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TUTTLE, Charles R[ichard] [b. 1848].
Our North Land: Being A Full Account Of The Canadian North-West And Hudson's Bay Route, Together With A Narrative Of The Experiences Of The Hudson's Bay Expedition Of 1884.
Toronto: C.Blackett Robinson, 1885..
8vo. pp. xvi, [17]-589. with half-title. 2 folding coloured maps (frontis. map backed repairing tears - no loss). original blind & gilt-stamped cloth (outer portion of rear cover stained, extremities bit frayed). First Edition. "Based on the author's observations during the expedition of 1884, and on reports of other Canadian explorers and surveyors, a narrative of the expedition with notes on white, native and halfbreed peoples, the villages, missionaries and economic life observed along Labrador, the posts of Ungava Peninsula, Churchill, York Factory and the islands of the Bay; accounts of fighting field ice, bear hunting, and the work of Hudson's Bay Co.". (Arctic Bib.) Arctic Bib. 18107. Peel 1302.
$282 USD                          Book Number: ATTrTUTT10                         Order / Enquire



TYRRELL, J[ames] W[illiams] [1863-1945].
Across The Sub-Arctics Of Canada A Journey Of 3,200 Miles By Canoe And Snowshoe Through The Barren Lands.
Toronto: William Briggs., 1897..
8vo. pp. vi, [7]-280. folding map, 11 plates (incl. frontis.), & numerous text illus. (many full-page). original gilt-stamped pictorial cloth. First Edition. The author accompanied his brother, Joseph Burr Tyrrell, as topographer and Eskimo interpreter on an exploratory survey of the regions west of Hudson's Bay, May-Dec. 1893. They travelled from Lake Athabaska to Chesterfield Inlet, along Hudson's Bay and the coast to Hayes River. The present narrative includes a list of plants collected on the expedition, a vocabulary Of Eskimo words, a route map, a classified index, and illustrations from photographs taken on the journey, and from drawings by Arthur Heming. Arctic Bib. 18137.
$250 USD                          Book Number: elala3275                         Order / Enquire



TYRRELL, J[ames] W[illiams] [1863-1945].
Across The Sub-Arctics Of Canada A Journey Of 3,200 Miles By Canoe And Snowshoe Through The Hudson Bay Region.
Toronto: William Briggs., 1908..
8vo. pp. vi, [7]-280. 2 folding maps (1 colour), 16 plates (incl. frontis., 2 double-sided), & numerous text illus. (many full-page, incl. 1 map), many after photographs by J.B.Tyrrell. original gilt-stamped pictorial cloth (spine spotted). Third and Best Edition. The author accompanied his brother, Joseph Burr Tyrrell, as topographer and Eskimo interpreter on an exploratory survey of the regions west of Hudson's Bay, May-Dec. 1893. They travelled from Lake Athabaska to Chesterfield Inlet, along Hudson's Bay and the coast to Hayes River. The present narrative includes a list of plants collected on the expedition, a vocabulary Of Eskimo words, a route map, a classified index, and illustrations from photographs taken on the journey, and from drawings by Arthur Heming and J.S.Gordon. This third edition is revised, with two new chapters on musk-oxen and the Hudson Bay route, and many new illustrations, and a map.ud Arctic Bib. 18138.
$225 USD                          Book Number: elala3504                         Order / Enquire



TYRRELL, J[ames] W[illiams] [1863-1945].
Report On An Exploratory Survey Between Great Slave Lake And Hudson Bay Districts Of Mackenzie And Keewatin. (Dept. of the Interior Appendix No. 26, Part III, Annual Report 1901).
Ottawa: Government Printing Bureau, 1902..
8vo. pp. 62, [blank leaf], 207-329. 61 plates. 2 sketch maps in text. wrs. (rear wr. detached). Illlustrated account of travels east from Great Slave Lake via Artillery Lake and Thelon River to the confluence of the Dubawnt River, Tyrrell's exploration of the upper Thelon region, and C.C.Fairchild's completion of the survey of Aberdeen, Schultz and Baker Lakes in 1900. See Arctic Bib. 18140 (different issue with different pagination & incl. 22 maps).
$275 USD                          Book Number: elala5256                         Order / Enquire



TYRRELL, J[oseph Burr] [1858-1957].
Report On The Doobaunt, Kazan And Ferguson Rivers And The North-West Coat Of Hudson's Bay And On Two overland routes from Hudson Bay to Lake Winnipeg.
Ottawa: Printed by S.E.Dawson, 1897..
8vo. pp. 218F. 11 plates. 2 folding maps (1 very large in colour). (few tears in map -- no loss). In Geological Survey of Canada Annual Report (New Series) Volume IX 1896. cloth (cloth soiled). Ottawa: 1898. Other papers include 'Report on the Geology of the French River Sheet Ontario' by Robert Bell (large folding coloured map), and 'Report on a Traverse of the Northern Part of the Labrador Peninsula from Richmond Gulf to Ungava Bay' by A.P.Low (4 plates) -- Arctic Bib. 10373, 'Report on the Geology of South-West Nova Scotia' by L.W.Bailey (5 plates, large folding coloured map), &c. Arctic Bib. 18160.
$200 USD                          Book Number: elala5746                         Order / Enquire



[TYTLER, Patrick Fraser] [1791-1849].
The Northern Coasts Of America, And The Hudson's Bay Territories. A Narrative Of Discovery And Adventure.
London: T.Nelson And Sons, 1853..
8vo. pp. vi, 409 + 16(ads). steel-engraved frontis. & title, 6 wood-engraved plates (incl. portrait) & 1 folding map. original blind & gilt-stamped cloth (bit frayed & scuffed, shaken, some foxing mainly affecting plates). First Edition. The first four chapters (pp. 1-255) are chiefly derived from Tytler's Historical View Of The Progress Of Discovery. R.M.Ballantyne wrote the remaining chapters describing Back's 1833-35 explorations, Dease and Simpson's journey in 1837-39, and Dr. Rae's expedition of 1846-47. TPL 1752 (7 plates & folding map). Peel 156. Sabin 97657(n). Smith 10390. Strathern 552. cfGagnon I 3597.
$205 USD                          Book Number: AYTe[TYT42                         Order / Enquire



UNITED STATES. CONGRESS. HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES. COMMITTEE ON MERCHANT MARINE AND FISHERIES.
The Fur-Seal And Other Fisheries Of Alaska. Investigation Of the Fur-Seal And Other Fisheries Of Alaska. Report From the Committee On Merchant Marine And Fisheries Of The House Of Representatives.
Washington: Government Printing Office, 1889..
8vo. pp. 1 p.l., L, 415. 4 folding maps & 16 plates (7 folding). original cloth (spine ends frayed, few spots on front cover). Arctic Bib. 18318.
$125 USD                          Book Number: elala1678                         Order / Enquire



UNITED STATES. REVENUE-CUTTER SERVICE.
Cruise Of The Revenue-Steamer Corwin In Alaska And The N.W. Arctic Ocean In 1881. Notes And Memoranda: Medical And Anthropological; Botanical; Ornithological.
Washington: Government Printing Office, 1883..
4to. pp. 120. 12 plates: 4 hand-coloured lithographs of birds, 2 tinted lithographs of fish, 2 tinted lithographs of skulls, 1 coloured lithograph of tattooing, & 3 heliotypes of microscopic sections of Eskimo hair. original cloth (lacking rear flyleaf). with tipped-in slip: 'Compliments Of E.W.Clakr, Chief Revenue Marine'. First Edition. Report on the anthropological and natural history work accomplished on the cruise of the 'Corwin' in the northwest Arctic Ocean in 1881. From June to October, the 'Corwin' searched the waters north and west of Bering Strait for the 'Jeannette' and two missing whaling vessels. On her voyage, the 'Corwin' visited St. Lawrence Island and Plover Bay (Chukotsk Peninsula), Herald and Wrangel Islands, Point Barrow, and Unalaska Island. The present report includes medical and anthropological notes by I.C.Rosse, botanical notes on Alaska (listing 192 species) by John Muir, notes on birds of Bering Sea and the Arctic Ocean by E.W.Nelson, and a list of fishes of the Arctic Ocean north of Bering Strait (21 species) by T.H.Bean. Arctic Bib. 18399 (separately listed as 14876, 11837, 12172, 1187). Wickersham 7594.
$500 USD                          Book Number: elala1912                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate L from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting crew members attempting to free their ice-bound ship with shovels and axes, one man shooting at a bear with a musket, another attacking bear in the background. 138 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$700 USD                          Book Number: elala5582                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XL from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting men in two open boats killing a bear in the water with axes and a musket, with two sailing ships in the background. 142 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$800 USD                          Book Number: elala5578                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XLI from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting two indigenous Saami with bows and arrows in the foreground, with other Saami armed with bows and arrows, spears and a musket in the background, one on a sleigh pulled by two reindeer. 142 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$1000 USD                          Book Number: elala5579                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XLIII from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting three men shooting at a bear standing on its hind legs, two other bears seen in the background apparently attempting to steal food. 142 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$1000 USD                          Book Number: elala5580                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XLVI from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting crew members aboard ship and on land defending themselves against three attacking bears with spears and clubs, a sleigh and a group of men fleeing in the background. 142 x 178 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$700 USD                          Book Number: elala5581                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XXXVI from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting men in two open boats being attacked by bears, with two sailing ships in the background. 142 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$800 USD                          Book Number: elala5576                         Order / Enquire



VEER, Gerrit De.
Plate XXXVII from the first edition of Part III of Theodor De Bry's collection of voyages to the East Indies, known as the 'Petits Voyages'.
Frankfurt am Mayn: Matthes Becker, 1599..
copper engraving depicting men killing walruses on land, with an open boat and two sailing ships in the background. walruses and bears are shown swimming in the water. 142 x 180 mm., on a folio sheet with heading and text. matted and framed. De Veer's narrative, originally published in 1598, describes the three successive Dutch voyages in search of the north-east passage to the East Indies commanded by Willem Barents [d. 1597], two in company with Jan Huygen van Linschoten,. On the first (1594), Barents and his crew reached and sailed along the west coast of Novaya Zemlya and then via Vaigatz to the Kara Sea as far as the mouth of the Ob. The following year, their attempt to navigate the strait between the Asiatic coast and Vaigatz Island was thwarted by ice. The third and last voyage, which occupies most of De Veer's narrative, is by far the most celebrated and ranks as one of the greatest in the annals of Polar exploration. Bear Island and Spitsbergen were sighted on the voyage out, and the northern tip of Novaya Zemlya was rounded before Barents' ship was beset and crushed by ice. The crew was forced to spend the entire winter on the island, the earliest recorded over-wintering this far north. Early the following year, the ship was abandoned and most of the crew escaped to safety in open boats, eventually being rescued by Dutch ships on the Kola Peninsula. Barents himself died of scurvy. Gerrit de Veer was one of the survivors. Almost three centuries later, in 1871, the hut in which the company over-wintered was found intact by a Norwegian ship. The most striking feature of the various editions of De Veer's narrative is the series of animated engravings, which vividly portray the dangers, hardships and adventures experienced by Barents and his crew in the Arctic, the ice-bound ship, the preparations for wintering on Novaya Zemlya, bear attacks, the hunting of walruses, and the survivors' struggle to safety in open boats. Crawford, Bibliotheca Lindesiana. Collation And Notes. No. 3. Grands Et Petits Voyages Of De Bry, pp. 69-70.
$800 USD                          Book Number: elala5577                         Order / Enquire


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