Project Gutenberg 2021-04-29 Public domain in the USA. 153 Horton, Edith 11030018 The Frozen North: An Account of Arctic Exploration for Use in Schools Introduction -- Sir John Franklin, 1818 -- Franklin's first land journey, 1819-1821 -- Franklin's second land journey, 1825-1827 -- The Erebus and the Terror, 1845 -- Elisha Kent Kane, 1853 -- Winter in Rensselaer Harbor, 1853-1854 -- The Eskimos, 1854 -- Hunting in the icy north -- Home again, 1855 -- Nordenskjöld and the Northeast Passage, 1878-1879 -- Voyage of the Jeannette, 1879-1881 -- Greely in Grinnell land, 1881-1883 -- Farthest north of the Greely party, 1882 -- Lieutenant Schwatka in Alaska, 1883 -- Nansen crosses Greenland, 1888 -- The voyage of the Fram, 1893-1896 -- Peary crosses Greenland, 1891-1897 -- Andrée's balloon expedition to the pole, 1897 -- Expeditions of 1902 -- Discovery of the North Pole by Robert E. Peary, 1909. Donald Cummings and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive/American Libraries.) "The Frozen North: An Account of Arctic Exploration for Use in Schools" by Edith Horton is a historical account written in the early 20th century. The book aims to educate young readers about the exploration of the Arctic regions, highlighting the significant contributions made by explorers such as Sir John Franklin and Elisha Kent Kane. It delves into the hardships faced during these expeditions, the geography of the North, and the cultures of its inhabitants, making the subject accessible and engaging for school use. At the start of the book, the introduction outlines the challenges and historical context surrounding Arctic exploration. It discusses the vast and largely uncharted territory of the north polar regions, the influence of early navigators, and the motivations behind expeditions to find alternative trade routes. Horton emphasizes the importance of previous explorers in paving the way for current understanding, and introduces future chapters that will detail their individual journeys, struggles, and achievements while igniting curiosity about the mysterious Arctic landscape and its people. (This is an automatically generated summary.) Reading ease score: 78.3 (7th grade). Fairly easy to read. en Arctic regions G Text Category: Children & Young Adult Reading Category: Travel Writing Category: History - Other 304894 2025-06-26T04:17:29.206123 text/html 276849 2024-10-18T13:22:39 text/html 13105421 2025-06-26T04:17:36.172107 application/epub+zip 13103033 2025-06-26T04:17:30.865063 application/epub+zip 199808 2025-06-26T04:17:29.895067 application/epub+zip 13178387 2025-06-26T04:17:39.789052 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 13140262 2025-06-26T04:17:35.205041 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 244544 2022-09-29T10:45:16.931645 application/x-mobipocket-ebook 256846 2025-06-26T04:17:28.242071 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 236759 2024-10-18T13:22:39 text/plain; charset=us-ascii 16758 2025-06-26T04:17:39.922031 application/rdf+xml 20038 2025-06-26T04:17:29.994100 image/jpeg 3169 2025-06-26T04:17:29.944128 image/jpeg 13926238 2025-06-26T04:17:29.449176 application/octet-stream application/zip Archives containing the RDF files for *all* our books can be downloaded at https://book.klll.cc/wiki/Gutenberg:Feeds#The_Complete_Project_Gutenberg_Catalog