f; CORNELL UNIVERSITY LIBRARY BOUGHT WITH THE INCOME OF THE SAGE ENDOWMENT FUND GIVEN IN 1891 BY HENRY WILLIAMS SAGE Cornell University Library G742 .K81 1874 German Arctic expedition of 1869-70, and Clin 3 1924 029 845 405 Cornell University Library The original of tiiis book is in tine Cornell University Library. There are no known copyright restrictions in the United States on the use of the text. http://www.archive.org/details/cu31924029845405 '-% X THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION OF 1869-70, AND NAERATIVE OF THE WRECK OF THE "HANSA" IN THE ICE. By captain KOLDBWEY, COMMANDER OF THE EXPEDITION, ASSISTED BY MEMBERS OF THE SCIEN'JIMC STATE. NUMEROUS WOODCUTS, TWO COLOUMEA MAPS, TWO FORTSAITS OJf STEEL, AND FOUR CSROHO LITBOGRAPHIC ILLUSTRATIONS. TRANSLATED AND ABRIDGED BY THE REV. L? MERCIER, M.A., OXONj AND EDITED BY H^W. 'BATES, P.L.S., ASSISTANT SECRETARY, ROYAL GEOGRAPHICAL SOCIETY. fiontou ; SAMPSON LOW, MARSTON, LOW, & SEARLE, CROWN BUILDINGS, 188, FLEET STREET. 1874. \_JU riff Ms reserved.^ lL:^L^4r-^-*"e^ 30^ lONDON : Oir.DEM AND BIVINGTOU, PBINTEKS, ST. JOHN'S SQUABE. ($•' /' jt V" CONTENTS. PAGE Inti-oduction. — Preliminary Observations. — Object and Plan of the Expedition. — Victualling of the Ships. — Compact between the Captains. —Instructions for the Second German Arctic Expeditionof 1869, 1870. By Dr. A. Petermann . . 1 PAET I. JOINT PASSAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS, AND VOYAGE OF THE HANSA. Chapter I. — Joint Voyage of the Gei-mania and the Hansa, from the 15th June to 4th July. By Captain Koldewey and Dr. Pansch 24 Chapter II. — Further passage of the two Ships to the Ice. — Middle of July. By Captain Koldewey and Dr. Pansch . 45 Chapter III. — To the Separation of the Ships on the 20th July. By Captain Koldewey and Dr. Pansch . . . . .64 Chapter IV. — Further Voyage of the Hansa up to her Blockade in the Coast-ice of East Greenland. 20th July to 7th Sep- tember. By Captain Hegemann ...... 80 Chapter V. — From the blocking up of tlie Hansa to the Settlement upon the Floe. 7th September to end of October. By Captain Hegemann, Professor Laube, and others . . . .94 Chapter VI. — Drifting to the South. — Christmas time. — A severe January. November, 1869, to end of January, 1870. By Captain Hegemann . . . . . . . .116 IV CONTENTS. PACE Chapter VII, — Post nubila Phoebus. Abandonment of the Floe, and Boat-Journey to the Island of lUuidlek. February to 4th June, 1870. By Captain Hegemann . . • . t-oi Chapter VIII.— Journey along the Coast of areenland, from Illuidlek to Friedrichsthal. June, 1870. By Captain Hege- mann, with the assistance of Professor Laube and W. Bade . 163 Chapter IX. ^Further Stay in Friedrichsthal.— Journey via Igikait to Nennortalik. By Professor Laube . . . 1 87 Chapter X. — Liohtenau. — Excursion to the Island of Unartok. — Journey to Julianeshaab. By Professor Laube . • 205 Chapter XL — In Julianeshaab. — Excursion to Igalliko. By Professor Laube .....••• 220 Chapter XII. — Kaksimiut. — Frederickshaab. — Return to Europe. By Professor Laube . . . - • 244 PAET II. VOYAGE OF THE GERMANIA. Chapter I. — Continuation of tlie Vo3^age of the Germania after Separation from the Hansa. — Landing of the Germania in East Greenland. From 21st July to 5th August, 1869. By Captain Koldewey and Dr. Pansch ..... 265 Chapter II. — Pendulum Island. — State of the Ice Northwards. — Landing on Shannon Island. By the same . . . 278 Chapter III. — Shannon Island : with the Tell-Platte and Klein- Pendulum. By Dr. Copeland, First-Lieutenant Payer, and Dr. Borgen 288 Chapter IV. — Further Coasting Voyage of the Germania. I7th August to 13 th September, 1869. By Captain Koldewey . 297 Chapter V. — Sledge-Journey to the Fligely Fjord. — Discoveiy of Coal strata on Kuhn Island. 14tli to 21st vSeptember, 1869. By Captain Koldewey and Lieutenant Payer . . 312 Chapter VI. — Preparations for Wintering. 13th September to 7th November, 1869. By Dr. Pausch . . . .324 CONTENTS. PAGE Chapter VII. — Sledge- Journey to Clavering Island, and Dis- covery of the Tirol Fjord. 27tli October to 4tli November, 1869. By First-Lieutenant Payer, with additions by Captain Koldewey .......... 353 Chapter VIII. — Winter Night from November, 1869, to New Year's Day, 1870. By Dr. Pansch 371 Chapter IX.— First Month of the year 1870. By Dr. Pansch . 391 Chapter X. — Long Sledge-Jouraey on the Coast Northwards. — Discovery of King William's Island. 8th March to 27th April, 1870. By Lieutenant Payer and Captain Koldewey . 412 Chapter XL — SI edge- Journey to Ai'dencaple Inlet, from 8th May to 29th May. By Lieutenant Payer .... 449 Chapter XII. — Hunting and Animal Life in East Greenland. By Lieutenant Payer and Dr. Copeland, with additions by Dr. Hartlaub 465 Chapter XIII. — Sledge-Journeys in Spring. April to July, 1870. By Dr. Borgen and Dr. Copeland .... 486 Chapter XIV. — Excursions to Sabine and Clavering Islands, to examine remains of Esquimaux Settlements. By Dr. Pansch 507 Chapter XV. — The Germania steams Northwards. 22nd to 31st July. By Captain Koldewey 529 Chapter XVI. — Coast Voyage of the Germania towards South. Jackson Island. — Cape Broer Ruys. — Boat-Journey. — -Dis- covery of Francis-Joseph's Fjord. By Captain Koldewey 539 Chapter XVII. — Sailing into the Fjord. — Ascent of Payer's Peak. — Discovery of Petermann's Peak. — Homeward Voyage decided on. By Captain Koldewey, Lieutenant Payer, and Dr. Pansch ......... 551 Chapter XVIII. — Return to Bremerhaven. By Captain Kol- dewey .......... 565 Conclusion. By Captain Koldewey ...... 574 Appendix . . . . . . . . . .581 DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIONB. HALF-PAGE WOODCOTS. KilJer Dolphins Cape Bi'oer Buys Cape James The Flower-Basket . The Devil's Thumb . The Brandenburg Gate Hunting the Polar Bear Polar Bear as a Watch-dog Ice-formations . Skating on " Sinai " . Snow- Sphinx Iceberg with Refraction, by Cape Lowenor Iceberg .... Hunting the Polar Bear The boat Bismarck . Iceberg The Look-out . Sketch of Hansa Haven Group of Esquimaux Ruins of Erick Rauda's House Ice-drift Formations . First Sight of Laud . Tent for Sledge-journeying Arctic Fox at a trap . Tent-quarters . Young "Walrus . Surprised by a Bear . Depot on Kuhn Island Hiihnerberg Glacier The Krouenberg Block of Basalt Fossil from Kuhn Island . Ruined Esquimaux Huts, &c. Longitudinal section of Esquimaux Hut Portions of Esquimaux Implements DESCIUPTTON OP ILLUSTRATIONS. Vll Ruined Huts on Sabine Island .... . 526 Esquimaux Box . ... . 542 Regenerated Glacier 553 End of a Glacier 555 Lower end of the Glaciers . 557 WHOLK PAGE WOODCUTS. ■I'O FACE PAGE The Germania .... 14 The Hansa ... . . 16 Blocksof Ice with Seals ... . . . ^Sy Warping through the Ice ... . . . 86 Ice formations .... ... . 102 The Liverpool coast . . ... 105 The Hansa in distress . 108 Wreck of the Hansa . . . *. . 112 The Hansa House on the Floe ..... . 115 Iceberg . ..... . 132 Bivouac in boats ....... . 133 Dragging the boats to Illuidlek Island . 155 Coast to the South of Illuidlek .... . 157 The Boats under sail . 164 Boat-Journeys with Canoes . 198 Lichtenau .... ... . 207 In the Pack ........ . 270 The Germania in the Ice . ... . 331 The Germania on Sabine Island .... . 336 Iceberg near Cape Borlase Warren . 356 On Deck . ... 372 Deep-snow Travelling . 452 Death of the Musk Ox . 456 Esquimaux Implements . .... 516 Do. do. . . . ... . ib. The Germania on the South Coast of Shannon . . 538 Mountain Peak behind the Glaciers, &c. . 554 Glacier of Payer's Peak 560 STEEI. ENGRAVINGS. Karl Koldewey, Commander of the Expedition, Captain of the Germania .......... 11 Paul Friedrich August Hegemaun, Captain of the Hansa . . 35 Vin DESCRIPTION OF ILLUSTRATIONS. COLOURED II.I.USTKATIONS. Arrival of Boats at Friedriclisthal . . • ■ Frontisinece Queen Augusta Valley . . ... 306 Tirol Fjord . . . 363 The Devil's Castle . . 552 MAPS. (to be placed at the end.) Chart of the Northern Portion of East Greenland surveyed on the Sledge-Journey, from 24th March to 27th April, 1870. Chart of the Voyage and Discoveries of the Second German Arctic Expedition, with the aid of previous Charts. INTEODUCTION. First suggestion of the undertaking at a festival given at Bremen in honour of Dr. Petermann and the First German Arctic Expe- dition. — Dr. Petermann's plan of the 30th of October, 1868. — Dr. Petermann consents to the building of the Germania from the remaining funds of the Expedition of 1868. — His programme of the 8th of March, 1869. — Exploration of the Central Arctic region with the east coast of Greenland as a basis. — Captain Koldewey's circuit through the provinces. — Statement of the project. — Forming of committees in different German towns for the support of the undertaking. — Assistance of the Newspaper Press. — Forma- tion of the Bremen Committee. — Opposition to the choice of the yacht Greenland as the second" ship. — The Hamburg Committee. — Further action. — Definitive resolutions. — Appeal of the 10th of May. — The commander and the scientific staff of the expedition. — The steamer Germania. — Fitting the Hansa for the Arctic voyage. — Outfit. — Scientific instruments. — Captain Koldewey's audience in Bremen previous to departure. — Instructions for the Second German Arctic Expedition. — Activity of the Bremen Committee in raising funds to cover the cost of the expedition. On the 24.tli of October, 1868, a number of gentlemen were assembled at Bremen, to celebrate the happy return of the members of the First German Arctic Expedition, including their commander Captain Karl Koldewey, and its scientific originator, Dr. A. Petermann. It was on ^ INTRODUCTION. this occasion that expression was first given ta the idea of another expedition to this inhospitable region. Pre- liminary conferences took place between Dr. Petermann, Captain Koldewey, Dr. Breusing, and Messrs. Meier and Rosenthal, the result of which was that the despatch of a new expedition became only a question of ways and means. The " Eough sketch of a plan for the German Arctic Expedition of 1869," with maps, from Dr. Peter- mann, was not long wanting. According to his sug- gestion, the expedition was to consist of two parts, so as to endeavour to solve two problems at the same time. A steamer was to land on East Greenland, and taking it as the basis of the winter operations, should try to penetrate into the heart of the Polar region ; a second steamer should, at any point between Greenland and Nova Zembla, strive to reach the highest latitude possible. For the carrying out of this plan two steamers were considered necessary. But the preparations soon reached a critical point. It was with but small re- sults for his trouble that Koldewey, whose enthusiasm and self-sacrifice in the cause became daily more appa- rent, strove to keep up the interest in it by repeated consultations in influential quarters. Dr. Petermann then decided that, in order to render the carrying out of the exploration practicable that year, he would, with the money still in hand from the first expedition, com- mission the building of a steamer, the dimensions of which should both meet the requirements of an Arctic voyage, and keep within the compass of their straitened means. It became necessary for the promoters to drop one p_art of Dr. Petermann's original plan, and confine themselves either to exploring the Central Arctic region. INTRODUCTION. 3 with the coast of Greenland for a basis, or to advancino- towards the North Pole by the open sea between Nova Zembla and Spitzbergen. Captain Koldewey declared for the former course, and also for retaining the pro- gramme of the Expedition of 1868 ; taking this view of the case, viz., that it must be a condition sine qua non to make the coast, in which case they would have a far greater prospect, even under the most difficult and adverse cir- cumstances, of making discoveries and scientific investi- gations, than by advancing oh the high sea towards the Pole. - Dr. Petermann acknowledged the force of this argu- ment, and agreed that Bast Greenland must be the point to keep in sight. A communication dated from Gotha, 8th March, 1869, brought these proceedings to the knowledge of the friends of the undertaking. The plan was now nearly as follows : " That the expedition should consist of a newly-built screw steamer and of the sailing-yacht ' Greenland,' a ship of the pioneer journey of 1868; that the end and aim of the same should be discovery and exploration in the Central Arctic region, from 74° N.L. upwards, the Bast Greenland coast being the basis. The ' Green- land,' acting as consort and transport-ship, should return in the autumn of the same year ; but the return of the chief ship should not take place until late in the autumn of 1870, after their intended wintering. That the aim of the expedition should be scientific, as well as nautical; the latter department being under the command of Captain Karl Koldewey, who the year before had proved himself so able in every respect, and whose character for courage, perseverance, and self-sacrifice in the cause, B 2 INTKODUCTION. called for unhesitating confidence." The scientific staff had already been partly chosen. To awaken interest in this new undertaking, no trouble was thought too great either by Dr. Petermann or Captain Koldewey, the latter undertaking circuits through Germany and delivering lectures in several places, which were sometimes followed by profitable results, and sometimes gave expectation of the same. At the same time he circulated a confident, independent, and well drawn up pamphlet, giving the nautical view of the question, in one respect differing slightly from Dr. Petermann' s original plan, namely, that if the coast of Bast Greenland was not reached until the middle of August, then the eastern coast of Spitzbergen. and GiJlisIand should be the object of investigation. These explanations found their way into the daily press, exciting great interest. Dr. Petermann, though not quite agreeing with Koldewey's proceedings, acted with great zeal in trying to bring the undertaking to a successful issue. At his suggestion Dr. Bastian in Berlin, and Professor Arendts in Munich, formed committees for receiving subscriptions. The Berlin Committee was chosen from members of the Berlin Geographical Society, amongst whom were renowned representatives of 'science, who published on the '3rd of April ^n energetic appeal for subscriptions.. In this appeal attention' was particu- larly drawn to the scientific and great national impor- tance of the undertaking. Berlin, as the metropolis of the North German Confederation", the centre of her national efforts, was called upon, now that an important object for knowledge and action offered itself, to issue the first appeal. The sum still wanting Avas certain to be soon made up; and if Berlin with INTEODUOXION. claeerful self-saerifice once led the way, other towns would not be left behind. The appeal to the inhabitants of Munich (dated May) was issued by the Geographical Society, and signed by Professor Dr. Jolly as director, and Professor Dr. Arendts as secretary. Accordingly, collections were set on foot throughout the whole of Bavaria. In Bremen, where the preparations for the undertaking" were to be carried out, and where it would probably find its best support, people were very favour- able to the project. In a succession of communications in the daily press, and the Weser-Zeitung particularly, in an explanatory light article of the 4th of April, the national, nautical, and scientific importance of the undertaking were dwelt upon. Essays of the same kind soon appeared in the other different German papers. "We must not forget to mention here, that the first favourable notice of the expedition Came from the Marine Society Concordia, at Elsfleth. The chief towns throughout the whole of the North-Sea and Baltic coasts, beginning at Bremen, were actively interested in the cause. Before the formation of the committee at Bremen, Mr. G. Albrecht was. induced by the Consul, H. H. Meier, with Dr. Petermann's con- currence, to undertake the management of the accounts. When Consul Meier afterwards withdrew, Mr. A. G. Mosle undertook the presidency, offered to him by Mr. G. Albrecht and M. Lindeman, in order that a committee might be organized. With this view the first meeting took place on the 9th of April in the house of Messrs. Schiitting. It was composed of Captain Koldewey, Mosle, Albrecht, C. H. Noltenius, director of the pilot-school in Bremen, Dr. A. Breusing, D. H. Watjen, jun., Ship-builder Y. Tecklenborg, sen., the Eecorder of the Commercial 6 INTEODUGTION. Board H. A. Schumacher, Captain Gutkese from Bremer- haven, and M. Liademan, reporter. Captain Karl Kolde- wey laid the plan of the undertaking before them, and the choice of the steamer as expedition -ship and the "Green- land" as transport-ship. Director Breusing declared that to enable them to accomplish any great result, two steamers with outfits for three or four years would be necessary. Some gentlemen were of opinion that, if possible, a larger ship should be chosen in the place of the small confined sailing-yacht " Greenland," which might be richly stored with coals and provisions, so as to put them in a position to pass more than one winter, if necessary, and thus, if possible, carry their investiga- tion further northward. In the next sitting they agreed that Dr. Petermann and Captain Koldewey being really the originators of the undertaking, it devolved upon the committee to support the efforts of these gentlemen to the utmost of their power. The meeting styled them- selves " The Bremen Committee for the Second North Arctic Expedition," and chose A. G. Mosle as president, G. Albrecht as treasurer, and M. Lindeman as secretary. The committee, to which Messrs. R. Fritze, W. Nielsen, and Captain Ludwig Geerken were added, published on the 17th of April an appeal to their fellow-townsmen for subscriptions, which, among other things, contained the following : — ■" The scientific and maritime importance of the undertaking is everywhere admitted, and everywhere the highest interest evinced in it. Bremen will not be behind in promoting this national work. It rests for German inquiry to open up new domains, in order to show that German sailors are as qualified, as bold, and as persevering as those of other nations." INTEODUCTION. 7 The discussion -with Dr. Petermann as to whether a larger transport-ship should be chosen or not, led to no satisfactory conclusion. For practical as well as financial reasons he decided in the negative. But on the other side were voices of weight and influence in nautical circles of the North Sea and Baltic coasts, and which must be heard. People thought it right to raise serious objections to the insufficient size of the ship. These, with very great exaggeration, found expression in the daily press, so much so that Captain Koldewey was obliged to inter- fere by letter to the newspapers. In Hamburg one of the prime movers in the undertaking, the director of the North German Marine Observatory, W. v. Freeden, had resolved to form a committee. A number of repre- sentatives of respectable firms, the directors of the Mariue and Astronomical Observatories, formed them- selves into the " Hamburg Committee for the Northern Expedition of 1869." On the ,23rd of April an appeal followed, in which it was represented that Hamburg had always shown a lively interest in all national questions, and with regard to this undertaking felt it incumbent upon it, remembering its antecedents, to guard its position as the leading seaport of Germany. The Hamburg Committee also declared, in a sitting at which Dr. Petermann and Captain Koldewey were present, for Dr. Petermann's published plan of the 8th of March. By degrees the interest of the nation and the whole of the country began to warm niore and more. New committees were formed in Oldenburg, Emden, and Leei*, in Rheinhessen (Worms and Oppenheim), at Karlsruhe, Lubeck, Konigsberg, and Rostock. The committee of Bremen, in a letter of the 2nd of May 8 INTEODUOTION. addressed to the Berlin Committee, thus defined its position with regard to the carrying out of the expe- dition : — " After a lengthy conference between the sea- faring men belonging to our committee, and the whale fishermen of the "Weser-fleet, and others of the profession, we have decided that our direct influence must be directed and confined to the way and manner of carrying out the following points : — To keep in view that the ships shall be as good as possible, and to care- fully see to the supply of provisions and coal. Every other nautical question coming under our consideration we have laid, and will continue to lay before the com- mander of the expedition, and thoroughly enter into it with him, stiU, however, not considering it our business to interfere." A larger ship than the " Greenland" having been proposed, and this proposal approved of by Captain Koldewey, as well as by Captain Hegemann, who, being familiar with the Arctic waters, was to take the command of the second ship, it was agreed to. Amongst other reasons advanced for this was, that besides the thirty tons of coal required for heating in winter, the Germania could at the utmost only carry forty tons for feeding the engines. On this head alone the choice of a larger ship was desirable — namely, that the expedition was to be supplied with provisions for a longer time than was originally intended. The pending question as to pro- curing a larger ship instead of the " Greenland " was solved at a sitting of the Bremen Committee on the 8th of May, at which Dr. Petermann, Director W. v. Freeden from Hamburg, and three other scientific men interested in the expedition, were present — viz., that 'a number of Bremen merchants should be security for the purchase- INTRODtrCTION. 9 money for a larger companion vessel to the amount of £1500. Dr. Petermann' now declared decidedly for choosing a larger ship instead of the " Greenland," and that a sailing ship, on the ground that a suitable steamer was not easily procurable, and that two scientific men stould be attached to the ship. The following resolution was drawn up by Dr. Petermann and signed by aU present at th.e meeting : — " On the 7th of next month, the Second German Arctic Expedition, under Captain Karl Koldewey, shall put to sea. This is the unanimous resolution .of the friends of the undertaking, assembled from far and near, for the final settlement of the plan, at Bremen, on the 8th of May. " It is our unanimous endeavour to render every part of the equipment as perfect as possible. After strict trial and inspection, the steamer Germania, the newl}''- built chief ship of the expedition, fulfils every expecta- tion, as well as the sailors who conduct it and the men of science who accompany it. The steamer, like the convoy which accompanies her, will be equipped for two years. " The. Germania's size is expressly adapted for ice- navigation ; the accompanying ship, the Hansa, of nearly the same size, will also be expressly adapted for 'the same purpose, and will be under the command of Cap- tain Fr. Hegemann, of Oldenburg. If possible, the two ships will remain with each other, both on the outward journey, through the winter, and also on the return. Eegard to the greatest possible security of the expe- dition has led to this extension of the plan. " The plan of the originator of the undertaking, Dr. 10 INTRODUCTION. Petermann, of Gotha, v>rMch makes the eastern coast of Greenland the basis for advancing into the centre of the Arctic region, is to remain the first aim of this expe- dition. " The Bremen Con^mittee have become security for the necessary means (£1600) for providing the second ship. We hope that in other parts of Germany the friends of the undertaking will show the same deter- mination, as the enlarged plan requires greater means. " The naval and scientific importance of the expedition is everywhere acknowledged ; the means for speedily and fully carrying it out, the interests of the German navy and of German science demand. " Bremen, 10th of May, 1869. " Dr. A. Petermann, A. G. Mosle, Capt. K. Koldewey, G. Albrecht, Capt. Fr. Hegemann, 0. H. Noltenius, W. V. Freeden, Eichard Fritze, Dr. Borgen, D. H. Watjen, Dr. Copeland, W. Nielsen, Dr. Med. Pansch, Capt. L. Geerken, M. Lindeman, Capt. W. Gutkese, H. H. Meier, Synd. Dr. Schumacher." Thus a firm foundation was laid for the whole under- taking, and the Bremen Committee could undisturbed make the numberless preparations and give all their attention and trouble to raising the money — a care which fell exclusively upon it, and was by no means small. Dr. Petermann had acted in the same way for the Expedition of 1868. The committee issued some Karl Kolbewey. /■u-/y?iy.i?i^ - /^^^^e^\y^-4^?9^ a^c/zy INTRODUCTION. 11 thousands of circulars to raise money to meet the expense, which was now estimated at £] 0,500. The scientific staff for the Germania were, partly on Captain Koldewey's proposal, chosen and appointed by Dr. Petermann. The commander of the whole expedition was Captain Koldewey, of Bucken, near Hoya, in the province of Hanover. He was in the thirty-secp^nd year of his age. Brought up in the Pilot School. at Bremen, he had been -a sailor sixteen years, that is from 1853. Giving up his practical business for a time, Koldewey, in order to im- prove himself, attended the Polytechnic School in Hanover, and in the winter of 1867 and 1&68 the University of Gottingen, where he studied physics and astronomy, which after his return from. the first Arctic expedition, as far as the completion of his :;]8,eport of it would allow, he took up again. {{■■ -, The scientific members- of the expedition, to ship in the Germania were the following : — 1st. Dr. Karl IST. J. Borgen, born in Schleswig on the 1st of October, 1843. He attended the cathedral school in that place ; was drafted in 1863 to the University of Copenhagen, in 1864 to the University of Kiel, and in 1866 to that of Gottingen. In 1866, he was assistant in the observatory of that place; served as a volunteer in the army of the North German Alliance from January 15th, 1867, to 1868. Obtaining leave of absence for two years, he received on that occasion from the Prussian Ministry of Public Instruction a subsidy of £75. 2nd. Dr. R. Copeland, born the 3rd of September, 1837,atWoodplumptonin Lancashire, England. Acquired a scientific education in his own country, travelled in 12 INTRODUCTION. foreign countries, and in 1865-67 studied astrononay in Gottingen. Since 1867 he tad worked as voluntary assistant in the observatory of that place. In the spring of 1869 Dr. Borgen and himself published jointly a large astronomical work, together with " The History of Arctic Winterings." In the present expedition they had under- taken both astronomical and physical science as well as geodesy. 3rd. Julius Payer, first lieutenant of infantry in the Im- perial Austrian army, twenty-seven years old, was born at- Teplitz, in Bohemia, where his father was captain of a regi- ment of lancers. His education and training he received in the Neustadt Military Academy, from which he received his commission as an officer in the army in 1859, followed by a garrison life in Mainz, Frankfort, Verona, Venice, and Jagerndorf. In Verona, excited by the neighbourhood of the Alps, Payer began his studies. There appeared in Justus Perthes' Oeographische Mittheilungen several scientific papers from his pen on the Gross-Glockner, the Adamell group, and the Ortler Alps. Of his other works, a treatise on the Bocca di Brenta is deserving of mention. In 1866 Payer took part in the Italian war, and received the cross of merit at Oustozza; in 1868 he was recalled by the Minister of "War and was commissioned to the survey of the inhospitable region of the mountainous district of Austria. The request for leave to accompany the Arctic expedition was granted most graciously by the Minister of War, together with a supply of fire-arms, a considerable store of gunpowder, and various scientific instruments. Payer joined the expedition with the prestige of his previous reputation for activity in the cause of science. INTRODUCTION. 13 4th. Adolphus Pansch, M.D., surgeon to the Germania, to whom were assigned the departments of zoology, botany, ethnology, and anthropology, was twenty-eight years old, and studied medicine and physical science in Berlin, 1860; in 1861, at Heidelberg, physiology and geology ; travelled through Switzerland, attended the clinical lectures in Berlin and Halle ; and later on passed the prescribed examination in Oldenburg as a practical physician, and was made demonstrator of anatomy in July, 1866. In 1866 he acted as private tutor at the University of Kiel. Pansch had written several scientific treatises, from amongst which we should specify, from its practical bearings and its extensive research, a pamphlet upon the " Flora of the Seas." Dr. Pansch received permission from the government to join the expedition. The scientific men on board the Hansa were the two following : — 1st. Dr. Buchholz, M.D., and surgeon to the Hansa, represented the departments of zoology, ethnology, and anthropology. Whilst serving as tutor at the University of Greifswald, he receivied leave to join the expedition, with a grant from the Minister of Public Instruction and the University of £75 for his outfit. Dr. Buchholz was born at Frankfort-on-the-Oder in 1837, studied in Konigs- berg and Berlin, and in the Bohemian campaign of 1866 was assistant-surgeon in a hospital of the Prussian army. 2nd. Dr. Gustavus Laube, Vienna, professor of zoology and lecturer to the University and Polytechnic School in Vienna, thirty years old, was born in Teplitz, and studied in Prague, Munich, and Tubingen. He was afterwards 14 INTKODUCTION. assistant to Professor Hochstetter, in Vienna, who re- commended him warmly for the expedition. The Germania, the chief ship of the expedition, was laid on the shps for building on the 10th of March, 1869, by Joh. 0. Tecklenborg, of Bremerhaven, and was launched on the 16th of April. On the 9th of May, Captain Koldewey and Dr. Petermann went on board, accom- panied by various members of the Bremen Committee, the director of the North German Marine Observatory, W. v. Freeden, and other friends (amongst whom were several experienced seamen). The ship was thoroughly inspected in all parts. W. v. Freeden's report of this inspection, will form the best description of the ship. He says, that upon measuring the Germania she was ninety feet long, twenty-two and a half broad, eleven feet deep, and 143 tons burden : this size, a few years ago, was con- sidered the highest standard for the best West Iiidian fruit or Brazilian coffee schooners. Of course the steamer was built stronger than required for such purposes as the above ; and the ordinary planking was coated with a hand-thick sheathing, thus protecting the stem, and in a ship of 600 tons undisccrnible below the water-line. Over this iron sheathing, which is bolted and riveted, not simply nailed on, is fastened a layer of sheet-iron. Thus double provision was made in order that the ice fretting at the ship's sides should not force the oakum out of the seams, so causing a leakage. Over the iron sheathing, by the bow, heavy iron rods were laid cross- ways, close together. Notwithstanding this armour, the ship's lines were pleasing to the eye, and, on account of her sharp build, she proved an excellent sailer. In the interior also, the strength of her build was INTRODUCTION. 15 striking, even to landsmen. Such strong beams 'tween decks are seldom seen in vessels of 400 tons. They are only to be found in large barques and full-rigged ships. The knees were alternately of wood and iron ; vertical supports above and below the middle deck protected it, together with bands of the strongest iron clamps, from any side pressure of masses of ice against the ship's sides, so that neither keel or deck could be displaced. The sharp build of the ship would rather have the effect of raising her on to the ice, than of allowing her to be nipped by it. The compact machinery was mounted, and the axis tested in position; the double-flanged screw could be lifted in and out without trouble. A reserve screw was also taken. As the ship was to be completely fitted with sails, the machinery was only to be used amongst the ice, or when she was obliged to beat against the wind. The masts furnished were of that sort that no pressure on the sails nor heavy shock could dismast her. A topsail on the foremast rendered veering and backing easy, and her depth in the water was from nine to ten feet. As the ship's course would lie along the eastern coast of Greenland, between the land and the not far distant ice-pack, a deeper draught would have been dan- gerous; neither could she have been much larger, for a larger vessel must have been flat-bottomed, to prevent her drawing too much water. This was satisfactorily proved on the voyage. Flat-bottomed vessels are very dangerous amongst the ice. Certainly the ship would have turned more easily, if she had been two feet broader ; but her capability of threading the narrow channels between the ice would have been weakened in corresponding degree. 16 INTBODUCTION. Including the macliinery and sMp's fitiings, the Ger- mania cost the rovind sum of £3150. The second ship, the purchase-money of which, as we have already remarked, had been previously guaranteed by some merchants belonging to the Bremen Committee, was the Prussian schooner Fulton, built on the Weser in 1864, of 76| tons burden. She received the name of the " Hansa," and was laid on the slips by F. W. Wenke and Co. (Rosenthal). A difficult and important part of the preparations was the victualling the ships. The only precedents of use were supplied by the experience of those who had been engaged in the Greenland trade from the Weser. Certainly the eastward journey of the " Green- land," in 1868, constituted somewhat of a guide. But never yet had a German ship sailed from the German coast with the intention of passing a winter in Arctic latitudes. On that account the experience of Englishmen, Americans, and Russians was carefully considered in the outfitting. Above all, attention was particularly paid to completeness and plentiful supply, as well as to the good quality of every article. The honour- able character of the contractors, the eagerness shown- on their side to further a national undertaking, and their wish on this occasion to keep up their reputation, stood the undertaking in good stead. On their departure, the members of the expedition particularly thanked them for the consideration they had shown to all their wishes with regard to the stores, and expressed their satisfaction with everything. Parsimony could not for a moment be con- sidered at such a time ; it would have been misplaced, inhuman, and destructive of the very aim of the expedition, INTHODUCTION. 1 7 had any niggardliness been shown. A complete outfit for both ships for two whole years was above all things a necessity, and indeed a point of honour. The contract for the victualling of the Germania was given to D. Cordes and Co., of Bremen, and that for the Hansa to H. Richers of Hamburg. Neither ship carried much dried or salted meat, but a great quantity of preserved meats in tins ; also a good supply of drinks, which are so necessary on an Arctic voyage, besides many presents of wine; and lastly, a corresponding quantity of clothing for all who were taking part in the expedition. Both ships had a similar allowance of everything needful ; and the Berlin Committee were of very great assistance in providing scientific apparatus and instruments, some of the most important of which were kindly lent by various persons and institutions. On the 28th of May, Captain Koldewey had an audi- ence of his Majesty King William at Babelsberg. His Majesty allowed Captain Koldewey to explain his plan by aid of a map. He expressed his satisfaction that a man had been found willing to carry out the undertaking, and fixed his visit to the vessels for his future intended journey to Bremen. The time of starting was settled for the middle of June ; and from March to that time every exertion was brought to bear upon the work that all might be com- plete. The equipment in every respect was accomplished in good time ; and when all was ready for departure, a joint committee was called together to consider, at the last moment, what had been accomplished, and what remained to be decided on, in the case of certain even- tualities. The scientific men were first greeted with the warmest thanks for their courageous resolution, and the 18 INTRODUCTION. hope expressed that it would be followed by rich results. It was then decided by the committee that the expedition should sail from Bremerhaven on the 16th of June at noon. A telegram addressed to Captain Koldewey confirmed the interest which King WiUiam had already shown in the undertaking, stating that on the 15th he would be in Bre- merhaven and Geestemiinde. All was then to be prepared for the king's visit and for immediate departure. An elabo- rate form was drawn up by Dr. Petermann on the 7th of June under the title of "Instructions for the Second German Arctic Expedition of 1869-70." On all the chief points both captains and scientific men were agreed, though some seemed to require earnest consideration ; but there was now no time for further discussions. How- ever, they agreed to make some unimportant alterations regarding the oflBcial reports of the expedition, and the ownership of the notes made by the scientific members during the voyage, as well as regarding the form and address of any communications to be sent home. They were all to be sent to Dr. Petermann. On the return of the expedition a preliminary report was to be drawn up, and the whole given up to a commission composed, of the captains" and scientific men belonging to the expedition, and the supporters and leaders of the undertaking, as well as scientific authorities. Dr. Petermann informed them of his agreement to these alterations by telegraph. The most important part of the proceedings of the joint committee lay in the last consultation, namely, how and when tidings of the men belonging to the expedition were to be gained in case their return should be too long delayed, and they should require assistance, or if their death should take place on the ice-fields of Greenland. It was resolved : — INTRODUCTION. 19 "That the expedition should, on the coast or islands, as nearly as possible under each degree of latitude or longitude, build up a heap of stones, or some other erection; that the burying of documents detaihng the events and condition of the undertaking should not be within this sign, but at a distance of twenty metres due north of it {not magnetic). And if from the nature of the ground no such distance could be taken, the documents were still to be deposited to the north- ward. The monuments were, if possible, to be erected on a decliAdty ; and as the Esquimaux greatly venerate all graves, so, in case of death, tidings of the expedition were to be placed under the body." At the same spot also all notices of the German Arctic voyage were to be sought if they themselves were unable to give information. This decision was telegraphed to Dr. Petermann, who returned his assent. Then followed a solemn oath taken by all those belong- ing to the expedition ; the two captains, as well as the scientific men, promising that both by word and deed, and under all circumstances, they would strive with all their might to reach the goal set before them. The instructions contained thirty-one paragraphs ; in Sects. 1 and 2 the aim and object of the expedition was declared to be the discovery and scientific investigation of the Central Arctic region from 75° N.L. and up- wards, taking the eastern coast of Greenland as a basis. This object included two tasks : Ist, the solving of the so-called Arctic question ; 2nd, the discovery, surveying, and investigation of Bast Greenland ; thence northwards towards Behring's Straits, including all intermediate countries, islands, and stretch of sea; the measuring 2 20 INTRODUCTION. of degrees in East Greenland, and ascents of the glaciers in tlie interior, &c., &o. In the third, the " Arctic question," with special regard to the late Swedish, Russian, and English voyages of discovery, was discussed. For the better investigation of the Polar Sea, and for reaching the North Pole itself, the following of the coast-line was strictly enjoined, as experience had shown that land is the soonest free from ice, and that along the coast is formed the so-called land water ; the navigation too has a chance of commencing earher, is comparatively safe, and promises the largest results, as really important scientific discoveries can scarcely be expected without the solid basis of land. The Second German Arctic Expedition would there- fore make East Greenland their basis of operations. Even under the greatest difficulties, the results from an investigation of East Greenland, and an extended know- ledge of that still unknown coast, might be expected to mark an epoch in the history of science. Sect. 6 ordered that both ships under the command of Captain Karl Koldewey should make direct for the floating ice of East Greenland in about 74|-° N.L., and as soon as possible reach Sabine Island, lying on the east coast in that latitude, and then deliberate on the accessi- bility of the coast from 70° to 79°. Sects. 7 and 8 decided as follows : if in 74J° N.L. immediate access to the coast was not possible on ac- count of the ice and the state of the weather, and there was no prospect of being able to reach it in a short time, the attempt must be made farther northward as far as 80° ; if still unsuccessful, to go as low down as 70°, and take advantage of any opening lying between 70° and 80°N.L. INTRODUCTION. 21 If the coast of East Greenland in 74^° is readied, or any other point between 70° and 80° N.L., and it is found (as in the course of things might be expected) that there is open water, so, without more delay than is neces- sary for observing and surveying the newly-discovered land about 75° 14 N.L., to press forward to the north, and to go as far along the coast as circumstances will allow. Sect. 9 pointed out as the chief task of the expedition, the geographical one of penetrating into the still un- known heart of the Arctic regions, and stated that every other consideration was to give place to the solution of this question. Sects. 10 and 11 enlarged upon the scientific work, and the different course to be taken by the expedition in case they should find open sea in the region of the Polar circle. By Sect. 12, they were enjoined to winter at the most northerly point they could reach — if possible at the North Pole itself, but in any case it was hoped in not less than 80° of lat. Of the remaining instructions, we must draw attention to the Sects. 15, 16, 22, 24, 27, and 28. The two first-mentioned decided as follows : — The return of the expedition was to be managed so that both vessels should, at the latest, arrive at Bremer- haven together about the 1st of November, 1870. If the Hansa should be unable to keep up with the steamer Germania, either on account of the ice or want of fair wind, the steamer should without any delay proceed on her course, leaving the Hansa to follow as soon as pos- sible. In case of separation, the point each ship was to make for was 74^° N.L. outside the floating ice, though along the coast. By this Sabine Island was meant. Sect. 22 consisted of the special instructions drawn up 22 INTEODUCTION. by various German savans, and communicated througli Dr. Petermann. In Sect. 24 particular reference was made to the im- portance of the ascent of glaciers, to be undertaken by Lieut. Payer. Sects. 27 and 28 contained further orders concerning the namino- of the newly-discovered lands, which for the most part was to be left until the completion of the general map at home ; also regarding the value and the use to be made of the collections brought home, and the apportionment of the work resulting therefrom. All these provisions could only be seriously considered on the return of the expedition, and would then serve as rules for the guidance of the Bremen Committee. "With this the complicated preparations were ended, and the day of departure drew near. ^ The Bremen Committee might now look upon that part of their task which related to the support of these prepa- rations as finished. Another part which, as has been already remarked, devolved entirely upon them, was that of raising the' considerable amount still required to defray the cost of the undertaking. At the time of start- ing, not half the cost of the expedition had been raised, and the Bremen Committee were, in this task, busily occupied for more than a year. Invitations for subscrip- tions were published and sent to private individuals as well as to corporations, to the representatives of Germany in foreign countries, and also to the magistrates of many German towns.' An account of the position of the ' The contributions arising out of tliis appeal were to be forwarded to Dr. Petermann, or to the Accountant of tlie Expedition, Mr. G. Albrecht, in Bremen. INTRODUCTION. 23 undertaking was spread over the whole of Grermany by thousands of circulars, and even among the Germans in foreign towns and in Transatlantic lands ; the sum- mons being a printed communication entitled, — " The Despatch of the Second German Arctic Expedition." And, lastly, by the generous coming forward of an eminent German publisher, Mr. George "Westermann, in Brunswick, the entire pubUc was provided with a pamphlet containing some excellent wood engravings drawn to scale, entitled, " The Second German Arctic Expedition : Official Communication of the Bremen Committee," in which more distinct information was given as to the aim, means, and importance of the undertaking. This agitation, which kept alive the interest in it, was followed by the best results. Donations ^ poured in from all sides from Germans in foreign lands, even from Honolulu and Tahiti, South America, the East Indies, and China. The debts incurred by the expedition were paid off, and even after its return new and pressing expenses were met. The Biemen Committee were also freed from the insurance money of the Hansa, and some of Captain Koldewey's men had extra wages given to them. Whether and to what extent the Second German Arctic Expedition fulfilled the promised expectations, what and how much it was allowed to perform and to attain, with a full and true report of the same, is the task and aim of the work now before us. ' The list of subscriptions is published in the Geographische Mit- theilungen by Dr. Petermanu. CHAPTEE I. VOYAGE Oe THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA FEOM THE 15tH JUNE TO THE 4th JULY, 1869. First evening at sea. — Life on board. — The first storm. — Cabin life. — In 57° N.L. — Dutch fishing-boat. — Visits exchanged. — Fresh storm and fog. — Entrance to the North Sea. — A clear night. — Animal life. The departure of the expedition from Bremerhaven took place on the 15th of June, 1869, in the presence of his Majesty the King of Prussia, whose -warm interest in this great national undertaking showed itself in this solemn hour in a manner never to be forgotten. Amongst the numerous gentlemen in attendance on his Majesty were his Royal Highness the Grand Duke of Mecklen- burg Schwerin, Count Bismarck, the Minister of War and Marine, von Roon, General von Moltke, and Vice- Admiral Jachman. The ships lay at the entrance of the new harbour just outside the sluice. The king having been introduced to the scientific gentlemen and the com- mander of the expedition, and having greeted them with a hearty shake of the hand, the President of the Bremen Committee, Herr A. G. Mosle, requested his Majesty's permission to speak a few parting words ; and in an earnest and impressive manner the speaker referred to the greatness and importance of the object, the self-denial, difficulties, and dangers which lay before them, but VOYAGE OF THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA. 25 which they all willingly braved for the honour of their native land, for the honour of the German nayy and of German science. That the Second German Arctic Ex- pedition should put to sea under the eyes of his Majesty, would, he was sure, be looked upon by all present as a happy omen; and all might with good reason join in cheering the august Monarch of their country, whose mighty representative and protector he was, as well as those on board the two vessels, who were about to sail under the national flag lent by his Majesty, to unknown lands in search of knowledge. Cheers from a thousand voices then rent the air, after which the king once more shook hands with those belonging to the expedition, at the same time expressing hearty good wishes for their safe return. The king then passed on to the Germania at the head of his suite, and inspected the now finished preparations with great attention. But the decisive moment had arrived ; cannon roared ; three more cheers rose from either side, and the Germania towed by the steam- tug Simson, and the Hansa by the Vulcan, made for the mouth of the Weser, the king watching the ships to the very mouth of the harbour. It was an exciting time, as we glided over the quiet liquid mirror alongside of the quay — the banks decked with the fresh green of spring-time and enlivened by a gaily- dressed crowd, and the flags flying from the ships, large and small, — and took our last view of the houses and towers of the town. With heads uncovered and handkerchiefs waving, our friends sent their last farewell. But with these feelings of pleasure were mixed thoughts regarding the future. Would it be permitted to us some day to return home ? 26 THE GBEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. How many of us might be missing, sick, or infirm? How should we find our country ? Would it still be, as now, enjoying the blessings of peace, and its grey-headed king still be living ? But we were not "yet quite parted from it. Besides the pilot, two staunch friends, who would not be deprived of the pleasure of accompanying us to sea, were still on board. One was the director of the North German Marine Observatory, Mr. von Freeden, and the other the director of the Observatory of Gottingen, Professor Klinkerfues, who wished to take his last farewell of his pupils on the sea. The town was now fast disappearing from our eyes ; the flat green banks on either side, with their solitary houses and church towers, were receding ; and the lighthouse, visible for a long distance, was looming nearer and nearer. In the meantime the crew had not been idle on deck. Everything that had come on board in the hurry of the last hour had either been put in its proper place or made fast, and everywhere the last touch put. But in the cabin, where a magnificent bouquet had been placed by some loving hand, accompanied by a few appropriate poetical words of farewell, a most pleasing surprise to us, we sat with our friends over a good glass of wine, once more renewing every kind wish and hope for the future. One was hurriedly scribbling a last good-bye to relations and friends, another entrusting his money to those who were about to return (for in such an expedition it would have been comparatively useless), a third had only a greeting and a commission to send. Once more the glasses clinked over wishes for success and a happy return; and then we went on deck, for the increased motion of the ship reminded us that we were nearing the VOYAGE OF THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA. 27 sea. Indeed, we had already left the lighthouse and fire- ship far behind us, and passed the last sea-mark, the " Schliisseltonne." The tug stopped, the hawser was cast off, a boat came off from the pilot-cutter close by, and the pilot left us. Immediately afterwards a boat came alongside, and we were obliged to take leave of our friends. A hearty shake of the hand said more than words could. A last nod, and they too set off, not to reach the harbour until a late hour. By this time the Hansa had reached us and dismissed her tug. At first starting, she had had the misfortune to break her towing cable, from which circumstance, had we been superstitious, we should have drawn a bad augury. But this weakness, so much indulged in by seamen of all nations, was wanting in our community. We were now fairly left to ourselves, and with a cheerful song the sailors set one sail after another ; and thus, with a light south-westerly breeze, which had just sprung up, under full sail for the north we left our native land, to meet an uncertain future. The prevailing frame of mind was serious ; every man of us knew what depended individually upon himself, and what was ex- pected of us ; that the whole world of letters was watch- ing the undertaking ; but still we had full confidence in the cause, and were fully determined to return to our native shore only with honour. The ships sailed pretty well together, though the light breeze gave the Hansa a little advantage, the main- sail of the Germania not being large enough for such a wind. Under these circumstances, we had no difficulty in keeping company. Below, there was still enough to do to get things in 28 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. order. Our chests were already unpacked, and the cabin, whither most of our effects had been brought, somewhat cleared, that we might at least have room for ourselves. At eight o'clock the two captains met once more to have a necessary consultation as to the course they should now take. We then, for the first time, took our tea and supper all together at a modestly-laid table, took one more walk on the deck of the ship, now gaily sailing northward, sent one more long, earnest look, many a wish, back to our now no longer visible country, and then, tired and worn out with the noise and excite- ment of the day, sought an early rest in our berths. The wind remained in the same quarter during the night, so that about midnight we passed the beacon off Heligoland. The daily ship's life, that is, the occupation of the community on the Germania while at sea, was, of course, like that on any other ship : and the gentlemen in the cabin did their best to divide their time as follows : — " "We are " (writes one of them) " awakened at half-past six, dress, and take our turns in the small washing-room, finish our toilet, and go on deck to enjoy the fresh morning air, and look after the weather, which at sea is a much more important object than on land. In the cabiu, meanwhile, where cleaning has been begun quite early, the table is laid, and punctually at seven o'clock we sit down to breakfast, to which, besides bread and butter, is added cold meat of some kind or other, to which we were un- accustomed. The captain takes his meals with us, so that, as one oflicer is obliged to be on deck, we are seven. After breakfast, we generally stay a short time on deck, either sitting on the bulwarks or walking up and down. VOYAGE OP THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA. 29 whistling a tune or smoking a morning cigar. Before dinner, we generally have some work to do in the cabin, though at first, in the dry weather, nothing much comes of it. At twelve, the work-table is changed into the dining-table, and with hungry stomachs we sit down to steaming soup. After dinner, we take a nap in the cabin, or (which is more agreeable) in fine weather on deck, where a sail or one of our airing counterpanes serves as a couch. Then another cigar; and about four o'clock we have cofiee, which we frequently take in the open air. In the afternoon each goes to his own work or amuse- ment; and, punctually at seven, the evening meal is on the table, tea with bread and butter and cold meat. The evening finds us at different occupations, either above or below; some playing chess or cards, smoking, and trying, in mutual reminiscences of home and talk of future plans, to divert our thoughts, which, under the scouted name of home-sickness, will creep in now and then, particularly when we are out on a moonlight night. Between ten and twelve o'clock, we climb into our berths, and enjoy (except on stormy nights) a sound and healthy sleep. Over the smoking in the cabin there soon arose a lively debate. We found that amongst us, a thing very common in Germany, three were inveterate smokers ; that three were decidedly the contrary, and that the seventh was neutral. On account of the smallness of the cabin, this was a decided difficulty. At last we came to an agreement, that there should be perfect liberty to smoke in the cabin from twelve until an hour before the evening meal; for the rest of the day it was forbidden. Should this interdict prove too burdensome for any one, he must have recourse ta the deck ; and he who at any 30 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. time would not miss tliis enjoyment, could at least fall back upon a ' deck cigar.' " In the first part of the time the want of longer walks was much felt, particularly in a rough sea, when it was impossible even to walk up and down. For this reason we often helped to farl the sails, or take the helm for an hour. Dr. Pansch even took part in the watches for a certain time, partly for amusement and the interest he took in sea life, which he had learnt in his native sea-port town, and partly to become acquainted with the ship and the character of the men, which, in case of accidents, might be of great advantage. On the second day of our voyage the sea began to make itself seriously felt. The wind had veered to the north-west, and rose to a miniature storm, so it was no wonder that the greater part of us had to sacrifice to Neptune. The beginning of sea- sickness (writes one) was decidedly partly brought on by the fact that everything on board was new ; the smell of paint and varnish was mixed with the vapour of woollen coverings ; and this atmosphere found no vent, the door as well as the skylight being kept closely shut on account of the sea. And, as is often the case on board a new vessel, the seams were not perfectly caulked, so that water was constantly dropping into the cabin, and even into the berths on the sleepers. Besides that which ran down the stairs and was brought in with the clothes, a great deal collected under the matting, so that we lived in a very moist and vapoury atmosphere. If such inconveniences were not quite agreeable to experienced seamen, upon us, some of whom had come from the interior, and had never even smelt sea- water, they made a very disagreeable impression. Then the narrow space in which we were cramped, the very VOYAGE OF THE GERMANIA AND HANSA. 31 greasy food, and the impossibility of finding any work to occupy us, all acted greatly on both mind and stomach. But we got accustomed to it in time ; and the day comes when a man is able to look at such disagree- ables in a brighter light. Droll accidents, however, sometimes came to enliven the dulness of our situation. We scientific men found ourselves badly enough off in our berths. Like bedsteads, they were provided with a board that the occupants should not be thrown out. But as we had packed the greater part of our books, clothes, and small instruments under the mattresses, that means of protection answered no longer ; and those lying on the leeward side were obliged every evening to prop it up with heaps of books. Even then, it often happened, if the ship rolled heavily, that one of us would be pitched from the upper berth into the middle of the cabin near the stove, and there lie in a state of astonishment. The stay on deck, too, was not always very agreeable, for boxes and packages of aU kinds lessened the already narrow space to a painful degree. In a high rolling sea the ship was nearly always on her leeside, and more often took water on both sides, so that it was really only aft that we could keep our feet dry, or indeed move at all. The stormy weather of the 17th and 18th of June brought on a heavy sea, so that, in order not to get too far from each other the Hansa was obliged to keep more to lee- ward, but towards evening neared us again. The first look and the first words upon coming on deck naturally related to the Hansa, and so the oft-repeated question came to be a by -word, " Where is the Hansa ? " " To leeward ! " On the 19th, it was calm with fine weather, and a slight sea-roll to windward from the north. We took this 32 THE GERMAN ARCTIC BXPEDTTION. opportunity of trying our macliinery, and endeavoured to tow tlie Hansa. "We succeeded beyond our expectations. Witli a steam pressure of only forty pounds we were able to bring the Hansa along at tbe rate of two and a half knots against the breeze, which seemed quite enough for our purpose. In the afternoon a light breeze from the north-east got up ; the boiler was therefore dispensed with, the cable hauled in, and sail set, which gave us about eighty-eight nautical miles for the day's run.' Then followed more than a week of almost uninterrupted violent north-west wind, which for many days kept us in 57° N.L. This long standstill was very unsatisfactory, and tried our patience sorely. With every fresh morning did we hope for a change in the wind. The scientific men were particularly impatient, as the constant rolling of the ship prevented them from doing anything but read and read again. The zoologists were the only persons fortunate enough to find work in their department, although on board the Germania it seemed to result in nothing more than anghng either on the surface or in deep water. Dr. Buchholz on the Hansa was busy with his task, helped by Dr. Laube, the geologist, with all his might, as well as by the whole of the sailors. As often as the weather permitted nets were thrown out, then drawn in from time to time, and emptied of their contents. The only good gained by this involuntary delay (so writes Dr. Pansch on board the Germania) was that we thoroughly ' A day is the period between the sun's departure from and return to the same meridian. It is calculated from twelve noon to the next twelve noon. VOYAGE OP THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA. 33 was learnt all the qualities of our vessel. The captain delighted to. find that she not only tacked well and easily, but that she worked well off the wind. The Hansa in this respect was far behind us, and we were often obliged to stand before the wind, that she might come up with us. The sailors on both ships soon showed their good qualities, and between them and the learned part of the ship's company there was very soon a good under- standing. The 26th of June form.ed a salutary pause in this stormy week ; the wind, which had been fitful since the afternoon before, died quite away in the night, and the ship on the following morning was gently rolling with the now diminished breeze. This morning, in 57° N.L. and 2° 43' B.L., -we came up with a small vessel, which our sailors had already recognized as a fishing-smack. On approaching nearer , this was confirmed by the fish hung up to dry in the rigging ; and immediately a lively longing awoke within us to have some cheap and fresh-caught members of the " scaly tribe" for our table. With this aim in view, one of our company hailed the northmen with a loud cry of, " Ship ahoy ! have you any fish on board ?" "Yes." "Fresh fish?" "Yes." " Come on board ! " The small vessel was at once full of life; a boat was lowered, and in a short time was alongside of us, and two young sailors, looking like Dutchmen, came up with a basket of the finest kinds of large turbot and soles. In the jargon which all seafaring frequenters of the North Sea soon learn, be their native language Low Dutch, Flemish, Danish, Norwegian, Swedish, or English, we managed to negotiate with them, and with bright faces 34 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. the fishermen took back as the price a piece of salt meat and bacon, together with a flask of brandy. They then asked if we had a doctor on board, and begged of him to go with them, as their " captain was sick." For such an adventure, and unexpected extension of his practice. Dr. Pansch did not want a second invitation. He paid a visit to the worthy old Dutchman, and with the help of a limited stock of Dutch once gained in Holland, he succeeded in holding a conversation in the national gibberish with the honest fisher-people, giving his best advice to the " captain," who had been struck with a bar on the breast, and also to an old sailor ill with scurvy, promising to send something to do them good. As a fee he brought back with him a second basketful of fish, and thus "we had the pleasure of knowing that the whole of the ship, or as the sailors expressed it " all hands," both at noon and in the evening could participate in the dainty food. When the sailors mentioned the direction of our voyage, the Dutchmen took us for whale-fishers ; but on really understanding the unusual task that had been allotted to our ship, instead of opening their mouths wide with, perhaps, unintelligible pity, their eyes brightened. " Oh, new discoveries in Greenland!" they exclaimed, and became at once quite at home with us. It seemed as if the proud remembrance of a time long past, when Dutch ships made millions every year by the northern fisheries, and Dutch seamen enriched geography by the grandest discoveries, was still alive in the minds of these people. They now looked upon the ship with heightened interest, put many intelligent questions with regard to our wintering, and took leave of us with such repeated and hearty gqod wishes that many VOYAGE OP THE GEEMANIA. AND HANSA. 36 of our seamen at home, who thought fit to look upon our voyage with indifference or derision, would have been thoroughly put to shame by these simple Dutch fisher- men. And the captain did not forget, immediately upon running his craft into the harbour, to enter his meeting with the Germania in the Shipping News ; this notice being the first news of the expedition seen in the papers. These fishermen, with their old-fashioned craft, hang about the banks of the North Sea for weeks together. They fish with the li^ie tod the net, and catch turbot, soles, and cod more particularly. These are at once cleaned, cut into suitable pieces, salted in barrels, and then packed. When they have a good cargo they run into harbour, unload, and ru'n out again. This practice they carry on as long as the weather wiU allow. .For many years their, captains and their steersmen have, been fami- Har with the neighbourhood of the North Sea, and often, from hard-earned experience, know better than the most learned seaman how to ta;ke their bearings. Nautical instruments they do not use ; they do not even under- stand them. According to the depth of the line and the nature of the matter brought up from the bottom by the lead, they know their whereabouts. With a light breeze rising, we continued our course, and about noon our sister-ship joined us. Captain Hegemann and Dr. Laube came on board, while Mr. Sengstacke and Dr. Pansch went over to the Hansa to shake hands with their friends once more. "It was interesting" (writes Dr. Pansch) "to see, from another ship, the Germania under sail, with her peculiar build, strong masts, and black body without any D 2 36 THE GECMAN AECTIO - EXPEDITION. streaks. The peculiar pleasure one naturally feels at being stationed on the chief ship, and that a steamer, was to a certain degree corrected. "What we Germania people had to bear from deprivations and want of room we fully- realized, now that we saw the complete and well-ordered space on the Hansa. In the handsome bright cabin (he continues) there were only five people. Dr. Buchholz showed me his nice cabin, which he enjoyed all to himself. In front of his bunk was' room enough for chests and boxes, not piled one on another, but placed so that they could be got at ; and besides that, a place for a writing- table, where he could work quietly and undisturbed. The deck-space was not encroached upon by all sorts of stores, and even now seemed to offer accommodation for working upon large animals, without being in the way of the sailors. There was room enough for a zoologist in cold and windy weather to put up his table there. We pictured to ourselves om- united activity in the brightest colours ; we agreed upon the plan of attack, and carrying out of our future work amongst the ice Fauna ; we supplemented our literature by changing some books; in short, we lived entirely in the delightful contemplation of our great task. Fate had, however, ordered our future far other- wise. Besides this, every one on board both ships was overjoyed at last by a sunny day, and all tried their best to dry all their wet things. On board the Hansa this seemed particularly necessary, for lying in the sun on the quarter-deck were some thousands of cigars which in the storm had made too intimate an acquaintance with the sea-water. At noon each party returned to their own ship." Then followed a two-days' gale, which blew stubbornly VOYAGE OP THE GERMANIA AND HANSA. 37 from the nortli-west. It flooded the deck and cabin once 'more with water ; but these days were the last to bring us any sad remembrance of the German Ocean. Upon nearing 59° N.L., exactly a fortnight after our departure, the influence of the north wind came to an end, and it came on to blow from the south. This last storm ended on the 28th of June, and the next day we went slowly forward. It was a clear, warm day, so that we opened and aired every place, and all dampness' was once more got rid of. The deck, too, was perfectly dry; so it was cleared, and in some places caulked by the carpenter. In the last days of June the freshening north wind brought us another hindrance, which was to follow us for many days. As long as the temperature stood at 60° F. a fog rose about noon, which in the evening grew so dense, that for fear of being separated from the Hansa each ship was obliged to blow the fog-horn alternately for sixteen hours, the broken tones of which sounded most melan- choly through the troubled atmosphere. Slowly but surely we cruised onwards, so that on the evening of the 1st of July we had the pleasure of finding ourselves in 61° N.L., and of passing the entrance be- tween Norway and the Shetland Isles. With that, the German Ocean was left behind and the open sea reached, which already made itself felt by the pecuhar " Atlantic swell." We now found ourselves in that part of the Atlantic known to Germans as the " Nordmeer." For this first part of our voyage, which a ship with a fair wind would have made in about two days and a half, we had taken sixteen days. From the clear space before us we might now hope for greater progress, the more so. 38 THE GBEMAN ABCTIO EXPEDITION. as the Norwegian coast here runs somewhat to the north- east, and we of course, even in a continuous north-west wind, could still make, on the starboard tack, some north- ward progress. On account of this continuous northerly wind, and the easterly-setting Gulf Stream, we came so near the Nor- wegian coast, that one evening we thought we could see it from the top. It was not until we reached the latitude of Drontheim that we were able to return to our north- westerly course. The darkness of the nights had in the meantime visibly diminished; and at midnight between the 1st and 2nd of July, when the sun left us at about a quarter past ten, lamplight on deck, even by the binnacle, was unnecessary. "We could read the finest print comfortably. As a glance at the map will show, we were now in a neighbourhood frequented comparatively by few ships, except those going to the northern Norwegian harbours or visiting the Arctic region proper. Whilst in the North Sea, one or more sail might generally be seen on the horizon, or in the distance the smoke of a steamer. Now we found ourselves alone upon the broad surface, which to some offers only a picture of boundless void and lasting same- ness, but in others excites a deep feeling of the might and sublimity of boundless Nature. Animal life, too, now prevailed to a remarkable degree, which is in a great measure, at least as far as birds are concerned, connected with the neighbourhood of land. The ship was surrounded nearly the whole day by the three-toed sea-gull {Larus tridactylus, L.) in flocks of from twenty to fifty, with the swiftness and lightness of wing peculiar to this small gull, following the ship VOYAGE OP THE GEEMANIA AND HANSA. 39 with manifold unwearying windings and turnings, spying for prey in the dead-water, and then darting like light- ning upon some little crab tossed in the current ; or sitting sociably some short distance from the ship's side upon the smooth or even strongly-heaving water, sunning them- selves, trimming their plumage, or fishing. They also liked to whirl round the mast, accompanying the truck in all its waving to and fro, and sometimes settling upon it. If we mounted into the top, the birds were not at all shy, but hovered about with fluttering wings, apparently standing stUl, and from time to time shooting nearer to the observer, who might almost fancy that he could clasp them easily in his hand, thus having a good opportunity of observing this really handsome bird at his leisure. The round head, with the knowing dark eyes, turns backwards and forwards upon the short neck, the wings move in grace- ful lines, the small black feet are drawn tight under the tail. The whole under part of the bird is a pure white, whilst the upper part is bluish grey. But what strikes the eye the most is that the tips of the slender wings and the fan-shaped tail are jet black. In rather lighter black, differing according to the age and time of year, are marks on the head and neck, one in particular looking Hke a collar. In spite of all this outward beauty (in which property they are far surpassed by the ivory gull) there remains an ugly peculiarity common to this species, namely, their ever harsh and grating cry. In fair or foul weather, in slow and in swift flight, the sharp "ih, ih, ha, ha," is, ever heard without inter- mission and in every possible cadence. These are the same gulls that in northern neighbourhoods flock toge- ther in thousands, make their nests in the rocks, and 40 THE GERMAN ABCTIC EXPEDITION. thus form the so-called " gull m&untains " of which Fr. Boie, Faber, Brehm, and other travellers cannot relate enough. These creatures are, upon the whole, known to be very sociable and gentle, so their cry only ex- presses contentment and hveliness. Now and then, however, our attention would be aroused when those tones were quicker, more decided, and fell heavily on the ear. We naturally looked round for the cause, and saw three of them flying terror-stricken, followed by another bird with darker plumage, longer wings, and a quicker, stronger flight. It is the robber gull (Lestris) ; and now an odd spectacle is presented to our sight. One of our small gulls has just caught a little fish which,, prompted by curiosity, had come to the surface, and flies hurriedly forward anxious to devour it. His plundering dark cousin, not far off, roving apparently purposeless above the waves, scarce has time to espy this, when he darts swiftly down, catches the flying gull, and sets upon it unmercifully, until bursting into this scream of terror, it opens its beak and lets the booty fall. The robber having now gained his end, quits the chase, and rushes after the falling fish which, with incredible agility, he catches half-way. In the next moment we see the bird again quietly circling above the waves as if nothing had happened, or sailing slowly in the distance, bent upon robbing other guUs of their hard-earned meal. Besides the gulls, we saw in stormy weather a small bird known to all. sailors as the stormy petrel (Thalas- sidvoma felagica, L.). It is almost entirely dark brown, and is chiefly seen in violent stormy weather, when it seems to run unwearily on the water, seldom rising higher. VOYAGE OP THE GEBMANIA AND HAJSfSA. 41 To old sailors it is an unlucky bird ; they believe that its appearance denotes storm, putting, as is usually the case, the cause for the effect. The old idea, from which they are called " Mother Carey's Chickens," is at least poetical. We chased the gulls but little ; only once a calm sea rendered it possible to secure our booty, and this chance was very nearly the cause of a misfortune on board the Grermania. It was the 4th of July about noon. Several gulls had been circling over the after part of the ship, followed with longing eyes by the doctor, who was far too ready to make a nearer inspection of one of them with his knife. Dr. Copeland caught up a gun, and soon one bird lost its hfe, and fell into the water close to the ship's side. The men hurried forward to hook it out. This, however, failed, and the ship glided quietly onwards. . To let down the boat would have taken too much time, as during the storm it had been lashed with several ropes. A sailor passing by, without thinking and certainly most rashly, wishing to pick up the floating bird, before any one thought or could prevent it, jumped dressed as he was into the water, and swam with well practised and strong arms towards it. In the meantime, the vessel ghded onwards, and (as we now noticed) with great speed. This must soon have been apparent to our sailor, whose chest would be cramped by the low temperature of the water (47^° F.), so that he must soon have reahzed his critical position. He reached the goal, and then in a weak voice called for the boat. Meanwhile, Mr. Tramnitz had called together the rest of the watch, turned the ship's head to the wind, and thrown out the life-buoy. Quickly two men climbed into the boat. Loosening the 42 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. ropes was not to be thought of; they fell under the heavy- gashes of an ever-ready knife ; it rattled down ; another cut or two and it was free, and flying under the strong and long drawn strokes. Those were long and fearful moments as we stood silently and with bated breath following with our eyes the little craft, and for the first time realizing how great the distance was. Would the attempt to save him prove successful ? or would this act of youthful thoughtlessness be punished ? No ! we saw the boat reach its mark, we saw them rest on their oars, and one lean over ; and now the drowning man is drawn in alive. Then the gull and the life-buoy had to be got in, and they pulled hurriedly back to the vessel. Like a drowned poodle the sinner soon stood once more amongst us, receiving as a reward a sound lecture from the captain, followed by a good draught of brandy. But the doctor took the corpus delicti (the gull) in hand. On this occasion we unfortunately lost a basket containing some fine flower bulbs, which had been given us by some friendly hand with the hope that, if successful, they might cheer our long Arctic winter with their blossom, and had been placed in the boat as being a dry airy position. In the North Sea we had already seen some spouting dolphins; now they often came up close to us. In the beginning of July, they came so near, that our zoologist had the great satisfaction of taking an exact drawing of the back. It was the species well known to all sailors, the "Nordkaper" or "Killer" (DeZp/imws orco,, Fabr.), one of the largest kind in the whale family, being sometimes twenty-five feet long. It is distinguished, and for the same reason easily recognized at a great distance, by the VOYAGE or THE GERMANIA AND HANSA. 43 small, long, and sharp upright back-fin, which has also earned for it the name of " sword fish." These enormous creatures come to the surface to take breath, and mostly move in zig-zag windings along the top of the water, so they may be seen from three to half-a-dozen times, though only the upper part of their shining black bodies, rirst the snout is to be seen, -and from the " blow-hole " is forced the breath and spray; then the fins and the hinder parts of the back make their appearance. The " KILLER " DOLPHINS. tail is only to be seen when the creature dives under, when it is sometimes straight out of the water. The name " Nordkaper " by which our sailors call it, was received long ago, when it frequented the North Cape in droves. The Americans call it "Killer," and the Nor- wegians " Whale-catcher," from a circumstance which for a long time was considered a fable, but is now con- 44 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION, firmed by tlie least prejudiced whalers of the present day, namely, that they are the whale's greatest eneniies, following and attacking it in large droves. Besides the " Nordkapers," one day (the 10th of July), we observed another kind of dolphin, three or four of which played under our bows. They were quite brown, without any upright back-fin, having a thick head and steep forehead. It was a strange and fasci- nating sight to watch these boorish, uncouth cetacea of nearly fifteen feet long, playing in the water so peaceably and securely and yet so nimbly. Unfortunately the disturbing hand of man, in the attempt to make use of the breech-loader, startled these peaceful creatures. Before we were prepared for it shots were heard, and the dolphins hurriedly withdrew from the further observation of the " lords of the creation." For the sake of the zoologist and his science, it was to be wished that such a creature should be killed and exa- mined. But the Germania was wanting both in the apparatus and means for taking it, as well a;S in accom- modation for working. We also saw, though only in the distance, the blowing of some rorquals. Meanwhile a number of soundings had been taken on the Hansa, which gave the following result : 1st of July, in 60° 45' North lat. and 2° 4' 3" East long., a depth of 65 fathoms, with stony ground, Norwegian granite ; 7th of July, in 68° 18' North lat. and 7° 14' Bast long., 700 fathoms, hard sand. A series of other soundings gave no decided result. The temperature of the sea was taken daily. CHAPTEE II. CONTINUED VOYAGE OE THE TWO SHIPS UNTIL REACHING ICE.' MIDDLE OF JULY. Second meeting witla the Hansa. — Neptune and the Arctic christen- ing. — Entrance into the Arctic Sea. — Zoological matters. — Jan Mayen. — Neai-ing the ice. — Seals. — Separation of the vessels. The 4tli of July, Sunday, brouglit us a fine, clear morning : the wind died quite away ; tlie sea, even in the far, far distance, was glossy and smootli. The sleep- ing sails swung to and fro with the gaffs ; the gearing rattled ; the ship swung without answering the helm ; in short, it was that sort of calm so disagreeable to a sailor, and particularly so to us after our three weeks' voyage. Every eye looked longingly for a rising breeze. In the course of the morning it rippled the surface with beautiful blue lines here and there, and then dropped again. The Hansa was far astern, and presently a dark spot appeared on the water in the distance. It scarcely moved; but the telescope showed us that it must be a boat. Perhaps a post from the Hansa! Now the mainsail was set, and then we knew for certain that it was Captain Hegemann's fine whale-boat that was approaching. "We lay to, and welcomed heartily on '■ By Dr. Pansch and Capt. KolJewej. 46 THE GBKMAIS:, ABOTIO EXPEDITION. board Messrs. Hegemaun, Hildebrandt, Buchliolz, and Laube. Engaged in an improvised hunting party, they were fortunate enough to bag some gulls. For the second time we all sat together in the cabin, confiding our hopes and plans to each other. Meanwhile, on the eastern horizon, there rose a well-known dark line ; and soon a light, quick breeze filled the sails, and gave our ship steerage way. Slowly she began to move, and took a nor'-nor'-westerly course, direct to the island of Jan Mayen. The wind now blew stronger ; the Hansa had already reached us, and thus a speedy end was put to our meeting. Our friends took leave and were soon on board their own ship. The next day it blew fresh from the E.N.E., so that we nearly always made two degrees N. as our day's work, a highly desirable progress, which raised all our hopes afresh. Already, on the evening of the 5th of July, at fifty lilinutes past eleven, we had passed the Arctic circle (66° 33'), and that nearly under the meridian of Greenwich (0° 15' W.L.). A violent wind was blowing ; and with a speed of nine knots we entered the Arctic Ocean, which was to be our quarters for a whole year. The Hansa was some miles in advance of us, and was the first to unfurl the North German flag; at the same time firing one gun. We followed. Conformably to the custom, as on crossing the equator, Neptune came on board to welcome us, and wish us success on our voyage ; of course not without all those who had not yet crossed the Arctic circle having to undergo the rather rough shaving and christening customary on such occasions. The ceremony closed (as CONTINUED VOYAGE OF THR TWO SHIPS. 47 is usual on suoli occasions) with a good glass of wine, to wash, away the evil effects of the cold water. With us, Peter Iversen and Peter EUinger undertook the parts of Neptune and the barber, and carried out with great earnestness the soaping and the very mild christening. At the next meal in the cabin we were surprised by a poetical composition by Neptune. On board the Hansa the proceeding was carried out much more scrupulously. Neptune came on board with two followers, and addressed Captain Hegemann with the question, "Any green hands on board ?" At the answer, " Yes," there began a sharp examination of the " green ones," Drs. Buchholz and Laube, as well as the sailors Max Schmidt and Konrad Gierke. Afterwards came the christening. Dr. Laube writes thus : — "We entered into the spirit of the fun willingly, knowing that our sailors were decent fellows, and would not carry things too far, even had we not entered on the ship's books with them in Bremen, and become seamen. Our carpenter went about the whole day with a sly, laughing face, and towards evening had quite lost his usual chattiness. We ourselves kept in the cabin, so as not to witness the preparations. At midnight, we were called on deck, A gun was fired; and as its thunder died away we heard the well-known cry, ' Ship ahoy ! ' Three wonderful figures climbed over the bowsprit ; Neptune first, in an Esquimaux's dress, with a great white cotton beard, a seven-pronged dolphin harpoon for a trident in one hand, and a speaking-trumpet in the other, A tarpaulin was spread on the quarter-deck, and a stool placed upon it. It looked like a judge's bench. Here each of us was seated with eyes bound, while the masked followers of 48 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the northern Ruler went through the customary pro- ceedings. I was soaped and shaved ; god Neptune was most favourable to me ; he knows what good cigars are, and has great respect for those to whom they belong. Then came the christening, which in this case was not applied to the head (as is usual), but to the throat and stomach. Neptune put some questions to me through, 'his speaking-trumpet, desiring me to answer. I saw his object, answered with a short ' Yes,' and then closed my lips. The mischievous waterfall rattled over me, causing universal merriment. They then took the bandage from my eyes, that I might see my handsome face in the glass ; but instead of a looking-glass, it was the combing of the wooden hatchway, which with great gravity was held before my face by the barber's assistant. I was now absolved, and could laugh with the others, whilst seeing my comrades obliged to go through the same course one after the other." Universal grog on board both ships brought the time- honoured and merry ceremony to a close. But with ever-growing impatience did we now long for a nearer acquaintance with the ice. As we before men- tioned, the favourable wind first met us outside the Arctic circle. Later on it blew more faintly, though, on the whole, keeping in the good quarter from the east, so that on the morning of the 9th of July we came in sight of the island of Jan Mayen. The midnight hours had now grown visibly lighter; even in the cabin we no longer wanted a lamp ; at twelve o'clock at night we could read and write without difficulty. The very first night we reached the .latitude in which it was possible to be seen, we were allowed to enjoy the CONTINUED VOYAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS. 49 wonderful sight of tlie midnight sun. The thick clouds, which the whole day had covered the heavens, drew somewhat together towards the north just at that time ; .and over the edge of the endless sea, hovered the sun, like a red ball, visible almost in its entire circumference, surrounded by gold and purple- violet clouds. But unfor- tunately this majestic spectacle was of short duration; the cloudy curtain closed again, and we had to wait many weeks before we again saw the midnight sun. The temperature of the air fell steadily. From the 6th to the 7th of July there was a sudden fall, as shown by our table of daily temperatures. This was accompanied, on the 7th of July, by snow, and on the 8th the fog began its rule of terror, from which we suffered, except at short intervals, for four weeks, that is, until we landed.' The swarms of birds were countless, and at a glance we could see that those frequenting the icy sea were quite different from any other sorts. There were the well- known Auk,^ and other aquatic species of various genera.'' But there was no possibihty of exactly knowing each kind, as we did not succeed in bringing any down ; and only seeing them in the distance in their hurried flight and the dim atmosphere, they were very difl&cult to distin- guish. They generally flew from^two to four together; sometimes one would strike out with a short flap of the wings, and fly at a uniform height over the smooth water, > From the 10th of July to the 1st of August we registered 368 hours of fog, being seven-tenths of the whole time. ^ A lea tor da, L. ' Uria Brunnichii, Sab. ; Uria grylle, L. ; Mormon fratercula, Tcmra. ; and Mergulus alle, Viell. E 50 THE GEEMAN AUCTIO EXPEDITION. when, according to its uniform custom, it would circle two or three times at some distance round the ship, and either settle down once more, or totally disappear. Besides these, we frequently saw the grey petrel {Procellaria glacialis, L.), which until that time had been rare. They strike the observer at once by their long, grey, straight wings hovering almost motionless over the water. Like all northern travellers, we soon learnt to know among the ice the peculiar bird called the Mallemock. With the crossing of the Arctic circle we found our- selves in our own broad field of action ; for if our chief task was to foUow the coast of Bast Greenland as far as possible to the north, our expedition was also one of general knowledge, and therefore the exploring of the whole of the North Arctic region was incumbent upon us. So that, although still far from the ice, regular, and, when possible, searching investigation was made, not, the ordinary observations on board ship, regarding the direction of the wind, barometrical pressure, and so forth, but inquiries into subjects relating to the physical geo- graphy of the sea. The temperature of the surface water, as during the whole of the voyage, was taken every two hours, and that of greater depths, ever since the 1st of July (61° N.L.), four times every day. In connexion with this Drs. Borgen and Copeland began a series of experiments relating to the quantity of salt contained in the surface water and in the depths. Notice was also taken of the colour of the sea, as well as of the wood met with. Soundings were taken every six hours, and everything brought up by the apparatus was carefully preserved. These observations were of no small interest, as we CONTINUED VOYAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS. 51 were in that part of the somewhat changing boundary where the warm (so called) Gulf Stream coming up from the south and the cold Arctic current coming down from the north just meet. This Gulf Stream is known not only by its relative warmth, but by the greater saltness and deep blue colour of its waters. The beautiful blueness of the sea struck us as soon as we left the North Sea. ■But from this time until we reached the ice the colours changed continually, and sometimes very quickly, from dirty blue, light blue, greenish blue, bluish green, clear and trainsparent green, greyish green, and so on, so that our attempts at representing a series of these colours became a failure.* Sharp limits between green and blue water, such as have been often observed, not only in the Atlantic but also in the Arctic Ocean, we never met with.' As regards temperature, the blue water certainly was the warmest ; but even here sudden and considerable differences were almost imperceptible. With our advance towards the north-west the warmth of the water gradually decreased. Exactly corresponding to the isotherm for May, which we found in 1868, we registered on the 6th of July at noon 42.12° Fahr., and the next day, at the same time, it was already two degrees lower. On the other hand we first found the temperature at zero, or below zero, in the neighbourhood of the ice, whilst in May, 1868, it was as low as that at * A "lance at the surface is not suflficient to decide the real colour of the water, as it is affected by the reflected colour of the heavens. The influence of the latter must therefore be excluded ; and we therefore examined the water through a tube. A convenient arrangement for the purpose offered itself in the opening for hauling in the screw. * It is said that ships are sometimes half in blue and half in greou water. B 2 52 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. 200 (nautical) miles distant from it. As regards the observations made on the true currents/ as well as on the argeoraetrical reading of the quantity of salt held in solution in them, it is not our province to enter lipon their discussion here. Regarding the former, however, we soon had lively witnesses in the shape of drift-wood, small pieces of which passed us on the evening of the 6th of July ; and two days later we saw a large knotted tree ; but on the high sea it was impossible to make our- selves masters of it. In order to gain more exact information regarding the surface-currents, it has long been the custom to throw out a corked bottle containing a piece of paper, on which is wi'itten the exact time and place of immersion. If a seaman sees this bottle in the water, he picks it up, noticing the time and place, and forwards the paper to the place mentioned. With this view we threw out bottles from time to time. The soundings, from the period of our leaving the remarkable shallowness of the North Sea, showed a tole- rably uniform descent in the bottom of the sea as far as the island of Jan Mayen, and- farther on to the borders of the ice. From eighty fathoms it went on to 180 and 270 (2nd July), 406 fathoms (3rd July), 569 on the 4th, and 1066 fathoms on the 7th of July. Whilst the Physicists were thus making a commence- ment of their labours, and the crew were pretty well occupied with soundings, the Zoologists found many opportunities for collecting and observing. From the ° By comparison of the direct astronomical observations of position with the partially indirect results obtamed by the reckoning of the log. COiSTTINUED VOYAGE OP THE TWO SHIPS. 53 bird world they were compelled now to descend to lower creatures; and if unfavourable circumstances did not allow them to use the drag-net to bring subjects from the depths of the sea, still much that was interesting was to be found on the surface. Dr. Pansch constructed a bag-shaped net out of some gauze, and through the circular opening passed two long, narrow boards, so that when put into the water, one half was under and one above ; this net was fastened to the hind part of the ship on the lee-side, and as we sailed slowly forwards, took in every creature lying on the surface. In this manner the calm nights of the 7th and 8th brought us a rich booty ; there were the Galanus hyperborceus, small tender creatures with white transparent bodies, articulated red- tipped tails, and long, fine, beautiful red feelers, with which they jerked themselves forward. Next came a number of small yellow red-spotted crabs {Themisto libellula, Mandt) with great oval-shaped black eyes, which like the rest of its family, as we had already seen, lay upon their side and swam along the surface in search of food. The low side and bulwarks of our vessel made it easy, if we saw a large creature of any kind, to catch it with a long pole-net. The brown-violet fibrous medusge (Gyanea capillata, L.), which we had often seen in the North Sea, seemed entirely wanting here. Nevertheless, zoological work in the open air was now decidedly dis- agreeable. For if it was tolerably warm in the evening, towards morning, particularly when a damp fog and cold wind got up, and the warming influence of the evening meal had long since disappeared, it was painfully cold ; but just the night-time was best for catching. And even 54 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. with spirits and water we could obIj work when, sailor fashion, we constantly beat our arms across our breast. Still more difficult is it to skin birds, seek for entozoa and such like, work which cannot always be carried on in the cabin, but which makes little progress with cold, stiff fingers. As already mentioned, we sighted the island of Jan Mayen on the 9th of July. The Hansa passed it at about one and a half German miles to the eastward. Had the weather been clear,, we should long since have been able to see the highest point of the island, the Beerenberg. The atmosphere was, however, heavy and gloomy, and was as little inclined to grant the beautiful sight to us as it is to other sailors. Just at dawn we caught a glimpse of streaks of glaciers ; the know- ledge that land, and that of so interesting a nature, was so near, caused great excitement amongst the scien- tific part of the community ; and it was no wonder that, after such long inaction and crossing of our wishes, the question of attempting a landing on Jan Mayen was more eagerly discussed than ever. But, even if, set- ting aside the strict letter of our instructions, we had consented to this interesting attempt, the ever-thickening fog and the windward sea-roll on the eastern side of the island would have rendered it impossible ; and on the western side it would only have been possible with great OSS of time. Meanwhile, we kept near to land, that we might at least have a view of its wonders as long as possible. At last, just before breakfast, our expectations seemed likely to be fulfilled ; the fog lifted a little, and at some miles' distance we saw a tolerable stretch of broken, rocky and rugged coast. It must have been the north- CONTINUED VOYAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS. 55 east side of tlie island, that is, the foot of the Be^ren- berg, dark rocks interspersed with long stripes of glacier ice reaching to the water. But the whole was indis- tinct and misty, so that the general appearance had somewhat of a weird look about it. All hurried on deck, trying to put the wondrous picture on paper ; but there was scarcely time for that; the impervious veil of fog covered it once more, and that so thick that we had no hope of another glimpse.' Unsatisfied and disappointed, we eat our breakfast, picturing to ourselves how delight- ful a bright, sunny day must be on Jan Mayen. We read the accounts given by previous travellers, and found for our consolation that this island had almost always been seen under disadvantageous circumstances. According to a Dutchman of that name who discovered it in the year 1611, the island of Jan Mayen lies lonely in the middle of the wide, deep sea between Norway and Greenland, Iceland and Spitzbergen; and is distant about sixty geographical miles from the coast of Green- land. It is nine miles in length and one in breadth, and so thoroughly mountainous, mostly with rugged rocks reaching down to the sea, that it has really only at two spots a flat beach and so-called landing-places. The north-east part rises to a height of 6863 feet, in the lofty Beerenberg, which has a large crater, and indeed the whole island is of volcanic origin. In the year 1732, Burgomaster Anderson, of Hamburg, reported a de- ' Lord Dufferin and Karl Vogt were fortunate enough to catch a glimpse of the wonderful snowy peak of the Beerenberg, rising isolated to a height of 6863 feet. " My delight was that of an anchorite catch- ing a glimpse of the seventh heaven." (Lorf" DuiFerin, " Letters from High Latitudes," p. 139, 5th Ed.) 66 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. cided eruption fipom a small side crater, wliicli had been observed by a seaman ; and in the year 1818, Scoresby and another captain saw great pillars of smoke rising from the same place. Surrounded by floating ice the whole winter through, and often for a longer period, Jan Mayen lies in the spring-time and early summer so near the edge of the ice- fields, that from 1612 to 1640 it afforded to the Enghsh and Dutch whale-fishers a comfortable and much sought after station for their booty and train-oil preparation. It is said that a single ship, in one year, then brought home from Jan Mayen 196,000 gallons of oil. Wishing to make an attempt at colonizing, in 1633-34 seven Dutch sailors passed the winter here. " The small community outlived the severity of the winter without much danger to their lives, until the scurvy broke out amongst them ; and as they could not procure the necessary fresh nourishment, the sickness made rapid strides. The first died on the 16th of April; and all the others shared the same fate one month later. Their diary ended with the 80th, When, on the 4th of June, the Dutch fleet appeared off the island, they were all found dead in their huts." * Scoresby visited the island in August, 1817, and gave the first reliable account of it. The interest excited by this account led to two other visits. Lord Dufiierin landed on the north side of Jan Mayen in 1866, but what with fog and floating ice, could only stay one hour. More good fortune and success attended that in 1861, ' Scoresby, "Account of the Arctic Regions," i. 168. Also Churchill's "Collection of Voyages and Travels," ii. 367—378. CONTINUED VOYAGE OE THE TWO SHIPS. 57 undertaken by Dr. Berna, of Frankfort, and described by- Karl Yogt as one of tbose interested in the "Arctic Expedition." He succeeded in landing at two places, and tte weather allowed of two days' interesting investi- gation ; then the fog returned, and they were obliged to set sail. The same envious fog made our landing impossible in 1869, and the strong rising sea-breeze and the high sea ren- dered it unadvisable to go too near the land. We tacked, therefore, and sailed in an east-south-easterly direction from it, so as to go round the east side of the island, and at midnight resume our northerly course. The fog was continually getting thicker, so that our two ships could scarcely see each other; and in order to keep together at all were obliged to use the horn. A fine rain fell at the same time, and it was about 2^ degrees warmer, though, on the whole, most disagreeable weather. We could now thoroughly enjoy the Arctic fog " as pictured in books," and we felt the perfect truth and the full meaning of the excellent descriptions given of it. "We thought of the " sea-lungs " of Pytheas, that impenetrable mixture encountered beyond Thule, which is neither land, nor sea, nor atmosphere ; of that bit of Horace, — " Quod latus munJi nebula malusque Jupiter urget." We thought of the troublous gloominess with which the northern legends enveloped the unknown ice region ; and indeed began to believe in the influence which a long sojourn in such a climate would have upon mind and body. Indeed, there can be nothing more melancholy than this everlasting grey veil ; even the sea, as far as one can 58 THE German arctic expedition. see, is sad and grey. An auk or a diver, now and again flying before tlie ship, is the only tMng presented to the wandering eye. Occasionally the gloom lightens so much, that one can just make out where the sun is ; but it is seldom so far visible as to afford us an obser- vation for latitude, or the sight of a fogbow : but every hope of a change which might rise at such a moment was at once destroyed by fresh mist rolling up thicker than ever. One glance over the different diaries at this par- ticular time wiU best show the depressing influence of such continual foggy weather. As in the North Sea over the constant north wind, so here over the new enemy, the everlasting complaint was, — "Tog! thick fog!" And if it would stop at that ! But now the small vesicles condense and fall first like fine spray, and then like a heavy shower, though without bringing any rehef from the fog. The sails flap, the running-gear droops ; and, added to this, is a fresh cold breeze, with the ship swinging to and fro. At such a time every one appears on deck in the excellent oil-skin clothes, with high boots and serviceable sou' westers. With wide and cautious steps, we walk up and down on the ever wet and slippery deck, our eyes, as if open sea lay before us, constantly sweeping the horizon and turning doubly disappointed away. The sight of the swaying masts and the rustle of the untiring wavelets against the ship's side, at length bring the comfortless impression of all surroundings to rest. The mind turns inwards upon itself; and amidst -all the thoughts of the serious and yet eagerly looked-for future, the remembrance of the past and home stand vividly before us. We think of the last time we were on land, of that wonderfully beautiful and CONTINDED VOYAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS. 59 warm summer day at Eutin, with all the brightness of the rose-blossom and the song of the nightingale. We see ourselves once more united with our loved ones at home, and, flying from the heat of the day, wandering in the high arched forest, or in familiar conversation en- joying the peace and quiet of the garden. We see the stars twinkhng in the heavens, and the dark red moon rise over the distant woods — when a heavy , wave strikes us, sending the ship on to its side. We are pitched heavily against the boat, the cold water splashes in our faces, and rushes in a torrent over the deck and over our feet. The beautiful dream of the pleasant summer is over, and the cold reality of an Arctic, foggy day resumes its sway. With perhaps an unheard sigh, but in every case a smiling face, we shake ofi" the water and continue our walk. We know that very soon we shall have much greater trials to bear. Beyond the regular aragometrical readings of the water, and the constant zoological work, there was little to gain outside in the way of knowledge. We therefore tried to make it as comfortable as possible below, which was cer- tainly not easy, for even here the wet penetrates and is brought down with boots and clothes ; so that the air is often heavy and damp. With the near prospect of the all-absorbing work on the ice and also on land before us, we once more looked up all our things, — instruments, and so on, — and put them in order, filling up the rest of the time with reading, studying, and playing. We studied Scoresby's works, read the Swedish Expedition, or Linde- man's " Arctic Fisheries of the German Sea-port Towns," or turned over the leaves of Kane's and Parry's standard works. When comfortably seated at the chess-board, or 60 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. at a rubber of whist, or engaged in a sharp argument, we now began to feel quite at home. We were accustomed to the cabin, and had learnt to know each other better. We found that it was not so difficult to live in such a confined space in peace and quietness, if we only to some extent considered each other and learned to take quietly- such disagreeables as would naturally turn up. And they soon^ did turn up. Our store of water had already greatly decreased, and we were obliged to submit to great restrictions. We could only have one glassful daily to wash in, but as compensation we found on deck a fresh-drawn bucket of salt water. As it had become -somewhat muddy in the tanks, our filter stood us in good stead. The rye-bread had already disappeared on the 8th of July, but we still had a store of potatoes. Since the midnight of the 9th to the lOfch of July, we had sailed with a fresh easterly breeze direct for the ice, and early in the morning had already lost sight of the Hansa; the fog-horn no longer found an echo. Presently with the wind from the distance there rolled the thunder of a cannon-shot ; a second followed, and we joyfully returned the greeting of -the sister-ship. At noon we fired again, and received no answer ; we were for the time separated from the Hansa. The follow- ing five days brought no change in the weather; day after day passed with the interesting variations of — fog, thicker fog, thickest fog. The temperature was about 36° Fahr. ; only once rose to 39^°, and fell to 33.80°. The only comfort was that no obstacle stopped our progress, as on the open sea the ship can find her way with the help of the compass in the darkest night as easily as in broad daylight. A collision was not to be feared here, so we CONTINUED VOYAGE OP THE TAVO SHIPS. 61 had no feeling of insecurity, as one has in a thick fog near land. The bird world did not change much; the stormy petrel, however, preponderated. On the other hand, we saw far more freqiiently a creature peculiar to the Arctic regions, the Greenland seal (Phoca Gronlandica, Miill.). They stretched their black, flat heads out of the water with great curiosity, but immediately disappeared, setting at defiance every attempt to reach them with the deadly shot. The appearance of these seals reminded us that we were now in the neighbourhood of the seal-catchers, that is, in that part of the northern icy sea where, from the end of March to the end of April, the seals come in thousands to the smooth floating ice to cast their young ones. These " seal-coasts " change their position somewhat every year, and range between 68° and 74° N. Lat. and from 2° to 16° W. Long. It is a highly inte- resting sight to see the seals assembled from all quarters at this time. It is said that they not only come from the coasts of Spitzbergen and Greenland, but even swim in flocks from Nova Zembla. The whitish-coloured young stay on the ice the first few days, and are then killed with clubs by the parties of seal-hunters. The skin with its underlying fat is brought on board. The skin and fat of a young seal are worth from 7s. 6d. to 9s. ; besides which they catch many old seals. The number caught by a single Bremen ship now sometimes amounts to from 8 to 10,000 seals; and one may form some idea of the war of destruction waged against these harmless creatures, by man, when we hear that of European ships in 1868, five German, five Danish, fifteen Norwegian, and 62 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. twenty-two British, which were in company in West Greenland, obtained 237,000. On the " Jan Mayen ice " besides the Greenland seal there is another kind found, called the crested seal (Gystophora cristata, Nilss.), seldom the bearded seal {Phoca harbata, Mull.) only. The expected meeting with the ice necessitated a peculiar provision on the ship, the "crow's-nest," so as to have a clear and commanding prospect over the labyrinth of flakes and floes, and to enable us to steer through all, and when possible find the best road, as the range of sight over the water from the deck was no longer sufficient. The commander, therefore, has to look for the highest possible steady stand-point, and this is easily found in the " top " of the masts, to which the shrouds give easy access. A long sojourn in this airy region is not very agreeable at any time ; one must be careful to protect the body somewhat against the wind, and this object is attained by a suitably formed barrel. A good telescope is hung constantly up here, and a little straw is placed at the bottom. This necessary " crow's- nest," already well known from Scoresby's and the late Swedish expeditions, was on the 1 2th, with much merri- ment and many good and bad jokes called forth by its peculiar appellation, hoisted up the mainmast, and fastened by the carpenter to the crosstrees, between the top and the top-shrouds. The view attained by this means at a height of thirty- eight feet, gave us the survey over a circle the radius of which was seven and a quarter nautical miles. About eleven at night in the thick fog an unusually white spot was seen, and this we discovered to be the first piece of ice. At the so long looked-for announce- CONTINUED VOYAGE OF THE TWO SHIPS. 63 ment of "Ice!" every one was on deck, and hurrying to the fore. Every eye rested with interest on the small rocking scrap which was at the most quite an isolated, far- washed piece. "With intense attention and impatience, during the night and following day (the 13th), the sailors were to be seen on the watch, and from time to time the cap of one of the inmates of the cabin diving into the thick fog ; but gaily as we advanced, no ice appeared ! On the 14th, there was a calm the whole day, so we went about in the boat fishing up the drift-wood, hunting the gulls and sketching them. Sometimes it 'brightened, and we could see a little farther ; but still no trace of the Hansa. But we had another intimation of the near- ness of the ice. We could see in the west or north- west over the horizon, a white or yellowish glistening, which must spring from the ice, and which is known as the " Ice-sky," yet essentially differing from the " Ice-bhnk." Besides this, we saw the ivory gull {Larus eburneus), a bird never found far from the ice. CHAPTER Til. TO THE SEPARATION OF THE SHIPS ON THE 20tH JULY. The ice in the Arctic Ocean, particularly off East Greenland. — The border of the ice reached on the 15th of July. — Further voyage of the Germania. — Position and nature of the ice. — Arctic birds. — Meeting of the vessels once more. The Polar circle is termed the boundary of the Arctic or Northern Icy Sea. For that term there is a physical reason, as at every spot within this circle the sun does not rise in winter for a certain number of days together, and its influence being thus so circumscribed, the " everlast- ing " ice is enabled to form. But the Polar circle is the boundary also in a geographical point of view, as it cuts directly through Behring's Straits, and the narrowest part of Davis's Straits, besides stretching over both the old and the new worlds, so that the whole of the enclosed (so-called) Polar basin is contained within it. This has but one broad approach, and that lies between Scandinavia and Greenland. Here the Polar circle is least satis- factory as a boundary ; for here, as in every case in which the shackles of art are imposed upon nature, the arbitrary line is overstepped by the irregularities of nature, and nowhere more so than in the present case. From the west coast of Norway to far beyond the North Cape rush the waves of the Atlantic, which are never covered with ice ; FROM THE SEPARATION OP THE SHIPS. 65 while on the east coast of Greenland, down to its most southerly point, presses from one year's end to another a powerful mass of heavy ice. The boundary of the icy sea (as a sea covered with ice) may now upon the whole be settled by a line drawn from Cape Farewell to Iceland, from thence to Spitzbergen, and lastly to Nova Zembla. The cause of this appearance lies really in the existence of two important sea-currents. From the coast of Norway up to Spitzbergen and Nova Zembla stretches the north-easterly branch of the Gulf Stream, driving back all floating ice, and from the comparative warmth of its waters conducing to the melting of the same all along the ice boundary. On the other hand, on the east coast of Greenland runs the Polar current in a south-westerly direction to a great distance, carrying with it the heavy ice formed in the extreme north, and picking up on its way all the younger ice frozen during the winter; while, from the coldness of its waters, it prevents the melting of the same in a remarkable degree. Thus it is explained how from Davis' Straits also must flow towards the south just such another cold, ice-burdened stream, and how on the voyage from Germany to New York are often seen one or more drifting pieces of ice, or even icebergs. This Greenland ice-current forms the main outlet for the removal of the Polar ice, and we may very reasonably liken it to a floating glacier whose farthest domain is the Polar basin. Upon the nature of the ice in this Polar current, the following preliminary remarks may throw some hght. At the beginning of the current, in the same latitude as Spitzbergen, and much nearer to the coast, as far down F G6 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. as Iceland, the largest fields of ice are to be found ; tracts of enormous extent and sometimes more than fifty feet in thickness. Between these, and originating from them in the course of time, by their breaking up, are smaller fields called ice-floes ; and these, increased by thawing, by the surrounding driving and pressing, as well as by the waves, break up in small pieces, the real hummocks which prevail at the eastern boundary of the current, at the " ice-line," as well as at the most southerly end. As a last remains of the disturbing process, huge hummocks float about, or cover the broken ice or the wide expanse of sea with small brashes. Real icebergs seem almost peculiar to the southern part of the coasts ; such an ice- berg is not formed in the sea, but is a broken piece of glacier moving with its lower part in the sea, and from which at different times large pieces have been broken off" by the pressure of the water, and carried onward by the current. The breadth of this ice-current, and also the position of the ice-line is, as may be imagined, very different at different times of the year. Whilst in spring-time it runs about the middle of Iceland past Jan Mayen to the southern point of Spitzbergen, in summer it retreats nearer to the coast, and stretches somewhat in the direction of the west-end of Iceland to the north of Spitz- bergen. Some pieces of ice, under peculiar circum- stances, naturally float very far fcom this boundary towards the south-east; sometimes even reaching the Faroes. But even at corresponding times of the year, the ice- line may occupy very different positions; much de- pending upon the compactness of the labyrinth of FKOM THE SEPAEATION OP THE SHIPS. 67 fields, floes, and drifts, and also of the prevailing winds. As all ice rises out of the water, and from its irregular form offers to the wind an easy object of attack, so it is often drawn from the course of the water-current by a strong air-current, and either hurried onward or retarded in its progress. An easterly and south-easterly wind must drive the ice westward, and press the masses closer than ever ; whilst a westerly and- north-westerly wind drives the icy dominion farther eastward, dividing the masses, and thereby rendering the ice-stream more navigable. This ice-current, or ice-zone, in the outer part of which the whale-fishers mostly catch their prey, was what we were now about to sail across. That this task was certainly not so easy and simple as many think who have not seen for themselves, we knew from experience in the yacht " Greenland " in 1868. This time our steam power gave us greater hope. If we could only reach the vicinity of land we thought that in the much-talked- of " Land- water " we should at least be able to move with ease, and thereby obtain good results. On the 15th of July we reached the ice-line. After a foggy day a light southerly breeze got up, the sails filled, the ship answered the helm once more, and we moved in a north-westerly course between small floes and brashes. A practised ear might now notice a peculiar distant roar, which seemed to come nearer by degrees. It was the sea surging against the still hidden ice. However unwelcome and equivocal this surging might sound to the ears of sailors far from any harbour (and it has a wonderfully paralyzing eSect as one approaches), to-day it was E 2 68 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. listened to with unmistakable pleasure. The object of our longing is then at last reached, and if the ice should prove a blockade to us, we could at least remain com- fortably in the Germania in its neighbourhood to inspect it. Nearer and nearer comes the rushing noise. Every man is on deck ; when, as with the touch of a magic wand, the mist divides, and a few hundred yards before us Hes the ice, in long lines like a deep indented rocky coast, with walls glittering blue in the sun, and the foam of the waves mounting high, with the top covered with blinding white snow. The eyes of all rested with amazement on this grand panorama : it was a glorious but a serious moment, stirred as we were by new thoughts and feelings, by hopes and doubts, by bold and far-reaching expectations. The mist closed again almost immediately; but this short moment and a glimpse from the crow's-nest sufficed to show us the absolute thickness of the masses of ice. Here, even had it been our intention, we could never have broken through, and if any of us had formed a mistaken idea of ice-navigation, this must prove to the most inexperienced that such an obstacle could neither be overcome by the most powerful ironclad ship, nor by gunpowder. Our duty bade us first seek the Hansa in 75° N.L. ; but, besides the fact that an easterly wind had been blowing for some days, making it anything but a favourable moment for forcing the icy range, it became necessary to wait another opportunity for making an energetic attempt. The spot where the Germania struck the ice was in 74° 47' N. Lat., and 11° 50' W. Long., and the edge FROM THE SEPARATION OF THE SHIPS. 69 stretched almost due north and south. The Hansa reached the ice-Hne the same day in 74° 57' N. Lat., and 9° 41' W. Long. The log-book of the Germania says, "Heard the rushing of the water against the ice, but unfortunately could see nothing on account of the fog. Temperature of the sea's surface 32° Fahr., a sure sign that we were near the ice ; tacked therefore, and ran with a south-westerly wind some miles to the north- west, until the floes became so dense that we were obliged to turn. Steered in the fog along the ice northward. At four in the afternoon a point was passed, from which the line seemed to stretch more westward. Accordingly we sailed in that direction, and about seven came again to compact ice, which obliged us to turn and lie to. The fog was now so dense that we could only make out the pieces nearest to us. To judge by the breakers, the ice here stretched again to the north. On the morning of the 16th of July, the atmosphere lightened a little; when we set all sail and made for the ice, which was soon in sight. Towards the north and north-north-east lay a long chain of closely packed pieces ; to the west and north-west opened a large bay, into which we sailed', that we might inspect nearer the position of the ice. By eleven we reached what was to all appearance the end of this bay, namely, a chain of drift ice, behind which, to westward, some open water showed itself, surrounded with ice. As it was not our intention to make any serious attempt to advance until we fell in with the Hansa, once more we lay to, in order to wait for clearer weather." The first excitement and restlessness had by this time subsided, and we could observe surrounding nature more at our leisure. When 70 THE GERMAN ABCTIO EXPEDITION. the mist shifted a little, the view from the crow's-nest was very beautiful ; first the icy boundary, and then behind the endless labyrinth of floes. One was also able exactly to trace how the light and dark parts of the clouds lying over the horizon, as well as the light and dark stripes in them, reflected a true picture of the ice on the sea, and to study attentively this important appearance known as the " Ice and water sky." The chase brought us a new bird to-day, a handsome black guillemot {TJria grylle, L.), with its greenish shining plumage ; the white band on its wings, and the red beak and wings looked wonderfully pretty. Our interest was, however, more aroused by a young crested seal which was killed in the night {Gystojphora cristata), with shining black back, and whitish yellow belly. Of the peculiar blistery formation on the nose, from which they take their name, and which characterizes the grown-up male, there was yet no sign : but the creature was unmistakable from the form of its head ; the well-defined snout of the common seals had entirely disappeared ; but the strongest zoological mark lay in the teeth. We filled a wine-barrel half full of its fat, and the rest fell into the hands of the zoologist. On the 17th we cruised about in the thick fog with a south-westerly breeze. "We had no sooner tacked than we came upon ice, and were obliged to tack once more. It seemed as if we lay in a bay, surrounded by floating ice. At the same time many small loose floes were drifting around us, and were covered on the surface with the decomposing ice like white snow. We took up some shovelsful to melt, with a view to renewing our store of water. The mischievous fog played us many a trick in our tacking backwards and forwards. PPOM THE SEPARATION OF THE SHIPS. 71 It is almost incredible how much larger the ice-floes appear in the fog. We seem, for instance, to be driving at a hill, forty-five to fifty feet high ; and when we arrive there, it is a small floe with a hummock of about ten feet ! This delusion we had subsequently often to experience, though at first it afforded us great ground for amuse- ment. The ice had in the thick fog something altogether spectral and gloomy in appearance ; but as to real danger to the ship in this floating ice, where there are no ice- bergs, there is none, except in a heavy sea, with storms or calm. Towards evening the ice pressed closer and closer around, so that to prevent ourselves being enclosed, we had to keep more eastward. At two in the morning we broke through the current, that is the outer chain of floes, and saw at once by the wind- ward roll that we were once more in the open sea, w^here we had to lie by in expectation of better Weather. The floes lay so thick at the border, that with the faint breeze the ship could not get through, and for the first time we had to employ the long ice-hooks to push aside those lying directly under our bow, or when very large, to work the ship round them. It was a most agreeable night ; and as it was the first time that the ship, in the true sense of the word, had really come in contact with the ice, all on deck willingly took a hand in the work and made it a pleasure to get rid of the obstinate com- panions that impeded the progress of our Germania. Here we had the best opportunity of studying the con- figuration of the floes somewhat more nearly. They were mostly flat, and of the most varied form. We could see at once, that warmth, air, sun, and wave-friction had been 72 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. at work upon them for some time past'. From the rushing of the water the edges were rounded and hollowed ; they ranged from four to twelve inches out of the water, whilst the mass under the water was about four times as great. On the surface, as we have already mentioned, they were covered with the melting ice like snow some inches high ; and on the larger ones small pools of water were found, which generally make their appearance about the begin- ning of July, and about the beginning of August are again covered with a crust of ice. Remove the snow and we come once more to the glistening blue ice. Between the floes are hummocks, miniature mountains so to speak, which rise in various forms, now elegant, now bold, and from the crevices and shaded plains shed the most beautiful blue light. This blue changes some- times to a green ; indeed, one is often surprised to see a most lovely emerald green. Taking also into considera- tion that this almost always quiet water reflects the clearest pictures, one can imagine how great a charm this ice scenery must have for a novice. But it is not only the beautiful and majestic which has such an eflFect, but all sorts of fantastic shapes which dehght the be- holder by their wonderful variety. For instance, the small or large ice-blocks, from melting and the washing of the water, frequently assume the most peculiar forms. Here rides a stately swan, there an eagle spreads its mighty wings; here a staring seal stretches its head out of the water, and there stands an elegant marble table. At home, when wishing to picture such things out of the clouds, or the ice-trees on the windows, one must exer- cise a certain amount of imagination ; here they are forced FEOM THil SEPARATION OF THE SHIPS. 73 upon the least enthusiastic observer, and we could not help giving our unquaUfied assent to Scoresby's descrip- tion, which until then we had thought a little exaggerated. "Arctic birds" (so it runs in the Hansa's Journal at this time) " such as the stormy petrel, gulls, robber- gulls, auks, and puflSns surrounded the ship. For want of something else to do, we caught a number of them by angling, and then gave them their Hberty after fastening a small piece of metal to them by a silken band with the name Hansa and the latitude (73° N.) engraved upon it. Procellaria gladalis were swimming like ducks in our wake, and biting one another with loud chattering for the pieces of bacon thrown to them almost under the stern." On the morning of the 18th, the atmosphere brightened with a light southerly wind ; and for the first time since we left Jan Mayen, on the 9th of July, it was bright and clear. We now saw that we were in a large ice bay, opening towards the south-east. It was a wonderfully beautiful (one might almost say a festive) Sunday morn- ing,. The eye refreshed itself with the deep blue of the softly rippling and Hghtly moving sea, and rested quietly upon the wide semicircle of the ghttering ice-bank. The sun once more sent a fi^iendly beam from the clear sky, and seemed to show us that even here he could provide what we had so long needed — warmth and dryness. ' With what pleasure we enjoyed those morning hours, and drew in the clear fresh air ! How we once more learned to realize what sun and sunshine are to mankind ! But, wonderful to relate, with all this, the recollections of our own country receded more and more. We stood and felt that we were at the entrance of a new world, whose whole enchantment had thus burst upon us. At first. 74 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. there was an imperceptible struggle with the mighty- powers of nature ; but now we were thoroughly prepared for anything that might turn up, and looked forward with impatience to our advancing westward. One after th6 other mounted to the topmast or the " crow's-nest," and gazed out upon the masses of ice : we could not satiate ourselves with the panorama. A way for the Germania must and should be found. But there was another and more important object which the sharpest eyes could not succeed in finding, our lost sister-ship, the Hansa, which we had not seen since leaving Jan Mayen. It was impossible that she could be far away, for we were . quite near the ap- pointed place of rendezvous, 75° N.L., and we must in any case find her now before the fog should surround us once more. The prize of a bo-ttle of wine was therefore set upon the discovery of the Hansa, though we scarcely required this incitement, so keen and so deep was onr interest in the fate of our beloved comrades. Soon after breakfast, to the great joy of all, a sail was discovered from the topmast far away in the ice in E.N.B. It was a schooner, and as the whale-fishers do not use such craft, it must be the Hansa, which by a seaman's eye was soon verified by her peculiar rig. The Hansa was under full sail ; certainly she must have already seen us, and was trying her best to reach us through the apparently thick ice which surrounded her. We ourselves hoped that we should be able at once to advance farther west- ward together ; so the boiler was heated without delay, and everything prepared for getting up steam, so as to unite the two vessels before the fog returned. Meanwhile, it was four o'clock in the afternoon ere we could move, FEOM THE SEPAEATION OF THE SHIPS. 75 as, in fitting tlie screw, sometliing had been overlooked, wHch took us some hours to rectify. The Hansa had in the meantime worked herself some miles nearer to us, and now lay in the floating ice. The weather was beau- tiful and clear, and there was a dead calm ; so that with the speed of 5j knots, which we made with a 501b. pres- sure, we reached our friends at about eight o'clock. The ice- spikes which encircled our bay to the north-east, stretching far to the east, and towards which we were driving, resolved themselves as we approached into small, and very small, brashes, between which the ship easily made her way or forced it, though not without some gratings and slight working of the steam. Our farther advance was unimpeded. The ice-strewn sea now presented a peculiarly interesting spectacle. It had assumed by the reflection of the sky, which had been heavily-clouded for some hours, an almost black hue, in strong contrast with the colour of the ice, whilst the north- westerly horizon shone with the brightest yellow tints. At eight we were near the Hansa; both ships hoisted their flags. The Hansa gave expression to her joy by firing her guns ; but we, not being prepared, had to return the salute with our fowling-pieces. Greetings re-echoed from one side to the other, as we went round the Hansa, and universal joy reigned on board both ships. We then took her in tow, and steered back the same way by which we had come, until some slight disorder in the machinery obliged us to stop, when both ships were again put under sail. Meanwhile Captain Hegemann, Dr. Buchholz, and Dr. Laube had come on board, and the captains consulted together regarding the next steps to be' taken. The 76 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. Hansa had, like ourselves, been several days in the ice. Indeed, a glance at the logs showed that since their separation the two vessels had never been far from one another, that they had sailed in the same course to the ice, and had also sighted it the same day, and that nothing but continued fog had prevented us from sighting each other sooner. Captain Hegemann reported that farther north a larger bay penetrated to the westward. We, however, preferred trying the southerly one. "We further agreed, conformably with our instructions, that in case of a separation among the ice, the next place of meeting should be Sabine Island, as it was plainly loss of time to return to 74|^°N.L., to the line of heavy ice, if we had each found an opening ; besides which, the attempt ought not to be given up before the middle of Sep- tember, and we hoped to get through much sooner, as the position of the ice, in comparison with that of 1868, seemed more favourable. Meanwhile, the gentlemen sat in the cabin over their wine, exchanging the experiences and results of the last few days. The zoologists, it is true, were the only men who were particularly satisfied, as both in the higher and lower classes of animals they had already an interesting collection. Of birds there were several "Mallemucke" shot and properly prepared ; also one of the robber-gulls with the two peculiar elongated middle tail feathers (Lestris crepidata, Brehm). Several seals {Plioca Green- landica, L.) had also fallen a sacrifice to science. But the lower animals had yielded the richest harvest, and besides different species of Galanus, Lijsianassa, Gam- mams, and so forth, several specimens of the beautiful Beroe had been oltained. Pity that these wonderful FEOM THE SEPAEATION OF THE SHIPS. 77 creatures, with transparent cucumber- shaped bodies, long rosy -red tentacles, and their eight rows of gHtter- ing, many-coloured leaf-like processes, with which they move slowly forward, cannot be preserved in their original beauty. But in other respects also we had not been altogether inactive. The soundings — this difficult and time-con- suming work — had here on the ice boundary shown an important deepening of the bottom of the sea ; whilst on the 14th we had touched ground at 930 fathoms, on the 15th we could no longer do so with 1230 fathoms. Here the unsettled state of the weather prevented us from finishing this work with satisfaction to ourselves. The mean temperature of these four days was 35° Fahr. It did not rise above 40°, and once, early on the 16th, sank to below 32°. The water on the surface was of much the same temperature; it oscillated between 34° and 33 1°. The colour of the water was mostly clear blue. In the exchange of such observations and merry and free conversation, it was now midnight. At this time we were obliged to stop, as the axle-bed was heated and required coohng. A rising fog and a coming breeze decided us ; so we gave up steam entirely, and let the two ships separate once more and proceed under sail. Full of joy and confident hope for the future, we shook hands at parting, and the gentlemen from the Hansa returned to their ship. In sisterly harmony the two ves- sels sailed along, and many a joyous greeting and joke resounded from the one to the other. Who on this evening would have thought that this was the last time we should be together? that we should 78 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. never again see our sister-ship, and our comrades only after fourteen months' time, and then so -wonderfully pre- served from drowning ? Our happy feelings did not allow such unwholesome thoughts to arise. Our present object was now to follow the ice boundary farther southward, at the same time looking for an open- ing by which we might push on to the west. In tacking in contrary winds,, we came against several sharp pro- minences of the thick ice-line, which here stretched in a west-south-westerly direction. On the afternoon of the 19th of July the breeze fresh- ened ; we made good way, and as much open water was before us, we soon noticed the now unusual swell. The weather was tolerable, the fog came and went, so that we kept the Hansa mostly in sight. This day brought us something new. The first white bear was seen, and that swimming, and for the first time an Arctic dish appeared on our table. At breakfast the cook astonished us with a very delicate and tender seal liver, and in the evening a very savoury stew of the flesh ; we were glad to get a little fresh meat, and soon lost the excusable repugnance to the " oily" seal. We sailed farther along the ice-line towards the south- west. On the night of the 19th and 20th we fell in with ice, seemingly a part of the closely-packed floes driven from the great mass. The swell had entirely disappeared, and we moved amongst loose floating ice to the south-west. It was mostly thick fog at night, though it cleared some- what about eight in the morning. The wind was S.S.W. In the south-west we stiU found compact floating ice, and at eleven turned again to westward. The Hansa was a FROM THE SEPARATION OP THE SHIPS. 79 few miles to windward of us ; and as both captains wished to consult together once more, and, if the weather allowed, to take coals on board the Germania, the ap- proach signal was hoisted. The Hansa misunderstood this,' set more sail, and disappeared in the now thickly- rising fog before we could succeed in following her. Thus a fatal misunderstanding separated the two ships, and that for ever. We will now leave the Germania, under Captain Koldewey's command, to her further course, and hear Captain Hegemann and his companions' report as to how the Hansa fared. ' We signalled — " Come within hail." The Hansa understood — " Long stay a-peak." CHAPTER IV. FTJETHER VOYAGE OF THE HANSA UNTIL HER BLOCKADE IN THE COAST ICE OE EAST GREENLAND. 20tH JULT TO 7tH SEPT. Final separation of both ships. — The Germania's signal misun- derstood by the Hansa. — The Hansa photographed in the ice. — Snow blindness. — Difficulties of making way through the ice. — Animal life. — The rocky coast of Greenland visible for the first time. — The Hansa steers once more Out of the ice. — Two ships in sight to seaward. — The Hansa's struggle with the ice. — Fall of snow on the 3rd of August. — Southerly cun-ents. — Second attempt of the Hansa to reach Sabine Island. — The Hansa sails to the north. — Countless seals — Steer to the north-west. — Circumstances particularly unfavourable to further progress. — By towing the ship open water at last reached. — Hemmed in once more. — Reverses, trouble, and dangers, until the blocking up of the Hansa. — Changeable frame of mind on board. — Soundings. — Trial with the dredge. — Journey in. the boat in the direction of land. — Sabine and Pendulum Islands in sight. — Meal on the ice. — The Captain's birthday. — Poverty of animal life on the sea near the coast.— Hunting. Morning of the 20tli, strong W-S-W. wind blowing. At eight o'clock spoke the Germania. Captain Koldewey signalled to keep farther from the ice on account of bad weather. We therefore steered eastward for some time, but found that, instead of getting looser, the ice had become more dense ; we therefore lay close hauled on the port tack, and at ten o'clock were obliged to steer to N.W, Meanwhile, the water improved, and after sailing through a stream of floating ice, we saw open water in a k* 1 FGETHEB VOYAGE OP THE HANSA. 81 westerly direction. So for westward ! Captain Koldewey gave us a signal, which, through the hazy weather, we unfortunately misunderstood. We thought we read, "Long stay a-peak," which Captain Hegemann interpreted that the ship should sail as far westward as possible. The signal, however, really meant, " Come within hail." The misunderstanding vsras fatal ; the Hansa pushed on to westward, lost sight of the Germania on the 20th of July, and never saw her again. It is, however, tolerably certain, and it is also confirmed by both captains' statements, that, on account of the Arctic weather, it would have been very, very diflBcult for the two ships to have remained together, and it would have made landing doubly difficult. And in the course of this account, it wiU be seen that the Hansa on her side of the coast could have reached another point, had she not been prevented by the letter of her instructions. Before noon on the 21st of July, as we lay quietly in the pack, Mr. Hildebrandt, who had brought his photo- graphic apparatus on the ice, succeeded in taking a good photograph of the Hansa. The dazzling snow in the sun- shine produced snow-blindness for the first time in one of the sailors, Philip Heine, and snow spectacles were at once distributed. Seals and narwhals were seen near the ship, some of which we killed at first. An attempt to draw out the ice-bears by a fire lit on a block of ice, and fed with seal-blubber, failed. Nevertheless, our mid-d.w table was enriched with seal-meat, regarding the palxita- bleness of which opinions differed. The continually falling fog enveloped everything, shrouds, masts, rigging, with a thick crust of ice, so that some one had to be sent up to beat it down ; and pieces were constantly falling, G 32 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. covering the deck witli broken ice. With great trouble the sHp moved slowly forwards, sometimes towed and pushed by the men, sometimes sailing through a littlfe water. Nevertheless, we were quite aware that the wind and currents were driving us far from our destination to- wards the south, and indeed, the leeway amounted m seven days (from the 21st to the 28th July) to about seventy-two nautical miles. For awhile we had comparatively low temperature, on the 24th July, for example, 31° Fahr. CAPE BBOER ETJYS. Of birds, the Lestris and Procellaria were mostly seen, and the ivory gull daily. Of Radiata, Dr. Buchholz mentions a beautiful ribbed Medusa, with vermiHon ribs and fringes. On the 28th of July, we found ourselves in 72° 56' N.L. and 16° 54'W.L. On that day we caught sight of the dark, rocky coast of East Greenland for the first time, from Cape Broer Ruys to Cape James. Dr. Laube remarks : — " I know now what is meant by making an expedition to the North Pole, and what weighty difficulties he between Bast Grreenland and Spitzbergen. Scoresby found it easier ; he broke through to the coast just where he found a good place : and we shall evidently rURTHEE VOYAGE OP THE IIANSA. 83 have to proceed in the same manner, for it does not seem difficult to reach the Liverpool coast; 'Clavering and Sabine, also, easily found an opportunity of getting to Pen- dulum Island ; but it is difficult, indeed almost impracti- cable, for us to land at that place. The decision is easier on the map than in the Arctic Sea, as circumstances there arise which cannot be anticipated." As we could no longer continue the same course, there remained nothing for us but to act up to the letter of our instruc- CAPE JAMES. tions, and steer once more in an easterly direction out of the ice; and having once reached the edge, begin afresh. On the 29th and 30th of July, we sighted two vessels, tacking with a north-east wind, about twelve sea miles distant. As we afterwards learned, one was the steamer Bienenkorb, Captain Hagens, from the "Weser, which, on the 29th of July, farther northwards, spoke with the (to us) still invisible Germania; and on her return to Bremen on the 2nd of September, reported thus : — " Spoke the Germania on the 29th of July, in about 73° 2' N.L. and 15° 50' W.L. ; she was steering northwards along the border of the ice to rejoin the Hansa. The 6 2 84 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Bienenkorb took a south-westerly course along tlie ice, and about noon, in 72° 38' N.L. saw the Hansa beset about eight miles Within the pack." Blocked in we were not really yet, though nearing the coast at once was not to be thought of, on account of the compactness of the floes. On the 31st of July, the vessels had disappeared. The following day, the 1st of August, they appeared once more, though possibly only in the way caused by refraction. The Hansa 'struggled heavily through the ice. At one o'clock in the afternoon (says the captain's log-book) we sailed under bare poles, merely by the pressure of the wind on the masts and rigging E.N.E. with a strong west-sou' -west wind. At two o'clock we broke through two gigantic floes. At the first shock against them, the forepart of the ship rose two feet on to the ice, and quivered as if the keel had struck the bottom. Masts and shrouds trembled and swayed under the powerful shock, but, as we might have expected, the Hansa bore it well. 3rd of August : a fine fall of snow. On the 5th (the same day on which the Germania anchored ofi" Sabine Island) the Hansa was once more in open water. Eight days previously, before we had resolved to sail eastward, we were in 72° 65'6' N.L. and 16° 54' W.L. Now, on the 5th of August, we were in 72° 29' N.L. and 13° 48' W.L. The current had carried us in this time twenty-six nautical miles to the southwards. The direction and strength of the southerly drift current coiild not be accurately determined, as in going back- wards and forwards through the ice, no control could be kept over our course. In spite of the many shocks, and the pressure of the ice, the ship had not sufi'ered. FUBTHEE VOYAGE OF THE HANSA. 85 We now made a second attempt at following the instructions to penetrate to the coast in latitude 75°. From the 5th to the 11th of August we had, with the exception of slight fogs, good weather, the reading of the thermometer ranging from 27° to 36° T. We sailed northwards along the ice boundary with a good southerly wind, until the 10th of Aiigust. Seals were numerous, swimming in troops of from ten to twenty. They were very lively, often springing with the whole of their body out of the water, a sign that it was pairing time. At eight o'clock we fancied we saw a vessel, and the hope of finding the Germauia once more arose within us, but a thick fog set in, and our signal- gun remained unanswered. 9th August : in 74° 14-6' N.L. and 11° 2'W.L. Froze in the night, between the 10th and 11th, the ice being an inch and a half thick. We steered in a north-westerly direction, and at seven in the morning were twenty-five nautical miles nearer the coast, in 74° 58^' N.L. and 11° 16-5''W.L., the thickness of the ice preventing us from making further use of the favourable south-west wind. For the next few days our task was an unusually heavy one. The wind was unfavourable, so the attempt to sail through the opposing ice was impracticable. But twelve hours' work of dragging the ship along by means of a small anchor fastened to a rope, through the icy barrier, resulted in our reaching navigable water on the 13th. But we were again disappointed ! After sailing west- ward one night, we saw ourselves, on the morning of the 14th, hemmed in once more on all sides; fresh ice formed between the floes, besides filling up every passage, so that the Hansa was fast again. From this time 86 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. forward until the complete blocking up of tlie Hansa, tlie captain's log-book unfolds a succession of reverses, troubles, and dangers. August 14tli, fast ; shot a Polar bear; stream soutli-west i° W. ; made thirteen nautical miles in forty-eight hours-: 15th, we are nearer thef coast than we have yet been. Shannon I. distant forty-eight THE " riOWEK-BASKET." nautical miles. Pendulum, fifty-nine; thick ice. 16th, thermometer, 25° Pahr, ; fine weather. Stuck fast to the floe, drifting steadily southward. "Warping quite use- less. 18th and 19th warped again. Made some few ship's lengths. Open water to the north-west, which we reached on the 23rd, hoping to sail farther westward. ill w o o M TUETHER VOYAGE OE THE HANSA. 87 Evening, fast again in 74° 36-4' N.L. and 15° 49-1' W.L. For zoological observation there was much, to interest. The body of a Phoca Greenlandica had drawn numerous ivory gulls together. Two birds {8trepsilas interpres) were observable on the new ice ; and the dredge produced us many beautiful star-fishes and molluscs. August 24th: a boat excursion to the land; captain, two of&cers, Dr. Laube, and two sailors. We left the ship at two o'clock, and pressed forward to within sixteen nautical miles of the land. Passed a peculiar icy formation, which we named the " Flower -basket." Saw the coast very distinctly from a tall hummock, which we climbed, and hoisted the German flag upon it. Further we could not go, as the ice was too close, and a late return to the ship, which was ever drifting southwards, would be very difficult in a possibly rising fog. Eeturn journey began quarter past seven in the evening. On board once more by half-past twelve at night. The position of the ice was much altered, and a dense fog came up, so that we could scarcely find our way, and were often obliged to haul the boat over the floes. "W. Bade's diary describes with genuine sailor's humour the frugal evening meal under the open sky upon the ice during their excursion. In the hurry, only hard bread and some cocoa had been brought with us, and a few bottles of sherry and brandy. Cigars never failed. " At first, owing to the lowness of the temperature, we could not succeed in boiling the water; and in order to concentrate the heat had to lay our sou' -westers over the machine — a very questionable proceeding, inasmuch as these oilskin coverings were with great difficulty saved from the flames, which readily caught them." On the 25th 88 THE GERMAN AUCTIC EXPEDITION. we towed tlie ship in a calm towards the coast. To-day the Hansa reached its nearest to Sabine Island. The vessel lay due west J° JST., thirty-five nautical miles off, in 74° 30' N.L. and 16° 40' 5" W.L. On the 25th and 27th the ship underwent pressure by the ice, but remained undamaged. According to the report of the Germania's voyage, she anchored after a journey to Shannon Island on the 27th of August in the evening, and was at Little Pendulum at eleven o'clock. At this time we were in about 74° 20' N.L. and 16° 60' W.L. ; so that at the utmost the ships were not more than thirty-four nautical miles distant from each other ! Much colder these last few days : 23° to 16° F. August 28th : the first and only time we had a brisk north-west wind ; drifted with a large ice-field considerably southward. Taking into consideration the strong ice pressure to which the ship was continually subject, we made ready the boats and divided the fur clothing. We saw before us the imminent prospect" of being obliged to pass the winter oflF the coast. We began seriously to talk of using our coal- bricks to build a house on the ice to which we might fly for refuge in case the ship were lost. September 2nd : rain and storm from the south-east. Morning of the 5th, fine weather, light south-east wind ; sailed twenty nautical miles in a north-westerly direction, partly by the side of an ice-field fifteen nautical miles long, until eight in the evening, when calm, fog, and ice brought us once more to a stand. This was our last sail. Had we had steam we should most likely have reached the open water, which we saw along the coast. The next day we laid the Hansa between two pro- montories of a large ice-field, which eventually proved a I'URTHEK VOYAGE OF THE HANSA. 89 raft of deliverance. Now began the complete blockade of our ship in the ice. These occurrences and the changing state of mind on board up to this time is plainly perceivable in the diaries. Dr. Laube writes thus on the 13th of August : — " As towards morning the wind was more favourable, we heaved up the anchor and tried to get free. Vain effort ! Although we towed from one floe to the other, with all our strength, we were none the nearer. Scarcely were we free from one floe than another immediately drifted into its place. It seems bewitched. At noon, our faces were very long, and we came to look upon our mission as a failure. Open water seemed nearer again, but we were faster than ever in the ice. In spite of all our trouble the ship had not moved an inch from the floe, which is in reality an immense ice-field on our lee, whilst on our weather-side lay some large blocks. At last, after fourteen hours' heavy labour, the ship got free. The floes broke asunder, a passage opened, and we sailed into it with a fair wind. The canal gets broader and broader. Beyond, the sea seems almost free from ice. Ei^ht and left it receded to the horizon. It was as if we were on a great lake ; some floes swimming about like islands. As a heavy fog shut out the sun, we could not see where the open water ended. We hovered between hope and fear. Ten minutes before six o'clock we got under weigh ; seven, eight, nine o'clock, no end to be seen ! Ten o'clock, open water still before us. Unfortunately the breeze dropped entirely. I asked Mr. Bade how long we could still sail. He thought the whole night through. We could not go to rest yet. Our hearts beat from excitement, and however deep hope had sunk at 90 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION, noon, it rose now liiglier every minute. Eleven o'clock, still sailing ! but very slowly, till the wind died away entirely." The 14th of August, in 74° 45,4' N,L., and 13° 66-5 "W,L, At nine in the evening soundings were taken, and a depth of 120 fathoms found. The ground was mud ; the dredging-nets were full of sponges, polythalamias, and so forth. Another on the 16th in 74° 38' N,L, and 14° 34' 'W",L,, at noon gave 100 fathoins ; the ground was brown slime. In the evening several attempts were made with the dredge. The first brought up a beautiful sponge, in the cavities of which were many fine and beautiful amphipoda; besides a great deal of sand and fine slime, in which by sifting we found countless bivalves and snails, {Terehratidce, Serpularice) ; and some beautiful polythalamias, &c, A second and third attempt was followed by no result. It freezes visibly, and the fresh ice uniting the floes is already so thick that it can bear a man, "We re- mained," says Dr, Laube, " with every sail set between the great, thick ice-packs, having advanced upon the whole three ship's-lengths westward. In the evening we distinctly saw land towering above the ice ; the re- fraction showing us a solid barrier to the north. To the east the ice lies just as thickly packed. Two- thirds of the way happily lay behind us, but the last third seemed to be beset by insurmountable difl&culties. To what purpose was all our labour ? I thought of those at home, who only admit imaginary difl&culties in the ice, and who, perhaps, doubt our good will, our self-sacrifice, and our sincere endeavours. I did not go to rest that night with the best and quietest of thoughts. We were PUETHER VOyAGE OP THE HANSA. 91 in the ice, but whether or how we should ever come out again, God only knew." Several photographs of the ship were taken from the neighbouring floes by the first ofl&cer, Mr. Hildebrandt. The frost and the reflection of the ice were very trouble- some, but some succeeded very well. Unfortunately, this trouble was also in vain. Neither the apparatus nor the plates could be saved at the going down of the Hansa. On the 20th, fifty nautical miles from the coast, two small land-birds were seen picking up food on the ice. The boat journey to the longed-for land was under- taken by the captain, the second officer, and two sailors, as well as Dr. Laube. " "We sailed," says the latter in his diary, " at two o'clock, and made a rapid course through a long, wide canal. The vessel was soon lost to sight, as the floes were very high. The ice-field along which the Hansa lay, was nearly four miles long. Passing through a cross channel, we came into some more open water, so that at five o'clock we were about seven to eight nautical miles distant from the ship, and consequently so many miles nearer land. "We lay to by a large floe, and from its top looked around us. The ice before us was ' Pack- ice.' "We saw the islands of Pendulum and Sabine surrounded by a streak of light which we took for open coast water.' " We spread our oilskin coats on the floe, encamped there, and made our cocoa, enjoyed the fine sunny day, and rejoiced over the glimpse of land. We then crossed another and a larger tract of ice, and climbed a wall which rose straight out of the water. On this, our farthest point, we ' This was confirmed later by the return voyage, through this -water, of the Germania on the 27th. 92 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. planted the flag. As we noticed that the ice was once more in motion, from the fact that the small harbour in which our boat lay was entirely filled up, we resolved to return. The home journey was considerably more difficult than the outward one ; the canal was closed up, and it was not easy to find the right opening. We were often obliged to get out and survey ffom some high spot, and often to push the boat over the ice. As the wind had quite dropped we were compelled to row. In some places the fresh ice prevented us from making any way ; and after sunset a dense fog rose, which might in so far be dis- agreeable, as to compel us to pass the night on the floe. We, however, eventually succeeded in reaching the Hansa, which we had left in open water, and now found jammed between two hummocks, so that we could scarcely get near her. But we at least brought the hope with us that it was not impossible to reach the coast." The 25th of August was the captain's birthday, and was kept by firing a gun, the hoisting of the ship's flag, and a huge cake, made with great art by our cook. At breakfast, the hero of the fete found upon his plate a pretty poem by Dr. Laube, in which the good wishes of all were heartily expressed. A part of our community amused themselves by skating. On the afternoon of the 29th we saw a magnificent phenomenon. Two coloured coronas formed round the sun, in which were conspicuous, by their greater brightness, three spots. One stood vertically over the sun, and was the spring of an arch, which touched one corona, and the convex side of which' was turned to the sun. This was not really a mffch sun, like those on each side, but a concentration of bright- FURTHER VOYAGE OP THE HANSA. 93 ness at the point of contact of the two bows, tius giving the impression that it stood across the vertical spot. The two side mock suns, to the right and left of the sun, were imited by an elliptical arch, passing through it, and were elongated, presenting the colours of the rain- bow, and emitting a bright steel-grey pyramid or cone. The red colour spread over the sun. Marine animal life was strikingly poor near the coast. Gydippe and Beroe were not rare, but on the other hand gammarus and amphipoda, which we noticed on the outer ice boundary, were quite wanting. On the 15th of August the dredge brought up some very fine Gomatulce and Antedon 8arsii. Larus ehurneiis, the ivory gull, was often fed ffom the ship, and caught by angling. Some birds we let fly again, with a brass coin with " Hansa " upon it fastened round their throats. At the beginning of September Mergulus alle was common. We often saw ravens. The hunting-expeditions from the 10th of August to the blockading of the ship yielded nine seals, amongst which were two crested seals, and one young polar bear. Sunday, August 29th : steadily drifting forward in a southerly direction. Of land we shall soon see nothing more, and the ice is so dense on all sides that it is in vain to look for an opening even from the crow's-nest. Our position is growing every moment more serious ; but in case of the worst, the boats are completely fitted and victualled, on the deck, so that at a moment's notice they can be lowered. CHAPTER V. FROM THB BLOCKING UP OP THE HANSA TO OUB SETTLEMENT ON THE FLOE. 7Tn SEPT. TO END OF OCT. Fresh attempt to reach the coast. — Open water to westwards. — The Hansa completely frozen in by Sept. 14th. — Pressure of the floes against the ship. — A she-bear and her cub. — The bear killed. — Wintering on the ice off the coast unavoidable. — Our prospects for the future. — We build a house in which to pass the winter. — The boats clear. — The Hansa in a struggle with the ice. — Breaking up of the keel. — The ship has to be abandoned. — Extri- cation of the chief necessaries from the ship. — First night in the Hansa-house on the floe. — Wreck of the Hansa. — Favourable weather during the period of the catastrophe. — Sinking of the wreck. — Completion of the arrangements in our liut. — Hoisting of the North German flag. — We steadily drift to the southwards. On the 7th. of September the hope of reaching the coast fluttered once more in our breasts. In the afternoon, with clear weather and a temperature of 20° Fahr., the coast-line was clearly to be seen about thirty-five nautical miles distant. To the west of the ice-field, on the east side of which the Hansa lay blocked up, could be seen a large, open, navigable, white- crested water which seemed to reach to the coast. "We took an excursion over the ice-field along the southern border towards the west, in order to ascertain whether the channel there was navigable all the way through, so thp^t by means of it we might reach the open water. BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA, 95 Wading through deep and superficially frozen snow, we reached a high block of ice, which we named the " Devil's Thumb," from the top of which a wider view could be obtained. Sitting astride or lying on this, we refreshed the inner man with a httle " caraways," which Bade had brought with him as a streng-thener. Two other colossal masses of ice, between which lay a pic- THB devil's thumb. turesque narrow pass, we called the "Brandenburg Gate." One of them we succeeded in climbing, by mounting on one another's shoulders and then cutting steps with a knife in the ice wall. Hildebrandt sketched the little scene. Unfortunately the channel proved too narrow to admit the vessel ; and soon the ice in it and 9G THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. on the other side of the field set firmer together. The next day we had frosty weather, 23° to 5° Fahr., and on the 14th of September, the Hansa was completely frozen up in 73° 25-7' KL., and 18° 39-5' W.L. The south- westerly drift combined with the continual wind blow- ing from the north drove the ship in the ice steadily south- wards, so that from the 12th to the 14th (for example) we had drifted thirteen nautical miles to the south. THE " BRANDS NBUBG GATE." On the 9th, a large floe drifted into the mouth of the bay in which the Hansa lay. This we made fast with hawsers, in order to protect us from the floating ice. Some days later, a storm from the N.N.E. broke the hawsers and set the floe drifting once more. The BLOCKING UP OF THE HANS A. 97 ice thrust our ship into the field, at the same time raising the Hansa a foot and a half. On a neighbouring field we saw a she-bear with her cub. A boat at once put ofi' to hunt them. The pair soon espied us, and tramped to the edge of the ice near the boat, the old one gnashing her teeth and licking her chaps. We fired as soon as we could take a HUNTINS THE POLAK BEAE. steady aim, and the bear fell dead in the snow. Over the young one, which remained by her side licking and caressing her in the most afiecting way, we repeatedly cast a noose, which, however, it always eluded, and at last ran away howling and lamenting ; so we lost it in spite of a shot which wounded it. H 98 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. At ten p.m. we saw in a westerly direction towards the south some gleams of the northern lights. They were short, bright, glittering sheaves and phosphorescent spots, which lengthened out towards the zenith, but soon dis- appeared. At the same time, we heard the young bear howling dismally on the spot where its mother had been -^m^ ^^-^-z^l POLAR BEAE. AS A "WATCHDOS. killed. The fresh bear's-meat came most opportunely, and tasted excellent either as a roast joint or in chops. On the 12th, from the east as before, leaving the land behind them, came another couple of bears. The old one met the same fate as her forerunner ; the young one was BLOCKING DP OF THE HANSA. 99 caugtt, escaped again, was brought back swimming, and lastly cbained to the ice-anchor. It was very frightened, but eagerly devoured its mother's flesh which we threw to it. We built it a snow-house, and offered it a couch of shavings, which, however, the young bear, as a genuine inhabitant of the Arctic seas, despised, and preferred camping in the snow. Some days later, it had dis- ss-* '^"«^s>SS^ lOE-FOKlIATlONS. appeared, together with the chain, which must have become loosened from the anchor. From the weight of the iron alone the poor creature must soon have sunk. Other Arctic guests visited the Hansa.. ^ With a brisk wind came two white foxes from the coast close to the ship, a certain proof that the ice, either in fields or H 2 100 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. young ice, must extend to the coast. With tails high in the air they shot over the ice-fields like small craft sailing before the wind. For the ifirst moment it seemed as if .the wind had caught up a couple of large semicircles of whitish yellow paper, and was wafting them along. One of the creatures was shot from on board by Mr. Hildebrandt, and the next day • gave us a very well- i^ SKATING ON " SINAI." flavoured joint of fox. The idle time we did our best to fill up with all sorts of occupations. In the course of frequent walks, we observed the forms which the ice assumed, and some particularly strange and striking ones we gave names to. A short half-hour's 'valk from the ship lay " Sinai," an ice mass thirty-nine BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. 101 feet high, composed of fragments and mighty blocks, and the highest jagged point of which looked in the distance like the finger of an outspread hand ; then somewhat farther on stood the already mentioned " Brandenburg Gate," two pieces of ice standing near each other like a gateway fifteen feet thick and twenty high ; and lastly, between some neighbouring floes, the " Devil's Thumb." We managed to skate on the rough ice, and in fine weather we strengthened our constitution by gymnas- tic games. The men, for example, amused themselves thoroughly with ball-play ; which in twenty-seven degrees of cold and bright sunshine covered their foreheads with beads of perspiration. You should have seen our carpenter, how light-footed he ran with his fur cap over his ears, his great thick jacket, and coarse heavy boots ! Towards the end of September, the necessity of winter- ing on the floating ice off" the coast, with or without the ship, was decided upon ; and the serious question forced itself upon us, as to what chances we had to count upon in our favour, or how to prepare against the possibility which lay before us that with the ship, though possibly under many dangers, we might drift south- wards, and in February emerge from the ice not far from Iceland. Certainly, the experience of many former Greenland captains, who had got on to the ice on the Greenland coast, told us that their vessels had gone to the bottom, and the men had been sometimes lost, and sometimes saved in the boats, after frightful difl&culties and dangers, by reaching an Esquimaux settlement on the south-west coast. In Lindeman's " Arctic Fishery " (p. BT), for example, it is related that this happened in the year 1777 to several ships; amongst others. 102 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the Willielmine, from Texel. On the other side, there floated before our eyes the eqiially dangerous circum- stances of the journey carried out by the Fox, blocked up in the ice under MacOlintock, as well as Kane's fir^t voyage. Our ship was provided with every improvement which could make an Arctic expedition in the present day less dangerous than formerly. It would have been unwise on our part to rest content with these facts ; indeed, in the second part of September, the more frequent pressure of the ice warned us that we must prepare for the worst, namely the loss of the ship. A winter passed in the boats on the ice with only sail- roofs was conceivable ; but apparently, both in regard of health and life, it would be in the highest degree dan- gerous. . How protect oneself from the storms, the cold, and the increasing down- whirling masses of snow, which sometimes last for weeks together? How provide the indispensable warm nourishment? The erection of a winter-house on the ice must be taken into consideration. Immediately the building of the aforesaid coal-house was clamoured for. Bricks were already there in the shape of coal-tiles, an excellent building material, which would absorb the damp and keep the warmth in the room. Water and snow formed the mortar. For the roof, in case of a real settlement on the ice-field on account of the loss of the ship, we purposed taking the snow roofing of the deck of the Hansa. Before anything else was done the boats were cleared out, and two of them, the Hope and the Bismarck, covered with the snow roof. For each of these, provisions were kept ready on deck. Captain Hegemann sketched the plan for the building. The length was 20 feet, the breadth 14 feet, BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. 103 and the height 6J feet in the gable, the side -walls being only 4 feet 8 inches high. A firm spot, free from any fracture, was chosen about 450 paces from the ship ; and we had no cause to fear that the floe might soon break from friction with any other drifting ice-field. Had the house been a greater distance from the ship, the difficulty of bringing up the heavy materials would have been greater, and thus have retarded the progress of the building. The work began on the 27th of September with the foundations, which here were more ready to hand than o-n land. "With snow-axes and ballast-shovels we then cleared away from the firm mass of ice about a foot and a half of snow. "We had intended to raise the walls with a double row of stones ; but unfortunately had overrated our stock, and were therefore obliged to econo- mize, and only use the 9-inch broad stones up to about two feet, and after that lay them singly. A brook which we had dug in the ice hard by, and which gave us the sweetest of water, also afibrded the most excellent cement. Whilst wall-building on land has to be given up in frosty weather, our building on the contrary pro- gressed the more rapidly. "We only needed to strew finely-powdered snow between the grooves and cracks, pour water upon it, and in ten minutes all was frozen to a strong compact mass, from which one single stone would with difficulty have been extracted ! The roof, for the present, was composed of sail-cloth and some mat- ting, which had by chance been left on the Hansa after her last West Indian voyage. (This was made of reeds, and was laid down in the cabin when company was expected.) The rafters were made out of the spars and staves of tubs ; the first-named were laid crossways upon 104 THE GEEMAN ABCTIO EXPEDITION. the latter. On this framework the sail-cloth and matting were nailed ; and in order to give this somewhat airy- building more solidity and firmness, snow was thrown upon the top. A double door two feet and a half wide we made on board ; the floor we filled in with coal blocks; and thus in seven days, namely on the 3rd of October, we began to provide the finished house with provisions for two months — about 400 lbs. of bread, two dozeii tins of preserved meat, a side of bacon, some cofiee and brandy ; afterwards fuel, and some boxes of coal. At the same time the plank roofing, in case of wintering on board, was erected. This wooden roof, covered with felt, rested on the one side on the mast and on the other on the bulwarks. It reached from the mainmast to the after part of the ship. Amidships and to the fore, sails were stretched. The whole work was favoured by fine weather and a medium temperature of 20° to 9° Fahr. On the 7th the young ice broke in front of us once more. The men were just busy sweeping the excellent skating-ground which they had found there, when a peculiar rustling and a violent movement of the thick ice betokened a storm from the north. Immediately it bulged and burst, forcing up each floe on its edge. This breaking up, heaving, and pressing, lasted about an hour, during which we watched it from the safe observatory of our field. On the 8th of October, shortly after the completion of the coal-house, such bad weather set in, with drifting snow, that would have made the continuation of it perfectly impossible, and in five days have completely destroyed both house and ship. On the middle and after part of the deck such drifts of snow had collected that it was BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. ' 105 difficult to get from the cabin to the lodging. The young ice surrounding the Hansa was so heavily laden -with the snowfall, that it gave way, loosening itself from the ship, and causing the sea-water to penetrate between the ice and the snow. At the same time it blew violently from the north ; the thermometer stood at 9|-° Fahr., and suddenly the wind with a rushing noise hurled the ship over to starboard, so that, owing to the impossibihty of seeing farther than a few paces, we feared lest she might be driven from the field. The ropes were therefore with much trouble made fast to the ice-anchor, a work which took all the men more than an hour to accompKsh. By the 13th, the storm had spent itself; it was once more clear, quiet weather, and we found ourselves sixteen nautical miles north-east from the Liverpool coast. It looked like a steep, jagged mountain chain, sparingly covered with snow. Greater quantities only appeared in the valleys and ravines. We could distinctly see the northern point, Cape Gladstone, and the outlying islands of Murray and Reynolds, as also a great part of the far distant southerly-stretching coast, which, according to the astronomical observations of the 14th to the 15th, Ues in reaUty ten nautical miles more to the south than is given on Scoresby's chart. The drift current on thosei days, from the 5th to the 14th of October, was very powerful. In this time we left seventy-two nautical miles behind us to south-south-west. The nights were remarkably cold, sometimes 4° F. below zero. The only sign of animal life was the frequent appearance of ravens {Oorvus corax) in the neighbourhood of the ship, which doubtless were wintering on the coast. Once we saw a gull and a falcon; and now and then we were made 106 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. aware of the proximity of narwalils- in the frozen channel by their blowing. On the 17th, in clear weather, three men, the carpenter Bowe, and the sailors Biittner and Heyne, undertook to reach the land, which was about ten nautical miles distant. They started at seven in the morning in a calm and 0° Pahr. After crossing many dangerous places in the young ice, some fields lay before them, over which they pressed forward to within four nautical miles from land. After three hours' wandering, however, they had to halt, as a strip of water two nautical miles broad, and about the same breadth of land-ice running along the coast, blocked their way. At one o'clock, with a north wind and drifting snow, they started back to the ship, where we were already uneasy about them. On the 18th of October early, again clear and still frosty weather; but already at half-past eight a.m. the ice began to thrust and press round the ship. This unpleasant noise lasted until the afternoon. At regular intervals underneath, the ice, like a succession of waves, groaned and cracked, squashed and pufi'ed; now sounding like the banging of doors, now like many human voices raised one against the other, and lastly, like a drag on the wheel of a railway engine. The evident immediate cause of this crushing was that our field had turned in drifting, and was now pressed closer to the coast-ice. The two floes of ice lying before the vessel received the hardest pres- sure, so that for a time the Hansa was spared, though trembling violently. The masts often swayed so much that it seemed as though some one was climbing them. At the same time our field sustained long and deep fissures, by which the whale-boat seemed so endangered, BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. 107 that -we tliouglit it necessary for its safety to bring it alongside tlie ship. Towards evening tlie weatlier cleared again ; but our fear that this day was only a forerunner of worse proved itself on the following day too well grounded. We were, however, busy with preparations for either case, viz., the wintering in the coal-house, supposing the ship should be lost, or remaining on board the ship itself. The store in the house was aug- mented by a barrel of bread and fuel (particularly wood) ; our fur clothing was rolled together and taken on deck from the winter lodging, where it had previously lain with other articles. This was soon to be used after fitting up our still missing berths. On moving the provisions, numbers of rats were found which had not yet deserted the ship. We little thought how much our preservation depended upon the fact that the following day the provisions • had not yet been moved to their destination, the summer lodging, which had again to be emptied. By the evening the pressure had ceased ; the air was quiet, but not clear; around the full moon, which cast a troubled uncertain light upon the fields and icebergs, a halo had formed ; and in the cabin, as well as in the lodging,, we sought to divert ourselves by playing at cards. The morning of the 19th dawned, foretelling mischief with a N.N.W. storm of snow' and ice pressure. The air was gloomy and thick, and the coast, which was a little more than four miles distant, not to 'be seen. The first heavy pressure followed at ten a.m., though not ' On Sabine Island, at this time, there was fair weather; the storm was therefore more of a local nature, whilst generally the Northern storms rage the whole length of the coast. 108 THE GEEMAN' ARCTIC EXPEDITION. before noon did our position become serious. At this time, tbe constantly nearing, piled-up masses of young ice (about four feet thick) had broken up on the starboard side of the vessel, and pressed heavily on the outer side. The fore part of the ship rose somewhat, and would have risen more, had not the high ice-blocks prevented it; it had therefore to bear the whole weight of the pressure. A trial of the pumps in the meantime showed that she was still water-tight. Shortly before one o'clock, the deck-seams amidship sprang, but still she seemed tight. After this strong pressure followed a short pause, which we employed in taking our mid-day meal on deck. . Below it was very uncomfortable. But soon some mighty blocks of ice pushed themselves under the bow of the vessel, and although they were crushed by it, they forced it up, slowly at first, then quicker, until it was raised 17 feet out of its former position upon the ice. This move- ment we tried to ease as much as possible by shovelhng away the ice and snow from the larboard side. . The rising of the ship was an extraordinary and awful, yet splendid spectacle, of which the whole crew were witnesses from the ice. In all haste the clothing, nautical instruments, journals, and cards were taken over the landing-bridge. The after part of the ship, unfortunately, would not rise ; and therefore the stern-post had to bear the most fright- ful pressure, and the conviction that the ship must soon break up forced itself upon our minds. About five o'clock there was again a pause in the pres- sure of the ice-floes, and the raised ice retreated, so that in the course of an hour the ship, lying on her starboard side, glided into more open water. The hawser^, which had been cast loose, so as not to stop her from rising, ■ "1 '.¥ ' ^ jt" * *■ 1 •V 4 'X ^ "f^k'y' r W % BLOOKING UP OP THE HANS A. 109 were again made fast ; after wliicli we went to the pumps, and found that there were seventeen inches of water in the hold. We set them working at once, and about seven o'clock had the pleasure of finding them run more slowly. We now allowed ourselves time for our evening meal, for we might entertain the hope that, in spite of the Mghtful pressure she had sustained, our ship was not very leaky; But in a quarter of an hour's time, we found to our terror, that there was again two feet of water in the pumps. Even admitting that part of this water had penetrated slowly fcom the after part, the ship must be dreadfully leaky. Again we set to work at the pumps, determined to do all in our power to rid our vessel of the water. A half-hour's work, however, showed that all exertions were vain ; the depth of the water in the cabin was increasing steadily, though slowly. The most careful investigation of the ship, however, did not reveal the position of the leak. In vain did both captain and steers- man listen for the sound of water dripping. Evidently this was taking place at some part of the ship's bottom, under the coal. Besides the leak in the stern-post, the keel must have sustained a fracture; perhaps even the ship's sides near the floor-heads had been forced in. Enough! the fate of the Hansa was sealed ; our good ship must go to the bottom ! Calmly, though much moved, we faced this hard fact. The house of coal on the southward drifting ice-fields was destined now to be, through the long Arctic winter, our only place of refuge — perhaps too, our grave ! There was not a minute's time to be lost. The work went steadily forward. By nine p.m. the fall of snow had ceased; a clear, starry heaven shone down upon us, and the moon shed her light over the 110 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. dreary ice-field. Now and again the northern lights shot upwards in ever-changing colours. At the same time it was freezing sharply, the thermometer marking in the night — 13° F. One half of the men stayed by the pumps ; the others were busily engaged until midnight, in bringing the most necessary articles from the vessel on to the floe. " As to sleep," writes Dr. Buchholz in his day-book, " that was not to be thought of, as the idea of our dreadful position was whirling through my head in the wildest manner. What would become of us when winter really set in, if it already announced its approach with such bitter cold ? In vain did I try to think of any means of preservation. An attempt to reach the land could not be entertained for a moment. It might be possible to make our way through great dangers over the floes and fields to the coast ; but at the uttermost we could only provide ourselves with nourishment for a few days. Esquimaux settlements, according to Scoresby's experience, were not to be expected; so that the idea of dying of hunger seemed very near us. There remained, then, nothing for it, but to try and hold out in the coal-hut on the south- ward-drifting field. If it held together, we might hope to reach a South Greenland Esquimaux settlement in the spring, or (which was very unlikely) get across the icy belt to Iceland," One great evil with the pumps was, that the water streaming on the deck could not, owing to the uneven position of the vessel, run off" through the scuppers, which were filled up with ice ; and thus it froze between the provision-chests. Soon the whole of the after-deck was full of ice ; the water which was pumped up stood round the pumps, and the men who worked them had to stand BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. Ill in tubs in order to keep dry. To make a way for it to escape, we had to make holes in the bulwarks ; though without any particular result, as from the intense cold the water came out quite in a half-frozen state. At the same time the ice settled so over the cabin skylight, that the water penetrated through the chinks. The night allowed our exhausted men some hours of refreshing .sleep ; then all gladly drained a cup of hot coffee, and set to work /again. But the catastrophe was near! At eight a.m. the men who were busy in the fore-peak getting out fire-wood came with anxious faces, with the news that the wood was already floating below. When the captain had aiscertained the truth of this intelligence, he ordered the pumping to cease. It was evident that the ship was sink- ing, and that it must be abandoned. The first thing to be done was to bring all necessary and useful things from the 'tween decks on to the ice ; bedding, clothing, more provisions, and coal. Silently were all the heavy chests and barrels pushed over the hatchway. First comes the weighty iron galley, then the two stoves are happily hoisted over ; their possession ensures us the enjoyment of warm food, the heating of our coal-house, and other matters indispensable for a wintering on the floe. At three o'clock, the water in the cabin had reached the table, and all movable articles were floating. The fear that we should not have enough fuel made us grasp at every loose piece of wood and throw it on to the ice. The sinking of the vessel was now almost imperceptible, it must have found siipport on a tongue of ice or some promontory of our field. There was stiU a small medicine chest, and a few other things, which, in our future position, would be great treasures, — 'such, as 112 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. the cabin-lamp, books, cigars, boxes of games, &c. The snow-roof, too, and the sails were brought on to the ice ; but still all necessary work was not yet accomplished. Round about the ship lay a chaotic mass of heterogeneous articles, and groups of feeble rats struggling with death, and trembling with the cold ! All articles, for greater safety, must be conveyed over a fissure to about thirty paces farther inland. The galley we at once took on a sledge to the house, as we should want it to give us warm coffee in the evening. We then looked after the sailor Max Schmidt, who was suffering from frost bite, and brought him on planks under the fur covering to the coal-house. By nine a.m. all were in the new asylum, which was lit by the cabin-lamp, and looked like a dreary tomb. Pleased with, the completion of our heavy day's work, though full of trouble for the future, we prepared our couch. A number of planks were laid upon the ground, and sail-cloth spread over them. Upon these we lay down, rolled in our furs. A man remained to watch the stove, as the temperature in the room had risen from 2° Fahr. to 27 J° F. It was a hard, cold bed ; but sleep soon fell upon our weary over-worked limbs. On the morning of the 21st we went again to the ship to get more fuel.. The coal-hole was, however, under water. "We therefore chopped down the masts, and hauled them, with the whole of the tackle, on to the ice, a work which took us nearly the whole day. At eleven, the foremast fell ; at three, the mainmast followed, and now, the Hansa really looked a complete, comfortless wreck. For the last time, the captain and steersman went on deck, and about six o'clock loosed the ropes, which, by means of the ice-: anchor," held the ship to the field, as we feared that our ll ' r - >" '*^*-.^': 1 r M,4 '- >^:. ,. ,:^ . J ,i. . ■ "^ CmOFND-PLAN OF TIIj; " HANSa" HOUSE. BLOCKING Ur OP THE HANSA. 113 floe, wliicli bore all our treasures, being so near the sink- ing vessel, might break-- All, even the two scientific men, were instinctively bent on the means for our preservation, so that the collections, contained in bottles, boxes, and chests, as well as the photographic apparatus, together with all the finished photographs belonging to the first officer, Mr. Hildebrandt, were sacrificed ! This loss often troubled us ; but from the great difficulty of transport on the boat journey in the spring, we must have left the greater part behind. Our work of self-preservation was wonderfully favoured by the weather; for from the evening of the 19th to the 20th it was calm and clear. On the night of the 21st to the 22nd, the wreck sank in 70° 62' N. Lat. and 21° W. Long, about six miles from the Liverpool coast. "We distinctly saw its clifi"s and mountains, which, according to Dr. Laube, resembled the Chalky Alps near Munich. We recognized Halloway Bay and Glasgow Island, but nowhere a way through the icy labyrinth ! The jolly-boat, King William, stood loose upon the deck; so that, by the sinking of the Hansa, it remained above water, and as the weather was still fine, we drew this third means of preservation on to the ice near the coal-house. The next few days we set zealously to work to make our black house somewhat more habitable. The in- creased heat of the house caused the sail-cloth roof to leak, from the quantity of snow lying upon it, and we therefore passed a bad night. We rectified that, however, by a plank roofing covered with more sail-cloth. In order to satisfy our urgent need for light and air, we made a dormer-window in the roof, and later on a second. In spite of all this, we could not do without the light of the I 114 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. lamp for the greater part of the day. Along the whole length on both sides of the room, we raised a bed of boards to sleep upon, and laid the sacks of straw upon it. It was six inches above the floor, and we then put boards down the middle. To prevent the pillows from freezing to the wall, we had to make a wooden Hning along that part. The cooking-stove had its place behind, a smaller one stood more forward. Along the walls, which were covered with sail-cloth, shelves were placed, on which we laid our books, instrumients, and cooking vessels. The ship's chests at the foot of the sleeping places along the passage, served both as tables and stools. The gilt-framed looking-glass from the cabin adorned the back wall, underneath which hung a costly barometer, and the accustomed ticking of the clock was to be heard. By all these orderly arrangements, the comfort of our stay in the coal-house would be greatly enhanced. A healthy sleep refreshed us more than anything else ; and, thanks to our excellent preserves, we could strengthen ourselves with the meat soup which the cook prepared. The dread of immediate danger to life had departed ; we breathed more freely, we felt once more at hberty, and even remembered many comical scenes from our ex- periences on the 19th, with laughter and joking. In the evening we had the usual whist, and as we had no table, played on a volume of the ship's journal. The greater part of the provisions and fuel, together with the boats, lay not far from the shipwreck. These were conveyed up for the most part on sledges, and took several days to accomplish. All was then stacked near the house. As the depth of snow reached up to the walls, we dug a four-feet-broad walk round the house, BLOCKING UP OF THE HANSA. 115 covering it with sail-cloth, and strewing the snow upon it to make it more solid. This walk was our larder, and held nearly all our provisions ; whilst the remainder (enough for about two months) was carefully placed in the boats. The small firewood which we chopped up from the masts and spars was set up in piles ; the boats, first in one place and then in another, as after digging them out of the snow we had to put them in a more sheltered spot. The hatchway we put up to catch the wind before the door of the coal-house. A man-rope served for descending into the house, so that it was more like a fox's hole with its roof scarcely rising above the level of the snow than anything else. The large flag was saved too. At the rear of the house, on a snow-hill, we put up the topgallant mast as a flag- staff ; and in fine weather hoisted it for our pleasure as well as for the possible chance of attracting the notice of any Esquimaux settlement on the coast. At last, by degrees, order gained the upper hand. The confused heap of individual belongings had each found their owner. The warming arrangement was good, for in an atmospheric temperature of — 13° Fahr. we could in our hut, with the protection of the snow surrotmding us, get a warmth of 72^°. Often the firing necessary for preparing the meals was sufficient also for heating ; and therefore, to spare the wood, we hardly ever used the second stove. The damp was remarkably diminished, for it easily escaped through the dormer- window, which also let in fresh air. I 2 CHAPTER VI. DBJFTING TO THE SOUTH. CHEISTMAS. A HABD JASUART. NOVEMBEE, 1869, TO THE END OP JANUAEY, 1870. View of the coast. — Settling the daily order of our life on the floe.-- Good health of all. — Revolving of our ice-field. — We come within four miles of the coast (Egede's Land). — Christmas festival. — An iceberg passes us. — Danger of the breaking up of the floe. — Preparations for decamping. — Portions of the floe destroyed. — The dangerous bay. — Coast scenery.— Impossibility of reaching the coast. — The Arctic niglit. — Catastrophes of the days 11th to 15th of January. — Destruction of the Hansa house. — Escape in tl^e boats, and passing the night in the same. — Comfortless quarters. — ■ Erection of new habitations. — In the channel between Iceland and Greenland. — Snow-wall on the floe. — Hope of reaching the settle- ments of West Greenland. Slowly but steadily our ice-field drifted to the south. By the 3rd of November we had passed the Liverpool coast, and had reached Scoresby's Sound, sometimes being near the firm land ice, and sometimes far from it, a movement which would no doubt originate in tha ebb and flow off this large, deep sound. "We could distinctly see the picturesque formation of the rocky coast ; and in two plains lying between two rugged mountain-tops we thought we could distinguish glaciers covered with snow. Since the ship had sunk fourteen days before, the ice had closed in upon us, and even the blocks which had broken away from our field had frozen to it again. Our BEWTING TO THE SOUTH. 117 eyes often rested with sorrow on the spot where the Hansa went down. Now there was room enouo-h for her between the field and the land-ice ! At the end of October the sun rose at half-past nine a.m., and set behind the rocky coast at three p.m. In the coal-house we could only see to read and write under the dormer-windows for a few hours each day. We grew more and more accustomed to the daily round of things, which so much resembled that on board. The last night-watch woke us at seven. We rose, threw on our woollen clothing, washed in melted snow, and enjoyed our morning coflFee with hard bread. Then we all be- took ourselves to the ever-plentifal stock of work; the finishing of all sorts of useful and still wanting furni- ture, sail-sewing, wood-chopping, replacing clothes from the clothes-store, keeping the diaries, and study. In clear weather astronomical observations were taken, and all necessary calculations recorded. At one we dined. Strong meat-soup formed the substantial part of this meal ; and as we were in no want of preserved vegetables, we had plenty of changes prepared for us. Of salt meat and bacon we eat little. Of all spirits we had to be very sparing, only allowing ourselves one glass of strengthen- ing port-wine on Sundays. Our state of health all through the winter was good. Except the sailor Schmidt's attack of fever when the ship went down, which was soon over, and a fi'ost-bitten toe of the sailor Biittner, we had no sickness or other bodily discomfort. We were always actively employed, and daily order and regularity were rigidly kept up. Our floe was by degrees thoroughly investigated in every quarter. We cleared roads, and set up marks for 118 THE GEEMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. short tours. The mass of ice was about seven nautical miles in circumference, and seemed in all directions to have a diameter of about a little more than two miles. An excellent picture of the monotony of the landscape which surrounded us at the end of the year (end of December and January), can be formed by imagining a uniform plain, or field, covered with snow. The term "field " indicates the size of a connected floating mass of ice. Smaller pieces are called " floes," and still smaller ones " drifts." The ice-raft, on which (as Dr. Laube aptly remarked) " we were as the Lord's passengers," drifting for months together between the sea and the coast, was a solid field composed of these drifts and floes compacted together. The average thickness of this was about five feet above the water ; a fact which, according to experience, would allow a submergence of at least forty feet. Soundings from the edge of the ice were not possible, as the line was lost in the shipwreck. The piled-up snow, which was often eight feet high, had at this time, the beginning of January, filled up every hole and crack on the field ; so that, without one single resting-point, the eye wandered over the wearying uniform white desert. If we were at any distance from ' the hut, so deeply buried in the snow, every visible sign had disappeared except the dark spot or line' of the chimney, the boats, and the stafi" with the fluttering flag, which after every whirlwind of snow was again unfurled. Later in the spring, when the greater part of our field had disappeared, the plain looked, owing to the pushed- up pieces of ice and snow-wall, almost like animated blocks of ice. Upon closer inspection these " ramparts " seemed to be the fragments of the pushed-up walls of DRIFTING TO THE SODTH. 119 small ioe-masses, to whicli our field had been knitted by the frost. Here and there were snow-mounds, which the change from thawing weather to frost had almost turned into glaciers, forming a firm massive whole. The side of our field lying to the west and north-west presented a wild and discouraging view. The grating and pressing of the driving ice-floes had there heaped up A S.NOW SPHINX. walls ten feet high, the snow-crystals glittering m the sun like millions of diamonds. The morning and evenmg Aurora turned the white flakes to pale green. The nights were beautifully light, the light streaming downwards from the heavens; and the snow, with its 120 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. receptive and reflective powers glittered so radiantly, that one could read the finest writing without trouble, and see far out into the distance. Amongst other things, on such nights, we always saw the Aurora borealis. As an instance, on the 5th of December, it shone so intensely that the starlight waned, and objects ojn our field cast shadows. The coast, according as it was near or far away, was recognizable now as a dark streak of fog, and now as a rocky form in all its details. Our settlement at the beginning of November, when we were not yet snowed up, might be seen from the most distant point of our field. Near the chief building lay two snow-houses, which served for washing and drying ourselves. Boats, heaps of wood, barrels containing coals and bacon, surrounded this heart of our colony. To prevent the entrance of the snow and wind into our coal-house, we built an entrance-haU with a winding path, and a roof constructed in the same way as that of the house. At the beginning of November we observed two strange natural phenomena. We were about eight nautical miles from the Liverpool coast, when, as we were walking along, a number of small willow-like leaves whirled around us, which had evidently been carried from the land by the wind ; at another place the snow was, for a considerable distance, covered with a red-stone dust. Dr. Laube thought it must be of volcanic origin, and that it had been carried through the air from Iceland, Avhich was about 180 nautical miles distant. In November, upon a neighbouring floe, separated from us by a small piece of frozen water, we saw the shapeless body of a large walrus lying motionless as a rock. The steersmen, Hildebrandt and Bade, with some others, DEIFTING TO THU SOUTH. 121 started for the cliase as soon as the boat could be got into the water, whicli was done with mucli trouble, they being obliged to carry it for some distance over the young ice. Here, too, the needle-gun proved its value, the ball passing through the monster's inch-thick hide. A few shots killed him, after being badly wounded, and in a fury trying to smash the young ice on which the hunters stood, and seize them when once in the water. The further moving of the colossal carcass for our own purposes was, besides, no small matter. With the united strength of ten men and the help of a powerful pulley, it was several hours before we got the walrus out of the water on to the ice. Skinning the specimen, too, was dreadfully difficult, for it soon froze in a cold of —20° Fahr. to a hard, stony mass, over which we had no power. Under the skin lay a coating three inches thick of fat, which afforded us very acceptable fuel. The tongue was excellent; indeed, amongst the whale-fishers of the Behring's Straits, salted walrus tongues are a favourite dish. Late that same evening a white bear, the first of our winter campaign, was attracted to the house by the smell of our walrus' fat. Three shots greeted him, the effect of which could not be seen until the following morning. About 1 00 yards distant lay the bear, hit in the side by the bullet, as if asleep, though quite dead, upon the snow. It was a fine, handsome beast ; its well- developed head lay upon its front paws ; the red drops of blood stood sharply out against the clean white snow : a gift fi-om heaven in our present position, as an addition of fresh meat was greatly to be desired. The four hams, weighing 200 lbs., would form a delicate roast for a suc- cession of Sundays ; at the same time that the skin was a 122 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. further protection for the still sometimes leaking roof. Some days later we had another visit from master " Bruin." As we left the house on the 23rd of November, we noticed several traces of his presence ; he had been at the boat Bismarck, and standing on his hind feet Lad sniffed the provisions lying there, when he had met with the misfortune of falling through the tightly-spread, stiffly-frozen sail-cloth. Terrified by this from the inves- tigation of the contents of the boat, he had turned to the house, at the entrance of which we found his marks. The brightness of the lamp, always burning in the snow path, had then (we supposed) frightened him. In the beginning of November our drifting was con- siderable; from the 6th to the 13th of November it amounted daily to eight nautical miles ; from 70° N.L. and 21° W.L. to 69° 4-6' N.L. and 22° 44' W.L. At' this time the bright northern lights afforded us daily an agreeable matter for conversation. The dazzling- coloured rays stretched perpendicularly over the whole horizon, sometimes undulating like the folds of a giant curtain set in motion by the wind. The down-shooting colours seemed to touch our field, emitting such a blind- ing light that our shadows were sharply defined, and the light of the stars greatly weakened. When, as was often- times the case, the beautiful appearance was suddenly , manifested, it went slowly through diff"erent forms to the height of its glory. The rotatory motion of our field was, up to the 22nd of November, rather slow, as from the 10th it had only turned once round. The quicker drift-current had been more effectual in its working, and had brought about this revolution in the short space of four days. DRIFTING TO THE SOUTH. 123 Moreover, until tlie beginning of January our ice-mass tad experienced np damage. On the 14th of November we passed in our southward journey the most southerly point, according to Scoresby, of this stretch of coast, Cape Barclay, lying in 69° 14' N.L. and 24° 30' W.L. From this time to the most northerly point of Graah's coast- journey, Cape Dan, lying in 65° 37' N.L. and 37° 20' W.L., we saw an unknown land, the so-called " Egede's Land." We succeeded at least in determining some points of this coast, which we approached within four miles. Unfortunately the very time we found ourselves nearest to it our Uves were in great danger, our ill fate following us here, and we were obliged to allow the favourable moment for serving science to pass by unheeded. From the 2nd to the 4th of November we floated past Scoresby's Sound. The discoverer of this rather considerable Fjord relates that by the strength of a submarine current icebergs are frequently driven from it. And, indeed, whilst up to this time we had been unable ' to catch sight of one, we saw on the 5th (after having evidently passed through the current and out of the Sound, being about ten to fifteen nautical miles from the coast some days later) for the first time a great iceberg in the north-west towards Scoresby's Sound, about four nautical miles from us. Icebergs are known to be broken portions of glaciers. That seen by us was rather long but not high, allowing us to conclude that the original had considerable breadth but no great height. The temperature in November and December showed great variations : 6th November, — 20° Fahr., fine weather with a west wind; 20th, 32° Fahr. with driving snow to 124 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the soutli-west, and, later, fine rain; evening of the 1st December, 32.2° Fahr. ; 3rd December, 35" Fahr., our snow-buildings began to tbaw ; ISth December, — 20° Fabr. -with a light sou'-wester, and the lowest tempera- tiire we ever had, being then in Q7^° N.L. On the 16th of December, we greeted a white Arctic fox as a messenger from land. Its appearance was indis- putable evidence that the ice reached to the coast. The fox, white with a. black-tipped tail, was particularly con- fiding, even bold. He scratched up the bear's flesh buried in the snow, and had carried it off to eat as we approached him. He then quite unconstrainedly took a walk on the roof of our house, and through the small window convinced himself as to what was going on within. Should we shoot it ? No ! It was a long time since we had seen such a fearless creature. At times we placed nets with a meat-bait to teaze him ; but he always managed to get clear of them at the right time. November and December passed without anything par- ticular happening. On the 13th of December strong northern lights. On the 18th the full moon and spring tide occurred, and with them, the usual ice pressure which, in the night of the 20th to the 21st, destroyed " Sinai," the locality of one of our walks. On the afternoon of the 6th, a small white bear showed himself near our house. We fired, and it fled over the young ice, leaving traces of blood behind it. Thus we had passed the shortest day without any serious danger. Christmas, that beautiful domestic festi- val, drew near, and we felt inclined, as we were all in good health, to keep it right festively in the proper spirit. During the last few days we had had violent storms. On DEIFTINCr TO THE SOUTH. 125 Christmas Eve there was a heavy fall of snow which buried our house so completely, that in the morning we could walk over the roof as over a flat surface. In the night from the first to the second day of the hohday, showers of rain fell, followed by a south-westerly breeze. Then another whirlwind of snow. The mass of falling snow whirled over the field by the rushing wind was so great, that in the open air we could scarcely keep our eyes open, and in spite of our exertions, it was impossible to keep the front of our house clear. In the afternoon, whilst we went for a walk, the steers- men put up the Christmas-tree ; and on our return the lonely coal-hut shone with wonderful brightness. Keep- ing Christmas on a Greenland floe ! Made of pinewood and birchbroom, the tree was artistically put together. For the lights, Dr. Laube had saved some wax candles. Paper-chains and home-baked gingerbread were not want- ing. The men had made a knapsack and a revolver case for the captain; we opened the leaden box of Christmas gifts from Professor Hochstetter, and the other from the Geological Eeichsanstalt, which caused much merriment. ■ Then we had a glass of port-wine, and fell upon the old newspapers in the boxes, and distributed the gifts, which consisted of small musical instruments, such as whistles, Jew's-harps, and trumpets, also little puppets and games of roulette, cracker bonbons, &c. In the evening, chocolate and gingerbread-nuts. "In quiet devotion" (says Dr. Laube in his day-book), "the festival passed by; the thoughts which passed through our minds (they were much alike with all), I will not put down. If this should be the last Christmas we were to see, it was at least bright enough. If, how- 126 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. ever, we are destined for a happy return home, the next will be a brighter one ; may God grant it ! " Early on the 26th, we were awoke by a shout from the sailor on the watch. We were drifting to land ! an island straight ahead of us ! Amid universal conster- nation, all rushed out. The air was not clear, but about three nautical miles distant we could distinguish a dark mass, which looked like an island. The steersmen went somewhat in advance to reconnoitre the distance, and the nature of the appearance. The mass gave no indication whatever, and we soon made out that what we saw was an enormous iceberg. The next . day we passed the drifting mass, moving much slower than our field, and soon lost sight of it. Saint Sylvester we kept up exactly as they do at home, with salvos of fire- arms and punch; and at midnight we did not forget mutual good wishes for the " New Year," with the loud clink of the glasses. These good wishes, so often nothing but a polite formula, came here from the heart. Wonderful as our preservation in great dangers had been up to this time, we each felt how greatly we needed God's sup- port for the future, in strength, endurance, and health. The new year, at 16° Fahr., brought us the first clear, fine weather we had had for a long while. The land between north-east and south-west, was beautifully in sight; high sharp mountains and small glaciers. In the west-sou' -west we saw the dark outline of an island, the position of which was about 66° 14' N.L. and 33° 45, W.L. as near as could be determined. The 2nd of January brought frightfully bad weather ; storm from the north- DBIFTING TO THE SOUTH. 127 nor'-east and continual driving snow at 16" to 14° Fahr. In the morning, we thought we heard a peculiar rustling noise as if some one was shuffling his feet on the floor ; but as it was soon over we took no further notice. In the afternoon, as we were resting after dinner, we sud- denly heard the same rustle, but much louder. It was a scraping, blustering, crackling, sawing, grating, and jarring sound, as if some unhappy ghost was wandering under our floe. Perplexed we all jumped up, and went out; we thought that our store-house had fallen in. Some of the sailors going in front with the lamp care- fully searched the path to it. But in whatever direction the light fell on the sparkling and glittering ice-walls, we saw nothing. Immovable hung the rigid icicles often a foot long; evidently nothing was amiss here. "We rummaged in the snow-path before the house. Although completely snowed up (indeed, the whole house was buried more than a foot deep in ice), we all rushed out, but of course we could not see more than ten steps, nor hear anything but the howling of the storm. Still, between whiles, we could detect the same rubbing and grinding. For a change, we laid ourselves flat down with our ears to the floor, and could then hear a rust- ling like the singing of ice when closely jammed, and as if water was running under our great floe. There could be no doubt but that it stood in great danger of being smashed to pieces, either from drifting over sunken rocks and bursting up, or breaking against the ice border ; perhaps both at once. We packed our furs, and filled our knapsacks with provisions. Our position, if the floe should be destroyed, seemed hopeless. Certainly ropes were fastened from the 128 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION". house to the boats lymg about fifteen steps from us, so that,' in case of a catastrophe, we might be able to reach them. But the driving snow was so teriible, that we could not have moved them from the spot, and we should no doubt, soon have sunk in the depths. At eight, we set a sharp watch of two men in the pathway. The remainder stretched themselves on the sacks to sleep, as the un- earthly rustling was no longer heard. It was a long, stormy, fearful night, allowing no one to sleep. At nine the longed-for twihght appeared and an hour later the wind abated a little. Some of us went out in the direction of the quay ; for thus we had christened the spot, 500 steps from the house, where the sunken Hansa lay. They there found a new wall of ice, and recognized to their horror that this wall was now the boundary of our floe, whilst on all sides of it large pieces had been broken off, and rose in dark shapeless masses out of the drifted snow. The bad weather lasted with undiminished violence till two in the afternoon. On the morning of the 4th of January it had completely worn itself out ; the air was clear, and allowed an open view over the ice-field to the coast. Our floe had lost con- siderably in circumference, and changed its round form into a long one. The diameter which before was two nautical miles, was now at the utmost but one. On three sides, our house was only 200 steps from the edge of the floe. On the fourth it was about 1000 where before it had been 3000. The distance to the coast amounted to scarcely two nautical miles. Besides the island seen on the 1st of January, we caught a ghmpse of several others with different pyramidically rising clifi's in the north-west. We named them the " New Year's Islands," as we had DRIFTING TO THE SOTJTH. 129 seen the first on the 1st of January. They lay near the east cape of a deep bay which, from the never-to-be- forgotten danger we had passed through, we christened "Bay of Horrors." In the background rose snow-covered mountains, which by the rising sun were Ht up with a beautiful Alpine glow, and here and there in the bay were small glaciers visible. The extreme land to the south-west stood out as a steep cape, which we called Cape Buchholz; another to the west (HUdebrandt) was close to us, only two nautical miles off ; that is the nearest land. "We thus found ourselves in the mouth of the bay. After the dangers gone through, and as our ice- raft seemed to afford us less security than formerly, it was proposed that we should make an attempt to get to the coast with the boats, and sufficient provisions, so as to have some prospect of reaching the inhabited part of Greenland, the south-westerly side, in the mild time of year. But unfortunately, we found that we could get no further than the edge of our field, ^hort broken fragments succeeded, so covered over with snow, that one could see neither the gaps or crevasses. Tp get to the coast from here seemed impracticable, and, as before, our ice-field was our only means of dehverance. The following days were pretty good. We got the boats out of the snow, dug out the fire-wood, and made swimming jackets and snow-shoes out of cork, to prevent ourselves sinking up to the hips as we used to do. As we had already observed, and it now was confirmed, the pressing and the quick drifting of the ice depended on the spring-tides, which happen here from ten to fifteen hours after the new and full moon. On the 8th of January, we once more obtained an obser- K 130 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. vation for position, and found we were in 66° 47'2' N.L., and 34° 1-5'W.L., so that from the 27th of December, that is in twelve days, we had travelled 625- nautical miles south-west to west three-quarter west. As we lay almost still in the bay, great and small icebergs floated out to sea coming from the north, on the highway from Bast Greenland to the south. On the 9th of January one of the sailors writes thus in his day-book : — • " Thursday, 9tli of January, 1870. Northern Hotel. " The weather in the past night was calm and clear. The moon shone brilliantly ; the northern lights and the stars glittered upon the dead beauty of a landscape of ice and snow. Listening at night, a strange, clear-sounding tone strikes the ear, then again a sound as of some one drawing near with slow and measured steps. We listen — who is it ? All still ! not a breath stirring ! Once more it sounds like a lamentation or a groan. It is the ice; and now it i§ still, still as the grave, and from the pale glance of the moon the ghastly-outlined coast is seen, from which the giant rocks are looking over to us. Ice, rocks, and thousands of glittering stars. thou wonder- fully ghost-hke night of the north ! " The days from the 11th to the 15th of January were destined to bring us new horrors. On the 11th, heavy storm from the north-east with driving snow. At six in the morning Hildebrandt, who happened to have the watch, burst in with the alarm, " All hands turn out ! " An indescribable tumult was heard without. With furs and knapsacks all rushed out. But the outer entrance was snowed up ; so to gain the outside quickly DRIFTING TO THE SOUTH. 131 we broke througli tlie snow-roof of the front hall. The tnmult of the elements which met us there was beyond anything we had already experienced. Scarcely able to leave the spot, we stood huddled together for protection from the bad weather. Suddenly we heard, " "Water on the floe close by ! " The floe surrounding us split up ; a heavy sea arose. Our field again began to break on all sides. On the spot between our house and the piled-up store of wood which was about twenty-five paces distant, there suddenly opened a huge gap. Washed by the powerful waves, it seemed as if the piece just broken, off" was about to fall upon us ; and at the same time we felt the rising and falling of our now greatly reduced floe. All seemed lost. From our split-up ice-field all the firewood was drifting into the raging sea. And in like manner we had nearly lost our boat Bismarck ; even the whale-boat was obliged to be brought for safety into the middle of the floe. The large boat, being too heavy to handle, we were obhged to give up entirely. All this in a temp, of — . 9^°, and a heavy storm, was an arduous piece of work. The community were divided into two parts. We bade each other good-bye with a farewell shake of the hands, for the next moment we might go down. Deep despondency had taken hold of our scientific friends ; the crew were still and quiet. Thus we stood or cowered by our boats the whole day, the fine pricking snow penetrating through the clothes to the skin. It was a miracle that just that part of the floe on which we stood should from its soundness keep together. Our floe, now only 150 feet in diameter, was the 35 to 40 feet nucleus of the formerly extensive field to which we had entrusted our preserva- tion. Towards evening the masses of ice became closely K 2 J32 THE GEEMAN AROTCC EXPEDITION. packed again. At the same time the heavy sea had sub- sided and immediate danger seemed past. Relieved, we partook of something in the house and lay down, after setting a good watch. It was past midnight, when we were roused from our sleep by a cry of terror ; the voice of the sailor on watch exclaiming, " Turn out; we are drift- ing on to a high iceberg !" All rushed to the entrance; dressed we always were ; we had no time to run through the long snow passage, but biu-st open the roof, climbed on to the door, and so out. Wliat a sight ! Close upon us, as if hanging over our heads, towered a huge mass of ice, of giant proportions. " It is pasf," said the captain. Was it really an iceberg, or the mirage of one, or the high coast? "We could not decide the question. Owing to the swiftness of the drift, the ghastly object had disappeared the next moment. On the 12th and 13th, the weather was good. The boats, now that the masts and sails were thrown out, so that we could move them more easily, were put in order, and the snow shovelled up. On the 12th, we were able to ascertain our latitude by a lunar altitude. We found ourselves in 65° 50'7' N.L., so that in four days we had drifted fifty-six miles southward. It was on the evening of the 14th of January, at ten o'clock ; outside blew a frightful storm ; the watch came in with news that the ice was once more in motion. In the immediate neighbourhood of the house, our floe burst ; and the bi'oken ice flew high around us. It was high time to bring the boat Bismarck and the vs^hale- boat more into the middle. This we did ; but they were far too heavily laden to bnng further. On this account, furs, sacks of bread, and clothing were taken out and .y 4^^ \% Ai i« DEIFTING TO THE SOUTH. 13-3 packed on two sledges, which were, however, soon com- pletely snowed up. All our labour was rendered heavier by the storm, which made it almost impossible to breathe. About eleven we experienced a sudden fissure which threat- ened to tear our house asunder ; with a thundering noise an event took place, the consequences of which, in the first moments, deranged all calculations. God only knows how it happened that, in our flight into the open, none came to harm. Biit there in the most fearful weather we aU. stood roofless on the ice, waiting for daylight, which was still- ten hours off. The boat King William lay on the edge of the floe, and might have floated away at any moment. Fortunately the fissure did not get larger. As it was somewhat quieter at midnight, most of the men crept into the captain's boat, when the thickest sail we had was drawn over them ; some took refuge in the house. But there, as the door had fallen in, they entered by the skylight, and in the hurry broke the panes of glass, so that it was soon full of snow. This night was the most dreadful one of our adventurous voyage on the floe. The cold was — 9 J° Fahr. Real sleep, at least in the boat, was not to be thought of; it was but a confused, unquiet, half -slumber, which overpowered us from utter weariness, and our limbs quivered convulsively as we lay packed like herrings in our furs. The cook had, in spite of all, found energy enough in the morning to make the coffee in the house, and never had the dehcious drink awakened more exhausted creatures to life. The bad weather raged the whole day. We lay in the boat, half in water, half in snow, shivering with the frost, and wet to the skin. We also passed the night of the 15th to the 16th, in the same comfortless position, and only on the morning of the 16th 134 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. did the weather begin to mend, allowing us to leave the shelter of our asylum. At four in the morning, the second officer, to whom a longer stay in the boat was painful, caught sight of a star, and with a thankful heart brought us news of the good- sign. The driving snow had not quite left off, but one could at least take breath. Our first steps were directed to the boat King William, which lay on the other side of the half-foot-broad fissure running through the house. It was brought to the flag-stafi" near the two other boats, which were fast frozen in, in spite of all the storm. "We provided this conveyance with a roof of boards, covered with sail-cloth, and six of the men made it their sleeping apartment, whilst the house was cleared from the snow. For five nights we slept in the boats. The days to the 19th were employed, it being tolerable weather, in raising our settlement from its ruins, and laying the foundations of a necessary and satisfactory abode. Soon a wooden kitchen was built. A new dwelling-house, exactly like the one destroyed, but only half as big (14 feet long, 10 broad, 6 J high in the middle), was built, with all requisite arrangements, store room, wooden beds, stove and window, and so on. Unfortunately the first night we moved in being stormy weather, the I'oof flew off ; the inside was at once filled with snow, and we had to migrate to the boats once more. The mischief was repaired on the following day. As there was only sleeping room in our new house for six men, the rest from this time had to sleep in the boats. Throughout all the discomfort, want, hardship, danger of all kinds, the frame of mind among the men was good, undaunted, and exalted. The cook kept a DRIFTING TO THE SOUTH. 135 right seamanlike humour, even in the most critical mo- ments. As long as he had tobacco he made no trouble of anything. On the 3rd of January, during the fright- ful pressure of the ice which destroyed our floe, and threatened every minute to sink our house, the cook happened to be repairing the coffee-kettle. " If the floe would only hold together until he had finished his kettle ! he wished so to make the evening tea in it, so that, before our departure, we might have something warm." Toilet and cleanliness have long since become, .juiber- tain ideas with us. "Washing is a luxury, which at the uttermost we can only allow ourselves twice a week, and which the scientific men have quite given up. The coal- walls of our house, smoke from the lamp, and dust from the stove have so blackened us, that we might be taken for some of the choicest Esquimaux. Hair and beard were intact from the time we left Bremen. Weeks have passed since the clothes have left our bodies. The tem- perature in the first three weeks of the new year, so pregnant with interest for us, may on the whole be thus characterized : — that, with northerly and north-easterly winds, which were generally accompanied by violently drifting snow, it was tolerably mild, between 23° F. and 9° F., whilst the few clear days with a south and west wind brought us zero and 6° below. One of the weightiest causes of the powerful ice-pressure we had undergone, seemed to be, together with the temporary influence of the spring-tides, the fact that at this time we were in the narrow sea-passage between Iceland and Greenland, where the ice, carried on by the current (chiefly on account of the numerous prominent capes on the east coast of Green- land), must necessarily be pressed close. This movement, 136 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. in its greatest strength, reached as far as Cape Dan, where the coast falls considerably backwards to the west ; and on the east the boundary of Iceland recedes, thus causing the ice stoppage to cease. Later we met, farther south- ward from Cape Dan, a whole chain of icebergs drifting in a southerly direction. These had evidently been affected by the advance of successive masses of ice. On the 23rd, we could distinguish a hawk and a raven which flew over us, greeting them as messengers of our return to life. A remarkable phenomenon appeared about the end of January, in the snow- walls which rose around our floe. During the calm, the floating ice had become loosened, and the fissures and openings had been filled up with snow as fine as sand, in gigantic masses " like sheaves ;" and when, on the 25th, another close pressure of the ice began, the masses of snow rose in walls of from twenty to twenty-five feet high, changing the whole face of our settlement into that of a ravine. Of course, these snow enclosures were but of short duration ; they broke up on the 1st of February, as soon as the spring-tide set the ice once more in motion, and soon melted quite away. On this occasion, a piece of our floe, which had been divided by a great fissure, broke off and drifted slowly away. We could then pretty well estimate the strength of it, as the water was very transparent, and the shining ice was perceptible at thirty to thirty-five feet deep. So we might hope, unless another crisis overtook us, that our floe's firmness might last until it brought us into a latitude from which, by the boat, we might be able to reach the nearest West Greenland settlement. CHAPTER yil. POST NTJBILA PHCEBTJS. ABANDONMENT OF THE FLOE AND BOAT JOURNEY TO THE ISLAND OF ILLTJIDLEK. FEB. TO JUNE 4, 1870.' A Fox near the Hansa-house. — Eapid drift of our floe. — Open water westwards. — Changed aspect of the coast. — A family of seals.^ Numerous glaciers on the coast. — Threatened danger from an iceberg. — In the latitude of Nukarhik.— Linnets. — Carpenter attacked by scurvy. — Keeping Easter Festival.— Considerable ad- vance of our floe in its southward drift.— Attractive aspect of the coast. — The Puisortok glacier. — Walruses. — Bird life. — Open water in the direction of land. — Determination to quit the floe and take to the boats. — Preparations therefor. — Departure. — Storm from the north. — Huge appetites and scanty rations. — Excessive heat. — ^A fly.- — Dragging the boats towards the coast. — Excursion to the island of lUuidlek. — Difficulty in dragging the boats over the ice. — Anniversary of our departure from Bremen harbour. — Prospects for the future. — Great exertions to escape. — Landing on the island of Illuidlek on 4th June. On tlie 1st of February we caught a glimpse of some seals, the first we had seen for a long time ; also a raveii, and some various kinds of sea-gulls. The former came from the land, the latter from the sea. One morning, too, a fox appeared before our house. He stayed many days, and became so bold at last, that he would fetch the meat which had been thrown from the galley, and allow himself to be stroked. The creature caused us much fun. It never entered our heads to capture him. ' By Captain Hegemann. 138 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. At four p.m. we passed Cape Dan, but the coast was too far distant for us to discern its outline distinctly. For the next few days we drifted at the speed of one nautical mile an hour, passing numerous huge icebergs, some more than 100 feet high, without receiving any injury to our floe. Before such a mountain the currents of course divided, the water rushing on either side. With this current our floe regularly went from twenty to twenty-five paces either to the right or left of the monster, and thus happily passed it. Bade and Hilde- brandt made an attempt to climb one of these icebergs, but under ever increasing difficulties only succeeded in getting half way up. " Then the smooth, white walls rose so steep, that we might just as well have tried to chmb the bare outer wall of a church tower." Fragments of the mighty glaciers of Greenland forced out to sea " calves " of the same, these icebergs resemble huge basaltic rocks in all shades of white and blue. On the 6th of February, according to our reckoning, we ought to be near Dan Island. As, however, we could not see it, we naturally concluded that it had no exist- ence, and that the marking of it on Graah's chart must rest upon the fact that, icebergs being so numerous here, they must have mistaken one for an island. February passed quietly ; the weather throughout was fine. Floating ice and icebergs, which were more nume- rous than ever, left our floe undiminished ; we supple- mented many of our arrangements, and above all gained more confidence in our future. With regard to our possessions and effects, we have become very indifferent. The most costly books are torn up for the most trifling purposes. The gilded frame of our cabin looking-glass has POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 139 long since been used as firewood, and the glass thrown on one side. Streams of petroleum and brandy .flow in the course of heating the stove; packets of tobacco furnish a welcome means of warmth. Why is gun- powder of no use to us ? We like letting it off" in fire- works for our pleasure, and to pass away the time ! Only one event, which happened about the beginning of March, ICEBittG WITH REl'KACTIOX NEAR CAPE LOWENORN. grieved us sadly ; our Dr. Buchholz, who until now had shown himself courageous and resolute in all moments of danger, became melancholy, and a nervous disorder developed itself, which he never lost until he returned home. Of course we did all we could for him ; but our position on the floe, and later in the boats, without 140 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. medical advice, was of that kind that we were unable to follow up any means of cure whatever. Middle of Tebruary, in 64° 40' N.L., and about twenty nautical miles from land, we saw, in a westerly direction, and running parallel with the coast for about eight nautical miles, a strip of open water. It was evidently of considerable breadth, and seemed to reach nearly to the land, for with a westerly wind came up a strong swell. With an east wind, on the contrary, it remained calm ; and we might therefore conclude that towards the east the ice lay densely packed. The coast landscape has become less wild; it looks as though people might be living there. The sun, which now stands seventeen degrees high on the meridian, begins to have some power. It begins to feel quite like summer. Off with the furs, and the cramped up sleeves ! the men now go about with bare throats and chests. Beautiful northern lights brighten the night. Like the leaves of a fan or a flower, the sheaves of hght unroll themselves over the heavens. Its pole seems to lie exactly over our house. March brought abundant snow, and gave us but few cheerful days. Once we drifted within a short distance of a small iceberg about sixty feet high, on the top plateau of which we could see a seal family. The wife had evidently in this retirement made her lying-in bed; At four p.m. on the distant horizon, owing to the glistening ice-blink, the " Kolberger-Heide " glacier became visible twenty-five nautical miles from us. On approaching it we could see from there, as far down as Cape Moesting, one unin- terrupted row of glaciers, which seemed to reach down to the sea. The intervening towering rocks were about POST NTJBILA PHCEBUS. 141 3000 feet high. In the neighbourhood were countless icebergs, some of which were fast to the ground. We passed through the middle of them; and on the 19th, drifting swiftly along within six nautical miles from land, we nearly ran on to one. When, however, we were within twenty-five paces from the monster, the ice- current stopped, and for three hours we lay completely still. Then the ice loosened once more, and the journey began quicker than before. A collision, perhaps the total destruction of our floe, seemed imminent ; for twenty minutes we were in the greatest danger, and looked on at the grand spectacle with breathless atten- tion. The nearest part of the berg was a firm, connected mass. Farther on its build, under the combined in- fluence of sun and water, had been worn into magni- ficent cliff's and gateways. On the south side was an aperture which seemed broad and high enough to hold a ship as large as the Hansa. As we came nearer the mass, we suddenly saw directly above us numerous points and jagged spikes ; one projecting angle indeed we could grasp. " We are lost !" such was the thought of each of us. But — wonderful ! our floe was unshaken ; it did not even graze it. Sniall pieces of floating ice which sur- rounded it served both as "fender" and protector to our raft from this fatal collision. The berg once behind us, we drifted for some time in open water, which had collected itself here as in the wake of a ship. On the 18th of March, in latitude 64° 2', we took our longitude. By the chronometer it was 40° 44' W. Accord- ing to the Coast Survey, however, it was 40° 0' W. So that the land on Graah's chart is carried 44' too far to the east. On the 29th of March, to our great joy, we found 142 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. ourselves in the latitude of Nukarbik. "Was it on this island tkat Graah wintered from the 3rd of September, 1829, to the 6th of April, 1830 ; and where his trouble- some and dangerous boat journey to the north was broken off ? We had long nourished the hope of starting from here on a boat voyage to Friedriohsthal, the most southerly settlement on the western coast, though the ice lay so thick that two sailors asked permission to go «n land. Fortunately the captain refused his consent; for a few hours later a change set in, which would have rendered it fearfully difficult for the men to have reached us again. On the evening of the 29th of March we thought we saw a fire on shore, and conjectured that it came from an Esquimaux settlement. We therefore sent up some rockets, and the next day hoisted our flag ; but eventually we saw nothing but some snow-buntings and ravens. The latter came regularly every morning from the land to the sea, and returned at sunset. In the Bight of Nukarbik we had an unwilling stay of four weeks. We found ourselves two to three nautical miles from land. Whilst farther out the ice drifted southward without interruption, our floe tacked now to the south, now to the north. This was caused by the course of the current which ran close under the coast. The wind did not affect it, for we sometimes drove right against it. The coast is here deeply indented by three important Fjords. At the flood these land openings exert great strength of attraction, and our floe neared them. The ebb drew us back again; the next tide renewed the forward motion, and thus for weeks together we were the sport of the currents. At this time the spring flood of the 3rd of April passed over without any remarkable POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 143 effect. The 12t]i being a bright day, the opportunity pre- sented itself of observing the ebb and tide. We lay near an iceberg, which measured 120 feet high, was estimated at 180 in breadth and 200 in length. From ten a.m. until four p.m. the current set us slowly towards an iceberg surrounded by a strip of water, sometimes so near that we tried to push ourselves from it by poles. During this time we observed that the flood had risen two feet to the easily discernible high-water mark on the berg. At four p.m. the water again began to sink, and we floated back. We could hear the hissing and thundering of the ice floes falling after the ebb headlong from the banks. Small flights of hnnets and snow-buntings visited us. We threw them some oat-groats, which they greedily devoured ; at the same time being so tame, that we could catch them with the hand. In the middle of April a shght attack of scurvy attacked one of our men, the carpenter, whose leg was much swollen. We applied some simple remedies, made him take plenty of exercise, and he was soon restored. The Easter Festival fell at the time we lay floating backwards and forwards in the Bay of Nukarbik. We spent it cheerfully, in health, and full of hope of eventual preservation out of all danger and want; to us it was indeed a real Resurrection Festival. Had we not often had death before our eyes in its most threatening form ? Nature, too, began to show signs of approaching spring; the air was considerably milder, the lowest temperature in the night 23° Fahr.; in the sunshine, which we often enjoyed while stretched upon the sails of the boats, the thermometer rose to 642-° Fahr. On the first festival day (17th of April) we had a good meal, pre- 144 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. served meat made into soup, ham, kidney beans, peas, and a bottle of sherry, whicli we had carefully kept until this day. On the second, we were to be released from our unwelcome position between the steep reddish-brown retreating cliffs of Cape Moltke and the low island of Nukarbik. A storm from the north gave to the motion of our floe a seaward direction, and we once more floated southward. The next three weeks brought us a long way forward, for this part of our voyage began on the 18th in 63° 30' N.L., and on the 6th of May we found ourselves in 61° 4', almost in the latitude of Bergen. During this stage, as speedy as it was free from danger, the evolutions of the ice-floes afforded us much interest, and our spirits rose immensely. The coast, with its many branching mountain chains, which on the southern side were mostly free from snow, its Fjords, creeks, islands, and capes formed a highly pleasing prospect. Grand was the appearance of the " Puisortok " glacier, a mighty ice- field extending thirty nautical miles along the coast, from which protruded the yellowish rocky masses of Cape Steen Bille. On the 25th, we saw a seal lying on a floe, whilst from the land a bear with stealthy steps was nearing it; but the seal soon detected the threatened danger, and quickly disappeared. Linnets and snow- buntings are no longer rare. Fearless and confiding, these small birds seem to like the approach of men. " Some of them," so says Bade's day-book, "will almost perch upon our noses, and in five minutes allowed them- selves to be caught three times." Still no open water ! During the first days of May it rained heavily ; the snow melting, the path to our house became a ruin ; its roof leaked like a sieve, and the house POST NUBILA PHCEBU3. 145 itself, wtich. formerly stood in a valley, was now upon a hill J We were obliged to prop it up. From tlie con- tinued thaw a heap of things came to light which we thought were lost. Among them was the carpenter's chest. Even on the 6th of May we had no idea that we should be able to leave our floe on the following day, much less meet with all sorts of provisions, which would be useful to our frail settlement destined to destruction. After the continued rain of the last few days, we broke xip the remainder of the snow-path round the house entirely, and tried to give additional firmness to our falling dwelling with the laths and supports which were thereby set at liberty. These we drove into the floe on the outer side of the house, and bound together high above it with ropes, so that it was thoroughly laced in. Be- tween these supports and the house wall we stuffed sail- cloth to keep out the draught and rain. The galley, which was fastened to the flagstafi", had lost its bottom through the thaw, and slanted sideways in the air. We loosened it from this aimless connexion and stood it once more on the snow. On the morning of the 7th we were agreeably surprised to see open water in the direction of land. A stiff south- easter had cleared the sky during the night, and in the grey morning the watch heard through the fog a rushing and roaring sound, which could be nothing but the sea. The thought had now to be seriously entertained as to whether the time had not come for our release from the floe. And it had come. Wind and weather remained favourable. The strip of water in the south-west came nearer and nearer, the wind separating masses of small floes and driving 146 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. them northwards. At half-past twelve the captain, after having uninterruptedly observed the ice and the weather for some time, decided, with the agreement of all the officers, that according to his opinion, the moment had come when thej should leave the floe and try to, save AN ICEBERG. themselves by reaching the coast in the boats. But he did not wish to bear the entire responsibility of such an important stop, believing that if the abandonment of the floe and the taking to the boats were decided upon with unanimous consent, or at least with that of the majority of POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 147 his comrades, their prospect of ultimate preservation would be greatly enhanced by increased individual exertions. How well founded this opinion was, time would prove. It was also found that this day's observations gave a latitude of 61° 12' ; more northerly than that of yesterday, as on the 6th we were in 61° 4'. This vjew of the captain's HUNTING THE POLAR BEAE. therefore received unlimited approbation, Dr. Laube only showing some hesitation, which was overruled. Our decision stood firm. After a hasty mid-day meal we at once began to clear the boats. This was troublesome work. First we took out all the provisions, clothing, saUs, masts, oars, instruments, and so forth, so that the 148 THE GERMAN xVECTIC EXPEDITION. boats miglit be hauled empty over three floes ; and the whole of the contents were carried after them, partly on sledges and partly on the back, and they were again reladen. In feverish haste and impatience this work was accomplished, and in' three hours all was ready. We took one last thankful look at our faithful floe ; through numerous dangers and calamities, from the region of terror and death, it had borne us here in 200 days, into a more hospitable latitude ; and now filled with fresh courage we might hope for a speedy release. It was about four p.m. as with three hearty cheers we set sail. The community were divided amongst the boats in the following manner : — The whale-boat, which was commanded by Captain Hegemann, took the two scientific men, the cook, and the sailors Philipp Heine and Bernhard Gatjen. The boat Bis- marck was commanded by the first ofiicer, Hildebrandt ; under him were the two sailors Paul Tilly and Hein- rich Biittner. The large boat King William was com- manded by the second officer, Bade ; and the carpenter, Wilhelm Bowe, Fritz Kewell, Max ■ Schmidt, and Conrad Gierke constituted the crew. We sailed until nine p.m., at first slowly, but after we had stowed away better, more rapidly ; so that upon hauling the boat up on a floe, we had left seven nautical miles behind us. This hauling up was a hard bit of work. After finding a low spot and first emptying the boat, we lifted it on to the floe by swinging it backwards and forwards, and then when it came up the third time, with a strong puU at the painter a part was raised on to the ice, and afterwards the whole was hauled up. The provisions and other equipments of each boat were stacked up close by, and POST NUBILA THCEBUS. 149 covered over with the oil-skin. The missing sail-roof of the boat King William had to be replaced by the insufficient protection afforded by the boat- sail. Some hours sped by at this work. The evening meal con- sisted of hard bread and cofiee, which the men prepared in the boats by means of the spirit-lamp. At THE BOAT BISMARCK. length, at half-past twelve, we laid down on our furs io sleep ; and at half-past five the next morning, we got up again. Sailing in a westerly direction brought us to within four nautical miles from the land. At twelve at noon, however, the ice was so dense that we were obliged to pull up at a floe. On this piece of ice, drifting slowly 150 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. southward, we rested in our boats until five p.m. The sun's warm rays did us good, but they also produced that painful evil, snow-blindness. Besides which, from the constant looking-out against the wind for the chance of seeing the entrance to a channel, the eyes were so affected that they could not bear the blinding white of the light upon the glistening ice-fields. First a great weariness is felt, and then a burning in the eye, which soon mounts to unbearable pain. The eye waters vio- lently, and the head is aifected. There is then little else to do but to wait patiently, and fasten a cloth over the eyes to keep out every ray of light. After one and a half to two days the suffering is over, but one must be careful of a relapse. This sickness shows itself in many different forms. Some people suffer often and most vio- lently from it, others only find their eyes slightly affected. Later, we tried to guard ourselves by making the green shading-glasses of the telescope into snow-spectacles. By this sensible improvised help, and others which we found, we were able to provide each with this, for an Arctic voyage, most necessary article. Our sailing journey, which at first was through dense ice, had brought us by the evening one and a half nautical miles nearer, when suddenly there fell a calm, and the floes before us had packed themselves into an impenetrable mass. The above- described work of hauling up the boats exhausted our strength again considerably; and after enjoying some coffee and bread, we fell into a deep sleep, dead tired. Bad weather, fall of snow and storm, kept us fixed six days more to the floe. The temperature changed from 361° pahr. by day, to 21° Fahr. by night. Yesterday, the 10th of May, in the afternoon, we POST NUBILA PHfEEUS. 151 played our usual game at whist in the whale-boat. Our boat-sail (that belonging to the King William), which serves as a roof during the night, from its lightness and transparency keeps but little of the wet off; the rain has dropped gently upon us for now nearly twenty-four hours, as from the rose of a watering-pot. The other boats are better off in this respect, as they have oil-cloth AN ICEBEKG. sail coverings. The day ended, Mr. Hildebrandt and his people came to us in the large boat, for company and also for any alcohol and provisions that we could spare, with which we were better provided. There were therefore eight men to feed in the large boat. In the 152 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. morning we boiled a kettle of coffee, and eat a piece of dry bread witb it. The mid-day meal consisted of a portion of soup, and the meat boiled in it. In the evening a drink of cocoa refreshed us, of course "without either milk or sugar. We had to be economical with our provisions ; for if we had to lie quiet much longer, hunger would knock sharper at the door. Our appetite is extraordinary, but easily accounted for, as the diet 'of fresh meat and fat, which is indispensable to this climate, had to be sparingly weighed out in scales which we manufactured for the occasion. The store of bacon is reckoned at 6 lbs. per head; besides which, there are two hams. At last, on the 14th, the bad weather broke up, the ice opened towards the evening for a short distance south- wards, and we rowed to an iceberg; when, however, close under its walls, the cold was so intense that we tried to row round it. As we could not succeed, we retreated as fast as possible from this uncomfortable neighbour ; and that just at the right time, for the open water closed behind us once more, and again we saw ourselves condemned to another five days' existence on the floe. Our latitude was 61° 1'. "Up to yesterday morning, 29th of May" (so it runs in the pilot Bade's day-book), "uninterrupted storm from the north with snow; ice dense, land not often discernible, temperature not under 32° Fahr., mostly 32.5° to 41° Fahr. ; not moved from the spot; very wearisome ; banished to the boat, as we must not get wet. Each one passes the time as well as he can. Mr. Hildebrandt makes sketches of our boats on and between the ice ; Fritz, as cook of the large boat, makes POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 153 experiments on his fire apparatus in order to insure tlie greatest economy; Konrad composes poems; the carpenter relates Vegesack stories, and how as captain of a gun- boat he sailed by the help of a chart of the Mediterranean from Bremen to Hull, and how by means of soundings he found himself at Kamsgate ; I studied Heine's poems, or carved boats, and so on ; Max tried his hand at drawing. Yesterday it gave over snowing ; we reviewed our pro- visions and divided them equally. We have about 27 lbs. of bread per man, 5 lbs. of bacon, some cofiee and cocoa, which we hope will last us quite a month. Our appetite is boundless, and the scanty rations to which we are restricted, prevent us from ever feeling satisfied. I have made a small pair of scales, in which I weigh the bread to my crew ; the bacon I cut by my eye in pretty equal pieces, which is then given out by call to the men. This is always an exciting moment ; all eyes brighten at the sight of the bacon, and a piece of bread is looked upon as tenderly as the finest confection. Fritz pretends to have discovered that one feels much more satisfied by bolting the little one eats, and not biting it much : it seems to last longer ! We almost look our eyes out after a seal. Oil and fresh meat would be a delicious addition to our provisions. It is a peculiar and very mixed feeling, to think that in six weeks we shall have nothing to eat ; if then we have not reached the land, we must drop off one after the other ; but serious as is the thought, there are times when it seems irresistibly comical. Of tobacco we have plenty, and a good portion is consumed every day. Fritz is making himself a new pipe. To-day, the 19th of May, is again lovely weather. Whilst I am writing this at half-past nine a.m., the warmth is 72^° Fahr. 154 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Tbe teat is oppressive, the wind calm, the ice quite dense. In sucli weather it ought soon go to pieces. "With the telescope we can see the torrents falling from the steep overhanging rocks on land; fresh water we find everywhere on the floe. Melting the snow is, thank God, over now. Our health is good, only Dr. Buchholz THE LOOK-OUT. is still suffering. Our eyes have improved these last few days by sparing their use. The temperature of the sea- water is 31° Fahr., that of the fresh water on the floe 32° Fahr. At this moment, I am hearing much astonish- ment expressed over a fly which has settled on the sails ; in reality, a welcome sign. The month of May is, how- mat \f;\y^ .i;.r I POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 155 ever, no month of delight to us here. Setting aside the mild temperature and the brightness, it differs but little from January, resembling it in the continued northern storms. Real nights we have now no longer; the sun rises at three o'clock and sets shortly before nine ; the inter- mediate period is half twilight. The time must be near for the birds to choose their quarters and lay their eggs. This east coast of Greenland is, indeed, a dead, deserted neighbourhood ; and one may judge how difficult it is to get at, as, had our lives depended upon it, we could not once have reached it with the boats." As no change took place in the position of the ice, we resolved to drag our boats to the Island of lUuidlek, about three miles distant,' which we were obliged to admit was hard work. We began on the evening of the 20th. The tow-line which we had made for the purpose during the winter, was made fast through the thole-holes ; and we harnessed ourselves to it by a band round the shoulders. Only 300 steps did we advance. Snow fell plentifully, but soon turned to water, so that in our night-quarters in the boat we suffered much from the damp. On the afternoon of the 21st, the weather cleared. The captain and Mr. Hildebrandt undertook a ramble in the direction of land. They found the ice but little adapted for our purpose, nothing but burst fragments, high towering floes, and huge blocks ; there were but few fields, and those not more than 100 paces in extent. It seemed almost impossible to. pull the boats through these laby- rinths of ice to the land ; and we were obliged to agree to wait for the working of the spring-floods, which would ^ In reckoning by miles, nautical miles must be understood, four of which go to one German mile. 156 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. take place in a few days. The time seemed dreadfully long. Some sailors practised wood-carving. We amused ourselves with the chess-board and carving the pieces; Bade worked at a king in robes and crown ; others turned to some useful employment,' such as twisting fishing-lines eighty fathoms long, in the hope of hauling up a cod fish wherewith to enrich our pitiful meals. The 24th of May was glorious weather. The sun shone on us from a cloudless sky, and where its rays fell the thermometer was 96° Fahr. It was a welcome oppor- tunity of dryiiig our washing and clothes thoroughly, which had been in a chronic state of wet, and we eagerly embraced it. The boats, too, were laid open, and steamed under the heat of the sun. All the men turned out. Mr. Bade, the purser, mindful of his duty, was with some of the men hunting for something for dinner. But, alas ! seals would not show themselves, fishes would not take the bacon-bait, and the stupid northern- divers were at all events clever enough to keep beyond the reach of shot. A successful attempt to reach the Island of lUuidlek, which was about three miles distant, and lay from 140 to 150 yards high, was made by Mr. Hilde- brandt and the sailors Philipp and Paul. After three hours' exertion, at about one o'clock, they set foot on firm ground. They were with us again by four o'clock. Their return was quicker. In the sailor Heine's day- book it says : — " The fine weather has lasted. Mr. Hildebrandt, Paul, and I tried to get to land; we suc- ceeded with great diflB.culty. We ran more than we walked, and sometimes sank deep in the snow. We perspired all over, and the water ran into our boots, so that we had to empty them continually and wring our POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 167 stockings. Tlie island slio-wed no signs of vegetation, fell steep and often perpendicularly down, and had many fissures and gaps. Tlie southern part seemed more accessible, but we bad to burry our return, and were therefore obliged- to give up further investigation." Heine further reports, as we were led to e;xpect from Graah's observations, that a small strip of water ran along the land, formed by the torrents falling from the coast. On this swam a few divers. They succeeded in passing this water by standing on a floe, and by means of the boat-hooks pushed themselves from one piece of ice to the other. The desert, rocky Island of lUuidlek is about ten nau- tical miles in circumference. They landed on the north- east side at a spot from which, by the help of the boats, they could easily reach the south coast, where we might hope to find protection from the wind and ice drift. There also seemed a prospect of increasing our provisions by hunting sea-bu-ds. This, on the whole favourable report, was given in the captain's boat, in the presence of the oflScers and Dr. Laube, and it served to strengthen our resolution to try with all our might for a temporary refuge on this lonely island. No sooner said than done. As the warmth of the sun was already very fatiguing when we were at work, and as in addition to that most of us had not yet recovered from snow- blindness, we agreed, weather permitting, to drag the boats by night and rest by day. In this way we hoped to be on land in eight days. Observations of the 24th of May gave 60° 59.8' N.L. Double altitude of the sun's limb, 86° 25' 40". Chronometer, 12h. 21m. 15s. p.m.; reading of the 158 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. chronometer, 13m. 30.6s., giving tlie longitude 48° 10.1' W. According to Graah's chart, however, it should be 42° 20' "W., resulting in an error in the latter of about 50m.^ A later comparison of our chronometer with that of the royal Danish brig Constance, gave an error to us of —85.4s., whereby our longitudinal observation would require nine minutes more. The first night with great exertion we advanced 580 paces ; seven a.m. fall of snow ; rested until eight p.m. Mr. Hildebrandt and Max had a severe attack of snow-blindness, and were obliged to remain quiet in the boat while we puUed it. We were doubtful whether it would not be better to leave the heavy boat King "William behind, but we still dragged it on with us, as we hoped to find it of great use on our journey by water. The 28th was a clear day. We were able to dry our things once more, and find a path for our dragging the next night. By seven a.m. we had gained 700 paces, when it again began to snow. Dragging is fearfully tiring work, and makes but slow progress, particularly when the boats have to be hauled now over high lumps of ice, now over places where the water is only covered with loose snow, on which occasions it does not give merely wet feet, but an entire bath. ^ Dr. Laube is very fortunate that way. I have but one pair of boots, which are so torn with the ice, that the' water runs unhindered in and out. Having once reached our goal, stockings and shoes are off at once, and the naked feet put into the fur sleeping-sack, where they soon get warm. Fortunately, each of us has ' It must not be forgotten that Graah's chronometer at that time had become useless. (Graah, Narrative, &c., English Translation, p. 65.) POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 159 about three pairs of stockings to cliaiige ; thougli in tHs damp weather they dry badly, and often enough we can only wring them and put them on again stone cold as they are. We have borne it well up to this time, but I fear for the consequences. The temperature is seldom below 32° Fahr. The 27th was Konrad's birthday. To raise their spirits somewhat, I gave my men a glass of sherry — a festive luxury in our poverty, as our whole store consisted of one bottle of sherry and one of rum. That we might sit dry, we borrowed the oilskin coats from the " Hope," and hung them up under our sail, which is very thin and lets the rain through, so that we are much better off. The carpenter, thank Grod, is recovered from his scurvy. Our neighbour, the iceberg, has also changed its form. In the night one side of it fell with a thundering crash. When all is quiet, we can hear from the land the splitting of the perpendicular walls. The nights are light; real darkness we have none, and the twilight, which breaks about twelve, resembles that of our own summer evenings at half-past nine. Water for cooking and drinking we find plentifully on the floe after the rain, and this is acceptable, as our. brandy would soon come to an end if we had to melt the snow. " To-day we have been on our way with the boats twenty-one days, and to-day it is exactly a year since I left home ; what may have hap- pened there since then ? Will the next news be sad or joyful ? What have we accompHshed in this time ? what endured? When shall we again see our beloved country ? We all naturally hope for a return." (Bade's day-book.) The work, is getting more difficult. First the boats 160 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. have to be emptied, and pulled to the spot where our next day's rest is to be taken, while we frequently have to go over walls of ice, the slipping downwards being often more difficult than the pulling up. Then the boats tip over in the snow, or get caught behind a piece of ice, when it costs us untold trouble to get them free again.. Then, again, we have to go over rifts in the ice, and weary our- selves over places where it has fallen in. When this difficult manoeuvre is happily accomplished, all the things must be put in again. At this work each has to carry from 100 to 105 lbs. weight; and one can imagine that, as with this burden we now sink deep into snow or snow- water, and now have to climb over closely-packed frag- ments of floes, all that is not really necessary is left behind. On the night of the 30th to the 31st of May, we left the longest distance behind us yet accomplished, viz. 1200 paces. As we had drawn two boats to their desti- nation, the captain, who had been leading and energetic the whole night, and also active in dragging the boats, fainted. In all this galling work hunger tormented us ; and if night gave us sweet dreams of tables richly provided with food, on awaking, our murmuring, grumbling stomachs soon brought us back to reality. Beginning of June, uninterrupted storms from the north, and fall of rain as from a bowl since the last three days and nights. Our bad, thin sail can scarcely stand the drops which fall like lead upon it. Truly we in the King Wilham are not to be envied. Our rations, too, are getting scantier than ever ! As there is not even a distant prospect of increasing our provisions, our meals are reduced to two in twenty-four hours; and every POST NUBILA PHCEBUS. 161 morning at nine I give each, a quarter of a pound of bread and a small bit of bacon, and at six in tte evening the same weight of bread, and to all a half-ration of cold soup with, meat in it. In the morning we could still have a drink of coffee ; but in the evening cocoa only. Our brandy disappeared rapidly ;* if we did not soon kill a seal, to supply oil for fuel, we should be obliged to give up warm food. Thus one can imagine that we are plagued with a continual and never-satisfied wolf s craving. The bread-bag and remainder of the bacon I have always by my side for safety's sake. The conversation turns upon nothing but eating. Max only wishes he was in the Exchange Restaurant at Bremen; Konrad would be contented with, a juicy beefsteak with some eggs, and maintains that he could at once demolish twenty-five eggs with one pound of butter and sixpennyworth of bread ; at the- same time, the eye falls upon the clock and counts the hours which must still pass before the scanty meal will recur. And how quietly and devotedly is the meal then taken ! how busy is each trying to stifle the gnawing hunger, if only for a short time ! If one could only get rid of the burdensome feeling by sleep ! But scarcely does sleep come than the water leaks on to our faces, or one of the coats on the roof glides from the edge of the boat, scattering the whole of its watery contents upon us. Konrad was quite sad this morning; in his sleep he had consumed a portion of ham and some poached eggs one after the other, but on waking felt so dreadfully hollow within. The wet cold air of 39° Fahr. in the boat is very disagreeable ; we shiver u.nceasingly. It is really wonderful that we are so well, though we feel that our M 162 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. strength is diministing. When will open water, either to sail or row in, appear before us ? Shall we even now, after so many clangers and difficulties oyercome, be destined to a miserable end ? Before yesterday the ice pushed and got into motion, probably on account of the spring-tide and the storm, but it packed itself closer than ever, and did not open again. It is to be hoped we shall soon have better weather. We have moved somewhat nearer the island, whether to our advantage or not we do not know. At length, on the 4th of June, we succeeded in landing on Illuidlek. This day we dragged the boats 2000 paces in thirteen hours, and at eight p.m. we were able to launch them. CHAPTEE VIII. JOUENEY ALONG THE COAST OP GEEENLAND PROM ILLTJIDLEK TO PBIEDRIOHSTHAL. JUNE, 1870.' Description of the Island. — Arrival in the Bay of " Hansa Haven." — Departure for Friedrichsthal. — Desert appearance of the coast. — The cliffs near Cape Hvidtfeldt. — Vegetation and landscape scenery. — Excursion to the Island of Sedlevik. — A Swiss landscape in Greenland. — The Bay of Friedrichsthal. — Men upon the shore. — The Moravian Mission-colony of Friedrichsthal. — Dwelling- houses in Friedrichsthal. — Hospitable reception. — The natives. — Preparations for returning home. — Commercial dealings with Denmark. — Travelling in Greenland. — The Esquimaux village. — East-Greenlander frightened. — West-Greenlander. — Beer in Greenland. The small Island of Illuidlek extends in its longer axis from south-east to north-west. A dome-staped, steep declivity to tlie north-west, to the south-east a sloping mountain, form centres round which cluster a crowd of wild rugged cliffs. A small strait separates the island from the smaller Ivimiut lying before it, and Cape Discord.^ Inland extends a long chain of rocks, a very quickset hedge, the innermost end of which forms a small low island, which we took for that called Omenarsuk on Graah's map. Naked and bare of all vegetation, these grotesque rocks rise into the air. The ^ By Captain Hegemann, with the assistance of Professor Laube and W. Bade. ' Graah's map gives Lat. 60° 52' for Cape Discord. ^ Our own measurement determined it as 61 0. M 2 164 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. inliabitants of the island, a pair of lonely gulls, watched with evident curiosity from a rift in the rocks the arrival of the strange visitors, and some guillemots fluttered piping around the open water of the strait. It was between the south-east point of the island, Cape Discord, and the small Island of Ivimiut. About ten o'clock we lay in a bay protected from the north wind, and sur- rounded by high rocks, which we called " Hansa Haven." Here we wished to pass the night, and had already brought our things to shore with that intention, when the tide fell and our boat grounded ; we therefore left the bay at about twelve at night, pulhng np at a piece of ice lying not far from the land. It was now exactly four weeks since our departure from the floe, which we had left with such fconfi- dent hope of reaching the neighbouring shore in a few days. Whitsunday, glorious weather ! Messrs. Hildebrandt and Bade went hunting in the boat Bismarck. They brought home a small bag of twenty-two divers, the flesh of which, prepared as a stew, provided us with two excellent mid-day meals. This, however, only helped for the moment ; and we had, at the utmost, only provisions for fourteen days ! The hunters had been in the upper part of the island. They saw along the southern coast a small strip of water. " Everywhere we find nothing but bare barren cliff's, the higher the wilder, sparingly clothed with moss and stn.nted willows. But no trace of human inhabitants!" lUuidlek, where Graah fell in with some natives,'' seems to have been long iminhabited. On the second day, the 6th of June, we started again. ' " ABother family, consisting of six individuals, was established on a point of land at lUuidlek, opposite Ivimiut." Graali's "Voyage to Greenland," p. 70. mm JOUENBy ALONG THE COAST OP GREENLAND. 161 Our aim was rriedrichsthal, tlie nearest colony on tlie soutli--w"est coast of Greenland. But we reckoned upon soon meeting one or the other of the Esquimaux seal- boats searching the Fjord. We worked, pushing and rowing laboriously, up the Kangerdleck Fjord, then struck straight across, and rowed and cruised about from six o'clock, at which time the ice loosened a little, until eleven in the evening, against a hard, south-west wind. The Island of Omenarsuk scarcely rises 125 feet above the sea, and yet on its north side shows a spot only a few square feet in size, which is covered with fresh-water ice, and looks exactly like a diminutive glacier. From its position it could not possibly be an ice-block hurled there; besides, it was fresh water, ice from the snow which had been frozen in the ravines of the island. This inland ice- formation in such small masses against the neighbouring powerful ice-current, is an interesting phenomenon. Some nautical miles from the south point of the above-mentioned Fjord, which we christened " Pfingstkap," we hauled up the boats on to the firm, even coast ice. The following sketch will explain the situation : — The next day, 7th June, was delightful weather. We sailed pleasantly past "Pfingstkap," the highest rocky point of which rises boldly in the air, stretching along the steep coast southwards. Its aspect was barren and dreary. The dark- ness of the rocks was broken here and there by small strips of snow, reaching about half 166 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. way up; some of which looked grass-green from the scanty moss growing on the stones. On a low island, which on Graah's map bears the name of Kutek Island, we took our mid-day meal. In the depths of the rocks we found some beautifully-tasting water, and for once we drank as much as we wanted. The rocks of Kutek Island must often have come in hard contact with the ice drifting from the north ; many places distinctly showed that they had been polished by the ice and worn quite flat. On many rocks, which were partly covered by the tide, lay the glistening blue fragments of pieces washed up, and of crushed ice-floes. In the evening we hauled up our boats five miles north of Cape Yalloe, for the first time on the rocks of the continent of Greenland. For the first time, now that we had no longer the crowding ice to fear, did we give ourselves completely and quietly up to rest. The light of another bright sunshiny dawn showed us some signs of vegetation inland. There were sorrel, dandehon, and cinque-foil, which we sought for eagerly in the fissures and rents of the rocky ground, and with which, with the help of some pickle, we im- provised' a salad with the remainder of the divers ; got once more under sail, and in the evening had left twenty miles behind us. Our quarters this night were close to the south end of Greenland (60° 34' N.L.), in front of the Fjord of Lindenow (marked by Graah under the unpronounceable name of Kangerdlurksoeitsiak). On the following day we passed the grandly-formed pyramidical Cape of Hvidtfeldt (Kaningesekasik), more than a thousand feet high. Before it lay a group of clifi's, at one of which we pulled up, in order to find the best channel. On this occasion granite was found JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST OF GEEENLAND. 167 amongst the rocks. Dr Laube reports : — " We pulled up to one of the rocks for a short rest, and for our meal. It was a huge block of granite, and that of the beautiful large grained kind, the pegmatite, which is known to come from Siberia and other northern lands. Besides this, it contained a great number of garnets and carnelians mixed up together ; and from its bosom the waves had washed a lovely block of rose quartz. I had made no secret of the presence of sapphires and garnets, and so came to grief through it, as we all wanted to capture a large sapphire. Hammer and chisel, which I had always to borrow, as my case went down with the Hansa, were scarcely to be obtained, and only with the sacrifice of my daily meal did I at length succeed in quieting my geologico- mineralogical mind by the acquisition of some fragments, when we at once said good-bye to the rock and its treasures, and went on our way. My mineralogico-geological mind ! How often on the way did it rise in an excitement of longing to get hold of this or that spot, to climb up, and laden with stones return to the boat ! but I must suppress such longings. If, as is well known, one cannot study well upon a full stomach, I can certify that a craving, gnawing stomach, does not incline one to work. But, even had I overcome this, a half-hour spent on such an excursion might have brought the lives of my waiting companions into danger. For this I would not be responsible. So that I only allowed my wishes to prevail when the occasion was warranted by circum- stances." The colour of the mountains, beginning from Cape Hvidtfeldt, was quite different from those seen hitherto ; they looked like melted copper. That explains at once 168 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. tlie brown colour so often borne by naked rocks ; it may also arise from the weather-beaten stratum of the pecuhar granite of which they are built.* The blue atmosphere, in which the rocks rise, enhances the picturesque appearance of this richly-coloured coast scenery. The rocks lying almost under Kaningesekasik, are washed perfectly round ; they lie like giant ice-breakers, smooth and polished on all sides. Waves and ice have done their work. These cupola and dome-shaped rocks we now met constantly on our coasting journey; thousands of them lay scattered along the mainland, a stony outwork against the onward-pressing ice. Our further voyage showed us a more pleasant land- scape. To the north of the promontory of Igalalik appeared, extending for some distance, green tracts clothed with short grass. Unfortunately it was very foggy weather, and the clusters of islands, amid which we were now steering to find the entrance to Prince Christian Sound, caused us to miss this mark. The weather had become bad, and the south-east wind setting straight in on to shore drove us to seek protection in the first suitable of the many opening bights. After sailing in it for some time, the water became smoother ; we were evidently in a strait,, and that the one we wanted, viz. Prince Christian Sound. Lazily we rowed until two a.m. A flat piece of granite, sloping gently down to the water, afforded us a capital resting-place. Soon the boats were placed in the usual way, prepared as a tent couch. * Is not this coppery colour due to the lichen which overlies the granite, similar to the violet-coloured Byssiis iolithes of the Brocken ? JOUENBY ALONG THE COAST OP GREENLAND. 169 More quietly ttiaii usual could -we give ourselves up to sleep. The southern point of Greenland was, we thought, happily reached ; in a few days we must be in Friedrichs- thal. That horrible spectre which had martyred us for a long four weeks, the prospect of starvation, vanished ; and we set valiantly to work upon the side of bacon and the ham. One must not, however, think, says Dr. Laube, that, on that account, we were careless of our provisions. Captain Hegemann providently kept the bread basket somewhat high. It might still happen that by the ice or some other hindrance we might be de- layed, and with our store of provisions have to prolong our hves for a longer time. The long-missing feeling of satiety, and the joyful knowledge that soon this lingering, troublesome work of deliverance would be successful, helped to put us in the happiest frame of mind. It was already late in the morning, when the voice of the care- ful cook awoke us out of a refreshing sleep with the cry of ' Schaffen ! schaffen ! ' ^ " The next thing was to try, if possible, to ascertain our exact position ; the further journey was, therefore, put off until after the mid-day rest. When the accustomed morning toilette had been gone through (a brook leaping from the mountains gave an opportunity for a thorough cleansing), I employed the time in climbing the over- hanging rocks to look about a little and see what was here offered to the eye. How different the ground already looked here ! No longer those bare masses of rock alternating with everlasting ice ! green moss spread * THs is the nautical term for the summons to dinner (eight bells), and is still kept up at the seamen's anniversary festivals in Bremen. 170 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. itself around ; dwarf birches, creeping willows showed young shoots, though even here the snow seemed. not long to have disappeared. Indeed, we had no need to climb very high above the valley to find the winter carpet still spread. The straits here had more the character of a lake. Prom our resting-place straight to the south opened another in the distance, bordered by an island. In the east, from whence we had come, rose long-backed ridges ; whilst westward, where the straits disappeared behind a rocky promontory, rose high moun- tains. Still and deserted it was on all sides; scarcely a white gull fluttered over the water, or a snow-bunting piped its simple song. About mid-day I returned to the camp. On the broad granite flat the captain and the pilot had erected a temporary observatory. Ob- servations gave us 60° 4' N.L., according to which we were not in Prince Christian Sound, but some nautical miles more to the south. Graah's chart, which had generally given the run of the coast pretty exactly, had disappointed us more than once with regard to our geographical position. With a fresh breeze we sailed about twelve miles over the supposed Sound, then found it surrounded by rocks, and after climbing some heights were convinced that we were in a Fjord and not in a sea-strait, so we were obliged to row back again. The scenery on both sides was wildly picturesque, and grand dark rocky walls, covered on the top with snow, rose more than a thousand feet high; torrents of the melted snow rushed from the clefts and fell foaming in the Fjord. In some places, a sickly mossy covering was perceptible. Birds were often visible. At six in the evening, we were once more at the entrance; allowed JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST OF GREENLAND. 171 ourselves no rest, lio-wever, but sailed until midniglit in a south-westerly direction, four miles further, where in a small safe harbour we landed. On the shore were many signs that here had passed or lived some human beings, and (to judge from the bones of the seals) not very long ago some Esquimaux. Small stones were laid on the top of each other in the shape of a quadrangle : fragments of earthenware and seals' bones lay strewn around. In this bight, too, the scenery was indescribably grand. To the left it was bounded by a hilly chain clothed in green moss. To the right rose a mighty wall 1200 feet high. A rocky pyramid towered in the air, and broad cataracts shot over the slopes, the waters collecting at the bottom, and the overflow being borne to the sea. The background was picturesquely sur- rounded by mountains, the waters of whose glaciers fell over a mountain terrace in a mighty torrent thunder- ing to the sea. I thought of the ' Trauafall ' in Upper Austria. No words are equal to the description of this majestic scenery ; it wants a vivid water-colour drawing to convey that impression to the reader which this picture landscape made upon me. Pity that the journey to this region is so uninviting ! If such were not the case, an artist might not be indisposed to undertake it, in order to bring home to the world full and glorious' sketches and views of an unknown land abounding in nature's beauty. At eleven in the morning, with a fresh north wind, we sailed on. At noon we passed the point of Christian rV. Island, and from thence rowed between the high island lying north of Gape Farewell, to the important Island of Sedlevik with its many far-stretching arms, 172 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. where we passed the night and the following day. Now, indeed, we had the certainty of knowing that we were near Friedrichsthal, and might give ourselves up to the joyful hope of soon being once more among men. Strangely enough, up to this time, we had not had a glimpse of an Esquimaux, though we might reasonably conclude that they were now busy in these waters catch- ing the seals. Later we learnt that this (which is for the Greenlander a weighty business) was carried on to the south of Cape Farewell. The bank rises from the spot where we were, in an obhque direction, about 320 feet, forming a wide hilly plateau inland, on the soft, elastic, mossy carpet of which we stretched ourselves in the noonday sun and enjoyed some hours of long-wanted rest. Here and there, half hidden in the moss, were small blue flowers. Some of our party went hunting, but shot nothing but a few birds. In the afternoon came the tide, which rose eight feet, and with a pretty strong north-east wind made such breakers that would have been dangerous to us, if some of the men had not been on the spot at the time, and held the boat, which was driving on to the shore, with the oars. Towards evening, the water retreated, the boats lay still, and we laid ourselves down with the conviction that the next night we should pass under a roof in Friedrichsthal. The glaciers which hung every where on the rocks of the island, now like birds'-nests between the needles and the rocky pinnacles, now of considerable strength, stretching down the declivities, no longer reached (so Dr. Laube afl&rmed) down to the sea, though in some places they protruded their moraines low down, and some of the broken ice getting loose JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST OE GEEENLAND. 173 fell over this dam into tBe sea. The temperature of the air seemed considerably warmer, and the land bore a far fresher green ; whilst the islands around Cape Farewell formed a connected, high towering, tattered rocky block. The northerly Island of Sedlevik, which we had now reached, showed a level shore ; only in the middle did a high, steep massive mountain rise. Everywhere the bank rose so high above the sea, that we had to search for some time before we could find a place suitable for pulhng up the boats ; and this on account oE the steep- ness of the rough rocks was hard work, though it at last succeeded. One week had passed since we reached lUuidlek; more happily than we had ventured to hope had our journey sped since then ; and now we might once more allow ourselves a day of rest. Sunday, the 12th of June, we passed on Sedlevik. Although it blew hard from the north-west, the day was beautifully clear, and we could scan the land around us at our leisure. A party went hunting. " Less blood-thirsty " (writes Dr. Laube) " was my excursion ; armed with the carpenter's hammer, and accompanied by Philipp and Konrad, I undertook an excursion through the island. How difiierent it was over the soft, swelling, mossy carpet, in which the feet often sank up to the ankles, to the hard stony rocks which we had trodden up to this time ! Under the high mountains of the island, Spring's first children had been born to her ; amongst blooming willows and birch bushes, which rose in their succulent green sprays from the mossy ground like embroidery, the kidney-leaved sorrel and sweet-smelling angelica, finely indented fan-like ferns, waved in the air, and on the hanging rocks the 174 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. low-lying Sibhaldia' spread its violet flower-bed. Below, at our feet, lay the light blue straits; branching off here and there, and forming deep Fjords stretching into the mountains, which with the glittering glaciers and bluish ravines bounded the distant view. I thought of the glorious Lake of the four Cantons ! The small ice- bergs drifting on the water, gave life 'to the picture, looking like a fleet of blinding white sails ; but instead of the smihng banks which delight the eye on that Swiss lake, it fell upon a desert shore. And yet what a different impression the landscape made upon me now to what it did a short time ago, when we were so un- certain as to our fate, and scarcely ventured to look up, much less give our souls to the great beauty of a northern landscape !" June 13, started at four in the morning. "We crossed between floes, until we had gone round the north point of the island, ran before the wind through the Straits of Torsukatek, and then took our course as a calm fell, rowing westward, remaining as near as possible to the coast, looking sharply in the direction of Eriedrichsthal. There suddenly, after rounding a low promontory, the longed-for bay lay before us ! It was a never-to-be- forgotten moment. The wind was now favourable, so we at once set sail, and hoisted our flag. A few hundred steps from the shore, on the green ground, stood a rather spacious red house, topped by a small tower. It was the mission-house. More to the side, and somewhat nearer to the bank, stood a similar smaller building, near which lay a dark mass of stony heaps ; these we conjectured were the Esquimaux houses. Further on to the left opened a broad Fjord running from the north. High JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST OP GEEENLANP. 176 mountains framed this pleasant landscape picture, wMcli was closed in the background by dim bluish mountain chains. Friedrichsthal (so says Dr. Laube) is one of the younger mission stations of the Moravian confraternity. It "was established in the year 1827, and lies in 60° N.L., and" is, excepting Pamiadluk (which Hes some miles to the south of Cape Farewell, and is the residence of a Danish petty trader) the most southerly place in G-reenland inhabited by Europeans. The com- munity of Friedrichsthal, which also includes some of the scattered squatters of Esquimaux in the neighbour- hood, contains 437 inhabitants. The natives call the mis- sion "Narsak," that is, level land; definite enough for the conditions of land in G-reenland. Plains are so rare there, that they answer well for defining places. But one's expectations with regard to this European colony must not be too high. On a green meadow-land, which rises gently from the sea, stands the mission-house. On either side high mountains stretch inland to the north ; the chain to the left is separated from Friedrichsthal by a parallel-running Fjord, the Narksamiut. From the high ridge to the right springs a merry brook, called by the Missionaries " Konigsbach." The generally flat shores of the bay juts out on the left into a natural mole, a prominent granite rock, the "Look-out" hill. To the left again of this rock is the entrance to the Nark- samiut, a Fjord running deep into the land, from the waters of which Cape Igikait rises proud and steep. For some distance, about an Enghsh mile, one may follow the flat land lying along Narksamiut ; then the cliffs and rocks crowd closer together ; and only to those who are 176 THE GERMAN ARCTIO EXPEDITION. practised in climbing is it possible to penetrate a step further, when they may reach a rock which suggests nothing but a retreat or a giddy fall. This green flat spot of land the Moravian Brotherhood have chosen for their most southerly mission station. The Northmen had already lived here. As the brothers' house was being built, traces were found of their old settlement in the ground. Friedrichsthal is, indeed, one of the most lovely spots in. Greenland. Open and plea- santly situated on the grassy sward, and enclosed in a wide semicircle of high mountains, it makes a good im- pression on all comers ; how much more so on us, comparatively raised from the dead ! "Hurrah! hurrah! European houses, Friedrichsthal ! " Indeed, there lay before us two low, red-painted houses. At this moment sprang up a most welcome breeze, and from our flagstaff the German flag fluttered lustily. I sat behind, with the glass to my eye, viewing the land. At the door of the mission-house a blue dress was visible for a moment, and then disappeared ; now came a whole company from the house down to the strand ; they had seen us. The rocks of the look-out hill, too, were alive. A European strode up and down, like an official guardian of order. Was it possible that in Greenland were already to be found harbour-masters and other govern- ment officers ? What I had at first conjectured to be a heap of stones now stood upright. It was a group of oddly dressed human beings, natives, who crouching close together, with their skin clothes and fawn-coloured faces, could not be distinguished from the cliffs. Now the boats neared the shore. Even the water was alive. A man approached us in a^ canoe, but when he saw us would JOUENHY ALONG THE COAST OF GREENLAND, 177 have turned quickly back again. The call of the Euro^ peans to him from the cliff made him bolder; he came towards us, greeted us, and nodding pleasantly accom- panied us into the harbour. Still it was uncertain whether the missionaries were Danish, but we heard,— " That is the German flag! GROUP OF ESQUIMAUX. They are our people ! Welcome, welcome to Greenland !" Germans, Germans in Greenland ! The first word after so long a time heard from strange lips was German ; the first sound, our dear German mother-tongue ; and their 178 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. people the first to offer us help and refreshment — who can describe our wonder and delight ? The land reached, each wanted to be first on the bank. I sprang into shallow water. We almost forgot the boats ; the men could not finish the work quickly enough. What hand-shaking and grasping on all sides. Words •died away in the throat, and the voice trembled. The man from the cliffs, too, and the natives had come up to greet us. The supposed guardian of public security was Mr. Starick, the missionary, who with Mr. Gericke super- intended the Mission. The good people opened their eyes when they heard some short details of our voyage ! But this was Germany. As a token, we have Mr. Gericke's command: — " Wives, go and get ready at once some good coffee ; in the meantime, we men will drink a bottle of wine as a welcome." No sooner said than" done. Whilst the men on the strand were busy making fast and unloading the boats, we followed the missionaries to the house, relating and Ustening alternately. The mission-house is a small one-storied building. Like most of the European houses in Greenland, it was made in Denmark, brought piecemeal from the ship to this place, and at last set up there. It is not larger than the houses in the Brzgebirge, or the Harz ; and from the red paint resembles the Swedish, peasant-houses. The foundation is a rocky site covered with moss. The building of that, as well as of the unadorned wooden church, cost more trouble than the building of many a palace in Germany. Tediously must every piece have been brought from Julianeshaab, nearly eighty miles distant, in the small umiaks or women's boats. The dwelling-houses are ^small, and not adapted for a JOUENBY ALONG THE COAST OP aEEENLAND. 179 numerous family. Some rooms, suoli as the dining-room and the kitchen, are used jointly by the missionaries. The room in which we first were, was the sitting-room of Mr. Gericke, the superintendent of the community. It was plainly furnished ; a sofa with cushions, a table, and some stuffed chairs, formed the whole of the furniture. The walls were decorated • with photographs of missio- naries. Homely and comfortable the room looked to us, however ! It was painted with oil paint, and all looked clean and orderly. The long dispensed- with European cleanliness, and the feeling that we were once more in a circle where a German matron could exercise her beneficient activity, acted like a charm upon us. Even in Greenland, amongst everlasting ice, the German wife, we now found, had managed to provide a souvenir of her own country. Some flowers in the windows supphed a necessity which the coldness of the climate refused outside ; for the garden before the house, the surface of which, as well as that before the Esquimaux dwell- ings and Other favourable spots, had been ploughed, looked sad and dreary enough. Turnips, which alone thrive here, scarcely showed their first green. Entering the house, after crossing a stone hall, we reached the sitting-room of Mr. Gericke, which lay to the left. To the right lay Mr. Starick's room. Another door led to the kitchen.^ Soon we sat in Mr. Gericke' s room at table, giving an account of our experiences, to the great astonishment of our hearers. Mr. Stariok is a big, thin man, in his thirtieth year, a Lusatian, dressed partly in Greenland fashion (seal stockings and shoes). He is very talkative, though throughout the friendly conversation, his long N 2 180 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITEON. pipe seldom went out. His young wife came from one of the West Indian islands ; site was sent to him by the mission. Mr. Gericke, a man of about fifty, had a European wife who was born in Greenland, and had been brought up at Gnadau, near Magdeburg. Their marriage is blessed with three children, from two to six years old. Not long did we have to wait for the women of the house. A white cloth flew over the table ; a heaped-up dish of rusks had the place of honour, and near it appeared some beautiful shining butter. Then the amiable house- wives brought in a mighty can of coffee. And for us — we set to work upon the good things of this life with an appetite which defies all description. We sat, talked, drank and eat. To our no little dismay, the contents of the dish of rusks had disappeared in an indecorously short space of time. We looked at one another with signs of astonishment, when lo ! another stood before us. Captain Hegemann could not help saying something regarding modesty, and so on. But our hosts would not hear of it ; on the contrary, begged us to set to work again, which friendly invitation a still unfortunate grum- bling in the stomach made us willingly follow. With some apology, the contents of the second dish disap- peared. How the good people rejoiced over our blessed appetites ! I thought it would frighten them to think how much fourteen famished stomachs could contain ! But not we alone, the men, too, sat in the church-room at a cheerful meal, and the Schonroggen (ship's biscuits made of sifted rye-flour) disappeared there no less quickly. The good, good missionaries ! What they possessed they brought out to help us. They offered us linen and clothes, but we had enough of them ; what JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST OP GEEENLAND. 181 we greatly needed was a washing-day. As regards cover- ing for the feet, we were badly off. But that want was speedily remedied. The store of shoes was brought out, and soon our pairs of feet were decked with rough Kamiken (Esquimaux boots made of seal leather). In a small room, near the church, in the school, we made our resting-place on the school forms, all packed close together. The church is really nothing but a bed-room ; a black covered table marks the spot from whence the preacher speaks. Near the table is an harmonium. The men remained in the boats under the sail-roofing. In the Greenland village of Friedrichsthal no one was at home ; men, women, and children were out on the island on the seal-hunt, or at the Fjord for the herring- fishing; only the female portion of the missionaries' household was there. They had received us on the cliff with the others. The first impression made upon us by the natives was not unfavourable. Certainly these ex- pressionless and plain physiognomies, with their broad flat faces, small, black, and somewhat crooked eyes, little stunted noses, and great swelling mouths, all set in black strips of hair, were not inviting ; but the striking harm- lessness and good nature of these half-wild people soon earned our fullest favour. As soon as they saw that we were friendly people, indeed the countrymen of their beloved missionaries, they were confiding towards us. The man who met us had brought the post ; he was the overseer of a Greenland village, Igalorsoeitsiak, near Cape Farewell, and was named Jonathan. The missionaries praised him as a capital seal-hunter and an excellent man; he Tvas very open-hearted and a great drinker. 182 THE GERMAN AltCTIC EXPEDITION. What was meant by open-heartedness, which, oddly enough, is also (it seems) to be met with in Greenland, I will not enter into, but the inclination for drink can certainly only refer to coffee ; Jonathan was therefore, at least in our sense of the word, no " soaker." Before anything else, we now wanted a pilot to guide us from Triedrichsthal farther on our way. No one seemed more suited to this than Jonathan himself, and for this post he declared himself ready, only begging to be allowed first to settle his affairs at home. The permission was willingly granted. Jonathan hurried home. Had he not also to take the weighty news of our arrival to his people ? and no true Greenlander could have foregone such an opportunity of showing his importance. Our friendly hosts would not hear of our immediate departure ; but when we learnt that a royal Danish colonial ship, the brig Constance, Captain Bang, was expected in Julianeshaab every moment, and that we could not reckon upon any other opportunity this year of returning to Europe, unless the later coming Peru should take us, or that we should travel northwards thirty German miles to Ivikat, the place where cryolite is shipped, we determined to hasten to Juhaneshaab, and if possible make our home voyage in the Constance. We had thought the ships running from Denmark to- Greenland stopped at every European settlement along the coast to Cape Farewell, and had so understood the notice in Maury* s sailing directions. Here in Friedrichsthal, however, we learned better. A large vessel had never, on account of the ice, come any further than Julianeshaab. The southern trading-places and missions, Sudproven, Lichtenau, Igdlopait, Nennortalik, Ostproven, Friedrichs- JOUENEY ALONG THE COAST OP GEEBNLAND. 183 thai, and Pamiadluk had to fetch all their necessaries in small sailing-boats from Julianeshaab or in the Green- land women's boats. Remembering that Julianeshaab is eighty miles from Friedrichsthal, and that the light, fragile hide-boats can only be used in fine weather, one can easily see that it is no easy matter for the poor Friedrichsthalers to provide their yearly stock of pro- visions. We further learned that, for the moment, the mis- sionaries, on account of the non-arrival of the provision transports the year before, had but little to spare. The German mission in Greenland is provided with all and everything they want for the support of Hfe from Copen- hagen, by the Moravian Mission Society. Every year one of the ships takes the goods, and in the summer visits once both South and North Greenland, from whence the parties concerned provide means of further transport. The often unfavourable situation of the ice, and some- times the loss of the ship, prevents the cargo from always falhng into the hands of the rightful owner. To meet such an emergency, the stations have mostly a year's store in advance. Our friends the Friedrichsthalers, might well find that, on account of the ice, they could not reach Ju- Haneshaab ; we ought, therefore, not to make too great a hole in their provisions. So we resolved that, as soon as Jonathan returned, we would travel on. For to-morrow and the next day we would stay where we were. About three o'clock, an excellent meal was served up, upon which we set to work valiantly. This is the memo : wine-soup, roast kid, with a mess of potatoes (dried 184 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. potatoes) ; then pancakes and pickled gherkins, with light white wine. In the afternoon, curiosity moved me to pay another visit to the Esquimaux village. All the houses stood empty ; the windows were taken out, the inside was stiff with dirt. The huge dung-heap, which here never fails at any Greenland dwelling, spreads a pestilential odour, and it is not to be wondered at that millions of flies crawl in and around, setting the heaps perfectly in motion. In the absence of men, some goats received us ; and as I seated myself at the other end of the village, to take a sketch of the mission, the horned fourfooted beasts took me for some exotic dainty, and nibbled at me so all over, that I was at last obliged to go away, followed by a herd of them. And now it was time for the evening meal — a large dish of milk-soup, and a mountain of excellent egg-cakes. The missionaries have chickens, which in the summer, when the village is deserted, find plenty of nourish- ment. Over this, of course, much was asked and re- lated. Strangely enough, we now learned that, quite unintentionally, we had found the best way from Bast Greenland. Prince Christian Sound was, according to the missionaries, quite blocked with ice and difl&cult to cross, being filled up with earth as we thought it was not ; and our Fjord was a discovery. We were also enhghtened as to why we had not seen any inhabitants. AH Green- landers have a great dread of the men who live high up in the north on the east side, and who, according to their ideas, are cannibals. (See, too, Graah's communications on this head.) This idea may be an echo of the old Norse traditions. Imagine us, therefore, in our three JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST QP GREENLAND. 185 boats, things never before seen coming from the north along the coast ! Must we not have filled the faint- hearted, superstitious Greenlanders with indescribable terror, and wherever they saw us, put them to a hurried flight ? We may have sailed close under their villages ; it is even possible that, at Sedlevik, we passed the night close to one of them. But the low, oven-shaped, grass- overgrown huts can only be seen and recognized when close against them, or when the eye is familiar with their appearance; besides which, the Eastlanders go between the islands to catch the seals. The greater part of them were, therefore, absent.^ Of their condition the mis- sionaries knew Httle. In former times, some intercourse had been kept up with them, and on AUuk Island there was every year a sort of exchange market between Bast and "West Greenland. This had long since been given up. Visits from the east side were very rare.' The people are, it is said, finer and stronger than those of West Greenland, and have light and brown hair. Does not this remind us of the old Northmen? If it happens that East Greenlanders settle in the west, they must first be acclimatized; they must go through a skin disease, which the missionaries call " Bskimokratze." It ' In a particularly interesting letter from the missionaries, received by our Society on the 4th of Nov., 1871, and virritten by A. Gericke, Friedrichsthal, 22nd August, it is said, — "A short time since a great number of the heathenish inhabitants of the east coast of Greenland came to us to barter, as they are in the habit of doing in some years. They said that they had seen the crew of the Hansa on the ice-floe, but from terror at such an appearance on their desert shore they had not ventured to go to them." ' See the detailed account of East Greenland by Graah. " Voyage to Greenland," p. 114. 186 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. is not contagious, and the natives of the west coast never suffer from it. Amongst the inhabitants of Fried- richsthal, was a woman from the east ; she and her children formed the only family unbaptized; all the others were Christians. Thus we had much to talk about ; and it was getting late when we retired to our couch in the schoolroom. The latter, with the bedroom (the church), forms an additional building to the mission house. How wonderful it seemed to us that, for the first time since the 2nd of January, we could take off our clothes ere we lay down to rest ! How free from care we could give ourselves up to sleep ! How many anxious terrible nights lay behind us ! — how, all was happily passed ! We had already finished our night toilet when the door opened, and there in his never- ending goodness came Mr. Starick, laden with beer, in case we should be thirsty in the night. Beer! What German could withstand that ! The bottles were un- corked, and soon the foaming drink filled the tankard, doing all honour to its Greenland brewer. It was late when sleep overtook us, tired out ! Once more did the picture of the past vividly recur to our minds, from the tragedy of our shipwreck, to the happy moment which brought us to Friedrichsthal ; and in our inmost hearts we all ejaculated, " God be thanked !" CHAPTER IX. FPETHEE STAY IN PEIEDEICHSTHAL. JOURNEY VIA IGIKAIT TO NENNORTALIK.' Occurrences and impressions in Friedrichsthal. — Intercourse with the natives. — Matrons and maidens. — Provision cellars in Greenland. — Good qualities and quickness of the Greenlander. — Delay of our departure.^Fishery in Nai-ksamiut. — Presents at parting. — Bury- ing-places near Friedrichsthal. — Farewell and departure from Friedrichsthal. — A European recluse at Igikait. — The Danish settlers. Early the next morning friend Starick appeared with a bountiful breakfast. The yesterday's demoHtion of biscuits was repeated, only quicker, as we were alone. Then we set to work upon our morning toilet ; one after the other turned out as much cleansed and " got-up " as possible. Our men had done the same, particularly Philipp, who looked quite grand. No wonder that he at once made himself master of a Greenland maiden's heart. Outside, meanwhile, the women had been washing the linen we had taken off. We had not to wait long for new scenes and impres- sions of the strangest kind. Already some canoes had come in, and their conductors had approached our boats quite confidingly. These small, black httle fellows, I took for boys of fourteen, but was told that they were married people and fathers of families. Of course, everything that was given to them was useful, and they were soon ' By Professor Laube. 183 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. good friends with our men. Not a little proudly did each one bring out his rifle and powder-horn from his canoe; but when our men took the " needle-guns " and fired rapidly, they were dumb with astonishment, and stood with their mouths wide open. The musical-box which we had with us caused little less wonderment. It was too ridiculous to see the amazement of the little men, as well as the women, at the tinkling box. I think if Mr. Starick himself had not been there, their thoughts would have turned to the long-forgotten " Tornik," ^ their evil genius, and we should have been taken for enchanters; but their friendship was heartier than ever. The missionary and our pilots were shooting at the target on the strand, and the natives kept watch, while others visited the servants in their houses, who were busy making shoes for those of us who needed them. I presented each one with a sewing-needle, and earned a friendly " Kojunok " (I thank you much for it), whicli was the first Greenland word I learnt. I cannot aflB.rm that the Glreenland ladies are bashful, for during our stay in the women's house the cook Luise came in, and quite coolly in our presence made the most critical alterations in her dress. The girls and women looked good-natured and dull; there were eight of them, as I tried to draw them in my pocket-book ; and Eva, whom I fully portrayed, was not a little vain. We also allowed them to write their names in our note-books, whereat the 2 It ' ■ Tornik " is the plural of " Tunek," originally the Esquimaux name for the North American Indians a word, therefore, which the Greenlanders have brought with them from North America. They apply it now to fabulous creatures, who are supposed to dwell in the interior, far from the coast. They are twice the size of men, though of human form ; and they are supposed to be generally hostile, though capable at times of rendering good service. (Eink.) FUETHEB STAT IN FBIEDRICHSTHAL. 189 fair Greenlanders displayed the same naive coyness and affectation as our lovely ones at home. What a tittering and whispering, what turning and twisting ! At last they all stood on the page ; even the honoured fifty-year old Miss SybiJ[lahad, with much bashfulness, entered her name. When we went away they thanked us for our visit. But a curiosity was still to be seen this morning in the shape of a Greenland cellar or storehouse. The respected reader must not think of a similar locality in our country. The Greenlanders are contented- in this respect with an excavation in the overhanging rock, which they build up with a stone wall like a swallow's nest. In this, without any choice, is heaped all that is good for winter use — dried fish, seal-bacon, and meat — until the place is full, when ' the last hole is blocked up with a stone. Such cellars the Greenlanders like to have away from their houses. Accustomed to live from hand to mouth, they are no friends to saving. They eat as long as there is anything there, or they see anything. When, however, the cellar with its store is not near them, and cannot provoke their appetite, then, in the long winter-time, when there would often be poor fare, they have something to fall back upon. It never enters their heads to injure the possessions of another ; so they need never fear that their neighbour will empty their cellar. The missionaries praised their converts particularly for their honesty, and assured us that nothing but the bitterest hunger would occa- sionally tempt any of them to take anything eatable from their neighbour. Even in this respect we had nothing to complain of ; but something more I can say to the honour of the good Greenlanders. There was scarcely one who could not 190 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. write his own name, and it is really astonishing what fine regular handwriting is to be met with. Even a poor little boy, too weak to paddle a canoe, who worked in the mission as a day-labourer for his meals, could write his name well and distinctly. I can also call the Green- landers a musical community, in spite of compassionate smiles. The horn-music in their church they provide themselves ; the organ, too, is superintended by a sleek Greenlander; and more than that, he "writes hymns and composes music himself. Observe also the artistic way in which the Greenland women ornament leather. With what trouble and patience they make the finest mosaic of dififerent coloured leathers no bigger than the head of a pin, sewing them together to adorn shoes and such like things ; and how, under good guidamce, they acquire a taste for clean and well-ordered households. Good guidance is, however, very necessary. The Greenland men and women whom we saw later, were as difierent from those of the mission of Friedrichsthal as night is from day, and the real specific Greenland house- hold, we could only learn to know by degrees. At table to-day our host told us that he had been in- formed by the natives that, a few days before, they had heard from the neighbours that some people were coming from the east, and that they had been much frightened about it, but were composed now, as we were the expected arrival. From the first it may be that the news of our coming had spread among the natives, owing to our having been seen in the distance among the islands. But the Greenlanders have the evil propensity of speak- ing contrary to the truth to please one. Thus, later on, we heard that our floe had been met FPETHER STAY IN FEIEDMCHSTHAL. 191 witt, and that, if we liked, we miglit satisfy ourselves that such was the case. They also related how that they had seen the Germania at full steam near Cape Farewell; they had begged them to pilot them to Friedrichsthal, or anywhere to land ; but they had not listened to them, and the steamer had at once sailed from the coast north- wards. Strange it always seemed to us ; but the mis- sionaries assured us that they certainly expected to see some one from the German expedition. Shortly before our arrival they had said, " Now they must soon come." They had mentioned it to the natives, and when they saw us and prepared to fly, Starick composed them by the words, " They are our countrymen, who we told you would come." They had also rightly concluded that, from the condition of the ice around Friedrichsthal, we should have much difficulty in reaching the coast. As during the summer months but little ice had shown itself at Cape Farewell, all the more must have remained above. At the same time, it was so thick at the end of September, that the missionaries were obliged to give up their official journey. This setting of the ice southward we not long afterwards traced to the accelerated speed of the drift. In the afternoon Jonathan's brother, Esra, came to visit his friends. "We had just retreated to the school- room, when he peeped curiously in at the window, and we signed to him to come in. He did not wait to be asked twice. How just seemed his claim to a gift ! A handful of tobacco went straight to the mouth, but his sharp eye had lit upon another dainty morsel, the worth of which we certainly underrated. In the fireplace lay the end of a cigar ; Esra picked it up, and asked if he might have it. We then found several pieces for him 192 THE GERMAN AECTtC EXPEDITION. about the room. But a number of these stumps dis- appeared at once. I could not conceive where, and told him so; when he grinningly opened his wide mouth, pointing to either side, where, between teeth and cheeks, lay a store. Hence the reason that the Greenland men have such great swellings in the lower jaw. We gave up our intention of starting the next day, at the special request of our hosts. They affirmed that by Cape Bgede, which we must pass, there was a great deal of ice, and gave it as their opinion that the north wind now blowing would in a day or two open up a path. In the evening, Missionary Starick and Mr. Hildebrandt rowed up the Narksamiut. They went to a place in the centre of the Fjord, where about eighty women and children were busy with the herring fishery. The Green- land herrings, the " Angmaksatten " as the natives call them, are for them as important as the seal ; they form their chief nourishment. If the draught is bad, famine is at hand. Like our herrings, these small smelt-like fishes (Mallotus arcticus, Fabr.) rush into the Fjords in great numbers in the evening, and are taken out of the water in sack-nets by women and children. Without either cleaning or opening they are then simply laid on the grass until the sun has dried them sufficiently ; they are then collected into an old skin sack, or stowed in any other way for the winter, and eventually consumed after being dipped in oil. As they became aware of the presence of the boats, tlie women broke into a howl of terror; some even fled to the tent. At last they saw their friend Starick, and became somewhat calmer, soon quite con- fiding ; and the boys paddled their canoes in emulation round the boats. They promised the home-returning FURTHER STAY IN PRIEDEICHSTHAL. 193 ones some fresh "Angmaksatten" early the next day, and they kept their word. Two great tubs of fish arrived the next morning, and prepared by the careful hand of our hostess came on table for breakfast. We did them justice, for they were excellent. To-day, too, some canoes came to visit us ; and amongst our sailors were soon some to be found, who wished to try a voyage in these light craft, which certainly for an unpractised man are very difficult to manage. The reader, unversed in the customs and usages of the Greenlanders, must know that they have two different sorts of boats, the " Kajak," and the "Umiak." The Kajak, or canoe, is about eighteen feet long, very narrow and low, the thin ribs of which are covered with seal's leather. In the middle of this skin- covered boat is a circular opening, large enough for the body of a man. Here sits the paddler. He must sit with his legs stretched out straight before him, to keep his balance, and work his way forward by means of the double stroke of the paddle. On the deck before him the Greenlander has his hunting tackle, bird and seal harpoons, lances and slings, and on a particular table some rolled up harpoon-thongs made of seal-skin. Behind him the canoe bears, besides provi- sions and booty, an inflated seal-skin, which, attached to the harpoon, prevents the seal just shot from sinking. The canoe is the men's exclusive vehicle; boys of twelve years' old have their canoes, and make good practice with them. It is in any case their chief possession, and is as important to them as the flint is to our hunter. In the community of the Moravian . missionaries, where the native poor are recognized as a class, the men and children receive a canoe fitted up as a means of 194 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. subsistence. At the same time, any man wlio is not too old and too feeble, thinks it beneath, his dignity to sit in a Umiak. These boats are used by the women, and are called women's boats. A Umiak is about thirty feet long and very narrow. Like the Kajak it is built of light ribs of deal, covered over with seal's leather. The Umiak is flat-bottomed, constructed the same both fore and aft ; the rim on both sides, with the inward-turned fork, extends somewhat over the body of the boat. The cavity thus formed by the fork serves for the attachment of tow-ropes, as well as to make fast the boats when they are pulled out of the water. For this purpose they use besides heavy stones, as, in spite of their size, these skin-boats are so light that a storm will carry them through the air. From six to eight women, who sit on small seats in the after- part, set them in motion with a shovel-shaped oar, by springing from their seats, and after three strokes stop- ping for a time. The large well-to-do families have each their Umiak, but smaller and poor ones have one in common. In every Mission, too, some are to be met with ; for however fragile these vessels seem to be, and at first, from the water oozing through the seal-skin, very uncomfortable, they are generally, even by Europeans, admitted to be the most desirable means of conveyance., The missionaries use them on their coast voyages, which extend more than 120 miles. Certainly they can stand neither rough sea nor ice, and in unfavourable weather have to lie on shore for days together; on the other hand, they are light to carry, and in spite of their fragile appearance are wonderfully firm and capa- cious. Such a skin-boat can carry a weight of thirty FUETHEE STAY IN FEIEDRIOHSTHAL, 195 Danish, tons. A Umiak, however, never travels alone — a man in a Kajak (the Kajalik) always accompanies it. Either it is the owner himself, or some other native (as for example is customary with the travelling missio- naries), hired for the purpose. At certain times, namely in summer, when the Greenlanders move from place to place, whole fleets of these vessels may be met with, which on such occasions are generally lively enough. The bacon-face of old Sybilla, who had taken such a fancy to Philipp, or " Bilik " as she called him, beamed with deligh.t as she saw her darling travelling round the harbour in a canoe. But it was not so easy to keep above water, and no easy task for an inexperienced person to keep the legs stretched out so straight. The natives, however, greeted this first attempt with joyful grins. They were already on the best of footing with our men, and a small exchange of civilities took place in the most peaceful and satisfactory way. Even the female servants at the mission were soon sociable and trustful. Konrad had installed himself precentor, and made the girls sing some choruses ; and we were surprised to hear how true and correctly these people sang. Certainly they drawled every melody frightfully ; and the execution of the hymn, " We had built a stately house," to which they had adapted Greenland words, sounded in most wonderful fashion from the lips of the native ladies. We had already gone to rest, when two Umiaks with women and children arrived from the Fjord, and at once encamped by our boats, carrying on such a loud conver- sation througli the night, that no one could sleep. As we came down to the strand the next morning, it was alive with men, women, and children, who from their 2 196 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. dirty appearance showed to great disadvantage compared with the people of the mission. For the last time we sat in the hospitable circle of the Friedrichsthalers at breakfast : we then took our departure. The few days we had spent here had served to attach us so sincerely to the inhabitants of the Mission, that parting was painful ; with much emo- tion we spoke our thanks to our dear kind hosts. We took leave of the women on the shore who had remained behind, and also of the natives who had come to see us. The goodFriedrichsthalers had provided us plentifully with food — fresh baked bread, butter, sugar and coffee. With three cheers we set to at the oars, and soon the " Look-out" mountain hid the friendly Friedrichsthal from our eyes. We were accompanied in state. Mr. Gericke and his little daughter conducted us in the Umiak, which was also filled with the whole household, as far as the next station ; and twelve natives in canoes formed our escort. On the other side of the Narksamiut, under the before- mentioned high towering cape, lies Igikait, the Her- julfsnas of the old Norsemen. There is but little of the walls left as evidence of former European dwellings; but some years ago it is said that the waters of the Narksamiut washed up a coffin with the body of an ordained priest. At this day there lives in the long- abandoned settlement an old European, who has learnt to renounce the world, and as a free man with little means leads a life of liberty. This inhabitant of Igikait is named Hagen, a tough, hospitable Dane, in his fiftieth year, who came into the country as a subordinate official, and married a half-caste woman, a " Blanding," ' and " "Blanding" signifies a half-hreed, and is the term commonly- used by the Danes all over Greenland. PURTHEB STAY IN FJJIEDEICHSTHAL. 197 now with the permission of the Government lives a sort of improvised idyl at Igikait. His whole wealth consists of a large herd of goats, which in summer find plenty of nourishment on the green coast. He and his family live in a house constructed exactly like the Greenlanders', but more roomy, and it diflfered in the interior by being clean and airy. His wife and daughter, like all the people here, except Europeans, . wear the Greenland women's dress; the difference, however, is' favourably seen in those of European descent, and struck us in these women, for up to this time we had only seen full-blooded Greenlanders. Indeed, Hagen's slim daughter, with her dehcate complexion and dreamy northern features, did not look amiss. A son of Mr. Hagen's had a situation in Jvigtuk as trader in the service of the Danisli Company. The youngest son was to accompany us in his canoe to Nennortalik, where he was going to be confirmed. After our greeting, we did not stay long at Igikait. Hagen had spread his treasures on the shore ; that is, he had prepared a row of tubs full of fresh milk, and invited us in an idiom, composed of Danish, Greenlandish, and broken German to partake of them. Those who wanted any took moderately, and in order to put the poor man to no further trouble, we took a hasty leave. Mr. Gericke remained behind with the people of the mission. It was really a hard moment when we shook hands with him and his for the last time. The good girls could not help weeping, and gave us their hands over and over again. As we sat in the boats and pushed from the shore, they called and nodded after us. We journeyed on ; the neighbourhood of Friedrichsthal soon 19S THE GBEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. disappeared from our sight ; our convoy liad also dimi- nished ; some canoes had remained in Igikait, and some had gone back. We were now alone with Jonathan, Hagen's son (whom we were to take to Nennortalik), and a volunteer, who having just had a son born to him begged Mr. Hildebrandt to be godfather to it. We had thrown a rope to Jonathan, who as pUot tugged with all his might at the flotilla, while our volunteer made all kinds of artistic strokes with his weapons. Although the ice on our way reached pretty close to the land, we came across no hindrance; only that, as the wind was against us, we had to lay upon our oars. Wild mountain chains formed with their sharply cut contoiu'S a most lovely distant view. About noon we caught sight of a high Greenland mountain ; like an obelisk, the thin rocky peak rises boldly into the clouds.* Cape Bgede, too, of evil repute on account of the piled-up ice, came in sight. At a small island (which bore the high- sounding though not easily pronounced name "Kiker- tarsoeitsiak ") we landed for a short rest. Some ptarmigan provoked the bloodthirsty appetites of our hunters at once ; and even our Greenland godfather could not allow this opportunity of showing his dexterity in fire-arms to pass, without a^v ailing himself of it. Once more we were all together, and the cold cakes from Friedrichsthal were ■• The height of this mountain was stated to us to be 12,000 feet, which is considerably above the mark. The highest yet ascertained is on the north-west coast, from 6000 to 7000 feet. The highest peak (over 10,000 feet in height) was discovered by the Germania. In Southern Greenland they reach scarcely 4000 feet. In the interior, near the Tessermiut Fjord, is a mountain, to which they give the name Napersorsoak. This has now been ascended by Europeans, and accord- ing to Dr. Rink's statement, is at the most 4000 feet high. I 'I' ) I FUETHEK STAY IN FBIEUEIOHSTHAL. 199 very acceptable. Even for the natives who, lying on the rocks, were watching our movements with longing eyes, we laid out two good portions; for Mr. Starick told us that we were to give our pilot Jonathan somethings if we did not wish to wound his feelings ; indeed he would have felt it so deeply, that very little would have made him turn back and go home. There was, therefore, nothing left for us to do, but leave the godfather's empty stomach unsupplied. But Jonathan was a good fellow ; as he received his share, he divided it good-naturedly with his countryman, and both chewed with full cheeks as for a wager. About four o'clock, we reached the vicinity of Nen- nortalik — in German, " Bear Island." Here is a small Danish store, or provision depot; this was the end of this day's journey, and was about half way to Lich- tenau. Over against this island lie others, which rise into rather high steep mountains. Not until the harbour is reached, do the few houses of the place come in sight. We had been already seen from the land ; soon we were surrounded by a whole fleet of canoes; and Jonathan, who had fastened his up, and now sat with us in the boat, thought not a little of this new honour. As we neared the island, some of our companions left us and hurried forwards ; and not long afterwards loud salvos were heard, as if the destruction of a fortress were determined on, the surrounding mountains re-echoing the sound two and threefold. For a festive recep- tion from the Danes we were not in the least prepared ; there was no end to the firing. As we turned the last rocky promontory, which had hidden Nennortalik from our view, we saw that the banks of the harbour were 200 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. crowded with people, from the midst of whom shots rose in the air every now and then. Again and again the crowd broke into howls of deHght. More than three hundred natives— men, women, and children — waited our arrival. We had hoisted our flag. As a return greeting, the Danish colours fluttered from the station-house. "We had ' some difficulty in preventing the people, in their wilUngness to serve us, from pulling us to land in the boats. The men really tore each other, in order to lay their hands on the painter. At length the figure of a European pushed through the crowd; it was the mer- chant, Mr. Rosing, who now welcomed us, and invited us to accept his hospitality. The ceremonious politeness of the man left us in doubt as to whether he had provided this festive reception for "us ; but he soon enlightened us himself. He admitted openly, that for his part he would not have wasted so much powder upon us ; besides which, it was Esra who had gone from one island to the other, relating our story, and had thus caused all the natives to assemble from all parts to receive us in this alarming manner. I had already seen Esra's friendly face in the crowd and nodded to him ; that his countrymen should be assembled in such numbers seemed to make him very happy. Shortly after our landing, the natives dispersed in their " Umiaks " and " Kajaks." It had not escaped me that the type of population at Nennortalik differed essentially from that of Friedrichsthal. What we after- wards remarked in all Danish colonies and outlying towns we here noticed for the first time, namely, the preponderance of European features, even amongst the Greenland natives. Indeed, those who wish to know the genuine unmixed Greenlanders, will only find them at the FURTHER STAY IN FRIBDRICHSTHAL. 201 Moravian mission- villages in South Greenland ; the people of the Danish settlements and their neighbourhood, are for the most part "Blandings," amongst whom the European stamp prevails. Even in Nennortahk we saw girls with flaxen hair, blue eyes, and delicate white com- plexions ; the men's physiognomies, too, were far more intelhgent than in the full-blooded Greenlander; here and there we saw beards, though very scanty ones. Owing to the thinly-scattered population of Greenland, one must not be astonished at the striking mixture of the European race which everywhere prevails ; and still less so, when one takes into consideration that, owing to circumstances, an intermingling of the natives with the Europeans must occur ; the missionaries and the higher civil officers of the Danish colonies have European wives, and their children are brought up in Europe. Again, the lower servants — coopers, carpenters, oil- melters, and so on — from their scanty earnings, are not in a position to keep their families in European style : circumstances compel them, accordingly, to marry in Greenland. The issue of these marriages never have the opportunity of being educated in Europe. In some cases they are engaged by the Danish Government, or some relations in their own country take them; but, as I said before, few are so fortunate ; the greater number remain in the country, adopting its customs, lan- guage, dress, and manners of living, and retaining but little signs of their descent beyond the features. I had the opportunity of making acquaintance with the fourth generation of a Danish family which had become entirely Greenlandish. Considering this change in so short a time, we can no longer wonder that, on his arrival in 202 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Greenland, Hans Egede found no trace of his Norse countrymen who had settled there hundreds of years before. The remains of them had been absorbed amongst the natives. Mr. Rosing, who welcomed us kindly to his house, informed us that he had authentic news that the brig Constance had reached Julianeshaab. He regretted at the same time that he had not heard of us before, as shortly before our arrival he had sent a boat to Julianes- haab, which could have announced our arrival there. Now, he maintained, there was little prospect that the Constance would take us with her ; for having a second Grreenland journey to make this summer, she would only unload and put to sea again ; that she had been much hindered by the ice, and therefore her stay in JuUaneshaab would consist of only a few days. Further, Mr. Rosing affirmed that we could not reach the colony in time to accompany her. He consoled us with the prospect of Ivikat, a station lying sixteen miles north from Julianeshaab in the Arsut Fjord, where generally in summer several ships come to load with Kryolite.^ The prospect of a long boat voyage, however, did not please us. What should we do now ? After a short consulta- tion, we formed our resolutions. As the boat had already left Nennortalik, we had to look out for another, natu- rally our eyes fell upon Jonathan. At the same time we begged Mr. Rosing to write to the superintendent of the colony, and ask him to assure us a passage in the Constance. Mr. Rosing was willing, and Jonathan ' A mineral peculiar to this locality, produced from soda, a kind of clay much used in dying, from which Aluminium [? Alumina. — Tr.j and other products may be extracted. FURTHER STAT IN FEIBDBICHSTHAL. 203 was soon won over. We should stay in Lichtenau for the answer. After dinner, while Mr. Rosing was writing the letter, we took a walk round the neighbourhood. Nennortalik belongs to the superior class of settlements in Greenland. The dwelling-houses of the merchants, painted black, with white window-frames and peaceful- looking gardens, make a pleasing impression ; but the houses of the natives are built of stone and turf, some having a roof made of planks nailed together. The fit- tings of the interior were thoroughly Greenlandish. A narrow low passage leads to a room of very modest dimen- sions, with a wainscoting all round. The greater part of this room is taken up with the wooden benches, which form the sleeping-place of all the inhabitants. The walls are decorated with gaudy lithographs, sometimes even gilt-framed looking-glasses. Next to the window, as a luxury, stands a small table ; and instead of chairs, one or two chests. To a European, a stay in such a house is a difficult matter. The evaporation from its occupants, the train-oil lamps, the half-putrid food, the state of corruption of the skin-clothing, poison the atmosphere to such a degree that it is almost impossible to breathe. There are means of airing the dwellings, in the large window which takes up the whole south side of the wall, but it is so besmeared, that the daylight only comes in thick and gloomy ; still it never enters the heads of the people to open it. The island itself is wild and rather flat, strewn with erratic boulders ; and on the west side it rises to a high mountain ridge, the outer promontory of which forms the well-known Cape 204 THE GEKMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. Bgede. Mosses, lichens, cranberries, and bilberries, form of their kind a luxuriant vegetation, if the term " luxuriant " is not inappropriately applied to these waste rocks. Jonathan was soon ready for the journey, but beggedj as he received the letter, that he might have a few hours' rest ; as he feared that, if not, he should be overtaken by sleep and so not arrive at the right time ; promising to hurry afterwards and bring the answer to Lichtenau without delay. This was willingly granted to the good fellow. The evening we spent with our kind host; at night a small house sheltered us, which is set apart by the colony for strange travellers ; for whoever travels in Greenland- must be beholden to hospitality, as there are no inns. Our room was, of course, not fitted up with too much comfort ; but our sleep was, nevertheless, a blessed one. CHAPTER X. LICHTENAU. EXCURSION TO THE ISLAND OP UNAETOK. JOUENEY Departure from Nennortalik. — Igdlopait. — Mission in Igdlopait. — Arrival in Lichtenau. — Greenland women. — Mode of Life in Lichtenan. — Message from Julianeshaab. — Determination to remain still in Lichtenau. — Evening service. — Excursion to the Island of TJnartok. — Warm springs there. — Another message from Julianes- haab. — Prospect of returning home. — Parting presents. — Depar- ture from Lichtenau. — -Arrival in Julianeshaab. Cheerpullt we started the next morning, with a favour- able breeze. Tbe straits between the island Sermesok were rapidly passed through, past Tessermiut and TJnartok Fjords as they are all called. By noon we had reached Igdlopait. This island is a branch of the Lichtenau mission. A missionary with wife and children lives here amongst eighty natives. As our boat neared the island, the shore became alive with people ; here no one had an idea of our visit. Mr. Starick related our story to the crowd assembled on the banks in a few words, and went before us up to the mission. Mr. Starick' s speech raised the people's interest in us. An old grey-headed Green- lander held out his hand to me, saying, " I thank God with you that He saved you so wonderfully, and brought you to us." Igdlopait, the youngest of the mission stations under the care of Mr. Warmow, is in a lonely ' By Professor Laube. 206 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. situation on an island. Tlie inhabitants are dirty and filthy to a degree. The men's skin-clothes were torn, and the women were going about with wild unkempt hair. The mission-house, neat and attractive, with a grey slate roof, seemed to invite us hospitably. A smooth road led from the village to the dwelling of the missionary, Mr. Hilbig. He was not at home, but had gone with his colleague from Lichtenau to the Fjord, to collect wood for the winter. His wife, a friendly countrywoman, wel- comed us heartily. Not less amiable was Mrs. Warmow from Lichtenau, who happened to be on a visit to her. In order to provide for our unexpected quartering, Mrs. Warmow decided to return at once with us. We were really sorry to leave Mrs. Hilbig alone in Igdlopait. What a task, what deprivations does the wife of a Green- land missionary take upon herself one may imagine, by picturing the loneliness which surrounds a missionary's family on a barren island in the Arctic Sea, bare of trees and shrubs, among a rough people but little susceptible of civilization, natives whose culture and salvation they unceasingly sacrifice themselves to promote. A few goats and hens form her only companionship. Even the blossom and fruit of family life the poor settlers dare only half enjoy, for custom and order demand that, when the missionaries' children are about seven years old, they shall be sent to Europe to be brought up in a school of the fraternity. They do not see their parents again for many years, when they have become comparative strangers to them. We would not stay longer than was necessary ; and as Mrs. Warmow could not be dissuaded from accompany- ing us, we started in the boats at four in the afternoon. \\ ^ r ^^*V ^ iWHl J l" l' LICHTENATT. 207 "Without a guide it would have been impossible to have gone any distance, as a thick fog had fallen, which in Greenland happens invariably with the north wind. In about three hours we had reached Lichtenau. This is the oldest South Greenland German Mission (it was founded in 1772), and hes four miles inwards in the Lichtenau Fjord, which stretches thirty-two miles beyond it. On a small half-island, crowned with a rocky plateau, stands the mission and the native village, the huts of which are grouped around the rocks in the form of an amphitheatre. The mission-house of Lichtenau is the largest we have seen. Three missionaries work here : Mr. Warmow (as superintendent), and Messrs. Spindler and Kogel. Like that of Friedrichsthal, it is made of wood, and is only one story high. On the ground-floor is a large school-room, kitchen, store-room, and guest-room; up one flight of stairs the friendly and comfortable dwelling of the missionary, A small vegetable garden lies in front of the house. On one side of the road stands the old decaying church, and on the other storehouses and stables. The harbour is very comfortable, and allows the boats to lie steady on the soft sand. As we neared Lichtenau we were at once seen, as the fog had rolled on to the land, and every one ran down to the strand to see the strangers from far distant Europe. Although the greater part of the inhabitants of Lichtenau were out at the seal fishery, there were more at home than there were at Friedrichsthal ; and we were soon convinced that the Greenlander, left to himself, would never appreciate the comfort and advantage of German cleanhness. We were filled with horror at the sight of some old crones, 208 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. whom curiosity had allured from their huts. The features of the young girls and women are, according to our sesthetic opinions, far below the level of the agreeable, and the bodily mien is more repulsive than attractive. The dress of the Greenland women differs little from that of the men. They wear boots covered with gaudy leather em- broidery, which reach to the knee ; short drawers of seal- skin, which without straps are hung around the hips, fitting closely to the body; and the coat-of-mail shaped " Natzek," pointed before and behind, which proceeds from the fur round the body. The narrow drawers compel them to walk Avith bent knees and body bent forward, shuffling one foot before the other, giving them some- what the appearance of apes. If this in itself is not nice, imagine a pair of old crones, with all the burden and de- formity of old age ; and added to that, broad, wrinkled faces, with noses smeared thickly with snuff, and bleared eyes, surrounded with disordered fluttering grey hair! I made as large a detour as possible, to avoid the crowd, in advancing to meet the approaching mis- sionary, Mr. Spindler, and his kind wife, who welcomed us heartily, and expressed their pleasure in receiving such an unexpected visit from countrymen. Mr. Spindler, a very intelligent and learned man, who gave us much information on Greenland affairs, is in the prime of life, and seems not yet to be quite acclimatized. Mrs. Spindler, a Hvely talkative woman, provided for us as well as she could. The mission-house shelters three missionaries and their families. Only Mr. Spindler was at home, his two colleagues having gone to fetch wood from the Lichtenau Fjord : whilst the northern lying coast, namely the neighboiirhood of Lichtenfels, receives LICHTENAU. 209 every year a considerable quantity of drift-wood from the Arctic current, the missionaries in the south are obliged to bring all necessary firing, partly from Europe, partly from the inside of the Fjord, and often from a great distance. The birch^ and -willow ' are seldom seen on the outlying islands, and on the shore of the mainland are very scant of growth ; but the farther one gets into the Fjord they become stronger and stouter, and the banks of inlets are often covered with a considerable quantity of brushwood as high as a man. This in the summer months is gathered, and often conveyed many days' journey; for the source of supply is yearly more and more distant, owing to the slowness of the growth. European coals have long since had to help, as the moss here and there met with cannot be used. Like the firewood, the winter fodder for the hve stock (Lichtenau possesses three oxen and some goats) has to be fetched with difficulty from a distance. The few small grass plats, which give a scanty crop of hay, He miles apart, and often just as far from the mission. All this business is attended to by the missionaries and their wives ; and during the short summer they are absent weeks together. Mr. Spindler vnshed at once to send for his colleague fi:'om the Fjord; but as we intended leaving the next day, in order to reach Julianeshaab ia time to find the ship, we of course did not consent. Jonathan reappeared at last. He had, as the mis- sionaries had premised, made all speed ; but he had been delayed by the fog. His answer by word of mouth from the captain of the Danish ship was, that we were to come, and he would take us all with him. He also ' Betula nana L. ' Salix herhacea, reticulata, arhuscula. P 210 THE GBEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. brought a letter from the Governor of the colony, which was very laconic : " The German Arctic Explorers could not sail in the Constance, as she must start at once, having to make another voyage to Greenland." It further said, that we had better go on to Ivikat ; that there we might meet with a vessel which would take us up. Of the possibility of the next expected ship, the Peru, granting us a passage, there was not one word. There we sat, but little edified by the amiability of the Danish ofl&cial, consulting as to what we should do. In about three weeks the Peru might arrive;' but the missionaries were of opinion that, from national con- siderations, we had less chance of a passage by this ship. But in any case, to travel to Ivikat by the boats would be very difficult; added to which, according to our calcu- lations, it would take us at least ten days, supposing that the favourable weather we had previously had should still accompany us. And now the further question arose, should we, above all, find a ship there, which would take us ? and, if so, what sort of one ? Long we con- sulted. At last we decided, that as in any case we must now claim help from the mission-station, the head of the house should be called in from the Fjord, and as he should advise, so we would act. Again Mr. Starick and Mr. Hildebrandt undertook the boat journey. Dr. Laube would this time have liked to have been of the party, but for a long time past he had felt too unwell, and preferred remaining at home. That same evening some young fellows arrived in a boat from Julianeshaab on their way to Nennortalik. They thought they could not allow the opportunity to pass without obtaining at least a handful of tobacco, and, if LICHTENAU. 211 possible, something to eat. As they had heard from Jonathan on the way of us and his mission, they impro- vised the message — we were to come to Juhaneshaab at once, and take ship in the Constance. Their object, however, they did not attain, for the missionaries knew the men too well not to know what such a message was worth. The next morning the boat brought back Mr. Warmow and the messengers. The " Isersarnak," or wind of the Fjord, which always blows inward, had helped him much on the outward journey, but had made the homeward much more difficult. Directly after breakfast we held a consultation. Mr. "Warmow thought it better to waste no more words on the Dane, but try and take passage in a Kryohte ship from Ivikat.* The journey to that place he admitted to be very difficult, and he thought it unad- visable to begin it at once. He suggested that we should have a good rest at Lichtenau, and in about eight days start for Ivikat. Mr, Warmow's kind proposition pleased us. We consented all the more readily as he promised to accompany us, Mr. Starick being compelled by time and circumstances to begin his return journey to Friedrichsthal as soon as possible. The proposal was therefore agreed to. And now I hoped to have an opportunity of scouring the neighbourhood. An excursion for the next day to the Island of Unartok and the Unartok Fjord, with a lodging at Igdlopait, was agreed upon. To-day (it was Sunday) we remained at home. As the greater part of the population were away, there was no early morning * The chief place to which Kryolite is exported is Philadelphia, though some cargoes go to Hamburg, where the material is further prepared. A' 2 212 THE OEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. prayer ; but evening united us all in the school-room for a short service. It was a very strange spectacle that we here witnessed. In the old, decaying, plain-looking room, which might have been taken for a barn, if the small organ, some wind in- struments, the benches, and a green covered table had not stamped it as something else, we sat with the missionaries' wives on either side of the preacher; before us, on the benches, the native men and women, and our people. Near the preacher and ourselves stood the children. The service began with a Greenland hymn, which was sung by those present in the usual drawling manner, but other- wise very nicely. Then a sermon in their native tongue. The adult natives followed the discourse very devoutly ; the children seemed but little impressed, and passed the time in amusing themselves. After the Greenland ser- mon followed a German hymn, which we sang badly enough without accompaniment, and then the preacher addressed a few earnest words to us which did not fail of their effect. In simple words, he thanked the Most High for our preservation; then a hymn, and it was over.^ The excursion was carried out the next day. The Island of Unartok, which is about twelve miles from Lichtenau, particularly interested us, because of the warm spring there. It had been mentioned by Ivar Bardsen, the ancient Northman chronicler, who wrote in the beginning of the fifteenth century upon the Norse settlements in Greenland. According to his account, a Benedictine nunnery stood in the neighbourhood ; and the spring, which in winter was much hotter than in summer (it may have steamed more in the chilly atmo- sphere) was then much used by the colonists as a bath. LICHTBNAU. 213 By noon we had reached the island. Some natives, who met us on the way, had, doubtless to the neglect of their daily labour, preferred following us. The island, like the rest of Greenland, is entirely barren and desolate, rather flat towards the north-east, but rising in a hilly chaui to the south-west. Nowhere could we discover any trace of a building. One would scarcely fancy that a monastery, according to our notions, could in the course of time so utterly and entirely disappear from the face of the earth. Only the suppo- sition that the ancient Northmen erected their buildings similarly to the missionaries of the present day, of wood, and that when deserted by the inhabitants the natives broke them up when necessary and carried them else- where, could give the statement of the Northman chro- nicler any semblance of truth. The warm spring is, however, there. On the western strand, scarce a gunshot from the shore, is a shallow basin twenty feet in diameter and three feet deep, covered with fine granitic sand. The water issues from the ground in three places, emitting, at the same time, an odourless gas. The temperature of the spring, according to my spirit bulb thermometer, was 93° 87' Fahr, About twenty paces westward, and somewhat higher, lies a second smaller spring, which is deeper and full of stones. The whole surface is covered thickly with a slimy, yellowish brown deposit, evidently of vegetable origin. The temperature of this spring I found to be 102° 87' Fahr. The water had a shghtly alkaline taste, and left a white precipitate. The higher temperature of the soil, caused by the springs, is shown by the fresh vegetation v/hich in a small circle surrounds both basins, forming a pleasant contrast to the 214 THE GEKMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. dead aspect of the other part. The green land is a spot which reminds us of our native meadows. "Water- cresses, orchids, wild buttercups, and other meadow flowers showed their gay heads, and on the edges of the spring basin grew a species of reed which reminded us of our pond-reed at home. At the present day the spring is but little used as a bath. The natives, of course, never think of giving their persons the benefit of a bath, and the missionaries seldom visit this outlying island. Besides, the draught of cold air towards the basin deprives one of all pleasure in bathing. After supplying myself with a sample of the water and some pieces of rock, which to the natives seemed a strange proceeding, we left the island, to make another visit toXJnartok to see the so-called " soft-stone" rock mineral. This stone (veegsteen) is a species of talc, of great importance in a Greenland household, and formerly still more so. Before pottery was known, " soft-stone " was the only material out of which they carved their household vessels ; and even now, although Danish ore provides iron and copper utensils, they make pans and saucepans from it. Above all, it is necessary for the construction of their lamps. This lamp is a crescent- shaped stone, hollowed out and fastened to a low three-legged wooden stand. The shallow depth is fiUed with train oil, which is furnished in the following manner : — the person who prepares the lamp takes a piece of seal blubber in his mouth, and with wonderful dexterity sucks out all the oil, and squirts it into the lamp. Then some dry moss is strewn over as a wick, and pressed tight to the concave edge and lighted. This lamp, which gives both light and heat (for they even LICHTENATJ. 215 prepare their meals by it) is, of course, to be found in every bouse, and is (so to speak) tbe symbol of Greenland family-life, for all gather round it. Weights for anghng are also cut out of " soft-stone," and it is interesting to know that the Northmen made similar use of this material. The stone, however, is not common; some- what plentiful in North Greenland, it is seldom met with in the southern districts, and is often brought from the north. Bast Greenland is not quite wanting in it, as the name of an island under the Kolbergerheide Glacier proves; it is called Okusiksak, which in the Greenland tongue means " soft-stone." This Fjord, not so deep as its neighbours, is surrounded by a beautifiil panorama. At its end opens a ravine which allows a wide prospect. By keeping a straight course along this narrow valley one could reach Friedrichsthal, but from the necessity of climbing over numerous fallen rocks and other difficulties, the way by water is preferred. Scarcely had our boat entered the Fjord than the apparently desert shore became ahve. Inhabitants of Lichtenau and Igdlopait were here, stationed on the herring fishery; and as just at that time there were none to catch, the whole community were idling in their accustomed manner. Orn* arrival brought them to their feet, and soon they were at the shore calHng and scream- ing against one another, and first one and then another wanting to show us a -good landing-place. It was with much trouble that we could keep them from the boat, as they wished to drag it, with us in it, along the stony rugged strand. Of course all of them fcUowed us on our way to the " soft-stone " rock, except a few old crones, who, being no longer able to walk over the 216 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. rough ground, set themselves to prepare a dainty meal of herrings for us. At the " soft-stone " rock itself there was little to be seen, for the natives had long since so cut away the block that it scarcely rose above the ground ; and so we thought it better to travel onwards without waiting for the dainty meal prepared for us by the old women, who, however, were not at aU offended, but eat it themselves. Not so easy was it to leave the Fjord as to enter it. The Isersamak blew strongly against us, and it took many strokes of the oars and much time ere we saw Igdlopait. "We decided to spend the whole of the next day on the island, and enjoy once more the hospi- tality of Mrs. Hilbig. Amongst other things, Mrs. Hilbig set before us at the evening meal a dish pecuhar to Greenland : young shoots of the Angelica steeped in vinegar and sugar. This piquant aromatic food, which would do honour to any great table, had our full appreciation, and the good beer no less, which awaited us once more on this desert rocky island. Our amiable hostess rejoiced in our blessed hunger and thirst ; but the times of Friedrichsthal were happily over, so without being brought into difficulties by too great a hunger, we sought our nightly couch, which we prepared by placing side by side the forms in the church. Of Igdlopait and its hospitable mission-house, how- ever, we were to see no more. As we were at breakfast the following morning, a E^jak post arrived from Lich- tenau. We were to go thither immediately. A message had arrived from Juhaneshaab that the Constance was waiting for us, and would take us all ! What could now tempt us to remain a moment ? We departed at once. Filled with thankfulness, we bade good-bye to our kind LICHTENAU. 217 hostess, wlio participated in our joy. "Witli tearful eyes sh.e sent ter greetings to those at home, whither her heart so often turned from this desert strand. Returned to Lichtenau, our people were in an excited state of mind. The news forwarded to Igdlopait had been overtaken by a fresh message from Julianeshaab, by which Captain Bang informed us that, being detained by the ice, he had only reached Pardleet, an island near Julianeshaab, where he at first thought of waiting for us, but had now gone on to Julianeshaab to take in provisions, and by unloading some oil make room for us. What kissing and rejoicing there was amongst us, as the glad tidings spread that now we should soon have started on our homeward journey. Whilst our good hostess was busy preparing a plentiful meal in the kitchen, Mr. War- mow was looking after provisions for the boat ; and that we might never forget our stay in Lichtenau, there was ■ placed before us quite a number of beautiful little souve- nirs, to remind us of our kind entertainers. We returned these kindnesses as well as we could ; and as, when once having reached Julianeshaab and the Constance we no longer needed our boats, we gave one to the missionaries of Lichtenau. Several of the musical-boxes, too, which, in spite of many hard knocks, were still sound, we divided among the missionaries ; and those of our weapons, too, which we did not want, we left to our kind, hospitable friends. It was high noon when we took leave of our hosts. Again the whole population were on the strand : the men did not cease firing their guns, and others sat in their canoes ready to give us their escort. Amidst hurrahs and farewell greetings, the travellers began their journey. -5f 218 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. Once more we were to be terrified by the malice of an iceberg. Before the harbour of Lichtenau lay some small, malicious, jagged bergs. Some were so weak that the natives' shooting put them in danger of demolition, but one in its last moments would fain commit a crime, which, for- tunately for us, did not succeed. Ourselves in the whale- boat had just passed it ; the small boat, with the native crew and Mr. Hildebrandt, was following us ; the large one was farther behind, when the berg burst, falling with a rustling and cracking over the craft beneath. It did not, however, touch it, but the masses of ice fell close to it in the water, which rose in huge waves, hurhng the boat far away. For one moment we looked with horror at the spectacle ; but our horror changed at once to joy, as we saw the little craft dancing on the water, and the natives, wet as poodle dogs from the spurting of the water, spitting, and spluttering, and drying their faces, which for a long time had never been free from dirt. In a short time Lichtenau had for ever disappeared from our sight. At the entrance of the Fjord is a small outlying town, Sudproven, Here we rested a moment to greet the merchant and his wife once more. Here our convoy took leave of us, and the three boats made the last portion of the road to the colony alone. In the evening we reached the Island of Karsok. The natives, who at first hid themselves, came forward when they saw Mr. "Warmow, and received bread and meat with delight. They lived high above the strand on a cliff, the house rather large and in good order. Our people, who followed them into it, were immediately regaled with coffee, which they praised. Through channels and straits, between a labyrinth of LICHTBNAU. 219 islands, we continued our journey. This night (it was the 21st to the 22nd) it was scarcely dark at midnight ; but the fog, which in the evening had lain around the tops of the mountains, grew thicker and thicker, and towards morning fell in a soft rain. After midnight we passed the Island of Omarsuk and a great heart-shaped moun- tain, which the Greenlanders on that account call the Mountain of the World, and neared the district of Julianeshaab. Towards five in the morning we reached the entrance of the Fjord. Here on a clifi" we took a little rest. The heavy work on this long boat journey, on which we could not once use the sail, had told greatly upon our men, and added to that was the damp, cold weather, fi'om which we were quite unprotected. But the hot strong coffee, which soon ran into the mugs from the faithful old kettle, and a good portion of bread and meat, helped us considerably. Actively we went on. Soon we were between the islands which stretch before the colony, the largest of which, right in front of JuHaneshaab, is called Storo. Two hours more, and the end of our last journey in Greenland — Julianeshaab — was reached. CHAPTER XI. IN JULTANESHAAB. EXCTTESIOlSr TO IGALLIKO.' Julianeshaab. — Unfriendly behaviour of the Governor of the Colony. — Missionary Draxler. — Shelter on board the Constance. — Visit to Dr. Gundlack.- — Greenland leather-work. — ^A ball. — Excursion up the Igalliko-Fjord. — Northman ruins. — The Egede family in Igal- liko. — ^Peculiar customs. — Inspection of the plan of the Northman buildings. — Geological observations. — Return. — Pastor Anton. — Lake near Julianeshaab. — On the Storefjeld. Julianeshaab is situated in 60° 43' N.L. and 46° 1' W.L. (Greenwicli) ; a group o£ islands, some of larger, some of smaller circumference, lies in front of tlie real continent. Tlie colony lies in a small Fjord, and you are only aware of its existence when you are near to it. Julianeshaab is tlie most southerly Danish colony, as well as the most southerly point which can be reached by large vessels. The small outlying towns — JSTennortalik, South and Bast Proven, and so on — are only visited by small coasting vessels. Founded about the end of the last century, Julianeshaab first rose in the present one to be a colony. From the term colony, in regard to Julianeshaab, one must not form too great expectations. On either bank of a stream, the outlet of a lake which Ues half an. Bnghsh mile inland, the settlement is built along the harbour on the slope of a mountain. The centre is occupied by the ' By Professor Laube. IN JULIANESHAAB, 221 residence of tlie superintendent of the colony, wHch is close to the harbour ; next to that lives the doctor ; on the other side of the stream stands what, for Greenland, is a stately church, and the dwelling of the preacher. The house of the clerks of the colony, some stores, and a small house for strangers, are the only buildings built in the European style; they are all painted black, but look quite neat with their white window-frames. The remain- ing houses, inhabited by the natives, are partly the old turf huts, and partly a mixture of Greenland and European, as indeed the inhabitants are, too, being mostly half -breeds. These huts have a slanting plank roof; their interior fittings and their whole appearance are Greenlandish : even the dung-heaps are not wanting, though there are exceptions. A high, round-topped mountain, the StareiQeld, overtops the whole, whilst the lower highland (the Harefjeld) juts out as a cape into the sea. The harbour is large and roomy. It is, as a rule, only visited by one ship in a year. Long before we had rounded the HareJQeld clifis we had looked eagerly for the longed-for journey's end. At last, as we rounded the last of them, the colony lay close before us, with the trim brig, the Constance. Our boat's flag was of course hoisted, and it was not long before the Danish colours fluttered fi:"om the Constance. Our first visit was to the vessel on whose hospitable deck we were to begin our homeward journey. A happy feeling came over us as, after so long a time, we once more felt the planks of a good ship under oxir feet. We were received most heartily on board, and the seamen showed much interest in our sad story. After having stowed our luggage on and between decks, 222 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. tte question rose where should we stow ourselves ? The captain, officers, and Dr. Buchholz found shelter in the cabin, but the men had still to be cared for, as the room for their reception was not yet prepared. We hoped to find a sheltering roof for them in the colony in the mean- time; that was really necessary, as it still rained fast. And now we would at once pay a visit to the governor. He received us with cold ceremony, seemed to think it unnecessary to offer us a seat, and allowed himself very unwillingly to be drawn into conversation. This con- versation gave us more the idea of an examination than a conference. To our narrative the governor replied, now and then, by a short but very decided, " That I do not think." The question then followed as to whether we had enough provisions for the homeward journey. Upon the captain's answer, that in that respect we must trust to the goodness of our hospitable friends, and that we hoped to supply ourselves with much that was neces- sary in the colony, his worship merely answered, " If you have good Danish thalers in your pocket, you can buy all you want of me." For manners' sake, and as there were other guests present, we were offered a glass of wine. At length we asked about a lodging for our comrades who were out in the rain. Upon this point, too, the answer Was rough and short, " For them I have no room ; they must stay in the boats, or raise a tent and stay there." Upon our remarking that in rainy weather a stay in the boats was not exactly the thing, his worship said, half- sneeringly, " If you really have borne so much, a little rain will not kill you." With this answer we left." ^ It is a matter of great satisfaction to lis that in news received from Greenland from the Inspector-General of the Danish Colony, Herr IN JULIANESHAAB. 223 In Julianeshaab we had unexpectedly met a countryman and his family, Mr. Draxler, -who had been acting as missionary at Lichtenau, and was now going to Fried- ^ richsthal to free our friend Starick, who was to go to Lichtenfels. According to the custom of Grreenland, he travelled with two "Women's" boats. His people he had housed under a tent, but a traveller has to obtain a lodging on shore. To him we complained of the wants of our men, and he at once offered to take them into his own tent. Brave Captain Bang then came to the rescue. He learnt our trouble and gave his advice. The schoolmaster was fetched, the school-room opened, the forms removed, and our men were placed at once under dry shelter. Somewhat less imposing did the governor of the colony look, when later we saw him in his shop taking small coin from the natives for sugar and coffee. After seeking the doctor of the colony, who received us very kindly, on behalf of our sick comrade, we returned on board to arrange our things more comfortably. The room was scanty enough ; and as only two berths were provided in the cabin, and one we wanted for the sick man, the pilots preferred, as they would not go with the men, to make their lodging in the hold. We now, for the first time, experienced the disagree- ableness of a Greenland summer ; for when it did not rain, the dreadful swarm of gnats destroyed all peace in the open air. We visited our countrymen in the colony, and our men made acquaintance with the natives. The shy- ness of the people, who yesterday were gaping in crowds Eink, contained in a letter to Professor Laube, he expresses his regret tliat such a person should have been in office at the time. 224 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. at tte strangers, had vanislied. ; and they seemed, on the contrary, to take much pleasure in the intercourse with our people. "We, too, were introduced to the society of Julianeshaab. Dr. Gundlack invited us to coffee. Our kind host, who during the day had trudged about in heavy wooden shoes and long fur-lined coat, with a long pipe and a broad flop-hat, through the colony to his patients, or visiting friends, seemed not at all put out at our primitive dress. There we sat in a motley row, with three European ladies (a very silent elderly one and two young ones), and kept up a conversation. That same day Captain Hegemann signed the passage-contract with the Danish ofl&cial, and now there seemed no obstacle in the way of our homeward joiirney. But the weather would not change. An ashy grey fog enveloped the mountains, and the rain poured down- with- out intermission. "We had, therefore, nothing to do but to get rid of the time. The German missionaries were still there, and with them we passed some pleasant hours. But the next day separated us. The weather improved, and our friend hastened to his destination. The small fleet, with men, women, and children, and all the bag- gage, pulled up by the Constance once more, and our dear countrymen parted from us, sending many greetings to those at home. We much wanted to take some Green- land products home with us. The people in Julianeshaab were much more accessible to trading than the southern settlers, and also we had more time and opportunity to get acquainted with them ; so we soon found a woman, who, for a certain sum, was ready to sew us some shoes. The dwelling of this woman and her daughter differed advantageously from the surrounding Greenland houses. IN JULIANESHAAB. 225 Tte sitting-room, which was japanned with white varnish, was kept very clean, and ornamented with pictures, and the never-faihng looking-glass; the window-panes were transparent, which is a great matter in Grreenland. The inhabitants, now busied eagerly for us, were in their own persons laudable exceptions to the rule. Yery elabo- rate is the finishing and ornamenting of shoes with the customary leather mosaic in Greenland. "With untiring patience the women sew on little beads of leather in stripes, with thread made of seals' sinews. The preparation of this thread caused us some merriment. The tail-sinews are dried, then cut into filaments. As these filaments are not smooth and fit to sew with, they must first be prepared ; this is done by the sewer rolling the thread quickly under her hand over her cheek shining with grease. The price of the work was, of course, not high, and we were soon possessors of it. Our people, however, had become much more intimate with the natives. In the evening we went again on land. From the store resounded dance-music and merri- ment. Let the respected reader imagine a low square room, not- very large, feebly lit by the rays of an oil lamp hanging from the centre. In one corner stands an empty oil tub, on which two- Greenlanders have taken their stand, and are working with great delight at their fiddles. The melody and the manner of dancing which it elicits sounds very strange. According to the time of this music, the couple whirl round each other under the oil lamp. Man and woman crack and stamp with their feet and clap with the hands, at which the lady dancer in an opportune moment tickles her partner under the Q i:!26 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. nose with a tuft of hair. The couple now form chains and circles. After a short rest the dance begins again. Over the scene hangs a thick cloud of dust and smoke from the oil lamp, which only allows one to see the outlines of the native youths leaning against the walls. Por the amusement of the guests, they gave themselves up to the pleasures of the dance. Our men disported themselves bravely, and the Greenlanders showed them- selves agile dancers. Pleasure shone in their eyes,' and one could plainly see that, on the other side of the Arctic circle, the young folk dance as passionately as on this. Many of the ladies had dressed for the occasion ; but others, relying on their native charms, ventured contentedly into the ball-room in their everyday dress. The winding up of the festival consisted in a general coffee-drinking in a neighbouring house. Such dancing entertainments were of course repeated, and one was so noisy as to disturb the governor of the colony, who lived close by, from his slumbers. Driven from the store, the company withdrew to the Harefjeld, where, upon a somewhat swampy meadow, they kept it up till early morning. This fondness for dancing is moreover peculiar to- the full-blooded Greenlander, but the strict customs of the Moravian fraternity do not permit this amusement, and the missionaries have, therefore, declaimed against it. In the southern mission stations, where the inter- course of the community of the Moravian mission is less brisk, this is easily prevented. In the north, how- ever, it is more difficult ; in Gotthaab, for instance, where the inhabitants rejoice in unbridled dissoluteness. The neighbouring relatives come, too, to join in the revels. IN .TULIANESHAAB. 227 Two kinds of dances are customary in Greenland. The one is a social dance, resembling French quadrilles. Here, too, circles are made and groups formed. The step is peculiar. The foot is dragged and stamped according to the rhythm, and then again quickly brought up in time. The other is danced by two persons, and reminds me of the Hungarian " csardas." It is an ever seizing and escaping, a quick twisting, now together, now separately. Both dances are pretty, and show the goodnatured, as well as the wild expression of the national character perfectly. Moreover, the Green- lander dances the customary European dances quite as well as we do. The national dance-music does not enrich its treasures by teaching ; a sailor learned in the accordion brings this instrument with its new tunes over the sea, and the musically gifted Greenlander soon fiddles it after him. The Greenlanders' treasures of melody have now been enriched with some German tunes by our men. By degrees, our stay in the colony grew very weari- some. In vain we waited for a fair wind to run us out of the harbour. At last, after long rain, fine weather set in. But in the meantime, as the Constance could not run out, the fine days must be turned to account, and I found an opportunity for an excursion to the Fjord of Igalliko. On the boat voyage from Friedrichsthal to Julianes- haab, I had everywhere sought for traces of the ancient Norse buildings, which, according to the chart of the ArchEeological Society of Copenhagen, were to be found in many places ; but, except the small remains of Har- julfsnas, the Igikait of the Greenlander of- the present day, had not yet seen any. The district of Juhaneshaab, Q 2 228 THE GEBMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. however, was rich in thern. In all probability, the deep Fjord in the neighbourhood of this colony, had been, in the time of the Northman settlers, thickly peopled. In Julianeshaab itself, the Danish oflicials could tell us a good deal; for they pride themselves much on these monuments of their ancestors, and repeatedly offered to show us the ruins of the Church of Kakorlok near Kakorlok Fjord, though in the meantime they did not at all help us to profit by their invitation. We had, therefore, to ask for a boat and provisions. From the moment we went on board the Constance, we had given up all claim to our own, the possession of which had in reality gone over to the Danes. It was very hard for us to ask our hosts for anything they did not ofier, and thus the Norse ruins remained unvisited. From the Harefjeld, however, I examined them with the telescope, and even- tually I had an opportunity of making acquaintance with this ancient monument. A store of fresh meat is not easily obtained in Greenland; and some we wanted for the voyage. In the Igalliko Fjord, on the very spot where Erick Rauda's (the first Northman settler's) house is said to have stood, there now lived a Greenland family, which —the only one in the country— bred cattle. There, according to Captain Bang's opinion, we might hope to get some meat. A boat journey must, therefore, be made to it. The Danish sailors had very httle desire to pull a good forty miles to IgaUiko; our people on the contrary were ready enough to take to their oars for another day or two ; so. the crew was soon fixed upon, and I accom- panied the party. IN JULIANESHAAB. 229 The weather was lovely ; merrily the boat flew over the smooth surface of the wa'ter ; soon we were out of the Julianeshaab Fjord, and sailing between the island and the continent. A deep sea bay, overlooked by gloomy mountains, opened to our left. This was the Kakorlok Ijord, on the inner coast of which lay the ruins of a Forthman house, known by the name of the Cathedral of Kakorlok. Straight across the Fjord, and round Storo, did the road to Igalliko take us. The Fjord itself from its entrance to its end is thirty-two miles long. The overhanging rocks to the left as you sail inwards are very steep. Along the whole length, from beginning to end, there is scarcely a place to be found fit to haul the boat in ; and in many places it is utterly impossible, owing to the steepness of the rocks. The rocky masses which encircle the Fjord on this side belong to the mountain chain of Redekam, which runs between the two great Fjords north and south from Julianashaab up into the land. The opposite bank is in many places flatter, the ground rises more gradually, and between the distant lying rocks shines here and there the inland ice. The landscape here is decidedly much more pleasing. About the middle the Fjord sends out a short southerly arm. There once settled the Northmen, and the place was called Gammelgard; at this day the Greenlander calls the ruined town Kaksiarsuk. On the road hither, one naturally asks oneself how is it possible to breed cattle here ? At the time when the ancient settlers were here, it might have worn a some- what more habitable aspect; but to-day the eye sees nothing but the Greenland stereotyped plots of moss, with a few willow bushes and bare masses of rocks, 230 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. in whose rifts tlie dear sun has enticed a flower out here and there. As to the view, the neighbourhood is beautiful ; but a fruitful appearance it certainly has not. Indeed, provender must be some days' journey from this spot, and fetched with much trouble; for the places overgrown with sweet grass are sparse and very far apart ; and only when quite within the Fjord can one understand how ■ cattle, at all events Greenland cattle, that is animals not pampered with fodder, can be reared. Here another kind of landscape spreads before us. The high overhanging downs open out by degrees into a smooth table-land, shut in by a rampart of red rocky wall, opening in one spot by a pass to the neighbouring Fjord. This is covered with vegetation ; though not the usual velvety green mat of moss, but the real juicy fresh-coloured domestic meadow. Here it is, indeed, more habitable; but here, too, the traveller misses, as he does everywhere in Greenland, tree and shrub. Further inland there is a continuation of willow bushes about the height of a man. On the meadow-land one sees f^'om far stones of large extent laid in long rows ; this is the first trace of man's energy having once ruled here. Before this, the journey had become laborious ; not to me indeed, fqr I sat near the steersman, and had nothing to do but to smoke my pipe, survey the neighbourhood, now and then let loose a rope, and help bravely with the meals. But from the entrance into the Fjord, the wind had dropped ; our poor fellows had, therefore, to work hard. It was late in the night, when we at length found ourselves under the low cKffs of Igalliko. Twilight was scarcely worth mentioning. The air was agreeably mild. IN JULIANBSHAAB. 231 With, united efforts we hauled the boat up on to the strand; and while the men were busy unloading the craft, I went with the steersman to wake the inhabitants of Igalliko, who in spite of our shouts had as yet taken no notice of our arrival. The honest Greenland cattle-breeder had spread his store of Angmaksatten and Owak (Gadus ovac, Rhd.) on the grass and cliffs, and the drying fish emitted a pesti- lential odour, which fortunately later on dispersed a little. From a low rocky pinnacle we could overlook the whole settlement. The houses were larger than those usually erected by the natives, and strikingly better built. From the distance the building materials looked like brick, or artificially-hewn stone. We passed over a hillock, and came to the flat top of a rock, which seemed to be surrounded by a number of regular blocks. Close by, however, they seemed to possess more and more order; and the first Norse remains lay before us. The ancient builders had, in the erection of this house, made use of the steep rock as a wall. The building materials were huge blocks of stone. To all appearances it was rather a low building. The rocky wall was about six feet and a half high, one foot broad, and deeply hollowed out, which plainly had the eflFect of limiting the upper part of the room ; and it seemed to me from this simple grooving, that the closing up was performed by large stone slabs, which, later on, I saw applied to other buildings, of which the neighbour- hood of Igalliko has many. At last we reached the house. There, in spite of all shouting, the inhabitants gave no sign of life, so there remained nothing for it but to knock them up. From 232 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. the mildness of the air, it did not seem strange that the cattle were out all night. The present inhabitants of Igalliko were not origi- nally Greenlanders ; they are rather European, and wandered into Greenland scarcely a hundred years ago. The family ancestor was called Olsen; he was the first merchant in Julianeshaab. His descendants have dropped the name of Olsen, and taken that of the beloved Greenland apostle, Bgede. This family is a striking example how by degrees a tribe settling here may become naturalized into natives. Except the fea- tures, I could discover nothing in the inhabitants of Igalliko which now remained to them from their European ancestors. Language, customs, and manner of living, all have they taken from the Greenlanders. We now entered the house of young Sorn Egede. After going happily round the dungheaps, and several muddy puddles, we reached the utricular building, in which the door of the dwelling-room was found. No movement was to be heard in the half-darkened room. Only when the steers- man called, did Sorn spring from the wooden bed common to all, in a highly primitive toilette. He forthwith recog- nized the visitors. But now the skin coverlet of the bed- stead became alive underneath. Children's voices in every different tone were heard ; and from the dark mass soon peeped out here and there a head. Near Sorn, his wife Annie had rested, who now, anything but put out by nature's costume in which she was, viewed us atten- tively, and in spite of the prevailing darkness, read the letter which the steersman had brought. She then turned gracefully round and suckled her youngest child. At. the sight of the dirty figures, maids, and shepherd- IN JDLIANESHAAB. 23lJ boys, who now appeared from under tlie fur covering, it dawned upon me that we had better sleep somewhere else. So after waking Sorn's family, we went into the next building, where Sorn's father, Paul Egede, lived with his wife and his youngest son, who was also married. Paul Egede was a feeble, grey-headed old man, in whom the flame of life barely seemed to flicker. His brown wife, nevertheless, seemed to have a good quantity of Green- land blood in her veins ; she was younger than he, and quite active. Paul Egede was luxuriously clad in a shirt. Madame found this superfluous while sleeping. Awakened from slumber, she at first seemed to think of putting on such an article of clothing; soon, however, she rehn- quished the idea, and stared at us vacantly. Old Paul spoke Danish. We greeted him, and went back to the boats with his sons, which we finally hauled on land. , "We met, too, with some preparations for our stay. Sorn's dwelling was, according to Greenlandish ideas, very roomy, and betrayed the certain well-to-do position of the owner. Gold-framed looking-glasses and large lithographs of Enghsh origin decorated the walls, even a "Dutch " clock was not wanting. The greater part of the room was taken up by the one common bedstead. Sorn himself was a robust yoimg man with the typical Danish face, tolerably clean ; his wife Annie, a blonde, had once been a pretty girl, but now that she had been married a little while, she seemed to us somewhat faded, and not free from the vice of uncleanness peculiar to all Greenland women. I say purposely women, for though I do not mean to assert that the Greenland girls are so thoroughly clean that they wash themselves at least once a day, and 234 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. that even amongst the grown up daughters of the land one does not see many unclean faces, still the young girls are not wanting in a certain innate desire to please, which can even rise to vanity and love of finery. After marriage, however, this all vanishes ; then the Greenland women take but httle care of their outward appearance, particu- larly when a family comes on. Exceptions are not often met with. Annie brought us some tea which we had given her to make, and china cups to drink out of, which were decorated with gold rims and gaudy flowers. Our friendly hosts looked at us quite delighted, and Sorn and Annie felt much honoured and very happy, when we handed back a rye loaf with butter. The others, too, had some bread, but dry. The remainder of the tea, and some candied sugar, we also presented to the Greenland company, who immediately made the most of the strange drink, and gulped it down speedily. For our sleeping apartment we chose the fodder- house. The Bgedes at once conducted us there. The small building served as a store-room for all sorts of things, and greatly needed air. They offered us some milk in a washing-basin, but we preferred drinking it out of an unsuspicious-looking stone dish. Meanwhile, a window had been made in the room ; that is, Sorn had simply pushed out a stone in the wall, and through the opening now flew all superfluous objects ; a calf's head, old shoes, dried fish, calves' entrails, and divers other things in no way belonging to each other. At last the atmosphere became endurable; fresh hay was spread, and we lay down on our sacks to sleep. The next morning we had undisputed proof of the two- fold use of the dish, which had at first been offered us IN JULIANESHAAB. 235 as a washing-basin; it now appeared full of coffee and milk. Sorn's kindly invitation to help ourselves, we were still less able to accept from the fact that the children took an innocent pleasure in dipping their cups in the dish, by which proceeding their unwashed arms dived up to the elbow in the milk. Sorn, the steersman, the cook, and some of our men KUINS OF ERICK EAUDA S HOUSE. then went to kill the oxen, and I turned towards the ruins. On the spot where IgaUiko now stands, the oldest Norse settlement once stood — Brattelid, Erick Rauda's, the first emigrant's, house, when IgaUiko Fjord was known as Eimar Fjord, and the arm of the sea to the northern end of Julianeshaab, which is not far distant overland from 236 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITFON. Brattelid, was called Erik Fjord. What degree of value this statement deserves, Archaeologists must determine. Norse ruins exist, and to a rather large extent. Next appears a large room, forming a square on one side enclosed by a re-entering angle, with huge stones. The blocks lie close together and are not joined with mortar. In former times, doubtless, there were more rows lying one on the other ; now there is but one ; though the stones lying around may have fallen down. In the re- entering angle of this court lie the ruins of a house, which, if a dwelling-house, indicates but small dimensions. I will here give a hasty sketch. The extent of space enclosed by walls was from about twenty-six to thirty feet long, and ten paces broad. Here, too, the walls were made of low blocks of stone, and, exactly like the Cyclopean walls of the south of Europe, not set in mortar. None of the blocks were hewn ; the hewn portion of the stone formed the smooth side. The holes were filled up with small stones. In that part of the building facing the south were two entrances. This, too, reminded one of those ancient buildings; for the sides of the door, built of stones, inclined inwards towards the top, and were closed by giant stone-slabs laid over them, and therefore exactly resembled the entrances in the Cyclo- pean walls of Greece. Both doors were in full preserva- tion. One room was transformed by the Egedes into a store-house, the door of the other was open. They were at the utmost six feet high; a big man, so it seemed, could not have gone through the doorway upright. On the stone slab which covered the door lay some earth ; grass grew upon it, and as this layer of earth was pretty thick, and as, according to all circumstances in Greenland, this IN JULIANESHAAB. 237 ean arise neither from the course of time, vegetation, or decay, we may assume that this is the remainder of the old roof, and that the builder, like his descendants in Iceland, covered his house with sods. The space in the enclosure of the stone circle is covered with pieces of rock. If time has not set its teeth quite in vain upon the old walls, the population of Greenland have at all events done their best to destroy them ; for all the stones, with which the inhabitants of Igalliko build their houses in the present day, have been hewn by Northman hands so beautifully even, that they make splendid building materials. A Greenlander would not give himself such trouble, but takes it from the Norse buildings, only allowing those to remain which require great strength to move. Some hundred steps off lie the ruins of another seem- ingly smaller building, unenclosed. Still further on, a plain stone wall is to be seen. On the grass, too, to- wards the end of the Fjord, lay heaped-up masses of stone, which apparently can only have been the work of human hands. On a small low island, too, in the Fjord, facing the harbour, the foundations of some Norse buildings exist. Perhaps these were used partly as dwellings for the servants, partly for magazines; that on the island was possibly a place of refuge in time of threatened danger. The ancient settlers had their building materials very near at hand. Immediately behind Igalliko, which itself stands upon a steep slope rising from the sea, is a terrace-shaped row of red rocks. This stone, which has many perpendicular clefts, and forms as steep declivities, is a red sedimentary kind of sandstone which in its under strata is harder, has more quartz in it, and is lighter; 238 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. but towards the surface is. unequal, and in its red masses contains white flint stones. This stone splits easily in its strata into slabs, and was therefore very serviceable in building, such as I have never met with in any other part of Grreenland. Very interesting to me was one other appearance which I noticed on that sandstone rock. Even from below, at a height of about 300 feet above the sea, a heap of debris had struck me from its peculiar appearance. At first I fancied it was artificially built, and strewn with stones. Upon closer investigation, how- ever, it seemed that this debris must have floated there. The loose blocks of stone had been broken off by the tide, and lay in such masses that it would have been impossible for the hand of man to have brought them there. From above, I noticed on the shore a very low spot, where things were rolled up on a lower terrace in the same way. It is not easy to imagine that storm- floods, however high, could roll such masses over the ground and carry them up here. Rather would the assumption of an ancient coast-line be justified, and that ' the inner part of the Igalliko Fjord had later on been raised, certainly at a time when Norse settlements were unknown. I was sorry that I had not the leisure to investigate this phenomenon, as well as the sur- rounding neighbourhood. Scarcely had I finished some hasty sketches, when our people were ready for depar- ture. With my sleeping-sack across my shoulder, I said good-bye to Sorn, his Annie, and the whole household. On our return journey we enjoyed the most lovely weather : at noon we rested on a cliff, where we found willow-bushes enough to boil the kettle. Unwashed IN JULIANBSHAAB. 239 and unmolested, however, we were not to return home. As we were half-way in the Fjord the sky clouded over, and it began to rain, and also the boat very decidedly to rock; and the idea of stopping at some place on the bank, roofless and unprotected, having to wait for better weather, was seriously entertained. But it cleared again; and, after a fourteen hours' journey, we pulled up alongside the Constance. We found her in the har- bour quite blocked up with ice, which had come in with the current, being a bad omen for our speedy release. The day after my return from Igalliko Fjord, I had an opportunity of making the acquaintance of a very amiable man. He was, too, the only Dane who of his own accord offered us help and support. Pastor Anton. He had just returned to Julianashaab from an official circuit. As this included every Danish settlement in South Greenland to Cape Farewell, and northwards to Cape Kaksimiut, it could not be effected under some weeks. In the smaller settlements of Greenland there is now a certain degree of order and management in the matter of religious worship. A catechist, a native, who has received his education at the seminary at Gotthaab, looks after the native school, and devotional services : Europeans generally attend to their own fami- lies. At the best part of the year the pastor arrives ; and during his stay children are baptized, weddings blessed, the Holy Communion administered, the grown up youth are prepared for confirmation, and admitted in the religious community ; graves, too, are not forgotten by this shepherd of souls. All outlying places are visited, and then he returns to his own station. The return journey in the hide-boat, often in unfavourable weather, 240 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. is difficult enough. Pastor Anton had greeted all belong- ing to us on board heartily, as already said, and most kindly offered his help in any way that could be useful. We were to ask him for anything we wanted ; he would give it willingly. These offers we received with the warmest thanks^ but we were nevertheless able to decline them, as we were already provided with all that was most necessary. He invited us to his house for the afternoon, where we passed some hours chatting pleasantly with the chief people of Julianeshaab. It was quite a political chat, and interested us greatly. The Danish gentlemen could not help showing how deeply they still felt the loss of ^chleswig and Holstein, and made no secret of their hope that France would take upon herself the office o£ avenger. Greatly astonished were they when I informed them that we Germans in Austria had long since calmed ourselves with regard to the events of 1866, and that no sensible man amongst us would ever dream of entering into an alliance with France against Germany. Who thought then that the denouement was so near ? that at home things were happening, which in a short time would lead to war, — to a war from which Germany would, in an unlooked-for manner, come forth united, conqueror, and mighty, and France punished, crushed, and humbled ! We sat long with the pastor. It was homelike and comfortable there; and in his little study there came over me once more a great longing for home. Without raged a violent storm from the south-east; we could scarcely stand; though it was clear, and the air, for Greenland, particularly warm. The thermometer showed 27° Fahr. This temperature lasted the whole night. IN JULIANESHAAB. 241 Towards morning it fell somewliat lower. I accom- panied Captain Bang in a walk to tlie Harefjeld, where lie wished to survey the condition of the ice. The sea seemed quiet, but broad stripes of ice lay before us, and above and below the Islands Akkia and Storo, the straits were full. That did not look like soon getting away ! In the evening I was invited alone to the house of the governor of the colony. There I met the pastor and the doctor. If my host thought that I should reveal myself as a thorough Austrian, he had an opportunity of undeceiving himself. The walk to the lake near Julianeshaab is as pleasant as it is instructive. Huge cliffs, from which a foaming torrent after a short course falls into the sea, hem it in towards the colony. In the background rise pictu- resque rocks, reflecting their bald high tops in the clear quiet waters. On the banks lie soft moss cushions, in which the feet sink up to the ankles. Th« majestic peace of the far north lies over the landscape, and particulai4y over the sea. How utterly different is the character of our own Alpine scenery. We are strongly reminded of that hidden sea basin, which no one seeks, and which touches the feet of the glaciers. The Storefjeld, too, a high mountain of 1200 feet, the highest anywhere near the colony, was climbed. To the dome-shaped top we made our way over cliffs and through ravines ; it was climbing the Alps in miniature ; one could once more use ones limbs properly, if only the abomin- able Greenland summer plague, the gnats, had not been there. These small tormentors followed us at every step ; no beating about helped one, and no tobacco smoke ; they swarmed in the valley as on the heights, 242 TITK GERMAN ARCTIC EXVEDITION. and the body was covered over and over with tliem. Even if their sting on our hardened bodies did not have quite the same effect as those bloodthirsty gnats have upon the tender skin of our ladies at home, still this continual worrying was in the highest degree irritating. The view from the summit of the mountain is extensive and beautiful. Over the bald mountain chain, strewn with giant rocks, and its neighbours beyond (which remind one of the Brockenfeld of the Hartz), the eye strays, until the far distant mountains of the inland with their glaciers set the last boundaries. At our feet the lake shimmered blue, and on the other side of the island and strait the eye met the glistening sea with its icebergs and floes. It was an excursion well rewarded; deep in the contemplation of this grand scenery, one could even forget the gnats' stings. The steersmen were not particularly edified by the sight of the ice in the sea. Did it mean longer waiting ? The bay of Julianeshaab seemed very rich in fish. A boat sent out by the Constance dorse-fishing, returned to the ship after a short absence with a rich booty. The fish were split up and salted, and, in anghng, a dog-fish nine feet long was pulled up. Immediately a whole body of natives received the sea-hygena, brought it to the shore, there dissected it, and quite close to the dung-pits before their houses buried it, in order, according to their ideas, to improve the taste of the meat. For the next day, which was Sunday, another pleasant dance was in prospect. The men, too, now wished to be of the party. Sixty ladies, after the last ball, had escorted those who were returning on IN JULIANESHAAB. 243 board, and the shouting and noise was heard in the lower deck of the ship. Still greater enjoyment did this Sun- day promise; a "Women's" boat had already arrived from some distance ; but it was destined to turn out otherwise. a ji 2 CHAPTER XII. KAKSIMIUT. FEEDEEIOKSHAAB. EBTUBN VOYAGE TO EUROPE.' Farewell and departure. — Visit to the Island of Pardleet. — In Peru harbour. — HoUander^e.— Festive days in Kaksimiut. — Continua- tion of the voyage.^MFrederickshaab. — Copenhagen. The 3rd. of July was a fine day; and to my astonisliment I heard that Captain Bang had decided upon running out. I had still something to look after on shore, but it had to be quickly done. Indeed, the captain and other gentlemen soon followed to say good-bye to the inhabitants of Julianeshaab. Presently the capstan choked with the raising of the anchor. Now we were off in earnest. "We took leave of the European ladies of the colony who came down to the harbour, and nodded farewell to the natives. At eleven o'clock the Constance unfurled her sails, and glided slowly out of the harbour. The governor of the colony, the doctor, and the pastor escorted us. Above, on the clifEs of the shore, sat the maidens of Julianeshaab, in company dress, but sad ; they nodded farewell to us in their Greenland fashion. They had been shamefully disappointed of their pleasure. Our sudden departure had struck the poor things like a thunderbolt. And as for our men — well, it struck me, ' too, that they would willingly have waited another day; ' By Professor Laube. KAKSIMIUT, 245 but we tad entered upon our homeward path, and on the whole, we were all heartily glad to be on the road home. Outside in the street, running along the harbour, the gentlemen of the colony wished us a prosperous voyage. We cruised nearly the whole afternoon, in a complete calm, between Akkia and the continent, having the ship in tow. At last, at ten p.m., the outer harbour of Julianeshaab, on the island of Pardleet, about one German mile distant, was reached, where, in expecta- tion of more favourable weather, we dropped anchor once more. We had really made a great mistake in becoming so soon tired of Juhaneshaab ; for, in the main, there was life about us there, and that was at least a change. What weariness really is we had now to learn. Pardleet is a completely desert island. The low rocky . masses are clothed with scanty vegetation. Whortleberries, the marsh lystus, stunted willows, and birch brushwood are not wanting here either : but a never-ending loneKness rests upon the island, which is poor in animal hfe, and but seldom visited by birds. In former times, a G-reen- land family Hved here; the ruins of their dwelling are still visible. The small celandine and grasses thrive upon this spot luxuriantly, and this green spot seemed like an oasis in the desert. I and our men roamed over the whole island. Por want of other amusement, they collected mussels,^ which exist here in clusters in the shallows in shore. They had all learned from the natives to eat them raw. We took a number of these mussels on board, and when pickled I myself found them very " Mytilus edulis, L. The Greenland name for this mollusk is Niloolc. 246 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. palatable. We lay in Pardleet harbour until the fol- lowing day at noon, when we weighed anchor, in order to continue our voyage at least as far as Hollanderoe. The Constance, however, could not quit the spot, as the wind was contrary, and we were unable to tack owing to the narrowness of the straits between the islands. Nothing, therefore, remained but to bring out the hawser once more; and that evening, about ten p.m., we landed in Peru harbour, on the island of Kingitok. On the map of "West Greenland, a great many harbours are marked along the coast, the Aurora harbour, Gray's, and others. The uninitiated imagine, although incor- rectly, that these are inhabited by natives. Greenland captains are often compelled to stay against their will close in shore, owing to calms, or contrary winds, or ice. Then nothing remains for them but to have recourse to one of these harbours, where they can at least ride in safety and wait for favourable weather. Peru harbour lies in a narrow strait over against Hollanderoe. As we saw no prospect of leaving on the following day, and the weather was fine, we undertook an excursion to this island. On the west it slopes gently down, but towards the east rises into two lofty cliffs, which form a deep ravine, separating them from one another, as well as from the remaining part of the island. As we descended into this defile, in order to reach the steep top on the other side, the stair-shaped bottom of the valley covered with rubbish struck me at once, as weU as the steep walls, which showed pretty distinct furrows along them. This roused the conjecture in my mind, that here had once been a glacier, and that we were now completely in its bed. The top of the rock afforded a KAKSIMIUT. 247 splendid view on every side over the sea, whicla for a long way was covered with ice, which the south-east storm had closely crushed together, both towards the north and also towards the rocks of the mainland. But .the gnats here, too, plagued us frightfully, and soon drove us altogether away. From above I could now see that the rift in the valley opened into a broad gateway to the sea, confirming my former conjecture as to its geological nature. No doubt remained in our minds when we reached the upper part of the ravine. There the bare rocky masses showed the finest unequivocal naked alpine formation, which in no other way could be accounted for but by glacier-ice. These observations, which I made also later in a ravine resembling this at Kaksimiut and in the neighbourhood of Frederickshaab, raised the opinion that there must have been a time when Greenland was much more covered with ice than it now is. That this was previous to historical times, indeed was most probably coeval with the glacial period of the northern hemisphere of the earth, notwithstanding that all visible traces have not yet disappeared, can be easily accounted for by the slight decay of the rocks, and from the low state of vegetation in the country. Moreover, to this very day, it seems to assert its favourable position for a glacier; as in one spot, and that in no way high above the surface of the sea, lays a huge mass of unmelted snow, which, under similar circumstances during our stay in West Greenland, we had not noticed. Peru harbour would not let us depart so soon ; we lay there from the 6th to the 11th of July. Excursions to land were rendered tormentingly difficult by the impor- tunate swarms of gnats. A small hunting party, at the 248 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. ■utmost, might venture out in the evening to kill a ptar- migan. Besides, the dreary cliffs in their horrible same- ness offered little or no inducement for excursions. The only change was caused by the natives, who knew how to find us even here ; exchanging some birds or fish for a piece of bread, and then lying half the day near the ship, or on it, and sometimes being persuaded to show their tricks in the Kajaks, by sitting in them and turning over, so that the bottom of the boat became uppermost, they having their head in the water, and then cleverly turning up again without any assistance. Once, a whole fleet came, six Kajaks and three Umiaks. We hoped to find amongst them our friend Starick, who ought to have begun his journey to Lichtenfels by this time ; but they were only natives, returning from seal-catching or merely wandering about. Of course they could not miss the opportunity of satisfying their curiosity. They came alongside, and some men stepped on board, the women meanwhile remaining in their Umiaks. The latter were but lightly clad. The work had made them v/arm, and they had thrown everything off that .was a burden; but they thought nothing of arranging and completing their toilette before our ship's crew. At last, on the 11th of July, at noon, we left Peru harbour with a favourable wind, hoping now to reach Kaksimiut. But, unfortunately, when about eight mUes from the goal, a calm brought us to a stand-still, forcing us to find a suitable anchorage under the shore. The harbour where we lay for some days had no name ; Captain Bang said he visited it now for the first time. Unfavour- able wind, fog, and rain rendered our abode remarkably dis- agreeable. On the 14th, a boat came from Kaksimiut with KAKSIHIUT. 249 a letter. The contents were not comforting. Beyond there lay mucli ice (so it ran), and an Bnglish Kryolite ship, which had run out of Ivikat the week before, had suffered greatly, was obHged to return, and now lay a wreck in the harbour. Upon this we rejoiced that we were in the Constance ; for had we gone to Ivikat instead, we should no doubt have taken shelter on board this ship, as at the time none other lay ready for departure. Thus it might still have happened that we might be once more banished by the ice to Greenland. On the 15th of July, another attempt to run out was made. At first it seemed as if we should soon reach the island of Kaksimiut, but unfortunately a calm fell when half-way ; indeed, we saw ourselves driven a good way back by the storm. Towards evening the wind changed, and we at last reached the latitude of the island. Company was soon found. The youth of the place paddled, about, and made a noise in their Kajaks around the ship. The chasing and raillery of the merry crowd knew no end ; at the same time vying with each other, in paddling and throwing the harpoon, in which they exhibited great proficiency. As it got dark the swarm returned to land. It was midnight before we got into the harbour; and the darkness rendered it more difficult to find a good place for dropping anchor. The following afternoon we resolved to go on shore. Our only comfort in weariness (tobacco !), was it not vanishing ? and now our last penny must be expended in its purchase. Kaksimiut is a provision depot. The Danish government have here erected a small dwelling- house, a still smaller warehouse, and an oil-store. Around these buildings are grouped some dozen Green- 250 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. land huts and otter appurtenances. The island, like all those on this coast, is rocky, though rather low. Large stony plains slope gently towards the sea, so that at high water it is partly flooded. On these plateaux the inhabi- tants lay their hunting stores. The sea is the street- cleaner, the tide carrying away all refuse. After taking in at a glance the advantages of our position, and becoming a little more familiar with them, we made the acquaintance of the merchant, Mr. Motz- feld, a man of sixty-seven years of age, with a friendly red face and bright eyes, whose age it was not easy to guess. He was singularly vigorous,- active, and chatty. His store of tobacco was at once placed at our service ; and he had no hesitation, upon the faith of our honest faces, to supply us with a suflB.cient quantity until we should reach Denmark. Thus, at least for a time, this need was overcome ; and full of joy the men withdrew with the beloved weed on board. Motzfeld took us to his house. The government building he did not live in ; he kept it, however, for particular occasions to receive company ; for instance, he opened it and showed us all sorts of rarities and curiosities which he had collected. Then he led the way to his dwelling. Motzfeld was married, and the father of (actually !) nineteen legitimate children. His wife (after the death of his first he had ventured on a second) was a full-blooded Greenlander. A European house did not suit her, she preferred living in a building of the kind peculiar to the country. Her husband at once provided her with one which, after his death, she could claim as a widow's portion. There he lived with the younger part of his family ; the youngest- member of which was about a year old, whilst many of KAKSmiPT. 251 the elder ones Lad already children ; so that in this old man might be seen the head of a family which would spread all over South Greenland. We had met with some belonging to him in Nennortalik, JuHaneshaab, and IgalUko, and some lived here in Kaksimiut. The wife looked like every other Greenlander, neither prettier nor cleaner : one must really, like her husband, who sprang from a good Danish family, become altogether Green- landized before one can feel at home amid such surroundings. Friend Motzfeld was in high spirits. He rattled on with all sorts of fun, of course in Danish, which we could only now and then understand. " Yes, German he could not speak," he said, "but sing it he could;" and then he sang, " Zachaus was a brave man," and " I take my glass in my hand," and so on. Meanwhile his eyes twinkled, and he accompanied his song with corresponding actions. The accordion, too, must make its notes heard ; and when the concert was over, we took our leave well contented, and returned on board.. In honour of our arrival, Motz- feld had killed a goat, and sent by his son the half of it on board, wrapped in a really clean cloth. The youth had cleaned and adorned himself, wore a washed Anorah ^ and handsomely stitched shoes. We had noticed him some days before amongst the crowd of receivers for his superior agility. Judging by his friendly, intelligent face, he seemed a good youth. Later in the day his father came on board, joining our evening meal. He had all the talk to himself, the others being scarcely able to get a word in. But who would blame the settler for gladden- ^ A kind of wrapper made of European materials, which is drawn over the fur dress. 252 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. ing his heart with gossip, and giving scope to his tongue one day in the year. The following day was Sunday. With the Green- landers, to whom every day is Sunday, that does not mean much ; but the men of the Constance thought of one particular pleasure. Here, too, through the Danes, our sailors soon became intimate with the inhabitants ; and the festival of Julianeshaab had to be repeated. For this there vras the more opportunity, as the merry Motzfeld would certainly put no hindrance in the way. In the afternoon he came on board. He had donned his holiday suit, a velvet frock and a high silk round hat, which in Greenland means something. The two captains and myself he invited to dinner. At first, remembering his Greenland domestic economy, I gave no direct con- sent ; besides which, we were sorry to be a burden to a man not over richly stocked with European provisions. But Captain Bang persuaded us to accompany him, assuring us that only roasted meat, and no boiled, would appear at table ; moreover, that Motzfeld was so well oflF, that he could afford to give us a glass of wine : so we accepted the invitation. This time we were received in the European house, our host's wife and widowed daughter, Agatha, doing the honours ; they had adorned their persons in order to receive us, had combed their hair, and washed their faces. Motzfeld experienced " the noble pride of hospitality," and offered all that his desert island had to offer ; the other half of the goat sent to us roasted, stewed fruits, bread and butter, wine and grog. In drinking he took the lead, and scolded us because we did not properly respond. Meanwhile matters had become lively in the other room. The fiddles squeaked. KAKSIMIUT. 253 the accordion drawled, and the feet shuffled and stamped in tune. The ball was opened. As we came out, the same sight met us as at Julianeshaab in the stores. In a cloud of dust, redolent of the fumes of the oil-lamps, heads were spinning round each other ; and here, too, the tuft of hair belonging to some fair one came in very close contact with the face of the partner or spectator. The conversation was highly interesting, and it was not long before our old host had grasped a jolly maiden, and was swinging round with the others. He could not understand that neither myself, nor the steersmen, who now came in, would know anything of the dance. Much too early, according to his idea, did we leave his hospitable roof, and much too little honour had we done to his rum. He could not reproach himself in that respect, for, even after our departure, he continued to probe the contents of the bottle in quiet solitude, even- tually giving unmistakable proofs to the still active company in the ball-room of the effect produced by a somewhat excessive enjoyment of spirituous hquors. The morning of the , 18th of July brought more life than usual into our neighbourhood. A small coasting vessel, bound to Julianeshaab, had, on her return journey, put into Kaksimiut harbour in order to land some goods and take in oil. She brought the news that the Peru, on her way to Juhaneshaab, would that day pass Kaksimiut. For Motzfield, besides various other things, they had brought a barrel of liquor. The receiver had at once proved both quality and quantity, and found them excel- lent, which accounted for his spirits being of the best order when he came on board that morning. Not long after that, we saw him pull out of the bay in holiday 254 THE GERMAN AB.CTIC EXPEDITION. costume, in an Umiak (from wliich. waved the Danish flag) to pay a visit to the Peru. Only the cyhnder hat had he taken the precaution to leave at home. From the Constance, too, a boat went to the Peru. Myself and several other ofl&cers, with some of the men, went on shore. Agatha (it was ten a.m.) had not yet had time to wash herself since yesterday, and on the faces of several other young ladies were evident traces of yesterday's exertions in the ball-room. Mrs. Motzfeld sat in her house in her new Natzek. On the bench, by the window, which was provided with a crane, stood the liquor-cask, and close by a full-drawn bottle" and a large glass. This day the merchant's house seemed to have a great attrac- tion for the people of Kaksimiut ; for they spoke oftener than usual, and did not go away without something to strengthen them. The old Greenland captain came from the schooner, the catechist came ; indeed, every one came who had time, and as often as he had time. The cause of this unusual frequency it is easy to guess. When we returned on board we learned the news as to what the Peru had brought with her, and also that Mr. Motzfeld, faithful as ever, without further consideration, had started in the Peru for Julianeshaab. Kaksimiut was, therefore, bereft of its head. Indeed, as I came on shore in the afternoon for a ramble through the island it lay deserted and still. Through many cross-roads and by-ways, I returned to the settlement. Not a creature was to be seen. At last some of our men turned up, who at this unusual hour were returning on board. " Well," said I, "is Kaksimiut dead to-day?" "No, not that," they answered, " but they are all drunk." And so they were. They lay in the huts, young and old, men and women, KAKSIMIUT. 265 under the influence of liquor, no longer masters of them- selves. Motzfeld's wife was no exception to the rule, and even her offspring were in high spirits. They had got pos- session of the emblem of their father's pride and dignity, the cyhnder hat, and were quarrelling over it to their hearts' content, as, sitting on the roof of the house, they played with it as prettily as an ape or a cat might. Only two of the whole number of the inhabitants were really sober, Hans, Motzfeld's son, and a young girl named Concordia, who was a praiseworthy exception to the rest of her country- women. In the evening they brought the crane back to the ship. How much, or rather how little, of his liquor Mr. Motzfeld found left on his return, what heavy punish- ment he awarded to the culprits who had drimk it, and with what joy he saw his cylinder hat once more — of all this I was unfortunately not an eyewitness; but the respected reader can, without much trouble, picture it for himself. The next morning brought a thick fog, which, however, cleared at noon, and the wind was fair ; we, therefore, weighed anchor, and bade adieu to Kaksimiut. Above, on the rocks, sat the maidens of the place ; they had soon formed a fervent friendship for our people on board, and, as they saw the whole estabhshment depart- ing, waved a sad farewell to us; indeed, some of -them were wiping their eyes. So rare and entertaining a visit, and of such short duration ! In and out among the islands, we now floated north- wards. Soon the steep fall of the giant Serminalik, the most southerly moraine in West Greenland lay before us. A powerful broad belt here forced the inner ice over the berg into the sea. Since we had left Bast Greenland we had not seen a glacier so near to us. On the east 266 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEUITION. side, too, under the same latitude, there are some huge ones ; but there the belt of moraines reaches down to 60° of lat., whilst this most southerly one lies quite alone in 61°. After a long open space to the north of Fredericks- haab is another large one, the lisblink, with its feet dipping in the sea. Soon we had the island of Tunarsoit, and the wild, jagged rocks of the high Malene^elds, in sight. We hoped to be in Arsut the following morning, but in the straits between Nunarsoit and the continent the wind changed, and we had to ride at anchor. This was the more necessary, as it presently became more violent, and at noon a regular storm burst ; so we lay once more bound to a deserted strand. The weather would not even allow of any further excursion, as the wind brought up heavy masses of fog, rendering any ramble unsafe. It did not last long, however. On the morning of the 22nd of July I noticed with joy, from the rolling of the ship, that we must be at sea, and I was right. With a favourable wind we had weighed anchor at half-past four a.m., and going through the straits o£ Torsukatek, were at sea. Already far to the south, when I came on deck, lay the rocky pinnacles of Malenefjeld, and on that side of the shore they showed me the entrance to a Fjord ; that was the Arsut Fjord, close to which the Kryohte layers are found, which would, of course, be very interesting to me. If one leaves Rome without having seen the Pope, it is a sad misfortune ; still perhaps one may see him the next time one comes. But when a geologist has so much and for so long traversed Greenland, and now, when near one of the most interesting spots, is recklessly carried past it, his misfortune is very much greater. It could not be helped, KAKSIMIUT. 257 however. We left it further and further behind. In the warm, bright sunshine a troop of fin-back whales were playing round us, which, in their security, swam with astonishing boldness so close to the ship that they dashed the water all over the deck. The gambols of these colossal creatures were wonderfully interesting. It was Uke an explosion under the sea, when two or more of these whales leaped at the same time out of the water, and rested on the surface, beating it with their flappers, untU the sound was like that of great guns. The natives had left us, and now these giants of the Arctic seas had become our escort. In the evening, unfortunately, tLe wind died away, and the next morning we had not advanced much farther, namely, still in the latitude of Frederickshaab. It was not long before the people noticed us. Natives ap- proached, and later a boat came alongside with the colonial officials. At first Captain Bang did not seem to wish to cast anchor again ; but at. length several different circumstances induced him to do so, and thus we were once more to go on shore. Frederickshaab lies in 62° Lat. and 50° 1' Long. The colony has not the extent of Julianeshaab. The district lies at the extremity of a Fjord-arm, into which a small stream flows. It is not protected by islands, and offers a safe harbour for any ship running in ; but the Greenland cap- tains avoid lying-to in Frederickshaab, as they are often prevented for weeks together, by fog and contrary winds, from running out again. The houses lie on a plateau between three mountains ; to the right and left rise two round-headed granite peaks and a wild jagged rock, the Kotentjeld, which shuts in the prospect. From any of 258 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. tliese summits one lias a most pleasant view of the colony. By the harbour lie the magazines. The governor's house scarcely differs from the others, and, owing to its sur- roundings, appears very low. Some other buildings, the clergyman's and the assistant's dwellings, stand in the same row. A cleanly-kept broad foot-way, and an open space before the chief building paved with gravel, look well against the green plots within the colony. The church stands at the upper end of the settlement, and is sur- rounded by a grave-yard hedged in with stakes. Between this and the houses of the officials stand the huts of the natives, which throughout are supplied with plank roofs. Seen from a distance, Frederickshaab seems an excep- tion to the general rule in Greenland; but when you go into the district itself, there is the siame disorder and the > same intolerable stench as there is everywhere else. The church-yard, which at a distance looks quite decent, really reminds one more of a place where the flayer does his work ; for on the graves and on the sward lie bones brought by the dogs ; whale bones, birds, and fish in a state of putridity, lie all around, and nothing but the stakes separated this place from that lying in the same state between the houses, which is still more disfigured by the inevitable dung-heaps. Besides the governor, his assistant, and a pastor, no Europeans live here. Nevertheless, the natives, who are without exception half-breeds, have a strikingly European cast of countenance, the men as well as the women. Besides this, Ivikat being in the neighbourhood, from whence the Kryolite ships frequently have to put into Frederickshaab, they are accustomed to intercourse with Europeans. I even saw some native girls going about in KAKSIMIUT, 259 European dress, though evidently without the necessary under-clothes ; and comical enough they looked, as they slid down hill-slopes with the rest of their tribe. The population is, moreover, not at all numerous, and exceeds but little that of Kaksimiut. The object of our stay in Frederickshaab was entirely that of baking bread and brewing beer. Brewing beer is in Greenland, in the mission-stations as well as in the colonies, a business, and the beverage produced is very agreeable. The Ger- man missionaries brew white beer, the Danes their much- loved brown beer. Of course, the malt is brought from Europe. A very primitively-erected brewing place is found in every large district, as well as a kneading- trough, and both were found here. Brewing and baking were done with most industrious haste ; and so it hap- pened that the bread failed, and the beer turned sour, though through the whole sea voyage both would have to be used. We did not try to make any acquaintances in Frederickshaab, though our own men were soon friendly with the natives, and the customary dance easily arranged ; but they did not seem to be so comfortable as in Julianeshaab. We were invited, through Captain Bang, to the governor's, but did not go, as subsequently there was a death in the house. Mr. Hildebrandt had an opportunity of greatly asto- nishing the natives by his cleverness in canoe paddling. As everywhere else, so in the harbour of Frederickshaab, the Constance was continually surrounded by visitors, who, by their odd ways, whiled away the time. Matters, however, did not always go so smoothly with the Kajak ; and they often had an opportunity of making acquaintance with the watery element. Thus it hap- 260 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. pened to the aforesaid gentleman, who got upset with the Kajak, and came on board wet as a poodle. But, when close to the man-rope he turned round, sprang into the water, and swam in the bitterly cold stream around the Constance. Such a thing the Greenlanders had never before seen ; and although they are, as it were, part of their Kajaks, they can none of them swim : the bitter cold of the element of itself forbids it. Their astonish- ment found vent in all sorts of exclamations, when Mr. Hildebrandt returned on board. Whenever they saw him afterwards, they begged him to repeat the trick once more. Patiently they waited the whole day by the ship, but the artistic swimmer did not satisfy their curiosity. The neighbourhood of Frederickshaab offered but little that was interesting. We passed the time in aimless rambles, and viewing the prospects from the heights which, at last, rewarded us with a lovely distant view, We could not, however, count upon our stay here ; for already, on the evening of the 24th, our business on shore was nearly ended, so that we might hope to put to sea the following day. But not until early on the 25th of July could the anchor be weighed for our homeward voyage, when, for the last time, we trod on Greenland soil. The dense ice out at sea forced the Constance still to keep a northward course. Wind and weather favoured us. By the evening we had the great Ice-blink near Fiskernass, the second great glacier of South Greenland, close to us. The huge masses of ice showed the gateways and arches in a greenish light; and now louder, now fainter, we heard the washing of the water. A lovely evening closed the day. Once more did we see that magic light, which KAKSIMIUT. 261 we had already learnt to recognize on the other side of the ice, and of which in our homely latitudes, we can form no idea. But the burning red clouds boded no good ; and, indeed, we tacked the next day in a pretty strong wind and thick fog. As it cleared on the 29th of July, we could see far away the bergs of the G-reenland coast. On the 30th, the Constance took a westerly course. Towards evening, the well-known rushing of breakers on the ice struck our ears. Soon the barrier was before us, but the floes lay far apart ; and how different they looked ! Jagged and crumbling, small, and to our eyes insignificant, they drifted about, the sport of the Avaves. Once more we heard the well-known command on the ice, " floe upon floe, keep back ! " Herds of seals which lay upon them lifted their heads curiously. They should not want a farewell greeting ; and soon the needle-gun resounded, sending death to the harmless creatures, for the last time on our voyage. Behind us lay the ice, which closed up, forming a blinding white strip ; and the Greenland icebergs, gilded with the setting sun, sent us their parting greeting. They sank deeper and deeper ; the veil of night spread over all ; and when we came on deck the following day, we were in latitude 65° 11', on the high sea in Davis Straits. " 31st July. No more ice ! Set southwards, and — heavenly music of the word — homewards !" This is the last note in my day-book. I write it with feelings too deep for expression. A few weeks more, and all we have gone through will lie behind us, and all that we have suffered (if God will) be at an end ! But how long will this trial of our patience last ? 262 THE GERMAN ABCTIC EXPEDITION. After nearly a montli's voyage across the lonely North Atlantic Ocean, the Shetland Isles at last hove in sight. Soon they were reached, and a fresh wind drove us into the German Ocean. In all directions did we scour the broad plain with our glasses to discover the first German vessel, which, perhaps, taking the direct way to our country, might hurry on with the news of our return. But none were to be seen. On the great Doggerbank were none but Dutch and Moravian fishermen. The entrance of the Kattegat was now reached ; the sea around us was animated. In the latitude of Skagen there lay with us 300 ships, whose destination was the Baltic Sea. But still no German sail showed itself! What did it mean ? Had the German nation given up seafaring since our departure ? Then the pilot came on board, and brought the news of the great events which had taken place in Europe in the interval. Now for the first time did vfe learn how that the long-impending war with our old enemy had broken out ; and how that the Danes themselves must in truth confess that hitherto the Ger- man arms had been crowned with victory. Now all was cleared up. Now we understood why we had met with no German vessels, why hundreds of German ships lay at anchor in the roads of Helsingor. How it flew from mouth to mouth ! We were not yet on our home soil, and all the younger ones were eager to be off" to France ; they only feared " it might be over before they reached it in time to have a brush with the French." On the 1st of September we at length reached Copen- hagen. The handsome pleasant town, with its beautiful beech-groves, made a doubly satisfactory impression on us strangers. How different the landscape appeared RAKSIMIUT. 263 here in comparison with the waste shores of Greenland ! With pleasure, even in the Sound, did our eyes roam over the banks; and with joy did we greet the neat suburbs and the green trees, which we had not seen for so long. Here, in Copenhagen, were we restored to civilized society; the two captains had gone on shore together ; we remained on board. The Constance was laid up in the Train-oil dock. It now entered our heads that it was necessary to pay some attention to our outward appearance ; and our ragged community had a hearty laugh at one another. In our present condition we could not leave the ship, at least not by day, or we should certainly have been com- promised with the police. Some in seal-skin caps, some in " kamiken," ' others in sea-boots, from which the toes protruded, with ragged trousers, and threadbare coats, or Iceland shirts; thus we returned home. At last Captain Hegemann fetched us away in a fly in the twilight. Our fi.rst visit was to a clothing warehouse; and one cannot blame the owner for trying to protect his goods from us until he had received a certificate from the Consul, which gave him a little more confidence. Then essentially improved in appearance, we drove to the hotel ; even the host seemed surprised at the sight of such unusual guests ; but we were changed for the better, and could' walk through the streets of Copenhagen with- out fear of making acquaintance with the police through outward appearance. Thanks to the telegraph, the news of our happy return spread from one end to the other of our country, and ^ Kamiken appears to be a Polish word for some description of fur. (Tr.) 26-1 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPKDITXON. soon more and more distinct tidings followed. On the 3rd of September, the same day that through the home provinces, indeed through the whole of Europe, the news of the night battle of Sedan flew, we trod on German soil, coming through Priedericia in Schleswig. Flags were everywhere displayed. In the evening, every suburb we reached was illuminated, until we entered Hamburg in time to witness the great illumination in celebration of the victories, and thus greeted our country, as it were, in triumph. Thus we all stood again on native soil ; and after so much distress and danger, we had the happiness, scarcely hoped for in many weary hours, of shaking hands with relations and friends. We should certainly have pre- ferred it, had we, like the Germania later on, been able to run into Bremen harbour with our good ship, instead of coming into Bremen in an express car by the east gate from Hamburg; but it was so destined. And now that all is done, and our fate accomplished by a higher power, may all murmuring as to the right or wrong be far from us. As the consciousness of honourably fulfilling one's duty is comforting, so we Hansa men will quietly await the judgment of our contemporaries. We cannot flatter our- selves that we have greatly increased the knowledge of Greenland ; but we have shown what man's nature can bear, and what man's strength and perseverance can accomplish. The narrator closes this account with the hope that he has succeeded in rendering these extraordinary adven- tures, which must always be unique in their kind, interesting to the reader. PART IT. CHAPTER I. COMINUATION OP THE VOYAGE OP THE GERMANIA, APTER HER SEPARATION PROM THE HANSA. LANDING OP THE GERMANIA ON EAST GREENLAND. FROM 21ST JULY TO 5th AUGUST, 1869. Meeting with the whaler Bleneukorb. — Visit ou board. — Small prospect ' of reaching the coast. — Advantage of steam in ice-voyages. — • Animal life. — Wonderful effect of the Arctic climate on health. — Ice scenery. — Among the ice-packs. — First sight of land.— The Bienenkorb and Hudson in sight. — Visit from the former. — A mirage. — Nearing the coast. — Pendulum Island in sight. — Open water westwards. Thus on the 20th. July, an event took place, as unlocked for as it was fatal in its consequences for the success of our undertaking, vt^ithout raising gloomy forebodings in any of us. To be separated for a short time from our sister ship under existing circumstances caused no un- easiness ; at noon, therefore, on the day that the Hansa disappeared in the fog we set all sail, but at two o'clock we struck upon the ice and were obliged to turn. We afterwards found that this was a tongue of ice which the Hansa had passed to windward of, to enable her to advance further westward. On account of the thick fog we laid our topsail aback. At five o'clock the atmosphere cleared a little, but though we watched eagerly, the Hansa was 266 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. no longer to be seen ; to the south-west .we saw a whaler in the drift-ice. We had already seen this ship in the morning, and, as it was our last chance of sending news home, had hastened to finish our letters. It was a curious sight ; everywhere and in every possible position we were busy writing; the ship might have been taken for an academy of science in which all were working out a difficult problem. As we approached we saw that it was a steamer, and from its red and • white flag, must be the Bienenkorb, Captain Hagen, belonging to Mr. Eosenthal of Bremerhaven. Dr. Dorst of Jiilich was on this vessel taking meteorological, astronomical and magnetic observa- tions. We crossed to her, taking with us a whole packet of letters. It was indeed a pleasure to us to be once more amongst other men, and doubtless those of the Bienen- korb thought the same. This ship was five times as big as the Germania, a somewhat old-fashioned craft, full rigged, and had only had machinery within the last few years. On deck in a large cage was a bear and her two cubs ; fortunately for them, on board a whaler they were not likely to want for food. One would think that a creature so powerful and active could never be taken alive, but on its hunting expeditions among the drift-ice it frequently trusts itself to the water, and here in spite of its endurance, man is more active and clever, and with a well managed boat, a lucky cast of the noose generally falls on the neck of the swimming bear, when half dragged and half swimming he is hoisted on deck like any other animal, the noose round its neck being a guarantee for its peaceful behaviour. On their return they are generally sold to some menagerie or Zoolo- gical Garden, the price of a full-grown animal being 100 or 150 thalers; sometimes they are killed and skinned. VISIT TO THE BIENENKOEB. 267 the skin being salted, and afterwards sold for 15 or 20 thalers. Looking beyond the ship we saw the tail fins of some narwhals (Monodon monoceros, L.). These creatures are common here, but are seldom harpooned as they are uncommonly quick in their movements. We then went down into the cabin to enjoy the usual bottle of sherry. Captain Hagen's report of the condition of the ice was most unfavourable. Since the beginning of June easterly winds had prevailed, on account of which the ice was now dense and closely packed for some miles. These obser- vations were afterwards confirmed by the Hansa, which about this time was blockaded by the ice. We also learnt that there were several ships further south, amongst which we hoped to meet with Captain Gray, commander of the Eclipse from Peterhead (Scotland). Dr. Dorst showed us some interesting drawings of the narwhal and several views of Jan Mayen, which island the Bienenkorb was fortunate enough to see in a clear atmosphere. We returned to the Germania about midnight. Meanwhile the wind had freshened, but there was a thick fog ; so we had to remain under sail amongst the block. The fol- lowing day at noon (21st) the weather brightened, and we saw that we were more or less surrounded with drift-ice ; and vsdth a light south-west breeze it was useless to at- tempt any advance westward. We therefore lay-to, and as there was a large floe close to us, with several pools of water upon it, we landed in order to renew our store of fresh water, which was nearly exhausted. This was the first time during the voyage that we had set foot on the ice, and "the opportunity of closely observing it was not lost. Besides this, the deep blue light proceeding from the cavity of an ice block was subjected to an analysis by the spectroscope. 268 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. When our scientific observations were over we joined the row of water-bearers, forming two lines along which the full and empty buckets were merrily passed, but it was midnight before our task was done and we retired to rest. At two a.m. we made an attempt to advance, but the fog was still too thick. In the night a seal was killed : it was a small young thing and was brought on deck alive, when it looked ICE-DETFT POKMATIONS. boldly around and seemed ready to fall upon its enemies. Soon afterwards we obtained a good specimen of the large petrel (Uria brunnichii). Until the 23rd the weather remained foggy : we kept tacking in the loose drift-ice and along the edge of the heavy ice which seemed everywhere closed. To the north of 74° we found it so solid and huge that the captain determined, if he could find an opening, to go south of 74°, instead of beyond it. The 24th July was very cold, and we had a fire in the cabin. Towards evening we again saw the Bienenkorb to the north of us, and in 73° 40' lat. we thought that our ANIMAL LIFE. 269 efforts miglit be successful ; accordingly on Sunday the 25t]i July at nine a.m. steam was got up and we forced our way westward through, the ice; at first it was pretty thick, so that, occasionally, we could only make a way through the floes by boring with high steam pressure and full sail. At noon, after making sixteen miles in a westerly direction, we reached open water ; but after a few miles the ice closed again. We then went more southward and, later on, somewhat eastward, still steaming along the dense pack-ice; the weather was gloomy and rainy, and at eight p.m. it was so foggy that we had to lay by a large floe, that we might not run into a " cul-de-sac," and be blocked up by the ice. The great advantage we possessed in our steam can scarcely be overrated, for during the foggy weather we could with our heated machinery remain quiet on one spot. If the ice closed upon us, we could steam to another suitable spot, and in clear weather could in a few hours inspect several miles of the icy edge for an opening. Besides the determination of the ship's position, and the usual meteoro- logical observations, soundings were made when possible, magnetic observations taken, photographing, fishing, and so on. Of the lower class of animals there was little that was new, and we tried in vain for the Olio borealis, the chief food of the whale : seals we saw frequently. The bird world remained the same, but was poorly represented. Solitary mallemuckes were seldom wanting, besides which were snow buntings (Larus eburneus) and robber gulls (Lestris), and between the floes swam small groups of divers and black guillemots {Uria grylle). In the neighbourhood of much ice we found that the temperature sank considerably, from 31.52° Fahr. to 270 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. 30.20° Falir., bat the most striking fact was the small difference between the heat of the day and night. This was at the most only one degree, and frequently less than that. Such an unusual state of things must have some effect on the human frame. Such an equal climate is not possible in the temperate and torrid zones, and only in the Arctic latitudes among the ice ; of course this must be as beneficial to the skin as to the respiratory organs. Indeed we were all in the best of health,. and this was astonishing, considering the low temperature, fog, and other damp we had to encounter : not one of us suffering from catarrh. But we must not lose sight of the fact that our acclimatization was gradual, we were not sud- denly set down in the ice, but approached it gradually. On the 27th of July, at noon, according to astronomical calculations, we were in 73° 7' N. Lat., and 16° 4' "W. Long, from Greenwich. The weather was fine, with a light south wind ; we steamed some nautical miles westward, and again came upon densely packed ice, without a sign of water anywhere ; and the channel by which we had just come began to close, so that we were obliged to steam back to prevent ourselves from being blocked. At eleven p.m. the atmosphere cleared entirely, and we had the first sight of the midnight sun. Of open water we could see but httle, though to the north it seemed pretty fi'ee. The floe by which we lay was, like many more around us, very large and wild and jagged in appearance, resem- bling a miniature mountain range. In some places the surface was slightly arched, falling gently to the water ; yonder were steep ridges, broken by a ravine, through which ran a small brook. On one spot lay blocks of different sizes thrown one upon another ; and at another I I .1' I I II 1 1 ""K.- ICE SCENERY. 271 spot the ice rose like steep rocky masses, or solitary- columns, points, and peaks, to a teigtt of from twenty to thirty feet. Forcing onr way. through this labyrinth, we were astonished at the sight of a fine broad sea of clear, light green water. The snow, changed into ice, covered these floes so thickly that we often sank as if in soft snow-drifts to the depth of from two to four feet. We were particularly interested in watching the small creatures in the sea, which we did by lying flat upon the ice and looking over the edge of the floe : the stickleback (Galanus hyperbm-eus, K.) were turning summersaults up to the surface, their red feelers coming into strong relief against the blue background ; then came a yellow spot, gradually increasing until we recognized a small craw- fish {Lysianassa) hurriedly wending its way to the surface, and then laying itself in a niche, or on a tongue of ice to rest, nothing but the constant motion of its webbed feet showing that the creature lived. Now and again in the depths, a fine Beroe might be seen moving slowly on its way. It was a fine, still midnight, too wonderfully solemn and grand to be easily forgotten. The fog had almost entirely disappeared, and lay to the east, like a bank over the water. The sea was perfectly calm, so that the ice was clearly reflected, and where the water was visible it had taken different colours ; under the clouds it lay dark, and from blackish brown to yellowish ; and where the atmosphere was clear it glistened a transparent green. Even to the brush of an experienced artist, it would be no light task to render the different colours and lights truly; this soft red of the sun upon the ice; on the shady side of the blocks, the softest blue and violet ; and between, the deepest, coldest shadow. Effiects such as 272 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. these can only be produced in all their beauty by the midnight sun in a region of ice ; indeed, to fully appre- ciate the peculiar beauty .of such a scene, one must see it with one's own eyes. All had long since been hushed on board, but we felt no fatigue. This wonderful repose of nature, without either motion or life, overcomes one with a feeling of boundless desolation and solitude. Now and again the stillness is broken by a thundering and cracking, softened by the distance, and suddenly a rushing of water is heard, accompanied by a groaning and blowing ; it is a herd of narwhals coming to the surface for breath. But the hours of night are fast running out, and with one more look we descend to our cabin. About four a.m., as we were about to start again, a dense fog rolled wp ; some hours later, however, it dis- FIEST APPEARANCE OF LAKD. persed, and we steamed in a northerly direction, as from that quarter we should most probably sooner see open water. At half-past eight the fog cleared completely, and we forced our way through a chain of connected PIBST SIGHT OF LAND. 273 floes, when in a north-westerly du^ection we found com- paratively open water ; and after making about sixteen nautical miles, at one a.m. on the 29th saw land dis- tinctly. From our position, this must have been Cape Broer Buys. By four a.m., we had advanced so far, that only to the east did there seem to be any loose ice ; we therefore stopped at a brash to fill our boiler with fresh water, and wait for a change. The only living thing we were likely to see here was a bear; bui although our hunters looked eagerly around, his shining yellow coat was nowhere to be seen. As the atmosphere was so clear in the morniug, we made some observations on the degrees of the sun's Leat. A blackened-bulb thermometer rose to nearly 99.60° Fahr, A common instrument, just above the snow, showed 50° Fahr. On the 29th of July, our observations at noon gave our position as 73° 2' JS". Lat., and 16° 19' W. Long., which compared with the log reckoning, showed us to have made twenty- seven nautical miles more southwards in two days' work. This we partly attributed to the north wind, which had caused a rapid drift of ice. The attempts of the last few days showed that in this latitude it was impossible to' get through; so, after being driven back to 73°, the captain determined to keep clear of the ice and to try again in 74°, as he thought that the north wind might have made an opening. Accordingly we steamed eastward,, partly through thick drifting ice. Here we saw two ships, which turned out to be the Bienenkorb and the Hudson ; we advanced to meet the former, and Captain Hagen and Dr. Dorst came on board. The captain was disheartened at not T 274 THE UERi\[AN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. having caugtt a single whale ; he considered it impossible to reach the coast this year, and determined to begin his homeward journey in a few days. Of the Hansa, during the last nine days, he had seen nothing. At ten p.m. on the 29th of July, we took leave of the Bienenkorb, and steered in a northerly direction to try and reach the coast in 74° N. Lat. The weather was clear and still, and we had a good opportunity of observing the refraction of light and the mirage. The whole atmosphere was qi;ivering with a kind of wavy motion, so that the exact outline of the object was often so distorted as to be unrecognizable. It may be imagined that pictures of things far beyond our range of sight could thus be seen. Scoresby relates, and it was afterwards proved true, that he once saw and recognized his father's ship, perfectly, in the mirage when it was thirty miles distant. The effects of this phenomenon on the distant ice was wonderful ; sometimes it appeared hke a mighty wall, and sometimes like a town rich in towers and castles. On the 30th of July the weather was fine, and the wind, to our joy, westerly; the ice was, however, so impassable that we had to steam still further north, as the captain found that within the last eight days the ice barrier had shifted some degrees to the east, and he had hopes of finding a large opening in the pack-ice. On the 31st of July, at four p.m., we were in 73° 59' N. Lat., and 13° 3' W. Long., when we saw a great deal of loose ice, and forcing our way through, steered in a westerly direction. Towards evening the wind died away, and we got up steam, the floes lying loosely scattered around us. Here, as on other occasions, steam PENDULUM IST,AND IN SIGHT. 275 stood us in good stead, and we threaded our way easily amongst them. By ten a.m., on the 1st of August, we had steamed without interruption thirty-six miles, and were of course so much nearer the coast; here a dense barrier pre- vented our farther advance. Land was in sight (Pen- dulum Island), which by a strong refraction seemed much raised and transfigured. The same refraction also showed us what appeared to be open water westwards. Mr. Sengstacke was of opinion that it was only a few nautical miles distant, but he soon saw his mistake. That there was open water under the land, there was scarcely a doubt ; but it was separated from us by an icy barrier, several German miles broad. Under these circumstances, the captain thought it better to keep our post and wait for a change in the position of the ice.' Ross himself lays great stress upon the fact that, in the ice, a little judgment and a little patience go farther than advancing headlong, and often save much danger. Here we increased our zoological collection by a fine reddish Clio ; the dredging net was also let down at 224 fathoms, but brought up nothing but stones. Universal interest was raised by the mallemuckes (Mergulus alle), which for some days had followed us in, flocks. Voraciousness is the chief characteristic of these birds ; and if a large solid piece of bacon is thrown into the water, which they cannot swallow at a gulp, a dreadful battle ensues ; sometimes two or three begin upon it at different ends, working both with beak and claw. "We ' A glance at the chart will show that the Hansa, on her first advance on the 22nd of July, was nearly on the same spot, but was ice- blocked, and drifted to the south. T 2 270 THE GEiarAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. often fastened a piece of bacon to a string or hook, and easily caught one and brought it on deck. The bird is not ugly ; its colour is variable ; the young ones are greyish, whilst the old ones are, with the exception of the wings, almost always white ; its head is the most peculiar looking part of it, being highly arched; its strong bluish beak is high and bent like a hook. On the night of the 2nd of August a thick fog came on, lasting the whole day, and to prevent our impatience from gaining the mastery we all had recourse to the ropes. On the 3rd it was clear ; the ice had indeed changed its position : we were more surrounded than ever by floes, and to the east still less water could be seen. We, how- ever, broke through the ice, and steamed in a north- westerly direction. The floes became larger and larger ; and at last the endless brashes and boundless ice-fields came in sight. At ten p.m. we anchored by a large field, on account of the fog ; we sounded 165 fathoms, nothing but mud. We were in 74° 18' N. Lat. and 16° 6' W. Long. On the 4th, at a quarter-past eight a.m., we started west- ward once more ; the air was thick with snow ; to the west we saw a dark water sky, and steered between the brashes and fields in that direction. At nine we came into a large piece of open water, with a few floes drifting. At noon we anchored, principally on account of the boiler, which had to be cleared from the salt. We were in 74° 19' N. Lat. and 16° 59' W. Long., not more than thirty- one nautical miles from Sabine Island. On these fields we first saw the bears ; there were two watching our ship with great curiosity. Our first shot missed, and they hurriedly took to flight. At ten p.m. fog gradually came on, and we were not OPEN WATBE WESTWARDS. 277 more than five German miles from tlie coast ; but at half- past ten it cleared again, and the whole group of islands lay clear and distinct before us. The water was open, and we made straight for Griper Roads. "We were all greatly excited, and, in spite of the severe cold, remained nearly the whole night on deck. In the early morning we had a fall of snow, giving the ship a thick white covering. A few miles from land a large brash lay direct in our course ; this we sailed round, and at last anchored in a small bay, which was afterwards our winter harbour. On the 5th of August we dropped anchor on Greenland soil, and a loud " hurrah !" arose as we planted our flag, which also waved proudly from the mainmast. In the day-book we find that at the beginning of our voyage strong north-westerly winds prevailed, which of course delayed us. We all noticed the increase of tempe- rature, both in the atmosphere and the water, from the coast of Norway until the latitude of the Shetland Islands, and then a decrease in both after crossing the Arctic circle. The influence of the warm gulf-stream was unmistakable, and was observed by both ships. During the first part of the month of July easterly winds prevailed, driving the ice up to the borders, and making it impossible to break through. In the second part of July northerly and southerly winds alternated without bringing any great change in the ice ; but at the beginning of August strong westerly winds set in, so loosening it that we easily made our way through. A glance at the ship's course on the chart will show dis- tinctly how the ice shifted in the beginning of August. Before this time it had been impossible to reach the coast. CHAPTER II. PENDULUM ISLAND. STATE OE THE ICE NORTHWARDS. LANDING ON SHANNON ISLAND. Accident to Dr. Pansch. — Boat voyage to the mainland. — Scientific operations. — Attempt of the Germania to advance northwaids. — Musk-oxen. The group of islands known under tlie name of Pendulum Islands were j&rst discovered and appropriated by Claver- ing in tlie year 1823. He anchored his ship, the Griper, on the south side of the largest island, between it and the mainland. On this side of the island is good anchor ground ; several glacier streams debouche here, bringing with them soil and mud, and the roads are protected, from heavy ice by a small island lying in front, which, from the number of walrus seen there, we called Walrus Island. According to our instructions, the position of Sabine's Observatory was to be sought for and newly marked, after which we were to advance northward; this, of course, caused a stay of some days. The astronomers brought out their instruments to determine our exact position, and settling the magnetic constants on land, especially towards the tongue of land eastward from our harbour (Cairn Point), where we conjectured Sabine's Observatory to have been, but of which, with all our seeking, we could find not the slightest trace, nor of anything else which PENDULUM ISLAND. 279 miglit show that Europeans had ever visited the spot. First Lieutenant Payer made preparations for surveying the island ; and Dr. Pansch roamed through it as explorer and naturalist, inspecting the remains of the Esquimaux huts found by Sabine on the tongue of land to the west of our stand-point. In the afternoon the weather, which on our arrival had been unfriendly and snowy, became fine and clear, with a perfect calm and a temperature of 41° Fahr. From the plateau of the neighbouring mountains, the baro- metrical height of which was 1040 feet, we had an extensive view over the sea from the north-east round to the south, as well as over the surrounding land, and along the coast to the noi^th. The condition of the ice was here first distinctly seen. The straits between Sabine Island and the mainland, and also between the two largest islands, were completely blocked with apparently old land ice. Farther north, between Shannon Island and the mainland, as far as the eye could reach, the ice was firm, and, from its whole position, we might well conclude that there would be no breaking up that year. Along the coast, therefore, we could not advance further north; the only possible way remaining was by the eastern side of Shannon Island. This island was distinctly seen, and seemed to be quite surrounded with ice ; though to the south side, and also to the east side of Pendulum Island, there was open water, only covered with drift-ice. The pack-ice to the east was very broad, stretching at least twelve nautical miles from the coast, but farther southward it made a considerable curve inward towards tbe land, and lay so dense that in 74°, and even more south than 280 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. that, we should with difficulty have been able to pene- trate it. Along the coast to the south there was also much open water, and Gael Hamkes Bay appeared to be free from ice. .For the next few days scientific work kept us fully employed. In the evening Dr. Pansch unfortunately shot himself in the arm while following a reindeer, and had to be brought on board ; we found, however, that the ball had only gone through the muscles, and that no bone had been injured ; but it healed very slowly, and through the whole of the autumn. Dr. Pansch could take but a small share in all our scientific explorations. On the 6th it was slightly foggy, with a south wind ; but the sun seemed . bright and clear, and the work suffered no interruption. Lieutenant Payer roamed all over the island, topographically interested as well as bent upon hunting. We found many traces of reindeer, and saw a few without being fortunate enough to kill one, though we killed several walrus which stopped in our neighbour- hood. The fat of these creatures was mostly thrown into the coal bunk for fuel, in case the Hansa did not join us again. On the 7th we made a boat excursion to the mainland, and took the opportunity of sounding the straits. In the middle, at eighty-one fathoms, it was muddy; towards Sabine Island and Cape Wynn the bottom was analogous to the character of the land. Indeed the soundings along the coast, as far as the Germania sailed, were uniform, and the character of the depths mostly indicated by the Ihnd. Shallows in any way dangerous did not exist along the coast that we sailed by. PENDULUM ISLAND. 281 On our boat excursion we had a combat with a large walrus and her young one; the young one was killed easily, but the other escaped . severely wounded. We found it in the afternoon dead upon a floe, and brought it on board. We climbed Cape Wynn, which was rather steep but not very high, and found on the top a plateau of several miles in circumference, quite free from snow, but scantily covered with vegetation. Farther inland we came to a valley watered by a glacier stream, and showing moss, grass, and many green spots. Behind this valley the mountains rose to a height of more than 1850 feet, but, even here, the summits were perfectly free from snow, which was only collected in the. rifts. The snow-beds and the falls of snow in Bast Greenland are much smaller than we expected to find, and even less than in Spitz- bergen, which lies so near. During our whole stay on this coast we only once, and that in June 1870, saw the land with an entire covering of snow. The view to the north was bright and clear ; in 76|-° N. Lat. we could distinctly see the land edged with firm ice. Over the sea lay a thick fog, which spread over all by degrees. We went hunting for a reindeer, but missed it, and had to content ourselves with a white hare. We returned on board in the evening. In the night ice formed in the bay, which is also the case in summer during a calm with a clear sky, though about the beginning of August it disappears in the daytime. The heavy ice in the straits had these last few days drifted out to sea, and the land ice was more broken up. Thanks to the continued fine weather, work was 282 THE GEEMAN AECTFO EXPEDITION. finished by the 10th of August ; the instruments brought on board, and all made ready to sail, which we did after piling a heap of stones on the eastern point of land, and, about 100 to 104 feet to the north of it, depositing a document containing the chief dates of our voyage. At six on the following morning we weighed anchor, and steered out of the harbour, with a light southerly breeze^ northwards. "We passed the low cliff at eight, and steamed along the firm ice, which at first stretched to the north and afterwards to the north-east. The land ice bordered the whole south side of Shannon Island, and also Cape Philip Broke, which was its most south-easterly point. We doubled it at noon, and found to the east of the island along the land ice, which has here an average breadth of from three to four nautical miles from the coast, a channel of from two to three miles broad, though in some places so blocked with ice that only by the help of both steam and sail could we make way through. The border of the land ice was pretty high ; in many places the blocks lay piled up from forty to fifty feet high. At three p.m. we broke through a chain of brashes, on the other side of which was again open water. Here the pack-ice had retreated quite four nautical miles. As the wind was still south, steam was let off, and we set all sail to save our coals. At six p.m. we sighted more ice to the north, which seemed very thick. The wind shifted to the west and a dense fog came up, hiding everything from our sight; we therefore halted until the morning. We were now upon the most northerly point reached by Captain Olavering, but still Shannon Island stretched further to the north — much further than is given on the PENDULUM ISLAND. 283 old charts. At first we thought there must be some mistake in the log's reckoning, so, as a calm had fallen we lay-to. Our observations gave 75° 17' Lat., and 17° 22' W. Long, from Greenwich by our chronometer, the standpoint of which was on Sabine Island. Later on we ascertained that the position of the north-east cape of the island was 75° 26' N. Lat., and 18° 0' W. Long. The correctness of our reckoning we proved beyond a doubt, and we were therefore obliged to conclude that it was impossible for Clavering to have reached the spot indicated by Dr. Petermann on the chart at 75° 14' N.W. of the frozen bay, and that most likely the whole boat journey rested upon some misunderstanding; and later, upon going through Sabine's and Clavering's original reports, we found that this supposed journey had never actually taken place. We stayed by the ice all that day (12th August), partly to take more observations, and partly because there was so much ice in the north which could only be penetrated by a favourable wind or steam. In the afternoon the current set the ice strong to the south, at a speed of one and a quarter nautical miles an hour in a perfect calm; but from four to ten p.m. it stopped completely, when it began to drift again. It seemed, therefore, as if there was ebb and flood, but that the current to the south decidedly prevailed.' And with all our late observations we could not prove a decided ebb and flood, although the tidal wave could regularly be seen along the coast. ^ According to our later observatious the harbour time on this spot was 12h. Oni., consequently high water on this day was at 6h. 41m. ; the current noticed must therefore be ascribed to some local influence, especially as the tidal wave ran to the north. — Koldewey. 284 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. In an ice-covered sea it is especially difficult to arrive at any right conclusion with regard to the currents. Those on the coast of Bast Greenland we most carefully noticed. Putting the experience of both ships together, and that of the floe on which the crew of the Hansa passed the winter, the following remarks are probably correct. Along the outer border of the ice, and among the drift- ice even as far as the fields themselves, which extend a long way within the barrier, there exists between the latitudes *7(!)° and 72° a south-westerly current, the average speed of which is from eight to ten nautical miles in twenty-four hours. The direction taken by this current greatly depends upon the prevailing winds, and therefore often turns the foremost portion of the drift consider- ably to the east or west. Immediately under the coast, according to our observa- tions, a southerly motion of both ice and water is not to be denied, but it is far weaker than that on the outer border; and in summer, when south winds prevail, it stops altogether, so that at times the ice fields are stationary, or only move up and down. In winter the drifting is much more considerable, owing to the pre- vaihng north winds and storms. Regular ebb and tidal currents the Germania did not meet with in the latitudes . through which she passed, but only a rising and falhng of the water. In the autumn it seems certain that there is always a setting of the heavy pack-ice to the coast, and what is termed land- water disappears more, and more ; indeed, the question as regards the continuation of this land-water along the coast the whole of the summer cannot be entertained for a moment; its appearance PENDULUM ISLAND. , 285 depends more upon the formation of the coast, the prevaihng winds, and other local influences, than on the runing ofi" of melted water. The ice in its drift southwards had turned somewhat to the east, thiis leaving more and more open water behind it to the north. We therefore set sail on the 13 th of August, and .steered, with a light south wind, along the border of the firm land ice without meeting with any great diflSculties. A fog bank rose in "the south, which soon spread over Shannon, and the channel which we were following northward was becoming narrower and nar- rower; to the east lay boundless fields thick together, and to the north we soon saw more firm ice, so as the evening drew on, we lay-to. On the morning of the 14th the atmosphere was quite clear, and we saw with dismay that our further advance northward had come to a sudden halt. Some nautical miles ahead of us lay a monster ice field, stretching eastward as far as the eye could see, and apparently joining the land ice in the west. Far, far to the north-east behind the fields there seemed to be, judging from a small dark spot in the heavens, more water; further advance, however, was not possible until the field was set in motion and separated from the land ice. The weather was fine and clear ; we therefore took some observations, which gave the latitude 76° 30' 5" and 17° 30' "W. Long. ; the declination of the compass, taking the mean of several azimuths, 45° 24' W, At night there was mostly a calm, with bright weather. To the north and north-west there was a very strong refraction, which showed us that unless a steady wind 286 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. set the sluggish masses in motion, further advance to the north would be amongst the impossibiHties. We -were all of opinion that in order to avoid the dangerous pressure of the ice fields, we should withdraw at once to the south side of Shannon Island, investigate it scientifically, and from the hills watch for a favourable opportunity of advancing. As a light breeze from the north-west sprang up on the morning of the 15th, we set sail to carry out our plan; but in order to be sure-that there was no opening to the north, we sailed along the northern border of the ice as far as the closely-packed end in the east, but without finding a way through.' At about ten p.m. we were once more to the east of the island, and the mean height of the firm ice above the water was fi"om two to five feet, and .large blocks of from thirty to forty feet were piled upon the shore in all direc- tions — proof of the enormous force of the pressure of the fields in their revolving motion to the south. Our strait was very narrow in many places, and we sailed round Cape ' The question has been raised several times, especially inland, as to why, being unable to advance along the land ice, I did not re-enter the pack and work my way through it northwards, and, in a higher latitude, again try to leach the coast. This is opposed to all experience : it has long been known that in a stream of heavy ice, in fact in the so-called pack, never, nor at any place, with the strongest and best steamer, has any considerable progress been made without the coast as a support. Had I wished to have reached the coast at a more northerly point, I should have had to penetrate the ice-barrier, again to steer along the northern bordei', and force my way into the pack once more in 78°. Such a proceeding would certainly never have been followed by the desired result, and it would have been unjustifiable to give up a basis, reached with so much trouble, to follow a phantom. — Koldewey. PENDULUM ISLAND. 287 Philip Broke at half-past eleven a.m. on the 16th of August, and anchored on the south side in six fathoms of water, between some stranded blocks of ice. Every- thing was at once prepared for the land expedition, and the captain and Lieutenant Pa,yer started first to reconnoitre. "We found the remains of some Esquimaux summer-huts on the shore, with a great deal of moss and weeds. We climbed a height of about 230 feet, and were busy fixing a point for observation and building a cairn, when in the distance we saw a remarkable-looking animal which could be neither bear nor reindeer. Of musk-oxen we never thought for a moment, and, when at length we discovered that such was the creature before us, we were indeed surprised. It was hunted down, however, and killed by Peter Iversen. We afterwards found that the whole of the coast up to 77° was frequented by theSe ruminating creatures, but that to the south their numbers decreased. With the rein- deer the opposite seemed to prevail ; north of 75^° we did not see a single one. In the evening calm. Ice formed everywhere, but dis- appeared again upon the rising of a southerly breeze. The following day, on the 17th of August, the land expedition started. First-Lieutenant Payer received as helpmates — Mr. Sengstacke, Peter Iversen, and Peter EUinger ; and the two astronomers took Theodor Klentzer. They were provided with six days' provisions, and ordered to return without delay when they saw the flag wave ffom the Cape. CHAPTER III. SHANNON ISLAND, WITH THE TBLL-PLATTB AND KLEIN- PENDULUM. Situation, extent, and character of Shannon Island. — Freeden Bay. — Exploration and measurement of Shannon Island. — Basaltic columns. — Arctic fox. — Esquimaux dwellings. — Unsuspected neighbourhood of the Hansa. — Sledge journey of Lieutenant Payer to the Tell-Platte. — A polar bear. — Difficulty in advancing. — Ascent of the Tell-Platte. — Beautiful prospect of the Greenland Coast. — Low temperature. — Return of Dr. Borgen's excursion to Klein-Penduhim. — Esquimaux utensils. — The Stufenberg. Shannon Island, wHcli, according to our reckoning, stretches from 74° 56' to 75° 26' N. Lat., is the lowest of all the large islands within the range of our coasting. In the north it reaches the considerable height of 305.2 metres, equal to 972 Rhenish feet ' (barometrical measure- ment). To the east and south, however, the hills scarcely exceed 500 feet; and the remaining portion of the island rises but a few feet above the level of the sea. On the south side is a somewhat important creek, which we named Freeden Bay ; whilst in the north-east is a still deeper Fjord, stretching so far into the interior of the island as almost to reach Freeden Bay, so that the island is divided into two very unequal parts. Upon the whole, the shores of these bays are very low, and, as far ' About 940 English feet. (Tr.) SHANNON ISLAND. 289 as we can judge, they are seldom free from an icy covering ; thus one can easily see how difficult it must be to give their exact limit. In some neighbourhoods it was no easy task to decide whether we were on land or ice. In summer time the low-lying lands, when not covered with snow, are mostly changed into a muddy swamp. The whole island, with the exception of the northern part between Cape Copeland and Cape Borgen, where it con- sists of fine syenite, is of volcanic origin. The party to which I belonged consisted of three. Dr. Borgen, the sailor EHentzer, and myself. Our task was to explore the ground, if possible, completely, and also with regard to the possibility of measuring a base in such a position as to start from, and, if necessary, triangulate along the whole coast. We soon ascertained, however, that it was not possible here to get a good triangle for the purpose of measuring. The 18th of August was at first foggy, but it afterwards cleared, and we raised a row of stone heaps on the best spots of ground we could find. One of these spots, in the north of the peninsula, is a small basaltic dome, and although only 250 Ehenish feet high, gave us a fine distant view into the interior of Shannon. On the 19th we had fog for breakfast again, but in the afternoon we continued our explorations in a north- easterly direction. Close to the coast we were astonished at the sight of a fine group of basaltic columns ; they were the first we had seen of so regular and distinct a form. The largest must have been quite twenty feet high. From here we marched for an hour and a quarter over to Bast Shannon. The land resembled that by Cape Philip Broke, but the high levels were more extensive, V 290 THE GERMAN ABCTTO EXPEDITION. and covered with several low, muddy spots. As we were taking onr measurements we saw a musk-ox, which we shot ; we took some of the flesh, and reached the tent by half-past three. The 20th of August found us active on the east coast, in the neighbourhood of the basaltic columns. For a long time we had seen a large bear in the dis- tance, investigating the row of hummocks, which showed the edge of the land-ice, but it did not seem advisable to follow him. On our return road we saw some snow of a pale reddish colour ; it seemed to be formed of a mixture of red clay or sandstone dust.^ On the 21st, as we were exploring more to the south and east, we came upon a small, deep ravine ; it ran close down to the shore, and seemed to be a collecting place for the drift-wood. One tree, which was certainly broken in many places, was at least forty feet long. Under the drift-wood lay the skull of a fine bear, and by the side a jaw-bone, which now was likely to grace some European museum. In the evening we returned on board, as the next day was Sunday. It was not, however, to be a day of rest, as Captain Koldewey had decided upon sailing to Cape Desbrowe, from this height to study the state of the ice, and look out for the Hansa. We, as well as Lieutenant Payer, Sengstacke, and two sailors, were therefore again set on shore and left to our fate. The night before, Klentzer, who had slept alone in the tent, had suffered from the intrusion of a fox ; it had fled in to him, and not until after several vain attempts to kill his guest with a bayonet did the creature seek safety in flight. ' The same appearance was also noticed by some of the Hansa men at the beginning of November. SHANNON ISLAND. 291 In tlie afternoon we took a pleasant walk along the west coast, and discovered a number of " Tent-rings," or circles, and other traces of inhabitants long since disap- peared. On the 23rd of August a cold wind blew, with wet fog, covering everything with rime. The fox visited us again, and again escaped from our attempt at murder. We passed our time in fetching drift-wood from the east coast, whilst Payer conveyed a basaltic column from the north end of the peninsula to our anchor-ground. Upon continuing our work on the south end of the peninsida on the 24th, we found everywhere traces of very old Esquimaux huts and graves. The huts were not the usual underground winter-dwellings, but were built of stones on the flat eai-th, a block of rock being taken as the back wall. The largest of these peculiar dwelhngs was ten feet in diameter and six feet in height. In the night Payer, Sengstacke, and two sailors went to south-west Shannon (Tell-platte), and the 'next morning nothing was to be seen either of them or the Germania. Now we know that at this time the Hansa lay at no great distance in the ice, and that a part of her gallant crew had advanced in the boat to within a short distance of Cape Desbrowe. Close by the west point of Cape Philip Broke lay a strange object on the land-ice. The hght grey and whitish colour at first made us think that it was a bear, but afterwards we found it to be an old walrus ; it lay close to a hole in the ice. We approached it stealthily, and the first shot took efifect. It was about ten feet long and nine feet in circumference near the fore-fins. We were glad of this capture, as in case the voyage should u 2 292 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. be hindered, we were at least supplied with meat and fuel for some weeks. We now collected our apparatus and brought them down to the Cape, together with the tent. At nine p.m. we had the pleasure of seeing the little Germania sailing slowly towards us, though still at some considerable distance. At midnight it was pretty dark, but we could see to read in the tent. At one a.m. I went out ; the ship was nearer, and a column of smoke showed that she was under steam. I went far out on to the ice to speak privately to the captain, but I might have saved myself the trouble, for those on shore heard every word of the conversation, the air was so still and clear. The ship was worked chiefly at low pressure on account of the young ice, although it was not more than one-half to three-quarters of an inch thick ; but with each motion of the ship the ice was pushed layer upon layer, until at last she was brought to a stand-still, and only by backing and running a-head did they at length reach the anchor- ground. The rest of the day was passed in measuring and skinning the walrus. Near the Esquimaux huts we saw a block of quartz, two feet and a half in diameter, the surface of which was wonderfully worn and polished. Had it been used as a sharpening stone, or for what other purpose ? On this day our attention was first drawn to the peculiar unearthly moaning and groaning of the ice-floes, as they were forced against the land by the tide, and as I was coming from the ship over the ice to land un- armed, I cannot deny that a feeling of terror _seized me, and I looked round to see the unknown animal from whence the sound proceeded. I afterwards discovered the true cause, however. SHANNON ISLAND. 293 On the 27th Payer and his party returned full of the wonders of the Tell-platte ; their tour had been most satisfactory. "We now held a consultation, and all agreed that for the moment there was no prospect of getting further northward; so at four p.m. we steamed for Klein-Pen- dulum, which we reached at half-past eleven p.m. Since the 12th of August the sun had again risen and set for us, and at midnight it was already twilight, so that for the first time for two months we could see the bright stars, and at midnight on deck we could see to read the smallest print. These uniform and imeventful days on Shannon Island were useful to us, in so far that they showed us the capabilities as well as deficiencies in our tents, coverings, cooking apparatus, and so on. So much for Dr. Copeland and his party. We will now give some account of Lieutenant Payer's first sledge journey to the Tell-platte. On the 16th of August, on the plateau north of Cape Philip Broke, Payer had measured a base 1600 fathoms long, and in order to conclude this work he on the 26th started on a small sledge journey, accompanied by Sengstacke, EUinger, and Iversen, to the south-west of Shannon, called the Tell-platte. They pulled a small sledge, without either tent or sleeping-sack, across the monotonous snow-fields of Freeden Bay. A layer of fog hung over it only a few fathoms high, disguising the real distance from the travellers. Suddenly icebergs emerged like ghosts from the surrounding fog, apparently far off", yet close at hand; then a yellowish spot began to move, and a bear stood a few steps from the sledge- 294 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. drawers. To halt and fire was the work of a moment, and, after a vain attempt to rise again, the bear died at the feet of the travellers. Gradually the sun broke through the fog, and the terraces of the Tell-platte looked like a violet silhouette. The further they advanced the more impractible the ice became, being perforated by numerous springs. With some trouble they at length reached the lowlands to the west of the bay ; here the sledge remained behind as the land was perfectly free from snow. And after dividing the baggage the wanderers continued their ascent, when after fifteen hours' march they reached the highest point of the Tell-platte (670 ft. above the sea). "Here on the broad mountain top were masses of rubbish of gneiss formation resembling those on Pendulum Island. "We were also astonished by the sight of a large flat promontory (south of Haystack) which is not distinctly marked on Clavering's charts. The view of the front coast of Greenland was full of majestic beauty." Brown and blue lines of mountains with their sharp pinnacles rose in the warmth of the midnight sun on the other side of a snow desert some miles broad, long shadows lying on those parts turned from the sun. Whilst for six hours Payer was busy with measure and theodolite, his companions had discovered a herd of musk- oxen and killed two of them. Heavily laden they returned to the sledge at midnight. The sun had gone down some hours. The mountain country had taken those fantastic hues of deep red and violet, even to the coldest, palest toning of the snow ; in the zenith shone a faint whitish blue; to the south a lively greyish blue; and the newly-risen copper-coloured moon, distorted by refraction, shone in SHANNON ISLAND. 295 every little mirrored surface of the young ice. The tem- perature of the snow had fallen to 20° Fahr., so that the travellers in their thin shoes were on the point of freezing. A drowsiness crept over them, Cape Philip Broke seemed unattainable; at last they reached the place where the dead bear lay, and, after thirty-three hours' absence. Cape Philip Broke (seven German miles). On the same day (26th August), the Germania returned from Pendulum Island, but only to start again on the 27th for the same place with the whole community. Dr. Borgen gives the following description of the excursion to Klein-Pendulum, from the 27th to the 31st of August. Whilst Lieut. Payer surveyed the land and roamed through the island, we were chained to the shore by astronomical and magnetic observations. But we did not altogether miss interesting things ; we were much amused by the confidence of the sand-pipers, with their rCielancholy " tut-tut " coming close to us. The ducks, however, were more shy, who with their young ones were evidently on an excursion (as they do not nest on Pendu- lum). Near the place where we had pitched our tent we found some winter huts, the digging up of which brought much to light that was useful for our collection. Even Dr. Pansch, whose wound was beginning to heal, would not remain inactive, and spent the sunny day in looking for botanical specimens. The wind was rough, and, though the Stufenberg protected us, on the whole, from the north wind, it some- times rushed down the steep sides and slopes like a whirlwind, against which our little tent could make no 296 THE GEKMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. resistance. We were, therefore, obliged to lay it down, to prevent its being torn in pieces ; and Pansch, who had to be careful of catching cold in his wound, and had lain down to rest, was completely wound up in the violently- blowing canvas, much to our amusement and his own discomfiture. At last, on the 31st of August, when our work was finished, we started to view the island, making an excursion to ascertain the barometrical height of some of the tops. The Stuf enberg was our first destination ; on the top we found a large plateau, narrowing towards the north, and also sinking to rise on the other side into a similar though smaller plateau, separated from the Stufenberg by a great valley. From this second high plateau run several small ridges, which again rise to small low summits, leaving valleys between, more or less broad in extent. From here we went through the above-mentioned valley, and then over the south-easterly declivity of the Stufen- berg plateau to the south shore, which we reached at two o'clock. The height of the Stufenberg was 1512 feet, and that of the highest mountain, 1985 feet. Such was the scientific knowledge acquired on this tour. But the kitchen, too, profited by this excursion, for we brought home four hares and some ducks ! CHAPTER IV. FUETHEE COASTING VOYAGE OF THE GEEMANIA. 17tH AUGUST TO 13th SEPTEMBER, 1869.' The Germania anchored on the south side of the island of Klein-Pen- dulum. — Still open water to the south. — Return to Shannon Island. — Arrival near Cape Philip Broke. — The Germania anchors near the Stufenberg. — Journey to Sabine Island. — Fruitless attempt to cruise towards the north. — Storm. — The Germania steers southwards. — Ascent of 3000 feet up the Sattelberg by First Lieutenant Payer, Dr. Copeland, and P. EUinger. — Glimpse into the interior of the Fjord from the top of the Sattelberg. — Tracks of Lemmings on the top. — Remains of an Esquimaux summer hut. — Return to winter-quarters under Sabine Island. — Results obtained. We now resume our narrative on board tlie Germania, August 17. The following day a fresh southerly breeze ■was blowing, raising the sea and bringing up much ice, compeUing us to veer away the cable, and keep every- thing in readiness for a move in case of need. The ice, which, on account of the roughness of the sea, was con- stantly breaking away from the pack, kept coming up from the west. At times we were so completely sur- rounded by it, that we had to hoist up the boats, and were so prevented from landing. The sky, during this southerly wind, was obscured by continual fogs — the ' By Captain Koldewey. 298 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. average temperature being not many degrees above freezing point. On the evening of the 19th of August the wind dropped, the ice opened again, and we were soon lying in open water, and able to keep up communication with the shore. We made observations on the current the next day, ' and sent men on shore to hunt for food ; they returned with some musk-oxen which they had killed. Payer also came on board. August 21 . Weather warm and foggy. Snowfall in the afternoon with a light wind from the north-east, in con- sequence of which we were prevented from continuing our labours on shore. Meanwhile we made preparations for further excursions on the island, and for a stay of some days for our scientific staff, as our captain intended to sail westward in order to ascertain the condition of the land-ice, and gain a general view of the ice from the high mountains on Klein-Pendulum. There was no prospect as yet of getting further north from the eastward of Shannon. The passage had, in fact, become narrowed; and from the east the pack had begun to settle nearer in to shore. After landing the scientific staff with the necessary crew, and a boat in case of necessity, at noon on the 22nd, with a light north wind, we steered westward along the solid land-ice. Somewhat broken in the edges, the ice here slightly changed its aspect and showed signs of breaking-up. On the eastern side of Klein-Pendulum the ice remained solidly firm, and it was only on the southern side that we found open water for anchorage. Next day a frosh breeze sprang up from the north, with FUfiTHEE COASTING OF THE GERMANIA. 299 a cloudy sky. The weatlier being in other respects i^air, the captain ascended a mountain, 1990 feet high, in order to survey the ice ; but so thick a fog prevailed that he was compelled to return on board without having accom- plished his object. The next day the sky cleared, although a fresh breeze still blew from the north, and it became possible to obtain a clear view from the top of the mountain, which, however, was not encouraging for further progress northwards. The line of the land-ice was still almost the same, and what lay between Shannon Island and the mainland was quite solid. We could see Haystack and the high promontory to the west quite distinctly, but entirely surrounded with solid ice. North and west of Shannon Island immense fields were visible, mostly close packed ; and even the open space between it and the mainland, which a week ago was quite clear, was now filled with large fields. Only in the south-east, and along the coast towards the south, was open water stUl to be descried. Eastwards, Gael Hamkes Bay appeared to be open, but close round Cape James and the adjacent island the ice was again thick. There was, consequently, httle hope this year of penetrating further north. Besides, Captain Koldewey hardly expected that it would be possible for the Hansa to reach the coast, as the pack had apparently again become closer, and the open water under the coast had become narrower. In the afternoon the weather cleared, enabling us to make correct surveys and soundings of the coast-line. The soundings gave us a fine and safe anchorage under the lofty mountain, afterwards named Stufenberg. The bottom shelved gradually, and it became possible to anchor in a soft clay in four fathoms close under the 300 THE CxEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. mountain. The niglit was calm, and during it a quantity of new ice formed round us ; which, however, broke up under the influence of a stiff southerly breeze. We availed ourselves of this breeze to return to Shannon Island, as we feared being cut off it by the approaching pack. About half-past four p.m. we sailed round the northern cape of the island, steering along the land-ice, as we could not take the direct route to Cape Philip Broke on account of the large fields. Towards six p.m. we came upon new ice, which during the late calm had formed between the fields. This we broke through easily at first, but presently stood still, owing to the- breeze dying out. We broke through this ice, and got out hawsers to tow the ship through, as at a mile to the N.W. open water was in sight. The fields, how- ever, united, and so piled up the ice that it became impossible to advance. We had no resource left, there- fore, but to get up steam, which enabled us to break through . At times it was so thick that we had to charge it repeatedly with full steam, in order to force a passage. At length, at twelve (midnight), we anchored under Cape Philip Broke. The night was calm, and the sky cloudless. The temperature fell to 22° Fahr., and new ice rapidly formed. Dr. Copeland, who had observed our progress from land, informed us that Payer was still on the southern hill some miles away from anchorage. Their tents, however, had been pitched quite' close to us. The captain requested Dr. Copeland to hoist a flag as a signal for Lieut. Payer to return on board immediately. The anchorage by Cape Philip Broke appeared to be no longer tenable, as large fields continued drifting towards us from the east, filling up the bay between Shannon and PURTHEE COASTING OF THE GEEMANIA. 301 Pendulum islands. According to our astronomers, who had been constantly watching the ice from the eastern hill, there remained only one open channel to the east of Shannon. As far as they could judge, the ice to the north had not begun to move yet. Under these circum- stances, our chances of further explorations to the north this autumn became fainter and fainter. On the return of Lieutenant Payer and his men on the morning of the 29th, the captain summoned a council of the scientific staff and officers, to obtain their opinions as to the feasibility of penetrating further. Taking into consideration all circumstances, the utter improbability of our being able to advance further north, the danger of our present anchorage, and the non-arrival of the Hansa, which we had now given up altogether, it was unanimously resolved, as being most in accordance with the object of the Expedition, to return to the safe anchorage on the south side of Klein-Pendulum, there to complete the survey of the surrounding country j and, if possible, to undertake a sledge-expedition to the main- land. We had on that island the additional advantage of the mountain, whence we were enabled to observe the move- ments of the ice, and at once avail ourselves of any favourable opportunity. We still hoped that the au- tumnal storms would bring about a general breaking-up. August 27, at four p.m., we raised anchor and steered southwards. The sea was now everywhere frozen over, and mostly covered with inch-ice, through which; we could only force a passage with full steam power up. We found open water only near Bass Eock, and could sail freely and quickly round the island. We 302 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. anchored at eleven p.m. under Stufenberg, in four fathoms. On the following days the weather was fine and clear, with light north and west winds, so that the labours of the astronomers in determining our locality, as well as observations regarding the magnetic influences and current, together with Lieutenant Payer's work, made good and rapid progress. Dr. Pansch, whose arm was now almost well, had resumed his active labours in the cause of science, and examined the remains of the Esquimaux huts which were discovered under the Stufen- berg, and formed botanical collections. The island, partly barren, and clothed with scanty vegetation, was explored in all directions. Whenever time allowed we went out shooting, but, Avith the exception of a few Arctic hares, brought back no game. The position of the ice was constantly watched from the mountains, and on the 13th of August Payer reported that, upon the whole, its position had not altered ; also that the young ice between Shannon and Pendulum Islands had not disappeared ; and that that lying to the north-east of Shannon was quite firm. Accordingly, when the work on Klein-Pendulum was finished, we sailed on the 1st of September to the small harbour on the south side of Sabine Island, in order to start on a lengthy excursion to the mainland. The nights were now growing darker and darker, the forma- tion of the young ice proceeded rapidly, .so much so that nothing but a strong wind could break it. The weather, which during the whole of oiu" stay on the coast had been particularly tranquil and fine, began now to be unsettled and stormy. On the night of the 2nd of Sep- FURTHER COASTING OP THE GERMANIA. 303 tember tlie first violent storm burst from the N.N.W., accompanied by a heavy fall of snow. The wind came down in gusts from the mountains, and we had to let go our second anchor and pay out much cable, which kept us secure. As on this coast all violent winds blow from the north, anchorage is very insecure on the north side, particularly in spring-time, when, on account of the stronger motion of the ice, it is extremely dangerous. At last, on the morning of the 7th, the air cleared and a fresh wind blew from the north. From the deck we could see the heavy pack-ice drifting rapidly past our harbour southwards ; the young ice, too, was loosened and parted from the land, so that we were once more in open water. Looking from the mountain, the pack-ice in the east formed a complete block ; only about our island and to the south of the island of Shannon was there open water. On the eastern side from Klein-Pendulum, too, a large field had been pushed forward and pressed close to the land, so that even the road to Shannon was no longer open. In the night another heavy storm burst,- which obliged us to let go the second anchor. The weather-side of the ship, and the bow, even under the bowsprit, were covered over with a thick coating of ice from the washing of the water. At midnight, under a clear sky, a calm of several hours' duration fell sud- denly ; but in the morning the wind again blew from the north, sometimes assuming the force of a storm, as we could see from the quick motion of the heavy pieces of ice. We hoped that this continuous north wind would sweep a clear path for us, and thus be favourable to a last attempt at gaining the north. Accordingly, at nine a.m., although it was still blowing freshly, we set sail, 304 THE OiERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. tacking nortliwards towards Klein-Pendulton. Ho-wever, we were not able to go far, for we were met by a yiolent downfall of snow ; the wind once more rose to a storm, and we were again compelled to anchor under the pro- tection of Klein-Pendulum. In the afternoon another heavy storm broke with hurricane gusts from the moun- tains, the air being thick with snow ; so that we had to ride by both anchors, and were unable to do any sort of work in the open air. The next morning (the 10th of September), as the wind was still blowing hard, Captain Koldewey climbed the highest summit of the island, in order to obtain a good look-out over the ice. The air was clear ; not a bit of fog, so that on all sides we had a wide prospect, which, unfortunately, showed us that any advance with the ship at this time of the year was impossible. The ice between Shannon and the mainland, and further along the coast towards the north, lay unchangeably solid, exactly the same as on our arrival; and the land-ice in the creek between Shannon and Pendulum islands was only slightly broken. The pack-ice to the east was ' completely closed up, having large fields which were pressed close to the land under Klein-Pendulum, shutting up the access to the Shannon, under which island, however, there was an open channel. To the east of Shannon Island a small strip of water showed itself now and then, but, most probably, the large fields were revolving in the immediate neighbourhood of the land-ice, preventing any continued sailing, even had we been mad enough to venture between these grinding masses. Along the coast to the south appeared a small strip of open water, and the captain decided upon availing himself of the north wind for FURTHER COASTING OF THE GEEMA.NIA. - 305 exploring this in the interests of tlie undertaking. On the lOth of September we therefore weighed anchor at one p.m., and steered southwards with a moderate north breeze. A field lay between Walrus and Sabine Island; but close under the latter, we found in four fathoms of water a small passage to the south. We could no longer sail round Walrus Island, which lay to the east. At six p.m. we found ourselves over against a creek, at the egress of a valley, through which ran a stream from the glaciers, which we called " Konigin- Augusta Thai." ^ As this creek was very shallow, we called it " Flache Bay." We dropped anchor here, as southwards so much ice was pushed close to the coast that it was impossible to sail round Cape Borlase Warren. The glacier stream had accumulated such an amount of rubbish, that even at the mouth with a boat one could not land, and at low water the greater part of the bay was dry. Only under the steep mountains to the south could we land at all. The night was fine and star-light, the temperature 29.5° Fahr. The astronomers availed themselves of this opportunity to determine the exact Polar latitude with the sextant, which gave the lat. at 74° 24' 3". The next 'morning First Lieutenant Payer and Dr. Copeland climbed the " Sattelberg," more than 8700 feet high, one of the loftiest peaks of this peninsula. Payer reported the following : — " Our intention of inspecting the interior of ' Gael Hamkes Bay,' and the branches of the Fjord to westward, had led us towards Flache Bay. From thence a two-hours' boat journey to Cape Borlase Warren convinced us that it ' I. e. Queen Augusta "Valley. (Tr.) X 306 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. was impossible to penetrate into the interior by means of the ship, on account of the numerous icebergs and floes which were stranded at the entrance. There re- mained, therefore, but one means to gain our end — the climbing of a high overlooking mountain. The only one we could see fit for this purpose was the Sattelberg, 3700 feet high, which formed the highest point to the north of Gael Hamkes Bay, and was easily reached from our anchorage by going through ' Konigin- Augusta Thai.' " Thus on the 11th of September, at eight a.m.. Payer and EUinger left the ship, provided with theodolite and barometer, and wandered up the dreary, gently-rising valley. Here Dr. Oopeland joined them. A tiring, mono- tonous road led us up and down the mountains and.slopes covered with scanty vegetation, through rough water- rifts, and, lastly, over a small, steep glacier on to the Dolerite-crest of the Sattelberg. A violent north wind made the moderate cold of 14° Fahr. particularly painful to the travellers during their stay on the summit, espe- cially whilst carrying on their work. " The view westward was unimpeded, and afforded a most interesting glimpse of the interior of the Greenland Fjord, the exploration of which, by means of extensive sledge-journeys (for which the time of year was most favourable), seemed desn-able. The opposite view, too, of a broad, smooth, icy sea losing itself in the distance, and the wild, imposing, rocky land to the west and north was, in a purely landscape point of view, most beautiful. " And where was the so-called coast water ? It was a small channel close to the south of Pendulum Island. " Here we observed, as upon all mountains previously," and upon others since, the freedom from snow even on FURTHER COASTING OP THE GERMANIA. 307 the high-lying lands, and the fact that the snow-fields seemed exclusively to form a distant background to the glaciers ; drifts, and the more or less accidental gatherings in clefts, and so forth, of course excepted. " We left the top after an hour's observation, and made some cofiBe on our way down ji a rift in the glacier, returning to the ship by a most glorious aurora, after four hours and a half absence." So far First Lieutenant Payer's account. At the same time a boat-journey along the coast towards the south was carried out and the coast surveyed. It is here particularly free from shallows, and the depth so regular that the lead was a sure guide for the approach of the ship to land. The mountains on the shore are from 450 to 560 feet high, and mostly rise rather abruptly. On a tongue of land between Flache Bay and Cape Borlase "Warren we found the remains of some Esquimaux huts, and near them some graves, which we inspected, and found all sorts of curious vessels. The graves were old and decayed, and probably no living Esquimaux had been on the spot for a very long time. Gael Hamkes Bay was so filled with ice, and the blocks and floes so heaped up at the cape, that even with the boat we could not get round, and therefore could not reach Clavering Island. It was often necessary to drag the boat for some nautical miles over the ice-blocks — a gigantic work, bearing no proportion to the small results to be expected. We there- fore contented ourselves with inspecting the immediate neighbourhood more closely, especially the graves. Vege- tation was more plentiful than on Pendulum Island ; even some grass plats were to be found. We also saw nume- rous traces of the reindeer in a valley running westward X 2 308 THE GERMAN AltCTIC EXPEDITION. from the cape, and gradually rising to the mountain chain, though we only saw one single living specimen, ■which, although eagerly hunted, escaped our shots. We returned late in the evening to the Germania. The report regarding the ice of First Lieutenant Payer, who returned with Dr. Oopeland about eleven p.m., was as unfavourable as the description of the above excur- sion. The pack-ice, as far as one could see to the eastward, was completely blocked. Northwards from the Shannon nothing but ice to be seen. It was clear to all that the time for ship cruising was over, and that we must think of placing our vessel in some secure winter harbour before we were cut off from her, and thus be exposed to certain destruction. The only fit harbour, as already mentioned, was under Sabine Island, the one in which we had anchored for the first time on the 5th of August. Although the captain would willingly have wintered more northwards, about Shannon Island, in order to hold a more advanced position, no more secure position offered itself here ; and upon the security of the ship, particularly as the Hansa had failed in reaching the coast, hung the whole success of the expedition. It may here be mentioned that in Arctic regions, when wintering upon a coast, which is not always free from ice even in summer, if circumstances, or, above all, choice permit, the harbour should be chosen opening to the south, having land to the north ; also a creek into which falls a glacier stream, as such a harbour is, in the course of the summer, most likely to become free from ice. In any case it must be protected from the heavy pack-ice. The small bay on the south-east side of Sabine Island combined all these adva,ntages in a high degree, but, on account of its little rUETHEE COASTING OF THB (JEKMANIA. 309 depth, is only safe for ships drawing less than ten feet of water, and which can lie inside the straight line which unites the two land points in the east and west. As our ship could eifect nothing further in a southerly direction, and our anchorage was now insecure from the pressure of the ice and the violent north wind, we steamed out at half-past ten a.m. on the 13th of Sep- tember, after having made another geological excursion to Sabine Island, to the harbour which, for ten months, was to be our home. In looking back upon the summer's enterprise and summing up the results, we had cause, in spite of all failures and disappointed hopes, to be thankful for what we had attained. If we had not succeeded in advancing northwards, and our separation from the Hansa, and her continued non-appearance, limited our investigations in a great measure, the fact remained (the condition sine qua non of the whole undertaking) that we had reached the coast with the Germania quite safely, and had already made some important discoveries, which, the winter happily over, might result in a rich store of knowledge, however unfavourable the condition of the ice might be. We found ourselves in a field (which, scientifically, was almost unknown), on a coast respecting which the most unreliable and contradictory reports obtained, and nearly all our discoveries and observations seemed new, thus affording important contributions to the knowledge of the Arctic region. Events proved that Captain Koldewey was right in choosing the coast of Bast Greenland for the basis of Arctic exploration, instead of Dr. Peter- mann's suggestion of advancing between Nova-Zembla and Spit7jbergen to the North Pole. Captain Kolde\\-t-y 310 THE GEKMAN ARCTIC EXI'EDITION. was convinced, and is now more so tlian ever, tliat in that quarter any considerable advance by ship to the north would be as impossible as from the north of Spitz- bergen. " Under the most favourable cii'cumstances," so says Captain Koldewey, "we could only make some explorations in Nova-Zembla, and take some hydrogi'a- phical observations which, however unimportant they might be, would bear no proportion to the cost of the undertaking ; whilst on the coast of Bast Greenland, if even the conjecture of open coast water to the north should not prove true, we might, after breaking through the icy belt, make some important and satisfactory discoveries." That the Hansa had not been able to reach the coast was unfortunate, as it weakened our community; but from that circumstance we found ourselves deprived of a larger supply of coal so necessary for our boilers ; and not knowing how much fuel we might want during the winter, we were obliged to use the utmost economy, and only employ steam power on urgent occasions. Had the Hansa been with us, nothing would have prevented us, after the first failure, in the attempt to reach the north in the middle of August, from steaming at once south- ward with the Germania. Our sister ship could have remained at Shannon Island. Bight days would have sufficed us to explore the whole land of Gael Hamkes Bay, which at this time was free from ice, and then return to the north; whilst, in the meantime, the Hansa would have begun and finished the exploration of Shannon Island. The coming spring proved still more what a pity it was that the Hansa did not reach the coast. We were really too feeble, even with our greatest exertions. FUETHBR COASTING OP THE GBEMANU. 311 to master the amount of work. Captain Koldewey is con- vinced ttat we might have advanced two degrees further north had he had sufficient men. It is, therefore, unjust to draw the conclusion (as has been done in many parts by inland people) from the events which have taken place, that taking the Sansa as a sister ship was a mistake. To maintain that, because the Hansa was lost in the ice, she was therefore superfluous, is scarcely a logical conclusion. CHAPTER y. JOUBNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE ELIGELY FJOED. DISCOVBEY OF COAL LAYEES ON KUHN ISLAND. 14tH TO 21ST SEPT., 1869.' Our outflttings. — Departure on 14th September. — First night under tents. — Passage of Clavering Straits in sledges. — Cape Hamburg. — A Polar bear shot. — The Fllgely Fjord. — Ascent of a mountain- ' peak 4050 feet high. — The prospect therefrom. — The Fligely Fjord connected with Ardencaple Bay. — Scientific labours of Lieutenant Payer. — Return to the tent. — An Arctic night. — Back to the ship. — Discovery of coal strata on Kuhn Island by Lieutenant Payer. — Arrival at the ship on 21st September. The temperature was now settled at one degree below freezing point, and althougi. in tlie neighbourhood of Pendulum Island tbe young ice was destroyed by tie wind as soon as formed, tlie ground on land was frozen hard, and the watery pools on the firm land-ice were already covered with a coating of ice, so thick as to be able to bear the weight of sledges and men. Now was the fittest time for our proposed sledge-journey to the west; and on the same day, the 13th, all necessary preparations were made. It was the first of. any importance that we had undertaken, and though, from works on the Arctic regions, we understood something of the ways and means of carry- ing it out, none of us had any practical experience, so that ' By Captain Koldewcy and Lieutenant Payer. JOURNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE FLIGELY PJOED. 313 our arrangements eventually proved to be somewhat defi- cient. As, on our departure from home, the prevailing idea was that the greatest and most substantial discoveries must be made with the ship, our instructions spoke only of probable glacier excursions to the interior of the country, and not of extensive sledge journeys along the coast and the banks of the Fjord. At the outfitting in Bremen there was, therefore, no provision made for these, and our sledge apparatus (tents, coverings, and so on) was not quite what it ought to have been. During the summer we had learnt from experience that the round tent with a pole in the centre, which we had TENT FOK SIEDGE-J0UENI:TIKG. brought from Bremen, was not practically useful ; it was, therefore, changed into a four-cornered one, and provided with a roof. At each corner a pole was placed, perpen- dicularly, and fastened by ropes, held and propped up with stones. In stretching the roof also ropes had to be made fastio the ground. This tent answered our purpose 314 THE GERMAN AECTIG EXPEDITION. on the whole, and proved serviceable. The supports were, however, weak and unsatisfactory, and constantly requir- ing alteration and strengthening to enable it to bear up against the storms. This took place in the beginning of the winter. Our further apparatus consisted of necessary wooUen coverings (fur we had not yet taken to), pro- visions for eight days, and of instruments — theodolite, barometer, and thermometer. We began our journey on the afternoon of the 14th of September, in fine quiet weather, and under a cloudless sky. The night previous, in a temperature of 23° Fahr., a thin ice-crust had formed from our harbour over the whole of Clavering Straits to the old land-ice, the extent of which was two nautical miles from the south-west cape of the island, and therefore four nautical miles from our harbour, through which we had to force our way with much trouble, with the boats laden with the sledges and baggage on to the old ice. After three hours' work we reached it, and now the sledge journey may be said to have begun. The sledges, which carried about six cwt., were drawn by six men, the Captain, First Lieutenant Payer, Tramnitz, Kranschner, Klentzer, and EUinger, travelUng with comparative ease over the almost snowless ice ; but a short distance past the south-west cape of the island, the road became rough and uneven from the half- melted and again frozen snow-drifts, so that it required all our strength to get along. In order not to tire the men too much on the first day, we halted about eight p.m. on a tongue of land running from the Kronenberg of Sabine Island, and raised our tent. Not being yet prac- tised in such travelling, and in all the management of our hands, so necessary in raising tents and cooking food, we JOURNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE FLIGELY FJOED. 315- were an hour and a half before we could roll ourselves in our blankets and go to rest. Tbe narrow and cramped position in wbich we lay in the small tent (nine feet long and six feet broad) on the hard frozen ground, prevented us from enjoying a good night's rest, although we were quite warm enough ; and we had plenty of time in which to consider how far superior a soft bed was. Although bears were numerous round about us, and we met some almost every day, we had not as yet set any watch during the night, and had only taken a loaded gun and revolver into the tent with us as a precaution. The time for rest on a sledge- journey, if one wishes to press forward, is necessarily of the shortest, and setting watch would, from the unavoid- able loss of rest, be very prejudicial, or cause us to lose many hours of very precious time. One must also con- sider the wary nature of bears, and that they would always have to destroy the tent before getting at us. But, indeed, in all our sledge-journeys during sleeping time we were spared the visits of such combative companions. Either the bears preferred making no further acquaintance with us, or they came at a time when we could best greet them with a shot. The next morning, the 15th, we started at a quarter to six, after a good breakfast, taking a north-westerly direc- tion obliquely across Clavering Straits, in order to reach the mainland; the temperature was 20.5° Fahr., the weather fine, the wind quiet, and we brought the sledge along over the hard snow with comparative ease. We reached Cape Berlin after a six hours' journey. After a mid-day rest we pulled on through snow deserts of ever- increasing depth towards the mainland. This sur- rounded a broad bay stretching to the south, and was 316 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. intersected by a Fjord of, as yet, undecided extent to the west of our road. The exploration of this Fjord was our aim. We thought from the imposing walls of gneiss at its point of debouche (Cape Hamburg) that we should be able to reach it in a few hours, far under-rating the actual dis- tance, which is often the case in Arctic regions. In the bright clear air, the land looked so near that we fancied we could see every crack in the rocks, and even every stone, distinctly enough to grasp it with the hand ; but the further we walked, the further the land seemed to recede, and as the journey in the not quite frozen snow was trying enough without this, there was a great amount of ill-humour over the constant disappointment. But everything has an end, and at last it was real land, and a real mountain- chain which lay before us. In Arctic regions one is so subject to illusions, that you cannot swear to having land before you, until your feet are actually upon it. This happened with us in the evening at dusk, and we pitched our tent on a smooth spot. This second night's rest was better than the first, and after such a trying day's work we slept the sleep of the just. " On the 16th of September, as we 'were at breakfast, a white fox rushed almost into the midst of us, wishing to share it, but he paid for his boldness with his life. We also saw a bear in the distance ; he did not venture near, however, but shufiied, first, comfortably along to our encampment, which we had long since left. A saucepan cover, which we afterwards missed, served him as a ball ; and as Bruin found nothing to eat, he followed on our track, and, as he drew nearer, had to pay for liis murderous JOURNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE FLIGELY FJOED. 317 intentions by a well-aimed shot from Mr. Tramnitz. We took one of his hams with us as an addition to our stock of provisions ; the beautiful skin, and the remainder of the flesh we left for the ravens and the foxes. At the mouth of the Fjord, where Cape Hambm-g bends round to the west, we halted for our mid-day meal, as well as for the purpose of making some necessary measurements. In the meantime we had discovered, to our great sur- prise, that the Fligely Fjord was covered with an uninter- rupted coating of ice. Sorry we were that we had brought no skates, by which our journey would have been much hastened. We pushed ourselves along the ice with the alpenstocks ; the sledge followed easily, almost by the influence of the wind. The ice in the Fjord ^, evidently only formed in September, was at first from three to four inches thick, then three-quarters of an inch, so that our steps were accompanied by an uninterrupted cracking. Large cracks formed, and we kept near the land, so that in case of falling in we might find a bottom. With one thrust of the iron point of the alpenstock, we broke the icy covering, and drank eagerly of the up- springing water. This, being immediately under the ice, was but little salt, and quite drinkable. The shore of the Fjord was surrounded by beautiful mountain-chains — to the north gneiss — and granite chffs, at the foot of which were slopes covered with soft grassy vegetation; to the south rose ice-crowned rocks, the . highest of which (we will call it Domberg) was certainly ' This Fjord had for the most part been free from ice in the summer. The heat in the two summer months is here so great that it will melt ice of seven feet thickness, which is not possible in the outer coast in these latitudes. The ice outside the Fjord remained firm all the summer. 318 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. more than 3900 feet tigli. Reindeer came from all sides of the strand in a state of wonder ; but this time we with- stood the desire to hunt, in order to lose no time. Only once was the journey interrupted by a slight topographical incident. A bear which came near us, we frightened away by shouting, after which, Klentzer fell through the ice ; he was pulled out, and had to cross a long broad breach. The ice had now become so thin that it began to break dangerously ; we might, therefore, think ourselves fortunate, when in the darkness, after a seven hours' march of eighteen (English) miles, and after crossing a small field of snow, we arrived safely at the west side of the Fjord, which bent sharply to the north. It suddenly struck us that tlie sound in which we had landed was con- nected with the Ardencaple Inlet ; we therefore altered our original plan of ascending the Domberg, and followed the Fjord northwards in order to climb one of those over- looking summits from which we might expect to solve this question. On the morning of the 1 7th of September, there- fore (28° Fahr.), the sledge was left in the care of Tram- nitz (who this day killed a reindeer), Kranschner, and Klentzer, whilst Captain Koldewey, Ellinger, and Payer hurried along for two hours in a northerly direction over the smooth ice, carefully jumping over the fragments broken by the tide, till at length they stood on the land at the foot of the mountain they wished to cHmb. Everywhere we were met by chilly glacier-streams, buried deep in a sedimentary crystaUine formation. Our way led off over a precipitous declivity. Above a lovely valley containing a lake, we went, step by step, over large boulders ; then over a small ice-field to the summit, which had taken us six hours and a half to reach. No- JOURNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE FLIGELY FJORD. 319 where was the boundary of vegetable life so marked as in our own Alps, which, may arise from the fact that, owing to the length of the Arctic day, elevation above the sea less sensibly affects vegetation than with us. The view from the top was beyond description beau- tiful. It stretched over Hochstetter's Foreland and Shannon, as far as Pendulum Island. We were at once convinced of the impregnable solidity of the pack-ice, as well as that the Fligely Fjord (as we had conjectured) did really open into Ardencaple Bay. Only to the west the horizon was entirely closed by massive peaks about twenty miles off. Several readings of the quicksilver barometer gave the height of our mountain as a little over 4050 feet. After three hours' measuring. Payer had finished with the panorama, by which time the temperature of 31.8° Fahr. was most unpleasant. In the meantime Captain Koldewey had gone back in a westerly direction on an excursion to the shoulders of a mountain, upon which he thus remarks in his day- book: — The mountain was nearly the highest in the neighbourhood, and as the weather was particularly fine and clear, we had a fine wide prospect.. I went some nautical miles further westward along the ridge, in order to gain a better glimpse of the interior. Towards the south-west, the mountain fell precipitously in a deep ravine; beyond this the land was undulatory, and the outer horizon seemed bounded by a mountain chain running north -and south. Towards the north was a long valley stretching east and west, and also to the south lay a deep basin with rugged sides. This basin was particularly free from snow, only the highest peaks being 320 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. partly covered. Large glaciers were nowliere to be seen. Towards tlie east only, over Shannon, and Hocli- stetter's Foreland, were some connected tracts of ice, but no trace of open water. Besides tbis, tbe ice-fields to tbe nortb-east of Sbannon were not yet in motion, and tbe faint bope of advancing furtber nortb witb tbe sbip in tbe spring (wbicb until now Captain Koldewey bad nourisbed), disappeared at tbis sigbt. Wintering on Sabine Island bad now become a certainty, and we retraced our way over ice and naked rocks. In vain did we try, in tbe now increasing darkness, to find a weapon wbicb we bad left bebind, and just as fruitless was tbe searcb for a draugbt in tbe cbilly glacier streams witb wbicb to quencb our burning tbirst. As we could no longer feel our way over tbe smootb ice along tbe strand, we ran quickly on. It was a glorious nigbt; a perfect calm and a cloudless sky. A wbitisb nortbern ligbt, wbicb we saw to tbe soutb of us, togetber witb tbe Hgbts of tbe stars, sbed a feeble glimmer over tbe icy landscape round us, and tbe ice-crowned tops of tbe surrounding mountains were distinctly to be seen. No- wbere does Nature sbow berself witb greater power and expression tban in tbe Arctic regions; and on, sucb a September nigbt as tbis it was truly majestic. About midnigbt we reacbed tbe tent. Tbe men were already wrapped in tbeir blankets, and tbe fire made of drift-wood and reindeer fat was nearly out. It was again brougbt to a flame, and soon we bad a basin of strong reindeer soup, and some delicious steaks before us, wbicb did us good. Witb a pipe we enjoyed tbe beauty of tbe nigbt a little time longer, tben wrapped ourselves in our blankets for a good sleep. .TOURNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE FLIGELY FJORD. 321 On the IStli of September (20° Falir.) a grey foggy curtain hung over Migely Fjord. Tramnitz and BUinger went to look for the missing weapon ; others collected drift-wood on the shore, whilst Payer completed the materials for the chart, and the geological collection. At four p.m. we started on our return to the ship, as unfortunately our provisions forbade a longer stay. Further investigation of so important a discovery as Ardencaple Inlet, and that of the Fjord opening into it, could have been easily carried on under any other circumstances. The already-mentioned broad fissure in the road over the Fjord, brought us this time into an unpleasant position, for Klentzer broke through with the sledge. He succeeded in working himself up on to a stronger piece of ice ; but as the water soaked through the bag- gage, the sledge sunk deeper and deeper. As it was impossible to puU it out on to the thin ice without unloading, we cut the ropes and brought the goods, one by one, on to the ice, and lastly the sledge also. Both of the barometers fell victims to this mishap, and from the theodohte-case the water spurted as if it had been touched by Moses' wand. "We were now forced to encamp at once on the shore, in order to dry our blankets, &c., by a fire of Andro- meda.^ That this was not quite a success may be be- lieved, at a temperature of 18° Fahr. The saturated and frozen tent we could with difficulty raise at all; the folds were like lead. We suffered not a Httle from the cold that night ; the weather at the ' This fuel had to be sought under fresh fallen snow, whereby I had a finger frostbitten. Y 322 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION, same time becoming damp and inclement. The sky was cloudy, and in tlie afternoon there was a fall of snow, though without the customary accompaniment of wind. Meteorological observations on board indicated at the same time a storm from the north, which broke over Sabine Island and its neighbourhood on the afternoon of the 18th and the night of the 19th, The interior of the Fjord is evidently not so exposed to the devastation of the northern storms, which sweep the outer coast for nine months in the year, as it is to the deep loose snow which in the spring effectually prevents any advance into it. Nearly everywhere on the outer coast the snow was hard and firm. On the morning of the 19th a herd of musk-oxen approached to within about sixty paces of us, while some reindeer came very near us, "We left them unharmed however, as we still had a store of that killed two days before. As we were starting on our way (14° Fahr.), Payer noticed a stone of strikingly light colour, which, on the south side of Kuhn Island, formed solid over- hanging crystals, to at least 2000 feet high. He therefore left the sledge, and to his great astonishment stumbled upon an enormous layer of coal, alternating with sand- stone ; this was most likely Lias coal, from three-quarters to eighteen inches thick. The fact that Payer was not armed, and that therefore — as he was heavily laden with coal and other minerals — he must be careful in this neighbourhood so overrun with bears, and had better return to the sledge, prevented any further investigation for the moment, of this interesting geological discovery. In the afternoon we reached Oape Hamburg (eight miles and a half). The following morning (20th Sep- JOtJRNEY BY SLEDGE TO THE ELIGELY FJORD. 323 tember, 5° Fahr.) Payer, Tramnitz, and Bllinger, took the three hours' walk back to the coal strata, to find, if possible, any petrifactions and imbedded substances. Their trouble was richly rewarded. The discovery of a coal layer is, for the future in- vestigation of Grreenland, of the greatest importance, as, of all the necessaries of life, want of fuel is that which would most prevent any long stay inland. Another interesting discovery was the trace of former glaciers. There were smooth rocks, 170 feet above the sea, and that in a valley perfectly free from ice, — central and lateral moraines, with the sharp, charac- teristic, longitudinal ridge, — and the mounds of debris and peculiar stone-dust. Unfortunately, in sledge journeys, hunger is a permanent discomfort ; and although we ate plentifully and often of the reindeer, we were never thoroughly satisfied, in consequence of the difficulty of respiration. On the 21st of September we pulled, in 18° Fahr. and through violently drifting snow, over the snowy desert to Cape Berlin. After a short midday rest, and three more hours of traveUing, we neared the northern entrance of Falsche Bay, where we passed the night. On the following day (21st September) we went on foot over the young ice, to our winter quarters on board ship, having travelled 133^ miles in all. CHAPTER VI. PRErABATIONS FOB WINTEEING. 13tH SEPTEMBEB TO 7th novbmbee, 1869.' Hunting. — Supplying the ship witli water for the winter. — Forewarn- ings of wioter. — Frost. — Habits of birds of passage. — Eeturn of the discoverers of the Fligely Fjord. — Laying up of the ship for the winter. — State of the Germania's winter harbour. — Need of a good harbour for Arctic wintering. — Heaving up anchor. — Laying up of tlie ship. — Evening on the ice. — Skating. — Securing the hull against the winter cold. — Wall of ice-blocks round the ship. — Fine autumnal weather. — Storm. — Sun disappears the 6th November. — Vegetation. — Scurvy-grass. — Visit from a bear. — A bear-hunter. — A black fox. — Dredging. The Germania, as we liave seen, liad anchored once more under Sabine Island on the 13tli of September ; having thus performed a voyage of five weeks and a half; a space of time in which much might be done with steam, if only one had open water ; instead of which we could only run along the coast by small stretches, as both in the north and the south, and also in the creeks to west- ward, solid masses of ice met the ship, which it was impossible to overcome. Attempts had therefore to be made to explore the land, independently of the ship. Accordingly, on the following day, the 14th, a journey was undertaken to Falsche Bay. ' By Dr. Pansch. PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING. 325 Wintering under Sabine Island in the small " Ger mania Harbour," where on the 6th of August we had first cast anchor, now seemed an absolute necessity ; and Mr. Sengstacke was commissioned by the captain, in his absence to make all necessary arrangements. It was a fine, clear spring day, the 14th of September^ at two p.m., when, with high hopes, we saw the well- packed boat take its way through the young ice and disappear behind the tongue of land. The day before. Dr. Copeland and Sengstacke had gone hunting, and had fired at a reindeer, when the practised eye of the former saw a dark moving mass high on the Hasenberg, which could be nothing else than musk-oxen. This discovery set all in joyful excitement. We now knew that this creature visited our island, and we therefore had the prospect of successfully hunting some, which would form a treasured store of meat for the winter. As it was already late, the hunt had to be put off until the morning. Fortunately, the next day was just as fine and cloudless, and Dr. Copeland started early, accompanied by Louis Wagner, the stoker. Let us hear the events of this day : — "On the morning of the 13th of September, 1869, Sengstacke and I, accompanied by the stoker, started to follow the track of a reindeer which had been wounded the evening before. The weather was clear and fine; and as we had the whole day before us, we hoped cer- tainly to find the object of our search, — provided, of course, that it had not left the island. After half an hour's walking, we came to the plateau between Hasen- berg and Germaniaberg, and soon found traces of the wounded creature. We followed them for some time, 326 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. ■when we became suddenly aware of the very desirable presence of three musk-oxen — two bulls and a cow — wbicb were quietly grazing at a little distance. Vntil now we bad not met witb any of these animals on Pen- dulum Island ; and our delight at the sight of these wild, interesting creatures may be imagined. Sengstacke and Wagner made a circuit towards the interior, to prevent them from flying to the hills in the interior of the island, whilst I remained on the coast, protected from their sight by a small hilly ridge running parallel with the shore, Sengstacke was the first to get within shooting distance, when, all at once, the oxen began to snort, which with them is a sign either of fear or of anger ; and all three started at full speed straight to the Hasenberg, when they rapidly disappeared in the ravine at its foot. We now separated further still from one another, as we hoped to find them again in one of ~ the deep ravines, when we suddenly saw them once more, hurrying up a steep declivity of loose stones. It was really a fine sight to see them leaping with such astonishing agility, where man would have had great trouble in even setting his foot. They kept close to each other, as all animals do that go in herds. Had they done otherwise, those far behind would have been under a perfect hail of stones from those which, in their eagerness, had hurried for- ward.' This was the last we saw of them that day ; for, although we scoured the whole of the southern slope of the Hasenberg, making a circuit into the interior, the creatures remained invisible. Chiefly from the wish to bag something, we shot some hares ; but our whole thoughts were on the musk-oxen. As we returned I saw, as I had done in the morning, some eider-drakes. I PREPAEATIONS FOE WINTERING. 327 mention this fact because we had seen a great number of ducks since we bad landed, but only mothers with their little ones, tending them until they were able to undertake the long journey to the south. " The next day Mr. Sengstacke, as acting officer of the ship, could not, unfortunately, accompany us. Wagner and I, therefore, started alone in quest of the oxen. As we neared the Hasenberg, we saw our friends, by the help of a pocket telescope, peacefully resting on the snow, at a height of from 1050 to 1200 feet above us, on the side of the mountain looking landwards. We climbed as quickly as possible, and after about an hour's time found our- selves near them. But although we tried on every side to get close to them, we could not succeed without their seeing us. At last we were obliged to agree to try with less circumspection. At first they seemed quite con- tented with their work of chewing, not dreaming of any threatened danger, but suddenly, with a, bound, they were oflF. I was so beyond myself at this mishap, that, from sheer desperation, I sent some shots after them, of course without any result. If their great speed and agiHty had astonished us the day before, our wonder was greater to-day, as we saw them bound up the acchvity, which was as steep as basalt fragments could possibly be. At the utmost, they were not more than three or four minutes reaching the height of 450 feet, which the top of the mountain appeared to reach. We followed slowly after them, and really the ascent was so difficult that it took us quite half an hour to do what the oxen had done in a few minutes. We found a slight trace of blood, thereby concluding that the chance shot had not been without its effect. Upon reaching the summit, we saw 328 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. that they had chmbed to a steep snow furrow on the outer slope of the roof-shaped mountain. As we knew that by following them we should only hasten their flight, we sat down and took some refreshment. It did not escape us, however, that the oxen had ceased to mount, and had withdrawn to the north-west side of the moun- tain. Here the ground was very uneven; deep rifts, alternating with stony hills. We now distinctly saw that one of the bulls was less active than the other, and as the unharmed one seemed resolved not to leave his comrade, they went but slowly forward. We waited until they were out of our sight behind the hills, and then followed as quickly as the stony nature of the ground permitted. We now passed quickly, but cautiously; one hilly range after another, and, at every open spot where the oxen might perceive us, we looked carefully to see if they were not in the next hollow. Thus we had passed several hiUs, and had begun to fear that our prey had escaped us again, when at that moment we espied the back of one. It was grazing, and coming straight towards us. I fell back at once, and, after drawing Wagner's attention, dropped upon hands and knees, and thus approached the unsuspecting beast. Before they suspected anything, we were alongside of all three. Wagner's Austrian breech-loader and my double-barrelled gun made it possible to give them the three shots in as many seconds ; one of the oxen was quite incapable of combat. Wagner looked after the other, with which it seemed that he would have enough to do. The poor terror-stricken cow tried to blunder down the slope, and I ran after her. In two or three minutes I stood but a few steps from her and fired, aiming at the head. It was PEEPABATIONS FOE WINTERING. 329 the first and last time that I tried this shot upon a musk ox. I struck the cow exactly in the middle of the fore- head, about an inch above the eyes ; she scarcely seemed to shrink, and I was glad to be able to give her another in the shoulder immediately, as she seemed inclined to try what she could do with her short, crooked horns in self-defence. Wagner in the meantime had finished his part of the work, so that, after cutting their throats, we rolled them some hundred feet down the deep, steep slope, where they rested upon a comparatively smooth snow-heap. Then followed the less agreeable but neces- sary work of skinning them. Wagner was willing enough and strong enough; but as this sort of work was new to him, the greater part of course fell to my share. As the animals were so near the ship, I much wished to so skin them as to put them in our collection ; and at last, after the lapse of two hours, we had the pleasure of taking off the skin of the third ox, with its head and feet attached. Whilst thus busied, we kept a sharp look-out for less agreeable guests; for a bear, attracted by the smell of the dead animals, might visit us; but at first nothing happened. Excited by the happy results of our hunt, we were about returning, when Wagnev suddenly saw a huge bear very near to us. He was a magnificent fellow. Standing on the back of the neighbouring height, he twisted his long neck from right to left, sniffing the air with, every sign of caution and mistrust ; he showed to advantage as he stood with his powerful broad breast presented to us ; his huge paws firm upon the ground, or sometimes raised when he stood on his hind feet to sniff the air more efifectually. As soon as we saw him, we ducked between the stones, and examined whether 330 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. we tad cartridges enougli. I being more practised in shooting than Wagner, took Ms breecli-loader, wliicli for this case was the best weapon. Carefully did I pick the spot in the silvery shining fur of Bruin where the heart ought to be, and fired. With a fearful howl he disap- peared behind the hill. We followed him as fast as our legs could carry us, and found the huge beast about twenty paces from the spot where he had been standing mortally wounded. We gave him an extra shot to make sure, and then opened the jugular vein. I think this was the largest specimen of Ursus maritimus that we saw during our stay in the Arctic regions. He was very fat, proving that though his teeth were gone, the experience of age had taught him how to supply all necessaries. Our united exertions could not turn him round, so, for the present, we had to leave him. Our comrades on board were delighted at the prospect of being so richly provided with fresh meat ; and on the following morning, at half- past two, we started with seven men, two boats, and a light sledge. At two p.m. we returned laden with the carcases, heads, and skins of our three oxen, and the head and skin of the great bear, besides some foxes which we surprised at our meat store. One of them seemed fond of liver, and was making ofE with a large piece when a shot brought him down. At dinner, when the liver came on the table, some shot in the piece which had fallen to my lot, showed that I had shared the unlucky fox's last morsel. Our careful sailors were of opinion that no gift of God's should be lost, so they had brought it away and found it useful for the cabin table." So far Dr. Oopeland's account. Frost had now set in, and we could not tell how soon PEEPARATIONS FOE WINTEEING. 331 real winter, with, cold, storm, and snow, would overtake us. Our first duty was the ship's safety and preparations for passing the winter. Orders were then given that all the ship's crew should once more enjoy the sweet water from the neighbouring brook, as we wished to avoid as long as possible the use of melted snow. In spite of the difl&culty of fetching water in the boat, we had just finished in time ; as on the 17th the earth was frozen on the surface, and the streams showed but little water, and in the course of a day or two ceased running altogether. And now ever more menacingly did the harbinger of winter warn us. Boreas, with his sudden and violent rising, and the heavy squalls under Pendulum Island, which we soon learnt to know, burst no fewer than three times over the ship this week. On the 16th the storm was so strong that we had to drop the second anchor. The next day was again a fine, still autumn day. On the 18th the almost inch-thick covering of ice burst into several floes, so that we were able to tow our ship further into the harbour. That evening and night we had another storm from the north, which, however, did no harm to the ship, but broke up aU the ice afresh and drifted it away, so that the Germania was once more free in the water ; but it was for the last time. The coming Sunday broke still and clear, though the temperature even at noon was not above 19° Fahr. rising to 46°. A new icy covering formed, increasing in thick- ness so quickly that in the night of the 20th and 21st, the rising storm in the creek, with its hurricane gusts, could not break it. All possibility of going out with the 332 THE GEJIMAN AEU'L'IO EXPEDITION. boat was now quite at an end. It was on this Sunday (19tli), the same day on whicli the Hansa, on the floe 120 miles further south, found that she was frozen in; but what a diflference in circumstances there and here ! It was interesting for us at this time to observe the hfe and ways of some of those birds of passage whose existence depends upon open water. There were from thirteen to fifteen eider-ducks in the harbour, four of which were old ones, swimming in two groups. During the follow- ing days we had frequent opportunities, in the open fissures and holes at the entrance of the creek, particularly near the peninsula, where the observatory stood, to watch the short flights of these birds. They also flew round the ship and the bay, and then disappeared. On the 20th these water-holes had disappeared, and with them the ducks. Only one young thing was left behind, which timidly waddled by on the slippery ice, and dead-tired was at last shot out of pity. "When later, from the cutting through of the ship on the 24th, a channel of open water was formed, ducks again appeared, and several were killed. The attempt to keep one ahve on board did not, however, succeed. As in the course of the 21st the weather cleared, and our comrades had been absent seven days, we began to be uneasy about them ; we anticipated all sorts of mis- haps, and finally determined to go and meet them the next day with some provisions. On the 22nd, therefore, Mr. Sengstacke started early with two men, to beat the south side of the island. For the first time they succeeded in getting to land on foot across the ice, it having frozen so sharply the last few nights. Our uneasiness was fortunately quite unneces- PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING. 333 sary. The travellers returned to the island in good spirits, and Mr. Sengstacke and his companions had the unexpected good fortune to kill two reindeer. Thus we were all together once more, and were able seriously to set to work upon our winter preparations. It was indeed . high time. The thermometer at night was already below 14° Fahr., and we could expect nothing but an increase of cold. The first requisite was to find a secure position for the ship. It ought not to come in contact with drifting ice, but remain quietly on the spot where it was frozen in, until summer should free it from its icy fetters. The experience of former Arctic explorers had proved that the most serious dangers and difficulties might arise under unfavourable circumstances. The eminent Arctic explorer Kane was in his first voyage blocked in the pack-ice for nearly nine months ; and on the second he was obliged to leave the frozen-in brig in Rensselaer har- bour, and make a most difficult journey with the boats. . For ourselves, according to human calculations, we might look forward to future events without any mis- giving. Our ship had run at the right time into the finest winter harbour that we could desire. It seemed as if nature had made it for the Germania. Almost circular, with a peculiarly narrow entrance, it lay on the south-east point of the island. To the north, the far-spreading land and a mountain chain of more than 900 feet high formed a continual protection against the devastating northern storms, as well as fi:om the rushing current of the pack-ice ; and "Walrus Island, lying to the south-east, protected the harbour from the strong pressing and pushing of the ice, which, drifting by the 334 THE GERMAN AECJTIC EXPEDITION. sea-breeze or the currents against the neighbouring open coast, was sometimes followed by frightful results. This creek was named " Germania Harbour." Kolde- wey would willingly have wintered farther north, in order to have a more advanced starting-point for the sledge journeys in the spring, but no safer harbour or anchorage existed under Shannon Island or Klein-Pendulum ; and we had cause to be thankful that we were not obliged to seek shelter farther south, somewhere about Gael Ham- kes Bay. On the 24th of September, the ship was brought to the chosen spot, 300 paces from the western point of land. For this purpose we had to cut a channel in the now three-inch-thick ice. The cutting of the ice, and the song of the sailors as they towed the ship along, sounded cheerful on this fine winter morning ; and before noon the work was completed. The Germania now lay for 290 days condemned to inactivity, with her bow N.N.W., in order, as much as possible, to break the force of the storm. The next morning the command, " Heave anchor ! " sounding so peculiar to every voyager, was heard for the last time, followed by the regular rattling of the wind- lass. The anchor was stowed away on board, as we had no further use for it ; and the ship, until it should freeze in position, was made fast with ropes to the ice and the neighbouring rock. She had now to be entirely unfitted, down to the lower masts and the shrouds, and everything brought on land that would not be required during the winter. Thus, on one side, the ship was disburdened, and on the other we gained considerable space both on deck and in the cabin, ^r-'- •' i ■*• ■~j*'"fyt ii' PREPARATIONS FOR WINTERING. 335 whicli in every respect was, in winter, of the greatest importance. First, the sails were taken down and rolled together, then the yards and the maintopmast, and the sails and all the rigging dismantled. The foretopmast we purposely left standing, that we might have a lofty point, which, in the course of time, might be useful for observing the air- currents and electricity. Then the deck was cleared, and the long-boat hoisted from its place. The spare spars and all utensils and chests were brought to shore. The sam.e thing was done with all provisions which the frost could not destroy, except, of course, what we needed for use during the half-year. The two largest boats we laid with the yards, &c., on the flat shore at the end of the harbour. For the provisions, however, we erected a " depot, " half way to the observatory on the peninsula. On a layer of planks we closely packed our chests and vessels, covering them with sails, the edges of which were kept down by heavy stones. Thus buried, our belongings seemed able to defy both storms and bears. But other things re- mained to be done. One or two men had to help build the stone houses ; and the engineer and the stoker were busy taking the machinery to pieces. One of these stone houses was intended for an observatory. It was built on the corner of land lying near to the ship, upon the steep edge of the bank ; foi the other, as a magnetical obser- vatory, a more north-west position seemed preferable. The glorious evenings on the ice during these last September weeks, the first of our winter stay, will ever be remembered by all. Seamen and scientific men worked valiantly in the sweat of their faces the whole day long ; and when the 336 THE GERMAN ATACTIC EXPEDITION. longed-for evening meal was over, there remained one or two hours of enjoyment in each other's society, which we generally passed in skating. If the ice had not that mirror-face which our own fresh- water lakes present, still it had its charms. We then settled down to friendly conversation, as we were accustomed to do in our own country, some adepts, others novices, but all eager to learn the art. The fate of the Hansa, too, troubled us, giving us con- stant room for conjecture, though having but little real fear for her. For comforting circumstances greatly pre- ponderated, and it would have been unnatural with such, if we had not believed in the lucky stars of our comrades and their tried captain. Added to this, the present had such constant claims upon us that we had no time for moping. To keep out the snow and wind, and also to keep in the warmth, a tent of strong sail-cloth was stretched over the ship ; and finally a three-inch-thick layer of moss was spread over the deck. The tent-roof had been prepared before our departure, so it had only to be put up. Where it was bolted we placed upright supports, so that even there we might walk upright, and from these the roof rose almost obliquely to the top, which was composed of the mainboom and the mizzen- boom placed longitudinally. From the foremast it de- scended to the forestays, and with that down to the bows, ending over the stern with a more perpendicular gable. As has already been said, this was composed of the strongest sail-cloth; and the different parts were so firmly put together that we dared to hope it would resist the storm ; and the more so as the sharp front lay towards PEEPARATtONS FOR WINTERING. 337 the nortli wind. At the back, looking towards the obser- vatory, was the exit, the only opening in the tent, which could, be closed by a trap-board. Through this small hole we slipped in and out on to some wooden steps by which we reached the ice. The favourable weather was also taken advantage of to tar the ship's sides. Whilst the outside was thus putting on its winter clothing, many alterations were made within. The ques- tion here was not only the greatest protection from cold, but the making it really habitable and home-Hke. We already found that the warmest half was the fore- cabin, just abaft the forecastle, and which was built like a cage in the middle of the hold, which surrounded it on all four sides. Hereupon a winter cabin for the captain had to be made, as the former, from its isolated position in the afterpart of the ship, required too much coal to warm it. As it was farther desirable, both for work and amuse- ment during the long winter, to have more room, the back wall of the cabin was set back three quarters of a yard ; and on a line with this a new room of forty-three inches in depth was built, connected by an opening, but with no door. The wooden walls of the cabin were then covered on the outside with felt, and on the inside with thick woollen stuflF, called " coating." The floor was partly covered with a carpet, and partly also with felt and sailcloth nailed over it. The iron stove had then to change its place and go into the farthest corner, from whence it could most effectually warm all parts. The ceiling was likewise set up inside, and it was intended by-and-by to cover the roof with snow for protection. The skylight, too, could not be allowed to remain open ; z 338 THE GEBMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. ao we covered it, both out and inside, except in the brightest hours of the day ; and in order that we might enjoy the light as long as possible, the back part of the tent roof on the forepart of the ship was always rolled back until the 9th of October, when lamps were burnt all day long. Our stove proved excellent. While outside the temperature stood at from 0° to 4° Fahr., in the cabin we were able to keep up an agreeable warmth with about ten pounds of coal. But, besides the cold, the European wintering in the North has another enemy awaiting him, which often brings on illness ; this enemy is the damp. The wateri- ness of the atmosphere, rising from all parts, penetrates into the rooms, settling naturally upon every relatively cold object. These are particularly the walls and ceiliag of the cabin. And even with continual airing we did not succeed in keeping the damp really out of the cabin. In order, therefore, to accomplish this, we bored large holes, after Ross's example, of two inches diameter through the deck, turning over it a large hollow iron vessel covered with snow, on the very cold inner surface of which the watery contents of the atmosphere soon condensed, forming a crust of ice, which was removed from time to time. Two of these condensers we placed over the cabin, two over the forecastle, and one over the captain's cabin. In the forecastle, as may be supposed, no further heat- ing was necessary than that caused by the daily cooking in the caboose. Indeed, at meal-time the heat was so great that the door had to be opened and the condensing holes left uncovered for a long time ; by these means the damp was more easily got rid of. PEEPAEATIONS FOB WINTERING. 339 Another contrivance we made for melting the snow. In the chimney of the caboose we constructed a receiver, from the bottom of which a pipe ran through the deck into a barrel, and all snow thrown into the receiver, being melted by the warmth of the chimney, fell into it. During all these preparations in September and October the days had become visibly shorter and the air colder. As, however, it had not snowed yet, we agreed for the time to surround the ship with a wall of ice-blocks. This we did on the 11th of October. A row of blocks were brought in a line from the stern of the ship to the small bridge near the observatory leading to the land. They were soon frozen fast, and from them a rope was drawn to the land. This erection, already tried by Parry, was also intended to show us the way to the ship in gloomy and snowy weather. We did not then dream of what great service this improvised fence would be to us. Our jolly-boat, too, would more than once have been carried away by the storm had it not found a check to its wild course. On the 2nd of November so great a quantity of snow fell that the ship was completely enveloped, and also a thick layer over the moss on deck. And now, when the winter night should come, we were prepared to receive it ; but we had to wait some time longer. The whole of October and some part of November we enjoyed the finest autumn weather. We called this, with good reason, late autumn ; real winter it was not yet to us. " Fine clear weather with calm," — such was the ever-repeated entry in the ship's log, and we had, indeed, " over East Greenland an ever-smiling heaven." Besides the storms of the 19th and 20th, until the 21st of z 2 340 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. September, we had three more. On the 7th they blew the fiercest, lasting seventeen hours, and bringing, much snow with them. These were followed by the others on the 13th and 30th. During these storms the roof of the observatory was completely torn off, and scattered in por- tions wide over the ice, so that we had to construct a new and stronger one. Fortunately we had delayed putting in the instruments, or they would have suffered terribly. On the 12th of October we began hourly meteorological readings. Besides the thermometers hanging in their cases in the observatory, some were posted up between the ship and the land, and by them was hoisted a black white and red flag, partly for ornament and partly to show the direction of the wind. At the stern of the ship an ingenious apparatus was erected, by which the rising and falling of the tide could be observed. The hole in the ice, through which the pole protruded for some dis- tance (" Flutloch " ^ we named it), served the cook for getting out the water wanted, and in case of fire was our only means of preservation. To keep this free from ice and of uniform dimensions was our daily care. In the course of October the cold increased sensibly, though not so much as we expected. Whilst at the end of September the mean daily temperature was still 14° Fahr., it fell by the 19th of October, with few exceptions, to 12°, which was its minimum, whilst its maximum was 25°. The temperature of the water under the ice was 84°, and remained at that point during the whole winter. For a long time we noticed a peculiar appearance, which, at the first glance, seemed to contradict all known facts. At first the surface of the young ice in the harbour ' I. e. Tide-hole. (Tr.) PEEPAEATIONS FOE WINTERING. 341 ■was smooth and firm, but soon we fomad it damp and slippery, even at 13° to 18° of cold. We now found tliat this damp coating was strongly saHne, and that in places, as, for example, quite in the inside of the creek, where an overflow of water from the shore, or from cracks or holes, was not to be thought of. Later on, after a storm, we found on the surface of the newly-formed ice in front of the creek, a white covering of salt ; more than this, we all found from experience that the snow lying on the ice, even at a great depth, was more or less brackish, so that what was wanted for melting had to be brought from land. As it is now a knowra fact that in the freezing of sea-water the salt is expelled, and nothing but pure water is found in the ice when formed, the appearance of salt on the surface puzzled us. The same appearance has already been noticed by Wrangell. It is difficult to account for this in any way but the following, viz., that part of the salt water concentrated under the ice being hard to freeze, it is by some power or other forced through the pores of the ice to the surface. The ice in the harbour itself retained its smooth surface and its first appearance, though in front of it the young ice, soon after its formation, was repeatedly, and often to a large extent, thrown one piece upon another, and that frequently in sharp detached corner fragments. To the south of the harbour, and the east of Walrus Island, this appearance was most perceptible. The cause of this, as weU as of the fractures in the ice, is to be found in the crowding together of heavy masses, which are set in motion either by the current or the wind. In the same way the yoimg crowded ice, when the coast lies before it, is pushed on to it ; or, if the bank is steep, is crushed 342 THE GEHMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. against it and heaped up in wild confusion. Ttis heap- ing up the bank is considerably increased by the ebb-tide, and if the difference only amounts to about three feet, still at each sinking of the water the ice will break away from the bank, and during the flow press slowly but steadily again towards it. In this way, in contrast to the real icy covering of the sea, is formed a more or less seamless wall on the bank, which is called " ice-foot." This push- ing up of the ice was but slight in the harbour, but on the south end of Walrus Island we noticed that it rose to the height of 30 feet. Another phenomenon of the moving ice was the formation of " hummocks," which we could not properly observe in our neighbourhood, as the ice either lay harmless or was torn away by the storm. All these movements of the ice — the gradual crowding and pressing, bending and pushing, the breaking of the masses of snow lying at the "ice-foot" — do not go on noiselessly, but are generally accompanied by certain sounds, which are called the " voices " of the ice. Now we hear a low singing, splashing, or grumbling, alternating with various other noises, cracking and snapping ; now it sounds irregularly from a great distance, like a confusion of human voices, like the changing din of a train or a sledging party ; or you fancy you hear the steps and voices of all sorts of animals. There is a peculiar charm in listening to these sounds on a still moonUght night, and often at first we were greatly deceived. All belonging to the real heavy ice masses we watched the whole autumn through, at ever- varying distances from the coast. Like a boundless, continuous, uneven white mass lay the pack-ice to the north, joining the land-ice at Shannon Island, reaching in the south past Gael PBEPABATIONS FOB WINTERING. 343 Hamkes Bay to the coast. Seldom did we see even the smallest streak of water ; and if this did happen, it was soon again covered with ice and snow. Moreover, that this pack-ice was no firm connected mass we convinced ourselves ; and, more than that, we saw distinctly that it slowly but steadily drifted southward. In stormy weather (from the north) this drift was greatly increased, and the few fields and flakes were more separated from one another. As the winter drew on, and the sun described a smaller and smaller circle each day as the cold increased, and snow as well as ice covered everything, we were begin- ning our really winter Hfe, the commencement of which we set at the 6th of November, the day the sun disap- peared. On some excursions in the neighbourhood of Ger- maniaberg, Hasenberg, Hansa Bay, and "Walrus Island, the ground being free from snow afforded us continual opportunities for botanical research, which were not with- out result. On a clear sunny day, for instance, the surface of the earth got warm, so that by noon, at two inches deep, it was 37° to 89° Fahr. ; but the night fi?osts were so sharp, and the temperature of the air so low, that by the middle of September the plants had already run their yearly course, and were prepared for a nine months' winter rest. Only two there were that differed from the rest by retaining their green leaves to deck the earth, boldly facing the cold winter day, and even bearing well-pre- served blossom ; these were the mouse-ear chickweed (Gerastum alpinum, L.) and the spoon-wort {Gochlearia fenestrata, R. Br,). The first-mentioned resembles our well-known pimpernel, which in the autumn distributes 344 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. amongst the dead plants tiie green-wMte soft leaves of tlie young shoots, sometimes retaining its blossoms or buds quite fresb in spite of the frost, and, later on, when covered with snow, still remaining unchanged, and with the beginning of the new year, as soon as the warmth has penetrated to its roots, the nine months' interrupted growth continues without any perceptible change in the plant. These interesting circumstances, which one would scarcely expect to meet in the far North, only happens with the mouse-ear chickweed upon favourable spots, as, for instance, on the heights of "Walrus Island. Much more distinctly and constantly does it appear with the spoon-wort. This plant, many species of which grow on our German coasts, is pretty general in the far North ; and by old seafarers its green succulent leaves are eaten as a specific against scurvy. If at the present day they have no longer this virtue, as a salad it is both a whole- some and agreeable dish. We scarcely made use of it, partly because it was scarce and partly because we had an abundant supply of preserved vegetables. The spoon- wort we really only found in great quantities during the whole of our journeys, in two places at the end of the peninsula, where the observatory stood, and on the cliffs of Walrus Island. But here it does not seek the damp salt earth as in our country, but the highest parts of these places ; the thick rosette of leaves, either large or small, lying between the stones, often inclosing in its centre the differently-developed, thickly -knotted buds. Thus, whilst the long outer leaves* fall a quick sacrifice to the frost, this stout juicy heart braves it vahantly. At a cold of 4° to 9° Fahr. we saw no effect produced upon it; and, perhaps, this hardy growth could stand still more. PEEPAEATIOKS EOR WINTERING, 345 Of annuals which flourish in more temperate cHmates, the Arctic Mora possesses few. We found in reality none, though one might consider a sort of saxifrage {Saxifraga flagellaris, Willd.) amongst them which propa- gates, itself by layers, and is called by the English most appropriately " spider-wort." This plant, with its strong rosette of leaves and coarse, handsome, yellow flowers, we had seen blooming in numbers on the low grounds in August. On the reddish stalks, from one to three inches long, we saw buds about the size of a small pea, gene- rally from three to eight in a circle. These buds form roots at their bases, which were even then begiuning to sink into the ground. Now, at the end of September, we found the parent plant dead. It was easily pulled from the earth, and even the tendrils broke short off, so that the young plant stood alone ready to unfold its blossoms next year. In spite of all our searches we found no fruit, not even any partly developed. Thus we have an example of a plant being only able to propagate itself by its seed in favour- able years. The preservation of this sort of plant is quite independent of chmate. All other plants are evergreen shrubs, each individual having the power of ripeniug seed unnecessarily every year. Upon this also we made some observations. The bilberry {Vacdnium uliginosum, L.), which we found growing in low, weak bushes on the eastern decli- vity of the Hasenberg, and lower down near the shore, showed no sign whatever of having bloomed the year before. The same was the case with the Andromeda on the southern declivity of Germaniaberg ; whilst this plant, on the warm southern slope of the Hasenberg, not only 346 THE QEEMAN ABCTIC EXPEDITION. grew strong, but still bore the withered blossoms of this and the former year. But we found no formation of fruit. Overtaken by the autumnal frost while in its bloom was another species of saxifrage, the Saxifraga Mr cuius (L.), and often some specimens of the yellow-blooming poppy (Palaver nudicaule); whilst other plants, as the Silene acaulis (L.), Lychnis apetala, mostly GrucifercB,ihe Ranun- culus, Oinquefoil, and the beautiful Polemonium humile, the seed of which had long since ripened, and was partly scattered. The Polemonium I saw for the first time on the southern dechvity of the Hasenberg — a strong, large-leaved plant in the otherwise so sterile, stony ground. The Oinquefoil grew here to half a foot high. Moreover, we found nearly everywhere and on every plant" this year's leaves, and very often those of the former year. In September this was seen mostly in the willow-leaves (and the catkins), though many had been torn away by the storm, and heaped up in the hollows and on the slopes. Thus in the snow furrows between the low land and the great valley had formed, as far as one could see, a dark horizontal line, which we after- wards proved consisted of nothing but dry willow-leaves. "We were also able to study the important influence which storms exert over the different kinds of vegetation. The storm of the 9th and 10th of October afforded us a good opportunity for our observations, which were con- firmed the following year. To a much less extent, unfortunately, were we able to learn the flora of the sea. We succeeded in pulHng up some floride^ at a depth of from twenty-six fathoms and five fathoms. It was also striking how, nearly every- where in the neighbourhood of the coast, either under or PREPARATIONS FOE WINTERING. 347 amongst the ice, where pieces of algge were torn up, they proved to be the large yellow-green Laminaria phyllitis and the many -branching, greyish-green JDesma- restia aculeata, mostly uprooted by the walrus, and, when rising to the surface, eventually frozen in. If the land presented all that was interesting to . a botanist, the zoologists found ib' quite the reverse. The lower grade of animal life had, since the first regular night- frosts (that is on land, for on the banks it froze much sooner), run its course ; and of birds, most had taken their departure ; still, on the 5th of October, we saw two snow- buntings. The day after the great storm (October 10th) we killed a ptarmigan at the foot of the Hasenberg in fuU winter feather. Besides the ravens, which we saw frequently, we were visited at the end of September by some grey-backed sea-mews ; three hawks circled one day round our ship, and once we saw a white eagle. The capture of a lemming ' was interesting to us, one of those insignificant rodentia, different species of which are to be found in all Arctic countries. On the west coast they are not yet knowm to any extent ; from the east coast one of these animals was brought by Scoresby. They were lemmings which we saw on the 5th of August while digging among the Esquimaux huts, though we did not succeed in kilhng one. This specimen, the first and the last we ever captured, was killed on the open field running among the stones. A pecuhar creature, in its thick, unshaped head and body, without ears or tail, ' Myodes torquatus, Pall. " It can only be classed as a very rare and local (possibly accidental) member of the Fauna of Greenland, as it has never since being found in the country." — Proceedings of Zoological Society of London, 1868, p. 349. 348 THE GERMAN AECTIG EXPEDITION. it somewliat resembles the mole ; the short, long-haired feet were armed with strong claws, and the thick fur was of a greyish-brown colour. Lemmings do not seem rare here. Independently of the masses of filth in the entrance of those huts, we had seen earth -holes in several places, which must have belonged to them, and particularly in the neighbourhood of the harbour and Walrus Island. On the latter, on the freshly-fallen snow, in the middle of October were unmistakable tracks of them; and that they are often welcome food to the fox we concluded from finding the dung of these beasts of prey, consisting of nothing but the hair and bones of lemmings. Some tracks, as we have already said, we followed from the south corner of the island over to Walrus Island, which shows that they move late in the year, and also to some distance. Besides these, we saw foxes and reindeer ; hunting the latter was all the more our particular pleasure, that it promised a further supply of fresh meat to our larder. The reindeer, moreover, never appeared in our neigh- bourhood except by ones or twos, were very shy, and were easily driven away by nearing them incautiously. We saw no more of musk-oxen ; on the other hand, on the 20th of October the Germania received the first visit from a polar bear. As Dr. Borgen in the twilight was about reading ofi" the depth by the sounding-pole at seven p.m. he suddenly saw a bear about thirty paces from him coming slowly along, most likely attracted by the smell of a dead reindeer which lay by the ship. Unarmed as he was, he hastily returned to the ship, and now, of course, all were on deck with guns ready. But the bear, either from the PEEPARATIONS FOE WINTERING. 349 disturbance or the unusual sight of the ship, hesitated somewhat, making a large circle round it, often standing still, and tossing its snout in the air. As he seemed inclined to go to land, and take no further notice of us, we tried to entice him by a savoury-smelling fire of bacon, but in vain. At last, after some time, we discovered him again by the observatory, fumbling over all sorts of offal placed there as a bait for foxes, ravens, &c. Armed with guns and ammunition, we approached him cautiously from two sides. The combat began, and, hit in the leg, the bleeding animal turned to bolt with mighty strides sheer across the land, but was soon forced to rest; our hunters rushed across the stones towards him, and once more shots rattled round him. The bear gathered himself up and made for the ice, and was given up for lost by his pursuers, when he suddenly fell. Hurrah ! But it was nine o'clock, and we had no time to lose, for at a temperature of 0° Fahr. he must be quickly skinned. This not very agreeable work in the cold and twilight was undertaken by Messrs. Copeland, Pansch, and Iversen, whilst others went on board for a sledge. On this the carcase and the skm were laid. Dr. Pansch, however, would not leave the preparation of the bones, which he already mentally saw gracing some German museum. His gun lay ready beside him, for it was very likely that a second bear, drawn by the smell of flesh, might come to help at the work. But nothing hap- pened, and about two o'clock the skeleton lay upon the ice. The beginning of November the first black fox was brought in; it was caught in a trap, and was a fine creature. Thus for the zoologists there was instructive work enough on land. But the question always rose 350 THE GERMAN ABOTIC EXPEDITION. over and over again, Could there be no investigation of the fauna of the seas, which, unfortunately, during the voyage had to remain in abeyance ? Could not some- thing be done now ? On the 11th of October, from the cutting of the ice- blocks, there was left a channel, and from it, witk the help of the dredging-net, we brought up different Crustacea, particularly amphipoda, and several species of worms. But it was difficult to classify them, as the cold in the evening was over 2.5° Fahr., so that the contents of the net froze rapidly. As, on the 25th of October, Captain Koldewey went far to the east across the ice to take soundings, he saw that several small, fresh cracks had taken place. This seemed a favourable opportunity for dredging, promising the greater success, as the depth of the water was here twenty-five to twenty-eight fathoms. On two of the foUowiag days this was carried out ; a sledge was laden with the necessary articles, and about ten o'clock Dr. Pansch and two men set to work ; as soon as the thin ice was removed, forming a fresh gap, two holes, at appropriate distances from it, were made large enough to let down the net and puU it up again. When it reached the ground, the strong rope was drawn in the whole length of the gap to the other hole, then, running over a smooth stick, was held at the end by four strong hands, and slowly in the direction of the gap drawn further on until the net appeared at the hole, when it was taken out and emptied on to the sledge. Besides different kinds of cockles and shell-fish, crabs and worms, there were a great number of sea-urchins (Toxopieuster negledus), and several long-armed ophiuri. PEEPABATIONS FOE WINTEEING. 351 On the 1st of November we succeeded in dredging once more from tTie edge of the old ice. With that this geological work was also brought to an end, as the days were growing darker and shorter, and storms were breaking out again. The scrupulous, minute record of meteorological calculations from hour to hour (so sneered at by the uninitiated) had begun, and was now part of our daily work, and was carried on through the whole of the winter without intermission. Besides this it was desirable (and was also mentioned in the instructions) that longer journeys should be taken into the interior. These were to have chiefly a geo- graphical aim, and, as far as the necessary care for our safety allowed, Koldewey endeavoured to carry these out. In the beginning of October, therefore, a sledge journey was planned, first in a westerly direction, in order to ascertain if in the interior of Flache Bay there might be a stratum of coal ; and then southwards towards Cape Wynn to Clavering Island, to find whether the Esqui- maux settlement seen by Clavering in the year 1823 still existed. Preparations were made for this excursion, and on the evening of the 7th of October the party started (Captain Koldewey, First Lieutenant Payer, Dr. Copeland, Peter BUinger, Peter Iversen, and George Herzberg). The air was heavy, but otherwise fine weather, and the travellers reached Flache Bay the same day, raising their tent under a mountain to the north. The next morning the weather was gloomy and foggy, with some snow falling. We could, therefore, only make a hasty geological excursion to the mountain which lay near. We found coal-formation and petrifactions, without coming upon real coal. Fog and snow prevented 352 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. further investigation, so that, in a geographical point of view, nothing could be done. As the weather was so unfavourable, we thought it better to return and husband our strength for another enterprise to the south. On the 12th and 13th violent snow-storms raged, which broke all the ice around Cape "Wynn. First Lieutenant Payer, however, wished much to close the year, if pos- sible, with one good discovery. Thus, on the 27th of October, a sledge expedition started under his super- intendence with the intention of exploring the land to the south of Flache Bay. He was accompanied by Dr. Copeland and the sailors Iversen, Wagner, and Herzberg. They returned on the 4th of November at half-past nine p.m. The account of this journey will be given in the next chapter. ABCTIC FOX AT A TRAP. CHAPTER VII. RETURN BY SLEDGES TO CLAVBRING ISLAND, AND DISCOVERY OF THE TIKOLER FJORD. 27tH OCTOBER TO i'ni NOVEMBER, 1S69. Autumn the best time for sleJge excursions. — Skating journey. — Dr. Copeland's bear adventure. — Walrus. — Cape Borlase Warren. — East side of Clavering Island. — Tiroler Fjord discovered on 29tli October. — Splendid Aurora Borealis.— Night-quarters on an Arctic journey. — Glaciers. — Rich vegetation.— On Clavering Island. — Remarkable glacier movement. — Erratic ice-blocks. — The Green- land glacier-ice. — Return to quarters of 28th October. — Chased by a walrus. — Returu to ship on 4th November, 1869. No more exciting situation can be imagined than tbat of an explorer in unknown lands, more especially when nature seems to have surrounded them with an impene- trable wall, and the earth is as yet untrodden by the foot of man. The Arctic pioneers of England and America have, in their voyages of discovery, nearly always come in contact with mankind, if only those of the lowest grade of civilization. The fast dog-sledges of the Esquimaux — this slowly-dying-out people (often most incorrectly classed with the Mogul race) — seem to form, in the account of these explorers, as great a factotum of life as the art of their conjurers or the cleverness of their hunters. For ourselves, this longing for companionship was left unsatisfied, for the Esquimaux have either A a 354 THE GERMAN AEOTIG EXPEDITION." entirely deserted the eastern coast of Greenland or have become extinct. We found that sledge journeys could only be under- taken across the frozen sea or the Fjord in the autumn ; the temperature ranging at that time (in the latitude in which we were) between 21° Fahr. and — 11° ; the weather was now perfectly clear and settled ; and, lastly, the Fjords were mostly covered with smooth ice. Again, the moderate cold of this time of the year, when com- paratively light clothing is sufficient, is preferable to the sharper cold of the early spring. Plenty of woollen clothes can then supply the place of heavy fur. Masks, hoods, and so on, are still unnecessary; and, when wanted, leather boots can be used instead of those made of sail-cloth. Even snow spectacles are not needed in the autumn, except after freshly-fallen snow or under a cloudy sky, as the land with its dark masses affords rest enough to the eye. A small tent served us as a sleeping apartment. The general sleeping-sack, which in our spring journey to the north we were obliged to use, did not yet exist ; each had his own peculiar one. A lamp for cooking, twelve bottles of spirit as our only fuel, two breech-loaders with car- tridges, skates, mountain-shoes, an aneroid barometer, a theodolite, and mathematical instruments ; bacon, salt, suet, pemmican, extract of meat, coffee, Cognac, cocoa, and hard bread, formed our store, — a load for five men during a nine days' sledge journey, which- we (Copeland, Iversen, Herzberg, Wagner, and myself) undertook late in the autumn of 1869, for the purpose of investigating the passage from Clavering Island to the conjectured opening into Gael Hamkes Bay, to the north of the first- A SKATING JOUENBT. 355 named island, and to penetrate furtter in the direction of Jordan Hill. On the 27tli of October (the day of our leaving the ship) we had daily but four hours' sun; and in a few days this must entirely disappear for three long months. We took a southerly direction, traversing half the way on skates, until we reached Cape Wynn, whose dark rocky face we could distinguish in the darkest Arctic night. The south wind now blew stronger ; and as we could not get at our warmer clothing for the moment, we suffered so much from the moderate cold of 0° Fahr., that, in the beginning of the journey, some of us were in great danger of being frozen to death. A group of dolerite pillars on the shore southward from Flache Bay, behind which we sheltered ourselves from the icy wind after a run of thirteen nautical miles, formed an acceptable place of re- fuge. We crouched in the rifts of the rocks for protection, and then pitched our tent, — no easy matter, owing to the difficulty of obtaining the stones with which to make it firm. At four p.m. we lay down to rest, in order to begin the journey earlier the next day, and by forced marches make up for this day's loss. Towards morning the wind dropped, the icy influence of which could be disagreeably felt through the tent. On the 28th of October, at three a.m., favoured by moonlight and calm, we continued our journey (5° Fahr.). After two hours we came upon an ever-thickening com- plication of small icebergs and hummocks, which forced us to make several detours ; and at last left us but with one opening to the east, far from our projected goal. Meanwhile, daylight appeared, and climbing an ice- berg we surveyed the east. Presently we heard Copeland A a 2 350 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. at no great distance exclaim in a voice of alarm, " A bear ! a bear ! " "We hurried forward, and found our companion behind a group of high ice-cliffs, in such a state of excitement as a hand-to-hand encounter with a bear might well warrant. He informed us that he was surprised by it at about fifty paces' distance, that it had broken from a bai'rier of hummocks and had galloped up to within five paces, had then raised itself, and had struck him down with both fore-paws. Cope- land had had no time to load his gun ; but as the creature caught his clothes, he swung the butt-end of it across its snout. This (and perhaps the noise of our approach) had the unexpected effect of putting Master Bruin to flight ; and we saw the monster a hundred paces off in the swinging gallop peculiar to him, looking round every now and then, TLis experience served as a lesson to us to keep our weapons loaded on the sledge for the future, and to be watchful, especially with a circumscribed horizon of view. In spite of all our efforts to keep to our southerly course, the constantly increasing collection of the ice masses forced us to the eastward ; and at eight a.m., in the latitude of Cape Borlase Warren, we stopped at the entrance of Gael Hamkes Bay. We found ourselves nearly five miles from the coast in a perfect forest of high jagged ice-chffs, the boundary of which we could not see even from a high stand -point. Eound about us rose ice- barriers on eyerj side; evidently the pack-ice of the previous summer had drifted direct into the bay, and had there increased to bergs. They were the same masses which a month before had prevented the ship from advancing. A SKATING JOURNEr. 357 Some nautical miles to the east a bright smooth surface glittered, to all appearance an inviting road; wHch, however, we could only hope to reach bj carrying our baggage piecemeal over the chaotic masses ; besides this, we were not at all sure of being able to reach our goal this new way. We were already preparing to undertake this troublesome work, when we suddenly heard the grunting and puffing of walruses, and saw their sphynx- like bodies emerge from the supposed icy surface — in reality a watery mirror. There remained, therefore, nothing for us but to retrace our steps for two hours, and seek an outlet along the coast. In this we succeeded : the coast offered much that was geologically interesting ; a scanty intermediate stratum of coal, probably of lias formation, and some petrified wood in dolerite may be mentioned. "We proceeded along the shore over slippery ice thrown up by the tide. Arrived at the promontory of Borlase Warren, which is a sharp advancing group of rocks, we came upon a number of stranded icebergs, amongst which we had much trouble in finding a road. We followed the coast, which curved sharply to the west and was covered with the remains of Esquimaux dwellings, until it became more open, though more and more covered with snow ; and after a march of twenty nautical miles, we encamped for the night at the foot of a mountain north of Cape Mary. On the 29th of October, at half-past seven a.m., we continued our journey westward ; the weather was lovely (14° Fahr.). Nothing interrupted our march, but an occasional topographical survey. The easterly mountain- range of Clavering Island, with precipitous masses covered 358 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. with ice, 3250 to 4875 feet high, lay before us. Even from the distance the geological character of this island was unmistakeable. Its rocks of granite and gneiss, which also seem to prevail in the interior of Greenland, were interspersed to the north with numerous dark streaks of basalt, which struck one, even in the distance, by their regularity of form and dark colour. Up to the last moment the existence of the Fjord which we were seeking seemed doubtful ; but as we turned a pro- montory to the south-west of Sattelberg peninsula, we came upon it. It stretched in a northerly direction, and then bent to westward, and was enclosed, cell-Hke, by glorious mountain domes. Our great desire to extend our journey as much as possible could now be carried out, if, on the one hand, we made the most of our limited time, and, on the other, our not less limited provisions, by agreeing to short rations ; we therefore gave up our regular mid-day meal. As our stock of spirit was far too small to allow of our melting ice for drinking purposes, our thirst became exceedingly troublesome. The layer of snow on the thick ice we found interspersed with smooth spots, which we crossed upon skates. Later on, we continually came across parts where the frozen sea-water had formed a saline deposit upon the surface of the ice, which made our advance much more difficult. It was now dark ; and when at five o'clock, after marching twenty-two nautical miles in a tempera- ture of 9° Fahr., we encamped at the foot of a stony hillock, we were delighted by the sight of a lovely Aurora — violet, green, and yellow. In unusual intensity it passed from west to east through our zenith. It NIGHT-QUABTEES. 359 appeared like one single beam, so that involuntarily we were drawn to the conclusion that the appearance re- sembled a flattened lens, or a ring, in the centre of which we were exactly placed. Night had spread its wings over the comfortless dreariness. The surrounding moun- tains appeared like black, shadowy masses. The sledge is now freed from its burden, — a much more complicated affair than might be supposed; for, though we had only taken the merest necessaries, we had to be very careful of the instruments, cooking appa- ratus, climbing-poles, lamp, &c., also the barometer and thermometer to read off. In Europe we generally undress to go to rest. In Arctic regions, on the contrary, we generally dress. Each one frees his long beard from the clusters of ice which had settled upon it, and brings out his reserve stockings or his bear-skin shoes. The feet are thrust into the sleeping-sack, and the body follows. The space is so narrow, and the party so closely packed, that the pulling-off of boots can only be accomplished by sitting on one's neighbour, and every one must inevitably step over or on another at the least movement, and seeking for one's fur gloves necessitates kneeling either upon the face or the shins of some one else, thus causing an indignant remonstrance. From the spot where the knee rests issues a howl ; you start back unsus- piciously — knock over the lamp (an uncovered tin dish fiUed with bears' -grease which hung from the gable of the tent by a wire) ; a flood of oil ensues— but who cares for that ? But it is dangerous when the tent gets on fire— an accident which happened twice on our journey. In a moment several square feet of covering, on which :]60 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the burning spirit had been spilt, was in flames ; we burnt fur hoods and gloves in trying to put it out. The sufferers then drew fur stockings over their hands. The cooking apparatus, filled either with ice or snow, is in full activity ; the temperature rises rapidly ; heavy clouds of smoke fill the tent, so that one cannot see one's '» '. j^t<^^ \M^f/ /w'^^ ^ ^^v; *^0^.» 1 Cl ^ ^^^ 1 M. ^ ^1. "^^*^^'' \ ^Wfc. * •< ^ \ k\ "^^ hand ; a burning candle has the appearance of a halo round a moon ; a light rain falls from the thoroughly wet walls of the tent, which, after becoming steam, at once CLAVEE.ING ISLAND, 361 freezes — the dampness of clothes and covering thus augmenting daily. The satisfying of thirst (that great torment of Arctic sledge journeys) by melted ice, and the preparation of the evening meal — cocoa or coffee, with a little bread and bacon — had occupied the spirit-lamp three-quarters of an hour, causing an atmosphere most trying to the eyes, and, from its daily recurrence, creating perfect torture. The evening meal over (not one would give it up for all the treasures of the world), we took a short siesta, the only pleasant time of the day. "We smoke — the sailors that dreadful shrub called " Camel' s-hair." The day's events, new discoveries, as well as possible even- tualities, are discussed; the day-book is closed, and those suffering from dysentery take some opium. Then from a locked tin box is taken a bottle of rum or brandy, from which we each have two or three spoonfuls. For a few minutes conversation brightens, then the pipe is emptied, and we bury ourselves in our sleeping- sack. , About nine o'clock on the 30th of October we found ourselves ready to start again. We bent our steps west- ward into the cell-like windings of the Sound, which, from its grand scenery, we named the " Tiroler Fjord," the breadth of which was at first seven nautical miles, but narrowed suddenly to one nautical mile and a half. Numerous cliffs and close-lying ice-fields here caused us much hindrance. A large promontory of Clavering Island, somewhat resembling the "Eiger" in Switzerland, the steep wall of which fell sheer into the Fjord, was our next aim ; 362 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. but before we reached it, imposing fields of glaciers were visible. We now found ourselves more to the north side of Clavering Island. The chief glacier of this valley, the farther end of which might be 800 feet above the level of the sea, showed the most perfect lateral and central moraines. The height of the tide in the Fjord at this spot was from two to three feet. Our road here was a perfect rocky street, leading us now over a field of snow some miles in extent, and then over smooth ice, interspersed with spots of snow, which we crossed on skates. After awhile this became imprac- ticable. We went on in the increasing darkness along the north-west strand of the island, and, after travelhng twenty nautical miles, halted at sis p.m. The object of our journey had now been proved, and, more than that, we found that the Sound opened into two arms running westward. The west side, which from here we had almost entirely overlooked, consisted of the coarse-grained, greyish- yellow granite which had been washed from the heights, crumbhng easily, and thoroughly percolated by the streams running down from the glaciers, at some distance giving one the impression of weather-beaten sandstone. This sedimentary formation fell five degrees towards the west. The surface was covered with a thick growth of birches and willowSj and grasses of a few inches high. This spot was the richest in vegetation of any I had seen in Greenland ; and we might therefore count upon the pre- sence of reindeer, which was all the more welcome, as the continuation of our journey depended upon the success of our hunters. Whilst Herzberg and Iversen hunted, and Wagner GLACIEES. 363 remained to guard the tents, Copeland and I started for the middle of the fork, which was here from three to five nautical miles broad, in order to find a spot, if possible, from which we could get a favourable view of the branches. Ice-cliffs in numbers filled it, their hght colour striking with a glare against the steel-green of the smooth ice-covering of the Fjord. To the north and west brown walls, 8000 feet high, rose in imposing forms in giant rows, as a back-ground to the glaciers of the Tiroler Ijord. The gentle slopes of Olavering Island were covered with a light green, and over it hung long icy tongues and frozen torrents, surmounted by the snow-capped main ridge, 4200 to 6250 feet high; and in a south-westerly direction, in another arm of the Fjord, we could see a rocky island with glaciers about 4200 feet high ; this had been landed upon from another side by Olavering, and named " Jordan HiU." On this journey a dark layer of a variety of con- glomerate drew us nearly five miles out of our way towards Jordan HUl. From the colour we had hoped to find a stratum of coal. After discovering our mistake, and retracing our steps, we found that our hunters were busy cutting up two nearly white reindeer. We were so hungry that we ate some of the meat raw, and carried the legs away to the sledge. It was half-past three p.m. before we left our resting- place, and, from the unexpected increase of our pro- visions, we determined to sacrifice another day in order to explore the back-ground of the Tiroler Fjord. On the strand of Olavering Island we had collected a quantity of drift-wood, and on the south side Olavering had met with Esquimaux ; but from the presence of the 364 THE GERMAN AKOT[C JiXPEDITIO-N. drift-wood we concluded that they were uot there, as they would have carefully collected it. On the 1st of November, at half-past six a.m., in this darkness when we started for the back-ground of Tiroler Fjord, it was still lovely weather (8.5° Fahr.) ; the end of the Fjord, however, was not visible, and for a time we thought that it was connected with Fligely Fjord, when a much shorter route would be opened for our return to the ship. By nine o*clock (6.8° Fahr.) we had reached the mid-length of the Fjord, and stood upon its west bank opposite a beautiful semicircle of glaciers, in the centre of which- rose a mighty granite colossus. The lower end of these glaciers might be about 300 feet above the level of the sea. A dead-white barrier, which from our standing-point appeared to close in the Fjord a mile to the north of us, and which in the early dawn of the morning we could not understand, we now discovered to be the mighty wall of the termination of a glacier. Natural as this dis- covery was, we were taken by surprise, though even in the distance we recognized these glaciers as of primary formation. After an hour and a half's walking over the smooth surface of the Fjord, we came upon an isolated conical rock, surrounded by gigantic walls 300 feet high, and upon the opposite bank was a similar isolated screen. Behind the same, separated merely by a large bed of rubbish, lay a colossal terminal moraine, and over this rose the icy front of wildly-shaped glaciers. Scarcely anywhere can the traces of glacier formation be so strikingly followed out as on this spot. The surface of this rock was perfectly polished, and cut with parallel GLACIERS. 366 furrow-shaped cavities, with an inchnation of eight de- grees southward, where a local deviation in the rock, agreeing with the inclination of the neighbouring glacier, formed a prominency. Parallel with the cavities above described ran small furrows an inch deep; thus these polished cavities of larger dimensions seem to show us that the glaciers at different epochs, and with different degrees of force, flowed down, passing hghtly in some places over the surface of the rocks, and at last resting unevenly on one level, leaving everywhere traces of its presence. Lastly, these small rifts and furrows are known to have been formed from • blocks which the streaming glacier had forced against the walls. Remark- able, too, is the upward tendency of the cavities in some places as well as the smaller furrows. The same thing is observable in those spots where the tenacious bulk of the forward-driving masses of the upper portions of the glacier have been hemmed in by projections, or rather when, for a short space, it was forced to go upwards. Where the smaller inclination of the surface of the rocky cone admitted of it, we found it strewn with erratic blocks of a cubic yard in size. They were upright, and situated often in the most peculiar places ; the summit of the rooky cone was also covered with them. At the foot of the Fjord walls lay lateral moraines, placed terrace- wise one above another. Evidently the large glaciers had long since left these spots. Over the frozen road covered with rubbish we reached the terminal moraine, 150 feet high, over which the glacier torrents now hung, turned to icy giant cataracts. What water-floods must have hurried onward to the Fjord when the sun shone bright ! From the height of the terminal moraine ridge the 366 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. slope of rubbish fell forty- six feet over the outer edge of the glacier. The icy stream, from its azure colour and its transparency, we named " Pasterze," and the heights above, which, to carry out the analogy, we called " Grossglockner," rose in confused towering groups ; though we missed the characteristic feature of our Alps, the sharpness of the ice edges. This circumstance may be explained by the fact that the ice of the Greenland glaciers is not so sohd and glassy as ours. It resembles more last year's ice, and for this reason cracks and fissures are not so frequent as with us ; for a long time the edges, from thaws and evaporations, have rounded off; and, lastly, the very formation of the ice is not so sharp and defined as in our glaciers. "We found the ice so smooth that it was with difficulty we reached the heights. To a certain extent it was from here that we first really overlooked the glacier. It was formed from five great tributaries, which were partly engulfed on the high plateaus of the mountain range, and sinking between the steep walls of the Fjord. Perhaps these gigantic breaches in the walls of the Fjord might be partly the result of thousands of years' erosion. More distinctly than anything else, however, did the glorious polish on the Hornblend-gneiss and the walls, composed of epidote granite, entitle us to assume that at one time the whole of the Fjord must have been filled with this Greenland " Pasterze ;" for in the back-ground it reaches to 720 feet above the level of the sea, and sinks towards the exit of the Sound down to 520 feet. In our Alps primary glaciers end as soon as they come into the region of 41° Fahr. mean temperature (Schla- gintweit, Physikalische Geographie der Alpen ) ; in Green- EETUEN TO QUAETEES. 367 land, on the contrary, this isothermal line nowhere exists, and the reaching the level of the sea and the extent of the ice is their only limit. Furthermore, in our Alps the slightest covering of snow on the summit of the glaciers does not fall until the the beginning of September, In Greenland, again, this does not happen until a month and a half later. Some nautical miles upwards from the mouth of the glacier streams in the Fjord the ice was strikingly transparent, hght blue, and pecuUarly smooth. This was evidently fresh-water ice from the falling torrents, and turned by degrees into the steel-green salt-water ice. We now found ourselves S^° west of the ship; and, in spite of the great circuit we had made to the south, we were again in its latitude, as shown by an astronomical calculation of Oopeland's. Our provisions now consisted mainly of reindeer's flesh, which caused a dysentery that not even opium could assuage. "We had, therefore, no choice but to return, which we did at four p.m. "We took our course from Cape Giesecke, which we reached, after a thirteen nautical miles' tramp, at seven p.m. (1° Fahr.) Here we enjoyed the sight of a lovely meteor. For several seconds the whole of the Fjord was bathed in one intense carmine light. On this day the sun set for us, from our circumscribed horizon, shortly before noon, so that it was perfectly dark, when at 7^ p.m. we reached our resting-pl'ace of the 29th of October (0° Fahr.). On the 3rd of November, at 7f a.m., we con- tinued our journey in a southerly direction, from the mouth of the Tiroler Fjord, over a monotonous desert of fresh-fallen snow. The temperature had fallen to 368 THE GERMAN ABCTIC EXPEDITION. — 9° Falir., by wliicli the working with the theodolite was rendered very diiBcult, for we could scarcely approach it without causing the lenses to become coated with moisture. At six p.m., after retracing eighteen nautical miles, we reached the halting-place of the 28th of October (—11° Fahr.). That night we were kept awake by storm and drifting snow. We started again on the 4th of November -at six a.m. with a light west wind (— 13° Fahr.), and, after three hours' march, reached Cape Borlase Warren, when, after passing the dense ice-groups, it became daylight. The sun did not appear quite above the horizon this day. We rested for an hour ; the remainder o£ the spirits pro- vided us with a soup, and then we entered the icy labyrinth. In the neighbourhood of Flache Bay, how- ever, we found it very unsafe, the last northern storm having broken up all the ice, and opened up broad streams of water, which were partly again covered with thin ice, that bent under our weight like leather. In the meantime it was quite dark ; even open water we could only distinguish by sounding with the alpenstock. We soon found it very diflS.cult to drag the sledge ; so we left it behind in a secure place on the coast, only taking with us our books and instruments. We then followed the line of the coast, but there we met with complicated and impassable masses of ice, so we had to return to the treacherous ice-field. As with difficulty we were fol- lowing the road, we were suddenly startled by a walrus breaking through the ice close to us. We fled as quickly as we could, for any attempt to defend ourselves would have been madness. But the walrus swam as quickly under the ice after us, breaking through it CHASED BY A WALRUS. 369 near us, evidently intending to swim in our company. "We dispersed as mucli as possible, springing over the ice-crust, through which the alpenstock constantly broke, followed by the rustling and flapping caused by the YOUNG WALKUS. monster. Had any one fallen in, it would have been im- possible to have pulled him out again. Fortunately, near Cape Wynn, a screen of old ice relieved us of our pursuer. These creatures can break through ice six inches thick, and strike the exact spot where they last saw their enemy. From here to the ship (five to six nautical miles) the ice, being thicker, had not suffered from the storm, whilst an intense yellow Aurora covered the greater part of the heavens, its brightness resembhng that of the moon in her first quarter. We reached the winter harbour at B b 370 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. nine p.m., having traversed twenty-six nantical miles, just as ttey were about to send a sledge after us, being uneasy as to our fate. Two days after tlie sun set, not to rise again until the spring, and frightful snow-storms began. The passage conjectured by Clavering to exist to the north of the island of the same name, the disco- very of some Fjords, the enlargement of our- geographical knowledge of the neighbourhood, the completion of its chart, and, lastly, the highly interesting study of the Greenland glaciers, were the fruits of this difficult journey of over 200 miles, reckoning the distance out and in. CHAPTER VIII. "WINTEE NIGHT. NOVBIIBER, 1869, TO NEW YEAe's DAY, 1870.' Storm and snow-drift. — Boisterous niglit. — Damage to the observatory. — Snow-wall on the ship. — The cold. — Tidings from East Green- land. — Stormy weather again. — Increase of darkness. — Establish- ment of a school of navigation. — Fresh storm. — The shortest day. — Damage during the storm. — Force and velocity of the wind. — Magnetic periods. — Celebration of Christmas. — Singing and dancing on Christmas-eve. The sun, that source of all light and life, had left us. The three months' Arctic night had begun. There was enough daylight, however, to allow of our working in the open air ; the cold too was not very great, so that we did not feel the transition much. On the 7th and 8th a storm raged surpassing any that we had hitherto felt ; but after our experience it did not terrify us. As the men seemed inchned to treat this change in our position too lightly, we, estimating the seriousness of the case more justly, thought it our duty to notice it in some way, and thus our entrance into this winter night was made somewhat solemnly. An arrangement was then made by Captain Koldewey setthng the daily order of things, and on . some points giving more strin- • By Dr. Pansch. B b 2 372 THE GERMAN AECTTC EXPEDITION. gent directions. Moreover, it was fortunate tliat Mr. Sengstacke had, on the 5th of November, returned on board with the sledge left behind by Payer; for the whole of the following days there were storms from the north, with thick drifting snow, thus putting a stop to all business in the open air. During the night the force of the. squall seemed to increase, so that by the morning it was no longer possible to go on shore ; but we hung a thermometer against the mainmast, in a place where no local influence could be brought to bear upon it, and during the storm it showed exactly the same tempera- ture on land as on the ice. Thus began Sunday, the 7th of November; but the prevailing quiet on board from the cessation of all work made the raging of the storm without more noticeablOi Boreas did not acknowledge the day of rest, but gained strength hour by hour, and howled round us without the slightest intermission. From time to time there were perfect hurricane gusts, causing the ice-bound ship to quiver throughout : such weather we had never before experienced. If we ventured beyond the closely-shut hatchways on to the deck, we were nearly deafened by the blustering, roaring, and crashing with which the wind broke upon the ship and howled round it. Conver- sation was not to be thought of, for the loudest word of command could not be heard over the whole ship. Looking through the rifts of the tightly-closed opening, one could see nothing but the everlasting softly-falling thick masses of fine snowy particles. No trace of land; indeed, one could scarcely distinguish the next block of ice. It was no wonder, from the increasing violence of the storm, that our thoughts, too, should become stormy. STOEM AND SNOWDRIFT. 373 What if tlie ship should break away from the ice ? Could we then remain on the same spot ? Land had apparently- disappeared. A dreadful squall drove the sharp snow in our faces, and, shuddering, we quickly retreated under the tent-roof, which bent inwards more and more, the fastenings seeming to slacken. The chimney shook; even the mast above, which we could see. through a slit in the roof, swayed. We feared the tent would split up if the storm lasted much longer. And then ? then the whole of the deck would be swept clean, and we must resign ourselves to remain below until the storm had spent itself, and allowed us to make good all damage done. And on land ? how could we tell whether this furious storm had not demolished our provision dep6t, torn off the roof, or destroyed the chests, &c., and rolled them into the sea ? As we paced the deck on that Sunday morning we were gi'ave, but still of good heart ; we had done aU that lay in our power. On deck it looked interesting enough. Through all existing or freshly-made holes, through the smallest breaks or rents, and even through the sail-cloth itself, the snow had forced its way ; the atmosphere was filled with the smallest grains and needle-points, which fell on everything on deck, soon, in spite of all our trouble, forming a thick covering of snow. The after-part of the ship presented the worst appear- ance : here was a perfect snow landscape. And in order to get at the provisions we were obliged every time to use the shovel, and at the wheel-house the drift was from six to seven feet high. Later, the storm seemed to abate a little, allowing Mr. Sengstacke and Dr. Copeland to work their way 374 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. witli much, difficulty tlirougli the still drifting snow to land. The observatory and its roof were still there, but they were both, as well as the thermometer-case, fuU of snow. It would have been m-ost interesting could we have ascertained the actual force of the storm, as Robinson's anemometer would give it. But what a disaster ! the wings had been blown off. Breathless, without any result, and most picturesquely snowed over, did the gentlemen return, — and only just in time, for the storm rose again with undiminished strength ; indeed, from nine a.m. until eleven p.m. it seemed trying to outdo itself. We turned up our collars, and waded in our fur boots through the snow, looking carefully roimd on all sides. Everything was fast as yet. But the storm seemed to. know no end, and at short intervals squall upon squall thundered down on to the ship : one could feel the deck, quiver under one's feet. Attentively we listen to the raging concerts, to see if we can catch any signs of abatement. Every fresh squall seems to be the last, as it rumbles and dies away in the distance. We listen anxiously — one — two — three minutes ! but again we can distinguish in the regular blustering and grumbling another tone, and before we have time to consider a fresh and stronger tempest howls and roars around us. With anxious glances at the threatened tent-roof we leave the deck and go below, seat ourselves at the table, and take a book. But reading is impossible. It is already late in the evening, and we can take refuge in our berths. But sleep will not come. Everything about us is in a constant tremble ; the stone and glasses clatter, and now and then a stronger shock rouses us DAMAGE TO THE OBSERVATOEY. 375 from our talf -slumber ; until at length, as tlie storm lulls by degrees, fatigue conquers, and helps the weary- one to rest. . We commend ourselves to heaven, and sleep. The following morning (8th November) we convince ourselves, to our great joy, that the tent is not split. The heavy squalls had ceased at midnight, but a violent storm was still raging; and, though lasting more than two whole days, seemed not yet likely to drop, although the barometer was rising energetically. Directly after coffee, every man goes to work with broom and shovel to get rid of the masses of snow that had gathered on deck. The cold is zero (F.), but after the inactivity of yester- day we find the air most agreeable. Not until four p.m. did the snow cease and the storm give over ; and by six o'clock a most imearthly stillness reigned, and the foul weather was over. We felt exactly as one does after standing for a long time by a waterfall or a glacier torrent, and then suddenly turning a rocky projection, when the roaring is no longer heard — so wonderfully still and quiet lay all around us. The barometer had now reached the unusual height of 30.8 inches. During the night the equilibrium of the atmosphere was quite restored, and nature lay still and quiet as before ; the veil of clouds parted, and with the same feelings as at home we greet the rainbow after a heavy storm, we watched the red rays of the Northern Lights shoot up in the southern sky. The next day there was plenty of work ; our greatest trouble was the observatory. Here melancholy disco- veries awaited the astronomers. The whole interior of the building was filled with 376 THE GERMAN AKCTIC EXPEDITION. dense masses of snow. Carefully we press through it to the stone on which the theodolite stood, covered over : the stone is empty ! That was a severe blow. But we soon discovered the costly instrument lying on the floor quite unharmed. The telescope stand, too, was overturned. We were fortunate enough to find Robinson's wings again ; they had not suffered much, and Wagner's clever hands soon succeeded in restoring the useful instrument. The next days were calm, with a clear or slightly clouded atmosphere. The outline of the fog to the south was interesting, betokening open water, whilst before noon a thin veil hid the southern mainland. Later on, stretched at the same height a fog bank, from Walrus Island into Olavering Straits, which after a time disappeared. In this expanse Captain Koldewey saw open water, when at ten o'clock he went to the Ger- mania-berg to survey the condition of the ice. The line in which the ice had been torn asunder went from the south end of Walrus Island, through Clavering Straits to the west, past the small island to Cape Wynn ; from the north end of Walrus Island to Cairn Point, then up the shore of our island to the south-east end of Klein Pendulum. South of Shannon, however, the old ice lay unaltered. Here we again recognized the great import- ance of Walrus Island, as affording a secure harbour. In the neighbourhood of land there was but little snow on the ice ; and on the mountains but little more than formerly. The condition of the vegetation had previously led us to the conclusion, which seemed to be correct, that the snow-fall in winter was but small. We were now able to make use of the large quantity of fallen snow, as it had hardened in the storm and the SNOW-WALL ON THE SHIP. 377 cold. Where i]jq snow-drifts were deep enough, square pieces were cut out and brougTit to the ship. With these a high wall was built adjoining the ice-blocks, the space between being filled in with fragments. From similar snow-stones a screen was built in front of the ventilator to keep out the cold. At the exit of the back path, which was twelve feet long, and higher than a man's height, we put the door of the wheel-house, thus causing the warmth to be sometimes so intense that the snow began to melt and the walls to shrink. By the second week of November the cold had increased to a mean daily temperature of from — 2° Fahr. to —13°, reaching a minimum of —16°, a temperature which agreed with us in every respect. This may be attributed to the force of habit ; besides which, the cold was much more easily borne in a still atmosphere. Our bodies required no greater protection than the usual winter clothing ; even this was a great deal too warm if we were busied in any active work. In the cabin we mostly took off our coats, and yet we did not require fifteen pounds of coal a day to heat our Meidinger stove. Indeed, at first, the heat of this stove was our greatest trouble, and it required some experience and great care not to allow the temperature to rise beyond 68° Fahr. On the 13th the first large wash was held, and the men were examined by the doctor from head to foot, when none of them showed the least sign of disease. After this proceeding the expedition clothing (coats, trowsers, waistcoats, and woollen underclothing) was given out. The next day, the first really quiet Sunday, brought a slight interruption to the monotony of our daily life. 378 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION, The first nunxber of the " East Greenland Gazette " appeared. "We thought that on this point too we ought to follow the example of our predecessors,. although our prevailing state of mind had. as yet in no way required such cheer- ing and refreshing. Materials for the pubUcation of such a number every fourteen days could never be wanting. Unfortunately, a small printing press, given by the print- ing-house at Bremerhaven, had not followed us on board. In order, therefore, to have two copies, one for the cabin and one for the forecastle, we had to take the trouble to write it. Already on the 10th had appeared " Invitation to assist in the publication." Dr. Pansch was appointed editor, and a locked box was hung up, in which every one dropped his contribution anonymously. At last, on Sunday at noon, the first number appeared " with a supplement," sixteen pages in the whole. It contained all sorts of fun, some poems, " ofl&cial pro- clamations," and an address to the men by the doctor. That afternoon merriment reigned in both rooms, and in the fore-cabin the well known " Volkslieder " were heard in the evening. Well might we enjoy this fine still day. On the 15th, just eight days after the last catastrophe, it again began to blow a storm from the north, and that crescendo. The storm howled and sobbed, the squall crashed and thundered, the tent bent, and the poles cracked; dense, wildly- drifting snow without, and fine powdery drifts on deck. It is the same mighty spectacle of northern nature that we so vividly remembered the week before. And it raged thus unabated for quite eighty-one hours ; as far as we could ascertain, the fall of snow lasted forty-five hours. THE "east GREENLAND NEWSPAPER." 379 Of course tlie effects were misfortune upon misfortune. Tlie snow walls of the observatory were for the most part blown away, and the interior snowed up. The snow walls of the ship had suffered too. Worse than all was the loss of the " Robinson," which had again dis- appeared ; and this time, in spite of all our search, was nOt to be found. From the dii'ection of the snow-drifts we found that the storm came from the same quarter as before. One thing was very plain to us, namely, that had our ship been larger, we could not have hauled it into the creek, and would most likely have had to stop on the same spot where Captain Clavering had anchored with the Griper, on the south side of the island, near the Esqui- maux huts. In that case we must inevitably have been torn away with the ice by the storm and been destroyed. We must mention that the temperature rose on the 18th to 16° Pahr. ; the consequence of which was, that the screen on deck began to thaw considerably, sending much wet into the cabin. The following day, too, the temperature remained moderate, and even rose to 11.75°. To our feelings this " warmth " was anything but agree- able ; it forced us, hardened as we were, when working in the snow, to relieve ourselves of nearly all clothing but our shirts. On the 21st (Sunday) the second number of our paper appeared, as rich in contents, and with much that was interesting and funny. The following is an example of the ofl&cial part : — Reward ! ! ! Whoever finds the body of Robinson (Crusoe), who 380 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. has disappeared from his island, shall receive a reward of one bottle of wine and one dozen of cigars. Many may compete for this prize at the same time. Given from onr winter quarters, Clavering Straits, Nov. 10. C. KOLDEWEY. • The fine weather of the next days facilitated repairs of the damage done by the storm. The observatories received a new and thicker coating of snow, which sloped up to the roof, by which the whole obtained a uniform appearance ; over this we poured water, which formed a crust of ice, apparently strong enough to defy any storm. Noteworthy now was the increase of darkness. On the 22nd of November, at noon, all thermometers had to be read by the lamp ; and on the 23rd, at noon, stars of the second magnitude (for example, the polar-star) could be distinctly seen. The whole morning the southern horizon from Walrus Island to Cape Borlase Warren was yellowish-red ; and this tvsdlight showed strong against the black line of open water. At the same time there was a strong refraction of the rays, and in the atmo- sphere appeared a glimmering undulating motion fi:"om west to east. The evenings and nights too were beautiful ; the moon shone without setting from the 19th to the 25th. At noon we still saw its pale hght, and at night it was frequently surrounded with a halo, accompanied by a jjaraselene or mock moon. The Northern Lights again appeared in all their beauty, and when the magnetic observatory was in order, obser- A SCHOOL OF NAVIGATION. 381 vations upon tte fluctuation of the declination of the pole were made in connexion with notices upon the rapidly changing appearance of the Aurora. This work, upon which, and more especially upon the scientific work duiing the winter, a glance will be taken in the next chapters, was often difficult enough, as it had to be written down in the open air by the light of a lamp for hours together. The captain made use of the clear evenings to take a number of lunar calculations. The temperature and the thickness of the ice were also measured. The latter, at some distance from the ship, was thirty-six and a half English inches. Thus our daily life passed pretty regularly, one day being much as another. Scientific work we had in plenty. Our leisure hours were spent agreeably in reading, play- ing at chess, and conversation. One great evil we still had to contend with was the small room, and especially the small table, which we had to share. In any great zoological work, this was so con- siderable that Dr. Pansch had to make use of the night hours, when all but the watch had gone to rest. A decided change had now taken place in the life of the men by the introduction of a navigation school. The captain's suggestion for this object was received with great approbation ; indeed, every one wanted to take a part in it. But on the 25th the school was opened with four scholars : P. Iversen, P. Ellinger, Th. Klentzer, and G. Herzberg. The captain taught navigation, Dr. Borgen undertook geography and astronomy. Dr. Cope- land natural science. An hour was given every day, and the rqen had enough to do to get through the work and impress it upon their 382 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. minds ; but they did it with great eagerness, and seldom in a forecastle was so much heard of plus and minus, of squares and square roots as with us on the Germania. Christmas month was approaching, and the first week passed without any particular occurrence. The mean daily temperature remained moderate, 14° to — 4° Fahr. The wind frequently blew violently from the north, and on the 4th brought heavy drifting snow. To the south and south-east we heard from time to time crashing and roaring, as of water and ice, but we were spared a real storm. On the 3rd of December, in the afternoon, we were suddenly alarmed by a loud and violent breaking and cracking the whole length of the ship, followed by a shght shock. Hurrying out to see the cause, we soon found that the snow- wall on the port side had loosened itself from the ship and had sunk some inches against it, in consequence of which it was forced to the starboard side, and this crooked position increased later, and was at once perceptible in the cabin. The ice behind it showed some cracks and fissures, one of which reached to the land. The sternpost, however, of the Germania seemed not to have suffered ; the rudder and the rudder-pin were uninjured. It seemed that the colossal burden of the snow masses heaped on the starboard side had caused the ice to sink, and, giving way, had loosened the wall from the ship. Weeks passed without any unusual interruption. Everything went its usual way, the increasing darkness of the days turning our thoughts to Christmas and the new year. But not very considerately did the old one intend to FOECB AND VELOCITY 0^ THE WIND. 383 take leave of us. After some days of unsettled weather, on the 10th of December came an unsteady north wind, alternating with drifting snow, now rising to a storm, and now quite dying away. At the same time one could hear the mighty roaring and howling of the water and ice. From the 8th to the 15th it raged thus continually, when the mean force of the wind was thirty miles an hour. Without, little could be done ; and at noon^ even on deck, nothing could be distinctly seen without a lamp. On the 16th it began suddenly to rage from the north so violently that in from three to four hours the " Robin- son " had marked no less than sixty-three English miles. And this was the begining of the worst and most lasting storm experienced. On the evening of the 16th it abated a little, so that the next moi-ning we could with some trouble return to observations on land ; but in the even- ing the wind roared with redoubled fury. In the later hours its speed was from sixty-five to sixty-seven English miles, and that of the real storm of course much greater. It was Dr. Borgen who took these two readings at the observatory ; and indeed that was no trifle. On land he was once taken bodily up and thrown at least ten paces forward, and not without great exertion did he reach the guiding rope, and then on his way to the ship he was lifted up several times and thrown aside. Our greatest help, indeed our actual preservation in such cases, was the row of ice-blocks with the rope stretched along it; for while the heavy drifting snow hid every- thing within a few paces, the rushing wind stopped the play of the lungs, and seemed to paralyze the brain, and all the attention and muscular pawer had to be directed to the keeping of one's feet. Then it is almost impos- 384 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. sible for the lonely wanderer to keep in one decided direction. Beaten and overpowered by the storm, the strongest man will soon in such a case be lost. Two of our men, having strayed far to the north, we should probably never have seen again had they not struck upon the ship's anchor and thus retraced their steps. Besides, such attempts were never carried to rashness. On the following stormy days, three different times we felt our way to land by the rope, but from the thickness of the falling snow dared not venture to let it go and mount. The danger of going the wrong way was so imminent in such cases that we always stood on the steps, in order to help, if necessary, as far as was pos- sible. With the lantern in hand we tapped around on deck in the deep snow. The hurricane raged round the tent, so that the props cracked and the cordage creaked ; mighty fiends seemed let loose upon us, and at one time we were seriously afraid for the preservation of our tent- roof. The 18th dawned and ended : the storm raged on, and squall upon squall rushed over the ship without inter- mission or abatement; the falling snow being so dense that we could not see six steps before us. The 19th was the same — the storm howled and raged unchanged, but we still lay firm in the ice. But for how long — who could tell ? Destruction might be near, and perhaps the open water already splashing, beneath us. The long inactivity began to tell upon us. The food no longer tasted as usual, we had no heart to work, and here and there were signs of bad temper. In the fore- castle something had happened. The snow-wall must have become relaxed, for on one side , the cold wind DAMAGE DURING THE STORM. 385 whistled through the cracks of the planks, covering the cabin walls with ice. It cost us a whole day's work to shut out the unwelcome guest. To get some Httle motion we paced the deck by the melancholy light of a lantern ; but that did not last long. The everlasting rushing noise deafened one, and the tent seemed to crush us, though spanned to its uttermost. In a few minutes we were thickly covered with snow, and had to be scraped down so as not to carry too much wet below. On the 20th matters somewhat improved. The astro- nomers were in despair; for the 21st was a magnetic period, and the whole twenty-four hours must be passed in the observatory. But everything has an end, even an Bast Greenland winter's storm. Towards evening we could get to land comfortably without danger, and the astronomers were able to arrange the instruments and the observatory to their satisfaction. The icy case had lasted well this time ; only through a few small holes had the snow penetrated. In the ob- servatory, however, there was more. The " Robinson " was again wingless ; the bar on which the wings worked was much worn and bent to the south. The provision dep6t was unharmed. "We, however, found the flood- pole broken and frozen firm in the thick ice, and the snow-waUs of the ship were partly blown away, and partly eaten away, and riddled with holes. But how had the storm dealt with the ice ? this we must ascertain next. And soon, through the pale twihght, to the south we saw a dark strip shining — the open water. It must have come nearer to us than the last time; that was evident. We were, however, c c 386 THE GEBMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITIOlsr. astonishied to find that it was no longer 300 paces distant from the ship. It reached nearly to the observatory, and, upon trying to get to Cairn Point, we could not reach it ; the ice was here torn into loose fragments. How about the ice-dam by "Walrus Island, so important for our safety ? We could not distinctly see whether it had been broken through, or whether it was still standing. It was with pecuhar feeUngs that on the 21st — both the shortest and the darkest day — we walked about, on the ice and on the neighbouring land. At home, after such a con- vulsion of nature, everything bears the stamp of destruc- tion; here nothing showed traces of the fury of the elements but the large and small snow-drifts. White and still all lay around, the pohshed walls of rock rising dark above them; gloomy and almost foggy was the atmosphere. After the nearly ten days' roar of the storm this quiet had in it something refreshing ; but, in spite of that, we this day felt the deep melancholy impress of the Arctic night. In troubled, unsteady twilight lay the landscape, so that we could only see a few steps before us, and could scarcely see to read fine print. A faint light under the dark clouds in the south was the only sign of day. In looking back upon the storm, and reckoning the dates, we first realized what a mighty effort of nature it had been. Without reckoning 'the forerunners, the real storm had raged 103 hours, blowing with a mean strength on Beau- fort's scale ^ of more than 9. If we take the rate during these 103 hours to be sixty miles (= fifteen German ' Beaufort scale of 0—12. Nine would indicate a rate of fifty-six miles per hour. CELEBKATION OF CHEISTMAS. 387 miles ^) per hour, and if it had continued straight in a southerly direction, this storm would not only have reached the equator, but have gone far beyond it even to the lati- tude of the south point of Africa ; thus traversing more than a quarter of the earth's circumference. Another peculiarity of this storm was, that, contrary to the sudden rising of the former, it seemed to increase by long preparatory stages. The barometer fell slowly, though not unusually low. The sky, too, at the beginning was perfectly clear ; but most striking was the fact that the temperature remained low, —4° to —11° Fahr., until the end of the storm, when it rose by degrees. The 21st of December, as has been said, was a mag- netic period. The astronomers had prepared the room and the instruments at the right time, and the twenty- four hours of minute observation began. Two hours' relief was allowed. The going backwards and forwards, the eating and drinking through the night, and the hot can of coffee on the stove all night was a welcome change from the uniformity of our life. Thus Christmas-time drew near. That the beautiful festival should be kept was understood, small gifts being prepared on all sides for the purpose. We were the first Germans who had wintered here, and so it was clear to all that the Christmas-tree must not be wanting on the Germania. This was an unavailing wish, for fir- trees do not grow in Greenland. But Nature seemed to take pity on us in our distress ; sparing as her growth is, she offered us a helping hand and some fresh green for our Christmas-tree. The stalks of the Andromeda " By these mUst be understood German (jeographical miles, each of which is equal to one-fifteenth of a degree. — Tr. C C 2 388 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. retain their leaves in winter, wMoli, altlidugli of a dark greenish-brown, are still fresh. The carpenter made a pedestal, on which stood a three-feet stem, with the chief branches representing a fir-tree. These were covered with the shoots of the Andromeda, and smaller sticks were fastened on to resemble the natural branches. In thi^ way we obtained a "fir-tree" far surpassing our expectations. The overhanging slope of Germaniaberg was one of the few spots where the plant grew plenti- fully ; our botanist knew how to find the spot under the snow, and in the dark noontide hour the plants were raked up and brought home triumphantly. The after-cabin was warmed, and here the fir-tree was put together. The men persevered with the work, and there was not one among them but put some finishing touches to it ; small wax-lights and golden-nuts were not wanting. We sat in the small room by a dimly-burnuig lamp ; cheerful conversation went round, and pleasanter Christmas enjoyment than we had could not well be found. At four o'clock every one was to leave the cabin. The walls were decorated with flags, near the sofa the finest foxes' skins were hung up, and the table by the help of some chests lengthened as far as the mast. By six all was ready. The ship's bell gave the summons; under the ventilator was a small coloured transparency, and from the forecastle a Christmas hymn rose. Then all entered the cabin and ranged themselves round the table. German Christmas in Bast Greenland ice ! There stood the powerful forms of big " children," serious but cheerful, and the finest Christmas-tree rose on deck, glittering with lights and gold and silver; and on the fresh white table-cloth lay the plates with the gifts upon SINGING AND DANCING ON CHRISTMAS EVE. 389 them ; they were but trifling things, but they gave much pleasure : small books, letter-cases, and so on. Near the tree lay a large harmonica " for the men ;" this, with some balls of cord, in which -were enclosed different small things, was a present from the ladies of Kiel. On the other side stood the complete model of a full-rigged ship, just finished by P. Iversen. Somewhat later followed a hot supper, in which the cook astonished us with some delightful cakes. Healths were drunk in foaming wine of the Neckar, and at dessert a large chest, which had taken its place in the cabin since yesterday, was opened. It contained a valuable present from Mainz : a number of bottles of excellent Rhine wine. You should have seen the men of the Grermania ! Heart and mind were in a glow, they joked and chattered, speeches were made and healths drunk, and the ship resounded with many a hearty cheer. We thought of our loved ones at home, our brothers on the Hansa, and our ever dear country ! But we still wanted a song. Bach one had his song- book, a gift from the publisher, G. Westermann, and — were we not Germans, "Yereint zur frohen Stunde"? So it was not long before we had a song. Was it a warning that the " Wacht am Ehein " should resound in the Arctic night ? As it was a wonderfully warm, soft air, the suggestion of a dance on the ice received universal approbation. Soon we were dancing merrily on the white snow, whilst the boatman, wrapped in a reindeer's skin, played the new harmonica with an artist's hand. More bottles were opened, more healths drunk, and midnight had passed before we retired to rest. 390 THE GEEMAN AEGTIC EXPEDITION. The last week in the year passed without any particular event. Twice Boreas visited us again, but he seemed to have lost his energy, for he dropped after about ten hours, causing no further disturbance. The temperature re- mained high the whole time, and on the 27th even reached 28° Fahr. Thus the year came to an end, and with brighter expectations could we look forward to the future. St. Silvester's Eve* passed in the usual manner; we sat cheerfully together over our wine, amusing ourselves with the innocent game of pouring the lead, and so on, while awaiting the twelfth hour, when with the clinking of the glasses we expressed reciprocal wishes for the fulfilment of our hopes and for the success of our expe- dition. The astronomers had calculated when the mid- night hour would reach the different places in Germany ; so each individual had a particular touch of the glasses, and " To what we love best" at home. The kind givers were not forgotten, nor our comrades of the Hansa, whom we believed had long since run into the "Weser. Quickly the hours passed, and one after the other sought his hard couch. ■■ December 31, Festival of Silvester, Bishop of Rome. CHAPTER IX. FIRST MONTH OF THE TEAR 1870.' Lethargy. — The Arctic winter. — Mid-day twilight. — Meteorological observations. — Plans for spring travelling. — Fur dresses. — Klentzer pursued by a bear. — The ship on fire. — Snowdrift. — Promise of the sun's reappearance. — Sunrise on 3rd February. — Northern Lights. — Hunting. — The days lengthen. — Low temperature. — Spring-tide. — The ship aground. — Borgen wounded by a bear. The new year had now begun, and we had greeted it with new thoughts, new plans and hopes. Nearly six months had we already spent on the coast — a short time judging from results — but long enough, with the help of the experience gained, to prepare for the promised excursions in the coming summer. Half of the dreaded Arctic night was over, without either body or mind being materially in- fluenced by it ; and if the coldest time still lay before us, it had lost its terrors. The holidays were faithfully kept as a period of rest. The whole of us experienced great weariness, and, upon giving way to it, we could plainly see, what every one knew long since, that in Arctic regions one can take any amount of sleep. On the other hand, everything went on regularly. A ' By Dr. Pausch. 392 THB GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. new number of the paper appeared on Sunday, whicli, by its diminutive size, showed the decrease of material. Mr. Tramnitz and Dr. Copeland went hunting, and brought home four ptarmigan, objects as welcome to the unaccustomed stomach as to the long-idle hands of the zoologists. The collection was increased by a few skins, and examinations made as to the food of these native birds of the extreme north. The crops of all were full, and were about the size of a boy's fist. The contents con- sisted, chiefly of young willow shoots, only here and there by chance was a little moss, or a few leaves and dry sprouts, of a species of saxifrage and other shrubs. Thus while in summer, as we have seen, the ptarmigan feeds on fresh herbs and seeds, which it finds on the mountains, in winter time it confines itself to the willow, which is easily obtainable. The 3rd of January was still a dark, foggy day; truly there is something very solemn in this universal silence, this unbroken sleep of organic nature. " The stillness of an Arctic winter," writes First Lieu- tenant Payer, "has something awful about it; the gloomy shade under which hfe passes, without one charm, is burdensome to the spirit. Every sound of creation is silenced ; the whispering and gm^gling of the springs and brooks have died away ; the breaking of the waves is mute ; the waterfall stands motionless against the cold wall of rock ; the plants, choked under their covering of snow, seem for ever destroyed. Animals that had migrated, either to the outer edge of the pack-ice or to milder latitudes, have withdrawn to the interior or begun their winter sleep. No faint sunshine colours the heights, shedding its beams on the glistening masses of ice on AN ARCTIC WINTEB. 393 the golden mirror of the sea. Forms and colours are tinged witli gloom ; a universal winding-steet enwraps every form of nature, over wliicli broods the icy night ; the stars, twinkling brightly, shed their cold light ; ghost-like stand out the shadowy snowy walls of the mountains from the black edge of the rock ; sullenly rise the crested rocks in the night ; snow-flakes glide in noiseless monotony on to the still cold earth, and on to the ice-deck, which has bound our ship for months. The deck is laden with snow ; masts and yards stretch their coal-black arms to heaven ; frost hangs to the ropes in tender crystal webs ; the helm is buried under blocks of ice." We easily lose ourselves in a feehng of utter desertion in the midst of these lifeless surroundings, and the heavy leaden-gi'ey of the sky is reflected in our painfully-oppressed spirits. One must be more than mortal not to be occasionally over- come by such feelings, though with us they were but of short duration ; besides which, the time of perpetual darkness was quickly drawing to a close. That we proved the next day, when in — 22° we were surrounded by a bright hght sky, with numerous and beautiful pictures of Arctic light. The noonday twilight was so strong that for an hour we fancied it was really day- light, and on the 10th, at seven a.m., the beginning of dawn in the eastern sky proved it to be correct. This fine, clear weather lasted to the 16th, and was highly acceptable to the astronomers : the cold, however, in- creased, and the thermometer sank to — 26.50° Fahr. It was already settled that, as soon as practicable — we thought about the beginning of March — our great journey should begin, geography being its main object, by following the coast-line northward, thus accomplishing 394 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXraoiTION. our cHief task, in the instructions of the expedition, on the ice, as with the ship it had been proved to be unsuccessful. For this journey, which it need not be said was under Captain Koldewey's direction, eight men were necessary. We considered that we might dispense with the necessity of establishing provision-stores, and therefore decided that a second sledge, under Mr. Sengstacke's direction, should accompany them for some days on their journey, and somewhat later the circuit of the astronomers would begin, having geodetical measurements for their object, and not until after the return from the north should any more sledge journeys be arranged for the exploration of the interior of Greenland. The great difficulty of all these undertakings we could not disguise from, ourselves. Not only was the want of dogs greatly felt, but numbers of other matters necessary for winter sledging. On the ship, as has been already said, reigned cheer- fulness and unwearied activity ; there was tailoring and shoemaking, carpentering and smiths' work going on from morning till night. We next went to work upon the clothing. For the degree of cold we had hitherto ex- perienced, nothing was better than the woollen things we had, but only when the air was quiet ; for in a high wind the body, in spite of all motion, became stiff and cold in a very short time. On our contemplated journey, however, we must be in a position to brave all weathers, so out came the fur. As the long fur-coats, reaching to the feet, were quite useless, they were taken to pieces, and fresh, short, tight-fitting coats lined with wool were made. The fur hoods remained unaltered ; the boots, however j^ were thrown aside, as they so soon get hard and uncomfortable. These were replaced by an irregular manufacture com- ADVENTUEES WITH BEAES. 395 posed of sail-cloth lined with woollen stujff, with leathern soles, which we had on board. Then the tent must be worked at and enlarged in proportion ; the fur sacks also and coverings for our sleeping-place had to be sewn. We need scarcely say that the school of navigation was carried on as industriously as ever. On the 10th, as in the morning twilight our engineer who was entrusted with the melting apparatus, was re turning alone with the sledge, heavily burdened with snow, from the Germaniaberg to the ship — he looked round him and suddenly saw, at a little distance, a bear slowly foUoW' ing him. Struck with terror, h,e hastily left the sledge and hurried forward to the ship, the creature following him for some distance, and then turning back. Scarcely had the fact transpired when, in a moment, all were in motion, and soon a number of well-armed forms were hurrying in all directions to the land — the irresistible charm of bear- hunting urging them on. But Bruin did not seem inclined to face our heroes, and, after a short hour, the hunters returned disappointed. Thus this bear adventure ended as happily as all former ones had done. But much more serious was the position into which, a short time afterwards, one of our sailors was betrayed. On the morning of the 13th, Theodor Klentzer, during the time the men were busied without, or were obliged to take their daily walk, climbed the Ger- maniaberg to view the landscape in the increasing mid-day light. Reaching the top, he seated himself on a rock, and sang a song in the still air. As he looked behind him, however, he saw, not many steps off, a huge bear, which with great gravity was watching the stranger. Now to our " Theodor," who was as quiet and decided a man 39G THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. as he was powerful, this would, under other circumstances, have been nothing ; for the bear stood wonderfully well for a shot, and could not easily be missed, but Klentzer was totally unarmed, not having even a knife ! Incredi- ble ! is it not ? But as Lieut. Payer writes, " the bears always come when one has forgotten all about them." Thus Klentzer saw himself unarmed and alone, far from his companions, and close to the bear. Flight is the only, though a doubtful, chance of safety, and the auda- cious thought struck him of plunging down the steep side of the glacier; but he chose the softer side-slope, and began to hurry down the mountain. Upon looking back, after a time, he perceived the great bear trotting behind him at a little distance, like a great dog. Thus they descended the mountain for some time. If Klentzer halted, so did the bear ; when he went on, the bear followed slowly ; if he began to run, the bear did the same. Thus the two had gone some distance, and" Klentzer thought seriously of saving himself, as the bear, finding the chase somewhat wearisome, might press close upon his heels. He therefore uttered a loud shout, but the bear, only disconcerted for a moment, seemed to get more angry and approached quicker, so that he seemed to feel the hot breath of the monster. At this dreadful moment — and it was most likely his preservation — he remembered the stories he had heard, and, while running, pulled off his jacket, throwing it behind him. And see! the trick answers : the bear stops and begins to examine the jacket, Klentzer gains courage, rushes on down the mountain, sending out a shout for help, which resounds through the silent region. But soon the bear is again at his heels, and he must throw away cap and waistcoat, by which he gains a little. Now Klentzer ADVENTURES WITH BBAES. 397 sees help approacMng — several friends hurrying over the ice. Collecting his last strength, he shouts and runs on. But help seems in vain, for the pursuer hurries too, and he is obliged to take the last thing he has, his shawl, which he throws exactly over the monster's snout, who, more ex- cited still by renewed shouting, throws it back again con- temptuously with a toss of the head, and presses forward upon the defenceless man, who feels his cold black snout touch his hand. Klentzer now gave himself up for lost ; he could do no more ; but the wonderful thought struck him of fastening up the bear's throat with the leathern belt ■ which he wore round his body. Fixedly he stared into the merciless eyes of the beast — one short moment of doubt — the bear was startled, his attention seemed drawn aside, and the next moment he was off at a gallop. The shouts of the many hurrying to the rescue had evidently frightened him. Klentzer was saved by a miracle. We had all hurried out just as we sat below, without coats or caps — indeed, some were in their stockings. The terrified creature fled on to tlfe ice, where he received a cross-fire, then turned hither and thither, and made for Cairn Point. Some of the bullets must have struck him, for he collapsed, and we thought it was all over. But he rallied the next moment, and climbed the steep bank with huge strides, and, leaving traces of blood on the open ice, hurried to the sea. Glad and thank- ful, our fiill number were soon seated at the mid-day meal, praising a good Providence who had saved our brave companion from death. From the efiects of this day several suffered slightly from pains in the chest, and Mr. Sengstacke and P. Iversen had large frost-bhsters on their feet. No wonder, when they had run about in stock- inged feet for a whole hour and a half ! 398 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. But a danger of quite another sort threatened us — fire on board ! On the 11th, when, as usual, all were in the cabin engaged in reading and smoking, some having already sought their berths, about a quarter to nine a slight smell of burning at the lower end of the cabin was perceived. It seemed to spring from the stove, in the fender of which things often fell and smouldered. But as Dr. Copeland went at nine o'clock to^ the meteorological reading, he noticed a stronger smell and smoke upon the stairs, and, hurrying on deck, was met by a thick vapour. There could no longer be any doubt ; there was fire somewhere, and the fireplace in the after-cabin must be the place, as it had been heated for the tailoring. Quickly all hands were to the fore ; buckets and vessels of all kinds were brought out; and while some fetched water from the tide-hole, others pulled off the top and saw at once the white flames quivering through the smoke. Some few pails of water soon put it out, and in about a quarter of an hour all was over. Deck-beams and deck-planks were burnt, *and charts were smoking; had not help come so speedily, the fire would have burnt through to the coal-bunkers. After this interruption, everything resumed its usual course, and on the 18th the travelling-tent was raised for trial. The weather remained pretty steady to the end of the month. Clear skies alternated with cloudy atmospheres, and from time to time Boreas sought us, though only for a short spell of fury. On the 17th a great deal of snow fell with stormy weather, so that for the first time the land was quite white, and the astronomers had the great pleasure of once more clearing the observatory. The 27th was the same, when a raging snow-storm lasted several hours. It SNOWDEIFT, ETC. 399 was a good thing for us that we could tell the approach of such storms beforehand ; the quick over-casting of the heavens, the light south wind, the rising of the thermo- meter, and the falling of the barometer, never left us in doubt as to what to expect, and we always had time for preparations. An observation which we had made several times in snow-drifting deserves to be mentioned. For instance, when out in such strong snow-drifts, one feels completely suffocated, as if the snow held back the breath by force, and pierced deep into the lungs. This feeling is of course stronger when facing the wind; it is even sensibly felt when the wind is at the back. Wind without snow-drift has not this effect. So striking was this that it was often and on all sides remarked. Through these almost uninter- rupted storms our scientific work was still carried on as far as possible. This was mainly astronomical and mag- netic ; but others, too, were begun ; for instance — experi- ments upon the speed of sound. The thickness of the ice at this time (20th January) measured fifty -three English inches. The zoological collection obtained an increase from some small crabs (Gopepodce) , which were caught in the tide-hole, and were found to be the source of the shining we had so often observed. This was indeed an interesting appearance. When the ice in the tide-hole was removed, it glistened in many places like phosphorus, and then slowly disappeared. These small crabs were tumbling about in water one degree below the freezing- point, nearly under the much colder ice, and when they were taken out with the surrounding ice, and it was melted in the cabin, they soon died. Thus the month of January drew to a close. The day- 400 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION, light grew longer and more intense. Tlie great epoch of the reappearing of the sun, the 3rd of February (as the astronomers had calculated), came nearer and nearer, and our expectation rose from day to day. Since the 30th of January the astronomers had gone daily to the Hasenberg to convince themselves whether their cal- culations were correct, or whether, perhaps, a particularly strong refraction, owing to the state of the atmosphere, would hasteii the appearance of the sun by some days. At last the 3rd of February had arrived, and long before noon all were on the look-out. Dr. Borgen was in the observatory, and Dr. Copeland and Captain Koldewey had climbed the Germaniaberg. It was with very solemn feelings that we awaited the appearance of the sun. Our thoughts flew over the sunless three months, as we con- templated the shadowless objects around, but our eyes turned again instinctively to the south, where it was ever getting lighter and lighter. To our great joy the horizon here was quite clear ; only a few clouds stood in the heavens. These added to the beauty of the scene, for they were of the brightest red and yellow. The noontide hour approached. Full of expectation and curiosity, the men appeared from time to time on the stairs to look for the sun ; some mounted the top-mast, to enjoy the pleasure somewhat sooner. Attentively we looked around, for at such a time nothing should escape one. The southern horizon grew ever brighter, and at last, almost blinded, we had to turn away our eyes ; but the glance rest's in the south-west at first, doubtful and questioning, and then in joyous certainty we shout to one another, " There it is !" The Sattelberg already lies in the sunshine ! And indeed in faint reddish, but unmis- KEAPrEABANCE OF THE SUN. 401 takable sunshine does ttis heiglit glitter above the other deeply-shaded mountains. More decided grows the light now, and in a short time the same beautiful spec- tacle is repeated on the Hasenberg and the other chief heights of the island, and from them it descends to the plains; and as we look around, the resuscitated orb of day shines full upon us. / ' Moved to the depths of our hearts, we thought to look our fuU upon the sun, but the long-unseen light was blind- ing, the eyes could not bear it, and we were compelled to have protecting-glasses before we could tell whether the sun's disc was as yet really above the horizon. Never- theless, its influence was strong enough, as we turned our backs to it, to show the whol^ island and the near main- land in complete daylight. It was a joyous and a glorious sight. Invigorating were the effects of its first rays as they fell upon us, as were also the. effects upon the landscape. For as, until now, the whole mountain panorama lay in one uniform coloured dark mass, except now and then, in the bright moonlight, when some glaring lights and shades stood out, and even the brightest twilight could scarcely individualize an object, now every part and outline of the mountain-chain stood prominently forward; the projections were elevated, and the distant points receded; and this now beau- tiful living landscape was flooded with the softest colours — red, violet, blue, and green in aU shades — according to the strength of the light, the kind of ground, and the nature of the surroundings. But our pleasure was destined to be of short duration, for the sun soon disappeared again behind the jagged horizon of ice, and the gloomy uniform greyish-blue D d 402 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. shadows descended one after tlie other on the wintry- landscape. We must not forget to mention that the first re- appearance of the sun was accompanied by two very- faint and not easily detected parhelia. What would most strike a scientific mind was the wonderful prismatic colours of the clouds, the easternmost of which, lying towards that side of Walrus Island, rose above the very highest of its peaks. It was peculiar that, however dis- tinctly we could see these parhelia, a person looking directly above another's head could not -with all his en- deavours perceive them. The air, which at seven a.m. wast his day —8.95°, cooled considerably later, and at noon the thermometer fell to — 22.67°. The new sunshine afforded us for the first time an uninterrupted view over the icy sea. From Germania- berg one could see how during this winter the ice had been loosened almost close to the coast from Klein-Pendulum to Flache Bay. To the extent of from one to three nautical miles along the land lay the young ice, which might be torn up by the first storm. Beyond lay the pack-ice — a broad, unbounded, snow-covered mass, sepa- rated, as far as the eye could reach, by neither fissure nor interval. A few fine, bright days now followed one another with a temperature of from -4° to --22° Fahr, We enjoyed the hght of the newly-risen sun. The twilight really lengthened the days, and through the period of dark- ness the Northern Lights shot athwart the heavens, displaying in the clear atmosphere a spectacle of rare beauty. But this peaceful scene could not last, and on the 5th there were distinct signs of the waking of Bor6as. COLD AND STORMS. 403 Over the ice lay a slight fog, and the sky clouded quickly fi^om the south. More distinctly than ever did the -nrell- known roaring reach us, and rising along the stretch of the sea were thick columns and clouds of frosty vapour, showing that the icy covering was already broken. This was a particularly interesting sight. Dr. Copeland, who was on a high mountain on the island at this time, saw the ice by Klein-Pendulum break up and drift away. Caught on the heights by the north wind, he was obliged to make the best of his way back on account of the in- tense cold, whilst below in the harbour a calm reigned for a long time, or a light breeze blew from the south or south- west. About noon a few gusts came through from the north, where it had been raging since early morning — at first in a clear sky, then in a thick atmosphere and snow- drift. This storm, too, which blew violently by the hour together, lasted a long time, quite fifty hours, until sud- denly, as if by a higher command, it fell, and there was a perfect calm. The raging of the ice, however, continued, and on the morning of the 9th was another six hours' storm. Then followed days in which wind and storm alternated, though work in the open air was not dis- turbed by it. The astronomers had enough to do to bring their geodetical work to a satisfactory conclusion during this year. The ground on which the basis was to be measured was reconnoitred, the direction and extreme point settled upon, and in different places signals were raised, so that, later on, the spots from which to mea- sure the triangle would be fixed at once. Dr. Pansch undertook the meteorological observations for those absent. Tramnitz frequently went hunting, and shot hares and D d 2 404 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. ptarimgan. On the first bright days the hares gambolled upon the southern slopes of the Hasenberg, as if they had never suffered from the long night and snow-storms. They, like the ptarmigan, had chosen the tender willow- shoots for their food. The men now prepared eagerly for the intended sledge journey. By the middle of February the tent, coverings, furs, and other necessaries, were so far finished that they could be laid by the side of the sledge, which was already put together. The latter, was then laden and tried. It was our intention to begin the journey at the commencement of March. "We expected no real hindrance from the cold, and we lived in the hope of happily being able to reach 80° N.L. ; we also made a successful attempt to sail the sledge. The astronomers had forwarded their work so energetically that they hoped to begin their geodetical journey about the middle of March. For this all was prepared. The sledges caused us the chief trouble, for, except one large one, the others were so constructed that for long and difficult journeys they were very insufficient. "We decided upon building one that should answer every purpose. The weather in the second half of February remained changeable — now fine and clear, now gloomy skies and some falls of snow. The Northern Lights shone the whole night through in the loveliest of colours, unim- peded by the light of the moon, which often emitted a halo. At the same time, light breezes blew from all directions, and only a few storms of short duration dis- turbed our work in the open air. Encouraging now was the rapid lengthening of the days. In the middle of the month, about five a.m., the first dusky twilight might AECTIC CLOTHING. 405 be seen in the eastern sky, and an hour later a faint trace of dayhght spread over the country. On the last of February, at- three a.m., it began to brighten in the north-east, and at four o'clock the dark- ness disappeared; the temperature of the atmosphere was - 13° Fahr. This degree of cold had reached a settled point, which we had never as yet observed. Excepting stormy weather, the temperature seldom rose above 13° Fahr., and sank more than once below — 27° and - 81° Fahr. On the evening of the 21st of February the thermometer reached its lowest point with —40°, which, however, lasted but one hour. This is exactly the stage at which quicksilver begins to freeze ; but, unfortunately, we were not allowed to witness this interesting phenomenon. A cold of more than — 26.50° in a calm was, moreover, quite bearable, and we never found any evil effects pro- duced by it. Here again we found that, in a still atmo- sphere, the wooUen clothing was best for keeping in the warmth of the body ; whilst in a cold wind, even many times double, it seemed as if we had no clothes on. Under such circumstances, fiir was the last resource. Also on the throat and lungs the breathing of the coldest air seemed to have no evil effect, just as when eating frozen things one feels the cold deeper down. We could, coming straight from the caboose, breathe with impunity, although the tempe- rature of the air varied in one minute from 90° above, to 40° below zero; that is a difference of 180 degrees, and yet this is not the extreme by a long way. In passing out from the heated dwellings of the Esqui- maux, at 99.50° Fahr., into the cold air of — 68° Reaumur, there is a difference of quite 157°, and this not only 406 THE GflRMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. can tte Esquimaux stand, but all Europeans who visit these parts. Although in such a temperature the ship itself was fearfully cold, we succeeded as easily as before in keeping warmth in the cabin, and only on stormy days did the quantity of coal used exceed 201bs. or a little more. At the cracks of the cabin door so much ice collected that it had to be removed once every day, and where the cold wind blew directly on the cabin-wall, constant attention was necessary to keep the mattresses free from ice and dry. Some of the observations of temperature at this time are perhaps worth noting, as giving the different degrees of cold at different heights. On the 22nd Dr. Copeland observed, on a mountain 918 feet high, —25.37° Fahr., whilst below it was about 28^°. Above, a strong north wind was blowing, of which below we had no sign. StiU more interesting is the fact that, on the 15th, the astro- nomers, at a height of more than 1960 feet, found only 27°, so that from the exertion of climbing they were bathed in perspiration. Below, at the same time, it was nearly zero. On the 16th an event happened which, under the circum- stances, might have endangered the safety of the ship. It was spring-tide; and at the lowest ebb the ship grounded. As the ice and the snow wall adhered to the ship, we could see the water sink in the tide-hole ; and the weight of the ice forcing down the vessel was enor- mous ; and had the ground been uneven, the stern-post or the rudder must have been damaged. The ice was at this time fifty-seven English inches thick. On the 21st, the regular meeting was again held for magnetic readings. iiOKGEN CAEEIED OFF BY A BEAIi. 407 The next few days passed rapidly in preparations for our sledge journey to the north, which was settled for the 7tli of Marcli. The provisions were stowed in sacks, the tent made ready, and the sledge laden for a trial trip, which resulted satisfactorily, and the sledge-party photo- graphed in different groups, but with, indifferent success. During this time the usual scientific work was continued; on the 3rd of March the astronomers measured the base for their geodetical observations, and on the 4th a magnetic meeting was held. On March 6th an incident occurred which threw everything else into the shade. "We were sitting (writes Lieut. Payer) fortunately silent in the cabin, when Koldewey suddenly heard a faint cry for help. We all hurriedly tumbled up the companion- ladder to the deck, when an exclamation from Borgen, ' A bear is carrying me ofi"! ' struck painfully on our ears. " It was quite dark ; we could scarcely see anything, but we made directly for the quarter whence the cry pro- ceeded, armed with, poles, weapons, &c., over hummocks and drifts, when an alarm-shot, which we fired in the air, seemed to make some little impression, as the bear dropped Ms prey, and ran forward a few paces. He turned again, however, dragging his victim over the broken shore-ice, close to a field which stretched in a southerly direction. All depended upon our coming up with him before he should reach this field, as he would carry his prey over the open plain with the speed of a horse, and thus escape. We succeeded. The bear turned upon us for a moment, and then, scared by our continuous fire, let fall his prey. " We lifted our poor comrade up on to the ice, to bear him to his" cabin — a task which was rendered somewhat 408 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. difficult by the slippery and uneven surface o£ the ice. But after we had gone a little way, Borgen implored us to make as much haste as possible. On procuring a light, the coldest nature would have been shocked at the spec- tacle which poor Borgen presented. The bear had torn his scalp in several places, and he had received several injuries in other parts of his body. His clothes and hair were saturated with blood. We improvised a couch for him in the rear of our own cabin, as his own was not large enough. " The first operation was performed upon him on the cabin table. And here we may briefly notice the singular fact that, although he had been carried more than 100 paces with his skull almost laid bare, at a temperature of — 13° Fahr., his scalp healed so perfectly that not a single portion was missing." So far Lieut. Payer. But let us hear what Borgen has to say for himself upon the subject : — " About a quarter before nine p.m. I had gone out to observe the occultation of a star, which was to take place abou.t that time, and also to take the meteorological readings. As I was in the act of getting on shore, Capt. Koldewey came on to the ice. We spoke for a few moments, when I went on shore, while he returned to the cabin. On my return from the observa- tory, about fifty steps from ttie vessel, I heard a rustling noise to the left, and became aware of the proximity of a bear. There was no time to think, or use my gun. The grip was so 'Sudden and rapid, that I am unable to say how it was done ; whether the bear rose and struck me down with his fore-paws, or whether he ran me down. But from the character of the injuries I have sustained (contusions and a deep cut on the left car), I conclude BOilGEN CAKBIBD OFF BY A BEAK. 409 that tlie former must have been the case. The next thing I felt was the tearing of my scalp, which was only pro- tected by a sknll-cap. This is their mode of attacking seals, but, owing to the slipperiness of their skulls, the teeth glide off. The cry for help which I uttered frightened the animal for a moment; but he tiirned again and bit me several times on the head.^ The alarm had meanwhile been heard by the captain, who had not yet reached the cabin. He hurried on deck, convinced himself that it was really an alarm, roused up the crew and hastened on to the ice, bringing assistance to his struggling comrade. The noise evidently frightened the bear, and he trotted off with his prey, which he dragged by the head. A shot fired to frighten the creature effected its purpose, inasmuch as he dropped me, and sprang a few steps aside ; but he immediately seized me by the arm, and, his hold proving insufficient, he seized me by the right hand, on which was a fur glove,^ and this gave the pursuers time to come up with the brute, which had by its great speed left them far behind. He was now making for the shore, and would certainly have escaped with his prey, had he succeeded in climbing the bank. However, as he came to the edge of the ice, he turned along the coast side, continuing on the rough and broken ice, which greatly retarded his speed, and thus allowed his pursuers upon the ice to gain rapidly upon him. After being dragged ^ From the slight effects produced by the bite of the animal, it would appear that it was not full grown. ' This fur glove had eo successfully resisted the gnawing of the bear, that Borgen had some difficulty in finding where the incisors of the brute had penetrated, and was able to wear it again without its being mended. " The furrier, Jahns, is still living in Bremen," writes Dr. Copeland. 410 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. in this way for about 300 paces, almost strangled by my sliawlj which, the bear had seized at the same time, he dropped me, and immediately afterwards Koldewey was bending over me with the words, ' Thank Grod ! he is still alive ! ' The bear stood a few paces on one side, evidently undecided what course to pursue, until a bullet gave him a hint that it was high time to take himself off. " No one thought of pursuing him, for their first care was to carry the wounded man on board, whither the doctor and Herr Tramnitz had gone in order to prepare the requisites for binding up the wounds. The main injuries were in the head, where, amongst numerous other wounds from the bites, two especially from four to six inches long ran along the scalp, the edges of which hung loose, leaving the skull bare for one-third to two-fifths of an inch. The other wounds, about twenty in number, were in part caused by striking against the fragments and rough broken edges of the ice. It is worth while mentioning that, neither during the act of receiving the wounds nor during the process of healing, which progressed favour- ably, did I experience the smallest pain.* The next day, upon the ice, at some distance from the scene of the accident, the chronometer' and the gun were found, ■' Similarly Livingstone, who, on being torn by a lion, tells us " There was no sense of pain nor feeling of terror. It was like what patients partly under the influence of chloroform describe, who see all the opera- tion, but feel not the knife." — Missionary Travels, S. Afr., p. 12. * After Dr Borgen had been for some time under Dr. Pansch's hands, he remembered that he had the pocket-chronometer (one of Felsing's, of Bremen) with him ; so, as it had not come on board, Dr. Copeland and a guard went in search of it, and found it fast frozen to the surface of the ice. It had gone on for some time after its fall, but had stopped at last, owing to the intensity of the cold; After warming it in the hand, it went on again for some seconds. BORGEN CARRIED OFF BY A BEAR. 411 sTiowing the force of tlie blow, and also the sail-cloth boots, which had dropped off while crossing the ice. " This accident was an additional proof how dangerous it was ever to go out alone in the dark; for weapons are but of little avail if one is not aware of the approach of the animal. This precaution, which was, as a rule, strictly observed, was in my case neglected simply be- cause the next day the whole crew were to start on a sledge expedition to the north, which had now to be postponed for a day." ^ ° Borgen's wounils healed and cicatrized rapidly. His youth aud vigorous constitution enabled him to throw ofi'all the evil effects of the bear's seizure. CHAPTER X. LONG SLEDGE JOURNEY ALONG THE COAST NORTHWARDS — DISCOVERY OE KING WILLIAm's ISLAND — MARCH 8tH TO APRIL 27th, 1870.^ Object and result of these sledge journeys. — Equipment and clothing.— Tent. — Departure. — Provisions. — Discipline on the march. — Hard- ships. — Refraction. — Parhelia. — Difficulties of sledge-dragging. — Tent-pitching. — Snow-blindness. — Eeturn to the ship. — Second start. — Return of the companion sledge. — Hochstetter's Fore- land. — Geological excursion. — Cape Oswald Heer. — -Ascent of the Haystack. — Bear-hunting. — Reaching of 76° K". Lat. — Cape Carl Ritter. — Remains of Esquimaux summer-huts. — Cape Peschel. — • Rooa Bay. — Icebergs. — The Devil's Cape. — Parhelia in Roon Bay. — Desert of snow. — Eastern Island. — Dove Bay. — Mountain- chain and glaciers on the west of it. — Erratic blocks on Eastern Island. — Cape Heligoland. — Storm Bay. — Passion-week. — Violent storm. — 11° N. Lat. passed. — Virgin soil. — Erection of a cairn on the northernmost point reached. — Depositing a document therein. — Want of necessaries. — Want remedied by killing two musk-oxen. — Snow-storm. — The midnight sun. — Difficulties of Arctic sledge journeys. — Greological formation of the Island at Cape Peschel. — Peter Ellinger taken ill. — Payer and Ellinger on forwards. — First salutation of spring. — Return to the ship. — Results of the journey. Sledge journeys, particularly in spring-time, are attended by great expenditure of strength and troubles of all kinds. A day's progress by ship would take a week in a sledge; indeed, sometimes with almost supei'human strength, ' By Lieut. Payor. SLEDGE JOUItNET. 413 not more than a few hundred paces can be made in a day. . Such Journeys must also always be made on the frozen sea or on the Fjords. Overland sledge journeys are impossible in East Greenland, on account of the uneven- ness of the ground and the insufficiency of snow. The most favourable time is the autumn. In winter, the long Arctic night effectually frustrates every excursion. In spring they are made more difficult by the intensity of the cold, and for at least three parts of the time by terrific snow-storms, and in the beginning of summer the changing of the snow into water, or snow-bog. For nine months and a half our ship, surrounded and fast bound by the ice, was the only place of refuge for such expeditions, during which we could not rely upon any means of subsistence from land, but only on the chance good fortune of the hunt. Everything had there- fore to be taken with us ; and the heavily- laden sledge was indeed the ship of the desert, the loss of which would carry all with it. The quantity of provisions to be taken also set a limit upon our excursions, as well as the knowledge that each man, even under favourable circum- stances, could only carry two hundred weight. The north-east coast of Greenland is so completely un- inhabited, that it was impossible to obtain dog-sledges ; so we had to drag them ourselves, which we did on five journeys which occupied three months, and in which we traversed nearly a thousand nautical miles. Clothing and outfit also requires great care, as on these expeditions the explorer has for weeks together to brave a temperature sometimes below - 24° Fahr. Snow-hoods, masks, coats of sealskin, boots of sail-cloth (leathern boots are not 414 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. pliable, and. crack in the frost) lined with flannel, stock- ings soled with flannel, were prepared, and every precau- tion taken. Bach man had two woollen shirts (the under one having a piece of skin with the hair inside sewn to it), trousers lined with fur, a thick vest with sleeves, two pairs of woollen drawers, three pairs of warm stockings, a water-tight sealskin coat — the hair outside, and by many drawn over the head, with only the hole at the throat, to keep out the wind and cold. Besides this, each wore a knitted hood, fitting close, to which was fastened the flannel mask, with small openings for the eyes and mouth, and the nose protected ; over this a large fur hood, only showing a small portion of the face ; a pair of knitted woollen gloves, inside of which were fur gloves ; and, lastly, a shawl — all this as protection against the cold. The clothing is provided with large sail-cloth pockets, the one in the coat being always filled with cartridges. Snow spectacles were worn on the march, those of a smoky grey colour being the best.^ Our tent was of light sail-cloth, the weight of which we had brought down to forty pounds, and was quite filled with the general sleeping-sack of sheepskin. For preparing our meals we had a cooking apparatus and a saucepan, with sixty bottles of spirit as fuel, — wood or coal being too heavy. The necessary quantity of provisions for each week was divided into sacks, each containing cofi'ee, chocolate, boiled beef, ham, butter, suet, salt, dry black bread, ^ Snow spectacles, on account of their fragility and metal mountings, are particularly undesirable, as in intense cold they burn the skin. Spectacles of india-rubber we found the best, completely enclosing the eye, which is protected by very fine wire gauze. — Bonjcn. SLEDGE JOURNEY". 415 pemmican extract of meat, beans, lentils, peas, barley, flour mixed witli melted butter, and twenty bottles of brandy. The pulse was cooked on board, left on deck to freeze, then chopped in pieces, and thrown into the sack. Our medicine-chest only provided for three diseases, frost-bite, dysentery, and bad eyes ; five pounds of private luggage were allowed for each man, and the three guns, with 200 cartridges, formed what may be termed the dead weight. Well, it is the 8th of March. Some days before we had made a trial trip, and it had proved most satisfactory ; there seemed no prospect of change in the temperature, which was the lowest we ever observed in Bast Green- land, being 24° to 35.50° Fahr. below zero, and still less hojDe of the cessation of those time-thieving, indescribably dreadful snow-storms. But time is too precious ; we have already ten hours' daylight ; the sledge is packed, and we begin the journey. The weather is lovely. A moderate wind blows from the north over the hard snowy covering, along which the sledge glides, now with hoarse and now with ringing tones. At the next rocky projection, beyond which the ship can no longer be seen, our companions, who have given us the customary escort, return ; and we continue our journey alone. The eye soon ,gets weary of the brightness of the white surface and the uniformity of the landscape. Chains of mountains, stretching along the coast from ten to fifteen nautical miles ofi", are seen day after day. -From insigni- ficant elevations there rise, in the course of a few hours, over the endless snowy surface, stately icebergs, behind which huge snow-drifts have accumulated. A short stay in the dry cold air causes a painful dimness in the larynx 416 THE GERMAN AROTIO EXPEDITION. and mouth, whilst the very cold but slightly damp air is exhaled with pei'-fect comfort. It is very difficult to keep a straight course when the snowy surface is covered with a peculiar layer of low fog, which, however, seldom happens in the spring, as in a violent fall of snow nothing can be done but by the compass, and this tiring way of proceeding can often only be employed when an iceberg is for a moment visible, as offering a direct object of sight. The great inequality in the warmth of the atmosphere, or unequal thickness of the atmospheric layers above the ice, produces the strangest distortions of the land, by means of refraction, causing objects still below the horizon to be distinctly seen. During our voyage in the pack-ice in 1869, we saw some most astonishing phenomena — column-shaped groups of ice towering aloft, often resembling the ruins of a town ; basins of water shut in by the ice, all of which were below the edge of the horizon ; and once a vessel, which seemed to stand as four, one above another. Still more interesting is the effect upon a land picture. Now appears a high, remote island, without any dis- figuration of its contour, apparently set up on a plinth at least 900 feet high ; or a completely dome-shaped moun- tain is turned into a square, the outlines of the ridge assuming a dreadfully wild character, every top threaten- ing to fall over ; or the distorted picture acquires a rapid motion, growing as high again ; or creating the delusive picture of a land which certainly existed, but not where we expected to find it (Fata Morgana). Thus, in Lat. 77° we for a whole day were advancing to a land,, the individvial features of which — such as snow-furrows and SLEDGE JOUENEY. 417 rocks — -were incontestably seen by all ; but upon leaving our tents in the evening it had all disappeared. Nearly resembling this, in a physical point of view, we frequently observed, during our spring sledge-journey, parhelia, or mock suns, caused by the refraction of the sun's light by the ice-crystals floating in the upper strata of air. These mock suns sometimes form a double circle round the sun, with a coloured bow beyond, and horizontal stripes of light emanating from the sun itself. The inner part of this bow is always red, the outer shading ofi" into pale green and a very light sky-blue. The first circle is bright yellow within; the second of a yellowish grey. This phenomenon only takes place in a yellow, vapourish atmosphere, with horizontal strata, and a somewhat cloudy sky. It was, however, too dangerous to give our undivided attention to this wonderful phenomenon of nature to the neglect of all surrounding objects ; for, though these appearances are frequent, bears are more fi-equent still. Indeed, bear-hunting took its turn in our hunting-roll, and some of us more than once narrowly escaped being torn to pieces. Amongst other disagreeables of an Arctic sledge- journey is its monotony. The ideas and wishes contained within the limited horizon of life in the Arctic-world pass as quickly away as the eye is wearied by the monotony of the landscape. Conversation carried on by men straining at the traces can certainly not be very animated. The frost prevents smoking, for the pipes freeze. There is a continued conflict against the loss of warmth ; and the cold pene- trates in a hundred difierent ways. Now the chin is E e 418 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. numbed, a painful straining of the foretead sets in, or a violent pricking of tlie nostrils, which are exposed to the wind. Sometimes one stands in danger of the heels, the toes, or the hands being frost-bitten. The hair of the face, and even the eyelashes, get hoar with frost — indeed, the eyes are often completely closed — and every frozen spot on the body must at onc6 be rubbed with lumps of snow resembling pumice-stone, until a warm, pricking glow succeeds. When, as in the case of many of our party, the frozen hands or feet were not rubbed with snow until too late, it led to numerous blisters. The fingers swelled up into lumps, and became quite numbed ; but the noses (the whole eight of which were frozen) were more fortunate ; they emerged from a white into a red stage of enlarged dimensions, were eventually covered with aparchment-like skin, remaining for some time most sensitive, and by slow degrees regained their normal condition, so that by the time we landed in Europe they were all right again. The heat of our bodies, which we did our best to retain by warm woollen clothes, was carried away in a moment by the slightest wind ; and if it increased, the cold crept between every button of our seal- skin clothing ; the penetrating icy wind was felt at every stitch, the arms hung down like lead, deadly cold, and no one dared to walk without a mask. If the wind rose still more, curtains of penetrating snow-crystals rose with it from the ground ; then a snow-storm, which always comes from the north, might be expected, announcing itself by a lofty white appearance in the south, the violet colour and close proximity of the moun- tains, and low-hanging clouds. But still we risk the march forward against the thickening snow, until painful SLEDGE JOURNEy. 419 breathing and stiffening limbs warn us to pitch our tent. Under ordinary circumstances this was done about six or seven p.m., on a smooth surface. A hole was quickly dug with shovels, on which the tent was erected, and the dug- out blocks of snow laid round it for safety against the storm, and the sledge placed as a shield to the north. The tent was kept upright by means of four long poles, each crossed at the top, stretched by ropes fastened to axes or piles driven into the ground. When the sleeping- sack had been laid down in the tent, our personal baggage settled, the kettle filled with blocks of snow by the cook, the lamp lit, and the rations given out, our comrades, who, owing to the increased cold since the setting of the sun, had meanwhile been running and jumping to keep them- selves warm, were allowed to enter. During our last half-hour's march, each man had been busy thawing his beard with his hands, for it had been changed into a lump of ice, so that it might not melt whilst the cooking was going on, and so wet their clothes and coverings. As soon as all were in their places in the tent the aperture was closed, and preparations made for passing the night. The stiff sail-cloth boots, fast frozen to the stockings which were to form our pillows, were thawed between the hands, and with difficulty taken off; the stockings, thick with rimy snow, were scraped, then wrung and laid upon the breast, to dry by our only available means — our bodily heat — so as to prepare them for the following day's work. At last all have wriggled themselves into the sleeping- sack, each one lying partly on his neighbour, and in this modest space waiting for the evening meal. E e 2 420 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Tlie first liour is spent in melting the snow, tlae second in preparing the meal, whicli is devoured eagerly, and as cool as possible. The development of steam during the cooking (which in the very cold weather consumed one bottle of spirit, or 1 lb.) put us into such a vapour-bath that we could not even see our next neighbour ; the tent walls were completely wet through, and the temperature, which had been 35° Fahr., rose to 36°. The dampness of the coverings and clothes, from the condensation of the steam on the rime, of course increased, and the opening of the tent-door occasioned a fall of snow within, so that by the time the cooking was over, all was covered with a thick coating of ice or' crust of snow. It is about eight or nine o'clock; the small rations of boiled beef, soup, and vegetables, are no longer enough to allay the daily increasing hunger ; but sleep buries that, as well as our burning thirst, in oblivion. Only occasionally did our sparing supply of spirits allow us to prepare an extra quantity of water. During the march each one carried an india-rubber or tin bottle, full of snow, on his bare body, turned as much as possible to the sun, and often after many hours only a few spare spoonfuls (and sometimes nothing) could be obtained from it. Last of all, the cook, after cleaning out the kettle, also fights his way into the sleeping-sack, which thus attains its proper complement. A side position is the only one possible — to-night all lie to the left, to-morrow all to the right. Comfortable positions, such as stretching on one's back for example, meet with a miserable protest, as well as any other after-movement ; and when at length silence falls upon all, the eight men form one single lump. SLBDGE JODRNEY. 421 The nose acts no longer merely as a condenser, as on the spring journey; it now becomes a cold-pole, and leaving it outside the rimy and icy covering is preferable to burying it in the questionable atmosphere of the sack. The mouth, as the only outlet of exhalation, must remain open, but the teeth get so cold that they feel like icicles, and the mask, which it is necessary to wear in the night freezes to the long beard. Happy were those who, during the lowest temperature within the first fourteen days of our journey, could really lose themselves during the hours of rest, if only for a short time, for they were generally passed in a painful waiting for a happy release, by — dragging ! This general wakefulness made it unnecessary to set a special watch for bears and foxes, which occasionally made a bold raid upon the stores in the sledge, for they had never yet succeeded in approaching us quiiie noiselessly. In spite of all efforts to the contrary, the cutting cold too soon penetrated the sleeping-sack ; within the tent . the temperature sinks from 60° or 65°, to below zero, and the body has to be again refreshed with artificial warmth, by motion and hot food. The natural consequences of this state of temperature is a continually increasing sensation of freezing until the morning. During the day the sack has got thoroughly cold on the sledge, and must again be warmed by bodily heat, being frozen into thick folds as hard as iron. Who- ever lies upon these seems to be lying on laths, which towards morning begin to lose their sharpness. One or the other we keep a bottle of snow about us. All are shivering, scarcely any sleep. For hours together we are in a state of suffocation, the pressure on either 422 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. side causing a feeling as tliougli the collar-bone was being forced into the chest, and the shoulders crushed. Each lies upon his arm (which of course goes to sleep), and is often prevented from breathing by the smell of train-oil proceeding from his neighbour's seal- skin. The breath condenses over the face and upon the sloping tent-side, in long snow webs, which fall at the slightest movement. The misery of tent life reaches its maximum during an uninterrupted snow-storm of sometimes three days' dura- tion. So long as this assumes the form of a hurricane, no one can leave the tent without danger of either being suffocated or blown away. These Greenland snow-storms, which carry small stones with them, greatly resemble West Indian hurricanes, only that the sun is completely darkened by the rush of snow. Of course our tents would soon have been blown over, if some precautions had not been taken. Great distress _ reigned within. The wind greatly lessened the already small space by pressing in the walls. Through the canvas, through every stitch or smallest opening, spurts a small flood of the finest snow, like flour out of a flour-mill, or collects itself on the inner surface, where its ever-increas- ing weight at length brings it down like small avalanches. As long as the storm rages the cold is alleviated from the equalization of warm air over the sea, though it seldom allows any heat to remain in the tent, so that we were still in a cold of from 14° to 5° Fahr. By degrees a covering of snow at least an inch thick lies on the sack, under which we must patiently wait till the storm ceases. We scrape it away with the knife, but it soon returns again. On some occasions this snow began SLEDGE JOURNEY. 423 to melt, and penetrate the clothes, making us look like seals coming up out of the water. In a steadily rising temperature, too, the snow on which we lay would melt, and the sack get wet underneath, not to dry again till the summer, but freeze on the sledge in those hard folds we dreaded so much. We repeatedly felt the want of india-rubber coverings. This state of things often lasted from two to three days, and we waited with an indifference bordering on stupidity, sitting squeezed, with numbed hands, mending the gloves or stockings, almost freezing, masked ; beards full of ice, stuffed up with a chaos of frozen clothes and boots, and, worst of aU, fasting. The duration of the journey, as well as the extent of country to be explored, depended upon the use of the provisions. If, therefore, some part of the time was lost through storms, this loss, in spite of hunger, thirst, and loss of strength, could only be regained by reduced rations, which often only consisted of a thin soup. The saucepan has become leaky, a small sea has formed on the sack, the spirit-lamp runs, and repeatedly threatens to destroy the tent by fire, which, during the storm, would be the work of a moment. The cook grumbles, burns his fingers to-day which were frozen yesterday ; — urged on by hunger, his cooking is subject to sharp criticism, as each is waiting for the eventful moment when the meal shall be ready. All food was frozen — even brandy began to freeze one night — meat in the tins or iiam had to be chopped with the axe; butter could, without any fear, be carried in the waistcoat-pocket, to be enjoyed on the march. Woe to the unfortunate man who, in a lull of the storm, 424 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. goes into the open air. He is almost torn to pieces, stifled by the snow-filled air, betrayed into snow-drifts, and yet not daring to open his eyes. Numbed with cold, white as a miller, he returns to the tent. Here he is a subject of horror to his neighbours in the sack, whom he intends robbing of their warmth to thaw himself. The snow-powder blown in upon the opening of the tent-door has penetrated through all the clothes, and the skin has to be scraped, and any frost-bites that may have set in have to be dispersed by rubbing. Indeed, the disturbance and excitement consequent upon a walk in the open air does not subside for some hours. But the snow-blind suffer the most from such a state of things. Out of consideration to them smoking was dropped. The irritation caused by the white snow-flakes, which with us are easily beaten aside, causes great suffering, in Greenland, from the inflamed state of the eyes and the thick heavy atmosphere, to those who may have been unfortunate enough to break their snow-spectacles. Beating them off while on the march is impossible^ for the damp cloth freezes at once to a lump of ice, making the eyes insupportably cold. The simple bandage, on the other hand, does not save one from the steady burn- ing pain, which acts like needle-pricks. Opening the eye for a moment is not to be thought of. The blind are obliged to pull with the others, as the laden sledge cannot be moved but by our united strength. As a rule, we break up about five a.m. The thin black coffee is taken with some ice-cold bread dust,' which effec- ' Fiom loadicg arid unloading the sacks, the hard bread carried with lis* falls by degrees into dust. SLEDGE JOUENEY. 42 5 tually destroys all its warming properties, mixed into it lik& a mashj and then follows laborious packing up of the clothes, in order to be prepared for all weathers. The frozen boots must first be thawed with the hands, and the folds taken out, the tent freed from snow, and beaten until pliable. The sleeping-sack receives the same treatment, which, as a sign of our disgust and its daily-increasing weight from the ice, we named " the Walrus." The ' soaked sealskin clothing freezes at once in the air, and damp condenses on the hair in frost-blossoms. One or the other rubs his face with scraped snow to refresh his eyes — a novel kind of washing, in default of water, though with the slightest breath of wind his hands are in danger of fi-eezing. After every snow-storm, tent and sledge has to be dug out, and the contents cleaned with difficulty. All this business occupies about two hours, when the traces are taken up with great satisfaction, as a long- looked-for release from the pain of the nightly couch. The sledge is loosened from its frozen position, and the journey continued, which, ~ after twenty-three days, brought us to 11° of Lat., the most northerly point ever reached on the east coast of Greenland. But we will now give an account of this expedition. It ought really to have begun on the 7th of March ; but an accident happened to one of our comrades, who, on the evening of the 6th, had been attacked in the darkness by a bear, and severely injured. This occasioned some delay, and we started on the morning of the 8th of March. We had two sledges and ten men. The smaller of the two was harnessed to four men, and was to accompany 426 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. US for a week, providing us with food, and after laying a depot on the east coast of Hochstetter's Promontory, was to return to the ship. "We judged that our journey would last fifty or sixty days. The first day our advance was rendered so diflS- cult by the hard, rough, sharp-edged snow-drifts, that we could only get the sledges along half laden, thus having to go over the road three times, and we only reached the north end of Sabine Island. The next day, finding the obstacles insurmountable, we thought to better ourselves by enlarging the tent, in spite of the fearful cold on the open field, and taking eight men with us instead of six, the other two returning to the ship ; but even up to the 10th of March no change for the better set in. Only with great trouble and in constant danger of destruction could we get the sledge over the masses of snow : signs of a heavy storm were also visible ; so, not to expend our time and strength in vain, we determined to return to the ship, and await a more favourable oppor- tunity for our undertaking. Upon reaching it, we saw a hunter chasing a bear, which, with the agility of a bat, was climbing the slopes of Germania mountain. He and his companion had besieged the ship for some time. On the 12th of March we fetched back the sledge fi'om the north end of Sabine Island, and on this occasion erected a provision dep6t. The dreadful snow-storm of the next few days made us bewail the loss of time, but showed us how fruitless the continuation of our journey would have been. At last, on the 24th of March, circumstances had, we thought, taken a more favourable turn ; so we left the MUSK OXEN. 427 vessel at nine a.m. for the second time. Six men^ Bllinger, Herzberg, Mieders, Klentzer, Wagner, the carpenter, and our commander, Koldewey, and Payer — ■ dragged the large one ; four men — Sengstacke, Krausch- ner, Iversen, and the boatswain — managed the convoy. As before, we realized the mildness of the temperature in the harbour compared with the snowy waste to the north of Sabine Island. The whole of Sengstacke's right foot was frost-bitten the first day, and rubbing with snow during the whole of the night was of no use ; so the convoy sledge had to return the following day, which was a great loss for us. "We increased our store of provisions by taking that from the other sledge, and continued our journey ; but on the 27th of March a snow-storm kept us in the tent, and on the afternoon of the 28th the sledge broke down one of the curved irons which supported it. With much trouble this was repaired, but the violence of the storm raging on the 29tb and 30th prevented us from leaving the tent. On the 31st of March, after a night of torment, we pulled through the straits between Shannon Island (from which a herd of musk oxen watched us with astonishment) and Hochstetter's Promontory. Upon reaching a large iceberg to the south-east of the latter, we took advantage of the sunny weather to shake out our ice-encumbered sleeping-sack. Unfortunately this brought no relief for the next night, as the low temperature robbed every one of sleep. The coast-edge of Hochstetter's Promon- tory (stretching direct north and south), we passed near enough to allow of a fruitless raid upon a herd of musk oxen. As soon as the hunter was within 200 steps of them, the animals formed their accustomed square, and, 428 THE GERMAN ARCTIO EXPEDITION. placing the young ones in the centre, they all take to flight, reversing these tactics whenever they are pursued. A geological excursion to the small clefts in the' valley of the basin-shaped land, which rose a few hundred feet, would have been well worth the trouble. The completely hori- zontal strata of micaceous sandstone (containing fossil bivalves), belonging to the mesozoic* epoch, contained layers of lias coal, dark and sometimes syenitic gneiss, and a reddish degenerate kind of the same. In the evening the island of Koldewey, many hundred feet high, came above the horizon, distorted by the refrac- tion into wild forms. Against the ever-increasing wind we sought to warm ourselves by pulling hard at the sledge; but noses, feet, and hands were all endangered. The distance travelled lately amounted to from ten to fifteen English miles daily. We had gone over the north end of Shannon, and saw icebergs in increasing numbers before us. On the 2nd of April a snow-storm again kept us in the tent. On the 3rd we reached the north end of Hoch- stetter's Promontory, formed by Cape Oswald Heer, next to the most northerly boundary of the explored country in Bast Greenland. The peninsula of Haystack, miscalled by Olavering an island, forms this boundary with a pyramidal summit of from 600 tp 700 feet high. Near to this mountain our sledge broke down in the evening for the second time; this, however, caused no loss of time, as the ascent of Mount Haystack, a point so important for the determination of our positions, could upon no account be left undone. The mountain is, as it were, sprinkled with erratic blocks, belonging partly to a very recent formation, and, like the high ridge * i. e. Secondarj. {Tr.) BEAR HUNTING. 429 of the coast consists chiefly of gneiss, with alter- nate layers of red felspar. The scanty vegetation already showed signs of budding. From the point one perceives a large bay (Bessel Bay) to the north, with the mouth of several fjords ; to the east nothing was to be seen but ice and the north end of Shannon, with its soft undulating mountains. The rosy sloping masses of Koldewey Island, in the north-east, looked in the splendour of the setting sun like fairy-land. An endless snowy waste- of bluish-grey shadows lay between it and us. Half we had already traversed. Near us rose the high, wild, Alpine front of the geologically interesting island of Kuhn ; to the west lay a rough mountainous district, the interior of which had never yet been trodden by the foot of man, and in which Olavering mistakenly makes a fjord (called Eose- neath Inlet) penetrate, which really never existed. From Cape Heer to Cape Seebach (west of Haystack) ran a beautiful bay, opening to the south, which, from its position, one would be inclined to say would form a perfect harbour for the winter. But what irreparable danger we should have run if, in the previous summer, we had found this bay free from ice, and had taken posses- sion of it, instead of that to the south of Sabine Island I Now it was blocked with ice — perhaps had been for a decade — certainly for some years. Even the deep pools south of Haystack lay upon ice several years old. In the course of the afternoon's march we had a bear- hunt, though an unsuccessful one. A she-bear and her two cubs — the latter very like poodles, and from their dirty yellow colour and black noses perceptible for a long distance — were making quickly towards us, but 430 THE GERMAN AUOTIO EXPEDITION. when within about 400 paces, our firing drove them back. On the morning of the 4th of April another bear attacked lis in the tent, but paid for his temerity with his hfe, giving us a can of fat (which served as fuel for four days) and a good deal of meat, which we immediately enjoyed SUKPMSED BY A BE4K. raw. For the first time drowsiness overcame us all, and first one and then another closed his eyes. In the after- noon snow again drifted from the north, against which we marched for some hours, but were eventually obliged to put up the tent. This lasted to the 5th, and kept us prisoners. A sudden and unexpected increase of tern- GEOLOGY AND ICEBEEGS. 431 perature, altliougli only lasting some hoiirs, made the snow melt inside our tent, placing us in a most uncom- fortable State. On the 6th of April we crossed the 76° of Lat., and reached the level mountain-foot of a cape called Karl Ritter, which was bounded to the north by the beautiful bay of Bessel (named after the great German astronomer), so rich in fjords. The shore consisted of mica gneiss, alternating with amphibolite, and a very coarse-grained granite, with red orthoclase, green oligo- clase, and black mica. To our great astonishment, on the south side of the cape, amongst some remains of bones of sea animals, we came upon some Esquimaux dwellings. They were summer tents, marked by a circle of stones, the hide being held down, and kept upright by a centre pole. Our road, in the meantime, had assumed a totally different character. It consisted of lumps of ice rounded by evaporation, amongst which we lost our can of bear's- grease. Nevertheless, the same evening we reached the southern exit of a second very large bay (Eoon Bay), north of Cape Peschel, which was marked by the wildest mountain character. The icebergs here increased everywhere both in size and numbers. They are successors of the glaciers, and are distinguished by their light green colour, their sharp, craggy formation, and more particularly the layers, which differ from the bluish and less dense ice of the sea-formed ice-floe. The appearance of these icebergs on the open sea is very irregular, as the icing of the bays stops all communication of the Fjord with the Arctic currents often for a decade of years, and the icebergs grow together with the flat ice into masses, until a 432 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. steady increase of temperature and spring storms open the latter and release tie former. It is also possible that the released fragments of Bast-Greenland glaciers may- be carried to the west coast by a connexion of the different fjords and currents, or that by interior channels they arrivB inScoresby's or Davis' Strait. Straight to the north of us rose an imposing wall, 3280 feet high. Its banks of gneiss, with their varied colours, sloped at an angle of 15° southwards. We named this reddish wall the " Devil's Cape," and were inclined to believe that behind it the Greenland coast, trending towards the north-west, was probably connected with Smith Sound. Towards evening, in the far distance to the north, appeared fresh monstrous mountain chains, with out- lying islands. We could not now tell whether we had to do with an entirely insular opening or with an enormous bay, as w;e were not in a position to give a decided opinion. Under such circumstances, our orders were to k;pep to the outer edge of the coast, from which we were already separated by the far-advancing land of Koldewey Island. So we continued our course in a north-easterly direction. On such a voyage of discovery, it may be laid down as a useful rule to keep at least from five to ten English miles from the coast, occasionally landing to climb some high look-out. Circuitous routes are thus saved, pro- jecting points only being touched without hugging the coast-line : wrong roads are in this way avoided ; and, above all, by these means the land-survey is correctly and quickly completed. • The nearer one goes to the coast, the narrower will the PAEHELIA AND STORM. 433 horizon become, as much from cliflFs as from low undu- lating shores. Om- new course brought us, still on the 7th of April, into a huge waste of loose snow, of ever increasing depth, which stopped our further advance. Mock suns, with double circles, which hung with wonderful effect in the afternoon over the colossal rocks of E,oon Bay, warned us of the approach of unfavourable weather. On the 8th, we continued our journey during a raging snow-storm. The "Devil's" Cape, only one German mile distant, appeared with a faint outline, as if seen through a thick curtain. The snow, in which, in spite of the in- tense cold, we sank deeper and deeper, hindered us so much that, even with judicious alterations in the pulling, we were six hours making five English miles, and the slides of the sledge acted as a perfect plough. From increasing dysentery, the loss of the opium bottle was much felt. On the night of the 8th to the 9th some foxes attacked the remains of the frozen bear's meat on the sledge. On the evening of the 9th, after a wearying march, we reached an island group (East Island) 660 feet high, in the middle of the large bay (Dove Bay), of which we climbed the highest summit, to inspect the nature of the land and explore our future course. The view from the heights showed us that, besides the one entrance, there was no other means of egress to the coast but by the narrow straits to the north of Koldewey Island ; but still, in another point of view, the ascent of this height was of great interest ; for we found that the westerly background of Dove Bay, which is filled with numerous moderately high-lying islands, formed a high F f 434 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. * mountainous country, separated by a large Fjord, and extending for sixty miles with glaciers and mountain tops, whicL. we estimated at 6500 feet high. From the direction of some of these fjords, we conjectured that the one at the back of Ardencaple Bay communicated with the sounds of Bessel and Dove Bays. On aU sides the chain was of wonderful beauty. Glacier cascades, more than a mile broad, fell from a snow plateau .4800 feet high, in the north-west. Icebergs of monstrous height, which on that very account we mistook for islands, were iced up in the interior of the bays. The rocks of Bast Island were polished to the summit, and cast in the most picturesque forms, and often, sup- ported only by a small stone, huge erratic blocks rested on the ridges. These blocks had evidently fallen in the place and spot, and had not rolled there. Once, perhaps, they had been borne by ice-floes, dropped to the bottom of the sea, and this, in the course of time, had risen, or else the level of the sea might have sunk. At least, this seemed the only feasible explanation of their erratic appearance on the summit itself. Several hours' drawing and work with the theodolite had completely numbed me by the time we left the moun- tain, the snowy slopes of which bore traces of bears and ptarmigan. On the 10th of April we kept in an easterly direction, towards the north end of the most northerly of the Koldewey Islands. Violently drifting snow, with heavy atmosphere, increased snow-blindness, and drowsiness paralyzed all of us. Nearly the whole day long did we take a picture produced by the Fata Morgana for real land. Cape Heligoland, the north-west corner of the WANT OP POOD. 435 rocky island, whicli we reacted in the evening, consists of very tliin layers of hornblende-scliist, with, distinct traces of glacial detritus. For the first time, in spite of the lowness of the temperature, we saw the snow melt on the rocks, from the now increasing power of the sun. On the morning of the 11th of April we had again 27° Fahr. below zero. In an almost northerly direction, and after that, by reconnoitring, we had fully convinced our- selves that any attempt to reach the outer coast edge would be attended with great loss of time, we continued our way along the inner part of Dove Bay, and reached the end of our actual sledge journey in a bay bounded by an easterly-lying plateau, 975 feet high. This we called Storm Bay, and not without a cause. The cape bound- ing Dove Bay, to the east, we named Cape Bismarck {1Q° 47'). On the 12th we climbed to this plateau during a violent snow-storm, which effectually prevented any great geo- graphical acquisition. Eeturning to the tent, a raging storm broke over lis, , and a fresh flood of snow fell, last- ing three days. During this time we ate almost nothing, as our store of provisions threatened to disappear alto- gether. Scarcely ever was the fast of Passion week (14th April) more strictly observed than it was by us. Not until the 15th could we leave the tent. The three days of inactivity had diminished our strength; faint, hungry, and thirsty, we started upon our last stretch of journey to the north, leaving Ihe tent behind us, and taking only a covering. Want of provisions, which necesr sitated our returning, forbade our extending the journey further. Some musk oxen, which we came upon un- expectedly, were clever enough not to prove the range p f 2 436 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. of the rifle, and out-manoeuvred BUinger, wto, aftel- making a wide circuit, thought to come close upon them. In deep snow we accomplished the thirty- miles there and back to a mountain more than 1080 feet high, which rose above the plateau stretching along the coast. We had crossed the 77th degree of latitude ! Like so many of our predecessors, we, too, longed to lift the veil hanging over the whole of the Arctic world, so opposed to the mandate, "Thus far shalt thou, go, and no further ;" and, like so many others, found that our object gained fell far short of our bold flights of fancy ; and that, resting after endless troubles at the end of our journey, we still looked in vain for the solution of the many riddles which science expected of us. The conjecture, once broached, of an open Arctic Sea, we could, from our stand-point, only reject as idle. To the furthest point of the horizon the sea was covered with a solid covering of ice, over which, had it not been for the want of provisions, we could have con- tinued our sledge journey. The outer coast-line stretched in an almost northerly direction ; to the north-west, the prospect was closed in by lofty ice-covered mountains^ only a few miles distant. The question, in which direction Greenland now ex- tended, had thus far found no solution. The great num- ber of inland maritime districts, the everywhere striking division of land which, in a favourable bright evening, stood out so plainly, gave room to the conjecture that "the chief mass of land (if this should be a continent), probably trended off to the north-west, in 76° Lat., and that we as yet had only to do with outlying islands ; this, at least, appeared as likely as a north and south DEPOSITING A EECORD. 437 continuation of the coast, as arbitrarily represented on charts for many years past. A feeling of awe steals over the most thoughtless when his feet stands on virgin ground, and there lies before him a world on which, from the beginning of time, no European eye has ever rested. The North-German and Austrian flags fluttered in a light north wind peaceably side by side. We erected a cairn, which will doubtless remain unmoved, though perhaps never again seen to the end of time, and placed inside it a box containing a short account of our voyage. The document ran thus : " This spot, which lies in 77° 1' North Lat. and 18° 50' West Long, from Greenwich, was reached by the German Arctic Expedition in sledges (the last three German miles on foot) starting from the winter harbour by Sabine Island, after an absence from the ship of twenty-two days." The storms, which for eight days kept us in the tent, and partly the great difficulties of the journey, as well as the want of provisions, prevented us from advancing further. The coast which falls off" rugged to the east stretches into a plateau for about 1500 feet further to the north. The sea, as far as the eye could reach (about seventy-five miles) ofifered one continuous surface of ice. The land ice, which is perfectly free from lumps, and is and has to all appearances been fast for years, stretches at least ten miles from the coast. The weather was very clear at sea, particularly to the east, in which not a sign of water was perceptible. Good Friday, 15th April, 1870. Karl Koldewey, Commander of the Expedition ; Julius Payer, first-lieutenant ; Thomas Klentzer, Peter Ellinger, 438 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. Bailors. Captain Koldewey remarks : " We put up the telescope of the theodolite on a distant ice-block, and let it stand for some time, in order to prove the motion of the ice, if there was any; but the ice-block remained stationary, as we fully expected, as the heavy sea ice seemed to be closely joined to the land ice. Fully con- vinced that perhaps never, or at least only in very particularly favourable years, could any ship advance along this coast, we set out on our return journey; the ice gave one the impression of a rampart built for eternity. With sledges it is possible, if the equipment is adequate, and the strength of the Expedition is concentrated upon them, to go considerably beyond 80° Lat. This is greatly facilitated by the quantity of game, by which, to a certain extent, the stock of provisions may be renewed. We got nine shots, and at half-past three p.m. began our return to the tent. Captain Koldewey had finished his study of the situation of the ice in the east, and Payer his work of land survey- ing, and had collected some mosses, lichen, saxifrage, and some specimens of granite, syenite, and hornblende-gneiss. The greater part of our return journey was made under increasing snow falls ; and soon after reaching the tent, completely exhausted, the roaring north wind began, interrupted by short periods of calm, until it rose to a regular storm. From our critical position with regard to provisions for our return journey to the ship we were in the mean- time happily freed. Those who had been left behind in the tent had succeeded in killing two musk oxen, which on our return they triumphantly exhibited. Some wiUow, gathered under difficulties, gave us plenty of fuel — and KETUEN JO0RNBY. 439 this we might thank for enabling us to obtain water — which with the meat formed a luxurious meal. Merely the flesh was cut from the creatures, and together with the hams packed on the sledge. This, together with a bear which we killed a few days later, lasted until we reached the ship. By degrees we had accustomed ourselves to eat reindeer, walrus, seal, bear, and musk oxen raw, and indeed fresh killed, for the nourishment contained in the fresh meat overcame the disagreeable taste of train-oil, and the great decrease of our stock of spirit compelled us to do so. Only at first did we object : tufts of hair, wool from our coverhds, with coflFee, bread dust, pepper, and juniper- berries (the contents of the sacks had become partly mixed), the remains of bears' grease, frozen butter, and the rest of the soup left at the last meal ; we were only too glad to swallow all when at last necessity compelled. The snow-storm lasted till the 16th April, and the temperature suddenly rose for a few hours to 17° Fahr., which caused the tiresome thawing of the snow in the tent. Not till five p.m., when we started, was the atmos- phere still ; some feet of fresh snow had fallen, and still the storm raged; the clouds lay close to the earth — only occasionally for a moment could we see the long wall of Devil's Cape in bluish colours far to the south- west. The road back to Cape Hehgoland was traversed slowly and silently. Beyond that was the large snowy waste south of Dove Bay. "We waded through it during Easter time, as step by step we sank up to the thighs through the crusted surface, and in spite of the greatest exertions could only make a short day's journey. Panting and almost bent double we tugged at the traces ; with strug- 440 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. gles the sledge-folloTved, sinking deep into the snow-dust, almost as much swimming as gliding. We did not now depend much upon the dayhght, as the sun only remained a short time below the horizon. We slept in the day, marched during the night, and at midnight had a short rest in the tent, rendered very painful by the frost. Shortly after midnight the sun rose blood-red above the faint violet silhouette of the mountain ridge of the most northerly discovered land (King William's Land), and brightly shone the rocky front of Cape Peschel towering in the waste. Kadiant lay the endless snow- fields in a yellowish rosy shimmer, over which the wind rolls thick veils of snow, resembling in effect of colour, from the illumination of the low-lying sun, an undulating flow of molten steel,* driving away over the diamond-sparkling road, and the long bluish shadows of the men breaking through the snowy masses as they knocked against each other in their violent and unequal motion, a spectacle and a work for the cursed, which Dante might have held up to the coryphees of his infernal regions. During the short rests on our return journey we em- ployed ourselves by splitting the frozen flesh into strips — as hard as oak— to put into the kettle with the soup or coffee, that we might the better enjoy it. Only by enduring the extremes of hunger and thirst, and enjoying the smallest possible quantity of sleep, is the Arctic traveller enabled to reach high latitudes. After a few weeks his strength greatly decreases, his ' Bessemer-Jluth in the original. {Ti-.) EFFECTS OP THE COLD. 441 rations steadily lessen, the baggage he has to draw seems to increase, the nightly chills, the disturbed digestion from instiflB.cient nourishment, the cold, and so on, lead to depression or sickness, particularly to dysentery. The tongue is often covered with blisters from taking the food boiling hot. The constant change from wet to frost leads to wounds in the . limbs, to the utter rotting and destruction of clothes, as well as to other internal evils, at last we went about in little else than torn stockings. Upon leaving the tent after several days' snow-storm one felt all the feebleness of convalescence. With gnaAving hunger drowsiness was combined, which so overcame some of our party that they dragged with closed eyes, only half awake, and between the short pauses sank at once to sleep. Of course they had to be awakened imme- diately. As we struck our tent at six a.m. on the 17th of April, the light-lying snow was four feet deep. On the 18th the cold again reached 13° Fahr., the daily distance made under the greatest exertions attendant upon great exhaustion, was but a few nautical miles. For hours together icebergs already passed seemed unchanged in point of distance. Not until the 19th did our road improve, when we slept better than we had done for a long time. One single sunny morning with moderate cold, how it raised the spirits and quieted the nerves ! Everywhere from the direction of the snow-drifts could we tell the local change of the prevailing wind. On the 20th, south of Devil's Cape, we killed a bear which was on the point of attacking us in the tent ; its fat freed us for some time (from the increasing want of fuel to melt the snow) from the fatiguing and precarious task of 442 THE QEliMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. willoW-seeking on the neighbouring coast, as well as from the further destruction of our sledge which had already been stripped of every available piece of wood. A short visit to Peschel Island, which lies over against the cape of the same name, during the journey of the 21st, convinced me once more of the great identity of the geological structure with the old crystal line formation belonging to the East Greenland coast. The island consisted of alternate strata of amphibolite and gneiss. Everywhere were to be seen large blocks of thirty-three cubic feet of hornblende-rock, and glacial detritus, which attained a maximum elevation of 229 feet. On the 22nd a bear attacked us while dragging, and was killed. A piece of his skin was taken with us and the head laid with the remainder. We then had to put up with drifting snow exactly resembling a storm, though it did not prevent us from advancing, as we had the wind at our backs and had made a sail of the empty sacks, which greatly lightened our load ; indeed, so much so for some distance, that the sledge ran with but very moderate pulling. During such snow-drifting it often happened that we had not the slightest idea where the land lay. The snow-drifting lasted through the 23rd, its numbing influence being increased by some hours' unsheltered stay on the peninsula of Haystack, where we tried in vain to sever the head of a bear, killed some time before, to take with us. A troop of foxes, which for weeks had been gnawing at the frozen flesh, would scarcely be driven away, and then were constantly returning. The temperature of the last few days had risen to EFFECTS OF THE COJ.D. 443 3° Fahr. ; but on the 24tli and 25tli April it fell again to - 13°. One of the sailors, a Frankfort man, Peter Bllinger (called Hans), the heartiest companion and the most diflBcult to replace, had greatly suffered* from excessive exertion and the frost; and as a great deal depended upon his being with us in the expedition for exploring the great Fjords to the north-west of Ardencaple Bay in the next sledge journey (which we were to begin after eight days' rest, and which would last for four weeks), Payer and he left the sledge, in order to reach the ship and the doctor as soon as possible. On the 26th they helped to drag the sledge from twelve p.m. to half-past eight a.m., when they started alone with some provisions and melted water, which however soon froze on their bodies, across the snow- ' Ellinger, with his aspirations and intelligence, might have hecome a great support to the German Arctic Expedition, but he unfortunately died shortly after its return. In December, 1870, he left Rotterdam on a Dutch ship for Savannah, and after eleven days' fever, in the hospital of that place, he died on the 26th February, 1871. Besides Payer every one connected with the Expedition gave him the most excellent character. In the official report of the Committee for the North German Expedition, in Bremen, on the 15th of July, 1871, it runs thus : — " Captain Koldewey and Dr. Copeland made hono'urable mention of Peter Ellinger, sailor on board the Germania during the second German Expedition, and who is lately dead. The death of this young man — he was only twenty-four — is still more to be deplored, as his whole conduct during that time led us to suppose that he would eventually prove an ornament to the German navy, not only from his cleverness in all seaman's work, but also for his great interest in all nautical science. He thirsted for knowledge, and was very successful in meteorological and magnetic observations, and afeo took part in sur- veying ; and being employed in all great undertakiugs, deserves the utmost thanks at the hands of the Expedition." 444 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. fields to the soutli, the sledge following slowly. The snow soon began to lose its hardness, and the nearer we came to land the looser and deeper it became from the drifts. The sight of the well-known walls and capes which had become our home, gave to our wishes and hopes a quiet security. But our quarter-master had not accomplished the day's march of forty miles to the rocky coast of Sabine Island, on the south-east shore of which the winter harbour lay, when the dreaded signs of a storm arose. The curtains of snow began to rise from the ground, causing them to regret the furs they had left behind ; and as they could neither reach the sledge nor the ship in time, they were placed in a somewhat serious predicament. However the storm subsided, the sun came out and shone brightly over the land as we set foot on the shore of the island, whilst the softening of the snow compelled us to raise the tent earlier than usual, and to take our last disposable meal. We slept at the foot of a cliff in Clavering Straits. Ellinger laid down on the rugged edge of the coast, and Payer sat beside to watch, the gun lying cocked by his side. With what delight could one enjoy the bright sunshine in this wild scenery. The strand ice began to whisper and to crack with the tide — the recollection of awakening spring at home lay alluringly near. Hans slept softly : it was a pity to have to wake him in a few minutes, which we must do for fear he should freeze. Then a bird's note sounded from the walls above, the first greeting of the awakening spring ! After Payer had also rested, the journey was continued, avoiding the long road along the shore ; and, though in stockings, they BETTJEN TO THE SHIP. 445 liad to traverse sharp rocky slopes, blocks, and lumps of snow over higli chains of mountains ; and from the summit of the last they looked down upon the winter harbour. There lay the ship still surrounded with ice. The coast-land, which we had left in its winter dress, had again donned its characteristic brown, and looked quite strange. Payer and Bllinger descended from the mountain. Full of joyful expectation did they approach the ship, which struck them (as it did us afterwards) as being wonderfully large and stately. It was midnight when the travellers reached it, after a march of twenty-one hours and a half. A black face looked up astonished from the engine-room. It was that of the engineer Krauschner, who was busily cleaning all up for the summer cruise. The unusual footsteps on deck called Oopeland, Borgen, and Pansch up armed, and the meeting was attended with as much excitement as if they had been separated for years. At Captain Koldewey's desire, Sengstacke. immediately came back to meet us with provisions, and on the fol- lowing day (27th April) we all reached the ship together. After such an expedition there is great danger in entering suddenly under a warm roof. Upon reaching the cabin, the blood rushed immediately to the surface. What a wonder the ship seemed to us ! A cabin — which had now been turned into a carpenter's shop— in which one could stand upright; boxes on which we " could sit. Here, after five weeks, we could once more undress ourselves ; here a berth, with mattress and coverings, invited us instead of the sleeping-sack. 446 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Our exceptional circumstances caused the cook to wink at the consumption of his melted snow-water, to which we applied ourselves unmolested : to satisfy our- selves was really hard work. For four hours we ate, without intermission, of everything that came in our way : large pieces of roasted bears' flesh (they had been yisited by bears in our absence, and had killed some), bacon, vegetables, ship's biscuit, bread, butter, cheese, wine, chocolate, black coff'ee, and so on. The change to rest was with some the beginning or the climax of ailing symptoms, such as relaxation, rheu- matic affections, cramp, dysentery, and gastric ailments. But we were not allowed much time for repose, for a few days after we started to explore Ardencaple Inlet. This account of one of our five sledge journeys, which occupied three months on the whole, will naturally raise the question whether, after all these privations, science was in any way the gainer ? Such was the case. The discovery of a land stretching over several degrees of latitude and longitude ; the reaching the most northerly point ever yet trodden in East Greenland ; the conviction that the land was wonderfully broken up and might possibly resolve itself into a group of islands; the certainty from our geodetical work that a future measurement of degrees would meet with no hindrance from climate, configuration of ground, or atmospheric condition ; the enriching of the geological knowledge of our terrestrial globe ; the confirmation of the conjecture that the most recent geological formations were certainly not wanting in the far north (as people were at one time inclined tobelieve); the discovery of enormous glaciers, the surroundings of which perfectly agreed with Pesohel's theory of the origin BESULTS OP THE JOURNEY. 447 of fjords ; the proof that the Esquimaux must long since have deserted the north-east coast,' and that the land is completely uninhabited ; observations upon the diffusion of certain plants and animals ; upon the almost exclusive dominions of the north wind ; and lastly, the experience that the navigability of the so-called coast water suffers great interruption from the ice masses in the Arctic current, amongst the local islands, — surely these may be considered as somewhat valuable results. The following Table gives the observations of tempera- ture during Captain Koldewey's journey as compared with those taken at the same time at the winter quarters on Sabine Island. The readings took place from a thermo- meter agreeing with the standard instrument on board, and noting the time at three and four periods during the day, from which the simple mean was taken. For Sabine Island the daily mean was reckoned from the same hours. ' In the interior they cannot exist, as the icing of the straits, and the consequent departure of their only means of support, the walrus and the seal, compels them to live on the coast. 448 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Long Sledge Journey Nobthwaiids. Discoveey or King William's Island. Mean Daily Temperature^ Excess of Date. Temperature Latitude. on Journey. on Sabine Island. on Sabine Island. March 24 -15°.25 - 2°.65 12°.6 „ 26 74° 47' — 26°.06 -11°.87 16°18 „ 26 66' -24°.47 -19°.07 6°.4 „ 27 — 9°. 62 - 5°.57 4°.05 „ 28. 75° 8' -12°.l - 7°.16 5°.96 „ 29 11' - 4°. - 4°.67 - 0°.67 „ 30 11' - 1°.52 - 3°.l — 1°.58 „ 31 14' -15°.7 - 7°.37 8°.33 April 1 25' -21°.77 -15°.02 6°.65 „ 2 - 2°.2 - 3°.55 - 1°.53 3 75° 37' -12°.77 - 0°.17 12°.65 ., 4 49' - 7°.6 - 3°.77 3°.83 ., 5 13°.55 6°.35 - 7°.2 „ 6 76° 6' 9°.95 10°. 62 0°.67 „ 7 20' - 3°.77 4°.l 7°.87 „ 8 32' -13°.45 2°.75 10°. 70 9 38' -10°.52 - 4°.45 6°.07 „ 10 42' - 9°.62 - 3°.55 6°.07 „ 11 50' -21°. 77 -14°.12 7°.65 „ 12 50- -11°.65 - 9°.85 1°.80 ,. 13 1°.3 0°.72 0°.57 „ 14 7°.02 8°.82 1°8 „ 15 77° 0' 2°.3 7°.25 4°95 .„ 16 8°.15 8°.16 0°.0 „ 17 8°.15 7°.25 - 0°.90 „ 18 -18°.0 0°.95 11°.05 „ 19 76° 33' 3°.2 7°.7 4°.5 „ 20 20' 4°77 9°.72 4°.95 „ 21 6' 7°.2 16°.12 7°.92 „ 22 75° 48' 0°.5 1°.62 1°.12 „ 23 24' - 4°.22 1°.8S 6°.07 Mean temj )eratures — 5°.80 - 0°. 85 4°.95 The mean temperature on the sledge journey was there- fore 4-96 degrees lower than it was at the same time at Sabine Island. Hence we concluded that the temperature decreases towards the north, although the protected position of the winter harbour was partly the cause of its greater warmth. * In degrees of Fahrenheit reduced from Reaumur's Scale. (Tr.) CHAPTER XI. SLEDGE JOURNEY TO AEDENCAPLE INLET, PROM 8tH TO 29tH MAY, 1870.' Fitting out. — High temperature. — Bad prospects for the journey. — Great difficulty of progress in deep snow. — Bears. — Impossibility of passing Fligely Fjord.— March to the eastern side of Kuhn Island. — Geological excursion. — Shooting of plants, and animal life. — Mieders snow-blind. — Bastian Bay passed. — Anchoring by Cape Bremen.— Ascent of Cape Bremen (3080 feet) by Lieut. Payer, in company with Herzberg and Wagner. — Alteration in plan of journey. — Exploration of Kuhn Island. — Erection of a Cairn on the Peak of Cape Bremen. — Return march commenced. — Geology of Kuhn Island. — Ascent of 3670 feet up the Black Wall on Kuhn Island by Lieut. Payer, with Herzberg and Wagner. — Running water. — Determination of the height of the Black Wall. — Cape Berlin reached. — Arrival at the ship. Returning from our sledge journey on tlie 27th April, we found the ship lying as we had left her, there being still seven feet thickness of ice in the harbour. Before the middle of July we could not expect our release from the ice, and then our exploring expeditions would begin. The in- terim could not be better employed than by repeated sledge journeys. The investigation of Ardencaple Inlet and the fjords opening into it, and then, too, the possible con- nexion of this bay with the sounds lying north-west of • By Lieut. Payer. a g 450 THE GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. Kuhn Island, formed a most interesting object of investi- gation, and that at no great distance. But above all things speed was indispensable ; for had we not in prospect the dreadful state of the snowy waste which must inevitably attend the rapid thaw of an Arctic midsummer ? After ten days' rest those who had been suffering from dysentery, cramp, and rheumatism (the effects of the pre- vious journey), had somewhat recovered ; a further reason for avoiding longer delay, although we were unfortunately obliged, to leave Klentzer and our brave EUinger behind. The hope of finding the ice in Tligely Fjord free from snow, as in the previous autumn, decided us in choosing this road to Ardencaple Inlet. The dread of a repetition of our l^-te sufferings from want of food made us burden ourselves with all we could take, but the dead- weight was lightened as much as possible by the general sleeping- sack being made of light woollen stuff, and by reducing the size o£ the tent. Our weapons consisted of three breech-loaders and a hundred cartridges ; our instruments, of a theodolite, aneroid, and thermometer. We also took thirty bottles of spirits, sixty lbs. of melted walrus and bear's fat for fuel, and nine bottles of ginger in a tin can. Our clothes were lighter, as we had relieved ourselves of the fur. In case the loosening of the coast ice should prevent our reaching the ship, we laid down a provision dep6t at Cape BerHn. Journeys at the end of the spring time are very dif- ferent from those at the beginning. In the first instance, one has to suffer from the frost, and in the second, from the glowing summer heat, althougli in the shade the thermometer is still below freezing-point. Very trouble- SI,EDGE JOUENEY CONTINUED. -15] some, too, is the reflected sunlight on the snow-fields on this journey: the temperature rose in the tent dui^ing the day, on the 9th May, 53° Fahr. ; on the 10th, 65° Fahr. ; and on the 26th, to IT Fahr., we were in a steam re- sembling a pot on the fire. The stony snow-fields change into pools of water at the end of May and the beginning of June, making the crossing, at all times troublesome, still more difficult by the overflowing tide. In the first days of May the cold decreased; the temperature rose from 60° to 68° Fahr. ; the sun did not set ; and the storms had suddenly ceased. So far we could not wish for more favourable conditions for travelHng, as we started five strong, on the 8th May (Tramnitz, Herzberg, Wagner, Mieders, and Payer), the others accompanying us as far as the next cape. Snow had fallen some days before ; but, besides this, the quantity of baggage (14 cwt.) delayed our progress, so that we were four hours reaching the south-west point of Sabine Island. A small isthmus covered with snow, which we had to cross here in order to avoid a wide circuit, showed us the great difficulty of dragging the sledge over even a small bit of land. Places quite free from snow would prevent it entirely. It must, therefore, be understood that journeys of this kind can only take place on an ice-covered sea. We now travelled independent of daylight, as the sun never sets, so that on the morning of the 9th of May (2° Fahr.), after reaching the west coast of Sabine Island, separated fi-om the mainland by Clavering Straits, we pitched our tents opposite the Kronenberg. Signs of bad weather increased from the north ; grey and vapourish lay the heavens above us. We slept during c; g 2 452 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. the day, and travelled in the afternoon. The snow became deeper and deeper, and it was with great difficulty that we could bring the sledge along; completely exhausted, we rested some hours by Cape Berlin. On the 10th of May, after four hours' march, 'we had scarcely made half a German mile (two miles and a half English), and in this distance had sunk deep in the snow at every step ; only by "Aussingen,"^ with jerks, could one get the sledge along — a most depressing and fatiguing expedient. But the prospect in the Fjord, beyond a snow waste, two German miles and a half broad, which we still had to cross, was somewhat more favourable, and greatly raised our hopes; and, indeed, we did find a good road, as on the evening of the 10th of May (19° Fahr.) we started for Cape Ham- burg, at the mouth of the Fligely Fjord. As a rule, we could now make more than 260 steps within five minutes; and as on the morning of the 11th (19° Fahr.) we stopped, the reddish gneiss wall of this promontory, with its winding strata and masses of granite, was only one nautical mile and a half distant. At its foot we hoped to find some smooth ice. In order to lighten the sledge as much as possible, we proposed erecting a depot here, so that all articles of clothing that could be dispensed with, as well as all pro- visions for the return journey, were placed in a sack. In the evening we started again (19.5° Fahr.), but at the very next step the difficulties increased to such a pitch that we were almost in despair. From seventy steps a minute it fell to twenty, and at last we stood still. The sledge sank in softened snow, and was scarcely to be ^ " Aussingen " is a seaman's term for a peculiar rhythm, iu time to which the mcu pull. -fr*- ^ "#-8?^ J ll^) SLEDGE JOURNEY CONTINUED. 4o3 moved, even by oui- taking circuits of a wide radius. We ourselves, during the last three days of great exertion, had sunk step by step up to our knees. That, under such circumstances, it was no easy matter to get the sledge along, need be hardly said. For days together the monotonous rhythm of the " Yo ! heave, oh!" might be heard at the foot of the walls. The bright light of the white flakes worked the ex- hausted travellers almost to madness. Only the third part or half of the baggage could be carried at a time ; we were, therefore, obliged to go over the same bit of road three and sometimes five times. Every ten steps the sledge had to be formally dug out; indeed, the bit passed over was like a hollow way, and as the snow became softer, and the tide rose from the edge of the coast, penetrating the under layers, it became like a perfect bog, and we could do nothing but kneel and pull along in the snow. As by this means one could only advance a few hundred steps daily, and that our last night's encampment was still within gunshot, it seemed almost impossible for us ever to reach the land, although we had approached the coast within half a nautical mile. Thus the 11th and 12th of May passed; the snow-storms of the last few days had lost their terrific character of the earlier months, and ofiered no serious hindrance. The continued jerking forward of the sledge had given us all a violent headache, the throbbing of which was most painful. We had carried the greater part of the baggage 800 paces forward — our whole day's march — and had re- turned to fetch the tent and the remainder, but, before taking it down, we rested for half an hour, when, upon going out, we saw three bears inspecting it, the result of 454 THE OEKMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. whicli might prove its total destruction. Quickly we fired some alarm shots. This succeeded : but we feared that they had already had time to do much damage. I was particularly anxious about my large work, for in it was the whole material of the geographical discoveries of the four sledge journeys, and its destruction would have been au irreparable loss. Nothing could have impressed us more with the asto- nishing strength possessed by this creature than the incredible agility with which it escaped, although sinking deeply into the bottomless snow ; we, on the other hand, were a long .time reaching the place of apprehended destruction. The straps of my theodolite case had been torn off, and it had received several bites ; the bears had devoured a piece of sugar and a pound and a half of cheese, our whole store of these luxuries, as well as every stearine candle, and had scattered the bread; but they had only bitten the mouth of the can of ginger flat, before throwing it away, and had only pulled out the cork of the spirit-can. Had not the latter, by some lucky chance, kept upright, the whole of our store would have been lost. Even the india-rubber bottles were either cut in pieces or totally eaten up ; one corner was bitten out of a packet of tobacco, but evidently spat out again. The climbing-pole had been carried some distance by the young bear, no doubt as a plaything ; we found it again, but without the straps, which had been eaten. My book was probably too tough; they had only gnawed it. Our further advance was not easier on the 13th of May; the thoroughly softened snow-diifts fell with a rush as we ncared tliem. The transport of the different lots took place under endless difficulties ; at noon the temperature SLEDGE J01TE,NEY CONTINUED. 456 only rose to 21° Fahr., but owing to the directness of the sun's rays, it caused a glowing heat. As at last we arrived at the hummocks of coast ice, broken by the tide, and also at the foot of the wall, and had conveyed the sledge with much trouble over ice barriers and water-pools, we discovered to our horror that the Fhgely Fjord, instead of being covered, as we had conjectured, with smooth ice, was filled with endless snow. Still we need not give up all hope ; it was just possible that the depth of snow might decrease towards the back of the Fjord. Again we started on a weary road between the ice barriers and the rocky shore, and at last landed on a somewhat higher snow surface — a hor- rible prospect ! Did we not know the difficulties hidden under this seeming smoothness ? The mountains round the Fjord were, with the excep- tion of the steep walls, perfectly white ; the winter storms, in conjunction with much heavier falls than we had had in our winter harbour, seemed to have borne the masses of snow along with them, and dropped them on the front of the mountains, and sprinkled the Fjord at the same time. !N^owhere could we see that stripe coming from the north caused by the storm, and always so striking on the snow-fields of the outer coast. Snow-buntings twittered cheerfully in our neighbour- hood, a raven croaked from the heights, and we were not a httle astonished at the sight of a musk-ox looking down at us from a steep overhanging rock several hun- dred feet high. We had left the sledge behind, and whilst Wagner had wandered in a southerly direction towards the middle of the Fjord, Tramnitz and Payer went along the shore, to investigate the possibility of further advance. 45G THE GERMAN AKCTIC EXl'KDITION. But, as far as we could judge from a good lieiglit, as well as from the great depth of the snow which lay on all sides, we were convinced of the impossibility of reaching Ardencaple Inlet through Fligely Sound; so, after many hours' fruitless march, we returned to our tent. There remained, therefore, nothing for it but to return by the difficult road, and seek to reach our goal by going round the east side of Knhn Island. But the exertions of the last few days had so weakened us that we agreed to take a short rest before starting, but we had scarcely done so when we were surprised by a spring-tide, and we had to pack the sledge and start again, with divided luggage, at three a.m. on the 14th of May. Fortunately the sky had clouded in the mean^ time, and the tempei-ature had sunk to 10.5° Fahr. The snow-bog dried, the snow hardened, and we broke through but seldom, and in three hours we reached the camping-place which we had left some days before on the border of the snow waste. At one stroke our spirits rose so, that after a short sleep we made another long stretch that same day, and pitched our tent on the 16th of May, at seven a.m. (5.5° Fahr.) On the soft easterly hanging slopes of Kuhn Island we saw twenty head of musk oxen, about 2000 paces from us. Tramnitz, our cleverest hunter, managed to creep near them by circuitous ways, whilst Payer and Herzberg undertook a geological excursion to a deep ravine on the coast, and made the interesting discovery that the gneiss granite ridge, which towered in such beau- tiful forms above the east coast of the island, was rich in extraordinary petrifactions, in strata of fuller's clay, coal loam, and sandstone. The same formation leading to ( \ \ 1 r-Y RISE OP TEMPEPvATURE. 457 coal we had seen the previous summer on the south side of the island. Tramnitz was less fortunate ; he returned empty-handed, with a broken gun and torn clothing, in- forming us that he had been thrown down by a musk-ox and trampled on. In a hunting expedition with Wagner, somewhat later, one of them was killed. The rise of the mean temperature, and uninterrupted daylight had in the meanwhile entirely altered the phy- siognomy of the land. Organic life woke once more in the few plants peculiar to the Arctic climate ; under the snow bridges and ice vaults might be heard the whisper of trickling water ; long trains of eider ducks came from the south ; light-grey lemmings rushed terrified over the stony rubbish ; yellowish brown caterpillars crawled with fruitless industry over the same; white hares revelled amongst the young shoots of moss ; slender reindeer frequented the deep furrows of the glacier streams ; and over the sunny surface of the water, although some dis- tance from us, rose the curious head of the seal. Meanwhile we had lost so much time that the success of our undertaking depended greatly upon a steady favourable road for the future, and above all whether the snow-fields over which our return road lay were acces- sible. At last we were entirely dependent upon hunting ; for before the musk-ox was killed, which gave us fifty- six pounds of meat, our provisions had consisted chiefly of coffee and hard bread. Mieders had become snow-blind ; so upon starting in the evening we put him in the midst of us to drag the sledge. The application of wet bandages during the march, (which a month before had been impossible,) relieved him in the course of a week from this painful 458 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITfON. evil. The niglits were foggy and sultry, and Tramnitz, who until now had attended to the observations of tem- perature, was also snow-blind.^ The snow was now soft again ; and again began the horrible " Aussingen," and forward jerking of the sledge, and though we lightened it by leaving a sack behind a block of rock, we scarcely moved from the spot, and were obliged to encamp sooner than we intended fi-om sheer exhaustion. On the 16th of May the temperature of the snow rose to 26.5° Fahr. ; thick fog, and a heavy fall of snow prevented us starting again until the evening, and during the whole of that night's march we could not see ten steps before us, we were constantly losing our course and were obliged at last to have recourse to the compass. On the 17th (14° Fahr.) despite a violent snow-storm we pressed onward, passed the mouth of the romantic Bay of Bastian, and arrived on the morning of the 18th at the foot of Cape Bremen, which forms the south- easterly corner of Ardencaple Inlet. The depth of the snow had confined our progress during the last few days to from three-quarters to one and a quarter German miles ; and our strength from the exertion of pulling the sledge had greatly decreased. Icebergs only at a little distance seemed inacces- sible. The period for successful sledge journeys was now quite over, and we had to climb half-way up to an horizontal stretching mass of dolerite, in order to decide whether it would be desirable either to advance through Ardencaple ^ A cloudy atmosphere greatly favours this disease of the eyes, as objects disa|)pcar, which servo as a rosliug-point or change. SLEDGE JOURNEY CONTINUED. 459 Inlet or undertake a geological examination of Kulm Island and finish our trigonometrical survey. On the 19th therefore Payer, with Herzberg and Wagner climbed to a steep snow-field, then over a mountain steep which with rugged walls of gneiss fell in a mountain ridge towards Ardencaple Bay, the highest point of which we reached after a three and a half hour's march. Clear weather favoured the extensive and highly in- teresting view from the Sattelberg and the Pendulum Island, as far as the noi-thern edge of Kolde wey Island. For eight hours Ave were able to sketch the whole of the panorama, and complete the triangle of our trigonometrical measurement. Ardencaple Inlet, far below us, was as well as Fligely Pjord covered with an uninterrupted sheet of snow, the nature and depth of which Tramnitz had undertaken to investigate; the large Fjord opening in the north-west corner of Ardencaple Bay we could follow from our standing point for at least fifty miles ; it then seemed to curve inwards to the west, but thus far it lay as if sketched upon a map. At its exit west from the im- posing and evidently crystalline mountain mass of Cape Klinkerfues, the Wildspitze, and the Matterhorns, lay countless icebergs enclosed. The existence of large glaciers in this Fjord could not be doubted, though few were visible. The snow surfaces between Kuhn and Shannon Islands were divided into two parts by a sharp line, the nearer one distinguished by its smoothness, and the further one by its undulatory character. But appearances were de- ceitful; for the smooth surface consisted of perfectly soft snow. The increasing difficulties of advancing, the decrease 460 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. of our provisions, and lastly the advanced time of year, all warned us to return to the ship within a week. During that time it would have been impossible even under the most favourable condition of' the snow, to investigate the Fjord to any extent, as from our elevated standing point we could see. We therefore decided to alter our plans on the spot and to give all the time we possibly could to the exploration of Kuhn Island. Events showed that we had made a happy choice. ^PA?BJ10C«H»UJ>-Kr>c llEPOT ON MUN rSI,AKn. After raising a trigonometrical signal on the top, about six feet high, in the shape of a massive stone cone, we returned to our tent, which had been guarded by Mieders who was still snow-blind. An attempt to measure the height of the mountain by the aneroid had failed from its being disturbed. GEOLOGICAL CONFOEMATIONS. 461 On the 20tli May (17.5° Fahr.) we began our return marcli, tlie deserted camp forming as usual a deep hole in the snow. On the 21st (10° Fahr.) we reached the middle of a segmental projection on the east side of Kuhn Island which rose in undulations to a height of 1020 feet. This projection consisted of layers of slaty sandstone and marl, the petrifactions showing that this deposit was of the secondary formation, lying like a cloak on the westerly rising of crystalline stone. The surface of this formation was covered with an erratic covering of rubbish of the last-named stone. On the 22hd and 23rd we explored the individual strata of the formation ; they showed a perfect agreement with those on the south side of Kuhn Island, a westerly incline of 7°, coal clay, petrifactions (Inocerames, Amraonites, Belemnites, &c.), bluish- grey fuller's clay, thin stratas of marl, and rather coarse-grained granite alternated with each other. Coal-beds were nowhere to be seen. But about under the summit of the " black wall " we found some sandstone and small pieces of coal. Several masses of dolerite ran horizontally through the upper bank of the sedimentary layers. Hochstetter's Promontory bore the same geological character, so that both these spots possibly belong to the later secondary sedimentary rocks, only interrupted by the sinking of Ardencaple Inlet. Much damage did our stay here cause amongst a herd of musk-oxen. On the 21st Tramnitz shot a cow; on the 22nd Wagner surprised the whole herd while sleeping, and killed a bull ; and on the following day another fell 462 THE GERMAN AECTIG EXPEDITION. by Payer's hand, who at once sketclied the beast as it lay ; and lastly Tramnitz brought home a calf and a hare. On the 24th, shortly before midnight. Payer, Herzberg, and Wagner started to climb the "black wall," to convert this favourable position of the highest (3675 feet) moun- tain on the island into use for surveying purposes. The way led first through a high-lying valley enclosed between beautiful walls, from the ice basin of which ran slopes of snow at an inclination of 45°, interrupted at intervals by projecting rocks ; then over some syenite gneiss and brown coal sandstone to the summit, after five hours' march. This consists of a rugged mass about 1 55 feet high, in the shape of a dome, surrounded by slender dolerite columns. This sort of stone forms here, and in many other parts of Kuhn Island, a sort of causeway on the mountain ridge, frequently in connexion with dolerite amygdaloia. The climbing of this mountain was rendered parti- cularly important by the discovery of a new sound, which seemed to connect the south-west corner of Fligely Fjord with Ardencaple Inlet. The pack-ice outside reached to the outer horizon, though there were several navigable channels to be seen. Payer finished his work in six hours; and, after erecting one. massive stone cairn, we started for the tent, which we reached in four hours and a half. Not far from this now ran a rushing stream down a deep cleft filled with snow. It was the first time since September that we had water without melting, water to the full ; it was also the first time that we were able to wash ourselves, and drink as much as we wanted. On the 26th of May the temperature rose to 32.9° Fahr. HETUEN TO SHIP. 463 The dispersion of the snow went on quickly, and as we were constantly sinking in it a base was measured on the surface of the sea-ice, by the help of which we took the altitude of the Black Wall. Whilst we slept during the day the temperature rose in the tent to 73.6° Pahr. ; we therefore now slept outside instead of inside the sleeping sack. Flies sunned themselves on the tent-walls, and the heat was as o ?erpowering as under the leaden roofs of Venice. Eheumatism, pains in the loins, and similar affections now made their appearance, as for two months y^e had slept on the snow, without- interruption, audit now melted under us from the warmth of the body and completely wetted us through. On the 25th, after the last geological excursion had been made, we began our return to the ship. The sledge was now as heavy as when we started, from the collection of petrifactions, musk-ox horns, minerals, skins, &c. On the 27th we reached Cape Berlin, after great exertion, and a slow march lastly through drifting «now over the snowy waste at the exit of Fligely Fjord. The deep snow-drifts at the foot of Cape Berlin had in the meanwhile changed into kind of teeth, from the warmth and a resisting paste which stuck to the sledge, making it very heavy. Once more did we suffer (28th May, 43°Fahr.) the already-described infliction of divided baggage and the deep sinking in the snow. Not until Clavering Straits did the road improve ; when near the mouth of Falschen Bay we passed the night, in order to be ready the next day for the trigono- metrical and topographical survey of a mountain more than 2275 feet high, remarkable for its craggy formation. 464 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEmTION. Thick fog, however, frustrated this intention for the time, and we began our return to the ship on the 29th of May. We reached it after an absence of twenty-one days. The pool-covered ice of our winter harbour we found in an advanced stage of melting, which the rain of the next few days hastened. The sky soon cleared, and within a few days the ever- increasing temperature enticed out of the lately frozen soil of Greenland the first-fruits of a scanty Flora. CHAPTER XII. HUNTING AND ANIMAL LIFE IN EAST GREENLAND.' The Polar bear. — Its aliment. — Migration of the bears. — Natural History notes on the Polar bear. — Its curiosity. — Precautions to be adopted in bear-hunting. — Their powerful vital energy. — Sundry matters. — Arctic foxes. — Their natural history. — The reindeer. — The musk-ox. — The walrus. — The seal. — The Arctic hare. — Birds. — Sea animals, &c. Hunting often begins in Greenland, where it ends with, us — in self-defence ; but it possesses scientific interest for the zoologist, and the food obtained by it enables the explorer to remain longer away from the ship. There is the zoological, the geographical, and the plea- sure hunt ; the latter is of the least frequent occurrence. Hunting the bear or the walrus is attended with con- siderable danger; that of the musk-ox, reindeer, fox, birds, and sea-animals affords only amusement. The polar bear,^ which, with his yellowish- white shaggy skin and black nose, forms a sharp contrast against the snow-fields at a long distance off, weighs from ten to twelve hundredweight, and far surpasses in size those specimens in zoological gardens or menageries (which are brought oyer young, and developed under such unfavour- ' By Lieut. Payer and Dr. Copeland. ' In Greenland language, Nennok. H h 4G6 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. able circumstances) ; it is surpassed by neither tlie lion nor tlie tiger in point of strength, and is quite as dan- gerous. But the cold zone in which it lives' cools its blood; it is wary and mistrustful. The contradictory reports of their courage shows tha,t one must never judge one specimen by another, but that each individual is guided by its need of food at the moment. It lives chiefly on seals, watching for them through the ice-fissures, and falls upon them whilst sunning them- selves, with all the cunning of the tiger, and the- same stealthy step. It also pursues the seal even when diving, for it is a powerful swimmer, and only the reindeer excels it in speed. Over jagged rocky declivities it climbs with cat-like dexterity. The roughness of its soles, its claws, and hairy paws, inspire its safety equally on smooth or sloping ice- surfaces. Payer skinned the hind-feet of a bear we had killed, carefully cleaned them from all fat, rubbed them with alum, and wore them himself — they were beautiful warm stockings, for the bear had good soles. Unfortunately they were lost in a fire on board during the winter. As the seals remain chiefly among the pack-ice, or on its outer edge, so also the bear during the summer is a frequent visitor. It follows the seal-hunters step for step, in order to devour the skinned animals, or when revelling in excess swims to the carcase of a whale. The bear kills its prey before eating it, although it likes to play with it first. It rides on the floes in the Arctic current down to Iceland. It is often seen miles from land, and ' Tlie most northerly point at which a bear has been met with is 81° 30' N. Lat. It was killed by some of Parry's men on the pack- ice. THE ARCTIC BEAR. 467 swims towards boats or ships, until driven back by shots. When glutted with the enjoyment of fat seals it varies its diet by ducks' eggs, and a few hours is quite enough for it to clear a small island entirely. It is certainly hard for the Arctic traveller to be exposed to the tender mercies of a bear's two-inch incisors ; but a gun, and a pocket filled with cartridges, are a much more simple process than dragging a dead seal about after one. If you are unarmed, the slightest movement disquiets the bear, and provokes him to action. But it is a much more serious matter to meet him in the darkness, and be mistaken for a seal, a mistake only cleared up when it is too late. If you are armed, the coolness of his adversary inspires the bear with a certain amount of respect. But the bear also deserves our compassion. His life is one continued pursuit of food, although he is protected from the cold by a layer of fat several inches thick. Once we found in the stomach of one that had belonged to a besieging corps (which during the whole of the winter and spring had watched the frozen ship closely, and had forced us to be wonderfully cautious), nothing but a flannel lappet, which our tailor had thrown away, and in the case of many others it was quite empty. Sometimes the stomach of a dead bear contains nothing but water, and large pieces of sea- weed (Laminaria), so that hunger compels it to eat herbs. It is certainly no trifle in this world of frost, cold, and darkness, with its horrible snow-storms, that mountains only can offer sufficient obstacles to his wanderings for food amidst the chaotic crowding and towering ice-fields, surrounded by fissures, or floating out to sea on an ice-floe. Certainly its brown H h 2 468 THE GEEMAN AllCTIC EXPEDITION. cousin in Europe lives in luxury compared with him, and is comparatively to be envied. In the early part of the year the layer of fat, which lies under the skin in the summer and autumn, quite fails. A large male bear, killed near the ship on the 1st of April, 1870, was dreadfully lean ; while a female bear, shot on Sabine Island, the 7th of July, 1870, was rather fat. With regard to the much agitated question as to whether the bear hybernates, we could make no direct observation. But we can say at what time of year we saw them. On the 10th of January, 1870, one came to the ship, and we hunted him, but he escaped ; on the 13th of January, 1870, Theodore Klentzer was pursued by one ; on the 6th of March, Dr. Borgen was attacked by another ; afterwards they visited us daily. When I add that Cope- land fought with one near Cape Borlase Warren, on the 28th of October, 1869, one may easily see that their winter sleep, if they have any, must either be very short or very disturbed. On the 9th of March we saw a bear in a storm, wandering about with powerful strides, and seeming to think nothing of the bad weather, although a man, pro- tected by the best of clothes, could scarcely have moved from the spot; The bear which we shot on the 1st of April, about 300 steps from the ship, cost us the greatest exertions to drag away against the north wind. The smell of burnt fat draws the creatures from miles round. In their wanderings they climb high groups of ice, and one can sometimes see them looking far out, with their snouts in the air, smelling for food. The Esquimaux often catch them by it, — a manoeuvre, which requires cleverness and self-possession : and many of them THE AECTIC BEAR. 469 bear marks of tlie battle fougbt under sucb circumstances. Head wounds excepted, a sbot will sometimes take away all power of resistance in the strangest manner. Meetings with bears are attended by very different results. It often happens that a party of sledge travellers, under peculiar circumstances, and with but little time to spare, pass one, or more of them, sometimes but a few steps off, when they cause no other feeling than that of curiosity and astonishment. Krauschner, the engineer, was the snow-purveyor for the kitchen, and had to go twice a day with his sledge to the neighbouring glacier. Once a bear attached himself to him. He walked with dignified steps as an escort behind the sledge, and not until the engineer had reached the ship did our shout of alarm make him aware of the presence of his somewhat doubtful friend. On the whole, the flesh of the bear (particularly that of the old animals) is far inferior to that of the brown bear. It is coarse and tough, and tastes more or less of train oU. Barentz and many others maintain that the liver is prejudicial to health. The flesh, however, we have always found wholesome, and the Esquimaux west of Davis Straits give it to their dogs. Sometimes, on our sledge journeys, we were surprised in the tent ; but we never set a thorough watch, chiefly because we none of us really slept, and a large creature like that could not approach without a slight rustle. A tent is to a bear thoroughly unintelligible, and an object alike of mistrust and curiosity. One of Kane's companions, who was roused by the growling of a bear and the appearance of its head through the aperture of the tent, had the presence of mind to put a lighted box of 470 THE GEHMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. lucifer-matches under his nose, an insult which he mag- nanimously forgave, and disappeared at once. Our first meeting with one was on the 4th of August, among the pack-ice, the day before we landed in Grreen- land. We had laid to by a large ice-floe, when about 300 steps from us we saw two bears. The burning of seals' fat had drawn their attention, for their black nozzles were high in the air, though they were shy of approach- ing the ship. Copeland, Sengstacke, and Payer got into the boat, and under cover of the steep floe, rowed towards them ; but the newly-formed ice, which filled a creek in the floe, only admitted of Payer's landing. He shot hurriedly and missed, and they at once disappeared among the hummocks. It is not advisable to approach such a powerful enemy, unless he is completely disabled. We met with bears which stood as firm as a rock against the shot, although at every bullet they quivered violently, and streams of blood flowed from them J Void of all fat, and hungry, these beasts of prey haunted the coast, until upon discovering the ship, the movements of the men at once drew their attention, and they never left the neighbourhood of Griper Roads (the name of the winter harbour). Whoever went into the open air, though only a few steps from the ship, during the long polar night, required his gun at half-cock. One night the engineer, as he came on deck, heard a great rustle ; and in the morning foot- * It will be interesting to notice that the bear killed on the 7th of July, after having a ball y\ lb. through both lungs and the thickest part of the heart, ran forward with powerful leaps for at least sixty yards befoi'e it fell dead. THE ARCTIC BEAR. 471 prints showed that a bear had advanced over the snow to the tent. These besiegers also paid repeated visits to our provi- sions on land ; but they played our astronomers the worst trick, for they carried off the measuring apparatus for deciding the length of the base. The greatest evil for sledge-travellers is, that however important a depot they may make for provisions, they can never leave it secure from these ferce of the ice. The best way is to hang a sack upon an inaccessible wall of rock. The strength which the bears possess in digging out anything that is buried is astonishing. Covering over with frozen sand and water is better than the heaviest stone, because it blunts the bear's claws. In spite of their great numbers seldom more than three (and that a family) are ever seen together.' It is always well understood that the old ones must be killed first, for a she-bear deprived of her cubs is a ter- rible adversary. If they are only wounded, she pushes them before her or defends them with her own body, though a cub will never hesitate to devour the flesh of its mother. The ice-fields of its native home are pleasant to the bear, and it will, not willingly part from them. The whaler " Bienenkorb," which we visited in 1869, had one in a cage on deck ; and when, from the strong motion of the ship, it caught sight of the ice, it began to howl dismally. Indeed, the sight of the drift-ice worked so powerfully on the creature, that they were * Scoresby reports that once on the coast of Greenland he saw 100 bears, of which at least twenty might have been killed. 472 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. at last obliged to hang a veil of sail-cloth before the cage. On the 23rd of August, on our return voyage, we saw through the pack-ice, half hidden by the fog, the three last bears, and as it fell they seemed to be taking leave of us in a stage tableau. The Arctic fox {Ganis lagopus, L.") is a very interest- ing species of its genus. It is either (and that irrespec- tive of the time of year) bluish white or grey.' Its coat, which is wonderfully soft, forms an article of commerce with the Hudson's Bay Company. It is considerably smaller in bulk than the polar hare, which, when grown up, generally weighs eight pounds and three- quarters. Its flesh is no delicacy. Barentz, and since him several other Arctic travellers, have, however, found it enjoyable, and we (Pansch and Copeland) did our best to eat it. The Arctic fox has, with but few exceptions, none of the cunning attributed to our own Eeynard. At least our recollections of it (except in one or two cases) are of a most harmless character. During the winter we suc- ceeded in catching some after the manner of the , Esqui- maux. Once one was taken out of the trap and laid down for dead, but after a time it sprang up and rushed away. For the young ducks, for which it has a great weakness, the fox is a bitter enemy. It lives upon any- thing it can get in winter, even shell-fish and other salt- water produce which is brought by the tide on to the strand-ice. In the summer lemmings seem to be its chief food. ' In Greenlandish, Terienniak and Kakaka. ' Between which there are varieties or cross-breeds. ARCTIC FOXES. 473 Nearly the whole of the winter and spring we kept some prisoners in the engine-room ; in such close proxi- mity to the coals they aU turned black. Two of them died of tubercles on the lungs. A beautiful grey fox had to be garotted in the cabin for refractoriness ; another was set free, and the last deserted the cage that we had made it and put upon the ice near the ship. This desertion, which was brought about by the melting and falling down of the block of ice on which the cage stood, and which we all witnessed from the deck, had something particularly comical about it. The fox, which had almost waned away to a skeleton, began to stretch himself, then to stick out his bushy tail like a broom, wriggled his lanky body into a pool of water, and lastly, as elegantly as a dancing- master and as if longing for liberty, started off, without deigning to cast another look at the ship. The European fox shuns mankind, but the Greenland fox seeks his society in perfect innocence, and without any suspicion, for it hopes to profit by him. It is the first, after a fortunate day's hunting, to show its astonish- ment, and also hasten to enjoy the spoil, as well as steal a reindeer ham from the sledge in the night, and carry it away. It accompanies him on hunting and sledge jour- neys at a respectful distance, and employs his time of rest in visiting, opening, and plundering the sack of pro- visions. An ice-bound ship it watches with great favour, for there is always some lucky chance bringing him chance of profit, and things which can easily be carried away. Indeed, it is so accustomed to spunging upon others that it is often difficult to make him ashamed of himself. If, after hours of constant gnawing, or, when in com- 474 THB GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. pany witli others, his envious snarling, one goes out of the tent to stop his tugging at the ropes, instead of going away humbly, he looks boldly into his benefactor's face, barks at the firing, and goes off reluctantly. At other times they come curiously trotting along, not allowing themselves to be frightened by the firing, and a piece of bacon-rind will entice them to follow the sledge for miles. It is a troublesome piece of work to skin a fox newly killed, in the icy cold; its warm skin forming a warmer neck-tie on that account. The Grreenland reindeer (Tarandiis rangifer, L., var. Groenlayidicus) difi"ers at least from the American, Lap- landish, and Spitzbergen species. Its horns are not shovelled at the tips, like theirs ; they are also more upright. It carries its head and neck high ; its whole build is elegant, and reminds one, in every respect, of the European deer. Kane and Hayes also met with them in the most northerly parts of West Greenland. Our excur- sions taught us that they increase in numbers towards the interior of the country; indeed, at the back of Kaiser Franz-Joseph Fjord, in the neighbourhood of a glacier remarkable for its luxuriant vegetation, we came upon a tolerably good footpath trodden by the reindeer. The musk-ox,^ properly speaking, the sheep-ox (Ovibos moschatus, Blainv.), is somewhat sm.aller than the Euro- pean ox. Its threatening appearance is quite in CQstrp,st to its harmless nature ; its colour is black ; its hair long, and falling in rough manes, though on its back is some " In Grcenkud lauguage, JJmingmah. MUSK-OXEN. 475 wool, not to be surpassed in fineness/ Payer pulled out the wool of ttree tliat were killed, on Kulin Island, to wrap up a number of fossils in, for transportation, and took a careful sketch of one of the most stately. Its eyes are particularly small. As the name implies, the creature is distinguished according to its age, some more, some less, by the smeU of musk in its flesh and fat ; to which, however, one can as easily accustom oneself as to the smell of train oil. Its flesh, upon the whole, greatly resembles that of our own ox,' The first we saw and killed was on Shannon Island, in August, 1869. As we did not then know this animal, we made the strangest guesses, comparing it to a gnu. Like the reindeer, it lives on vegetable food, which is scanty enough here. Scarcely anywhere in Greenland does the Flora sufiice to change the face of the soil ; at the utmost, it only serves to shade it. Moss, lichen, greyish-green grasses, ranunculus, saxifrage, &c., form meagre solitary patches amongst the weather-beaten stone heaps. Here and there the plains are covered with birch bushes, a few inches high (the stems of which are often no thicker than a lucifer-match), also with bilberry-bushes, but more often with sallows, creeping along the ground. Almost every species of the Flora of the plain, especially The wool of a musk-ox would fill a moderate-sized pillow. — Tramnitz. ' The flesh of one of these animals not too old was quite free from this taste, and could not be distinguished from our European beef ; and the milk, which I also tasted, was similar to the best European cow- milk. — Tramnitz. 476 THE GERMAN AROTTC EXPEDITION. the garden-poppy, did we find on mountains from 1625 to 3250 feet higli. On the summit of a rock 7495 feet high grew, near the well-known black and yellow lichen, known everywhere in the European Alps as the last representative of vegetation, a long, fibrous kind of moss. The greater summer warmth of the rocky interior of the country insures there a more varied Flora. Former Esquimaux settlements, if only covering a few square fathoms, were at once recognizable from their light green colour, caused by constant manuring. Meadows, in our sense of the term, were nowhere to be seen. How far north the musk-ox and the reindeer are found we can scarcely decide. The first we met in 11° N. Lat., and the last only in 75°. The scanty means of existence afforded by the soil compel them to constant wanderings. Both animals are almost always met with in herds, sometimes of from twenty to thirty head. The greatest number of reindeer we ever saw were about 100 to 200 head, on a hilly ground to the west of Cape Broer Ruys ; and the greatest number of musk-oxen in the brown-coal district of Kuhn Island. To the former we gave battle. Their behaviour towards the hunter is in no way similar. The reindeer approaches him at a brisk trot, full of curiosity, to within a few steps; indeed, sometimes they come quite close to him. The musk- ox remains as if rooted to the spot, staring at the strange, unknown enemy, and arrives very slowly at a resolution. At Cape Philip-Broke four of them most humbly MUSK-OXEN. 477 condescended to play witli Payer by pretending to carry off his portable table. Older animals stand fire most coolly, even after being wounded, and amuse themselves by defending the most exposed part by putting down their heads, which is their invulnerable part. One of them once received a shot from a Wanzl-gun on his mailed forehead without showing the slightest annoy- ance. The ball fell a flattened disc on to the ground ! If a family, or a herd with young ones, are surprised, they either form a square (the young being in the centre, ana the old outside, with their heads down), or else the bull, placed as a sentinel, takes to flight, and the others follow closely, the placing of their outposts being astonishing. They are also excellent climbers. A retreating herd climbed a snow-path at an incline of not less than 45° on a high mountain near our winter har- bour, and to our great astonishment we saw one looking down upon us from between the craggy walls of Cape Hamburg.^ At the first shot a herd of approaching rein- deer will make a spring and then stand terrified; the next shot, or the fall of one of them, puts them to flight. It costs something thus to dispel their innocent con- fidence. Once a reindeer ran hurriedly over the land to a boat that was landing. It stood close to us on the shore, with its head stretched out, and its large soft eyes watching us confidingly. One of us sprang hastily on shore, and ' In the beginning of August, 1870, on the top of Cape Franklin, Copeland observed traces of musk-oxen in the snow at a height of 4875 feet above the level of the sea, and on the 15th of September Copeland and Wagaer saw bear-tracks on the back of the Hasenberg, 1950 feet high. 478 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. it ran. off. Another time a number of them came close to the tent. But a scene took place, which many of our hunting friends would envy us, in a herd near Cape Bennet, in August, 1870. "We had just left our boat, which we were going to load with seven carcasses which we had killed some days before and left behind; but unfortunately they had ail turned bad, as we had neglected to open them. Suddenly there came from twenty to thirty head over the mountain-slope, and upon reaching a snow-field all lay down, enticed by the refreshing coolness and our own example, as we had just done the same thing. As, however, we started to con- tinue our journey,, the front guard of the reindeer rose to do the same; but it happened that one of them — evidently the leader — seemed displeased that the greater number took no notice of the movement, as they desired to have a little more rest ; so it stopped the others, turned back, and went to each animal separately, pushing it with its horns, until they all stood up and began their march together to a new grazing-place. The flesh of the reindeer is good, though somewhat soft and spongy. It is plain that these creatures were very useful to us, and that without them we should often have been in a sad predicament. Unfortunately, our furthest and most productive hunt took place shortly before we left Green- land, and over against the island Jan-Mayen. We had to throw more than a thousand pounds of reindeer and musk-oxen flesh overboard, as the rising of the tem- perature beyond the pack-ice, together with the damp, turned it all bad. If any creature deserves the name of monster, it is the walrus. It is from 9 feet 6 inches to 16 feet 6 inches long. THE WALRUS. 479 weiglis about 20 cwt., and its skin is 3| inches thick (a sort of massive coat of mail), -with, a head of infinite ughness, rather large eyos, and tusks sometimes 30 inches long (of a sort of ivory), which helps the creature to obtain his food (chiefly mussels) from the bottom of the sea, and, together with the breast-fins, help him to climb on to the floating ice to a place of rest. Round his jaws are long cat-like bristles, as thick as a large darning- needle. Demoniacal as his appearance is, his voice is as bad — a jerking, imitative scream, lowing and puffing, often repeated, and in which it seems to delight. Walruses and seals, from their richness in train-oil, are highly esti- mated in the Arctic fishery, and are invaluable to the Esquimaux — indeed, in many cases when, either from the blocking up of the coast with ice or the retreating of the herd, they have been unable to catch any, they have almost died of hunger. One way the Esquimaux have of killing the seals is to approach them by degrees with a white screen, behind which they crouch, and another by lying in ambush amongst the ice and harpooning them. One of the largest walruses that we saw was killed on the ice, near Shannon, on the 27th of August, 1869, by Dr. Copeland. It measured 9 feet 11 inches in length. The skin is particularly flexible and soft, and the leather we used for straps for the machinery. The time it remains under water depends (I think) upon the time the creature has had for preparation. If a walrus is suddenly hunted from his sleep into the water, it must rise again immediately to the surface. Now it takes a deep breath. If it is again hunted, it comes up again; if this is repeated five or six times, the walrus 480 THE GBEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. then seems to be provided with a store, for now it dives in reality, and is seldom seen again. "Walrus-hunting is very dangerous, for in its fury this animal can break through ice six inches thick. If, there- fore, it is not met with on strong old ice, it is necessary to change one's place very quickly, for (as is the case with all mammals) the walrus is obliged to come to the surface of cracks, or ice-holes, kept open for the purpose, in order to breathe every ten minutes. The animals notice exactly the direction and the distance of their enemy, and emerge at the spot to meet and destroy him. Returning from the sledge journey from Tiroler Fjord, we had abundant opportunity of proving this. Contrasted with its ferocity in the water there is no- thing more innocent and harmless than a herd of walruses sunning themselves on an ice-floe or the shore, or, indeed, sleeping on ' the water ; but unfortunately the com- parison with a torpedo (which, for fear of some accident, one dares not touch) is only too well founded. A single ice-floe often bears twenty and sometimes a much larger number of these creatures, their dark, sphynx-like bodies lying close together; the head, from their long tusks, leaning sideways or upon one another; and thus they sleep away the greater part of their existence in the sun, lulled by the rushing and roaring of the breakers. The walrus, surprised on shore or on an ice-field, is utterly helpless ; and although it strikes furiously on all sides with its teeth, is just as harmless as it is terrible when its anger is roused in the water. One peculiarity, which under some circumstances may be very dangerous, is its great curiosity. Should one of these monsters see a boat, it raises itself THE WALEUS. 481 astonislied above the surface, utters at once a cry of alarm, swimming towards it as quickly as possible. This call brings up others, awakens the sleepers which the boat had carefully avoided, and in a short time the small vessel is followed by a number of these monsters, blustering in apparent or real fury in all their hideousness. The crea- tures may possibly be only actuated by curiosity, but their manner of showing it is unfortunately so ill-chosen that one feels obliged to act on the defensive. The bellowing, jerking, and diving herd is now but a short distance from the boat. The first shot strikes, and this inflames their wrath, and now begins a wild fight in which some of the black sphynxes are struck with axes on the flappers, with which they threaten to overturn the boat. Others of the men defend themselves with a spear or with the blade of an oar. Often, from some unknown cause, these creatures turn suddenly from the fight, jerking and diving under water, and when at some distance, turn their ugly heads to look back, and fill the air with their vindictive grunts. In the summer of 1869 a boat excursion to Cape Wynn with difficulty escaped the destruction of their craft. Another time they were followed by a herd and succeeded in reaching the shore of an island, where, though only for a short time, they were blockaded in. The longer you live in Arctic regions the less can you persuade yourself to attack these creatures in their own element, unless forced by pressing circumstances, i. e., want of either food or of oil, and then it is advisable, if in boats, to provide oneself with cartridges. The most successful hunt is when these creatui-es are surprised on the ice-floes. When approaching very near them, the oars are shipped and the 1 i 482 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. boat noiselessly landed. The hunters get upon the floe behind the creature, but scarcely does one raise its head in contempt and anger than all the others wake up, and the whole herd press forward, pushing the young ones with them to the edge of the floe, where they turn head foremost into the water. Only this short time is at the hunter's disposal, and his shots must be quick and true. Should one of the young ones be killed, the mother carries it with her flappers, challenging her enemies to fight, with a fierce look. A walrus once killed is quickly made fast by a rope to the boat before it sinks. The weight of these creatures is so enormous that two of them which we had hoisted on to the same side of the deck gave it a decided inclination. "We were obliged to eat seals as well as walrus, and that too (more often than not) raw. Their flesh has a strong flavour of train oil ; that of the latter is almost black, the liver a beautiful violet. Both creatures have the extra- ordinary habit of occasionally swallowing stones. The seal is from three to six feet long, perfectly harmless and defenceless. It is cautious and suspicious and will dive for the slightest cause. Indeed, its apish face, with its peculiar expression of curiosity, is in and out of the water every minute. Seals, too, live in herds. Seal-htmters often find hun- dreds on one ice-floe. Whilst they sleep or sun them- selves they set a watch, which being killed, the whole herd may often be taken. A seal hunt is carried on in diflFerent ways ; the most successful is with clubs. Their skull is very weak. Our bullets had the effect of blowing them to pieces. The most fruitful ground for seal-hunt- ing is the neighbourhood of Newfoundland and the lonely THE GREENLAND HAEE. 483 island of Jan Mayen, lying within the Arctic Circle. In southern latitudes they rarely appear. When dead they sink very quickly. To the Esquimaux, the seal and walrus are of universal utility. They cut straps out of their skin, make dresses, finish their boats, cover the floors and walls of their snow-huts ; their bones they use for the repair of their sledges and weapons, their fat as fuel, and their flesh for food : in a word, where Esquimaux exist, seal and walrus are eaten. The European hare is remarkable for its long and rapid hasty flight, and its timidity. The Greenland hare {Lepus glacialis), on the contrary, sits as if nailed down in its rocky refuge, however near the hunter may pass to him. Sometimes one sees the mountain slopes dotted with white spots, which from their motionlessness might be taken for snow; but they are only white hares. They are about the size of our own hares ; but their flesh, like that of the Alpine hare, is insipid. Hare-hunting in Green- land often gives rise to the drollest scenes. Their hear- ing appears to be even weaker than their sight. Payer once stood near a hare, which was startled by repeated firing, but had confined its flight to a few steps. The creature was nibbling the moss quietly. Payer took out his sketch-book, and drew it in all the different positions which, in its uneasiness at the conversation and laughter of his companions, it assumed. The peculiar species of wolf met with in other Arctic neighbourhoods is not found in East Greenland ; neither is the wolf-like dog, now dying out from disease, and upon which the existence of the Esquimaux in East Greenland is completely dependent. 484 THB GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION^ Brown, In his Fauna of Greenland, believes that the dogs brought by Torell from Greenland to Spitzbergen in 1861, to work the sledges (a plan frustrated by the sea being found open), would increase rapidly, and return to the original wolf-type. They are also unknown in the north of Europe, and like the ice-bear, fox, and reindeer, are peculiar to the Arctic Circle. The remaining Fauna of this country — lemmings, butterflies, a species of bee, spiders, and gnats (the latter at certain times of the year, and in particular neighbour- hoods, being a perfect plague), all possess a high zoo- logical interest ; but they lie beyond the descriptive limits of a Greenland hunt. Interesting, too, is the more or less periodical return of a large number of birds which animate the Arctic world ; some for only the summer weeks, and some for the whole year, such as ptarmigan and ravens (both of which remain through the winter) ; a number of scream- ing birds — most of which are species of gulls distinguished by their greediness — such as the auks, the divers, and above all, the eider ducks. These cling like so many white spots to the clefted rock, screaming to each other or sitting in a circle on the edge of a floe. A short early ice-covering of the coast water, indicating the close of a fleeting summer, has many embarrassments for them : and soon the far greater part accept the signal for emigration to southern regions. The west coast of Greenland is much richer in birds than the east coast. Our share was therefore propor- tionately small. The flesh of Arctic birds has, doubtless owing to the nature of their food, a strong taste of train-oil. ARCTIC SEA- ANIMALS. 485 The Arctic Sea "is inhabited, besides small fish, by- numberless creatures of lower development {Crustacea, &c.), which serve for food to the gigantic inhabitants of the same element, such as the Greenland whale, tKe fin-backed whale, and the narwhal. CHAPTER XIII. SLEDGE JOURNEYS IN SPRING. APRIL — JULY, 1870.' Exclusion to Klein Pendulum.— Sledge tour to the Huhnerberg.— Ascent of the icebergs. — Return to the ship in a storm.— Second expedition to Hiihnerbei'g and Kronenberg. — Superb illuminatioa of the felspar rocks of the Hasenberg. — Return to Klein Pendulum. — Picturesque region of Kefersteinberg. — Starting for the Geodetical Expedition on the 14th of May. — Iversen snow- })lind. — Spectacles. — Provision depot erected. — Copeland and Sengstacke depart for Hochstetter's Foreland. — Discovery of lignite. — A musk-ox calf caught. — First ascent of the Muschel- berg. — Third ascent of Cape Bremen. — Sudden thaw. — Starting for Hochstetter's Foreland. — Impossibility of advancing the sledges. — Toilsome progress. — The Muschelberg. — Sledges left behind. — Cape Hamburg. — The Fligely Fjord. — Deficiency of provisions.— Passage over Clavering's Straits. — Arrival on board on 17th of Ja'y. — Magnetical and astronomical observations. In the beginning of April, the state of Dr. Borgen's liealth was sucli that he was compelled to take great care of himself, and in all geodetical work had to content himself with being adviser only. It was therefore de- cided that on the 4th Dr. Copeland should make an excursion to Klein Pendulum, to choose some sites and to signal from thence, whether the Hiihnerberg, as well as the intended stations on Kuhn Island and Tell- platte were visible, and therefore could be easily con- ' By Dr. Copeland and Dr. C. Borgen. EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 487 nected with the others on Sabine Island. On this occasion we used a small sledge made for the purpose by the carpenter and the smith. The ice was very thin, and we had to pick our way carefully along the " Ice-foot." After passing the south-east point of the island we saw a walrus sleeping on the ice, which Copeland and Iversen killed. Upon skinning the creature fifteen minutes after its death, the warmth of the blood in the jugular vein was ninety-eight; we may therefore conclude that this is its true warmth, as in that short time it could not possibly have fallen to any extent. In the straits between the two islands we came upon the old ice, and started direct across to Klein Pendulum, where at half- past seven we raised our tent at the foot of the Stufen- berg. The next morning was stormy, and we could not leave the tent until evening, when Dr. Copeland set out to find the station where, the summer before, we had taken our observations. We then built a small cairn about fourteen yards to the south-west of it, and as the spot is easy of access and may be visited by future travellers, the following particulars may be useful. The cairn stands near a group of Esquimaux winter huts, its top being 32 feet 9 inches above the mean height of the water. The latitude and longitude, according to ob- servations made last autumn, is 74° 37' 37" North, and 1° 13' 67", or 18° 29' 2" West from Greenwich. The next day was rather fine ; we climbed the Stufen- berg, and added seven feet to the height of the cairn built by Lieutenant Payer the year before. Through a telescope of 18-lines aperture, we could distinguish the small cairn built by Drs. Borgen and Copeland the August before on the Hiihnerberg. 488 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. The following day, the 7th, the weather was anything but satisfactory; but we climbed the north-westerly height of the island, which, according to our chart, had been chosen as a station. This height we called Church Point, as the rocky masses reminded us of a church, and here we built a cairn ; though, owing to the fog, we were unable to decide whether the spot would ever be useful as a station. Friday, 8th of April, the weather had become worse-, and we were doubtful what to do ; but at last decided that after signalling another point from Klein Pendulum, we should either climb the Tafelberg north of Hansa Bay, or any other height, then round by Sabine Island to the Kronenberg, in order to supply this with a catrn. But upon reaching the coast of Sabine Island, north of Hansa Bay, the weather had become so bad that we determined to return on board ; and as the young ice was now safe, we reached the ship shortly after three p.m., although our sledge was heavily laden with the skin of the walrus. On Monday, the 11th, Dr. Copeland accompanied by Dr. Pansch, Iversen, and "Warkmeister, started once more, this time for the mainland, to signal from the Hiihnerberg and then to go on to the Kronenberg. By the time we reached the foot of the Hiihnerberg it was too late to chmb it, so we visited a glacier lying in one of those peculiar cauldron-shaped valleys in which the Pendulum Islands abound. The water which runs from this glacier in the summer finds its way by subterranean channels into the sea.- The surface seemed free from cracks ; but an ever- recurring cracking noise told us that even at this season EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 489 of the year it was not motionless. Tlie lower part stood so far behind the tipper, that we were bo and to conclude that the upper strata moved forwards quicker than the under. It seemed as if very recently many large ice- blocks had fallen, and others hung in such dangerous positions that we dared not venture nearer, even to get some loose stones scattered among the ice. The aneroid '"' :r ■■i,*fa — ' 1 aJ .'/.-.'- HTyiNEKBEllG GLACIEK. barometer gave the height of the lower edge of the glacier at 370 feet above the level of the sea. Pansch sketched while Copeland took observations. The whole of that night the thermometer stood at 22° below zero, but we were so heavily covered with woollen clothing that we did not suffer. 490 THE (JEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. The next day we had a fresh breeze from the north, with fog. But we needed a clear prospect, in order to decide upon the desirability of the stations chosen; as we often had to give them up, when from any change in the refraction the distant station could not be seen. At about half -past one we reached the summit ; to the north and west was still a clear view, and we recognized all • Jim"', ,**■ i^M THE KRONENBEEG. that we had observed the year before relating to the extent of land and the formation of the mountains. Olavering Island, with its jagged points and rounded tops, seemed quite near. But there were signs of an approaching storm, and though from our stand-point we were at least eight nautical miles from open water, and eighteen from the drifting ice, we could still hear the EXCURSION TO KLEIX PENDULUM. 49.1 cracking and pressing of the icy masses on the high seas. The 13 th and part of the 14th we were compelled to keep in the tent, with nothing to read and nothing to do. The thought that our ship lay within seven nautical miles of us, and that the next day was Good Friday, raised our impatience to such a pitch that we finally determined in spite of the drifting snow to make an attempt to reach it. The chart was consulted, our course decided upon, and the tent poles were drawn. The deeper we got into the straits, and the less the wind was influenced by the mountain slopes, the more we had to depend upon the compass ; but at last we trusted entirely to the wind, always keeping the same side of the body against it, as from our long experience we knew that during the whole of a storm the wind never changed its direction. Our way now lay along the south coast of Sabine Island; but wishing to avoid the deep snow and the smooth ice which alternated close to the shore, we kept farther out, thereby making a great mistake, for we were walking in a south-easterly direction straight to the open water. A look at the compass, however, soon set us right, and about eight p.m. we were once more on board. Good Friday, the 16th, the weather was better. Cope- land employed it, as he was on Sabine Island, in choosing another spot on the Germaniaberg instead of that called No. 4, and also in simplifying the triangle. The 16th and 17th were unfavourable. The 18th was a glorious day. Dr. Oopeland, accompanied by Mr. Sengstacke, Iversen, and Warkmeister, returned to the tent left on the Hiihnerberg. It was completely snowed 492 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. up, and took nearly tlie wliole afternoon to dig out. At three the next morning we climbed the mountain and built a cairn. It was wonderfully fine, at — 4° Fahr. The cairn buUt on Church Point station on the 7th was just visible, but the direction went so straight over the slope of the Kefersteinberg that we feared we should have some diflBculty in seeing it. By four p.m. we were again in the tent, and then started for the Kronenberg, part of our way lying along one of those long islands of which there are so many in Clavering Straits, and between Sabine and Pendulum Islands. Here, as there, they were composed of huge rocky masses of vertical plates of basalt, from nine to twelve feet in length. At half -past eight p.m. we raised our tent at the foot of the Kronenberg, where to our great joy we could see the newly-built cairn on the Hiihnerberg with the naked eye. The next day we climbed the mountain, and were astonished to find yellow sandstone, while the whole crown consisted of beautiful vertical plates of basalt. The sandstone covers the whole of the upper part, and contained the remains of some carbonized plants. Upon this march Dr. Copeland's eyes were severely tried by snow-blindness, as also the boatswain's. On our return journey we enjoyed a beautiful sight. The sun was already low on the north-west horizon, so that the whole of the straits and the mountains of the mainland were in deep shadow. Only the steep cliffs of the Hasenberg shone in a purple glow, contrasting strangely with the azure blue of the sky and the fixed deadly whiteness of the snow. The colouring was sometimes so intense that one might fancy the basalt rocks were in a red glow of fire. EXCUESION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 493 We reached the ship at midnight, though still in broad, daylight. From this time until the middle of August lasted the long Arctic day of 100 days. Dr. Copeland suffered from snow-blindness for some time; but the weather was nearly always stormy and foggy, so that but little could be done in the open air. This enforced rest we employed in carefully considering our triangle. We then decided to give up the stations on Ohiirch Point and Stufenberg, and take instead but one station on the highest point of Klein Pendulum, and for those on Sabine Island take only the Kefersteinberg. This was a great simplifying of the area, and we thereby obtained a larger basis for the northern triangulation. Our plan was now decided upon and the measurement of the base was to be commenced at once. Sengstacke, Mersen and Copeland left the ship on Sunday the 24th of April at four a.m., without either tent or sledge, going through the valleys to the south-east of the island, and at forty-five minutes past eight reached the coast of Klein Pendulum at the entrance of a large valley. Here grew much moss, and flocks of ptarmigan were chirping as gaily as if they were enjoying the summer already, although the thermometer stood only at 32"^ F, All signals except that on the Hiihnerberg were dis- tinctly visible. A couple of hares which we killed- here increased the weight of our knapsacks, but also gave us some fresh meat, which was very acceptable. Reaching the coast once more, we halted a short time to heat some frozen soup. In a temperature of —4°, with a sharp north wind blowing, hungry and spent as we were, we could scarcely keep ourselves warm until the snow was melted. 494< THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. The cairn which we built there could be seen at a distance of nearly forty English miles. In the mean time Dr. Borgen had recovered and could now take his share in the work. The next thing to be done before the beginning of the great sledge journey was the measuring of the base. We had already made an attempt at this, in the beginning of March, but were obliged to give it up. Measuring- stakes and tripods had been buried on the spot, and from time to time we had seen that all was right. When on the 25th we thought to take them up without any trouble, we found that the tripods which we had buried . in two boxes heavily weighted with stones, were scattered around and that the stakes were not to be found. Since Mr. Sengstacke's last visit on the 20th April a bear had no doubt been there, and a storm might have carried away the stakes. We had now to provide new ones as soon as possible, for which purpose Mr. Sengstacke gave us two oars belonging to the large boat, which were the required length of twelve feet six inches. On the morning of the 27th the sleighing party returned from the north. The remainder of the day was of course given up to them, and the joy of their return ; and on the 30th April, the first part of the base of 296 feet was again measured. The temperature at this time was not above 14°, and we feel sure that the low- ness of temperature is no hindrance whatever to European base measurement in Arctic regions with the most delicate instruments and the utmost exactness. On an excursion to the top of the Kefersteinberg we climbed several gently rising valleys, and at last over a yard and a half broad rift, to the left of which is a very beautiful cauldron- shaped valley with steep walls, in EXCURSION TO KLEIX PENDULUM. 495 wliicli a glacier has its rise. To the right the mountain deoHnes in not very steep slopes on to the flat shore of Hansa Bay. One more gently sloping hill, and we are at the top ; to the north, the declivity is so steep that the little stones can scarcely lie upon it without rolling. Turning from here to the plateau, which sinks by degrees to the west, towards the Kronenberg, a most picturesque and interesting amphitheatre is seen, consisting of basaltic columns. Numbers of them lie in fragments, which are ever increased by others falling amongst them with a thundering noise. But many columns, from six to nine feet thick and hundreds of feet high, still withstand the storms and other influences which seek to destroy them. Many stand quite isolated, and being broken in several places, lean overhanging against each other in such a way that they threaten to fall every moment : but it requires other strength than that of the hand of man to hurl such masses from their position. The whole of this valley which surrounds the Kronenberg to the east, resembles the crumbled wall of a crater, and is grandly picturesque. On the 9th of May, Oopeland and Iversen passed four hours on the top of this mountain (2252 feet high), which is not only the highest point of the island but of the whole group. By the 14th of May our base was completely measured ; the sledge was packed, the stakes made even once more, and at ten p.m. we started on another journey. We left the ship accompanied by Capt. Koldewey, who with four men helped us to pull for some miles. It was greatly to be wished that we might be able to carry our triangle as far as Haystack. Three nautical miles from the ship our friends 496 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. left US. At six a.m. we reached our former resting-place, lialf-way along the west coast of Klein Pendulum, where we were met by our old friends the ptarmigans ; here we slept the whole of the sunny day and began ovlv march in the evening. Our road lay at first on the smooth undulating fresh- water ice, running along the coast-line, our only fear being that of running ourselves down from the momentum of the sledge. Between Kuhn Island, Shannon and ■Pendulum Straits the snow lay full of holes, the outer crust being hard; but the sledge slides broke through, and it was soft beneath, so that the tent-poles pierced it easily at least seven feet and a half. At six a.m. on the 16th we were only one nautical mile and a half north of Klein Pendulum, and quite exhausted we put up our tent for a rest ; starting again in the evening, we could ta'ke only part of our baggage with us, and after marching two nau- tical miles and a half had to go back for the other part. Upon starting it was so foggy that we had to direct our course by the compass, though a lift showed us the edge of the land ice a few nautical miles from us. This day we marched fifteen nautical miles and found ourselves in 74° 65' N. Lat., exactly south of Tellplatte. We here discovered by the Dancer-telescope, to our great joy, that all the cairns built were visible, although they were quite from fifteen to twenty nautical miles distant. The exertions of the last few days had so greatly ex- hausted our strength that we could not start again until eight a.m. on the 19th. At noon we trod the coast, and climbed the mountain to choose the spot for our cairn. The ground resembled Cape Philip Broke, which we had visited the year before. EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. - 497 Huge blocks of basalt lay around, one resting upon these small stones, as if man's hand had placed it there for a purpose. On the highest point of the south-easterly part of one of the hills still stood a cairn built the autumn before by Lieut. Payer, and this seemed to be the best spot we could find on the Tellplatte. Traces of the musk-ox were everywhere to be seen, and soon we saw six full-grown animals and two calves. Returning in the evening we found Iversen snow-blind. The next day, the 20th, so violent a south wind blew, accompanied by fog, that we could do nothing but erect ^^'"^^•'.^ __, l^" '*' ■m" ^ ". BLOCK OP BASALT. a depot ; about 250 lbs. of provisions and reserve clothing were buried in different places in the rock, and stones rolled against them. The coast here forms a small bay about half a nautical mile broad. Along the strand were numerous tent circles and many other signs, such as bones K k 498 " THE GERMAN AECTIG EXPEDITION. of the walrus and seal, and heaps of mussel-sliells, show- ing that formerly this had evidently been a favourite summer resort of the Esquimaux. In the tent we refreshed ourselves with two newly killed hares, cooked by a fire of willow wood and bear's fat. Towards the evening, as the wind dropped we went to the spot where our cairn was to be built, leaving Iversen, whose eyes were worse, behind in the tent; it was still too windy, however, to do anything with the theodolite, so we built the cairn and ascertained by the barometer the height of the hill ; this was 672 feet above the surface of the sea. On our return we passed through a broad valley to the south of our station, whose rich vegetation had attracted a whole herd of musk-oxen, eleven full-grown animals and three calves. It was remarkable how carefully, even in their hurried flight, they looked after the calves, which, although certainly not more than four|ieen days old, ran with astonishing speed. It was morning before we reached the tent ; we rested until the evening, and on the 21st of May continued our journey. The weather was quiet but foggy. "We also found to our relief that the sledge went easily with the whole of the baggage. With the exception of an hour in which to make some coffee, we marched until ten a.m. of the next day. This was our longest march, being thirteen nautical miles. Here we took an observation for magnetic declination, which gave 44° 62' westerly; and fixed the position of the place as 74° 55.2' N". Lat. and 19° 9' Long, west of Greenwich. In the evening it was 14° Fahr., and when we started at midnight 7°, making the snow hard. Until EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 499 six a.m. this was good, then the influence of the sun began to he felt, and the sledge sank deeper and deeper. We pitched our tent over against a huge ice-block, and ■were soon under the bed-clothes, but not for long, for the sun shone so po-werfuUy on the tent that by one p.m. the temperature was 81° Fahr., whilst in the shade the glass stood some degrees below freezing. We started again at one a.m., and even for the short stretch of a mile and a half we had to divide our baggage, some of which had to be left behind. Whilst Iversen and the boatswain effected this change, we climbed the Ruthner to signal. On the way from the ice-block to the shore we saw traces of a sledge, which we rightly attributed to Lieutenant Payer, who, not being able to penetrate the Fjord, had to return to the ship. After reading the barometer on the shore we climbed the mountain. In the snow were traces of musk- oxen, reindeer, lemmings, foxes, and hares; a bear, too, was seen in the distance. The upper part of this mountain consists, I believe, of mica-schist, the strata of which falls at an inclination of about 30° to the north-west. Below IS rather a rich vegetation, particularly of Andromeda tetragona, whilst above, where the stones lie loose, there is no trace of it. Here the first flies were evi- dently enjoying the warmth of the stones ; the top we found was formed of a steep roof of snow and ice, not very extensive, but enough to make it of no use to us. This was unfortunate, as all the points of our triangle, such as Tellplatte, Pendulum, and Hiihnerberg, could K k 2 500 THE GEKMAN AECTIC EXrEDlTI&N. be distinctly seen. Besides these were two others erected by Lieutenant Payer, one at Cape Bremen, and one at the " black wall," to the south of our standing point. The prospect from Riithner to westward, if only over the interior of Kuhn Island, is wonderfully beautiful. The wildly rent mountains, with broad ravines and narrow gorges, and the wonderful contrast of the granite sandstone, and basaltic rocks against the blinding white snow, made a never-to-be-forgotten impression. To the north end of the island lay a long, narrow channel, run- ning deep into the land to the west ; where to, remained an unsolved question. In Ardencaple Inlet at 75°, and Gael Hamkes Bay in 74°, was ample room for sledging expeditions in the spring and autumn. Our interesting excursion ended at three-quarters past six p.m. At seven on the 25th of May we left Ruthner, which we were unable to use as a station, for Cape Bremen, reaching the shore beneath it by half-past three a.m. It was quite clear and evident to us that our sledge journeys would soon have to be given up for this year, and therefore it would be impossible to carry our measuring as far as Haystack. The furthest we could hope to reach was a spot on Hochstetter's Promontory, in order to connect it with the Observatory on Sabine Island ; this Copeland and Sengstacke were to do, and choose the station from which to signal. Borgen and Iversen were to climb Cape Bremen, to heighten the cairn already built, and there begin the measurement of the angles. We should then visit Tellplatte once more, and leaving all we could behind, hurry on board with the instruments. We trod Hochstetter's Promontory at a small tongue of EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 501 land, behijad which stretched a rather large bay ; here we found, to our astonishment, some brown coal, some of which we collected for a fire. We soon came upon a family of musk-oxen, which all fled at our approach, except a calf, which we caught. We were, however, a long way from the ship, and its loud and unceasing bellowing put us in some danger, so we were forced to kill it, preserving only the skin and head for the zoolo- gical collection. We mounted the most easterly of two hills forming the greatest projecting point of the peninsula. The whole summit is composed of plates of a dark kind of marble chalk-stone, which answered our purpose beauti- fully, and after four hours' hard work we had the pleasure of seeing a cairn two yards and a half high, and a base of at least two yards in diameter. Under its protection we had a short sleep and refreshment of water, black- bread, pemmican, and ham, which tasted excellent. We then continued our journey, and, after an absence of twenty-five hours, reached the tent, where our comrades were sleeping, at half-past seven p.m. on the 27th. About noon on the following day we climbed the mountain for the third and last time, and were received by such a violent west wind that it was impossible to put up our instruments. We retraced our steps through the ravine, but what a change ! Spring had indeed come with might. Where forty-eight hours before not a drink of water could be had without a fire, and where twenty-four hours before we could hear a low gurgling deep under the snow, were now countless rills of crystal water and a foaming, rushing torrent. But we were indeed astonished upon reaching 502 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the shore to find our tent, wbicli we had left on^a gravelly hillock, standing on a peninsula in the midst of a broad sea. Yes, the Arctic summer comes overnight ! how else would it be possible, in the short space of three months, for the earth to bring forth flowers, and for the fruit to ripen ? At four a.m. on the 4th of June we prepared to carry- out our plan of taking the sledge to Hochstetter's Pro- montory, but it was a colossal work ; at every step both ourselves and the sledge broke through, and some inches of water stood on the ice, so that our boots were soon full. We now determined to leave everything behind except the instruments, and, keeping close to the coast, reach the ship as soon as possible. On our way we found the first blooming plant, a Saxifraga oppositifolia. Copeland and Iversen went hunting, and killed two musk-oxen; upon reaching the top we were just in time to take the sun's altitude ; it then clouded over, and began to snow. Deep in Ardencaple Inlet we discovered a glacier reaching down to the sea, from which, no doubt, proceeded the greater portion of the icebergs with which this Fjord is filled. In Ardencaple Inlet and north of Kuhn Island so much water had collected on the ice that the mountains were reflected in it; we might therefore make up our minds to wade from thirteen to fourteen hours through water at 32°. At eleven p.m. we retraced our steps, with the inten- tion of visiting the western hill, which we conjectured to be the beds in situ of the brown coal which lay in such quantities on the shore ; this was so good that it lit with a lucifer-match. By noon we had returned to the tent. EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDDLDM. 503 and after sleeping twenty-four hours began our return march to Cape Bremen, which we reached on the morning of the 10th, By the telescope we inspected the south coast of Bastian's Bay,' and found it almost impossible for us to get along with the sledge, which we therefore decided upon leaving behind, taking with us on our backs nothing but the instruments, the tent, and a few other things. Three great difBculties we should have to surmount — the passage of Bastian's Bay, the Fligely Fjord, and Clavering Straits; the whole distance we hoped to do in four marches at the utmost. After a short sleep we began our march on the 10th of June, at midnight, each with a weight of from 40 lb. to 50 lb. on his back. We first tried to cross the bay direct, but this we found impossible from the depth of water and snow upon the ice. We therefore went along the coast to the nar- rowest part, which we crossed in two hours, and at ten p.m. on the 11th of June we began our second day's journey; but we seemed to have over-estimated our strength, and could scarcely hope to reach the ship by the time we had hoped ; we had, therefore, to be careful of our provisions, which had fallen very low. Fortunately for us, we fell in with a herd of fifteen musk-oxen and four calves ; they were very shy and restless, which we could account for afterwards, as Lieutenant Payer had already met them and killed two. We fired four shots, and had the satisfaction of bringing down one young bull. We soon had a bright fire of willow branches, and some Andromeda made us an excellent soup, which, with the liver and heart of the animal, afforded us a refreshing rossiL ruoM kuhn 504 THE GEEMAN AKCTIC EXPEDITION. meal. This day we saw a number of sea-gulls, and caught an ermine, already in its summer dress, which we took on board. The exertions of the previous days, our con- stantly wet feet and boots, were beginning to tell upon us. The feet began to swell, and Sengstacke and the boatswain suffered much. At eleven p.m., on the 12th, we began our third day's march, and soon reached the summit of the foreland, the height of which we found to be 994 feet. Vegetation was here rather plentiful, the willow, the dwarf birch, and a shrub somewhat resembling the pine, though not belong- ing to this group. Prom here we descended quickly to the shore, and came upon a layer of coal clay about island. twelve yards thick, containing a number of fossils, which were unfortunately lost. As we descended th^ slope to the coast, we saw walk- ing along the shore a she-bear, and two cubs, the size of a poodle, playing together, the mother taking no notice of them whatever. No sooner did the young ones per- ceive the hunter than they galloped towards their mother, who in two strides turned and stood by them, with such rage expressed in all her actions, that we knew we must be careful J finding, however, that they were unhurt, she seemed to think only of bringing them to a place of safety. It was eleven p.m. on the 13th of June when we pre- pared ourselves for the most difBcult and critical part of our journey, the passage of the Fligely Fjord. "We kept on the northern side of the straits, until we came to the narrowest part, according to Payer's chart, opposite a tongue of land. The water Avas here from 111 feet to 125 EXCURSION TO KLEIN PENDULUM. 506 feet deep, covered with a thin coating of ice, wliicli broke at every step. Fortunately, just at the moment when we were going to leave our instruments behind, we came upon a firm bank of snow, where we rested awhile, and warmed our feet in our hands, and wrung out our stockings, after which we got on better, and, had our provisions been somewhat more plentiful, we should have felt quite comfortable; but they only consisted of biscuit-dust, of which we had two table-spoonfuls at each meal, with some coffee and meat. At two a.m. on the 15th we started once more. The road was good, but the diminution of our strength was more and more perceptible. Every little while we had to rest. We were now passing through a great valley in which were some considerable streams to ford. Soon we came to a broad, deep river, with a strong current. After several attempts, we at last pitched upon a spot in which, sinking up to the waist, we succeeded in crossing. It now seemed necessary to leave our things behind. Sengstacke was not well, and we were not much better, and, as we did not wish to get really ill by remaining in our wet things, we thought it better to hurry on to the ship. At eight p.m. on the 16th all was ready for starting, when a snow-storm set in, and we began to think of murdering some of the Boatswain birds {Lestris para- sitica) which were flying about us, when Iversen descried a fine reindeer, and a luck shot brought it to the ground. At eight a.m. on the 16th we started for our last march ; the snow in Olavering Straits, at which we had 506 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. secretly quailed, we found firmer than we expected, so that we soon came to the island, and, after eighteen hours' march, trod the deck of our good Germania at two a.m. on the 17th of June. The hearty welcome we received from Captain Kol- dewey, Dr. Pansch, and Lieutenant Payer greatly enhanced the pleasure of our return. Some days later Sengstacke fetched the instruments which we had left behind. CHAPTER XIV. EXCUESIONS TO SABINE AND CLAVEEING ISLANDS, TO EXAMINE EEMAINS OF THE ESQUIMAUX SETTLEMENTS.' Hut-ruins and graves on Sabine Island. — Bone implements. — ^Previous condition of these huts and their inhabitants. — Tent-circles.^ — Sole traces of the Expedition of Sabine and Clavering. — Esquimaux remains on Klein Pendulum. — Ethnology of Shannon. — Boat journey to Clavering Island. — Clavering's statement regarding the Esquimaux. — Hut-ruins and graves by Cape Mary. — Vegetation. — Misadventure at night. — Further progress hindered by the ice. Journey to Clavering's Esquimaux hamlet. — Luxuriant vegetation. — Examination of deserted settlements. — Probable fate of the original inhabitants. — Keturn to boat, and so to ship. As everjwliere else, so also in the Arctic regions, the question of the existence of a population, its civihzation, manner of life, habits and customs, must be as full of general interest as it is of the greatest importance to science. It may, therefore, be believed that we were all on the look-out for the natives. Our eyes and thoughts, which had not yet accustomed themselves to a perfectly uninhabited country, had on our approach to Greenland been directed to the discovery of some signs of human life — a tent, or any dark moving spot ; but in vain — nothing broke the brown uniformity of the hfeless landscape before us. ' By Dr. Pansch. 508 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. On Captain Koldewey's return from his first visit on shore, he reported that there were Esquimaux huts in the neighbourhood, and brought a bleached, partially moss-grown, human jaw-bone. In the morning, with the help of Peter EUinger and Wilhelm Mieders, I ex- plored the remains of an Esquimaux settlement on the afterwards named " Observatory Peninsula." '^i^ty^f^" - J', KUINED ESftUIMADX HUTS AND TENT-IIINGS. On the shore facing the south-west we discovered a long row of graves, heaps of stone so evidently built by the hand of man that they must at once strike the eye ; besides these wore the upper parts of four well-preserved ESQUIMAUX HUTS AND REMAINS. 509 eartt-liuts belonging to the natives. These were remark- able, even in the distance, by a small crater edged vs^ith a circle of stones, the walls of which, together with the whole surroundings, were covered with thick green grass and moss. Upon coming nearer, square open holes were to be seen half in the earth, built over with strong stone walls from which a narrow underground passage led into the open air. ^ The huts seemed to be mostly rectangular, some, how- ever, had the corners rounded. The size differed : the ,^ i rtf"-, -s- 10 20' I I.I.I .^^1- LONGITUDINAL SECTION OF AN ESCJUIMAUX HUT. length was from three to three yards and a half, the breadth two, and the height about one. The walls were most artistically raised with middling-sized stones which lay near at hand, the interstices in which grass and weeds now thrived were originally filled with moss and turf. Within the walls were here and there small niches, we also found a larger one in one of the back corners. Besides which between the stones were the remains of wooden pegs, which had no doubt served for hanging up vessels. The floor-s of the huts seemed composed of earth and stones, and were partly covered with thick close sward. Ice lay in some places, and the earth was frozen on the surface. 510 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. At the end of the hut facing the sea (south) was a square opening in the floor, surrounded with stones about a foot and a half in length and breadth, and from half a yard to three-quarters deep ; this was the beginning of a passage running horizontally nearly parallel with the front wall of the hut. This passage was therefore below the level of the floor, and was from three to three yards and a half in length, opening on to the sloping shore. The walls were built of suitably sized stones, also the ceiling, in which for better support long bones and bits of drift-wood were found. The whole of this, too, was covered with earth and sward. Of a closing door nothing was seen, and of a roof there was now no trace. Far and near around the huts, without any particular regularity, were a number of small holes or cavities, of from a half to a yard in diameter, and not much deeper. They may have been used for keeping bacon, meat, and so on, for in some were bones of different animals, and others were covered with heavy stones. In a wide circle on the green grass lay bleached bones, the remains of their meals, mostly belonging to seals and walruses, as well as bear, reindeer, hare, and narwhal. After securing some relics of this " village " and its huts, we decided upon digging in the huts themselves. With much trouble we succeeded in raising the partly frozen layer of earth, and laid bare the real flooring. This was composed partly of the stony earth and partly of artistically laid flat stones. A layer of these were found in the back corners of about half a yard broad, and ere long the conjecture that this had been their fire-hearth, was confirmed by our finding in one of the huts a firm mass of carbonized wood, moss, and ESQUIMAUX HUTS AND REMAINS. 511 fat. "We discovered little of any consequence. Isolated pieces of bones, reindeer horns, and walrus' teeth we found, full of holes bored close together, as Scoresby has already described. This arrangement supplies. in the quickest and surest manner the want of a broom, and seemed to have been cleverly filled in with splinters of flint stone. The holes are the size of a goose-quill, or perhaps smaller, but those near together are equal in size. The bottom (if they do not go quite through) is rounded off, and the sides have grooves running horizontally round them. On other pieces of bone or wood we observed notches, which were certainly cut by stone knives. Completed articles of any kind, we found but few : only such as a harpoon-point and a kind of chisel. We remained in the dark only as to the kind of roof of these most lamentable of all human dwellings, and that, from the description of others, we could imagine to have been a flat covering composed of wood, stones, and earth. If any one wishes to realize the size of such a hut, let him imagine ten men sitting on the bare floor and five leaning against each side wall; thus quite filling the room. Their stretched out feet would touch each other, and allowing for the present shrinkage of the walls, the flat roof could have been but little more than from one- half to three-quarters "of a yard above the head; so that on their knees they might have moved about comfortably, but in an upright position, never. In this wretched amount of room a whole family, on an average five or six persons, had to live together for at least seven long winter months. One must bear in mind their fur clothing, also that this was their sitting, sleep- ing, and eating room, their kitchen, larder, nursery, and 512 THE GERMAN" ARCTIC EXPEDITION. SO on. It must, moreover, be remembered that there was no opening in the walls of any kind, and that neither for air or light was there a window in the roof (which such circumstances might warrant, and which is the case with some Esquimaux tribes). The only opening leading to the dwellings from the outer world, is the before-men- tioned small square hole in the floor leading to the narrow underground tunnel. Through this they went in and out, and through this the air was renewed. The train-oil lamp for lighting and cooking purposes is the only compensation for the absence of a stove. And yet one can imagine how with that and the inha- bitants together in this confined space, the temperature may be kept at a considerable height, if the walls are only thick and tight, and the wind unable to blow in. These huts, therefore, do not stand on the earth as is mostly the case in West Greenland, but are half under- ground, and with their grass-covered roofs greatly resemble mole-heaps on a garden-bed. About thirty paces from the stony, gently sloping shore,' looking south, were ten graves, five of which were in good preservation. They were from ten to sixteen feet above the level of the sea, and consisted of a sort of box, con- structed of suitable stones mostly above the surface of the earth. The interior was one yaTd and a half long and two-thirds broad, the height of the walls about half a yard. On one of the graves, which was still undisturbed, the covering was composed of long flat stones laid across, such as are easily found in the neighbourhood. This grave we at once examined. The bottom of it, which was nearly upon the same level as the outer earth, was covered with a quantity of dried willow leaves, which in ESQUIMAUX GRAVES. 513 the course of years must have been blown in through the cracks of the walls. The bottom itself consisted of a layer of earth and sand, on which lay some stones probably fallen from the roof. A human skeleton, or, indeed, any other object, we did not at first see, but soon found the somewhat decayed ends of bones, evidently human. We now dug carefully in tbe hard earth, and came upon a number of bones belonging to a human skeleton. It was, however, quite impossible, in spite of our care, to get it perfect; and besides the small bones of the feet and hands, the skull was unfortunately missing. The position of the bones, particularly those of the limbs, was strikingly irregular ; but from that of the ribs and vertebra we could safely conclude that the dead, when first buried, lay either in a recumbent or an upright posture, with the face to the south, overlooking the water. If from the first the corpse had not been disturbed by foxes, &c., I might, from the position of the arm and leg-bones, have believed that it was placed upright, although this was not in unison with the lengthened form of the grave. The bones were, on the whole, in good preservation, and pretty heavy. Their condition made the absence of the skull more conspicuous, and gave us reason to sup- pose that it had either been unearthed by some animal, or that the English, under Clavering, had taken it with them forty-six years before. Anything in the shape of weapons, or vessels, buried with the corpse, we did not find. Besides these graves, we were also struck the first few days by the before-mentioned " Tent-rings." These rough stones are ranged in a circle of about three yards in diameter, and are more or less firmly imbedded in the L 1 .514 THE-GEIiMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. earth's surface. The circle has an opening facing the water, and is mostly divided into two parts by a row of stones across. As regards the meaning of these " Tent-rings," there can, even with our superficial knowledge of Esquimaux life, be no doubt. They ' are the stones which once fastened down the tent raised on that spot, and which, on its removal, were left in the same place. The back part must have been the general sleeping apartment, and that near the entrance the place for the lamp-stand. As these tents must to a certain extent agree with those used in West Greenland, we give the figure and description as found in Bgede's work : — " They live the whole of the summer in their summer dwellings, which are nothing more than tents raised in the following manner : — they set up some poles, or lath . binding them together at the top and roofing with a double covering, the interior being hung with seal or reindeer skin, with the hair inside ; the outside, on the contrary, of seal-sldn from which the hair has been taken, and then smeared with fat to prevent the rain or water penetrating. In the inner part of the tent • they have a sleeping frame made of planks, on which they all lie, and on which they place their lamp for cooking. At the entrance, or door of the tent, is a curtain made from the intestines of the seal, through which the daylight comes. Every father of a family has such a tent for his people." The remaining traces of the Esquimaux to be found on the island at the present day, are the different " Provision-holes," or " caches,'' lying near the shore and high up in the mountains. These are holes of Page 515. ESQUIMAUX EKMAINS. ■ 515 dififerent sizes roughly built with stones, either on the flat earth or, against a rock or large stone, and now- more or less in ruins. For instance, when the Esqui- maux obtain any booty so far from their tents or huts that they cannot easily bring it home, they cover the remains with stones, that the foxes may not steal it before they returu. Some isolated pieces of Esquimaux vessels and weapons we eventually found in different places on the open fields, and added them to the ethnological collection. 'But besides the traces of the former native inhabitants, there were other traces of humanity, which we had eagerly searched after from the first, though apparently without success in this deserted land. To us any indication whatever of the visit paid forty-six years before, by our predecessors of the English Expedition under Sabine and Clavering, was interesting. The astronomers were particularly anxious, according to the terms of our In- structions, to discover the spot on which Sabine erected his Observatory. But in vain did we search in every likely place. The task was all the more difficult, as we 'knew that Sabine had brought a wooden Observatory out with him ; and not until our return, after searching the original account near the journey, did we find that the building had stood near the first-describ&d Esquimaux huts. As regards the Esquimaux traces on Klein Pendulum, directly after our arrival we discovered three winter huts ; they lay close to our anchorage, on the gently sloping plain from the foot of the Stufenberg to the shore. As the astronomers had raised their tents on the land, L 1 2 516 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Dr. Pansch determined to make an effort to go there, although the inflamed state of his wounds scarcely allowed of it. These huts were in much the same condition as those on Sabine Island, and their whole construction and position were perfectly similar. The walls only seemed a little higher, and the corners more rounded off. In two the " tossut " or entrance tunnel was in good preser- vation. "We also found some tent-rings, but no graves. At Cape Desbrowe, however, a little farther off, were some from which we took a well-preserved skull. We found no winter huts on Cape Philip Broke, although this must have been the only point of the island on which they could have stood. On the other hand tent-rings and caches were so crowded on the pro- jecting-land point that we jokingly suggested that the Esquimaux must have held their chief markets here. The tent-rings did not merely lie near each other, but in many cases over-lapped one another, distinctly show- ing that they must be of different ages; they do not either necessarily show that one and the same family always returned to the same spot every year ; and from these traces of an ever-changing and most likely short summer sojourn, it is likewise impossible to attempt to decide upon the number of the former inhabitants, as some writers have done. These are, however, ex- cusable mistakes of those who have either not seen for themselves, or have only cursorily noticed these things. It was understood that before leaving Pendulum Island we should seek out the spot where, forty-seven years before, Clavering met the natives. For his account of the meeting, I refer the reader to his own narrative. Paije S 1 6 J^ ESQUIMAUX REMAINS. 517 The fitting time seemed now to have come, and after several inspections of the ice from the neighbouring mountains, we found that it was possible, in the direction of Gael Hamkes Bay, to advance with a boat to within a short distance of our goal. PORTIONS or ESQUIMAUX IMPLEMENTS. The large boat was therefore fitted up with provisions for eight days, and a tent: besides Captain Koldewey and the Doctor, were Lieutenant Payer, Mr. Tramnitz, Peter Iversen, Theodore Klentzer, and George Herzberg. On the 14th of July, at three p.m., we started with fine weather ; but owing to a calm were confined to rowin'g under the dusky cliffs of Walrus Island, where the Burgo- 518 THE GEEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. master-gull Wakfes tlife echos with its everlasting scream, and the black guillemot {Uria grylle) pipes gently as it swims ; along Welit tke boat, eventually taking a south- westerly direction towards Flache Bay. The road was open ; only here and there floated large or small ice-floes. We passed the glaciered snow slopes of Cape Wynn, and by half-past eight reached the very flat bay about a fathom, deep, which we entered. The bottom was composed of soft mud, produced by the in- falling of a considerable gutter or drain. The water was of elevated temperature (we found it 39°), whilst without the thermometer had previously shown only 34°. Besides some solitary burgomaster gulls, which seemed to have built their nests in the rocks, and a few eider ducks, we saw a bear in the distance. A calm still reigned, so that it was ten o'clock before we reached the steep cliffs seen from Sabine Island ; as a little to the north of these lay a small flat promontory and a good anchorage, we deter- mined to pass the night here, hoping for a better wind and greater speed the next morning. Vegetation was vigorous, and that not only in damp places. A few plants of Gerastium alpinum covered spots of a square- foot in size. Here we started a hare, but unfortunately could not kill her. On the 14th we again visited the southern projection of the promontory where some Esquimaux had lived ; but we found nothing but tent-rings, and the earth was covered with bleaching bones of animals; here we were struck with the large quantity of marine plants washed up by the ice and tide, along the bank, or in the hollows ; it was mostly the large-leaved Laminaria. In the meantime a iight sou'-wester had got up, and EIDEK DUCKS, AND PLANTS. 619 we returned hurriedly to the boat and rowed along the coast southward. Later on we thought it advisable to put up our sail, and with the help of the oars to cross to the other side, where Lieutenant Payer landed, bent on a geological expedition along the shore. Ice-blocks were now more numerous, though they did not hinder our progress. Here we saw a curious sight ; a whole flock of eider ducks in a row upon the water, fishing and cleaning themselves; they were nearly all .drakes, but one or two had brown plumage. Similar flocks of eider drakes have been often noticed. It is supposed that they take flight together in a northerly direction, as later in the year they are not seen. By noon we reached Cape Borlase Warren in bright sunshine, and our excursions began. This cape forms a slight ridge, rising by degrees to the high mountains of the interior ; the distant slopes to the east were sparingly covered with grass, whilst on the southern bank, between and under the rocks, grew the thickest and most vigorous grass. Here was now a new real sea-shore plant, the thick-leaved star- wort, Eelianthus peploides, reminding us vividly of our German downs. Like the Gochlearia, however, it did not grow exactly on the shore, but higher up on the bank. Our zoological collection was also increased by a long-tailed duck (Harelda gladalis), shot by Mr. Tramnitz; there were also numerous relics of the natives, tent-rings, and some ruined graves. Upon closer inspection we found two more winter huts and some undisturbed graves ; amongst which we for the first time came upon one divided by a low partition wall into two parts, from both of which we took the well-preserved skull of a seven-year old child, and some bones ; we also 520 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION, found amongst tte rocks tte half of a Kajak oar quite bleached. About three o'clock we continued our way ; Dr. Pansch, Lieutenant Payer, and P. EUinger going along the shore, and the rest in the boat to Gael Hamkes Bay. For the first time the bank showed a fine sandy open shore, and at the tide mark lay a number of dried marine plants. About ten or twenty steps from this broad sandy shore, was a beautiful green band of meadow-land, the Pedicu- laris hirsida being particularly luxuriant. Marching around several bays, we halted on a point of rock projecting far into the sea, to wait for the boats. "We then steered westwards, the steep mountains of Clavering Island coming nearer and nearer. Here we saw a young reindeer peeping from behind a hillock, not far from the shore. The number of ice-floes increased considerably, and though not exactly in our way, we were obliged to go out of our course to avoid .them. Towards the middle of the bay the ice became denser, frequently assuming fan- tastical forms. The further we advanced, the more unlikely it seemed that we could reach Clavering Island with the boat ; but by keeping along the bank we constantly came upon open channels ; and thus about evening time, reached a low promontory opposite Cape Mary, the mOst easterly point of Clavering Island. The straits, to our great joy, were almost free from ice; as there was a calm, the steep mountains rose from a mirrored surface, over which occasionally sped a diver or a pair of ducks. It was the most perfect summer picture of a beautiful northern Fjord seen for the first time. AECTJC ELOEA. 521 We now made straight for Cape Mary, hoping to reach it soon, as the "water was free from ice ; but the distance was greater than we supposed, and we were still far from land, when we were surrounded by numerous ice-floes, and soon we were in a perfect labyrinth, through which we laboriously made our way. Somewhat more to the south-west lay a suitable spot for our encampment ; a large green plain, promising both protection and a supply of fresh water. Indeed, so thick and luxuriant was the grass, that we conjectured it must formerly have been an Esquimaux settlement, and we were not wrong. We landed at eleven p.m. We found some very old winter huts, which must have been long since forsaken ; they were so decayed and overgrown, that we could scarcely recognize them, only here and there stood a piece of wall. Thick moss covered the ground and grew in the entrance, the tender star-wort, long small blossoming saxifrages, and fine-haired grasses and sedges sprouted in the walls. Finely developed blossoms of the Poa, and other species, were also there, and the yellow-headed dandelion (Taraxacum' phymatocarpum, Yahl). Farther on, where the earth was drier, the cinquefoil flourished in large bushes, as well as the fresh sprays of the Oxyria. We were also delighted by quite a new plant, the slender rich-leaved Epilohium latifolium (L.), with large lovely red flowers ; also the yellow-head of the Arnica alpina (Murr.) ; and in some places we collected fine samples of the Sedum rhodiola ; a bell-flower [Campanula uniflora, L.) was unfolding its first dark IdIuc bells ; thus all the elements of a lovely bouquet were present. White was represented by the Dryas, which here, as on Sabine Island, bore but few blossoms, though much finer ones. 522 THIS GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. Of other plants may also be mentioned, Polygonum vivi- parwrn (L.), Wahlbergella apetala (Fries.), Oxyria, Taraxa- cum, Potentilla, and Saxifraga. It was now one o'clock, and we retired to rest. Dr. Panscli and Captain Koldewey made tlie boat their coucli, but it was an uneasy one ; for as the water sank, it left it leaning on one side on a rock, so that they were rolling down upon each other ; scarcely had they again fallen asleep in this uncomfort- able position, when, with a jerk, the boat fell from the rock, and the whole concern, men, chests, and boxes lay in the water, from which we with difficulty rescued them. The south coast of the island was completely beset with ice, partly drifting, and partly firm, and seem- ingly stretching to the southern shore and Jackson Island, To advance further with the boat was absolutely impossible, and our hopes of landing at the Esquimaux village, making a rich ethnological collection, and then exploring the land to the west were destroyed : and we were at least five German miles from our destination. Koldewey then made some astronomical observations, took the necessary steps for observing the tide, and about half -past ten we continued our journey ; with difficulty we sprang from stone to stone, or sought a path more inland. The skeleton of a reindeer attracted our attention ; the skull was still fast to the fore parts of the body, while the hind part lay bleaching at a short distance, and farther on lay the leg bones still hanging together. In opposition to this picture of death, our eyes were almost immediately afterwards cheered by blooming life as we continued our way at the feet of the steep mountain chain. Growing among the loose pebbles and m the rocky crevices was the beautiful Polemoniuiu ARCTIC PLOEA, AND GEAVES. 523 Tiumile (Willd.). Such blossoming splendour we had not yet seen in Greenland, and for the moment forgot that we were in the far North ; we had already known the plant in Germaniaberg and Klein Pendulum, but there it was nothing to this luxuriance ! The vigorous pinnate leaves were more than half a foot long, the blossom the bulk of a good-sized apple, and on this the flowers were crowded of the clearest and most lovely blue, and at some considerable distance we could smell the aromatic perfume of its leaves. The south-easterly projection of the Cape rose in steep low cliffs sheer from the water, so that we were forced to climb and go along the ridge. Here was plentiful vegetation, but nothing new. We also came upon some tent-rings and some rectangular graves, most carefully built, which had evidently never been opened ; indeed, these traces of the natives must have been very ancient. We shoiild haA^e liked to open the graves, and many sitting at home in a warm room may think it inexcusable that we did not do so ; but our head-quarters were our end and aim, and the sky warned us not to delay our march. It was possible that we might have both rain and fog, neither of which would conduce to the success of our enterprise, nor to the march over these unknown mountains ; so we hurried on down the hills to the shore. Here we had a .fine glimpse of the mainland with its blue heights, though far more imposing Were the steep moun- tains of Jordan Hill Island which rose before us. A small rocky point projecting into the water was inte- resting from the statue4ike form which the basalt had assumed. The inaccessible heads of the most isolated columns offered a favourable breeding spot for many 524 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. pairs of gulls ; from whicli we concluded that the water here must keep longer free from ice. Near these rocks we again met with the Helianthus peploides ; it was in full bloom, and covered a consider- able spot with uninterrupted green. Now and again, for an instant, we could see the high tops soaring perpendicularly above us through the clouds of fog there, the whole heavens and the landscape thickly veiled, and at last a fine rain began to fall. Vegetation gained both in height and extent, and when the fog rose for a moment we could see all the soft slopes for more than 300 yards high distinctly green. In plants, besides fine bushes of bilberry and Andromeda, and the frequently recurring arnica was a new Composite, the Erigeron eriocephalus (Vahl). "Worth noticing here was the discovery of a piece of whalebone, and that most of the plants of the common saxifrage (Saxifraga oppositifoUa) bore light flesh-coloured blossoms. Several large and small pieces of driftwood too were seen. Thus, amid continued fine rain, we reached the most southerly promontory ; and upon climbing to the heights, we saw a bay cutting deep into the land, and by the help of glasses could plainly descry in the midst of a large green plain some dark spots, which were evidently Clavering's Esquimaux settlement. "We opened two of the few graves strewn about : they, too, were long and quadrangular. Here we could dis- tinctly see that the roof-stone, being too short, had been supported lengthwise and across with pieces of drift-wood. There was nowhere the slightest trace of either bones or tools. EUINED ESQUIMAUX HUTS. 625 We saw a herd of about fifteen stately reindeer grazing at a little distance from us, but at our approach they drew quietly off to the mountains. Except some hares sitting in the distance, and scarcely to be distinguished from white stones, we saw one solitary ptarmigan in its summer plumage. We now drew very near to the spot where, forty-seven years before, a small band of natives led a peaceful and contented life. Now we had reached the first hut : there was but an empty room, on the floor of which grew high moss and grass ; we hurried on to the next, — the same sight ; a third lay a Httle on one side; here, too, the same comfortless picture of desertion. . With our minds somewhat disabused we laid down our baggage, and examined them more closely. As we had always previously found them, these huts lay in the neigh- bourhood of the water. The two best-preserved were more to the east, and a little farther on were two more, seemingly older. These all had the same build, the same position, and the same size, as those on Sabine and Pendulum Island. There were also some well preserved tent-rings. The round holes (Provision-magazines), too, were not wanting; what struck us most, however, was the great number of earth-holes roimd about the huts : they seemed to be the . last signs of the oldest buildings, and we could distinctly trace the different stages of destruction. In some might still be seen the sharp four-cornered deep hole with the open entrance tunnel, but the stone walls were quite wanting. From this we concluded that the Esquimaux, when their huts were dilapidated, or from any other cause no longer suited them, built fresh ones, using the old stones. How else could the walls of 526 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. the old huts have entirely disappeared ? To take these heavy stones from the hard earth was a troublesome task ; and the only object worth their while would be for making graves; but as there, were none about here, they could not enter into the question. The result of all this in our minds was, that long before Clavering's visit RUINED KSQUIMAUX HUTS ON SADINE ISLAND. only a few huts, perhaps, three or four, were inhabited; and that on this spot, at least, there could be no question of the slow dying-out of a once numerous population. With improvised tools we then set to work on the floors of the two newest huts which in Clavering's time RUINS OF HUTS AND TENTS. 527 were inliabited. We soon found that the roofs had sunk to the ground. That was shown by a strong lath hanging slanting from the wall on the inside, so that the earth and the growing plants we had removed was not really the floor, but had once formed the roof. We dug deeper in the earth, but found nothing. Here, too, large bones had been let into the walls, and in a large side-niche lay the perfect skull of a young narwhal ; in the second hut, still less than this was found. So thinking we had done our duty, and judging by the height of the water that it must be near midnight, and rain and fog seeming to increase, we prepared to return. We took the same route back, only sorry that we had not seen this interesting spot in clearer weather. At the large stream we came upon some reindeer, two stately old ones and one young one. With curious looks they advanced fearlessly to within ten paces of us. Completely wet through we hurried on, the strong ebb reminding us of the past night's adventure in the boat, and showing us that it was about three o'clock. Living in this continuous, almost uniform daylight, unfettered by any regular partition of daily work, simply following up one object, has a strange effect upon one ; something can certainly be accomplished by its means, but to go on for long in such a life, even if one's health kept good, would be impossible. After breakfast we lay down to rest, but as the rain had left off we preferred the dry grass to the tent. Upon awaking, we went to inspect the neighbouring graves. We opened them all, and were rewarded by find- ing a number of fine skulls and other bones. Interesting to us was a small figure carved out of wood lying in a 528 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. child's grave. So that these human figures, found also by Graah, in South-Bast Greenland, are not idols, but merely children's toys. Thus the great object of this excursion had been accomplished, and we determined to return. Stiff with cold (it was 29.75° Fahr.) we arrived on board at half- past seven on the morning of the 18th of July, to the great astonishment of our pilot, who had not expected us so soon. CHAPTER XV. THE GBEMANIA STEAMS NOETHWAEDS. 22nd TO 31 ST JULY.' Voyage of the Germania towards tlie North. — Ascent of the highest points of Klein Penduhim. — Damage to the boilers of the Germania. — The so-called open Polar Sea. — Attainment of 75° 29' N.L. — Shannon. — Cape Borgen. — Solid barrier of ice northwards. — Abandonment of the attempt to push northwards. — Course to the south. The scientific work on Sabine Island and its neighbour- hood might now be considered finished. The ship was quite ready to sail ; the latest observations, as taken from the Grermaniaberg, with regard to the ice were favourable, there being much open water, and it there- fore seemed to be a suitable time for pushing on to the north. Thus, on the 22nd of July, at nine a.m., we left the harbour which had been our home for ten months, in high spirits, with waving flags, and the loud hurrahs of the whole party. Dr. Pansch, Peter Iversen, and Peter Bllinger, remained behind to explore some Esqui- maux graves, and collect some skeletons : they came on board later in the afternoon. Our course was taken in the direction of Klein Pendulum, as the astronomers had some important work to finish relating to the geo- detical measuring. "We anchored at eleven a.m. ' Bj Captain Koldewey. M m 530 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. The Captain, Dr. Borgen, and Lieutenant Payer, climbed to tte highest point of the island. Unfortu- nately, a fog rose from the north, thus debarring all prospect. The Tellplatte, 650 feet high, was soon covered; one thing we were just able to perceive, namely, that to the east of Cape Philip Broke there was much open water, The fog continued to roll south- wards, and upon returning on board at three a.m. on the 23rd, Pendulum Island was invisible, we therefore lay at anchor the whole day. Dr. Pansch and Dr. Copeland employed the time in exploring the Esquimaux huts, and were well rewarded for their trouble. The Flora could only be investigated near the huts. There was nothing remarkable to be found. As in the spring, there were the luxuriant Polemonium humile (Willd.), and the yellow crowfoot {Uanunculus nivalis, L.), and in dry places the lousewort (Pedicularis hirsuta, L.). We also collected some fine blooming specimens of the willow, but, on the whole, blooming time was over. Vegetation had already partly assumed its autumn tints. We had a good opportunity of noting here how little change takes place in the course of time. Spots where the autumn before we had placed stones or removed them were still unchanged, as if but a few days had elapsed since we had been there. This is important, as it confirms the fact that many years must have passed since the Esquimaux huts had been forsaken. On the morning of the 24th of August the fog rolled more eastward, and coast and island once more made their appearance. Steam was at once got up and the anchor weighed, but it was not to be done so easily; a large ice-field, several miles in diameter, had jammed THE SUPPOSED OPEN SEA, 631 itself so close to tlie land-ice lying east of Pendulum Island, tliat after a fruitless attempt to force our way througt we were obliged to go round. To increase our difl&culties, to the east of tlie field there was such a crowd of blocks, that with all our steam-power we could scarcely get through. It was about four p.m. before we had passed the field, and found ourselves to the east of the low cHffs close to the land-ice ; from these we directed our course straight for Cape Philip Broke, as this part of the sea was nearly free from ice. At ten minutes past seven p.m. we anchored at the Cape, the captain at once climbing the nearest hill to see if the water was open on the east side of the island. He found that for two nautical miles the ice was loose, and there was an open passage. Farther north, as far as one could see, the land-ice surrounded the island to the depth of about four nautical miles. A large field had here united with the land-ice, though more easterly there was open water to the north, where, as far as the horizon, nothing but water, strewn with drifting ice, could be seen. Besides this, the heavens on the northern horizon wore a dark aspect as far as the eye could see, leading us to conclude that beyond it lay more water, — another sufficient reason for talking of an open Arctic Sea, when, from a mountain 140 feet high, there is water to be seen, and a dark water sky above to the farthest north, and yet we were again doomed to dis- appointment. Indeed, such signs of water as we saw from Shannon Island have much to do with the prevailing idea of an open Arctic Sea, which is ever cropping up and ever winning friends, in spite pf all experience to the contrary, and in spite of the weightiest physical reasons. > Indeed, it is easily shown how_ little this theory of an open sea M m 2 632 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. at the Pole can be accepted. In the icy sea there are everywhere small and large places free from ice caused by local circumstances, so that often, even from a high mountain, nothing but vfater may be seen in one par- ticular direction. Dove's Isothermal chart gives a temperature of 5° under the Pole ; -we may, therefore, assume that here it is more likely to be lower than higher. Even in the warmest months it rises but a few degrees above freezing. Thus in the Spitzbergen Sea Scoresby, in 78° N. Lat., which is still under the influence of the warm current, finds, after twelve years' observation, the following tempe- ratures ;— May, 23° Fahr.; June, 31°; July, 36°. We found in our winter harbour, under Sabine Island, April, ■2° Fahr.; May, 22°; June, 36°; July, 39°; Aug-ast, 33°; September, 24°. In such temperatures the sea will freeze nine months in the year in the open ocean ; and amongst the high ice-fields in a calm at midnight, when the sun is at its lowest, in every month of the year ice is forming, so that the influence of the sun alone is not sufficient to destroy what is formed in the winter. Under such conditions it is clear that in a completely enclosed sea no open spaces of water could obtain ; in a few years they would be per- manently covered with ice. Such a condition is, how- ever, nowhere found within the Arctic basin, for the simple reason that its waters are not enclosed, but stand connected with the Atlantic Ocean by a powerful arm of the sea. Strong currents, combined with raging winds in the winter, are the cause of the breaking up of the otherwise firm ice, so that the Arctic basin may be compared to a NEAE CAPE PANSGH. 633 strong running stream of ice. As has already been said, we saw from the hill northwards, as far as the eye could reachj water and a dark water sky; it was, therefore, thought well to steam on without delay. It was, how- ever, discovered that one of the boiler-pipes leaked. Our impatience to push forward before the open water should again be blocked by fields, led us to weigh anchor, in the hope that a 401b. pressure would at least not increase the leakage ; but this force we found insufficient. We were therefore obliged to He to, as the wind was not strong enough for us to work our way through the floes. That same night the pipe was repaired. The compulsory stay at this Cape was on the following day (25th of July) turned to account by the scientific men. The peculiarity of this part of the island was the broad, soft, billowy-shaped plains, in which but little water ran. Everywhere one could see distinctly the effects of the spring snows and hear the gently-gurgling melted water. On the 26th of July, at two a.m., we continued our journey northwards. The weather was fine, with a light south-west wind, the temperatiire 36.5° Fahr. From the mountain the captain had seen that the field blocking the channel by the land-ice had parted, so that a passage many miles in length had been opened up to us ; there was, however, a fog-bank to the south, which soon rolled up and enveloped us. At five a.m. it cleared, and we found a quantity of ice ahead of us ; we were close to the most easterly cape of Shannon, Cape Pansch, in the same latitude in which Clavering had to turn back on account of the densely-packed ice. Here we lay to, and, climbing a neighbouring hill of about 100 feet in height, took a 534 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. survey. This was not reassuring. Closely -packed fields and blocks lay to the north and east of us, so that for a time advance seemed impossible, except at a dispropor- tionate expenditure of coal. Beyond this ice, Kowever, to our great joy, as far as the horizon there was broad open water, so that if only the shifting fields and blocks moved from the land-ice we were sure of several miles' clear passage. Upon the barren earth of the hillock, writes Dr. Pansch, all was a desert, but beyond were well-developed blooming plants of well-known species (Papaver, Pedi- cularis, Saxifraga, Oerastiiom, and so on) ; there were also several other plants, particularly a fine yellow- blossoming mustard {Draba alpina, L.), and the Oxyria digyna (L.). On the shore were several pieces of driftwood. Of birds, besides snow-buntings, were a couple of burgomaster- gulls {Larus glaucus, L.). Near the ship we saw later a diver {Uria grylle) fishing, and a flock of sea-swallows occasionally broke the stillness of the evening with their querulous screams. Further southwards on the distant hills we recognized some musk-oxen, and a fine bear walking quietly up and down on the high, steep wall of land-ice, who did not allow himself to be disturbed by the passing puffing of the steamer. "We kept a sharp look-out from the hills, and when in the afternoon Mr. Sengstacke reported that the ice had moved, we steamed forward along the edge of the land- ice, which here made a sharp bend to the east. Too much attention cannot be drawn to the fact that in Arctic regions, having once found a suitable way, a little patience and energetic action, to turn every favour- ON SHANNON ISLAND. 536 able chance to account, is far better than blindly fighting against hindrances which can either not be overcome at all, or, if so, only at the expense of great loss of time and strength. At seven p.m. we again stopped, and Dr. Copeland that same evening climbed the highest point of the island. Lieutenant Payer, on the contrary, with the officer 0. Trammitz, climbed one of the lowest hills. The mountain was composed of syenite, which, for the greater part, had split into huge blocks, making the climbing any- thing but easy. The land-ice, which was here from two to three nautical miles in breadth, exhibited many cracks and fissures, some so broad that Dr. Copeland had to take a plank in order to improvise a bridge over which to cross. During the night a thick fog lay to the east, but with a Hght north wind lifted towards the morning, so that we steamed forwards in fine weather, and with the hope of leaving some miles behind us that day. The water was quite free from ice ; even the pack-ice in the east was no longer visible from the deck. Bight na,utical miles we made without obstacles that day, when the road grew narrower and narrower, and at fifty minutes past ten a.m. became blocked by a huge mass ; and from the masts of the ship no signs of water could be seen. This mass was connected with the land-ice ; and, unless it should be separated by a strong wind, all further .advance was impossible. Our latitude was 75° 29' N., a few minutes more than we had reached the previous summer. As the weather was pleasant, we landed to explore the island ; and as it was clear that this would be the most northerly point of the coast that we could reach with thtj 536 THE GJSEMAK AKCTIC BXPEMTION. sHp, the botanists did tlieir best. They were surprised to find so nrncli vegetation on a tongue of land so sur- rounded with ice. Certainly, after getting over the land- ice, we had had to cross a stretch of the driest and moat barren pebbly ground that we had yet seen • in Green- land. There was, writes Dr. Pansch, not the smallest trace of moss. As we toiled up the slope in the warm morning sun, we were again reminded of the chalk Alps of Switzerland. We stopped upon a height where Andro- meda grew plentifully, but all the plants seemed nearly lifeless ; so dry was their fohage that the Andromeda burnt like tinder. The plants on the summit were as sapless, though taller and more vigorous ; particularly some species of grass between the blocks of rock, and some small willows. The whole of this part of the island was, however, not so arid ; in the low-lying districts and hollows lay masses of snow, spreading into ponds, with marshy banks and gurgling brooks running through luxuriant green meadows of moss and grass. Here we saw the yellow- blossomed ranunculus and the saxifrage ; the white- blossoming Dryas opened its large flowers, and the Pedi- cularis reminded us of home scenery. As was the case on Sabine Island, on our return we came upon large tracts of land under gurgling water, which were of course fruitful. Farther on we collected some well preserved pieced of drift-wood ; it was in such masses, and had evidently lain so long, that we concluded that for miles round no natives could have lived for some time. Such valuable material as drift-wood in so accessible a situation they EXPLOKATIONS, 537 could scarely tave overlooked ; besides the usual fir and larch, were pieces of Alder {Alnus incana, L.) and poplar (Populus tremula, L.), plainly showing that the drift-wood of North-east Greenland comes originally from North Siberia; whence driven into the sea by the strong cur- rents, it floats in a westerly direction, north of Spitz- bergen, and is carried on until it reaches the Greenland coast, when it takes a southerly course. We "dredged by the ship's side to thirty fathoms ; and though the booty was poor, it was interesting, consisting as it did of some elegant corals. On the morning of the 28th of July Lieutenant Payer returned from his excursion, reporting that the prospect to the north was not comforting ; nothing but ice as far as the eye could reach ; no signs of water. No change on the 29th ; nothing but heavy ice and a white ice-sky to the north. It was evident that until the beginning of the autumn storms nothing could set the enormous mass in motion. According to our expe- rience, these did not begin before the middle or end of August, and therefore not until near the end of the sailing-season; so that, as our instructions positively forbade a second wintering, we should have to think of returning. The probability of advancing further, even in the course of the year, was very uncertain, besides the threatening danger to the ship from the crowding masses of ice, and to this danger the amount of knowledge gained would scarcely be equivalent. All this considered, the Captain thought the best plan was to spend the remainder of the time in exploring the coast and the interior of the country. Whether this decision was the best must be left to a just and well-vM"sed judge"; sufficient, that all 538 THE GERMAN AEOTIO EXPEDITION. the officers and scientific members of the Expedition unanimously agreed witli the Captain. Steam was got up once more ; but at a pressure of: thirty pounds the boiler-pipe leaked again. During the night our bay filled more and more with large floes and blocks, which had broken partly from the land-ice, but also came up from the south, threatening to block us up entirely. : At ten minutes past three a.m. on the 30th of July, we again steamed southwards. VI % #: V V- ■», .^*-^i r ,i ■fl iJiw^siiiiii f-f5a5r*mK""iiwinr^ CHAPTER XVI. COAST VOYAGE OP THE GEEMANIA TOWARDS THE SOUTH. — JACKSON ISLAND.— CAPE BKOER EUTS. — BOAT JOURNEY.-^ EXPLORATION OP PBANZ- JOSEPH'S PJORD.' Departure from Sabine Island. — Storm from tlie North. — Landing on the Eastern Cape of Jackson Island. — Excursions. — Farther pro- gress Southwards. — Cape Broer Euys. — Hudson's " Hold with Hope." — Boat journey along the Coast to explore Mackenzie's Inlet. — Esquimaux huts, — Pleasures of boat-journeying. — Icebergs to the South. — Indication of the proximity of large Fjord. — Journey to Cape Franklin. — Payer and Copeland ascend the point of Cape Franklin. — Discovery of Kaiser Franz-Joseph's Fjord. — Payer's account of the ascent of the point of Cape Franklin. The next day was Sunday ; and after all necessary work had been done, the men were allowed a short holiday, which they well deserved, and which many employed in taking leave of the spot which for a whole year had been their home. But home was not to be thought of yet, since to all ap- pearances this summer, as regarded the condition of the ice, was far more favourable than the last. From Ger- maniaberg, towards the south and south-east, there was open water on all sides between the floes. At night we had a sudden four hours' storm from the north ; this was the first time we had seen real storm-clouds in Greenland, although there was neither thunder nor lightning. ^ By Captain Koldewey, Dr. Pansch, and First-Lieutenant Payer. 640 THE GEEMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. On the 1st of August, at ten minutes past six a.m., we weighed anchor and steamed out of our harbour. Between Cape Wynn and Flache Bay were large brashes of land-ice which had been broken in the night from Claveiing Straits, and driven south ; but eventually we pushed our way through the masses to Jackson Island, partly for further scientific observations, and partly to increase our collection. We anchored at four p.m. south of the east cape of the island. The mountains rose above 1000 feet, and on the east side were , steep cliffs and slopes, so that close to the shore were still two fathoms of water. The astro- nomers took observations and collected geological speci- mens. Dr. Pansch botanized, and Lieutenant Payer climbed the highest points of the island to survey it in detail. Some remains of Esquimaux huts were found, also some skulls and sundry implements. Traces of the musk-ox and reindeer were everywhere visible. Upon landing, we had but to cross a short stretch of dark sand and stones, when we found ourselves upon a green plain, covered thickly with various kinds of grass, and with the blossom of the taraxacum and ranunculus. The elegant sprays of the stellaria wound themselves far and near, whilst in the soft-cushioned moss were some stiff willow bushes. Here in our shirt sleeves we chased the butterfly, which was fluttering from flower to flower, it was the small brown bluish variegated Argynnis polaris (Boisd.), and Argynnis chariclea (Herbst), that we already knew from Pendulum Island ; our attention was also drawn to a larger fine yellow butterfly, which we eventually caught, the Golias Heda. We also found the already well-known spider {Lycosa FLOEA. . 541 aguilonaris, Koch). It is interesting to know that this species is also met with among the glaqjers of the Euro- pean Alps. Farther westward the thick turf, plants, and grass grew more in clumps and bushes. Besides those always met with, was the beautiful willow rose {Epilohium lati- foKum, L.) ; it grew in small bushes by Cape Mary ; here it was not in bud, but from three to five large blossoms perfectly developed, stood close together on one stalk of a beautiful red colour. There were also many other beau- tiful flowering plants which have already been mentioned. Later on the boats took us still more westward ; where, on a small steep promontory, the burgomaster-gull had its nesting-place ; there were about six nests, from one of which a hungry young one stretched its grey head. "We stopped here to collect plants, and we were not disappointed ; luxuriant were the leaves of the Oxp'ia and others in the rocky fissures. Dr. Pansch here looked out for something new, and found to his delight a row of elegant plants with pale violet blossoms, the com- mon eye-bright (Euphrasia officinalis, L.), which we never met with again, A walk the next day on the mountain to the west showed us that vegetation was pretty luxuriant every- where. From hence we turned to the rocky heights of the East Cape, under which the Germania was anchored ; here we were met by a flock of screaming burgomaster-gulls ; there must have been from ten to fifteen nests. Amongst the rolling pebbles, nearly under the overhanging rocks, were thick bushes of the large-leaved Oxyria in bloom. In ornithology we found nothing new ; but Dr. Cope- land picked up on the shore several black feathers, which 542 THE GEEMAN . ARCTIC EXPEDITION. undoubtedly belonged to two different kinds of duck, the Anser albifrons and leucopsis. Sea-swallows were in large flocks. From the form and position of the land on this spot, we conjectured that there might be some ancient traces of the natives, and possibly some winter huts ; these, however, did not turn up ; but we found a few tent-rings and some long four-cornered ruined heaps of stone, which we took to be graves, but found nothing amongst them. On the cliffs of the Bast Cape, however, something in- teresting was discovered. Amongst the loose stones, Peter Iversen pulled out what he thought to be a piece of drift- wood, but it proved to be a regularly worked long four- cornered plank, with fine holes along the edge. We turned over the stones and found some more planks, also a well-preserved skull and some arm and leg bones. How could we account for this strange discovery ? Evidently the body had been purposely buried under the stones ; that it should have come there by chance was not probable. "We could think of no other solution than that of some religious motive. Upon putting the boards together, we had a box of 9 "4 inches in length, 6 inches in breadth, and about 3" 2 inches highj the boards were one-fifth of an inch thick ; it had had a partly closed hd, .only a space of 1"7 inches broad being left open ; instead of hinges there were small straps, and on the other side a DISCOVERIES. 543 hole, showing that there must have been some sort of a fastening, The boards vs^ere put together by small wooden nails or pegs. Without doubt, of all the things we had discovered, this box showed the most artistic workmanship ; and taking into consideration the little use such an implement would be in an Esquimaux household, and the peculiar spot on which it was found, the supposition that it must in some way be connected with the religious worship of the natives seems justified. Close by among the rocks. Dr. Copeland found a well- preserved piece of a stone vessel, which the Esquimaux hang over their lamps ; it seemed to have been rounded off at the edges, was long and four-cornered and about three inches and three-quarters thick ; it was of opaque stone and carefully worked. The underneath part and sides were covered with a coating of soot. From all this we gathered that the island had been ■visited by the natives several times, but that they had made no long stay, possibly because the neighbourhood was not favourable to the musk-ox and other animals.. During the night large masses of land-ice were loosened, which set with great speed eastward, so that towards the morning of the 2nd of August we could see from the neighbouric^g mountain of 800 feet high that southward to ,Cape Broer B(Uys and beyond there was much open water. Lieut. Payer suggested exploring Gi-ael Hamkes Bay ; but upon consideration Captain Koldewey thought it better to .go further south, and if possible penetrate into one of the larger sounds, either Scoresby's Sound, or Davy Sound, as Scoresby reported that they stretched far inland. ; The weather remained fine and bright, with light soul- 644 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. west and west winds, tlierebj driving the ice from the land and opening a free passage for us. In the best of spirits we weighed anchor on the morning of the 3rd of August, and steered south in a temperature of 11° to 13° a,bove freezing. After going some distance, as there was apparently an impassable block of ice to the south, we steered westward, and anchored under the coast. One glimpse from the mountains above showed that, as far as the eye could reach, the ice lay firm to the land, and that the entrance to the great Sound at that time was imprac- tica.ble. Bontekoe Island was enclosed in ice. "We therefore agreed upon a boat journey along the coast to westward, to investigate what on Clavering's chart was marked as Mackenzie Inlet. The further we advanced southward the greener and more beautiful became the country. Comparing these far stretching valleys and mountain slopes and the in some places luxuriant growth of grass and sward vnth the scant vegetation of Sabine Island, we could scarcely believe that we were not more than one degree of latitude from it. Many herds of reindeer were grazing here, and musk-oxen were by no means rare. At noon the temperature rose to above 54°, and in swampy places were swarms of mosquitos {Tipula tnm- wrum, Meig.). Of birds, besides snow-buntings there were some shore- birds, such as Strepsilas interfres and Tringa maritima. Except a few tent-rings, nothing reminded us of the Esqui- maux. Farther westward the appearance of the ground changed ; the whole promontory was covered with vege- tation resembling the early spring-time at home when the fresh green is everywhere, but the growth of the plants 18 still low. Here the different kinds of knotgrasses ; two DEBDGING. 545 kinds of cotton-grass, Eriophorum polystacMum (L.), and Eriophorum Scheuclizeri (Hppe.), and several kinds of Garex, as well as Juncus biglumis (L.), and other plants before mentioned, flourislied. In several places we met with the bilberry ( Vaccinium) : this was the most northerly point of the coast, and though the plants were plentiful they were low and the wood soft; signs of fruit or blossom were nowhere to be seen. When the boat started for Mackenzie Inlet, Dr. Pansch remained on board, although everything seemed to pro- mise well both for ethnology and botany, but he thought it his duty to pay some attention to marine zoology, and hoped to bring up some fine specimens of the sea Fauna and Flora at great depths. The first dredge near the ship, at fi-om three to five fathoms, gave Crustacea, mussels, cockles, and worms, as well as some small slimy fish which were not new to us. Our hopes of enriching our collection failed partly from stormy weather, and partly because Dr. Pansch was suffering under peculiar circumstances, at one time being in an excited nervous state, and at another in apathetic drowsiness : rest and much sleep, however, soon relieved these symptoms. In the evening we shot five reindeer easily, the herd being so confiding that they allowed themselves to be surrounded before they thought of moving. "We therefore rejoiced in some fresh meat, which lately had been scarce. From constant motion in the fresh air the men's appe- tites were so great that the cook grumbled from morning till night that he could never satisfy the men. With such nourishment our strength increased, our working powers were doubled, and universal good spirits reigned on board the Germania. N n 546 THE GEEJIAN ARCTIC EXPEDITIOK. On tlie 5t]i of August preparations "were made for a boat journey, and on the 6tli we sailed at nine a.m. with provisions for eight days. The wind blew fresh from the north, and the water was as flat as the land, which just here rose but little. After a course of eight nautical miles we came to a tongue of land, beyond which the coast took a curve to the north-west. From here we soon saw that Mackenzie Inlet was only a creek into which a stream fell, often running through a valley. We sailed to the end of the creek and landed. Our men gazed with longing eyes on some reindeer which were feeding near, and soon shot one. Close against the shore, under the green slope of a hill, were the remains of some Esquimaux huts, evidently much older than those on Olavering Island. Whilst Dr. Copeland investigated these, Dr. Borgen and the Captain took the bearings of our position. During the morning we had made twelve nautical miles in three hours, and now spent the whole afternoon on our work. In the evening the Captain and Dr. Coppland chmbed a hill lying to the north-west, about 476 feet high : from thence we could see the end of Loch Fine, the Fjord discovered by Clavering in 1823, behind which rose a highly picturesque mountain chain. Before us lay a plain stretching far to the south-south-west as far as Cape Franklin, and disappearing with a mountain chain to the west, marked on our chart as Bennet Island. Beyond this plain, near Cape Frankhn, glittered a number of icebergs, bringing us to the ) conclusion that yonder must be the mouth of a large Fjord; for along the coast we had seen no glacier from which they could have sprung. Dehghted with this apparent discovery we returned to the tent, agreeing that the next morning we CAM FEANKLIN AND FJORD, 647 would make for Bennet Island, and if possible advance as far as Cape Franklin. It was the 7tlL of August. Tlie sky was clouded iu the east, and it had rained hard in the night. But it cleared at ten o'clock, and we set sail with a light south-easterly wind. This soon lulled, and we had to take to the oars, so ■ that we did not reach Cape Bennet until the afternoon, when we had to seek protection in the tent from the rain. On the morning of the 8th the fog seemed to have dis- persed, and we steered straight for Cape Franklin. The . icebergs increased and although the land retreated to the south-west, we could still see no glaciers. It was evident to us that we were on the point of making an important discovery. At two nautical miles east of the Cape we were obliged to halt. The ice lay fast to the land, and sheer across the mouth of the Fjord, forming a barrier that our ship could not force. The boat must, therefore, be tugged over, but before doing this it was advisable to ascertain whether it was navigable. Tent and tools were therefore landed, and Copeland and Payer prepared to climb the mountain, 4650 feet high. After doing all necessary work, we followed, and Borgen and the Captain mounted a rocky height of 476 feet, from whence their astonished eyes beheld a landscape, which was indescribable in its extraordinary grandeur. The interior of Greenland lay there like a splendid picture, displaying the Alpine world in its highest style. At our feet lay the mouth of a great Fjord, or rather arm of the sea, perfectly free from drifting ice, but covered with numerous icebergs of from 95 -to 190 feet high, and stretching westward in the far, far distance, N n 2 648 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. then seeming to divide into several arms, rising even higher and higher into the regions of eternal snow and ice. This was a moment which richly rewarded us for all our troubles and difficulties. Before us lay in all its virgin beauty the mirrored surface of these unknown waters, and if only we could succeed in bringing up our ship, what scope was there for science and discovery; aye, even into the very .heart of Greenland! But it seemed almost, impossible, a mailed ship could never break through this barrier of many feet. There was therefore nothing for it but to pull the boat over ; prepa- ratory to this w© were to have a little rest, especially as Payer and Copeland could not return before morning. Koldewey was, however, awoke from a beautiful morning slumber by Oopeland's voice, who, looking in at the tent, called to him that the ice had broken and was moving eastward. Jumping up, we hurried from the tent ; to convince ourselves was the work of a moment, when there was a loud hurrah ! " Now, my good fellows, pack up ; we must be back on board to-day, and bring up the Grermania." This was answered by a cheerful "Aye, aye !" and all hands went to work. Could we yet get over seven German miles to-day ? Lieutenant Payer gives the following account of Franklin Point: — "We followed a valley running from the mountain (the other side of Cape Franklin), until we came to a raging glacier stream cut at least thirty yards deep in the perpendicular rock. How should we get to the other side ? was the question. At last, going up the stream, we came to a natural bridge ; the capabilities of which we tried by dropping a block of rock upon it, and FRANKLIN POINT. 549 then began a quick marcll over the declivity, fragments of which were set in motion at every step. This de- clivity ended at a high basalt-wall, which cut like a road through the massive rocks of the Cape, seeming to isolate them from one another. We scrambled through this confusion of rocis over a craggy ridge to the edge of a high roof-shaped glacier, and then on to a weather-beaten cone, thus reaching the north-easterly summit of the group of rocks forming the Cape. " What an unexpected sight met our delighted eyes ! A monstrous Fjord with numberless glistening icebergs lay to the westward at our feet, with its high many branch- ing rocky masses covered with ice, sometimes enclosing real islands with rugged walls. " More than ten German miles to westward we could see that one of the chief arms of the Fjord curved in a south-westerly direction, at the foot of a mountain-chain about 8750 feet high. To the south the solitary Cape Parry stretched far into the sea, in spite of the crowding of the pack-ice which lay silent and stiff to the farthest horizon, and through which we should one day have to make our return journey to Europe. "It was eight p.m., as after five hours' march we reached the summit ; the temperature was 34° Fahr., and not a breath of wind was stirring ; and Payer sat down without a coat to sketch the panorama, and then proceed to trigonometrical measurement. By the help of some solar observations the azimuth of the most southerly point of our trigonometrical net was decided, in order to connect our standing-point with it. " After four hours' stay we went along a craggy ridge to the south-west, to satisfy ourselves as to the northerly 650 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. direction of tte Fjord arm. At two a.m. we readied a rocky group towering above a snow plateau, the altitude of which was at least 4900 feet; and from which we convinced ourselves that the chief arm of Kaiser Franz- Joseph's Fjord was reallj to be sought in a northerly- direction. " At half-past four a.m. all our work was finished on this spot, and at nine we returned to our tent." At Bennet Island we rested, after a good meal, though five reindeer which we had shot in Mackenzie Bay had already turned bad, showing the effects of a- Greenland sun. We could easily have provided some more, as a herd of twenty-two lay about 1000 paces from us, and dispersed only by degrees, with the exception of five or six who seemed to have no desire to move ; this indo- lence, however, was not encouraged, tile old leader of the herd returning and striking them with his horns, until they lazily rose and followed the others. At the south-east cape from Bennet the loosened ice floating eastward was so heaped up, that we were obHged to tug the boat. Later on, too, we had to make a great curve in order to avoid some large drifting masses, so that not until midnight did we reach the ship, thoroughly tired out. CHAPTER XVII. SAILING INTO. THE FJOED. — ASCENT OP PAYEr's PEAK. — DISCOVERY OP PETBRMANN PEAK. — THE RETURN VOYAGE Cape Franklin passed. — Entrance into the Fjord. — Magnificent scenery of the Kaiser Franz-Joseph's Fjord. — The Teufelschloss (Devil's Castle). — Interminable branchings of the Fjord. — Great depth of the Fjord. — Payer's, Copeland's, and EUinger's mountain ascent and Glacier journey on 12th of August. — Condition of the Ger- mania's boilers. — A second wintering not in accordance with our strict instructions to avoid risk.- — Our return to Germany decided on. — Erection of a memorial cairn at the anchorage of the Ger- mania. — The Germania aground. — Cause of the numerous drifting icebergs near the coast-land. During our absence the crew of the Germania had been much troubled with the floating ice, which at times was driyen in great masses round the Cape ; so that Sengstacke was obUged to bring the ship nearer to land. With this exception all had gone on well. The weather remained fine and clear, with a light west wind ; we weighed anchor, and at ten a.m. steamed through the advancing masses of loose land-ice towards the newly discovered Fjord. At first, we had some trouble to steer our way through it ; but after passing ' By Captain Koldewey, First-Lieutenant Payer, 'and Dr. Pansch. 662 THK GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. Bennet's peninsula tlie water was more open, and at five p.m. we passed Cape Franklin and ran into the Fjord. What strange feelings arose within us as we advanced into these lonely waters, as yet unclef t by the keel of any vessel. At first we steered along the northern bank of the Fjord, stretching in a west-north- westerly direction, and afterwards changing to a north-westerly; but as we noticed a larger branch dividing into several arms running westward, we decided upon following that first, as it would most likely take us deeper into the interior. Lieutenant Payer gives the following excellent descrip- tion of this wonderful district : — ■" We had entered a basin, the shores of which were formed by rocks, which for glorious form and colour I had never seen equalled. Here were congregated all the peculiarities of the Alpine world : huge walls, deep erosion-fissures, wild peaks, mighty crevassed glaciers, raging torrents, and waterfalls ; which iu Europe, as a rule, come but singly. All these pictures of wild beauty were taken in at a glance. To me the impression given by the high towering rocky mountains of the basin was that of some fairy tale, A colossal cubic rock on the small basis of a tongue of land stretched itself far into the Fjord, rising out of the blue water to a height of at least 6600 feet ; regular reddish-yellow, black, and light stripes, showing the different layers of the stone. The terraces and towers on its edges resembled a ruined castle; we therefore called it the Devil's Castle. " Never in the Alps had I seen anything even ap- proaching this m grandeur. Here a diminutive Matter- GLAGIJiRS. 553 horn rose straight from the water ; there rushed a huge mass of water from some glacier over the giant walls deep down into the clear quiet water below. "Day and night we stayed on deck, every moment EBGENEKATBD GLACIER IN E5fPEK0K PKANZ-JOSEPH's PJOED. bringing some astonishing scene, conjuring up as it were some natural wonder, our astonished eyes wandering from one point to the other. No sound but that of the monotonous click of the machinery and the rushing of the keel-water broke the solemn stillness. The trans- 664 THE GERMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. parency of the atmospliere showed up every individual feature, and the morning sun warmed the blue air plea- santly, in which the smoke from our chimney floated in horizontal stripes." Further, and further we advanced ; until, at last, we thought that our discoveries had come to an end, but steering south-west towards the "Devil's Castle," there suddenly opened upon us a gateway at least two nautical miles broad, with wondrously beautiful scenery; and to the west, another seemingly endless branch of the Fjord. For some hours longer we continued to advance, when the engineer informed us that the boiler leaked again, and that he must put out the fire. On the south side of the Fjord we saw what we thought would be a good spot to anchor, which we did in ten fathoms of water at nine a.m. on the 11th of August. This point, the most westerly that we reached, was in 73° 11' 6" N. Lat. and 25° 68' 6" W. Long, from Greenwich. We now decided upon climbing one of the higher mountains, in order that we might have a good general view of the whole neighbourhood. This First-Lieutenant Payer undertook to do ; Dr. Oopeland climbed to one of the glaciers, to prepare some contrivance for. measuring the rate of its motion ; Dr. Borgen conveyed all necessary instruments on shore; and Dr. Pansch rambled in the neighbourhood in search of Fauna and Flora. An attempt to observv the tides utterly failed, on account of the waves caused by the continual descent of icebergs. A current in any direction, either con-' stant or alternating, we could not, in spite of the most GLACIERS. 555 careful observation, be sure of; tlie icebergs seeming to drift liere and there, without being subject to any settled influence, and upon the whole changing their places but very little. A regular rising and falling of the water was however perceptible, and, according to the high-water mark on the shore, the tide evidently rose ^1v END or THE GLACIEll IN EJIPEROE ERANZ-JOSEFn's EJOKD. to the same height as on the outer coast. The depth of the Fiord was considerable, near the land being 100 fathoms and more, and in the middle Mr. Sengstacke did not touch the ground with a 500 fathom line. The sur- face temperature was high, and rose to ICv Fahr., but at 556 THE GEEMAN AECJTIO EXPEDITION. sixty-five fathoms it was only 34°, and still deeper it was lower. The saltness of the water in connexion with its specific gravity, in spite of the amount of fresh melted water, showed no difference from that of the open sea. The atmospheric temperature between these steep, rocky walls, which had been so warmed from the late steady sunshine, was of course higher than that on the outside coast. On board, where, from the cooling in- fluence of the melting icebergs, it was considerably colder than on land, the mean daily temperature given was — August 11th, 48° Fahr. ; August 12th, 45°; August 13th, 44°: the maximum on the 11th of August amounted to 53°, and the minimum on the same day only 42° Fahr. Only once, on the 1st of July at noon, did the tempe- rature, in the winter harbour under Sabine Island, rise to 56°, and the mean daily temperature on this our warmest day was 47|-°. In August a marked decrease is to be noticed. On Sabine Island -the difference between the two months amounted to 6.40°, and we might therefore conclude that here in July the temperature of the interior of the Fjord must often rise to 58° or 59° Fahr. ; how otherwise can we explain the melt- ing of the entire winter-ice, as in the summer season the interior of the Fjord is not exposed to the influence of the warmer sea water ? On land, in the warm months, the steady sunshine raises the warmth in the valleys and on the mountain slopes still higher, and, for these high latitudes, a luxuriant growth of plants shoots up rapidly. Dr. Pansch thus describes the vegetation : — " "We found it much in the same freshness and vigour as on the higher Alps in Switzerland. As on Claver- GLACIERS. 557 ing Island, all the mountain slopes were green ; though there were large spots of low, woody bushes, namely, willow, birch, and bilberry. The willow was the common and only kind met with here, the Salix arctica (Pall.) ; and in connexion with its very strong growth is the fact that the rings formed in the stem every :!»!:*;*■ ^k loweh end of the glacieus. year had attained .06 of an inch, whilst, as a rule, they are not more than from .004 to .012. Fruit we frequently met with. " As regards the birch, thick bushes stood alongside the old moraine, rising to the height of from two to three feet ; 658 THE GERMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. thougli we could see ttat in the hollows it attained even a greater height than this. The boughs^ were thickly interlaced, and in the inside of the bushes mostly leafless. That the climate agreed with this dwarf birch (Betula nana,lj., var. genuina, Eegel) we could tell by the number of catkins upon them. Later on we found that a stem of four-tenths of an inch in diameter had sixty-seven rings. " The commonest of all, however, was the bUberry {Vaccinium uliginosuin, L.) which covered the slopes, but did not grow very high. Other striking plants were the willow herb (Epilobmrn) and the harebells ; of the latter, besides the elsewhere observed G.uniflora (L.), we found the G. rotundifolia (L.), var. arctica (J, Lange), which reached a stately height. Near it flourished the ever- green Pyrola rotundifolia (L.), var. arenaria (Koch). " Here on the slopes, at a height of from 800 to 900 feet, was the finest and most varied vegetation ; and the highest grasses and shrubs mostly in bloom, and some bearing fruit. And as a last surprise,- we discovered the Alpine-rose (Rhododendron lapponicum, L.), but, unfor- tunately, the blossoms were over. The same was th^ case with the bearberry (Ardostaphylos alpiiia, Spreng.), of which, in spite of all our seeking, we could only find a small bush, on which hung some fine ripe fruit. The most interesting find, however, to us, because not pre- viously met with, was the moss Orimmia lanuginosa (C. Miill.), vci/)\ arctica. " Besides birds, we also caught an ermine hurrying between the stones, and . saw ravens, ducks, hares, and reindeer ; of the latter, near Bleanora Bay, was a whole herd. The only traces of the natives were the remains of store-holes and tent-rings or circles." GLACIERS. 559 On the 12t]i of August First-Lieutenant Payer, Dr. Copeland, and Peter Ellinger started to climb the glacier. Payer thus describes the excursion : — " Our outfit consisted of climbing-irons, alpenstocks, and an eighteen-fathom rope. " The scenery of the valley was simple but imposing ; it consisted of massive granite walls, between which tongues of ice were pressed, the torrents from which formed a row of beautiful waterfalls ; mighty gateways of ice, and a number of wild seracs, which depended from the high glacier peaks in the background like steps. Close by, in the glacier basin, which was about six miles broad, from a basis 3900 feet high rose an isolated pyramid of ice about 2960 feet high sheer into the air. " At first we kept to a tolerable path, trodden by the reindeer above the left bank of the stream. The end of the largest valley glacier lay 875 feet above the level of the sea ; and the edge of the tongue of ice, which was covered with debris, was at the commencement convex, and 2950 feet in breadth ; then becoming concave, it widened to 7180 feet, and sloped, in a broken surface, down to the adjacent land. " We took to the glacier at about 2100 feet above the sea's level. Its surface, like the mountain slopes, was free from snow ; and the covering of rubbish, which until now had been in one connected mass, branched upwards into four central moraines. The prevailing colour of the ice here is whitish green ; the ice layers the same as those under similar circumstances in the Alps. Very different, however, is the surface of a Greenland glacier. In Europe they split upon going over any mountain step, and .560 THE GEEMA^f ARCTIC EXPEDITION. the same at the junction of any streams, into a chaos of needles and steps. Our ice, exposed to greater periodical and daily differences of atmospheric temperature, becomes very much denser than can be the case in Greenland, Tsrhere, for the greater part of the year, the low temperature is stationary. Hence the northern glacier-ice is less glassy and dense, possesses greater elasticity, and greater power of passing over steep descents without breaking. " Numerous brooks fell spluttering over fathom-deep furrows ; the inclination was about four degrees ; higher up it was more; in some places twenty; but nowhere did we need the climbing-irons. The glacier, however, from the numerous side streams issuing from many points, and even at right angles, began to be full of fissures. " The greatest stream came from the south, flowmg from a valley surrounded by craggy granite walls. The long undulations were split into close-lying fissures. "We floundered from labyrinth to labyrinth, and were forced to make many circuits, and, though sounding carefully, I repeatedly sank to the shoulder, the icy spikes rattling down into the depths like broken glass. The cords to bind us together were indispensable, as we could never, like European Alpine parties, have been got out of the depths. Sometimes we stood all together on a small band of ice, surrounded by a deceitful covering of snow which concealed a dark abyss. "In the course of my former labours in the Alps it had been granted me many times to gaze in wonder from heights of 9000 to, 12,000 feet upon the ma- jestic beauty of those icy uplands. But what a differ- ence ! Throughout the whole vast prospect lay the GLACIEKS AND FJOEDS. 561 stillness of deatt ; scarcely a sign of life interrupted tlie rough grandeur of the mountain land. Instead of the luxuriant plains of our own Alpine valleys, with their farms and villages, lay the dark water-surface of the Fjord 6850 feet beneath us. Countless ice-bergs floated on its surface, looking in the distance like glistening pearls, and the frightful rocky walls seemed to descend perpendicularly into it. From every mountain steep of yonder valley descended gigantic glaciers, and ffom the high barrier of ice at its lower end the stately icebergs were loosened, and carried onward to the ocean by ebb- tide and current. " One thing attracted our attention more than any- thing else, and that was a monstrous pyramid of ice to the west, rising about 4850 feet above a high mountain ridge. This glorious peak could bear none other name than that of Petermann, the honoured originator of the first German Arctic Expedition : its real height must have approached 11,000 feet, " Along the horizon stretched an Alpine world, with countless summits, exceeding 9700 feet. The Kaiser Franz- Joseph's Fjord could be traced for about forty miles towards W.S.S. "For two hours I had been sketching and working with the theodolite on the top of a rocky projection, and in order that I might' not slip, had taken ofi" my shoes and stood in my stockings, although they were wet through from the long walk in the snow, and quite frozen. This caused me to suffer more from the cold than I had done during our worst sleighing journeys, when the cold, at 27° Fahr.,^ had been unnoticed. The temperature, " And yet on the southern side of a block of rock we found melted ice-water. 562 THE GERMAN AliCTIO EXPEDITION. taken on the ship at the same time, was 44.6°, showing a decrease of 2i° for every 700 feet of height. " Organic hfe was confined to a fibrous moss (Grimmia lanuginosa, var. arctica), and to the black and yellow, osier {Gyrophora anthradna) , which are also met with on the highest points of the Alps. We left the summit at eleven p.m., taking a new and far shorter way back over the ridge of the mountain, and at seven a.m. reached the ship after -one and twenty hours' absence." We now found that reliance could no longer be placed upon the boiler, the machinist informing us that at the utmost it could only last forty-eight hours. This was sad news, as all the steam power now to be obtained must be used for reaching the outer coast ; for with sails alone in the heavy calm we should with difficulty be able to, work our way out ■ of this rocky basin in time, and a second wintering was expressly forbidden in our " Instructions." Our time here, therefore, at the latest was until the end of August, but experience had already shown that, before that time the mouth of the Fjord was blocked by a setting in of heavy ice. There were also many reasons against a boat-journey in the short time we had to spare, not more than eight days ; we could not, under the most favourable circumstances, advance more than seventy-five English miles ; so that the results of a boat excursion would in nowise equal the risk of a second wintering, which must be avoided. Preparations were now made for departure. Opposite our anchoring-place we erected a heap of stones, in which we laid a document recording our discovery. We then weighed anchor and steamed in a north-easterly direction along the Fjord. A dense fog rose, and we had to find FJORDS. 663 our way by the help of the compass, and keep a sharp look-out for icebergs. At noon we passed the narrow pass by the Devil's Oastle, and kept close to the land, with the intention, if possible, of anchoring in a fine bay called Eleanor Bay, from whence we could make farther investigation. As we rounded the south cape of the harbour, however, the water shallowed so suddenly that we grounded, and were set fast in the mud. During the night the tide reached its highest, and with some exertions we floated once more, and rode at anchor until the morning, when we steamed eastward. At the mouth of the Fjord we found the land-ice pretty dense, and between Cape Bennet and Bontekoe Island was such a strong barrier, that even close under the land we could with difficulty force our way through. At twenty minutes past eleven p.m., on the 14th of August, three nautical miles westward of our former anchorage, we anchored again, to take in necessary ballast and water. On the 15th the Captain and Mr. Sengstacke climbed the cape, which was more than 2950 feet high, to inspect the position of the ice. To the east the pack-ice was loose enough to steer through, particularly to the east- north-east and south-east. Directly in the east the fields lay denser, but still streams of water could be seen. The horizon seemed strewn with ice. The whole of the coast to the south, as far as the eye could see, was covered with numberless icebergs, chiefly from Kaiser Franz- Joseph's Fjord, which, however, never appeared upon the open sea. 2 564 THE GBEMAN ARCTIC EXPEDITION. The reason of tliis lies in the depth of the water, which, close under the shore and in the interior of the Fjord, is much greater than it is farther out. The same conditions are seen here as on the Norwegian coast, where a channel of more than 200 fathoms deep runs close along the shore, whilst but a little beyond rises the plateau of the North Sea from thirty to forty fathoms deep. Our soundings gave analogous results on the coast of Greenland. Under Shannon Island, only a few miles from land, there was a depth of more than 200 fathoms^ whilst beyond there was only 100. The same showed itself near Cape Broer Buys, and in the Fjord itseK it reached the unheard-of depth of more than 500 fathoms. This is also the reason that in the Greenland seas no icebergs are met with far from land. To the south, according to Captain Hegemann's report, they increase in numbers under the land, partly for the reason that there many glaciers discharge themselves straight into the sea, whilst farther to the north they descend only in the interior of Fjords. CHAPTER XVIII. RETURN TO BEEMERHAVEN.^ Eepeated leakage of the boiler-tubes. — Becalmed. — Disappearance of the Coast. — Dense fog. — Voyage in the ice. — The Germania forces a passage through the ice. — The boiler finally refuses to work altogether. — Perceptible sound of breakers in the open sea. — Collision with an icebank. — We reach the open sea. — Joy over our speedy return homewards. — Passing by Iceland between the Faroe and Shetland Islands. — Near Heligoland. — No pilots. — No sail at the mouth of the Weser. — German men-of-war. — First know- ledge of the German victories and of the fate of the Hansa. — Salute by the crew of the King William on the safe return of the Germania from the Arctic Sea. — Steamer and pilots. — Arrival at Bremerhaven on 11th of September, 1870. All was now ready for our retarn to Europe, and on the 16tli of August our poor patched boiler was heated once more, but as soon as steam was up more pipes began to leak, and it was very doubtful whether it could be used at aU. One more trial, however, must be made ; in the meantime, as there was no wind, we rode at anchor. Calms seem to prevail here in the summer months. During our year of observation, from the beginning of 1869 to the end of July, 1870, we noted no less than 2435 hours of total calm, 760 hours of which fell in the summer months of June, July, and August, being the third part of the whole time. ' By Captain Carl Koldewcy. 566 THE GEHMAN AECTIO EXPEDITION. From this, one may judge tow little can be done with a saiHng-ship in so short a time. The next morning, the 17th of August, dawned with a dense fog, which did not lift until noon, when we weighed anchor homeward-bound. "We steamed "due east, as the Captain intended if possible to force the barrier in that latitude, instead of going further south. After a few hours the boiler-pipes again began to leak, so as there was a calm and thick fog, we were obliged to anchor by a small field. The whole coast of Greenland was hidden from our sight, and we had seen the last of that land which for a whole year had been our home. The machinery was repaired in the night, though with but little hope of its durability, and we started once more. On the 18th the wind blew from the south, and the fog was thicker than ever, falling wet around us, so we preferred remaining by our field instead of advancing blindly into the pack. We remained pretty stationary, the astronomical ob- servations at noon showing but a slight change in the position of our ice-field, though it had turned upon its axis ten points of the compass, and that with the sun. We had paid particular attention to the revolving of the ice-fields, and found that by far the greater number turned against the sun. Our observations were, how- ever, not numerous enough to warrant our assuming this to be the rule. On the morning of the 19th of August, as the fog was lighter, we steamed forward in an easterly direction, only a few floes at first drifting in our way. But, as might be expected, the ice became denser as we advanced into DENSE FOGS. 567 the pack, from time to time passing large fields between whicli lay broad channels of open water. At tliree a.m. we came to a chain of floes with a more watery appearance than the large fields we had passed during the night, which was therefore a pleasing sign that we were nearing the sea. After passing round these floes in a south-westerly direction, we came into open water for a short time longer. There was still a dense fog, and at four o'clock we struck upon a large field, and a row of thick-lying floes. After some attempts to break through these masses, we found ourselves entangled in a labyrinth of ice showing not the smallest opening to westward. Nothing but the manoeuvring capabilities of the ship by means of the screw prevented us from being completely blocked in. But how in this thick fog could we retain this freedom of motion ? One of those happy circumstances that can never be counted upon came to our 'assistance. At six o'clock the fog suddenly lifted, and at some miles to westward we could see an opening. We now steered along the edge of the ice-field, at the end of which to rather a broad extent lay closely packed floes, and beyond these to our great joy was again open water. We had no alternative but to force our way through : and with the whole of its steam power the Germania was run into the ice. The ship quivered and groaned, but the ice slowly gave way, and we glided into open water. The violent shock, however, had been too much for our invalid boiler : the pipes again began to leak, and put out the fire. We had just time to anchorj in a complete calm, when thick fog set in once more. Our position was 73° 17' N. Lat. and 15° 41' W. Long. On the morning of the 21st of August, we made one 568 THE GBEMAN AKCTIC EXPEDITION. more attempt to work our way out of the ice .by ^team. But in a very sliort time, the boiler refused its services ; and the Captain found that all further progress by steam was at an end, and that the remainder of the voyage must be made under sail. At this time, however, there was so little wind, that the seemingly unmanageable ship soon drifted against a large floe, where we lay under all sail. It was still very foggy, but the sun shone through, so that we could take our observations, which gave us as usual S.S.W., with ten nautical miles for the day's run ; whilst, when nearer the coast, they placed us more towards the east. In the afternoon we tried with a light southerly breeze to sail further, but again struck upon thick ice, and on account of the fog were obliged to , anchor. In the night the south-east wind rose to a storm ; the ice began to move, which greatly incommoded us, for several blocks were driven by the wind against our field, subjecting us to great pressure. Indeed, at about two a.m., some large floes threatened to crush us. We were obliged to run for it^ and tried to pull round to the north-west point of our field, on the lee side of which we should find more protection from the advancing ice. After great exertions we succeeded in placing the ship in safety ia a bend in the ice-field, where it was made fast with strong ropes, and the men then took a few hours' rest. In the meanwhile the ice pushed itself closer together, so that we feared being blockaded in ; and yet nothing remained for us but to wait patiently, and see what fate would bring us. To set sail in the storm and fog would have been still more dangerous. On the morning of the following day the atmosphere TACKING TO THE S.W. 569 cleared a little, tliougli it rained violently: the wind moderated. To the south and south-west there appeared to be much open water, to which, exactly to wind- ward, led a small channel blocked by several ice floes ; and it seemed almost impossible to tack against a fresh wind through this narrow pass. But it was our only chance of escaping from a blockade in the ice. We therefore set sail in the pouring rain, and made tacks for the channel. But it was not till after much manoeuvring that we succeeded in avoiding the floating blocks, and clearing it. We had now so much sea-room that for a quarter of an hour we were able to keep on one tack ; and on either side, to the east as well as to the west, the ice lay com- pletely closed. Towards evening we could go no further either to the south or south-west, and open water was only to be seen in the direction we had come from. The violent south and south-east wind, which outside had no doubt raged like a storm, had driven the ice so together that the Captain felt convinced with such a wind there could be no getting clear. As it was quite dark, we anchored by a field to wait for clear weather and a change of wind. During the night it sometimes 'rained violently, but it blew more from the east, and the rising barometer gave us expectations of better weather. The following day we again tried to go a little further by steering along the field to the north-east, but here, too, as we might have expected, the ice was closed ; so on account of a fog which had come up with the east wind, we dropped anchor once more. According to the log-reckoning our position was 73° 4' N. and 15° 32' W., but the current had drifted us 670 THE GEEMAN AECTIC EXPEDITION. a little to the south. The icy cold of the water (the temperature was near freezing-point) and the work of the last few days had exhausted the men, and as we had to be ready any moment in case our ship should be threatened by the ice, no scientific work could be under- taken. Soundings, too, had to be given up. In the face of new difficulties the men required some rest. In the evening the fog drew ofi"; the wind blew north- east, with a rising barometer. This was the first time since our departure from the coast that we had had a clear horizon, and an open field of view around us. Only to the south and south-east was there navigable water ; in every other direction the ice was closely packed. On the 24th of August, at two a.m., we set sail with as favourable a breeze from the north-north-east as we could possibly wish for, and with a confident hope of being able to break through the belt of ice. We worked our way south, leisurely making tacks to the west, according to the position of the ice, which lay so thick that we had to force our way. To the east still no opening; we must go still further south. A glorious breeze came to our assistance, and in five or six knots all icy difficulties were victoriously overcome. At three p.m. the Germania met a string of floes which showed unmistakable signs of coming from the ocean, and we could distinctly hear the sound of breakers. Our joy was indescribable, and we thought nothing of running into the icy labyrinth at a speed of seven knots. The ship groaned and quivered from the force of the pressure, and the stern-post received a shock, that for a moment the captain feared for the timbers ; but the Germania bore it bravely. Driven by the powerful pressure of the wind she bounded through, IN OPEN SEA. 571 and in a short time we glided into open water, where the long-missed swell of the Atlantic greeted us. WJiat cared we now for the threatening white fog which sur- rounded us in thick masses, or for the ice-blocks we met, or even for the storms that still awaited us ? We were in open water, had plenty of sea-room, and that is all a sailor needs. " Breakers ahead !" sounded from the bow. The ship was running upon an ice-bank lying almost before us, and only by the prompt watchfulness of the man at the wheel, who threw the helm hard a-starboard, did we avoid running aground. We now steered north-west, feo as to find a more open spot to windward over the starboard bow by which to clear the ice. A heavy sea raised by the last storm met us, setting all the ice-blocks through which the ship had to pass in dangerous motion. But aU went well. An hour more, and the last bit of ice had disappeared in the fog. In a south-easterly course we now made straight for the Weser. "My watch is over!" was a saying of old Scoresby's, when he was free of the Green- land ice, and found himself in open sea. " My watch is over !" exclaimed Captain Koldewey to Mr. Sengstacke, as he retired to his cabin with a feeling of security that he had not enjoyed for many a day. Now we were going towards our dear home, and nothing stood in the way of our hope of soon reaching it. For the first time a German expedition, under the auspices of the black, white, and red flag, had visited, for a scientific object, the least known region of the globe, and had there sought to solve some scientific problems ; we might cer- tainly maintain, not quite without success. The .North Pole we had not certainly discovered, and the secret of the 672 THU GERMAN AEOTIC EXPEDITION. real Polar basin had remained sealed. But we had been allowed, by observation and investigation of the principles of natural science and navigation, to contribute no incon- siderable share of knowledge, both of the laws and the principal phenomena of the Arctic world, so that the real North Pole question was at any rate theoretically nearer its solution. Conscious of this, we comforted ourselves for the many- hopes left unfulfilled, and the many objects unattained. There remain but a few words to be said regarding our return voyage. Captain Koldewey chose the course past Iceland, between the Faroe and Shetland Isles, in order to take some soundings at the confluence of the Gulf-stream and the Arctic current, as well as some measurements of temperature. But stormy weather, with but slight interruption, lasted almost to the "Weser, and hindered the work so much, that the result was very indifferent. On the 10th of September we were a few miles from Heligoland. A heavy storm blew from the south-west, but in the evening shifted to the north-west, enabling us to run into shore. At daybreak, though we had seen no pilot, we recognized Langerooge, and steered along the South-wall to the mouth of the Weser. No sign of a ship ! The Weser seemed to have died out. Where are the pilots hidden ? Are they lying perdu on account of yesterday's storm ? Well, then, we must run into the Weser without them ; the wind is- favourable, the weather clear, the outer buoy will be easy to find ; there is the church-tower of Wangerooge. Suspecting nothing, we steered on; the tower bears S.S.W., south-west by south, south-west, but no buoy in sight. The Captain ENTEEING THE WESER. 573 and steersman look at each otter in astonishment. Can we have been so mistaken and out of our reckoning? But no ! That is certainly "Wangerooge ; the depth of ■water agrees, our compass is correct. No doubt about it, we are in the Weser ; something unusual must have happened ! Still no , sail in sight ! But what is that ? Yonder are the roads. There are several large vessels under steam; they at least can give \is some informa- tion. So we make for them. We saluted the German flag, and soon the cry was heard, "War, war with France ; Napoleon is prisoner ! France has declared a Eepubhc; our armies are before Paris!" And then, " Hansa destroyed in the ice, crew saved." We thought we were dreaming, and stood stiff with astonishment at such grand and heart-stirring news. Not until a loud hurrah for " King William " sounded from a hundred German throats did we regain our speech, and answer with another " Hurrah ! ' ' Captain-Lieutenant Stenzel came on board, and wel- comed us to German soil, and from him we learnt somewhat more connectedly the events of the last few weeks. From the fleet we procured a tug and pilot for the Weser, and on the 11th of September, at six p.m., we ran safely into Bremerhaven, where the next morn- ing we had the pleasure of shaking hands with some gentlemen of the Bremer Committee, at the head of which was Mr. A. G. Mosle, as well as some of our comrades of the Hansa. CONCLUSION. Let us now sum up tlie results of the second German Arctic Expedition, in reference to the light thrown upon the Arctic question by the voyage of the Grermania and Hansa : — 1. Uninterrupted, open coast-water, along the coast of Bast Greenland has been proved not to exist ; it has been shown that the coast-water is dependent upon local circumstances, and that the ice-current brings down its masses, even when the ice is at its loosest, to every pro- jecting point of the coast. 2. East Greenland has been proved not to form a suit- able basis for reaching the North Pole, even setting aside the possibility of reaching a higher latitude by ship along the coast, in favourable years. 3. On the other hand, by inquiries into the geology, natural history, and climate of the country itself, and by the investigation of the large Fjords and their extent north and south, a new basis for promoting further Arctic discoveries has been created, promising rich results which may eventually materially assist in solving the Arctic problem ; more so than any advance on the high sea could have done. 4. No important advance into the ice, nor any con- siderable scientific result essentially belonging to the laild is to be reckoned upon without the firm support of the coast ; and without wintering and erecting stations for CONCLUSION. 575 observation, no thorougli investigation of the Arctic regions is possible. This last point is further confirmed by the results of the latest Arctic Expedition, the leading features of which are as follows : — Even whilst we were in Greenland, Kara Straits, be- tween Nova Zembla and Continental Russia, which is so often impassable from the ice, was traversed by Nor- wegian fishermen; indeed, in the year 1870, the whole of Nova Zembla was sailed round, and the sea both to the north and east of the island found to be perfectly navigable. This circumstance, in connexion with the observed proportionately high surface temperature of the sea, suggested the belief that the easiest way of advancing to the north, or even of reaching the Pole itself, might be through Barents' Sea. As is already known, Lieu- tenant Weyprecht and First-Lieutenant Payer followed this course, and on the 1st of September, 1871, reached (in 78° 43' N. Lat.) the meridian of 42° 30' E., a point com- paratively remote in this region, although not the first or only instance of the kind. The sea, too, as far as 59° E. Long., and in almost the same latitude, was quite free fi'om ice. The ice towards the north is declared to be lighter and looser, and the surface temperature of the sea more often between 89° and 41° Fahr. From these circumstances, combined with the steady motion of the Polar ice, caused by the large ice-current running along the coast of East Greenland, the conclusion was at once drawn by Lieu- tenant Weyprecht that this might probably be the best road to the North Pole, and that this open sea might be connected with the so-called Polynia of the Russians. At Vienna, on the 7th of December, 1871, in a state- ment made before the Imperial Academy of Science, 576 THE GERMAN AKCTIO EXPEDITION. Weyprecht explained his reasons more fully. Although these reasonings were not based upon altogether correct suppositions, it is true, as pointed out by Dove, that the distribution of the Polar ice does without doubt create variations in the state of the temperature in different years (and that irrespective of any particular spot in the Arctic territory). The zealous, endeavours of Payer and Weyprecht, however, succeeded in calling into existence, in 1872, a still larger Austrian expedition. Oddly enough, in spite of authentic accounts of. the navigability of the Arctic Sea, as far as the highest lati- tude, the project of an Arctic expedition on the basis of the Barents' Sea, was dropped, and the exploration of the Siberian coast and the unknown waters of the north of Siberia was undertaken. To me this seems to imply that in Austria, too, they could not quite trust to the existence of an open Arctic sea, as they evidently laid more stress upon the desirability of following the coast, and promised themselves richer scientific results than they could ever expect from advancing on the high sea. The Austrian Expedition started 'in the summer of 1872 ; but, instead of .finding an open and easily navigable sea, as in the previous year, there were masses of thick ice near Nova Zembla, so that in spite of steam power, up to the 18th of August they had advanced no further than Cape Nassau, though they hoped for more favourable op- portunities about the beginning of September. At the same time, some Norwegian fishermen found the sea perfectly free from ice further westwards ; the much-talked-of Wiche's, or King Charles's Land, or Weiche Land (which- ever it is called), was even reached, and its extent decided CONCLUSION. 577 within a fraction;' whilst again to the north of Spitz- bergen so much ice was met with by the Swedish ■ Expe- dition, that they could not even reach Parry Island, where they had intended wintering, so as to be ready in the early spring for the sledge journeys, by which they proposed to advance to the Pole. And, although this sea was generally free from ice as far as 81° JsT.L., the expe- dition was forced to pass the winter in Mossel Bay, and in the spring attempted vainly to reach a higher latitude by crossing the sea-ice with sledges. They did not get beyond Parry Island, as the state of the drift-ice (probably too uneven and lumpy) prevented them. All exploration had to be confined to Spitzbergen during the winter, as well as during the sledge-journeys, by which the land ice to the north-east of the country was crossed ; adding a valuable amount of knowledge regarding the physical condition of Arctic countries. The above implied variation in the position and extent of the Arctic ice was particularly proved in the year 1872, by the different voyages undertaken, and also by the Swedish Expedition ; of the Austrian we have no further news. The advance on the high sea led to no other result than that of proving the changeableness of the ice-border, and to leisurely-made observations of temperature and soundings ; which, however important and useful in them- selves, without the knowledge of the extent, of the surrounding country and coast and their climate, can only serve to assist in forming rough conjectures as 'to the physical condition of the Pole and its vicinity. ' It consists of one or more unimportant islands of no great size. P p -!- 578 THE GERMAN ARCTIC EXFEMTION. Even by the reaching of King Charles's Land by the Norwegians no new fact is established, except that, what some himdreds of years ago was looked upon as a continent, consists only of a few islands. No examination of the land itself was made, and nothing but an entire winter passed there will ever supply us with any important facts concerning it. The American Expedition, a part of tlie crew of which were saved on an ice-floe, brings to light the most facts. Their vessel, the Polaris, reached the coast of Greenland through Smith Sound, penetrating to the highest Lati- tude ever yet attained by any ship, namely, 82° 16'. It was doubtless the most northerly point of Greenland. The supposition that Grinnell Land extends as far as 83° N. was confirmed, and the existence of musk-oxen and a rich Fauna up to 82° N. of Greenland was proved. At the same time Kane and Hayes' illusion of an open Arctic Sea, which proved to be nothing but the entrance of a channel through which ran a strong current, was thoroughly dispelled. This voyage of the Polaris, combined with the results obtained by the German Expedition, shows in a striking manner that the investigation of Greenland, as the country stretching nearest to the Pole — along the coast of which one can penetrate to the north on two different meridians ■ — and where such an extensive field offers for scientific re- search, supplies by far the best field for investigating the geographical and physical condition of Arctic regions, and consequently the real solution of the Arctic question. In a pamphlet issued by " The Royal Geographical. CONCLUSION. 579 Society" (p. 10), it is said :—" The unknown region covers a surface of more than a million of English square miles. It is impossible that one single expedition could ever undertake the investigation of the whole of this territory, and it is therefore necessary to choose that part which contains the three chief requirements : these are — 1, the certainty of exploring a country up to this time unknown, and of some considerable extent ; 2, the prospect of important discoveries in the different branches of science; 3, the best security for a safe return. These leading features can only be secured in a neighbourhood where there is a large extent of coast-line ; for the most important discoveries are to be expected chiefly on land or near it." All this is as suitable for East Greenland, as for West Greenland, and there can be no reason why the discoveries in Bast Greenland under the German Flag should not be continued. It seems to me a matter of honour for the German nation, that the further investigation of the large Fjord discovered by us should not be left to other nations, but that it should garner into itself the seed sown with so much trouble. An English Expedition to West Greenland through Smith Sound, and a German one to East Greenland starting at the same time would, with oiir present experience and means of assistance, certainly lead to the exploration of a considerable extent of the unknown Polar area, and bring home a rich result of scientific discoveries in all branches that could not be obtained in any other way. May the present work contribute to reawaken interest p p 2 580 CONOLTJRION. in Arctic explorations, and give a spur to a new Expedi- tion, by wliich the German Flag may have its due share in all scientific discoveries in the North Polar region. To take part in the achievement of this object, is my greatest desire. Hamburg, Oct. 1873. Karl Koj,DEWEY. APPENDIX. DESCRIPTION OF THE ESQUIMAUX IMPLEMENTS Figured on plates after p. 516. 1. Representation of a human figure in wood. This figure was found in a grave on Clavering Island, near Cape Mary. The shape and small size of this grave clearly indicated that of an infant. The absence of a skeleton did not surprise us, inasmuch as the bones of an infant are much more easily destructible than those of an adult. We concluded, therefore, that this figure was a child's toy. Two similar figures, roughly carved in wood, were found by Graah on Sneedoi-fFs Island. They remind one forcibly of those discovered by Behring amongst the savages of the North- West coast of America, where they are held as idols, although (says Graah) they very probably, as in Greenland, are used simply as children's toys. This opinion is also confirmed by the consideration of the religious views of the Esquimaux. The present fragment was originally more clearly distinguishable than now, as the softer projecting parts of the wood have somewhat suffered. 2. A wooden figure of some animal found among the Esquimaux huts on Klein-Pendulum. This may also have been a toy, and seems to be the imitation of a fox or perhaps an ermine. 3. This is also the representation of some animal, though what species was in the carver's mind it is difficult to say. 4. a, h, c. A sledge-bone, i. e. a piece of bone which the Esquimaux fasten under the slides in place of our usual iron tires. We can see still the wooden pegs with which the fastening was accomplished. We see here also the very beautiful bores by which, instead of saws, the Esquimaux cut the bones and teeth into pieces. The finely-bored cir- cular holes arc plainly to be seen. 5. a b. A so-called "woman's knife" of reddish slate. Wo found 582 APPENDIX. many of these in the southern parts. To the smaller and rougher side a handle of wood or bone was attached, and fastened by ineans of the holes bored in it. The knife served the women chiefly for scraping the fat off the hides. 6—9. Harpoon sockets of walrus teeth, with stone heads. The harpoon is the principal weapon of the Esquimaux. At the pointed end of the wooden shaft, which is generally made of a piece of walrus- tooth, the harpoon-head (siatko) is fixed in a gi-ove made in the stump. It is attached by means of a cord, the end of which is fastened through a hole, and it is held taut to the middle of the shaft by a simple contrivance. At the end a still sharper stone-head is fitted ; such a harpoon is capable of being thrown into a seal or walrus. This being done, the head is easily loosened from the shaft, so soon as the bight of the line is detached by a slight jerk of the free end, pi-ovided only it be held tight in the hunter's hand, or it is furnished with an inflated bladder. 10. Upper portion of a spear-head of walrus tooth, found on the shore of Klein-Pondulum. 1 1 . Drawing of a perfect spear, after Kane. 12. One half of a Kajak rudder, found near Cape Borlase Warren. 13. A stick suitable for various purposes. It is not improbable that it was a kind of bat,' used by the Esquimaux lads to play with. 14. Handle for a dagger or similar implement (or weapon), found on Klein-Pendulum. It is very neatly wrought. We see the holes through which the thongs were passed, by means of which the head of bone, or tooth, was fastened to the handle. 15. Tusk of a bear, pierced at the root. Such pierced teeth were worn by the Esquimaux as ornaments, or possibly occasionally as amulets.^ 16. An object of walrus tooth, the purport of which is unknown, and which is only depicted here in order to show the very exact and elegant workmanship. 17. a, b, c. Similar object, also of walrus tooth. 18. An instrument of bone which probably, fastened to a shaft, served as a hunting-weapon, or had some other purpose now unknown. 19. Needle made of bone, for sewing the Kajaks. 20. Iron knife found in an Esquimaux hut on Klein-Pendulum. The ' (?) Hooky, or bandy-stick. (Tr.) ' This conjecture is supported by the fact, that in Ocean I., one of the Kingsmill group in the South Pacific Ocean, a similar ciistom prevails. Human teeth, thus bored, are used by the native women as necklaces. (IT)-.) APPENDIX. 583 handle is of wood and grooved, and the iron blade is inserted, and then is fastened by means of thongs twisted round it. A perfectly similar handle was found in another place, but without any iron- in it. This is the only instance of our finding iron material in North- East Greenland. Still such iron instruments must always have been veiy scarce. Iron is not anywhere found in the land in the form of ore, but it is real wrought iron imported. As to its origin, two hypotheses only present themselves. Either the natives obtain it through exchange with the inhabitants of the southern disti'icts, and these similarly obtain it from the west coast, in traffic, which, though not impossible, seems to us still very improbable ;' or else it is a piece of the iron which Clavering, in 1823, presented to the natives in the form of knives and other implements. ' See Parry's Journal, p. 286. THE END. € H il B t of the lortliernPortioRof surveyed on the Sledi^e journey frum k'^SraFcK to 27*2'^ April 1870. Scale. I : i 700.000 Outward in urii&u JSeiurn o o Eiicaniprrunis -- ash'oneTnieallu determijie^d. Voln.ts. .\ Soti/idiruis. TIl£ dtptiis iW€ ffivoh in, EngUs/L fatJwms. Lith F, A, Br-PcikhbU3 ^/^\\\*l^i. 1.1^1 of the second ICf] im ¥1 iiifii the years 1869 dud 1870. According to the original Surveys I and executed with tlie aid of older Cliarts iZe 1:5000000 ^ ,