Part, Chapter
1 I, II | to try to work the little known countries of the north,
2 I, V | start. The route across the known districts, between the Slave
3 I, VI | specimens of the family of deer known under the various names
4 I, VII | regions, still so little known. Mackenzie, Franklin, Penny,
5 I, XI | is as yet but imperfectly known.~After carefully ascertaining
6 I, XII | until then imperfectly known, covering but a small extent
7 I, XIV | yielding a favourite beverage known in North America as “ spruce-beer.”
8 I, XIV | The other plant was that known throughout North America
9 I, XV | great, that they have been known to overturn the whalers
10 I, XVII | cemented together at the edges, known as “ drift ice,” and the “
11 I, XVII | surface of the snow, has been known to cause several cases of
12 I, XXIII| this district. If I had known it better I should not have
13 II, I | about which nothing was known. For months this drifting
14 II, II | Circle and the imperfectly known zone, called the North-West
15 II, V | ocean? Had not boats been known to be drifted several thousands
16 II, X | Fahrenheit, and it is well known that several days of cold,
17 II, XIII | Salt water, as is well known, does not freeze so readily
18 II, XVII | Current, which, as is well known, runs along the coast of
19 II, XXI | The fact quickly became known, and every one was seized
20 II, XXI | all.”~It is, in fact, well known that salt separates from
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