790 



INDEX. 



Corniciilaria!, carpets of, and the treeless zone, 21. 

 Cortereal, liis voyages of discovery, 325. 

 Cossacks, Don, their depredations, 192. 



, their conquest of Sil)eria for the Czar, 193. 



, their privileges and duties in Ni.ihne-Ko- 



lyinsk, 23«. 

 Coureur des bois, the, of North America, 304. 

 Cranberries of the Arctic rey;ions, 24. 

 Cree Indians, uses of the paper-birch-tree to the, 



305. 



, range of the various tribes of, 319. 



, their conquests of the Tinne, but subsequent 



•defeat, 319, 320. 



, their wars with the Blackfeet, 320, 321 



, their character, 321. 



-, their customs, habits, and dress, 321, 322, 



323. 



■ , their wives and families, 323. 



, their cradles, 323. 



, tlipir wigwams, or tents, 324. 



, their medicine-men and vapor-baths, 324. 



, their games and sports, 324, 325. 



, their wooden figures for worship, 325. 



, their malicious or capricious spirit, called 



Kepoochican, 325. 

 • , their notion of the Great Spirit and of the 



Deluge, 325. 



, their Tartarus and Elysium, 325. 



, prospects of Christianity amongst them, 326. 



Cross, the game of, of the Cree Indians, 325. 

 Crowe, Mr., his copper mines at Alten, 128. 

 Crozier, Captain, his last voyage, 350. 



, the last heard of him, 364. 



, his Antarctic voyages, 402. 



CruciferiE, the, of the treeless zone, 20. 

 Crustaceans, immense numbers of, on the coast of 



Greenland, 59. 

 Cumberland Strait, Davis's discovery of, 337, 338. 

 Currents, magnificent system of, and their eflPects 



on the accumulation of ice, 56, 57. 



D. 



Dances of the Tchuktchi, 266. 



Darwin, ^Ir., his ascent of Mount Tarn, 411. 



Davis, John, his voyages to discover an Arctic pas- 



sag-^ to India, 337. 



, his visit to Lal)rador, 338. 



, his subsequent life, 3.38. 



Davis's Straits, probable influence of the northerly 



winds on the depression of the temperature of, 



27. 



, Sebastian Cabot's discovery of, 335. 



Dead, reverence paid to the, by the Samoiedes, 181. 

 Dease, Peter Warren, his land Arctic expedition, 



355. 

 Death, black, its ravages in Iceland, 95. 

 Deception Island, account of, 393. 

 Deer, red {Ce7-i-us elepkas), its habitat and uses to 



man, 40. 

 Deer of Vogelsang and Treureiiberg Bay, 1.37. 

 Deluge, Cree legend of tlic, 325. 

 Demidoff", foundation of the family of, 219. 



, their enormous wealth, 219. 



Deschnew, Semen, his tiie first and last voyage 



through Bering's Strait, 197. 

 Desolation, South, 412. 



Detti-f'oss, an Icelandic cascade, Mr. Gould's de- 

 scription of the, 78. 

 Disco bay, icebergs formed in, 49. 



Divers, their migrations to and from the north, 42. 

 Dog-ril) Indians, hunling-grounds of the, 327. 



, their character, dress, and customs, 327, 329, 



, their want of hos))itality, 329. 



, their honesty, 329. 



, their notions of a future life, 329. 



Dog, the reindeer of the Lapps, 161. 



, Wrangell's dog-sledges on the Polar sea, 



239. 



, Icelandic, 80. 



, the, of the p.ople of Kolymsk, 236. 



, the Kamchatkan, and dog-sledgcs, 258,. 259. 



, their mode of foretelling storms, 259. 



, mode of training sledge-dogs, 259. 



-, trained by Esquimau.x to attack the bear, 



I 



297 



-, description of the, and dog-sledges of the Es- 

 imanx, 299. 



qu. Dr. Kane's Newfoundland and Esquimaux, 

 367. 



, epidemic amongst the Esquimaux, 372. 



Dolgorouky, Prince, his exile to Silieria, 205. 



Dol|)hin, white, or beluga, of Nova Zembla, 155. 



• , Greenland fishery of tiip, 387. 



Dolphins of the Polar seas, 61, .398. 



, the beluga, or white dolphin, 61. 



, the llack dolphin, " ca'ing " whale, or grind, 



61. 



, the ore, or grampus, 62. 



■' of Spitzbergen, 137. 



Drake, Sir Francis, his vovage through the Strait 

 of Magellan, 414. 



Drifanda Foss. an icelandic cascade, 114. 



Drontheim, the red deer near, 40. 



-, description of, 124. 



Ducks, wild, of the Arctic regions, 19. 



, their migrations to and from the north, 42. 



of Iceland, 81, 84. 



Dndinka, Castren's visit to, 176. 



Dungeness, Point, 409. 



Durfoorth, his voj'age and death, 336. 



D'Urville, Dnniont, his discoveries in the Antarctic 

 ocean, 402. 



Dutch, their expeditions to discover an Arctic pas- 

 sage to India, 339. 



E. 



Eagle, the sea- (^flalicetus albicilla), of the north, 



44. 

 — — , his food, 44. 



, white-taili'd, of Iceland, 85. 



, value of the skins of the, 85. 



, the, on the coast of Norway, 125. 



-, in the Tundra in summer. 19. 



Ebierbing, 441, 4G6, 778, 774, 758-761, 



Egede, Hans, his voyage to Greenland, 384. 



Egg-vare of the coast of Norway, 124. 



Egilson, Olaf, the Wcstman clergyman, his slavery 



in Algiers, 118. 

 Eider-duck, its migrations to and from tjie north, 



43. 



of Iceland, 81. 



, breeding of, 83. 



, Mr. Shepherd's visit to one of its hcad-quar- 



I 



ters, 83. 



Elder, (he, in the Arctic regions, 24. 

 Elephant, sea-, of the Antarctic ocean, 399. 

 Elk, or moose deer, of the forests of the north, 38. 



, CiBsar's acciiunt of it, 39. 



, its food and present habitat, 40. 



