INDEX. 



797 



Magerf), island of, 129. 

 Magicians of the Samo'iedes, 180, 181. 

 Malewinsky, Lieutenant, liis gold mine of Olginsk, 

 218. 



Maelstrom, the, 126. 



Mammoth, fossil remains of the, in New Siberia, 

 202. 



Man, his difficulty in establishing a footing in the 

 Arctic regions, 17. 



. , how he is able to stand the rigors of an Arc- 

 tic winter, 28. 



Maps of the Esquimaux, 302. 



Mariinsk, station of, built by the Russians, 196. 



, gold mine of, 217. 



Marshes of Newfoundland, 377. 



Marten, pine {Martes abiefum), the, 316. 



■ , value of the fur of the, 316. 



Mary Minturn river, flowers of, 20. 



Matiusehkin, his sledge journev over the Polar Sea, 

 241. 



Matoschkin Schar, visits to, 147-152. 

 Matthew, St., island of, inhospitable character of 

 the, 271. 



Matthew's Straits, visited hy Rosmysslow, Pach- 



tussow, and Herr von Baer, 147-152. 

 McClintock, Lieut, (now Sir Leopold), his search 



for Franklin, 360. 

 , his voyage in the " Fox," and discovery of 



the fate of Franklin and his companions, 362-364. 

 McClure, Captain, his search for Franklin, 359-n61. 



, his discovery of the north-west passage, 360. 



Mecham, Lieut., his search for Franklin, 360. 

 Mediterranean, dried codfish sent to the, 129. 

 Medusae, enormous numbers of, in the Polar world, 



59. 



■ , in the seas off Spitzbergen, 133. 



Melville Bay, enormous glaciers of, 49, 50. 

 Melville Island, discovery of, 345. 

 Mentschikoff, Prince, his exile and death in Siberia, 

 205. 



, his son restored to the honors of his house, 



205. 



Mercy Bay, discovery of, 361. 

 Mercy, fi arbor of, 412. 



Middendofff. Von, his adventures in Taimurland, 

 220. 



' , his visit to the Chatanga river, 221. 



• , his journey down the Taimur river to the 



Polar Sea, 221-223. 



• , his return journey and illness, 223-225. 



, gratitude of the Samo'edes, 224. 



, his observations on the climate and natural 



productions of Taimurland, 225. 

 Midnight, silence of, in Spitzbergen, 135. 

 Milk of the reindeer, 36. 

 Minerals of Iceland, 88. 



Mink ( Vison A mericauj/s'), value of the fur of the, 

 316. 



Misery, Mount, 145. 

 Mollusca, small, of the Polar Seas, 59. 

 Moonlight nights in the Arctic regions, 32, 33. 

 Morse. See Walrus. 



Morton, one of Kane's crew, 368, discovers 

 Washington land, 369 Hall's last exped., 759. 



Mosquitoes of Nishne-Kol ymsk, 235. 



Mosses, dingy, of the barren grounds," 18. 



of Nova Zembla, 153. 



of the Pribilow Islands, 270, 271. 



Mourawieff, Count Nicholas, his annexation of the 

 Amoor, 196. 



Mouse, field, of Spitzbergen, 137. 



Muchamor, the fungus, used as food by thj Kam« 



chatkans, 258. 

 Mud-springs, boiling, of Iceland, 70. 

 Munich, Marshal, his exile to Siberia, 205. 



, his return and subsequent life, 206. 



Munk, Jens, his voyages, 343. 



Munkholm, castle of, 124. 



Murderers, treatment of, in Russia, 206. 



Muscovy Company, its endeavors to discover a 



north-east passage to India, 336. 

 Musk-ox {Ovibos moschatus), description of tiie, 40. 



, its former and present habitat, 40, 41. 



Musquash, musk-rat, or ondatra (^Fiber zibethicus), 



317. 



, villages, 318. 



, modes of catching the animal, 318. 



, value of the fur of the, 318. 



Mussels on the coast of Greenland, 59. 

 My vatn, ducks of the, 84, 



N. 



Naddodr, the Norwegian pirate, his discovery of 

 Iceland, 89. 



Namar, or boiling mud-springs of Iceland, 70. 



Narborough, Sir John, his chart of the Strait of 

 Magellan, 414. 



Narwhal, or sea-unicorn, domain of the, 60. 



, its tusk, 61. 



, Greenland fishery of the, 387. 



Narvm, Castren's visit to, 175. 



Necromancy of the Samoiedes, 180. 



Nertschinsk, treaty of, 196. 



, criminals at the mines of, 206. 



Ness, Castren's vi8it to the Samo ede village of, 172, 



Newfoundland, discovered and colonized by Green- 

 landers, 335. 



, its desolate appearance, 376. 



, its forests, marshes, and barrens, 376, 377. 



, its lakes and ponds, 377, 378. 



, its fur-bearing animals, 378. 



, its reindeer and wolves, 378. 



, its climate and inhabitants, ."78. 



, its capital, St. John's, 378, 379. 



, history of the island, 379. 



, taken possession of by the English, 379. 



, right of the French and Americans to fish 



on the banks of, 379. 



, the French town of Placentia, 379. 



, the whole island ceded to England. 379. 



, importance of the cod-fisheries. 379. 



, the great banks of, 380. 



, account of the mode of fishing, 380. 



, fogs and storms, 380, 381. 



, seal-catching, 381. 



Newspapers of Iceland, 110. 



Night of a Polar winter, Kane's description of, 366. 

 Nicolayevsk, station of, built by the Russians, 196. 

 Noiba, gold-diggings on the, 216. 

 Norfolk Bay, position and fui'-trade of, 272. 

 North-eastern route to India and China, Sebastian 



Cabot's idea of, 335. 



, attempts to discover it. 335-337. 



North Pole, the first attempt to sail across the, 342. 



, the plan first suggested b}^ Thorne, 342. 



, Scoresby's near approach to the, 8-14 



, Parry's boat and sledge journey towards the, 



350. 



■ . Dr. Hayes's opinion as to the practicability 



of reaching the, across Kenuedj* Ciianiitl. 374. 



