Part, Chapter
1 I, IV | temperature frequent in these latitudes. Each one, officer or soldier,
2 I, IV | injurious to the health in cold latitudes, as much as possible. The
3 I, V | eider ducks sought colder latitudes; and little shrews no bigger
4 I, V | press on to the very highest latitudes of the globe,; he had not
5 I, VI | thought of in temperate latitudes, spoils my Arctic home.”~“
6 I, VI | met with in such elevated latitudes.~On the morning of the 15th
7 I, VIII | only visiting the higher latitudes of North America during
8 I, VIII | must go to still higher latitudes, to the ice-bound regions
9 I, IX | peculiar to these elevated latitudes.~“Let us be off, sir! let
10 I, IX | rather darkness, for in these latitudes night only lasts a few hours
11 I, X | Middleton, sent to explore these latitudes, was publicly charged with
12 I, XI | driven by famine from higher latitudes, there would probably be
13 I, XI | animals to be found in these latitudes, and Hobson, being assured
14 I, XI | These birds haunt the high latitudes by millions, and it would -
15 I, XI | And indeed in these remote latitudes hunters may be overtaken
16 I, XII | sometimes met with in these high latitudes?” was Mrs Barnett’s natural
17 I, XIII | those who winter in high latitudes Nooks and corners are, in
18 I, XIV | who have wintered in these latitudes. It is impossible to take
19 I, XIV | It is found in very high latitudes; and the short fur with
20 I, XIV | are invaluable in these latitudes. In choosing the site of
21 I, XVIII| so complete in these high latitudes. The roaring of the wind
22 I, XX | unaccustomed to living in such high latitudes. They were caused by the
23 I, XXIII| observations of explorers in these latitudes, to have risen fifteen or
24 I, XXIII| total for places in high latitudes, such as Lapland, Siberia,
25 I, XXIII| taken in these elevated latitudes?”~“What special interest?”
26 II, II | open sea to the high Polar latitudes, from which there is no
27 II, II | currents divide the dangerous latitudes comprehended between the
28 II, II | take us to remote northern latitudes. Our wandering island would
29 II, III | occurrence in such elevated latitudes.~Hobson was obliged to put
30 II, III | however, to watch the northern latitudes very carefully, and to note
31 II, VII | being very numerous in these latitudes. A few degrees farther south,
32 II, X | drifting towards the unknown latitudes where the large icebergs
33 II, XII | peculiar phenomena of the high latitudes, such as the Aurora Borealis,
34 II, XIII | floes here had come from latitudes farther north, and, if we
35 II, XIV | in the terrible northern latitudes, in the colony itself, he
36 II, XV | not right. She knows these latitudes well, and will tell you
37 II, XV | in these high northern latitudes, and in latitudes in the
38 II, XV | northern latitudes, and in latitudes in the neighbourhood of
39 II, XV | presently enveloped the Arctic latitudes, but not an ordinary mist.
40 II, XVII | approaching the more frequented latitudes of Behring Sea. There was
41 II, XIX | solid in comparatively low latitudes, and vice versa in early
42 II, XIX | ocean currents from warm latitudes, passed the island on their
43 II, XIX | transferred as it was to milder latitudes. The little mosses and tender
44 II, XXI | hurricanes peculiar to these latitudes.~At eight o’clock in the
45 II, XXII | vessels dread more in these latitudes than the approach of icebergs
46 II, XXIV | similar conditions in the same latitudes in 1896. And therefore I
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