[[11]]
In vol. I, page
196, Nansen writes:
"It is a peculiar phenomenon,—this
dead water. We had at present a better
opportunity of studying it than we
desired. It occurs where a surface
layer of fresh water rests upon
the salt water of the sea, and this
fresh water is carried along with the
ship gliding on the heavier sea
beneath it as if on a fixed foundation.
The difference between the two strata
was in this case so great that while
we had drinking water on the surface,
the water we got from the bottom cock
of the engine-room was far too salt
to be used for the boiler."
[[12]]
In volume II,
pages 18 and 19,
Nansen writes about the inclination
of the needle. Speaking of Johnson,
his aide: "One day—it was November
24—he came in to supper a
little after six o'clock, quite alarmed,
and said: 'There has just been a
singular inclination of the needle in
twenty-four degrees. And remarkably
enough, its northern extremity
pointed to the east.'"
We again find in Peary's first voyage
—page 67,—the following: "It
had been observed that from the moment
they had entered Lancaster
Sound, the motion of the compass
needle was very sluggish, and both
this and its deviation increased as
they progressed to the westward, and
continued to do so in descending this
inlet. Having reached latitude 73
degrees, they witnessed for the first
time the curious phenomenon of the
directive power of the needle becoming
so weak as to be completely overcome
by the attraction of the ship, so
that the needle might now be said to
point to the north pole of the ship."
[[13]]
Nansen, on
page 394, says: "Today another
noteworthy thing happened, which was
that about mid-day we saw the sun, or
to be more correct, an image of the sun,
for it was only a mirage. A peculiar
impression was produced by the sight
of that glowing fire lit just above the
outermost edge of the ice. According
to the enthusiastic descriptions
given by many Arctic travelers of the
first appearance of this god of life
after the long winter night, the
impression ought to be one of jubilant
excitement; but it was not so in my
case. We had not expected to see it
for some days yet, so that my feeling
was rather one of pain, of disappointment
that we must have drifted farther
south than we thought. So itwas with
pleasure I soon discovered that it could
not be the sun itself. The mirage was at
first a flattened-out, glowing red, streak
of fire on the horizon; later there were
two streaks, the one above the other, with
a dark space between; and from the maintop
I could see four, or even five, such
horizontal lines directly over one
another, all of equal length, as if one
could only imagine a square, dull-red
sun, with horizontal dark streaks
across it."
[[14]]
Peary's first voyage,
pages 69 and 70, says:
"On reaching Sir Byam Martin's Island, the
nearest to Melville Island, the latitude
of the place of observation was 75
degrees -09' -23", and
the longitude 103 degrees -44'
-37"; the dip of the magnetic needle
88 degrees -25' -56" west in the
longitude of 91 degrees -48',
where the last observations on the shore had
been made, to 165 degrees -50' -09",
east, at their present station, so that
we had," says Peary, "in sailing over
the space included between these
two meridians, crossed immediately
northward of the magnetic pole, and
had undoubtedly passed over one of
those spots upon the globe where the
needle would have been found to vary
180 degrees, or in other words, where
the North Pole would have pointed to
the south."
[[15]]
Asiatic
Mythology,—page 240,
"Paradise found"—from
translation by Sayce, in a book called
"Records of the Past," we were told of
a "dwelling" which "the gods created
for" the first human beings,—a
dwelling in which they "became great"
and "increased in numbers," and the
location of which is described in words
exactly corresponding to those of
Iranian, Indian, Chinese, Eddaic and
Aztecan literature; namely, "in the
center of the earth."—Warren.
[[16]]
"According to
all procurable
data, that spot at the era of man's
appearance upon the stage was in the now
lost 'Miocene continent,' which then
surrounded the Arctic Pole. That in
that true, original Eden some of the
early generations of men attained to
a stature and longevity unequaled in
any countries known to postdiluvian
history is by no means scientifically
incredible."—Wm. F. Warren,
"Paradise Found," p. 284.
[[17]]
"And the Lord
God planted a garden, and out of the
ground made the Lord God to grow every
tree that is pleasant to the sight and
good for food."—The Book of Genesis.