Part, Chapter
1 I, I | Holland, from Swan Bay to the Gulf of Carpentaria, Paulina
2 I, II | Behring Strait to Coronation Gulf, on the eastern side of
3 I, V | heat on the shores of the Gulf of Carpentaria—you remember
4 I, VIII| hundred miles from Coronation Gulf, one of the numerous estuaries
5 I, VIII| refuge on the shores of the Gulf of Mexico when winter sets
6 I, IX | disappeared around this awful gulf, which, growing deeper and
7 I, X | which flows into Coronation Gulf.~The distance between Fort
8 I, X | deep hollow formed by the gulf is bounded on the north
9 I, XI | ALONG THE COAST.~Coronation Gulf, the large estuary dotted
10 I, XXII| the coast from Coronation Gulf. If not exactly the shortest,
11 II, III | vessels is probably now in Gulf Kotzebue, at the entrance
12 II, IV | between them and the awful gulf of the ocean?~Sergeant Long,
13 II, VII | off and drifted away, or a gulf has been made, which we
14 II, VII | breakers.~“It is only a gulf.” screamed Hobson in the
15 II, VIII| parts in the storm. The gulf observed the night before
16 II, VIII| arrived at the edge of the gulf they had seen the night
17 II, VIII| rough in a fresh storm, this gulf would widen more and more.~
18 II, VIII| they could round the huge gulf, making direct for Fort
19 II, XIII| after having rounded the gulf which the cold had imperfectly
20 II, XV | to Arctic regions by the Gulf Stream, and would be taken
21 II, XVII| of the lagoon. The large gulf which had opened near Cape
22 II, XVII| Sound, a large triangular gulf running some distance inland
23 II, XX | rest of the party.~The wide gulf near Cape Michael, which
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