| Cecil Fairfield Lavell, Charles Edward Payne - 1918 - 440 sider
...its edge. It extended east and west far beyond the reach of our sight. . . . Ninety-seven ice hills were distinctly seen within the field, besides those...looking like a ridge of mountains rising one above the other until they were lost in the clouds." So the explorer had to turn back and content himself... | |
| Sir Clements Robert Markham - 1921 - 624 sider
...be seen, was reached on the 3oth January, 1774. Captain Cook counted 97 ice hills within the pack, many of them very large, and looking like a ridge of mountains rising one above another until they were lost in the clouds. Cook adds that a mile within the pack there was solid ice in one... | |
| James Cook - 1999 - 494 sider
...west, far beyond the reach of their sight. In the situation they were in, just the southern half of the horizon was illuminated by the rays of light reflected...immense field was composed of loose or broken ice closely packed together; so that it was not possible for anything to enter it. This was about a mile... | |
| Bernadette Hince - 2000 - 416 sider
...772. I 773. I 774. and I 775 Libraries Board of South Australia facs. Adelaide II970i. vol I: 267. The outer. or northern edge of this immense field....close packed together; so that it was not possible for any thing to enter it. 19 Mar 1823 Morrell. Benlamin |nr. quoted in Kenneth |. Bertrand II 97I I Americans... | |
| Sir Clements Robert Markham - 1921 - 624 sider
...be seen, was reached on the 3oth January, 1774. Captain Cook counted 97 ice hills within the pack, many of them very large, and looking like a ridge of mountains rising one above another until they were lost in the clouds. Cook adds that a mile within the pack there was solid ice in one... | |
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