You are here
قراءة كتاب Through the Yukon Gold Diggings A Narrative of Personal Travel
تنويه: تعرض هنا نبذة من اول ١٠ صفحات فقط من الكتاب الالكتروني، لقراءة الكتاب كاملا اضغط على الزر “اشتر الآن"
Through the Yukon Gold Diggings A Narrative of Personal Travel
Through
the
Yukon Gold Diggings
A Narrative of Personal Travel
BY
JOSIAH EDWARD SPURR
Geologist, United States Geological Survey
BOSTON
EASTERN PUBLISHING COMPANY
1900
by
JOSIAH EDWARD SPURR
Preface.
As a geologist of the United States Geological Survey, I had the good fortune to be placed in charge of the first expedition sent by that department into the interior of Alaska. The gold diggings of the Yukon region were not then known to the world in general, yet to those interested in mining their renown had come in a vague way, and the special problem with which I was charged was their investigation. The results of my studies were embodied in a report entitled: "Geology of the Yukon Gold District," published by the Government.
It was during my travels through the mining regions that the Klondike discovery, which subsequently turned so many heads throughout all of the civilized nations, was made. General conditions of mining, travelling and prospecting are much the same to-day as they were at that time, except in the limited districts into which the flood of miners has poured. My travels in Alaska have been extensive since the journey of which this work is a record, and I have noted the same scenes that are herein described, in many other parts of the vast untravelled Territory. It will take two or three decades or more, to make alterations in this region and change the condition throughout.
In recording, therefore, the scenes and hardships encountered in this northern country, I describe the experiences of one who to-day knocks about the Yukon region, the Copper River region, the Cook Inlet region, the Koyukuk, or the Nome District. My aim has been throughout, to set down what I saw and encountered as fully and simply as possible, and I have endeavored to keep myself from sacrificing accuracy to picturesqueness. That my duties led me to see more than would the ordinary traveller, I trust the following pages will bear witness.
Let the reader, therefore, when he finds tedious or unpleasant passages, remember that they record tedious or unpleasant incidents that one who travels this vast region cannot escape, as will be found should any of those who peruse these pages go through the Yukon Gold Diggings.
CONTENTS
CHAP. | PAGE | |
I. | The Trip to Dyea | 9 |
II. | Over the Chilkoot Pass | 35 |
III. | The Lakes and the Yukon to Forty Mile | 65 |
IV. | The Forty Mile Diggings | 109 |
V. | The American Creek Diggings | 156 |
VI. | The Birch Creek Diggings | 161 |
VII. | The Mynook Creek Diggings | 207 |
VIII. | The Lower Yukon | 229 |
IX. | St. Michael's and San Francisco | 264 |
ILLUSTRATIONS
PAGE | |
"We of the Flannel Shirt and the Unblacked Boot" | Frontispiece |
An Alaskan Genealogical Tree | 12 |
Bacon, Lord of Alaska | 21 |
Lynn Canal | 31 |
Alaskan Women and Children | 40 |
Alaskan Indians and House | 63 |
Shooting the White Horse Rapids | 93 |
Talking it Over | 98 |
Alaska Humpback Salmon, Male and Female | public@vhost@g@gutenberg@html@files@44038@[email protected]#Page_107" |