An Expedition to Mount St. Elias, Alaska
VOL. III, PP. 53–204, PLS. 2–20 MAY 29, 1891
( Accepted for publication March 18, 1891. )
The southern coast of Alaska is remarkable for the regularity of its general outline. If a circle a thousand miles in diameter be inscribed on a map of the northern Pacific with a point in about latitude 54° and longitude 145° as a center, a large part of its northern periphery will be found to coincide with the southern shore of Alaska between Dixon entrance on the east and the Alaska peninsula on the west. On the northern part of this great coast-circle lies the region explored in the summer of 1890 and described in the following pages.
From Cross sound, at the northern end of the great system of islands forming southeastern Alaska, westward along the base of the Fairweather range, the mountains are exceedingly rugged, and present some of the finest coast scenery in the world. There are but two inlets east of Yakutat bay on this shore which afford shelter even for small boats. These are Lituya bay and Dry bay. Ships may enter Lituya bay, at certain stages of the tide, and find a safe harbor within; but the approaches to Dry bay are not navigable. West of Yakutat bay the coast is equally inhospitable all the way to Prince William sound.
As if to compensate for the lack of refuge on either end, there is in the center of this great stretch of rock-bound coast, over 300 miles in extent, a magnificent inlet known as Yakutat bay, in which a thousand ships could find safe anchorage. On some old maps this bay is designated as Baie de Monti, Admiralty bay and Bering bay, as will be seen when its discovery and history are discussed on another page.
The southern shore of Alaska, for a distance of 200 miles along the bases of the Fairweather and St. Elias ranges, is formed of a low table-land intervening between the mountains and the sea. Yakutat bay is the only bight in this plateau sufficiently deep to reach the mountain to the northward. This bay has a broad opening to the sea; the distance between its ocean capes is twenty miles, and its extension inland is about the same. Its eastern shore is fringed with low, wooded islands, among which are sheltered harbors, safe from every wind that blows. The most accessible of these is Port Mulgrave, near its entrance on the eastern side.
Israel C. Russell
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THE
NATIONAL GEOGRAPHIC MAGAZINE.
AN EXPEDITION TO MOUNT ST. ELIAS, ALASKA
CONTENTS.
ILLUSTRATIONS.
THE SOUTHERN COAST OF ALASKA.
NARRATIVE OF THE ST. ELIAS EXPEDITION OF 1890.
SKETCH OF THE GEOLOGY OF THE ST. ELIAS REGION.
GLACIERS OF THE ST. ELIAS REGION.
HEIGHT AND POSITION OF MOUNT ST. ELIAS.
OFFICIAL INSTRUCTIONS GOVERNING THE EXPEDITION.
REPORT ON TOPOGRAPHIC WORK.
REPORT ON AURIFEROUS SANDS FROM YAKUTAT BAY.
REPORT ON FOSSIL PLANTS.
INDEX.