Part, Chapter
1 I, I | of roughly-hewn trunks of trees piled up horizontally, were
2 I, IV | the Great Slave Lake.~The trees on the northern shores of
3 I, V | with the gaunt skeletons of trees. The vast plains stretched
4 I, VI | on every side, the forest trees fell beneath the axe of
5 I, VII | with shrubs, but with large trees, all of the same species —
6 I, VII | the Polar Sea; for these trees would supply him with wood
7 I, VIII| were crowned by resinous trees of the Scotch pine species.
8 I, VIII| Scotch pine species. These trees, which attain a height of
9 I, VIII| monotonous. Between the groups of trees the soil was clothed with
10 I, VIII| direction, and beneath the trees strutted ospreys two feet
11 I, VIII| in the forked branches of trees. The hunter Sabine managed
12 I, VIII| their homes in the trunks of trees or the holes of rocks in
13 I, IX | of the wind; no clumps of trees, no hills, checked for a
14 I, X | scattered clumps of resinous trees broke the monotony of the
15 I, XI | build their nests in dead trees and migrate to the Arctic
16 I, XI | were crowned with green trees, amongst which the pine
17 I, XI | the warm season all these trees were covered with verdure,
18 I, XIII| Fortunately there were plenty of trees about Cape Bathurst, although
19 I, XIV | zoologists, lives in hollow trees or rocky caves, whence it
20 I, XIV | covered with pine and fir trees; and Jaspar also noticed
21 I, XIV | green in the autumn. These trees and larches were, however,
22 I, XVI | to their homes in hollow trees, or shot them as they glided
23 I, XVII| whiteness; the woods of trees of different kinds were
24 I, XX | cracking of the trunks of trees, of which the walls were
25 II, I | from which have sprung the trees and mosses with which it
26 II, III | arbutus to become shrubs and trees! Perhaps the sheet of ice
27 II, V | in different species of trees.~Many a time did the unconscious
28 II, VII | little hills crowned with trees afforded them some protection,
29 II, VII | and there were neither trees nor rising ground, the wind
30 II, VII | kind of torpor, whilst the trees above them bent beneath
31 II, VII | them.~“Let us hope these trees will hold,” at last observed
32 II, VII | it up at the stems of the trees, set fire to it, and soon,
33 II, VIII| night before. Numbers of trees were lying on the ground,
34 II, VIII| crowned by a clump of birch trees and a few shrubs afforded
35 II, X | passed to and fro amongst the trees of the woods, on the banks
36 II, XV | In some places trunks of trees were seen embedded in the
37 II, XV | Cape Michael crowned with trees, had disappeared. In its
38 II, XV | shoots appeared upon the trees, and the newly-thawed sap
39 II, XV | formed a thick layer on trees, shrubs, the walls of the
40 II, XIX | waters. Now and then floating trees of different kinds, which
41 II, XIX | willow, birch, fir, and pine trees were clothed with dark verdure;
42 II, XX | away from the roots of the trees, which fell in large numbers.
43 II, XX | changed. A few groups of birch trees and thickets of firs alone
44 II, XXI | with a productive soil, trees and shrubs flourished upon
|