The Voyage of The<i>Jeannette</I>
DOI: 10.1017/cbo9781139236669.002
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The Last of the Jeannette

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Cited by 3 publications
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“…Jeannette was an expedition ship under George W. De Long which had sailed through Bering Strait and continued northwards in 1879 where it was caught by the drifting pack ice. It was eventually crushed in 1881 just northwest of the New Siberian Islands between the Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea (De Long, 1884). The debris included signed documents and garments with name tags, so we know for a fact that the source was Jeannette .…”
Section: Arctic Ice Drift In Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…Jeannette was an expedition ship under George W. De Long which had sailed through Bering Strait and continued northwards in 1879 where it was caught by the drifting pack ice. It was eventually crushed in 1881 just northwest of the New Siberian Islands between the Laptev Sea and the East Siberian Sea (De Long, 1884). The debris included signed documents and garments with name tags, so we know for a fact that the source was Jeannette .…”
Section: Arctic Ice Drift In Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Yet another major contribution to the body of direct empirical evidence related to the TPD was generated by the aforementioned 1879 Jeannette expedition under George W. De Long. Instead of being able to voyage unobstructed towards the North Pole via the Bering Strait, Jeannette was caught firmly in the ice northeast of Wrangel Island (De Long, 1884, pp.116–119). She was never released but drifted helplessly and erratically with the ice for almost two years before she finally was crushed and sank on 12 June 1881 after having been transported about 1,000 km in an approximate northwesterly direction along a route which is very reasonable given what we know today about TPD (De Long, 1884, p.578).…”
Section: Arctic Ice Drift In Practicementioning
confidence: 99%
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“…The species was named after the American seafarer and Arctic explorer George Washington DeLong, who died in 1881 in the Lena River delta, very close to "locus classicus". DeLong's expedition was a tragic one, only twelve of its 32 members returned alive (De Long, 2018).…”
Section: Carex Delongiimentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The history of its discovery and study is associated with the names of the heroic pioneers George De Long, Eduard Toll and Alexander Kolchak, but the island remained poorly studied due to its remoteness. The first information on the geology of Bennett Island was reported by De Long's expedition, which discovered the island in 1881 (De Long, 1883). First geological samples were collected by EV Toll in 1902(removed from the island in 1913Toll', 1904).…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%