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Elisha Kent Kane (1820 57) was a medical officer in the United
States Navy, best known for the so-called 'Grinnell voyages' to the
Arctic in search of Sir John Franklin's expedition. Originally
published in 1856, this two-volume work documents his second
expedition, between 1853 and 1855, during which his ship became
ice-bound, and he and his men survived by adopting Inuit survival
skills, such as hunting, sledge-driving and hut-building. In Volume
1, Kane recounts the dangers posed by icebergs, glaciers and
fluctuating tides, which led to his ship's entrapment, and records
his impressions of the Inuit whom he later relied on for survival.
Along with extensive illustrations of the animals, terrain and
people encountered on his mission, and a useful glossary of Arctic
terms, Kane's writings reveal his own controversial personality as
well as his relationship with the Inuit and his admiration for
their skills.
Elisha Kent Kane (1820-57) was a medical officer in the United
States Navy, best known for the so-called 'Grinnell voyages' to the
Arctic in search of Sir John Franklin's expedition. Originally
published in 1856, this two-volume work documents his second
expedition, between 1853 and 1855, during which his ship became
ice-bound, and he and his men survived by adopting Inuit survival
skills, such as hunting, sledge-driving and hut-building. In Volume
2, Kane continues to describe the Inuit people by whom he was
aided, their birth and death rites, their survival skills in times
of famine, and their rescuing of his crew. Accompanied by an
extensive appendix containing his meteorological and geological
surveys of the area, Kane's writings reveal his own controversial
personality, his scholarly and navigational abilities, and his
admiration of the way in which the Inuits' life was adapted to
their environment.
Dr Elisha Kane (1820 57), the most famous of American Arctic
explorers before Peary, published this work in 1853. Having
graduated from medical school, Kane joined the US Navy in 1843, and
in 1850 was appointed senior medical officer on the expedition
financed by the philanthropist Henry Grinnell to search for Sir
John Franklin. Kane had departed on a second expedition while this
book was in press, and he continued his Arctic travels, to the
detriment of his health, until the year before his early death. In
this work, Kane describes the origins of the expedition in the
worldwide appeal by Lady Franklin, and, using his own journals,
gives a vivid account of a winter spent icebound in the Arctic.
Among the appendices is the official report of the expedition's
commander, Lieutenant De Haven. Though Franklin's first winter camp
was found, there were no further traces of his crew."
Elisha Kent Kane (1820-57) was a medical officer in the United
States Navy, best known for the so-called 'Grinnell voyages' to the
Arctic in search of Sir John Franklin's expedition. Originally
published in 1856, this two-volume work documents his second
expedition, between 1853 and 1855, during which his ship became
ice-bound, and he and his men survived by adopting Inuit survival
skills, such as hunting, sledge-driving and hut-building. In Volume
1, Kane recounts the dangers posed by icebergs, glaciers and
fluctuating tides, which led to his ship's entrapment, and records
his impressions of the Inuit whom he later relied on for survival.
Along with extensive illustrations of the animals, terrain and
people encountered on his mission, and a useful glossary of Arctic
terms, Kane's writings reveal his own controversial personality as
well as his relationship with the Inuit and his admiration for
their skills.
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