s of hill".
227 "ecstacy" corrected to "ecstasy".
230 "68" changed to "66": 3 days ago they were at 67 deg. 10', heading
SW; the northernmost point of Great Bear Lake is at about
67 deg..
232 "Thursday 24th" changed to "Thursday, 24th" to be consistent with
other sidenotes.
"I I therefore embarked" changed to "I therefore embarked";
repeat was across line break.
237 "Krusensten" changed to "Krusenstern" since the latter is used
in the rest of the text.
240 "indvalids" corrected to "invalids".
244 "extrordinary" corrected to "extraordinary"
"Corona" corrected to "Coronae".
245 "+30.5 degrees." changed to "+30.5 degrees,".
246 "re-appearance" corrected to "reappearance".
257 "house changed to "House".
261 "depots" changed to "depots".
268 "sulphat" corrected to "sulphate": "crystals of sulphate of
iron".
271 "moses" corrected to "mosses": "is covered a foot deep, or
more, by mosses".
274 "off" corrected to "of": "at the bottom of the cliff".
278 "sandsone" corrected to "sandstone".
279 "sand-stones" corrected to "sandstones".
"oscasionally" corrected to "occasionally".
280 "clay-stone" to "claystone".
283 "long;" changed to "long.;".
284 "formation" corrected to "formations": "similar formations
which occupy".
285 "limetone" corrected to "limestone".
290 "swells gently into a hill several feet high"; should this be
"several hundred feet high"?
"Horn Mountain" changed to "Horn Mountains".
"sienities" changed to "sienites".
293 "in some, reaches" changed to "in some reaches,".
Footnote 36: "very-fine grained" changed to "very fine-grained.
295 "specifind" corrected to "specified".
"sphoeroidalis" corrected to "sphaeroidalis".
"corbrash" corrected to "cornbrash".
296 Removed spurious opening quotation mark before "ramparts",
thereby balancing quotation marks.
297 "terrebratula" corrected to "terebratula".
303 "coasted" changed to "coated".
308 "othoceratites" changed to "orthoceratites".
318 "Sowbery" changed to "Sowerby".
End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Narrative of a Second Expedition to
the Shores of the Polar Sea, by John Franklin and John
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