Report on the Dominion Government Expedition to Hudson Bay and the Arctic Islands on board the D.G.S. Neptune, 1903-1904

audiobook

Report on the Dominion Government Expedition to Hudson Bay and the Arctic Islands on board the D.G.S. Neptune, 1903-1904

by A. P. (Albert Peter) Low

EN·~11 hours·12 chapters

Chapters

12 total
1

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS.

2:13
2

SHIP’S COMPANY.

1:12
3

CHAPTER I. VOYAGE TO THE BAY

46:42
4

CHAPTER II. WINTER QUARTERS AT FULLERTON.

1:29:19
5

CHAPTER IV. AN HISTORICAL SUMMARY OF THE DISCOVERIES AND EXPLORATIONS IN ARCTIC AMERICA.

1:22:00
6

CHAPTER V. THE ARCTIC ISLANDS.

34:31
7

CHAPTER VI. ESKIMOS.

1:01:34
8

CHAPTER VII. ESKIMOS (CONTINUED).

39:59
9

CHAPTER VIII. GEOLOGY.

2:04:27
10

CHAPTER X. WHALING.

1:06:08

Description

A daring 1903‑04 scientific expedition set sail aboard the D.G.S. Neptune, threading its way through the icy channels of Hudson Bay and the remote northeastern Arctic islands. Led by a seasoned commander‑geologist and supported by a surgeon‑botanist, naturalist, topographer‑meteorologist and a skilled photographer, the crew documented the stark landscape, its wildlife, and the lives of the Inuit peoples they encountered. Their narrative captures the challenges of navigating treacherous ice fields, the camaraderie among the ship’s officers and the mounted police, and the early hopes of opening new passages through the Arctic.

The report is richly illustrated with photographs, sketches of icebergs, snow‑houses, and bustling whaling stations, alongside detailed lists of birds, plants and fossils collected along the way. Listeners will hear vivid descriptions of towering glaciers, bustling ports, and the daily rhythms of northern communities, all framed by careful scientific observations that bring the early twentieth‑century Arctic to life.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~11 hours (645K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Release date

2017-09-03

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

A. P. (Albert Peter) Low

A. P. (Albert Peter) Low

1861–1942

A pioneering Canadian geologist and explorer, he helped map vast stretches of northern Quebec and Labrador at a time when much of the region was still little known to southern Canada. His field work also played an important part in later boundary-making and Arctic sovereignty efforts.

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