Finally available, a high quality book of the original classic edition of In Northern Mists (Volume 2 of 2) - Arctic Exploration in Early Times. It was previously published by other bona fide publishers, and is now, after many years, back in print. This is a new and freshly published edition of this culturally important work by Fridtjof Nansen, which is now, at last, again available to you. Get the PDF and EPUB NOW as well. Included in your purchase you have In Northern Mists (Volume 2 of 2) - Arctic Exploration in Early Times in EPUB AND PDF format to read on any tablet, eReader, desktop, laptop or smartphone simultaneous - Get it NOW. Enjoy this classic work today. These selected paragraphs distill the contents and give you a quick look inside In Northern Mists (Volume 2 of 2) - Arctic Exploration in Early Times:Look inside the book: 3 The author of the "Grnlendinga-ttr" in the Flateyjarbk is so entirely ignorant of these things that he makes grapes grow in the winter and spring (like the fruits all the year round on the trees in the myth of the fortunate land in the west), and makes Leif's companion Tyrker intoxicate himself by eating grapes (like the Irishmen in the Irish legends), and finally makes Leif cut down vine-trees ("vnvi and fell trees to load his ship, and at last fill the long-boat with grapes (as in the Irish legends); in the voyage of Thorvald Ericson they also collect grapes and vine-trees for a cargo, and Karlsevne took home with him "many costly things: vine-trees, grapes and furs." ...Through finding the connection between Wineland the Good and the Fortunate Isles, and between the latter again and the lands of the departed, the "huldrelands," fairylands, and the lands of the Irish "sd," I arrived at the kindred idea that perhaps Skrling was originally a name for those gnomes or brownies or mythical beings, and that it was these that Are Frode meant by the people who "were inhabiting Wineland"-and further, that when the Icelanders in Greenland found a strange, small, foreign-looking people, with hide canoes and implements of stone, bone and wood, which also looked strange to them, they naturally regarded them as these same Skrlings; and then they may afterwards have found similar people (Eskimo, and perhaps Indians) on the coast of America. ...One of the lays, which describes the poet's disappointment at not getting wine to drink in the new country instead of water, shows that a notion was current that wine was abundant there, and this notion must have come from the myth of the Fortunate Land or Wineland; for, if we confine ourselves to this one saga, the notion cannot have been derived from the single earlier voyage thither that is there mentioned-namely, Leif's: during his short visit he cannot possibly have had time to make wine, even if he had known how to do so. About Fridtjof Nansen, the Author: In November Nansen announced his plan: when the ship passed latitude 83 he and Hjalmar Johansen would leave the ship with the dogs and make for the pole while Fram, under Sverdrup, continued its drift until it emerged from the ice in the North Atlantic. ...75 Whether this still-distant land was Franz Josef Land or a new discovery they did not know-they had only a rough sketch map to guide them.n 3 On 6 August they reached the edge of the ice, where they shot the last of their dogs-they had been killing the weakest regularly since 24 April, to feed the others.