WeRead Powered by ReaderPub
Our Arctic province cover

Our Arctic province

Chapter 2: INTRODUCTION.
Open in WeRead

About This Book

A comprehensive portrait of Alaska and its sealing islands mixes regional history, travel impressions, natural history, and practical observation. The narrative opens with early exploration and political transfer, then moves to detailed descriptions of coastal geography, glaciers, climate, forests, and fisheries. It records indigenous settlements, domestic life, and material culture alongside careful accounts of marine mammals, seal and sea‑lion rookeries, hunting methods, and commercial sealing operations. Numerous sketches and maps illustrate local scenes, and chapters progress from focused local studies to broader assessments of resources, industry, and the practical challenges of living and working in the Arctic environment.

INTRODUCTION.


If the writer could materialize in the reader’s mind that large aggregate of printed matter now stacked on book-shelves and filed in newspaper columns, which has been published to the world during the last eighty years upon Alaska, the effect would certainly be startling.

Scores of weighty volumes, hundreds of pamphlets and magazine articles, and a thousand newspaper letters, have been devoted to the subject of Alaskan life, scenery, and value. In contemplation of this, viewed from the author’s standpoint of extended personal experience, he announces his determination to divest himself of all individuality in the following chapters, to portray in word, and by brush and pencil, the life and country of Alaska as it is, so clearly and so truthfully, that the reader may draw his or her own inference, just as though he or she stood upon the ground itself.

How differently a number of us are impressed in the viewing of any one subject, by which observation we utterly fail to agree as to its character and worth! This variance is handsomely illustrated by the diverse opinion of Alaskan travellers.

Smithsonian Institution,
February 26, 1886.