I N SPITE of the vastness of the northern portions of Canada's mainland, it is unusual that a river of one hundred and ninety miles in length should remain unexplored for some eighty years after its discovery. This is apparently what happened to a river discovered in 1868 by a French missionary...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: J. K. Fraser
Other Authors: The Pennsylvania State University CiteSeerX Archives
Format: Text
Language:English
Subjects:
Online Access:http://citeseerx.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.540.3935
http://pubs.aina.ucalgary.ca/arctic/arctic5-4-224.pdf
Description
Summary:I N SPITE of the vastness of the northern portions of Canada's mainland, it is unusual that a river of one hundred and ninety miles in length should remain unexplored for some eighty years after its discovery. This is apparently what happened to a river discovered in 1868 by a French missionary who mapped its course during his explorations, but unfortunately never reached its mouth and consequently drew in the lower reaches and the outlet from hearsay. Later explorers found no river where he had placed it on the map, and were apt to conclude that it did not exist. Recent mapping from air photographs (Fig. 1) and geographical studies in the area have now probably vindicated this explorer and show that his maps were not as inaccurate as cartographers had believed. But it remains a mystery why intelligent travellers should conclude from one negative piece of evidence that the river was non-existent, especially when the rest of the map was found to be fairly accurate. This river, now known as the Hornaday, drains part of the virtually unexplored country between Great Bear Lake and the coast of the Arctic Ocean. Access to the arctic coast was supplied to early explorers by the valleys of the Mackenzie and Coppermine rivers and consequently there was little reason a t first to investigate and map the area between these rivers. The main migration routes of the caribou swing away to the Coppermine and Bathurst Inlet country to the east, and so only a few Eskimo occupy the northern coastal fringe, while the Hare and Yellowknife Indians living along the northern shores of Great Bear Lake seldom venture north of the tree line. No explorer has searched here for gold and copper. No wealth of fur exists in the treeless lands north and south of the ribbon of spruce along the winding Horton River. This region has been almost by-passed in the explor-ation of the north and only in the last three years has it been photographed from the air and the drainage features added to the map. The first white men entered the area from the ...