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Through the Yukon Gold Diggings: A Narrative of Personal Travel cover

Through the Yukon Gold Diggings: A Narrative of Personal Travel

Chapter 15: Transcriber's Notes
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About This Book

A United States Geological Survey geologist recounts an early expedition into Alaska's interior, narrating the journey from coastal ports over passes and lakes down the Yukon to mining camps. The account mixes vivid descriptions of fjords, glaciers, native villages and totem poles with practical reports on routes, river rapids, and gold-digging operations at places such as Forty Mile and various creeks. Travel hardships, packing and transport challenges, camp life, prospecting methods, and geological observations are recorded alongside encounters with settlers and Indigenous peoples, creating a compact travelogue of natural scenery, mining practices, and frontier living before the later gold rushes.

FINIS.

Transcriber's Notes

Obvious punctuation errors repaired.

Hyphen removed: "network" (p. 123), "sawmill" (p. 130), "Thronduc" (p. 106).

Hyphen added: "wood-box" (p. 73).

Both "nigger-head" and "niggerhead" are used and have not been changed.

P. 13: "comtemplate" changed to "contemplate" (contemplate in their suddenly awakened fancies).

P. 18: "synonomous" changed to "synonymous" (he used it as synonymous with "tenderfeet").

P. 93: "bottow" changed to "bottom" (the bottom of the scow).

P. 183: "caribon" changed to "caribou" (he had shot three bears, seven caribou, and a moose).

P. 222: "read" changed to "reap" (reap the benefits of his discoveries).