North Hendon, snow cottages of the Boothians. J. Ross

Colored lithographed view showing the village of "snow cottages" [igloos] where the Inuit people lived at North Hendon [in current-day Boothia Peninsula (Nunavut)], amidst a nocturnal landscape of ice and what appears to be the aurora borealis, in violet. View is 10 x 16 cm, on sheet 25 x...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Ross, John, Sir, 1777-1856, Say, William, 1768-1834, Lahee, J., Ross, James Clark, Sir, 1800-1862
Format: Book
Language:unknown
Published: A. W. Webster 1834
Subjects:
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Summary:Colored lithographed view showing the village of "snow cottages" [igloos] where the Inuit people lived at North Hendon [in current-day Boothia Peninsula (Nunavut)], amidst a nocturnal landscape of ice and what appears to be the aurora borealis, in violet. View is 10 x 16 cm, on sheet 25 x 32 cm. Accompanied by descriptive text on following pages. In first volume. Narrative of a second voyage in search of a north-west passage, and of a residence in the Arctic regions during the years 1829, 1830, 1831, 1832, 1833, by Sir John Ross, Captain in the Royal Navy. Published by A. W. Webster in London, 1835. First edition. In two volumes; second entitled, The first Appendix to the narrative of a second voyage in search of a north-west passage … First volume bound in the original, recased, cloth with a navy-colored scale pattern. Appendix also in original cloth but with a teal-colored scale pattern. Collation: 4° : volume 1 : [viii], [xxxiv], 740 pages, [30] leaves of plates, including 1 fold-out vol. 2 : xii, 120, cxliv, [CIII] pages, [20] leaves of plates. 30 plates in vol. 1 contain 7 maps and 23 views; 20 plates in vol. 2 contain 1 map, 15 views, 3 illustrations and 1 portrait. Maps show topography, drainage, coastlines, islands, soundings and routes. Views include scenes of the Victory ship at sail and docked, as well as portraits of Inuit individuals met during the voyage. "As a result of the failure of his voyage in 1818, the Admiralty refused to support John Ross [JR] in a second expedition. It was not until 1829 that the assistance of Felix Booth, the sheriff of London, enabled him to set out in the small paddle-steamer Victory with his nephew James Clark Ross [JCR] as second-in-command. The expedition survived the winters in the Arctic, during which [JCR] discovered the North Magnetic Pole. [JCR] edited the natural history section of the appendix, and [JR] the remaining sections, comprising meteorology, navigation, and ethnology" (Hill). Hill: 1490; Sabin: 73381. Vol. 1 contains a dedication to King William ...