Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'

More than six thousand years after humans reputedly first reached the North America continent by land, Vitus Bering led a Russian expedition aboard two ships to explore Alaska in 1741. Four decades later, Captain James Cook arrived by boat to map Alaska’s extensive coastline for Great Britain. Soon...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Ringer, Greg
Format: Book Part
Language:English
Published: CABI Publishing/Butterworth-Heinemann 2006
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1794/5893
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spelling ftunivoregonsb:oai:scholarsbank.uoregon.edu:1794/5893 2024-05-12T08:06:34+00:00 Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush' Ringer, Greg 2006 1050051 bytes application/pdf http://hdl.handle.net/1794/5893 en eng CABI Publishing/Butterworth-Heinemann CRUISE SHIP TOURISM 10: 1-84593-048-7 http://hdl.handle.net/1794/5893 Alaska Cruise tourism Cruise ships -- Alaska Book chapter 2006 ftunivoregonsb 2024-04-17T14:05:04Z More than six thousand years after humans reputedly first reached the North America continent by land, Vitus Bering led a Russian expedition aboard two ships to explore Alaska in 1741. Four decades later, Captain James Cook arrived by boat to map Alaska’s extensive coastline for Great Britain. Soon thereafter, intrepid Russian colonialists sailed from Siberia to establish the first European settlement on Kodiak Island, and almost 30,000 adventurous goldseekers disembarked from steamships in 1897 in transit to the Yukon and Klondike mines. Today, almost one million visitors reach Alaska by boat each year during the brief summer season (May-September). Though many come aboard ferries of the state’s famed Alaska Marine Highway System, most sail on one of 32 vessels owned by twelve cruise lines that now ply the inland waters of Alaska and the Canadian Pacific – and their popularity is growing almost exponentially. Book Part Kodiak Alaska Siberia Yukon University of Oregon Scholars' Bank Pacific Yukon
institution Open Polar
collection University of Oregon Scholars' Bank
op_collection_id ftunivoregonsb
language English
topic Alaska
Cruise tourism
Cruise ships -- Alaska
spellingShingle Alaska
Cruise tourism
Cruise ships -- Alaska
Ringer, Greg
Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
topic_facet Alaska
Cruise tourism
Cruise ships -- Alaska
description More than six thousand years after humans reputedly first reached the North America continent by land, Vitus Bering led a Russian expedition aboard two ships to explore Alaska in 1741. Four decades later, Captain James Cook arrived by boat to map Alaska’s extensive coastline for Great Britain. Soon thereafter, intrepid Russian colonialists sailed from Siberia to establish the first European settlement on Kodiak Island, and almost 30,000 adventurous goldseekers disembarked from steamships in 1897 in transit to the Yukon and Klondike mines. Today, almost one million visitors reach Alaska by boat each year during the brief summer season (May-September). Though many come aboard ferries of the state’s famed Alaska Marine Highway System, most sail on one of 32 vessels owned by twelve cruise lines that now ply the inland waters of Alaska and the Canadian Pacific – and their popularity is growing almost exponentially.
format Book Part
author Ringer, Greg
author_facet Ringer, Greg
author_sort Ringer, Greg
title Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
title_short Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
title_full Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
title_fullStr Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
title_full_unstemmed Cruising North to Alaska: the new 'gold rush'
title_sort cruising north to alaska: the new 'gold rush'
publisher CABI Publishing/Butterworth-Heinemann
publishDate 2006
url http://hdl.handle.net/1794/5893
geographic Pacific
Yukon
geographic_facet Pacific
Yukon
genre Kodiak
Alaska
Siberia
Yukon
genre_facet Kodiak
Alaska
Siberia
Yukon
op_relation CRUISE SHIP TOURISM
10: 1-84593-048-7
http://hdl.handle.net/1794/5893
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