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POLAR REGIONS

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Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 954 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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POLAR REGIONS , a See also:

general See also:term for the regions about the See also:North or See also:South See also:Pole, otherwise called the See also:Arctic or See also:Antarctic regions. The ancients had no actual knowledge of See also:History of the Polar regions. They had probably heard rumours Arctic of the See also:light summer nights and the dark See also:winter Exploration. nights in the north, as is shown by See also:Homer's description of the Laestrygons having the See also:short nights and the Cimmerians living in perpetual darkness. By astronomical speculations the Greeks had come to the conclusion that north of the Arctic Circle there must be midnight See also:sun at midsummer and no sun at midwinter. The general view was that the Polar regions, north and south, belonged to the uninhabitable frozen zones; while according to a less scientific notion there was a happy region north of the north See also:wind (See also:Boreas), where the sun was always shining and the See also:Hyperboreans led a peaceful See also:life. The first traveller of history who probably approached the Arctic Circle and reached the See also:land of the midnight See also:Pytheas. sun was the See also:Greek Pytheas (q.v.), from Massalia (See also:Marseilles), who about 325 B.C. made a voyage of See also:discovery northwards along the See also:west See also:coast of See also:Europe, which is one of the most remarkable in history. He visited See also:England, See also:Scotland, the Scottish isles, and probably also See also:northern See also:Norway, which he called See also:Thule. He moved the limits of the known See also:world from the south coast of England northward to the Arctic Circle. It seems probable that he made two or perhaps several voyages. He also discovered the northern coasts of See also:Germany as far See also:east as See also:Jutland. We hear of no other voyages towards the Arctic regions before the Irish See also:monk See also:Dicuil, See also:writing about 825, mentions the discovery by Irish monks of a See also:group of small islands (the Irish Faeroes), and a greater See also:island (See also:Iceland), which he Discovery calls Thule, where there was hardly any See also:night at of Iceland. midsummer.

It is possible that Iceland and the Faeroes were inhabited by a small See also:

Celtic See also:population before the Irish monks came thither. The fact that Irish monks lived in Iceland before the Norsemen settled there in the end of the 9th See also:century is verified by the Icelandic sagas. In his See also:translation of See also:Orosius, See also:King See also:Alfred inserts the interesting See also:story of the first known really Arctic voyage, told him by the See also:Norwegian Ottar (Alfred calls him Ohthere), who Ottar. about 87o rounded the North Cape, sailed eastwards along the Murman coast and discovered the See also:White See also:Sea, where he reached the south coast of the See also:Kola See also:Peninsula and the boundary of the land of the Biarmians (Beormas). Ottar told King Alfred that "he chiefly went thither, in addition to the seeing of the See also:country, on See also:account of the walruses." After Ottar's See also:time the king of Norway took See also:possession of all land as far east as the White Sea and the land of the Biarmians, and the native " Finns" had,to pay him See also:tribute. Many voyages, mostly of hostile nature but also for See also:trade purposes, were under-taken from Norway to the White Sea, and even See also:kings went as far. It is told of King See also:Eric, called Bloodyaxe, who died as king of See also:York in England, that he made such a voyage, and fought with the Biarmians, about 920, and about 965 his son Harold Graafeld defeated the Biarmians and killed many See also:people in a See also:great See also:battle near the See also:river See also:Dvina, where See also:Archangel was built later. After having settled in Iceland in the end of the 9th century, the Norsemen soon discovered See also:Greenland and settled there. The first who is reported to have seen the coast of Greenland was a Norwegian, Gunnbjorn Ulfsson, who on his way to See also:Ice-land was See also:storm-driven westwards. He came to some islands, afterwards called Gunnbjornskier, and saw a coast, but, without exploring the new land, he had evidently continued his way till Prlct6eRed.he reached Iceland. The real discoverer and explorer of Greenland was the Norwegian, Eric the Red, who, with his See also:father had settled in Iceland. As he and his men had there been declared outlaws for having killed several people they had to leave Iceland for three years, and he went westward to find the land which Gunnbjorn was reported to have seen.

He explored the west coast of Greenland for three years, probably about 982-985. He then returned to Iceland, but founded the following See also:

year a See also:colony in Greenland (q.v.). Many colonists followed, and two Norse settlements were formed, viz, the Eystrabygd (i.e. eastern See also:settlement) on the south-eastern See also:part of the Greenland west coast, between Cape Farewell and about 61° N. See also:lat., where Eric the Red had his See also:house, Brattalid, at the Eiriksfjord; and the Veslrabygd (i.e. western settlement) in the region of the See also:present Godthaab See also:district, between 63° and 66° N. lat. The Norse settlers carried on their See also:seal and See also:whale-See also:hunting still farther north along the west coast beyond the Arctic circle, and probably in the region of Disco See also:Bay. A runic See also:stone was found in a See also:cairn on a small island in 72° 55' N. lat. north of Upernivik, showing that Norsemen had been there. The stone probably See also:dates from the 14th century. About 1267 an expedition was sent northwards along the west coast and may possibly have reached some distance north of Upernivik. The last known communication between the Norse settlements in Greenland and Norway was in 1410, when some Icelanders returned, who four years previously had been storm-driven to Greenland. After that time we possess no reliable See also:information about the See also:fate of these settlements. When Greenland was rediscovered in the 16th century no descendants of the Norse settlers were found. The See also:probability is that having gradually been cut off from all communications with Europe, the remaining settlers who had not returned' to the motherland were obliged to adopt the See also:Eskimo mode of life, which in those surroundings was far See also:superior to the See also:European, and by inter-See also:marriage they would then soon be absorbed amongst the more numerous natives. There is See also:evidence to show that an expedition was probably sent from See also:Denmark or Norway to Greenland Pinlugand in the latter part of the 15th century (perhaps about scolvus 1476) under Pining and Pothorst (by See also:Purchas called " Punnus and Pothorse ") ; and perhaps with Johan Scolvus as See also:pilot.

It is probable that this expedition had inter-course with the natives of Greenland, and possibly even reached Labrador, but it is unknown whether any remains of the Norse settlements were found on the Greenland west coast. It is reported by See also:

Adam of See also:Bremen (about 1070) that the Norwegian king Harold Haardraade (in the lrth century) made an expedition into the Arctic Sea (probably north-wards) in See also:order to examine how far it extended, but we know nothing more about this voyage. The Icelandic See also:annals See also:report that a land called Sealbardi was discovered in 1194. The name means the See also:cold See also:side or coast. The land was, according to the sagas, situated See also:Spitsbergen. four days' sailing from north-eastern Iceland north- wards in the Hafsboln (i.e. the northern termination of the sea, which was supposed to end as a bay). There can be no doubt that this land was Spitsbergen. The Norsemen carried on seal, See also:walrus and whale hunting, and it is believed on See also:good ground that they extended their hunting expeditions eastwards as far as Novaya Zemlya and northwards to Spitsbergen. On his way to Greenland from Norway in the year See also:rood Leif Ericsson found See also:America, probably Nova See also:Scotia, which he called Wineland the Good. A few years later Thorfinn Karlsefni sailed from Greenland with three See also:ships to make a settlement in the land discovered by Leif. They first came to Labrador, which they called Helluland, then to See also:Newfoundland, which was called See also:Markland (i.e. woodland), and then to Cape See also:Breton and Nova Scotia (See also:Vinland; Wineland). After three years they had to give up the undertaking on account of hostilities with the natives, probably Red See also:Indians, and they returned to Greenland about xoo6. We know of no later expedition of the Norsemen that reached Greenland; it is stated that Eric Uppri, the first See also:bishop of Greenland, went in 1121 to seek Vinland, but it is not related whether he ever reached it, and the probability is that he never returned.

The Icelandic annals See also:

state that in 1347 a small Greenland See also:ship which had sailed to Markland (Newfoundland) was after-wards storm-driven to Iceland with seventeen men. This is the last known voyage made by the Norse- Newfound.. men of Greenland which with certainty reached land. America. The discoveries of the old Norsemen extended over the north-ern seas from Novaya Zemlya in the east to Labrador, Newfoundland and Nova Scotia in the west; they had visited all Arctic lands in these regions, and had explored the White Sea, the See also:Barents Sea, the Spitsbergen and Greenland Sea, See also:Davis Strait, and even some part of See also:Baffin Bay. They were the first navigators in history who willingly See also:left the coasts and sailed across the open ocean, and they crossed the See also:Atlantic between Norway and America, thereby being the real discoverers of this ocean, as well as the pioneers in oceanic See also:navigation. They were the teachers of the navigators of later centuries, and it is hardly an See also:accident that the undertakings of England towards the west started from See also:Bristol, where many Norwegians had settled, and which from the beginning of the 15th century had much trade with Iceland. See also:John See also:Cabot, sent out by the merchants of Bristol, rediscovered the See also:American See also:continent in 1497. He came to Cape Breton and Nova Scotia, probably the same land where John cebor. Leif Ericsson had landed Soo years before. John Cabot started on a new expedition towards the west in 1498, but no more is known of this expedition, not even whether Cabot returned or not. There is no reliable evidence to prove that John Cabot or his son See also:Sebastian ever discovered Labrador, as has been generally believed. The Portuguese Gaspar See also:Corte-Real rediscovered Greenland in 1500.

He sailed along its east coast without being able to land on account of the ice. Whether he visited the come-Real. west coast is uncertain. In 1501 he made a new expedition when he also rediscovered Newfoundland. One of his ships returned See also:

home to See also:Lisbon, but he himself and his ship disappeared. His See also:brother went in See also:search of him the following year, but was heard of no more. Cabot's and Corte-Real's discoveries were followed by the development of the Newfoundland and Labrador See also:fisheries, King Harold. and a whole See also:fleet' of See also:English, Portuguese, Basque and Breton fishermen was soon met with in these See also:waters, and they probably went along the Labrador coast northward as far as See also:Hudson Strait, without having left any report of their discoveries. It is believed, on good grounds, that expeditions (combined English-Portuguese) were sent out to the newly discovered regions from Bristol in 15or and 1502. It is unknown what their discoveries were, but they may possibly have sailed along the coast of Labrador. It is possible that John Cabot's son, Sebastian Cabot, made an Arctic expedition in 15o8-1509, in search of a short passage to See also:China towards the north-west, and later, in 1521, King See also:Henry VIII. made an See also:attempt to persuade the merchants of See also:London to support him in sending out an expedition, under Sebastian Cabot, to the north-western countries. It is uncertain whether it ever started, but it is certain that it achieved nothing of importance. John Rut sailed from See also:Plymouth in 1527, in order to seek a passage to China through the Arctic seas towards the north- west, following the See also:suggestion of See also:Robert See also:Thorne of Joha Rut.

Bristol. He met ice in 53° N. lat. and returned to Newfoundland. Several other expeditions were sent out from various countries towards the north-west and west during this See also:

period, but no discoveries of importance are known to have been made in the Arctic regions. There are rumours that the Portuguese, as See also:early as 1484, under King John II., had sent out an expedition towards Novaya Zemlya in search of a north-east passage to See also:India. Center one. The Genovese See also:Paolo Centurione probably proposed to King Henry VIII. of England, in 1525, to make an expedition in search of such a passage to India north of See also:Russia, and there is evidence to show that there had been much talk about an undertaking of this See also:kind in England and at the English See also:court during the following period, as it was hoped that a new See also:market might be found for English merchandise, especially See also:cloth. But it led to nothing until 1553, when Sebastian Cabot was one of the See also:chief promoters. Three ships and 112 men under See also:Sir See also:Willoughby. See also:Hugh Willoughby sailed from Ratcliffe on the loth (loth) May 1553. See also:Richard Chancelor commanded one of the ships, which was separated from the two others in a See also:gale off northern Norway on the 3rd (13th) See also:August. Willoughby, after having sighted land in various places, probably See also:Kolguev Island, where they landed, the coast near the See also:Pechora river and Kanin Nos, came on the 14th (24th) See also:September to a good See also:harbour on the northern coast of the Kola Peninsula. His one ship being leaky, Willoughby resolved to winter there, but he and all his men perished.

Chancelor, after his Chancelor. separation from the two other ships, rounded the North Cape, to which he or his sailing-See also:

master, See also:Stephen See also:Borough, gave this name. He reached VardShus, and after having waited there in vain for Willoughby, he followed the route of the Norsemen to the White Sea and reached the bay of St See also:Nicholas, with a monastery of this name, near the mouth of the Dvina river, where Archangel was built later. Chancelor undertook a See also:journey to See also:Moscow, made arrangements for commercial inter-course with Russia, and returned next year with his ship, which was, however, plundered by the Flemings, but he reached London safely with a See also:letter from the See also:tsar. In spite of the disaster of Willoughby and his men this expedition became of fundamental importance for the development of English trade. Chancelor's success and his so-called discovery of the passage to the White Sea, which was well known to the Norwegian traders in that region, proved to people in England the See also:practical utility of polar voyages. It led to a See also:charter being granted to the Association of See also:Merchant Adventurers, also called the Muscovy or Russia See also:Company, and gave a fresh impulse to Arctic discovery. Chancelor undertook a new expedition to the White Sea and Moscow in 1555; on his way home in the following year he was wrecked on the coast of Scotland and perished. In 1556 Stephen Borough (Burrough), who had served with Chancelor, was sent out by the Muscovy Company in a small See also:pinnace called the "Search-See also:thrift," in order to try to reach theriver Ob, of which rumours had been heard. Novaya Zemlya, Vaigach Island, and the Kara Strait leading into the Kara Sea, were discovered. Borough kept a careful See also:journal of his voyage. In 158o the company fitted Borough. out two vessels under See also:Arthur Pet and See also:Charles Jackman, with orders to See also:sail eastwards north of Russia and See also:Asia to the lands of the See also:emperor of See also:Cathay (China). They penetrated through the Kara Strait into the Kara Sea; they Pet. possibly saw the west coast of Yalmal, but met with much ice and were compelled to return.

The two ships were separated on the way home, Pet reached London on See also:

December 26th in safety; Jackman wintered with his ship in Norway and sailed thence in See also:February, but was never heard of again. About 1574 the Portuguese probably made an attempt to find the north-west passage under Vasqueanes Corte-Real. They reached "a great entrance," which may have been Hudson Strait, and they "passed above twentie Corte- Real eaJ. Corte-. leagues" into it, "'without all impediment of ice," "but their victailes fayling them, . . . they returned backe agayne with ioy." After the expeditions in search of the north-east passage achieved the success of opening up a profitable trade with Russia, via the White Sea, new life was inspired in the under-takings of England on the sea, at the same time the See also:power of the Hanseatic merchants, called the Easterlings, was much reduced. It was therefore only natural that the See also:plan of seeking a north-west passage to China and India should again come to the front in England, a.nd it was much discussed. It was Sir See also:Martin See also:Frobisher who opened that See also:long See also:series of Frobisher. expeditions all of which during three See also:hundred years were sent from England in search of the north-west passage until the last expedition, which actually accomplished it, sailed from Norway. " Being persuaded of a new and neerer passage to Cataya" (China) towards the north-west, Frobisher "determined and resolved wyth himselfe, to go make full See also:proof e thereof .. . or else never to retourne againe, knowing this to be the onely thing of the worlde that was left yet undone, whereby a notable mind mighte he made famous and fortunate." After having attempted in vain for fifteen years to find support for his enter-prise, he at last obtained assistance from See also:Ambrose See also:Dudley, See also:earl of See also:Warwick, and through him the See also:interest of See also:Queen See also:Elizabeth was also secured. The Muscovy Company was now obliged to give a See also:licence for the voyage in 1574, and the necessary See also:money was found by London merchants. Aided especially by See also:Michael Lok, an influential merchant and diligent student of See also:geography, Frobisher sailed, on the 7th (17th) of See also:June 1576, from See also:Deptford with two small vessels of 20 and 25 tons, called the" See also:Gabriel" and "Michael," and a small pinnace of to tons; the crews amounted to 35 men all told. On the 8th (18th) of See also:July they lost sight of the pinnace, which was seen no more.

On the rrth (21st) of July they sighted a high, rugged land, but could not approach it for ice. This was the east coast of Greenland, but, misled by his charts, Frobisher assumed it to be the fictitious Frisland, which was the fabrication of a Venetian, Niccolo See also:

Zeno, who in 1558 published a See also:spurious narrative and See also:map (which he pretended to have found) as the See also:work of an ancestor and his brother in the 14th century. The Zeno map was chiefly fabricated on the basis of a map by the Swede Olaus See also:Magnus of 1537 and the map by the Dane See also:Claudius Clavus of the 15th century. It was accepted at the time as a work of high authority, and its fictitious names and islands continued to appear on subsequent maps for at least a century, and have puzzled both geographers at home and explorers in the See also:field. These islands had also been introduced on the charts of See also:Mercator of 1569 and of See also:Ortelius of 15701 which were probably used by Frobisher. Evidently frightened by the sight of the great quantities of ice off the Greenland coast, one ship, the " Michael," left him secretly, " and retourned home wyth greate reporte that he was See also:cast awaye. " The gallant Frobisher continued his voyage towards the north-west in the "Gabriel" alone, although his See also:mast was sprung, his topmast blown overboard, and his "mizen-mast" had had to be cut away in a gale. On the 29th of July (Aug. 8) he sighted high Sebastian Cabot. land which he called Queen Elizabeth's See also:Foreland. This was the See also:southern part of Baffin Land (See also:Resolution Island) in about 62° N. lat. He was stopped by ice, but nearly two See also:weeks later he reached the coast and entered an inlet which he considered to be the strait of the north-west passage, and he gave it his own name (it is now Frobisher Bay on Baffin Land).

The land was called "See also:

Meta Incognita." Frobisher was not well prepared for going much farther, and after his See also:boat with five men had disappeared he returned home, where, unfortunately, some "See also:gold-finders" in London took it into their heads that a piece of dark heavy stone brought back contained gold ore. This caused great excitement; it was now considered much more important to collect this See also:precious ore than to find the north-west passage, and much larger expeditions were sent out in the two following years. As many as fifteen vessels formed the third expedition of 1578, and it was the intention to See also:form a colony with a hundred men in the gold land, but this See also:scheme was given up. Frobisher came into Hudson Strait, which was at first thought to be Frobisher Strait and therefore called Mistaken Strait. There was an open sea without any land or ice towards the west, and Frobisher was certain that he could sail through to the "See also:Mare del Sur" (Pacific Ocean) and " Kathaya," but his first See also:goal was the " gold mines," and the vessels returned home with full loads of the ore. One of them, a See also:buss (small ship) of See also:Bridgwater, called the "See also:Emmanuel," reported that on her voyage home she had first sighted Frisland on the 8th (18th) of September, but four days later she had sighted another land in the Atlantic and sailed along it till the following See also:day; they reckoned its southern end to be in about 571° N. lat. This land soon found its See also:place on maps and charts south-west of Iceland under the name of Buss Island, and as it was never seen again it was after 1745 called " the sunken land of Buss." The explanation is that, misled by the maps, Frobisher assumed Greenland to be Frisland of the Zeno map and Baffin Land was afterwards assumed to be the east coast of Greenland. When the buss on her way home sighted Greenland in about 62° N., she therefore thought it to be Frisland, but when she four days later again sighted land near Cape Farewell and her dead reckoning probably had carried her about two degrees too far south, she naturally considered this to be a new land, which puzzled geographers and navigators for centuries. Owing to a similar See also:mistake, not by Frobisher, but by later cartographers and especially by Davis, it was afterwards assumed that Frobisher Strait (and also Mistaken Strait) was not in Baffin Land but on the east coast of Greenland, where they remained on the maps till the 18th century. John Davis, who made the next attempt to discover a north-west passage, was one of the most scientific See also:seamen of that See also:age. Davls. He made three voyages in three successive years aided and fitted out by See also:William See also:Sanderson and other merchants.

Sailing from See also:

Dartmouth on the 7th (17th) of June 1585, with two ships, he sighted on the loth (3oth) of July " the most deformed, rocky and mountainous land, that ever we sawe." He named it the Land of Desolation, although he understood that he had rediscovered " the See also:shore which in See also:ancient time was called Groenland." It was its east coast. He visited the west coast, where Frobisher had also landed mistaking it for Frisland. Davis anchored in a place called See also:Gilbert's See also:Sound in 64° 10' (near the present Danish settlement of Godthaab) and had much intercourse with the Eskimo. He then, See also:crossing the strait which bears his name, traced a portion of its western shore southwards from about 66° 40' N. lat. and came into See also:Cumberland Sound, which he thought to be the strait of the north-west passage, but returned home on account of contrary winds. In the second voyage (with four ships) Davis traced the western shore of Davis Strait still farther southwards, and sailed along the coast of Labrador. In the third voyage (with three ships) in 1587 he advanced far up his own strait along the west coast of Greenland in a small leaky pinnace, the "Ellin," and reached a lofty See also:granite island in 72° 41' N. lat., which he named See also:Hope Sanderson. He met with ice in the sea west of this place, butreported that there was not " any yce towards the north, but a great sea, See also:free, large, very See also:salt and blew, and of an unsearcheable See also:depth." By contrary winds, however, he was prevented from sailing in that direction. He sailed into Cumberland Sound, but now found that there was no passage. He also passed on his way southwards the entrance to Frobisher Strait, which he named Lumley Inlet, and Hudson Strait, without under-See also:standing the importance of the latter. When Davis came to Labrador, where his two larger ships were to have waited for him, they had sailed to England. The little "Ellin" now struck a sunken See also:rock and sprung a leak, which was repaired, and he crossed the Atlantic in this small leaky See also:craft. He still believed in the existence of a passage through Davis Strait, but could find no support for another Arctic voyage.

Davis was not the first to discover this strait; it was well-known to the Norsemen. Gaspar Corte-Real had possibly also been there, and Frobisher had during his voyages crossed its southern part every year. The result of Davis's discoveries are shown on the See also:

Molyneux globe, which is now in the library of the See also:Middle See also:Temple; they are also shown on the " New Map " in See also:Hakluyt's See also:Principal Navigalions (1598-1600). When Davis was trying to reconcile his discoveries with the previous ones, especially those of Frobisher, he made fatal mistakes as mentioned above. As early as 1565, by the intervention of a certain See also:Philip Winterkonig, an See also:exile from Vardohus in Norway, Dutch merchants formed a settlement in Kola, and in 1578 See also:Brunel. two Dutch ships anchored in the mouth of the river Dvina, and a Dutch settlement was established where Archangel was built a few years later. The leading See also:man in these under-takings was See also:Olivier Brunel, who is thus the founder of the White Sea trade of the Dutch; he was also their first Arctic navigator. He had travelled both overland and along the coast to See also:Siberia and reached the river Ob; he had also visited Kostin Shar on Novaya Zemlya. He propounded plans for the discovery of the north-east passage to China, and in 1581 he went from Russia to See also:Antwerp to prepare an expedition. He probably started with one ship in 1582, on the first Arctic expedition which left the See also:Netherlands. Little is known of its fate except that it ended unsuccessfully with the See also:wreck of the ship in the shallow Pechora Bay, possibly after a vain attempt to penetrate through the Yugor Strait into the Kara Sea. In 1583 we find Olivier Brunel in See also:Bergen trying to organize a Norwegian under-taking, evidently towards' the north-east, but it is uncertain whether it led to anything. The Dutch, however, had begun to see the importance of a northern route to China and India, especially as the routes through the southern seas were jealously guarded by the Spaniards and Portuguese, and after 1584 all trade with See also:Portugal, where the Dutch got See also:Indian goods, was forbidden.

By Brunel's efforts their See also:

attention had been directed towards the north-east passage, but it was not until 1594 that a new expedition was sent out, one of the promoters being See also:Peter Plancius, the learned cosmographer of See also:Amsterdam. Four ships sailed from Huysdunen on the 5th (15th) of June 1594. Two of these ships from Amsterdam were under the command of Willem Barents, who sighted Novaya Zemlya, north of Barents Matochkin Shar, on the 4th (14th) of July; and and See also:Nay. from that date until the 1st (11th) of August Barents continued perseveringly to seek a way through the ice-floes, and discovered the whole western coast as far as the Great Ice Cape, the See also:latitude of which he, with his admirable accuracy, determined to be 77° N. Having reached the See also:Orange Islands at the north-west extremity, he decided to return. The two other ships under the command of Cornelis Nay had discovered the Yugor Strait, through which they sailed into the Kara Sea on the 1st (11th) of August. They reached the west coast of Yalmal; being sure that they had passed the mouth of the river Ob, and finding the sea open, they thought they had found a free passage to See also:Japan and China, and returned home on the 11th (21st) of August. A new expedition was made the following year, 1595, with seven ships under the command of Cornelis Nay, as See also:admiral, and Willem Barents as Land of Buss. chief pilot, but it merely made several unsuccessful attempts to enter the Kara Sea through the Yugor Strait. The third expedition was more important. Two vessels sailed from Amsterdam on the loth (loth) of May 1596, under the command of See also:Jacob See also:van Heemskerck and Corneliszoon Rijp. Barents accompanied Heemskerck as pilot, and Gerrit de Veer, the historian of the voyage, was on See also:board as See also:mate. The masses of ice in the straits leading to the Sea of Kara, and the impenetrable nature of the See also:pack near Novaya Zemlya, had suggested the advisability of avoiding the land and, by keeping a northerly course, of seeking a passage in the open sea.

They sailed northwards, and on the 9th (19th) of June discovered See also:

Bear Island. Continuing on the same course they sighted a mountainous See also:snow-covered land in about 8o° N. lat., soon afterwards being stopped by the polar pack ice. This important discovery was named Spitsbergen, and was believed to be a part of Greenland. Arriving at Bear Island again on the 1st of July, Rijp parted company, while Heemskerck and Barents proceeded eastward, intending to pass See also:round the northern extreme of Novaya Zemlya. On the 26th of August (See also:Sept. 5) they reached Ice Haven, after rounding the northern extremity of the land. Here they wintered in a house built out of driftwood and planks from the 'tween decks and the See also:deck-house of the See also:vessel. In the See also:spring they made their way in boats to the See also:Lapland coast; but Barents died during the voyage. This was the first time that an arctic winter was successfully faced. The voyages of Barents stand in the first See also:rank among the polar enterprises of the 16th century. They led to flourishing whale and seal fisheries which long enriched the Netherlands. The English enterprises were continued by the Muscovy Company, and by associations of patriotic merchants of London; waymouth. and even the East India Company sent an expedition under See also:Captain Waymouth in 1602 to seek for a passage by the opening seen by Davis, but it had no success.

The best servant of the Muscovy Company in the work of polar discovery was Henry Hudson. His first voyage was Hudson. undertaken in 1607, when he discovered the most northern known point of the east coast of Greenland in 730 N. named "Hold with Hope," and examined the ice between Greenland and Spitsbergen, probably reaching Hakluyt's Headland in 79° 50' N. On his way home he discovered the island now called See also:

Jan See also:Mayen, which he named " Hudson's Tutches." In his second expedition, during the See also:season of 16o8, Hudson examined the edge of the ice between Spitsbergen and Novaya Zemlya. In his third voyage he was employed by the Dutch East India Company; he again approached Novaya Zemlya, but was compelled to return westwards, and he explored the coasts of North America, discovering the Hudson river. In 1610 he entered Hudson Strait, and discovered the great bay which bears and immortalizes his name. He was obliged to winter there, undergoing no small hardships. On his way home his See also:crew mutinied and set him, his little son and some sick men adrift in a boat, and the explorer perished in the seas he had opened up. The voyages of Hudson led immediately to the Spitsbergen whale See also:fishery. From 1609 to 1612 See also:Jonas See also:Poole made four Spitsbergen voyages for the See also:prosecution of this lucrative business, whale and he was followed by Fotherby, Baffin, See also:Joseph, Fishery. and Edge. These bold seamen, while in the pursuit of whales, added considerably to the knowledge of the See also:archipelago of islands known under the name of Spitsbergen, and in 1617 Captain Edge discovered an island to the eastward, which he named Wyche's Land. About the same period the kings of Denmark began to send expeditions for the rediscovery of the lost Greenland Danish colony. In r6o5 See also:Christian IV. sent out three ships, voyages. under the Englishmen See also:Cunningham and See also:Hall and a Dane named Lindenov, which reached the western coast of Greenland and had much intercourse with the Eskimo.

Other expeditions followed in 1606-1607. Meanwhile, the merchant adventurers of London continuedtions. In 1616 Bylot and Baffin again set out in the Baffin. "Discovery." Sailing up Davis Strait they passed that navigator's farthest point at Sanderson's Hope, and sailed round the great channel with smaller channels leading from it which has been known ever since as Baffin Bay. Baffin named the most northern opening See also:

Smith Sound, after the first See also:governor of the East India Company, and the munificent See also:promoter of the voyage, Sir See also:Thomas Smith. See also:Lancaster Sound and See also:Jones Sound were named after other promoters and See also:friends of the voyage. The fame of Baffin mainly rests upon the discovery of a great channel extending north from Davis Strait; but it was unjustly dimmed for many years, owing to the omission of Purchas to publish the navigator's tabulated journal and map in his great collection of voyages. It was two hundred years before a new expedition sailed north through Baffin Bay. It may be mentioned, as an See also:illustration of the value of these early voyages to See also:modern See also:science, that See also:Professor See also:Hansteen of See also:Christiania made use of Baffin's magnetic observations in the compilation of his series of magnetic maps. In 1619 Denmark sent out an expedition, under the command of Jens Munk, in search of the north-west passage, with two ships and 64 men. They reached the west coast of Hudson Bay, where they wintered near See also:Churchill river, but all died with the exception of one man, a boy, and Munk himself, who managed to sail home in the smallest ship. In 1631 two expeditions were despatched, one by the merchants of London, the other by those of Bristol.

In the London ship " Charles" See also:

Luke See also:Fox explored the western Luke F side of Hudson Bay as far as the place called " Sir See also:mes ox; Thomas See also:Roe's Welcome." In August he en-countered Captain See also:James and the Bristol ship "Maria" in the middle of Hudson Bay, and went north until he reached " North-west Fox his farthest," in 66° 47' N. He then returned home and wrote an entertaining narrative. Captain James had to winter off Charlton Island, in James Bay, the southern extreme of Hudson Bay, and did not return until See also:October 1632. Another English voyager, Captain See also:Wood, attempted, without success, to discover a north-east passage in 1676 through the sea round the North Pole, but was wrecked on the coast of Novaya Zemlya. The 16th and 17th centuries were periods of discovery and daring enterprise. Hudson Strait and Bay, Davis Strait and Baffin Bay, the icy seas from Greenland to Spitsbergen and from Spitsbergen to Novaya Zemlya had all been explored; but much more was not discovered than had been well known to the Norsemen five or six centuries earlier. The following century was rather a period of See also:reaping the results of former efforts than of discovery. It saw the settlement of the Hudson Bay Territory and of Greenland, and the development of the whale and seal fisheries. The Hudson's Bay Company was incorporated in 167o, and See also:Prince See also:Rupert sent out Zachariah Gillan, who wintered at Rupert river. At first very slow progress was made. A voyage undertaken by Mr See also:Knight, nearly 8o years old, who had been appointed governor of the factory at See also:Nelson river, was unfortunate, as his two ships were lost and the crews perished. This was in 1719.

In 1722 John See also:

Scroggs was sent from Churchill river in search of the missing ships, but merely entered Sir Thomas Roe's Welcome and returned. His reports were believed to offer decisive proofs of the existence to push forward the western discovery. Sir Thomas See also:Button, in command of two ships, the "Resolution" and "Discovery," sailed from England in May 1612. He entered Bottom Hudson Bay, crossed to its western shore, and wintered at the mouth of a river in 57° 10' N. which was named Nelson river after the master of the ship, who died and was buried there. Next year Button explored the shore of See also:Southampton Island as far as 65° N., and returned home in the autumn of 1613. An expedition under Captain See also:Gibbons despatched in 1614 to Hudson Bay was a failure; but in 1615 Robert Bylot as master and William Baffin as pilot and navigator in the " Discovery" examined the coasts of Hudson Strait and to the north of Hudson Bay, and Baffin, who was the equal of Davis as a scientific See also:seaman, made many valuable observa- Scroggs. of a passage into the Pacific; and a See also:naval expedition was de- spatched under the command of Captain See also:Christopher See also:Middleton, Middleton. consisting of the " Discovery " See also:pink and the " See also:Fur- nace " See also:bomb. Wintering in Churchill river, Middle- ton started in July 1742 and discovered See also:Wager river and Repulse Bay. In 1746 Captain W. See also:Moor made another voyage in moor. the same direction, and explored the Wager Inlet. Later in the century the Hudson's Bay Company's servants made some important land journeys to discover the shores of the American polar ocean.

From 1769 to 1772 See also:

Samuel See also:Hearne descended the See also:Coppermine River to the polar sea; and in 1789 See also:Alexander See also:Mackenzie discovered the mouth of the Mackenzie river. (For the See also:establishment of the modern Danish settlements in Greenland, see GREENLAND.) The countrymen of Barents vied with the countrymen of Hudson in the perilous calling which annually brought fleets Dutch of ships to the Spitsbergen seas during the 17th and Whale 18th centuries. The Dutch had their large summer Fishery. station for boiling down blubber at Smeerenberg, near the northern extreme of the west coast of Spitsbergen. Captain Vlamingh, in 1664, advanced as far round the northern end of Novaya Zemlya as the winter quarters of Barents. In 1700 Captain Cornelis Roule is said by Witsen to have sailed north in the See also:longitude of Novaya Zemlya and to have seen an extent of 40 M. of broken land, but Theunis Ys, one of the most experienced Dutch navigators, believed that no vessel had ever been north of the 82nd parallel. In 1671 See also:Frederick See also:Martens. Martens, a See also:German surgeon, visited Spitsbergen, and wrote the best account of its See also:physical features and natural history that existed previous to the time of See also:Scoresby. In 1707 Captain Cornelis Gilies went far to the eastward along the northern shores of Spitsbergen, and saw land to the east in 8o° N., which has since been known as Gilies Land. The Dutch See also:geographical knowledge of Spitsbergen was embodied in the famous See also:chart of the Van Keulens (father and son), 1700-1728. The Dutch whale fishery continued to flourish until the See also:French Revolution, and formed a splendid nursery for training the seamen of the Netherlands. From 1700 to 1775 the whaling fleet numbered too ships and upwards. In 1719 the Dutch opened a whale fishery in Davis Strait, and continued to frequent the west coast of Greenland for upwards of sixty years from that time.

The most flourishing period of the See also:

British fishery in the Spitsbergen and Greenland seas was from 1752 to 1820. Bounties British of 40s. per ton were granted by See also:act of See also:parliament; Whale and in 1778 as many as 255 sail of whalers were Fishery. employed. In order to encourage discovery £5000 was offered in 1776 to the first ship that should sail beyond the 89th parallel (16 Geo. III. c. 6). Among the numerous daring Scoresby. and able whaling captains, William Scoresby takes the first rank, alike as a successful whaler and a scientific observer. His admirable Account of the Arctic'Regions is still a textbook for all students of the subject. In 18o6 he succeeded in advancing his ship " Resolution " as far north as 81° 12' 42". In 1822 he forced his way through the ice which encumbers the approach to land on the east coast of Greenland, and surveyed that coast from 75° down to 69° N., a distance of 400 M. Scoresby combined the closest attention to his business with much valuable scientific work and no insignificant amount of exploration. The Russians, after the acquisition of Siberia, succeeded in gradually exploring the whole of the northern shores of that vast Russians. region. In 1648 a Cossack named See also:Simon Dezhneff is said to have equipped a boat expedition in the river Kolyma, passed through the strait since named after See also:Bering, and reached the Gulf of See also:Anadyr.

In 1738 a voyage was made by two See also:

Russian See also:officers from Archangel to the mouths of the Ob and the See also:Yenisei. Efforts were then made to effect a passage from the Yenisei to the See also:Lena. In 1735 Lieut. T. Chelyuskin. Chelyuskin got as far as 77° 25' N. near the cape which bears his name; and in 1743 he rounded that most northern point of Siberia in sledges, in 77° 41' N. Captain See also:Vitus Bering, a Dane, was appointed by Peter the Great to command an expedition in 1725. Two vessels were built at See also:Okhotsk, and in July 1728 Bering ascertained the See also:Bern existence of a strait between Asia and America. In 1740 Bering was again employed. He sailed from Okhotsk in a vessel called the " St See also:Paul," with G. W. Steller on board" as naturalist.

Their See also:

object was to discover the American side of the strait, and they sighted the magnificent See also:peak named by Bering Mt St See also:Elias. The Aleutian Islands were also explored, but the ship was wrecked on an island named "after the See also:ill-fated discoverer, and See also:scurvy See also:broke out amongst his crew. Bering himself died there on the 8th of December 1741. See also:Thirty years after the See also:death of Bering a Russian merchant named Liakhoff discovered the New Siberia or Liakhoff Islands, and in 1771 he obtained the exclusive right .from the empress See also:Catherine to dig there for fossil See also:ivory. These islands were more fully explored by an officer named Hedenstrom in 1809, and seekers for fossil ivory annually resorted to them. A Russian expedition under Captain Chitschakoff, sent to Spitsbergen in 1764, was only able to attain a latitude of 8o° 30' N. From 1773 onwards to the end of the loth century the See also:objects of polar exploration were mainly the acquisition of knowledge in various branches of science. It was on these grounds that Daines See also:Barrington and the Royal Society induced the British See also:government to undertake arctic exploration once more. The result was that two vessels, the "Racehorse " and " See also:Carcass " bombs, were commissioned, under the command of Phipps. Captain J. C. Phipps.

The expedition sailed from the See also:

Nore on the 2nd of June 1773, and was stopped by the ice to the north of Hakluyt Headland, the north-western point of Spitsbergen. Phipps reached the Seven Islands and discovered See also:Walden Island; but beyond this point progress was impossible. When he attained their highest latitude in 8o° 48' N., north of the central part of the Spitsbergen group, the ice at the edge of the pack was 24 ft. thick. Captain Phipps returned to England in September 1773. Five years afterwards James See also:Cook. Cook received instructions to proceed northward from See also:Kamchatka and search for a north-east or north-west passage from the Pacific to the Atlantic. In accordance with these orders Captain Cook, during his third voyage, reached Cape Prince of See also:Wales, the western extremity of America, on the 9th of August 1778. His ships, the " Resolution " and " Discovery," arrived at the edge of the ice, after passing Bering Strait, in 70° 41' N. On the 17th of August the farthest point seen on the American side was named Icy Cape. On the See also:Asiatic side Cook's survey extended to Cape North. In the following year Captain See also:Clerke, who had succeeded to the command, made another voyage, but his ship was beset in the ice, and so much damaged that further attempts were abandoned. The See also:wars following the French Revolution put an end to voyages of discovery till, after the See also:peace of 1815, north polar See also:research found a powerful and indefatigable See also:advocate in Sir See also:Barrow.

John Barrow. Through his See also:

influence a measure for promoting polar discovery became See also:law in 1818 (58 Geo. III. c. 20), by which a See also:reward of £20,000 was offered for making the north-west passage, and of £5000 for reaching 89° N., while the commissioners of longitude were empowered to See also:award proportionate sums to those who might achieve certain portions of such discoveries. In 1817 the icy seas were reported by Captain Scoresby and others to be remarkably open, and this circumstance enabled Barrow to obtain See also:sanction for the despatch of two expeditions, each consisting of two whalers—one to attempt discoveries by way of Spitsbergen and the other by Baffin Bay. The vessels for the Spitsbergen route, the " Dorothea " and " See also:Trent," were commanded by Captain See also:David See also:Buchan and Lieut. John See also:Franklin, and sailed in See also:April 1818. Driven into the pack by a heavy swell from the south, both vessels were severely nipped, and had to return to England. The other expedition, consisting of the " See also:Isabella " and " Alexander," commanded by Captain John See also:Ross and Lieut. See also:Edward See also:Parry, fcllowed in the See also:wake of Baffin's voyage of 1616. and succeeded in reaching the east coast of Greenland, where . Ross sailed from England in April 1818. The chief merit of his observations were taken on Pendulum Island.

He charted the voyage was that it vindicated Baffin's accuracy as a discoverer, coast-See also:

line from 76° to 72° N. Its practical result was that the way was shown to a lucrative In Parry's attempt to reach the pole from the northern coast fishery in the " North See also:Water " of Baffin Bay, which continued of Spitsbergen by means of sledge-boats (see PARRY), the highest to be frequented by a fleet of whalers every year. Captain Ross latitude reached was 82° 45' N., and the attempt was persevered thought that the inlets reported by Baffin were merely bays, while in until it was found that the ice as a whole was drifting to the the See also:opinion of his second in command was that a wide opening south more rapidly than it was possible to travel over it to to the westward existed through the Lancaster Sound of Baffin. the north. Parry was selected to command a new expedition in the In 1829 the Danes undertook an interesting piece of explorafollowing year. His two vessels, the " Hecla " and " Griper, " tion on the east coast of Greenland. Captain Graah of the Parry's passed through Lancaster Sound, the continuation Danish See also:navy rounded Cape Farewell in boats, with First and of which was named Barrow Strait, and advanced four Europeans and twelve Eskimo. He advanced Graah. second westward, with an archipelago on the right, since as far as 65° 18' N. on the east coast, where he was stopped by 'voyages. known as the Parry Islands. He observed a wide an insurmountable barrier of ice. He wintered in 63° 22' N., opening to the north, which he named See also:Wellington Channel, and and returned to the settlements on the west side of Greenland in sailed onwards for 300 M. to See also:Melville Island. He was stopped 183o. by the impenetrable polar pack of vast thickness which surrounds In the year 1829 Captain John Ross, with his See also:nephew James the archipelago to the north of the American continent, and was See also:Clark Ross, having been furnished with funds by a wealthy obliged to winter in a harbour on the south coast of Melville distiller named See also:Felix See also:Booth, undertook a private Island.

Parry's hygienic arrangements during the winter were expedition of discovery in a small vessel called the The Rosses. judicious, and the scientific results of his expedition were vain- " Victory. " Ross proceeded down Prince See also:

Regent Inset to the able. The vessels returned in October 1820; and a fresh ex- Gulf 'of See also:Boothia, and wintered on the eastern side of a land named pedition in the " Fury " and " Hecla," again under the command by him Boothia Felix. In the course of exploring excursions of Captain Parry, sailed from the Nore on the 8th of May 1821, during the summer months James Ross crossed the land and and passed their first winter on the coast of the newly discovered discovered the position of the north magnetic pole on the western Melville Peninsula in 66° 11' N. Still persevering, Parry passed side of it, on the 1st of June 1831. He also discovered a land to his second winter among the Eskimo at Igloolik in 69° 20' N., the westward of Boothia which he named King William Land, and and discovered a channel leading westward from the See also:head of the northern shore of which he examined. 'The most northern Hudson Bay, which he named Fury and Hecla Strait. The point was called Cape Felix, and thence the coast trended south-expedition returned in the autumn of 1823. Meantime Parry's west to Victory Point. The Rosses could not get their little Franklin's friend Franklin had been employed in attempts to vessel out of its winter quarters. They passed three winters First reach by land the northern shores of America, there, and then See also:fell back on the stores at Fury See also:Beach, where they Journey. hitherto only touched at two points by Hearne and passed their See also:fourth winter, 1832-1833. Eventually they were Mackenzie.

Franklin went out in 1819, with Dr John Richard- picked up by a whaler in Barrow Strait, and brought home. son, See also:

George Back and Robert See also:Hood. They landed at York Great anxiety was naturally See also:felt at their prolonged See also:absence, and factory, and proceeded to the Great Slave See also:Lake. In August of in 1833 Sir George Back, with Dr Richard King as a the following year they started for the Coppermine river, and, See also:companion, set out by land in search of the missing Back. embarking on it, reached its mouth on the 18th of July 1821. explorers. Wintering at the Great Slave Lake, they left Fort From that point 550 M. of coast-line were explored, the Reliance on the 7th of June 1834, and descended the Great See also:Fish extreme point being called Cape Turnagain. Great sufferings, river for 530 M. The mouth was reached in 67° 11' N., and then from See also:starvation and cold, had to be endured during the return the want of supplies obliged them to return. In 1836 Sir George journey; but eventually Franklin, See also:Richardson and Back arrived Back was sent, at the suggestion of the Royal Geographical safely at Fort Chippewyan. Society, to proceed to Repulse Bay in his ship, the " Terror, " It was thought desirable that an attempt should be made to and then to See also:cross an assumed See also:isthmus and examine the coast-connect the Cape Turnagain of Franklin with the discoveries line thence to the mouth of the Great Fish river; but the ship parry's made by Parry during his second voyage; but the was obliged to winter in the drifting pack,. and was brought home Third first effort, under Captain See also:Lyon in the " Griper," was in a sinking See also:condition. Voyage. unsuccessful. In 1824 three combined attempts were The tracing of the polar shores of America was completed by the organized. While Parry again entered by Lancaster Sound and Hudson's Bay Company's serva nts. In June 1837 Thomas Simppushed down a great opening he had seen to the south son and P.

W. Dease left Chippewyan, reached the named Prince Regent Inlet, Captain See also:

Beechey was to enter mouth of the Mackenzie, and connected that position and See also:Simpson Dease. Bering Strait, and Franklin was to make a second journey by with Point Barrow, which had been discovered by the land to the shores of Arctic America. Parry was unfortunate, " Blossom " in 1826. In 1839 Simpson passed Cape Turnagain but Beechey entered Bering Strait in the " Blossom " in August of Franklin, tracing the coast eastward so as to connect with 1826, and extended our knowledge as far as Point Barrow Back's work at the mouth of the Great Fish river. He landed Franklin's in 71° 23' 30" N. lat. Franklin, in 1825-1826, de- at See also:Montreal Island in the mouth of that river, and then second scended the Mackenzie river to its mouth, and ex- advanced eastward as far as See also:Castor and See also:Pollux river, his Journey. plored the coast for 374 M. to the westward; while farthest eastern point. On his return he travelled along Dr Richardson discovered the shore between the mouths of the the north side of the channel, the south shore of the King Mackenzie and Coppermine, and sighted land to the northward, William Island discovered by James Ross. The south-named by him See also:Wollaston Land, the dividing channel being western point of this island was named Cape See also:Herschel, and called See also:Union and See also:Dolphin Strait. They returned in the autumn there Simpson built a cairn on the 26th of August 1839. of 1826. Little remained to do in order to See also:complete the delineation of the Work was also being done in the Spitsbergen and Barents northern shores of the American continent, and this task was Seas.

From 1821 to 1824 the Russian Captain Ltitke was entrusted to Dr John See also:

Rae, a Hudson's Bay See also:factor, in Rae. 2 }itke. See also:surveying the west coast of Novaya Zemlya as far as 1846. He went in boats to Repulse Bay, where he Cape See also:Nassau, and examining the ice of the adjacent wintered in a stone hut nearly on the Arctic Circle; and there he sea. In May 1823 the " Griper " sailed, under the command and his six See also:Orkney men maintained themselves on the See also:deer they Clavering. of Captain Clavering, to convey Captain See also:Sabine to shot. During the spring of 1847 Dr Rae explored on See also:foot the the polar regions in order to make pendulum shores of a' great gulf having 70o m. of coast-line. He thus observations. Clavering pushed through the ice in 75° 30' N., i connected the work of Parry, at the mouth of Fury and Hecla Strait, with the work of Ross on the coast of Boothia, proving that Boothia was part of the American continent. While British explorers were thus working hard to solve some of the geographical problems See also:relating to Arctic America, the See also:Anjou . Russians were similarly engaged in Siberia. In 1821 Lieut. P. F.

Anjou made a complete survey of the New Siberia Islands, and came to the conclusion that it was not possible to advance far from them in a northerly direction, wraageu. owing to the thinness of the ice and to open water existing within 20 or 30 M. See also:

Baron Wrangell prosecuted similar investigations from the mouth of the Kolyma between 182o and 1823. He made four journeys with See also:dog sledges, exploring the coast between Cape Chelagskoi and the Kolyma, and making attempts to extend his journeys to some distance from the land, but he was always stopped by thin ice. mtadeadorf. In 1843 Middendorf was sent to explore the region which terminates in Cape Chelyuskin. He reached Taimyr Bay in the height of the short summer, whence he saw open water and no ice blink in any direction. The whole arctic shore of Siberia had now been explored and delineated, but no vessel had yet rounded the extreme northern point. The success of Sir James Ross's Antarctic expedition and the completion of the northern coast-line of America by the Hudson's Bay Company's servants gave rise in 1845 to a fresh Franklin attempt to make the passage from Lancaster Sound Expedition. to Bering Strait. The story of the unhappy expedition of Sir John Franklin, in the " See also:Erebus " and " Terror," is told under FRANKLIN; but some geographical details may be given here. The heavy polar ice flows south-east between Melville and See also:Baring Islands, down M'Clintock Channel, and impinges on the north-west coast of King William Land. It was this See also:branch from the " palaeocrystic " sea which finally stopped the progress of Franklin's expedition. On leaving the winter quarters at Beechey Island in 1846 Franklin found a channel leading south, along the western shore of the land of North See also:Somerset discovered by Parry in 1819.

If he could reach the channel on the American coast, he knew that he would be able to make his way along it to Bering Strait. This channel, now called See also:

Peel Sound, pointed directly to the south. He sailed down it towards King William Island, with land on both sides. But directly the southern point of the western land was passed and no longer shielded the channel, the great ice stream from Melville Island, pressing on King William Island, was encountered and found impassable. Progress might have been made by rounding the eastern side of King William Island, but its insularity was then unknown. It was not until 1848 that anxiety began to be felt about the Franklin expedition. In the spring of that year Sir James Ross Search was sent with two ships, the " Enterprise " and Expedition; " Investigator, " by way of Lancaster Sound. He Ross. wintered at See also:Leopold Harbour, near the north-east point of North See also:Devon. In the spring he made a long sledge journey with Lieut. Leopold M'Clintock along the northern and western coasts of North Somerset, but found nothing. On the return of the Ross expedition without any tidings, the country became thoroughly alarmed. An extensive plan of search See also:Austin. was organized—the " Enterprise " and " Investi- gator " under Collinson and M'Clure proceeding by Bering Strait, while the " Assistance " and " Resolute," with two See also:steam tenders, the " See also:Pioneer " and " Intrepid," sailed on the 3rd of May 185o to renew the search by Barrow Strait, under Captain Horatio Austin.

Two brigs, the " See also:

Lady Franklin " and " See also:Sophia," under William See also:Penny, an energetic and able whaling captain, were sent by the same route. He had with him Dr See also:Sutherland, a naturalist, who did much valuable scientific work. Austin and Penny entered Barrow Strait, and Franklin's winter quarters of 1845-1846 were discovered at Beechey Island; but there was no See also:record of any kind indicating the direction taken by the ships. Stopped by the ice, Austin's expedition wintered (r850-1851) in the pack off See also:Griffith Island, and Penny found See also:refuge in a harbour on the south coast of See also:Cornwallis Island. Austin, who had been with Parry during his third voyage, wasan admirable organizer. His arrangements for passing the winter were carefully thought out and answered perfectly. In See also:concert with Penny he planned a thorough and extensive See also:system of search by means of sledge-travelling in the spring, and Lieut. M`Clintock superintended every detail of this part of the work with unfailing forethought and skill. Penny under-took the search by Wellington Channel. MlClintock advanced to Melville Island, marching over 77o M. in eighty-one days; Captain Ommanney and Sherard See also:Osborn pressed southward and discovered Prince of Wales Island. Lieut. See also:Brown examined the western shore of Peel Sound.

The search was exhaustive; but, except the winter quarters at Beechey Island, no record was discovered. The absence of any record made Captain Austin doubt whether Franklin had ever gone beyond Beechey Island; so he also examined the entrance of Jones Sound, the next inlet from Baffin Bay north of Lancaster Sound, on his way home, and returned to England in the autumn of 185r. This was a thoroughly well conducted expedition, especially as regards the sledge-travelling, which M'Clintock brought to great perfection. So far as the search for Franklin was concerned, nothing remained to be done west or north of Barrow Strait. In 1851 the " Prince See also:

Albert " See also:schooner was sent out by Lady Franklin, under Captain Wm. See also:Kennedy, with Lieut. See also:Bellot of the French navy as second. They wintered on the east coast of North Somerset, and in the spring of 13eilot.dyl 1852 the gallant Frenchman, in the course of a long sledging journey, discovered Bellot Strait, separating North Somerset from Boothia—thus proving that the Boothia coast facing the strait was the northern extremity of the continent of America. The " Enterprise " and " Investigator " sailed from England in See also:January 185o, but accidentally parted company before they reached Bering Strait. On the 6th of May 1851 the " Enterprise " passed the strait, and rounded Point c°mnson. Barrow on the 25th. Collinson then made his way up the narrow Prince of Wales Strait, between See also:Banks and Prince Albert Islands, and reached Princess Royal Islands, where M`Clure had been the previous year.

Returning southwards, the "Enter-prise " wintered in a sound in Prince Albert Island in 710 35' N. and 1170 35' W. Three travelling parties were despatched in the spring of 1852—one to trace Prince Albert Land in a southerly direction, while the others explored Prince of Wales Strait, one of them reaching Melville Island. In September 1852 the ship was free, and Collinson pressed eastward along the coast of North America, reaching See also:

Cambridge Bay (Sept. 26), where the second winter was passed. In the spring he examined the shores of See also:Victoria Land as far as 70° 26' N. and See also:rod° 45' W.: here he was within a few See also:miles of Point Victory, where the fate of Franklin would have been ascertained. The " Enterprise " again put to sea on the 5th of August 1853, and returned west-See also:ward along the American coast, until she was stopped by ice and obliged to pass a third winter at See also:Camden Bay, in 700 8' N. and 145° 29' W. In 1854 this remarkable voyage was completed, and Captain Collinson brought the " Enterprise " back to England. Meanwhile M'Clure in the " Investigator " had passed the winter of 1850-1851 at the Princess Royal Islands, only 3o m. from Barrow Strait. In October M'Clure ascended a See also:hill whence he could see the frozen See also:surface of 'N`cture. Barrow Strait, which was navigated by Parry in 1819-182o. Thus, like the survivors of Franklin's crews when they reached Cape Herschel, M`Clure discovered a north-west passage. It was impossible to reach it, for the stream of heavily packed ice which stopped Franklin off King William Land See also:lay athwart their northward course; so, as soon as he was free in 1851, M`Clure turned southwards, round the southern extreme of Banks Land, and commenced to force a passage to the northward between the western shore of that land and the encrmous See also:fields of ice which pressed upon it.

The cliffs See also:

rose like walls on one side, while on the other the stupendous ice of the " palaeocrystic sea " rose from the water to a level with the " Investigator's " See also:lower yards. After many hairbreadth escapes M`Clure took refuge in a bay on the northern shore of Banks Land, which he named the Bay of 946 See also:God's See also:Mercy. Here the " Investigator " remained, never to move again. After the winter of 1851—1852 M'Clure had made a journey across the ice to Melville Island, and left a record at Parry's winter harbour. Abundant supplies of See also:musk ox were fortunately obtained, but a third winter had to be faced. In the spring of 1853 M'Clure was preparing to abandon the ship with all hands, and attempt, like Franklin's crews, to reach the American coast; but succour arrived in time. The Hudson's Bay Company continued the search for Franklin. In 1848 Sir John Richardson and Dr Rae examined the American coast from the mouth of the Mackenzie to that of the Rae's Coppermine. In 1849 and 185o Rae continued the Journeys. search; and by a long sledge journey in the spring of 1851, and a boat voyage in the summer, he examined the shores of Wollaston and Victoria Lands, which were afterwards explored by Captain Collinson in the " Enterprise. " In 1852 the British government resolved to despatch another expedition by Lancaster Sound. Austin's four vessels were recommissioned, and the " North See also:Star " was sent out as a See also:depot ship at Beechey Island.

Sir Edward See also:

Belcher See also:corn-Belcher. manded the " Assistance, " with the " Pioneer " under Sherard Osborn as steam See also:tender. He went up Wellington Channel to See also:Northumberland Bay, where he wintered, passing a second winter lower down in Wellington Channel, and then abandoning his ships and coming home in 1854. But Sherard Osborn and Com. G. H. See also:Richards did good work. They made sledge journeys to Melville Island, and thus discovered the northern side of the Parry group. Captain Kellett Kellett. received command of the "Resolute, " with M'Clintock in the steam tender "Intrepid." Among Kellett's officers were the best of Austin's sledge-travellers, M'Clintock, Mecham, and Vesey See also:Hamilton, so that good work was sure to be done. George S. See also:Nares, See also:leader of the future expedition of 1874-1895, was also on board the " Resolute." Kellett pressed onwards to the westward and passed the winter of 1852—1853 at Melville Island. During the autumn Mecham discovered M'Clure's record, and the position of the " Investigator " was thus ascertained. Lieut.

Pim made his way to this point early in the following spring, and the officers and crew of the " Investigator," led by M'Clure, arrived safely on board the " Resolute" on the 17th of June 1853. They reached England in the following year, having not only discovered but traversed a north-west passage, though not in the same ship and partly by travelling over ice. For this great feat M'Clure received the See also:

honour of See also:knighthood, and a reward of £io,00o was granted to himself, the other officers, and the crew, by a See also:vote of the House of See also:Commons. The travelling parties of Kellett's expedition, led by M'Clintock, Mecham and Vesey Hamilton, completed the discovery of the northern and western sides of Melville Island, and the whole outline of the large island of Prince See also:Patrick, further west. M'Clintock was away from the ship with his sledge party for one hundred and five days, and travelled over 1328 M. Mecham was away ninety-four days, and travelled over 1163 m. Sherard Osborn, in 1853, was away ninety-seven days, and travelled over 935 M. The " Resolute" was obliged to winter in the pack in 1853—1854, and in the spring of 1854 Mecham made a remarkable journey in the hope of obtaining See also:news of Captain Collinson at the Princess Royal Islands. Leaving the ship on the 3rd of April he was absent seventy days, out of which there were sixty-one and a See also:half days of travelling. The distance gone over was 1336 See also:statute miles. The See also:average See also:rate of the homeward journey was 232 M. a day, the average time of travelling each day nine See also:hours twenty-five minutes. Fearing detention for another winter, Sir Edward Belcher ordered all the ships to be abandoned in the ice, the officers and crews being taken home in the " North Star," and /ngleHel& in the " See also:Phoenix " and " See also:Talbot," which had come out from England to communicate.

They reached home in October 1854. In 1852 Captain Edward A. See also:

Inglefield, R.N., had made a voyage up Baffin Bay in the " See also:Isabel " as far as the entrance of Smith Sound. In 18.53 and 1854 he came out in the " Phoenix " to communicate with the "North Star" at Beechey Island. Rae's Discovery. The See also:drift of the " Resolute " was a remarkable proof of the direction of the current out of Barrow Strait. She was abandoned in 740 41' N. and roe 11' W. on the 14th of May 1854. On the loth of September 1855 an American whaler~Retott, Resoluteee.' sighted the " Resolute " in 67° N. lat. about twenty miles from Cape Mercy, in Davis Strait. She had drifted nearly a thousand miles, and having been brought into an American See also:port, was See also:purchased by the See also:United States and presented to the British government. In 1853 Dr Rae was employed to connect a few points which would quite complete the examination of the coast of America, and establish the insularity of King Willian Land. He went up See also:Chesterfield Inlet and the river Quoich, wintering with eight men at Repulse Bay, where See also:venison and fish were abundant. In 1854 he set out on a journey which occupied fifty-six days in April and May.

He succeeded in connecting the discoveries of Simpson with those of James Ross, and thus established the fact that King William Land was an island. Rae also brought home the first tidings and See also:

relics of Franklin's expedition gathered from the Eskimo, which decided the See also:Admiralty to award him the io,000 offered for definite news of Franklin's fate. Lady Franklin, however, sent out the " Fox " under the command of M'Clintock (see FRANKLIN). M'Clintock prosecuted an exhaustive search over part of the west coast of Boothia, the whole of the shores of King William Island, the mouth of the Great Fish river and Montreal Island, and See also:Allen See also:Young completed the discovery of the southern side of Prince of Wales Island. The See also:catastrophe of' Sir John Franklin's expedition led to 7000 M. of coast-line being discovered, and to a vast extent of unknown country being explored, securing very considerable additions to geographical knowledge. The American nation was first led to take an interest in Polar research through a See also:noble and generous sympathy for Franklin and his companions. Mr See also:Grinnell of New York gave practical expression to this feeling. In 185o he Grinnell Expedition. equipped two vessels, the " Advance " and " See also:Rescue," to aid in the search, commanded by Lieuts. de Haven and Griffith, and accompanied by Dr E. K. See also:Kane. They reached Beechey Island on the 27th of August 185o, and assisted in the examination of Franklin's winter quarters, but returned without wintering.

In 1853 Dr Kane, in the little brig "Advance," of 12o tons, under-took to See also:

lead an American expedition up Smith Sound, the most northern outlet from Baffin Bay. The Kane. " Advance " reached Smith Sound on the 7th of August 1853, but was stopped by ice in 78° 45' N. only 17 M. from the entrance. Kane described the coast as consisting of precipitous cliffs 800 to 1200 ft. high, and at their See also:base there was a See also:belt of ice about 18 ft. thick, resting on the beach. Dr Kane adopted the Danish name of "ice-foot " (is fod) for this permanent frozen ledge. He named the place of his winter quarters Van See also:Rensselaer Harbour. In the spring some interesting work was done. A great See also:glacier was discovered with a sea See also:face 45 M. long and named the See also:Humboldt glacier. Dr Kane's steward, See also:Morton, crossed the foot of this glacier with a team of See also:dogs, and reached a point of land beyond named Cape Constitution. But sickness and want of means prevented much from being done by travelling parties. Scurvy attacked the whole party during the second winter, although the Eskimo supplied them with fresh See also:meat and were true friends in need. On the 17th of May 1855 Dr Kane abandoned the brig, and reached the Danish settlement of Upernivik on the 5th of August.

Lieut. Hartstene, who was sent out to search for Kane, reached the Van Rensselaer Harbour after he had gone, but took the retreating crew on board on his return voyage. On the loth of July i86o Dr I. I. See also:

Hayes, who had served with Kane, sailed from See also:Boston for Smith Sound, in the schooner " United States, " of 130 tons and a crew of fifteen men. His object was to follow up the line of research Hayes. opened by Dr Kane. He wintered at Port Foulke, in 78° 17' N., but achieved nothing of importance, and his narrative is not to be depended on. Charles Hall (q.v.), in his first journey (186o-1862), discovered remains of a stone house which Sir Martin Frobisher built on the stau Countess of Warwick Island in 1578. In his second expedition (1864–1869) Hall reached the line of the See also:retreat of the Franklin survivors, at Todd's Island and Peffer River, on the south coast of King William Island. He heard the story of the retreat and of the wreck of one of the ships from the Eskimo; he was told that seven bodies were buried at Todd Island; and he brought home some bones which are believed to be those of Lieut. Le Vescomte of the " Erebus." Finally, in 1871 he took the " Polaris " for 250 M. Up the channel which leads northwards from Smith Sound.

The various parts of this long channel are called Smith Sound, Kane See also:

Basin, Kennedy Channel and Robeson Channel. The " Polaris " was beset in 82° II' N. on the 3oth of August; her winter quarters were in Thank God Harbour, 810 38' N., and here Hall died. The Spitsbergen seas were explored during last century by Norwegian fishermen as well as by See also:Swedish and German expedi- tions and by British yachtsmen. In 1827 the Nor- Norwegian wegian geologist Keilhau made an expedition to Bear Explorers. Island and Spitsbergen which was the first purely scientific Arctic expedition. The Norwegian Spitsbergen fishery dates from 182o, but it was only in the latter part of the century that Professor Mchn of Christiania carefully collected information from the captains who had taken part in the work when at its height. In 1863 Captain Carlsen circumnavigated the Spitsbergen group for the first time in a brig called the " Jan Mayen." In 1564 Captain Tobiesen sailed round North-East Land. In 1872 Captains Altmann and Nils Johnsen visited Wiche's Land, which was discovered by Captain Edge in 1617. In that year there were twenty-three sailing vessels from See also:Tromso, twenty-four from See also:Hammerfest, and one from Vardo engaged in the Arctic sealing trade, averaging from 35 to 40 tons, and carrying a dozen men. Exploration went on slowly, in the course of the sealing and fishing voyages, the records of which are not very full. In 1869 Carlsen crossed the Kara Sea and reached the mouth of the Ob. In 187o there were about sixty Norwegian vessels in the Barents Sea, and Captain Johannesen circumnavigated Novaya Zemlya.

In 1873 Captain Tobiesen was unfortunately obliged to winter on the Novaya Zemlya coast, owing to the loss of his schooner, and both he and his young son died in the spring. Two years previously Captain Carlsen had succeeded in reaching the winter quarters of Barents, the first visitor since 1597, an See also:

interval of two hundred and seventy-four years. He landed on the 9th of September 1871, and found the house still standing and full of interesting relics, which are now in the naval museum at the See also:Hague. Between 1858 and 1872 the Swedes sent seven expeditions to Spitsbergen and two to Greenland, marking a new scientific Swedish era in Arctic exploration, of which Keilhau had been Expeditions. the pioneer. All returned with valuable scientific results. That of 1864 under A. E. See also:Nordenskiold and Duner made observations at 8o different places on the Spitsbergen shores, and fixed the heights of numerous mountains. In 1868, in an See also:iron steamer, the " Sophia," the Swedes attained a latitude of 81° 42' N. on the See also:meridian of 18° •E., during the See also:month of September. In 1872 an expedition, consisting of the " Polhem " steamer and brig " Gladen," commanded by Professor Nordenskiold and Lieut. Palander, wintered in Mossel Bay on the northern shore of Spitsbergen. In the spring an important sledging journey of sixty days' duration was made over North-East Land.

The expedition was in some See also:

distress as regards supplies owing to two vessels, which were to have returned, having been forced to winter. But in the summer of 1873 they were visited by Mr See also:Leigh Smith, in his yacht " See also:Diana," who supplied them with fresh provisions. Dr A. See also:Petermann of See also:Gotha urged his countrymen to take their See also:share in the work of polar discovery, and at his own See also:risk Koldewey. he fitted out a small vessel called the " Germania," which sailed from Bergen in May 1868, under the command of Captain Koldewey. His cruise extended to Hin- lopen Strait in Spitsbergen, but was merely tentative; and in 187o Baron von See also:Heuglin with See also:Count Zell explored the Stor See also:Fjord in a Norwegian schooner, and also examined See also:Walter Thymen Strait. After the return of the " Germania " in 1868 a See also:regular expedition was organized under the command of Captain Koldewey, provisioned for two years. It consisted of the " Germania," a See also:screw steamer of 140 tons, and the brig " Hansa," commanded by Captain Hegemann. Lieut. See also:Julius Payer, the future explorer of See also:Franz Josef Land, gained his first Arctic experience on board the " Germania." The expedition sailed from Bremen on the 15th of June 1869, its destination being the east coast of Greenland. But in latitude 7o° 46' N. the " Hansa " got separated from her See also:consort and crushed in the ice. The crew built a house of patent See also:fuel on the See also:floe, and in this See also:strange See also:abode they passed their See also:Christmas. In two months the current carried them 400 M. to the south.

By May they had drifted 11oo m. on their ice-raft, and finally, on the 14th of June 187o, they arrived safely at the Moravian See also:

mission station of Friedriksthal, to the west of Cape Farewell. Fairer See also:fortune attended the " Germania." She sailed up the east coast of Greenland as far as 75° 30' N., and eventually wintered at the Pendulum Islands of Clavering in 740 30' N. In See also:March 187o a travelling party set out under Koldewey and Payer, and reached a distance of See also:loo m. from the ship to the northward, when want of See also:pro-visions compelled them to return. A grim cape, named after Prince See also:Bismarck, marked the northern limit of their discoveries. As soon as the vessel was free, a deep branching fjord, named Franz Josef Fjord, was discovered in 73° 15' N. stretching for a long distance into the interior of Greenland. The expedition returned to Bremen on the 11th of September 1870. Lieut. Payer was resolved to continue in the path of polar discovery. He and the naval officer Weyprecht chartered a Norwegian schooner called the " Isbjorn," and examined the edge of the ice between Spitsbergen Payer and and Novaya Zemlya, in the summer of 1871. Their Weyprecht. observations led them to select the route by the north end of Novaya Zemlya with a view to making the north-east passage. It was to be an Austro-Hungarian expedition, and the See also:idea was seized with See also:enthusiasm by the whole See also:monarchy. Weyprecht was to command the ship, while Julius Payer conducted the sledge parties.

The steamer " Tegethoff," of 30o tons, was fitted out in the See also:

Elbe, and left Tromso on the 14th of July 1872. The season was severe, and the vessel was closely beset near Cape Nassau, at the northern end of Novaya Zemlya, in the end of August. The summer of 1873 found her still a See also:close prisoner drifting, not with a current, but chiefly in the direction of the prevailing wind. At length, on the 31st of August, a mountainous country was sighted about 14 m. to the north. In October the vessel was drifted within 3 M. of an island lying off the See also:main See also:mass of land. Payer landed on it, and found the latitude to be 79° S4' N. It was named after. Count Wilczek, one of the warmest friends of the expedition. Here the second winter was passed. Bears were numerous and sixty-seven were killed, their meat proving to be an efficient preventive of scurvy. In March 1874 Payer made a preliminary sledge journey in intense cold (thermometer at -58° F.). On the 24th of March he started for a more prolonged journey of thirty days.

Payer believed that the newly discovered country equalled Spitsbergen in extent, and described it as consisting of two or more large masses—Wilczek Land to the east, Zichy Land to the west, intersected by numerous fjords and skirted by alarge number of islands. A wide channel, named See also:

Austria Sound, was supposed to See also:separate the two main masses of land, and extend to 82° N. The whole country was named Franz Josef Land. Payer's large land-masses have by later discoveries been broken up into See also:groups of islands and much of the land he thought he saw towards the east was found by See also:Nansen not to exist. Payer returned to the " Tegethoff " on the 24th of April; and a third journey was undertaken to explore a large island named after M'Clintock. It then became necessary to abandon the ship and attempt a retreat in boats. This perilous voyage was commenced on the loth of May. Three boats stored with provisions were placed on sledges. It was not until the 14th of August that they reached the edge of the pack in 77° 40' N., and launched the boats. observations had ever been taken before, and large See also:geological and Eventually they were picked up by a Russian schooner and arrived at Vardo on the 3rd of September 1874. One of the most interesting problems connected with the physical geography of the polar regions is the actual condition whympgr. of the vast elevated interior of Greenland, which is one enormous glacier. In 1867 Mr Edward See also:Whymper planned an expedition to solve the question, and went to See also:Green- land, accompanied by Dr Robert Brown; but their progress was stopped, after going a short distance over the ice, by the breaking down of the dog-sledges. The expedition brought home geo- logical and natural history collections of value.

Dr H. Rink, for many years royal inspector of South Greenland and the most distinguished authority on all Greenlandic questions, also visited the inland ice. An important inland journey was undertaken by See also:

Norden. Professor A. E. Nordenskiold in 187o, accompanied Amid in by Dr Berggren, professor of See also:botany at See also:Lund. The Greenland. difficulty of traversing the inland ice of Greenland is caused by the vast ice-cap being in See also:constant See also:motion, advancing slowly towards the sea. This See also:movement gives rise to huge crevasses which See also:bar the traveller's way. The chasms occur chiefly where the movement of the ice is most rapid, near the ice streams which reach the sea and See also:discharge icebergs. Nordenskiold therefore See also:chose for a starting-point the northern See also:arm of a deep inlet called Auleitsivikfjord, which is 6o m. south of the discharging glacier at Jakobshavn and 240 north of that at Godthaab. He commenced his inland journey on the 19th of July. The party consisted of himself, Dr Berggren, and two Greenlanders; and they advanced 30 M. over the glaciers to a height of 2200 ft. above the sea.

The gallant enterprises of other countries rekindled the zeal of Great See also:

Britain for Arctic discovery; and in 1874 the See also:prime British See also:minister announced that an expedition would be Expedition despatched in the following year. Two powerful of1875. steamers, the " Alert " and " Discovery," were selected for the service, and Captain George S. Nares was recalled from the " Challenger " expedition to act as leader. See also:Commander Albert H. See also:Markham, who had made a cruise up Baffin Bay and Barrow Strait in a whaler during the previous year, Lieut. See also:Pelham See also:Aldrich, an accomplished surveyor, and Captain Henry See also:Wemyss Feilden, R.A., as naturalist, were also in the " .Alert." The " Discovery " was commanded by Captain Henry F. See also:Stephenson, with Lieut. See also:Lewis A. See also:Beaumont as first See also:lieutenant. The expedition left See also:Portsmouth on the 29th of May 1875, and entered Smith Sound in the last days of July. After much difficulty with drifting ice Lady Franklin Bay was reached in 81° 44' N., where the " Discovery " was established in winter quarters. The " Alert " pressed onwards, and reached the edge of the heavy ice named by Nares the palaeocrystic sea, the ice-floes being from 8o to Too ft. in thickness.

Leaving Robeson Channel, the vessel made progress between the land and the grounded floe pieces, and passed the winter off the open coast and facing the great polar pack, in 82° 27' N. Autumn travelling parties were despatched in September and October to lay out depots; and during the winter a complete scheme was matured for the examination of as much of the unknown See also:

area as possible, by the combined efforts of sledging parties from the two ships, in the ensuing spring. The parties started on the 3rd of April 1876. Captain Markham with Lieut. See also:Parr advanced, in the face of great difficulties, over the polar pack to the latitude of 83° 20' N. Lieut. Aldrich explored the coast-line to the westward, facing the frozen polar ocean, for a distance of 220 M. Lieut. Beaumont made discoveries of great interest along the northern coast of Green-land. The parties were attacked by scurvy, which increased the difficulty and hardships of the work a hundredfold. The expedition returned to England in October 1876. The " Alert " reached a higher latitude and wintered farther north than any ship had ever done before.

The results of the expedition were the discovery of 300 M. of new coast line, the examination of part of the frozen polar ocean, a series of meteorological, magnetic and tidal observations at two points farther north than any such Lei the Greenland icebergs are generally angular and S mih Smith. peaked, those of Franz Josef Land are See also:

flat on the See also:top, like the Antarctic bergs. The " Eira " sailed along the south side of Franz Josef Land to the westward and discovered rio m. of coast-line of a new island named Alexandra Land, until the coast trended north-west. A landing was effected at several points, and valuable collections were made in natural history. In the following year the same explorer left See also:Peterhead on the 14th of July; Franz Josef Land was sighted on the 23rd of July, and the " Eira " reached a point farther west than had been possible in her previous voyage. But in August the ship was caught in the ice, was nipped, and sank. A hut was built on shore in which Mr Leigh Smith and his crew passed the winter of 1881-1882, their See also:health being well maintained, thanks to the exertions of Dr W. H. See also:Neale. On the 21st of June 1882 they started in four boats to reach some vessels on the Novaya Zemlya coast. It was a most laborious and perilous voyage. They were first seen and welcomed by the " Willem Barents " on the 2nd of August, and soon afterwards were taken on board the "Hope," a whaler which had come out to search for them under the command of Sir Allen Young.

Professor A. E. Nordenskiold, when he projected the achievement of the north-east passage, was a See also:

veteran polar explorer, for he had been in six previous expeditions to Greenland and Spitsbergen. In 1875 he turned his attention to the possibility of navigating the seas along the northern coast of Siberia. Captain Joseph Wiggins of See also:Sunderland was a pioneer of this route, natural history collections. In the same year 1895 Sir Allen Young undertook a voyage in his steam yacht the " See also:Pandora " to attempt to force his way down Peel Sound to the magnetic pole, and if possible voyages to make the north-west passage by rounding the of the eastern shore of King William Island. The " Pandora" "Pandora." entered Peel Sound on the 29th of August 1875, and proceeded down it much farther than any vessel had gone since it was passed by Franklin's two ships in 1846. Sir Allen reached a latitude of 72° 14' N., and sighted Cape See also:Bird, at the northern side of the western entrance of Bellot Strait. But here ice barred his progress, and he was obliged to retrace his track, returning to England on the 16th of October 1875. In the following year Sir Allen Young made another voyage in the " Pandora " to the entrance of Smith Sound. Lieut. Koolemans Beynen, a young Dutch officer, who had shared Young's two polar voyages, on his return successfully endeavoured to interest his countrymen in polar discovery.

It was wisely determined that the first Dutch Expeditlons. expeditions of See also:

Holland should be summer reconnais- sances on a small See also:scale. A sailing schooner of 79 tons was built at Amsterdam, and named the "Willem Barents." In her first cruise she was commanded by Lieut. A. de Bruyne, with Koolemans Beynen as second, and she sailed from Holland on the 6th of May 1878. Her instructions were to examine the ice in the Barents and Spitsbergen seas, take deep-sea soundings, and make natural history collections. She was also to erect memorials to early Dutch polar worthies at certain designated points. These instructions were ably and zealously carried out. Beynen died in the following year, but the work he initiated was carried on, the " Willem Barents " continuing to make See also:annual polar cruises for many years. In 1879 Sir Henry See also:Gore-Booth and Captain A. H. Markham, R.N., in the Norwegian schooner " Isbjorn " sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya to its most northern Gore-Booth point, passed through the Matochkin Shar to the east and See also:Mark-coast, and examined the ice in the direction of Franz See also:ham. Josef Land as far as 78° 24' N., bringing home collections in various branches of natural history, and making useful observations on the drift and nature of the ice in the Barents and Kara Seas.

In 188o Mr B. Leigh Smith, who had previously made three voyages to Spitsbergen, reached Franz Josef Land in the polar steam yacht " Eira." It was observed that, while and his voyages in 1874, 1895 and 1876 led the way for a trade between the ports of Europe and the mouth of the Yenisei River. Norden- In June 1875 Professor Nordenskiold sailed from skiold and Tromso in the Norwegian vessel, the " Proven," the N.E. reached the Yenisei by way of the Kara Sea, and dis- Passage. covered an excellent harbour on the eastern side of its mouth, which was named Port See also:

Dickson, in honour of Baron Oscar Dickson of See also:Gothenburg, the munificent supporter of the Swedish expeditions. It having been suggested that the success of this voyage was due to the unusual state of the ice in 1875, Nordenskiold undertook a voyage in the following year in the " Ymer," which was equally successful. By a See also:minute study of the history of former attempts, and a careful See also:consideration of all the circumstances, Professor Nordenskiold convinced himself that the achievement of the north-east passage was feasible. The king of See also:Sweden, Baron Oscar Dickson, and M. Sibiriakoff, a wealthy Siberian proprietor, supplied the funds, and the steamer " See also:Vega " was purchased. Nordenskiold was leader of the expedition, Lieut. Palander was appointed commander of the ship, and there was an efficient See also:staff of officers and naturalists, including Lieut. Hovgaard of the Danish and Lieut. Bove of the See also:Italian navy. A small steamer called the " Lena " was to keep company with the " Vega " as far as the mouth of the Lena, and they sailed from Gothenburg on the 4th of July 1878.

On the See also:

morning of the loth of August they left Port Dickson, and on the 19th they reached the most northern point of Siberia, Cape Chelyuskin, in 770 41' N. On leaving the extreme northern point of Asia a south-easterly course was steered, the sea being free from ice and very shallow. This absence of ice is to some extent due to the mass of warm water discharged by the great Siberian See also:rivers during the summer. On the 27th of August the mouth of the river Lena was passed, and the " Vega " parted company with the little "Lena," continuing her course eastward. Professor Nordenskiold very nearly made the north-east passage in one season; but towards the end of September the " Vega " was frozen in off the shore of a See also:low See also:plain in 67° 7' N. and 173° 20' W. near the settlements of the Chukchis. During the voyage very large and important natural history collections were made, and the interesting aboriginal tribe among whom the winter was passed was studied with great care. The interior was also explored for some distance. On the 18th of July 1879, after having been imprisoned by the ice for 294 days, the " Vega " again proceeded on her voyage and passed Bering Strait on the loth. Sir Hugh Willoughby made his disastrous attempt in 1553. After a See also:lapse of 326 years of intermittent effort, the north-east passage had at length been accomplished without the loss of a single life and without damage to the vessel. The " Vega " arrived at See also:Yokohama on the 2nd of September 1879. In 1879 an enterprise was undertaken in the United States, with the object of throwing further light on the sad history of the retreat of the officers and men of Sir John Franklin's expedition, by examining the west coast of King William Island in the summer, when the snow is off the ground.

The party consisted of Lieut. Schwatka of the United States See also:

army and three others. Wintering near the entrance of See also:Chester- field Inlet in Hudson Bay, they set out overland for the See also:estuary of the Great Fish river, assisted by Eskimo and dogs, on the 1st of April 1879. They took only one month's provisions, their main reliance being upon the See also:game afforded by the region to be traversed. ' The party obtained, during the journeys out and home, no less than 522 See also:reindeer. After See also:collecting various stories from the Eskimo at Montreal Island and at an inlet west of Cape Richardson, Schwatka crossed over to Cape Herschel on King William Land in June. He examined the western shore of the island with the greatest care for relics of Sir John Franklin's parties, as far as Cape Felix, the northern extremity. The return journey was commenced in See also:November by ascending the Great Fish river for some distance and then marching over the intervening region to Hudson Bay. The cold of the winter months in that country is intense, the thermometer falling as low as — 70° F., so that the return journey was most remarkable, and reflects the highest See also:credit on Lieut. Schwatka and his companions. As regards the search little was left to be done after M` Clintock, but some See also:graves were found, as well as a See also:medal belonging to Lieut. See also:Irving of H.M.S.

" Terror," and some bones believed to be his, which were brought home and interred at See also:

Edinburgh. Mr See also:Gordon See also:Bennett, the proprietor of the New York See also:Herald, having resolved to despatch an expedition of discovery at his own expense by way of Bering Strait, the " Pandora " De Long. was purchased from Sir Allen Young, and rechristened the " See also:Jeannette." Lieut. de Long of the United States navy was appointed to command, and it was made a See also:national undertaking by See also:special act of See also:Congress, the vessel being placed under See also:martial law and officered from the navy. The " Jeannette " sailed from See also:San Francisco on the 8th of July 1879, and was last seen steaming towards Wrangell Land on the 3rd of September. This land had been seen by Captain Kellett, in H.M.S. " Herald " on the 17th of August 1879, but no one had landed on it, and it was shown on the charts by a long dotted line. The " Jeannette " was provisioned for three years, but as no tidings had been received of her by 1881, two steamers were sent up Bering Strait in search. One of these, the " See also:Rodgers," under Lieut. See also:Berry, anchored in a good harbour on the south coast of Wrangell Land, in 70 57' N., on the 26th of August 1881. The land was explored by the officers of the " Rodgers " and found to be an island about 70 M. long by 28, with a See also:ridge of hills traversing it east and west, the 71st parallel See also:running along its southern shore. Lieut. Berry then proceeded to examine the ice to the north-ward, and attained a higher latitude by 21 m. than had ever been reached before on the Bering Strait meridian—namely, 730 44' N. No news was obtained of the " Jeannette," but soon afterwards See also:melancholy tidings arrived from Siberia.

After having been beset in heavy pack ice for twenty-two months, the " Jeannette " was crushed and sunk on the 13th of June 1881, in 77° 15' N. lat., and 155° E. long. The officers and men dragged their boats over the ice to an island which was named Bennett Island, where they landed on the 29th of July. They reached one of the New Siberia Islands on the loth of September, and on the 12th they set out for the mouth of the Lena. But in the same evening the three boats were separated in a gale of wind. A boat's crew with Mr Melville, the engineer, reached the Lena See also:

delta and searching for the other parties found the ship's books on the 14th of November, and resuming the search at the earliest possible moment in spring, Melville discovered the dead bodies of De Long and two of his crew on the 23rd of March 1882. They had perished from exhaustion and want of See also:food. Three survivors of De Long's party had succeeded in making their way to a Siberian See also:village; but the third boat's crew was lost. The " Rodgers " was burnt in its winter quarters, and one of the officers, W. H. See also:Gilder (1838-1900), made a hazardous journey homewards through north-east Siberia. The Norwegian geologist Professor Amund Helland made an expedition to Greenland in 1875 and discovered the Reiland. marvellously rapid movements of the Greenland glaciers. The Danes have been very active in prosecuting discoveries and scientific investigations in Greenland, since the journey of Nordenskiold in 187o.

Lieut. See also:

Jensen made a gallant attempt to penetrate the inland ice in 1878, urees in enland. collecting important observations, and Dr Steenstrup, with Lieut. Hammar, closely investigated the formation of ice masses at Omenak and Jacobshavn. In 1883 an expedition under Lieuts. Holm and Garde began to explore the east coast of Greenland. In the summer of 1879 Captain Mourier, of the Danish man-of-See also:war " Ingolf," sighted the coast from the 6th to the loth of July, and was enabled to observe and delineate it from 68° ro' N. to 65° 55' N., this being the See also:gap left between the discoveries of Scoresby in 1822 and those of Graah in 1829. Nansen sighted part of the same coast in 1882. Lieut. Hovgaard of the Danish navy, who accompanied Nordenskiold in his discovery of the north-east passage, planned an expedition to ascertain' if land existed to the north of Schwatka. Cape Chelyuskin. He fitted out a small steamer called the " Dymphna " and sailed from See also:Copenhagen in July 1882, but was unfortunately beset and obliged to winter in the Kara Sea.

In 1883 Baron A. E. Nordenskiold undertook another journey over the inland ice of Greenland. Starting from Auleitsivikfjord on the 4th of July, his party penetrated 84 M. eastward, and to an See also:

altitude of 5000 ft. The Laplanders who were of the party were sent farther on snow-shoes, travelling over a See also:desert of snow to a height of 7000 ft. Useful results in physical geography and See also:biology were obtained. On the 18th of September 1875 Lieut. Weyprecht, one of the discoverers of Franz Josef Land, read a See also:paper before a large meet- See also:ing of German naturalists at See also:Graz on the scientific Static results to be obtained from polar research and the Stations, s. best means of securing them. He urged the See also:im- portance of establishing a number of stations within or near the Arctic Circle, and also a See also:ring of stations as near as possible to the Antarctic Circle, in order to record complete series of synchronous meteorological and magnetic observations. Lieut. Weyprecht did not live to see his suggestions carried into See also:execution, but they See also:bore See also:fruit in due time. The various nations of Europe were represented at an See also:international polar See also:conference held at See also:Hamburg in 1879 under the See also:presidency of Dr Georg Neumayer, and at another at Berne in 188o; and it was decided that each nation should establish one or more stations where synchronous observations should be taken for a year from August 1882.

This See also:

fine project was matured and successfully carried into execution. The stations arranged for in the North Polar region were at the following localities: Norwegians: Bossekop, See also:Alten Fjord, Norway (M. Aksel S. See also:Steen). Swedes: Ice Fjord, Spitsbergen (Professor N. Ekholm). Dutch: Port Dickson, mouth of Yenisei, Siberia (Dr M. Snellen). Russins: Sagastyr Island, mouth of Lena, Siberia (Lieut. Jurgens). Novaya Zemlya, 72° 23' N. (Lieut.

C. Andreief). Finns: Sodankyla, See also:

Finland (Professor S. Lemstrom). i Americans: Point Barro'r', North America (Lieut. P. H. See also:Ray, U.S.A.). ( Lady Franklin Bay, 81' 44 N.(Lieut.A.W.Greely,U.S.A). British : Great Slave Lake, Dominion of See also:Canada (Lieut. H. P.

See also:

Dawson). Germans: Cumberland Bay, west side of Davis Strait (Dr W. Giese). Danes: Godthaab, Greenland (Dr A. See also:Paulsen). Austrians: Jan Mayen, North Atlantic, 71° N.(Lieut. See also:Wohlgemuth). The whole scheme was successfully accomplished with the exception of the part assigned to the Dutch at Port Dickson. They started in the " See also:Varna " but were beset in the Kara Sea and obliged to winter there. The " Varna " was lost, and the crew took refuge on board Lieut. Hovgaard's vessel, which was also forced to winter in the pack during 1882-1883. The scientific observations were kept up on both vessels during the time they were drifting with the ice.

The American stations commenced work in 1882 and one of these furnished a rare example of heroic devotion to See also:

duty in Greely, face of difficulties due to the See also:fault of those who should have brought See also:relief at the appointed time. Lieut. A. W. Greely's party consisted of two other lieutenants, twenty sergeants and privates of the United States army, and Dr Pavy, an enthusiastic explorer who had been educated in See also:France and had passed the previous winter among the Eskimo of Greenland. On the r 1th of August 1881 the steamer " See also:Proteus " conveyed Lieut. Greely and his party to Lady Franklin Bay during an exceptionally favourable season; a house was built at the " Discovery's" winter quarters, and they were left with two years' provisions. The regular series of observations was at once commenced, and two winters were passed without accident. Travelling parties were also sent out in the summer, dogs having been obtained at Disco. Lieut. See also:Lockwood with twelve men and eleven sledges made a journey along the north coast of Greenland and reached Lockwood Island in 83° 24' N. and 42° 45' W., the highest latitude reached up to that time. From this island at a height of 2600 ft. on a clear day an unbroken expanse of ice was seen stretching to the northward, the view extending far beyond the 84th parallel.

A promontory of the north coast of Greenland seen to the north-east in 83° 35' N. was named Cape See also:

Washington. Vegetation was found at the extreme position and See also:animal life was represented by foxes, See also:hares,lemmings and See also:ptarmigan. The party returned to Fort Conger on the 1st of June 1882 after an absence of 59 days. Greely made two journeys westward into the interior of Grinnell Land following up the northern branch of See also:Chandler Fjord to a great See also:sheet of frozen 'fresh water, Hazen Lake, with an area of about 500 sq. m. Beyond this, 175 M. from Fort Conger, he climbed Mt Arthur, 4500 ft., the highest See also:summit of Grinnell Land, and saw distant mountains beyond a fjord to the southwest. In the spring of 1883 Lockwood made still more extensive journeys, crossing Grinnell Land to Greely Fjord, which entered the western sea. The central depression of Grinnell Land abounded in musk oxen and was free from ice, though the higher land to north and south lay under permanent ice-caps. Important as these geographical discoveries were, the main object of the expedition was the series of scientific observations at the headquarters, and these were carried out during the whole period with the most scrupulous exactness. As neither the relief ship which was to have been despatched in 1882, nor that in 1883, sent the expected relief to the station at Fort Conger, Lieut. Greely started from Lady Franklin Bay with his men in a steam See also:launch and three boats on the 9th of August, expecting to find a vessel in Smith Sound. The boats were beset and had to be abandoned, the party reaching the shore across the ice with great difficulty, carrying their supplies of food, now rapidly diminishing. On the 21st of October 1883 they were obliged to encamp at Cape Sabine, on the western shore of Smith Sound, and build a hut for wintering.

A few depots were found, which had been left by Sir George Nares and Lieut. Beebe, but all supplies were exhausted before the spring. Then came a time of indescribable misery and acute suffering. The party proved insubordinate and the sternest See also:

measures were required to maintain military discipline. When the sun returned in 1884 the poor See also:fellows began to See also:die of actual starvation; but it was not until the 22nd of June 1884 that the relieving steamers " See also:Thetis " and " Bear " reached Cape Sabine. Lieut. Greely and six suffering companions were found just alive, but with all their scientific records, their See also:instruments in order and the great collections of specimens intact. The failure of the relief expeditions to overcome difficulties which were See also:child's See also:play to what Greely and his companions had come through only enhances the splendid courage and determination of the heroic survivors. Danish expeditions under Lieut. G. Holm explored the east coast of Greenland from Cape Farewell northwards in Eskimo boats between 1883 and 1885, and at Angmagssalik they encountered a tribe of Eskimo who had never seen white men before. Lieut.

See also:

Ryder and Lieut. T. V. Garde continued the exploration of East Greenland, and Ryder explored the great Scoresby Fjord. Captain Holm established a missionary and meteorological station at Angmagssalik Fjord in 1894, from which the Danish government take See also:charge of the Eskimo of that region. In 1892-1893 an expedition sent out by the See also:Berlin Geographical Society under Dr Erich von Drygalski studied the ice formations on the west of Greenland. In July 1886 Lieut. Robert E. See also:Peary, See also:civil engineer, U.S. Navy, accompanied by the Dane Christian Maigaard, made a journey on the inland ice of Greenland eastward from Disco Bay in about 69° 30' N. They reached a height of Peary and 7500 ft., when according to Peary's observations Nansen in they were loo m. from the coast, and then re- Greenland. turned. Dr Fridtjof Nansen with See also:Otto See also:Sverdrup and five other companions, after overcoming great difficulties in penetrating the ice-floes, succeeded in landing on the east coast of Greenland in August 1888 in 64° 23' N. and reached a height of 8920 ft, on the inland ice, which was crossed on See also:ski to the west coast.

The interior was found to be a nearly flat See also:

plateau of snow resembling a frozen ocean, and at the high altitude of more than 8000 ft. the cold was intense. The crossing occupied more than two weeks, and the party not having dogs had themselves to haul all their See also:gear on sledges. As they approached the western edge of the ice their progress was checked by dangerous crevasses; but on the 26th of September they succeeded in reaching the west coast at the head of the Ameralik Fjord in 64° 12' N., having traversed 26c m. of glacier. Nansen discovered that in that reasoning, but the methods were totally at variance with those latitude the inland ice of Greenland has the form of a huge See also:shield rising rather rapidly but regularly from the east coast to nearly goon ft., flat and even in the middle and falling again regularly toward the western side, completely enveloping the land. An important principle acted on for the first time in Arctic travel on this journey was that of starting from the less accessible side and pushing straight through with no possibility of turning back, and thus with no See also:necessity for forming a base or traversing the same route twice over. Peary spent the winter of 1891—1892 at Inglefield Gulf on the north-west coast of Greenland, Mrs Peary, Dr F. A. Cook, Eivind Astrup and a coloured servant See also:Matthew Henson being in his party, and a large number of the See also:Etah Eskimo in the vicinity. In April 1892 he set out for a journey across the inland ice to the north-eastward in the hope of reaching the east coast and also the northern extremity of the land. After getting well up on the ice-covered plateau a supporting party returned to winter quarters, while Peary and Astrup, with two companions and sixteen dogs, entered on the serious part of their work. The highest part of the inland ice was found to be about 5700 ft., and as usual after the first part of the descent, towards the north-east in this See also:case, the surface was broken by numerous dangerous crevasses, progress amongst which was very slow. Great hardships were experienced from cold, insufficiency of food and the wearing out of sledges and clothes, but on the 4th of July, having left the ice and got on See also:bare land in 81° 37' N., where musk oxen and other game were found and See also:flowers were growing, Peary was rewarded by a glimpse of the sea to the north-eastward, and named it from the date See also:Independence Bay.

He also traced a channel to the north beyond which lay a new land largely free from snow, no doubt the southern part of the island along the north of which Markham and Lockwood had travelled to their farthest north. The return journey to Inglefield Gulf was a wonderful feat of endurance, which was completed on the 4th of August; the See also:

total distance marched on the whole journey out and home was 1300 m. Peary returned to northern Greenland in 1893, having spent the whole time between the two expeditions in writing and lecturing in order to raise funds, for he travelled at his own charges. He landed on the shore of Inglefield Gulf on the 3rd of August and wintered there with a party of thirteen, including Mrs Peary, and there their daughter was See also:born. Astrup was taken ill after starting on the great journey in March 1894, which was to have extended the explorations of the previous year, and had to return; others were severely See also:frost-bitten, disease broke out amongst the dogs, and a month after the start Peary was only 130 M. from his base and had to return. Peary with two of his party, Hugh J. See also:Lee and Matthew Henson, remained at Inglefield Gulf for another winter, and on the 1st of April 1895, with deer and walrus meat in place of See also:pemmican, the See also:supply of which had been lost, set out for Independence Bay. They reached the ice-free land when their food was exhausted and fortunately fell in with a See also:herd of musk oxen, the meat from which made it possible to get back to Inglefield Gulf, though without adding anything material to the results of 1892. The experience of ice-travel and of Eskimo nature gained in the four years' almost continuous See also:residence in northern Greenland were however destined to bear See also:rich fruit. Dr Nansen, after making an exhaustive study of the winds and currents of the Arctic Sea, and influenced largely by the Nansen; occurrence of driftwood on the shores past which the Drift of the ice-laden waters flowed southward between Green-" Fram." land and Spitsbergen, satisfied himself that there was a general drift across the polar basin and perhaps across the Pole. He planned an expedition to take See also:advantage of this drift on the principle which guided his crossing of Greenland, that of entering at the least accessible point and not turning back, thus having no line of retreat and making a relief expedition impossible. He planned a ship, the " Fram," which was immensely strong, to resist crushing, and of such a See also:section that if nipped in the ice the opposing ice-masses would pass under her and lift her on to the surface.

The plan of the expedition was based on scientific of previous explorers. Otto Sverdrup, who had been one of Nansen's party in crossing Greenland, was captain of the "Fram," and the party included eleven others, the whole ship's company of thirteen living together on terms of social equality. Nansen paid the greatest possible attention to the provisions, and all the arrangements for the health and happiness of those on board were carefully thought out. The clothing of the expedition was as See also:

original in See also:design as the ship; instead of having furs, thick woollen underclothing was adopted, with a light wind-proof material for the See also:outer See also:dress. The " Fram " left Christiania in the summer of 1893 and made her way through the Kara Sea and along the north coast of Asia until on the loth of September she was run into the ice in 770 30' N., off the New Siberia Islands, and the great drift commenced. As anticipated, she rose to the pressure of the ice and was See also:borne on an even See also:keel high above the water for the whole duration of the drift. The movement of the ice was irregular, and on the 7th of November the "Fram " was back at her starting-point, but on the whole the movement was north-westward until the 15th of November 1895, when the highest latitude of the ship was attained, 85° 55' N. in 66° 31' E., the meridian of the east of Novaya Zemlya; then it was westward and finally southward until the ice was broken by See also:blasting round the ship in June in 83° N. lat.; and after being afloat, though unable to make much progress until the middle of July, the " Fram " broke out of the ice off the north coast of Spitsbergen on the 13th of August 1896. No ship before or since has reached so high a latitude. In all her drift the "Fram" came in sight of no new land, but the soundings made through the ice proved that the Arctic Sea was of great depth, increasing towards the Pole, the greatest depth exceeding 2000 fathoms. The great mass of water filling the polar basin was comparatively warm, indicating free circulation with the Atlantic. It was established that the ice formed off the coast of Asia drifted across the polar basin in a period of from three to five years, and the See also:hypothesis on the truth of which Nansen risked his success was abundantly verified by facts. The ship's company all returned in perfect health.

After the second winter on the " Fram " at a time when the northward movement of the. drift seemed to be checked, Nansen, accompanied by Lieut. Hjalmar Johansen, left the ship in order to explore the regions towards the Pole by travelling on ski with dog sledges carrying kayaks. It was obviously hopeless to attempt to find the drifting ship on their return, and Nansen intended to make for Spitsbergen in the hope of See also:

meeting one of the tourist steamers there. A more daring plan was never formed, and it was justified by success. Leaving the ship on the 14th of March 1895 in 84® N. 102° E., they made a fairly rapid march northward, reaching a latitude of 86° 5' N. on the 8th of April, the nearest approach to the Pole so far achieved. Turning south-westwards they travelled with much difficulty, sometimes on the ice, sometimes in kayaks in the open lanes of water, incur-ring great danger from the attacks of bears and walrus, but at length reaching a group of new islands east of Franz Josef Land. They travelled westward through this archipelago until the 28th of August, when they built a small stone hut roofed with their light See also:silk See also:tent, in which they passed the winter on a land since called Frederick See also:Jackson Island. There they lived like Eskimo on bear and walrus meat cooked over a blubber See also:lamp. The journey southward was resumed in the spring of 1896, and on the 15th of June they met Mr F. G. Jackson, in whose relief ship, the " Windward," they returned to Norway.

Nansen and Johansen reached Vardo on the 13th of August 1896 full of anxiety for the fate of their old comrades, when by a coincidence unparalleled in the history of exploration, the " Fram " was on that very day breaking out of the ice off Spitsbergen and the original party of thirteen was reunited at Tromso the following See also:

week and returned together to Christiania. On this remarkable expedition no life was lost and the ship came back undamaged under the skilled guidance of Sverdrup with a great See also:harvest of scientific results. Mr Frederick George Jackson planned an exploring expedition to attain a high latitude by the Franz Josef Land route and was supported financially by Mr A. C. Harmsworth (See also:Lord North-Jackson.. cliffe). He was accompanied by Lieut. Albert Harmsworth Armitage, R.N.R., as second in command and six Expedition. scientific men, including Dr Reginald Koettlitz; Dr W. S. See also:Bruce also was one of the number in the second year. The Jackson-Harmsworth expedition sailed in 1894, and was landed at Cape See also:Flora, where See also:log houses were built. In the spring of 1895 Jackson made a journey northward to 81° 19' N., the highest latitude reached, and added considerably to our knowledge of the archipelago by discovering a channel between groups of islands west of the Austria Sound of Payer. He made numerous other journeys by land and in boats, and surveyed a considerable portion of the islands on which he landed, the most interesting being that of 1897, to the western portion of the group.

The geological collections were of some value and the specimens secured indicated that Franz Josef Land and Spitsbergen were parts of an extensive land existing in See also:

Tertiary times. The expedition returned in 1897. In 1897 and subsequent years a party led by Sir Martin See also:Conway explored the interior of Spitsbergen. Dr A. G. Nathorst, the Swedish geologist, explored the eastern coast and off-lying islands, and made important observations on North-East Land, circumnavigating the Spitsbergen archipelago in 1898. In 1899 Nathorst visited the north-east coast of Greenland in search of See also:Andree's See also:balloon expedition, and here he mapped Franz Josef Fjord and discovered the great King Oscar Fjord in waters that had never been navigated before. In subsequent years valuable surveys and scientific observations were made by the Prince of See also:Monaco in his yacht "Princesse Alice," by Dr W. S. Bruce, notably on Prince Charles Foreland, and by others. Franz Josef Land was visited by the American explorer W. Wellman in 1898 and 1900, and his companion E.

See also:

Baldwin in the former year made the discovery of several islands in the east of the archipelago. A wealthy American, W. Zeigler, also sent out expeditions to Franz Josef Land in 1901 and between 1903 and 1905, in the course of which A. Fiala reached the high latitude of 82° 4' N. in the " America," but the ship was afterwards lost in See also:Teplitz Bay. These expeditions added little to our knowledge of polar geography, but some useful meteorological, magnetic and tidal observations were made. The Italian expedition under the command of H.R.H. Prince See also:Luigi, See also:duke of the Abruzzi, was the most successful of all those which have attempted to reach high latitudes by Duke of the way of Franz Josef Land. Embarking in the Abruzzi. summer of 1899 on the " Stella Polare " (formerly the Norwegian whaler " See also:Jason " which had landed Nansen on the east coast of Greenland in 1888) the expedition put into Teplitz Bay in See also:Rudolf Land, where they wintered and there the ship was seriously damaged by the ice. In the spring of 1900 a determined effort was made to reach the North Pole by sledging over the sea-ice. The duke of the Abruzzi having been disabled by frost-bite, the leadership of the northern party devolved upon Captain Umberto Cagni of the Italian navy, who started on the iith of March 1900 with ten men (Alpine guides and Italian sailors) and nearly a hundred dogs. His plan was to sledge northward over the sea-ice, sending back two parties as the diminishing stores allowed the advance party to take on the whole of the supplies destined to support them on their way to the Pole and back.

Before losing sight of Rudolf Island three men forming the first party started to return, but they never reached winter quarters and all must have perished. The second party went back from latitude 83° 10' N., and reached their base in safety. Cagni pushed on with three companions, determined if he could not reach the Pole at least to outdistance his predecessor Nansen, and on the 25th of April 1900 he succeeded in reaching 86° 34' N. in 65° 20' E. Diminishing food supplies made it necessary to turn at this point, and although he had reached it in 45 days it took Cagni 6o days to return. The advance of summer loosened the ice-floes, and the westward component of the drift of the pack became a more and more serious danger, threatening to carry the party past Franz Josef Land without sighting it. Fortunately Cape See also:

Mill, a headland of characteristic outline, was sighted just in time, and with this as a See also:guide the party succeeded in reaching Teplitz Bay, having eaten the last of their dogs and been reduced to great extremities. At the farthest north no land was visible, the rough sea-ice extending to the See also:horizon on every side. As early as 1895 a scheme for an exploring expedition in a balloon was put forward seriously, and in 1897 the Swedish aeronaut S. A. Andree carried it out. He had Andree. brought a balloon to Danes Island, in the north of . Spitsbergen, the previous year, but the See also:weather was unpropitious and the ascent had to be postponed.

On the Loth of July 1897 he started in a new and larger balloon with about five tons of supplies and two companions. It was hoped that the balloon could be steered to some extent by the use of heavy guide See also:

ropes dragging over the ice, and Andree had already made successful flights in this way. Rising at 2.30 p.m. the balloon was out of sight of Danes Island in an See also:hour. At 10 p.m. Andree threw out a See also:buoy containing a See also:message which was recovered, and this stated that the balloon was in 82° N. 25° E., moving towards the north-east at an altitude of 800 ft. above a rugged ice-field. This was the last news received, and although scarcely a year has passed without some rumour of the balloon having been found in Siberia or North America, nothing further has ever been ascertained. In 1899 Admiral Makaroff of the Russian navy arranged for the trial trip of the great ice-breaker " Yermak," which he designed, to take the form of an expedition into hlakarot, the sea-ice off Spitsbergen. Though no high lati- tude was attained on this occasion he formed the opinion that a vessel of sufficient See also:size and power could force a passage even to the Pole. The Russian-See also:Japanese War put an end to the polar projects of this gifted See also:marl of science. Captain Otto Sverdrup, who had been Nansen's companion on his two polar expeditions, planned an Arctic voyage for the circumnavigation of Greenland, and the " Fram " Sverdrup. was altered and refitted to suit her for the work. Starting in 1899, he was obliged to abandon the attempt to get northward through Smith Sound, and making his way westward into Jones Sound he spent three years in exploring and mapping the portion of the Arctic archipelago which lay to the north of the field of labour of the Franklin search expeditions.

See also:

Ellesmere and Grinnell Lands were shown to be part of one large land mass called King Oscar Land, which is separated by a narrow channel, See also:Eureka Sound, from an extensive island named Axel See also:Heiberg Land. Two of his party (Isachsen and Hassel) discovered and explored two islands west of Heiberg Land, and Dr Schei made most valuable observations on the See also:geology of the whole of the district examined. Sverdrup's journeys cleared up a great See also:deal of uncertainty regarding the geography of the least known portion of the Arctic archipelago, and leave little more to be done in that See also:quarter. He brought the " Fram " safely back to Norway in 1903. Many American whalers working in the sea reached through Bering Strait believe that land of considerable extent lies farther west than the Arctic archipelago, north of the mouth of the Mackenzie River, but neither the English traveller A. H. See also:Harrison in 1905, nor the Dane Einar Mikkelsen in 1907, was able to find any trace of it, though the latter sledged over the sea ice as far as 72° N., where in 15o° W. he got a See also:sounding of 339 fathoms with no bottom. This depth makes it somewhat improbable that land exists in that quarter. Russian surveyors and explorers continued to map portions of the Siberian coast, and in 1886 Dr Bunge and Baron See also:Toll visited the New Siberia Islands and made known Baron T©& the remarkable remains of mammoths which exist there in great See also:numbers. In 1893 Baron Toll made an important geological expedition to the islands, discovering many well-preserved remains of mammoths and other See also:extinct mammals and finding evidence that in the See also:mammoth period trees See also:grew at least as far as 74° N. Indefatigable in the pursuit of his studies, Toll set out once more in 1901 on board the " Zarya," hoping to reach Sannikoff Island, the most northern and still unvisited portion of the New Siberia group. In August 1902 he reached Bennet Island with the astronomer Seeberg and two men; he found the island to be a plateau about 15o0 ft. in See also:elevation, and remained there until November studying the geological features.

Nothing more was heard of the expedition, and a relief expedition in 1904, under Lieuts. Brusneff and Kolchak, failed to find any trace of the explorers beyond a record left on Bennet Island, which gave a See also:

summary of their movements up to the time of leaving the island. In 1901 Captain Roald Amundsen, a Norwegian, who had been mate on the " Belgica " in her Antarctic voyage, planned an expedition to the area of the north magnetic Amundsen. pole visited by Sir James Ross in 1831, in order to re-locate it, and as a secondary object he had in view the accomplishment of the North-West Passage by water for the first time, 1WClure not having carried his ship through from sea to sea. A small Norwegian sealing See also:sloop, the " Gjoa," the See also:cabin of which measured only 9 ft. by 6, was fitted with a See also:petroleum motor See also:engine of 39 h.p. for use in See also:calm weather and strengthened to withstand ice-pressure. She left Christiania on the 17th of June 1903 with a total company of six men, second in command being Lieut. Godfred See also:Hansen of the Danish navy. She passed through Lancaster Sound and worked her way down the west side of Boothia Felix in August, and took up winter quarters in Gjoa Harbour at the head of Petersen Bay in King William Land. Here the little vessel remained for two years while magnetic and meteorological observations were carried out, and sledging excursions were made to the magnetic pole and along the coasts of Victoria Land, which was charted up to 7 2° N. In August 1905 the " Gjoa " proceeded westward along the American coast but was frozen in off King Point for a third winter. On the See also:lath of July 1906 she got free, and after much difficulty with the ice reached Bering Strait on the 3oth of August and entered the Pacific, the first ship to pass from ocean to ocean north of See also:Patagonia. . Danish explorers have continued to concentrate their attention on the problems of Greenland, and especially the geography of the east coast. Lieut.

G. D. Amdrup, in a series of expedi- tions between 1898 and 1900, charted the coast-line as far north as 7o° 15' N., and made important scientific observations and collections. From time to time whalers reached the east Green- land coast at points in high latitudes. The duke of See also:

Orleans in the " Belgica," under the command of Captain See also:Gerlache, made an important voyage in 1905, in the course of which he cruised along the coast of Germania Land between 76° and 78° N., and fixed the general outline of the land up to that latitude. This expedition did a large amount of scientific work, especially in oceanography. The stream of sea-ice which presses out- wards from the polar basin every summer bears close against the east coast of Greenland, and exploration by sea has always proved exceedingly difficult and See also:precarious, success depending very much on the occurrence of See also:chance leads amongst the ice. Taking advantage of all previous experience, the most important of the Danish expeditions was planned by L. Mylius-See also:Erichsen in loos, the expenses being partly raised by private subscriptions and partly provided by the Danish government. He sailed in the " Danmark " in June 1906 and found winter quarters in Danmarkhaven, 750 43' N., where the ship remained for two years, while systematic magnetic and meteorological observations were kept up at the base and the main work of exploring to the northward was carried on by sledge. From existing maps it was believed that about 62o m. of coast separated the winter quarters from the northern point of Greenland, but when the sledge expedition went out in 1907 the coast was found to See also:curve much farther to the eastward than had been anticipated, and the outward journey extended to 80o m.

Having left the winter quarters on the 28th of March 1907. Mylius-Erichsen, with Captain See also:

Koch, See also:Hagen, an educated Eskimo, Bronlund and two others, reached North-East Fore- land, the eastern extremity of Greenland (81° 20' N., 11° 15' W.). Here they divided; Koch with Berthelsen and the Eskimo Tobias went north-westward to explore the east coast of Peary Land, and succeeded in reaching the northernmost extremity of the land beyond Cape See also:Bridgman in 83° 30' N. From this great journey he returned in safety to winter quarters, arriving on the 24th of June. Meanwhile Mylius-Erichsen, with Hagen and the Eskimo Bronlund, followed the coast westward into what was believed to be the Independence Bay seen from a distance by Peary; this turned out to be a deep inlet now named Danmark Fjord. Keeping to the coast, they entered the great channel separating the mainland of Greenland from Peary Land, and surveyed Hagen Fjord on the southern shore and Bronlund Fjord on the northern shore of the strait. They had pushed on to Cape Glacier in 82° N. and 35° W. by the 14th of June 1907, within sight of Navy Cliff, which had been Peary's farthest coming from the west side, and here the softness of the snow kept them all summer. When they could travel, more than a fortnight was wasted adrift on a floe in the effort to cross Danmark Fjord. Here the sun left them, while they were without food, almost worn out and more than 5oo m. from the ship. It was impossible to attempt the long journey round the coast, and the only chance of safety, and that a very slender one, was to make a way south-ward over the inland ice and so cut off the eastern See also:horn of Green-land which the expedition had discovered. Under the most terrible difficulties, with only four starved dogs, and their equipment going to pieces, they accomplished the feat of marching 16o m. in 26 days, and reached the east coast again in 79° N. Hagen died on the way; Mylius-Erichsen himself struggled on until he nearly reached the provisions left on See also:Lambert Island on the northern journey; but he too perished, and only Bronlund reached the supplies.

He was frost-bitten and unable to proceed further, and after recording the tragedy of the return journey in his See also:

diary, he died also alone in the Arctic night. His See also:body and the records of the great journey were discovered in the following year by Koch, who started on a relief expedition as soon as travelling became possible. The results of this expedition are a splendid See also:monument to the courage and devotion of the leader and his followers. The channel between Spitsbergen and Greenland was shown by their efforts to be far narrower than had previously been supposed, and the outline of Greenland itself was fixed for the first time, and that by an extremely accurate survey. There only remains one further See also:episode to bring the history of polar exploration up to 1910, but that is the crowning event of four hundred years of unceasing effort, the attain- ary ment of the Pole itself; and it was accomplished by Pe ' the undaunted perseverance of one man who would never accept defeat. After the return of the Jackson-Harmsworth expedition, Lord Northcliffe presented the " Windward " to Lieut. Peary, who resumed in 1898 his systematic explorations of the Smith Sound region in the hope of finding a way to the Pole. He was not restrained by the precedents of earlier travellers and made some long sledge journeys in the winter of 1898—1899, having his feet badly frost-bitten and losing eight toes. Even this crippling did not stop his work. He wintered amongst the Etah Eskimo in 1899—1900 and next spring made a successful journey to the most northerly land north of Greenland in 83° 35' where the land had an abundant flora and See also:fauna, and he pushed north over the sea-ice for twenty miles farther, reaching 83° 54' N. Peary wintered again at Fort Conger in 1900-1901, and for the fourth year in See also:succession he went through the Arctic winter, 1901—1902, at Payer Harbour. In the spring of 1902 he made a great journey to Cape Hecla in the north of See also:Grant Land and thence northward over the frozen sea to 84° 17' N. in 7o° W.

Frequent open leads of water and the moving of the ice-floes made further advance impossible, and after an unparalleled sojourn in the farthest north, Peary returned to the United States. The Peary Arctic See also:

Club of New York, formed to support this indomitable explorer, provided funds for a new expedition and a ship differing in some respects from those hitherto employed and named the " See also:Roosevelt." In her he proceeded in the summer of 1905 through Smith Sound and the northern channels to Cape See also:Sheridan on the north coast of Grant Land, Myllus-Erichsen. Captain Robert See also:Bartlett being in command of the ship. From this point he advanced by sledge to Cape Hecla, whence he made a most strenuous attempt to reach the North Pole. Organizing his large following of trained Eskimo, whose confidence in him had been won by many years of friendship, and his few white companions in separate parties, each complete in itself and well furnished with dogs and food, he set off at the end of February 1906. A very broad lead of open water was encountered in 84° 38' N., and as the party did not carry kayaks much time was lost in getting across. The floes had a marked eastward drift and it was difficult to make progress northward; however, Peary struggled on by forced See also:marches to 87° 6' N.,' which he reached on the 21st of April 1906, the most northerly point so far attained. His return journey was the most dangerous in his experience; many leads had to be crossed, sometimes on ice so thin that it See also:bent beneath the See also:weight of the explorers, provisions were exhausted and the men were reduced to eating their dogs before they made land at Cape Neumayer in the north of Greenland, where game was found, and whence the return to the ship was comparatively easy. Returning to America, Peary prepared for a last attempt. The " Roosevelt " was overhauled and various defects made e,ys good, but not in time for the summer of 1907. Journey to Leaving New York in July 1908 the " Roosevelt," the North again under the command of R. Bartlett, brought POD' the party, with the Eskimo who were picked up on the way, to Cape Sheridan by the 5th of September.

During the winter all supplies were transported to Cape See also:

Columbia, farther west on the coast of Grant Land. Here there were ready to start in the first light of the Arctic day seven explorers, 17 picked Eskimo and 133 of the best dogs in Greenland with 19 sledges. As the outcome of all Peary's experience the expedition was arranged to consist of a lightly equipped advance party to select the route and make the trail by clearing a way -through rough ice, and a main party composed of See also:units of four men each with sledges containing all their requirements marching one day behind the pioneer party. From this unit parties were to return southward at intervals with the empty sledges, leaving the diminished main party to push on fully provisioned. The " big lead " which marks the edge of the See also:continental shelf in 84° N. was crossed after some delay and here the sun appeared for the first time on the 5th of March 1909. Dr See also:MacMillan with three Eskimo and three sledges returned along the outward trail after the 7th of March from 84° 29' N. A sounding at this point showed the depth of the sea to be 825 fathoms. After five more marches G. Borup turned back in 85° 23' with three Eskimo and three sledges, the best Eskimo and dogs remaining with the main party. From this point the advance was regular; the pioneer party started from the snow-houses they had built and slept in when the main party arrived, and while the latter slept the pioneers marched, selected a See also:camp, built new snow-houses, and slept till the main party came up. At 86° 38' N. Prof.

R. G. Marvin turned back, as usual with the three worst Eskimo and the worst dogs. His party reached the ship, but he himself was drowned in recrossing the " big lead," the only casualty of the expedition. At 88° N. Bartlett turned back on the 1st of April in accordance with the system with two Eskimo, one sledge and 18 dogs. Up to this point Peary had saved him-self as much as possible, leaving the path-finding and the observations to his very competent colleagues; but now he put forth all his strength for the arduous 140 M. which separated him from the Pole. He was accompanied by Henson and four Eskimo. The ice improved as he went on and it was possible to do 25 M. in a daily march of ro hours, and on one occasion 30 in. in 12 hours. On the 6th of April an observation gave 89° 57' N., and here a camp was made and observations taken throughout 24 hours to See also:

fix the position, as well as excursions a few miles farther on and a few miles to right and left so as to be sure of actually reaching the Pole. No land was to be seen, and a sounding through the ice gave a depth of I5oo fathoms with no bottom. The American See also:flag was hoisted; the goal of all the ages of exploration had been reached.

The return journey was See also:

quick and easy. The tracks kept open by the passage of the various return parties were distinct enough to follow, the snow-houses stood ready for sheltering at the end of each march, and a northerly gale kept the ice pressed well together and the leads closed. On the 23rd of April Cape Columbia was reached and soon after the party was safe on board the " Roosevelt." Success was due to the accumulated experience of twenty-three years' constant Arctic work, and to the thorough acquaintance with the Eskimo and their dogs, which enabled the best work to be got out of them. Dr F. A. Cook spent two years in the Arctic regions, 1907-1909, and claimed to have reached the Pole by sledging alone with two Eskimo a year before Peary. He submitted the evi- F. A. Cook. dence for this achievement to the university of Copen- hagen, which failed to find it satisfactory, and Dr Cook did not appear to See also:challenge this decision.

End of Article: POLAR REGIONS

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POLARITY (Lat. polaris, poles, pole)