The Wit Of The Wild
Ernest Ingersoll
7 chapters
54 minute read
Selected Chapters
7 chapters
Districts, Capes and Points, Islands, Lakes, Mountains, Rivers, and Towns.
Districts, Capes and Points, Islands, Lakes, Mountains, Rivers, and Towns.
[A] Money Order Offices. [B] Post Offices not located on Map....
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FROM JUNEAU TO THE GOLD FIELDS.
FROM JUNEAU TO THE GOLD FIELDS.
The few persons who formerly wished to go to the head of Lynn Canal did so mainly by canoeing, or chartered launches, but now many opportunities are offered by large steamboats. Most of the steamers that bring miners and prospectors from below do not now discharge their freight at Juneau, however, but go straight to the new port Dyea at the head of the canal. Lynn Canal is the grandest fiord on the coast, which it penetrates for seventy-five miles. It is then divided by a long peninsula called S
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HISTORY AND CHARACTERISTICS OF THE UPPER YUKON VALLEY.
HISTORY AND CHARACTERISTICS OF THE UPPER YUKON VALLEY.
The sources of the Yukon are just within the northern boundary of British Columbia (Lat. 62 deg.) among a mass of mountains forming a part of the great uplift of the Coast range, continuous with the Sierras of California and the Puget Sound coast. Here spring the sources of the Stikeen, flowing southwest to the Pacific, of the Fraser, flowing south through British Columbia, and of the Liard flowing northeasterly to the Mackenzie. Headwaters of the Stikeen and Liard interlock, indeed, along an ex
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THE KLONDIKE.
THE KLONDIKE.
During the autumn of 1896 several men and women, none of whom were "old miners," discouraged by poor results lower down the river resolved to try prospecting in the Klondike gulch. They were laughed at and argued with; were told that prospectors years ago had been all over that valley, and found only the despised "flour gold," which was too fine to pay for washing it out. Nevertheless they persisted and went at work. Only a short time elapsed, when, on one of the lower southside branches of the
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THE METHODS OF PLACER MINING
THE METHODS OF PLACER MINING
in the Klondike region and elsewhere along the Yukon are different from those pursued elsewhere, owing to the fact that from a point about three feet below the surface the ground is permanently frozen. The early men tried to strip off the gravel down to the gold lying in its lower levels or beneath it, upon the bed rock, and found it exceedingly slow and laborious work; moreover, it was only during the short summer that any work could be done. Now, by the aid of fires they sink shafts and then t
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LEGAL ASPECT OF ALASKA.
LEGAL ASPECT OF ALASKA.
Commissioner Hermann, of the General Land Office, has announced that the following laws of the United States extend over Alaska, where the general land laws do not apply: First—The mineral land laws of the United States. Second—Town-site laws, which provide for the incorporation of town-sites and acquirement of title thereto from the United States Government by the town-site trustees. Third—The laws providing for trade and manufactures, giving each qualified person 160 acres of land in a square
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CLIMATE, AGRICULTURE AND HEALTH.
CLIMATE, AGRICULTURE AND HEALTH.
The Weather Bureau has made public a statement in regard to the climate of Alaska, which says: "The climates of the coast and the interior of Alaska are unlike in many respects, and the differences are intensified in this as perhaps in few other countries by exceptional physical conditions. The fringe of islands that separates the mainland from the Pacific Ocean from Dixon Sound north, and also a strip of the mainland for possibly twenty miles back from the sea, following the sweep of the coast
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