Part, Chapter
1 I, II | year the Company lost the western slopes of the Rocky Mountains,
2 I, X | river Churchill, near the western shores of Hudson’s Bay.
3 I, X | arrival in the elevated western districts for which they
4 I, X | widened considerably. The western banks, curving slightly,
5 I, XI | American continent. At its western angle opened the mouth of
6 I, XII | America-imperfect, it is true-the western coast beyond Cape Bathurst
7 I, XII | day touch the edges of the western horizon without dipping
8 I, XIII| embraced the lagoon and the western districts to a distance
9 I, XIII| seals which abounded on the western shore to be taken until
10 I, XV | thought the mountains on the western horizon were volcanoes.~“
11 I, XIX | for Point Barrow, on the western coast of Russian America,
12 I, XX | eruption.~Indeed, above the western cliffs beyond Walruses’
13 I, XX | the volcanic eruption. The western horizon still glowed with
14 I, XXII| inundate a portion of the western coast. The stream would
15 I, XXII| consequence, the water on the western side had risen, and if not
16 II, II | driven by the currents to the western waters of the Pacific, would
17 II, IV | slowly advancing along the western horizon, and its oblique
18 II, IV | return to Fort Hope along the western coast.~No fresh incident
19 II, V | a little promontory of western Alaska, and two hundred
20 II, VI | Russian America—probably Western Alaska.”~“You are right,
21 II, XIII| party skirted along the western edge of this gap, in the
22 II, XV | out of the valley on the western side of the chain of icebergs,
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