stefansson-wrangel-09-27-001

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Samara Cary at Jun 07, 2024 07:30 PM

stefansson-wrangel-09-27-001

48 both are true 47 5 1 - ✓ 5 2 - ? CHAPTER V The Planning of the Expedition The sailing of our expedition for [[Wrangel Island (Russia)|Wrangell Island]] in September, 1921, was due to the strong conviction that the world is at the dawn of a revolution in transportation ideas similar to that initiated heard of? heralded by Copernicus and Columbus. When the nations of [[Europe]] discovered four hundred years ago that the earth was round, they found it necessary to modify not only their intellectual concepts but also their diplomacy, their foreign policy and their commercial endeavors. It appeared to us that a similar, if less conspicuous, change would come when the nations realized that the earth is round from north to south from the point of view of the transportation engineer as well as from that of the astronomer and geodecist sp?. Nations that had been far from each other as measured from east to west were about to become neighbours across the northern sea. On a Mercator's map the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] looks like an area of vast extent, and seems to be located between continents on the south and nothingness on the north. But on a map which has the equator for circumference and the [[North Pole]] for center, the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] looks like a small hub from which the land masses radiate like the spokes of a great wheel. It may be said that on a spherical world any point is central if we choose to consider it so. Mathematically that is right, but from the human point of view it That is specious reasoning, because for we inhabit the land and not the sea. It is possible to determine the center of distribution of the land masses. While this does not coincide with the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]], it does fall so near the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] that the validity of our figure remains undisturbed. The polar sea does hold a position analogous to that of the hub as related to the rest of a wheel. Umiak illustration There must have been a time, before navigation began, when from the practical point of view the Mediterranean was a barrier between the peoples of [[Africa]] and [[Europe]]. But navigation developed through slow centuries. We cannot say in which

48 [both are true]

47

5 1 - ✓
5 2 - ?

CHAPTER V
The Planning of the Expedition

The sailing of our expedition for Wrangell Island in September,
1921, was due to the strong conviction that the world is at the dawn of a
revolution in transportation ideas similar to that initiated heard of? heralded by Copernicus and
Columbus. When the nations of Europe discovered four hundred years ago that the
earth was round, they found it necessary to modify not only their intellectual
concepts but also their diplomacy, their foreign policy and their commercial
endeavors. It appeared to us that a similar, if less conspicuous, change would
come when the nations realized that the earth is round from north to south from
the point of view of the transportation engineer as well as from that of the
astronomer and geodecist sp?. Nations that had been far from each other as measured
from east to west were about to become neighbours across the northern sea.

On a Mercator's map the Arctic looks like an area of vast extent,
and seems to be located between continents on the south and nothingness on the north. But on a
map which has the equator for circumference and the North Pole for center, the
Arctic looks like a small hub from which the land masses radiate like the spokes
of a great wheel. It may be said that on a spherical world any point is central
if we choose to consider it so. Mathematically that is right, but from the human point of view it That is specious reasoning, because for we inhabit
the land and not the sea. It is possible to determine the center of distribution
of the land masses. While this does not coincide with the Arctic, it does fall
so near the Arctic that the validity of our figure remains undisturbed. The
polar sea does hold a position analogous to that of the hub as related to the
rest of a wheel.

[Umiak]
illustration

There must have been a time, before navigation began, when from
the practical point of view
the Mediterranean was a barrier between the peoples of Africa and
Europe. But navigation developed through slow centuries. We cannot say in which

stefansson-wrangel-09-27-001

48 both are true 47 5 1 - ✓ 5 2 - ? CHAPTER V The Planning of the Expedition The sailing of our expedition for [[Wrangel Island (Russia)|Wrangell Island]] in September, 1921, was due to the strong conviction that the world is at the dawn of a revolution in transportation ideas similar to that initiated heard of? heralded by Copernicus and Columbus. When the nations of [[Europe]] discovered four hundred years ago that the earth was round, they found it necessary to modify not only their intellectual concepts but also their diplomacy, their foreign policy and their commercial endeavors. It appeared to us that a similar, if less conspicuous, change would come when the nations realized that the earth is round from north to south from the point of view of the transportation engineer as well as from that of the astronomer and geodecist sp?. Nations that had been far from each other as measured from east to west were about to become neighbours across the northern sea. On a Mercator's map the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] looks like an area of vast extent, and seems to be located between continents on the south and nothingness on the north. But on a map which has the equator for circumference and the [[North Pole]] for center, the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] looks like a small hub from which the land masses radiate like the spokes of a great wheel. It may be said that on a spherical world any point is central if we choose to consider it so. Mathematically that is right, but from the human point of view it That is specious reasoning, because for we inhabit the land and not the sea. It is possible to determine the center of distribution of the land masses. While this does not coincide with the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]], it does fall so near the [[Arctic regions|Arctic]] that the validity of our figure remains undisturbed. The polar sea does hold a position analogous to that of the hub as related to the rest of a wheel. Umiak illustration There must have been a time, before navigation began, when from the practical point of view the Mediterranean was a barrier between the peoples of [[Africa]] and [[Europe]]. But navigation developed through slow centuries. We cannot say in which

48 [both are true]

47

5 1 - ✓
5 2 - ?

CHAPTER V
The Planning of the Expedition

The sailing of our expedition for Wrangell Island in September,
1921, was due to the strong conviction that the world is at the dawn of a
revolution in transportation ideas similar to that initiated heard of? heralded by Copernicus and
Columbus. When the nations of Europe discovered four hundred years ago that the
earth was round, they found it necessary to modify not only their intellectual
concepts but also their diplomacy, their foreign policy and their commercial
endeavors. It appeared to us that a similar, if less conspicuous, change would
come when the nations realized that the earth is round from north to south from
the point of view of the transportation engineer as well as from that of the
astronomer and geodecist sp?. Nations that had been far from each other as measured
from east to west were about to become neighbours across the northern sea.

On a Mercator's map the Arctic looks like an area of vast extent,
and seems to be located between continents on the south and nothingness on the north. But on a
map which has the equator for circumference and the North Pole for center, the
Arctic looks like a small hub from which the land masses radiate like the spokes
of a great wheel. It may be said that on a spherical world any point is central
if we choose to consider it so. Mathematically that is right, but from the human point of view it That is specious reasoning, because for we inhabit
the land and not the sea. It is possible to determine the center of distribution
of the land masses. While this does not coincide with the Arctic, it does fall
so near the Arctic that the validity of our figure remains undisturbed. The
polar sea does hold a position analogous to that of the hub as related to the
rest of a wheel.

[Umiak]
illustration

There must have been a time, before navigation began, when from
the practical point of view
the Mediterranean was a barrier between the peoples of Africa and
Europe. But navigation developed through slow centuries. We cannot say in which