Summary of your 'study carrel' ============================== This is a summary of your Distant Reader 'study carrel'. The Distant Reader harvested & cached your content into a collection/corpus. It then applied sets of natural language processing and text mining against the collection. The results of this process was reduced to a database file -- a 'study carrel'. The study carrel can then be queried, thus bringing light specific characteristics for your collection. These characteristics can help you summarize the collection as well as enumerate things you might want to investigate more closely. This report is a terse narrative report, and when processing is complete you will be linked to a more complete narrative report. Eric Lease Morgan Number of items in the collection; 'How big is my corpus?' ---------------------------------------------------------- 7 Average length of all items measured in words; "More or less, how big is each item?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 93623 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 67 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 Mr. 4 River 4 P.M. 4 North 4 Lake 4 Esquimaux 4 Bay 3 West 3 Richardson 3 Indians 3 Hood 3 Fort 3 Copper 2 ship 2 ice 2 Winter 2 Wentzel 2 Slave 2 Providence 2 Lyon 2 Lieutenant 2 Island 2 Hudson 2 House 2 Hepburn 2 Hecla 2 Germain 2 Fury 2 Enterprise 2 Dr. 2 Cumberland 2 Crees 2 Company 2 Chipewyan 2 Captain 2 CHAPTER 2 Akaitcho 2 A.M. 1 time 1 passage 1 mile 1 man 1 day 1 boat 1 Toolemak 1 Time 1 Streight 1 Strait 1 St. 1 Spain Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 1703 day 1600 man 1500 ice 1201 time 1200 part 1185 mile 1037 ship 942 water 799 party 761 river 745 snow 742 shore 713 morning 699 wind 683 place 661 course 652 sea 652 foot 633 land 633 canoe 604 distance 595 night 594 degree 563 lake 561 side 553 boat 537 country 519 hour 506 weather 491 island 487 tent 487 deer 479 people 472 way 465 winter 447 evening 426 provision 423 journey 423 hunter 414 meat 413 coast 406 wood 392 fire 388 north 385 piece 375 woman 374 point 366 hill 361 bank 353 animal Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 8485 _ 1024 Mr. 1022 Indians 634 River 632 Lake 556 North 499 de 438 Fort 414 Esquimaux 361 Bay 325 Fonte 318 West 294 P.M. 282 Sea 281 Copper 280 Island 278 Account 273 Captain 269 Company 263 Hudson 242 A.M. 218 Akaitcho 217 Passage 211 Richardson 200 Expedition 197 Dr. 196 St. 195 Hecla 188 America 186 Hood 173 House 172 Providence 170 Back 166 Cape 165 Mine 165 Hepburn 160 August 158 England 151 Fury 148 South 147 Enterprise 145 Slave 143 Chipewyan 142 Spain 141 Crees 139 Cumberland 138 Wentzel 136 west 136 Land 134 Islands Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 8101 we 5026 it 4229 they 3032 he 2703 them 2519 i 2271 us 1131 him 559 me 329 she 299 themselves 261 her 259 himself 179 ourselves 155 you 148 myself 96 itself 35 herself 26 theirs 25 one 14 ours 6 his 4 mine 2 yourself 2 yours 2 thereof 2 shore.--rejoin 1 whereof 1 thee 1 ha 1 break Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 23751 be 9013 have 1982 make 1373 find 1113 come 1068 see 1065 do 998 go 970 take 877 give 709 pass 696 leave 565 set 561 receive 547 send 540 return 530 appear 499 carry 492 get 491 become 489 say 477 bring 457 follow 442 proceed 416 remain 412 keep 411 continue 400 arrive 388 fall 371 consider 364 lie 364 know 348 kill 345 reach 342 call 337 seem 337 cross 330 form 329 run 329 meet 315 put 309 accompany 307 obtain 305 observe 302 encamp 294 place 294 enter 291 begin 282 cover 279 suppose Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 3002 not 1486 very 1472 so 1312 more 1215 great 1188 other 1150 much 1033 only 976 up 921 small 859 as 848 now 789 also 735 out 712 most 708 however 704 first 666 several 655 well 652 then 651 little 639 same 619 about 612 large 572 such 559 soon 552 few 550 good 548 many 535 long 451 high 445 therefore 432 here 425 far 424 next 415 off 397 down 389 even 380 again 379 still 372 whole 337 immediately 333 in 324 before 315 too 310 own 308 strong 305 low 300 almost 292 together Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 178 most 130 least 104 good 97 great 43 large 43 high 39 slight 32 near 31 small 21 strong 21 Most 15 low 15 early 9 narrow 9 heavy 8 warm 8 short 8 late 7 young 7 fine 7 bad 6 weak 6 lofty 6 fat 6 cold 5 stout 5 old 5 long 4 southernmost 4 soft 4 gross 4 full 3 rich 3 furth 3 eld 3 brave 2 wide 2 thick 2 sweet 2 sure 2 strict 2 southw 2 sincere 2 pure 2 neat 2 manif 2 loud 2 lively 2 hot 2 happy Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 534 most 28 least 15 well 3 near 1 youngest 1 off{27 1 highest 1 farthest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- 1 ccx074@pglaf.org Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 11 ice was so 10 day was fine 9 night was very 9 snow took place 8 day was extremely 8 night was stormy 6 _ did not 6 ice was not 6 night was cold 6 snow fell so 5 _ is not 5 _ was not 5 day was very 5 ice coming in 5 night was fine 5 river is about 5 water was so 5 wind was moderate 4 _ had not 4 canoe was so 4 day did not 4 day was cloudy 4 day was unusually 4 distance made good 4 distance made today 4 lake is extensive 4 lake was still 4 men went out 4 men were absent 4 men were much 4 morning was very 4 river was about 4 sea was still 4 snow fell heavily 4 water did not 4 wind became more 4 wind being moderate 4 wind being unfavourable 3 _ had particularly 3 course was nearly 3 day was too 3 ice was much 3 men being much 3 men had just 3 men were not 3 men were so 3 men were very 3 party had not 3 river is only 3 sea was clear Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 ice was not more 2 ice was not so 2 indians make no sacrifices 2 land were not discernible 2 man was not only 2 men were not able 2 water was not lower 2 wind was not much 1 _ had no large 1 _ had not absolutely 1 _ is not consistent 1 _ is not duly 1 _ is not just 1 _ is not reconcileable 1 _ makes no delay 1 _ makes no mention 1 _ proceeded no further 1 _ was not inactive 1 _ was not navigable 1 _ were not _ 1 day was not more 1 ice was no longer 1 ice was not only 1 ice was not yet 1 lands were not far 1 men are not prepared 1 men were not sorry 1 parts got no information 1 party had not long 1 place was not attainable 1 ships were not homeward 1 ships were not yet 1 time was not sufficiently 1 winds are not always A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 13518 author = Franklin, John title = The Journey to the Polar Sea date = keywords = Akaitcho; Bay; Chipewyan; Company; Copper; Crees; Cumberland; Dr.; Enterprise; Esquimaux; Expedition; Fort; Franklin; Germain; Hepburn; Hood; House; Hudson; Indians; Lake; Mr.; North; P.M.; Providence; Richardson; River; Slave; Wentzel; West summary = his way to Red River in a small canoe manned by two Indians, overtook us encamped, having come seven miles during the day on a South-West course. winter, a heavy fall of snow having taken place during the night. having come during the day nineteen miles and a half on a South-West arrived at Hill Gates by sunset; having come this day eleven miles. directed our course North-West until we reached Long Lake and encamped at sea-coast by the Copper-Mine River; and that he and a party of his men, hunters who carry their furs to the Great Slave Lake, forty to Hay River, The Indians who had left Fort Providence with Belanger arrived the day some little addition to our party; and at three hours thirty minutes P.M. arrived at the North-West Fort on Moose-Deer Island where I was received men returned, having left Dr. Richardson on the borders of Point Lake. id = 18979 author = Franklin, John title = Narrative of a Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea, in the Years 1819-20-21-22, Volume 1 date = keywords = Athabasca; Bay; Chipewyan; Company; Copper; Crees; Cumberland; Fort; Hood; House; Hudson; Indians; Lake; Mr.; North; P.M.; Portage; Richardson; River; Saskatchawan; Slave; West summary = encamped, having come seven miles during the day on a S.W. course. Portage in Jack River; the distance sailed to-day being sixteen miles arm of the lake, arrived at Hill Gates by sunset; having come this day water, termed the White Fall Lake, and entering the river of the same from the source of the river, having come during the day seventeen miles Sea River; having come during the day twenty miles and three quarters. the day we passed an Indian encampment of three tents, whose inmates Island Lake from the Saskatchawan River, and are about two miles and Indian entered the North-West Company''s House, carrying his only child river, we crossed a portage and came upon the Methye Lake, and soon quitted the river, and after crossing a portage, a small lake, and a then crossed to the north bank of the river, where the Indians id = 18985 author = Franklin, John title = Narrative of a Journey to the Shores of the Polar Sea, in the years 1819-20-21-22, Volume 2 date = keywords = Akaitcho; Augustus; Belanger; Copper; Dr.; Enterprise; Esquimaux; Fort; Germain; Hepburn; Hood; Indians; Lake; Mr.; Providence; Richardson; River; St.; Wentzel summary = The Indians who had left Fort Providence with Belanger arrived the day On the 12th, we sent four men to Fort Providence; and, on the 17th Mr. Back arrived from Fort Chipewyan, having performed, since he left us, a arrived at Fort Enterprise, having travelled about eighteen miles a-day. same day the two Belangers arrived from Fort Providence, having been men returned, having left Dr. Richardson on the borders of Point Lake. Having received information that the hunters had killed a deer, we sent About ten A.M. we landed, to breakfast on a small deer which St. Germain had killed; and sent men in pursuit of some others in sight, but time, and then encamped having come twenty-three miles north by east afternoon of the following day Belanger arrived with a note from Mr. Back, stating that he had seen no trace of the Indians, and desiring id = 3482 author = Hakluyt, Richard title = Voyages in Search of the North-West Passage date = keywords = America; Asia; August; Cape; Cathay; England; God; Greenland; John; July; Master; North; Pole; Sir; West; passage summary = north-west, to Behring Straits, and take the South Pole on her passage find easy way, it is fair "sailing ice." In the clear sky to the north a On our way to the south point of Greenland we pass near Cape North, a _To prove a Passage by the North-West to Cathay and the East Indies_. great islands of ice which fleet in the seas, far to the south of that sea-card any through passage that way by the north-west. adjacent on the east shore, the ships and barques, having great care not days, and so the 4th thereof we came to our general on the east shore, the 18th day we came by two islands, whereon we went on shore, and found We also saw them at Bear''s Sound, both by sea and land, in great they came to us again, and four of our men went into the ship boat, and id = 13512 author = Parry, William Edward, Sir title = Three Voyages for the Discovery of a Northwest Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and Narrative of an Attempt to Reach the North Pole, Volume 1 date = keywords = A.M.; Bay; CHAPTER; Captain; Esquimaux; Fury; Griper; Hecla; Iligliuk; Island; Lieutenant; Lyon; Mr.; Okotook; P.M.; Strait; Winter; ice; ship summary = were observed this evening, the low ice being at times considerably floes and streams of ice, we got into clear water near that coast, after having had a clear view of the ice and of the land about and that there was very little ice near the ships. The Griper arrived soon after, and by half past eight A.M. both ships were secured in the proper position for commencing the hole was cut twice a day in the ice, close alongside of each ship. that of a party of men employed upon the ice to-day resembled a and Parhelia.--Snow Blindness.--Cutting the Ice round the Ships, and Parhelia.--Snow Blindness.--Cutting the Ice round the Ships, open in the ice alongside each ship, to ensure at all times a Esquimaux build Huts near the Ships.--Return of the Travellers, Esquimaux build Huts near the Ships.--Return of the Travellers, id = 14350 author = Parry, William Edward, Sir title = Three Voyages for the Discovery of a Northwest Passage from the Atlantic to the Pacific, and Narrative of an Attempt to Reach the North Pole, Volume 2 date = keywords = A.M.; CHAPTER; Captain; Esquimaux; Fury; Hecla; Igloolik; Island; Lieutenant; Lyon; Mr.; P.M.; Toolemak; Winter; boat; day; ice; man; mile; ship; time summary = and a half an hour, with a point of the land-ice left the preceding very heavy grounded ice, one third of a mile from a point of land lying shore; and here, finding some land-ice, the ships were secured late at Tides.--Continued Obstacles from fixed Ice. _Aug._ 1.--The information obtained by Captain Lyon on his late journey time the main body of ice remained, in most parts, close to the shore, with young Ice.--Ships beset and carried near the Shore.--Driven with young Ice.--Ships beset and carried near the Shore.--Driven ships could be released from the ice, and our travelling parties having Obstructions from Ice.--Both Ships driven on Shore.--Fury seriously Obstructions from Ice.--Both Ships driven on Shore.--Fury seriously drift-ice, and, after some time, landed on a small floe to the eastward, left the ice in our boats, a ship might have sailed to the latitude, of id = 48528 author = nan title = The great probability of a North West Passage deduced from observations on the letter of Admiral de Fonte date = keywords = Account; Bay; Coast; Discovery; Eskemaux; Fonte; Lake; Land; Latitude; Letter; North; Passage; People; River; Sea; South; Spain; Streight; Time summary = PRIVY COUNCIL, AND F.R.S. The Discovery of a North-west Passage having deserved the particular fictitious Account under the Title of a Letter of Admiral _de Fonte_. a North-west Passage, as it was a great Year for Ice; that it would The Course _de Fonte_ steered, he accounts as to the Land being A North-east Part of the _South Sea_ that _de Fonte_ passed up 50 De Fonte _arrives at the_ Indian _Town, and receives an Account The _Boston_ Ship returned before _de Fonte_ left those Parts. _Salvatierra_, his Account of a North-west Passage discovered 97 to the Truth of this Account, from the Time that _de Fonte_ is sailing lay only _along_ the Coast; and _de Fonte_ in his Account mentions, Lake _de Fonte_ from the _North Sea_, and when he passed the Streight North-west Passage, from the Time soon after which the _South Sea_ was