In color. Includes decorative cartouche. Published in Samuel Purchas's Purchas his pilgrimes to accompany Briggs's A treatise of the Northwest passage to the South Sea.
Relief shown by hachures. Possibly from Colton's American Atlas, 1857 edition. "No. 6." Text on verso describing New Brunswick, Nova Scotia, Prince Edward and Newfoundland. In color. 29 x 39 cm.
Shows Hudsons Bay, Baffins Bay, the east coast of Canada including Newfoundland, Iceland, Arctic Europe and Arctic Asia. Shows Greenland as being attached to Canadian Arctic, and includes "Bas" south of Iceland. Incomplete representation of...
This color slide depicts Harold and Roxolana (Roxy) Pomeroy's Newfoundland dogs competing in the Anchorage Dog Show on April 2, 1974. Three dogs stand in a row in front of a table while three men inspect them. There are people in the background...
This color snapshot depicts Harold Pomeroy and his Newfoundland dog, Chancellor, who is harnessed to a two-wheeled cart. The two are standing in front of a building with a car and a van parked outside, likely in Anchorage, Alaska. The photograph...
This photograph depicts Harold Pomeroy sitting in a chair in front of the fireplace at his home in Anchorage, with his two Newfoundland dogs sitting on the floor in front of him. The photograph was taken circa 1980 by an unidentified photographer.
Title taken from back of stereograph. "The story of Peary's attempts to discover the North Pole is a tale of heroism. For twenty years he struggled before he finally succeeded. He made his first trip to Greenland in 1886 when he was a young...
Title taken from caption. View of the harbor and town of Turnavik, Newfoundland, with the S.S. Hope anchored in port. En route to Greenland on Peary's 1896 expedition.
Two separate maps on one sheet. Nautical chart shows Eclipse Harbor, Labrador, with soundings, surveyed by Lieut. Comdg. A. Murray; sketch map includes map of a segment of the coast of Labrador and seven views of locations along the coast of...
United States atlas: maps and charts accompanying the case and counter case of the United States, by the Alaskan Boundary Tribunal, and published by the United States Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C., 1904.