A dental explorer or sickle probe is an instrument in dentistry commonly used in the dental armamentarium. A sharp point at the end of the explorer is used to enhance tactile sensation.
In the past it was usual for dentists to use the explorer to determine the presence of toothdecay on tooth enamel. Some dental professionals have questioned this practice in the first decade of the twenty-first century. Since enamel is demineralized in the early stages of tooth decay, the use of an explorer opens a cavity in the enamel where none existed previously. Instead, they argue that fluoride and oral hygiene should be used to remineralize the enamel and prevent it from decaying further. This debate still continues because sometimes decay can be difficult to diagnose without tactile verification. Additionally, radiographs and other products designed to identify decay (such as measuring fluorescence from a laser) help the dental professional make a final diagnosis of tooth decay.
There are various types of explorers, though the most common one is the No. 23 explorer, which is also known as a "shepherd's hook". Other types include the 3CH (also known as "cowhorn" or "pigtail") and No. 17 explorers, which are useful for the interproximal areas between teeth.
After inquiring about the cost of chartering one of the Colorado River steamboats of George Alonzo Johnson, and finding their rates too high, Lt. Ives ordered a steamboat built in 1857:
After being transported by the Panama Railroad across the Isthmus to the Pacific Ocean the Explorer was shipped again by steamship from Panama City up to San Francisco. From there expedition sailed with the parts of the steamboat on the deck of the schoonerMonterey to the Colorado River Delta where it arrived November 30. There Ives oversaw its reassembly and launch on December 30, 1857 at Robinson's Landing, Baja California. David C. Robinson, owner of the landing and a pilot for George Alonzo Johnson, was made captain of the boat.
After Ives used the Explorer to ascend the Colorado River he sent it back to Fort Yuma with Richardson. There it was put up for auction and sold to George A. Johnson for $1000. He had its engine and paddle wheel removed and used it for a barge to carry firewood to steamboat landings. In 1864 it broke free from it moorings at Pilot Knob and was carried away 60 miles down river into the Delta where it sank in a slough, sometimes seen by passing steamers, until the river moved away from the location and it was hidden by the delta foliage and lost. Its wreck was found in 1929, by a survey party, in a dried up slough miles away from the new course of the river. A mere skeleton remained, its iron plates long ago removed to make comales for baking tortillas.
Explorers program, the United States' first successful attempt to launch an artificial satellite and the program continues to launch satellites that provdide scientific investigations from space
Mendocino is the second album by country rock group The Sir Douglas Quintet, released in April 1969 on Smash Records. The release of the album was expedited as the result of the top 40 success of the title song. It reached its peak at number 81 on the Billboard 200 charts. Neon Records re-released the album in 2001 and 2008.
Clip of crewmen attempting to winch the sternwheeler "Nenana" free from a sandbar. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. The audio is from the Alaska & Polar Regions Collections & Archives, Oral History Collection.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” sectio...
published: 14 Sep 2012
Sternwheeler Yukon
Clip of the sternwheeler "Yukon" traveling upriver. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archi...
published: 05 Dec 2012
€2.5M Steel Long-Range TRAWLER YACHT For Sale (And Charter!) | M/Y Beleza
This stunning long-range trawler yacht is currently for sale and charter! She is a great live-aboard that is ready and willing to take you on your next far-flung adventure!
► Become a member of my 'virtual crew': https://bit.ly/join_my_crew
► Check out my nautical stores on Amazon:
U.S. Store: http://bit.ly/3xa9izu
U.K. Store: https://amzn.to/3YAtLt1
Canadian Store: https://amzn.to/3Z9Pubp
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► For business enquiries: [email protected] or DM me on Instagram
FIND OUT MORE: https://bit.ly/Inace_86_Beleza
published: 04 Apr 2023
Joseph Christmas Ives and the Steam Boat Explorer - Steam Culture
Today on Steam Culture, Brent talks about a steamboat that was used to help ferry supplies up and down the Colorado river. Trying to move wagons through the Grand Canyon was proving to be a very difficult if not impossible process so Joseph Ives came up with an idea to use the river that flows through it. Only with the power of steam was the boat powerful enough to go against the strong current of the Colorado River.
Key Terms:
Steam Boat Explorer
Joseph Christmas Ives
Stern Wheeler
Fort Yuma
Steam Education
WARE is All Ways Steam!
Remember the value of your boiler system, maintain it properly and save cost in the future.
Need Steam Boiler Parts quick? Check out our online boiler parts store, www.BoilerWAREhouse.com. +40,000 parts in stock!
502-968-2211 - Need a Boiler Rental? We off...
published: 26 Mar 2021
We explored one of the most haunted hotels in the USA
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published: 25 Jan 2023
The Awful Conflagration of the Steamboat Lexington (1840)
If you enjoyed this video, please consider joining my Patreon to help create more videos like this! https://www.patreon.com/PartTimeExplorer
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In 1840, the steamboat Lexington of the New Jersey Steamship Navigation and Transportation Company caught fire due to overheated boilers, burned up and sank in what would be the worst steamboat disaster in the History of Long Island Sound. As with several of the topics we've covered, this one has never before been properly told.
published: 08 Jan 2022
The W T Preston Snagboat
The W. T. Preston snagboat cleared the Skagit River and other waterways of snags and debris from the 1930s to the 1980s. Take a guided or self-guided tour. It's part of the Maritime Heritage Center in Anacortes.
For more videos on Skagit County, see Skagit County Explorer (http://www.skagitcountyexplorer.com).
published: 16 Dec 2020
DJI Mavic Air 2 | 4k | Part 2: Wreck of the Ghostly Sternwheeler Gleaner - Yukon's Carcross
We conclude our tour of Carcross by flying you over a relic of Yukon's gold rush history - the wreck of the Sternwheeler "Gleaner." Why call it a ghostly ship? Because we had strange, unexplained signal interference and the controller completely lost contact with the drone at one point when we flew over the wreck. Coincidence?
Built in 1899 near Carcross, Yukon, the 34.44 metre | 113 foot long and 7.5 metre | 24.6 foot wide Gleaner was a Klondike Gold Rush era transport ship. It moved up to 135.2 metric tonnes | 149.05 tons of gold and silver ore from the gold fields and was licensed to carry up to 150 passengers. The boat was retired in 1932 to make way for larger and newer sternwheeler vessels; it was scuttled on the beach at Carcross shortly afterward. Nearly a century later, the ship'...
published: 13 Aug 2021
Exploring Carcross, Yukon including Dog Sledding in Canada
This time we visit Carcross, formally Caribou Crossing and go dog sledding in Canada with Alaskan Huskys.
An hours drive from Whitehorse, Carcross is a sleepy quiet First Nation town in winter and a hive of activity in the summer with the White pass Yukon Route railway terminating here from Skagway Alaska. Join us for a winter tour around the town with some history about the gold rush, followed by unforgettable Alaskan Husky Dog Sledding in the wonderful landscape of Canada.
We visited www.alayuk.com for the husky sledding.
Chapters:-
0:00 Intro
0:42 Alaska Highway
1:14 Carcross
3:32 First Nation People
3:56 Skookum Jim Mason
4:20 Caribou Hotel
6:28 SS Tushi
9:06 Husky Dog Sledding
❤ Please support our channel in one of the following ways:
1. Subscribe and click the notifications bell. ...
published: 22 Jan 2022
Historic Shipwrecks Abandoned on the River | Destination Adventure
The Paddlewheel Graveyard, is a fascinating spot because it is home run historical site, but it's almost forgotten by the locals. I understand how this can happen though. Often times, the things in our own backyard are the ones that get overlooked, or lose their interest. Lucky for me, I was told about this location long before arriving in Dawson City, and let me tell you it did not disappoint.
This location along the Yukon River, was once a ship yard, and is now home to the Ship Graveyard. As time goes on, technology advances and industry shifts, we must also shift with it. When these ships were pulled onto shore here, there was little to nothing wrong with them, other than the fact they were no longer needed. It is a shame really, because these much have been beautiful boats in t...
Clip of crewmen attempting to winch the sternwheeler "Nenana" free from a sandbar. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was ...
Clip of crewmen attempting to winch the sternwheeler "Nenana" free from a sandbar. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. The audio is from the Alaska & Polar Regions Collections & Archives, Oral History Collection.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Clip of crewmen attempting to winch the sternwheeler "Nenana" free from a sandbar. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. The audio is from the Alaska & Polar Regions Collections & Archives, Oral History Collection.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Clip of the sternwheeler "Yukon" traveling upriver. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and...
Clip of the sternwheeler "Yukon" traveling upriver. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Clip of the sternwheeler "Yukon" traveling upriver. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
This stunning long-range trawler yacht is currently for sale and charter! She is a great live-aboard that is ready and willing to take you on your next far-flun...
This stunning long-range trawler yacht is currently for sale and charter! She is a great live-aboard that is ready and willing to take you on your next far-flung adventure!
► Become a member of my 'virtual crew': https://bit.ly/join_my_crew
► Check out my nautical stores on Amazon:
U.S. Store: http://bit.ly/3xa9izu
U.K. Store: https://amzn.to/3YAtLt1
Canadian Store: https://amzn.to/3Z9Pubp
► Follow me on Instagram: https://bit.ly/Yacht_Buoy
► For business enquiries: [email protected] or DM me on Instagram
FIND OUT MORE: https://bit.ly/Inace_86_Beleza
This stunning long-range trawler yacht is currently for sale and charter! She is a great live-aboard that is ready and willing to take you on your next far-flung adventure!
► Become a member of my 'virtual crew': https://bit.ly/join_my_crew
► Check out my nautical stores on Amazon:
U.S. Store: http://bit.ly/3xa9izu
U.K. Store: https://amzn.to/3YAtLt1
Canadian Store: https://amzn.to/3Z9Pubp
► Follow me on Instagram: https://bit.ly/Yacht_Buoy
► For business enquiries: [email protected] or DM me on Instagram
FIND OUT MORE: https://bit.ly/Inace_86_Beleza
Today on Steam Culture, Brent talks about a steamboat that was used to help ferry supplies up and down the Colorado river. Trying to move wagons through the Gra...
Today on Steam Culture, Brent talks about a steamboat that was used to help ferry supplies up and down the Colorado river. Trying to move wagons through the Grand Canyon was proving to be a very difficult if not impossible process so Joseph Ives came up with an idea to use the river that flows through it. Only with the power of steam was the boat powerful enough to go against the strong current of the Colorado River.
Key Terms:
Steam Boat Explorer
Joseph Christmas Ives
Stern Wheeler
Fort Yuma
Steam Education
WARE is All Ways Steam!
Remember the value of your boiler system, maintain it properly and save cost in the future.
Need Steam Boiler Parts quick? Check out our online boiler parts store, www.BoilerWAREhouse.com. +40,000 parts in stock!
502-968-2211 - Need a Boiler Rental? We offer nationwide boiler rental. Get a quote within an hour!
4steamware.com - Purchase clever, steam industry themed t-shirts. All proceeds go to Kosair Charities.
YouTube Channel: youtube.com/wareboilers
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WareInc
Twitter: twitter.com/wareinc
Website: www.wareinc.com
Today on Steam Culture, Brent talks about a steamboat that was used to help ferry supplies up and down the Colorado river. Trying to move wagons through the Grand Canyon was proving to be a very difficult if not impossible process so Joseph Ives came up with an idea to use the river that flows through it. Only with the power of steam was the boat powerful enough to go against the strong current of the Colorado River.
Key Terms:
Steam Boat Explorer
Joseph Christmas Ives
Stern Wheeler
Fort Yuma
Steam Education
WARE is All Ways Steam!
Remember the value of your boiler system, maintain it properly and save cost in the future.
Need Steam Boiler Parts quick? Check out our online boiler parts store, www.BoilerWAREhouse.com. +40,000 parts in stock!
502-968-2211 - Need a Boiler Rental? We offer nationwide boiler rental. Get a quote within an hour!
4steamware.com - Purchase clever, steam industry themed t-shirts. All proceeds go to Kosair Charities.
YouTube Channel: youtube.com/wareboilers
Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/WareInc
Twitter: twitter.com/wareinc
Website: www.wareinc.com
MERCHHH!!!
https://sturnioloclothing.com
Follow us on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/sturniolo.triplets
Follow us on TikTok : qhttps://www.tiktok.com/...
MERCHHH!!!
https://sturnioloclothing.com
Follow us on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/sturniolo.triplets
Follow us on TikTok : qhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sturniolo.triplets
Follow us on Twitch : https://www.twitch.tv/sturniolos
Follow Chris on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/christophersturniolo
Follow Chris on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.sturniolo
Follow Nick on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/nicolassturniolo
Follow Nick on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@nicolassturniolo
Follow Matt on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/heyitsmatthew___
Follow Matt on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@mattsturniolo
Follow Yung Pleit on instagram https://www.instagram.com/yungpleit
Follow Yung Pleit on Tiktok https://www.tiktok.com/@yungpleit
Follow Madi on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/madifilipowicz
Follow Madi on TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@madifilipowicz
Follow Lxst on all socials https://linktr.ee/Lxstmusic
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Sturniolos Live youtube (Twitch streams) https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCufNiOm4agzDlWvwJoWPw2Q
MERCHHH!!!
https://sturnioloclothing.com
Follow us on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/sturniolo.triplets
Follow us on TikTok : qhttps://www.tiktok.com/@sturniolo.triplets
Follow us on Twitch : https://www.twitch.tv/sturniolos
Follow Chris on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/christophersturniolo
Follow Chris on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@chris.sturniolo
Follow Nick on Instagram : https://www.instagram.com/nicolassturniolo
Follow Nick on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@nicolassturniolo
Follow Matt on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/heyitsmatthew___
Follow Matt on TikTok : https://www.tiktok.com/@mattsturniolo
Follow Yung Pleit on instagram https://www.instagram.com/yungpleit
Follow Yung Pleit on Tiktok https://www.tiktok.com/@yungpleit
Follow Madi on Instagram https://www.instagram.com/madifilipowicz
Follow Madi on TikTok https://www.tiktok.com/@madifilipowicz
Follow Lxst on all socials https://linktr.ee/Lxstmusic
Follow YSB Tril on all socials https://hoo.be/ysbtril
Twitch https://www.twitch.tv/sturniolos
Sturniolos Live youtube (Twitch streams) https://www.youtube.com/channel/UCufNiOm4agzDlWvwJoWPw2Q
If you enjoyed this video, please consider joining my Patreon to help create more videos like this! https://www.patreon.com/PartTimeExplorer
To give a one-time ...
If you enjoyed this video, please consider joining my Patreon to help create more videos like this! https://www.patreon.com/PartTimeExplorer
To give a one-time tip, please visit: https://www.historicalfx.com/support
In 1840, the steamboat Lexington of the New Jersey Steamship Navigation and Transportation Company caught fire due to overheated boilers, burned up and sank in what would be the worst steamboat disaster in the History of Long Island Sound. As with several of the topics we've covered, this one has never before been properly told.
If you enjoyed this video, please consider joining my Patreon to help create more videos like this! https://www.patreon.com/PartTimeExplorer
To give a one-time tip, please visit: https://www.historicalfx.com/support
In 1840, the steamboat Lexington of the New Jersey Steamship Navigation and Transportation Company caught fire due to overheated boilers, burned up and sank in what would be the worst steamboat disaster in the History of Long Island Sound. As with several of the topics we've covered, this one has never before been properly told.
The W. T. Preston snagboat cleared the Skagit River and other waterways of snags and debris from the 1930s to the 1980s. Take a guided or self-guided tour. It's...
The W. T. Preston snagboat cleared the Skagit River and other waterways of snags and debris from the 1930s to the 1980s. Take a guided or self-guided tour. It's part of the Maritime Heritage Center in Anacortes.
For more videos on Skagit County, see Skagit County Explorer (http://www.skagitcountyexplorer.com).
The W. T. Preston snagboat cleared the Skagit River and other waterways of snags and debris from the 1930s to the 1980s. Take a guided or self-guided tour. It's part of the Maritime Heritage Center in Anacortes.
For more videos on Skagit County, see Skagit County Explorer (http://www.skagitcountyexplorer.com).
We conclude our tour of Carcross by flying you over a relic of Yukon's gold rush history - the wreck of the Sternwheeler "Gleaner." Why call it a ghostly ship? ...
We conclude our tour of Carcross by flying you over a relic of Yukon's gold rush history - the wreck of the Sternwheeler "Gleaner." Why call it a ghostly ship? Because we had strange, unexplained signal interference and the controller completely lost contact with the drone at one point when we flew over the wreck. Coincidence?
Built in 1899 near Carcross, Yukon, the 34.44 metre | 113 foot long and 7.5 metre | 24.6 foot wide Gleaner was a Klondike Gold Rush era transport ship. It moved up to 135.2 metric tonnes | 149.05 tons of gold and silver ore from the gold fields and was licensed to carry up to 150 passengers. The boat was retired in 1932 to make way for larger and newer sternwheeler vessels; it was scuttled on the beach at Carcross shortly afterward. Nearly a century later, the ship's bones are still visible during low water levels. Let's fly!
----------
Click the link below to learn more about this historic gold rush era boat (website is in English).
• Link to ExploreNorth - The Sternwheeler Gleaner: https://explorenorth.com/library/ships/gleaner.html
----------
#bravewilderness #yukonwild #upnorth
We conclude our tour of Carcross by flying you over a relic of Yukon's gold rush history - the wreck of the Sternwheeler "Gleaner." Why call it a ghostly ship? Because we had strange, unexplained signal interference and the controller completely lost contact with the drone at one point when we flew over the wreck. Coincidence?
Built in 1899 near Carcross, Yukon, the 34.44 metre | 113 foot long and 7.5 metre | 24.6 foot wide Gleaner was a Klondike Gold Rush era transport ship. It moved up to 135.2 metric tonnes | 149.05 tons of gold and silver ore from the gold fields and was licensed to carry up to 150 passengers. The boat was retired in 1932 to make way for larger and newer sternwheeler vessels; it was scuttled on the beach at Carcross shortly afterward. Nearly a century later, the ship's bones are still visible during low water levels. Let's fly!
----------
Click the link below to learn more about this historic gold rush era boat (website is in English).
• Link to ExploreNorth - The Sternwheeler Gleaner: https://explorenorth.com/library/ships/gleaner.html
----------
#bravewilderness #yukonwild #upnorth
This time we visit Carcross, formally Caribou Crossing and go dog sledding in Canada with Alaskan Huskys.
An hours drive from Whitehorse, Carcross is a sleepy q...
This time we visit Carcross, formally Caribou Crossing and go dog sledding in Canada with Alaskan Huskys.
An hours drive from Whitehorse, Carcross is a sleepy quiet First Nation town in winter and a hive of activity in the summer with the White pass Yukon Route railway terminating here from Skagway Alaska. Join us for a winter tour around the town with some history about the gold rush, followed by unforgettable Alaskan Husky Dog Sledding in the wonderful landscape of Canada.
We visited www.alayuk.com for the husky sledding.
Chapters:-
0:00 Intro
0:42 Alaska Highway
1:14 Carcross
3:32 First Nation People
3:56 Skookum Jim Mason
4:20 Caribou Hotel
6:28 SS Tushi
9:06 Husky Dog Sledding
❤ Please support our channel in one of the following ways:
1. Subscribe and click the notifications bell.
Subscribe to channel https://www.youtube.com/memoryseekers?sub_confirmation=1
2. Buys us a coffee https://ko-fi.com/memoryseekers
3. You can also make a one-off support donation through Paypal:
https://paypal.me/memoryseekers
⚑ Follow our travel adventures on social:
Instagram: MemorySeekers
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Tiktok: Memoryseekers
🗺 Web: www.memoryseekers.net Head over to our website for more photos and information about our travels.
🎹 Like the music we use?
We get it from these 2 sites below:-
Artlist.io - Get FREE additional months subscription using our link https://artlist.io/Simon-312477
Epidemic Sound - Get 30 days FREE use of Epidemic Sounds using our link https://www.epidemicsound.com/referral/6a40j0/
We receive 1 free month of access for any referrals
📷 If you'd like to know what equipment we use, see and buy our latest top kit for YouTubing and Travel Essentials in our Amazon shop:- https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/memoryseekers
If you buy from these links we will receive a small commission but you won't pay a penny extra.
With thanks to www.google.com and google earth for use of images
#yukon #Visityukon #Carcross
This time we visit Carcross, formally Caribou Crossing and go dog sledding in Canada with Alaskan Huskys.
An hours drive from Whitehorse, Carcross is a sleepy quiet First Nation town in winter and a hive of activity in the summer with the White pass Yukon Route railway terminating here from Skagway Alaska. Join us for a winter tour around the town with some history about the gold rush, followed by unforgettable Alaskan Husky Dog Sledding in the wonderful landscape of Canada.
We visited www.alayuk.com for the husky sledding.
Chapters:-
0:00 Intro
0:42 Alaska Highway
1:14 Carcross
3:32 First Nation People
3:56 Skookum Jim Mason
4:20 Caribou Hotel
6:28 SS Tushi
9:06 Husky Dog Sledding
❤ Please support our channel in one of the following ways:
1. Subscribe and click the notifications bell.
Subscribe to channel https://www.youtube.com/memoryseekers?sub_confirmation=1
2. Buys us a coffee https://ko-fi.com/memoryseekers
3. You can also make a one-off support donation through Paypal:
https://paypal.me/memoryseekers
⚑ Follow our travel adventures on social:
Instagram: MemorySeekers
Facebook: MemorySeekersUK
Pinterest: Memoryseekersuk
Twitter: Memoryseekers
Tiktok: Memoryseekers
🗺 Web: www.memoryseekers.net Head over to our website for more photos and information about our travels.
🎹 Like the music we use?
We get it from these 2 sites below:-
Artlist.io - Get FREE additional months subscription using our link https://artlist.io/Simon-312477
Epidemic Sound - Get 30 days FREE use of Epidemic Sounds using our link https://www.epidemicsound.com/referral/6a40j0/
We receive 1 free month of access for any referrals
📷 If you'd like to know what equipment we use, see and buy our latest top kit for YouTubing and Travel Essentials in our Amazon shop:- https://www.amazon.co.uk/shop/memoryseekers
If you buy from these links we will receive a small commission but you won't pay a penny extra.
With thanks to www.google.com and google earth for use of images
#yukon #Visityukon #Carcross
The Paddlewheel Graveyard, is a fascinating spot because it is home run historical site, but it's almost forgotten by the locals. I understand how this can hap...
The Paddlewheel Graveyard, is a fascinating spot because it is home run historical site, but it's almost forgotten by the locals. I understand how this can happen though. Often times, the things in our own backyard are the ones that get overlooked, or lose their interest. Lucky for me, I was told about this location long before arriving in Dawson City, and let me tell you it did not disappoint.
This location along the Yukon River, was once a ship yard, and is now home to the Ship Graveyard. As time goes on, technology advances and industry shifts, we must also shift with it. When these ships were pulled onto shore here, there was little to nothing wrong with them, other than the fact they were no longer needed. It is a shame really, because these much have been beautiful boats in the day, but that is the way things go. Nothing lasts forever, but I am happy to have had the opportunity to see these before they are lost forever.
I want to thank Alex, for making the time to fit me in for an interview. This location was surprisingly difficult to secure a reliable interview, but it managed to happen literally hours before I had to leave Dawson City. I am also excited to have seen so many people in the comments asking for this location, so I hope you are all happy to see this one.
A big thank you, as always, to my Patrons. I never had imagined I could make it this far north over the summer, and I owe that comfort to you guys and gals. Thank you!
If you wish to help the channel, and see places further and more remote, please consider joining one of the tiers on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/DestinationAdventure
The Paddlewheel Graveyard, is a fascinating spot because it is home run historical site, but it's almost forgotten by the locals. I understand how this can happen though. Often times, the things in our own backyard are the ones that get overlooked, or lose their interest. Lucky for me, I was told about this location long before arriving in Dawson City, and let me tell you it did not disappoint.
This location along the Yukon River, was once a ship yard, and is now home to the Ship Graveyard. As time goes on, technology advances and industry shifts, we must also shift with it. When these ships were pulled onto shore here, there was little to nothing wrong with them, other than the fact they were no longer needed. It is a shame really, because these much have been beautiful boats in the day, but that is the way things go. Nothing lasts forever, but I am happy to have had the opportunity to see these before they are lost forever.
I want to thank Alex, for making the time to fit me in for an interview. This location was surprisingly difficult to secure a reliable interview, but it managed to happen literally hours before I had to leave Dawson City. I am also excited to have seen so many people in the comments asking for this location, so I hope you are all happy to see this one.
A big thank you, as always, to my Patrons. I never had imagined I could make it this far north over the summer, and I owe that comfort to you guys and gals. Thank you!
If you wish to help the channel, and see places further and more remote, please consider joining one of the tiers on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/DestinationAdventure
Clip of crewmen attempting to winch the sternwheeler "Nenana" free from a sandbar. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks. The audio is from the Alaska & Polar Regions Collections & Archives, Oral History Collection.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
Clip of the sternwheeler "Yukon" traveling upriver. This clip is from the Geist Collection. Otto William Geist (1888 – 1963) was an archaeologist, explorer, and naturalist who worked for many years in the circumpolar north and for the University of Alaska in Fairbanks. (B&W/Silent/16mm film).
This film sequence is an excerpt of AAF-53 from the Geist Collection held by the Alaska Film Archives, a unit of the Alaska & Polar Regions Department in the Elmer E. Rasmuson Library, University of Alaska Fairbanks.
The Alaska Film Archives appreciates your support. Your donation in any amount will help us continue important preservation work. Please visit the “About” section of our YouTube channel to learn how you can help today. Thank you! For more information please contact the Alaska Film Archives.
This stunning long-range trawler yacht is currently for sale and charter! She is a great live-aboard that is ready and willing to take you on your next far-flung adventure!
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Today on Steam Culture, Brent talks about a steamboat that was used to help ferry supplies up and down the Colorado river. Trying to move wagons through the Grand Canyon was proving to be a very difficult if not impossible process so Joseph Ives came up with an idea to use the river that flows through it. Only with the power of steam was the boat powerful enough to go against the strong current of the Colorado River.
Key Terms:
Steam Boat Explorer
Joseph Christmas Ives
Stern Wheeler
Fort Yuma
Steam Education
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In 1840, the steamboat Lexington of the New Jersey Steamship Navigation and Transportation Company caught fire due to overheated boilers, burned up and sank in what would be the worst steamboat disaster in the History of Long Island Sound. As with several of the topics we've covered, this one has never before been properly told.
The W. T. Preston snagboat cleared the Skagit River and other waterways of snags and debris from the 1930s to the 1980s. Take a guided or self-guided tour. It's part of the Maritime Heritage Center in Anacortes.
For more videos on Skagit County, see Skagit County Explorer (http://www.skagitcountyexplorer.com).
We conclude our tour of Carcross by flying you over a relic of Yukon's gold rush history - the wreck of the Sternwheeler "Gleaner." Why call it a ghostly ship? Because we had strange, unexplained signal interference and the controller completely lost contact with the drone at one point when we flew over the wreck. Coincidence?
Built in 1899 near Carcross, Yukon, the 34.44 metre | 113 foot long and 7.5 metre | 24.6 foot wide Gleaner was a Klondike Gold Rush era transport ship. It moved up to 135.2 metric tonnes | 149.05 tons of gold and silver ore from the gold fields and was licensed to carry up to 150 passengers. The boat was retired in 1932 to make way for larger and newer sternwheeler vessels; it was scuttled on the beach at Carcross shortly afterward. Nearly a century later, the ship's bones are still visible during low water levels. Let's fly!
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Click the link below to learn more about this historic gold rush era boat (website is in English).
• Link to ExploreNorth - The Sternwheeler Gleaner: https://explorenorth.com/library/ships/gleaner.html
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#bravewilderness #yukonwild #upnorth
This time we visit Carcross, formally Caribou Crossing and go dog sledding in Canada with Alaskan Huskys.
An hours drive from Whitehorse, Carcross is a sleepy quiet First Nation town in winter and a hive of activity in the summer with the White pass Yukon Route railway terminating here from Skagway Alaska. Join us for a winter tour around the town with some history about the gold rush, followed by unforgettable Alaskan Husky Dog Sledding in the wonderful landscape of Canada.
We visited www.alayuk.com for the husky sledding.
Chapters:-
0:00 Intro
0:42 Alaska Highway
1:14 Carcross
3:32 First Nation People
3:56 Skookum Jim Mason
4:20 Caribou Hotel
6:28 SS Tushi
9:06 Husky Dog Sledding
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#yukon #Visityukon #Carcross
The Paddlewheel Graveyard, is a fascinating spot because it is home run historical site, but it's almost forgotten by the locals. I understand how this can happen though. Often times, the things in our own backyard are the ones that get overlooked, or lose their interest. Lucky for me, I was told about this location long before arriving in Dawson City, and let me tell you it did not disappoint.
This location along the Yukon River, was once a ship yard, and is now home to the Ship Graveyard. As time goes on, technology advances and industry shifts, we must also shift with it. When these ships were pulled onto shore here, there was little to nothing wrong with them, other than the fact they were no longer needed. It is a shame really, because these much have been beautiful boats in the day, but that is the way things go. Nothing lasts forever, but I am happy to have had the opportunity to see these before they are lost forever.
I want to thank Alex, for making the time to fit me in for an interview. This location was surprisingly difficult to secure a reliable interview, but it managed to happen literally hours before I had to leave Dawson City. I am also excited to have seen so many people in the comments asking for this location, so I hope you are all happy to see this one.
A big thank you, as always, to my Patrons. I never had imagined I could make it this far north over the summer, and I owe that comfort to you guys and gals. Thank you!
If you wish to help the channel, and see places further and more remote, please consider joining one of the tiers on Patreon: https://www.patreon.com/DestinationAdventure
A dental explorer or sickle probe is an instrument in dentistry commonly used in the dental armamentarium. A sharp point at the end of the explorer is used to enhance tactile sensation.
In the past it was usual for dentists to use the explorer to determine the presence of toothdecay on tooth enamel. Some dental professionals have questioned this practice in the first decade of the twenty-first century. Since enamel is demineralized in the early stages of tooth decay, the use of an explorer opens a cavity in the enamel where none existed previously. Instead, they argue that fluoride and oral hygiene should be used to remineralize the enamel and prevent it from decaying further. This debate still continues because sometimes decay can be difficult to diagnose without tactile verification. Additionally, radiographs and other products designed to identify decay (such as measuring fluorescence from a laser) help the dental professional make a final diagnosis of tooth decay.
There are various types of explorers, though the most common one is the No. 23 explorer, which is also known as a "shepherd's hook". Other types include the 3CH (also known as "cowhorn" or "pigtail") and No. 17 explorers, which are useful for the interproximal areas between teeth.