C
Cable, converted into sounding-line, I, 464, 465.
Cape Barents, II, 511.
Cape Buda-Pesth, II, 549.
Cape Butterless, I, 202.
Cape Chelyuskin, I, 212, 215.
Cape Clements Markham, basalt rock, II, 555.
Cape Fisher, II, 501 (Note).
Cape Fligely—
Distance from proposed starting-point of sledge journey, I, 580.
Speculations as to position with regard to, II, 256, 268, 272.
Cape Flora, geological investigations, II, 550.
Cape Flora, geological investigations—Nathorst, Professor, report on, II, 560.
Cape Lapteff, I, 191 (Note).
Cape Lofley, speculations as to position with regard to, II, 391, 458, 489, 490.
Cape M’Clintock, basalt rocks, II, 493, 554.
Cape Richthofen, II, 504 (Note).
Reached by Jackson, II, 534 (Note).
Card-playing on board the Fram, I, 364, 365, 517.
Carex œsicaria, boots lined with, on sledge journey, II, 117.
“Castle” Rock, II, 493.
Cephalotaxus Fortunei, II, 561.
Chart-room, used as kitchen in summer, I, 527 (Note).
Chatanga River—Fram passes north of, I, 225.
Land lying between the Chatanga and the Anabara, I, 225, 226.
Child, Mr., member of Jackson-Harmsworth expedition, II, 534.
Sails on the Windward, II, 576.
Christiania Fjord, the Fram enters, on return from expedition, II, 595.
Christiania Geographical Society, Nansen’s address before, idea of expedition first propounded in, I, 14, 15.
Christmas festivities, I, 343, 344 ; II, 31, 33, 34, 448.
Christofersen, secretary to Nansen, I, 104.
Leaves the Fram at Khabarova, I, 132, 133, 144.
Meets Nansen at Hammerfest on return of expedition, II, 588.
Cladophlebis, II, 562.
Clay sandstone, Cape Flora, II, 553.
Clements Markham’s Foreland, II, 363 (Note).
Cleve, Professor, diatoms found in ice-floes off Greenland Coast, examined by, I, 39.
Clio Borealis, II, 283.
Clothing, I, 392, 393, 413, 415.
Deplorable condition during life in hut, II, 434.
Drying clothes on sledge journey, II, 145.
Equipment for sledge journey, II, 14, 114, 115.
Equipment for southward journey, II, 474, 484.
Cloudberry flower, tundra-plains of Asia, I, 123.
Cloudberry, “Polar champagne 83d degree,” II, 33.
Coal found in clay, Cape Flora, II, 553.
Coal-oil apparatus for range-heating, I, 526, 547.
Coal supply for the Fram, I, 76, 77, 548; II, 650.
Cod, Polar, II, 258.
Cold in Arctic regions, reports exaggerated, I, 392, 393.
Committee of expedition. I, 56.
Compasses taken on sledge expedition, II, 124.
Cooking arrangements—
Fram, I, 526, 527, 547.
Hut, II, 428.
Sledge journey, II, 15, 120.
Southward journey after winter in the hut, II, 483.
Cook’s expedition (1776) through Bering Strait, I, 12.
Coral insects, I, 298.
Crew of the Fram, I, 77.
Courage and cheerfulness, I, 361, 365, 450, 545, 546.
Faith in their leader, I, 535.
Health of, I, 244, 245, 354, 355, 356, 362, 390, 407; II, 627.
Meeting with Nansen and Johansen on return of expedition, II, 706.
Nansen’s address to, explaining objects of sledge journey northward, II, 8.
News of safe arrival of Nansen and Johansen, II, 704, 705.
Occupations during winter, I, 238, 427.
Return to Norway—meeting with Nansen at Tromsö, II, 593.
Crown-Prince Rudolf’s Land—
Discovery by Payer, I, 12.
Sighted by Nansen, II, 321, 357.
Speculations as to position with regard to, II, 349, 459.
Crustaceæ, I, 298, 399; II, 283.
Current from Bering Sea to Atlantic Ocean, Nansen’s theory as to, I, 16, 368, 443.
Current, Nansen’s theory, existence of slow current established, II, 711.
Currents, Hydrographic observation, results, II, 711.
Czekanowskia, II, 562.