Rocks and Muskoxen
Our first journey started well, for we were given a lift across the lake by boat, but after the ride we had to walk. Walking with a heavy pack is unpleasant at the best of times, and the sun was still hot enough to make the five-mile trek across the glaring sands of the "dustbowl"-as we ca...
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Format: | Book Part |
Language: | unknown |
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Hodder and Stoughton
1957
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Online Access: | https://authors.library.caltech.edu/65800/ https://resolver.caltech.edu/CaltechAUTHORS:20160331-102806889 |
Summary: | Our first journey started well, for we were given a lift across the lake by boat, but after the ride we had to walk. Walking with a heavy pack is unpleasant at the best of times, and the sun was still hot enough to make the five-mile trek across the glaring sands of the "dustbowl"-as we called Skovdalen-extremely unpleasant. My companion and assistant this autumn was George Fletcher, one of the "new boys", whose first arctic journey this was to be. His introduction to Greenland travel was a march across a desert; but the ice came soon enough, and on the second day we walked fifteen miles up Admiralty Gletscher to the Trefork Sø depot. Here we pitched a permanent tent, our base for daily excursions to the various cliffs and outcrops which I wished to examine. We consolidated our results of the first year in reasonable conditions; and, after completing a fair amount of work, returned slowly towards base visiting selected outcrops on the way. |
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