Part, Chapter
1 I, II | commanding the course of the river Nelson, is the headquarters
2 I, II | discovery of the Coppermine River; Franklin, in 1819 to 1822,
3 I, II | after having discovered the river to which he gave his name,
4 I, II | cultivation, such as the Red River and Saskatchewan districts,
5 I, III | traversed the lakes to the Red River settlement, and pressed
6 I, V | done was to cross the large river connecting Lakes Slave and
7 I, VIII| to go down the Coppermine river, from the north-east of
8 I, X | the Coppermine, a large river which flows into Coronation
9 I, X | Confidence and the mouth of this river is only a degree and a half-that
10 I, X | east, so as to reach the river in a few hours.~In the afternoon
11 I, X | the next day, June 3d, the river was gained. It was now free
12 I, X | Prince of Wales, on the river Churchill, near the western
13 I, X | discovered the Coppermine river, July 13th, 1772, the course
14 I, X | 1819 to 1822 between the river discovered by Hearne and
15 I, X | ice, drifted down by the river, still resisted the action
16 I, X | mouth of the Coppermine river. He was therefore most eager
17 I, X | leaving Fort Confidence the river widened considerably. The
18 I, XI | mouth of the Coppermine River, and ended in Cape Krusenstern.~
19 I, XII | named the stream Paulina river, and the little harbour
20 I, XIII| resources of the lake and river, and found great reason
21 I, XIII| fresh-water fish; and the little river was a favourite resort of
22 I, XVI | with the clayey mud of the river, previously pounded by the
23 I, XXII| the lake and of Paulina river, in obedience to the law,
24 I, XXII| my name to the port and river, and now there will be neither
25 I, XXII| will be neither Paulina river nor Port Barnett. I must
26 I, XXII| replied Hobson, “although the river is gone, the lake remains,
27 I, XXII| been submerged.~The little river dried up as soon as the
28 I, XXII| We have now to erase a river from the map of the Arctic
29 II, I | and produced the little river; vegetation transformed
30 II, III | Port Barnett and Paulina River; who can tell whether Cape
31 II, III | disappearance of the little river. With no ledges to shelter
32 II, VIII| our lagoon as we lost our river and our port!”~“Well, if
33 II, XVII| dried-up bed of Paulina River, when an unexpected noise
34 II, XX | dried-up bed of the little river. It was probable that it
35 II, XX | bounded on the west by the river bed, would disappear—that
36 II, XXI | disappeared, as Paulina River had done before.~Lieutenant
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