Since its discovery in 1596 Spitsbergen - the beautiful island of arctic
Norway - has been the destination of many expeditions from different
nations. Some of the most important research on the island was led by
Gunnar Isachsen. The Norwegian army officer and polar scientist
collected valuable topographic and bathymetric data and became the
founder of his country's systematic research on Spitsbergen. In 1912,
Fritjof Nansen - the popular arctic explorer and scientist - and his
assistant Bjørn Helland-Hansen published a summary of the oceanographic
observations made by Isachsen on his last journey to the island in 1910.
Reprint of the original edition.