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Resin, Alexander Alexandrovich. Ocherk Inorodtsev Russkogo Poberezhiya Tikhogo Okeana [Sketch of the Natives of the Russian Coast of the Pacific]. Saint Petersburg: Typ. of A.S. Suvorin, 1888.

#RA34

1888

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First and only edition. Octavo. [2 – t.p.], 78 pp. Original printed wrappers, neatly restored. THe upper left corner of the wrapper supplied, otherwise a very good copy.

Very Rare Russian imprint as no copies were found in Worldcat. Interesting eye-witness account of a Russian merchant voyage to the North Pacific and the Arctic Ocean around the Chukotka Peninsula, published as an offprint from the “Proceedings of the Russian Geographical Society” (vol. XXIV). Resin, an associate of the Governor General of the new Priamyrskoe [Near the Amur River] Governorate (formed in 1884), was assigned to observe and describe its northern regions. In May-September 1885, he joined the whaling schooner “Sibir” from Vladivostok, which travelled along the Kamchatka coast, reaching as far north as Serdtse-Kamen Cape (a headland on the northeastern coast of Chukotka, about 140 km west of Cape Dezhnev in the Chukchi Sea). The captain planned to reach Wrangel Island, but was forced to turn back by the pack ice. During the return trip, the schooner called at the Ratmanov Island (the Diomedes, Bering Strait) and traded there with the Chukchi. On the way to Providence Bay, the ship visited the Tkachen Bay (Chukotka), where the crew picked up a skull of a deceased Chukchi man, which was later sent to the Academy of Sciences. The book describes the voyage from Vladivostok to the Karaga River (Northern Kamchatka) and further north around the Chukotka Peninsula; the geography, climate, flora & fauna of Kamchatka, native population of the Petropavlovsk district, and the Gizhiginsky district (“chukmari” or Kereks, sedentary Koriaks, Raindeer Koriaks and Chukchi, sedentary Chukchi). A special part is dedicated to the activities of the Americans near Russian Pacific shores (about 30-35 whaling and trading ships call every year, they hunt whales and walruses, bring rum, Winchester guns, tobacco, gun powder, knives, axes, animal traps, pottery, fabrics etc.), the author concludes that their influence to the natives is negative and proposes to establish a permanent coast guard at the Kamchatka and Chukotka shores.

Item #RA34
Price: $1500.00

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