, to conclude with them, in 1817,
+a commercial treaty which appears to have been faithfully adhered
+to, to the satisfaction and advantage of both parties (_Dittmar_, p.
+128). ]
+
+[Footnote 277: Mueller has likewise saved from oblivion some other
+accounts regarding the Chukches, collected soon after at Anadyrsk.
+When we now read these accounts, we find not only that the Chukches
+knew the Eskimo on the American side, but also stories regarding the
+Indians of Western America penetrated to them, and further, through
+the authorities in Siberia, came to Europe, a circumstance which
+deserves to be kept in mind in judging of the writings of Herodotus
+and Marco Polo. ]
+
+[Footnote 278: Sauer, _An Account_, &c., pp. 255 and 319. Sarytschev,
+_Reise, uebersetzt von Busse_, ii. p. 102. ]
+
+[Footnote 279: _Ueber die Koriaeken und die ihnen sehr nahe verwandten
+Tschuktschen_ (Bulletin historico-philologique de l'Academie de St.
+Petersbourg, t. xiii., 1856, p. 126.) ]
+
+[Footnote 280: That the Chukches burn their dead with various
+ceremonies is stated by Sarytschev on the ground of communications
+by the interpreter Daurkin, who lived among the reindeer-Chukches
+from 1787 to 1791, in order to learn their language and customs, and
+to announce the arrival of Billings' expedition (Sarytschev's
+_Reise_, ii. p. 108). The statement is thus certainly quite
+trustworthy. The coast population with whom Hooper came in contact,
+on the other hand, laid out their dead on special stages, where the
+corpses were allowed to be eaten up by ravens or to decay (_loc.
+cit._ p. 88). ]
+
+[Footnote 281: If the runners are not shod with ice in this way the
+friction between them and the hard snow is very great during severe
+cold, and the draught accordingly exceedingly heavy. ]
+
+[Footnote 282: Nearly all the travellers from a great distance who
+passed the _Vega_ had their dogs harnessed in this way. On the other
+hand, Sarytschev says that at St. Lawrence Bay all the dogs were
+harnessed abreast, and that this was the practice at Moore's winter
+quarters at Chukotskojnos is shown by the drawing at p. 71 of
+Hooper's work, already quoted. We ought to remember that at both
+these places the population were Eskimos who had adopted the Chukch
+language. The Greenland Eskimo have their dogs harnessed abreast,
+the Kamchadales in a long row. Naturally dogs harnessed abreast are
+unsuitable for wooded regions. The different methods of harnessing
+dogs mentioned here, therefore, indicate that the Eskimo have lived
+longer than the Chukches north of the limit of trees. ]
+
+[Footnote 283: An exhaustive treatise on the food-substances which
+the Chukches gather from the vegetable kingdom, written by Dr.
+Kjellman, is to be found in _The Scientific Work of the Vega
+Expedition_. Popov already states that the Chukches eat many
+berries, roots, and herbs (_Mueller_, iii. p. 59). ]
+
+[Footnote 284: Already, in the beginning of the eighteenth century,
+all the Siberian tribes, men and women, old and young, smoked
+passionately (_Hist. Genealog. des Tartares_, p. 66). ]
+
+[Footnote 285: Dr. John Simpson gives good information regarding the
+American markets in his _Observations on the Western Esquimaux_. He
+enumerates three market places in America besides that at Behring's
+Straits. At the markets people are occupied also with dancing and
+games, which are carried on in such a lively manner that the market
+people scarcely sleep during the whole time. Matiuschin gives a very
+lively sketch of the market at Anjui, to which, in 1821, the
+Chukches still went fully armed with spears, bows, and arrows
+(Wrangel's _Reise_, i. p. 270), and a visit to it in 1868 is
+described by C. von Neumann, who took part as Astronomer in von
+Maydell's expedition to Chukch Land (_Eine Messe im Hochnorden; Das
+Ausland_ 1880, p. 861). ]
+
+[Footnote 286: I have seen such pins, also oblong stones, sooty at
+one end, which, after having been dipped in train-oil, have been
+used as torches, laid by the side of corpses in old Eskimo graves in
+north-western Greenland. ]
+
+[Footnote 287: In the accounts which were collected regarding the
+Chukches at Anadyrsk in the beginning of the eighteenth century, it
+is also stated that they lived without any government On the
+contrary, in M. von Krusenstern's _Voyage autour du monde,
+1803-1806_ (Paris, 1821, ii. p. 151), a report of Governor
+Koscheleff is given on some negotiations which he had with a "chief
+of the whole Chukch nation". I take it for granted that the
+chiefship was of little account, and Koscheleff's whole sketch of
+his meeting with the supposed chief bears an altogether too lively
+European romantic stamp to be in any degree true to nature. At the
+same place it is also said that a brother of Governor Koscheleff, in
+the winter of 1805-1806, made a journey among the Chukches, on
+which, after his return, he sent a report, accompanied by a Chukch
+vocabulary, to von Krusenstern. ]
+
+[Footnote 288: The originals of the drawings reproduced in the
+woodcuts are made on paper, part with the lead pencil, part with red
+ochre. The different groups represent _on the first page_--1, a
+dog-team; 2, 3, whales; 4, hunting the Polar bear and the walrus; 5,
+bullhead and cod; 6, man fishing; 7, hare-hunting; 8, birds; 9,
+wood-chopper; 10, man leading a reindeer; 11, walrus hunt--7 and 9
+represent Europeans. _On the second page_--1, a reindeer train; 2, a
+reindeer taken with a lasso by two men; 3, a man throwing a harpoon;
+4, seal hunt from boat; 5, bear hunt; 6, the man in the moon; 7, man
+leading a reindeer; 8, reindeer; 9, Chukch with staff and an archer;
+10, reindeer with herd; 11, reindeer; 12, two tents, man riding on a
+dog sledge, &c. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+ The development of our knowledge of the north coast of Asia--
+ Herodotus--Strabo--Pliny--Marco Polo--Herberstein's map--
+ The conquest of Siberia by the Russians--Deschnev's voyages--
+ Coast navigation between the Lena and the Kolyma--Accounts of
+ islands in the Polar Sea and old voyages to them--
+ The discovery of Kamchatka--The navigation of the Sea of Okotsk
+ is opened by Swedish prisoners-of-war--The Great Northern
+ Expedition--Behring--Schalaurov--Andrejev's Land--The New
+ Siberian islands--Hedenstroem's expeditions--Anjou and Wrangel
+ --Voyages from Behring's Straits westward--Fictitious Polar
+ voyages.
+
+
+Now that the north-eastern promontory of Asia has been at last
+circumnavigated, and vessels have thus sailed along all the coasts
+of the old world, I shall, before proceeding farther in my sketch of
+the voyage of the _Vega_, give a short account of the development of
+our knowledge of the north coast of Asia.
+
+Already in primitive times the Greeks assumed that all the countries
+of the earth were surrounded by the ocean. STRABO, in the first
+century before Christ, after having shown that HOMER favoured this
+view, brings together in the first chapter of the First Book of his
+geography reasons in support of it in the following terms:--
+
+ "In all directions in which man has penetrated to the
+ uttermost boundary of the earth, he has met the sea, that
+ is, the ocean. He has sailed round the east coast towards
+ India, the west coast towards Iberia and Mauritia, and a
+ great part of the south and north coast. The remaining
+ portion which has not yet been sailed round in consequence
+ of the voyages which have been undertaken from both sides
+ not having been connected, is inconsiderable. For those who
+ have attempted to circumnavigate the earth and have turned,
+ declare that their undertaking did not fail in consequence
+ of their having met with land, but in consequence of want
+ of provisions and of complete timidity.
+
+ At sea they could always have gone further. This view (that
+ the earth is surrounded by water) also accords better with
+ the phenomena of the tides, for as the ebb and flow are
+ everywhere the same, or at least do not vary much, the
+ cause of this motion is to be sought for in a single
+ ocean."[289]
+
+But if men were thus agreed that the north coast of Asia and Europe
+was bounded by the sea, there was for sixteen hundred years after
+the birth of Christ no actual knowledge of the nature of the Asiatic
+portion of this line of coast. Obscure statements regarding it,
+however, were current at an early period.
+
+While HERODOTUS, in the forty-fifth chapter of his Fourth Book,
+expressly says that no man, so far as was then known, had discovered
+whether the eastern and northern countries of Europe are surrounded
+by the sea, he gives in the twenty-third and twenty-fourth chapters
+of the same book the following account of the countries lying to the
+north-east:--
+
+ "As far as the territory of the Scythians all the land
+ which we have described is an uninterrupted plain, with
+ cultivable soil, but beyond that the ground is stony and
+ rugged. And on the other side of this extensive stone-bound
+ tract there live at the foot of a high mountain-chain men
+ who are bald from their birth, both men and women, they are
+ also flat-nosed and have large chins. They speak a peculiar
+ language, wear the Scythian dress and live on the fruit of
+ a tree. The tree on which they live is called _Ponticon_,
+ is about as large as the wild fig-tree, and bears fruit
+ which resembles a bean, but has a kernel. When this fruit
+ is ripe, they strain it through a cloth, and the juice
+ which flows from it is thick and black and called _aschy_.
+ This juice they suck or drink mixed with milk, and of the
+ pressed fruits they make cakes which they eat, for they
+ have not many cattle because the pasture is poor. As far as
+ to these bald people the land is now sufficiently well
+ known, also the races on this side of them, because they
+ are visited by Scythians. From them it is not difficult to
+ collect information, which is also to be had from the
+ Greeks at the port of the Borysthenes and other ports in
+ Pontus. The Scythians who travel thither do business with
+ the assistance of seven interpreters in seven languages. So
+ far our knowledge extends. But of the land on the other
+ side of the bald men none can give any trustworthy account
+ because it is shut off by a separating wall of lofty
+ trackless mountains, which no man can cross. But these bald
+ men say--which, however, I do not believe--that men with
+ goat's feet live on the mountains, and on the other side of
+ them other men who sleep six months at a time. The latter
+ statement, however, I cannot at all admit. On the other
+ hand, the land east of the bald men, in which the Issedones
+ live, is well known, but what is farther to the north, both
+ on the other side of the bald men and of the Issedones, is
+ only known by the statements of these tribes. Above the
+ Issedones live the one-eyed men, and the gold-guarding
+ griffins. This information the Scythians have got from the
+ Issedones and we from the Scythians, and we call the
+ one-eyed race by the Scythian name Arimaspi, for in the
+ Scythian language _arima_ signifies one and _spou_ the eye.
+ The whole of the country which I have been speaking of has
+ so hard and severe a winter, that there prevails there for
+ eight months an altogether insupportable cold, so that if
+ you pour water on the ground you will not make mud, but if
+ you light a fire you will make mud. Even the sea freezes,
+ and the whole Cimmerian Bosphorus, and the Scythians who
+ live within the trench travel on the ice and drive over it
+ in waggons. . . . Again, with reference to the feathers
+ with which the Scythians say the air is filled, and which
+ prevent the whole land lying beyond from being seen or
+ travelled through, I entertain the following opinion. In
+ the upper parts of this country it snows continually, but,
+ as is natural, less in summer than in winter. And whoever
+ has seen snow falling thick near him will know what I mean.
+ For snow resembles feathers, and on account of the winter
+ being so severe the northern parts of this continent cannot
+ be inhabited. I believe then that the Scythians and their
+ neighbours called snow feathers, on account of the
+ resemblance between them. This is what is stated regarding
+ the most remote regions."
+
+These and other similar statements, nowithstanding the absurdities
+mixed up with them, are founded in the first instance on the
+accounts of eye-witnesses, which have passed from mouth to mouth,
+from tribe to tribe, before they were noted down. Still several
+centuries after the time of Herodotus, when the Roman power had
+reached its highest point, little more was known of the more remote
+parts of north Asia. While Herodotus, in the two hundred and third
+chapter of his First Book, says that "the Caspian is a sea by itself
+having no communication with any other sea," Strabo, induced by
+evidence furnished by the commander of a Greek fleet in that sea,
+states (Book II. chapters i. and iv.) that the Caspian is a gulf of
+the Northern Ocean, from which it is possible to sail to India PLINY
+THE ELDER (_Historia Naturalis_, Book VI. chapters xiii. and xvii.)
+states that the north part of Asia is occupied by extensive deserts
+bounded on the north by the Scythian Sea, that these deserts run out
+to a headland, _Promontorium Scythicum_, which is uninhabitable on
+account of snow. Then there is a land inhabited by man-eating
+Scythians, then deserts, then Scythians again, then deserts with
+wild animals to a mountain ridge rising out of the sea, which is
+called _Tabin_. The first people that are known beyond this are the
+Seri. PTOLEMY and his successors again supposed, though perhaps not
+ignorant of the old statement that Africa had been circumnavigated
+under Pharaoh Necho, that the Indian Ocean was an inland sea,
+everywhere surrounded by land, which united southern Africa with the
+eastern part of Asia, an idea which was first completely abandoned
+by the chartographers of the fifteenth century after the
+circumnavigation of Africa by VASCO DA GAMA.
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF THE WORLD, SAID TO BE OF THE TENTH CENTURY.
+Found in a manuscript of the twelfth century in the Library at
+Turin. (From Santarem's Atlas.) ]
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF THE WORLD SHOWING ASIA TO BE CONTINUOUS WITH
+AFRICA. (From Nicolai Doni's edition of _Ptolemaei Cosmographia_, Ulm.
+1482.) ]
+
+The knowledge of the geography of north Asia remained at this point
+until MARCO POLO,[290] in the narrative of his remarkable journeys
+among the peoples of Middle Asia, gave some information regarding
+the most northerly lands of this quarter of the world also. The
+chapters which treat of this subject bear the distinctive titles:
+"On the land of the Tartars living in the north," "On another region
+to which merchants only travel in waggons drawn by dogs," and "On
+the region where darkness prevails" (_De regione tenebrarum_). From
+the statements in these chapters it follows that hunters and traders
+already inhabited or wandered about in the present Siberia, and
+brought thence valuable furs of the black fox, sable, beaver, &c.
+The northernmost living men were said to be handsome, tall and
+stout, but very pale for want of the sun. They obeyed no king or
+chief, but were coarse and uncivilised and lived as beasts[291].
+Among the products of the northern countries white bears are
+mentioned, from which it appears that at that time the hunters had
+already reached the coast of the Polar Sea. But Marco Polo nowhere
+says expressly that Asia is bounded on the north by the sea.
+
+All the maps of North Asia which have been published down to the
+middle of the sixteenth century, are based to a greater or less
+extent on interpretations of the accounts of Herodotus, Pliny, and
+Marco Polo. When they do not surround the whole Indian Ocean with
+land, they give to Asia a much less extent in the north and east
+than it actually possesses, make the land in this direction
+completely bounded by sea, and delineate two headlands projecting
+towards the north from the mainland. To these they give the names
+_Promontorium Scythicum_ and _Tabin_, and they besides place in the
+neighbourhood of the north coast a large island to which they give
+the name that already occurs in Pliny, _Insula Tazata_, which
+reminds us, perhaps by an accidental resemblance of sound, of the
+name of the river and bay, Tas, between the Ob and the Yenisej.
+Finally, the borders of the maps are often adorned with pictures of
+wonderfully formed men, whose dwellings the hunters placed in those
+regions, the names being at the same time given of a larger or
+smaller number of peoples and cities mentioned by Marco Polo.
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF THE WORLD AFTER FRA MAURO FROM THE MIDDLE OF
+THE FIFTEENTH CENTURY. (From Il mappamondo di Fra Mauro Camaldolese
+descritto ed illustrato da D. Placido Zurla, Venezia, 1806.) ]
+
+[Illustration: HERBERTSTERN'S MAP OF RUSSIA, 1550 (photo-lithographic
+facsimile). ]
+
+On the whole, the voyages of the Portuguese to India and the Eastern
+archipelago, the discovery of America and the first circumnavigation
+of the globe, exerted little influence on the current ideas
+regarding the geography of North Asia. A new period in respect of
+our knowledge of this part of the old world first began with the
+publication of HERBERSTEIN'S _Rerum Moscoviticarum Commentarii_,
+Vindobonae 1549[292]. This work has annexed to it a map with the
+title "Moscovia Sigismundi liberi baronis in Herberstein Neiperg et
+Gutnhag. Anno MDXLIX. Hanc tabulam absolvit AUG. HIRSFOGEL Viennae
+Austriae cum gra. et privi. imp.,"[293] which indeed embraces only a
+small part of Siberia, but shows that a knowledge of North Russia
+now began to be based on actual observations. A large gulf, marked
+with the name Mare Glaciale (the present White Sea) here projects
+into the north coast of Russia, from the south there falls into it a
+large river, called the Dwina. On the banks of the Dwina there are
+forts or towns with the names Solovoka (Solovets), Pinega, Colmogor,
+&c. There are to be found on the map besides, the names Mesen,
+Peczora, Oby,[294] Tumen, &c. Oby runs out of a large lake named
+Kythay lacus. In the text, mention is made of Irtisch and
+Papingorod, of walruses and white bears[295] by the coast of the
+Polar Sea, of the Siberian cedar-tree, of the word Samoyed
+signifying self-eaters, &c.[296] The walrus is described in great
+detail. It is mentioned further that the Russian Grand Duke sent
+out two men, SIMEON THEODOROVITSCH KURBSKI and Knes PIETRO UCHATOI,
+to explore the lands east of the Petchora, &c.
+
+Herberstein's work, where the narrative of Istoma's circumnavigation
+of the northern extremity of Europe, which has been already quoted,
+is to be found, was published only a few years before the first
+north-east voyages of the English and the Dutch, of which I have
+before given a detailed account. Through these the northernmost part
+of European Russia and the westernmost part of the Asiatic Polar Sea
+were mapped, but an actual knowledge of the north coast of Asia in
+its entirety was obtained through the conquest of Siberia by the
+Russians. It is impossible here to give an account of the campaigns,
+by which the whole of this enormous territory was brought under the
+sceptre of the Czar of Moscow, or of the private journeys for sport,
+trade, and the collecting of tribute, by which this conquest was
+facilitated. But as nearly every step which the Russian invaders
+took forward, also extended the knowledge of regions previously
+quite unknown, I shall mention the years in which during this
+conquest the most important occurrences in a geographical point of
+view took place, and give a later more detailed account of the
+exploratory or military expeditions which led directly to important
+results affecting the extension of our knowledge of the geography of
+the region now in question.
+
+The way was prepared for the conquest of Siberia through peaceful
+commercial treaties[297] which a rich Russian peasant ANIKA, ancestor
+of the STROGANOV family, entered into with the wild races settled in
+Western Siberia, whom he even partially induced to pay a yearly
+tribute to the Czar of Moscow. In connection with this he and his
+sons, in the middle of the sixteenth century, obtained large grants
+of land on the rivers Kama and Chusovaja and their tributaries, with
+the right to build towns and forts there, whereby their riches,
+previously very considerable, were much increased. The family's
+extensive possessions, however, were threatened in 1577 by a great
+danger, when a host of Cossack freebooters, six to seven thousand
+strong, under the leadership of YERMAK TIMOFEJEV, took flight to the
+country round Chusovaja in order to avoid the troops which the Czar
+sent to subdue them and punish them for all the depredations they
+had committed on the Don, the Caspian Sea and the Volga. In order to
+get rid of the freebooters, MAXIM STROGANOV, Anika's grandson, not
+only provided Yermak and his men with the necessary sustenance, but
+supported in every way the bold adventurer's plan of entering on a
+campaign for the conquest of Siberia. This was begun in 1579. In
+1580 Yermak passed the Ural, and after several engagements marched
+in particular against the Tartars living in Western Siberia, along
+the rivers Tagil and Tura to Tjumen, and thence in 1581 farther
+along the Tobol and Irtisch to Kutschum Khan's residence Sibir,
+situated in the neighbourhood of the present Tobolsk. It was this
+fortress, long since destroyed, which gave its name to the whole
+north part of Asia.
+
+From this point the Russians, mainly following the great rivers, and
+passing from one river territory to another at the places where the
+tributaries almost met, spread out rapidly in all directions. Yermak
+himself indeed was drowned on the 16th August, 1584, in the river
+Irtisch, but the adventurers who accompanied him overran in a few
+decades the whole of the enormous territory lying north of the
+deserts of Central Asia from Ural to the Pacific, everywhere
+strengthening their dominion by building _Ostrogs_, or small
+fortresses, at suitable places. It was the noble fur-yielding
+animals of the extensive forests of Siberia which played the same
+part with the Russian _promyschleni_, as gold with the Spanish
+adventurers in South America.
+
+At the close of the sixteenth century the Cossacks had already
+possessed themselves of the greater part of the river territory of
+the Irtisch-Ob, and sable-hunters had already gone as far
+north-east[298] as the river Tas, where the sable-hunting was at one
+time very productive and occasioned the founding of a town,
+Mangasej, which however was soon abandoned. In 1610 the Russian
+fur-hunters went from the river territory of the Tas to the Yenisej,
+where the town Turuchansk was soon after founded on the Turuchan, a
+tributary of the Yenisej. The attempt to row down in boats from this
+point to the Polar Sea, with the view of penetrating farther along
+the sea coast, failed in consequence of ice obstacles, but led to
+the discovery of the river Pjaesina and to the levying of tribute
+from the Samoyeds living there. To get farther eastward the
+tributaries of the Yenisej were made use of instead of the sea
+route. Following these the Russians on the upper course of the
+Tunguska met with the mountain ridge which separates the river
+territory of the Yenisej from that of the Lena. This ridge was
+crossed, and on the other side of it a new stream was met with,
+which in the year 1627 led the adventurers to the Lena, over whose
+river territory the Cossacks and fur-hunters, faithful to then
+customs, immediately spread themselves in order to hunt, purchase
+furs, and above all to impose "jassak" upon the tribes living
+thereabouts. But they were not satisfied with this. Already in 1636
+the Cossack ELISEJ BUSA was sent out with an express commission to
+explore the rivers beyond, falling into the Polar Sea, and to render
+tributary the natives living on their banks. He was accompanied by
+ten Cossacks, to whose company forty fur-hunters afterwards attached
+themselves. In 1637 he came to the western mouth-arm of the Lena,
+from which he went along the coast to the river Olenek, where he
+passed the winter. Next year he returned by land to the Lena, and
+built there two "kotsches,"[299] in which he descended the river to
+the Polar Sea. After five days' successful rowing along the coast to
+the eastward he discovered the mouth of the Yana. After three days'
+march up the river he fell in with a Yakut tribe, from whom he got a
+rich booty of sable and other furs. Here he passed the winter of
+1638-39, here too he built himself a new craft, and again starting
+for the Polar Sea, he came to another river falling into the eastern
+mouth-arm of the Yana, where he found a Yukagir tribe, living in
+earth huts, with whom he passed two years more, collecting tribute
+from the tribes living in the neighbourhood.
+
+At the same time IVANOV POSTNIK discovered by land the river
+Indigirka. As usual, tribute was collected from the neighbouring
+Yukagir tribes, yet not without fights, in which the natives at
+first directed their weapons against the horses the Cossacks had
+along with them, thinking that the horses were more dangerous than
+the men. They had not seen horses before. A _simovie_ was
+established, at which sixteen Cossacks were left behind. They built
+boats, sailed down the river to the Polar Sea to collect tribute,
+and discovered the river Alasej.
+
+Some years after the river Kolyma appears to have been discovered,
+and in 1644 the Cossack, MICHAILO STADUCHIN, founded on that river a
+_simovie_, which afterwards increased to a small town, Nischni
+Kolymsk. Here Staduchin got three pieces of information which
+exerted considerable influence on later exploratory expeditions, for
+he acquired knowledge of the Chukches, at that time a military race,
+who possessed the part of North Asia which lay a little further to
+the east. Further, the natives and the Russian hunters, who swarmed
+in the region before Staduchin, informed him that in the Polar Sea
+off the mouths of the Yana and the Indigirka there was a large
+island, which in clear weather could be seen from land, and which
+the Chukches reached in winter with reindeer sledges in one day from
+Chukotska, a river debouching in the Polar Sea east of the Kolyma.
+They brought home walrus tusks from the island, which was of
+considerable size, and the hunters supposed "that it was a
+continuation of Novaya Zemlya, which is visited by people from
+Mesen." Wrangel is of opinion that this account refers to no other
+than Krestovski Island, one of the Bear Islands. This, however,
+appears to me to be improbable. It is much more likely that it
+refers partly to the New Siberian Islands, partly to Wrangel Land,
+and perhaps even to America. That the Russians themselves had not
+then discovered Ljachoff's, or as it was then also called, Blischni
+Island, which lies so near the mainland, and is so high that it is
+impossible to avoid seeing it when one in clear weather sails past
+Svjatoinos, which lies east of the Yana, is a proof that at that
+time they had not sailed along the coast between the mouths of the
+Yana and the Indigirka. Finally, a great river, the Pogytscha, was
+spoken of, which could be reached in three or four days' sailing
+eastward from the mouth of the Kolyma. This was the first account
+which reached the conquerors of Siberia of the great river Anadyr
+which falls into the Pacific.
+
+These accounts were sufficient to incite the Cossacks and hunters to
+new expeditions. The beginning was made by ISAI IGNATIEV from Mesen,
+who, along with several hunters, travelled down the Kolyma in 1646
+to the Polar Sea, and then along the coast eastwards. The sea was
+full of ice, but next the land there was an open channel, in which
+the explorers sailed two days. They then came to a bay, near whose
+shore they anchored. Here the Russians had their first meeting with
+the Chukches, to which reference has already been made. Hence
+Ignatiev returned to the Kolyma, and the booty was considered so
+rich and his account of his journey so promising, that preparations
+were immediately made in order next year to send off a new maritime
+expedition fitted out on a larger scale to the coast of the Polar
+Sea.
+
+This time FEODOT ALEXEJEV from Kolmogor was chief of the expedition,
+but along with him was sent, at the request of the hunters, a
+Cossack in the Russian service in order to guard the rights of the
+crown. His name was SIMEON IVANOV SIN DESCHNEV; in geographical
+writings he is commonly known under the name of DESCHNEV. It was
+intended to search for the mouth of the great river lying towards
+the east, regarding which some information had been obtained from
+the natives, and which was believed to fall into the Polar Sea. The
+first voyage in 1647, with four vessels, was unsuccessful, it is
+said, because the sea was blocked with ice. But that this was not
+the real reason is shown by the fact that a new and larger
+expedition was fitted out the following year with full expectation
+of success. The crews of the four boats had more probably been
+considered too weak a force to venture among the Chukches, and the
+ice had to bear the blame of the retreat. What man could not
+reproach the conquerors of Siberia with, was pusillanimity and want
+of perseverance in carrying out a plan which had once been sketched.
+Resistance always increased their power of action; so also now.
+Seven boats were fitted out the following year, 1648, all which were
+to sail down to the Polar Sea, and then along the coast eastwards.
+The object was to examine closely the unknown land and people there,
+and to their own advantage and the extension of the Russian power,
+to collect tribute from the tribes met with during the expedition.
+Mueller states that every boat was manned with about thirty men--a
+number which appears to me somewhat exaggerated, if we consider the
+nature of the Siberian craft and the difficulty of feeding so large
+a number either with provisions earned along with them or obtained
+by hunting.
+
+Four of the boats are not mentioned further in the narrative; they
+appear to have returned at an early period. The three others, on the
+contrary, made a highly remarkable journey. The commanders of them
+were the Cossacks, GERASIM ANKUDINOV and SIMEON DESCHNEV, and the
+hunter FEODOT ALEXEJEV. Deschnev entertained such hopes of success
+that before his departure he promised to collect a tribute of seven
+times forty sable skins. The Siberian archives, according to Miller,
+contain the following details.[300]
+
+On 30/20th June, 1648, a start was made from the Kolyma. The sea was
+open, at least the boats came without any adventure which Deschnev
+thought worth the trouble of noting in his narrative to Great
+Chukotskojnos. Of this cape Deschnev says that it is quite different
+from the cape at the river Chukotskaja. For it lies between north
+and north-east, and bends with a rounding towards the Anadyr. On the
+Russian side a rivulet runs into the sea, at which the Chukches had
+raised a heap of whales' bones. Right off the cape lie two islands,
+on which people of Chukch race with perforated lips were seen. From
+this cape it is possible with a favourable wind to sail to the
+Anadyr in three days, and the way is not longer by land, because the
+Anadyr falls into a gulf of the sea. At Chukotskojnos or, according
+to Wrangel at a "holy promontory," Svjatoinos (Serdze Kamen?)
+previously reached, Ankudinov's craft was shipwrecked. The crew were
+saved, and distributed on Deschnev's and Alexejev's boats. On the
+30/20th September the Russians had a fight with the Chukches living
+on the coast, in which fight Alexejev was wounded. Soon after
+Deschnev's and Alexejev's "kotsches" were parted never to meet
+again.
+
+Deschnev was driven about by storms and head-winds until past the
+beginning of October. Finally his vessel stranded near the mouth of
+the river Olutorsk, in 61 deg. N.L. Hence he marched with his
+twenty-five men to the Anadyr. He had expected to meet with some
+natives in its lower course, but the region was uninhabited, which
+caused the invaders much trouble, because they suffered from want of
+provisions. Although Deschnev could not obtain from the natives any
+augmentation of the certainly very small supply of food which he
+carried with him, he succeeded nevertheless in passing the winter in
+that region. First in the course of the following summer did he fall
+in with natives, from whom a large tribute was collected, but not
+without fierce conflicts. A _simovie_ was built at the place where
+afterwards Anadyrski Ostrog was founded. While Deschnev remained
+here, at a loss as to how, when the boats were broken up, he would
+be able to return to the Kolyma, or find a way thither by land,
+there came suddenly on the 5th May/25th April 1650, a new party of
+hunters to his winter hut.
+
+For the accounts of islands in the Polar Sea, and of the river
+Pogytscha, which was said to fall into the sea three or four days'
+journey beyond the Kolyma, had led to the sending out of another
+expedition under the Cossack STADUCHIN. He started from Yakutsk in
+boats on the 15th/5th June, 1647, wintered on the Yana, travelled
+thence in sledges to Indigirka, and there again built boats in which
+he rowed to the Kolyma. It is to be observed that Staduchin, just
+because he preferred the land-route to the sea-route between the
+Yana and the Indigirka, missed discovering the large island in the
+Polar Sea, of which so much has been said. Next summer (1649)
+Staduchin again sailed down the river Kolyma to the sea, and then
+for seven days along its coast eastwards, without finding the mouth
+of the river sought for by him. He therefore returned with his
+object unaccomplished, carrying with him a heap of walrus-tusks,
+which were sent to Yakutsk as an appendix to a proposal to send out
+hunters to the Polar Sea to hunt for these animals. In the meantime
+a true idea of the course of the Anadyr had been obtained through
+statements collected from the natives, and a land-route had become
+known between its territory and that of the Kolyma. Several Cossacks
+and hunters now petitioned for the right to settle on the Anadyr,
+and collect tribute from the tribes in that neighbourhood. This was
+granted. Some natives were forced to act as guides. The party
+started under the command of SIMEON MOTORA, and came finally to
+Deschnev's _simovie_ on the Anadyr. Staduchin followed, and
+traversed the way in seven weeks. He however soon quarrelled with
+Deschnev and Motora, and parting from them on that account, betook
+himself to the river Penschina. Deschnev and Motora built
+themselves boats on the Anadyr in order to prosecute exploratory
+voyages, but the latter was killed in 1651 in a fight with natives
+called Anauls. They had been the first of all the natives of the
+Pacific coast of North Asia to pay "jassak" to Deschnev, and he had
+already at that time come into collision with them and extirpated
+one of their tribes.
+
+In 1652 Deschnev travelled down the Anadyr to the river mouth, where he
+discovered a walrus-bank, whence he brought home walrus-tusks. There
+afterwards arose a dispute between Deschnev and Selivestrov[301]
+regarding the rights founded on the discovery of this walrus bank, which
+came before the authorities at Yakutsk, and it was from the documents
+relating to it that Mueller obtained the information that enabled him to
+give a narrative of Deschnev's expedition. Only in this way have the
+particulars of this remarkable voyage been rescued from complete
+oblivion.[302]
+
+In 1653 Deschnev gave orders to collect wood to build craft in which
+he intended to carry home by sea the tribute he had collected to the
+Kolyma, but he was compelled to desist from want of the necessary
+materials for the building and equipment of the boats, comforting
+himself with the statement of the natives that the sea was not
+always so open as during his first voyage. Compelled by necessity,
+he remained a year longer at the Anadyr, and in 1654 undertook a new
+hunting voyage to the walrus-bank, where he met with the
+before-mentioned Selivestrov. He here came in contact with the
+natives (Koryaeks), and found among them a Yakut woman, who had
+belonged to Ankudinov. On asking her where her master had gone to,
+she answered that Feodot and Gerasim (Ankudinov) had died of scurvy,
+and that their companions had been killed with the exception of some
+few, who had saved themselves in boats. It appears as if the latter
+had penetrated along the coast as far as to the river Kamchatka. For
+when Kamchatka was conquered by Atlassov in 1697 the natives stated
+that a long time before one FEODOTOV (probably a son of Feodot
+Alexejev) had lived among them along with some companions, and had
+married their women. They were venerated almost as gods. They were
+believed to be invulnerable until they struck another, when the
+Kamchadals saw their mistake and killed them.[303]
+
+By the expeditions of Deschnev, Staduchin, and their companions, the
+Russians had by degrees become acquainted with the course of the
+Anadyr and with the tribes living on its banks. But it still
+remained for them to acquire a more complete knowledge of the
+islands which were said to be situated in the Polar Sea, and one
+must be surprised at the extreme difficulties which were encountered
+in attempting the solution of this apparently very simple
+geographical problem. The reason indeed was that the Siberian seamen
+never ventured to leave the immediate neighbourhood of the coast, a
+precaution which besides is very easily explained when the bad
+construction of their craft is considered. Along the shore of the
+Polar Sea on the other hand, a very active communication appears to
+have taken place between the Lena and the Kolyma, though of those
+voyages we only know such as in one way or another gave rise to
+actions before the courts or were characterised by specially
+remarkable dangers or losses.
+
+In 1650 ANDREJ GORELOJ was sent by sea from Yakutsk to impose
+tribute on the tribes that lived at the sources of the Indigirka,
+and on the Moma, a tributary of the Indigirka. He passed Svjatoinos
+successfully, and reached the mouth of the Kroma, but was there
+beset by ice, with which he drifted out to sea. After drifting about
+ten days he was compelled to abandon the vessel, which was soon
+after nipped, and go on foot over the ice to land. On the 22nd/12th
+November he came to the _simovie_ Ujandino, where famine prevailed
+during the winter, _because the vessels, that should have brought
+provisions to the place, had either been lost or been compelled to
+turn_; a statement which proves that at that time a regular
+navigation took place between certain parts of the coast of the
+Polar Sea.
+
+The same year, the Cossack, TIMOFEJ BULDAKOV travelled by sea from
+the Lena to the Kolyma to take over the command of the neighbouring
+region. He reached the Kroma successfully, but was beset there and
+drifted out to sea. He then determined to endeavour to get to land
+over the ice. But this was no easy matter. The ice, which already
+was three feet thick, went suddenly into a thousand pieces, while
+the vessel drove before a furious gale farther and farther from the
+shore. This was repeated several times. When the sea at last froze
+over, the vessel was abandoned, and the party finally succeeded,
+worn out as they were by hunger, scurvy, work, and cold, in reaching
+land at the mouth of the Indigirka. The narrative of Buldakov's
+voyage is, besides, exceedingly remarkable, because a meeting is
+there spoken of with twelve "kotsches," filled with Cossacks,
+traders, and hunters, bound partly from the Lena to the rivers lying
+to the eastward, partly from the Kolyma and Indigirka to the Lena, a
+circumstance which shows how active the communication then was in
+the part of the Siberian Polar Sea in question. This is further
+confirmed by a narrative of NIKIFOR MALGIN. While Knes IVAN
+PETROVITSCH BARJATINSKY was _vojvode_ at Yakutsk (1667-75), Malgin
+travelled along with a trader, ANDREJ WORIPAJEV, by sea from the
+Lena to the Kolyma. During this voyage the pilot directed the
+attention of all on board to an island, lying far out at sea, west
+of the mouth of the Kolyma. In course of a conversation regarding
+it, after Malgin had succeeded in reaching the Kolyma, another
+trader, JAKOB WIAeTKA, stated that on one occasion when he was
+sailing with nine "kotsches" between the Lena and the Kolyma, three
+of them had been driven by wind to this island, and that the men who
+had been sent ashore there, found traces of unknown animals, but no
+inhabitants.
+
+All these narratives, however, do not appear to have met with full
+credence. In the beginning of the eighteenth century, accordingly,
+new explorations and new expeditions were undertaken. A Cossack,
+JAKOB PERMAKOV, stated that during a voyage between the Lena and the
+Kolyma, he had seen off Svjatoinos an island, of which he knew not
+whether it was inhabited or not, and likewise, that off the mouth of
+the Kolyma there was an island which could be seen from land. In
+order to make sure of the correctness of this statement, a Cossack,
+MERCUREJ WAGIN, was sent out. He travelled along with Permakov, in
+the month of May, in dog-sledges over the ice from Svjatoinos to the
+island lying off it, that Permakov had seen. They landed there,
+found it uninhabited and treeless, and fixed its circumference at
+nine to twelve days' journey. Beyond this island Wagin saw another,
+which, however, he could not reach for want of provisions. He
+therefore determined to turn, in order to undertake the journey the
+following year in a better state of preparation. During the return
+journey the party suffered severely from hunger, and in order to
+avoid a renewal of the dangerous and difficult journey of
+exploration, the men at last murdered Permakov, Wagin, and his son.
+The crime was discovered, and the knowledge we possess of this
+expedition is founded on the confused information obtained during
+the examination of the murderers. Mueller even throws doubts on the
+truth of the whole narrative.
+
+The attempts which were afterwards made to reach those islands,
+partly by sea in 1712, by WASILEJ STADUCHIN, partly by dog-sledges
+in 1714 by ALEXEJ MARKOV and GRIGOREJ KUSAKOV, yielded no result.
+Ten years afterwards, "the old saga" of the islands in the Polar
+Sea, induced one SIN BAJORSKI FEODOT AMOSSOV to undertake an
+expedition with a view to impose tribute on their inhabitants, but
+he was prevented by ice from reaching his goal. On the way he met
+with a hunter, IVAN WILLEGIN, who said, that along with another
+hunter, GRIGOREJ SANKIN, he had travelled over the ice to these
+islands from the mouth of the river Chukotskaja. He had seen neither
+men nor trees, but some abandoned huts "Probably this land extends
+all the way from the mouth of the Yana, past the Indigirka and
+Kolyma to the region which is inhabited by the Schelags, a Chukch
+tribe." He had learned this from a Schelag named Kopai, at whose
+home he had been the preceding year. In order to reach this land by
+sea it was necessary to start from the coast which the Schelags
+inhabited, because the sea was less covered by ice there.
+
+As Amossov could not reach his goal by sea he travelled thither the
+same year, in November, 1724, over the ice, but his description of
+the land differs widely from that of his predecessor, and Mueller
+appears to entertain great doubts of the truthfulness of the
+narrative[304]. On the ground of a map constructed by the Cossack,
+Colonel SCHESTAKOV, who, however, according to Mueller, could neither
+read nor write, this new land was introduced into DELISLE and
+BUACHE'S map, with the addition that the Schelag Kopai lived there,
+and had there been taken prisoner by the Russians. This is so far
+incorrect, as Kopai did not live on any island, but on the mainland,
+and never was prisoner with the Russians, although after having paid
+tribute to them, he tired of doing so, and killed some of Amossov's
+people, after which no more was heard of him. Mueller complains
+loudly of the incorrect statement regarding Kopai, but the learned
+academician commits a much greater mistake, inasmuch as he considers
+that he ought to leave the numerous accounts of hunters and Cossacks
+about land and islands in the Siberian Polar Sea completely out of
+account. All these lands are therefore left out of the map published
+by the Petersburg Academy in the year 1758[305]. It is in this
+respect much more incomplete than the map which accompanies
+Strahlenberg's book.[306]
+
+Before I begin to sketch the explorations of the great northern
+expedition, some account remains to be given of the discovery of
+Kamchatka. It appears from the preceding that Kamchatka was already
+reached by some of Deschnev's followers, but their important
+discovery was completely unknown in Moscow. Kamchatka is, however,
+already mentioned in the narrative of Evert Ysbrants Ides' embassy
+to China in 1693-95,[307] accounts of it had probably been obtained
+from the Siberian natives, who are accustomed to wander far and
+near. These accounts, however, are exceedingly incomplete, and
+therefore, VOLODOMIR ATLASSOV, _piaetidesaetnik_ (_i.e._, commander of
+fifty men) at Anadyrsk, is considered the proper discoverer of
+Kamchatka.
+
+While Atlassov was commander at Anadyrsk, he sent out in 1696, the
+Cossack LUCAS SEMENOV SIN MOROSKO with sixteen men to bring the
+tribe living to the south under tribute. The commission was
+executed, and on his return Morosko stated that he not only was
+among the Koryaeks, but had also penetrated to the neighbourhood of
+the river Kamchatka, and that he took a Kamchadal "ostrog," and
+found in it some manuscripts in an unknown language, which,
+according to information afterwards obtained, had belonged to some
+Japanese who had stranded on the coast of Kamchatka.[308] It was the
+first hint the conquerors of Siberia obtained of their being in the
+neighbourhood of Japan.
+
+The year after Atlassov, with a larger force, followed the way which
+Morosko had opened up, and penetrated to the river Kamchatka, where
+as a sign that he had taken possession of the land, he erected a
+cross with an inscription, which when translated runs thus: _In the,
+year_ 7205 (i.e. 1697) _on the 13th July this cross was erected by
+the piaetidesaetnik Volodomir Atlassov and his followers_, 55 _men_.
+Atlassov then built on the Kamchatka river a _simovie_, which was
+afterwards fortified and named Verchni Kamtschatskoj Ostrog. Hence
+the Russians extended their power over the land, yet not without
+resistance, which was first completely broken by the cruel
+suppression of the rebellion of 1730.
+
+In 1700 Atlassov travelled to Moscow, carrying with him a Japanese,
+who had been taken prisoner after being shipwrecked on the coast of
+Kamchatka, and the collected tribute which consisted of the skins of
+3,200 sables, 10 sea-otters, 7 beavers, 4 otters, 10 grey foxes and
+191 red foxes. He was received graciously, and sent back as
+commander of the Cossacks in Yakutsk with orders to complete the
+conquest of Kamchatka. An interruption however happened for some
+time in the path of Atlassov as a warrior and discoverer, in
+consequence of his having during his return journey to Yakutsk
+plundered a Russian vessel laden with Chinese goods, an accessory
+circumstance which deserves to be mentioned for the light which it
+throws on the character of this Pizarro of Kamchatka. He was not set
+free until the year 1706, and then recovered his command in
+Kamchatka, with strict orders to desist from all arbitrary
+proceedings and acts of violence, and to do his best for the
+discovery of new lands. The first part of this order he however
+complied with only to a limited extent, which gave occasion to
+repeated complaints[309] and revolts among the already unbridled
+Cossacks. Finally, in 1711, Atlassov and several other officers were
+murdered by their own countrymen. In order to atone for this crime,
+and perhaps to get a little farther from the arm of justice, their
+murderers, ANZIPHOROV and IVAN KOSIREVSKOJ,[310] undertook to subdue
+the not yet conquered part of Kamchatka, and the two northernmost of
+the Kurile Islands. Further information about the countries lying
+farther south was obtained from some Japanese who were shipwrecked
+in 1710 on Kamchatka.
+
+At first in order to get to Kamchatka the difficult detour by
+Anadyrsk was taken. But in the year 1711 the commander at Okotsk,
+SIN BOJARSKI PETER GUTUROV, was ordered, by the energetic promoter
+of exploratory expeditions in Eastern Siberia, the Yakutsk
+_voivode_, DOROFEJ TRAUERNICHT, to proceed by sea from Okotsk to
+Kamchatka. But this voyage could not come off because at that time
+there were at Okotsk neither seagoing boats, seamen, nor even men
+accustomed to the use of the compass. Some years after the governor
+Prince GAGARIN sent to that town IVAN SOROKAUMOV with twelve
+Cossacks to make arrangements for this voyage. For want of ships and
+seamen however this could not now be undertaken, and after
+Sorokaumov had created great confusion he was imprisoned by the
+authorities of the place, and sent back to the Governor. Peter I.
+now commanded _that men acquainted with navigation should be sought
+for among the Swedish prisoners of war and sent to Okotsk, that they
+should build a boat there and, provided with a compass, go by sea
+along with some Cossacks to Kamchatka and return_.[311] Thus
+navigation began on the Sea of Okotsk Among the Swedes who opened
+it, is mentioned HENRY BUSCH,[312] according to Strahlenberg a
+Swedish corporal, who had previously been a ship-carpenter.
+According to Mueller, who met with him at Yakutsk as late as 1736, he
+was born at Hoorn in Holland, had served at several places as a
+seaman, and finally among the Swedes as a trooper, until he was
+taken prisoner at Viborg in 1706. He gave Mueller the following
+account of his first voyage across the Sea of Okotsk.
+
+After arriving at Okotsk they had built a vessel, resembling the
+_lodjas_ used at Archangel and Mesen for sailing on the White Sea
+and to Novaya Zemlya. The vessel was strong; its length was eight
+and a half fathoms, its breadth three fathoms, the freeboard, when
+the vessel was loaded, three and a half feet. The first voyage took
+place in June 1716. The voyagers began to sail along the coast
+towards the north-east, but an unfavourable wind drove the vessel,
+almost against the will of the seafarers, right across the sea to
+Kamchatka. The first land sighted was a cape which juts out north of
+the river Tigil. Being unacquainted with the coast the seafarers
+hesitated to land. During the delay a change of wind took place,
+whereby the vessel was driven back towards the coast of Okotsk. The
+wind again becoming favourable, the vessel was put about and
+anchored successfully in the Tigil. The men who were sent ashore
+found the houses deserted. For the Kamchadales being terrified at
+the large ship had made their escape to the woods. The seafarers
+sailed on along the coast and landed at several places in order that
+they might meet with the inhabitants, but for a long time without
+success, until at last they fell in with a Kamchadal girl, who was
+collecting edible roots. With her as a guide they soon found
+dwellings, and even Cossacks, who had been sent out to collect
+tribute. They wintered at the river Kompakova. During the winter the
+sea cast up a whale, which had in its carcase a harpoon of European
+manufacture and with Latin letters. The vessel left the winter haven
+in the middle of May (new style) 1717, but meeting with ice-fields
+was beset in them for five and a half weeks. This occasioned great
+scarcity of provisions. In the end of July the seafarers were again
+back at Okotsk. From this time there has been regular communication
+by sea between this town and Kamchatka. The master of the vessel
+during the first voyage across the Sea of Okotsk was the Cossack
+SOKOLOV.[313]
+
+[Illustration: MAP OF ASIA. From on Atlas published, by the Russian
+Academy of Sciences in 1737. ]
+
+From what I have stated it follows that, thanks to the fondness of
+the hunters and Cossacks for adventurous, exploratory expeditions,
+the current ideas regarding the distribution of the land and the
+courses of the rivers in north-eastern Asia were in the main
+correct. But, in consequence of want of knowledge of, or of doubts
+regarding, Deschnev's discoveries, there prevailed an uncertainty
+whether Asia at its north-east extremity was connected with America
+by a small neck of land, in the same way as it is with Africa, or as
+North and South America are connected with each other, a view which,
+in consequence of the unscientific necessity of generalising
+inherent in man, and the wish to have an explanation of how the
+population extended from the old to the new world, was long
+zealously defended[314]. No one, either European or native, had yet,
+so far as we know, extended his hunting journeys to the northernmost
+promontory of Asia, in consequence of which the position which it
+was assumed to occupy only depended on loose suppositions. It was
+possible for instance that Asia stretched with a cape as far as to
+the neighbourhood of the Pole, or that a broad isthmus between the
+Pjaesina and the Olenek connected the known portion of this quarter
+of the world with an Asiatic Polar continent. Nor had geographers a
+single actual determination of position or geographical measurement
+from the whole of the immense stretch between the mouth of the Ob
+and Japan, and there was complete uncertainty as to the relative
+position of the easternmost possessions of the Russians on the one
+side and of Japan on the other.[315] It was difficult to get the maps
+of the Russians to correspond with those of the Portuguese and the
+Dutch, at the point where the discoveries of the different nations
+touched each other, which also was exceedingly natural, as at that
+time too limited an extent east and west by 1700 kilometres was
+commonly assigned to Siberia. In order to investigate this point, in
+order to fill up the great blank which still existed in the
+knowledge of the quarter of the world first inhabited by man, and
+perhaps above all for the purpose of forming new commercial treaties
+and of discovering new commercial routes, Peter the Great during the
+latest years of his life arranged one of the greatest geographical
+expeditions which the history of the world can show. It was not
+until after his death, however, that it was carried out, and then it
+went on for a series of years on so large a scale that whole tribes
+are said to have been impoverished through the severe exactions of
+transport that were on its account imposed on the inhabitants of the
+Siberian deserts. Its many different divisions are now comprehended
+under the name--_the Great Northern Expedition_. Through the
+writings of Behring, Mueller, Gmelin, Steller, Krascheninnikov and
+others, this expedition has acquired an important place for all time
+in the history not only of geography but also of ethnography,
+zoology, and botany, and even now the inquirer, when the natural
+conditions of North Asia are in question, must return to these
+works. I shall therefore, before drawing this chapter to a close,
+give a brief account of its principal features.
+
+The Great Northern Expedition was ushered in by "the first
+expedition to Kamchatka". The commander of this expedition was the
+Dane VITUS BEHRING, who was accompanied by Lieutenant MORTON
+SPANGBERG, also a Dane by birth, and ALEXEI CHIRIKOV They left St.
+Petersburg in February 1725, and took the land route across Siberia,
+carrying with them the necessary materials with which in Kamchatka
+to build and equip the vessel with which they should make their
+voyage of exploration. More than three years were required for this
+voyage, or rather for this geographico-scientific campaign, in which
+for the transport of the stores and the shipbuilding material that
+had to be taken from Europe the rivers Irtisch, Ob, Ket, Yenisej,
+Tunguska, Ilim, Aldan, Maja, Yudoma, and Urak were taken advantage
+of. It was not until the 15th/4th April that a beginning could be
+made at Nischni Kamchatskoj Ostrog of the building of the vessel,
+which was launched on the 21st/10th July, and on the 31st/20th of
+the same month Behring began his voyage.
+
+He sailed in a north-easterly direction along the coast of
+Kamchatka, which he surveyed. On the 19th/8th August in 64 deg.
+30' N.L. he fell in with Chukches, who had still a reputation among
+the Russians for invincible courage and ferocity. First one of them
+came to the vessel, swimming on two inflated seal-skins, "to inquire
+what was intended by the vessel's coming thither," after which their
+skin-boat lay to. Conversation was carried on with them by means of
+a Koryaek interpreter. On the 21st/10th August St. Lawrence Islands
+as discovered, and on the 26th/15th of the same month the explorers
+sailed past the north-eastern promontory of Asia in 67 deg. 18'
+and observed that the coast trends to the west from that point, as
+the Chukches had before informed them. Behring on this account
+considered that he had fulfilled his commission to ascertain whether
+Asia and America were separated, and he now determined to turn,
+"partly because if the voyage were continued along the coast ice
+might be met with, from which it might not be so easy to get clear,
+partly on account of the fogs, which had already begun to prevail,
+and partly because it would be impossible, if a longer stay were
+made in these regions, to get back the same summer to Kamchatka.
+There could be no question of passing the winter off the coast of
+the Chukch Peninsula, because that would have been to expose the
+expedition to certain destruction, either by being wrecked on the
+jagged rocks of the open unknown coast, or by perishing from want of
+fuel, or finally by dying under the hands of the fierce unconquered
+Chukches". On the 1st Oct/20th Sept the vessel returned to Nischni
+Kamchatskoj Ostrog.[316] It was during this voyage that the sound,
+which has since obtained the name of Behring's Straits, is
+considered to have been discovered. But it is now known that this
+discovery properly belongs to the gallant hunter Deschnev, who
+sailed through these straits eighty years before. I suppose
+therefore that the geographical world will with pleasure embrace the
+proposal to attach the name of Deschnev along with that of Behring
+to this part of our globe; which may be done by substituting Cape
+Deschnev, as the name of the easternmost promontory of Asia, for
+that of East Cape, an appellation which is misleading and unsuitable
+in in many respects. Several statements by Kamchadales regarding a
+great country towards the east on the other side of the sea, induced
+Behring the following year to sail away in order to ascertain
+whether this was the case. In consequence of unfavourable weather he
+did not succeed in reaching the coast of America, but returned with
+his object unaccomplished, after which he sailed to Okotsk, where he
+arrived on the 3rd Aug/23rd July 1729. Hence he betook himself
+immediately to St. Petersburg, which he reached after a journey of
+six months and nine days.
+
+In maps published during Behring's absence, partly by Swedish
+officers who had returned from imprisonment in Siberia,[317]
+Kamchatka had been delineated with so long an extension towards the
+south that this peninsula was connected with Yezo, the northernmost
+of the large Japanese islands. The distance between Kamchatka and
+Japan, rich in wares, would thus have been quite inconsiderable.
+This nearness was believed to be further confirmed by another
+Japanese ship, manned by seventeen men and laden with silk, rice,
+and paper, having stranded in July 1729 on Kamchatka, south of
+Avatscha Bay. In this neighbourhood there was, along with a number
+of natives, a small party of Cossacks under the command of ANDREAS
+SCHTINNIKOV. He at first accepted several presents from the
+shipwrecked men, but afterwards withdrew from the place where the
+wreck took place. When the Japanese on this account rowed on in
+their boats along the coast, Schtinnikov gave orders to follow them
+in a _baydar_ and kill them all but two. The cruel deed was carried
+into execution, on which the malefactors took possession of the
+goods, and broke in pieces the boats in order to obtain the iron
+with which the boards were fastened together. The two Japanese who
+were saved were carried to Nischni Kamchatskoj Ostrog. Here
+Schtinnikov was imprisoned and hanged for his crime. The Japanese
+were sent to St. Petersburg, where they learned the Russian language
+and were converted to Christianity, while some Russians in their
+turn learned Japanese. The Japanese died between 1736 and 1739. Both
+were from Satsuma; the elder, SOSA, had been a merchant, and the
+younger, GONSA, was a pilot's son. Their vessel had been bound for
+Osaka, but having been carried out of its course by a storm, had
+drifted about at sea for six months, stranding at last with so
+unfortunate a result for the greater part of the crew.
+
+This sad occurrence further reminds us that much still remained
+unaccomplished with respect to the geography of north-eastern Asia.
+Behring's Kamchatka expedition had besides yielded no information
+regarding the position of the northern extremity of Asia, or of the
+part of America lying opposite to Kamchatka. A number of grave
+doubts appear besides to have been started as to the correctness of
+the observations during Behring's first voyage. All this induced him
+to make proposals for a continuation of his explorations, offering,
+along with his former companions, Spangberg and Chirikov, to take
+the command of the maritime expedition which was to start from
+Kamchatka to solve the questions proposed, both eastwards to
+ascertain the position of the east coast of Asia in relation to the
+west coast of America, and southwards to connect the areas which the
+West-Europeans and the Russians were exploring.
+
+The Russian senate, the Board of Admiralty, and the Academy of
+Sciences were commissioned to develop this plan and to carry it into
+execution. With respect to the way in which the commission was
+executed I may be allowed to refer to Mueller's oft-quoted work, and
+to a paper by VON BAER; _Peters des Grossen Verdienste um die
+Erweiterung der geographischen Kenntnisse (Beitraege zur Kenntniss
+des Russischen Reiches_, B. 16, St. Petersburg, 1872). Here I can
+only mention that it was principally through the untiring interest
+which KIRILOV, the secretary of the senate, took in the undertaking,
+that it attained such a development that it may be said to have been
+perhaps the greatest scientific expedition which has ever been sent
+out by any country. It was determined at the same time not only to
+ascertain the extent of Siberia to the north and east, but also to
+examine its hitherto almost unknown ethnographical and natural
+conditions. For this purpose the Great Northern Expedition was
+divided into the following divisions:--
+
+1. _An expedition to start from Archangel for the Ob_[318]--For this
+expedition two _kotsches_ were employed, the _Ob_ and the
+_Expedition_ 52-1/2 feet long, 14 feet broad, and 8 feet deep, each
+manned with 20 men. The vessels, which were under the command of
+Lieutenants PAULOV and MURAVJEV, left Archangel on the 15th/4th
+July, 1734. The first summer they only reached Mutnoi Saliv in the
+Kara Sea, whence they returned to the Petchora and wintered at
+Pustosersk. The following year they broke up in June, but did not
+penetrate farther than in 1734. The unfavourable issue was ascribed
+to the vessels' unserviceableness for voyages in the Polar Sea, in
+consequence of which the Board of Admiralty ordered two other boats,
+50 to 60 feet long, to be built for the expedition, which were
+placed under the command of SKURATOV and SUCHOTIN, Muravjev being
+besides replaced by MALYGIN who sailed with the old vessels on the
+7th June/27th May 1736, down the Petchora river, at whose mouth the
+_Expedition_ was wrecked. Without permitting himself to be
+frightened by this, Malygin ordered his men to go on board the other
+vessel, in which with great dangers and difficulties they penetrated
+through the drift-ice to Dolgoi Island. Here on the 18th/7th August
+they fell in with the new vessels sent from Archangel. Suchotin was
+now sent back to Archangel on board the _Ob_; Malygin and Skuratov
+sailed in the new vessels to the Kara river and wintered there.
+During the winter 1736-1737 the men suffered only slightly from
+scurvy, which was cured by anti-scorbutic plants growing in the
+region. The ice in the Kara river did not break up until the
+12th/1st June, but so much ice still drifted about in the sea that a
+start could not be made until the 14th/3rd July. On the 4th Aug/24th
+July the vessels anchored in the sound which I have named Malygin
+Sound. Here they were detained by head winds 25 days. Then they
+sailed on round a cape, which the Samoyeds call Yalmal, up the Gulf
+of Ob to the mouth of the river, which was reached on the 22nd/11th
+September, 1737, and then up the river to Soswa, where the vessels
+were laid up in winter quarters. The crews were taken to Beresov.
+Malygin returned to Petersburg, after having given Lieut. Skuratov
+and the second mate Golovin a commission to carry the vessels back
+to the Dwina the following year. They did not get back until August
+1739. The return voyage thus also occupied two years, and was
+attended with much difficulty and danger.
+
+Six years in all had thus gone to the voyage from Archangel to the
+Ob and back, which now can be accomplished without difficulty in a
+single summer. By means of Malygin's and Skuratov's voyages, and of
+a land journey which the land-measurer Selifontov undertook during
+July and August 1736 with reindeer along the west coast of Yalmal
+and then by boat to Beli Ostrov, Yalmal and the south coast of this
+large island were mapped, it would appear in the main correctly.[319]
+
+2. _An expedition to sail from the Ob to the Yenisej_--For this
+Behring ordered a double sloop, the _Tobol_, 70 feet long, 15 feet
+broad, and 8 feet deep, to be built at Tobolsk. The vessel had two
+masts, was armed with two small cannon, and was manned with 53 men,
+among whom were a land-measurer and a priest. The commander was
+Lieut. OWZYN. They sailed in company with some small craft carrying
+provisions from Tobolsk on the 26th/15th May, 1734, and came to the
+Gulf of Ob through the easternmost mouth-arm of the river on the
+30th/19th June. There a storm damaged the tender-vessels. Of the
+timber of those which had sustained most damage, a storehouse was
+erected in 66 deg. 36' N.L., in which the provisions landed from
+the unserviceable craft were placed. When this was done they sailed
+on, but slowly in consequence of unfavourable winds and shallow
+water, so that it was not until the 17th/6th August that they
+reached 70 deg. 4' N.L. Hence they returned to Obdorsk, arriving
+there on the 15th/4th September. Seven days afterwards the Ob was
+covered with ice.
+
+The following spring the voyage was resumed. On the 17th/6th June
+they came to the depot formed the preceding year. At first ice
+formed an obstacle, but on the 31st/20th July it broke up, and the
+navigable water became clear. The crew had now begun to suffer so
+severely from scurvy, that of 53 only 17 were in good health; Owzyn
+therefore turned, that he might bring his sick men to Tobolsk. He
+reached this town on the 17th/6th October, and the river froze over
+soon after. Owzyn now travelled to St. Petersburg in order to give
+in, in person, reports of his unsuccessful voyages and to make
+suggestions as to the measures that ought to be taken to ensure
+better success to next year's undertaking. His proposals on this
+point were mainly in the direction of building at Tobolsk a new
+vessel, which should accompany the _Tobol_ during the dangerous
+voyage, and confer upon it greater safety. This was approved by the
+Board of Admiralty, but the vessel could not be got ready till the
+summer of 1736, on which account that year's voyage was undertaken
+in the same way as that of the preceding year, and with the same
+success. The new vessel was not ready until 1737. It came with the
+shipbuilder KOSCHELEV and the mate MININ on the 16th/5th June to
+Obdorsk, where Owzyn took command of it, handing over the old one to
+Koschelev, and beginning his fourth voyage down the Gulf of Ob. This
+time he had better success. After sailing past Gyda Bay, he came,
+without meeting with any serious obstacles from ice, on the
+27th/16th August to Cape Mattesol, and on the 12th/1st September to
+a storehouse erected for the expedition by the care of the
+authorities on the bank of the Yenisej in 71 deg. 33' N.L. The
+Yenisej froze over on the 21st/10th October.
+
+Four years had thus gone to the accomplishment of Owzyn's purpose,
+but it can scarcely be doubted that if he had not turned so early in
+the season, and if he had had steam, or a sailing vessel of the
+present day at his disposal he would have been able to sail from the
+Ob to the Yenisej in a few weeks. It is at all events Owzyn's
+perseverance to which we are in great measure indebted for the
+mapping of the Gulf of Ob, and the Bays of Tas and Gyda[320].
+
+3. _Voyages from the Yenisej towards Cape Taimur._--In the winter of
+1738 Owzyn and Koschelev were called to St. Petersburg to answer for
+themselves with reference to a complaint lodged against them by the
+men under their command[321]. In their room Minin got the command of
+the expedition which was to endeavour to penetrate farther eastwards
+along the coast of the Polar Sea. The two first summers, 1738 and
+1739, Minin could not get further than to the northernmost
+_sumovies_ on the Yenisej. But in 1740 he succeeded, as it appears
+in pretty open water, in reaching on the west coast of the Taimur
+Peninsula the latitude of 75 deg. 15'. Here he turned on the 1st
+Sept./21st Aug. on account of "impenetrable" ice, but mainly in
+consequence of the late season of the year. The preceding winter
+Minin had sent his mate STERLEGOV in sledges to examine the coast.
+On the 25th/14th April he reached 75 deg. 26' N.L., and there
+erected a stone cairn on a rock jutting out into the sea. Many open
+places appear to have been seen in the offing. Minin and his party
+returned on account of snow-blindness, and during the return voyage
+rested for a time at a _sumovie_ on the river Pjaesina, whose
+existence there shows how far the Russian hunters had extended their
+journeys[322].
+
+4. _Voyage from the Lena Westward_--On the 30th July/11th June 1735,
+two expeditions started from Yakutsk, each with its double sloop,
+accompanied by a number of boats carrying provisions. One of these
+double sloops was to go in an easterly direction under the command
+of Lieut. LASSINIUS. I shall give an account of his voyage farther
+on. The other was commanded by Lieut. PRONTSCHISCHEV, whose object
+was to go from the Lena westwards, if possible, to the Yenisej.
+The voyage down the river was successful and pleasant. The river was
+from four to nine fathoms deep, and on its banks, overgrown with birch
+and pine, there were numerous tents and dwelling-houses whose
+inhabitants were engaged in fishing, which gave the neighbourhood
+of the river a lively and pleasant appearance[323]. On the 13th/2nd
+August the explorers came to the mouth of the river, which here
+divides into five arms, of which the easternmost was chosen for
+sailing down to the Polar Sea. Here the two seafarers were to part.
+Prontschischev staid at the river-mouth till the 25th/14th August.
+He then sailed in 1-1/2 to 2-1/2 fathoms water along the shore of
+the islands which are formed by the mouth-arms of the Lena. On the
+6th Sept./26th Aug. he anchored in the mouth of the Olenek.
+A little way up the river some dwelling-houses were met with,
+which hunters had built for use during summer. These were put in
+order for winter, which passed happily. On the 2nd July/21st June
+the ice broke up at the winter quarters, but in the sea it lay still
+until the 14th/3rd August, and it was only then that Prontschischev
+could go to sea. The course was shaped for the north-east.
+The Chatanga was reached on the 24th/13th August. On the beach,
+in 74 deg. 48' N.L., a hut was met with in which were found newly
+baked bread and some dogs, and which therefore appeared to belong to
+some Russian hunters absent at the time. While sailing on along the
+coast the explorers, after having passed two bays projecting into the
+land, came to an inlet which they erroneously took for the mouth of
+the Taimur river. Among the reasons for this supposition is mentioned
+the immense number of gulls which swarmed round the vessel in that
+region. The bay was covered with fast ice, "which probably never
+breaks up," and broad ice-fields stretched out to sea from the coast,
+on which Polar bears were seen.
+
+On the 31st/20th August, in 77 deg. 29' N.L., the vessel was
+suddenly surrounded with so large masses of ice that it could make
+no further progress, and was every instant in danger of being
+nipped. Prontschischev therefore determined to turn, but this at
+first was rendered impossible by a complete calm, a crust of ice
+being formed at the same time in open places between the pieces of
+drift-ice. If the latitude stated is correct, the turning point lay
+quite close to the northernmost promontory of Asia. With a better
+vessel, and above all with the help of steam, Prontschischev would
+certainly have rounded it. The unbroken ice which he mentioned
+several times in his narrative, ought probably to be interpreted as
+belts of pretty closely packed drift-ice. Many times during my
+Arctic voyages have I sailed through belts of ice which, when
+observed from a boat some hundred yards from their borders, have
+been reported as immense unbroken ice-fields. On the 5th Sept./25th
+Aug. a high north wind began to blow which drove the vessel, with
+the surrounding ice-fields, towards the south. The voyagers had
+doubts as to then being saved, but the gusts of wind broke up the
+ice so that the vessel got free and could sail to the mouth of the
+Chatanga, which, however, was already frozen over. The explorers
+were therefore compelled to continue their voyage towards the
+Olenek, whose mouth was reached on the 8th Sept./28th Aug. In the
+neighbourhood of the haven which they intended to make, they were
+driven about by contrary winds and drift-ice about six days more,
+exposed to cold and wet, and worn out by exertions and privations of
+every description. Prontschischev, who before had been sick, died of
+his illness on the 10th Sept./30th Aug. to the great sorrow of his
+men, by whom he was held in great regard. The mate, CHELYUSKIN, now
+took the command. On the 14th/3rd Sept. he succeeded in carrying his
+vessel into the river Olenek. On its bank Prontschischev was buried
+with all the solemnities which circumstances permitted. To
+Prontschischev's melancholy fate there attaches an interest which is
+quite unique in the history of the Arctic exploratory voyages. He
+was newly married when he started. His young wife accompanied him on
+his journey, took part in his dangers and sufferings, survived him
+only two days, and now rests by his side in the grave on the
+desolate shore of the Polar Sea.
+
+On the 9th Oct./28th Sept. the Olenek was frozen over and the winter
+became very severe for Chelyuskin and his companions. The following
+summer they returned to Yakutsk convinced of the impossibility of
+sailing round the north point of Asia, and as Behring was no longer
+to be found in that town, Chelyuskin started for St. Petersburg in
+order to give an oral account of Prontschischev's voyages. The Board
+of Admiralty, however, did not favour Chelyuskin's views, but
+considered that another attempt ought to be made by land, but if
+this, too, was unsuccessful, that the coast should be surveyed by
+land journeys. Lieut. CHARITON LAPTEV was appointed to carry out
+this last attempt to reach the Yenisej by sea from the Lena.
+
+Laptev, accompanied by a number of small craft carrying provisions,
+left Yakutsk on the 20th/9th July, 1739, and on the 31st/20th of the
+same month reached the mouth-arm of the Lena called Krestovskoj, on
+which he built, on a point jutting out into the sea, a high signal
+tower, one of the few monuments that are to be found on the north
+coast of Asia, and which is on that account mentioned by succeeding
+travellers in those regions. He sailed hence along the coast past
+the mouth of the Olenek and past a large bay to which, for what
+reason I know not, he gave the purely Swedish name of Nordvik. This
+bay was still covered with unbroken ice. After having been beset for
+several days in Chatanga Bay, the voyagers on the 31st/20th August
+reached Cape Thaddeus, where the vessel was anchored the following
+day in 76 deg. 47' N.L. A signal tower was built on the extremity
+of the cape, and the land-measurer CHEKIN was sent to examine the
+neighbouring territory, and Chelyuskin to search for the mouth of
+the river Taimur. Chekin could carry out no geodetic work on account
+of mist. Chelyuskin again reported that the whole bay and the sea in
+the offing were, as far as the eye could reach, covered with
+unbroken ice This induced Laptev to turn. After many difficulties
+among the ice, he came, on the 7th Sept./27th Aug. to the confluence
+of the river Bludnaya with the Chatanga. Here the winter was passed
+among a tribe of Tunguses Irving on the spot, who owned no reindeer,
+and were therefore settled. They used dogs as draught animals, and
+appear to have carried on a mode of life resembling that of the
+coast Chukches.
+
+In spring Chekin was sent to map the coast between the Taimur and
+the Pjaesina. With thirty dog-sledges and accompanied by a nomad
+Tunguse with eighteen reindeer,[324] he travelled over land to the
+Taimur river, followed its course to the sea, and then the coast
+towards the west of a distance of 100 versts. Scarcity of provisions
+and food for his dogs compelled him to turn. Laptev himself,
+convinced as he was of the impossibility of rounding the north point
+of Asia, now wished to carry back his vessel and the most of his
+stores to the Lena. After having with great danger and difficulty
+sailed down the river to the Polar Sea, reaching it on the 10th
+Aug./30th July, the vessel on the 24th/13th was beset and nipped
+between pieces of ice, according to a statement on a Russian map
+published in 1876 by the Hydrographical Department in St.
+Petersburg, on the east coast of the Taimur Peninsula in 75 deg.
+30' N.L. Six days after there was a strong frost, so that thin ice
+was formed between the blocks of drift-ice. Some foolhardy fellows
+went over the weakly frozen together pieces of ice to land. Three
+days after Laptev himself and the rest of the men could leave the
+vessel. Several streams, still unfrozen, lying between them and
+their old winter station, however, prevented them from going
+further. They endeavoured to get protection from the cold by digging
+pits in the frozen earth and lying down in them by turns one after
+the other. The men were sent daily to the vessel to fetch as much as
+possible of the provisions left behind, but on the 10th Sept./29th
+Aug. the ice again broke up, and carried the abandoned vessel out to
+sea.
+
+By the 2nd Oct./21st Sept. the streams at last had frozen so much
+that the return journey could be begun to the former year's winter
+station distant more than 500 kilometres. The journey through the
+desolate _tundra_, perhaps never before trodden by the foot of man,
+was attended with extreme difficulties, and it was twenty-five days
+before Laptev and his men could again rest in a warmed hut and get
+hot food. Twelve men perished of cold and exhaustion. Laptev now
+determined to remain here during the winter and to go the following
+spring over the _tundra_ to the Yenisej, where he hoped to find
+depots with provisions and ammunition. Nor did he now remain
+inactive. For he did not wish to return until the surveys were
+complete. For want of vessels these were to be made by land. Such of
+the men as were not required were therefore sent in spring over the
+_tundra_ to the Yenisej and the rest divided into three parties
+under Laptev himself, Chekin, and Chelyuskin, who were to survey
+each his portion of the coast between the Chatanga and the Pjaesina
+and then meet at the Yenisej. These journeys were successfully
+accomplished, the explorers travelled several times without, it
+would appear, excessive difficulty, over the desolate _tundra_
+between the Chatanga and the Taimur rivers, discovered Lake Taimur,
+and surveyed considerable stretches of the coast. But when they were
+all again assembled at Dudino, it was found that the north point of
+Asia had not yet been travelled round and surveyed. This was done in
+1742 by Chelyuskin in the course of a new sledge journey, of which
+the particulars are only incompletely known, evidently because
+Chelyuskin's statement, that he had reached the northernmost point
+of Asia, was doubted down to the most recent times. After the voyage
+of the _Vega_, however, there can be no more doubt on this
+point.[325]
+
+5. _Voyages from the Lena Eastward_--During these Lieutenant
+Lassinius and after his death Lieutenant DMITRI LAPTEV had the
+command. A double sloop was built at Yakutsk for the voyage of
+Lassinius. As I have already mentioned, he left this town,
+accompanied by several cargo-boats, at the same time as
+Prontschischev, and both sailed together down the Lena to its mouth.
+Lassinius was able to sail to the eastward as early as the 20th/9th
+August. Four days after he came upon so much drift-ice that he was
+compelled to lie to at the mouth of the river, 120 versts to the
+east of the easternmost mouth-arm of the Lena. Here abundance of
+driftwood was met with, and the stock of provisions appears also to
+have been large, but notwithstanding this, scurvy broke out during
+the winter. Lassinius himself and most of his men died. On being
+informed of this, Behring sent a relieving party, consisting of
+Lieutenant CHERBININ and fourteen men to Lassinius' winter quarters.
+On their arrival on the 15th/4th June they found only the priest,
+the mate, and seven sailors alive of the fifty-three men who had
+started with Lassinius the foregoing year from Yakutsk. These too
+were so ill that some of them died during the return journey to
+Yakutsk. Dmitri Laptev and a sufficient number of men, were sent at
+the same time to take possession of the ship and renew the attempt
+to sail eastwards. He went to sea on the 10th Aug./30th July. At
+first he had to contend with serious obstacles from ice, and when at
+last he reached open water he thought himself compelled to turn on
+account of the advanced season of the year. On the 2nd Sept./22nd
+Aug. he came again to the Bychov mouth-arm of the Lena, up which he
+found it difficult to make his way on account of the many unknown
+shoals. On the 19th/8th September the river was frozen over. He
+wintered a little distance from the mouth, and now again scurvy made
+its appearance, but was cured by constant exercise in the open air
+and by a decoction of cedar cones. In a report sent from this place,
+Dmitri Laptev declared that it was quite impossible to round the two
+projecting promontories between the Lena and the Indigirka, Capes
+Borchaja and Svjatoinos, because, according to the unanimous
+statement of several Yakuts living in the region, the ice there
+never melts or even loosens from the beach. With Behring's
+permission he travelled to St. Petersburg to lay the necessary
+information before the Board of Admiralty. The Board determined that
+another attempt should be made by sea, and, if that was
+unsuccessful, that the coast should be surveyed by means of land
+journeys.
+
+It is now easy to see what was the cause of the unfortunate issue of
+these two attempts to sail to the eastward. The explorers had
+vessels which were unsuitable for cruising, they turned too early in
+the season, and in consequence of their unwillingness to go far from
+land they sailed into the great bays east of the Lena, from which no
+large river carries away the masses of ice that have been formed
+there during the winter, or that have been drifted thither from the
+sea. Dmitri Laptev and his companions besides appear to have had a
+certain dislike to the commission intrusted to them, and, differing
+from Deschnev, they thus wanted the first condition of success--the
+fixed conviction of the possibility of attaining their object.
+
+By order of the Board of Admiralty Dmitri Laptev at all events began
+his second voyage, and now falsified his own prediction, by rounding
+the two capes which he believed to be always surrounded by unbroken
+ice. After he had passed them his vessel was frozen in on the
+20th/9th September. Laptev had no idea at what point of the coast he
+was, or how far he was from land. He remained in this unpleasant
+state for eleven days, at the close of which one of the mates who
+had been sent out from the vessel in a boat on the 11th Sept./31st
+Aug. returned on foot over the ice and reported that they were not
+far from the mouth of the Indigirka. Several Yakuts had settled on
+the neighbouring coast, where was also a Russian _simovie_. Laptev
+and his men wintered there, and examined the surrounding country.
+The surveyor KINDAeKOV was sent out to map the coast to the Kolyma.
+Among other things he observed that the sea here was very shallow
+near the shore, and that driftwood was wanting at the mouth of the
+Indigirka, but was found in large masses in the interior, 30 versts
+from the coast.
+
+The following year, 1740, Laptev repaired as well as he could his
+vessel, which had been injured during the voyage of the preceding
+year, and then went again to sea on the 11th Aug./31st July. On the
+14th/3rd August he passed one of the Bear Islands, fixing its
+latitude at 71 deg. 0'. On the 25th/14th August, when Great Cape
+Baranov was reached, the progress of the vessel was arrested by
+masses of ice that extended as far as the eye could reach. Laptev
+now turned and sought for winter quarters on the Kolyma. On the
+19th/8th July, 1741, this river became open, and Laptev went to sea
+to continue his voyage eastwards, but did not now succeed in
+rounding Great Cape Baranov. He was now fully convinced of the
+impossibility of reaching the Anadyr by sea, on which account he
+determined to penetrate to that river by land in order to survey it.
+This he did in the years 1741 and 1742. Thus ended the voyages of
+Dmitri Laptev, giving evidence if not of distinguished seamanship,
+of great perseverance, undaunted resolution, and fidelity to the
+trust committed to him.[326]
+
+6. _Voyage for the purpose of exploring and surveying the coast of
+America_--For this purpose Behring fitted out at Okotsk two vessels,
+of which he himself took the command of one, _St. Paul_, while the
+other, _St. Peter_, was placed under CHIRIKOV. They left Okotsk in
+1740, and being prevented by shoal water from entering Bolschaja
+Reka, they both wintered in Avatscha Bay, whose excellent haven was
+called, from the names of the ships, Port Peter-Paul. On the
+15th/4th June they left this haven, the naturalist GEORG WILHELM
+STELLER having first gone on board Behring's and the astronomer
+LOUIS DE L'ISLE DE LA CROYERE Chirikov's vessel. The course was
+shaped at first for the S.S.E., but afterwards, when no land could
+be discovered in this direction, for the N.E. and E. During a storm
+on the 1st July/20th June the vessels were separated. On the
+29th/18th July Behring reached the coast of America in 58 deg. to
+59 deg. N.L. A short distance from the shore Steller discovered
+here a splendid volcano, which was named St. Elias. The coast was
+inhabited, but the inhabitants fled when the vessel approached. From
+this point Behring wished to sail in a north-westerly direction to
+that promontory of Asia which formed the turning-point of his first
+voyage. It was however only with difficulty that in the almost
+constant fog the peninsula of Alaska could be rounded and the vessel
+could sail forward among the Aleutian island groups. Scurvy now
+broke out among the crew, and the commander himself suffered
+severely from it, on which account the command was mainly in the
+hands of Lieut. WAXEL. At an island the explorers came into contact
+with the natives, who at first were quite friendly, until one of
+them was offered brandy. He tasted the liquor, and was thereby so
+terrified that no gifts could calm his uneasiness. On this account
+those of the crew who were on land were ordered to come on board,
+but the savages wished to detain their guests. At last the Russians
+were set free, but a Koryaek whom they had taken with them as an
+interpreter was kept behind. In order to get him set at liberty,
+Waxel ordered two musket salvos to be fired over the heads of the
+natives, with the result that they all fell flat down from fright,
+and the Koryaek had an opportunity of making his escape. Now the
+fire-water is a liquor in great request among these savages, and
+they are not frightened at the firing of salvos of musketry.
+
+During the following months Behring's vessel drifted about without
+any distinct plan, in the sea between Alaska and Kamchatka, in
+nearly constant fog, and in danger of stranding on some of the many
+unknown rocks and islands which were passed. On the 5th November the
+vessel was anchored at an island afterwards called Behring Island.
+Soon however a great wave arose which threw the vessel on land and
+crushed it against the rocky coast of the island. Of the wintering
+there, which, through Steller's taking part in it, became of so
+great importance for natural history, I shall give an account
+further on in connection with the narrative of our visit to Behring
+Island. Here I shall only remind the reader that Behring died of
+scurvy on the 19th/8th December, and that in the course of the
+voyage great part of his crew fell a sacrifice to the same disease.
+In spring the survivors built a new vessel out of the fragments of
+the old, and on the 27th/16th of August they sailed away from the
+island where they had undergone so many sufferings, and came eleven
+days after to a haven on Kamchatka.
+
+After parting from Behring, Chirikov on the 26th/15th July sighted
+the coast of America in 56 deg. N.L. The mate ABRAHAM DEMENTIEV
+was then sent ashore in the longboat, which was armed with a cannon
+and manned by ten well-armed men. When he did not return, another
+boat was sent after him. But this boat too did not come back.
+Probably the boats' crews were taken prisoners and killed by the
+Indians. After making another attempt to find his lost men, Chirikov
+determined to return to Kamchatka. He first sailed some distance
+northwards along the coast of America without being able to land, as
+both the vessel's boats were lost. Great scarcity of drinking-water
+was thus occasioned, which was felt the more severely as the return
+voyage was very protracted on account of head-winds and fog. During
+the voyage twenty-one men perished, among them de l'Isle de la
+Croyere, who died, as is said often to be the case with scurvy
+patients, on board ship, while he was being carried from his bed up
+on deck to be put on land.[327]
+
+The voyages of Behring and Chirikov, attended as they were by the
+sacrifice of so many human lives, gave us a knowledge of the
+position of North-western America in relation to that of
+North-eastern Asia, and led to the discovery of the long volcanic
+chain of islands between the Alaska peninsula and Kamchatka.
+
+7. _Voyages to Japan_--For these Captain SPANGBERG ordered a
+_hucker_, the _Erkeengeln Michael_, and a double sloop, the
+_Nadeschda_, to be built at Okotsk, the old vessel _Gabriel_ being
+at the same time repaired for the same purpose. Spangberg himself
+took command of the _Michael_, that of the double sloop was given to
+Lieutenant WALTON, and of the _Gabriel_ to Midshipman CHELTINGA.
+Drift-ice prevented a start until midsummer, and on that account
+nothing more could be done the first year (1738) than to examine the
+Kurile Islands to the 46th degree of latitude. From this point the
+vessels returned to Kamchatka, where they wintered at Bolschaja
+Reka. On the 2nd June/22nd May, 1739, Spangberg with his little
+fleet again left this haven. All the vessels kept together at first,
+until in a violent storm attended with fog Spangberg and Cheltinga
+were parted from Walton. Both made a successful voyage to Japan and
+landed at several places, being always well received by the natives,
+who appeared to be very willing to have dealings with the
+foreigners. During the return voyage Spangberg landed in 43 deg.
+50' N.L. on a large island north of Nippon. Here he saw the Aino
+race, enigmatical as to its origin, distinguished by an exceedingly
+abundant growth of hair and beard which sometimes extends over the
+greater part of the body. Spangberg returned to Okotsk on the 9th
+November/20th October. Walton sailed along the coast in a southerly
+direction to 33 deg. 48' N.L. Here was a town with 1,500 houses,
+where the Russian seafarers were received in a very friendly way
+even in private houses. Walton subsequently landed at two other
+places on the coast, returning afterwards to Okotsk, where he
+anchored on the 1st September/21st August.[328]
+
+The very splendid results of Spangberg's and Walton's voyages by no
+means corresponded with the maps of Asia constructed by the men who
+were at that time leaders of the Petersburg Academy. Spangberg
+therefore during his return journey through Siberia got orders to
+travel again to the same regions in order to settle the doubts that
+had arisen. A new vessel had to be built, and with this he started
+in 1741 from Okotsk to his former winter haven in Kamchatka. Hence
+he sailed in 1742 in a southerly direction, but he had scarcely
+passed the first of the Kurile Islands when the vessel became so
+leaky that he was compelled to turn. The second expedition of
+Spangberg to Japan was thus completely without result, a
+circumstance evidently brought about by the unjustified and
+offensive doubts which led to it, and the arbitrary way in which it
+was arranged at St. Petersburg.
+
+8 _Journeys in the interior of Siberia_ by Gmelin, Mueller, Steller,
+Krascheninnikov, de l'Isle de la Croyere, &c.--The voyages of these
+_savants_ have indeed formed an epoch in our knowledge of the
+ethnography and natural history of North Asia, but the north coast
+itself they did not touch. An account of them therefore lies beyond
+the limits of the history which I have undertaken to relate here.
+
+
+The Great Northern Expedition by these journeys both by sea and land
+had gained a knowledge of the natural conditions of North Asia based
+on actual researches, had yielded pretty complete information
+regarding the boundary of that quarter of the globe towards the
+north, and of the relative position of the east coast of Asia and
+the west coast of America, had discovered the Aleutian Islands, and
+had connected the Russian discoveries in the east with those of the
+West-Europeans in Japan and China[329]. The results were thus very
+grand and epoch-making. But these undertakings had also required
+very considerable sacrifices, and long before they were finished
+they were looked upon in no favourable light by the Siberian
+authorities, on account of the heavy burden which the transport of
+provisions and other equipment through desolate regions imposed upon
+the country. Nearly twenty years now elapsed before there was a new
+exploratory expedition in the Siberian Polar Sea worthy of being
+registered in the history of geography. This time it was a private
+person, a Yakutsk merchant, SCHALAUROV, who proposed to repeat
+Deschnev's famous voyage and to gain this end sacrificed the whole
+of his means and his life itself. Accompanied by an exiled
+midshipman, IVAN BACHOFF, and with a crew of deserters and deported
+men, he sailed in 1760 from the Lena out into the Polar Sea, but
+came the first year only to the Yana, where he wintered. On the 9th
+August/29th July, 1761, he continued his voyage towards the east,
+always keeping near the coast. On the 17th/6th September he rounded
+the dreaded Svjatoinos, sighting on the other side of the sound a
+high-lying land, Ljachoff's Island. At the Bear Islands, whither he
+was carried by a favourable wind over an open sea, he first met with
+drift-ice, although, it appears, not in any considerable quantity.
+But the season was already far advanced, and he therefore considered
+it most advisable to seek winter quarters at the mouth of the
+neigbouring Kolyma river. Here he built a spacious winter dwelling,
+which was surrounded by snow ramparts armed with cannon from the
+vessel, probably the whole house was not so large as a peasant's
+cabin at home, but it was at all events the grandest palace on the
+north coast of Asia, often spoken of by later travellers, and
+regarded by the natives with amazed admiration. In the neighbourhood
+there was good reindeer hunting and abundant fishing, on which
+account the winter passed so happily, that only one man died of
+scurvy, an exceedingly favourable state of things for that period.
+
+The following year Schalaurov started on the 1st August/21st July,
+but calms and constant head-winds prevented him from passing Cape
+Schelagskoj, until he was compelled by the late season of the year
+to seek for winter quarters. For this he considered the neighbouring
+coast unsuitable on account of the scarcity of forests and
+driftwood, he therefore sailed back to the westward until after a
+great many mishaps he came again at last on the 23rd/12th September
+to the house which he had built the year before on the Kolyma.
+
+He proposed immediately to make a renewed attempt the following
+spring to reach his goal. But now his stores were exhausted, and the
+wearied crew refused to accompany him. In order to obtain funds for
+a new voyage he travelled to Moscow, and by means of the assistance
+he succeeded in procuring there, he commenced in 1766 a voyage from
+which neither he nor any of his followers returned. COXE mentions
+several things which tell in favour of his having actually rounded
+Cape Deschnev and reached the Anadyr. But Wrangel believes that he
+perished in the neighbourhood of Cape Schelagskoj. For in 1823 the
+inhabitants of that cape showed Wrangel's companion Matiuschkin a
+little ruinous house, built east of the river Werkon on the coast of
+the Polar Sea. For many years back the Chukches travelling past had
+found there human bones gnawed by beasts of prey, and various
+household articles, which indicated that shipwrecked men had
+wintered there, and Wrangel accordingly supposes that it was there
+that Schalaurov perished a sacrifice to the determination with which
+he prosecuted his self-imposed task of sailing round the
+north-eastern promontory of Asia.[330]
+
+
+In order to ascertain whether any truth lay at the bottom of the
+view, generally adopted in Siberia, that the continent of America
+extended along the north coast of Asia to the neighbourhood of the
+islands situated there, CHICHERIN, Governor of Siberia, in the
+winter of 1763 sent a sergeant, ANDREJEV with dog-sledges on an ice
+journey towards the north. He succeeded in reaching some islands of
+considerable extent, which Wrangel, who always shows himself very
+sceptical with respect to the existence of new lands and islands in
+the Polar Sea, considers to have been the Bear Islands. Now it
+appears to be pretty certain that Andrejev visited a south-westerly
+continuation of the land named on recent maps "Wrangel Land," which
+in that case, like the corresponding part of America, forms a
+collection of many large and small islands. Andrejev found
+everywhere numerous proofs that the islands which he visited had
+been formerly inhabited. Among other things he saw a large hut built
+of wood without the help of iron tools. The logs were as it were
+gnawed with teeth (hewed with stone axes), and bound together with
+thongs[331]. Its position and construction indicated that the house
+had been built for defence, it had thus been found impossible in the
+desolate legions of the Polar Sea to avoid the discord and the
+strife which prevail in more southerly lands. To the east and
+north-east Andrejev thought he saw a distant land, he is also
+clearly the true European discoverer of Wrangel Land, provided we do
+not consider that even he had a predecessor in the Cossack, FEODOR
+TATARINOV, who according to the concluding words of Andrejev's
+journal appears to have previously visited the same islands. It is
+highly desirable that this journal, if still in existence, be
+published _in a completely unaltered form_. How important this is
+appears from the following paragraph in the instructions given to
+Billings--"One Sergeant Andrejev saw from the last of the Bear
+Islands a large island to which they (Andrejev and his companions)
+travelled in dog-sledges. But they turned when they had gone twenty
+versts from the coast, because they saw fresh traces of a large
+number of men, who had travelled in sledges drawn by reindeer."[332]
+
+In order to visit the large land in the north-east seen by Andrejev,
+there was sent out in the years 1769, 1770, and 1771 another
+expedition, consisting of the three surveyors, LEONTIEV, LUSSOV, and
+PUSCHKAREV, with dog-sledges over the ice to the north-east, but
+they succeeded neither in reaching the land in question, nor even
+ascertaining with certainty whether it actually existed or not. Among
+the natives, however, the belief in it was maintained very
+persistently, and they even knew how to give names to the tribes
+inhabiting it.
+
+The New Siberian Islands, which previously had often been seen by
+travellers along the coast, were visited the first time in 1770 by
+LJACHOFF, who besides Ljachoff's island lying nearest the coast,
+also discovered the islands Maloj and Kotelnoj. On this account he
+obtained an exclusive right to collect mammoth tusks there, a branch
+of industry which since that time appears to have been earned on in
+these remote regions with no inconsiderable profit. The importance
+of the discovery led the government some years after to send thither
+a land surveyor, CHVOINOV,[333] by whom the islands were surveyed,
+and some further information obtained regarding the remarkable
+natural conditions in that region. According to Chvoinov the ground
+there consists at many places of a mixture of ice and sand with
+mammoth tusks, bones of a fossil species of ox, of the rhinoceros,
+&c. At many places one can literally roll off the carpet-like bed of
+moss from the ground, when it is found that the close, green
+vegetable covering has clear ice underlying it, a circumstance which
+I have also observed at several places in the Polar regions. The new
+islands were rich not only in ivory, but also in foxes with valuable
+skins, and other spoils of the chase of various kinds. They
+therefore formed for a time the goal of various hunters'
+expeditions. Among these hunters may be named SANNIKOV, who in 1805
+discovered the islands Stolbovoj and Faddejev, SIROVATSKOJ, who in
+1806 discovered Novaya Sibir, and BJELKOV, who in 1808 discovered
+the small islands named after him. In the meantime disputes arose
+about the hunting monopoly, especially after Bjelkov and others
+petitioned for permission to establish on Kotelnoj Island _a hunting
+and trading station_. (?)[334] This induced ROMANZOV, then Chancellor
+of Russia, to order once more these distant territories to be
+explored by HEDENSTROeM,[335] a Siberian exile, who had formerly been
+secretary to some eminent man in St. Petersburg. He started in
+dog-sledges on the 19th/7th March, 1809, from Ustjansk going over
+the ice to Ljachoff's Island, and thence to Faddejev Island, where
+the expedition was divided into two parts. Hedenstroem continued his
+course to Novaya Sibir, the south coast of which he surveyed. Here
+he discovered among other things the remarkable "tree mountain,"
+which I have before mentioned. His companions KOSCHEVIN and SANNIKOV
+explored Faddejev, Maloj and Ljachoff's Islands. On Faddejev,
+Sannikov found a Yukagir sledge, stone skin-scrapers, and an axe
+made of mammoth ivory, whence he drew the conclusion that the island
+was inhabited before the Russians introduced iron among the savage
+tribes of Siberia.
+
+The explorations thus commenced were continued in 1810. The
+explorers started on the 14th/2nd March from the mouth of the
+Indigirka, and after eleven days' journey came to Novaya Sibir. It
+had been Hedenstroem's original intention to employ reindeer and
+horses in exploring the islands, but he afterwards abandoned this
+plan, fearing that he would not find pasture for his draught
+animals. Both Hedenstroem and Sannikov believed that they saw from
+the north coast of the island bluish mountains on the horizon in the
+north-east. In order to reach this new land the former undertook a
+journey over the ice. It was so uneven, however, that in four days
+he could only penetrate about seventy versts. Here on the 9th
+April/28th March, he met with quite open water, which appeared to
+extend to the Bear Islands, _i.e._ for a distance of about 500
+versts. He therefore turned southward, and reached the mainland
+after forty-three days' very difficult travelling over the ice.
+During the journey Hedenstroem was saved from famine by his success
+in killing eleven Polar bears. A new attempt, which he made the same
+spring to reach with dog-sledges the unknown land in the north-east,
+was also without result in consequence of his meeting with broad,
+impassable "leads" and openings in the ice, but even on this
+occasion he believed that he found many indications of the existence
+of an extensive land in the direction named. It was only with great
+difficulty that on the 20th/8th May he succeeded in reaching the
+mainland at Cape Baranov over very weak ice.
+
+The same year Sannikov explored Kotelnoj Island, where he fell in
+with Bjelkov and several hunters, who had settled for the summer on
+the west coast of the island to collect mammoth tusks and hunt foxes
+there. He found also a Greek cross erected on the beach and the
+remains of a vessel, which, to judge from its construction and the
+hunting implements scattered about in the neighbourhood, appeared to
+have belonged to an Archangel hunter, who had been driven by wind or
+ice from Spitzbergen or Novaya Zemlya.
+
+Next summer "the Hedenstroem expeditions" were concluded with the
+survey of the north coast of Novaya Sibir by CHENIZYN, and by a
+repetition of the attempt to penetrate from Cape Kamennoj over the
+ice in a north-easterly direction, this time carried out by the
+Cossack TATARINOV, and finally by a renewed exploration of Faddejev
+Island by Sannikov. Tatarinov found the ice, probably in the end of
+March, so thin, that he did not dare to proceed farther, and beyond
+the thin ice the sea was seen to be quite open. Sannikov first
+explored Faddejev Island. He thought he saw from the hills of the
+island a high land in the north-east, but when he attempted to reach
+it over the ice, he came upon open water twenty-five versts from
+land. He therefore returned the same spring to Ustjansk in order
+there to equip a caravan consisting of twenty-three reindeer, which
+started on the 14th/2nd May to go over the ice to Kotelnoj Island,
+which could be reached only with great difficulty in consequence of
+"leads" in the ice and the large quantity of salt water which had
+accumulated upon it. The reindeer were exceedingly enfeebled, but
+recovered rapidly on reaching land, so that Sannikov was able under
+specially favourable circumstances to make a large number of
+interesting excursions, among others one across the island. He
+stated that on the heights in the interior of it there were found
+skulls and bones of horses, oxen, "buffaloes" (Ovibos?) and sheep in
+so large numbers, that it was evident that whole herds of gramimvora
+had lived there in former times. Mammoth bones were also found
+everywhere on the island, whence Sannikov drew the conclusions, that
+all these animals had lived at the same time, and that since then
+the climate had considerably deteriorated. These suppositions he
+considered to be further confirmed by the fact that large, partially
+petrified tree-stems were found scattered about on the island in
+still greater numbers than on Novaya Sibir[336]. Besides he found
+here everywhere remains of old "Yukagir dwellings"; the island had
+thus once been inhabited. After Sannikov had fetched Chenitzyn from
+Faddejev Island, where he had passed the summer in great want of
+provisions, and ordered him, who was probably a greater adept at the
+pen, to draw up a report of his own interesting researches, he
+commenced his return journey on the 8th Nov./27th Oct. and arrived
+at Ustjansk on the 24th/12th November.
+
+[Illustration: PETER FEODOROVITSCH ANJOU. Born in 1798 in Russia,
+died in 1869 in St. Petersburg. ]
+
+[Illustration: FERDINAND VON WRANGEL. Born in 1790 at Pskov, died
+in 1870 at Dorpat. ]
+
+It may be said that through Hedenstroem's and Sannikov's exceedingly
+remarkable Polar journeys, the titles have been written of many
+important chapters in the history of the former and recent condition
+of our globe. But the inquirer has hitherto waited in vain for these
+chapters being completed through new researches carried out with
+improved appliances. For since then the New Siberian Islands have
+not been visited by any scientific expedition. Only in 1823 ANJOU,
+lieutenant in the Russian Navy, with the surgeon FIGURIN, and the
+mate ILGIN, made a new attempt to penetrate over the ice to the
+supposed lands in the north and north-east, but without success.
+Similar attempts were made at the same time from the Siberian
+mainland by another Russian naval officer, FERDINAND VON WRANGEL,
+accompanied by Dr. KUeBER, midshipman MATIUSCHKIN, and mate KOSMIN.
+They too were unsuccessful in penetrating over the ice far from the
+coast. Wrangel returned fully convinced that all the accounts which
+were current in Siberia of the land he wished to visit, and which
+now bears the name of Wrangel Land, were based on legends, mistake,
+and intentional untruths. But Anjou and Wrangel did an important
+service to Polar research by showing that the sea, even in the
+neighbourhood of the Pole of cold, is not covered with any strong
+and continuous sheet of ice, even at that season of the year when
+cold reaches its maximum. By the attempts made nearly at the same
+time by Wrangel and Parry to penetrate farther northwards, the one
+from the north coasts of Siberia, and the other from those of
+Spitzbergen, Polar travellers for the first time got a correct idea
+how uneven and impassable ice is on a frozen sea, how little the way
+over such a sea resembles the even polished surface of a frozen
+lake, over which we dwellers in the north are accustomed to speed
+along almost with the velocity of the wind. Wrangel's narrative at
+the same time forms an important source of knowledge both of
+preceding journeys and of the recent natural conditions on the north
+coast of Asia, as is only too evident from the frequent occasions on
+which I have quoted his work in my sketch of the voyage of the
+_Vega_.
+
+It remains for me now to enumerate some voyages from Behring's
+Straits westward into the Siberian Polar Sea.
+
+1778 _and_ 1779--During the third of his famous circumnavigations of
+the globe JAMES COOK penetrated through Behring's Straits into the
+Polar Sea, and then along the north-east coast of Asia westwards to
+Irkaipij, called by him Cape North. Thus the honour of having
+carried the first seagoing vessel to this sea also belongs to the
+great navigator. He besides confirmed Behring's determination of the
+position of the East Cape of Asia, and himself determined the
+position of the opposite coast of America.[337] The same voyage was
+approximately repeated the year after Cook's death by his successor
+CHARLES CLARKE, but without any new discoveries being made in the
+region in question.
+
+1785-94.--The success which attended Cook in his exploratory voyages
+and the information, unlooked for even by the Russian government,
+which Coxe's work gave concerning the voyages of the Russian hunters
+in the North Pacific, led to the equipment of a grand new
+expedition, having for its object the further exploration of the sea
+which bounds the great Russian Empire on the north and east. The
+plan was drawn up by Pallas and Coxe, and the carrying out of it was
+entrusted to an English naval officer in the Russian service, J.
+BILLINGS, who had taken part in Cook's last voyage. Among the many
+others who were members of the expedition, may be mentioned Dr.
+MERK, Dr. ROBECK, the secretary MARTIN SAUER, and the Captains HALL,
+SARYTCHEV, and BEHRING the younger, in all more than a hundred
+persons. The expedition was fitted out on a very large scale, but in
+consequence of Billings' unfitness for having the command of such an
+expedition the result by no means corresponded to what might
+reasonably have been expected. The expedition made an inconsiderable
+excursion into the Polar Sea from the 30th/19th June to the 9th
+Aug/29th July 1787, and in 1791 Billings sailed up to St. Lawrence
+Bay, from which he went over land with eleven men to Yakutsk. The
+rest of this lengthened expedition does not concern the regions now
+in question.[338]
+
+Among voyages during the century it remains to give account of those
+which have been made by OTTO VON KOTZEBUE, who during his famous
+circumnavigation of the globe in 1815-18, among other things also
+passed through Behring's Straits and discovered the strata,
+remarkable in a geological point of view, at Eschscholz Bay; LUeTKE,
+who during his circumnavigation of the globe in 1826-29, visited the
+islands and sound in the neighbourhood of Chukotskoj-nos; MOORE, who
+wintered at Chukotskoj-nos in 1848-49, and gave us much interesting
+information as to the mode of life of the Namollos and Chukches;
+KELLET, who in 1849 discovered Kellet Land and Herald Island on the
+coast of Wrangel Land; JOHN RODGERS, who in 1855 carried out for the
+American government much important hydrographical work in the seas
+on both sides of Behring's Straits; DALLMANN, who during a trading
+voyage in the Behring Sea landed at various points on Wrangel Land;
+LONG, who in 1867, as captain of the whaling barque _Nile_,
+discovered the sound between Wrangel Land and the mainland (Long
+Sound) and penetrated from Behring's Straits westwards farther than
+any of his predecessors, DALL, who, at the same time that we are
+indebted to him for many important contributions to the knowledge of
+the natural conditions of the Behring Sea, also anew examined the
+ice-strata at Eschscholz Bay, and many others--but as the historical
+part of the sketch of the voyage of the _Vega_ has already occupied
+more space than was calculated upon, I consider myself compelled
+with respect to the voyages of these explorers to refer to the
+numerous and for the most part accessible writings which have
+already been published regarding them.[339]
+
+
+Was the _Vega_ actually the first, and is she at the moment when
+this is being written, the only vessel that has sailed from the
+Atlantic by the north to the Pacific? As follows from the above
+narrative, this question may perhaps be answered with considerable
+certainty in the affirmative, as it may also with truth be
+maintained that no vessel has gone the opposite way from the Pacific
+to the Atlantic.[340] But the fictitious literature of geography at
+all events comprehends accounts of various voyages between those
+seas by the north passage, and I consider myself obliged briefly to
+enumerate them.
+
+The first is said to have been made as early as 1555 by a Portuguese,
+MARTIN CHACKE, who affirmed that he had been parted from his companions
+by a west wind, and had been driven forward between various islands to
+the entrance of a sound which ran north of America in 59 deg. N.L.; finally
+that he had come S.W. of Iceland, and thence sailed to Lisbon, arriving
+there before his companions, who took the "common way," _i.e._ south of
+Africa. In 1579 an English pilot certified that he had read in Lisbon in
+1567 a printed account of this voyage, which however he could not
+procure afterwards because all the copies had been destroyed by order of
+the king, who considered that such a discovery would have an injurious
+effect on the Indian trade of Portugal (_Purchas_, iii. p. 849). We now
+know that there is land where Chacke's channel was said to be situated,
+and it is also certain that the sound between the continent of America
+and the Franklin archipelago lying much farther to the north was already
+in the sixteenth century too much filled with ice for its being possible
+that an account of meeting with ice could be omitted from a true sketch
+of a voyage along the north coast of America.
+
+In 1588 a still more remarkable voyage was said to have been made by
+the Portuguese, LORENZO FERRER MALDONADO. He is believed to have
+been a cosomographer who among other tilings concerned himself with
+the still unsolved problem, of making a compass free from variation,
+and with the question, very difficult in his time, of finding a
+method of determining the longitude at sea (see the work of AMORETTI
+quoted below, p. 38). Of his imaginary voyage he has written a long
+narrative, of which a _Spanish_ copy with some drawings and maps was
+found in a library at Milan. The narrative was published in Italian
+and French translations by the superintendent of the library,
+Chevalier CARLO AMORETTI,[341] who besides added to the work a number
+of his own learned notes, which however do not give evidence of
+experience in Arctic waters. The same narrative has since been
+published in English by J. BARROW (_A Cronological History of
+Voyages into the Arctic Regions_, &c., London, 1818 App. p. 24.) The
+greater part of Maldonado's report consists of a detailed plan as to
+the way in which the new sea route would be used and fortified by
+the Spanish-Portuguese government.[342] The voyage itself is referred
+to merely in passing. Maldonado says that, in the beginning of March
+he sailed from Newfoundland along the north coast of America in a
+westward direction. Cold, storm, and darkness, were at first very
+inconvenient for navigation, but at all events he reached without
+difficulty "Anian Sound," which separates Asia from America. This is
+described in detail. Here various ships were met with prepared to
+sail through the sound, laden with Chinese goods. The crews appeared
+to be Russian or Hanseatic. Conversation was carried on with them in
+Latin. They stated that they came from a very large town, situated a
+little more than a hundred leagues from the sound. In the middle of
+June Maldonado returned by the way he came to the Atlantic, and on
+this occasion too the voyage was performed without the least
+difficulty. The heat at sea during the return journey was as great
+as when it was greatest in Spain, and meeting with ice is not
+mentioned. The banks of the river which falls into the haven at
+Anian Sound (according to Amoretti, identical with Behring's
+Straits) were overgrown with very large trees, bearing fruit all the
+year round among the animals met with in the regions seals are
+mentioned, but also two kinds of swine, buffaloes, &c. All these
+absurdities show that the whole narrative of the voyage was
+fictitious, having been probably written with the view of thereby
+giving more weight to the proposal to send out a north-west
+expedition from Portugal, and in the full belief that the supposed
+sound actually existed, and that the voyage along the north coast of
+America would be as easy of accomplishment as one across the North
+Sea.[343] The way in which the icing down of a vessel is described
+indicates that the narrator himself or his informant had been
+exposed to a winter storm in some northern sea, probably at
+Newfoundland, and the spirited sketch of the sound appears to have
+been borrowed from some East Indian traveller, who had been driven
+by storm to northern Japan, and who in a channel between the islands
+in that region believed that he had discovered the fabulous Anian
+Sound.
+
+Of a third voyage in 1660 a naval officer named DE LA MADELENE gave in
+1701 the following short account, probably picked up in Holland or
+Portugal, to Count DE PONTCHARTRIN: "The Portuguese, DAVID MELGUER,
+started from Japan on the 14th March, 1660, with the vessel _le Pere
+eternel_, and following the coast of Tartary, _i.e._ the east coast of
+Asia, he first sailed north to 84 deg. N.L. Thence he shaped his course
+between Spitzbergen and Greenland, and passing west of Scotland and
+Ireland came again to Oporto in Portugal." M. de la Madelene's narrative
+is to be found reproduced in M. BUACHE'S excellent geographical paper
+"Sui les differentes idees qu'on a eues de la traversee de la Mere
+Glaciale arctique et sur les communications ou jonctions qu'on a
+supposees entre diverses rivieres." (_Historie de l'Academie, Annee
+1754_, Paris, 1759, _Memoires_, p. 12) The paper is accompanied by a
+Polar map constructed by Buache himself, which, though the voyage which
+led to its construction was clearly fictitious, and though it also
+contains many other errors--for instance, the statement that the Dutch
+penetrated in 1670 to the north part of Taimur Land--is yet very
+valuable and interesting as a specimen of what a learned and critical
+geographer knew in 1754 about the Polar regions. That Melguer's voyage
+is fictitious is shown partly by the ease with which he is said to have
+gone from the one sea to the other, partly by the fact that _the only
+detail_ which is to be found in his narrative, viz. the statement that
+the coast of Tartary extends to 84 deg. N.L., is incorrect.
+
+All these and various other similar accounts of north-east,
+north-west, or Polar passages achieved by vessels in former times
+have this in common, that navigation from the one ocean to the other
+across the Polar Sea is said to have gone on as easily as drawing a
+line on the map, that meeting with ice and northern animals of the
+chase is never spoken of, and finally that every particular which is
+noted is in conflict with the known geographical, climatal, and
+natural conditions of the Arctic seas. All these narratives
+therefore can be proved to be fictitious, and to have been invented
+by persons who never made any voyages in the true Polar Seas.
+
+The _Vega_ is thus the first vessel that has penetrated by the north
+from one of the great world-oceans to the other.
+
+
+[Footnote 289: I quote this because the movement of the tides is
+still, in our own time, made use of to determine whether certain
+parts of the Polar seas are connected with each other or not. ]
+
+[Footnote 290: Marco Polo, in 1271, at the age of seventeen or
+eighteen, accompanied his father Nicolo, and his uncle Maffeo Polo,
+to High Asia. He remained there until 1295 and during that time came
+into great favor with Kubla Khan, who employed him, among other
+things, in a great number of important public commissions, whereby
+he became well acquainted with the widely extended lands which lay
+under the sceptre of that ruler. After his return home he caused a
+great sensation by the riches he brought with him, which procured
+him the name _il Millione_, a name however which, according to
+others, was an expression of the doubts that were long entertained
+regarding the truthfulness of his, as we now know, mainly true
+accounts of the number of the people and the abundance of wealth in
+Kublai Khan's lands. "Il Millione," in the meantime, became a
+popular carnival character, whose cue was to relate as many and as
+wonderful "yarns" as possible, and in his narratives to deal
+preferably with millions. It is possible that the predecessor of
+Columbus might have descended to posterity merely as the original
+of this character if he had not, soon after his return home, taken
+part in a war against Genoa, in the course of which he was taken
+prisoner, and, during his imprisonment, related his recollections of
+his travels to a fellow-prisoner, who committed them to writing, in
+what language is still uncertain. The work attracted great attention
+and was soon spread, first in written copies, then by the press in a
+large number of different languages. It has not been translated into
+Swedish, but in the Royal Library in Stockholm there is a very
+important and hitherto little known manuscript of it from the middle
+of the fourteenth century, of which an edition is in course of
+publication in photo-lithographic facsimile. ]
+
+[Footnote 291: Homines illius regionis sunt pulchri, magni, et
+corpulenti, sed sunt multum pallidi. . . . et sunt homines inculti,
+et immorigerati et bestialiter viventes. ]
+
+[Footnote 292: See note at page 54, vol i., for an account of von
+Herberstein and his works. ]
+
+[Footnote 293: As the copy of the original map to which I have had
+access, being coloured, is unsuitable for photo-lithographing, I
+give here instead a photo-lithographic reproduction of the map in
+the Italian edition printed in 1550. The map itself is unchanged in
+any essential particular, but the drawing and engraving are better.
+There is, besides, a still older map of Russia in the first edition
+of Sebastian Munster's _Cosmographia Universalis_. I have not had
+access to this edition, but have had to the third edition of the
+same work printed at Basel in 1550. A very incomplete map of Russia
+engraved on wood, on which, however, the Obi and the "Sybir" are to
+be found, is inserted in this work at page 910. The Dwina here falls
+not into the White Sea but into the Gulf of Finland, through a lake
+to which the name Ladoga is now given; places like Astracan, Asof,
+Viborg, Calmahori (Kolmogor), Solowki (Solovets), &c., are indicated
+pretty correctly, and in the White Sea there is to be seen a very
+faithful representation of a walrus swimming. ]
+
+[Footnote 294: The river Ob is mentioned the first time in 1492, in
+the negotiations which the Austrian ambassador, Michael Snups,
+carried on in Moscow in order to obtain permission to travel in the
+interior of Russia (Adelung, _Uebersicht der Reisenden in Russland_,
+p. 157). ]
+
+[Footnote 295: As before stated, Marco Polo mentions Polar bears but
+not walruses. ]
+
+[Footnote 296: Herodotus places Andropagi in nearly the same regions
+which are now inhabited by the Samoyeds. Pliny also speaks of
+man-eating Scythians. ]
+
+[Footnote 297: Arctic literature contains a nearly contemporaneous
+sketch of the first Russian-Siberian commercial undertakings,
+_Beschryvinghe vander Samoyeden Landt in Tartarien, nieulijcks
+onder't ghebiedt der Moscoviten gebracht. Wt de Russche tale
+overgheset_, Anno 1609. Amsterdam, Hessel Gerritsz, 1612; inserted
+in Latin, in 1613, in the same publisher's _Descriptio ac Delineatio
+Geographica Detectionis Freti_ (Photo-lithographic reproduction, by
+Frederick Mueller, Amsterdam, 1878). The same work, or more
+correctly, collection of small geographical pamphlets, contains also
+Isak Massa's map of the coast of the Polar Sea between the Kola
+peninsula and the Pjaesina, which I have reproduced. ]
+
+[Footnote 298: It is a peculiar circumstance that the vanguard of the
+Russian stream of emigration which spread over Siberia, advanced
+along the northernmost part of the country by the Tas, Turuchansk,
+Yakutsk, Kolyma, and Anadyrsk. This depended in the first place
+upon the races living there having less power of resistance against
+the invaders, who were often very few in number, than the tribes
+in the south, but also on the fact that the most precious and
+most transportable treasures of Siberia--sable, beaver, and
+fox-skins--were obtained in greatest quantity from these northern
+regions. ]
+
+[Footnote 299: Flat-bottomed, half-decked boats, twelve fathoms in
+length. The planks were fastened by wooden pins, the anchors were
+pieces of wood with large stones bound to them, the rigging of
+thongs, and the sails often of tanned reindeer hides (J.E. Fischer,
+_Sibirische Geschichte_, St. Petersburg, 1768, i. p. 517). ]
+
+[Footnote 300: G.P. Mueller, _Sammlung Russischer Geschichte_, St.
+Petersburg, 1758 Mueller asserts in this work that it was he who, in
+1736, first drew from the repositories of the Yakutsk archives the
+account of Deschnev's voyage, which before that time was known
+neither at the court of the Czar nor in the remotest parts of
+Siberia. This, however, is not quite correct, for long before
+Mueller, the Swedish prisoner-of-war, Strahlenberg, knew that the
+Russians travelled by sea from the Kolyma to Kamchatka, which
+appears from his map of Asia, constructed during his stay in
+Siberia, and published in _Das Nord- und Ostliche Theil von Europa
+und Asia_, Stockholm, 1730. On this map there is the following
+inscription in the sea north of the Kolyma--"Hie Rutheni ab initio
+per Moles glaciales, quae flante Borea ad Littora, flanteque Anstro
+versus Mare iterum pulsantur, magno Labore et Vitae Discrimine
+transvecti sunt ad Regionem Kamtszatkam." ]
+
+[Footnote 301: Selivestrov had accompanied Staduchin during his Polar
+Sea voyage, and had, at his instance, been sent out to collect
+walrus tusks on account of the State. He appears to have come to
+the Anadyr by land. ]
+
+[Footnote 302: Strahlenberg must have collected the main details of
+this voyage by oral communications from Russian hunters and
+traders. ]
+
+[Footnote 303: According to Mueller Krascheninnikov (_Histoire et
+description du Kamtschatka_, Amsterdam, 1770, ii. p. 292) states,
+evidently from information obtained in Kamchatka, that the river
+Nikul is called Feodotovchina after Feodot Alexejev, who not only
+penetrated thither, but also sailed round the southern promontory of
+Kamchatka to the River Tigil where he and his followers perished in
+the way described by Mueller. ]
+
+[Footnote 304: But we ought to remember that the oldest accounts of
+islands in the Polar Sea relate to no fewer than four different
+lands, viz, 1. The New Siberian Islands lying off the mouth of the
+Lena and Svjatoinos; 2. The Bear Islands; 3. Wrangel Land; 4. The
+north-western part of America. Contradictions in accounts of the
+islands in the Polar Sea probably depend on the uninhabited and
+treeless New Siberian islands being confused with America, which, in
+comparison with North Siberia, is thickly peopled and well wooded,
+with the small Bear Islands, with Wrangel Land, &c. ]
+
+[Footnote 305: _Nouvelle carte des decouvertes faites par des
+vaisseaux russiens aux cotes inconnues de l'Amerique, Septentrionale
+avec les pais adiacentes, dressee sur des memoires authentiques des
+ceux qui ont assiste a ces decouvertes et sur d'autres connoissances
+dont on rend raison dans un memoire separe_ St. Petersbourg,
+l'Academie Imperiale des Sciences, 1758. ]
+
+[Footnote 306: In this sketch of the discovery and conquest of
+Siberia I have followed J.E. Fischer, _Sibirische Geschichte_, St.
+Petersburg, 1768, and G.P. Mueller, _Sammlung Russischer
+Geschichte_, St. Petersburg, 1758. ]
+
+[Footnote 307: In the twentieth chapter of _Dreyjaehrige Reise nach
+China, &c._, Frankfort, 1707. The first edition came out at Hamburg
+in 1698. ]
+
+[Footnote 308: Mueller, iii. p. 19. An account of Atlassov's conquest
+of Kamchatka (_Bericht gedaen door zeker Moskovisch krygs-bediende
+Wolodimer Otlasofd, hoofl-man over vyftig, &c._) is besides to be
+found in Witsen (1705, _Nieuwe uitguaf_, 1785, p. 670) An account,
+written from oral communication by Atlassov himself, is to be found
+inserted in Strahlenberg's _Travels_, p. 431. Strahlenberg considers
+Kamchatka and Yezo to be the same land. A history of the conquest of
+Kamchatka, evidently written according to traditions current in the
+country, is to be found in _Krascheninnikov_ (French edition of
+1770, ii. p. 291). In this account 1698 and 1699 are given as the
+years of Morosko's and Atlassov's expeditions. ]
+
+[Footnote 309: Complaints were made, among other things, that in
+order to obtain metal for making a still, he ordered all the copper
+belonging to the crown which he carried with him, to be melted down.
+When the Cossacks first came to Kamchatka and were almost without a
+contest, acknowledged as masters of the country, they found life
+there singularly agreeable, with one drawback--there were no means
+of getting drunk. Finally, necessity compelled the wild adventurers
+to betake themselves to what we should now call chemico-technical
+experiments, which are described in considerable detail by
+Krascheninnikov (_loc. cit._ ii. p. 369). After many failures they
+finally succeeded in distilling spirits from a sugar-bearing plant
+growing in the country, and from that time this drink, or _raka_, as
+they themselves call it, has been found in great abundance in that
+country. ]
+
+[Footnote 310: He afterwards became a monk under the name of
+Ignatiev, came to St. Petersburg in 1730, and himself wrote a
+narrative of his adventures, discoveries, and services, which was
+printed first in the St. Petersburg journals of the 26th March,
+1730, and likewise abroad (_Mueller_, iii. p. 82) ]
+
+[Footnote 311: Von Baer, _Beitraege zur Kentniss des Russischen
+Reiches_, xvi. p. 33. ]
+
+[Footnote 312: Ambjoern Molin, lieutenant in the Scanian cavalry
+regiment, who was taken prisoner at the Dnieper in 1709, also took
+part in these journeys. Compare _Beraettelse om de i Stora Tartariet
+boende tartarer, som traeffats laengst nordost i Asien, pa aerkebiskop
+E. Benzelii begaeran upsatt af Ambjoern Molin (Account of the Tartars
+dwelling in Great Tartary who were met with at the north east
+extremity of Asia, written at the request of Archbishop E. Benzelius
+by Ambjoern Molin_), published in Stockholm in 1880 by Aug.
+Strindberg, after a manuscript in the Linkoeping library. ]
+
+[Footnote 313: Mueller, iii. p. 102. According to an oral
+communication by Busch, Strahlenberg's account (p. 17) of this
+voyage appears to contain several mistakes. The year is stated as
+1713, the return voyage is said to have occupied six days. ]
+
+[Footnote 314: As late as 1819, James Burney, first lieutenant on one
+of Captain Cook's vessels during his voyage north of Behring's
+Straits, afterwards captain and member of the Royal Society,
+considered it not proved that Asia and America are separated by a
+sound. For he doubted the correctness of the accounts of Deschnev's
+voyage. Compare James Burney, _A Chronological History of North
+eastern Voyages of Discovery_ London, 1819, p. 298; and a paper by
+Burney in the _Transactions_ of the Royal Society, 1817. Burney was
+violently attacked for the views there expressed by Captain John
+Dundas Cochrane. _Narrative of a Pedestrian Journey through Russia
+and Siberian Tartary_, 2nd ed. London, 1824, Appendix. ]
+
+[Footnote 315: The first astronomical determinations of position in
+Siberia were, perhaps, made by Swedish prisoners of war; the first
+in China by Jesuits (Cf. _Strahlenberg_, p. 14). ]
+
+[Footnote 316: A short, but instructive account of Behring's first
+voyage, based on an official communication from the Russian
+Government to the King of Poland, is inserted in t. iv. p. 561 of
+_Description geographique de l'Empire de la Chine, par le P.J.B.
+Du Halde_, La Haye, 1736. The same official report was probably the
+source of Mueller's brief sketch of the voyage (_Mueller_, iii. p.
+112). A map of it is inserted in the 1735 Paris edition of Du
+Halde's work, and in _Nouvel Atlas de la Chine, par M. D'Anville_,
+La Haye, 1737. ]
+
+[Footnote 317: _Histoire genealogique des Tartares_ (note, p. 107),
+and Strahlenberg's oft-quoted work (map, text, pp. 31 and 384). ]
+
+[Footnote 318: This expedition was under the command of the
+Admiralty; the others under that of Behring. In my account I have
+followed partly Mueller and partly Wrangel, of whom the latter, in
+his book of travels, gives a historical review of previous voyages
+along the coasts of the Asiatic Polar Sea. The accounts of the
+voyages between the White Sea and the Yenisej properly belong to a
+foregoing chapter in this work, but I quote them first here in order
+that I may treat of the different divisions of the Great Northern
+Expedition in the same connection. ]
+
+[Footnote 319: Wrangel, i. p. 36. ]
+
+[Footnote 320: Wrangel, i. p. 38. ]
+
+[Footnote 321: According to P. von Haven (_Nye og forbedrede
+Efterretningar om det Russiske Rige_, Kjoebenhavn, 1747, ii. p. 20),
+"it was the custom in Petersburg to send away those whose presence
+was inconvenient to help Behring to make new discoveries". It
+also went very ill with many of the gallant Russian Polar travellers,
+and many of them were repaid with ingratitude. Behring was received
+on his return from his first voyage, so rich in results, with
+unjustified mistrust. Steller was exposed to continual trouble,
+was long prevented from returning from Siberia, and finally
+perished during his journey home, broken down in body and soul.
+Prontschischev and Lassinius succumbed to hardships and sufferings
+during their voyages in the Polar Sea. Owzyn was degraded, among
+other things, because he used to be too intimate at Obdorsk with
+exiles formerly of distinction. A few years before the voyage of the
+_Vega_, Chelyuskin's trustworthiness was still doubted. All the
+accounts of discoveries of islands and land in the Polar Sea by
+persons connected with Siberia, have till the most recent times,
+been considered more or less fictitious, yet they are clearly in the
+main true. ]
+
+[Footnote 322: Wrangel, i. p. 46. ]
+
+[Footnote 323: According to Wrangel (i., note at p. 38 and 48),
+probably after a quotation from Prontschischev's journal. The Lena
+must be a splendid river, for it has since made the same powerful
+impression, as on the seamen of the Great Northern Expedition, on
+all others who have traversed its forest-crowned river channel. ]
+
+[Footnote 324: These all perished "for want of fodder." This,
+however, is improbable. For, in 1878, we saw numerous traces of
+these animals as far to the northward as Cape Chelyuskin, and very
+fat reindeer were shot both in 1861 and 1873, on the Seven Islands,
+the northernmost of all the islands of the Old World, where
+vegetation is much poorer than in the regions now in question. ]
+
+[Footnote 325: Wrangel, i. pp. 48 and 72. Of the journey round the
+northernmost point of Asia, Wrangel says--"Von der Tajmur-Muendung
+bis an das Kap des heiligen Faddej konnte die Kueste nicht beschifft
+werden, und die Aufnahme, die der Steuermann Tschemokssin
+(Chelyuskin) auf dem Eise in Narten vornahm, ist so oberflaechlich
+und unbestimmt, dass die eigentliche Lage des nordoestlichen oder
+Tajmur-Kaps, welches die noerdlichste Spitse Asiens ausmacht, noch
+gar nicht ausgemittelt ist." ]
+
+[Footnote 326: Wrangel, i, p. 62. I have sketched the voyages
+between the White Sea and the Kolyma, principally after Engelhardt's
+German translation of Wrangel's Travels. It is, unfortunately, in
+many respects defective and confused, especially with respect to the
+sketch of Chariton Laptev and his followers, sledge journeys,
+undertaken in order to survey the coast between the Chatanga and the
+Pjaesina. Mueller mentions these journeys only in passing. Wrangel
+gives as sources for his sketch (i. note at p. 38) _Memoirs of the
+Russian Admiralty_, also the original journals of the journeys.
+Chelyuskin he calls Chemokssin. ]
+
+[Footnote 327: In this account of Behring's and Chirikov's voyages, I
+have followed Mueller (iii. pp. 187-268). More complete original
+accounts of Behring's voyage are quoted further on in the sketch of
+our visit to Behring Island. ]
+
+[Footnote 328: Mueller, iii. p. 164. ]
+
+[Footnote 329: It deserves to be noted as a literary curiosity that
+the famous French _savant_ and geographer, Vivien do Saint Martin,
+in his work, _Histoire de la Geographie et des Decouvertes
+geographiques_, Paris, 1873, does not say a single word regarding
+all those expeditions which form an epoch in our knowledge of the
+Old World. ]
+
+[Footnote 330: An account of Schalaurov is given by COXE (_Russian
+Discoveries_, &c., 1780, p. 323) and Wrangel (i. p. 73). That the hut
+seen by Matiuschkin actually belonged to Schalaurov appears to me
+highly improbable, for the traditions of the Siberian savages seldom
+extend sixty years back. ]
+
+[Footnote 331: Wrangel, i. p. 79. ]
+
+[Footnote 332: Sauer, _An Account, &c._, Appendix, p. 48. ]
+
+[Footnote 333: Sauer, _loc. cit._ p. 103, according to an oral
+communication by Ljachoff's follower Protodiakonov. ]
+
+[Footnote 334: Compare Wrangel, i. p. 98. ]
+
+[Footnote 335: Matthias Hedenstroem, Aulic Councillor, whose name
+indicates that he was of Swedish birth, died at the village
+Hajdukovo, seven versts from Tomsk, on the 2nd October (20th
+September), 1845, at the age of sixty-five. Biographical notes
+regarding Hedenstroem are to be found in the Calendar for the Irkutsh
+government for the year 1865, pp. 57-60; I have not, however,
+succeeded in procuring this work, or in finding any other notices of
+Hedenstroem's birthplace and life. ]
+
+[Footnote 336: A very remarkable geological fact is the number of
+tree-stems in all stages of decay and petrifaction, which are
+embedded in the rocks and earthy strata of Siberia, having their
+origin all along from the Jurassic age till now. It appears as if
+Siberia, during the whole of this immense period of time, has not
+been subjected to any great changes in a purely geographical
+respect, whereas in Europe there have been innumerable alternations
+of sea and land, and alps have been formed and disappeared. The
+Siberians call the tree-stems found on the _tundra_ far from the sea
+and rivers _Adam's wood_, to distinguish them from more recent sub
+fossil trees, which they call _Noah's wood_. ]
+
+[Footnote 337: The first European who visited the part of America
+lying right opposite to Asia was Schestakov's companion, the
+surveyor Gvosdev. He crossed Behring's Straits to the American side
+as early as 1730 (_Mueller_, iii. p. 131), and therefore ought
+properly to be considered as the discoverer of this sound. The
+north-westernmost part of America, Behring's Straits and the islands
+situated in it, are besides shown in Strahlenberg's map, which was
+made at least a decade before Gvosdev's voyage. There north-western
+America is delineated as a large island, inhabited by a tribe, the
+_Pucho-chotski_, who lived in a constant state of warfare with the
+_Giuchieghi_, who inhabited the islands in the sound. Wrangel Land
+is also shown in this remarkable map. In 1767, eleven years before
+Cook's voyage in the Polar Sea, the American side of Behring's
+Straits was also visited by Lieut. SYND with a Russian expedition,
+that started from Okotsk in 1764. In the short account of the voyage
+which is to be found in William Coxe's, _Account of the Russian
+Discoveries, &c._, London, 1780, p. 300, it is said expressly that
+Synd considered the coast on which he landed to belong to America.
+On Synd's map, published by Coxe, the north part of the Behring Sea
+is enriched with a number of fictitious islands (St. Agaphonis, St.
+Myronis, St. Titi, St. Samuels, and St. Andreae). As Synd, according
+to Sarytchev in the work quoted below, p. 11, made the voyage in a
+boat, it is probable that by these names islands were indicated
+which lay quite close to the coast and were not so far from land as
+shown in the map, besides, the mountain-summits on St. Lawrence
+Island, which are separated by extensive low lands, may perhaps have
+been taken for separate islands. ]
+
+[Footnote 338: Billings' voyage is described in Martin Sauer's
+_Account of a Geographical and Astronomical Expedition to the
+Northern Parts of Asia, &c., by Commodore Joseph Billings_, London,
+1802, and Gavrila Sarychev's _Achtjaehrige Reise im noerdlichen
+Siberien, auf dem Eismeere und dem nordoestlichen Ocean. Aus dem
+Russischen uebersetzt von J.H. Busse_, Leipzig, 1805-1806. As
+interesting to our Swedish readers it may be mentioned that the
+Russian hunter Prybilov informed Sauer that a Swedish brigantine,
+_Merkur_, coppered, carrying sixteen cannon, commanded by J.H.
+Coxe, in 1788, cruised in the Behring Sea in order to destroy the
+Russian settlements there. They however, according to Prybilov's
+statement to Sauer, "did no damage, because they saw that we had
+nothing worth taking away. They instead gave us gifts, because they
+were ashamed to offer violence to such poor fellows as we" (Sauer,
+p. 213). ]
+
+[Footnote 339: Otto von Kotzebue, _Entdeckungs-Reise in die Sud-See
+und nach der Behrings Strasse_, Weimar, 1821 (Part III.,
+Contributions in Natural History, by Adelbert von Chamisso)--Louis
+Choris, _Voyage pittoresque autour du monde_, Paris, 1822.
+
+Frederik Luetke, _Voyage autour du monde_, Paris, 1835-36.--F.H. von
+Kittlitz, _Denkuuerdigkeiten einer Reise nach dem russischen Amerika,
+nach Mikronesien und durch Kamtschatka_, Gotha, 1858.
+
+Kellet, _Voyage of H.M.S. "Herald,"_ 1845-51, London, 1853
+(Discovery of Herald Island and the east coast of Wrangel Land).
+
+W.H. Hooper, _Ten Months among the Tents of the Tuski_, London, 1853
+(Moore's wintering at Chukotskoj-nos).
+
+John Rodgers, Behring's Sea and Arctic Ocean, from Surveys of the
+North Pacific Surveying Expedition, 1855 (only charts).--W. Heine,
+_Die Expedition in die Seen von China, Japan und Ochotsk, unter
+Commando von Commodore Colin Ringgold und Commodore John Rodgers_,
+Leipzig, 1858 (the expedition arrived at the result that Wrangel
+Land did not exist).
+
+(Lindemann) _Wrangels Land im Jahre_ 1866, _durch Kapiten Dallmann
+besucht (Deutsche Geograph. Blaetter_, B. iv. p. 54, 1881).
+
+Petermann, _Entdeckung eines neuen Polar-Landes durch den amerikan,
+Capt Long_, 1867 (Mittheil. 1868, p. 1).--_Das neu-entdeckte
+Polar-Land_, &c. (Mittheil 1869, p. 26). ]
+
+[Footnote 340: It ought to be remembered that the voyage of the
+distinguished Arctic explorer, McClure, carried out with so much
+gallantry and admirable perseverance, from the Pacific to the
+Atlantic along the north coast of America, took place to no
+inconsiderable extent _by sled journeys over the ice_, and that no
+English vessel has ever sailed by this route from the one sea to the
+other. The North-west Passage has thus never been accomplished by a
+vessel. ]
+
+[Footnote 341: Amoretti, _Viaggio del mare Atlantico al Pasifico per
+la via del Nord-Ovest, &c. Fatto del capitano Lorenzo Ferrer
+Maldonado, l'anno MDLXXXVIII_. Milano, 1811. ]
+
+[Footnote 342: At the date of Maldonado's voyage Spain and Portugal
+were united. ]
+
+[Footnote 343: The narratives of the Russian voyagers in the Polar
+Seas bear a quite different stamp. Details are seldom wanting in
+these, and they correspond with known facts, and the discoveries
+made are of reasonably modest dimensions. I therefore consider, as I
+have said already, that the doubts of the trustworthiness of
+Deschnev, Chelyuskin, Andrejev, Hedenstroem, Sannikov, &c., are
+completely unfounded, and it is highly desirable that all journals
+of Russian explorers in the Polar Sea yet in existence be published
+as soon as possible, and not in a mutilated shape, but in a complete
+and unaltered form. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+ Passage through Behring's Straits--Arrival at Nunamo--
+ Scarce species of seal--Rich vegetation--Passage to America--
+ State of the ice--Port Clarence--The Eskimo--Return to Asia--
+ Konyam Bay--Natural conditions there--The ice breaks up in
+ the interior of Konyam Bay--St. Lawrence Island--Preceding
+ visits to the Island--Departure to Behring Island.
+
+
+After we had passed the easternmost promontory of Asia, the course
+was shaped first to St. Lawrence Bay, a not inconsiderable fjord,
+which indents the Chukch peninsula, a little south of the smallest
+part of Behring's Straits. It was my intention to anchor in this
+fjord as long as possible, in order to give the naturalists of the
+_Vega_ expedition an opportunity of making acquaintance with the
+natural conditions of a part of Chukch Land which is more favoured
+by nature than the bare stretch of coast completely open to the
+winds of the Polar Sea, which we hitherto had visited. I would
+willingly have stayed first for some hours at Diomede Island, the
+market-place famed among the Polar tribes, situated in the narrowest
+part of the Straits, nearly half-way between Asia and America, and
+probably before the time of Columbus a station for traffic between
+the Old and the New Worlds. But such a delay would have been
+attended with too great difficulty and loss of time in consequence
+of the dense fog which prevailed here on the boundary between the
+warm sea free from drift-ice and the cold sea filled with drift-ice.
+
+[Illustration: SEAL FROM THE BEHRING SEA. _Histriophoca fasciata_,
+Zimm. ]
+
+Even the high mountains on the Asiatic shore were still wrapped in a
+thick mist, from which only single mountain-summits now and then
+appeared. Next the vessel large fields of drift-ice were visible, on
+which here and there flocks of a beautifully marked species of seal
+(_Histriophoca fasciata_, Zimm) had settled. Between the pieces of
+ice sea-birds swarmed, mostly belonging to other species than those
+which are met with in the European Polar seas. The ice was
+fortunately so broken up that the _Vega_ could steam forward at full
+speed to the neighbourhood of St. Lawrence Bay, where the coast was
+surrounded by some more compact belts of ice, which however were
+broken through with ease. First, in the mouth of the fjord itself
+impenetrable ice was met with, completely blocking the splendid
+haven of St. Lawrence Bay. The _Vega_ was, therefore, compelled to
+anchor in the open road off the village Nunamo. But even here
+extensive ice-fields, though thin and rotten, drifted about; and
+long, but narrow, belts of ice passed the vessel in so large masses
+that it was not advisable to remain longer at the place. Our stay
+there was therefore confined to a few hours.
+
+During the course of the winter Lieutenant Nordquist endeavoured to
+collect from the Chukches travelling past as complete information as
+possible regarding the Chukch villages or encampments which are found
+along the coast between Chaun Bay and Behring's Straits. His informants
+always finished their list with the village Ertryn, situated west of
+Cape Deschnev, explaining that farther east and south there lived
+another tribe, with whom they indeed did not stand in open enmity, but
+who, however, were not to be fully depended upon, and to whose villages
+they therefore did not dare to accompany any of us.[344] This statement
+also corresponds, as perhaps follows from what I have pointed out in the
+preceding chapter, with the accounts commonly found in books on the
+ethnography of this region. While we steamed forward cautiously in a
+dense fog in the neighbourhood of Cape Deschnev, twenty to thirty
+natives came rowing in a large skin boat to the vessel. Eager to make
+acquaintance with a tribe new to us, we received them with pleasure. But
+when they climbed over the side we found that they were pure Chukches,
+some of them old acquaintances, who during winter had been guests on
+board the _Vega_. "Ankali" said they, with evident contempt, are first
+met with farther beyond St. Lawrence Bay. When we anchored next day at
+the mouth of this bay we were immediately, as usual, visited by a large
+number of natives, and ourselves visited their tents on land. They still
+talked Chukch with a limited mixture of foreign words, lived in tents
+of a construction differing somewhat from the Chukches', and appeared to
+have a somewhat different cast of countenance. They themselves would not
+allow that there was any national difference between them and the old
+warrior and conqueror tribe on the north coast, but stated that the race
+about which we inquired were settled immediately to the south. Some days
+after we anchored in Konyam Bay (64 deg. 49' N.L., 172 deg. 53' W.L. from
+Greenwich). We found there only pure reindeer-owning Chukches; there was
+no coast population living by hunting and fishing. On the other hand,
+the inhabitants near our anchorage off St. Lawrence Island consisted of
+Eskimo and Namollo. It thus appears as if a great part of the Eskimo who
+inhabit the Asiatic side of Behring's Straits, had during recent times
+lost their own nationality and become fused with the Chukches. For it is
+certain that no violent expulsion has recently taken place here. It
+ought besides to be remarked that the name _Onkilon_ which Wrangel
+heard given to the old coast population driven out by the Chukches
+is evidently nearly allied to the word _Ankali_, with which the
+reindeer-Chukch at present distinguishes the coast-Chukch, also that, in
+the oldest Russian accounts of Schestakov's and Paulutski's campaigns in
+these regions, there never is any mention of two different tribes living
+here. It is indeed mentioned in these accounts that among the slain
+Chukches there were found some men with perforated lips, but probably
+these were Eskimo from the other side of Behring's Straits, previously
+taken prisoners by the Chukches, or perhaps merely Eskimo who had been
+paying a friendly visit to the Chukches and who had taken part as
+volunteers in their war of freedom. It therefore appears to me to be on
+the whole more probable that the Eskimo have migrated from America to
+Asia, than that, as some authors have supposed, this tribe has entered
+America from the west by Behring's Straits or Wrangel Land.
+
+The tent-village Nunamo, or, as Hooper writes, "Noonahmone," does
+not lie low, like the Chukch villages we had formerly seen, on the
+sea-shore, but pretty high up on a cape between the sea and a river
+which debouches immediately to the south-west of the village, and
+now during the snow-melting season was much flooded. At a short
+distance from the coast the land was occupied by a very high chain
+of mountains, which was split up into a number of summits and whose
+sides were formed of immense stone mounds distributed in terraces.
+Here a large number of marmots and lagomys had their haunt. The
+lagomys, a species of rodent that does not occur in Sweden, of the
+size of a large rat, is remarkable for the care with which in summer
+it collects great stores for the winter. The village consisted of
+ten tents built without order on the first high strand bank. The
+tents differed somewhat in construction from the common Chukch
+tents, and as drift-wood appears to be met with on the beach only in
+limited quantity, whale-bones had been used on a very large scale in
+the frame of the tent. Thus, for instance, the tent-covering of
+seal-skin was stretched downwards over the ribs or lower jawbones of
+the whale which were fixed in the ground like poles. These were
+united above with slips of whale-bones, from which other slips of
+the same sort of bones or of whalebone rose to the summit of the
+tent, and finally, to prevent the blast from raising the
+tent-covering from the ground, its border was loaded with masses of
+large heavy bones. Eleven shoulder-blades of the whale were thus
+used round a single tent. In the absence of drift-wood, whale and
+seal bones drenched in train-oil are also used as fuel in cooking in
+the open air during summer; a large curved whale rib was placed over
+the fire-place to serve as a pot-holder; the vertebrae of the whale
+were used as mortars; the entrances to the blubber-cellars were
+closed with shoulder-blades of the whale; hollowed whale-bones were
+used as lamps; shoes of whale-bone or pieces of the under-jaw and
+the straighter ribs were used for shoeing the sledges, for spades
+and ice-mattocks, the different parts of the implement being bound
+together with whale-bone fibres, &c. [345]
+
+Masses of black seal-flesh, and long, white, fluttering strings of
+inflated intestines, were hung up between the tents, and in their
+interior there were everywhere to be seen bloody pieces of flesh,
+prepared in a disgusting way or lying scattered about, whereby both
+the dwellings and their inhabitants, who were occupied with hunting,
+had a more than usually disagreeble appearance. A pleasant
+interruption was formed by the heaps of green willow branches which
+were placed at the entrance of nearly every tent, commonly
+surrounded by women and children, who ate the leaves with delight.
+At some places whole sacks of Rhodiola and various other plants had
+been collected for food during winter. As distinctive of the
+Chukches here it may be mentioned in the last place that they were
+abundantly provided with European household articles, among them
+_Remington guns_, and that none of them asked for spirits.
+
+Most of the seals which were seen in the tents were the common
+_Phoca hispida_, but along with them we found several skins of
+_Histriophoca fasciata_, Zimm., and I even succeeded, though with
+great difficulty, in inducing the Chukches to part with the skin and
+skull of this uncommon species, distinguished by its peculiar
+marking. The natives appeared to set a special value on its skin,
+and parted with it unwillingly. We had ourselves, as I have already
+stated, seen during our passage from Behring's Straits a number of
+these seals on the ice-floes drifting south, but the limited time at
+our disposal did not permit us to hunt them.
+
+[Illustration: DRABA ALPINA L., FROM ST. LAWRENCE BAY. Natural size. ]
+
+When we left Pitlekaj, vegetation there was still far from having
+reached its full development, but at Nunamo the strand-bank was gay
+with an exceedingly rich magnificence of colour. On an area of a few
+acres Dr. Kjellman collected here more than a hundred species of
+flowering plants, among which were a considerable number that he had
+not before seen on the Chukch Peninsula. Space does not permit me to
+give another list of plants, but in order that the reader may have
+an idea of the great difference in the mode of growth which the same
+species may exhibit under the influence of different climatal
+conditions, I give here a drawing of the Alpine whitlow grass
+(_Draba alpina_, L.) from St. Lawrence Bay. It would not, perhaps,
+be easy to recognise in this drawing the species delineated on page
+341 of vol. i,; the globular form which the plant assumed on the
+shore of Cape Chelyuskin exposed to the winds of the Polar Sea, has
+here, in a region protected from them, completely disappeared.
+
+At the rocky headlands there were still, however, considerable
+snowdrifts, and from the heights we could see that considerable
+masses of ice were still drifting along the Asiatic side of
+Behring's Straits. During an excursion to the top of one of the
+neighbouring mountains, Dr. Stuxberg found the corpse of a native
+laid out on a stone-setting of the form common among the Chukches.
+Alongside the dead man lay a broken percussion gun, spear, arrows,
+tinder-box, pipe, snow-shade, ice-sieve, and various other things
+which the departed was considered to be in want of in the part of
+the Elysian fields set apart for Chukches. The corpse had lain on
+the place at least since the preceding summer, but the pipe was one
+of the clay pipes that I had caused to be distributed among the
+natives. It had thus been placed there long after the proper burial.
+
+Anxious as I was to send off soon from a telegraph station some
+re-assuring lines to the home-land, because I feared that a general
+uneasiness had already begun to be felt for the fate of the _Vega_,
+I would willingly have remained at this place, so important and
+interesting in a scientific point of view, at least for some days,
+had not the ice-belts and ice-fields drifting about in the offing
+been so considerable that if a wind blowing on land had risen
+unexpectedly, they might readily have been dangerous to our vessel,
+which even now was anchored in a completely open road, for the
+splendid haven situated farther in in St. Lawrence Bay was still
+covered with ice, and consequently inaccessible. On the afternoon of
+21st July, accordingly, when all were assembled on board pleased and
+delighted with the results of the morning visit to land, I ordered
+the anchor to be weighed that the _Vega_ might steam across to the
+American side of Behring's Straits. As in all the Polar seas of the
+northern hemisphere, so also here, the eastern side of the Straits
+was ice-bestrewn, the western, on the other hand, clear of ice. The
+passage was at all events a rapid one, so that by the afternoon of
+the 21st July we were able to anchor in Port Clarence, an excellent
+haven south of the westernmost promontory of Asia, Cape Prince of
+Wales. _It was the first time the Vega anchored in a proper haven,
+since on the 18th August 1878 she left Actinia, Haven on Taimur
+Island._ During the intermediate time she had been constantly
+anchored or moored in open roads without the least land shelter from
+sea, wind, and drift-ice. The vessel was, however, thanks to Captain
+Palander's judgment and thoughtfulness, and the ability of the
+officers and crew, still not only quite free from damage, but even
+as seaworthy as when she left the dock at Karlskrona, and we had
+still on board provisions for nearly a year, and about 4,000 cubic
+feet of coal.
+
+Towards the sea Port Clarence is protected by a long low sandy reef,
+between the north end of which and the land there is a convenient
+and deep entrance. There a considerable river falls into the
+interior of the harbour, the mouth of which widens to a lake, which
+is separated from the outer harbour by a sandy neck of land. This
+lake also forms a good and spacious harbour, but its entrance is too
+shallow for vessels of any considerable draught. The river itself,
+on the contrary, is deep, and about eighteen kilometres from its
+mouth flows through another lake, from the eastern shore of which
+rugged and shattered mountains rise to a height which I estimate at
+800 to 1000 metres; but it is quite possible that their height is
+twice as great, for in making such estimates one is liable to fall
+into error. South of the river and the harbour the land rises
+abruptly from the river bank, which is from ten to twenty metres
+high. On the north side, on the other hand, the bank is for the most
+part low, but farther into the interior the ground rises rapidly to
+rounded hills from 300 to 400 metres high. Only in the valleys and
+at other places where very large masses of snow had collected during
+the winter, were snow-drifts still to be seen. On the other hand, we
+saw no glaciers, though we might have expected to find them on the
+sides of the high mountains which bound the inner lake on the east.
+It was also clear that during the recent ages no widely extended
+ice-sheet was to be found here, for in the many excursions we made
+in different directions, among others up the river to the lake just
+mentioned, we saw nowhere any moraines, erratic blocks, striated
+rock-surfaces, or other traces of a past ice-age. Many signs, on the
+other hand, indicate that during a not very remote geological period
+glaciers covered considerable areas of the opposite Asiatic shore,
+and contributed to excavate the fjords there--Kolyutschin Bay, St.
+Lawrence Bay, Metschigme Bay, Konyam Bay, &c.
+
+When we approached the American side we could see that the shore
+cliffs were formed of stratified rocks. I therefore hoped to be
+able, at last, to make a rich collection of fossils, something that
+I had no opportunity of doing during the preceding part of the
+voyage. But I found, on reaching them, that the stratified rocks
+only consisted of crystalline schists without any traces of animal
+or vegetable remains. Nor did we find on the shore any whale-bones
+or any of the remarkable mammoth-bearing ice-strata which were
+discovered in the bay situated immediately north of Behring's
+Straits, which was named after Dr. Eschscholz, medical officer
+during Kotzebue's famous voyage.[346]
+
+Immediately after the anchor fell we were visited by several very
+large skin boats and a large number of _kayaks_. The latter were
+larger than the Greenlanders', being commonly intended for two
+persons, who sat back to back in the middle of the craft. We even
+saw boats from which, when the two rowers had stepped out, a third
+person crept who had lain almost hermetically sealed in the interior
+of the _kayak_, stretched on the bottom without the possibility of
+moving his limbs, or saving himself if any accident should happen.
+It appeared to be specially common for children to accompany their
+elders in _kayak_ voyages in this inconvenient way.
+
+After the natives came on board a lively traffic commenced, whereby I
+acquired some arrow-points and stone fishing-hooks. Anxious to procure
+as abundant material as possible for instituting a comparison between
+the household articles of the Eskimo and the Chukches, I examined
+carefully the skin-bags which the natives had with them. In doing so I
+picked out one thing after the other, while they did not object to me
+making an inventory. One of them, however, showed great unwillingness to
+allow me to get to the bottom of the sack, but this just made me curious
+to ascertain what precious thing was concealed there. I was urgent, and
+went through the bag half with violence, until at last, in the bottom, I
+got a solution of the riddle--a loaded revolver. Several of the natives
+had also breechloaders. The oldest age with stone implements, and the
+most recent period with breechloaders, thus here reach hands one to the
+other.
+
+[Illustration: HUNTING IMPLEMENTS AT PORT CLARENCE.
+ 1. Bird dart with wooden handle for throwing, one-ninth of the
+ natural size.
+ 2. Whale harpoon with flint point, one-twelfth.
+ 3. Harpoon-point of bone and nephrite, one-half.
+ 4. Bone leister, one-third.
+ 5. Awl, one-half.
+ 6. Harpoon, one-twelfth.
+ 7. Flint dart-point, one-half.
+ 8. Arrows or harpoon-ends with points of iron, stone or glass,
+ one-eighth.
+ 9. Quiver, one-eighth. ]
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO FAMILY AT PORT CLARENCE. (After a photograph by
+L. Palander.) ]
+
+Many natives were evidently migrating to more northerly
+hunting-grounds and fishing places, perhaps also to the markets and
+play-booths, which Dr. John Simpson describes in his well-known
+paper on the West Eskimo.[347] Others had already pitched their
+summer tents on the banks of the inner harbour, or of the river
+before mentioned. On the other hand, there was found in the region
+only a small number of winter dwellings abandoned during the warm
+season of the year. The population consisted, as has been said, of
+Eskimo. They did not understand a word of Chukch. Among them,
+however, we found a Chukch woman, who stated that true Chukches were
+found also on the American side, north of Behring's Straits. Two of
+the men spoke a little English, one had even been at San Francisco,
+another at Honolulu. Many of their household articles reminded us of
+contact with American whalers, and justice demands the recognition
+of the fact that in opposition to what we commonly see stated,
+contact with men of civilised race appears to have been to the
+advantage and improvement of the savage in an economical and moral
+point of view. Most of them now lived in summer-tents of thin cotton
+cloth, many wore European clothes, others were clad in trousers of
+seal or reindeer-skin and a light, soft, often beautifully
+ornamented _pesk_ of marmot skin, over which in rainy weather was
+worn an overcoat made of pieces of gut sewn together. The
+arrangement of the hair resembled that of the Chukches. The women
+were tattooed with some lines on the chin. Many of the men wore
+small moustaches, some even a scanty beard, while others had
+attempted the American goatee. Most of them, but not all, had two
+holes from six to seven millimetres in length, cut in the lips below
+the corners of the mouth. In these holes were worn large pieces of
+bone, glass, or stone (figure 9, page 237). But these ornaments were
+often removed, and then the edges of the large holes closed so much
+that the face was not much disfigured. Many had in addition a
+similar hole forward in the lip. It struck me, however, that this
+strange custom was about to disappear completely, or at least to be
+Europeanised by the exchange of holes in the ears for holes in the
+mouth. An almost full-grown young woman had a large blue glass bead
+hanging from the nose, in whose partition a hole had been made for
+its suspension, but she was very much embarrassed and hid her head
+in a fold of mama's _pesk_, when this piece of grandeur attracted
+general attention. All the women had long strings of beads in the
+ears. They wore bracelets of iron or copper, resembling those of the
+Chukches. The colour of the skin was not very dark, with perceptible
+redness on the cheeks, the hair black and tallow-like, the eyes
+small, brown, slightly oblique, the face flat, the nose small and
+depressed at the root. Most of the natives were of average height,
+appeared to be healthy and in good condition, and were marked
+neither by striking thinness nor corpulence. The feet and the hands
+were small.
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO AT PORT CLARENCE. (After a photograph by L.
+Palander.) ]
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO AT PORT CLARENCE. (After photographs by L.
+Palander.) ]
+
+A certain elegance and order prevailed in their small tents, the
+floor of which was covered with mats of plaited plants. In many
+places vessels formed of cocoa-nut shells were to be seen, brought
+thither, like some of the mats, by whalers from the South Sea
+Islands. For the most part their household and hunting implements,
+axes, knives, saws, breechloaders, revolvers, &c., were of American
+origin, but they still used or preserved in the lumber repositories
+of the tent, bows and arrows, bird-darts, bone boat-hooks, and
+various stone implements. The fishing implements especially were
+made with extraordinary skill of coloured sorts of bone or stone,
+glass beads, red pieces of the feet of certain swimming birds, &c.
+The different materials were bound together by twine made of
+whalebone in such a manner that they resembled large beetles, being
+intended for use in the same way as salmon-flies at home.
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO FISHING IMPLEMENTS, ETC.
+ 1-6. Salmon hooks of stone of different colours, and bone in the
+ form of beetles, one-half of the natural size.
+ 7. Fishing rod one-sixth.
+ 8. End of rod.
+ 9. Bone sinker with tufts and fish-hook, one-half.
+ 10. Fish-hook with bone points, one-half.
+ 11. Fish-hook with iron-wire points, one-half.
+ 12. Snow spectacles one-third. ]
+
+Fire was got partly with steel, flint, and tinder, partly by means
+of the fire-drill. Many also used American lucifers. The bow of the
+fire-drill was often of ivory, richly ornamented with hunting
+figures of different kinds. Their tools were more elegant, better
+carved and more richly coloured with graphite[348] and red ochre than
+those of the Chukches; the people were better off and owned a larger
+number of skin-boats, both _kayaks_ and _umiaks_. This undoubtedly
+depends on the sea being here covered with ice for a shorter time
+and the ice being thinner than on the Asiatic side, and the hunting
+accordingly being better. All the old accounts however agree in
+representing that in former times the Chukches were recognised as a
+great power by the other savage tribes in these regions, but all
+recent observations indicate that that time is now past. A certain
+respect for them, however, appears still to prevail among their
+neighbours.
+
+The natives, after the first mistrust had disappeared, were friendly
+and accommodating, honourable in their dealings though given to
+begging and to much haggling in making a bargain. There appeared to
+be no chief among them, complete equality prevailed, and the
+position of the woman did not appear to be inferior to that of the
+man. The children were what we would call in Europe well brought up,
+though they got no bringing up at all. All were heathens. The liking
+for spirits appeared to be less strong than among the Chukches. We
+learn besides that all selling of spirits to savages is not only
+forbidden on the American side, but forbidden in such a way that the
+law is obeyed.
+
+During our stay among the Chukches my supply of articles for barter
+was very limited, for up to the hour of departure uncertainty
+prevailed as to the time at which we would get free, and I was
+therefore compelled to be sparing of the stores. I often found it
+difficult on that account to induce a Chukch to part with things
+which I wished to acquire. Here on the contrary I was a rich man,
+thanks to the large surplus that was over from our abundant winter
+equipment, which of course in warm regions would have been of no use
+to us. I turned my riches to account by making visits like a pedlar
+in the tent villages with sacks full of felt hats, thick clothes,
+stockings, ammunition, &c., for which goods I obtained a beautiful
+and choice collection of ethnographical articles. Among these may be
+mentioned beautiful bone etchings and carvings, and several
+arrow-points and other tools of a species of nephrite,[349] which is
+so puzzlingly like the well-known nephrite from High Asia, that I am
+disposed to believe that it actually comes originally from that
+locality. In such a case the occurrence of nephrite at Behring's
+Straits is important, because it cannot be explained in any other
+way than either by supposing that the tribes living here have
+carried the mineral with them from their original home in High Asia,
+or that during the Stone Age of High Asia a like extended commercial
+intercommunication took place between the wild races as now exists,
+or at least some decades ago existed, along the north parts of Asia
+and America.
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO BONE-CARVINGS, ETC.
+ 1-5. Buttons to carrying straps, representing heads of the Polar bear,
+ seals &c., carved in walrus ivory, one-half of the natural size.
+ 6. Carrying strap with a similar button, carved, in the form
+ of a seal, one-third.
+ 7. Stone chisel, one-half.
+ 8. Comb one-third.
+ 9. Buttons of bone, glass, or stone, to be placed in holes in the lips,
+ natural size.
+ 10. Ivory diadem, two-thirds. ]
+
+On the north side of the harbour we found an old European or
+American train-oil boiling establishment. In the neighbourhood of it
+were two Eskimo graves. The corpses had been laid on the ground
+fully clothed, without the protection of any coffin, but surrounded
+by a close fence consisting of a number of tent poles driven
+crosswise into the ground. Alongside one of the corpses lay a
+_kayak_ with oars, a loaded double-barrelled gun with locks at
+half-cock and caps on, various other weapons, clothes, tinderbox,
+snow-shoes, drinking-vessels, two masks carved in wood and smeared
+with blood (figures 1 and 2, page 241), and strangely-shaped animal
+figures. Such were seen also in the tents. Bags of sealskin,
+intended to be inflated and fastened to harpoons as floats, were
+sometimes ornamented with small faces carved in wood (figure 3, page
+241). In one of the two amulets of the same kind, which I brought
+home with me, one eye is represented by a piece of blue enamel stuck
+in, and the other by a piece of iron pyrites fixed in the same way.
+Behind two tents were found, erected on posts a metre and a half in
+height, roughly-formed wooden images of birds with expanded wings
+painted red. I endeavoured without success to purchase these
+tent-idols[350] for a large new felt hat--an article of exchange for
+which in other cases I could obtain almost anything whatever. A
+dazzlingly white _kayak_ of a very elegant shape, on the other hand,
+I purchased without difficulty for an old felt hat and 500 Remington
+cartridges.
+
+[Illustration: ESKIMO GRAVE. (After a drawing by O. Nordquist.) ]
+
+As a peculiar proof of the ingenuity of the Americans when offering
+their goods for sale, it may be mentioned in conclusion that an
+Eskimo, who came to the vessel during our stay in the harbour,
+showed us a printed paper, by which a commercial house at San
+Francisco offered to "sporting gentlemen" at Behring's Straits
+(Eskimo?) their stock of excellent hunting shot.
+
+As the west coast of Europe is washed by the Gulf Stream, there also
+runs along the Pacific coast of America a warm current, which gives
+the land a much milder climate than that which prevails on the
+neighbouring Asiatic side, where, as on the east coast of Greenland,
+there runs a cold northerly current. The limit of trees therefore in
+north-western America goes a good way _north of_ Behring's Straits,
+while on the Chukch Peninsula wood appears to be wholly wanting.
+Even at Port Clarence the coast is devoid of trees, but some
+kilometres into the country alder bushes two feet high are met with,
+and behind the coast hills actual forests probably occur. Vegetation
+is besides already luxuriant at the coast, and far away here, on the
+coast of the New World, many species are to be found nearly allied
+to Scandinavian plants, among them the _Linnaea_. Dr. Kjellman
+therefore reaped here a rich botanical harvest, valuable for the
+purpose of comparison with the flora of the neighbouring portion of
+Asia and other High Arctic regions.
+
+[Illustration: ANIMAL FIGURE FROM AN ESKIMO GRAVE.
+ _a._ From above.
+ _b._ From the side (One-third of the natural size.) ]
+
+[Illustration: ETHNOGRAPHICAL OBJECTS FROM PORT CLARENCE.
+ 1-2. Wooden masks, found at a grave, one-sixth of the natural size.
+ 3. Amulet a face with one eye of enamel, the other of pyrites from
+ a harpoon-float of sealskin, one-third.
+ 4. Oars, one-nineteenth.
+ 5. Boathook, one-twelfth.
+ 6. The hook or carved ivory, one-fourth.
+ 7. Carved knife handle (?) ofivory, one-half. ]
+
+Dr. Almquist in like manner collected very extensive materials for
+investigating the lichen-flora of the region, probably before very
+incompletely known. The harvest of the zoologists, on the other
+hand, was scanty. Notwithstanding the luxuriant vegetation
+land-evertebrates appeared to occur in a much smaller number of
+species than in northern Norway. Of beetles, for instance, only from
+ten to twenty species could be found, mainly Harpalids and
+Staphylinids, and of land and fresh-water mollusca only seven or
+eight species, besides which nearly all occurred very sparingly.
+Among remarkable fishes may be mentioned the same black marsh-fish
+which we caught at Yinretlen. The avi-fauna was scanty for a high
+northern land, and of wild mammalia we saw only musk-rats. Even the
+dredgings in the harbour yielded, on account of the unfavourable
+nature of the bottom, only an inconsiderable number of animals and
+algae.
+
+On the 26th July, at three o'clock in the afternoon, we weighed
+anchor and steamed back in splendid weather and with for the most
+part a favourable wind to the shore of the Old World. In order to
+determine the salinity and temperature at different depths,
+soundings were made and samples of water taken every four hours
+during the passage across the straits. Trawling was besides carried
+on three times in the twenty-four hours, commonly with an
+extraordinarily abundant yield, among other things of large shells,
+as, for instance, the beautiful _Fusus deformis_, Reeve, with its
+twist to the left, and some large species of crabs. One of the
+latter (_Chionoecetes opilio_, Kroeyer) the dredge sometimes brought
+up in hundreds. We cooked and ate them and found them excellent,
+though not very rich in flesh. The taste was somewhat sooty.
+
+Lieutenant Bove constructed the diagram reproduced at page 244,
+which is based on the soundings and other observations made during
+the passage, from which we see how shallow is the sound which in the
+northernmost part of the Pacific separates the Old World from the
+New. An elevation of the land less than that which has taken place
+since the glacial period at the well-known Chapel Hills at Uddevalla
+would evidently be sufficient to unite the two worlds with each
+other by a broad bridge, and a corresponding depression would have
+been enough to separate them if, as is probable, they were at one
+time continuous. The diagram shows besides that the deepest channel
+is quite close to the coast of the Chukch Peninsula, and that that
+channel contains a mass of cold water, which is separated by a ridge
+from the warmer water on the American side.
+
+[Illustration: SHELL FROM BEHRING'S STRAITS. _Fusus deformis_, Reeve. ]
+
+If we examine a map of Siberia we shall find, as I have already
+pointed out, that its coasts at most places are straight, and are
+thus neither indented with deep fjords surrounded with high
+mountains like the west coast of Norway, nor protected by an
+archipelago of islands like the greater part of the coasts of
+Scandinavia and Finland. Certain parts of the Chukch Peninsula,
+especially its south-eastern portion, form the only exception to
+this rule. Several small fjords here cut into the coasts, which
+consist of stratified granitic rocks, and in the offing two large
+and several small rocky islands form an archipelago, separated from
+the mainland by the deep Senjavin Sound. The wish to give our
+naturalists an opportunity of once more prosecuting their
+examination of the natural history of the Chukch Peninsula, and the
+desire to study one of the few parts of the Siberian coast which in
+all probability were formerly covered with inland ice, led me to
+choose this place for the second anchorage of the _Vega_ on the
+Asiatic side south of Behring's Straits. The _Vega_ accordingly
+anchored here on the forenoon of the 28th July, but not, as was at
+first intended, in Glasenapp Harbour, because it was still occupied
+unbroken ice, but in the mouth of the most northerly of the fjords,
+Konyam Bay.
+
+[Illustration: DIAGRAM, Showing the Temperature and Depth of the water
+at Behring's Straits between Port Clarence and Senjavin Sound. By G.
+BOVE. ]
+
+This portion of the Chukch Peninsula had been visited before us by
+the corvette _Senjavin_, commanded by Captain, afterwards Admiral,
+Fr. Luetke, and by an English Franklin Expedition on board the
+_Plover_, commanded by Captain Moore. Luetke stayed here with his
+companions, the naturalists MERTENS, POSTELS, and KITTLITZ, some
+days in August 1828, during which the harbour was surveyed and
+various observations in ethnography and the natural sciences made.
+Moore wintered at this place in 1848-49. I have already stated that
+we have his companion, Lieut. W.H. Hooper, to thank for very
+valuable information relating to the tribes which live in the
+neighbourhood. The region appears to have been then inhabited by a
+rather dense population. Now there lived at the bay where we had
+anchored only three reindeer-Chukch families, and the neighbouring
+islands must at the time have been uninhabited, or perhaps the
+arrival of the _Vega_ may not have been observed, for no natives
+came on board, which otherwise would probably have been the case.
+
+The shore at the south-east part of Konyam Bay, in which the _Vega_
+now lay at anchor for a couple of days, consists of a rather
+desolate bog, in which a large number of cranes were breeding.
+Farther into the country several mountain summits rise to a height
+of nearly 600 metres. The collections of the zoologists and
+botanists on this shore were very scanty, but on the north side of
+the bay, to which excursions were made with the steam-launch, grassy
+slopes were met with, with pretty high bushy thickets and a great
+variety of flowers, which enriched Dr. Kjellman's collection of the
+higher plants from the north coast of Asia with about seventy
+species. Here were found too the first land mollusca (Succinea,
+Limax, Helix, Pupa, &c.) on the Chukch Peninsula.[351]
+
+We also visited the dwellings of the reindeer-Chukch families. They
+resembled the Chukch tents we had seen before, and the mode of life
+of the inhabitants differed little from that of the coast-Chukches,
+with whom we passed the winter. They were even clothed in the same
+way, excepting that the men wore a number of small bells in the
+belt. The number of the reindeer which the three families owned was,
+according to an enumeration which I made when the herd had with
+evident pleasure settled down at noon in warm sunshine on a
+snow-field in the neighbourhood of the tents, only about 400, thus
+considerably fewer than is required to feed three Lapp families. The
+Chukches have instead a better supply of fish, and, above all,
+better hunting than the Lapps; they also do not drink any coffee,
+and themselves collect a part of their food from the vegetable
+kingdom. The natives received us in a very friendly way, and
+offered to sell or rather barter three reindeer, a transaction which
+on account of our hasty departure was not carried into effect.
+
+The mountains in the neighbourhood of Konyam Bay were high and split up
+into pointed summits with deep valleys still partly filled with snow. No
+glaciers appear to exist there at present. Probably however the fjords
+here and the sounds, like St. Lawrence Bay, Kolyutschin Bay, and
+probably all the other deeper bays on the coast of the Chukch Peninsula,
+have been excavated by former glaciers. It may perhaps be uncertain
+whether a true inland-ice covered the whole country; it is certain that
+the ice-cap did not extend over the plains of Siberia, where it can be
+proved that no Ice Age in a Scandinavian sense ever existed, and where
+the state of the land from the Jurassic period onwards was indeed
+subjected to some changes, but to none of the thoroughgoing mundane
+revolutions which in former times geologists loved to depict in so
+bright colours. At least the direction of the rivers appears to have
+been unchanged since then. Perhaps even the difference between the
+Siberia where Chikanovski's _Ginko_ woods grew and the mammoth roamed
+about, and that where now at a limited depth under the surface
+constantly frozen ground is to be met with, depends merely on the
+isothermal lines having sunk slightly towards the equator.
+
+[Illustration: KONYAM BAY. (After a photograph by L. Palander.) ]
+
+The neighbourhood of Konyam Bay consists of crystalline rocks,
+granite poor in mica, and mica-schist lowermost, and then grey
+non-fossiliferous carbonate of lime, and last of all magnesian
+schists, porphyry, and quartzites. On the summits of the hills the
+granite has a rough trachytic appearance, but does not pass into
+true trachyte. Here however we are already in the neighbourhood of
+the volcanic hearths of Kamchatka, which for instance is shown by
+the hot spring, which Hooper discovered not far from the coast
+during a sledge journey towards Behring's Straits. In the middle of
+the severe cold of February its waters had a temperature of +69 deg. C.
+Hot steam and drifting snow combined had thrown over the
+spring a lofty vault of dazzling whiteness formed of masses of snow
+converted into ice and covered with ice-crystals. The Chukches
+themselves appear to have found the contrast striking between the
+hot spring from the interior of the earth and the cold, snow, and
+ice on its surface. They offered blue glass beads to the spring, and
+showed Hooper, as something remarkable, that it was possible to boil
+fish in it, though the mineral water gave the boiled fish a bitter
+unpleasant taste.[352]
+
+The interior of Konyam Bay was during our stay there still covered
+by an unbroken sheet of ice. This broke up on the afternoon of the
+30th July, and had almost, rotten as it was, suddenly brought the
+voyage of the _Vega_ to a termination by pressing her ashore.
+Fortunately the danger was observed in time. Steam was got up, the
+anchor weighed, and the vessel removed to the open part of the
+fjord. As on this account several cubic feet of coal had to be used
+for getting up steam, as our hitherto abundant stock of coal must
+now be saved, and as, in the last place I was still urged forward by
+the fear that a too lengthened delay in sending home despatches
+might not only cause much anxiety but also lead to a heavy
+expenditure of money, I preferred to sail on immediately rather than
+to enter a safer harbour in the neighbourhood from which the
+scientific work might continue to be prosecuted.
+
+The course was now shaped for the north-west point of St. Lawrence
+Island. A little off Senjavin Sound we saw drift-ice for the last
+time. On the whole the quantity of ice which drifts down through
+Behring's Straits into the Pacific is not very great, and most of
+that which is met with in summer on the Asiatic side of the Behring
+Sea, is evidently formed in fjords and bays along the coast South of
+Behring's Straits accordingly I saw not a single iceberg nor any
+large block of glacier-ice, but only even and very rotten fields of
+bay-ice.
+
+The _Vega_ was anchored on the 31st July in an open bay on the
+north-western side of St. Lawrence Island. This island, called by
+the natives Enguae, is the largest one between the Aleutian Islands
+and Behring's Straits. It lies nearer Asia than America, but is
+considered to belong to the latter, for which reason it was handed
+over along with the Alaska Territory by Russia to the United States.
+The island is inhabited by a few Eskimo families, who have
+commercial relations with then Chukch neighbours on the Russian
+side, and therefore have adopted some words from their language.
+Then dress also resembles that of the Chukches, with the exception
+that, wanting reindeer-skin, they use _pesks_ made of the skins of
+birds and marmots. Like the Chukches and Eskimo they use overcoats
+of pieces of seal-gut sewed together. On St. Lawrence Island their
+dress is much ornamented, chiefly with tufts of feathers of the
+sea-fowl that breed in innumerable flocks on the island. It even
+appears that gut clothes are made here for sale to other tribes;
+otherwise it would be difficult to explain how Kotzebue's sailors
+could in half an hour purchase at a single encampment 200 coats of
+this kind. At the time of our visit all the natives went bareheaded,
+the men with their black tallow-like hair clipped to the root, with
+the exception of the common small border above the forehead. The
+women wore their hair plaited and adorned with beads, and were much
+tattooed, partly after very intricate patterns, as is shown by the
+accompanying woodcuts. Like the children they mostly went barefooted
+and barelegged. They were well grown, and many did not look ill, but
+all were merciless beggars, who actually followed our naturalists on
+their excursions on land.
+
+[Illustration: TATTOOING PATTERNS, FROM ST. LAWRENCE ISLAND.
+ 1., 2. Face tattooing.
+ 3. Arm tattooing. (After drawings by A. Stuxberg.) ]
+
+[Illustration: TATTOOED WOMAN FROM ST. LAWRENCE ISLAND.
+(After a drawing by A. Stuxberg.) ]
+
+The summer-tents were irregular, but pretty clean and light huts of
+gut, stretched on a frame of drift-wood and whale-bones. The winter
+dwellings were now abandoned. They appeared to consist of holes in
+the earth, which were covered above, with the exception of a square
+opening, with drift-wood and turf.
+
+During winter a sealskin tent was probably stretched over this
+opening, but it was removed for the time, probably to permit the
+summer heat to penetrate into the hole and melt the ice, which had
+collected during winter on its walls. At several tents we found
+large under-jaws of whales fixed in the ground. They were perforated
+above, and I suppose that the winter-tent, in the absence of other
+framework, was stretched over them. Masses of whale-bones lay thrown
+up along the shore, evidently belonging to the same species as those
+we collected at the shore-dunes at Pitlekaj. In the neighbourhood of
+the tents graves were also found. The corpses had been placed,
+unburned, in some cleft among the rocks which are split up by the
+frost, and often converted into immense stone mounds. They had
+afterwards been covered with stones, and skulls of the bear and the
+seal and whale-bones had been offered or scattered around the grave.
+
+North-east of the anchorage the shore was formed of low hills rising
+with a steep slope from the sea. Here and there ruinlike cliffs
+projected from the hills, resembling those we saw on the coast of
+Chukch Land. But the rock here consisted of the same sort of granite
+which formed the lowermost stratum at Konyam Bay. It was principally
+at the foot of these slopes that the natives erected their
+dwellings. South-west of the anchorage commenced a very extensive
+plain, which towards the interior of the island was marshy, but
+along the coast formed a firm, even, grassy meadow exceedingly rich
+in flowers. It was gay with the large sunflower-like _Arnica
+Pseudo-Arnica_, and another species of Senecio (_Senecio frigidus_);
+the _Oxytropis nigrescens_, close-tufted and rich in flowers, not
+stunted here as in Chukch Land; several species of Pedicularis in
+their fullest bloom (_P. sudetica, P. Langsdorfii, P. Oederi_ and
+_P. capitata_); the stately snow auricula (_Primula nivalis_), and
+the pretty _Primula borealis_. As characteristic of the vegetation
+at this place may also be mentioned several ranunculi, an anemone
+(_Anemone narcissiflora_), a species of monkshood with flowers few
+indeed, but so much the larger on that account, large tufts of
+_Silene acaulis_ and _Alsine macrocarpa_, studded with flowers,
+several Saxifrages, two Claytoniae, the _Cl. acutifolia_, important
+as a food-plant in the housekeeping of the Chukches, and the tender
+_Cl. sarmentosa_ with its delicate, slightly rose-coloured flowers,
+and, where the ground was stony, long but yet flowerless, slightly
+green tendrils of the favourite plant of our homeland, the _Linnaea
+borealis_ Dr. Kjellman thus reaped a rich harvest of higher plants,
+and a fine collection of land and marine animals, lichens and algae
+was also made here. The ground consisted of sand in which lay large
+granite blocks, which we in Sweden would call erratic. They appeared
+however not to have been transported hither, but to be lying _in
+situ_, having along with the sand probably arisen through the
+disintegration of the rocks.
+
+In the sea we found not a few algae and a true littoral
+evertebrate-fauna, poor in species indeed, something which is
+completely absent in the Polar seas proper. As I walked along
+the coast I saw five pretty large self-coloured greyish-brown seals
+sunning themselves on stones a short distance from land. They
+belonged to a species which I had never seen in the Polar seas.
+As there was no boat at hand, I forbade the hunters that accompanied
+me, though the seals were within range, to test their skill
+as shots upon them. Perhaps they were females of _Histriophoca
+fasciata_, whose beautifully marked skin (of the male) I had seen
+and described at St. Lawrence Bay. The natives had a few dogs
+but no reindeer, which however might find food on the island in
+thousands. No _kayaks_ were in use, but large _baydars_ of the
+same construction as those of the Chukches.
+
+St. Lawrence Island was discovered during Behring's first
+voyage, but the first who came into contact with the natives was
+Otto von Kotzebue[353] (on the 27th June 1816, and the 20th July
+1817). The inhabitants had not before seen any Europeans, and
+they received the foreigners with a friendliness which exposed
+Kotzebue to severe suffering. Of this he gives the following
+account:--
+
+ "So long as the naturalists wandered about on the hills I
+ stayed with my acquaintances, who, when they found that I
+ was the commander, invited me into their tents. Here a
+ dirty skin was spread on the floor, on which I had to sit,
+ and then they came in one after the other, embraced me,
+ rubbed their noses hard against mine, and finished their
+ caresses by spitting in their hands and then stroking me
+ several times over the face. Although these proofs of
+ friendship gave me very little pleasure, I bore all
+ patiently; the only thing I did to lighten their caresses
+ somewhat was to distribute tobacco leaves. These the
+ natives received with great pleasure, but they wished
+ immediately to renew their proofs of friendship. Now I
+ betook myself with speed to knives, scissors, and beads,
+ and by distributing some succeeded in averting a new
+ attack. But a still greater calamity awaited me when in
+ order to refresh me bodily they brought forward a wooden
+ tray with whale blubber. Nauseous as this food is to a
+ European stomach I boldly attacked the dish. This, along
+ with new presents which I distributed, impressed the seal
+ on the friendly relation between us. After the meal our
+ hosts made arrangements for dancing and singing, which was
+ accompanied on a little tambourine."[352]
+
+As von Kotzebue two days after sailed past the north point of the
+island he met three _baydars_. In one of them a man stood up, held
+up a little dog and pierced it through with his knife, as Kotzebue
+believed, as a sacrifice to the foreigners.[355]
+
+Since 1817 several exploring expeditions have landed on St. Lawrence
+Island, but always only for a few hours. It is very dangerous to
+stay long here with a vessel. For there is no known haven on the
+coast of this large island, which is surrounded by an open sea. In
+consequence of the heavy swell which almost constantly prevails
+here, when the surrounding sea is clear of ice, it is difficult to
+land on the island with a boat, and the vessel anchored in the open
+road is constantly exposed to be thrown by a storm rising
+unexpectedly upon the shore cliffs. This held good in fullest
+measure of the _Vega's_ anchorage, and Captain Palander was on this
+account anxious to leave the place as soon as possible. On the 2nd
+August at three o'clock in the afternoon we accordingly resumed our
+voyage. The course was shaped at first for Karaginsk Island on the
+east coast of Kamchatka, where it was my intention to stay some days
+in order to get an opportunity of making a comparison between the
+natural conditions of middle Kamchatka and the Chukch Peninsula. But
+as unfavourable winds delayed our passage longer than I had
+calculated on, I abandoned, though unwillingly, the plan of landing
+there. The Commander's Islands became instead the nearest goal of
+the expedition. Here the _Vega_ anchored on the 14th August in a
+very indifferent harbour completely open to the west, north-west,
+and south, lying on the west side of Behring Island, between the
+main island and a small island lying off it.
+
+
+[Footnote 344: The enmity appeared, however, to be of a very passive
+nature and by no means depending on any tribal dislike, but only
+arising from the inhabitants of the villages lying farthest eastward
+being known to be of a quarrelsome disposition and having the same
+reputation for love of fighting as the peasant youths in some
+villages in Sweden. For Lieut. Hooper, who during the winter 1848-9
+made a journey in dog-sledges from Chukotskoj-nos along the coast
+towards Behring's Straits says that the inhabitants at Cape Deschnev
+itself enjoyed the same bad reputation among their Namollo
+neighbours to the south as among the Chukches living to the
+westward. "They spoke another language." Possibly they were pure
+Eskimo. ]
+
+[Footnote 345: There is still in existence a sketch of a tribe,
+living far to the south on the coast of the Indian Sea, who at the
+time of Alexander the Great used the bones of the whale in a similar
+way. "They build their houses so that the richest among them take
+bones of the whale, which the sea casts up, and use them as beams,
+of the larger bones they make their doors." Arrian, _Historia
+Indica_, XXIX. and XXX. ]
+
+[Footnote 346: These strata were discovered during Kotzebue's
+cucumnavigation of the globe (_Entdeckungs Reise_, Weimar, 1821, i.
+p. 146, and ii. p. 170). The strand-bank was covered by an
+exceedingly luxuriant vegetable carpet, and rose to a height of
+eighty feet above the sea. Here the "rock," if this word can be used
+for a stratum of ice, was found to consist of pure ice, covered with
+a layer, only six inches thick, of blue clay and turf-earth. The ice
+must have been several hundred thousand years old, for on its being
+melted a large number of bones and tusks of the mammoth appeared,
+from which we may draw the conclusion that the ice-stratum was
+formed during the period in which the mammoth lived in these
+regions. This remarkable observation has been to a certain extent
+disputed by later travellers, but its correctness has recently been
+fully confirmed by Dall. On the other hand, the extent to which the
+strong odour, which was observed at the place and resembled that of
+burned horns, arose from the decaying mammoth remains, is perhaps
+uncertain. Kotzebue fixed the latitude of the place at 66 deg. 15'
+36". During Beechey's voyage in 1827 the place was thoroughly
+examined by Mr. Collie, the medical officer of the expedition. He
+brought home thence a large number of the bones of the mammoth, ox,
+musk-ox, reindeer, and horse, which were described by the famous
+geologist Buckland (F.W. Beechey, _Narrative of a Voyage to the
+Pacific and Behring's Straits, 1825-28_. London, 1831, ii.
+Appendix). ]
+
+[Footnote 347: _Further Papers relative to the recent Arctic
+Expedition, etc._ Presented to both Houses of Parliament. London,
+1855, p. 917. ]
+
+[Footnote 348: Graphite must be found in great abundance on the
+Asiatic side of Behring's Straits. I procured during winter a number
+of pieces, which had evidently been rolled in running water.
+Chamisso mentions in Kotzebue's Voyages (iii. p. 169) that he had
+seen this mineral along with red ochre among the inhabitants at St.
+Lawrence Bay; and Lieut Hooper states in his work (p. 139), that
+graphite and red ochre are found at the village Oongwysac between
+Chukotskoj-nos and Behring's Straits. The latter colour was sold at
+a high price to the inhabitants of distant encampments. These
+minerals have undoubtedly been used in the same way from time
+immemorial, and they are probably, like flint and nephrite, among
+the few kinds of stone which were used by the men of the Stone Age.
+So far as is known, graphite come first into use in Europe during
+the middle ages. A black-lead pencil is mentioned and delineated for
+the first time by Conrad Gessner in 1565. The rich but now exhausted
+graphite seam at Borrowdale, in England, is mentioned for the first
+time by Dr. Merret in 1667, as containing a useful mineral peculiar
+to England. Very rich graphite seams have been found during recent
+decades, both at the mouth of the Yenisej (Sidoroff's graphite
+quarry) and at a spur of the Sayan mountains in the southern part of
+Siberia (Alibert's graphite quarry), and these discoveries have
+played a certain _role_ in the recent history of the exploration of
+the country. ]
+
+[Footnote 349: Nephrite is a light green, sometimes grass-green, very
+hard and compact species of amphibolite, which occurs in High Asia,
+Mexico, and New Zealand. At all these places it has been employed
+for stone implements, vases, pipes, &c. The Chinese put an immensely
+high value upon it, and the wish to procure nephite is said often to
+have determined their politics, to have caused wars, and impressed
+its stamp on treaties of peace concluded between millions. I also
+consider it probable that the precious Vasa Murrhina, which was
+brought to Rome after the campaign against Mithridates, and has
+given rise to so much discussion, was nephrite. Nephrite was also
+perhaps the first of all stones to be used ornamentally. For we find
+axes and chisels of this material among the people of the Stone Age
+both in Europe (where no locality is known where unworked nephrite
+is found) and in Asia, America, and New Zealand. In Asia implements
+of nephrite are found both on the Chukch Peninsula and in old graves
+from the Stone Age in the southern part of the country. They have
+been discovered at Telma, sixty versts from Irkutsk, by Mr. J.N.
+Wilkoffski, conservator of the East Siberian Geographical Society.
+In scientific mineralogy nephrite is first mentioned under the name
+of _Kascholong_ (_i.e._ a species of stone from the river Kasch). It
+has been brought home under this name by Renat, a prisoner-of-war
+from Charles XII.'s army, from High Asia, and was given by him to
+Swedish mineralogists, who described it very correctly, though
+kascholong has since been erroneously considered a species of
+quarts. ]
+
+[Footnote 350: The Eskimo however, like the Chukches, do not appear
+to have any proper religion or idea of a life after this. ]
+
+[Footnote 351: We have already found some land mollusca at Port
+Clarence, but none at St. Lawrence Bay. The northernmost _find_ of
+such animals now known was made by Von Middendorff, who found a
+species of Physa on the Taimur Peninsula. ]
+
+[Footnote 352: That a fire-emitting mountain was to be found in
+Siberia east of the Yenisej is already mentioned in a treatise by
+Isaak Massa, inserted in Hessel Gerritz, _Detectio Freti_,
+Amsterdam, 1612. The rumour about the volcanos of Kamchatka thus
+appears to have reached Europe at that early date. ]
+
+[Footnote 353: Kotzebue says that he was the first seafarer who
+visited the island. This however is incorrect. Billings landed there
+on the 1st August (21st July), 1791. From the vessel some natives
+was seen and a _baydar_ which was rowed along the coast. The
+natives however were frightened by some gunshots fired as a signal
+(Sarytchev's _Reise_, ii. p. 91, Sauer, p. 239). Billings says that
+the place where he landed (the south-east point of the island) was
+nearly covered with bones of sea-animals. It would be important to
+have these thoroughly examined, as it is not impossible that
+Steller's sea-cow (Rhytina) may in former times have occasionally
+come to this coast. At all events important contributions to a
+knowledge of the species of whales in Behring's Straits may be
+gained here. ]
+
+[Footnote 354: Otto von Kotzebue _Entdeckungs-Reise an die Sud-See
+und nach der Behring-Strasse, 1815-18_ Weimar, 1821, i. p. 135, ii.
+p. 104, iii. pp. 171 and 178. ]
+
+[Footnote 355: On the days after our arrival at Pitlekaj several dogs
+were killed. I then believed that this was done because the natives
+were unwilling to feed them during winter, but it is not impossible
+that they sacrificed them to avert the misfortunes which it was
+feared the arrival of the foreigners would bring with it. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+ The position of Behring Island--Its inhabitants--The discovery
+ of the island by Behring--Behring's death--Steller--The former
+ and present Fauna on the island: foxes, sea-otters, sea-cows,
+ sea-lions, and sea-bears--Collection of bones of the Rhytina
+ --Visit to a "rookery"--Toporkoff Island--Alexander Dubovski
+ --Voyage to Yokohama--Lightning-stroke.
+
+
+Behring Island is situated between 54 deg. 40' and 55 deg. 25' N.L. and 165 deg. 40'
+and 166 deg. 40' E.L. from Greenwich. It is the westernmost and nearest
+Kamchatka of the islands in the long chain formed by volcanic action,
+which bounds the Behring Sea on the south between 51 deg. and 56 deg. N.L.
+Together with the neighbouring Copper Island and some small islands and
+rocks lying round about, it forms a peculiar group of islands separated
+from the Aleutian Islands proper, named, after the rank of the great
+seafarer who perished here, Commander's or Commandirski Islands. They
+belong not to America but to Asia, and are Russian territory.
+Notwithstanding this the American Alaska Company has acquired the right
+of hunting there,[356] and maintains on the main islands two not
+inconsiderable commercial stations, which supply the inhabitants,
+several hundreds in number, with provisions and manufactured goods, the
+company buying from them instead furs, principally the skin of an eared
+seal (the sea-cat or sea-bear), of which from 20,000 to 50,000[357] are
+killed yearly in the region. Some Russian authorities are also settled
+on the island to guard the rights of the Russian state and maintain
+order. Half a dozen serviceable wooden houses have been built here as
+dwellings for the officials of the Russian Government and the American
+Company, for storehouses, shops, &c. The natives live partly in very
+roomy and in the inside not uncomfortable turf houses, partly in small
+wooden houses which the company endeavours gradually to substitute for
+the former, by yearly ordering some wooden buildings and presenting them
+to the most deserving of the population. Every family has its own house.
+There is also a Greek-Catholic church and a spacious schoolhouse. The
+latter is intended for Aleutian children. The school was unfortunately
+closed at the time of our visit, but, to judge by the writing books
+which lay about in the schoolroom, the education here is not to be
+despised. The specimens of writing at least were distinguished by their
+cleanness, and by an even and beautiful style. At "the colony" the
+houses were collected at one place into a village, situated near the
+sea-shore at a suitable distance from the fishing ground in a valley
+overgrown in summer by a rich vegetation, but treeless and surrounded by
+treeless rounded heights. From the sea this village has the look of a
+northern fishing station. There are besides some scattered houses here
+and there on other parts of the island, for instance on its
+north-eastern side, where the potato is said to be cultivated on a small
+scale, and at the fishing place on the north side where there are two
+large sheds for skins and a number of very small earth-holes used only
+during the slaughter season.
+
+[Illustration: THE COLONY ON BEHRING ISLAND. (After a photograph.) ]
+
+[Illustration: THE "COLONY" ON COPPER ISLAND. (After a photograph.) ]
+
+Behring Island, with regard both to geography and natural history,
+is one of the most remarkable islands in the north part of the
+Pacific. It was here that Behring after his last unfortunate voyage
+in the sea which now bears his name, finished his long course as an
+explorer. He was however survived by many of his followers, among
+them by the physician and naturalist Steller, to whom we owe a
+masterpiece seldom surpassed--a sketch of the natural conditions and
+animal life on the island, never before visited by man, where he
+involuntarily passed the time from the middle of November 1741, to
+the end of August 1742.[358]
+
+It was the desire to procure for our museums the skins or skeletons
+of the many remarkable mammalia occurring here, also to compare the
+present state of the island which for nearly a century and a half
+has been exposed to the unsparing thirst of man for sport and
+plunder, with Steller's spirited and picturesque description, which
+led me to include a visit to the island in the plan of the
+expedition. The accounts I got at Behring Island from the American
+newspapers of the anxiety which our wintering had caused in Europe
+led me indeed to make our stay there shorter than I at first
+intended. Our harvest of collections and observations was at all
+events extraordinarily abundant. But before I proceed to give an
+account of our own stay on the island, I must devote a few words to
+its discovery and the first wintering there, which has a quite
+special interest from the island having never before been trodden by
+the foot of man. The abundant animal life, then found there, gives
+us therefore one of the exceedingly few representations we possess
+of the animal world as it was before man, the lord of the creation,
+appeared.
+
+After Behring's vessel had drifted about a considerable time at
+random in the Behring Sea, in consequence of the severe
+scurvy-epidemic, which had spread to nearly all the men on board,
+without any dead reckoning being kept, and finally without sail or
+helmsman, literally at the mercy of wind and waves, those on board
+on the 15th/4th November, 1741, sighted land, off whose coast the
+vessel was anchored the following day at 5 o'clock P.M. An hour
+after the cable gave way, and an enormous sea threw the vessel
+towards the shore-cliffs. All appeared to be already lost. But the
+vessel, instead of being driven ashore by new waves, came
+unexpectedly into a basin 4-1/2 fathoms deep surrounded by rocks and
+with quite still water, being connected with the sea only by a
+single narrow opening. If the unmanageable vessel had not drifted
+just to that place it would certainly have gone to pieces, and all
+on board would have perished.
+
+[Illustration: NATIVES OF BEHRING ISLAND. (After a photograph.) ]
+
+It was only with great difficulty that the sick crew could put out a
+boat in which Lieut. Waxel and Steller landed. They found the land
+uninhabited, devoid of wood, and uninviting. But a rivulet with
+fresh clear water purled yet unfrozen down the mountain sides, and
+in the sand hills along the coast were found some deep pits, which
+when enlarged and covered with sails could be used as dwellings. The
+men who could still stand on their legs all joined in this work. On
+the 19th/8th November the sick could be removed to land, but, as
+often happens, many died when they were brought out of the cabin
+into the fresh air, others while they were being carried from the
+vessel or immediately after they came to land. All in whom the
+scurvy had taken the upper hand to that extent that they were
+already lying in bed on board the vessel, died. The survivors had
+scarcely time or strength to bury the dead, and found it difficult
+to protect the corpses from the hungry foxes that swarmed on the
+island and had not yet learned to be afraid of man. On the 20th/9th
+Behring was carried on land; he was already much reduced and
+dejected, and could not be induced to take exercise. He died on the
+19th/8th December.
+
+VITUS BEHRING was a Dane by birth, and when a young man had already
+made voyages to the East and West Indies. In 1707 he was received
+into the Russian navy as officer, and as such took part in all the
+warlike enterprises of that fleet against Sweden. He was in a way
+buried alive on the island that now bears his name, for at last he
+did not permit his men to remove the sand that lolled down upon him
+from the walls of the sand pit in which he rested. For he thought
+that the sand warmed his chilled body. Before the corpse could be
+properly buried it had therefore to be dug out of its bed, a
+circumstance which appears to have produced a disagreeable
+impression on the survivors. The two Lieutenants, Waxel and Chitrov,
+had kept themselves in pretty good health at sea, but now fell
+seriously ill, though they recovered. Only the physician of the
+expedition, Georg Wilhelm Steller, was all the time in good health,
+and that a single man of the whole crew escaped with his life was
+clearly clue to the skill of this gifted man, to his invincible
+energy and his cheerful and sanguine disposition. These qualities
+were also abundantly tested during the wintering. On the night
+before the 10th December/29th November, the vessel, on which no
+watch was kept, because all the men were required on land to care
+for the sick, was cast ashore by a violent E.S.E. storm. So great a
+quantity of provisions was thus lost, that the remaining stock was
+not sufficient by itself to yield enough food for all the men during
+a whole winter. Men were therefore sent out in all directions to
+inquire into the state of the land. They returned with the
+information that the vessel had stranded, not, as was hoped at
+first, on the mainland but on an uninhabited, woodless island. It
+was thus clear to the shipwrecked men that in order to be saved they
+could rely only on their judgment and strength. At the beginning
+they found that if any provisions were to be reserved for the voyage
+home, it was necessary that they should support themselves during
+winter to a considerable extent by hunting. They did not like to use
+the flesh of the fox for food, and at first kept to that of the
+sea-otter. This animal at present is very scarce on Behring Island,
+but at that time the shore was covered with whole herds of it. They
+had no fear of man, came from curiosity straight to the fires, and
+did not run away when any one approached. A dear-bought experience,
+however, soon taught them caution; at all events, from 800 to 900
+head were taken, a splendid catch when we consider that the skin of
+this animal at the Chinese frontier fetched from 80 to 100 roubles
+each. Besides, in the beginning of winter two whales stranded on the
+island. The shipwrecked men considered these then provision depots,
+and appear to have preferred whale blubber to the flesh of the
+sea-otter, which had an unpleasant taste and was tough as
+leather.[359]
+
+In spring the sea-otters disappeared, but now there came to the
+island in their stead other animals in large herds, viz sea-bears,
+seals, and sea-lions. The flesh of the young sea-lion was considered
+a great delicacy.[360] When the sea-otters became scarcer and more
+shy and difficult to catch, the shipwrecked men found means also to
+kill sea-cows, whose flesh Steller considered equal to beef. Several
+barrels of their flesh were even salted to serve as provisions
+during the return journey. As the land became clear of snow in the
+middle of April, Waxel called together the forty-five men who
+survived to a consultation regarding the steps that ought to be
+taken in order to reach the mainland. Among many different
+proposals, that was adopted of building a new vessel with the
+materials supplied by the stranded one. The three ship-carpenters
+who had been on board were dead. But fortunately there was among the
+survivors a Cossack, SAVA STARODUBZOV, who had taken part as a
+workman in shipbuilding at Okotsk, and now undertook to manage the
+building of the new vessel. With necessity for a teacher he also
+succeeded in executing his commission, so that a new _St. Peter_ was
+launched on the 21st/10th August, 1742. The vessel was forty feet
+long, thirteen feet beam, and six and a half feet deep, and sailed
+as well as if built by an experienced master of his craft, but on
+the other hand leaked seriously in a high sea. The return voyage at
+all events passed successfully. On the 5th September/25th August
+Kamchatka was sighted, and two days after the _St. Peter_ anchored
+at Petropaulovsk, where the shipwrecked men found a storehouse with
+an _abundant_ stock of provisions according to their ideas, which
+probably were not pitched very high. Next year they sailed on with
+their Behring-Island-built vessel to Okotsk. On then arrival there,
+of the seventy-six persons who originally took part in the
+expedition, thirty-two were dead. At Kamchatka they had all been
+considered dead, and the effects they left behind them had been
+scattered and divided. Steller voluntarily remained some time longer
+in Kamchatka in order to carry on his researches in natural history.
+Unfortunately he drew upon himself the ill-will of the authorities,
+in consequence of the free way in which he criticised their abuses.
+This led to a trial at the court at Irkutsk. He was, indeed, found
+innocent, and obtained permission to travel home, but at Zolikamsk
+he was overtaken by an express with orders to bring him back to
+Irkutsk. On the way thither he met another express with renewed
+permission to travel to Europe. But the powers of the strong and
+formerly healthy man were exhausted by his hunting backwards and
+forwards across the immeasurable deserts of Siberia. He died soon
+after, on the 23rd/12th November, 1746, at Tjumen, only thirty-seven
+years of age, of a fever by which he was attacked during the
+journey.[361]
+
+The immense quantity of valuable furs brought home by the survivors
+of Behring's so unfortunate third voyage affected the fur-dealers,
+Cossacks, and hunters of Siberia much in the same way as the rumour
+about Eldorado or about the riches of the Casic Dobaybe did the
+Spanish discoverers of middle and southern America. Numerous
+expeditions were fitted out to the new land rich in furs, where
+extensive territories previously unknown were made tributary to the
+Czar of Russia. Most of these expeditions landed on Behring Island
+during the voyage out and home, and in a short time wrought a
+complete change in the fauna of the island. Thanks to Steller's
+spirited sketch of the animal life he observed there, we have also
+an opportunity of forming an idea of the alteration in the fauna
+which man brings about in a land in which he settles.
+
+Arctic foxes were found in incredible numbers on the island during
+the wintering of the Behring expedition. They not only ate up
+everything that was at all eatable that was left in the open air,
+but forced their way as well by day as by night into the houses and
+carried off all that they could, even such things as were of no use
+whatever to them, as knives, sticks, sacks, shoes and stockings.
+Even if anything had been never so well buried and loaded with
+stones, they not only found the place but even pushed away the
+stones with their shoulders like men. Though they could not eat what
+they found, they carried it off and concealed it under stones. In
+such a case some foxes stood on guard, and if a man approached all
+assisted in speedily concealing the stolen article in the sand so
+that no trace of it was left. When any of the men slept out of doors
+at night the foxes carried off their caps and gloves, and made their
+way under the covering. They nosed the noses of the sleepers to find
+out whether they were dead or living, and attempted to nibble at any
+who held their breath. As the female sea-lions and sea-bears often
+suffocate their young during sleep, the foxes every morning made an
+inspection of the place where these animals lie down in immense
+herds, and if they found a dead young one they immediately helped
+each other, like good scavengers, to carry away the carcase. When
+men were employed out of doors they had to drive the foxes away with
+sticks, and they became, in consequence of the slyness and cunning
+with which they knew how to carry out their thefts and the skill
+which they showed in combining to gain an end which they could not
+compass as single animals, actually dangerous to the shipwrecked
+men, by whom they were therefore heartily hated, pursued, tormented,
+and killed. Since then thousands and thousands of foxes have been
+killed on Behring Island by the fur-hunters. Now they are so scarce
+that during our stay there we did not see one. Those that still
+survive, besides, as the Europeans settled on the island informed
+me, do not wear the precious dark blue dress formerly common but the
+white, which is of little value. On the neighbouring Copper Island,
+however, there are still dark blue foxes in pretty large
+numbers.[362]
+
+Nine hundred sea-otters were killed here by Steller and his
+companions in 1741-42. The following quotation is taken from
+Steller's description of this animal which is now so shy at the
+sight of man:--
+
+ "With respect to playfulness it surpasses every other
+ animal that lives either in the sea or on the land. When it
+ comes up out of the sea it shakes the water from its fur,
+ and dresses it as a cat its head with its fore-paws,
+ stretches its body, arranges its hair, throws its head this
+ way and that, contemplating itself and its beautiful fur
+ with evident satisfaction. The animal is so much taken up
+ with this dressing of itself, that while thus employed it
+ may easily be approached and killed. If one strikes a
+ sea-otter twenty times across the back, it bears it
+ patiently, but if its large beautiful tail be struck once
+ it turns its head to its pursuer, as if to offer it as a
+ mark for his club in place of the tail. If it eludes an
+ attack it makes the most laughable gestures to the hunter.
+ It looks at him, placing one foot above the head as if to
+ protect it from the sunlight, throws itself on its back,
+ and turning to its enemy as if in scorn scratches itself on
+ the belly and thighs. The male and female are much attached
+ to each other, embrace and kiss each other like men. The
+ female is also very fond of its young. When attacked she
+ never leaves it in the lurch, and when danger is not near
+ she plays with it in a thousand ways, almost like a
+ child-loving mother with her young ones, throws it
+ sometimes up in the air and catches it with her fore-feet
+ like a ball, swims about with it in her bosom, throws it
+ away now and then to let it exercise itself in the art of
+ swimming, but takes it to herself with kisses and caresses
+ when it is tired."
+
+According to recent researches the _sea-otter_, sea-beaver or
+Kamchatka-beaver (_Enhydris lutris_, Lin.) is a species neither of
+the otter nor the beaver, but belongs to a peculiar genus, allied to
+a certain extent to the walrus. Even this animal, unsurpassed in the
+beauty of its skin, has been long since driven away not only from
+Behring Island but also from most of the hunting-grounds where it
+was commonly killed by thousands, and if an effective law be not
+soon put in force to keep the hunting in bounds, and check the war
+of extermination which greed now carries on against it, no longer
+with clubs and darts but with powder and breechloaders, the
+sea-otter will meet the same fate which has already befallen
+Steller's sea-cow. Of the sea-lion (_Eumetopias Stelleri_, Lesson),
+which in Steller's time were found in abundance on the shore cliffs
+of Behring Island, there are now only single animals there along
+with the sea-bears (_Otaria ursina_, Lin.); and finally, the most
+remarkable of all the old mammalia of Behring Island, the great
+sea-cow, is completely extinct.
+
+_Steller's sea-cow_ (_Rhytina Stelleri_, Cuvier) in a way took the
+place of the cloven-footed animals among the marine mammalia. The
+sea-cow was of a dark-brown colour, sometimes varied with white
+spots or streaks. The thick leathery skin was covered with hair
+which grew together so as to form an exterior skin, which was full
+of vermin and resembled the bark of an old oak. The full grown
+animal was from twenty-eight to thirty-five English feet in length
+and weighed about sixty-seven cwt. The head was small in proportion
+to the large thick body, the neck short, the body diminishing
+rapidly behind. The short fore-leg terminated abruptly without
+fingers or nails, but was overgrown with a number of short thickly
+placed brush-hairs, the hind-leg was replaced by a tail-fin
+resembling a whale's. The animal wanted teeth, but was instead
+provided with two masticating plates, one in the gum the other in
+the under jaw. The udders of the female, which abounded in milk,
+were placed between the fore-limbs. The flesh and milk resembled
+those of horned cattle, indeed in Steller's opinion surpassed them.
+The sea-cows were almost constantly employed in pasturing on the
+sea-weed which grew luxuriantly on the coast, moving the head and
+neck while so doing much in the same way as an ox. While they
+pastured they showed great voracity, and did not allow themselves to
+be disturbed in the least by the presence of man. One might even
+touch them without them being frightened or disturbed. They
+entertained great attachment to each other, and when one was
+harpooned the others made incredible attempts to rescue it.
+
+When Steller came to Behring Island, the sea-cows pastured along the
+shore, collected like cattle into herds. The shipwrecked men, for
+want of suitable implements, did not hunt them at first. It was only
+after a thoughtless love of slaughter had driven all other animals
+suitable for food far from their winter quarters, that they began to
+devise means to catch the sea-cow also. They endeavoured to harpoon
+the animal with a strong iron hook made for the purpose, and then
+drag it to land. The first attempt was made on the 1st June/21st May
+1742, but it was unsuccessful. It was not until after many renewed
+attempts that they at last succeeded in killing and catching a
+number of animals, and dragging them at high water so near land that
+they were dry at ebb. They were so heavy that forty men were
+required to do this, we may conclude from these particulars that the
+number of sea-cows killed during the first wintering on Behring
+Island was not very large. For the first one was killed only six
+weeks before the shipwrecked men left the island, and the hunting
+thus fell at a time when they could leave the building of the vessel
+to occupy themselves in that way only in case of necessity. Besides,
+only two animals were required to yield flesh-food to all the men
+for the period in question.
+
+It is remarkable that the sea-cow is so mentioned by later
+travellers only in passing, that this large animal, still hunted by
+Europeans in the time of Linnaeus, would scarcely have been
+registered in the system of the naturalist if Steller had not
+wintered on Behring Island. What Krascheninnikov says of the sea-cow
+is wholly borrowed from Steller, and in the same way _nearly all_
+the statements of later naturalists as to its occurrence and mode of
+life. That this is actually the case is shown by the following
+abstract, _complete_ as far as I know, of what is said of the
+sea-cow in the only original account of the first hunting voyages of
+the Russians to the Aleutian Islands, which was published at Hamburg
+and Leipzig in 1776 with the title, _Neue, Nachrichten von denen
+neuentdeckten Insuln in der See zwischen Asien und Amerika, aus
+mitgetheilten Urkunden und Auszuegen verfasset von J.L.S._**
+(Scherer).[363] In this book the sea-cow is mentioned at the
+following places:--
+
+ "Ivan Krassilnikoff's vessel started first in 1754 and
+ arrived on the 8th October at Behring Island, where all the
+ vessels fitted out for hunting the sea-otter on the remote
+ islands are wont to pass the winter, in order to provide
+ themselves with a sufficient stock of the flesh of the
+ sea-cow" (_loc. cit._ p. 38).
+
+ "The autumn storms, or rather the wish to take on board a
+ stock of provisions, compelled them (a number of hunters
+ sent out by the merchant Tolstyk under command of the
+ Cossack Obeuchov) to touch at Commander's Island (Behring
+ Island) where, during the winter up to the 24th/13th June,
+ 1757, they obtained nothing else than sea-cows, sea-lions,
+ and large seals. They found no sea-otters this year."
+ (_ibid_ p. 40).
+
+ "They (a Russian hunting vessel under Studenzov in 1758)
+ landed on Behring Island to kill sea-cows, as all vessels
+ are accustomed to do." (_ibid_ p. 45).
+
+ "After Korovin in 1762 (on Behring Island) had provided
+ himself with a sufficient stock of the flesh and hides of
+ the sea-cow for his boats.... he sailed on" (_ibid_ p. 82).
+
+In 1772 DMITRI BRAGIN wintered on Behring Island during a hunting
+voyage. In a journal kept at the request of Pallas, the large marine
+animals occurring on the island are enumerated, but not a word is
+said about the sea-cow (PALLAS, _Neue nordische Beytraege_, ii. p.
+310).
+
+SCHELECHOV passed the winter 1783-84 on Behring Island, but during
+the whole time he only succeeded in killing some white foxes, and in
+the narrative of the voyage there is not a word about the sea-cow
+(GRIGORI SCHELECHOV _russischen Kaufmanns erste und zweite Reise_,
+&c., St. Petersburg, 1793).
+
+Some further accounts of the sea-cow have been obtained through the
+mining engineer PET. JAKOVLEV, who visited Commander's Islands in
+1755 in order to investigate the occurrence of copper on Copper
+Island. In the account of this voyage which he gave to Pallas there
+is not indeed one word about the sea-cow, but in 1867 PEKARSKI
+published in the _Memoirs_ of the Petersburg Academy some extracts
+from Jakovlev's journal, from which it appears that the sea-cow
+already in his time was driven away from Copper Island. Jakovlev on
+this account on the 27th November, 1755, laid a petition before the
+authorities on Kamchatka, for having the hunting of the sea-cow
+placed under restraint of law and the extermination of the animal
+thus prevented, a thoughtful act honourable to its author, which
+certainly ought to serve as a pattern in our times (J. FR. BRANDT,
+_Symbolae Sirenologicae, Mem. de l'Acad. de St. Petersbourg_, t.
+xii. No. 1, 1861-68, p. 295).
+
+In his account of Behring's voyage (1785-94) published in 1802,
+Sauer says, p. 181: "Sea-cows were very common on Kamchatka and the
+Aleutian Islands,[364] when they were first discovered, but the last
+was killed on Behring Island in 1768, and none has been seen since
+then."
+
+On the ground of the writings of which I have given an account
+above, and of various pieces of information collected during this
+century from the Russian authorities in the region, by the skilful
+conservator WOSNESSENSKI, the academicians von Baer and Brandt[365]
+came to the conclusion that the sea-cow had scarcely been seen by
+Europeans before the 19th/8th November, 1741, when Steller, the day
+after his landing on Behring Island for the first time saw some
+strange animals pasturing with their heads under water on the shores
+of the island; and that the animal twenty-seven years afterwards, or
+in 1768, was completely exterminated The latter statement however is
+undoubtedly incorrect; for, in the course of the many inquiries I
+made of the natives, I obtained distinct information that living
+sea-cows had been seen much later. A _creole_ (that is, the
+offspring of a Russian and an Aleutian), who was sixty-seven years
+of age, of intelligent appearance and in the full possession of his
+mental faculties, stated "that his father died in 1847 at the age of
+eighty-eight. He had come from Volhynia, his native place, to
+Behring Island at the age of eighteen, accordingly in 1777. The two
+or three first years of his stay there, _i.e._ till 1779 or 1780,
+sea-cows were still being killed as they pastured on sea-weed. The
+heart only was eaten, and the hide used for _baydars_.[366] In
+consequence of its thickness the hide was split in two, and the two
+pieces thus obtained had gone to make a _baydar_ twenty feet long,
+seven and a half feet broad, and three feet deep. After that time no
+sea-cows had been killed."
+
+There is evidence, however, that a sea-cow had been seen at the
+island still later. Two _creoles_, Feodor Mertchenin and Stepnoff,
+stated, that about twenty-five years ago at Tolstoj-mys, on the east
+side of the island, they had seen an animal unknown to them which
+was very thick before, but grew smaller behind, had small fore-feet,
+and appeared with a length of about fifteen feet above water, now
+raising itself up, now lowering itself. The animal "blew," not
+through blowholes, but through the mouth, which was somewhat drawn
+out. It was brown in colour with some lighter spots. A back fin was
+wanting, but when the animal raised itself it was possible, on
+account of its great leanness, to see its backbone projecting. I
+instituted a through examination of both my informants. Their
+accounts agreed completely, and appeared to have claims to be
+regarded as trustworthy. That the animal which they saw was actually
+a sea-cow, is clearly proved both by the description of the animal's
+form and way of pasturing in the water, and by the account of the
+way in which it breathed, its colour, and leanness. In _Auesfurliche
+Beschreibung von sonderbaren Meerthieren_, Steller says, p. 97,
+"While they pasture, they raise every fourth or fifth minute their
+nose from the water in order to blow out air and a little water;" p.
+98, "During winter they are so lean that it is possible to count
+their vertebrae and ribs;" and p. 54, "Some sea-cows have pretty
+large white spots and streaks, so that they have a spotted
+appearance." As these natives had no knowledge of Steller's
+description of the animal, it is impossible that their statement can
+be false. The death-year of the Rhytina race must therefore be
+altered at least to 1854. With reference to this point it may be
+remarked that many circumstances indicate that the Rhytina herds
+were rather driven away from the rich pastures on Behring Island
+than exterminated there, and that the species became extinct because
+in their new haunt they were unable to maintain the struggle for
+existence. The form of the sea-cow, varying from that of most recent
+animals, besides indicates that, like the long-tailed duck on
+Iceland, the dront on Mauritius, and the large ostrich-like birds on
+New Zealand, it was the last representative of an animal group
+destined to extinction.
+
+Mr. OSCHE, one of the Alaska Company's skin inspectors, a native of
+Liffland and at present settled on Copper Island, informed me that
+the bones of the sea-cow also occurred on the western side of that
+island. On the other hand, such bones are said not to be found on
+the small island described farther on lying off the colony on
+Behring Island, although Rhytina bones are common on the
+neighbouring shores of the main island.
+
+This is the scanty information I have been able to collect from the
+natives and others resident in the quarter regarding the animal in
+question. On the other hand, my endeavours to procure Rhytina bones
+were crowned with greater success, and I succeeded in actually
+bringing together a very large and fine collection of skeleton
+fragments.
+
+When I first made the acquaintance of Europeans on the island, they
+told me that there was little probability of finding anything of
+value in this respect, for the company had offered 150 roubles for a
+skeleton without success. But before I had been many hours on land,
+I came to know that large or small collections of bones were to be
+found here and there in the huts of the natives. These I purchased,
+intentionally paying for them such a price that the seller was more
+than satisfied and his neighbours were a little envious. A great
+part of the male population now began to search for bones very
+eagerly, and in this way I collected such a quantity that twenty-one
+casks, large boxes, or barrels were filled with Rhytina bones; among
+which were three very fine, complete skulls, and others more or less
+damaged, several considerable collections of bones from the same
+skeleton, &c.
+
+[Illustration: SKELETON OF RHYTINA SHOWN AT THE 'VEGA' EXHIBITION AT
+THE ROYAL PALACE STOCKHOLM. (After a photograph.) ]
+
+[Illustration: ORIGINAL DRAWINGS OF THE RHYTINA.
+1. Drawing in an old map of the Behring Sea, found by Middendorff
+ (_Sibir. Reise_ iv. 2 p. 839).
+2. Sketch by Steller, given to Pallas
+ (Pallas, Icones ad zoographiam _Rosso-Asiaticam_, Fasc. ii.) ]
+
+The Rhytina bones do not lie at the level of the sea, but upon a
+strand-bank thickly overgrown with luxuriant grass, at a height of
+two or three metres above it. They are commonly covered with a layer
+of earth and gravel from thirty to fifty centimetres in thickness.
+In order to find them, as it would be too troublesome to dig the
+whole of the grassy bank, one must examine the ground with a pointed
+iron rod, a bayonet, or some such tool. One soon learns to
+distinguish, by the resistance and nature of the sound, whether the
+rod stuck into the ground has come into contact with a stone, a
+piece of wood, or a fragment of bone. The ribs are used by the
+natives, on account of their hard ivory-like structure, for shoeing
+the runners of the sledges or for carvings. They have accordingly
+been already used up on a large scale, and are more uncommon than
+other bones. The finger-bone, which perhaps originally was
+cartilaginous, appears in most cases to be quite destroyed, as well
+as the outermost vertebrae of the tail. I could not obtain any such
+bones, though I specially urged the natives to get me the smaller
+bones too and promised to pay a high price for them.
+
+[Illustration: RECONSTRUCTED FORM OF THE SEA-COW. After J. Fr. Brandt
+(_Symbolae Sirenologicae_, Fasc. iii. p. 282). ]
+
+The only large animal which is still found on Behring Island in
+perhaps as large numbers as in Steller's time is the _sea-bear_.
+Even it had already diminished so that the year's catch was
+inconsiderable,[367] when in 1871 a single company obtained for a
+payment to the Russian crown, if I recollect right, of two roubles
+for every animal killed, and exclusive right to the hunting, which
+was accordingly arranged in a more purposelike way. At certain times
+of the year the killing of the sea-bear is wholly prohibited. The
+number of the animals to be killed is settled beforehand, quite in
+the same way as the farmer at the time of killing in autumn is wont
+to do with his herd of cattle. Females and young are only killed
+exceptionally. Even the married males, or more correctly the males
+that can get themselves a harem and can defend it, commonly escape
+being killed, if not for any other reason, because the skin is too
+often torn and tattered and the hair pulled out. It is thus the
+bachelors that have to yield up their skins.
+
+That a wild animal may be slaughtered in so orderly a way, depends on
+its peculiar mode of life.[368] For the sea-bears are found year after
+year during summer at certain points projecting into the sea
+(rookeries), where, collected in hundreds of thousands, they pass
+several months without the least food. The males (oxen) come first to
+the place, most of them in the month of May or at the beginning of June.
+Combats of excessive violence, often with a deadly issue for one of the
+parties, now arise regarding the space of about a hundred square feet,
+which each seal-ox considers necessary for its home. The strongest and
+most successful in fight retain the best places near the shore, the
+weaker have to crawl farther up on land, where the expectation of
+getting a sufficient number of spouses is not particularly great. The
+fighting goes on with many feigned attacks and parades. At first the
+contest concerns the proprietorship of the soil. The attacked therefore
+never follows its opponent beyond the area it has once taken up, but
+haughtily lays itself down, when the enemy has retired, in order in the
+aims of sleep to collect forces for a new combat. The animal in such a
+case grunts with satisfaction, throws itself on its back, scratches
+itself with its fore-feet, looks after its toilet, or cools itself by
+slowly fanning with one of its hind-feet, but it is always on the alert
+and ready for a new fight until it is tired out and meets its match, and
+is driven by it farther up from the beach. One of the most peculiar
+traits of these animals is that during their stay on land they
+unceasingly use their hind-paws as fans, and sometimes also as parasols.
+Such fans may on a warm day be in motion at the same time by the hundred
+thousand at a "rookery."
+
+[Illustration: SEA-BEARS Male, Female, and Young. (From a water colour
+painting by H.W. Elliott.) ]
+
+In the middle of June the females come up from the sea. At the
+water's edge they are received in a very accommodating way by some
+strong oxen that have succeeded in securing for themselves places
+next the shore, and now are bent by fair means or foul on annexing
+the fair for their harem. But scarcely is the female that has come
+up out of the water established with seal-ox No. 1, when this ox
+rushes towards a new beauty on the surface of the water. Seal-ox No.
+2 now stretches out his neck and without ceremony lays hold of No.
+1's spouse, to be afterwards exposed to a repetition of the trick by
+No. 3. In such cases the females are quite passive, never fall out
+with each other, and bear with patience the severe wounds they often
+get when they are pulled about by the combatants, now in one
+direction, now in another. All the females are finally distributed
+in this way after furious combats among the males, those of the
+latter who are nearest the beach getting from twelve to fifteen
+consorts to their share. Those that have been compelled to settle
+farther from the shore must be content with four or five. Soon after
+the landing of the females they bring forth their young, which are
+treated with great indifference and are protected by the adopted
+father only within the boundaries of the harem. Next comes the
+pairing season, and when it has passed there is an end to the
+arrangement and distribution into families at first so strictly
+maintained. The seal-oxen, rendered lean by three months absolute
+fasting, by degrees leave the "rookery," which is taken possession
+of by the sea-cows, the young, and a number of young males, that
+have not ventured to the place before. In the middle of September,
+when the young have learned to swim, the place is quite abandoned,
+with the exception of single animals that have remained behind for
+one reason or other. In long continued heavy rain many of the
+animals besides seek protection in the sea, but return when the rain
+ceases. Continuous heat and sunshine besides exert the same
+influence, cold, moist air, with mist-concealed sun, on the other
+hand draw them up on land by thousands.
+
+Males under six years of age cannot, like the older males, possess
+themselves, by fighting, of spouses and a home of their own. They
+therefore collect, along with young females, in herds of several
+thousand to several hundred thousand, on the shores between the
+rookeries proper, some of them close packed next the water's edge,
+others scattered in small flocks a little farther from the shore on
+the grass, where they by turns play with each other with a
+frolicsomeness like that of young dogs, by turns he down to sleep at
+a common signal in all conceivable positions.
+
+[Illustration: "SEAL ROOKERY" ON ST. PAUL'S ISLAND, ONE OF THE
+PRIBYLOV ISLANDS. (After a drawing by H.W. Elliott.) ]
+
+It is these unfortunate useless bachelors which at the properly
+managed hunting stations yield the contingent for slaughter. For
+this purpose they are driven by the natives from the shore slowly,
+about a kilometre an hour, and with frequent rests, to the place of
+slaughter, situated a kilometre or two from the shore. Then the
+females and the young ones are driven away, as well as the males
+whose skins are unserviceable. The rest are first stunned with a
+blow on the head, and afterwards stabbed with a knife.
+
+While the _Vega_ steamed down towards Behring Island we met, already
+far from land, herds of sea-bears, which followed the vessel from
+curiosity for long stretches. Being unacquainted with the sea-bear's
+mode of life, I believed from this circumstance that they had
+already left their summer haunts, but on our arrival at the colony I
+was informed that this was not the case, but that a very great
+number of animals still remained at the rookery on the north-eastern
+point of the island. Naturally one of our first excursions was to
+this place, situated about twenty kilometres from the village. Such
+a journey cannot now be undertaken alone and unattended, because
+even an involuntary want of caution might easily cause much economic
+loss to the natives, and to the company that owns the right of
+hunting. During the journey we were accordingly accompanied by the
+chief of the village, a black-haired stammering Aleutian, and "the
+Cossack," a young, pleasant, and agreeable fellow, who on solemn
+occasions wore a sabre nearly as long as himself, but besides did
+not in the least correspond to the Cossack type of the writers of
+novels and plays.
+
+The journey was performed in large sledges drawn by ten dogs over
+snow-free rounded hills and hill-plateaus covered with a rather
+scanty vegetation, and through valleys treeless as the mountains,
+but adorned with luxuriant vegetation, rich in splendid lilies,
+syngenesia, umbellifera, &c. The journey was sometimes tedious
+enough, but we now and then went at a whistling rate, especially
+when the dog-team descended the steep mountain slopes, or went
+through the morasses and the clay puddles formed in the constantly
+used way. The driver was bespattered from top to toe with a thick
+layer of mud, an inconvenience attending the unusual team, which was
+foreseen before our departure from the colony, in consequence of
+which our friends there urged that, notwithstanding the fine
+weather, we should all take overcoats. The dog-team was kept pretty
+far from the shore in order not to frighten the seals, and then we
+went on foot to the place where the sea-bears were, choosing our way
+so that we had the wind in our faces. We could in this way, without
+disturbing them, come very near the animals, which, according to the
+undoubtedly somewhat exaggerated statement made to us on the spot,
+were collected at the time to the number of 200,000, on the
+promontory and the neighbouring shores. We obtained permission to
+creep, accompanied by our guide, close to a herd lying a little
+apart. The older animals became at first somewhat uneasy when they
+observed our approach, but they soon settled down completely,
+and we had now the pleasure of beholding a peculiar spectacle.
+We were the only spectators. The scene consisted of a beach
+covered with stones and washed by foaming breakers, the background
+of the immeasurable ocean, and the actors of thousands of
+wonderfully-formed animals. A number of old males lay still and
+motionless, heedless of what was going on around them. Others
+crept clumsily on their small short legs between the stones of
+the beach, or swam with incredible agility among the breakers,
+played, caressed each other, and quarrelled. At one place two
+old animals fought, uttering a peculiar hissing sound, and in
+such a way as if the attack and defence had been carried out in
+studied attitudes. At another place a feigned combat was going
+on between an old and a young animal. It looked as if the latter
+was being instructed in the art of fighting. Everywhere the small
+black young ones crept constantly backwards and forwards among the
+old sea-bears, now and then bleating like lambs calling on their
+mothers. The young ones are often smothered by the old, when the
+latter, frightened in some way, rush out into the sea. After such
+an alarm hundreds of dead young are found on the shore.
+
+[Illustration: SLAUGHTER OF SEA-BEARS. (After a drawing by H.W.
+Elliott.) ]
+
+[Illustration: SEA-BEARS ON THEIR WAY TO THE "ROOKERIES."
+(After a drawing by H.W. Elliott.) ]
+
+"Only" thirteen thousand animals had been killed that year. Their
+flayed carcases lay heaped on the grass by the shore, spreading far
+and wide a disagreeable smell, which, however, had not frightened
+away their comrades lying on the neighbouring promontory, because,
+even among them, a similar smell prevailed in consequence of the
+many animals suffocated or killed in fight with their comrades, and
+left lying on the shore.[369] Among this great flock of sea-bears
+sat enthroned on the top of a high stone a single sea-lion, the only
+one of these animals we saw during our voyage.
+
+For a payment of forty roubles I induced the chief of the village to
+skeletonise four of the half putrefied carcases of the sea-bear left
+lying on the grass, and I afterwards obtained, by the good-will of
+the Russian authorities, and without any payment, six animals, among
+them two living young, for stuffing. Even the latter we were
+compelled to kill, after in vain attempting to induce them to take
+some food. One of them was brought home in spirits for anatomical
+examination.
+
+The part of Behring Island which we saw forms a high plain resting
+on volcanic rocks,[370] which, however, is interrupted at many
+places by deep kettle valleys, the bottoms of which are generally
+occupied by lakes which communicate with the sea by large or small
+rivers. The banks of the lakes and the slopes of the hills are
+covered with a luxuriant vegetation, rich in long grass and
+beautiful flowers, among them an iris cultivated in our gardens, the
+useful dark reddish-brown Sarana lily, several orchids, two species
+of rhododendron with large flowers, umbellifera as high as a man,
+sunflower-like synanthea, &c. Quite another nature prevailed on the
+island lying off the haven, regarding which Dr. Kjellman and Dr.
+Stuxberg make the following statements:--
+
+ "Toporkoff Island is formed of an eruptive rock, which
+ everywhere rises along the shore some scores of feet from
+ high-water mark, in the form of steep cracked walls from
+ five to fifteen metres in height, which is different at
+ different places. Above these steep rock-walls the surface
+ of the island forms an even plain; what lies below them
+ forms a gently sloping beach.
+
+ "This gently sloping beach consists of two well-marked
+ belts; an outer devoid of all vegetation, an inner
+ overgrown with _Ammadenia peploides, Elymus mollis_, and
+ two species of umbellifera, _Heracleum sibiricum_, and
+ _Angelica archangelica_, the two last forming an almost
+ impenetrable thicket fifty metres broad and as high as a
+ man, along the slope. The steep rock-walls are coloured
+ yellow at some places by lichens, mostly _Calopaca murorum_
+ and _Cal. crenulata_; at other places they are covered
+ pretty closely with _Cochlearia fenestrata_. The uppermost
+ level plain is covered with a close and luxuriant turf,
+ over which single stalks of the two species of umbellifera
+ named above raise themselves here and there. The vegetation
+ on this little island unites a very uncommon poverty in
+ species with a high degree of luxuriance.
+
+ "Of the higher animals we saw only four kinds of birds, viz
+ _Fratercula cirrhata_, a black guillemot (_Una grylle_ var.
+ _columba_), a species of cormorant (Phalocrocorax) and a
+ sort of gull (Larus). _Fratercula cirrhata_ lived here by
+ millions. They haunted the upper plain, where they had
+ everywhere excavated short, deep, and uncommonly broad
+ passages to sleep in, provided with two openings. From
+ these on our arrival they flew in large flocks to the
+ neighbouring sea and back. Their number was nearly equal to
+ that of looms in the Arctic loomeries. The black guillemots
+ and cormorants kept to the cliffs near the shore.
+
+ "The number of the evertebrate land animals amounted to
+ about thirty species. The most numerous were Machilis,
+ Vitrina, Lithobius, Talitrus, some Diptera and beetles.
+ They all lived on the inner belt of the shore, where the
+ ground was uncommonly damp."
+
+Behring Island might without difficulty feed large herds of cattle,
+perhaps as numerous as the herds of sea-cows that formerly pastured
+on its shores. The sea-cow besides had chosen its pasture with
+discrimination, the sea there being, according to Dr. Kjellman, one
+of the richest in algae in the world. The sea-bottom is covered at
+favourably situated places by forests of seaweed from twenty to
+thirty metres high, which are so dense that the dredge could with
+difficulty force its way down into them, a circumstance which was
+much against the dredging. Certain of the algae are used by the
+natives as food.
+
+In the course of our journey to the hunting place we had an
+opportunity, during a rest about halfway between it and the village,
+of taking part in a very peculiar sort of fishing. The place where
+we rested was in an even grassy plain, resembling a natural meadow
+at home, crossed by a large number of small rivulets. They abounded
+in several different kinds of fish, among them a Coregonus, a small
+trout, a middle-sized long salmon with almost white flesh, though
+the colour of its skin was a purplish-red, another salmon of about
+the same length, but thick and hump-backed. These fish were easily
+caught. They were taken with the hand, were harpooned with common
+unshod sticks, were stabbed with knives, caught with the insect net,
+&c. Other kinds of salmon with deep red flesh are to be found in the
+large rivers of the island. We obtained here for a trifle a welcome
+change from the preserved provisions of which we had long ago become
+quite tired. The Expedition was also presented by the Alaska Company
+with a fine fat ox, milk, and various other provisions, and I cannot
+sufficiently value the goodwill shown to us not only by the Russian
+official, N GREBNITSKI, a zealous and skilful naturalist, but also
+by the officials of the Alaska Company and all others living on the
+island with whom we came into contact.
+
+[Illustration: ALGA FROM THE SHORE OF BEHRING ISLAND.
+_Thalassiophyllum Clathrus_ Post. and Rupr.
+One-fourth of the natural size. ]
+
+It was my original intention to sail from Behring Island to
+Petiopaulovsk, in order from thence to put a stop to the
+undertakings which were possibly in contemplation for our relief.
+This however became unnecessary, because a steamer, which was to
+start for Petropaulovsk as soon as its cargo was on board, had
+anchored by the side of the _Vega_ two days after our arrival. The
+steamer belonged to the Alaska Company, was named the _Alexander_,
+was commanded by Captain SANDMAN, and was manned almost exclusively
+by Swedes, Danes, Fins, and Norwegians[371]. We found on the
+_Alexander_ two naturalists, Dr. BENEDIKT DYBOVSKI and Dr. JULIAN
+WIEMUT. The former is a Pole exiled to Siberia but now pardoned,
+whose masterly zoological works are among the best contributions
+which have been made during recent decades to our knowledge of the
+natural conditions of Siberia. His researches have hitherto mainly
+concerned the Baikal region. Now he wishes to extend them to
+Kamchatka, and has therefore voluntarily taken a physician's post at
+Petropaulovsk. Science has reason to expect very rich results from
+his work and that of his companions in one of the most interesting,
+most mis-known, and least known lands of the north.
+
+The _Vega_ left Behring Island on the afternoon of the 19th August, and
+anchored at Yokohama on the evening of the 2nd September. The first part
+of the passage, while we were still in the cold northerly Polar Sea
+current, was favoured by fair winds and moderate heat. The surface
+temperature of the sea was from +9 deg. to +10 deg.. On the 25th August in 45 deg.
+15' N.L. and 156 deg. E.L. from Greenwich the temperature of the sea-water
+began to rise so rapidly that the thermometer in 40 deg. Lat. and 147 deg. 41'
+Long already showed +23.4 deg. at the surface. This indicated that we had
+come from the cold current favourable to us into Kuro-sivo, the Gulf
+Stream of the Pacific. The wind was now at times unfavourable and the
+heat oppressive, notwithstanding the frequent rain showers accompanied
+by lightning and heavy squalls. In such unfavourable weather on the 31st
+August the mainmast of the _Vega_ was struck by lightning, the flash and
+the report being of excessive violence. The vane was broken loose and
+thrown into the sea along with some inches of the pole. The pole itself
+was split pretty far down, and all on board felt a more or less violent
+shaking, the man who felt it most standing at the time near the
+hawse-hole. The incident was not attended by any further noteworthy
+unpleasant consequences.
+
+On our arrival at Yokohama we were all in good health and the _Vega_
+in excellent condition, though, after the long voyage, in want of
+some minor repairs, of docking, and possibly of coppering. Naturally
+among thirty men some mild attacks of illness could not be avoided
+in the course of a year, but no disease had been generally
+prevalent, and our state of health had constantly been excellent. Of
+scurvy we had not seen a trace.
+
+
+[Footnote 356: In February 1871 the right of hunting on these islands
+was granted by the Russian government to Hutchinson, Kohl,
+Philippeus &c. Co., who have made over their rights to the Alaska
+Commercial Company of San Francisco. ]
+
+[Footnote 357: According to a communication made to me by Mr. Henry
+W. Elliot, who, in order to study the fur-bearing seals in the North
+Behring Sea, lived a considerable time at the Seal Islands
+(Pribylov's Islands, &c.) on the American side, and has given an
+exceedingly interesting account of the animal life there in his
+work, _A Report upon the Condition of Affairs in the Territory of
+Alaska_, Washington, 1875, the statement in my report to Dr.
+Dickson, founded on oral communications of Europeans whom I met with
+at Behring Island, that from 50,000 to 100,000 animals are killed
+yearly at Behring and Copper Island, is thus probably somewhat
+exaggerated. ]
+
+[Footnote 358: Original accounts of the wintering on Behring Island
+are to be found in Mueller's _Sammlung Russischen Geschichte_, St
+Petersburg, 1768, iii, pp. 228-238 and 242-268, (Steller's)
+_Topographische und physikalische Beschreibung der Beringsinsel_
+(Pallas' _Neue Nordische Beytraege_, St. Petersburg and Leipzig,
+1781-83, ii. p. 225), G.W. Steller's _Tagebuch seiner Seereise aus
+dem Petripauls Hafen. . . und seiner Begebenheiten auf der
+Rueckreise_ (Pallas' _Neueste Nordische Beytraege_, St. Petersburg and
+Leipzig, 1793-96, i. p. 130; ii. p. 1). ]
+
+[Footnote 359: According to Mueller, whose statements (based on
+communications by Waxel?) often differ from those of Steller. The
+latter says that the flesh of the sea-otter is better than that of
+the seal, and a good antidote to scurvy. The flesh of the young
+sea-otter might even compete with lamb as a delicacy. ]
+
+[Footnote 360: To judge by what is stated in Steller's description
+of Behring Island (_Neue nord. Beytr._, ii, p. 290) no one would
+have dared to attack "diese grimmigen Thiere," and the only sea-lion
+eaten during the winter was an animal wounded at Kamchatka and
+thrown up dead on the coast of Behring Island. The fin-like feet
+were the most delicate part of the sea-lion. ]
+
+[Footnote 361: According to Mueller's official report, probably
+written for the purpose of refuting the rumours regarding Steller's
+fate current in the scientific circles of Europe. According to the
+biography prefixed to Georg Wilhelm Steller's _Beschreibung von dem
+Lande Kamtschatka, herausgegeben von J.B.S._ (Scheerer), Frankfurt
+and Leipzig, 1774, Steller had in 1745 begun his return to St.
+Petersburg, and was already beyond Novgorod, when he received orders
+to appear before the court at Irkutsk. After a year he obtained
+permission to travel to St. Petersburg, but when he came to the
+neighbourhood of Moscow, he received a new order to return, and for
+farther security he was placed under a guard. They had travelled a
+good way into Siberia, when he froze to death while the guard went
+into a public-house to warm themselves and quench their thirst. ]
+
+[Footnote 362: As early as Schelechov's wintering at 1783-84 the
+foxes on Behring Island were principally white. During Steller's
+wintering, over a third of the foxes on the island had a bluish fur
+(_Neue nord. Beytr._, ii, p. 277). In the year 1747-48 a fur hunter,
+Cholodilov, caught on Behring Island 1,481 blue foxes and 350
+sea-otters, and the following year another hunter returned with over
+a thousand sea otters and two thousand blue foxes, which probably
+were also caught on Behring and Copper Islands (_Neue Nachrichten
+von denen neuentdeckten Insuln_, Hamburg u Leipzig, 1766, p. 20). In
+the year 1751-53 Jugov caught on the same island 790 sea-otters,
+6,844 black and 200 white foxes, and 2,212 sea-bears (_loc. cit._ p.
+22). In 1752-53 the crew of a vessel belonging to the Irkutsk
+merchant, Nikifor Trapeznikoff, caught on Behring Island 5
+sea-otters, 1,222 foxes (colour not stated), and 2,500 sea-bears
+(_loc. cit._ p. 32). It thus appears as if the eager hunting had an
+influence not only on the number of the animals but also on their
+colour, the variety in greatest demand becoming also _relatively_
+less common than before. ]
+
+[Footnote 363: From this little work, compiled from the original
+journals (Cf. Coxe, _Russian Discoveries_, 1780, p. vi.) we see that
+the undaunted courage and the resolution which, matched with other
+qualities not so praiseworthy, distinguished the _Promyschlenni_
+during their expeditions of exploration, tribute-collecting, and
+plunder from the Ob to Kamchatka, did not fail them in the attempt
+to force their way across the sea to America. It happens yearly that
+a ship's crew save themselves from destruction in the most
+extraordinary craft, for necessity has no law. But it is perhaps not
+so common that an exploring expedition, wrecked on an uninhabited
+treeless island, builds for itself of fragments from its own vessel,
+indeed even of driftwood, a new one in order to sail out on the
+ocean to discover new fishing-grounds or new wild tribes, willing to
+pay "jassak" to the adventurers. This however happened very
+frequently during the Russian voyages of discovery and hunting to
+the Aleutian Islands from 1745 to 1770, and it was remarkable that
+the craft built in this way were used for years, even after the
+return from the first voyage. ]
+
+[Footnote 364: The sea-cow does not appear to have ever occurred on
+the Aleutian Islands; on the other hand, according to Steller, dead
+sea-cows have sometimes been cast ashore on Kamchatka, where they
+even obtained from the Russians a peculiar name _kapustnik_, derived
+from the large quantity of sea-weed found in their stomach. It
+appears to me that this name, specially distinctive of a
+graminivorous animal, appeals to indicate that on the first arrival
+of the Russians at Kamchatka the sea-cow actually visited
+occasionally the coasts of that peninsula. It is probable that in
+former times the sea-cow was to be met with as far south as the
+north part of Japan. Some scientific men have even conjectured that
+the animal may have occurred north of Behring's Straits. This
+however is improbable. Among the mass of subfossil bones of marine
+animals which we examined at Pitlekaj the bones of the sea-cow did
+not appear to be present. ]
+
+[Footnote 365: Von Baer's and Brandt's numerous writings on the
+sea-cow are to be found in the publications of the St. Petersburg
+Academy. ]
+
+[Footnote 366: That the hide of the sea-cow was used for _baydars_
+is evident from the short extract given from Korovin's voyage. On
+hearing this "creole's" account I inquired whether there were not
+to be found remaining on the island any very old sea-cow skins that
+had been used for _baydars_, but the answer unfortunately was in the
+negative. ]
+
+[Footnote 367: The number of these animals killed on Behring Island
+is shown by the following statement given me by Mr. Henry. W.
+Elliot:
+
+In the Year In the Year In the Year
+ 1867 27,500 1872 29,318 1877 21,532
+ 1868 12,000 1873 30,396 1878 31,340
+ 1869 24,000 1874 31,292 1879 42,752
+ 1870 24,000 1875 36,274 1880 48,504
+ 1871 3,614 1876 26,960
+
+
+During the eighteen years from 1862 to 1880 there have thus been
+shipped from Behring Island 389,462 skins. The catch on the Pribylov
+Islands has been still larger. These islands were discovered in
+1786, but the number of animals killed there is not known for the
+first ten years; it is only known that it was enormously large. In
+the years 1797-1880--that is in eighty-four years--over
+three-and-a-half millions of skins have been exported from these
+islands. In recent years the catch has increased so that in each of
+the years from 1872 to 1880, 99,000 animals might have been killed
+without inconvenience. ]
+
+[Footnote 368: The traits here given of the sea-bear's mode of life
+are mainly taken from Henry W. Elliot's work quoted above. ]
+
+[Footnote 369: Elliott (_loc. cit._ p. 150) remarks that not a
+single self-dead seal is to be found in the "rookery," where there
+are so many animals that they probably die of old age in thousands.
+This may be explained by the seals, when they become sick,
+withdrawing to the sea, and forms another contribution to the
+question of the finding of self-dead animals to which I have already
+referred (vol. i. p. 322). ]
+
+[Footnote 370: According to a statement by Mr. Giebnitski, tertiary
+fossils and coal seams are also to be found on Behring Island, the
+former north of the colony in the interior, the latter at the beach
+south of Behring's grave. Also in the neighbourhood of the colony
+the volcanic rock-masses are under-stratified by thick sandy beds. ]
+
+[Footnote 371: The first European who welcomed us after the
+completion of the North-east passage was a Fin now settled in
+California, from Bjoerkboda works in Kimito parish, in which I had
+lived a great deal when a youth. He was sent by the Alaska Company
+to do some work on Behring Island. As we steamed towards the
+colony he rowed to meet us, and saluted us with the cry "ar det
+Nordenskioeld?" ("Is it Nordenskioeld?") His name was Isak Andersson. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+ Arrival at Yokohama--A Telegram sent to Europe--The stranding
+ of the steamer _A.E. Nordenskioeld_--_Fetes_ in Japan--
+ The Minister of Marine, Kawamura--Prince Kito-Shira-Kava--
+ Audience of the Mikado--Graves of the Shoguns--Imperial Garden
+ at Tokio--The Exhibition there--Visit to Enoshima--
+ Japanese manners and customs--Thunberg and Kaempfer.
+
+
+Yokohama, the first harbour, telegraph station, and commercial town
+at which the _Vega_ anchored after circumnavigating the north coast
+of Asia, is one of the Japanese coast cities which were opened to
+the commerce of the world after the treaty between the United States
+of America and Japan negotiated by Commodore PERRY.[372] At this
+place there was formerly only a little fishing village, whose
+inhabitants had never seen Europeans and were forbidden under severe
+punishments from entering into communication or trading with the
+crews of the foreign vessels that might possibly visit the coast.
+The former village is now, twenty years later, changed into a town
+of nearly 70,000 inhabitants, and consists not only of Japanese, but
+also of very fine European houses, shops, hotels, &c. It is also the
+residence of the governor of Kanagava _Ken_. It is in communication
+by rail with the neighbouring capital Tokio, by regular weekly
+steamship sailings with San Francisco on the one hand, and Hong
+Kong, India, &c., on the other, and finally by telegraph not only
+with the principal cities of Japan but also with all the lands that
+have got entangled in the threads of the world's telegraph net.
+
+The situation of the town on the western shore of the Yedo or Tokio
+Bay, which is perhaps rather large for a haven, is not particularly
+fine. But on sailing in we see in the west, if the weather be fine,
+Fusiyama's snow-clad, incomparably beautiful volcanic cone raise
+itself from a cultivated forest-clad region. When one has seen it,
+he is no longer astonished that the Japanese reproduce with such
+affection on their varnished wares, porcelain, cloth, paper,
+sword-ornaments, &c., the form of their highest, stateliest, and also
+grimmest mountain. For the number of the men who have perished by
+its eruptions is reckoned by hundreds of thousands, and if tradition
+speaks truth the whole mountain in a far distant antiquity was
+formed in a single night. Before we enter Yedo Bay we pass a
+volcano, active during last year, situated on the volcanic island
+Oshima, known in Japanese history as the place of exile of several
+of the heroes in the many internal struggles of the country.
+
+While we sailed, or more correctly, steamed--for we had still
+sufficient coal remaining to permit the engine to be used--up the
+Bay of Yedo, the coasts were for the most part concealed with mist,
+so that the summit of Fusiyama and the contours of the shore only
+now and then gleamed forth from the fog and cloud. The wind besides
+was against us, on which account it was 9.30 in the evening of the
+2nd September before we could anchor in the haven that had been
+longed-for for such a length of time. I immediately hastened on
+land, along with Captain Palander, in order to send home a telegram
+across Siberia about the fortunate issue of the voyage of the
+_Vega_. At the telegraph station I was informed that the Siberian
+line was interrupted by inundations for a space of 600 versts, and
+that the telegram must therefore be sent by India, whereby the cost
+was nearly doubled. The telegraph officials also made difficulties
+about taking the foreign gold coin of various kinds which I had
+about me. Fortunately the latter difficulty was immediately removed
+by the accidental presence of the Russian consul, Mr. PELIKAN, while
+I was treating with the telegraph officials. When he heard that it
+concerned the sending home of a telegram from the much-talked-of
+_Vega_ expedition, he immediately offered to arrange the affair
+until I had time to operate on the letter of credit I carried with
+me from Messrs. James Dickson &c. Co. of Gothenburg. Soon after I met
+with the Swedish consul, Mr. VAN OORDT, who gave us a large parcel
+of letters from home. It was very gladly received by most of us, as,
+so far as I know, it did not bring the thirty members of the
+expedition a single unexpected sorrowful message. I got, however,
+soon after landing, an unpleasant piece of news, viz that the
+steamer _A.E. Nordenskioeld_, which Mr. Sibiriakoff had sent to
+Behring's Straits and the Lena to our relief, had stranded on the
+east coast of Yesso. The shipwreck fortunately had not been attended
+with any loss of human life, and the vessel lay stranded on a
+sandbank in circumstances which made it probable that it would be
+got off without too great cost.
+
+As the report of our arrival spread, I was immediately waited upon
+by various deputations with addresses of welcome, invitations to
+_fetes_, clubs, &c. A series of entertainments and festivities now
+began, which occupied a great part of the time we remained in this
+splendid and remarkable country. Perhaps a sketch of these
+festivities may yield a picture of Japan during the state of
+transition, which still prevails there, and which in a decade or two
+will undoubtedly belong to a past and to a great extent forgotten
+period, a picture which to future writers may possibly form a not
+unwelcome contribution to the knowledge of the Japan that now (1879)
+is. Such a sketch would however carry me too far beyond the subject
+of this narrative of travel, and require too much space, on which
+account I must confine myself to an enumeration of the festivities
+at the head of which were public authorities, learned societies, or
+clubs.
+
+[Illustration: FUSIYAMA. ]
+
+On the 10th September a grand dinner was given at the Grand Hotel,
+the principal European hotel--and very well kept--of Yokohama, by
+the Dutch minister, Chevalier VAN STOETWEGEN, who at the same time
+represents Sweden and Norway in Japan.
+
+[Illustration: THE STEAMER "A.E. NORDENSKIOeLD," STRANDED ON THE EAST
+COAST OF YEZO. (After a Japanese photograph.) ]
+
+The members of the Expedition were here introduced to several
+members of the Japanese Government.
+
+[Illustration: KAWAMURA SUMIYOSHI. Japanese Minister of Marine. ]
+
+We were invited to a _dejeuner a la fourchette_, at one o'clock P.M.
+on the 11th September, at the Imperial summer palace Hamagoten, by
+Admiral KAWAMURA, minister of marine. At this entertainment there
+were present, besides the scientific men and officers of the _Vega_,
+and our minister, Herr van Stoetwegen, several of the ministers and
+highest officials of Japan. Some of them spoke one or other of the
+European languages, others only Japanese, in which case officials of
+lower rank acted as interpreter these however taking no part in the
+entertainment along with the other guests. It was arranged after the
+European pattern, with abundance of dishes and wines. The palace
+consisted of a one-stoned wooden house in the Japanese style of
+construction. The rooms, to which we were admitted, were provided
+with European furniture, much the same as we would expect to find in
+the summer residence of a well-to-do family in Sweden. It was
+remarkable that the Japanese did not take the trouble to ornament
+the loom or the table to any considerable extent with the beautiful
+native bronzes or porcelain, of which there is such abundance in the
+country. The summer palace was surrounded by a garden which the
+Japanese consider something very extraordinary, and also on a very
+large scale. We should call it a small, well and originally kept
+miniature park, with carefully dressed turf, wonderful dwarf trees,
+miniature stone bridges, small ponds and waterfalls. The
+entertainment was very pleasant, and all, from our intelligent host
+to the Premier, Daiyo-daiyin, and the Imperial Prince, SANYO
+SANITOMI, showed us much friendliness. The latter looked a sickly
+young man, some years past twenty. He was, however, much older, and
+had taken a leading part in the most important political
+transactions since the opening of the ports. Our host, Admiral
+Kawamura, had more the appearance of a man of science than of a
+warrior. The modest exterior, however, concealed a great and noble
+man. For Kawamura, as commander of the Mikado's troops, had with
+special distinction brought about the suppression of the revolt
+under the brave Saigo Kichinosuke, who had at the restoration of the
+power of the Mikado been its heart and sword, but soon after fell
+before the government he himself contributed to create, and is now,
+a couple of years after, admired and sung by former friends and by
+former enemies as a national hero. All the Japanese present at the
+_dejeuner_ were clad in European dress--in black dress coat and
+white tie. Even the interpreters and attendants wore the European
+dress. The people, the lower officials, and the servants in private
+houses are still clothed in the Japanese dress, but do not wear a
+sword, which is now prohibited. Many of the people have even
+exchanged the old troublesome Japanese dressing of the hair for the
+convenient European style.
+
+In the course of conversation after the _dejeuner_ the ministers
+offered to do all they could to make our stay in the country
+agreeable and instructive. Distinguished foreigners are always well
+received in Japan, and we are informed that a special committee is
+appointed to make arrangements for their reception. This has given
+offence in certain quarters, and shortly before our arrival a
+proclamation was issued by a secret society, which threatened, if no
+change were made, to kill one of the ministers and one of the
+foreigners who were entertained in this, in the opinion of the
+secret society, extravagant way. One of my Japanese friends promised
+me a copy of the proclamation, but did not keep his promise,
+probably because it was impossible for the uninitiated to get hold
+of the dangerous writing.
+
+On the 13th September a grand dinner was arranged for us by the
+German Club, the photographer ANDERSEN being chairman. The hall was
+adorned in a festive manner with flags, and with representations of
+the _Vega_ in various more or less dangerous positions among the
+ice, which had been got up for the occasion, the bill of fare had
+reference to the circumstances of our wintering, &c. A number of
+speeches were made, the feeling was cheerful and merry.
+
+On the 15th September there was a grand entertainment in Tokio, given by
+the Tokio Geographical Society, the Asiatic Society of Japan, and the
+German Asiatic Society. It was held in the great hall in Koku-Dai-Gaku,
+a large stone building surrounded with beautiful trees, which were
+lighted up for the occasion by a number of variegated paper lanterns.
+Several Japanese ladies dressed in European style took part in the
+entertainment. I sat by the side of the chairman, Prince
+KITA-SHIRA-KAVA, a young member of the imperial house, who had served
+some time in the German army and speaks German very well. During the
+disturbances which were caused by the removal of the residence from
+Kioto to Yedo (Tokio), a group of insurgents had seized the prince, then
+a minor, who under the name of RINNOJINO-MIYA was chief priest in a
+temple, and endeavoured to set him up in opposition to the Emperor. The
+plan failed, and in consequence of the reconciliation at the end of the
+conflict, which distinguished in so honourable a way the many involved
+and bloody political struggles in Japan during recent years, this
+adventure was attended with no other insult for him than that the former
+chief priest was sent to a German military school. He was recalled
+sooner than was intended because he wished to marry a European, which
+was considered below the dignity of the family of the Mikado. After his
+return he was declared nearest heir to the throne, in case the Mikado
+should die without male heirs, and his name, KITA-SHIRA-KAVA-NO-MIYA,
+was changed a second time to YOHI HISHA. The former name was at the
+bottom of the speech he made for us at the dinner, and which he gave me,
+and the latter, with the addition, "Prince of Japan," was on his calling
+card. The dinner was quite European, with a large number of speeches,
+principally in European languages, but also in Japanese. Before every
+guest lay a map, of the form of a fan, with the course of the _Vega_
+marked upon it. As a memorial of the feast I received some days after a
+large medal in silver inlaid in gold, of which a drawing is given on
+pages 306, 307. We were conveyed back to the Tokio railway station in
+European equipages, in the same way as we had been brought to the
+dinner. During dinner musicians from the band of the imperial navy
+played European pieces of music with great skill, to the evident
+satisfaction of the Japanese.
+
+On the forenoon of the 17th September we were presented at the court
+of the Mikado in Tokio by the Swedish-Dutch minister. We were
+fetched from the railway station by imperial equipages, consisting
+of simple but ornamental and convenient _suflett_ carriages, each
+drawn by a pair of beautiful black horses of no great size. As is
+common in Japan, a running groom, clad in black, accompanied each
+carriage. The reception took place in the imperial palace, a very
+modest wooden building. The rooms we saw were furnished, almost
+poorly, in European fashion. We first assembled in an antechamber,
+the only remarkable ornament of which was a large piece of nephrite,
+which was a little carved and had a Chinese inscription on it. Here
+we were met by some of the ministers and the interpreter. After a
+short conversation, in the course of which the interpreter got a
+sight of the written speech, or more correctly the words of
+salutation, I was to speak, we were conducted into an inner
+apartment where the Emperor, clad in a uniform of European style and
+standing in front of a throne, received us. The only thing unusual
+at our reception was that we were requested at our departure not to
+turn our backs to the Emperor, and on entering and departing to make
+three bows, one at the door, another when we had come forward a
+little on the floor, and one at the place where we were to stand.
+After we had been presented the Emperor read a speech in Japanese,
+which was translated into French by the interpreter, and of which,
+before we left the place, a beautiful copy was given me, I then read
+my salutation, on which our minister, van Stoetwegen, said a few
+words, and got some words in reply. After leaving the imperial
+chamber, we were entertained in the anteroom with Japanese tea and
+cigars. The two princes who had taken part in the entertainment of
+the 15th came and talked a little with us, as did the minister of
+foreign affairs. The Emperor MUTSUHITO, in whose name reforms have
+been carried out in Japan to an extent to which history can scarcely
+show anything equal, was born the 3rd November, 1850. He is
+considered the 121st Mikado of the race of Jimmu Tenno, the members
+of which have reigned uninterruptedly in Japan for nearly two
+thousand years, with varying fates and with varying power--now as
+wise lawgivers and mighty warriors, now for long periods as weak and
+effeminate rulers, emperors only in seeming, to whom almost divine
+homage was paid, but who were carefully freed from the burden of
+government and from all actual power. In comparison with this race,
+whose first ancestor lived during the first century after the
+foundation of Rome, all the royal houses now reigning in Europe are
+children of yesterday. Its present representative does not look to
+be very strong. During the whole audience he stood so motionless
+that he might have been taken for a wax figure, if he had not
+himself read his speech. Prince Kita-Shira-Kava has the appearance
+of a young lieutenant of hussars. Most of the ministers have sharply
+marked features,[373] which remind one of the many furious storms
+they have survived, and the many personal dangers to which they have
+been exposed, partly in honourable conflict, partly through
+murderers' plots. For, unfortunately, a political murder is not yet
+considered in Japan an infamous crime, but the murderer openly
+acknowledges his deed and takes the consequences. Repeated murderous
+attempts have been made against the men of the new time. In order to
+protect themselves from these, ministers, when they go out,
+generally have their carriages surrounded by an armed guard on
+horseback.
+
+[Illustration: THE FIRST MEDAL WHICH WAS STRUCK AS A MEMORIAL OF THE
+VOYAGE OF THE "VEGA." Size of the original. ]
+
+[Illustration: THE FIRST MEDAL WHICH WAS STRUCK AS A MEMORIAL OF THE
+VOYAGE OF THE "VEGA." Size of the original. ]
+
+On the 18th September several of the members of the _Vega_
+expedition were invited to a _dejeuner a la fourchette_ by Admiral
+Kawamura, minister of marine. This entertainment had an interest for
+us because we were here for the first time received into a Japanese
+home. I sat at table by the side of Lady Kawamura. Even the children
+were present at the entertainment. Lady Kawamura was dressed in the
+Japanese fashion, tastefully but very plainly, if we except a heavy
+gold chain encircling the waist. In other respects the entertainment
+was arranged according to the European mode, with a succession of
+dishes and wines, both in abundance, according to the laws of
+gastronomy. When it was over our host offered us an airing in a
+carriage, during which I rode with the lady and one of the children,
+a little girl about ten years of age, who would have been very
+beautiful if she had not been disfigured, in the eyes of Europeans,
+by the thick white paint that was evenly spread over her whole face,
+and gave it a sickly appearance. Lady Kawamura herself was not
+painted, nor was she disfigured with blackened teeth. Most of the
+married women of Japan are accustomed after marriage to blacken
+their formerly dazzlingly white teeth, but it is to be hoped that
+this unpleasant custom will soon disappear, as the women of
+distinction have begun to abandon it. During this excursion we
+visited, among other places, the graves of the Tycoons, the imperial
+garden, and a very remarkable exhibition in the capital.
+
+A number of the Tycoons, or, as they are more correctly called,
+Shoguns, are buried in Tokio. Their place of sepulture is one of the
+most remarkable memorials of Old Japan. The graves are in a temple
+which is divided into several courts, surrounded by walls and
+connected with each other by beautiful gates. The first of these
+courts is ornamented with more than two hundred stone lanterns,
+presented to the temple by the feudal princes of the country, the
+name of the giver and the date at which it was given being inscribed
+on each. Some of these peculiar memorials are only half-finished,
+perhaps an evidence of the sudden close of the power of the Shoguns
+and the feudal princes in Japan. In another of the temple courts are
+to be seen lanterns of bronze, partly gilt, presented by other
+feudal princes. A third court is occupied by a temple, a splendid
+memorial of the old Japanese architecture, and of the antique method
+of adorning their sanctuaries with wooden carvings, gilding, and
+varnishing. The temple abounds in old book-rolls, bells, drums,
+beautiful old lacquered articles, &c. The graves themselves lie
+within a separate enclosure.
+
+The common Japanese gardens are not beautiful according to European
+taste. They are often so small that they might without inconvenience,
+with trees, grottos, and waterfalls, be accommodated in a small State's
+department in one of the crystal palaces of the international
+exhibitions. All, passages, rocks, trees, ponds, yea, even the fishes in
+the dams, are artificial or artificially changed. The trees are, by a
+special art which has been very highly developed in Japan, forced to
+assume the nature of dwarfs, and are besides so pruned that the whole
+plant has the appearance of a dry stem on which some green clumps have
+been hung up here and there. The form of the gold fish swimming in the
+ponds has also been changed, so that they have often two or four
+tail-fins each, and a number of growths not known in their natural
+state. On the walks thick layers of pebbles are placed to keep the feet
+from being dirtied, and at the doors of dwelling-houses there is nearly
+always a block of granite with a cauldron-like depression excavated in
+it, which is kept filled with clean water. Upon this stone cauldron is
+placed a simple but clean wooden scoop, with which one can take water
+out of the vessel to wash himself with.
+
+The imperial garden in Tokio is distinguished from these miniature
+gardens by its greater extent, and by the trees, at least at most
+places, bearing fruit. There is here a veritable park, with
+uncommonly large, splendid, and luxuriantly-growing trees.
+
+[Illustration: STONE LANTERN AND STONE MONUMENT. In a Japanese Temple
+Court. ]
+
+The public is generally excluded from the garden. At our visit we
+were entertained in one of the imperial summer-houses with Japanese
+tea, sweetmeats, and cigars.
+
+Last of all we visited the Exhibition. It had been closed for some
+time back on account of cholera. We saw here a number of beautiful
+specimens of Japanese art, from the flint tools and pottery of the
+Stone Age to the silks, porcelain, and bronzes of the present. In no
+country is there at this day such a love for exhibitions as in
+Japan. There are small exhibitions in most of the large towns. Many
+were exceedingly instructive; in all there were to be seen beautiful
+lacquered wares, porcelain, swords, silk, cloths, &c. In one I saw a
+collection of the birds and fishes of Japan, in another I discovered
+some vegetable impressions, by means of which I became acquainted
+with the remarkable locality for fossil plants at Mogi, of which I
+shall give an account farther on.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE HOUSE IN TOKIO. ]
+
+On the evening of the 18th September I was invited by the Danish
+consul, Herr BAVIER, to a boat excursion up the river which
+debouches at Tokio. At its mouth it is very broad and deep, and it
+branches somewhat farther up into several streams which are
+navigable by the shallow boats of the Japanese. With the present
+limited development of roads and railways in Japan, this river and
+its tributaries form the most important channels of communication
+between the capital and the interior of the country. During our row
+we constantly met with boats laden with provisions on their way to,
+or with goods on their way from, the town. The pleasant impression
+of these and of the remarkable environs of the river is sometimes
+disturbed by a bad odour coming from a passing boat, and reminding
+us of the care with which the Japanese remove human excreta, the
+most important manure of their well-cultivated land. Along the banks
+of the river there are numerous restaurants and tea-houses. At long
+intervals we see a garden on the banks, which has belonged to some
+of the former Daimio palaces. The restaurants and tea-houses are
+generally intended only for the Japanese; and Europeans, although
+they pay many times more than the natives, are not admitted. The
+reason of this is to be found in our manners, which are coarse and
+uncultivated in the eyes of the natives. "The European walks with
+his dirty boots on the carpets, spits on the floor, is uncivil to
+the girls, &c." Thanks to the letters of introduction from natives
+acquainted with the restaurant-keepers, I have been admitted to
+their exclusive places, and it must be admitted that everything
+there was so clean, neat, and orderly, that even the best European
+restaurants cannot compare with them. When a visitor enters a
+Japanese restaurant which is intended exclusively for the Japanese,
+he must always take off his boots at the stair else he gets
+immediately into disfavour. He is received with bended knee by the
+host and all the attendants, male, but principally female, and then
+he is almost always surrounded by a number of young girls constantly
+laughing and chattering. These girls have commonly sold themselves
+to the restaurant-keeper for a certain time, during which they carry
+on a life which, according to European standards of morality, is not
+very commendable. When the time fixed in the agreement has passed,
+they return to their homes and marry, without having sunk in any way
+in the estimation of their relatives. But those are unfortunate who,
+in any of the towns that are not yet opened to foreigners, carry on
+a love intrigue with a European. They are then openly pointed out,
+even in the newspapers, as immoral, and their respectability is
+helplessly gone. Formerly they were even in such cases severely
+punished.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE LADY AT HER TOILETTE. ]
+
+All women of the lower classes, and even most of the higher, wear
+the Japanese dress. The more distinguished ladies are often
+exceedingly beautiful, they have in particular beautiful necks.
+Unfortunately they are often disfigured by paint, for which the
+ladies here appear to have a strong liking. The dress of the younger
+women, even among the poor, is carefully attended to; it is not
+showy but tasteful, and nearly the same for all classes. Their
+manners are very attractive and agreeable. The women of the upper
+classes already begin to take part in the social life of the
+Europeans, and all European gentlemen and ladies with whom I have
+conversed on this point agree in stating that there is no difficulty
+in the way of a Japanese woman leaving the narrow circle to which
+she was formerly confined, and entering with pleasure and womanly
+dignity into European society. She appears to be born "a lady."
+
+On the 20th and 21st September the Governor of Yokohama had arranged
+an excursion for me, Dr. Stuxberg, and Lieut. Nordquist, to the
+sacred island or peninsula Enoshima, situated at a short distance
+from the town. We first travelled some English miles along the
+excellent road Tokaido, one of the few highways in Japan passable in
+carriages. Then we travelled in _jinrikishas_ to the famous image of
+Buddha (Daibutsu) at Kamakura[374], and visited the Shinto chief
+priest living in the neighbourhood and his temple.
+
+The priest was fond of antiquities, and had a collection, not very
+large indeed, but composed almost entirely of rarities. Among other
+things he showed us sabres of great value, a head ornament
+consisting of a single piece of nephrite which he valued at 500
+_yen_,[373] a number of old bronzes, mirrors, &c. We were received
+as usual with Japanese tea and sweetmeats. The priest himself took
+us round his temple. No images were to be seen here, but the walls
+were richly carved and ornamented with a number of drawings and
+gildings. The innermost wall of the temple was fenced by heavy doors
+provided with secure locks and bolts, within which "the divine
+spirit dwelt," or within which "there was nothing else," as the
+priest phrased it on another occasion.
+
+Enoshima is a little rocky peninsula, which is connected with the
+mainland by a low, sandy neck of land. Occasionally this neck of
+land has been broken through or overflowed, and the peninsula has
+then been converted into an island. It is considered sacred, and is
+studded with Shinto temples. On the side of the peninsula next the
+mainland there is a little village, consisting of inns, tea-houses,
+and shops for pilgrims' and tourists' articles, among which are
+beautiful shells, and the fine siliceous skeleton of a sponge,
+_Hyalonema mirabilis_, Gray. Here I lived for the first time in a
+Japanese inn of the sort to which Europeans in ordinary
+circumstances are not admitted. I was accompanied by two officials
+from the governor's court at Yokohama, and it was on their assurance
+that I did not belong to the common sort of uncultivated and
+arrogant foreigners that the host made no difficulty in receiving
+us.
+
+After we had at our entrance saluted the people of the inn and
+passed some time in the exchange of civilities, there came a girl,
+and, in a kneeling posture, offered the foreigners Japanese tea,
+which is always handed round in very small cups only half full. Then
+we took off our shoes and went into the guest-chamber. Such chambers
+in the Japanese inns are commonly large and dazzlingly clean.
+Furniture is completely wanting but the floor is covered with mats
+of plaited straw. The walls are ornamented with songs suitable for
+the place, or mottoes, and with Japanese paintings. The rooms are
+separated from each other by thin movable panels, which slide in
+grooves, which can be removed or replaced at will. One may,
+therefore, as once happened to me, lay himself down to sleep in a
+very large room, and, if he sleeps sound, awake in the morning in a
+very small one. The room generally looks out on a Japanese
+garden-inclosure, or if it is in the upper story, on a small
+balcony. Immediately outside there is always a vessel filled with
+water and a scoop. Generally on one side of the room there is a
+wall-press, in which the bed-clothes are kept. Those, the only
+household articles in the room, consist of a thick mat, which is
+spread on the floor, a round cushion for the head, or instead of it
+a wooden support, stuffed on the upper side, for the neck during
+sleep, and a thick stuffed night-shirt which serves at covering.
+
+[Illustration: A JINRIKISHA. ]
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE BEDROOM. ]
+
+As soon as one comes in the female attendants distribute
+four-cornered cushions for sitting on, which are placed on the floor
+round a wooden box, on one corner of which stands a little brazier,
+on the other a high clay vessel of uniform breadth, with water in
+the bottom, which serves as a spittoon and tobacco-ash cup. At the
+same time tea is brought in anew, in the small cups previously
+described, with saucers, not of porcelain, but of metal. Pipes are
+lighted, and a lively conversation commences. Along with the tea
+sweetmeats are brought in, of which, however, some cannot be
+relished by Europeans. The brazier forms the most important
+household article of the Japanese. Braziers are very variable in
+size and shape, but are often made in an exceedingly beautiful and
+tasteful way, of cast-iron or bronze, with gilding and raised
+figures. Often enough, however, they consist only of a clay crock.
+The Japanese are very skilful in keeping up fire in them without the
+least trace of fumes being perceptible in the room. The fuel
+consists of some well-burned pieces of charcoal, which lie imbedded
+in white straw-ashes, with which the fire-pan is nearly filled to
+the brim. When some glowing coals are laid in such ashes they retain
+their heat for hours, until they are completely consumed. In every
+well-furnished house there are a number of braziers of different
+sizes, and there are often four-cornered hatches in the floor, which
+conceal a stone foundation intended as a base for the large brazier,
+over which the food is cooked.
+
+At meal-times all the dishes are brought in at the same time on
+small lacquered tables, about half a foot high, and with a surface
+of four square feet. The dishes are placed in lacquered cups, less
+frequently in porcelain cups, and carried to the mouth with
+chop-sticks, without the help of knife, fork, or spoon. For fear of
+the fish-oils, which are used instead of butter, I never dared to
+test completely the productions of the Japanese art of cookery; but
+Dr. Almquist and Lieut. Nordquist, who were more unprejudiced, said
+they could put up with them very well. The following _menu_ gives an
+idea of what a Japanese inn of the better class has to offer:--
+
+ Vegetable soup.
+ Boiled rice, sometimes with minced fowl.
+ Boiled fish or raw fish with horse-radish.
+ Vegetables with fish-sauce.
+ Tea.
+
+Soy is used to the fish. The rice is brought in hot in a wooden
+vessel with a lid, and is distributed in abundance, but the other
+dishes in extremely small portions. After meals, especially in the
+evening, the Japanese often drink warm _saki_, or rice-brandy, out
+of peculiar porcelain bottles and small cups set apart for that
+purpose alone.
+
+During the meal one is commonly surrounded by a numerous _personnel_
+of female attendants, squatted down on the floor, who keep up with
+the guest, if he understands their language, a lively conversation,
+interrupted by salvoes of hearty laughter. The girls remain while
+the man undresses in the evening, and permit themselves to make
+remarks on the difference of the _physique_, of the Europeans and
+Japanese, which are not only, in our way of thinking, unsuitable for
+young girls, but even impertinent towards the guest. The male
+attendants are seldom seen, at least in the inner apartments. In the
+morning one washes himself in the yard or on the balcony, and if he
+wishes to avoid getting into disfavour, the guest will be careful
+not to spill anything or spit on the mat.
+
+The Japanese tobacco-pipe now in use resembles that of the Chukches,
+is very small, and is smoked out in a couple of whiffs. A Japanese
+smokes without stopping a score of pipes in succession.
+Tobacco-smoking is now very general among high and low of both
+sexes. It was introduced at the close of the sixteenth century, it
+is uncertain whether from Corea or from the Portuguese possessions
+in Asia, and spread with great rapidity. As among us, it here too at
+first gave occasion to stringent prohibitions, and a lively exchange
+of writings for and against. In a work by the learned Japanologist,
+Mr. E.M. SATOW ("The Introduction of Tobacco into Japan,"
+_Transactions of the Asiatic Society of Japan_, vol vi. part i. p.
+68), the following statements among others are made on this
+subject:--
+
+ "In 1609 there were in the capital two clubs whose main
+ delight was to contrive quarrels with peaceful citizens.
+ Upwards of fifty of the members of these clubs were
+ suddenly arrested and thrown into prison; but justice was
+ satisfied when four or five of the leaders were executed,
+ the rest were pardoned. As these societies were originally
+ smoking clubs, the tobacco-plant came by the bad behaviour
+ of their members into disrepute, and its use was
+ prohibited. At that time tobacco was smoked in long pipes,
+ which were stuck in the belt like a sword, or carried after
+ the smoker by an attendant. In 1612 a proclamation was
+ published in which tobacco-smoking and all trade in tobacco
+ were prohibited, under penalty of forfeiture of estate. The
+ prohibition was repeated several times, with as little
+ success as in Europe."
+
+[Illustration: TOBACCO SMOKERS. Japanese drawing. ]
+
+Mr. Satow further gives the following peculiar extracts
+from a Japanese work, which enumerates the advantages and
+disadvantages that are connected with tobacco-smoking:--
+
+
+"_A_--ADVANTAGES.
+
+"1. It dispels the vapours and increases the energies."
+
+"2. It is good to produce at the beginning of a feast."
+
+"3. It is a companion in solitude."
+
+"4. It affords an excuse for resting now and then from
+work, as if in order to take breath."
+
+"5. It is a storehouse of reflection, and gives time for the
+fumes of wrath to dispense."
+
+
+"_B_--DISADVANTAGES
+
+"1. There is a natural tendency to hit people over the head
+with one's pipe in a fit of anger."[376]
+
+"2. The pipe comes sometimes to be used for arranging the
+burning charcoal in the brazier."
+
+"3. An inveterate smoker has been known to walk about
+among the dishes with his pipe in his mouth."
+
+"4. People knock the ashes out of their pipes while still
+alight and forget to extinguish the fire."
+
+"5. Hence clothing and mats are frequently scorched by
+burning tobacco ash."
+
+"6. Smokers spit indiscriminately in braziers, foot-warmers,
+and kitchen fires."
+
+"7. Also in the crevices between the floor-mats."
+
+"8. They rap the pipe violently on the edge of the brazier."
+
+"9. They forget to have the ash-pot emptied till it is full
+to overflowing."
+
+"10. They use the ash-pot as nose-paper (_i.e._ they blow their
+nose into the ash-pot)".
+
+As during our stay at Enoshima as the governor's guests we were
+constantly attended by two officials from his court, I considered it
+my duty to show myself worthy of the honour by a liberal
+distribution of drink-money. This is not given to the attendants,
+but is handed, wrapped up in paper, and accompanied by some choice
+courteous expressions, to the host himself. He on his part makes a
+polite speech with apologies that all had not been so well arranged
+as his honoured guest had a right to expect. He accompanies the
+traveller on his departure a shorter or longer distance in
+proportion to the amount of drink-money and the way in which his
+guest has behaved.
+
+[Illustration: ITO-KESKE. A Japanese Editor of Thunberg's writings. ]
+
+It is a specially praiseworthy custom among the Japanese to
+allow the trees in the neighbourhood of the temples to stand
+untouched. Nearly every temple, even the most inconsiderable,
+is therefore surrounded by a little grove, formed of the most
+splendid pines, particularly Cryptomeria and Ginko, which often
+wholly conceal the small, decayed, and ill-kept wooden hut which
+is dedicated to some of the deities of Buddha or Shinto.
+
+On the 23rd September the Europeans and Japanese of Yokohama gave a
+dinner and ball for us in the hall of the English club. It was
+beautifully lighted and decorated. Among other things there were to
+be seen on a wall portraits of Berzelius and Thunberg, surrounded by
+garlands of greenery. The latter has a high reputation in Japan. His
+work on the flora of the country has lately been published in a
+Japanese edition with a wood-cut portrait, by no means bad, of the
+famous Swedish naturalist,[377] engraved in Japan; and a monument to
+his and Kaempfer's memory is to be found at Nagasaki, erected there
+at the instance of von Siebold.[378] The chairman of the feast was
+Dr. GEERTZ, a Dutchman, who had lived a long time in the country and
+published several valuable works on its natural productions.
+
+[Illustration: MONUMENT TO THUNBERG AND KAEMPFER AT NAGASAKI. ]
+
+On the 26th September I started for Tokio, in order thence to
+undertake a journey proposed and arranged by the Danish consul, Herr
+Bavier, to Asamayama, a yet active volcano in the interior of the
+country. In consequence of an unexpected death among the European
+consuls at Yokohama, Herr Bavier, however, could not join us until
+the day after that which had been fixed for our departure. The 27th
+accordingly was passed in Tokio among other things, in seeing the
+beautiful collections of antiquities made by the _attache_ of the
+Austrian legation, Herr H. VON SIEBOLD, son of the famous naturalist
+of the same name. Japan has also, like most other lands, had its
+Stone Age, from which remains are found at several places in the
+country, both on Yezo and on the more southerly islands. Implements
+from this period are now collected assiduously both by natives and
+Europeans, and have been described by H. von Siebold in a work
+accompanied by photographic illustrations. In general the implements
+of the Japanese stone folk have a resemblance to the stone tools
+still in use among the Eskimo, and even in this fruitful land the
+primitive race, as the bone remains in the kitchen-middens show,
+lived at first mainly by hunting and fishing.
+
+
+[Footnote 372: The Dutch had permission in former times to send some
+vessels annually to Nagasaki. By Perry's treaty, signed on the 31st
+March, 1854, Shimoda and Hakodate were opened to the Americans.
+Finally, by new treaties with the United States and various European
+powers, the harbours Kanagava (Yokohama), Nagasaki, Hakodate,
+Niigata, Hiogo, and Osaka, were assigned for commerce with
+foreigners. ]
+
+[Footnote 373: At first it strikes a European as if all the Japanese
+had about the same appearance, but when one has got accustomed to
+the colour of the skin and the traits of the race, the features of
+the Japanese appear as various in form and expression as those of
+Europeans. ]
+
+[Footnote 374: At the close of the twelfth century this now
+inconsiderable town was the residence of Joritomo, the founder of
+the Shogun power, and the arranger of the Japanese feudal system. ]
+
+[Footnote 375: Five _yen_ are about equal to 1 pound sterling. ]
+
+[Footnote 376: The Japanese pipes are now so small that no serious
+results from this disadvantage are to be dreaded. In former times
+the pipes used were long and probably heavy. The Dyaks of Borneo
+still use pipes so heavy that they may be used as weapons. ]
+
+[Footnote 377: The work bears the title _Tai-sei-hon-zo-mei-so_
+(short list of European plant-names), by Ito-Keske, 1829, 3 vols. ]
+
+[Footnote 378: Carl Peter Thunberg, born at Joenkoeping in 1743, famed
+for his travels in South Africa, Japan, &c., and for a number of
+important scientific works, finally Professor at Upsala, died in
+1828. Engelbert Kaempfer, born in Westphalia in 1651, was secretary
+of the embassy that started from Sweden to Persia in 1683. Kaempfer,
+however, did not return with the embassy, but continued his travels
+in the southern and eastern parts of Asia, among them, even to
+Japan, which he visited in 1690-92, he died in 1716. Kaempfer's and
+Thunberg's works, together with the great work of von Siebold, who
+erected the monument to them, form the most important sources of the
+knowledge of the Japan that once was. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+ Excursion to Asamayama--The Nakasendo road--Takasaki--
+ Difficulty of obtaining quarters for the night--The Baths
+ at Ikaho--Massage in Japan--Swedish matches--Travelling
+ in _Kago_--Savavatari--Criminals--Kusatsu--The Hot Springs
+ and their healing power--Rest at Rokuriga-hara--The summit
+ of Asamayama--The descent--Journey over Usui-toge--
+ Japanese actors--Pictures of Japanese folk-life--
+ Return to Yokohama.
+
+
+On the 28th September, early in the morning, accompanied by Lieut.
+Hovgaard, Herr Bavier, an interpreter, and a Japanese cook skilled
+in European cookery, I started on a journey to Asamayama. At first
+we travelled in two very rattling and inconvenient carriages, drawn
+each by a pair of horses, to the town Takasaki, situated on the
+great road "Nakasendo," which passes through the interior of the
+country and connects Tokio and Kioto. This road is considered
+something grand by the Japanese. In Sweden it would be called an
+indifferently kept district road. On this road _jinrikishas_ are met
+in thousands, and a great many horses, oxen, and men, _bearing_
+heavy burdens, but with the exception of the posting carriages, by
+which, for some years back, a regular communication between Tokio
+and Takasaki has been kept up, not a single wheeled vehicle drawn by
+horses or oxen, and though the road passes through an unbroken
+series of populous villages, surrounded by well cultivated rice
+fields and small gardens, there is not a single workhorse or work-ox
+to be seen. For all the ground in Japan is cultivated by the hand,
+and there are few cattle.
+
+Most of the roads in the country consist of foot-paths, so narrow
+that two laden horses can pass each other only with difficulty.
+Goods are therefore carried, where there is no canal or river, for
+the most part by men. The plains are extraordinarily well
+cultivated, and we must specially admire the industry with which
+water-courses have been cut and the uneven slopes changed into level
+terraces.
+
+The post-horses on Nakasendo were so poor and wretched that in
+Sweden one would have been liable to punishment for cruelty to
+animals for using them. They went, however, at a pretty good speed.
+There were places for changing horses at regular distances of
+fifteen to twenty kilometres. The driver besides halted often on the
+way at some dwelling-house to take a couple of scoopfuls of water
+out of the water-vessel standing before it and throw them into the
+horses' mouths and between their hind-legs. The opportunity was
+always taken advantage of by the girls of the house to come out and
+offer the travellers a small cup of Japanese tea, an act of courtesy
+that was repaid with some friendly words and a copper coin.
+
+When we visited any of the peasants' gardens by the wayside we were
+always received with extreme friendliness, either on a special dais
+in the common room looking to the road, or in an inner room whose
+floor was covered with a mat of dazzling whiteness, and on whose
+walls hung pictures, with songs and mottoes. The brazier was brought
+forward, tea and sweetmeats were handed round, all with lively
+conversation and frequent bows. The difference between the palace of
+the rich (if we may distinguish with the name any building in Japan)
+and the dwelling of the less well-to-do is much smaller here than in
+Europe. We did not see any beggars in our journey into the interior
+of the country.[379] Nor did the distraction of class appear to be
+so sharp as might be expected in a land where the evils of rank had
+been so great as in Old Japan. We several times saw in the inns by
+the roadside, people of condition who were travelling in
+_jinrikishas_ eat their rice and drink their _saki_ together with
+the coolies who were drawing their vehicles.
+
+To judge by the crowds of children who swarmed everywhere along the
+roads the people must be very prolific. A girl of eight or ten years
+of age was seldom to be seen without another young one bound on her
+back. This burden did not appear to trouble the sister or attendant
+very much. Without giving herself any concern about the child or
+thinking of its existence, she took part actively in games, ran
+errands, &c.
+
+Even in the interior of the country foreigners are received with
+great friendliness. The lower classes in Japan have also reason for
+this, for whatever influence the latest political changes may have
+had on the old _kuge_, _daimio_, and _samurai_ families of Japan, the
+position of the cultivator of the soil is now much more secure than
+before, when he was harmed by hundreds of small tyrants. His dress
+is the same as before, with the exception, however, that a great
+proportion of the male population, even far into the interior, have
+laid aside the old troublesome way of collecting the hair in a knot
+over a close shaven spot on the crown of the head. Instead, they
+wear their thick raven-black hair cut short in the European style.
+How distinctive of the new period this change is may be seen from
+the eagerness with which the Japanese authorities questioned GOLOVIN
+about the religious and political revolutions which they assumed to
+have been connected with the change in the European mode of wearing
+the hair during the commencement of the nineteenth century, for the
+Russian ambassador LAXMAN, who was highly esteemed by the Japanese,
+had worn a pig-tail and powdered hair, while Golovin and his
+companions had their hair unpowdered and cut short.[380] When it is
+warm the workmen wear only a small, generally light-blue, girdle
+round the waist and between the legs. Otherwise they are naked.
+They are thus seen to be in many cases strongly tattooed over the
+greater part of the body. I have not seen the women working naked.
+They perhaps do so at the warmest season of the year. At least they
+do not refrain from undressing completely while bathing right in
+the midst of a crowd of men known and unknown, a state of things
+which at first, in consequence of the power of prejudice, shocks
+the European, but to which even the former prude gets accustomed
+sooner than one would suppose. We even frequently see European
+ladies drawn in a _jinrikisha_ by a youth completely naked with the
+exception of the blue girdle. Many, especially of the younger men,
+have besides so well-formed a body, that the sculptor who could
+accurately reproduce it in marble would at once attain a reputation
+co-extensive with the globe.
+
+Takasaki is the residence of a governor, with a population of about
+20,000; but, like most of the towns of Japan, it differs little
+from many of the villages we passed through. We arrived late in the
+evening, and there had our first and last experience of an
+inconvenience of which Europeans often complain in travelling in
+Japan, and to which they have themselves given occasion by the
+offensive way in which they not unfrequently behave. We knocked at
+the door of one inn after another without being received. At one
+place "the house was full," at another "the rooms were under
+repair," at a third "the inn people were out," &c. At last we had
+to apply to the police. When we had shown them our passport, we
+succeeded with their help in getting a night's lodging with an
+elderly host, who received us with a countenance which clearly
+indicated that he would rather have hewn us in pieces with one of
+the two swords he had formerly as _samurai_ been entitled to wear,
+than received us under his roof. After our entrance he still turned
+to the police official with the cry of lamentation: "Must I then
+actually receive these barbarians?" But we had our revenge in a
+noble way. We took off our boots before we entered the room, were so
+profuse with talk, civilities, and bows, and on the whole behaved in
+such a courteous fashion, that our previously distracted host not
+only bade us welcome back, but also gave us a letter of introduction
+to the innkeepers at an inn where we were to stay next, declaring
+that if we showed this letter we need not fear any such disagreeable
+adventure as that just described.
+
+Most of the houses in the Japanese towns are built of pretty thin,
+carefully joined timbers. But besides these there are to be seen
+here and there small houses with very thick walls, windows provided
+with heavy iron gratings, and doors that could be fastened with
+large locks and bolts. These houses are fire-resisting, and are used
+as storehouses for valuables and household articles when there is
+danger of fire. Fires are so common in Japan that it is supposed
+that a tenth part of every town is burned down yearly. The fireman
+corps is numerous, well ordered from old times, its members bold and
+daring. During our stay overnight at Takasaki we were lodged in such
+a fireproof house, in very large clean apartments with the floor
+partly covered with carpets after the European pattern. The walls
+were very thick and of brick, the interior fittings and stairs on
+the other hand of wood.
+
+I have just mentioned that we were compelled to resort to the police
+in order to obtain quarters for the night. Policemen are numerous in
+Japan, both in town and country. For the most part they are taken
+from the former _samurai_ class. They are clothed in the European
+style, and walk, with a long stick in a certain position under the
+arm, quietly and calmly on the streets and roads, without, except in
+cases of necessity, making any show of their authority. Commonly
+they are, or appear to be, young, and all have a gentlemanlike
+appearance. In a word, they appear to be equal to the best European
+police of the present day, and stand immeasurably above the guardian
+of the peace, or rather the raiser of dispeace, as he appeared some
+decades ago on the European continent. During the latest revolt the
+police were employed by the Government as infantry, and elicited
+general admiration by the fire, the gallantry, and the contempt of
+death with which they went into action with their old favourite
+weapon, the Japanese sword.
+
+A passport is still required for travelling in the interior of the
+country, but this is easily obtained at the request of the consul if
+health or the wish to prosecute researches be given as the reason,
+it being possible perhaps to include common love of travelling under
+the latter head. Commercial travelling is not yet permitted in the
+interior, nor is the right of settling for the purpose of carrying
+on business granted to Europeans. The foreign ambassadors have often
+entered into negotiations in order to bring about a change on this
+point, but hitherto without success, because the Government, as a
+condition for the complete opening of the country, require the
+abrogation of the unreasonable "extraterritorial" arrangement which
+is in force, and by which the foreigner is not subject to the common
+laws and courts of Japan, but to the laws of his own country,
+administered by consular courts. An alteration in this point may
+however be brought about in a short time, as Japan will soon be
+sufficiently powerful to be able to abrogate all the injurious
+paragraphs in her treaties with the civilised countries of Europe.
+Now, besides, the ambassadors of the foreign powers, who in former
+times all acted together, have divided into two parties, of which
+one--Russia and America--wishes, or at least feigns to wish,
+gradually to free Japan from all tutelage and to place it on an
+equality with other civilised countries, the other again--England,
+Germany, Holland, and France--wishes still to retain the
+guardianship, which was established by violence, and confirmed by
+treaty several years ago.
+
+Shortly before our arrival a quarrel took place between Japan and
+the European powers about, as the Japanese themselves said, a breach
+of international law, which caused much irritation in the country. A
+German vessel coming from Nagasaki, where the cholera was raging, on
+the advice of the German minister broke the quarantine prescribed by
+the Government, and without further precautions discharged her cargo
+in the harbour of Yokohama. That the cholera in this town was
+thereby _made worse_ is indeed not only unproved but also
+undoubtedly incorrect, though many Japanese in their irritation
+positively affirmed that this was the case, but the words that were
+uttered by Japan's _feted_ guest, ex-President General GRANT,[381]
+that the Japanese Government had the right without more ado to sink
+the vessel, have left a memory in the minds both of the Government
+and of the people, which may in the future lead them to a perhaps
+unwise but fully justified exertion of their strength were such a
+deed to be repeated.
+
+The first impression of the Japanese, both men and women, is
+exceedingly pleasant, but many Europeans who have lived a
+considerable time in the country say that this impression is not
+maintained, a circumstance which in my belief depends more on the
+Europeans themselves than on the Japanese. For the European
+merchants are said not to find it so easy to cut gold here with a
+case-knife as before, and the ambassadors of the Great Powers find
+it day by day more difficult to maintain their old commanding
+standpoint towards a government which knows that a great future is
+before the country, if inconsiderate ambition or unlooked-for
+misfortune do not unexpectedly hinder its development. Another
+reproach, that the Japanese can imitate what another has done, but
+is unable himself to invent anything new, appears on the other hand
+to be justified in the meantime. But it is unreasonable to demand
+that a nation should not only in a few decades pass through a
+development for which centuries have been required in Europe, but
+also immediately reach the summit of the knowledge of our time so as
+to be at the same time creative. But it would be wonderful, if the
+natural science, literature, and art of the nineteenth century,
+transplanted among a gifted people, with a culture so peculiar and
+so pervasive, and with an art-sense so developed as those of Japan,
+did not in time produce new, splendid, and unexpected fruit. The
+same irresistible necessity which now drives the Japanese to learn
+all that the European and the American know, will, when he has
+reached that goal, spur him on to go further up the Nile river of
+research.
+
+A short distance beyond Takasaki the road to the volcano to which we
+were on our way, was no longer along Nakasendo, and we could
+therefore no longer continue our journey in carriages drawn by
+horses, but were compelled to content ourselves with _jinrikishas_.
+In these, on the 29th of September, we traversed in five and a half
+hours the very hilly road to Ikaho, noted for its baths, situated at
+a height of 700 metres above the sea. The landscape here assumes a
+quite different stamp. The road which before ran over an unbroken
+plain, thickly peopled, and cultivated like a garden, now begins to
+pass between steep uncultivated hills, overgrown with tall, uncut,
+withered grass, separated by valleys in which run purling rivulets,
+nearly concealed by exceedingly luxuriant bushy thickets. Ikaho is
+celebrated for the warm, or more correctly hot, springs which well
+up from the volcanic hills which surround the little town, which is
+beautifully situated on a slope. As at the baths of Europe, invalids
+seek here a remedy for their ailments, and the town therefore
+consists almost exclusively of hotels, baths, and shops for the
+visitors. The baths are situated, partly in large open wooden sheds,
+where men and women bathe together without distinction, partly in
+private houses. In every bath there is a basin one metre in depth,
+to which a constant stream of water is conducted from some of the
+hot springs. The spring water has of course cooled very much before
+it is used, but is still so hot notwithstanding that I could only
+with difficulty remain in it a couple of seconds.
+
+In the streets of the town we often met blind persons who walked
+about very safely without any attendant, only feeling their way with
+a long bamboo. They blew a short pipe now and then to warn
+passers-by of their presence. I thought at first that these
+unfortunates were trying to regain the sight of the eye at the hot
+springs, but on inquiring whether the water was beneficial in that
+respect, I was informed that they were not there as seekers after
+health, but as "massageurs" (shampooers). Massage has been in use in
+Japan for several centuries back, and therefore persons are often to
+be met with in the streets offering their services as massageurs,
+crying in the streets in about the same way as the fruit-sellers in
+Russia.
+
+The inn where we lodged for the night, consisted as usual of a
+number of very clean rooms covered with mats, without furniture, but
+ornamented with songs and mottoes on the walls. One would live here
+exceedingly well, if like the Japanese he could manage to live
+wholly on the floor and conform carefully to the indispensable
+rules, an observance which besides is necessary, because otherwise
+the inmate is exposed to a very unfriendly reception not only from
+his host but also from the attendants. An inconvenience in
+travelling in Japan is the difficulty a European has in accustoming
+himself to the dietary of the Japanese. Bread they do not use, nor
+meat, but their food consists mainly of rice and fish, with fowls,
+fruit, mushrooms, sweetmeats, Japanese tea, &c., in addition. Fish
+is generally eaten raw, and in that case is said to differ little in
+taste from our pickled salmon. The food is not unfrequently cooked
+with fish oils of anything but an agreeable taste. If a traveller
+wishes to avoid this dietary, he must have his own cook with him on
+the journey. In this capacity there attended us a Japanese, whose
+name was Senkiti-San, but who was commonly called by his companions
+Kok-San (Mr. Cook). He had learned European (French) cooking at
+Yokohama, and during the journey devoted himself with so great zeal
+to his calling, that even in the deserts at the foot of Asamayama he
+gave himself no rest until he could offer us a dinner of five
+dishes, consisting of chicken soup, fowl omelette, fowl-beefsteak,
+fowl _fricasse_, and omelette _aux confitures_, all thus consisting
+only of fowls and hens' eggs, cooked in different ways.
+
+For some years back lucifer matches have been an article of
+necessity in Japan, and it was pleasing to us Swedes to observe that
+the Swedish matches have here a distinct preference over those of
+other countries. In nearly every little shop, even in the interior
+of the country, are to be seen the well-known boxes with the
+inscription "Saekerhets taendstickor utan svafvel och fosfor." But if
+we examine the boxes more carefully, we find upon many of them,
+along with the magic sentence unintelligible to the Japanese, an
+inscription indicating that they have been made by some Japanese
+manufacturer. On other boxes this is completely wanting, but the
+falsification is shown by an unfortunate error in the inscription.
+It thus appears that the Swedish matches are not only introduced
+into Japan on a large scale, but are also counterfeited, being made
+with the Swedish inscription on the box and with a cover resembling
+that used at home. The imitation, however, is not nearly so good as
+the original, and my Japanese servant bade me therefore, when I
+purchased a box of matches, observe carefully that I got one of the
+right (Swedish) sort.
+
+Photography also has spread so rapidly in the country that at many
+places in small towns and villages in the interior Japanese
+photographers are to be met with who put out of their hands by no
+means bad work. The Japanese appear to have a great liking for
+having their by no means remarkable dwellings photographed. On
+several occasions, when we left a place we received from our host as
+a parting gift a photograph of his house or inn. Perhaps this was
+done with the same view as that which induces his European
+brother-in-trade to advertise at great expense.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE KAGO. ]
+
+Between Ikaho and Savavatari, our next resting-place, the road was
+so bad that the _jinrikisha_ could no longer be used, we accordingly
+had to use the _kago_, a Japanese sedan-chair made of bamboo, of the
+appearance of which the accompanying wood-cut gives an idea. It is
+exceedingly inconvenient for Europeans, because they cannot like the
+Japanese sit with their legs crosswise under them, and in course of
+time it becomes tiresome to let them dangle without other support by
+the side of the _kago_. Even for the bearers this sedan chair
+strikes me as being of inconvenient construction, which is shown
+among other things by their halting an instant every two hundred, or
+in going up a hill, every hundred paces, in order to shift the
+shoulder under the bamboo pole. We went up-hill and down-hill with
+considerable speed however, so that we traversed the road between
+Ikaho and Savavatari, 6 _ri_ or 23.6 kilometres in length, in ten
+hours. The road, which was exceedingly beautiful, ran along flowery
+banks of rivulets, overgrown with luxuriant bamboo thickets, and
+many different kinds of broad-leaved trees. Only round the old
+temples, mostly small and inconsiderable, were to be seen ancient
+tall Cryptomeria and Ginko trees. The burying places were commonly
+situated, not as at home, in the neighbourhood of the larger
+temples, but near the villages. They were not inclosed, but marked
+out by stone monuments from a third of a metre to half a metre in
+height, on one side of which an image of Buddha was sometimes
+sculptured. The recent graves were often adorned with flowers, and
+at some of them small foot-high Shinto shrines had been made of
+wooden pins.
+
+Savavatari, like Ikaho, is built on the slope of a hill. The streets
+between the houses are almost all stairs or steep ascents. Here too
+there well up from the volcanic rocks acidulous springs, at which
+invalids seek to regain health. The watering-place, however, is of
+less repute than Ikaho or Kusatsu.
+
+While we walked about the village in the evening we saw at one place
+a crowd of people. This was occasioned by a competition going on
+there. Two young men, who wore no other clothes than a narrow girdle
+going round the waist and between the legs, wrestled within a circle
+two or three metres across drawn on a sandy area. He was considered
+the victor who threw the other to the ground or forced him beyond
+the circle. A special judge decided in doubtful cases. The beginning
+of the contest was most peculiar, the combatants kneeling in the
+middle of the circle and sharply eying each other in order to make
+the attack at a signal given by the judge, when a single push might
+at once make an end of the contest. In this competition there took
+part about a dozen young men, all well grown, who in their turn
+stepped with some encouraging cries or gestures into the circle in
+order to test their powers. The spectators consisted of old men and
+women, and boys and girls of all ages. Most of them were clean and
+well-dressed, and had a very attractive appearance.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE WRESTLERS. ]
+
+Here it was the youth of the village themselves that took part in
+the contest. But there are also in Japan persons who carry on these
+games as their occupation, and exhibit themselves for money. They
+are in general very fat, as appears from the accompanying drawing,
+which represents the beginning of the contest, when both the
+combatants are still watching to get a good hold.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE BRIDGE. After a Japanese drawing. ]
+
+Next day, the 1st October, we continued our journey to Kusatsu. The
+road was uphill for a distance of 550 metres, downhill for nearly as
+far, then up again, and ran often without any protecting fence past
+deep abysses, or over high bridges of the most dangerous
+construction. It was, therefore, impossible for any wheeled vehicle
+to traverse it, so that we had to use in some cases _kagos_, in
+others riding-horses. Unfortunately the Japanese high saddle does
+not suit the European, and if the traveller prefers a riding-horse
+to a _kago_, he must, if he does not carry a saddle with him,
+determine to ride on an unsaddled horse, which, with the wretched
+steeds that are only available here, soon becomes so unpleasant that
+he at last prefers to let his legs hang benumbed from the _kago_. A
+peculiarity in Japan is that the rider seldom himself guides his
+horse. It is commonly led by a halter by a groom running alongside
+the rider. These grooms are very light-footed and enduring, so that
+even at a rapid pace they are not left behind. Running footmen also
+attend the carriages of people of distinction in the towns and the
+mail-coaches on Nakasendo. When there is a crowd before the carriage
+they jump down and drive away the people by a dreadful shouting.
+From the mail-coach they also blow the post-horn, not just to the
+advantage of the ear-drums of the travellers.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE MOUNTAIN LANDSCAPE. ]
+
+The scenery by the roadside was exceedingly beautiful. Now it
+consisted of wild valleys, filled with luxuriant vegetation which
+completely concealed the crystal-clear streams purling in the
+bottoms; now of level grassy plains or hill-slopes, thickly studded
+with solitary trees, chiefly chestnuts and oaks. The inhabitants
+were fully occupied with the chestnut harvest. Before every hut mats
+were spread out, on which chestnuts lay drying in thick layers.
+Grain and cotton were being dried in the same small way, as it
+appeared to us Europeans. On the plains there stood besides in the
+neighbourhood of the cabins large mortars, by which the grain was
+reduced to groats. On the hills these tramp-stamps are partly
+replaced by small mills of an exceedingly simple construction,
+introduced by the Dutch.
+
+We passed the 2nd October at Kusatsu, the Aix-la-Chapelle of Japan,
+famed like that place for its hot sulphurous springs. Innumerable
+invalids here seek an alleviation of their pains. The town lives
+upon them, and accordingly consists mainly of baths, inns, and shops
+for the visitors.
+
+The inns are of the sort common in Japan, spacious, airy clean,
+without furniture, but with good braziers, miniature tea-services,
+clean matting, screens ornamented with poetical mottoes, which even
+when translated were almost unintelligible to us, friendly hosts,
+and numerous female attendants. If the traveller brings his own cook
+with him, as we did, he can live very comfortably, as I have before
+stated, at such an inn.
+
+[Illustration: INN AT KUSATSU. ]
+
+The hot springs which have conferred on Kusatsu its importance rise
+at the foot of a pretty high hill of volcanic origin. The rocks in
+the surrounding country consist exclusively of lava and volcanic
+tuffs, and a short distance from the town there is an extinct
+volcano in whose crater there are layers of sulphur.[382] In the
+immediate neighbourhood of the place where the main spring rises
+there is a thick solidified lava stream, surrounded by tuffs, which
+near the surface is cleft into a number of large vesicular blocks.
+From this point the hot water is conducted in long open wooden
+channels to the bath-house of the town, and to several evaporating
+pools, some by the wayside, others in the town, intended for
+collecting the solid constituents of the water, which are then sold
+in the country as medicine. The great evaporation from these pools,
+from the open channels and the hot baths, wraps the town almost
+constantly in a cloud of watery vapour, while a very strong odour of
+sulphuretted hydrogen reminds us that this is one of the
+constituents of the healing waters.
+
+The road between the wells and the town appears to form the
+principal promenade of the place. Along this are to be seen
+innumerable small monuments, from a half to a whole metre in height,
+consisting of pieces of lava heaped upon each other. These miniature
+memorials form by their littleness a peculiar contrast to the
+_bauta_ stones and _jettekast_ of our Swedish forefathers, and are
+one of the many instances of the people's fondness for the little
+and the neat, which are often to be met in Japan. They are said to
+be erected by visitors as thank-offerings to some of the deities of
+Buddha or Shinto.
+
+I received from a Japanese physician the following information
+regarding the wells at Kusatsu and their healing power. In and near
+the town there are twenty-two wells, with water of about the same
+quality, but of different uses in the healing of various diseases.
+In the hottest well the water where it rises has a temperature of
+162 deg. F (= 72.2 deg. C.). The largest number of the sick who
+seek health at the baths, suffer from syphilis. This disease is now
+cured according to the European method, with mercury, iodide of
+potassium, and baths. The cure requires a hundred days, from seventy
+to eighty per cent. of the patients are cured completely, though
+purple spots remain on the skin. The disease does not break out
+anew. A large number of leprous patients also visit the baths. The
+leprosy is of various kinds; that with sores is alleviated by the
+baths, and is cured possibly in two years; that without sores but
+with the skin insensible is incurable, but is also checked by
+frequent bathing. All true lepers come from the coast provinces. A
+similar disease is produced also among the hills by the eating of
+tainted fish and fowl. This disease consists in the skin becoming
+insensible, the nerves inactive, and the patient, who otherwise
+feels well, finding it impossible to walk. It is also cured
+completely in very severe cases, by baths, ammonia applied inwardly,
+castor-oil, Peruvian bark, &c. A third type of this ailment is the
+bone-disease, _kak'ke'_, which is exceedingly common in Japan, and
+is believed to be caused by unvarying food and want of exercise. It
+is very obstinate, but is often cured in two or three years with
+chloride of iron, albumen, change of diet from the common Japanese
+to the European, with red wine, milk, bread, vegetables, &c. This
+disease begins with a swelling in the legs, then the skin becomes
+insensible, first on the legs, next on the stomach, the face, and
+the wrists. Then the swelling falls, fever comes on, and death takes
+place. There are besides, certain wells for curing rheumatism, for
+which from two to three years are required; for eye-diseases and for
+headache, the latter playing an important part among the illnesses
+that are cured at Kusatsu. It principally attacks women between
+twenty and thirty years of age. One of the Kusatsu wells acts very
+beneficially in this case. Its water is conducted to a special
+bathing-shed open to the street, intended exclusively for the men
+and women who suffer from this disease.
+
+Many of the baths at Kusatsu are taken so hot that special
+precautions must be adopted before one steps down into the water.
+These consist in winding cotton cloths round those parts of the body
+which are most sensitive, and in causing the body to perspire
+strongly before the bath is taken, which is done by the bathers with
+cries and shouts and with certain movements stirring the water in
+the basin with large heavy boards. They then all step down into the
+bath and up again simultaneously at a sign given by the physician
+sitting at the back of the bathing shed. Without this arrangement it
+would perhaps be difficult to get the patients to go into the bath,
+for agreeable it could not be, to judge from the grave faces of the
+bathers and the fire-red colour of their bodies when they come out.
+
+The baths are under open sheds. Men and women all bathe in common,
+and in presence of both male and female spectators. They make their
+remarks without reserve on the diseases of the patients, even if
+they are of that sort about which one would not speak willingly even
+to his physician. Often the bath-basin is not fenced off in any way,
+except that it is protected from rain and sunshine by a roof resting
+on four posts. In such cases the bathers dress and undress in the
+street.
+
+[Illustration: BATH AT KUSATSU. ]
+
+In consequence of the situation of Kusatsu at a height of 1050
+metres above the sea, the winter there is very cold and windy. The
+town is then abandoned not only by the visitors to the baths, but
+also by most of the other inhabitants. Already, at the time of our
+visit, the number of bathers remaining was only inconsiderable. Even
+these were preparing to depart. During the second night that we
+passed at Kusatsu, our night's rest was disturbed by a loud noise
+from the next room. It was a visitor who was to leave the place the
+following morning, and who now celebrated his recovery with _saki_
+(rice-brandy) and string music.
+
+The environs of Kusatsu are nearly uncultivated, though the
+vegetation is exceedingly luxuriant. It consists partly of bamboo
+thickets, partly of a high rich grass, above which rise solitary
+pines, mixed with a few oaks or chestnuts.
+
+On the 3rd October we continued our journey to the foot of
+Asamayama. The road was very bad, so that even the _kago_ bearers
+had difficulty in getting along. It first ran across two valleys
+more than 300 feet deep, occupied with close, luxuriant, bushy
+thickets. We then came to an elevated plain of great extent covered
+with unmown grass, studded with beautiful oaks and chestnuts. The
+plain was not turned to any account, though thousands of the
+industrious population could find an abundant living there by
+tending cattle. Farther up the oaks and chestnuts were mixed with a
+few birches, resembling those at home, and we came next to complete
+deserts, where the ground consisted of lava blocks and lava gravel,
+scarcely covered by any grass, and yielding nourishment only to
+solitary pines. This continued to the place--Rokuriga-hara--where we
+were to pass the night, and from which the next day we were to
+ascend the summit of Asamayama.
+
+Rokuriga-hara is situated at a height of 1270 metres above the sea.
+There was no inn here, nor any place inhabited all the year round,
+but only a large open shed. This was divided into two by a passage
+in the middle. We settled on one side of this, making our bed as
+well as we could on the raised floor, and protecting ourselves from
+the night air with coverings which our thoughtful host at Kusatsu
+had lent us. On the other side of the passage our _kago_ bearers and
+guide passed the night crowding round a log fire made on a stone
+foundation in the middle of the floor. The _kago_ bearers were
+protected from the very perceptible night cold only by thin cotton
+blouses. In order to warm them I ordered an abundant distribution of
+_saki_, a piece of generosity that did not cost very much, but which
+clearly won me the undivided admiration of all the coolies. They
+passed the greater part of the night without sleep, with song and
+jest, with their _saki_ bottles and tobacco pipes. We slept well and
+warmly after partaking of an abundant supper of fowl and eggs,
+cooked in different ways by Kok-San with his usual talent and his
+usual variety of dishes.
+
+We had been informed that at this place we would hear a constant
+noise from the neighbouring volcano, and that hurtful gases
+(probably carbonic acid) sometimes accumulated in such quantities in
+the neighbouring woods that men and horses would be suffocated if
+they spent the night there. We listened in vain for the noise, and
+did not observe any trace of such gases. All was as peaceful as if
+the glowing hearth in the interior of the earth was hundreds of
+miles away. But we did not require the evidence of the column of
+smoke which was seen to use from the mountain top, which formed the
+goal of our visit, or of the inhabitants who survived the latest
+eruption, to come to the conclusion that we were in the
+neighbourhood of an enormous, still active volcano. Everywhere round
+our resting-place lay heaps of small pieces of lava which had been
+thrown out of the volcano (so-called lapilli), and which had not yet
+had time to weather sufficiently to serve as an under-stratum for
+any vegetation, and a little from the hut there was a solidified
+lava stream of great depth.
+
+Next day, the 4th October, we ascended the summit of the mountain.
+At first we travelled in _kago_ over a valley filled with pretty
+close wood, then the journey was continued on foot up the steep
+volcanic cone, covered with small lava blocks and lapilli. The way
+was staked out with small heaps of stones raised at a distance of
+about 100 metres apart. Near the crater we found at one of these
+cairns a little Shinto shrine, built of sticks. Its sides were only
+half a metre in length. Our guide performed his devotions here. One
+of them had already at a stone cairn situated farther down with
+great seriousness made some conjurations with reference to my
+promise to make an extra distribution of red wine, if we got good
+weather at the top.
+
+As on Vesuvius, we can also on Asamayama distinguish a large
+exterior crater, originating from some old eruption, but now almost
+completely filled up by a new volcanic cone, at whose top the
+present crater opens. This crater has a circumference of about two
+kilometres, the old crater, or what the old geologists called the
+elevation-crater, has been much larger. The volcano is still active.
+For it constantly throws out "smoke," consisting of watery vapour,
+sulphurous acid, and probably also carbonic acid. Occasionally a
+perceptible smell of sulphuretted hydrogen is observed. It is
+possible without difficulty to crawl to the edge of the crater and
+glance down into its interior. It is very deep. The walls are
+perpendicular, and at the bottom of the abyss there are to be seen
+several clefts from which vapours arise. In the same way "smoke"
+forces its way at some places at the edge of the crater through
+small imperceptible cracks in the mountain. Both on the border of
+the crater, on its sides and its bottom there is to be seen a yellow
+efflorescence, which at the places which I got at to examine it
+consisted of sulphur. The edge of the crater is solid rock, a
+little-weathered augiteandesite differing very much in its nature at
+different places. The same or similar rocks also project at several
+places at the old border of the crater, but the whole surface of the
+volcanic cone besides consists of small loose pieces of lava,
+without any trace of vegetation. Only at one place the brim of the
+old crater is covered with an open pine wood. The volcano has also
+small side craters, from which gases escape. The same coarse
+fantasy, which still prevails in the form of the hell-dogma among
+several of the world's most cultured peoples, has placed the home of
+those of the followers of Buddha who are doomed to eternal
+punishment in the glowing hearths in the interior of the mountain,
+to which these crater-openings lead; and that the heresies of the
+well-meaning Bishop Lindblom have not become generally prevalent in
+Japan is shown among other things by this, that many of these
+openings are said to be entrances to the "children's hell." Neither
+at the main crater nor at any of the side craters can any true lava
+streams be seen. Evidently the only things thrown out from them have
+been gases, volcanic ashes, and lapilli. On the other hand,
+extensive eruptions of lava have taken place at several points on
+the side of the mountain, though these places are now covered with
+volcanic ashes.
+
+After having eaten our breakfast in a cleft so close to the smoking
+crater that the empty bottles could be thrown directly into the
+bottomless deeps, we commenced our return journey. At first we took
+the same way as during the ascent, but afterwards held off to the
+right, down a much steeper and more difficult path than we had
+traversed before. The mountain side had here a slope of nearly
+forty-five degrees, and consisted of a quite loose volcanic sand,
+not bound together by any vegetable carpet. It would therefore have
+been scarcely possible to ascend to the summit of the mountain this
+way, but we went rapidly downwards, often at a dizzy speed, but
+without other inconvenience than that one now and then fell flat and
+rolled head-foremost down the steep slopes, and that our shoes were
+completely torn to tatters by the angular lava gravel. Above the
+mountaintop the sky was clear of clouds, but between it and the
+surface of the earth there spread out a thick layer of cloud which
+seen from above resembled a boundless storm-tossed sea, full of
+foaming breakers. The extensive view we would otherwise have had of
+the neighbouring mountain ridges from the top of Asamayama was thus
+concealed. Only here and there an opening was formed in the cloud,
+resembling a sun-spot, through which we got a glimpse of the
+underlying landscape. When we came to the foot of the mountain we
+long followed a ridge, covered with greenery, formed of an immense
+stream of lava, which had issued from an opening in the mountain
+side now refilled. This had probably taken place during the
+tremendous eruption of 1783, when not only enormous lava-streams
+destroyed forests and villages at the foot of the mountain, but the
+whole of the neighbouring region between Oiwake and Usui-toge,
+previously fertile, was changed by an ash-rain into an extensive
+waste. Across this large plain, infertile and little cultivated,
+situated at a height of 980 metres above the sea, we went without a
+guide to the village Oiwake, where we lodged for the night at an inn
+by the side of the road Nakasendo, one of the cleanest and best kept
+of the many well-kept inns I saw during our journey in the interior
+of the country.
+
+Hence I sent a messenger on foot to Takasaki to order a carriage to
+Tokio. A former _samurai_ undertook for a payment of three _yen_,
+(about 12_s_) to carry the message. Oiwake is indeed situated on the
+great road Nakasendo, but it can here only with difficulty be
+traversed by carriages, because between this village and Takasaki it
+is necessary to go over the pass Usui-toge, where the road, though
+lowered considerably of late, rises to a height of 1200 metres. We
+therefore here used _jinrikishas_, a mode of conveyance very
+agreeable to tourists, which, though introduced only recently, has
+already spread to all parts of the country.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE LANDSCAPE. ]
+
+Every one with an open eye for the beauties of nature and interest
+in the life and manners of a foreign people, must find a journey in
+_jinrikisha_ over Usui-toge pleasant in a high degree. The landscape
+here is extraordinarily beautiful, perhaps unmatched in the whole
+world. The road has been made here with great difficulty between
+wild, black, rocky masses, along deep clefts, whose sides are often
+covered with the most luxuriant vegetation. No fence protects the
+_jinrikisha_ in its rapid progress down the mountains from the
+bottomless abysses by the wayside. A man must therefore not be weak
+in the nerves if he is to derive pleasure from the journey. He must
+rely on the coolie's keen eye and sure foot. On all sides one is
+surrounded by a confused mass of lofty shattered mountain tops, and
+deep down in the valleys mountain streams rush along, whose
+crystal-clear water is collected here and there into small lakes
+confined between heights covered with greenery. Now the traveller
+passes a dizzy abyss by a bridge of the most defective construction,
+now he sees a stream of water rushing down from an enormous height
+by the wayside. Thousands of foot-passengers, crowds of pilgrims,
+long rows of coolies, oxen and horses bearing heavy burdens meet the
+traveller, who during frequent rests at the foot of the steep slopes
+has an opportunity of studying the variegated life of the people. He
+is always surrounded by cheerful and friendly faces, and the
+pleasant impression is never disturbed by the expressions of
+coarseness in speech and behaviour which so often meet us in Europe.
+
+It is not until the traveller has passed the mountain ridge and
+descended to a height of only 300 metres above the sea that the road
+becomes passable for a carriage. While we exchanged, not without
+regret, our clean, elegant _jinrikishas_ for two inferior vehicles
+drawn by horses, I saw two men wandering from shop to shop, standing
+some moments at each place, ringing a bell and passing on when they
+were not attended to. On my inquiry as to what sort of people they
+were, I was informed that they were wandering players. For me of
+course they did not ring in vain. For a payment of fifty cents they
+were ready immediately to show in the street itself a specimen of
+their art. One of them put on a well-made mask, representing the
+head of a monster, with a movable jaw and terrible teeth. To the
+mask was fastened a cloak, in which the player wrapt himself during
+the representation. He then with great skill and supple tasteful
+gestures, which would have honoured a European _danseuse_,
+represented the monster now creeping forward fawningly, now rushing
+along to devour its prey. A numerous crowd of children collected
+around us. The small folks followed the representation with great
+glee, and gave life to the play, or rather formed its proper
+background, by the feigned tenor with which they fled when the
+monster approached with open mouth and rolling eyes, and the
+eagerness with which they again followed and mocked it when its back
+was turned.
+
+[Illustration: BURDEN BEARERS ON A JAPANESE ROAD. Japanese drawing. ]
+
+In few countries are dramatic representations of all kinds so much
+thought of as in Japan. Playhouses are found even in small towns.
+The play is much frequented, and though the representations last the
+whole day, they are followed by the spectators with the liveliest
+interest. There are playbills as at home, and numerous writings on
+subjects relating to the theatre. Among the Japanese books which I
+bought, there was for instance a thick one, with innumerable
+woodcuts, devoted to showing how the first Japanese artists
+conceived the principal scenes in their _roles_, two volumes of
+playbills bound up together, &c.
+
+The Japanese pieces indeed strike a European as childish and
+monstrous, but one must admire many praiseworthy traits in the play
+itself, for instance the naturalness with which the players often
+declaim monologues lasting for a quarter or half an hour. The
+extravagances which here shock us are perhaps on the whole not more
+absurd than the scenes of the opera of to-day, or the buskins,
+masks, and peculiar dresses, which the Greeks considered
+indispensable in the exhibition of then great dramatic masterpieces.
+When the Japanese have been able to appropriate what is good in
+European culture, the dramatic art ought to have a grand future
+before it among them, if the development now going on is carried out
+cautiously so that the peculiarities of the people are not too much
+effaced. For, in many departments, and not least in that of art,
+there is much to be found here which when properly developed will
+form a new and important addition to the culture of the West, of
+which we are so proud.
+
+The large Japanese theatres, besides, often resemble the European
+ones in their interior arrangement. The partition between the stage
+and the space occupied by the spectators is the same as among us.
+Between the acts the former is concealed by a curtain. The stage is
+besides provided with painted scenes representing houses, woods,
+hills, &c., supported on wheels, so that a complete change of scene
+can be effected in a few moments. The music has the same place
+between the stage and the spectators as at home. The latter, as at
+home, are distributed partly in a gently rising amphitheatre, partly
+in several tiers of boxes rising one above another, the lowest tier
+being considered the principal one. The Japanese do not sit in the
+same way as we do. Neither the amphitheatre nor the boxes
+accordingly are provided with chairs or benches, but are divided
+into square compartments one or two feet deep, each intended for
+about four persons. They sit on cushions, squatting cross-legged in
+the common Japanese fashion. The compartments are divided by broad
+cross beams, which form the passages by which the spectators get to
+their places. During the play we saw attendants running about with
+tea, _saki_, tobacco pipes, and small braziers. For every one smokes
+during the acts, and places himself in his crib as comfortably as
+possible. The piece is followed with great attention, favourite
+actors and favourite passages being saluted with lively applause.
+Even women and children visit the theatre, and I have seen the
+former give their children suck without the least discomposure among
+thousands of spectators. Besides the plays intended for the public,
+there are given also a number of other dramatic representations, as
+society plays, peculiar family plays intended for the homes of the
+old feudal princes, spectacles got up for the Mikado, and some which
+have a half religious significance, &c.
+
+On the evening of the 5th October we came to Takasaki, prepared to
+start immediately for Tokio. But though the messenger we sent had
+duly executed his commission, horses could not be procured before
+midnight. We passed the evening with our former host, who at our
+first visit received us so unwillingly, but now with great
+friendliness. We would easily have reconciled ourselves to the
+delay, for a Japanese small town such as Takasaki has much worth
+seeing to offer a European, but a great part of the time was wasted
+in fruitless attempts to get the horse-hirer to let us have the
+horses a few hours earlier. In spending time in long conversations
+mixed with civilities and bows the Japanese are masters. Of this bad
+habit, which still often makes the European desperate, it will not
+perhaps be long necessary to complain, for everything indicates that
+the Japanese too will soon be carried along at the endlessly roaring
+speed of the Steam Age.
+
+When we had at last got horses we continued our journey, first in a
+carriage to Tokio, then by rail to Yokohama, arriving there on the
+afternoon of the 6th October. From this journey I shall only relate
+an incident which may form a little picture throwing light on life
+in Japan.
+
+While we halted for a short time in the morning of the 6th October
+at a large inn by the roadside, we saw half a dozen young girls
+finishing their toilets in the inn-yard. In passing we may say, that
+a Japanese peasant girl, like girls in general, may be pretty or the
+reverse, but that she generally is, what cannot always be said of
+the peasant girls at home, cleanly and of attractive manners. They
+washed themselves at the stream of water in the inn-yard, smoothed
+their artistically dressed hair, which, however, had been but little
+disturbed by the cushions on which they had slept, and brushed their
+dazzlingly white teeth. Soap is not used for washing, but a cotton
+bag filled with bran. The teeth were brushed with a wooden pin, one
+end of which was changed by beating into a brush-like collection of
+wooden cords. The tooth-powder consisted of finely powdered shells
+and corals, and was kept in small, neat wooden boxes, which, along
+with tooth-brushes and small square bundles of a very strong and
+cheap paper, all clearly intended for the use of the peasants, were
+sold for a trifle in most of the innumerable shops along the road.
+For such stupid regulations as in former times in Europe rendered
+traffic in the country difficult, and often obliged the countryman
+to betake himself to the nearest town to buy some horse-shoes or a
+roll of wire, appear not to be found in Japan, on which account most
+of the peasants living on a country road seek a subsidiary way of
+making a living by trafficking in small articles in request among
+the country people.
+
+Incidents of the sort referred to we had seen so many times before
+that on this occasion it would not have attracted any further
+attention on our part, if we had not thereby been reminded that we
+must look after our own exterior, before we could make our entrance
+into the capital of Japan. We therefore took from the carriage our
+basket with linen, shaving implements, and towels, settled down
+around the stream of water at which the girls stood, and immediately
+began to wash and shave ourselves. There was now general excitement.
+The girls ceased to go on with their own toilet, and crowded round
+us in a ring in order to see how Europeans behave in such cases, and
+to give us the assistance that might be required. Some ran laughing
+and bustling about, one on the top of another, in order immediately
+to procure us what we wanted, one held the mirror, another the
+shaving-brush, a third the soap, &c. Round them gathered other elder
+women, whose blackened teeth indicated that they were married. A
+little farther off stood men of all ages. Chance had here quite
+unexpectedly shown us a picture from folk-life of the most agreeable
+kind. This pleasant temper continued while we immediately after, in
+the presence of all, ate our breakfast in the porch of the
+ground-floor, surrounded by our former ministering spirits, now
+kneeling around us, continually bowing the head to the ground,
+laughing and chattering. The same fun went on when a little after I
+bought some living fresh-water fishes and put them in spirit, yet
+with the difference that the girls now, with some cries, to show
+their fear of handling the living animals--though fish-cleaning was
+one of their ordinary occupations--handed over to the men the
+trouble of taking the fishes and putting them into the spirit-jars.
+For a worm placed in spirit they feigned the greatest terror,
+notwithstanding its covering of spirit and glass, and ran shrieking
+away when any one suddenly brought the jar with the worm near their
+faces. It ought to be noted to the honour of the Japanese, that
+although we were by no means surrounded by any select circle, there
+was not heard during the whole time a single offensive word among
+the closely-packed spectators, a fact which gives us an idea of the
+excellent tone of society which prevails here, even among the lowest
+of the population, and which shows that the Japanese, although they
+have much to learn from the Europeans, ought not to imitate them in
+all. In Japan there is much that is good, old, and national to take
+note of, perhaps more than the Japanese at present have any idea of,
+and undoubtedly more than many of the European residents will allow.
+
+
+[Footnote 379: On the contrary, we saw a number of beggars on the
+country roads in the neighbourhood of Yokohama. ]
+
+[Footnote 380: _Voyage de M. Golovin_, Paris, 1818, i. p. 176.
+Golovin, who was captain in the Russian navy, passed the years
+1811-13 in imprisonment in Japan. He and his comrades in misfortune
+were received with great friendliness by the people, and very well
+treated by the authorities, if we except the exceedingly tedious
+examinations to which they were subjected to extract from them the
+most minute particulars regarding Europe, and particularly Russia. ]
+
+[Footnote 381: General Grant, as is well known, visited Japan in the
+autumn of 1879. He left Yokohama the day after the _Vega_ anchored
+in its harbour. ]
+
+[Footnote 382: According to the statement of the inhabitants, I had
+not time to visit the place. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+ Farewell dinner at Yokohama--The Chinese in Japan--Voyage
+ to Kobe--Purchase of Japanese Books--Journey by rail to Kioto
+ --Biwa Lake and the Legend of its Origin--Dredging there--
+ Japanese Dancing-Girls--Kioto--The Imperial Palace--Temples
+ --Swords and Sword-bearers--Shintoism and Buddhism--
+ The Porcelain Manufacture--Japanese Poetry--Feast in a
+ Buddhist Temple--Sailing across the Inland Sea of Japan
+ --Landing at Hirosami and Shimonoseki--Nagasaki--Excursion
+ to Mogi--Collection of Fossil Plants--Departure from Japan.
+
+
+The last days at Yokohama were taken up with farewell visits there
+and at Tokio. An afternoon's leisure during the last day I spent in
+the capital of Japan I employed in making an excursion in order to
+dredge from a Japanese boat in the river debouching at the town. The
+Japanese boats differ from the European in being propelled not by
+rowing but by sculling. They have usually a deck above the level of
+the water, which is dazzlingly white and laid with matting, like the
+rooms in a Japanese house. The dredging yielded a great number of
+Anodonta, large Paludina, and some small shells.
+
+During our stay in Japan I requested Lieutenant Nordquist to make as
+complete a collection of the land and fresh-water crustacea of the
+country as the short time permitted. In consequence of the unusual
+poverty of the country in these animal forms the result was much
+smaller than we had hoped. During a preceding voyage to the Polar
+Sea I had assisted in making a collection of land crustacea on
+Renoe, an island north of the limit of trees in the outer
+archipelago of northern Norway. It is possible to collect there in a
+few hours as many annuals of this group as in fertile Japan in as
+many days. There are parts of Japan, covered with thick woods and
+thickets of bushes, where during a forenoon's excursion one can
+scarcely find a single crustacean, although the ground is full of
+deep, shady clefts in which masses of dried leaves are collected,
+and which therefore ought to be an exceedingly suitable haunt for
+land mollusca. The reason of this poverty ought perhaps to be sought
+in the want of chalk or basic calcareous rocks, which prevails in
+the parts of Japan which we visited.
+
+After the Swedish-Dutch minister had further given us a splendid
+farewell dinner at the Grand Hotel, to which, as before, the
+Japanese minsters and the representatives of the foreign powers in
+Japan were invited, we at last weighed anchor on the 11th October to
+prosecute our voyage. At this dinner we saw for the first time the
+Chinese embassy which at the time visited Japan with the view of
+settling the troublesome Loo-Choo affair which threatened to lead to
+a war between the two great powers of Eastern Asia. The Chinese
+ambassadors were, as usual, two in number, being commissioned to
+watch one over the other. One of them laughed immoderately at all
+that was said during dinner, although he did not understand a word.
+According to what I was told by one who had much experience in the
+customs of the heavenly empire, he did this, not because he heard or
+understood anything worth laughing at, but because he considered it
+good manners to laugh.
+
+Remarkable was the interest which the Chinese labourers settled at
+Yokohama took in our voyage, about which they appeared to have read
+something in their own or in the Japanese newspapers. When I sent
+one of the sailors ashore to execute a commission, and asked him how
+he could do that without any knowledge of the language, he replied,
+"There is no fear, I always meet with some Chinaman who speaks
+English and helps me." The Chinese not only always assisted our
+sailors as interpreters without remuneration, but accompanied them
+for hours, gave them good advice in making purchases, and expressed
+their sympathy with all that they must have suffered during our
+wintering in the high north. They were always cleanly, tall, and
+stately in their figures, and corresponded in no particular to the
+calumnious descriptions we so often read of this people in European
+and American writings.
+
+From Yokohama the course was shaped for Kobe, one of the more
+considerable Japanese ports which have been opened to Europeans.
+Kobe is specially remarkable on account of its having railway
+communication with Osaka, the most important manufacturing town of
+Japan, and with Kioto, the ancient capital and seat of the Mikado's
+court for centuries.
+
+I had already begun at Yokohama to buy Japanese books, particularly
+such as were printed before the opening of the ports to Europeans.
+In order to carry on this traffic with greater success, I had
+procured the assistance of a young Japanese very familiar with
+French, Mr. OKUSCHI, assistant in Dr. Geertz' chemico-technical
+laboratory at Yokohama. But because the supply of old books in this
+town, which a few years ago had been of little importance, was very
+limited, I had at first, in order to make purchases on a large
+scale, repeatedly sent Mr. Okuschi to Tokio, the seat of the former
+Shogun dynasty, and from that town, before the departure of the
+_Vega_ from Yokohama, to Kioto, the former seat of learning in
+Japan. The object of the _Vega's_ call at the port of Kobe was to
+fetch the considerable purchases made there by Mr. Okuschi[383]
+
+Kobe, or Hiogo, as the old Japanese part of the town is called, is a
+city of about 40,000 inhabitants, beautifully situated at the
+entrance to the Inland Sea of Japan, _i.e._, the sound which
+separates the main island from the south islands, Shikoku and
+Kiushiu. Mountain ridges of considerable height here run along the
+sea-shore. Some of the houses of the European merchants are built on
+the lower slopes of these hills, with high, beautiful, forest-clad
+heights as a background, and a splendid view of the harbour in
+front. The Japanese part of the town consists, as usual, of small
+houses which, on the side next the street, are occupied mainly with
+sale or work-shops where the whole family lives all day. The streets
+have thus a very lively appearance, and offer the foreigner an
+endless variety of remarkable and instructive pictures from the
+life of the people. The European part of the town, on the other
+hand, is built with stately houses, some of which are situated on
+the street that runs along the shore. Here, among others, are to be
+found splendid European hotels, European clubs, counting-houses,
+shops, &c.
+
+Not far from Kobe, and having railway communication with it, is
+Osaka, the largest manufacturing town of Japan, famed for its
+theatres and its dancing-girls. Unfortunately I had not time to
+visit it, for I started for the old capital, Kioto, a few hours
+after the _Vega_ anchored, and after I had waited on the governor in
+order to procure the passport that is still required for travelling
+in the interior. He received me, thanks to a letter of introduction
+I had with me from one of the ministers at Tokio, in an exceedingly
+agreeable way. His reception-room was part of a large European stone
+house, the vestibule of which was tastefully fitted up in European
+style with a Brussels carpet gay with variegated colours. At our
+visit we were offered Japanese tea, as is customary everywhere in
+Japan, both in the palace of the Emperor and the cabin of the poor
+peasant. The Governor was, as all the higher officials in Japan now
+are, dressed like a European of distinction, but he could not speak
+any European language. He showed himself, however, to be much
+interested in our voyage, and immediately ordered an official in his
+court, who was well acquainted with English, Mr. YANIMOTO, to
+accompany me to Kioto.
+
+We travelled thither by a railway constructed wholly in the European
+style. At Kioto my companion, at my special request, conducted me
+not to the European hotel there, but to a Japanese inn, remarkable
+as usual for cleanliness, for a numerous crowd of talkative female
+attendants, and for the extreme friendliness of the inn people to
+then guests as soon as they indicated, by taking off then boots at
+the door, that it was their intention not to break Japanese customs
+and usages in any offensive way. A calling card and a letter from
+Admiral Kawamura, minister of marine, which I sent from the hotel to
+the Governor of Kioto, procured me an adjutant No. 2, a young,
+cheerful, and talkative official, Mr. KOBA-YASCHI, whose eyes
+sparkled with intelligence and merry good humour. One would sooner
+have taken him for a highly-esteemed student president at some
+northern university, than for a Japanese official. It was already
+late in the day, so that before nightfall I had time only to take
+the bath which, at every Japanese inn not of too inferior a kind, is
+always at the traveller's call, and arrange the dreding excursion
+which, along with Lieut. Nordquist, I intended to make next day on
+Lake Biwa.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE SHOP. ]
+
+The road between Kioto and Biwa we travelled the following morning
+in _jinrikishas_. In a short time there will be communication
+between these two places by a railway constructed exclusively by
+native workmen and native engineers. It will be, and is intended to
+be, an actual Japanese railway. For a considerable distance it
+passes through a tunnel, which, however, as some of the Europeans at
+Kobe stated, might easily have been avoided "if the Japanese had not
+considered it desirable that Japan, too, should have a railway
+tunnel to show, as such are found both in Europe and America." It is
+probable, in any case, that the bends which would have been required
+if the tunnel was to be avoided, would have cost more by the
+additional length than the tunnel, and that therefore the procedure
+of the Japanese was better considered than their envious European
+neighbours would allow. There appears to prevail among the European
+residents in Japan a certain jealousy of the facility with which
+this country, till recently so far behind in an industrial respect,
+assimilates the skill in art and industry of the Europeans, and of
+the rapidity with which the people thereby make themselves
+independent of the wares of the foreign merchants.
+
+When we reached Lake Biwa we were conducted by Mr. Koba-Yaschi to an
+inn close by the shore, with a splendid view of the southern part of
+the lake. We were shown into beautiful Japanese rooms, which had
+evidently been arranged for the reception of Europeans, and in which
+accordingly some tables and chairs had been placed. On the tables we
+found, on our arrival, bowls, with fruit and confections, Japanese
+tea, and braziers. The walls were formed partly of tastefully gilt
+paper panels ornamented with mottoes, reminding visitors of the
+splendid view.
+
+A whole day of the short time which was allowed me to study the
+remarkable things of Kioto I devoted to Lake Biwa, because lakes are
+exceedingly uncommon in the south, for they occur only in the
+countries which have either been covered with glaciers in the most
+recent geological periods, or, in consequence of the action of
+volcanic forces, have been the scene of violent disturbances of the
+surface of the earth. I believed that Lake Biwa would form an
+exception to this, but I was probably mistaken, for tradition
+relates that this lake was formed in a single night at the same time
+that the high volcanic cone of Fusiyama was elevated. This
+tradition, in its general outline, corresponds so closely with the
+teaching of geology, that scarcely any geologist will doubt its
+truth.
+
+After our arrival at the inn we had to wait a very long time for the
+steamer I had ordered. On this account I thoughtlessly enough broke
+out in reproaches on my excellent Japanese adjutants, who, however,
+received my hard words only with friendly smiles, which increased
+still further my impatience at the loss of time which was thus
+occasioned. It was not until far on in the day, when I was already
+out dredging from a small steamer, that I was informed as to the
+cause of the delay. The Biwa Steamship Company had, at the request
+of the Governor, intended to place at my disposal a very large boat
+well provided with coal, but after taking the coal on board it had
+sunk so deep that it grounded in the mud of the harbour. We had
+already got far out with the little steamer when the large one at
+last got off. I was now obliged to exchange vessels in order to be
+received "in a more honourable way." It was not until this took
+place that I was informed that I was guest and not master, on which
+account I was obliged to employ the rest of the afternoon in
+excusing my former violent behaviour, in which, with the help of
+friendly words, beer, and red wine, I succeeded pretty well, to
+judge by the mirth which soon began to prevail among my now very
+numerous Japanese companions.
+
+On the little steamer I had ordered two of my crew whom I had
+brought with me from the _Vega_ to prepare a meal for the Japanese
+and ourselves. In this way the dinner that had been arranged for us,
+without my knowledge, became superfluous. I was obliged instead to
+receive as a gift the provisions and liquors purchased for the
+dinner, consisting of fowls, eggs, potatoes, red wine and beer,
+giving at the same time a receipt as a matter of form.
+
+During our excursion on the lake we met with various boats laden
+with sea-weed, which had been taken up from the bottom of the lake
+to be used as manure for the neighbouring cultivated fields. Partly
+among these algae, partly by dredging, Lieut. Nordquist collected
+various interesting fresh-water crustacea (Paludina, Melania, Unio,
+Planorbis &c.,) several sorts of shrimps (a Hippolyte) small fishes,
+&c. Lake Biwa abounds in fish, and harbours besides a large
+clumsily-formed species of lizard. In order to make further
+collections of the animal forms occurring there, Lieut. Nordquist
+remained at the lake till next day. I, on the other hand, went
+immediately back to Kioto, arriving there in the evening after
+nightfall.
+
+After having eaten, along with my two Japanese companions, an
+unexceptionable European dinner at the inn of the town, kept by
+Japanese, but arranged in European style, we paid a visit to a
+company of Japanese dancing-girls.
+
+Kioto competes with Osaka for the honour of having the prettiest
+dancing-girls. These form a distinct class of young girls, marked by
+a peculiar variegated dress. They wear besides a peculiar
+hair-ornament, are much painted, and have their lips coloured black
+and gold. At the dancing places of greatest note a European is not
+received, unless he has with him a known native who answers for his
+courteous behaviour. After taking off his shoes on entering, the
+visitor is introduced to a separate room with its floor covered with
+matting and its walls ornamented with Japanese drawings and mottoes,
+but without other furniture. A small square cushion is given to each
+of the guests. After they have settled themselves in Japanese
+fashion, that is to say, squatting cross-legged, pipes and tea are
+brought in, on which a whole crowd of young girls come in and,
+chatting pleasantly, settle themselves around the guests, observing
+all the while complete decency even according to the most exacting
+European ideas. There is not to be seen here any trace of the
+effrontery and coarseness which are generally to be found in similar
+places in Europe. One would almost believe that he was among a crowd
+of school-girls who had given the sour moral lessons of their
+governess the slip, and were thinking of nothing else than
+innocently gossiping away some hours. After a while the dance
+begins, accompanied by very monotonous music and singing. The slow
+movements of the legs and arms of the dancers remind us of certain
+slow and demure scenes from European ballets. There is nothing
+indecent in this dance, but we learn that there are other dances
+wilder and less decorous.
+
+The dancing-girls are recruited exclusively from the poorer classes,
+pretty young girls, to help their parents or to earn some styvers
+for themselves, selling themselves for a certain time to the owners
+of the dancing-places, and when the time agreed upon has come to an
+end returning to their homes, where notwithstanding this they marry
+without difficulty. All the dancing-girls therefore are young, many
+of them pretty even according to European ideas, though their
+appearance is destroyed in our eyes by the tasteless way in which
+they paint themselves and colour their lips. Unfortunately I had not
+time to avail myself of the opportunity which Kioto offers the
+foreigner of judging with certainty regarding the Japanese taste in
+female beauty. For here, as at various other Japanese towns, there
+are a number of girls who have been officially selected as the most
+beautiful among the youth of the place. The Japanese may visit them
+for a certain payment, but to Europeans they do not show themselves
+willingly, and only for a large sum. When this takes place at any
+time, it is only a dumb show for a few moments, during which no
+words are exchanged.
+
+[Illustration: JAPANESE COURT DRESS. ]
+
+The Governor had promised to carry me round next day to see whatever
+was remarkable in the town. I was not much delighted at this,
+because I feared that the whole day would be taken up with
+inspecting the whole or half-European public offices and schools,
+which had not the slightest interest for me. My fear however was
+quite unjustified. The Governor was a man of genius, who, according
+to the statements of my companions, was reckoned among the first of
+the contemporary poets of Japan. He immediately declared that he
+supposed that the new public offices and schools would interest me
+much less than the old palaces, temples, porcelain and _faience_
+manufactories of the town, and that he therefore intended to employ
+the day I spent under his guidance in showing me the latter.
+
+[Illustration: NOBLE IN ANTIQUE DRESS. ]
+
+We made a beginning with the old imperial palace Gosho, the most
+splendid dwelling of Old Japan. It is not however very grand
+according to European ideas. A very extensive space of ground is
+here covered with a number of one-story wooden houses, intended for
+the Emperor, the imperial family, and their suite. The buildings
+are, like all Japanese houses, divided by movable panels into a
+number of rooms, richly provided with paintings and gilded
+ornamentation, but otherwise without a trace of furniture. For the
+palace now stands uninhabited since the Mikado overthrew the Shogun
+dynasty and removed to Tokio. It already gives a striking picture of
+the change which has taken place in the land. Only the imperial
+family and the great men of the country were formerly permitted to
+enter the sacred precincts of Gosho. Now it stands open to every
+curious native or foreigner and it has even as an exhibition
+building been already pressed into the service of industry.
+Alongside the large buildings there are several small ones, of which
+one was intended to protect the Emperor-deity during earthquakes,
+the others formed play-places for the company of grown children who
+were then permitted to govern the country.
+
+[Illustration: BUDDHIST PRIEST. ]
+
+Much more remarkable and instructive than the now deserted imperial
+palace are the numerous temples at Kioto, of which we visited
+several. We were generally received by the priests in a large
+vestibule, whose floor was covered with a fine woollen carpet and
+was provided with tables and chairs of European patterns. The
+priests first offered us Japanese tea, cigars, and sweetmeats, then
+we examined some valuable articles exhibited in the room, consisting
+of bronzes, works in the noble metals, splendid old lacquer work,
+and a number of famous swords dedicated to the temple. These were
+the only things that our freethinking Governor treated with
+reverence, for the rest neither the priests nor their reliques
+seemed to inspire him with any particular respect.
+
+[Illustration: A SAMURAI. ]
+
+When a valuable Japanese sword is exhibited one touches neither the
+hilt nor the scabbard, and of course still less the blade, with the
+bare hand, but it is taken hold of either with a gloved hand, or
+with the hand with a handkerchief or piece of cloth wrapped round
+it. The blade is only half bared, the steel setting is looked at
+against the light and admired; on the often exceedingly valuable
+blades which are not mounted, but only provided with a wooden case
+to protect them from rust, the maker's mark is examined, and so on.
+As among us in former times, the swordsmith's is the only handicraft
+which in old times was held in high esteem in Japan, and immense
+sums were often paid for sword-blades forged by famous masters of
+the art. Among old Japanese writings are to be found many works
+specially treating of the making of weapons. But since the swordsmen
+(_samurai_) have now been forbidden to show themselves armed, old
+Japanese swords are sold in all the towns by hundreds and thousands,
+often for a trifle. During our stay in the country I purchased for a
+comparatively limited sum a fine collection of such weapons. Even
+those who cannot appreciate the artistic forging of the blade, the
+steel-setting, and tempering, must admire the exceedingly tasteful
+casting and embossing of the ornamentation, especially of the
+guard-plates of the sword. They are often veritable works of art,
+unsurpassed in style and execution.
+
+It is not very many years ago since the men who belonged to the
+_samurai_ class never showed themselves abroad without being armed
+with two swords. Even schoolboys went armed to the first European
+schools that were established in the country. This gave occasion to
+several acts of violence during the time which succeeded the opening
+of the ports, for which reason the European ambassadors some years
+after requested that carrying the sword in time of peace should be
+prohibited. To this the Japanese government answered that it would
+make short work with the minister who should publish such a
+prohibition. Soon after, however, it gave _permission_ to those who
+desired it to go without weapons, and the carrying of arms soon
+became so unfashionable that one of the authorities did dare at last
+to issue a distinct prohibition of it. During our stay in Japan,
+accordingly, we did not see a single man armed with the two swords
+formerly in use.
+
+After we had seen and admired the treasures in the temple vestibule,
+we visited the temple itself. This is always of wood, richly
+ornamented with carvings and gilding. If it is dedicated to Shinto,
+there are no images in it, and very few ornaments, if we except a
+mirror and a large locked press with the doors smashed in, which
+sometimes occupies the wall opposite the entrance, and in which, as
+I have already stated, the spirit of the deity is said to dwell. The
+Shinto temples are in general poor. Many are so inconsiderable as to
+look almost like dovecotes. They are often completely deserted, so
+that it is difficult to discover them among the magnificent trees by
+which they were surrounded. The entrance to the temple is indicated
+by a gate (_torryi_) of wood, stone, or copper, and here and there
+are ropes, stretched over the way, to which written prayers and vows
+are affixed.
+
+Even those who have long studied Japan and its literature have very
+little knowledge of the inner essence of Shintoism. This religion is
+considered by some a pure deism, by others a belief with political
+aims, the followers of which worship the departed heroes of the
+country. Of a developed morality this religion is wholly devoid. In
+the same way it appears to be uncertain whether Shintoism is a
+survival of the original religion of the country or whether it has
+been brought from abroad.
+
+[Illustration: GATE ACROSS THE ROAD TO A SHINTO TEMPLE. ]
+
+Buddhism was introduced from China by Corea. Its temples are more
+ornamented than the Shinto temples, and contain images of deities,
+bells, drums, holy books, and a great quantity of altar ornaments.
+The transmigration of souls, and rewards and punishments in a life
+after this, are doctrines of Buddhism. Outside the temples proper
+there are to be found in many places large or small images in stone
+or bronze of the deities of Buddha. The largest of these consist of
+colossal statues in bronze (_Daibutsu_), representing Buddha in a
+sitting position, and themselves forming the screen to a temple with
+smaller images. A similar statue is also to be found at Kamakura,
+another at Tokio, a third at Nara near Kioto, and so on. Some have
+of late years been sold for the value of the metal, one has in this
+way been brought to London, and is now exhibited in the Kensington
+Museum. The metal of the statues consists of an alloy of copper with
+tin and a little gold, the last named constituent giving rise to the
+report that their value is very considerable. To give an idea of the
+size of some _Daibutsu_ statues it may be mentioned that the one at
+Nara is fifty-three and a half feet high, and that one can crawl
+into the head through the nose orifices.
+
+
+[Illustration: BUDDHIST TEMPLE AT KOBE. ]
+
+Nearly all the _Daibutsu_ images are made after nearly the same
+design, which has been improved from generation to generation until
+the countenance of the image has received a stamp of benevolence,
+calm, and majesty, which has probably never been surpassed by the
+productions of western art. _Daibutsu_ images evidently stand in
+the same relation to the works of private sculptors as folk-poetry
+to that of individual bards.
+
+As I have before pointed out, the Western taste for the gigantic was
+not prevalent in Old Japan. It was evidently elegance and neatness,
+not grandeur, that formed the object towards which the efforts of
+the artist, the architect, and the gardener were directed. Only the
+_Daibutsu_ images, some bells, and other instruments of worship form
+exceptions to this. During our excursion at Kioto we passed an
+inclosure where the walls were built of blocks of stone so colossal,
+that it was difficult to comprehend how it had been possible to lift
+and move them with the means that were at the disposal of the
+Japanese in former times. In the neighbourhood of that place there
+was a grave, probably the only one of its kind. It is described in
+the following way in an account of the curiosities of Kioto written
+by a native:--
+
+ "Mimisuka, or the grave of the noses and the ears, was
+ erected by Hideyoshi Taiko, who lived about A.D. 1590. When
+ the military chiefs of this famous man attacked Corea with
+ a hundred and fifty thousand soldiers, he gave orders that
+ they should bring home and show him all the ears and noses
+ of the enemies who were killed in the contest, for it was
+ an old practice in Japan to cut off the enemies' heads to
+ show them to the king or the commander of the army. But it
+ was now impossible to bring the heads of the dead Corean
+ warriors to Japan, because the distance was too great.
+ Hideyoshi therefore gave the above order, and the ears and
+ noses, which were brought to Japan, were buried together at
+ that place. The grave is 730 feet in circumference, and is
+ 30 feet high."
+
+Kioto is one of the principal places for the manufacture of
+_faience_, porcelain, and _cloisonne_. The productions of the
+ceramic art are, as is well-known, distinguished by their tasteful
+forms and beautiful colours, and are highly valued by connoisseurs,
+on which account they are exported on a large scale to Europe and
+America. The works are numerous and small, and are owned for the
+most part by families that for a long succession of generations have
+devoted themselves to the same occupation. The articles are burned
+in very small furnaces, and are commonly sold in a shop which is
+close to the place where they are made. The making of porcelain in
+Japan, therefore, bears the stamp rather of handicraft than of
+manufacturing industry. The wares gain thereby in respect of art to
+an almost incredible degree. They have the same relation to the
+productions of the great European manufactories that the drawing of
+an artist has to a showily coloured lithograph. But the price is
+high in proportion, and the Japanese porcelain is too dear for
+every-day use even in its own country. Nearly all the large sets of
+table porcelain that I saw in Japan were, therefore, ordered from
+abroad. The cups which the natives themselves use for rice, tea, and
+_saki_ are, however, of native manufacture; but even in a
+well-provided Japanese household there is seldom so much porcelain
+as would be required for a proper coffee-party at home.
+
+In the evening the Governor had invited us to a dinner, which was
+given in a hall belonging to a literary society in the town. The
+rooms were partly furnished in European style with tables, chairs,
+Brussels carpets, &c. The dinner was European in the arrangement of
+dishes, wines, and speeches. The dishes and wines were abundant and
+in great variety. The company were very merry, and the host appeared
+to be greatly pleased, when I mentioned that at one of the places
+which I had seen that day I saw a wall adorned by a motto of his
+composition. He immediately promised to write a similar one on me
+with reference to my visit to the town, and when a few moments after
+he had the first line ready, he invited his Japanese guests to write
+the second. They tried for a good while with merry jests to hit upon
+some suitable conclusion, but in vain. Early the following morning
+Mr. Koba-Yaschi came to me, bringing with him a broad strip of silk
+on which the following was pencilled in bold, nobly-formed
+characters:
+
+ Umi hara-no-hate-made
+ Akiva-Sumi-watare,
+
+which when translated runs thus:
+
+ "As far as the sea extends
+ The autumn moon spreads her beneficent light."
+
+According to the explanation which I received the piece points out
+that the autumn moon spreads her beneficent rays as far as to that
+place in the high north where we wintered. After the above-quoted
+verse came the following addition in Japanese: "Written by Machimura
+Masanavo, Governor of Kioto-Fu, to Professor Nordenskioeld, on the
+occasion of a dinner given to him during the autumn of 1879." The
+whole besides was signed with the author's common, as well as his
+poetical, name, and had his seal attached. His poetical name was
+RIO-SAN, which may be literally translated "Dragon-Mountain."
+
+The poetry of the Japanese is so unlike that of the Western nations
+that we find it difficult to comprehend the productions of the
+Japanese poets. Perhaps they ought more correctly to be called
+poetical mottoes. They play a great part in the intellectual life of
+the Japanese. Their authors are highly esteemed, and even in the
+homes of the poorer classes the walls are often ornamented with
+strips of silk or paper on which poems are written in large, bold,
+pencil characters. Among the books I brought home with me are many
+which contain collections of the writings of private poets and
+poetesses, or selections from the most famous of the productions of
+Japanese literature in this department. A roll of drawings which
+turned up very often represents the sorrowful fate of a famous
+poetess. First of all she is depicted as a representative Japanese
+beauty, blooming with youth and grace, then she is represented in
+different stages of decay, then as dead, then as a half-decayed
+corpse torn asunder by ravens, and finally as a heap of bones. The
+series ends with a cherry-tree in splendid bloom, into which the
+heroine, after her body had passed through all the stages of
+annihilation, has been changed. The cherry-tree in blossom is
+considered by the Japanese the ideal of beauty in the vegetable
+kingdom, and during the flowering season of this tree excursions are
+often undertaken to famous cherry-groves where hour after hour is
+passed in tranquil admiration of the flower-splendour of the tree.
+Unfortunately I was so late in getting the explanation of the
+beautiful poetical idea that ran through this series of pictures,
+some of which were executed with execrable truth to nature, that I
+missed the opportunity of purchasing it.
+
+[Illustration: RIO SAN'S SEAL. ]
+
+I was obliged to leave Kioto too early in order to be present at a
+_fete_, which was given to us at Kobe by the Japanese, Europeans,
+and Chinese who were interested in our voyage. The entertainment was
+held in a Buddhist temple without the town, and was very pleasant
+and agreeable. The Japanese did not seem at all to consider that
+their temple was desecrated by such an arrangement. In the course of
+the afternoon for instance there came several pilgrims to the
+temple. I observed them carefully, and could not mark in their
+countenances any trace of displeasure at a number of foreigners
+feasting in the beautiful temple grove whither they had come on
+pilgrimage. They appeared rather to consider that they had come to
+the goal of their wanderings at a fortunate moment, and therefore
+gladly accepted the refreshments that were offered them.
+
+On the morning of the 18th October the _Vega_ again weighed anchor,
+to proceed on her voyage. The course was shaped through the Inland
+Sea of Japan for Nagasaki. When I requested of the Governor of Kobe
+permission to land at two places on the way, he not only immediately
+granted my request, but also sent on the _Vega_ the same
+English-speaking official from his court who had before attended me
+to Kioto. The weather was clear and fine, so that we had a good
+opportunity of admiring the magnificent environs of the Inland Sea.
+They resemble much the landscape in a northern archipelago. The
+views here are however more monotonous in consequence of their being
+less variety in the contours of the mountains. Here as at Kobe the
+hills consist mainly of a species of granite which is exposed to
+weathering on so large a scale that the hard rocks are nearly
+everywhere decomposed into a yellow sand unfavourable for
+vegetation. The splendid wild granite cliffs of the north
+accordingly are absent here. All the hill-tops are evenly rounded,
+and everywhere, except where there has been a sand-slip, covered
+with a rich vegetation, which in consequence of the evenness of
+height of the trees gives little variety to the landscape, which
+otherwise is among the most beautiful on the globe.
+
+[Illustration: BURYING PLACE AT KIOTO. ]
+
+We landed at two places, on the first occasion at Hirosami. Here
+some fishermens' cabins and some peasants' houses formed a little
+village at the foot of a high, much-weathered granite ridge. The
+burying-place was situated near one of the houses, close to the
+shore. On an area of some hundred square yards there were numerous
+gravestones, some upright, some fallen. Some were ornamented with
+fresh flowers, at one was a Shinto shrine of wooden pins, at another
+stood a bowl with rice and a small _saki_ bottle. Our zoologists
+here made a pretty rich collection of littoral animals, among which
+may be mentioned a cuttle-fish which had crept down amongst the wet
+sand, an animal that is industriously searched for and eaten by the
+natives. Among the cultivated plants we saw here, as many times
+before in the high-lying parts of the country, an old acquaintance
+from home, namely buckwheat.
+
+The second time the _Vega_ anchored at a peasant village right
+opposite Shimonoseki. When we landed there came an official on
+board, courteously declaring that we had no right to land at that
+place. But he was immediately satisfied and made no more
+difficulties when he was informed that we had the permission of the
+Governor, and that instead of the usual passport an official from
+Kobe accompanied the vessel. Shimonoseki has a melancholy reputation
+in European-Japanese history from the deeds of violence done here by
+a united English, French, Dutch, and American fleet of seventeen
+vessels on the 4th and 5th September, 1864, in order to compel the
+Japanese to open the sound to foreigners, and the unreasonably heavy
+compensation which after the victory was won they demanded from the
+conquered. Although only fifteen years have passed since this
+occurred, there appears to be no trace of bitter feeling towards
+Europeans among the inhabitants of the region. At least we were
+received at the village in the neighbourhood of which we landed with
+extraordinary kindness. The village was situated at the foot of a
+rocky ridge, and consisted of a number of houses arranged in a row
+along a single street, the fronts of the houses being as usual
+occupied as shops, places for selling _saki_, and workshops for home
+industry. The only remarkable things besides that the village had to
+offer consisted of a Shinto temple surrounded by beautiful trees and
+a considerable salt-work, which consisted of extensive, shallow,
+well-planned ponds now nearly dry, into which the sea-water is
+admitted in order to evaporate, and from which the condensed salt
+liquid is afterwards drawn into salt-pans in order that the
+evaporation may be completed. It was remarkable to observe that
+several crustacea throve exceedingly well in the very strong brine.
+
+[Illustration: ENTRANCE TO NAGASAKI. ]
+
+On the surrounding hills we saw thickets of the Japanese wax tree,
+_Rhus succedaneus_. The wax is pressed out of the berries of this
+bush with the help of heat. It is used on a large scale in making
+the lights which the natives themselves burn, and is exported
+bleached and refined to Europe, where it is sometimes used in the
+manufacture of lights. Now, however, these wax lights are
+increasingly superseded by American kerosene oil. The price has
+fallen so much that the preparation of vegetable wax is now said
+scarcely to yield a profit.[384]
+
+We left this place next morning, and on the 21st October the _Vega_
+anchored in the harbour of Nagasaki. My principal intention in
+visiting this place was to collect fossil plants, which I supposed
+would be found at the Takasima coal-mine, or in the neighbourhood of
+the coal-field. In order to find out the locality without delay, I
+reckoned on the fondness of the Japanese for collecting remarkable
+objects of all kinds from the animal, vegetable, and mineral
+kingdoms. I therefore hoped to find in some of the shops where old
+bronzes, porcelain, weapons, &c., were offered for sale, fossil
+plants from the neighbourhood, with the locality given. The first
+day, therefore, I ran about to all the dealers in curiosities, but
+without success. At last one of the Japanese with whom I conversed
+told me that an exhibition of the products of nature and art in the
+region was being arranged, and that among the objects exhibited I
+might possibly find what I sought for.
+
+Of course I immediately availed myself of the opportunity to see one
+of the many Japanese local exhibitions of which I had heard so much.
+It was yet in disorder, but I was, at all events, willingly
+admitted, and thus had an opportunity of seeing much that was
+instructive to me, especially a collection of rocks from the
+neighbourhood. Among these I discovered at last, to my great
+satisfaction, some beautiful fossil plants from Mogi, a place not
+far from Nagasaki.
+
+Immediately the following morning I started for Mogi, accompanied by
+the Japanese attendant I had with me from Kobe, and by another
+adjutant given me by the very obliging governor of Nagasaki. We were
+to travel across the hills on horseback. I was accompanied, besides
+my Japanese assistants and a man from the _Vega_, all on horseback,
+by a number of coolies carrying provisions and other equipment. The
+Governor had lent me his own horse, which was considered by the
+Japanese something quite grand. It was a yellowish-brown stallion,
+not particularly large, but very fine, resembling a Norwegian horse,
+very gentle and sure-footed. The latter quality was also quite
+necessary, for the journey began with a ride up a hundred smooth and
+not very convenient stone steps. Farther on, too, the road, which
+was exceedingly narrow and often paved with smooth stones, went
+repeatedly up and down such stairs, not very suitable for a man on
+horseback, and close to the edge of precipices several hundred feet
+deep, where a single false step would have cost both the horse and
+its rider their lives. But as has been said, our horses were
+sure-footed and sure-eyed, and the riders took care in passing such
+places not to pull the reins.
+
+None of the mountain regions I have seen in Japan are so well
+cultivated as the environs of Nagasaki. Every place that is somewhat
+level, though only several hundred square yards in extent, is used
+for growing some of the innumerable cultivated plants of the
+country, principally rice but as such easily cultivated places occur
+in only limited numbers, the inhabitants have by industry and hard
+labour changed the steep slopes of the mountains into a succession
+of level terraces rising one above the other, all carefully watered
+by irrigating conduits.
+
+Mogi is a considerable fishing village lying at the seaside twenty
+kilometres south of Nagasaki in a right line, on the other side of a
+peninsula occupied by lava beds and volcanic tuffs, which projects
+from the island Kiushiu, which at that place is nearly cut asunder
+by deep fjords. No European lives at the place, and of course there
+is no European inn there. But we got lodgings in the house of one of
+the principal or richest men in the village, a maker and seller _of
+saki_, or as we would call him in Swedish, a brandy distiller and
+publican. Here we were received in a very friendly manner, in clean
+and elegant rooms, and were waited on by the young and very pretty
+daughter of our host at the head of a number of other female
+attendants. It may be supposed that our place of entertainment had
+no resemblance to a public-house in Sweden. We did not witness here
+the tipsy behaviour of some human wrecks, and as little some other
+incidents which might have reminded us of public-house life in
+Europe. All went on in the distillery and the public-house as calmly
+and quietly as the work in the house of a well-to-do country squire
+in Sweden who does not swear and is not quarrelsome.
+
+_Saki_ is a liquor made by fermenting and distilling rice. It is
+very variable in taste and strength, sometimes resembling inferior
+Rhine wine, sometimes more like weak grain brandy. Along with _saki_
+our host also manufactured vinegar, which was made from rice and
+_saki_ residues, which with the addition of some other vegetable
+substances were allowed to stand and acidify in large jars ranged in
+rows in the yard.
+
+When my arrival became known I was visited by the principal men of
+the village. We were soon good friends by the help of a friendly
+reception, cigars and red wine. Among them the physician of the
+village was especially of great use to me. As soon as he became
+aware of the occasion of my visit he stated that such fossils as I
+was in search of did indeed occur in the region, but that they were
+only accessible at low water. I immediately visited the place with
+the physician and my companions from Nagasaki, and soon discovered
+several strata containing the finest fossil plants one could desire.
+During this and the following day I made a rich collection, partly
+with the assistance of a numerous crowd of children who zealously
+helped me in collecting. They were partly boys and partly girls, the
+latter always having a little one on their backs. These little
+children were generally quite bare-headed. Notwithstanding this they
+slept with the crown of the head exposed to the hottest sun-bath on
+the backs of their bustling sisters, who jumped lightly and securely
+over stocks and stones, and never appeared to have any idea that the
+burdens on their backs were at all unpleasant or troublesome.
+
+According to Dr. A.G. NATHORST'S examination, the fossil plants which I
+brought home from this place belong to the more recent Tertiary
+formation. Our distinguished and acute vegetable paleontologist fixes
+attention on the point, that we would have expected to find here a
+fossil flora allied to the recent South Japanese, which is considered to
+be derived from a Tertiary flora which closely resembles it. There is,
+however, no such correspondence, for impressions of ferns are almost
+completely wanting at Mogi, and even of pines there is only a single
+leaf-bearing variety which closely resembles the Spitzbergen form of
+_Sequoia Langsdorfii_, Brag. On the other hand, there are met with, in
+great abundance, the leaves of a species of beech nearly allied to the
+red beech of America, _Fagus ferruginea_, Ait., but not resembling the
+recent Japanese varieties of the same family. There were found, besides,
+leaves of Quercus, Juglans, Populus, Myrica, Salix, Zelkova,
+Liquidambar, Acer, Prunus, Tilia, &c., resembling leaves of recent types
+from the forests of Japan, from the forest flora of America, or from the
+temperate flora of the Himalayas. But as the place where they were found
+is situated at the sea-shore, quite close to the southern extremity of
+Japan, it is singular that the tropical or sub-tropical elements of the
+flora of Japan are here wanting. From this Dr. Nathorst draws the
+conclusion that these are not, as has been hitherto supposed, the
+remains of a flora originating in Japan, but that they have since
+migrated thither from a former continent situated further to the south,
+which has since disappeared. Dr. Nathorst's examination is not yet
+completed, but even if this were the case, want of space would not
+permit me to treat of this point at greater length. I cannot, however,
+omit to mention that it was highly agreeable to be able to connect with
+the memory of the _Vega_ expedition at least a small contribution from
+more southerly lands to vegetable palaeontology, a branch of knowledge to
+which our preceding Arctic expeditions yielded new additions of such
+importance through the fossil herbaria from luxuriant ancient forests
+which they brought to light from the ice-covered cliffs of Spitzbergen
+and from the basalt-covered sandstones and schists of the Noui-soak
+Peninsula in Greenland, now so bleak.
+
+[Illustration: FOSSIL PLANTS FROM MOGI.
+1, 2. Beech Leaves (_Fagus ferruginea_ Ait., var. _pliocena_, Nath.).
+3. Maple Leaf (_Acer Mono_, Max., var. _pliocena_, Nath.). ]
+
+[Illustration: FOSSIL PLANT FROM MOGI. Leaf of _Zelkova Keakii_
+Sieb., var. _pliocena_, Nath. ]
+
+After our return from Mogi I made an excursion to the coal-mine at
+Takasami, situated on an island some kilometres from the town. Even
+here I succeeded in bringing together some further contributions to
+the former flora of the region.
+
+After the inhabitants of Nagasaki, too, had given us a grand parting
+feast, at which speeches were spoken in Japanese, Chinese, English,
+French, German, Italian, Dutch, Russian, Danish, and Swedish, a
+proof of the mixture of nationalities which prevailed there, the
+_Vega_ again weighed anchor on the 27th October, in order to
+continue her voyage. We now left Japan to commence in earnest our
+return, and on our departure we were saluted by the crews of two
+English gun-boats anchored in the harbour, the _Hornet_ and the
+_Sylvia_, manning the yards and bulwarks. It was natural that the
+hour of departure, after fifteen months' absence from home, should
+be looked forward to with joy. But our joy was mixed with a
+regretful feeling that we were so soon compelled to leave--without
+the hope of ever returning--the magnificent country and noble people
+among whom a development is now going on which probably will not
+only give a new awakening to the old cultured races of Eastern Asia,
+but will also prepare a new soil for European science, industry, and
+art. It is difficult to foresee what new undreamed-of blossoms and
+fruit this soil will yield. But the Europeans are perhaps much
+mistaken who believe that the question here is only that of clothing
+an Asiatic feudal state in a modern European dress. Rather the day
+appears to me to dawn of a time in which the countries round the
+Mediterranean of eastern Asia will come to play a great part in the
+further development of the human race.
+
+
+[Footnote 383: The number of the works which the collection of
+Japanese books contains is somewhat over a thousand. The number of
+volumes amounts to five or six thousand, most of the volumes,
+however, are not larger than one of our books of a hundred pages. So
+far as can be judged by the Japanese titles, which are often little
+distinctive, the works may be distributed among the various branches
+of knowledge in the following way:
+
+ Number
+ of Works
+
+ History 176
+ On Buddhism and Education 161
+ On Shintoism 38
+ On Christianity (printed in 1715) 1
+ Manners and Customs 33
+ The Drama 13
+ Laws 5
+ Politics, Political argumentative writings, partly new
+ and privately printed against the recent statues 24
+ Poetry and Prose fiction 137
+ Heraldry, Antiquities, Ceremonies 27
+ The Art of War and the Use of Weapons 41
+ Chess 1
+ Coining 4
+ Dictionaries, Grammars 18
+ Geography, Maps 76
+ Natural History 68
+ The Science of Medicine 13
+ Arithmetic, Astronomy, Astrology 39
+ Handicrafts, Agriculture 43
+ Notebooks 73
+ The art of making bouquets (Horticulture?) 16
+ Bibliography 9
+ Various 20
+ -----
+ Total 1036 ]
+
+[Footnote 384: Further information on this point is given by Henry
+Gribble in "The Preparation of Vegetable Wax" (_Transactions of the
+Asiatic Society of Japan_, vol. iii. part. i. p. 94. Yokohama,
+1875). ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+ Hong Kong and Canton--Stone-polishing Establishments at
+ Canton--Political Relations in an English Colony--
+ Treatment of the Natives--Voyage to Labuan--Coal Mines there
+ --Excursion to the shore of Borneo--Malay Villages--Singapore
+ --Voyage to Ceylon--Point de Galle--The Gem Mines at Ratnapoora
+ --Visit to a Temple--Purchase of Manuscripts--The Population
+ of Ceylon--Dr. Almquist's Excursion to the Interior of the Island.
+
+
+Some days after our arrival at Yokohama the _Vega_ was removed to
+the dock at Yokosuka, there to be protected by coppering against the
+boring mussels of the warm seas, so injurious to the vessel's hull;
+the opportunity being also taken advantage of by me to subject the
+vessel to some trifling repairs and alterations in the fitting up,
+which were desirable because during the remainder of our voyage we
+were to sail not in a cold but in a tropical climate. The work took
+somewhat longer time than was reckoned on, so that it was not until
+the 21st September that the _Vega_ could leave the dock and return
+to Yokohama. It had originally been my intention to remain in Japan
+only so long as was necessary for the finishing of this work, during
+which time opportunity could be given to the officers and crew of
+the _Vega_ to rest after the labours and sufferings of the long
+winter, to receive and answer letters from home, and to gather from
+the newspapers the most important occurrences that had taken place
+during our fourteen months' absence from the regions which are
+affected by what takes place in the world. But as appears from the
+foregoing narrative, the delay was longer than had been intended.
+This indeed was caused in some degree by the difficulty of tearing
+ourselves away after only a few days' stay from a people so
+remarkable, so lovable, and so hospitable as the Japanese, and from
+a land so magnificently endowed by nature. Besides, when the _Vega_
+was again ready for sea, it was so near the time for the change of
+the monsoon, that it was not advisable, and would not have been
+attended with any saving of time, to sail immediately. For at that
+season furious storms are wont to rage in these seas, and the wind
+then prevailing is so unfavourable for sailing from Japan to the
+southward, that a vessel with the weak steam-power of the _Vega_
+cruising between Japan and Hong Kong in a head-wind might readily
+have lost the days saved by an earner departure. On the other hand,
+in the end of October and the beginning of November we could, during
+our passage to Hong Kong, count on a fresh and always favourable
+breeze. This took place too, so that, leaving Nagasaki on the 27th
+October, we were able to anchor in the harbour of Hong Kong as early
+as the 2nd November.
+
+There was of course no prospect of being able to accomplish anything
+for the benefit of science during a few days' stay in a region which
+had been examined by naturalists innumerable times before, but I at
+all events touched at this harbour that I might meet the expressed
+wish of one of the members of the expedition not to leave eastern
+Asia without having, during the voyage of the _Vega_, seen something
+of the so much talked of "heavenly kingdom" so different from all
+other lands.
+
+For this purpose, however, Hong Kong is an unsuitable place. This
+rich and flourishing commercial town, which has been created by
+England's Chinese politics and opium trade, is a British colony with
+a European stamp, which has little to show of the original Chinese
+folk-life, although the principal part of its population consists of
+Chinese. But at the distance of a few hours by steamer from Hong
+Kong lies the large old commercial city of Canton, which, though it
+has long been open to Europeans, is still purely Chinese, with its
+peatstack-like architecture, its countless population, its temples,
+prisons, flower-junks, mandarins, pig-tailed street-boys, &c. Most
+of the members of the expedition made an excursion thither, and were
+rewarded with innumerable indescribable impressions from Chinese
+city life. We were everywhere received by the natives in a friendly
+way,[385] and short as our visit was, it was yet sufficient to
+dissipate the erroneous impressions which a number of European
+authors have been pleased to give of the most populous nation. One
+soon saw that he has to do with an earnest and industrious people,
+who, indeed, apprehend much--virtue and vice, joy and sorrow--in
+quite a different way from us, but towards whom we, on that account,
+by no means have the right to assume the position of superiority
+which the European is so ready to claim towards coloured races.
+
+The greater portion of my short stay in Canton I employed in
+wandering about, carried in a sedan-chair--horses cannot be used in
+the city itself--through the streets, which are partly covered and
+are lined with open shops, forming, undoubtedly, the most remarkable
+of the many remarkable things that are to be seen here. The
+recollection I have of these hours forms, as often happens when one
+sees much that is new at once, a variegated confusion in which I can
+now only with difficulty distinguish a connected picture or two. But
+even if the impressions were clearer and sharper it would be out of
+the question to occupy space with a statement of my own superficial
+observations. If any one wishes to acquire a knowledge of Chinese
+manners and customs, he will not want for books on the country, his
+studies will rather be impeded by their enormous number, and often
+enough by the inferior nature of their contents. Here I shall only
+touch upon a single subject, because it especially interested me as
+a mineralogist, namely, the stone-polishing works of Canton.
+
+It is natural that in a country so populous and rich as China, in
+which home and home life play so great a _role_, much money should
+be spent on ornaments. We might therefore have expected that
+precious stones cut and polished would be used here on a great
+scale, but from what I saw at Canton, the Chinese appear to set much
+less value on them than either the Hindoo or the European. It
+appears besides as if the Chinese still set greater value on stones
+with old "oriental polishing," _i.e._ with polished _rounded_
+surfaces, than on stones formed according to the mode of polishing
+now common in Europe with plane facets. Instead the Chinese have a
+great liking for peculiar, often very well executed, carvings in a
+great number of different kinds of stones, among which they set the
+greatest value on nephrite, or, as they themselves call it, "Yii."
+It is made into rings, bracelets, ornaments of all kinds, vases,
+small vessels for the table, &c. In Canton there are numerous
+lapidaries and merchants, whose main business is to make and sell
+ornaments of this species of stone, which is often valued higher
+than true precious stones. It was long so important an article of
+commerce that the place where it was found formed the goal of
+special caravan roads which entered China by the Yii gate. Amber
+also appears to have a high value put upon it, especially pieces
+which inclose insects. Amber is not found in China, but is brought
+from Europe, is often fictitious, and contains large Chinese beetles
+with marks of the needles on which they have been impaled. Other
+less valuable minerals, native or foreign, are also used, among
+others, compact varieties of talc or soap-stone and of pyrophyllite.
+But works executed in these minerals do not fetch a price at all
+comparable to that of nephrite. In the same shop in which I
+purchased pieces of nephrite carefully placed in separate boxes, I
+found at the bottom of a dusty chest, along with pieces of quartz
+and old refuse of various kinds, large crystals, some of which were
+exceedingly well formed, of translucent topaz. They were sold as
+quartz for a trifle. I bought besides two pieces of carved topaz,
+one of which was a large and very fine natural crystal, with a
+Chinese inscription engraved on its terminal surface, which when
+translated runs thus: "Literary studies confer honour and
+distinction and render a man suitable for the court." The other was
+a somewhat bluish inch-long crystal, at one end of which a human
+figure, perhaps some Buddhist saint, was sculptured. The polishing
+of stones is carried on as a home industry, principally in a special
+part of the town. The workshop is commonly at the side of a small
+sale counter, in a room on the ground-floor, open to the street. The
+cutting and polishing of the stones is done, as at home, with metal
+discs and emery or comminuted corundum, which is said to be found in
+large quantities in the neighbourhood of Canton.
+
+Large, commodious, well fitted up, but in their exterior very
+unwieldy river steamers, built after American designs, now run
+between Hong Kong and Canton. They are commanded by Europeans. The
+dietary on board is European, and exceedingly good. There are
+separate saloons for Europeans and Chinese. All over the poop and
+the after-saloon weapons are hung up so as to be at hand, in case
+the vessel should be attacked by pirates, or, as happened some years
+ago, a number of them should mix themselves up with the Chinese
+passengers with the intention of plundering the vessel.
+
+Hong Kong was ceded to England in consequence of the war of 1842.
+The then inconsiderable fishing village is now one of the most
+important commercial cities of the globe. The harbour is spacious,
+affording good anchorage, and is well protected by a number of large
+and small granite islands. The city is built on the largest of these
+on slopes which rise from the shore towards the interior of the
+island. On the highest points the wealthiest foreign residents have
+built their summer houses which are surrounded by beautiful gardens.
+In winter they live in the city. We here met with a very gratifying
+reception both from the Governor, Mr. POPE HENNESSY, and from the
+other inhabitants of the town. The former invited Captain Palander
+and me to live in the beautiful Governor's residence, gave a dinner,
+arranged a stately official reception in our honour, and presented
+to the Expedition a fine collection of dried plants from the
+exceedingly well-kept botanical garden of the city, which is under
+the charge of Mr. CHARLES FORD, the latter presented me with an
+address of welcome at a festive meeting in the City Hall, specially
+arranged for the purpose and numerously attended by the principal
+men of the town. The meeting was opened by the Chairman, Mr.
+KESWICK, with a speech of welcome, after which Mr. J.B. COUGHTRIE
+read and presented the address, bound in red silk and beautifully
+illuminated in black; gold, and red, with 414 signatures, among
+which many were by Chinese. The address ended with a hearty
+congratulation to us all and a promise of a memorial of our visit to
+Hong Kong which should indicate the way in which the _Vega_
+expedition was appreciated there. Some time after our return home
+Palander and I received from members of the community of Hong Kong a
+splendid silver vase each.
+
+I here embraced with great interest the opportunity, which my coming
+in contact with the principal men of the place afforded, of getting
+a glance into the political relations which prevailed in this
+vigorous and promising colony. At first sight they appeared to be by
+no means satisfactory. Peace and unanimity evidently did not
+prevail; for dissatisfaction with the Governor was loudly expressed
+by many of the Europeans settled in Hong Kong. He favoured, they
+said, the Chinese in an exceedingly partial way, and mitigated their
+punishments to such a degree that Hong Kong would soon become a
+place of refuge for all the robbers and thieves of Canton. At the
+time of our visit an instructive parliamentary debate on a small
+scale was proceeding in the Legislative Council of the city. The
+controversy was carried on with a certain bitterness, but with a
+proper observance of the parliamentary procedure customary in the
+mother country. The eloquent leader of the opposition had evidently,
+as is usual in such cases, the general feeling of the Europeans on
+his side. For they appeared to be pretty well agreed that the only
+means of protecting themselves against the evil-doers from the great
+heavenly empire would be to punish them in an inhuman way when they
+were taken in the act.
+
+To an outsider it appeared, however, that the Governor not only had
+humanity and justice on his side, but also acted with a true insight
+into the future. When he came to the colony the corporal punishments
+to which the Chinese were condemned were exceeding barbarous,
+although mild in comparison with those common in China--a state of
+things which the opposition brought forward in defence of the
+severer punishments. Prisoners were repeatedly flogged with "the
+cat," often with the result that they were attacked by incurable
+consumption, they were prepared for the punishment by being
+subjected for some time to a starvation-diet of rice and water; they
+were branded when they left the prison, &c. Proceeding on the view
+that the greatest security for a colony such as Hong Kong lies in
+the affection which is cherished for it by the numerous native
+population, the Governor had sought to protect it from unjust
+attacks by Europeans. Considering that too barbarous punishments are
+likely rather to promote than to deter from the commission of
+crimes, in consequence of the protection the criminal in such a case
+may reckon upon from sympathising fellow-creatures, and that mild
+punishments are the first condition of a good protective police, the
+Governor had diminished the floggings, forbidden the public
+infliction of the punishment, given a reprimand in cases where "by
+mistake" or by an evasion of the letter of the law extra strokes had
+been given to criminals, exchanged "the regulation cat" for the
+rattan, abolished the preliminary starvation-diet and the branding,
+improved the prisons, &c. All this was now loudly complained of by
+the European merchants, but was approved by the Chinese subjects in
+the colony, who were however dissuaded from making any contrary
+demonstrations.
+
+When we came afterwards to other English possessions, we found that
+the inhabitants were often more or less in conflict with the
+authorities, but nowhere was there anything to prevent the
+opposition from endeavouring to promote their views by public
+meetings, by addresses in newspapers and pamphlets. In this way a
+pretty active political life arises early, and this is probably one
+of the main conditions of the capacity of the English colonies for
+self-government, and of their vigour and influence on the
+surrounding country.
+
+It will in truth be highly interesting to see what influence will be
+exerted on the great neighbouring empire if Mr. Hennessy's politics
+with reference to the Chinese settled in Hong Kong be carried out,
+and they be converted into fellow-citizens conscious that they are
+protected by law in person and property, that they do not require to
+crawl in the dust before any authority, and that so long as they
+keep within the limits of the law they are quite safe from the
+oppressions of all officials, and in the enjoyment of all the rights
+and privileges which the English law confers upon the citizen.
+
+Many of the Europeans settled at Hong Kong were convinced that for
+another thousand years one would be justified in using the
+expression regarding China: "Thou art what thou wast, and thou wilt
+be what thou art." Others again stated that contact with Europeans
+at Shanghai, Hong Kong, and Singapore, and the accounts given by the
+emigrants returning to China in thousands from California and
+Australia are by slow degrees changing the aspect of the world in
+the "heavenly empire," and thereby preparing for a revolution less
+violent, but as thorough as that which has recently taken place in
+Japan. If this comes about, China will be a state that must enter
+into the calculation when the affairs of the world are settled, and
+whose power will weigh very heavy in the scales, at least when the
+fate of Asia is concerned. At Hong Kong and Canton the report was
+current that the far-sighted Chancellor of the German Empire had
+taken this factor into calculation in settling his plans for the
+future.
+
+Already the Chinese took part in the European life. A number of
+Chinese names, as I have already said, were attached to the address
+that was presented to me; at the Governor's reception many stout,
+smiling heads provided with pigtails were seen; and Chinese had
+taken part in the meetings at which the Governor's scheme of reform
+was under discussion. There have also existed in the country from
+time immemorial secret societies, which are said only to wait for a
+favourable opportunity to endeavour to link their fates to the new
+paths.[386] The observations that I made at Hong Kong and Canton
+are, however, too superficial for me to wish to detain my reader
+with these matters. I accordingly point to the numerous works on
+these cities published by authors who have lived there as many
+months or years as I have days, and proceed to sketch the
+continuation of the voyage of the _Vega_.
+
+Accompanied by the good wishes of many newly acquired friends, we left
+the harbour of Hong Kong on the morning of the 9th November. It was my
+original intention to steer our course to Manilla, but the loss of time
+during our long stay in Japan compelled me to give up that plan. The
+course was shaped, however, not directly for Singapore, but for Labuan,
+a small English possession on the north side of Borneo. Its northern
+extremity (the coal mine) lies in 5 deg. 33' N.L. and 115 deg. 12' E.L. England
+took possession of Labuan on account of the coal-seams which are found
+there, which are of special importance on account of the situation of
+the island nearly in the midst of the large, numerous, and fertile
+islands of south-eastern Asia. It was the coal-seams too that attracted
+me to the place. For I wished to see whether I could not, in the
+neighbourhood of the equator itself, collect valuable contributions
+towards ascertaining the nature of the former equatorial climate.
+
+We at first made rapid progress, thanks to a fresh and favourable
+monsoon wind. But when we reached the so-called belt of calms, the
+wind ceased completely, and we had now to avail ourselves of steam,
+which, in consequence of the low power of the _Vega's_ engine and a
+strong counter current, carried us forward so slowly that it was not
+until the 17th November that we could anchor in the harbour of
+Labuan.
+
+The largest of the islands belonging to the colony has, with a
+pretty considerable breadth, a length of 10' from N.E. to S.W. It
+is inhabited by some thousands (3,300 in 1863) of Chinese and
+Malays, together with a few Englishmen, who are either crown
+officials or employed at the coal mine. The north part of the island
+has a height of 140 metres above the sea, but towards the south the
+land sinks to an extensive sandy plain, closely overgrown with bushy
+thickets and traversed by low marshes. Most of the inhabitants live
+along the shore of the harbour which bears the now, or perhaps only
+for the present, indispensable name for English colonies (which on
+that account conveys little information) of Victoria. The Governor's
+fine residence lies at a little distance from the harbour town in
+the interior of the island, the coal mine on its north side. At the
+time of our visit the coal company had recently gone into
+liquidation, and work had therefore been stopped at the mine, but it
+was hoped that it would soon be resumed. The sandy plain is of
+little fertility in comparison with the neighbouring tropical lands.
+It had recently been burned, and was therefore for the most part
+covered only with bushes, among which stems of high, dried-up,
+half-burned trees raised themselves, giving to the landscape a
+resemblance to a northern forest devastated by an accidental fire.
+In consequence of the fire which had thus passed over the island the
+plain which, when looked at from a distance appeared to be
+completely even, was seen everywhere to be studded with
+crater-formed depressions in the sand, quite similar to the
+_os_-pits in the _osar_ of Scandinavia.[387] On the north side there
+was sandstone rock rising from the sea with a steep slope six to
+fifteen metres high. Here tropical nature appeared in all its
+luxuriance, principally in the valleys which the small streams had
+excavated in the sandstone strata.
+
+The coal mine is sunk on coal-seams, which come to the surface on
+the north side of the island. The seams, according to the
+information I received on the spot, are four in number, with a
+thickness of 3.3, 0.9, 0.4 and 1.0 metre. They dip at an angle of 30 deg.
+towards the horizon, and are separated from each other by
+strata of clay and hard sandstone, which together have a thickness
+of about fifty metres. Above the uppermost coal-seam there are
+besides very thick strata of black clay-slate, white hard sandstone
+with bands of clay, loose sandstone, sandstone mixed with coal, and
+finally considerable layers of clay-slate and sandstone, which
+contain fossil marine crustacea, resembling those of the present
+time. The strata which lie between or in the immediate neighbourhood
+of the coal seams do not contain any other fossils than those
+vegetable remains, which are to be described farther on. Thirty
+kilometres south of the mine a nearly vertical coal-seam comes to
+the surface near the harbour, probably belonging to a much older
+period than that referred to above; and out in the sea, eighteen
+kilometres from the shore north of the harbour, petroleum rises from
+the sea-bottom. The manager of the mine supposed from this that the
+coal-seams came to the surface again at this place. The coal-seams
+of Labuan are besides, notwithstanding their position in the middle
+of an enormous, circular, volcanic chain, remarkably free from
+faults, which shows that the region, during the immense time which
+has elapsed since these strata have been deposited, has been
+protected from earthquakes. Even now, according to Wallace,
+earthquakes are scarcely known in this part of Borneo.
+
+From what has been stated above we may conclude that the coal, sand,
+and clay strata were deposited in a valley-depression occupied by
+luxuriant marshy grounds, cut off from the sea, in the extensive
+land which formerly occupied considerable spaces of the sea between
+the Australian Islands and the continent of Asia. A similar state of
+things must besides have prevailed over a considerable portion of
+Borneo. On that island there are coal-seams under approximately
+similar circumstances to those on Labuan. So far as I know, however,
+they have not hitherto been closely examined with respect to
+vegetable palaeontology.
+
+At Labuan fossil plants are found, though very sparingly, imbedded
+in balls of clay ironstone from strata above the two lowermost
+coal-seams. The upper coal-seams are besides exceedingly rich in
+resin, which crosses the coal in large veins. From the thickness and
+conversion into a hard sandstone of the layers of sand lying between
+and above the coal-seams we may conclude that a very long time,
+probably hundreds of thousands or millions of years have passed
+since these coal-seams were formed. They also belong to a quite
+recent period, during which the vegetation in these regions varied
+perhaps only to a slight extent from that of the present time. It
+is, however, too early to express one's self on this subject, before
+the fossils which we brought home have been examined by Dr.
+Nathorst.
+
+Coal mining was stopped for the time, but orders were expected by
+every post to resume work. The road between the mine and the harbour
+town was at all events pretty well kept, and Mr. COOKE, one of the
+directors of the company, still lived at the place. He showed me all
+possible hospitality during the time I remained on the north side of
+the island for the purpose of collecting fossils. The rest of the
+time I was the guest of the acting Governor, Mr. TREACHER, a young
+and amiable man, who showed me several collections in natural
+history from Labuan and the neighbouring parts of Borneo, and after
+our return to Europe sent me a collection of leaves and fruit of the
+kinds of trees which now grow on the island. I expect that this
+collection will be very instructive in the study of the fossil
+plants we brought home with us.
+
+At the steep shore banks on the north coast very fine sections of
+the sandstone strata, which lie under and above the coal, are
+visible. While I went along the shore in order to examine these, I
+visited some Malay huts built on poles. They were surrounded at
+flood tide by water, at ebb by the dry beach, bare of all
+vegetation. In order to get inside these huts one must climb a
+ladder two to two and a half metres high, standing towards the sea.
+The houses have the same appearance as a warehouse by the seaside at
+home, and are built very slightly. The floor consisted of a few
+rattling bamboo splints lying loose, and so thin that I feared they
+would give way when I stepped upon them. The household articles
+consisted only of some mats and a pair of cooking vessels. I saw no
+fireplace; probably fire was lighted on the beach. I could see no
+reason why this place should be chosen as a dwelling in preference
+to the neighbouring shore with its luxuriant vegetation, which at
+the same time was not at all swampy, unless it was for the coolness
+which arises from the any situation on the beach, and the protection
+which the poles give from the thousands of crawling animals which
+swarm in the grassy meadows of tropical regions. It is probable also
+that the mosquitos are less troublesome along the sea-shore than
+farther into the interior of the country.
+
+Some of my companions saw similar huts during an excursion, which
+they undertook in the steam launch, to the mouth of a large river
+debouching on the neighbouring coast of Borneo. Regarding this
+exclusion Dr. Stuxberg gives the following report:
+
+ "On the 19th November Palander, Bove, and I, together with
+ two men, undertook an excursion in the steam launch of the
+ _Vega_ to the river Kalias debouching right opposite to
+ Labuan. We started at dawn, a little after six o'clock. The
+ course was shaped first north of Pappan Island, then
+ between the many shoals that lie between it and the
+ considerably larger Daat Island, and finally south of the
+ latter island.
+
+ "Pappan Island is a small beautiful island, clothed down to
+ high-water mark with a dark green primeval forest. On Daat
+ Island, on the contrary, the primeval forest on the east
+ side has been cut down, and has given place to a new
+ plantation of cocoa-nut trees, the work of a former
+ physician on Labuan, which yields its present owner a
+ considerable revenue.
+
+ "We had no little difficulty in finding a way over the
+ sandy bar, which is deposited in front of the river mouth
+ at a distance of a nautical mile and a half to three miles
+ from the coast of Borneo. After several attempts in the
+ course of an hour we at last succeeded in finding the deep
+ channel which leads to the river. It runs close to the
+ mainland on the north side, from Kalias Point to the river
+ mouth proper. At the bar the depth was only a metre, in the
+ deep channel, it varied between 3.5 and 7 metres, in the
+ river mouth it was fourteen to eighteen metres and
+ sometimes more.
+
+ "On the south side of the tongue of land, which projects
+ north of the mouth of the Kalias, were found two Malay
+ villages, whose inhabitants appeared to view our passage up
+ the river with curious glances. A crowd of half or wholly
+ naked children began a race along the shore, as soon as
+ they set eyes upon the fast steam launch, probably in order
+ to keep us in sight as long as possible. We now had deep
+ water and steamed up the river without delay. The
+ longed-for visit to some of the Malay villages we thus
+ reserved till our return.
+
+ "We steamed about ten or twelve English miles up one of the
+ many winding river arms, when the limited depth compelled
+ us to turn. The vegetation on the mainland, as on the
+ shores of the islands lying near the river-mouth, was
+ everywhere so close that it was nearly impossible to find a
+ place where we could land; everywhere there was the
+ impenetrable primeval forest. Next the mouth of the river
+ this consisted of tall, shady broad-leaved trees, which all
+ had dark green, lustrous, large leaves. Some were in
+ flower, others bore fruit. The greater number consisted of
+ fig trees, whose numerous air-roots twining close on each
+ other formed an impenetrable fence at the river bank. These
+ air-root-bearing trees play an important _role_ in
+ increasing the area of the land and diminishing that of the
+ water. They send their strong air-roots from the branches
+ and stem far out into the water, and when the roots have
+ reached the bottom, and pushed their way into the mud, they
+ make, by the close basket-work they form, an excellent
+ binding medium for all the new mud which the river carries
+ with it from the higher ground in the interior. It has
+ struck me that the air-root-bearing trees form one of the
+ most important means for the rapid increase of the alluvial
+ land on Borneo. Farther up the river there commenced large
+ stretches of a species of palm, which with its somewhat
+ lighter green and its long sheath-formed leaves was sharply
+ distinguished from the rest of the forest. Sometimes the
+ banks on one side were covered with palms only, on the
+ other with fig-trees only. The palm jungles were not so
+ impenetrable as the fig-tree thickets, the latter preferred
+ the more swampy hollows, while the palms on the other hand
+ grew on the more sandy and less marshy places. Of herbs and
+ underwood there was nowhere any trace.
+
+ "During the river voyage we saw now and then single
+ green-coloured kingfishers flying about, and a honeysucker
+ or two, but they were not nearly so numerous as might have
+ been expected in this purely tropical zone. We saw some
+ apes leaping in pairs among the trees, and Palander
+ succeeded in shooting a male. Alligators from one to one
+ and a half metre in length, frightened by the noise of the
+ propeller, throw themselves suddenly into the water. Small
+ land lizards with web-feet jumped forward with surprising
+ rapidity on the water near the banks. This was all we saw
+ of the higher animals.
+
+ "After a run of two hours, during which we examined the
+ banks carefully in order to find a landing place, we lay to
+ at the best possible place for seeing what the lower fauna
+ had to offer. It was no easy matter to get to land. The
+ ground was so muddy that we sank to the knees, and could
+ make our way through the wood only by walking on an
+ intermediate layer of palm leaves and fallen branches. The
+ search for evertebrates did not yield very much. A
+ half-score mollusca, among them a very remarkable naked
+ leech of quite the same colour-marking and raggedness as
+ the bark of tree on which it lived, was all that we could
+ find here. It struck me as very peculiar not to find a
+ single insect group represented. The remarkable poverty in
+ animals must be ascribed, I believe, to the complete
+ absence of herbs and underwood. Animal life was as poor as
+ vegetation was luxuriant and various in different places.
+ Over the landscape a peculiar quietness and stillness
+ rested.
+
+ "During our return we visited one of the two Malay villages
+ mentioned above. It consisted of ten different houses,
+ which were built on tall and stout poles out in the water
+ at the mouth of the river, about six to ten metres from the
+ shore. All the houses were built on a common large platform
+ of thick bamboo, which was about a man's height above the
+ water. At right angles to the beach there floated long
+ beams, one end being connected with the land, while the
+ other was anchored close to the platform. From this
+ anchored end a plank rose at a steep angle to the platform.
+ Communication with land was kept up in this way. The houses
+ were nearly all quadrangular, and contained a single room,
+ had raised, not flat roofs, and were provided at one of the
+ shorter sides, near one corner, with a high rectangular
+ door opening, which certainly was not intended to be
+ closed, and on one of the long sides with a square
+ window-opening. The building material was bamboo, from
+ eight to eleven centimetres in thickness, mostly whole, but
+ sometimes cleft. The roof had a thin layer of palm leaves
+ upon it to keep out the rain. The house in its entirety
+ resembled a cage of spills to which the least puff of wind
+ had always free entrance. The floor bent and yielded much,
+ and at the same time was so weak that one could not walk
+ upon it without being afraid of falling through. One half,
+ right opposite the door opening, was overlaid with a thin
+ mat of some plant; it was evidently the sleeping place of
+ the family. Some pieces of cloth was all the clothing we
+ could discover. Of household articles there was scarcely
+ any trace. Nor were there any weapons, arrows, or bows. The
+ fireplace was in one corner of the room; it consisted of an
+ immense ash-heap on some low stones. Beside it stood a
+ rather dirty iron pot. All refuse from meals, bones and
+ mollusc-shells, had been thrown into the water under the
+ floor; there lay now a regular culture-layer, a couple of
+ feet higher than the surrounding sea-bottom, consisting for
+ the most part of mussel shells. The floor of the room was
+ very dirty and black; it looked as if it had never been in
+ contact with a drop of water. The interior of the whole
+ house struck one as being as poor and wretched as that of a
+ Chukch tent. Its inhabitants appeared scarcely to own more
+ than they stood or walked in, _i.e._ for every person a
+ large piece of cloth round the waist. Small boats lay
+ moored to the platform. They were nothing else than
+ tree-stems hollowed out, without any separate planks at the
+ sides, at most two to two and a half metres long, and
+ capable of carrying only two men. We had met such a boat a
+ little way up the river, rowed by two youths, and laden
+ with palm-leaves, it was not more than five to eight
+ centimetres above the water, and appeared as if it would
+ capsize with the least indiscreet movement on the part of
+ the boatmen. Some dogs of middle size went about loose on
+ the platform; they were at first shy and suspicious of us,
+ and growled a little, but soon allowed themselves to be
+ caressed.
+
+ "Of the natives, the Malays, unfortunately we saw at close
+ quarters only some middle-aged men. When we approached the
+ long floating beams which led to the platform, the women
+ and children fled precipitately out of the nearest houses,
+ and by the time we got to the platform, they had fortified
+ themselves in a distant house, where they sat motionless
+ and cast curious glances at us through a hole. The children
+ showed their fear of us by loud crying, kept up the whole
+ time. When we attempted to approach the fugitives, they
+ hastened farther away. We won their favour with some
+ cigarettes, which Palander distributed among them, and with
+ which they were evidently delighted. They had a serious,
+ reserved, perhaps rather indifferent appearance. A
+ physiognomist would perhaps have had difficulty in saying
+ whether their countenances expressed ferocity,
+ determination, or indifference. It appeared as if it would
+ not be easy to bring forth a look of mirth or gladness on
+ their faces.
+
+ "At the Malay villages which we visited, some Chinese had a
+ sago plantation. With some Malays as workmen in their
+ service, they were now employed in loading a vessel of
+ light draught with sago meal, of which they appeared to
+ have a large quantity in store. Another vessel had just
+ taken on board its cargo and was starting. The Chinese here
+ made the same favourable impression on me as their
+ countrymen, whom I had seen before in Japan and Hong Kong,
+ and whom I was afterwards to see at Singapore--the
+ impression of an exceedingly industrious, thriving,
+ contented, and cleanly race."
+
+Labuan strikes me as a very suitable starting-point for a naturalist
+who may wish to explore Borneo. Surrounded by Europeans, but
+undisturbed by the distractions of a large city, he would have an
+opportunity of accustoming himself to the climate, which, though
+rather warm for a dweller in the North, is by no means unhealthy, to
+get acquainted with the manners and customs of the natives, to
+acquire a knowledge of the commonest forms of the luxuriant nature,
+which would otherwise be apt to overwhelm the northern naturalist,
+in a word, to make such preparations for the journey as are
+necessary to secure its success. This region of Borneo appears to be
+one of the least known parts of the Indian Archipelago, and one need
+not go far from the coast to come to places which are never visited
+by Europeans. Labuan itself and its immediate neighbourhood have
+much that is interesting to offer to the observer, and from thence
+short excursions may be made with ease and without excessive cost to
+the territory of the Sultan of Bruni, who is favourable to
+foreigners, and to the mountain Kini Balu, near the northern
+extremity of Borneo, which is 4,175 metres high, and visible from
+Labuan. When, before our arrival at Japan, I arranged the plan of
+our voyage home, I included in it a visit to this mountain, at whose
+summit a comparatively severe climate must prevail, and whose flora
+and fauna, therefore, notwithstanding its equatorial position, must
+offer many points of comparison with those of the lands of the
+north. But when I was told that the excursion would require weeks, I
+had to give it up.
+
+On the 12th November, the _Vega_ again weighed anchor to continue
+her voyage by Singapore to Point de Galle in Ceylon. Between Labuan
+and Singapore our progress was but slow, in consequence of the calm
+which, as might have been foreseen, prevailed in the sea west of
+Borneo.
+
+Singapore is situated exactly halfway, when a vessel, starting from
+Sweden, circumnavigates Asia and Europe. We staid here from the 28th
+November to the 4th December, very hospitably received by the
+citizens of the town, both European and Asiatic, who seemed to vie
+with the inhabitants of Hong Kong in enthusiasm for the voyage of
+the _Vega_. A Babel-like confusion of speech prevails in the town
+from the men of so many different nationalities who live here:
+Chinese, Malays, Klings, Bengalees, Parsees, Singhalese, Negroes,
+Arabs, &c. But our stay was all too short for independent studies of
+the customs and mode of life of these different races, or of the
+rich vegetable and animal worlds in the neighbourhood of the town. I
+must refer those who are interested in these subjects to previous
+descriptions of that region, and to the abundant contributions to a
+knowledge of it which have been published by the Straits Branch of
+the Asiatic Society, which was founded here on the 4th November,
+1877.
+
+We arrived at Galle on the 15th December, having during our passage
+from Singapore had a pretty steady and favourable monsoon. While
+sailing through the Straits of Malacca strong ball-lightning was
+often seen a little after sunset. The electrical discharges appeared
+to go on principally from the mountain heights on both sides of the
+Straits.
+
+I allowed the _Vega_ to remain in the harbour of Point de Galle,
+partly to wait for the mail, partly to give Dr. Almquist an
+opportunity of collecting lichens on some of the high mountain
+summits in the interior of the island, and Dr. Kjellman of examining
+its algae, while I myself would have time to visit the famous
+gem-diggings of Ceylon. The return was as good as could have been
+expected considering our short stay at the place. Dr. Almquist's
+collection of lichens from the highest mountain of Ceylon,
+Pedrotalagalla, 2,500 metres high, was very large, Kjellman, by the
+help of a diver, made a not inconsiderable collection of algae from
+the neighbourhood of the harbour, and from an exclusion which I
+undertook in company with Mr. ALEXANDER C. DIXON, of Colombo, to
+Ratnapoora, the town of gems, where we were received with special
+kindness by Mr. COLIN MURRAY, assistant government agent, I brought
+home a fine collection of the minerals of Ceylon.
+
+Precious stones occur in Ceylon mainly in sand beds, especially at
+places where streams of water have flowed which have rolled,
+crumbled down, and washed away a large part of the softer
+constituents of the sand, so that a gravel has been left remaining
+which contains considerably more of the harder precious stone layer
+than the original sandy strata, or the rock from which they
+originated. Where this natural washing ends, the gem collector
+begins. He searches for a suitable valley, digs down a greater or
+less depth from the surface to the layer of clay mixed with coarse
+sand resting on the rock, which experience has taught him to contain
+gems[388]. At the washings which I saw, the clayey gravel was taken
+out of this layer and laid by the side of the hole until three or
+four cubic metres of it were collected. It was then carried, in
+shallow, bowl-formed baskets from half a metre to a metre in
+diameter, to a neighbouring river, where it was washed until all the
+clay was carried away from the sand. The gems were then picked out,
+a person with a glance of the eye examining the wet surface of the
+sand and collecting whatever had more or less appearance of a
+precious stone. He then skimmed away with the palm of the hand the
+upper stratum of sand, and went on in the same way with that below
+it until the whole mass was examined. The certainty with which he
+judged in a moment whether there was anything of value among the
+many thousand grains of sand was wonderful. I endeavoured in a very
+considerable heap of the gravel thus hastily examined, to find a
+single small piece of precious stone which had escaped the glance of
+the examiner, but without success.
+
+The yield is very variable, sometimes abundant, sometimes very
+small, and though precious stones found in Ceylon are yearly sold
+for large sums, the industry on the whole is unprofitable, although
+now and then a favourite of fortune has been enriched by it. The
+English authorities, therefore, with full justification, consider it
+demoralising and unfavourable to the development of the otherwise
+abundant natural resources of the region. For the numerous loose
+population devotes itself rather to the easy search for precious
+stones, which is as exciting as play, than to the severer but surer
+labours of agriculture, and when at any time a rich _find_ is made,
+it is speedily squandered, without a thought of saving for the times
+when the yield is little or nothing. A large number of the precious
+stones are polished at special polishing places at Ratnapoora, but
+the work is very bad, so that the stones which come into the market
+are often irregular, and have uneven, curved, ill-polished surfaces.
+Most of them perhaps are sold in the Eastern and Western Indian
+peninsulas and other parts of Asia, but many are also exported to
+Europe. The precious stones which are principally found at
+Ratnapoora, consist of sapphires, commonly blue, but sometimes
+yellow or violet, sometimes even completely colourless. In the last
+case they have a lustre resembling that of the diamond[389]. Rubies
+I saw here only in limited numbers.
+
+[Illustration: GEM DIGGINGS AT RATNAPOORA. ]
+
+The precious stones occur in nearly every river valley which runs
+from the mountain heights in the interior of the island down to the
+low land. According to a statement by Mr. Tennent (i. p. 33), the
+river-sand at many places contains so much of the harder minerals
+that it may be used directly for the polishing of other stones. The
+same writer, or more correctly Dr. GYGAX, who appears to have
+written the rather scanty mineralogical contributions to Tennent's
+famous work, states that a more abundant yield ought to be obtained
+by working in the solid rock than by the usual method. This idea is
+completely opposed to the experience of mineralogy. The finest gems,
+the largest gold nuggets, as is well known, are never, or almost
+never, found in solid rock, but in loose earthy layers. In such
+layers in Ceylon the abundance of precious stones, that is to say,
+of minerals which are _hard, translucent, and strongly lustrous_, is
+very great, and enormous sums would be obtained if we could add up
+the value of the mass of precious stones which have been found here
+for thousands of years back. Already Marco Polo says of Ceylon: "In
+ista insula nascuntur boni et nobiles rubini et non nascuntur in
+aliquo loco plus. Et hic nascuntur zafiri et topazii, ametisti, et
+aliquae aliae petrae pretiosae, et rex istius insulae habet pulcriorem
+rubinum de mundo".
+
+But some one perhaps will ask, where is the mother-rock of all these
+treasures in the soil of Ceylon? The question is easily answered.
+All these minerals have once been imbedded in the granitic gneiss,
+which is the principal rock of the region.
+
+In speaking of granite or gneiss in southern lands, or at least in
+the southern lands we now visited, I must, in the first place, point
+out that these rocks next the surface of the earth in the south have
+a much greater resemblance to strata of sand, gravel, and clay than
+to our granite or gneiss rocks, the type of what is lasting, hard,
+and unchangeable. The high coast hills, which surround the Inland
+Sea of Japan, resemble, when seen from the sea, ridges of sand
+(_osar_) with sides partly clothed with wood, partly sandy slopes of
+a light yellow colour, covered by no vegetation. On a closer
+examination, however, we find that the supposed sandy ridges consist
+of weathered granitic rocks, in which all possible intermediate
+stages may be seen between the solid rock and the loose sand. The
+sand is not stratified, and contains large, loose, rounded blocks
+_in situ_, completely resembling the erratic blocks in Sweden,
+although with a more rugged surface. The boundary between the
+unweathered granite and that which has been converted into sand is
+often so sharp that a stroke of the hammer separates the crust of
+granitic sand from the granite blocks. They have an almost fresh
+surface, and a couple of millimetres within the boundary the rock is
+quite unaltered. No formation of clay takes place, and the
+alteration to which the rocks are subjected therefore consists in a
+crumbling or formation of sand, and not, or at least only to a very
+small extent, in a chemical change. Even at Hong Kong the principal
+rock consisted of granite. Here too the surface of the granite rock
+was quite altered to a very considerable depth, not however to sand,
+but to a fine, often reddish, clay, thus in quite a different way
+from that on the coast of the Inland Sea of Japan. Here too one
+could at many places follow completely the change of the hard
+granite mass to a clay which still lay _in situ_, but without its
+being possible to draw so sharp a boundary between the primitive
+rock and the newly-formed loose earthy layers as at the first-named
+place. We had opportunities of observing a similar crumbling down of
+the hard granite at every road-section between Galle, Colombo, and
+Ratnapoora, with the difference that the granite and gneiss here
+crumbled down to a coarse sand, which was again bound together by
+newly-formed hydrated peroxide of iron to a peculiar porous
+sandstone, called by the natives _cabook_. This sandstone forms the
+layer lying next the rock in nearly all the hills on that part of
+the island which we visited. It evidently belongs to an earlier
+geological period than the Quaternary, for it is older than the
+recent formation of valleys and rivers. The _cabook_ often contains
+large, rounded, unweathered granite blocks, quite resembling the
+rolled-stone blocks in Sweden. In this way there arise at places
+where the _cabook_ stratum has again been broken up and washed away
+by currents of water, formations which are so bewilderingly like the
+ridges (_osar_) and hills with erratic blocks in Sweden and Finland
+that I was astonished when I saw them. I was compelled to resort to
+the evidence of the palms to convince myself that it was not an
+illusion which unrolled before me the well-known contours from the
+downs of my native land. An accurate study of the sandy hills on the
+Inland Sea of Japan, of the clay cliffs of Hong Kong, and the
+_cabook_ of Ceylon would certainly yield very unexpected contributions
+to an explanation of the way in which the sand and rolled-stone _osar_
+of Scandinavia have first arisen. It would show that much which the
+Swedish geologists still consider to be glacial gravel transported
+by water and ice, is only the product of a process of weathering or,
+more correctly, falling asunder, which has gone on in Sweden also on
+an enormous scale. Even a portion of our Quaternary clays have
+perhaps had a similar origin, and we find here a simple explanation
+of the important circumstance, which is not sufficiently attended to
+by our geologists, that often all the erratic blocks at a place are
+of the same kind, and resemble in their nature the underlying or
+neighbouring rocks.
+
+It is this weathering process which has originated the gem sand of
+Ceylon. Precious stones have been found disseminated in limited
+numbers in the granite converted into _cabook_. In weathering, the
+difficultly decomposable precious stones have not been attacked, or
+attacked only to a limited extent. They have therefore retained
+their original form and hardness. When in the course of thousands of
+years streams of water have flowed over the layers of _cabook_,
+their soft, already half-weathered constituents have been for the
+most part changed into a fine mud, and as such washed away, while
+the hard gems have only been inconsiderably rounded and little
+diminished in size. The current of water therefore has not been able
+to wash them far away from the place where they were originally
+imbedded in the rock, and we now find them collected in the
+gravel-bed, resting for the most part on the fundamental rock which
+the stream has left behind, and which afterwards, when the water has
+changed its course, has been again covered by new layers of mud,
+clay, and sand. It is this gravel-bed which the natives call
+_nellan_, and from which they chiefly get their treasures of
+precious stones.
+
+Of all the kinds of stones which are used as ornaments there are
+both noble and common varieties, without there being any perceptible
+difference in their chemical composition. The most skilful chemist
+would thus have difficulty in finding in their chemical composition
+the least difference between corundum and sapphire or ruby, between
+common beryl and emerald, between the precious and the common topaz,
+between the hyacinth and the common zircon, between precious and
+common spinel; and every mineralogist knows that there are
+innumerable intermediate stages between these minerals which are so
+dissimilar though absolutely identical in composition. This gave the
+old naturalists occasion to speak of ripe and unripe precious
+stones. They said that in order to ripen precious stones the heat of
+the south was required. This transference of well-known
+circumstances from the vegetable to the mineral kingdom is certainly
+without justification. It points however to a remarkable and
+hitherto unexplained circumstance, namely, that the occurrence of
+precious stones is, with few exceptions, confined to southern
+regions[390]. Diamonds are found in noteworthy number only in India,
+Borneo, Brazil, and the Transvaal. Tropical America is the home-land
+of the emerald, Brazil of the topaz, Ceylon of the sapphire and the
+hyacinth, Pegu of the ruby, and Persia of the turquoise. With the
+exception of the diamond the same stones are found also in the
+north, but in a common form. Thus common sapphire (corundum) is
+found in Gellivare iron ore so plentifully that the ore from certain
+openings is difficult to smelt. Common topaz is found in masses by
+the hundredweight in the neighbourhood of Falun; common emerald is
+found in thick crystals several feet in length in felspar quarries,
+in Roslagen, and in Tammela and Kisko parishes in Finland; common
+spinel occurs abundantly in Aker limestone quarry; common zircon at
+Brevig in Norway, and turquoise-like but badly coloured stones at
+Vestana in Skane. True precious stones, on the other hand, are not
+found at any of these places. Another remarkable fact in connection
+with precious stones is that most of those that come into the market
+are not found in the solid rock, but as loose grains in sand-beds.
+True jewel mines are few, unproductive, and easily exhausted. From
+this one would be inclined to suppose that precious stones actually
+undergo an ennobling process in the warm soil of the south.
+
+During the excursion I undertook from Galle to Ratnapoora, I visited
+a number of temples in order to procure Pali, Singhalese, and
+Sanscrit manuscripts; and I put myself in communication with various
+natives who were supposed to possess such manuscripts. They are now
+very difficult to get at, and the collection I made was not very
+large. The books which the temples wished to dispose of have long
+ago been eagerly brought up by private collectors or handed over to
+public museums, for example, to the Ceylon Government Oriental
+Library established at Colombo[391]. The collector who remains a
+considerable time in the region, may however be able to reap a rich
+after-harvest, less of the classical works preserved in the temples
+than of the smaller popular writings in the hands of private
+persons.
+
+We see in Ceylon innumerable descendants of the races who repeatedly
+subdued larger or smaller portions of the island, or carried on
+traffic there, as Moormen (Arabs), Hindoos, Jews, Portuguese,
+Dutchmen, Englishmen, &c., but the main body of the people at all
+events varies very little, and still consists of the two allied
+races, Tamils and Singhalese, who for thousands of years back have
+been settled here. The colour of their skin is very dark, almost
+black, their hair is not woolly, their features are regular, and
+their build is exceedingly fine. The children especially, who, while
+they are small, often go completely naked, with their regular
+features, their large eyes, and fresh plump bodies, are veritable
+types of beauty, and the same holds true of most of the youths.
+Instead of buying in one of the capitals of Europe the right to draw
+models, often enough with forms which leave much to desire, and
+which must be used without distinction for Greek or Northern
+divinities, for heroes or _savants_ of the present or former times,
+an artist ought to make tours of study to the lands of the south,
+where man does not need to protect himself from the cold with
+clothes, and where accordingly nakedness is the rule, at least among
+the poorer classes. The dress which is worn here is commonly
+convenient and tasteful. Among the Singhalese it consists of a piece
+of cloth wound round the middle, which hangs down to the knees. The
+men, who still prefer the convenient national dress to the European,
+go with the upper part of the body bare. The long hair is held
+together with a comb which goes right over the head, and among the
+rich has a large four-cornered projection at the crown. The women
+protect the upper part of the body with a thin cotton jacket. The
+priests wear a yellow piece of cloth diagonally over one shoulder.
+The naked children are ornamented with metal bracelets and with a
+metal chain round the waist, from which a little plate hangs down
+between the legs. This plate is often of silver or gold, and is
+looked upon as an amulet.
+
+The huts of the working men are in general very small, built of
+earth or _cabook_-bricks, and are rather to be considered as sheds
+for protection from the rain and sunshine than as houses in the
+European sense. The richer Singhalese live in extensive "verandas"
+which are almost open, and are divided into rooms by thin panels,
+resembling in this respect the Japanese houses. The Japanese genius
+for ornament, their excellent taste and skill in execution, are
+however wanting here, but it must also be admitted that in these
+respects the Japanese stand first among all the peoples of the
+earth.
+
+In the seaport towns the Singhalese are insufferable by their
+begging, their loquacity, and the unpleasant custom they have of
+asking up to ten times as much, while making a bargain, as they are
+pleased to accept in the end. In the interior of the country the
+state of things in this respect is much better.
+
+Among the temples which I visited in order to procure Pali books was
+the so-called "devil's" temple at Ratnapoora, the stateliest
+idol-house I saw in Ceylon. Most of the temples were built of wood;
+all were exceedingly unpretentious, and without the least trace of
+style. The numerous priests and temple attendants lived in rather
+squalid and disorderly dwellings in the neighbourhood of the temple.
+They received me in a friendly way and showed me their books, of
+which they occasionally sold some. The negotiation several times
+ended by the priest presenting me with the book I wished to purchase
+and positively refusing to receive compensation in any form. On one
+occasion the priest stated that he himself was prevented by the
+precepts of his religion from receiving the purchase-money agreed
+upon, but said that I might hand it over to some of the persons
+standing round. At two of the priests' houses there was a swarm of
+school-children, who ran busily about with their palm-leaf writing
+books and writing implements.
+
+[Illustration: STATUES IN A TEMPLE IN CEYLON. ]
+
+The temples were very different in their arrangements, probably on
+account of the dissimilar usages of the various Buddhist sects to
+which they belonged. A temple near Colombo contained a large number
+of wooden images and paintings of gods, or men of more than human
+size. Most of them stood upright like a guard round a sitting
+Buddha. I could not observe any dislike on the part of the priests
+to take the foreigner round their temples. The key, however, was
+sometimes wanting to some repository, whose contents they were
+perhaps unwilling to desecrate by showing them to the unbeliever.
+This was, for instance, the case with the press which contained the
+devil's bow and arrows, in the temple at Ratnapoora. The temple
+vessels besides were exceedingly ugly, tasteless, and ill-kept. I
+seldom saw anything that showed any sign of taste, art, and
+orderliness. How different from Japan, where all the swords, lacquer
+work, braziers, teacups, &c., kept in the better temples would
+deserve a place in some of the art museums of Europe.
+
+In the sketch of the first voyage from Novaya Zemlya to Ceylon, a
+countryman of Lidner can scarcely avoid giving a picture of
+"Ceylon's burned up vales." In this respect the following extract
+from a letter from Dr. Almquist, sketching his journey to the
+interior of the island may be instructive:--
+
+ "Three hours after our arrival at Point de Galle I sat
+ properly stowed away in the mail-coach _en route_ for
+ Colombo. As travelling companions I had a European and two
+ Singhalese. As it was already pretty dusk in the evening
+ there was not much of the surrounding landscape visible. We
+ went on the whole night through a forest of tall coco-nut
+ trees whose dark tops were visible far up in the air
+ against the somewhat lighter sky. It was peculiar to see
+ the number of fire-flies flying in every direction, and at
+ every wing-stroke emiting a bright flash. The night air had
+ the warm moistness which is so agreeable in the tropics.
+ Now and then the sound of the sea penetrated to our ears.
+ For we followed the west coast in a northerly direction.
+ More could not be observed in the course of the night, and
+ all the passengers were soon sunk in deep sleep.
+
+ "After seven hours' brisk trot we came to a railway station
+ and continued our journey by rail to Colombo, the capital
+ of Ceylon. As there was nothing special to see or do there,
+ I went on without stopping by the railway, which here bends
+ from the coast to Kandy and other places. The landscape now
+ soon became grander and grander. We had indeed before seen
+ tropical vegetation at several places, but of the
+ luxuriance which here struck the eye we had no conception.
+ The pity was that men had come hither, had cleared and
+ planted.
+
+ "In the lowlands I saw some cinnamon plantations. Ceylon
+ cinnamon is very dear; in Europe cheaper and inferior sorts
+ are used almost exclusively, and most of the plantations in
+ Ceylon have been abandoned many years ago. Soon the train
+ leaves the lowland and begins to ascend rapidly. The patch
+ of coast country, where the coco-nut trees prevail, is
+ exchanged for a very mountainous landscape; first hills
+ with large open valleys between, then higher continuous
+ mountains with narrow, deep, kettle-like valleys, or open
+ hilly plateaus. In the valleys rice is principally
+ cultivated. The hills and mountain sides were probably
+ originally covered with the most luxuriant primitive
+ forest, but now on all the slopes up to the mountain
+ summits it is cut down, and they are covered with coffee
+ plantations. The coffee-plant is indeed very pretty, but
+ grows at such a distance apart that the ground is
+ everywhere visible between, and this is a wretched covering
+ for luxuriant Ceylon.
+
+ "At two o'clock in the afternoon we arrived at the station,
+ Perideniya, the nearest one to Kandy. The famous botanical
+ garden lies in its neighbourhood, and there I had to visit
+ the superintendent of the garden, Dr. THWAITES. This
+ elderly, but still active and enthusiastic naturalist is
+ exceedingly interested in botanical research, and very
+ obliging to all who work in that department. He received me
+ in a very friendly manner, and it was due to him that the
+ programme of my visit there was so full.
+
+ "A botanic garden in Ceylon must naturally be something
+ extraordinary. Nowhere else can grander or more luxuriant
+ vegetation be seen than here. The garden has been
+ especially famous for the number of different varieties of
+ trees of immense size which it can show. Besides, all
+ possible better known plants are to be found here,
+ cultivated in the finest specimens. Spices and drugs were
+ specially well represented. Here long tendrils of the black
+ pepper-plant wound themselves up the thick tree-stems, here
+ the cardamon and the ginger flourished, here the pretty
+ cinnamon, camphor, cinchona, nutmeg, and cocoa trees made a
+ splendid show, here I saw a newly gathered harvest of
+ vanilla. The abundance of things to be seen, learned, and
+ enjoyed here was incredible. However, the next day I
+ determined on the advice of Dr. Thwaites to make a tour up
+ to the mountain localities proper, in order there to get a
+ better sight of the lichen flora of Ceylon.
+
+[Illustration: A COUNTRY PLACE IN CEYLON. ]
+
+[Illustration: HIGHLAND VIEW IN THE INTERIOR OF CEYLON. Coffee
+Plantations; Adam's Peak in the back-ground. ]
+
+ "I now travelled south partly by rail, partly by coach,
+ until in the evening I found myself lodged at a
+ 'rest-house' at Rambodde, a thousand metres above the sea,
+ at about the same height accordingly as that at which trees
+ cease to grow in southern Norway. This tropical mountain
+ land reminds one a little, in respect of the contours of
+ the landscape, of the fells of Norway. Here too are found
+ league-long deep valleys, surrounded by high mountain
+ summits and ranges with outlines sharply marked against the
+ horizon. But here they were everywhere overgrown with
+ coffee bushes, or possibly with cinchona plants. The
+ mountain slopes were so laid bare from the bottom all the
+ way up that scarce a tree was left in sight; everywhere so
+ far as the eye could reach only coffee.
+
+ "Next day, attended by a Singhalese, I went, or to speak
+ more correctly, climbed farther up the steep coffee
+ plantations. At a height of 1,300 metres above the sea
+ coffee ceases to grow, and we now found some not very
+ extensive tea plantations, and above these the primitive
+ forest commences. At a height of 1,900 metres above the sea
+ there is an extensive open plateau. Up here there is a not
+ inconsiderable place, Novara Elliya, where the governor has
+ a residence, and part of the troops are in barracks during
+ the summer heat. One of the mountains which surround this
+ plateau is Pedrotalagalla, the loftiest mountain of Ceylon,
+ which reaches a height of 2,500 metres above the sea.
+
+ "I have ascended not so few mountains, but of none has the
+ ascent been so easy as of this, for a broad footpath ran
+ all the way to the top. Without this path the ascent had
+ been impossible, for an hour's time would have been
+ required for every foot made good through the jungle, so
+ closely is the ground under the lofty trees covered to the
+ top of the mountain with bushes, creepers, or the bamboo.
+ In the evening I returned to my former night-quarters,
+ where I slept well after a walk of thirty-six English
+ miles.
+
+ "As I felt myself altogether unable the following day to
+ make any further excursion on foot, I travelled back to
+ Peradeniya by mail-coach. During this journey I had as my
+ travelling companion a Singhalese, whom it was a special
+ pleasure to see at close quarters. One of his big toes was
+ ornamented with a broad ring of silver, both his ears were
+ pierced above, and provided with some pendulous ornament,
+ and one side of the nose was likewise perforated, in order
+ that at that place too might he adorn himself with a piece
+ of grandeur. On his head he had, like all Singhalese, a
+ comb by which the hair drawn right upwards is kept in
+ position, as little girls at home are wont to have their
+ hair arranged. As the man did not appear to know a word of
+ English, it was impossible to enter into any closer
+ acquaintance with him.
+
+ "At noon on the following day I found myself compelled, by
+ a quite unexpected occurrence, to return precipitately to
+ the coast again. Dr. Thwaites and I had been invited to
+ dinner by his Excellency the Governor. As I was still
+ limping after my long excursion on foot, and besides had
+ not had the forethought to take a dress-suit with me, I
+ considered that, vexatious as it was to decline, I could
+ not accept this gracious invitation, but instead went my
+ way. Thus after six exceedingly pleasant days I came back
+ to Point de Galle and the _Vega_".
+
+
+[Footnote 385: Yet with one very laughable exception. I wished for
+zoological purposes to get one of the common Chinese rats, and with
+this object in view made inquiries through my interpreter at a shed
+in the street, where rats were said to be cooked for Chinese
+epicures. But scarcely had the question been put, when the old,
+grave host broke out in a furious storm of abuse, especially against
+the interpreter, who was overwhelmed with bitter reproaches for
+helping a "foreign devil" to make a fool of his own countrymen. All
+my protestations were in vain, and I had to go away with my object
+unaccomplished. ]
+
+[Footnote 386: See on this subject W.A. Pickering, "Chinese Secret
+Societies" (_Journal of the Straits Branch of the R. Asiatic
+Society_, 1878, No. 1, pp. 63-84) ]
+
+[Footnote 387: Concerning their formation and origin see a paper by
+K. Nordenskioeld in _Oefversigt af Vet.-akad Foerh_ 1870, p 29. ]
+
+[Footnote 388: Emerson Tennent says on the subject:--The gem
+collectors penetrate through the recent strata of gravel to the
+depth of from ten to twenty feet in order to reach a lower deposit,
+distinguished by the name of _Nellan_, in which the objects of
+their search are found. This is of so early a formation that it
+underlies the present beds of rivers, and is generally separated
+from them or from the superincumbent gravel by a hard crust (called
+_Kadua_), a few inches in thickness, and so consolidated as to have
+somewhat the appearance of laterite or sun-burnt brick. The nellan
+is for the most part horizontal, but occasionally it is raised into
+an incline as it approaches the base of the hills. It appears to
+have been deposited previous to the eruption of the basalt, on which
+in some places it reclines, and to have undergone some alteration
+from the contact. It consists of water-worn pebbles firmly imbedded
+in clay, and occasionally there occur large lumps of granite and
+gneiss, in the hollows under which, as well as in "pockets" in the
+clay (which from their shape the natives denominate "elephants'
+footsteps "), gems are frequently found in groups, as if washed in
+by the current. (E. Tennent, _Ceylon_ London, 1860, i. p. 34.) ]
+
+[Footnote 389: Diamonds are wanting in Ceylon. And neither gold nor
+platinum appears to occur in noteworthy quantity in the gem gravel. ]
+
+[Footnote 390: The only considerable exceptions from this are two
+localities for precious stones in Southern Siberia and the
+occurrence of precious opal in Hungary. The latter, however, in
+consequence of defective hardness and translucency, can scarcely be
+reckoned among the true precious stones. ]
+
+[Footnote 391: The Catalogue of Pali, Singhalese, and Sanscrit
+Manuscripts in the Ceylon Government Oriental Library, Colombo,
+1876, includes:--
+
+ 41 Buddhist canonical books
+ 71 Other religious writings
+ 25 Historical works, traditions
+ 29 Philological works
+ 16 Literary works
+ 6 Works on Medicine, Astronomy, &c.
+
+According to Emerson Tennent (i. p. 515), the Rev. R. Spence Hardy
+has in the _Journal of the Ceylon Branch of the Asiatic Society_ for
+1848 given the titles of 467 works in Pali, Sanskrit, and Elu,
+collected by himself during his residence in Ceylon. Of these about
+eighty are in Sanskrit, 150 in Elu or Singhalese, and the remainder
+in Pali. ]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+ The Voyage Home--Christmas, 1879--Aden--Suez--Cairo--
+ Excursion to the Pyramids and the Mokattam Mountains--
+ Petrified Tree-stems--The Suez Canal--Landing on Sicily
+ by night--Naples--Rome--The Members of the Expedition
+ separate--Lisbon--England--Paris--Copenhagen--Festive Entry
+ into Stockholm--_Fetes_ there--Conclusion
+
+
+During our stay in Japan and our voyage thence to Ceylon I had
+endeavoured at least in some degree to preserve the character of the
+voyage of the _Vega_ as a scientific expedition, an attempt which,
+considering the short time the _Vega_ remained at each place, could
+not yield any very important results, and which besides was rendered
+difficult, though in a way that was agreeable and flattering to us,
+by I may almost say the tempestuous hospitality with which the
+_Vega_ men were everywhere received during their visits to the ports
+of Japan and East Asia. It was besides difficult to find any new
+untouched field of research in regions which were the seat of
+culture and civilisation long before the time when the forest began
+to be cut down and seed to be sown in the Scandinavian North, and
+which for centuries have formed the goal of exploratory expeditions
+from all the countries of Europe. I hope however that the _Vega_
+will leave lasting memorials even of this part of her voyage through
+the contributions of Stuxberg, Nordquist, Kjellman, and Almquist to
+the evertebrate fauna and the sea-weed and lichen flora of East
+Asia, and by my collections of Japanese books, of fossil plants from
+Mogi and Labuan, &c.
+
+[Illustration: THE SCIENTIFIC MEN OF THE _"VEGA."_
+ F.R. Kjellman.
+ A. Stuxberg.
+ E. Almquist
+ O. Nordquist. ]
+
+With the new overpowering impression which nature and people exerted
+on those of us, who now for the first time visited Japan, China,
+India, Borneo, and Ceylon, it was however specially difficult,
+during a stay of a few days at each place, to preserve this side of
+the _Vega_ expedition. I therefore determined after leaving Ceylon
+to let it drop completely, that is, from that point merely to
+_travel home_. Regarding this part of the voyage of the _Vega_ I
+would thus have very little to say, were it not that an obligation
+of gratitude compels me to express in a few words the thanks of the
+_Vega_ men for all the honours bestowed upon them, and all the
+goodwill they enjoyed during the last part of the voyage. For many
+of my readers this sketch may perhaps be of interest as reminding
+them of some happy days which they themselves have lived through,
+and it may even happen that it will not be unwelcome to the friends
+of geography in a future time to read this description of the way in
+which the first circumnavigators of Asia and Europe were _feted_ in
+the ports and capitals of the civilised countries. In this sketch
+however I am compelled to be as brief as possible, and I must
+therefore sue for pardon if every instance of hospitality shown us
+cannot be mentioned.
+
+We started from Point de Galle on the 22nd December, and arrived at
+Aden on the 7th January. The passage was tedious in consequence of
+light winds or calms. Christmas Eve we did not celebrate on this
+occasion, tired as we were of entertainments, in such a festive way
+as at Pitlekaj, but only with a few Christmas-boxes and some extra
+treating. On New Year's Eve, on the other hand, the officers in the
+gunroom were surprised by a deputation from the forecastle clad in
+_pesks_ as Chukches, who came, in good Swedish, mixed with a few
+words of the Pitlekaj _lingua franca_ not yet forgotten, to bring us
+a salutation from our friends among the ice of the north, thanks for
+the past and good wishes for the coming year, mixed with Chukch
+complaints of the great heat hereaway in the neighbourhood of the
+equator, which for fur-clad men was said to be altogether
+unendurable.
+
+We remained at Aden only a couple of days, received in a friendly
+manner by the then acting Swedish-Norwegian consul, who took us
+round to the most remarkable points of the desolate environs of this
+important haven, among others to the immense, but then and generally
+empty water reservoirs which the English have made in the
+neighbourhood of the town. No place in the high north, not the
+granite cliffs of the Seven Islands, or the pebble rocks of Low
+Island on Spitzbergen, not the mountain sides on the east coast of
+Novaya Zemlya, or the figure-marked ground at Cape Chelyuskin is so
+bare of vegetation as the environs of Aden and the parts of the east
+coast of the Red Sea which we saw. Nor can there be any comparison
+in respect of the abundance of animal life between the equatorial
+countries and the Polar regions we have named. On the whole animal
+life in the coast lands of the highest north, where the mountains
+are high and surrounded by deep water, appears to be richer in
+individuals than in the south, and this depends not only on the
+populousness of the fowl-colonies and the number of large animals of
+the chase that we find there, but also on the abundance of
+evertebrates in the sea. At least the dredgings made from the _Vega_
+during the voyage between Japan and Ceylon gave an exceedingly
+scanty yield in comparison with our dredgings north of Cape
+Chelyuskin.
+
+Aden is now an important port of call for the vessels which pass
+through the Suez Canal from European waters to the Indian Ocean, and
+also one of the chief places for the export of the productions of
+Yemen or Arabia Felix. In the latter respect the harbour was of
+importance as far back as about four hundred years ago, when the
+Italian, LUDOVICO DE VARTHEMA, was for a considerable time kept a
+prisoner by the Arab tribes at the place.
+
+In the harbour of Aden the _Vega_ was saluted by the firing of
+twenty-one guns and the hoisting of the Swedish flag at the maintop
+of an Italian war vessel, the despatch steamer _Esploratore_ under
+the command of Captain AMEZAGA. The _Esploratore_ took part in an
+expedition consisting of three war vessels, charged with founding an
+Italian colony at Assab Bay, which cuts into the east coast of
+Africa, north of Bab-el-Mandeb, on a tract of land purchased for the
+purpose by Rubbattino, an Italian commercial company. On board was
+Professor SAPETTO, an elderly man, who had concluded the bargain and
+had lived at the place for forty years. It was settled that he
+should be the administrator of the new colony. On board the
+_Esploratore_ were also the _savants_ BECCARI and the Marquis DORIA,
+famous for their extensive travels in the tropics and their valuable
+scientific labours. The officers of the Italian vessel invited us to
+a dinner which was one of the pleasantest and gayest of the many
+entertainments we were present at during our homeward journey. When
+at the close of it we parted from our hosts they lighted up the way
+by which we rowed forward over the tranquil waves of the Bay of Aden
+with blue lights, and the desert mountain sides of the Arabian coast
+resounded with the hurrahs which were exchanged in the clear, calm
+night between the representatives of the south and north of Europe.
+
+The _Vega_ left Aden, or more correctly its port-town, Steamer
+Point, on the 9th January, and sailed the following day through
+Bab-el-Mandeb into the Red Sea. The passage of this sea, which is
+narrow, but 2,200 kilometres long, was tedious, especially in its
+northern part, where a strong head wind blew. This caused so great a
+lowering of the temperature that a film of ice was formed on the
+fresh-water pools in Cairo, and that we, Polar travellers as we
+were, had again to put on winter clothes in Egypt itself.
+
+The _Vega_ anchored on the 27th January at the now inconsiderable
+port, Suez, situated at the southern entrance to the Suez Canal.
+Most of the scientific men and officers of the _Vega_ expedition
+made an excursion thence to Cairo and the Pyramids, and were
+everywhere received in a very kind way. Among other things the
+Egyptian Geographical Society sent a deputation to welcome us under
+the leadership of the President of the Society, the American, STONE
+PACHA. He had in his youth visited Sweden, and appeared to have a
+very pleasant recollection of it. The Geographical Society gave a
+stately banquet in honour of the _Vega_ expedition. An excursion was
+made to the Great Pyramids, and, as far as the short time permitted,
+to other remarkable places in and around the heap of ruins of all
+kinds and from all periods, which forms the capital of the Egypt of
+to-day. During our visit to the Pyramids the Swedish-Norwegian
+consul-general, BOeDTKER, gave us a dinner in the European hotel
+there, and the same evening a ball was given us by the Italian
+consul-general, DE MARTINO. A day was besides devoted by some of us,
+in company with M. GUISEPPE HAIMANN, to a short excursion to the
+Mokattam Mountains, famous for the silicified tree-stems found
+there. I hoped along with the petrified wood to find some strata of
+clay-slate or schist with leaf-impressions. I was however
+unsuccessful in this, but I loaded heavily a carriage drawn by a
+pair of horses with large and small tree-stems converted into hard
+flint. These he spread about in the desert in incredible masses,
+partly broken up into small pieces, partly as long fallen stems,
+without root or branches, but in a wonderfully good state of
+preservation. Probably they had originally lain embedded in a layer
+of sand above the present surface of the desert. This layer has
+afterwards been carried away by storms, leaving the heavy masses of
+stone as a peculiar stratum upon the desert sand, which is not
+covered by any grassy sward. No root-stumps were found, and it thus
+appeared as if the stems had been carried by currents of water to
+the place where they were imbedded in the sandy layers and
+silicified. In their exterior all these petrifactions resemble each
+other, and by the microscopical examination which has hitherto been
+made naturalists have only succeeded in distinguishing two species
+belonging to the family Nicolia, and a palm, a pine, and a
+leguminous plant, all now extinct. It is possible that among the
+abundant materials I brought home with me some other types may be
+discovered by polishing and microscopical examination. Such at least
+was my expectation in bringing home this large quantity of stones,
+the transport of which to the _Vega_ was attended with a heavy
+expenditure.
+
+From Cairo we returned, on the 2nd February, to Suez, and the
+following day the _Vega_ weighed anchor to steam through the Suez
+Canal into the Mediterranean. This gigantic work, created by the
+genius and perseverance of LESSEPS, which is unsurpassed by the many
+marvels of construction in the land of the Pharaohs, has not a very
+striking appearance, for the famous canal runs, like a small river
+with low banks, through the monotonously yellow plain of the desert.
+There are no sluices. No bold rock-blastings stand as monuments of
+difficulties overcome. But proud must every child of our century be
+when he gazes on this proof that private enterprise can in our day
+accomplish what world-empires in former times were unable to carry
+into execution. We touched at Port Said for a few hours on the 5th
+February, after which we continued our voyage to Naples, the first
+European port we were to visit.
+
+At Aden and in Egypt I had received several letters and telegrams
+informing me that great preparations were being made at Naples for
+our reception, and that repeated inquiries had been addressed to the
+Swedish consul-general regarding the day of our arrival, questions
+which naturally it was not so easy to answer, as our vessel, with
+its weak steam-power, was very dependent on wind and weather. It was
+hoped that the _Vega_ might be signalled from the Straits of
+Messina, but we did not come to the entrance to the Straits until
+after sunset. I therefore ordered the _Vega_ to lie to there for
+some hours, while Lieut. Bove and I rowed ashore to send off
+telegrams announcing our arrival in Europe to Sweden, Naples, Rome,
+and other places. The shore, however, was farther off than we had
+calculated, and it was quite dark before it was reached. It was not
+without difficulty that in these circumstances we could get to land
+through the breakers in the open road quite unknown to us, and then,
+in coal-black darkness, find our way through thickets of prickly
+bushes to the railway which here runs along the coast. We had then
+to go along the railway for a considerable distance before we
+reached a station from which our telegrams could be despatched.
+Scarcely had we entered the station when we were surrounded by
+suspicious railway and coast-guard men, and we considered ourselves
+fortunate that they had not observed us on the way thither, for they
+would certainly have taken us for smugglers, whom the coast-guard
+have the right to salute with sharp shot. Even now we were
+overwhelmed with questions in a loud and commanding tone, but when
+they saw to what high personages our telegrams were addressed, and
+were informed by their countryman Bove, who wore his uniform, to
+what vessel we belonged, they became very obliging. One of them
+accompanied us back to our boat, after providing us with excellent
+torches which spread abundant light around our footsteps. They were
+much needed, for we were now compelled to share the astonishment of
+our guide that in the darkness we had succeeded in making our way
+over the rugged hills covered with cactus plants and bushy thickets
+between the railway and the coast, and along a railway viaduct which
+we had passed on our way to the station without having any idea of
+it. It was the last adventure of the voyage of the _Vega_, and my
+first landing on the glorious soil of Italy.
+
+On the 14th February, at 1 P.M., the _Vega_ arrived at Naples.
+At Capri a flag-ornamented steamer from Sorrento met us; somewhat
+later, another from Naples, both of which accompanied us to the
+harbour. Here the Swedish expedition was saluted by an American
+war-vessel, the _Wyoming_, with twenty-one guns. The harbour swarmed
+with boats adorned with flags. Scarcely had the _Vega_ anchored--or
+more correctly been moored to a buoy--when the envoy LINDSTRAND, the
+Swedish-Norwegian consul CLAUSEN, Prince TEANO, president of the
+Geographical Society, Commander MARTIN FRANKLIN, Commendatore NEGRI,
+and others came on board. The last-named, who nearly two years
+before had made a special journey to Sweden to be present at the
+departure of the _Vega_, now came from Turin commissioned by the
+Italian government, and deputed by the municipalities of Florence
+and Venice, the Turin Academy of Sciences, and several Italian and
+foreign geographical societies, to welcome the Expedition, which had
+now brought its labours to a happy issue.
+
+After Herr Lindstrand, as King Oscar's representative, had welcomed
+the Expedition to Europe, and publicly conferred Swedish decorations
+on Palander and me, and two adjutants of the Italian Ministry of
+Marine had likewise distributed Italian orders to some of the _Vega_
+men, some short speeches were exchanged, on which the members of the
+Expedition, accompanied by the persons enumerated above, landed in
+the Admiral's steam-launch under a salute of twenty-one guns from
+the Italian guard-ship. On the landing-quay, where a large crowd of
+the inhabitants of the city was assembled, the Swedish seafarers
+were received by the Syndic of Naples, Count GIUSSO, accompanied by
+a deputation from the municipality, &c. Here we were taken, between
+rows of enthusiastic students, in the gala carriages of the
+municipality, to the Hotel Royal des Etrangeres, where a handsome
+suite of apartments, along with equipages and numerous attendants,
+was placed at our disposal. We were there received by the committee
+in charge of the festivities, Prince BELMONTE and Cavalier RICCIO,
+who afterwards, during our stay in the city, in the kindest way
+arranged everything to make our stay there festive and agreeable.
+
+On Sunday the 15th several deputations were received, among them one
+from the University. A beautifully-bound address was presented by
+"Ateneo Benjammo Franklin," and a number of official visits were
+made and received. We dined with the Swedish-Norwegian consul,
+Clausen. On Monday the 16th an address was presented from "Scuola
+d'Applicazione per gl'Ingenieri," and from "Neapolitana
+Archaeologiae, Litterarum et Artium Academia," a song of welcome in
+Latin, written by Professor ANTONIO MIRABELLI. Then followed a grand
+dinner given by the municipality of the city in a hall of the hotel,
+which was now inaugurated and was named the _Vega_ Hall, and was on
+this occasion ornamented with the royal cipher, the Swedish and
+Italian flags, &c. In the evening there was a gala representation at
+San Carlo, where the members of the Expedition scattered among the
+different boxes were saluted with repeated loud cries of
+"Bravo!"--On Tuesday the 17th the Committee had arranged an
+excursion to Lake Averno, the Temple of Serapis, and other places
+famous in a geological and historical respect, situated to the
+north-west of Naples. Prince URUSOV entertained some of the members
+of the Expedition to dinner. There was an afternoon musical
+entertainment at the "Societa Filarmonica," where there was a
+numerous attendance of persons moving in the first circles in the
+city.--Wednesday the 18th, excursion along with the Committee to
+Pompeii, where the Swedish guests were received by the famous
+superintendent of the excavations, Director RUGGIERI. Breakfast was
+eaten with merry jests and gay speeches in a splendid Roman bath,
+still in good preservation, excavations were undertaken, &c. In the
+afternoon there was a grand dinner, followed by a reception by the
+admiral in command, and a festive representation at the Bellini
+Theatre.--Thursday the 19th, Dr. FRANZ KUeHN, arrived from Vienna,
+deputed by the Geographical Society there to welcome us. Excursion
+in company with Professor PALMIERI and the Committee to Vesuvius,
+which at the time of our visit was emitting thick columns of smoke,
+was pouring out a stream of lava, and casting out masses of glowing
+stone. We ascended the border of the crater, not without
+inconvenience from the heat of the half-solidified lava streams over
+which we walked, from the gases escaping from the crater, and from
+the red-hot stones flung out of it. The new railway, not then ready,
+was inspected, and the observatory visited. We dined with the
+Committee at the hotel--Friday the 20th, journey to Rome, where the
+members of the Expedition arrived at 2 P.M., and were, in the same
+way as at Naples, received in a festive manner by the Syndic of the
+city, Prince RUSPOLI, president and director of the Geographical
+Society, by members of the University, the Scandinavian Union, &c.
+Carriages met the Swedish guests, in which they were taken past the
+Swedish-Norwegian minister's hotel, decked with innumerable flags,
+to Albergo di Roma in the Corso, where a splendid suite of
+apartments, along with equipages, was placed at the disposal of the
+Expedition. In the evening we dined with the Swedish minister, and
+were afterwards received by Prince PALLAVICINI at his magnificent
+palace--Saturday the 21st, visit to the Chamber of Deputies, private
+excursions, dinner given by the Duke NICOLAS of Leuchtenberg, to
+Nordenskioeld and Nordquist.--Sunday the 22nd, public meeting of the
+Geographical Society, at which its grand gold medal was presented to
+Nordenskioeld. In the evening a grand dinner, given by the
+Geographical Society, in the Continental Hotel. Among the toasts
+which were drunk may be mentioned one to the King of Sweden and
+Norway, proposed in a very warm and eloquent speech by the Premier,
+CAIROLI; to Nordenskioeld, by Prince Teano; to Palander, by the
+Minister of Marine, Admiral ACTON; to the other members of the
+Expedition, to its munificent patrons, Oscar Dickson and Alexander
+Sibiriakoff, to Bove, the Italian officer, who took part in it,
+&c.--Monday the 23rd. Audience of the King. In the evening a grand
+reception at the Palazzo Teano, where almost all that was
+distinguished and splendid of Roman society appeared to be
+assembled.--Tuesday the 24th. Dined at the Quirinal with King
+Humbert. There were present, besides the King and his suite, the
+Swedish minister, the members of the _Vega_ expedition, Prince
+Teano, President of the Geographical Society; Commendatore Negri;
+Cairoli, Premier; Acton, Minister of Marine; MALVANO, Secretary of
+the Cabinet; Major BARATIERI, and the Italian naval officer, EUGENIO
+PARENT, a member of the Swedish Polar expedition of 1872-3, and
+others. In the evening, reception by the English minister, Sir A.B.
+PAGET, and a beautifully arranged _fete_ at the Scandinavian Union,
+at which a number of enthusiastic speeches were made, and flowers
+and printed verses were distributed.--Wednesday the 25th. Farewell
+visits. Some of the members of the Expedition travelled north by
+rail. Captain Palander made an excursion to Spezzia to take part in
+a cruise on the large ironclad _Duilio_. The others remained some
+days longer in Rome in order to see its lions, undisturbed by
+official _fetes_.
+
+While the _Vega_ lay in the harbour of Naples she was literally
+exposed to storming by visitors. The crew were on several occasions
+invited to the theatres there by the managers. Excursions to Pompeii
+had besides been arranged for them by the consul for the united
+kingdoms, Clausen, who spared no pains to make the stay of the
+expedition at Naples honouring to the mother-country and as pleasant
+as possible to the guests, as well as in arranging the more formal
+details of the visit. We had besides the joy of meeting in Italy our
+comrade from the severe wintering of 1872-3, Eugenio Parent, who
+soon after had the misfortune to be in the tower of the ironclad
+_Duilio_, when the large Armstrong cannon placed there burst, and
+the wonderful good fortune to escape with life and without being
+seriously hurt from this dreadful accident. The only mishap on board
+the _Vega_ during the latter part of her long voyage home occurred
+besides in the harbour of Naples, one of the sailors who was keeping
+back an enthusiastic crowd of people who stormed the _Vega_, being
+thrown down from the bulwarks with the result that he broke an
+arm.[392]
+
+On the 29th February the _Vega_ left the harbour of Naples, but no
+longer with her staff complete. Doctors Kjellman, Almquist, and
+Stuxberg, and Lieut. Nordquist had preferred the land route from
+Italy to Stockholm to the long _detour_ by sea, and Lieut. Bove was
+obliged, by family circumstances, to leave the _Vega_ at Naples. We,
+however, all met again at Stockholm. At our departure from Naples
+the gunroom _personnel_ thus consisted only of me, Captain Palander,
+and Lieuts. Brusewitz and Hovgaard.
+
+Through M.A. RABAUT, President of the young, but already so well
+known Geographical Society of Marseilles, I had received repeated
+invitations to visit along with my companions the birthplace of
+Pytheas, the first Polar explorer and the discoverer of the
+Scandinavian Peninsula. With great reluctance I was compelled to
+decline this invitation. We had to hasten home, and I wished to save
+some days for a visit to the fatherland of HENRY the Navigator and
+VASCO DA GAMA.
+
+We sailed through the Straits of Gibraltar on the 9th March, and
+anchored in the harbour of Lisbon on the 11th March at 2 P.M. The
+following day we made an excursion to the beautiful palace of Cintra,
+situated about five Portuguese miles from the capital. On Saturday we
+were received in audience by the King, Dom Luiz, of Portugal, who, a
+seaman himself, appeared to take a great interest in the voyage of the
+_Vega_. Later in the day the Swedish minister in Lisbon gave a dinner,
+to which were invited the President of the Portuguese Council, the
+Minister of Foreign Affairs, the members of the Diplomatic Corps, and
+others, ending in the evening with a grand reception. On Monday the 15th
+we were present by special invitation at a meeting of the Geographical
+Society, at which the newly-returned African travellers, BRITO-CAPELLO
+and IVEN, gave addresses. Here I had besides the great pleasure of
+meeting the famous African traveller, Major SERPA PINTO. The King at the
+same time honoured us with decorations, and at its meeting on the 10th
+March the Portuguese Chamber of Deputies resolved, on the motion of the
+Deputies ENNES and ALFREDO, to express its welcome and good wishes in a
+congratulatory address to the _Vega_ men.
+
+We weighed anchor again on the 15th March. We were favoured at first
+with a fresh breeze and made rapid progress, but at the entrance to the
+Channel we met with a steady head-wind, so that it was not until the
+evening of the 25th March, considerably later than we had counted on,
+that we could anchor in the harbour of Falmouth, not, as was first
+intended, in that of Portsmouth. We thus missed some preparations which
+had been made at the latter place to welcome us to the land which stands
+first in the line of those that have sent out explorers to the Polar
+Seas. We besides missed a banquet which the Royal Geographical Society
+had arranged in honour of the _Vega_ expedition, at which the Prince of
+Wales was to have presided, and which now, in the midst of the Easter
+holidays and a keenly-contested parliamentary election, could not be
+held.[393] Our stay in England, at all events, was exceedingly pleasant.
+Palander and I travelled on the night before Good Friday to London,
+where we were received at the railway station by the Swedish minister,
+Count PIPER, and a large number of our countrymen living in London.
+Count Piper carried me to my future host, the distinguished Secretary of
+the Geographical Society and famous Arctician and geographical writer,
+CLEMENTS R. MARKHAM, who did everything to make my stay in London as
+pleasant and instructive as possible. Saturday was spent in paying
+visits. On Easter Sunday Consul-General RICHTER gave a lunch in the
+Continental Hotel, to which a considerable number of Scandinavians and
+Englishmen were invited. The same evening we dined with the famous
+Arctic traveller, Sir ALLEN YOUNG. On Monday we were invited by the Earl
+of NORTHBROOK, President of the Geographical Society,[394] to his
+country seat, Stratton, near Winchester. Here we saw the way--an
+exceedingly quiet one--in which an English parliamentary election goes
+on. The same day we paid a visit to Mr. SPOTTISWOODE, the President of
+the Royal Society, at his magnificent country seat, in the neighbourhood
+of London. Here I saw several instructive experiments with very large
+machines for the production of light by electric discharges in highly
+rarified air. Wednesday the 31st, grand dinner at the Swedish
+minister's, and in the evening of the same day a Scandinavian _fete_ in
+the Freemasons' Hall, at which there were great rejoicings according to
+old northern usages.
+
+[Illustration: THE OFFICERS OF THE "VEGA."
+ E. Bruzewitz.
+ G. Bove.
+ A. Hovgaard. ]
+
+We started for Paris on the night before the 1st April. We went by
+Boulogne-sur-Mer, whose Chamber of Commerce had invited us to a
+_fete_ to celebrate the first landing of the _Vega_ men on the soil
+of France after the North-east Passage was achieved. Several of the
+authorities of the town and Dr. HAMY, a delegate from the
+Geographical Society of Paris met us in the waiting-room at the
+station. Here a breakfast had been arranged, in the course of which
+we were presented to a number of eminent persons of the place, with
+whom we afterwards passed the greater part of the day in the most
+agreeable way. After making several excursions in the neighbourhood
+of the town and paying the necessary official visits, we partook of
+a festive dinner arranged by the municipality. From Boulogne we
+travelled by night to Paris, arriving there on the 2nd April at
+7 A.M.
+
+Notwithstanding the early morning hour we were received here at the
+station in a festive way by the Swedish-Norwegian minister and the
+_personnel_ of the Legation, a deputation from the Geographical
+Society of Paris, and a considerable number of the members of the
+Scandinavian colony in the capital of France. The famous Madagascar
+traveller, GRANDIDIER, President of the Geographical Society's
+Central Committee, welcomed us, with lively expressions of assent
+from the surrounding crowd. We were invited during our stay in the
+city to live with our countryman, A. NOBEL, in a very comfortable
+villa belonging to him, Rue Malakoff, No. 53, and I cannot
+sufficiently commend the liberal way in which he here discharged the
+duties of a host and assisted us during our stay in Paris, which,
+though very agreeable and honouring to us, demanded an extraordinary
+amount of exertion.
+
+Our reception in Paris was magnificent, and it appeared as if the
+metropolis of the world wished to show by the way in which she
+honoured a feat of navigation that it is not without reason that she
+bears on her shield a vessel surrounded by swelling billows. It is a
+pleasant duty for me here to offer my thanks for all the goodwill
+we, during those memorable days, enjoyed on the part of the
+President of the Republic, of Admiral LA RONCIERE LE NOURY,
+President of the Geographical Society, his colleague, M. HECHT, M.
+MAUNOIR, the Secretary of the Society, M. QUATREFAGE, and M.
+DAUBREE, members of the Institute, not to forget many other
+Frenchmen and Scandinavians. Among the _fetes_ of Paris I must
+confine myself to an enumeration of the principal ones.
+
+Friday, the 2nd April. Public _seance de reception_ by the Geographical
+Society in the Cirque des Champs Elysee in the presence of a very large
+and select audience. Admiral La Ronciere delivered the speech on this
+occasion, which I replied to by giving a pretty full account of the
+Swedish Arctic expeditions, on which the President handed me the large
+gold medal of the Society "as a proof of the interest which the public
+and the geographers of France take in the voyage of the _Vega_." Dined
+the same day with the Swedish-Norwegian minister, SIBBERN.--Saturday the
+3rd. Invitation to a festive meeting of delegates from twenty-eight
+learned societies in France in the amphitheatre of the Sorbonne.[395] We
+were greeted by the Minister of Education in a masterly and eloquent
+speech, after which he conferred upon us, on the part of the Republic,
+Commander's and Officer's Insignia of the French Legion of Honour. "A
+reward," as the Minister of the _Republic_ expressed himself, "for the
+blood of the brave and the sleepless nights of the learned." After that
+an official dinner and reception by M. Jules Ferry.--On Sunday the 4th,
+an address was presented from the Scandinavian Union, under the
+presidency of Herr Fortmeijer. In the evening a brilliant entertainment
+on a large scale given by the Scandinavian Union in the Hotel
+Continental. Among those present may be mentioned Prince OSCAR of
+Sweden, the President of the _Fete_ Committee, Herr JENSEN, Fru KRISTINA
+NILSON-ROUZEAUD the Danish minister, the Swedish embassy, members of the
+Russian embassy, a large number of Scandinavian artists, many of the
+principal representatives of the French and foreign press, and lastly,
+what ought perhaps to have been mentioned first, a flower-garden of
+ladies, of which every dweller in the north might feel proud.--Monday
+the 5th. Meeting of the Institute in its well-known hall, with speeches
+of welcome. Hence we were conducted to a grand festive reception,
+arranged beforehand to the minutest details by the Municipal Council, in
+"la Salle des Etats," situated in that part of the Tuileries where the
+Geographical Congress was held in 1878. The hall and the ascent to it
+were richly ornamented with French tri-colours and Swedish flags,
+beautiful Gobelins, and living plants. A number of speeches were made,
+after which the President of the Municipal Council, on the part of the
+City of Paris, presented to me a large, artistically executed medal as a
+memorial of the voyage of the _Vega_[396]. In the evening a grand dinner
+was given by the Societe de Geographie, with several eloquent speeches
+for King Oscar (General Pittie), for President Grevy, for the prosperity
+of France (Prince Oscar), for the _Vega_ expedition (M. Quatrefage),
+and so on.--Tuesday the 6th. Dinner given by the President of the
+Republic, M. Grevy, to Prince Oscar and the _Vega_ men then in
+Paris.--Wednesday the 7th. Dinner given to a numerous and select company
+of French _savants_ by the then President of the Geographical Society
+and of the Institute, M.A. Daubree.--Thursday the 8th. Dinner to a
+small circle at Victor Hugo's house, where the elderly poet and
+youthful-minded enthusiast in very warm, and I need not say eloquent,
+words congratulated me on the accomplishment of my task. Reception there
+the same evening.
+
+Here ended our visit to the capital of France. Thoroughly exhausted,
+but bringing with us memories which shall never pass away, we
+travelled the following day to Vlissingen, whither the _Vega_ had
+gone from Falmouth, under the command of Brusewitz. We had been
+compelled to decline warm and hearty invitations to Holland and
+Belgium from want of time and strength to take part in any more
+festivities. The anchor was weighed immediately after we came on
+board, and the course shaped for Copenhagen. At noon on the 15th we
+passed Helsingborg, which was richly ornamented with flags for the
+occasion. Already at Kullaberg we had been met by the steamer _H.P.
+Prior_, with Lund students on board, and eight other steamers with
+deputations of welcome and enthusiasts for the voyage of the _Vega_,
+from Copenhagen, Malmoe, Helsingborg, and Elsinore. The number of
+passengers was stated to be 1,500, including a number of ladies.
+Songs were sung, speeches made, fireworks let off, &c. At night we
+lay at anchor in the outer road of Copenhagen, so that it was not
+until the following forenoon that we steamed into the harbour,
+saluting the fort with nine shots of our little cannon, and saluted
+in turn by as many. While the _Vega_ was sailing into the harbour,
+and after she had anchored, there came on board the Swedish
+Minister, Baron BECK-FRIIS, the Swedish consul-general EVERLOeF, the
+representatives of the University, of the merchants, and of the
+Geographical Society under the presidency of the former President of
+the Council, Count HOLSTEIN-HOLSTEINBORG, to bring us a welcome from
+the corporations they represented, and accompany us to the Toldbod,
+where we were received by the President-in-chief, the Presidents of
+the Communal Authority, and the Bourse, and the Swedish Unions of
+Copenhagen. We then drove through the festively ornamented city,
+saluted by resounding hurrahs, from a countless throng of human
+beings, to the Hotel d'Angleterre, where apartments had been
+prepared for us. On the 17th a _fete_ was given by the Geographical
+Society in the Casino Hall, which was attended by the King, the
+Crown Prince, and Prince John of Gluecksborg, and nearly all the
+distinguished men of Copenhagen in the fields of science, business,
+and politics. The speech of the _fete_ was delivered by Professor
+ERSLEV. Thereafter a gay and lively banquet was given, at which the
+Crown Prince of Denmark presided.
+
+The 18th April. Grand entertainment given by the King.--The 19th
+April. Magnificent banquet given by the Society of Merchants to the
+members of the _Vega_ expedition at the Bourse, the rooms being
+richly ornamented with flowers and flags, and with busts and
+paintings executed for the occasion by eminent artists. Councillor
+of state MELCHIOR presided, and amongst those present, were observed
+the Crown Prince, the ministers, the speakers and vice-speakers of
+the _folke-_ and _lands-ting_, and a number of the principal
+scientific and military men and officials. Speeches were delivered
+by the Crown Prince, State-councillor TEITGEN, Manager of the Great
+Northern Telegraph Company, Admiral BILLE, Professor MADVIG,
+State-councillor Melchior, &c. At another place, an entertainment
+was given at the same time to the crew. In the evening, _fete_ of
+the Students' Union, the Swedish National Union, and the Norwegian
+Union.
+
+I was obliged to decline an invitation to Lund, because his Majesty,
+King Oscar, had expressed the wish that we should first set foot on
+Swedish ground at the Palace of Stockholm.
+
+It was settled that our entry into Stockholm should take place in
+the evening of the 24th April, but we started from Copenhagen as
+early as the night before the 20th in order to be sure that we would
+not, in consequence of head winds or other unforeseen hindrances,
+arrive too late for the festivities in the capital of Sweden. In
+consequence of this precaution we arrived at the archipelago of
+Stockholm as early as the 23rd, so that we were compelled during the
+night between the 23rd and 24th to lie still at Dalaroe. Here we were
+met by Commander LAGERCRANTZ, who by the King's orders brought our
+families on the steamer _Skoeldmoen_ to meet us.
+
+[Illustration: THE CREW OF THE "VEGA." After a photograph taken at
+Naples. ]
+
+On the 24th at 8 A.M. the _Vega_ again weighed anchor in order to
+steam on slowly, past Vaxholm into Stockholm. We met innumerable
+flag-decked steamers by the way, fully laden with friends, known and
+unknown, who with shouts of rejoicing welcomed the _Vega_ men home.
+The nearer we came to Stockholm, the greater became the number of
+steamers, that, arranged in a double line and headed by the _Vega_,
+slowly approached the harbour. Lanterns in variegated colours were
+lighted on the vessels, fireworks were let off, and the roar of
+cannon mingled with the loud hurrahs of thousands of spectators.
+After being greeted at Kastelholmen with one salute more the _Vega_
+anchored in the stream in Stockholm at 10 P.M.
+
+The queen of the Maelar had clothed herself for the occasion in a
+festive dress of incomparable splendour. The city was illuminated,
+the buildings round the harbour being in the first rank. Specially
+had the King done everything to make the reception of the _Vega_
+expedition, which he had so warmly cherished from the first moment,
+as magnificent as possible. The whole of the Royal Palace was
+radiant with a sea of lights and flames, and was ornamented with
+symbols and ciphers in which the name of the youngest sailor on the
+_Vega_ was not omitted.
+
+An estrade had been erected from Logaorden to the landing-place.
+Here we were received by the town councillors, whose president, the
+Governor, welcomed us in a short speech, we were then conducted to
+the Palace, where, in the presence of her Majesty the Queen of
+Sweden, the members of the Royal House, the highest officials of the
+State and Court, &c., we were in the grandest manner welcomed in the
+name of the fatherland by the King of Sweden, who at the same time
+conferred upon us further marks of his favour and goodwill[397]. It
+was also at the Royal Palace that the series of festivities
+commenced with a grand gala dinner, on the 25th of April, at which
+the King in a few magnanimous words praised the exploit of the
+_Vega_. Then _fete_ followed _fete_ for several weeks.
+
+On the 26th the Swedish Yacht Club gave an entertainment in the
+Grand Hotel under the presidency of Admiral Lagercrantz. Among those
+who were present may be mentioned his Majesty the King, the Crown
+Prince, Prince Oscar, Oscar Dickson, and Baron von Otter, Minister
+of Marine. On the evening of the same day there was a torchlight
+procession by pupils of the Technical High School. On the 27th there
+was a gala-play, to which all the _Vega_ men were invited. On the
+28th at a festive meeting of the Academy of the Sciences, a medal
+struck on account of the _Vega_ expedition was distributed, the
+meeting being followed by a dinner given at the Hotel Phoenix by the
+Academy under the presidency of the Crown Prince. On the 30th April
+and 5th May banquets were given by the Publicist Club, and by the
+Idun Society, by the Naval Officers' Society to the officers of the
+_Vega_, and by the Stockholm Workman's Union to the crew. On the 7th
+and 8th May there were festivities at Upsala, the principal
+attraction of which consisted of gay, lively, and ingenious carnival
+representations, in which we received jocular addresses and homage
+from fantastically dressed representatives of the peoples of
+different countries and periods.
+
+[Illustration: THE ENTRANCE OF THE "VEGA" INTO STOCKHOLM ON THE 24TH
+APRIL, 1880. ]
+
+During this time there were daily received deputations addresses,
+and telegrams of welcome, among others from the _riksdag_ of Sweden,
+the _storting_ of Norway, and the principal towns of Norway and
+Finland, from the student corps at Upsala and Helsingborg, from the
+St. Petersburg Geographical Society, from women in Northern Russia
+(the address accompanied by a laurel wreath in silver), &c. In a
+word, the Stockholm _fetes_ formed the climax of the remarkable
+triumphal procession from Japan to Stockholm, which stands unique in
+the history of festivities. Even after the Expedition was broken up
+in Stockholm, and the _Vega_ had sailed on the 9th May for
+Karlskrona and Gothenburg, where she was again taken over by the
+whaling company that previously owned her, the _fetes_ were repeated
+at these towns. They commenced anew when the _Vega_ exhibition was
+opened with appropriate solemnities by His Majesty the King in one
+of the wings of the Royal Palace, and when some months after I
+visited Berlin, St. Petersburg, and my old dear fatherland, Finland.
+
+But I may not weary my reader with more notes of festivities. It is
+my wish yet once again to offer my comrades' and my own thanks for
+all the honours conferred upon us both in foreign lands and in the
+Scandinavian North. And in conclusion I wish to express the hope
+that the way in which the accounts of the successful voyage of the
+_Vega_ have been received in all countries will give encouragement
+to new campaigns in the service of research, until the natural
+history of the Siberian Polar Sea be completely investigated and
+till the veil that still conceals the enormous areas of land and sea
+at the north and south poles be completely removed, until man at
+last knows at least the main features of the whole of the planet
+which has been assigned him as a dwelling-place in the depths of the
+universe.
+
+Hearty thanks last of all to my companions during the voyage of the
+_Vega_; to her distinguished commander Louis Palander, her
+scientific men and officers, her petty officers and crew. Without
+their courage and the devotion they showed to the task that lay
+before us, the problem of the North-East Passage would perhaps still
+be waiting for its solution.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+[Illustration: Map of the North Coast of the Old World from Norway to
+ Behring's Straits, with the track of the _Vega_, constructed
+ from old and recent sources, and from observations made during the
+ Voyage of the _Vega_, by N. Selander, Captain in the General Staff. ]
+
+
+ABSTRACT OF THE VOYAGE OF THE VEGA
+
+ Distance traversed
+ English
+ 1878 geographical miles
+ Karlskrona--Copenhagen June 22--24 144
+ Copenhagen--Gothenburg ,, 26, 27 134
+ Gothenburg--Tromsoe July 4--17 1,040
+ Tromsoe--Chabarova ,, 21--30 930
+ Chabarova--Port Dickson Aug 1--6 580
+ Port Dickson--Cape Chelyuskin ,, 10--19 510
+ Cape Chelyuskin--Preobraschenie Island ,, 20--24 385
+ Preobraschenie Island--the Mouth of the Lena ,, 24--27 380
+ The Mouth of the Lena--Irkaipij Aug 27--Sept 12 1,260
+ Irkaipij--Pitlekaj Sept 18--28 235
+ _The Wintering_ Sept 28, 1878--
+ July 18, 1879
+
+ 1879
+ Pitlekaj--St. Lawrence Bay July 18--20 190
+ St. Lawrence Bay--Port Clarence ,, 21, 22 120
+ Port Clarence--Konyam Bay ,, 26--28 160
+ Konyam Bay--St. Lawrence Island ,, 30, 31 90
+ St. Lawrence Island--Behring Island Aug 2--14 900
+ Behring Island--Yokohama Aug. 19--Sept 2 1,715
+ Yokohama--Kobe Oct. 11--13 360
+ Kobe--Nagasaki ,, 18--21 410
+ Nagasaki--Hong Kong Oct. 27--Nov 2 1,080
+ Hong Kong--Labuan Nov. 9--17 1,040
+ Labuan--Singapore ,, 21--28 750
+ Singapore--Point de Galle Dec. 4--15 1,510
+ Point de Galle--Aden Dec. 22--Jan. 7, 1880 2,200
+
+ 1880
+ Aden--Suez Jan. 9--27 1,320
+ Suez--Naples Feb. 3--14 1,200
+ Naples--Lisbon Feb. 29--March 11 1,420
+ Lisbon--Falmouth March 16--25 745
+ Falmouth--Vlissingen April 5--8 345
+ Vlissingen--Copenhagen ,, 10--16 632
+ Copenhagen--Stockholm ,, 20--24 404
+ ---------
+ Total 22,189
+
+
+[Footnote 392: An accident also happened during the first half of
+the expedition, the steersman, in backing among drift-ice, having
+been thrown over the wheel and hurt very seriously. ]
+
+[Footnote 393: Further particulars on this point are given in the
+Annual Address on the Progress of Geography by the Right Hon. the
+Earl of Northbrook (_Proceedings of the Royal Geographical Society_,
+1880, p. 401). ]
+
+[Footnote 394: During our visit to London we had no opportunity of
+taking part in any of the meetings of the Society, but some time
+after the Society gave Palander the Founders Gold Medal (I had in
+1869 obtained the same distinction) and elected me an Honorary
+Corresponding Member. ]
+
+[Footnote 395: These are enumerated in the _Bulletin de la Societe
+de Geographie_, Mai, 1880, p. 463. In the same part (p. 450) there
+is also a report of the speeches made at the _seance de reception_. ]
+
+[Footnote 396: The medal was accompanied by an "extrait du registre
+de proces-verbaux du conseil municipal de la ville de Paris," a
+caligraphic masterpiece illuminated in various colours and gold. The
+_Conseil municipal_ also ordered a detailed description of the
+_fete_ to be printed, with the title _Relation officielle de le
+reception de M. le Professeur Nordenskioeld par le conseil municipal
+de Paris le lundi 5 Avril_ 1880. ]
+
+[Footnote 397: Among others to all who took part in the Expedition a
+_Vega_ medal, specially struck, to be worn on a blue-yellow riband
+on the breast. It may perhaps be of interest for numismatists to
+know that the medals distributed on account of the _Vega_ expedition
+are to be found delineated in the eighth and ninth parts of the
+Swedish Family Journal for 1880. To those that are there delineated
+there have since been added a medal struck by the Finnish Society of
+Sciences, and the Anthropological-Geographical Society's medal. ]
+
+
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+
+INDEX.
+
+(_n_ after the number of a page signifies note)
+
+A
+
+Aagaard, Aage, i. 302_n_
+
+_Acanthostephia Malmgreni_, ii. 49
+
+Actinia Bay, i. 331
+
+Acton, Admiral, ii. 446
+
+Adam's mammoth _find_, i. 408
+
+Adam's Peak, ii. 431
+
+Adam's wood, ii. 209
+
+Aden, ii. 437
+
+Ahlquist, A.E., i. 103
+
+Aino race, the, ii. 199
+
+Aitanga, Chukch woman, ii. 57; portrait, ii. 8
+
+Akja, Lapp sledge, i. 83
+
+Alasej, the river, discovered, ii. 161;
+ mammoth _find_ at, i. 408
+Alaska, ii. 196
+
+Alaska Commercial Company, ii. 257
+
+_Alauda alpestris_, i. 129_n_
+
+Albertus Magnus, i. 159
+
+Alecto, _see_ Antedon
+
+Aleutian Islands, the, i. 161_n_, ii. 274_n_, 275_n_;
+ discovered, ii. 196
+
+Alexejev, Feodot, ii. 162, 164, 167
+
+Alfred the Great, i. 46, 47, 215
+
+Algae, on the inland-ice of Greenland, i. 178;
+ in the Kara Sea, i. 185;
+ at Behring Island, ii. 292
+
+Alibert's graphite quarry, ii. 235
+
+Alkhornet, i. 112
+
+Almquist, E., i. 4, 37, 38, 93, 187, 208, 319, 320, 340, 436, 444,
+465, 478, 504, 505;
+ ii. 32, 242, 414, 434;
+ excursion to Beli Ostrov, i. 200;
+ report on a dead man laid out on the tundra, ii. 89;
+ on the colour-sense of the Chukches, ii. 135;
+ excursion in Ceylon, ii. 427;
+ portrait, ii. 435.
+
+Alophus (beetle), ii. 55
+
+Altaic races, i. 103
+
+Amber in China, ii. 399
+
+America, the north-west coast of, first visited by Europeans,
+ ii. 210_n_;
+ Russian voyages to, ii, 196.
+
+American whaler, near the _Vega's_ winter-quarters, i. 467;
+ voyages in the Siberian Polar sea, i. 27;
+ accounts of the state of the ice north of Behring's Straits, i. 459
+
+Amezaga, Captain, ii. 439
+
+Ammonites with gold lustre, i. 273
+
+Amossov, Feodot, ii. 170, 171
+
+Amoretti, Carlo, ii. 215
+
+Amulets, Chukch, i. 503, ii. 126, 134;
+ Eskimo, ii. 239
+
+Anadyr, the river, i. 22; ii. 75, 76, 164, 165, 167, 195;
+ is discovered, ii. 162
+
+Anadyrsk, ii. 165, 172
+
+Anauls, ii. 166
+
+Andersen, the photographer, ii. 304
+
+Andrejev Land, ii. 202
+
+Andrejev, Sergeant, ii. 202, 203
+
+Androphagi, i. 77_n_; ii. 157_n_
+
+Angara river, the, i. 374
+
+Anian Sound, the, ii. 215.
+
+Anika, Russian peasant, ii. 158
+
+Anjou, Peter Feodorovitsch, i. 23;
+ journey, ii. 209;
+ portrait, ii. 207
+
+Anjui river, market at the, ii. 14, 118
+
+Ankudinov, Gerasim, i. 22; ii. 163, 167_n_
+
+_Anser bernicla_, i. 118, 119, 247_n_;
+ seen during the expedition, i. 321, 334, 343
+
+---- _brachyrhynchus_, i. 126
+
+---- _hyperboreus_, ii. 42
+
+---- _leucopsis_, i. 126
+
+---- _pictus_, ii. 42
+
+---- _segetum_, i. 126
+
+_Antedon Eschrichtii_, i. 324, 325
+
+Anziphorov, the Cossack, ii. 174
+
+Arachnids on Novaya Zemlya, i. 148
+
+Archangel, i 167
+
+Arimaspi, Herodotus' statement regarding, i. 407; ii. 150
+
+Arnell, Dr., i. 383
+
+_Arvicola obscurus_, ii. 44
+
+Arzina, the situation of, i. 66
+
+Asamayama, ascent of, ii. 349;
+ descent of, ii. 351
+
+Asia, views regarding its geography in the beginning of the
+18th century, ii. 177
+
+Astronomical determinations of position, the first in Siberia, ii. 178_n_
+
+Atlassov, Volodimir, ii. 72, 167, 172
+
+Aurora, the, at the _Vega's_ winter quarters, ii. 35
+
+Austrian Arctic Expedition, i. 266, 300
+
+Avatscha Bay, ii. 181, 196
+
+Avril, Ph., i. 400
+
+
+B
+
+BACHOFF, Ivan, ii. 200
+
+Baer, K.E. von, i. 158; ii. 183, 276;
+ voyage to Novaya Zemlya, i. 282
+
+Baikal Lake, i. 374
+
+_Balaena Mysticetus_, i. 151, 169
+
+_Balaenoptera Sibbaldii_, i. 170
+
+Baratieri, Major, ii. 446
+
+Barents, i. 101, 108_n_, 422, 423;
+ voyages, i. 232;
+ wintering, i. 249;
+ death, i. 253;
+ discovery of relics from his wintering, i. 300
+
+Barjatinsky, Ivan Petrovitsch, ii. 169
+
+Barnacle Goose, see _Anser bernicla_
+
+Barrington, D., i. 265
+
+Barrow, J., i. 230; ii. 215
+
+Bartlett, W., i. 467
+
+Bassendine, James, i. 229
+
+Baths in Japan, ii. 345
+
+Baumhauer, ii. 36
+
+Bavier, Consul, ii. 312, 326, 327
+
+Bay-ice, i. 424
+
+Beaker sponges, i. 426, 427
+
+Bear Island, i. 12, 108, 115, 152;
+ discovery of, i. 247
+
+Bear Islands, the, ii. 171_n_, 195, 201, 202;
+ the _Vega_ arrives at, i. 421;
+ geological formation, i. 428
+
+Bear, land, ii. 45; _see_ Polar bear
+
+Beccari, ii. 439
+
+Beck Friis, Baron, ii. 455
+
+Beechey, F.W., i. 28; ii. 228_n_
+
+Behemoth, i. 400
+
+Behring, Vitus, i. 25, 28; ii. 183_n_, 193, 265;
+ first voyage, ii. 179;
+ second voyage, ii. 196;
+ stay on Behring Island, ii. 265;
+ death, ii. 265
+
+Behring the younger, Captain, ii. 211
+
+Behring Island, ii. 257;
+ discovered, ii. 197, 262
+
+Behring's Straits, ii. 218;
+ its hydrography, ii. 242;
+ is discovered, ii. 180, 181
+
+Beli, Ostrov, i. 187;
+ excursion to, i. 200;
+ description of, i. 201;
+ former visit to, i. 205;
+ mapping of, ii. 185
+
+Bellot, J.R., ii. 57
+
+Belmonte, Prince, ii. 444
+
+Bell Sound, i. 112, 122, 125, 129, 137, 183
+
+Beluga, _see_ White whale
+
+Beluga Bay, i. 361
+
+Bennet, Stephen, i. 152, 158, 291
+
+Bentinck, Swedish officer, ii. 76_n_
+
+Beormas, i. 48, 51
+
+Beresov, ii. 184
+
+Berggren, Sven, i. 176
+
+Beryl, ii. 422
+
+Berzelius, ii. 325
+
+Besimannaja Bay, i. 73, 112, 344
+
+Busk, i. 373
+
+Bille, Admiral, ii. 456
+
+Billings, J., ii. 78, 203, 254_n_
+
+Biwa Lake, ii. 370
+
+Bjelkov, hunter, ii. 204, 206
+
+Black-lead pencil first mentioned, ii. 235_n_
+
+Blischni Island, _see_ Ljachoff's Island
+
+Bludnaya river, the, ii. 191
+
+Boedtker, Consul-general, ii. 440
+
+Bog iron ore formations in the Kara Sea, i. 185, 186
+
+Bolschaja Reka, ii. 196, 199
+
+Bolschoj, Kamen, i. 173
+
+Bolvan worship, Samoyed, i. 79, 87, 95
+
+_Bona Confidentia_ (vessel), i. 59;
+ its fate, i. 225
+
+_Bona Esperanza_,(vessel), i. 59;
+ its fate, i. 225
+
+Books, purchase of Japanese, ii. 364
+
+Boergen, Dr., i. 143
+
+Borgmaestareport, i. 115
+
+Borneo, ii. 407, 413;
+ excursion to the interior of, ii. 409
+
+Borrowdale, graphite deposit at, ii. 235
+
+Bosman, Cornelis, i. 257
+
+Boulogne-sur-mer, arrival at, ii. 451
+
+Bove, G., i. 4, 39, 190, 318, 502; ii. 2, 47, 242, 409, 447;
+ excursion to Najtskaj, ii. 20;
+ to the interior of the Chukch Peninsula, ii. 28;
+ portrait, ii. 449
+
+Bragin, Dmitri, ii. 275
+
+Brandt, J.F., ii. 275, 276
+
+Brandt, W., i. 279
+
+Brandy, i. 440; ii. 116, 118
+
+Brandywine Bay, i. 108
+
+Briochov Islands, i. 210, 359, 381
+
+Brown, Richard, i. 229_n_
+
+Bruin, Cornelis de, ii. 72
+
+Brun, Captain, i. 360
+
+Brunel, Oliver, i. 234
+
+Bruzewitz, E., i. 4, 39, 339, 353; ii. 18, 44, 447, 455;
+ his measurements of the thickness of the ice, i. 465;
+ excursion to Najtskaj, ii. 7;
+ portrait, ii. 449
+
+Buache, ii. 171
+
+Buckland, John, i. 225
+
+Buckland, William, ii. 228_n_
+
+Buddhism in Japan, ii. 378
+
+Buldakov, Timofej, ii. 163
+
+Bulun, i. 362, 368
+
+Burgomaster, i. 114;
+ met with during the voyage, i. 191, 352; ii. 42
+
+Burney, James, ii. 178
+
+Burrough, Stephen, i. 60, 100, 169;
+ his voyage, i. 217
+
+Busa, Elisej, ii. 160
+
+Busch, Henry, ii. 175
+
+Buys, N., ii. 243
+
+Bychov mouth of the Lena, the, i. 367; ii. 194
+
+
+C
+
+CABOOK, ii. 420, 421
+
+Cabot, Sebastian, i. 56, 58, 217;
+ portrait, i. 59
+
+Cadamosto, ii. 73_n_
+
+Cairo, stay in, ii. 443
+
+Cairoli, premier, ii. 445, 446
+
+Cannibals in the North, i. 77_n_; ii. 157_n_
+Canton, ii. 398
+
+Cape Baranov, i. 25, 428; ii. 195, 206
+
+Cape Borchaja, ii. 194
+
+Cape Chelyuskin, i. 13, 19;
+ arrival at, i. 336
+ reindeer there, i. 344, ii. 192_n_;
+ flora, i. 340;
+ is discovered, i. 17, 20; ii. 193
+
+Cape Deschnev, ii. 68, 181
+
+Cape Kammennoj, ii. 206
+
+Cape Mattesol, ii. 186
+
+Cape Medinski Savorot, ii. 223_n_
+
+Cape Nassau, ii. 234
+
+Cape North, i. 442; ii. 210
+
+Cape Olenek, i. 363
+
+Cape Onman, i. 456
+
+Cape Prince of Wales, ii. 226
+
+Cape Ruski Savorot, i. 223
+
+Cape Schaitanskoj, i. 381
+
+Cape Schelagskoj, i. 426, 447; ii. 201, 202
+
+Cape St. John, i. 221, 222
+
+Cape Thaddeus, i. 20; ii. 190
+
+Cape Voronov, i. 219_n_
+
+Cape Yakan, i. 27, 447
+
+Capello, Brito, ii. 453
+
+_Carabus truncaticollis_, ii. 55
+
+Carlsen, Elling, ii. 294, 300
+
+Carska Bay, i. 172
+
+Carthaginians' traffic with African races, ii. 73
+
+Caspian Sea, former views regarding, ii. 151
+
+Castren's Island, i. 133
+
+Ceylon, stay at, ii. 414;
+ natives, ii. 424
+
+Chabarova, i. 75;
+ church of, i. 76
+
+Chacke, Martin, ii. 214
+
+Chamisso, A. von, ii. 235_n_
+
+Chancelor, Richard, i. 13, 60;
+ his voyage, i. 67;
+ his death, i. 226_n_
+
+Chatanga Bay, i. 20; ii. 189, 190
+
+Chatanga river, the, i. 354; ii. 188, 192
+
+Cheltinga, midshipman, ii. 198
+
+Chenizyn, ii. 206, 209
+
+China, stay in, ii. 396;
+ communication with Europe, i. 373;
+ its future, ii. 403
+
+Chinese in Japan, ii. 363
+ at Hong Kong, their treatment, ii. 402;
+ in Borneo, ii. 412
+
+_Chionoecetes opilio_, ii. 63, 242
+
+Cholodilov, ii. 270_n_
+
+Chukches, the, compared with other Polar races, i. 92, 146;
+ first meeting with, i. 430;
+ at Cape Yakan, i. 433;
+ barter with the, i. 439;
+ at Irkaipij, i. 449;
+ visit the _Vega_, i. 486, 513;
+ at Cape Deschnev, ii. 220;
+ at Konyam Bay, ii. 221, 245, 246;
+ on the American side of Behring's Straits, ii. 81, 232;
+ divided into reindeer and coast Chukches, ii. 81;
+ number of, ii. 81;
+ removals, ii. 93;
+ carry on traffic between America and Siberia, ii. 14, 118;
+ language, i. 489; ii. 82;
+ diseases, ii. 87;
+ position of the women, ii. 138;
+ their history, _physique_, disposition, and manners, ii. 70
+
+Chukotskojnos, i. 22; ii. 79, 164, 212
+
+Chvoinoff, landmeasurer, i. 418; ii. 204
+
+Chydenius, Carl, i. 142
+
+Clarke, Charles, ii. 211
+
+Clausen, Consul, ii. 443, 444, 446
+
+Clothing, i. 37;
+ of the _Vega_ men, i. 476
+
+Cloudberries, a powerful antiscorbutic, i. 42, 44
+
+Cochrane, John Dundas, ii. 178
+
+Coffee plantations, ii. 432
+
+Coleoptera in Novaya Zemlya, i. 148;
+ in North Siberia, i. 321;
+ at Port Clarence, ii. 242
+
+Collie, Dr., ii. 228_n_
+
+Colmogro, i, 225; ii. 156
+
+Colombo (Ceylon), ii. 427
+
+Colour-blindness, ii. 135
+
+Colours, Chukch, ii. 135
+
+Commander's Islands, ii. 257
+
+Cook, James, i. 13, 25, 28, 442, 445_n_; ii. 210
+
+Cooke, Mr, ii. 408
+
+Copenhagen, the _Vega_ calls at, i. 4;
+ reception at, ii. 455
+
+Copper Island, ii. 257, 261, 270, 275
+
+Corea, whales with European harpoons caught at, i. 264;
+ Japanese campaign to, ii. 380
+
+Coregonus caught by the Chukches, i. 494; ii. 18, 19
+
+Corpse found in Chukch Land, i. 505; ii. 89
+
+Corundum, ii. 400, 423
+
+Cosmic dust, i. 329
+
+Coughtrie, J.B., ii. 401
+
+Coxe, J.H., ii. 211
+
+Croyere, L'Isle de la, ii. 196, 198, 200
+
+Crustacea, phosphorescent, ii. 55, 56
+
+Cruys Eiland, i. 234
+
+Crystals found on the ice, i. 327
+
+Currents in the Siberian Polar Sea, i. 18
+
+_Cyqnus Bewickii_, i. 127
+
+_Cystophora cristata_, i. 165
+
+
+D
+
+Daat Island, i. 409
+
+Dahl, Captain, i. 314
+
+Daibutsu statues, ii. 379
+
+Dale, Fr. de la, i. 237, 243
+
+Dall, W.H. i. 459; ii. 213, 228_n_
+
+_Dallia delicatissima_, ii. 59, 242
+
+Dallmann, Captain, i. 313, 360, 459
+
+Daubree, A., ii. 454
+
+David, Russian ambassador, i. 54
+
+_Dawn_ (vessel), the, i. 317
+
+Day-reckoning on board the _Vega_, i. 453_n_
+
+Delisle, i. 171
+
+De Long, Captain, i. 489
+
+Dementiev, ii. 198
+
+Deschnev Simeon, i. 20, 21, 25; ii. 181, 194;
+ voyages of, ii. 164
+
+Devil's Temple at Ratnapoora, ii. 427
+
+Diamonds, ii. 416,422
+
+_Diastylis Rathkei_, i. 198, 199
+
+Diatoms, fresh-water, on sea ice, i. 189
+
+Dickson Island, i. 191
+
+Dietary of the expedition, i. 478
+
+Diomede Island, ii. 218
+
+Disco Island, i. 147_n_
+
+Dittmar, C. von, ii. 79, 118
+
+Dixon, Alexander C., ii. 414
+
+Dog-fish, ii. 59
+
+Dogs, Samoyed, i. 83;
+ tow boats on the Yenisej, i. 385;
+ Chukch, i. 501; ii. 94;
+ sacrificed, ii. 255
+
+Dolgans, i. 373
+
+Dolgoi Island, i. 223, 236; ii. 184
+
+Donis, Nic, i. 51; ii. 152
+
+Doria, Marquis, ii. 439
+
+Doerma, hunter, i. 300
+
+_Draba alpina_, i. 340, 341; ii. 224
+
+Dredgings, zoological, i. 174, 198, 324, 345, 350, 420, 426, 432,
+ 451, 455;
+ ii. 47, 68, 242, 362, 438
+
+Driftwood, at Port Dickson, i. 198;
+ at Beli Ostrov. i. 201
+
+Drums, Shaman, ii. 24, 129
+
+Dsungaria, i. 374
+
+Dudino, i. 359; ii 192;
+ thanksgiving service at, i. 369
+
+Du Halde J.B., ii. 180_n_
+
+Durfoorth, Cornelius, i. 60
+
+Dutch, first voyage of the, i. 231;
+ second voyage, i. 243;
+ third voyage, i. 245
+
+Dwina, the river, i. 54, 56, 67; ii. 157
+
+Dyaks, ii. 323
+
+Dybovski, Benedikt, ii. 294
+
+
+E
+
+Earth, changes of the surface of the,
+ in the arctic regions, i. 438
+
+East Cape, ii. 63,181
+
+Edge, Thomas, i. 62_n_
+
+Edward VI. of England, i. 58
+
+_Edward Bonaventure(_vessel) i. 60, 66, 218;
+ its fate i. 225_n_
+
+Egypt, stay in, ii. 432
+
+Ehlertz, Russian official, i. 360
+
+Eider, i. 123, 191, 208;
+ import of down, i. 125_n_
+
+Eisen, G., i. 148
+
+Elfving N.A., i. 460
+
+Elliott, H.W., i. 162; ii. 258, 281_n_, 282
+
+_Elpidia glacialis_, i. 184, 186
+
+_Emberiza lapponica_, i. 129_n_; ii. 62
+
+_Emberiza nivalis_, i. 129_n_, 191, 320, 334; ii. 41
+
+Emeralds, ii. 422
+
+England, stay in, ii. 448;
+ development of its navigation, i. 58,
+ north-east voyages from, i. 60, 215
+
+_Enhydris lutris_, ii. 266, 271
+
+Enontekis, the climate of, i. 45
+
+Enoshima, excursion to, ii. 315
+
+Ensamheten (island), i. 175, 335
+
+Envall, A., i. 11
+
+Erik the Red, ii. 146
+
+Eschscholz Bay, ii. 212, 228
+
+Eskimo in North America, i. 90, ii. 78_n_, 145
+
+Eskimo at Port Clarence, banter with, ii. 228, 236;
+ dress, ii. 232;
+ implements ii. 229,233;
+ boats, ii. 228;
+ carvings, ii. 237, 240, 241;
+ artistic skill, ii. 134;
+ graves, ii. 239, 240;
+ religion, ii. 239_n_
+
+Eskimo in Asia, ii. 221
+
+Eskimo on St. Lawrence Island, ii. 250
+
+_Eumetopias Stelleri_, i. 446_n_; ii. 272, 274, 290
+
+Europaeus, E.D., i. 203
+
+_Eurynorhynchus pygmaeus_, ii. 43
+
+Everloef, Consul-general, ii. 455
+
+Evertebrates living by turns in fresh and salt water, i. 198
+
+Exhibitions, Japanese, ii. 311, 390
+
+Exiles, Siberian, i. 387
+
+_Express_ (ship), i. 9, 74, 174, 189, 200;
+ voyage of, i. 357
+
+
+F
+
+Faddeyev Island, ii. 204, 206
+
+Falcons on Yalmal i. 208
+
+Falmouth, arrival at, ii. 448
+
+Feodor, the Cossack, i. 195, 358
+
+Ferry, Jules, i. 453
+
+Figurin, the surgeon, ii. 209
+
+Finmark, the settlement of, i. 51
+
+Fins carry on navigation in the Murman Sea, i. 219, 239
+
+Finsch, Richard, i. 76_n_, 172
+
+Finsch, O., i. 205
+
+Fire-drill, Chukch, ii. 121
+
+Fixed dwellings, i. 193_n_
+
+Flawes, Captain, i. 260
+
+Fletcher, Giles, i. 101
+
+Foehn wind, the, i. 276; ii. 35
+
+Fomin, the Yakut, i. 17
+
+Food-plants, Chukch, ii. 110
+
+Ford, Charles, ii. 401
+
+Foreland Sound, the, i. 137
+
+Fossil plants at Mogi, ii. 392;
+ at Labaan, ii. 407;
+ in Egypt, ii. 440
+
+Foal Bay, i. 106, 180
+
+Fox, the Arctic (or mountain), i. 146; ii. 44, 269, 270;
+ common _ib._
+
+Foeyn, Svend, i. 170
+
+Fra Mauro's map, ii. 155
+
+Franklin, Martin, ii. 443
+
+Franz Josef Land, i. 182_n_, 266, 302, 422
+
+_Fraser_ (steamer), i. 9, 74, 174, 187, 189, 318;
+ voyage, i. 357
+
+Fretum Nassovicum (Yugor Schar), i. 14, 172, 242
+
+Frost-bite, i. 474; ii. 87
+
+Frost-formation, the Siberian, ii. 60
+
+Frozen ground in Finland, ii. 60_n_
+
+Fruholm, the climate of, i. 45_n_
+
+_Fuligula glacialis_, i. 126, 208;
+ found during the expedition, i. 334; ii. 46
+
+---- _Stelleri_, ii. 46
+
+Fusiyama, ii. 299, 370
+
+_Fusus deformis_, ii. 243
+
+
+G
+
+_Gadus navaga_, i. 481
+
+Gagarin, Prince, ii. 175
+
+Gama, Vasco da, ii. 153
+
+Gardiner, Charles, i. 301
+
+Geertz, Dr., ii. 326, 364
+
+Gefferson, William, i. 60
+
+Gessner, Conrad, ii. 235_n_
+
+Gillissy (Yenisej), i. 243, 244
+
+Giusso, Count, ii. 443
+
+Glacier-iceblocks in the Polar seas, ii. 422;
+ burst asunder, i. 424
+
+Glaciers, various kinds of, i. 181;
+ formerly in North-Eastern Asia, ii. 227, 246
+
+Gmelin, ii. 199
+
+Gold lustre, stones with, on Novaya Zemlya, i. 273, 277
+
+Gold diggings, Siberian, i. 393
+
+Golovin, second mate, ii. 184
+
+Golovin, Captain, ii. 329
+
+Goltschicha, i. 193, 194, 313
+
+Gooseland, i. 72, 126
+
+Goreloj, Andrej, ii. 168
+
+_Gorm_ (larva of _Oestrus tarandi_), i. 137;
+ ii. 129, 143
+
+Gosho, palace in Kioto, ii. 374
+
+Gothenburg, i. 34
+
+Goulden, Captain, i. 264
+
+Gourdon, William, i. 256
+
+_Graculus bicristatus_, i. 453
+
+Grandidier, ii. 452
+
+Granite, weathered, ii. 419
+
+Grant, U.S., General, ii. 333
+
+Graphite, ii. 235
+
+Graves, Siberian, i. 393;
+ Chukch, i. 437; ii. 89, 225;
+ Eskimo, ii. 238
+
+Grebnitski, ii. 291_n_, 294
+
+Greeks, geographical ideas of the, ii. 148
+
+Green Harbour, i. 136
+
+Greenland said to be continuous with Norway, i. 51;
+ Inland-ice, i. 176
+
+Greenland seal, i. 164, 165
+
+Greenlander's dress, i. 41;
+ compared with other Polar races, i. 90; ii. 144;
+ are descended from Norse colonists, ii. 145
+
+Grevy, President, ii. 452, 454
+
+"Grip-claws" found in Siberia, ii. 408
+
+Gubin, mate, i. 274
+
+Gundersen, captain of the _Express_, i. 9
+
+Gundersen, M., i. 301
+
+Gusinnaya Semlya, _see_ Gooseland
+
+Gustaf Vasa's plan of a north-east passage, i. 57
+
+Guturov, Peter, ii. 174
+
+Gvosdarev, mate, i. 279
+
+Gvosdev, Michael, ii. 74, 210_n_
+
+Gyda Bay surveyed, ii. 186
+
+Gygax, Dr, ii. 419
+
+
+H
+
+Haga dust, the, i. 330
+
+Haimann, Guiseppe, ii. 440
+
+Hakluyt, Richard, i. 60_n_
+
+Hall, Captain, ii. 211
+
+Halos, i. 246, 518
+
+Hamy, Dr., ii. 452
+
+Hardy, R. Spence, ii. 404
+
+Hares, i. 507; ii. 44;
+ snow-blind, i. 508.
+
+Hartman, Hendrik, i. 243
+
+Haven, P. von, ii. 186_n_
+
+Health, state of, during the wintering, i. 478
+
+Hecht, ii. 452
+
+Hedenstroem, i. 23, 143, 408;
+ travels, ii. 205;
+ life, ii. 203_n_
+
+Heemskerk, i. 254
+
+Hellant, A., ii. 6_n_
+
+Hennessy, Pope, ii. 401, 403
+
+Hens, Jacob, ii. 74
+
+Herald Island, ii. 212
+
+Herbertsten, Sigismund von, i. 54; ii. 156
+
+Herdebol, ore-tester, ii. 74
+
+Herodotus on the geography of Asia, ii. 149, 154;
+on Androphagi, i. 77_n_; ii. 157_n_
+
+Heuglin, Baron von, i. 302_n_
+
+Hideyoshi, Taiko, ii. 380
+
+Hinloopen Strait, i. 110, 112, 137
+
+Hirosami, ii. 387
+
+_Histriophoca fasciata_, ii. 219, 224, 254
+
+Holland, development of its navigation, i. 231
+
+Holmgren, A.E., i. 148
+
+Holmgren, Fr., ii. 135
+
+Holstein-Holsteinborg, Count, ii. 455
+
+Homer, ii. 148
+
+Hong Kong, ii. 398;
+ rocks at, ii. 420
+
+Hooper, ii. 79, 128, 220_n_, 222, 235_n_, 245, 249
+
+Hoorn, Jan Cornelisz van, i. 257
+
+Hope Island, i. 165
+
+Horn Sound, i. 109, 110, 124, 137, 291
+
+Hovgaard, A., i. 4, 39, 93, 187, 200, 202, 208, 457, 497;
+ ii. 45, 112, 115, 327, 447;
+ Excursion to Menka's home, i. 500;
+ portrait, ii. 449
+
+Hudson, Henry, i. 255
+
+Hugo, Victor, ii. 454
+
+Humbert, King, ii. 446
+
+Hyacinth (precious stone), ii. 423
+
+
+I
+
+Ice, different kinds of, in the Polar Seas, i. 422;
+ action on the sea-bottom, i. 188;
+ thickness during the wintering, i. 465
+
+Icebergs, i. 182;
+ size of, i. 422
+
+Ice Fjord, i. 112, 137, 344
+
+Icing up, i. 451
+
+Ides, Evert Yssbrants, i. 404
+
+Idlidlja (island), ii. 27
+
+_Idothea entomon_, i. 198, 415, 416, 420
+
+---- _Sabinei_, i. 198, 415, 417
+
+Ignatiev, ii. 163
+
+Ikaho, ii. 334
+
+Ilgin, mate, ii. 209
+
+Illusions caused by mist, i. 347; ii. 32
+
+Indians, driven, i. 52
+
+Indigirka, ii. 195
+
+Ingoen, i. 42
+
+Inland-ice, i. 176, 182; ii. 246
+
+Inland Sea, of Japan, ii. 384, 421
+
+Inn, Japanese, ii. 313, 316
+
+Insects, i. 147, 202, 343; ii. 54, 242;
+ frozen stiff, i. 148; ii. 54;
+ in a bird's nest, i. 118
+
+Insula Tazata, ii. 155
+
+Irbit, i. 179
+
+Irgunnuk, i. 485; ii. 21
+
+Irkaipij, i. 441; ii. 210
+
+Irtisch, i. 373, 374; ii. 159
+
+Islands in the Siberian Sea, accounts of, i. 22; ii. 169, 170, 171_n_
+Isleif, i. 144
+
+Istoma, Gregory, i. 54; ii. 157
+
+Italy, ii. 442
+
+Ito-Keske, ii. 324
+
+Ivanov, mate, i. 279
+
+Ivanov, Rodivan, i. 269
+
+Ivens, ii. 448
+
+Ivory coat of mail, ii. 104
+
+
+J
+
+Jackman's voyages, i. 227, 229_n_
+
+Jakovlev, Peter, ii. 275
+
+Jauszoon, Harman, i. 243
+
+Japan, ii. 395
+
+Japanese, ii. 173, 174, 181
+
+Japanese voyage round the world, i. 161_n_
+
+_Jeanette_, the expedition of the, i. 448
+
+Jinrikisha, ii. 317
+
+Johannes de Plano Carpini, i. 102_n_
+
+Johannesen, Chr., i. 9, 300, 353, 358, 365, 366
+
+Johannesen, Edward, i. 185, 295
+
+Johannesen, Soeren, i. 300
+
+Jovius, Paulus, i. 57_n_
+
+Jugaria, i. 172
+
+Juschkov, i. 273
+
+
+K
+
+Kalias river, the, ii. 409
+
+Kamakura, ii. 315
+
+Kamchatka discovered, ii. 172;
+ subjugated, ii. 167;
+ first voyage to, ii. 176;
+ its extent towards the south in old maps, ii. 181
+
+Kamchatka river, the, ii. 172
+
+Kamenni Ostrova, i. 318
+
+Kaempfer, E., ii. 325
+
+Kanin-nos, i. 222
+
+Karaginsk Island, ii. 256
+
+Kara port, the, i. 14;
+ Pet sails through it, i. 229
+
+Kara river, wintering at the, ii. 184
+
+Kara Sea, the, voyage across, i. 187;
+ its name, i. 172;
+ its boundaries, i. 175,
+ depth, i. 15, 184, 187;
+ temperature of the water, i. 185;
+ salinity, i. 185, 189;
+ fauna, i. 184;
+ algae, 185;
+ icebergs uncommon in, i. 182,
+ "ice-house," i. 182;
+ navigated for the first time by West-Europeans, i. 227;
+ voyages to, i. 286
+
+Kargauts, i. 448
+
+Karlskrona, i. 34
+
+Karmakul Bay, i. 125, 255
+
+Kascholong, ii. 238_n_
+
+Kawamura, Admiral, ii. 301, 309, 369;
+ portrait of, ii. 302
+
+Kay, E.C. Lister, i. 360
+
+Kegor, i. 243
+
+Kellett, i. 448; ii. 212
+
+Kellett Land, ii. 212
+
+Keswick, ii. 401
+
+Keulen's Atlas, ii. 72
+
+Kilduin, i. 237
+
+Killingworth, George, i. 66
+
+Kindaekov, ii. 195
+
+King's Bay, i. 137
+
+Kini Balu mountain, ii. 413
+
+Kioto, ii. 366, 372,375
+
+Kirilov, secretary, ii. 183
+
+Kita-Shira-Kava, ii. 305, 308
+
+Kittiwake, see _Larus tridactylus_
+
+Kittlitz, ii. 245
+
+Kjellman, F.R., i. 3, 33, 38, 185, 189, 196, 201_n_, 202_n_, 319, 320,
+ 327, 333, 340, 354, 437, 451, 468, 504, 523;
+ ii. 15, 225, 240, 245, 254, 291, 292, 414, 434, 447;
+ sketch of a day during the wintering, i. 513;
+ portrait, ii. 435
+
+Klapmyts, i. 165
+
+Klingstedt, i. 271, 272
+
+Klokov, i. 279
+
+Knoop, Baron, i. 360
+
+Koba-Yoschi, ii. 370, 383
+
+Kobe, stay at, ii. 364
+
+Koch, i. 148
+
+Kola, i. 218, 253, 254
+
+Kolesoff, I.P., i. 362, 364
+
+Kolgujev Island, i. 62_n_, 229
+
+Kolmogor, i. 226; ii. 156
+
+Kolmogorzov, i. 22
+
+Kolyma river, the, i. 427; ii. 162, 165, 166, 195, 201;
+ discovered, ii. 163
+
+Kolyutschin Bay, ii. 227, 246;
+ _Vega_ comes to, i, 456;
+ its extent, ii. 31, 32, 76
+
+Kolyutschin Island, i. 456, 485
+
+Kompakova river, the, ii. 176
+
+Konungs skuggja on the walrus, i. 159
+
+Konyam Bay, ii. 221, 227;
+ _Vega_ comes to, ii. 245
+
+Kopai, a Schelag, ii. 171
+
+Korepovskoj, i. 315, 358
+
+Korovin, hunter, ii. 274, 276_n_
+
+Koryaeks, ii. 82, 167, 172
+
+Koscheleff, ii. 125_n_
+
+Koschelev, ii. 186
+
+Koschevin, ii. 205
+
+Kosirevskoj, Ivan, ii. 174
+
+Kosmin, mate, ii. 209
+
+Kostin Schar, i. 236
+
+Kotelnoj Island, i. 24; ii. 204, 206, 207
+
+Kotsches, i. 22_n_; ii. 160_n_
+Kotschuga, i. 374
+
+Kotzebue, i. 28; ii. 212, 228_n_;
+ stay at St. Lawrence Island, ii. 254
+
+Krascheninnikov, ii. 80, 167_n_, 173_n_
+
+Krassilinikoff, ii. 274
+
+Krestovski Island, ii. 162
+
+Krestovskoj, i. 193, 194
+
+Krestovskoj arm, the, ii. 190
+
+Kroma river, the, ii. 168
+
+Krotov, Lieut., i. 279
+
+Krusenstern, M. von, i. 161_n_; ii. 125_n_
+
+Krusenstern, Paul von, the elder, i. 284
+
+Krusenstern, Paul von, the younger, i. 287;
+ his portrait, i. 285
+
+Kueber, Dr., ii. 209
+
+Kuehn, Franz, ii. 445
+
+Kung Karl's Land, i. 137, 301_n_
+
+Kurbski, S.T., ii. 157
+
+Kuro-Sivo, ii. 295
+
+Kusakov, ii. 170
+
+Kusatsu, stay at, ii. 343;
+ the healing power of the baths, ii. 345
+
+Kutschum Khan, ii. 159
+
+Kythay lacus, ii. 157
+
+
+L
+
+Labuan, ii. 405
+
+Lagomys, ii. 222
+
+Lagercrantz, ii. 456, 460
+
+Lagoon formations, i. 433
+
+_Lagopus hyperboreus_, i. 129, 191, 214, 334, 508
+
+_Lagopus subalpinus_, ii. 46
+
+La Madelene, ii. 216
+
+La Martiniere, i. 257;
+ his map, i. 259
+
+_Laminaria solidungula_, i. 452
+
+Lamps, Chukch, ii. 23
+
+Landmarks, i. 228
+
+Land worms, i. 148
+
+Languet, Hubert, i. 57
+
+Lapland, the Dutch navigation to, i. 227_n_
+
+Lapps, the, dress, i. 40;
+ spoken of by Othere, i. 48_n_, 51;
+ compared with other Polar races, i. 90;
+ skilful hunters, i. 224_n_
+
+Lapp sparrow, see _Emberiza lapponica_
+
+Laptev, Chariton, i. 20, 21, 367_n_;
+ voyages, ii. 190
+
+Laptev, Dimitri, i. 24;
+ first voyage, ii. 193;
+ second voyage, ii. 195
+
+La Ronciere le Noury, ii. 452
+
+_Larus eburneus_, i. 117, 118; ii. 137;
+ met with during expedition, i. 343; ii. 42
+
+---- _glaucus_, i. 114;
+ met with during expedition, i. 191, 321, 352; ii. 47
+
+---- _Rossii_, i. 119, 120; ii. 48
+
+---- _Sabinii_, i. 119, 120, 508
+
+---- _tridactylus_, i. 117;
+ seen during expedition, i. 334, 352; ii. 42
+
+Lasarev, i. 277
+
+Lassinius, i. 24; ii. 187_n_;
+ voyage, ii. 193
+
+Laxman, ii. 329
+
+Lectures during the wintering, ii. 7
+
+Lemming, the, i. 146;
+ met with during the expedition, i. 191, 343, 437; ii. 44
+
+Lena (river), the, ascent of, i. 367;
+ river area, i. 372_n_;
+ navigable, i. 374;
+ its natural beauty, ii. 188_n_;
+ discovered, ii 160;
+ Russian voyages from, ii. 187, 198
+
+_Lena_ (steamer), i. 7, 8, 9, 41, 75, 171, 187, 200;
+ parting from _Vega_, i. 355;
+ voyage up the river Lena, i. 367
+
+Lena delta, the, i 367_n_
+
+Leontiev, ii. 203
+
+Leprosy in Japan ii. 345
+
+Lesseps, ii. 441
+
+_Lestris Buffonii_, i. 121, 334
+
+---- _parasitica_, i. 121, 321, 334
+
+---- _pomarina_, i. 121
+
+Letters sent home, i. 496, 501; ii. 9
+
+Lechtenberg, ii. 445
+
+Lighthouse Island, i. 428
+
+Lilljeborg, W, ii. 56
+
+Limit of trees in the north of Europe and Asia, i. 42;
+ at the Yenisej, i. 381,
+ at the Lena, i. 43
+
+Lindstrand, ii. 443
+
+_Linnaea borealis_, ii. 240, 254
+
+Linnaeus, ii. 43
+
+Linschoten, i. 236, 237
+
+Lisbon, stay in, ii. 447
+
+L'Isle de la Croyere, ii. 196, 198, 200
+
+Little Auk, see _Mergulus alle_
+
+Ljachoff, i. 418, 419; ii. 204
+
+Ljachoff's Island, ii. 162, 201, 204;
+ _Vega_ comes to, i. 415
+
+Logan, J, i. 400
+
+Lomme Bay, i. 112
+
+London, stay at, ii. 451
+
+Long, Captain, i. 26, ii. 212
+
+Looms met with at Port Dickson, i. 191, 353
+
+Loschkin, S., i. 273, 280
+
+Loshak, i. 224
+
+Lotterius, map by, ii. 77
+
+_Louise_ (steamer), i. 314, 360
+
+Ludlow, miner, i. 217
+
+Luiz, King of Portugal, ii. 448
+
+Lundstroem, A.N., i. 3, 193, 205, 206
+
+Lussov, ii. 203
+
+Luetke, von, i. 14, 279; ii. 78, 212, 245;
+ portrait, i. 278
+
+
+M
+
+MacClintock, i. 119
+
+Machimura Masinovo, ii. 382
+
+Mack, F.E., 298
+
+Madvig, J.N., ii. 456
+
+Maelson, F., i. 232
+
+Magnetical observations during the wintering, i. 509
+
+Magnus, Johannes, i. 51_n_
+
+Magnus, Olaus, i. 145, 159;
+ map of the North, i. 53, 56;
+ views regarding the North-east Passage, i. 53_n_
+
+Maeklin, F.W., i. 148
+
+Malacca, Straits of, ii. 414
+
+Malays on Labuan and Borneo, ii. 408, 412
+
+Maldonado, L.F., i. 214
+
+Malgin, N., ii. 169
+
+Malm, A.W., i. 523
+
+Malmgren, A.J., i. 119, 153
+
+Maloj Island, ii. 204, 205
+
+Malvano, Secretary of the Italian Cabinet, ii. 446
+
+Malygin, i. 203, 272; ii. 184
+
+Mammoth, i. 23, 30, 398, 445_n_;
+ in Europe, i. 399;
+ in Chukch Land, ii. 66;
+ at Eschscholz Bay, i. 228_n_;
+ old accounts of, i. 404;
+ legends regarding its mode of life, i. 405
+
+Maosoe, stay at, i. 41, 71;
+ climate, i. 45
+
+Maps of the North, i. 51
+
+Marco Polo, _see_ Polo
+
+Markets in Siberia and Polar America, ii. 13, 118
+
+Markham, Clements R., ii. 451
+
+Markov, A., ii. 170
+
+Marseilles, invitation to, ii. 447
+
+Martino, Consul-general, ii 440
+
+Massa, Isaak, ii. 249_n_;
+ his map, i. 225_n_, 239_n_; ii. 158_n_
+
+Massage in Japan, ii. 335
+
+Matiuschin, midshipman, ii. 118_n_
+
+Matotschkin Schar, i. 14, 70, 282;
+ mountains in its neighbourhood, i. 173;
+ stone ramparts on its shores, i. 188;
+ surveyed, i. 282
+
+Matveyev Island, i. 272
+
+Maunoir, ii. 452
+
+Maurice Island, i. 241
+
+Maydell, G. von, i. 410; ii. 79
+
+Medals in memory of the voyage of the _Vega_, ii. 306, 459_n_
+
+Melchior, state councillor, ii. 456
+
+Melguer, David, ii. 216
+
+Melkaja Guba, i. 283
+
+Menka, i. 495, 501; ii. 125;
+ portrait, i. 495
+
+_Mergulus alle_, i. 119
+
+Mertens, ii. 245
+
+Mesen, i. 51, 79; ii. 157
+
+Mesenkin, i. 381;
+ mammoth remains found at, i. 410
+
+Messerschmidt, i. 405
+
+Mestni Island, i. 174, 228, 241, 297
+
+Meteorological observations, i. 481; ii. 33
+
+_Metridia armata_, ii. 56
+
+Metschigme Bay, ii. 29, 227
+
+Meyenvaldt, mate, i. 213, 317
+
+_Mieralymma Dicksoni_, i. 343
+
+Middendorff, i. 17, 406_n_; ii. 246_n_
+
+Migrating birds, ii. 41
+
+Mikado, audience of, ii 305
+
+Miller, i. 460
+
+Mimisuka, the grave of the noses and ears, ii. 380
+
+Minin, i. 16; ii. 186, 187
+
+Minusinsk, i. 373
+
+Mirabelli, A., ii. 444
+
+Mogi, excursion to, ii. 390;
+ fossil plants at, ii. 392
+
+Mohn, i. 300
+
+Moisture in the air, i. 484
+
+Mokattam mountains, excursion to, ii. 440
+
+Molin, A., ii. 175
+
+Mollusca, land and fresh-water, at Port Clarence, ii. 242;
+ at Konyam Bay, ii. 245;
+ in Japan, ii. 362, 371;
+ the northernmost, ii. 245
+
+Mollusca, subfossil, in Siberia, i. 378
+
+Moma, the river, ii. 168
+
+Moore, Captain, ii. 79, 213, 245
+
+Morgiovets, i. 223
+
+_Mormon Arcticus_, i. 113
+
+Morosko, L., ii. 172, 173
+
+_Maskwa_ (steamer), i. 360
+
+Mosquitoes in the Polar regions, i. 147_n_
+
+Motora, Simeon, ii. 165
+
+Moxon, Joseph, i. 263
+
+Mucheron, B., i. 232
+
+Mueller, G.P., i. 16_n_, 21, 25; ii. 164_n_, 166, 167, 171, 172_n_,
+183_n_, 199, 268_n_
+
+Mueller, J.B., i. 405
+
+Muenster, S., ii. 156_n_
+
+Muravjev, Lieut., i. 272; ii. 183
+
+Murman Sea, i. 14
+
+Murray, Colin, ii. 415
+
+Muscovy Company, i. 172, 217
+
+Musk ox, discovery of the remains of, i. 411; ii. 228_n_;
+ supposed occurrence of, on Wrangel Land, i. 449_n_
+
+_Mustela vulgaris_, ii. 46
+
+Mutnaja river, i. 268
+
+Mutnoj Saliv, ii. 183
+
+_Myodes obensis_, i. 146; ii. 44
+
+_Myodes torquatus_, ii. 44
+
+
+N
+
+Nagasaki, arrival at, ii. 389
+
+Nakasendo road, the, ii. 327, 352
+
+Namollo, ii. 80, 221
+
+Naples, stay at, ii. 443
+
+Narainzay river, i. 225
+
+Narborough, John, i. 260
+
+Narwhal, i. 165, 418
+
+Narontza river, i. 225_n_
+
+Nathorst, A.G., ii. 332, 394, 408
+
+Nay, C., i. 232
+
+Nearchus, i. 169
+
+Nedrevaag, A.O., i. 298
+
+Negri, C., i. 34; ii. 443
+
+Nephrite among the Eskimo, ii. 236;
+ among the Chinese, ii. 236_n_, 399
+
+Neremskoe, i. 172
+
+Neumann, C. von, ii. 79, 118
+
+New Siberian Islands, i. 23, 131_n_, 132, 413; ii. 171_n_;
+ exploratory journeys to, i. 412;
+ first visited by Europeans, ii. 204;
+ journeys to, ii. 205
+
+Nierop, i. 203
+
+Nikul river, ii. 167
+
+Nilson, K., ii. 453
+
+Njaskaja, i. 370
+
+Noah Elisej, ii. 50; portrait, ii. 51
+
+Noah's Wood, i. 30, 207, 381; ii. 207_n_
+
+Nobel, A., ii. 452
+
+Nordenskioeld, K., i. 320; ii. 406_n_
+
+_Nordenskioeld_ (steamer), ii. 298, 301
+
+Nordquist, O.,
+ i. 4, 37, 39, 187, 200, 202, 319, 321, 327, 444, 446_n_, 489;
+ ii. 12, 44, 82, 115, 315, 362, 369, 371, 435, 447;
+ excursion to Menka's home, i. 497;
+ visit to Pidlin, i. 502;
+ excursion to Nutschoitjin, ii. 18;
+ on the animals wintering in Chukch Laud, ii. 44;
+ portrait, ii. 435
+
+Nordvik, ii. 190
+
+Noril Mountains, i. 360
+
+North-east Land, inland ice on, i. 176
+
+North-east Passage, reasons of search for, i. 58, 231;
+ prize for its discovery, i. 246
+
+North Pole, said to have been reached, i. 263
+
+Norways, the i. 109
+
+Northbrook, Earl of, ii. 451
+
+Notti, ii. 7, 19, 22, 129; portrait, ii. 8
+
+Novara Elliya, ii. 432
+
+Novaya Sibir, ii. 204, 205, 206
+
+Novaya Zemlya, animal life there, i. 107;
+ first known to West-Europeans, i. 215;
+ its name, i. 216;
+ Russian landmarks on, i. 228_n_;
+ its northern extremity passed for the first time, i. 248;
+ proposal to colonise it, i. 271_n_;
+ supposed riches in metals, i. 277;
+ Russian voyages to, i. 280;
+ Norwegian voyages to, i. 293;
+ curcumnavigation of, i. 297
+
+Nummelin, G.A., i. 211, 314; portrait, i. 316
+
+Nunamo, ii. 222
+
+Nutschoitjin, excursion to, ii. 18
+
+
+O
+
+Ob, Gulf of, Owzyn's voyage on, ii. 185, 186;
+ surveyed, ii. 186
+
+Ob, river territory, i. 372_n_;
+ navigable, i. 374;
+ first mentioned, ii. 157;
+ Russian navigation to in former times, i. 226, 244, 271;
+ English vessel stranded at, i. 229_n_, 256;
+ vessel stranded east of, i. 271;
+ Russian expedition to, ii. 183;
+ recent voyages to, i. 313
+
+Obdorsk, i. 204, 290; ii. 185, 186
+
+Observatory, magnetical, at Pitlekaj, i. 473, 509
+
+Oiwaki, ii. 352
+
+Okotsk, ii. 174
+
+Okotsk, Sea of,
+ bottom frozen, ii. 61_n_;
+ navigation on, ii. 175, 176
+
+Okuschi, ii. 364
+
+Old Believers, Russian sect i. 179, 270_n_
+
+Olenek river, i. 20, 26, ii. 160, 188, 190
+
+Olutorsk river, ii. 165
+
+Onkilon tribe, the ii. 80, 221;
+ excavations on the sites of old dwellings i. 444,
+ implements, i. 444;
+ Wrangel's account of them, i. 446
+
+Oom, L.G., i. 243
+
+Oordt, Consul van, ii. 298
+
+_Ophiacantha bidentata_, i. 345
+
+_Ophioglypha nodosa_, ii. 49
+
+Orange Island, i. 241
+
+Orange Islands, i. 234, 248
+
+_Orca gladiator_, i. 170
+
+Orosius, Paulus, i. 47_n_
+
+Osaka, ii. 364, 366
+
+Oscar, Duke of Gotland, ii. 453, 454
+
+Oscar, King, i. 2, 3; ii. 459, 460, 463
+
+Osche, ii. 278
+
+Oshima, ii. 297
+
+_Osmerus eperlanus_, i. 494
+
+Ostatiof, M., ii. 72
+
+Ostyaks, i. 384
+
+_Otaria Stelleri_, _see_ Sea lion
+
+_Otaria ursina_, _see_ Sea-bear
+
+Othere, i. 158;
+ voyage, i. 47
+
+Otter, F.W. von, i. 3; ii. 460
+
+Owl, snowy, i. 131;
+ observed during expedition, i. 343, 352
+
+Owzyn, Lieut, i. 16; ii. 185, 186
+
+
+P
+
+Pachtussov, voyages of, i. 279;
+ death of, i. 282
+
+Paget, Sir A.B., ii. 446
+
+Paj-Roj mountain, the, i. 74
+
+Palander, L, i. 4, 9, 10_n_, 11, 36, 38, 137, 141, 172, 176, 190, 191,
+ 319, 348, 429, 456, 474, 478, 509;
+ ii. 67, 131, 226, 256, 298, 401, 410, 412, 443, 445, 447, 451_n_, 463;
+ excursion to a reindeer-chukch camp, ii. 15;
+ portrait, ii. 68
+
+Pallas, ii. 211, 275
+
+Pallavicini, Prince, ii. 445
+
+Palliser, John, i. 286
+
+Palmieri, Prof., ii. 445
+
+Panelapoetski, i. 262
+
+Pansch, Dr., i. 140_n_
+
+Pappan Island, ii. 409
+
+Paradeniya, botanic garden at, ii. 428
+
+Parent, E., ii. 446
+
+Paris, _fetes_ at, ii. 453
+
+Parositi, Asiatic tribe, i. 103_n_
+
+Parry Island, i. 113, 133
+
+Parry, Sir Edward, ii. 144, 210
+
+Paulov, Lieut, i. 272; i. 183
+
+Paulutski, D., ii. 75, 221
+
+Payer, i., 266, 422
+
+Pedrotalagalla, ii. 414, 432
+
+Pekarski, ii. 275
+
+Pelikan, Consul, ii. 298
+
+Penschina Bay, ii. 75
+
+Penschina River, ii. 166
+
+Permakov, J., ii. 169
+
+Perry, Commodore, ii. 297
+
+Pet, A., i. 60, 172;
+ his voyages, i. 227
+
+Petchora river, i. 55, 219, 224; ii. 157
+
+Peter the Great, ii. 175, 179
+
+Petermann, A., his belief that the Polar Sea is occasionally
+navigable, i. 265
+
+Petersen, C., i. 143, 423
+
+Petropaulovsk, ii. 196, 268, 294
+
+Pet's Straits, i. 172
+
+Phalarope, i 128, 191, 320;
+ observed during the expedition, i. 415, 437; ii. 42
+
+_Philip and Mary_ (vessel), i. 226_n_
+
+Phipps Island, i. 133
+
+_Phoca barbata_, i. 159_n_, 162, 334
+
+_Phoca Groenlandica_, i. 165;
+ young of the, 164
+
+_Phoca hispida_, i. 165, 343
+
+Pidlin, i. 485;
+ excursion to, i. 502
+
+Pinto, Major, ii. 448
+
+Piper, Count, ii. 451
+
+Pitlekaj, i. 485;
+ flora at, i. 468;
+ appearance of, ii. 60
+
+Pjaesina River, i. 193; ii. 187;
+ is discovered, ii. 160
+
+Plancius, Dutch geographer, i. 232
+
+_Pleuropogon Sabini_, i. 332
+
+Pliny the elder, ii. 153, 157_n_
+
+Plover expedition, ii. 79, 245
+
+Podurids, Novaya Zemlya, i. 148
+
+Poetry, Japanese, ii. 382
+
+Pogytscha, River, ii. 162
+
+Point de Galle, arrival at, ii. 414;
+ departure from, ii. 437
+
+Polar bear seen during the expedition, i. 190, 339, 353; ii. 46;
+ account of, i. 137
+
+Polar Sea hunting, i. 291
+
+Pole of cold, i. 474
+
+Police in Japan, ii. 331
+
+Polo, Marco, i. 58, 144; ii. 154, 157_n_;
+ his life, ii. 153
+
+Polynias, i. 466
+
+Pompeii, excursion to, ii. 444
+
+Pontchartrin, Count de, ii. 216
+
+Poole, J., i. 291
+
+Popov, ii. 78
+
+Porcelain manufacture in Japan, ii. 381
+
+Port Clarence, ii. 226
+
+Port Dickson, i. 18;
+ stay at, i. 189;
+ its discovery, i. 311
+
+Porthan, i. 47
+
+Portugal, stay in, ii. 447
+
+Pospjelov, i. 277
+
+Postels, ii. 245
+
+Postnik, ii. 161
+
+Potatoes, antiscorbutic, i. 11
+
+Preobraschenie Island, i. 353
+
+Pribylov, ii. 212
+
+Pribylov Islands, ii. 258
+
+Priluschnoj, i. 195
+
+_Procellaria galcialis_, i. 108
+
+_Promontorium Scythicum_, ii. 153
+
+_Promontorium Tabin_, ii. 153
+
+Prontschischev, i. 19; ii. 188, 189
+
+Protodiakonoff, Z., i. 418
+
+_Proeven_ (hunting sloop), i. 1, 292
+
+Provision depot on land, i. 473
+
+Ptolemy, ii. 152
+
+Purchas, i. 62_n_
+
+Puschkarev, ii. 203
+
+Pustosersk, i. 75
+
+Putrefaction slow in the Polar regions, i. 167
+
+Pyramids, the, visit to, ii. 440
+
+
+Q
+
+Quaen Sea, i. 215
+
+Quaens, skilful harpooners, i. 224
+
+Quale, P, i. 298
+
+Quatrefages, ii. 453
+
+
+R
+
+Rabaut, A., ii. 447
+
+Railway, Siberian, i. 375
+
+Rambodde, ii. 432
+
+Ratnapoora, ii. 416
+
+_Recherche's_ wintering, ii. 36
+
+Red ochre, ii. 235
+
+Red Sea, ii. 439
+
+Reindeer, tame, i. 78; wild, i. 132
+
+Reindeer's skin used for clothing, i. 37
+
+Reindeer's stomach, contents of, consumed by the Chukches, i. 435
+
+Reitinacka, ii. 57, 58
+
+Renoe, i. 43
+
+_Rhinoceros antiquitatis_, i. 406
+
+_Rhinoceros Merckii_, i. 411
+
+Rhytina, ii. 272
+
+Riccio, ii. 444
+
+Richter, Consul-general, ii. 451
+
+Rijp, i. 246
+
+Riksdag, the, supports the expedition, i. 5
+
+Rio-San, ii. 382
+
+Rirajtinop, i. 485
+
+Robeck, ii. 211
+
+Rodgers, i. 26
+
+Rokuriga-hara, ii. 348
+
+Romanzov, ii. 204
+
+Rondes (sable), i. 145
+
+Rookery, ii. 282
+
+Rossmuislov, i. 274
+
+Rotgansen, i. 247
+
+Rotschilten, ii. 16, 31
+
+Roule, C., i. 216
+
+Rubies, ii. 419
+
+Ruggieri, Prof., ii. 444
+
+Ruinlike rock formations, i. 428
+
+Runeberg, R., i. 8
+
+Ruspoli, Prince, ii. 445
+
+Russians, at Chabarova, i. 79
+
+
+S
+
+_Sabinea septemcarinata_, ii. 48
+
+Sachanich Bay, i. 236_n_
+
+Sacrificial heights, i. 92
+
+Saigo Kichinosuke ii. 303
+
+Sajsan, Lake, i. 374
+
+_Salix artica_, ii. 65
+
+Samoyeds, i. 77;
+ their idols, i. 85, 94;
+ their dress, i. 89;
+ Compared with other Polar races, i. 91;
+ burying place, i. 97;
+ their weapons, i. 99;
+ old accounts of them, i. 100;
+ their place in ethnography, i. 103
+
+Samurai, ii. 376
+
+Sandman, Captain, ii. 294
+
+Sandpiper, _see_ Phalarope
+
+Sankin Grigorej, ii. 170
+
+Sannikov, i. 24
+
+Sanyo Sanitomi, ii. 303
+
+Saostrovskoj, i. 311
+
+Sapetto, Prof., ii. 439
+
+Sapphires, ii. 419
+
+Sarytschev, ii. 408
+
+Satow, E M, ii. 321
+
+Sauer, Martin, i. 418
+
+Savavatari, ii. 337
+
+Savina river, i. 280
+
+Schalaurov, ii. 200
+
+Schelags, ii. 170
+
+Schelechov, G, ii. 270_n_
+
+Scheltinga, ii. 198
+
+Schestakov, A, ii. 74
+
+Schigansk, i. 369
+
+Schmidt, F, i. 409
+
+Schmidt, H, i. 360
+
+Schrenck, L von, i. 410
+
+Schtinnikov, A, ii. 182
+
+Schwanenberg, D, i. 9_n_, 314
+
+Scoresby, i. 143_n_
+
+Scurvy, i. 45; ii. 295
+
+Sea-bear, the, ii. 272
+
+Sea-cow, ii. 272
+
+Sea-lion, i. 446; ii. 267
+
+Sea-otter, ii. 271
+
+Sea-spider, i. 349
+
+Seals, i. 162
+
+Sealskin used as clothing, i. 37
+
+_Searchthrift_ (vessel), i. 217
+
+Seebohm, Mr., i. 315
+
+Selenetz Islands, i. 228
+
+Selenga, i. 374
+
+Selennoe Lake, i. 269
+
+Self-dead animals, i. 322
+
+Selifontov, i. 204
+
+Selivaninskoj, i. 387
+
+Selivestrov, ii. 166_n_
+
+Semenoffski Island, i. 414
+
+Semipalitinsk, i. 373
+
+Senjavin Sound, ii. 244
+
+Senkiti-San, ii. 336
+
+Serapoa Koska, i. 217
+
+Serdze Kamen, i. 467
+
+Seribrenikoff, S.J., i. 39
+
+Seven Islands, i. 117
+
+_Severnoe Sianie_, i. 211
+
+Shamans, ii. 128
+
+Shaman drums, ii. 24
+
+Shimonoseki. ii. 387
+
+Shintoism, ii. 378
+
+Sibbern, ii. 453
+
+Siberian Polar Sea, i. 14, 28
+
+Siberian cattle plague, i. 78
+
+Sibir, ii. 159
+
+Sibiriakoff, A., i. 2, 3, 8, 24
+
+Sibiriakoff Island, ii. 312
+
+Sidoroff, M., i. 211
+
+Sidoroff's graphite quarry, ii. 235
+
+Siebold, P.H.F. von, ii. 326
+
+Siebold, H. von, ii. 326
+
+_Sieversia glacialis_, i. 197
+
+Simonsen, i. 300
+
+Simovies, i. 193
+
+Simpson, John, ii. 118
+
+Singapore, ii. 413
+
+Singhalese, ii. 424
+
+Sirovatskoj, ii. 204
+
+Skoptzi in Siberia, i. 387
+
+Skuratov, i. 204
+
+Slaves among the Chukches, ii. 123
+
+Sledges, i. 82, 83
+
+Smitt, F.A., ii. 59
+
+Snobberger, C.P., i. 259
+
+Snow-blindness, i. 477; ii. 10
+
+Snow-bunting, the, ii. 129
+
+Snow-drifting, i. 483
+
+Snow-shoes, ii. 102
+
+Snow-spectacles, i. 477; ii. 10
+
+Snow, the melting of the, ii. 34
+
+Snups, M., ii. 157_n_
+
+Sokolov, ii. 176
+
+Solovets, ii. 157
+
+_Somateria molissima_, i. 123
+
+_Somateria spectabilis_, i. 123
+
+_Somateria V.-nigrum_, ii. 42
+
+Spangberg, Martin, ii. 179
+
+Spinel, ii 423
+
+Spirits, i. 440; ii. 13, 116, 118
+
+Spitzbergen hunting, history of, i. 29
+
+Spitzbergen, its discovery ascribed to Willoughby, i. 62_n_;
+ discovered by Barents, i. 247;
+ Russian voyages to, i. 291;
+ Norwegian voyages to, i. 293
+
+Spottiswoode, Mr., ii. 451
+
+Springs, hot, ii. 343
+
+St. James's Islands, i. 223
+
+St. Laurens Bay, i. 236
+
+St. Lawrence Bay, ii. 212, 218
+
+St. Lawrence Island, i. 154; ii. 250
+
+_Stegocephalus Kessleri_, ii. 48
+
+Stellar, G.N., ii. 80, 187_n_, 200, 266;
+ his death, ii. 268
+
+Steppes, Siberian, i. 384
+
+_Sterna macroura_, i. 123
+
+Stockholm, arrival at, ii. 459
+
+Stolbovoj Island, i. 414
+
+Stone Pacha, ii. 440
+
+Stone polishing works in Canton, ii. 399
+
+Strabo, ii. 148, 151
+
+Strahlenberg i. 405
+
+_Strix nyctea_, i. 131
+
+Stroganov, Russian commercial house, i. 235
+
+Stuxberg, A., i. 3, 38, 151, 193, 194, 198, 311, 324, 438, 451;
+ ii. 225, 291, 315, 434;
+ portrait, ii. 435
+
+Suez, arrival at, ii. 440
+
+Suez Canal, the, ii. 441
+
+Sujeff, student, i. 185_n_
+
+Swan, Bewick's, i. 127
+
+Swedish expedition of 1875, the, i. 12;
+ visits Yalmal, i. 205;
+ reaches the Yenisej, i. 311
+
+Swedish prisoners of war in Siberia, ii. 175
+
+Swell from falling pieces of ice dangerous to vessels, i. 183_n_
+
+Sword-bearing in Japan, ii. 377
+
+_Sylvia Ewersmanni_, ii. 43
+
+Sylvius, AEneas, i. 52_n_
+
+
+T
+
+Tabin, Promontorium, i. 13, 241
+
+Taffelbeiget, ii. 29
+
+Tagil river, the, ii. 159
+
+Taimur Island, i. 331
+
+Taimur lake, ii. 192
+
+Taimur Land, inhabited by Samoyeds, i. 244_n_
+ position of its east coast, i. 352;
+ Minin's travels along the coast, ii. 187
+
+Taimur river, the, i. 409
+
+Takasaki, ii. 325
+
+Takasima coal mine, ii. 394
+
+Tamils, ii. 424
+
+Tanning reindeer hides hides, ii. 122
+
+Tas-ary, i. 362, 368
+
+Tas river, the, ii. 156, 159_n_
+
+Tatarinov, Feodor, ii. 203
+
+Tatariov, Cossack, ii. 206
+
+Tattooing, Chukch, i. 499; ii. 99;
+ Eskimo, at Port Clarence, ii. 232;
+ Eskimo, at St. Lawrence island ii. 251, 252
+
+_Tazata, Insula_, ii. 155
+
+Teano, Prince, ii. 445, 446
+
+Temples in Japan, ii. 375, 377;
+ on Ceylon, ii. 425
+
+Tennent, E, ii. 415_n_, 419, 424_n_
+
+Terfins, i. 48_n_
+
+Tetgales, B.Y., i. 232
+
+_Thalassiophyllum Clathrus_, ii. 293
+
+Theel, Hj, i. 3, 311
+
+Theatres in Japan, ii. 356
+
+Thorne, Robert, i. 57_n_
+
+Thunberg, C.P., ii. 43, 326_n_
+
+Thwaites, Dr., ii. 428
+
+Tietgen, state councillor, ii. 456
+
+Tigil River, the, ii. 167_n_, 176
+
+Tintinyaranga, i. 509
+
+Tjapka, Chukch village, ii. 20
+
+Tjumen, ii. 159, 268
+
+Tobacco, its use among the Chukches, ii. 116;
+ in Japan, ii. 321
+
+Tobiesen, S.K., i. 108, 141, 144, 152, 300;
+ his voyage to Spitzbergen, i. 302;
+ wintering on Bear Island, i. 303;
+ his death, i. 305;
+ his portrait, i. 303
+
+Tobol river, the, ii. 159
+
+Tobolsk, i. 344; ii. 185, 186
+
+Tokaido road, the, ii. 315
+
+Tokio, visit to, ii. 304;
+ the Shoguns' graves at, ii. 309
+
+Topaz, ii. 400, 419
+
+Toporkoff Island, ii. 291
+
+_Torosses_, i. 425, 463; ii. 2
+
+Toxar Island, i. 239
+
+Treacher, Governor, ii. 408
+
+Trees, distribution of, in Siberia, i. 383
+
+_Tringa maritima_, i. 128
+
+Trofimov's mammoth, i. 409
+
+Tromsoe, _Vega's_ stay at, i. 38;
+ its climate, i. 45_n_
+
+Tumat Island, i. 362
+
+_Tundra_, appearance of the, i. 378
+
+Tunguses, i. 384, 408; ii. 191
+
+
+U
+
+Umbellula in the Kara Sea, i. 184
+
+Ural-Altaic race, i. 103
+
+_Uria Bruennichii_, i. 110
+
+---- _grylle_, i. 113
+
+Urusov, Prince, ii. 445
+
+Ustjansk, ii. 205, 206
+
+Usui toge, ii. 352
+
+
+V
+
+Vardoe, i. 66, 68;
+ climate of, i. 45
+
+Varsina river, the, i. 66
+
+Varthema, Luduvico de, ii. 438
+
+Vasa Murrhina, ii. 236_n_
+
+Vaygats Island, i. 77, 93;
+ discovered, i. 215;
+ visited by Pet, i. 228
+
+Veer, Gerrit de, i. 101;
+ his book, i. 245
+ _Vega_, the, purchased, i. 8;
+ description of, i. 9;
+ equipment of, i. 11;
+ position when frozen in, i. 468;
+ action of cold on, i. 466;
+ prepared for wintering, i. 469;
+ repaired, ii. 396;
+ sold, ii. 463
+
+Vessels, Norse, i. 50; Russian, on the Polar sea, i. 219
+
+Vlamingh, i. 258
+
+Volcanic dust in Scandinavia, i. 330
+
+Volcanoes, ii. 249
+
+_Vulpes lagopus_, _see_ Fox, Arctic
+
+---- _vulgaris_, _see_ Fox, common
+
+
+W
+
+Waern, C.F., i. 5
+
+Waldburg-Zeil, Count, i. 205
+
+Walden Island, i. 112
+
+Walrus, i. 152
+
+Walton, Lieut., ii. 198
+
+Wax tree, the Japanese, ii. 389
+
+Waxel, Lieut, ii. 197
+
+Weasel, ii. 46
+
+Werchojansk, i. 411
+
+Werkon, the river, ii. 202
+
+Weyprecht, i. 266
+
+Whales, on the coast of Norway, i. 49;
+ scarce at Novaya Zemlya, i, 168;
+ fear of, in ancient times, i. 169;
+ with European harpoons, found in the Pacific, i. 264
+
+Whale bones on Spitzbergen, i. 168;
+ sub-fossil at Pitlekaj, i. 520;
+ used is building materials, ii. 223;
+ at St. Lawrence Island, ii. 253
+
+Whale-fishing, described by Albertus Magnus, i. 159_n_;
+ at Spitzbergen, i. 168
+
+Whale _mummy_ at Pitlekaj, i. 523
+
+White-fronted goose, i. 124
+
+White Island, _see_ Beli Ostrov
+
+White Sea, the, i. 215
+
+White whale, the, i. 79, 167
+
+Widmark, H.A., ii. 35
+
+Wiemut, Julian, ii. 294
+
+Wiggins, J., i. 311, 312;
+ portrait, i. 313
+
+Wilkoffski, ii. 238
+
+Willoughby, Sir Hugh, i. 13, 58;
+ portrait, i. 59
+
+Willoughby's, Land, i. 62
+
+Wilui river, the, i. 406
+
+Wood, Captain, i. 260
+
+Wosnessenski, conservator, ii. 276
+
+Wrangel, Ferdinand von, i. 23, 265, 446,
+ journeys, ii. 209;
+ portrait, ii. 208
+
+Wrangel Land, i. 23, 26, 448; ii. 171_n_, 202, 209;
+ landing on, i. 448
+
+Wrestlers, Japanese, ii. 339
+
+Wulfstan's travels, i. 50
+
+
+Y
+
+Yakovieva, i. 316
+
+Yakuts, i. 384; ii. 161
+
+Yakutsk, i. 19, 22, 26, 370, 371;
+ ii. 187, 190, 193
+
+Yalmal, exclusion to, i. 201;
+ visited in 1875, i. 205;
+ population i. 204;
+ origin of the name, i. 203;
+ old accounts of, i. 204;
+ surveyed, ii. 185
+
+Yana River, the, i. 418_n_
+
+Yanimoto, ii. 366
+
+Yefremov Kamen, i. 376
+
+Yekargauls, i. 498
+
+Yelmert, i. 203
+
+Yelmert Land, i. 203
+
+Yenisej, the, voyages of the _Fraser_ and
+ the _Empress_, up, i. 357;
+ ascent of, in 1875, i. 387;
+ river territory, i. 372;
+ navigable, i. 373;
+ its banks, i. 377;
+ vegetation on, i. 381;
+ steamers on, i. 394;
+ discovered, ii. 160;
+ Russian navigation on, in former times, i. 243;
+ Russian sea, expeditions to, ii. 185;
+ Minin's voyages on, ii. 186;
+ later voyages to, i. 311
+
+Yenisej, mouth of the, map of, i. 192;
+ formerly inhabited, i. 193;
+ winter at, i. 209
+
+Yettugin, ii. 29, 67, 125
+
+Yii gate, the, ii. 399
+
+Yinretlen, i. 485
+
+_Ymer_ (steamer), i. 1, 9_n_, 312, 358
+
+Yokohama, ii. 296;
+ arrival at, ii. 295;
+ departure from, ii. 364
+
+Yokosuka, ii. 396
+
+_Yoldia Artica_, i. 199
+
+Young, Sir Allen, ii. 451
+
+Yugor Schar, i. 14;
+ expedition passes, i. 171;
+ rules for sailing through, i. 172;
+ harbours in, i. 174;
+ origin of the name, i. 172;
+ Pet did not sail through, i. 228;
+ map of, i. 242
+
+Yukagires, ii. 75
+
+Yukagir dwellings, remains of, on the New Siberian Islands, ii. 209
+
+
+Z
+
+_Zaritza_ (steamer), i. 360
+
+Zeno, i. 53
+
+Ziegler's map of the north, i. 53
+
+Zivolka, A.K., i. 282; portrait, i. 284
+
+Zircon, ii. 423
+
+
+THE END
+
+
+
+
+THE ARCTIC VOYAGES OF BARON A.E.
+ VON NORDENSKIOeLD, 1858-1879 With Illustrations and Map.
+ Demy 8vo. 16_s_.
+ "Those who wish to get a clearer notion of one of the first
+ Arctic explorers of our day cannot do better than purchase
+ this interesting volume."--_Atheneum._
+
+
+By CAPTAIN ALBERT H. MARKHAM, R.N.
+
+NORTHWARD HO! By Captain ALBERT H. MARKHAM, R.N.,
+ Author of "The Frozen Sea," &c. Including a Narrative of Captain
+ Phipps's Expedition, by a Midshipman. With Illustrations.
+ Crown 8vo. 10_s_. 6_d_.
+ "Captain Markham's interesting volume has the advantage of being written
+ by a man who is practically conversant with the subject."--_Pall Mall
+ Gazette._
+
+
+By SIR C. WYVILLE THOMSON, LL.D., F.R.S., &c.
+
+THE DEPTHS OF THE SEA. An Account of the
+ General Results of the Dredging Cruises of H.M. SS. "Lightning" and
+ "Porcupine" during the Summers of 1868-69-70, under the Scientific
+ Direction of Dr. CARPENTER, F.R.S., J. GWYN JEFFREYS, F.R.S., and
+ Sir WYVILLE THOMSON, Director of the Scientific Staff of the
+ "Challenger" Exploring Expedition. 8vo, extra gilt, with nearly
+ 100 Illustrations and Eight Coloured Maps and Plans.
+ Second Edition 31_s_. 6_d_.
+
+THE VOYAGE OF THE "CHALLENGER"--THE ATLANTIC. A Preliminary
+ Account of the Exploring Voyages of H.M.S. "Challenger," during
+ the Year 1873, and the early part of 1876. With numerous
+ Illustrations, Coloured Maps, Charts, &c., and Portrait of
+ the Author, engraved by JEENS. Two Vols. 8vo. 45_s_.
+
+By LORD GEORGE CAMPBELL
+
+LOG-LETTERS FROM THE "CHALLENGER"
+ Fifth and Cheaper Edition, revised. Crown 8vo. 6_s_.
+
+By SIR SAMUEL BAKER, M.A., F.R.G.S.
+
+ISMAILIA A Narrative of the Expedition to Central
+ Africa for the Suppression of the Slave Trade, organized by
+ ISMAIL, Khedive of Egypt. With Illustrations by ZWECKER and DURAND.
+ New and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6_s_.
+
+THE NILE TRIBUTARIES OF ABYSSINIA, AND
+ THE SWORD HUNTERS OF THE HAMRAN ARABS. With Maps and
+ Illustrations Sixth and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6_s_.
+
+THE ALBERT N'YANZA GREAT BASIN OF THE
+ NILE, AND EXPLORATIONS OF THE NILE SOURCES. With Maps
+ and Illustrations. Fifth and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo. 6_s_.
+
+By BARON HUeBNER.
+
+A RAMBLE ROUND THE WORLD 1871. By M. le BARON de HUeBNER,
+ formerly Ambassador and Minister. Translated by
+ Lady HERBERT. New and Cheaper Edition With numerous Illustrations.
+ Crown 8vo 6_s_.
+
+By SIR CHARLES W. DILKE, M.P.
+
+GREATER BRITAIN. A Record of Travel in English-speaking
+ Countries during 1866-67 (America, Australia, India.) Sixth
+ and Cheaper Edition. Crown 8vo 6_s_.
+
+By W.G. PALGRAVE.
+
+A NARRATIVE OF A YEAR'S JOURNEY
+ THROUGH CENTRAL AND EASTERN ARABIA, 1862-63. With Map,
+ Plans, and Portrait of Author, engraved on Steel by JEENS. Crown
+ 8vo 6_s_.
+ MACMILLAN & CO., LONDON, W.C.
+
+
+
+START OF TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES:
+
+First a list of typographical errors, which have been corrected
+in the etext. Followed by alternative spellings of words noticed,
+the majority of which occur bewteen the index and the text,
+these have been left unchanged. There are also two short ERRATA
+for Volume I and Volume II in the printed edition.
+
+Vol I page x "Cape Schelagskog" changed to "Cape Schelagskoj"
+[ to match 4 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page xiii "Sieveria" changed to "Sieweria"
+[ as in the title "Neu-entdecktes Sieweria, worinnen die Zobeln
+gefangen werden" confirmed on Internet, and one other instance
+in the text ]
+
+Vol I page xxv "Ida Fallander" changed to "Ida Falander"
+[ to match 5 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page xxvi "Yenissej" changed to "Yenisej"
+[ to match many instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 22 "Staduschin" changed to "Staduschin"
+[ to match 11 other instances in the text ]
+
+Vol I page 43 "Middendorf" changed to "Middendorff"
+[ to match 19 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 51 "Ptolemoei Cosmographia"
+ changed to "Ptolemaei Cosmographia"
+[ confirmed on internet as the correct spelling,
+also correct in one other instance in the text ]
+
+Vol I page 73 "Besimmanaja Bay" changed to "Besimannaja Bay"
+[ to match 5 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 219 "Cape Woronov" changed to "Cape Voronov"
+[ to match entry in index and confirmed on Internet ]
+
+Vol I page 310 "Novya Zemlaya" changed to "Novaya Zemlya"
+[ over 200+ instances of "Novaya Zemlya" ]
+
+Vol I page 315 "Sewernoe Sianie" changed to "Severnoe Sianie"
+[ to match 2 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 317 "Meywaldt" changed to "Meyenwaldt"
+[ to match 2 other instances in text, note also spelt as
+"Meyenvaldt" in the index ]
+
+Vol I page 377 "YEKISEJ" changed to "YENISEJ"
+[ to match many instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 397 "MIDDENDORF" changed to "MIDDENDORFF"
+[ to match 19 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol I page 451 "Redogoerese" changed to "Redogoerelse"
+[ to match 4 other instances in the text ]
+
+Vol II page xvi "Pribyloo" changed to "Pribylov"
+[ to match 4 other instances in the text ]
+
+Vol II page 140 "ocasionally" changed to "occasionally"
+
+Vol II page 183 "Dolgoj Island" changed to "Dolgoi Island"
+[ to match index and 2 other instances in text ]
+
+Vol II page 249 "Hessal Gerritz" changed to "Hessel Gerritz"
+[Internet book text search gives both variations of surname
+see under differences of spelling below, but always "Hessel"
+as the first name of the author ]
+
+Vol II page 432 "Pedrotalegalla" changed to "Pedrotalagalla"
+[ to match 2 other instances in text, also confirmed on Internet
+as correct spelling for this mountain ]
+
+Vol II page 447 "Nutschoitzin" changed "Nutschoitjin"
+[ to match other index entry and 6 instances in the text ]
+
+Vol II page 481 "Vlaming" changed to "Vlamingh"
+[ to match 8 other instances in text ]
+
+Differences noticed in spelling, these remain unchanged as it is
+not obvious which is correct.
+
+"Bruzewitz" In index and Illustration, but "Brusewitz" in text
+
+"Engehardt's" or "Engelhardt's"
+
+"Hessel Gerritsz" or "Hessel Gerritz"
+
+"Gusinnaja Semlja" or "Gusinnyja Semlja"
+
+"Gwosdarev" in text, but "Gvosdarev" in index
+
+"Cape Kamennoj" in text, but "Cape Kammennoj" in index
+
+"Kolmogorsov" in text, but "Kolmogorzov" in index
+
+"Krassilnikoff's" in text, but "Krassilinikoff" in index
+
+"Labuan" in text, but "Labaan" in index
+
+"Matvejev" in text, but "Matveyev" in index
+
+"Meyenwaldt" in text, but "Meyenvaldt" in index
+
+"Morgiouets" in text, but "Morgiovets" in index
+
+"Mutnoi" in text, but "Mutnoj" in index
+
+"Oiwake" in text, but "Oiwaki" in index
+
+"Rotschitlen" in text, but "Rotschilten" in index
+
+"Sarytchev" or "Sarytschev"
+
+"Semenoffskoj" in text, but "Semenoffski" in index
+
+"Gusinnaja Semlja" in text, but "Gusinnaya Semlya" in index
+
+"Serebrenikoff" in text, but "Seribrenikoff" in index
+
+"skuggsja" in text, but "skuggja" in index
+
+"Sumiyashi" In list of illustrations, but
+"SUMIYOSHI" Caption on illustration
+
+"Tajmur river" or "Taimur river"
+
+"Volodomir" in text, but "Volodimir" in index
+
+"Yekargaules" in text, but "Yekargauls" in index
+
+
+END OF TRANSCRIBER'S NOTES
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Voyage of the Vega round Asia and
+Europe, Volume I and Volume II, by A.E. Nordenskieold
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK VOYAGE OF THE VEGA ***
+
+***** This file should be named 24365.txt or 24365.zip *****
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