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The Search For The Northwest Passage

The Search For The Northwest Passage in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $13.56
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The Search For The Northwest Passage

Coles

The Search For The Northwest Passage in Vernon, BC

By None

Current price: $13.56
Loading Inventory...

Size: Kobo eBook

Buy Online
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
For over three hundred years, Europe's most powerful nations threw ships, fortunes, and lives at the frozen channels above North America, chasing a sea route to Asia that the ice refused to surrender. The men who sailed into those straits faced crushing pack ice, months of polar darkness, scurvy, starvation, and navigational charts filled more with fantasy than fact. Many never came home. The ones who did brought back stories that only made the next generation more determined to try again. The 1845 Franklin expedition departed England with 129 men, two warships reinforced with iron and fitted with steam engines, and enough provisions for three years. Not a single man survived. What happened between the crews' final optimistic dispatches and their desperate, doomed march across King William Island took decades to piece together — and the full picture remains disturbing and incomplete. The search for Franklin alone redrew the map of the Arctic, pioneered sledging techniques still studied today, and triggered one of the Victorian era's most explosive public controversies. The passage was eventually conquered not by a massive naval fleet but by a Norwegian in a 47-ton herring boat with six crewmates, a 13-horsepower engine, and the uncommon sense to learn survival skills from the Inuit rather than ignore them. Roald Amundsen spent two years living among Arctic indigenous communities, studying their clothing, hunting, and dog-sledging methods — preparation that proved more valuable than any technology the British Admiralty ever deployed. His three-year transit succeeded precisely where the largest and best-funded expeditions had failed. Today the passage sits at the center of an accelerating collision between retreating ice, international law, and competing national interests. Canada claims the waterways as internal territory; the United States and other maritime powers insist they constitute an international strait open to free navigation. The same route that killed Franklin's crew is now drawing cargo ships, cruise liners, and submarines — and the questions it raises about sovereignty, environmental risk, and who controls an opening Arctic are far from settled.
For over three hundred years, Europe's most powerful nations threw ships, fortunes, and lives at the frozen channels above North America, chasing a sea route to Asia that the ice refused to surrender. The men who sailed into those straits faced crushing pack ice, months of polar darkness, scurvy, starvation, and navigational charts filled more with fantasy than fact. Many never came home. The ones who did brought back stories that only made the next generation more determined to try again. The 1845 Franklin expedition departed England with 129 men, two warships reinforced with iron and fitted with steam engines, and enough provisions for three years. Not a single man survived. What happened between the crews' final optimistic dispatches and their desperate, doomed march across King William Island took decades to piece together — and the full picture remains disturbing and incomplete. The search for Franklin alone redrew the map of the Arctic, pioneered sledging techniques still studied today, and triggered one of the Victorian era's most explosive public controversies. The passage was eventually conquered not by a massive naval fleet but by a Norwegian in a 47-ton herring boat with six crewmates, a 13-horsepower engine, and the uncommon sense to learn survival skills from the Inuit rather than ignore them. Roald Amundsen spent two years living among Arctic indigenous communities, studying their clothing, hunting, and dog-sledging methods — preparation that proved more valuable than any technology the British Admiralty ever deployed. His three-year transit succeeded precisely where the largest and best-funded expeditions had failed. Today the passage sits at the center of an accelerating collision between retreating ice, international law, and competing national interests. Canada claims the waterways as internal territory; the United States and other maritime powers insist they constitute an international strait open to free navigation. The same route that killed Franklin's crew is now drawing cargo ships, cruise liners, and submarines — and the questions it raises about sovereignty, environmental risk, and who controls an opening Arctic are far from settled.

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