Explore Siberia’s iron mountains and remote cultures through a detailed, firsthand travel account. This edition uncovers how landscapes, minerals, and people shape a vast, northern frontier.
The narrative follows journeys through Kushva and the surrounding hills, where greenstone, hornblend, and iron ore meet old mining legends. Readers glimpse the scale of ore deposits, the science of magnetism, and how early mining towns grew around rich resources. Along the way, the author records encounters with the Nisovian Ostyaks and Russian traders, sharing observations about daily life, dress, tools, and practical exchanges that illuminate a long history of cross-cultural contact.
- Detailed descriptions of mineral formations, ore distribution, and mining techniques in the Kushva–Blagodat region
- Scientific notes on magnetism, ore composition, and early metalworking experiments
- Insights into Ostyak customs, trade, and the social value of metal ornamentation
- Historical context tying exploration, industry, and cultural exchange to the broader Siberian frontier
Ideal for readers of travel writing, 19th‑century science, and ethnographic observation who want a window into the era’s northern exploration.