QUESTION IMAGE
Question
from \exploring and exploiting a gold country\
by albert williams jr.
in august 1896, a group of three prospectors found gold in
a creek that runs to the klondike river in the yukon-
canada’s western territory that borders alaska. this event
spurred the klondike gold rush, which is also called the
alaska gold rush. the following excerpt was originally
published in an engineering magazine of the day.
(the first section misses information and irrelevant unknowns)
read the sentences from paragraph 1.
it was so in the early days of california, where
all the conditions were ideally favorable, but in
california and other places more favored by
nature than alaska there was room for the
disappointed ones to do other things than
mine, in the latitude of the arctic circle, and
inland, there is little else to look for than mining
and the few industries depending upon it—
transportation, timber - cutting, etc.
what does the author suggest about the
klondike?
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To determine what the author suggests about the Klondike, we analyze the relevant sentences:
The text states that in California (and other favored places), there was "room for the disappointed ones to do other things than mine," but in the Klondike (at the Arctic Circle latitude), "there is little else to look for than mining and the few industries depending upon it—transportation, timber - cutting, etc."
This implies that the Klondike had far fewer alternative economic or livelihood opportunities compared to places like California. So the author suggests that the Klondike offered limited non - mining opportunities (or that most opportunities in the Klondike centered around mining and a few related industries, with little else available for those not focused on mining).