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?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------ 183245 Average readability score of all items (0 = difficult; 100 = easy) ------------------------------------------------------------------ 78 Top 50 statistically significant keywords; "What is my collection about?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 5 River 5 Indians 5 Columbia 4 mile 4 States 4 Missouri 4 Lewis 3 illustration 3 day 3 United 3 Mr. 3 Drewyer 3 Clark 3 Captain 2 water 2 small 2 man 2 great 2 Washington 2 St. 2 Sioux 2 September 2 Rocky 2 Rock 2 Portland 2 Oregon 2 North 2 Mountains 2 Mandans 2 Lake 2 July 2 Fort 2 Falls 2 Dalles 2 Creek 2 Clarke 2 Cascades 2 Capt 2 August 1 time 1 tell 1 soon 1 smoke 1 skin 1 situation 1 self 1 river 1 look 1 lodge 1 little Top 50 lemmatized nouns; "What is discussed?" --------------------------------------------- 6540 river 4149 mile 4022 man 3051 day 2872 side 2640 water 2291 foot 2053 horse 1966 mountain 1923 time 1916 part 1910 morning 1839 party 1835 place 1557 distance 1447 night 1431 evening 1329 point 1270 wind 1233 country 1157 head 1149 way 1144 number 1122 hill 1031 village 991 rock 979 canoe 978 plain 962 course 927 deer 907 camp 904 nation 872 boat 840 hunter 831 tree 824 island 820 bank 817 mouth 812 timber 808 people 803 yard 802 land 796 bottom 793 creek 777 inch 747 fish 704 root 696 rain 673 fall 669 skin Top 50 proper nouns; "What are the names of persons or places?" -------------------------------------------------------------- 2473 _ 2219 Indians 1738 S. 1631 Lewis 1617 Clark 1395 River 1324 Columbia 1025 Missouri 1022 Capt 1013 Creek 877 Elk 813 W. 782 c. 743 Island 619 Dick 578 N. 575 Roger 536 L. 505 July 500 Small 478 Side 477 Chief 472 E. 471 Drewyer 466 Camp 448 Mr. 431 June 428 August 425 Indian 395 Oregon 393 Captain 390 oClock 387 Canoes 377 States 372 buffaloe 371 May 360 Sand 330 Mountains 327 Canoe 327 C. 324 North 322 September 322 S 311 October 306 South 303 Lard 303 April 301 indians 293 St. 283 Clarke Top 50 personal pronouns nouns; "To whom are things referred?" ------------------------------------------------------------- 13127 we 10106 it 8775 they 8646 i 6271 he 5116 them 3839 us 2262 him 1693 me 1014 you 666 she 551 themselves 545 her 455 himself 332 itself 240 myself 185 ourselves 115 one 42 herself 14 yourself 14 ours 12 theirs 10 his 9 mine 9 ''s 5 yours 4 ''em 3 thee 3 genl 2 thy 2 sport 2 it- 1 you--(we 1 yerself 1 wothey 1 wappatoo 1 us- 1 s 1 pe 1 passed--(3 1 oneself 1 officer.--at 1 montaria 1 marshey 1 indelicate 1 embaüba 1 em 1 eighty 1 distressingthey 1 disposedthey Top 50 lemmatized verbs; "What do things do?" --------------------------------------------- 40365 be 14738 have 3378 see 3198 make 2858 pass 2551 find 2481 take 2320 do 2147 come 1979 kill 1976 give 1730 go 1479 leave 1390 return 1348 proceed 1291 call 1206 appear 1078 continue 1052 send 1030 set 1030 get 1016 cover 1004 inform 981 say 968 fall 951 form 947 bring 920 run 912 reach 817 seem 767 become 761 know 738 rise 724 Set 713 meet 712 think 707 tell 657 encamp 596 arrive 591 observe 588 remain 586 keep 574 look 564 begin 546 follow 514 put 477 visit 466 carry 464 turn 464 dry Top 50 lemmatized adjectives and adverbs; "How are things described?" --------------------------------------------------------------------- 5095 not 3222 great 2823 out 2550 about 2525 large 2458 much 2332 small 2328 up 2246 very 2137 so 2043 more 2004 high 1966 other 1908 as 1896 little 1802 also 1670 now 1513 several 1507 well 1486 long 1457 down 1441 only 1370 last 1328 most 1300 low 1293 same 1253 first 1251 then 1236 here 1156 white 1154 good 1105 wide 961 many 905 few 888 early 882 black 835 old 834 just 815 far 801 back 783 fine 770 indian 751 common 747 still 739 on 736 nearly 720 short 719 soon 707 in 673 such Top 50 lemmatized superlative adjectives; "How are things described to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------- 383 most 278 good 209 least 155 great 129 large 76 high 73 bad 54 near 44 fine 40 long 28 deep 25 small 24 Most 20 slight 18 low 14 early 13 grand 11 wide 10 rich 9 swift 9 short 9 narrow 8 young 8 late 8 big 7 rough 7 fair 6 topmost 6 strong 6 old 6 northw 6 noble 6 l 6 fat 5 wild 5 warm 5 safe 5 br 5 bold 4 white 4 thick 4 shallow 4 manif 4 lovely 4 hot 4 heavy 4 hard 4 foremost 4 fit 4 eld Top 50 lemmatized superlative adverbs; "How do things do to the extreme?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 945 most 50 least 49 well 8 near 2 long 1 worst 1 sharpest 1 lest 1 hard 1 grimmest Top 50 Internet domains; "What Webbed places are alluded to in this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 www.gutenberg.org 2 archive.org Top 50 URLs; "What is hyperlinked from this corpus?" ---------------------------------------------------- 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42893/42893-h/42893-h.htm 1 http://www.gutenberg.org/files/42893/42893-h.zip 1 http://archive.org/details/guardiansofcolu00willrich 1 http://archive.org Top 50 email addresses; "Who are you gonna call?" ------------------------------------------------- Top 50 positive assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-noun?" ------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 36 river is about 20 clark set out 20 morning was fair 14 _ did _ 14 morning was cloudy 14 wind was so 12 indians came down 11 morning was cold 10 lewis went out 10 morning was fine 10 river is here 9 party set out 9 river is very 8 morning sent out 8 mountains are high 8 river is still 7 men went out 7 morning being fair 7 wind was high 6 feet are black 6 men set out 6 party did not 6 river are high 6 river is not 6 river is now 6 river is verry 6 river is wide 6 side is high 5 day is clear 5 day was clear 5 day was cloudy 5 evening was cold 5 horses are very 5 men came down 5 party had not 5 place is about 5 river coming in 5 river is much 5 river is navigable 5 river is so 5 water is much 5 water is very 5 wind continued high 4 _ had _ 4 _ is _ 4 _ was _ 4 country is more 4 country is much 4 country was level 4 day is fine Top 50 negative assertions; "What sentences are in the shape of noun-verb-no|not-noun?" --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- 2 feet are not short 2 head is not at 2 horse has no possible 2 man is not always 2 men do not uniformly 2 time is no doubt 2 water make no impression 1 _ have no desire 1 columbia is not apparent 1 country are not so 1 country is not quite 1 country is not so 1 day is not so 1 day was not sufficiently 1 evening was not far 1 head is not unusial 1 head was not violent 1 horse has no chance 1 horses is no doubt 1 indians are not fond 1 indians are not verry 1 indians were not fond 1 lewis finding no game 1 lewis is not so 1 man has no business 1 man was not sufficient 1 men found no difficulty 1 men have no covering 1 morning finding no fresh 1 mountains are not alike 1 party have not yet 1 party is not inferior 1 party was not there 1 place having no doubt 1 place is not more 1 river are not so 1 river are not usually 1 river haveing no indian 1 river is no doubt 1 river is not more 1 river is not naviagable 1 river is not now 1 river is not so 1 river is not verry 1 river was no longer 1 river was not far 1 river were not numerous 1 rivers have no sources 1 side is not more 1 time had not yet A rudimentary bibliography -------------------------- id = 38774 author = Bulfinch, Thomas title = Oregon and Eldorado; or, Romance of the Rivers date = keywords = Amazon; August; CHAPTER; Capt; Clarke; Columbia; Drewyer; Eldorado; Godin; Indians; July; Lewis; Missouri; Orellana; Raleigh; River; September; Spaniards; States; United; day; find; foot; great; man; mile; water summary = Indian chiefs, several large tracts of land near Nootka Sound, for which he anchored at one o''clock in a large river of fresh water, ten miles half miles distance; a village on the north side of the river, this time, another chief, with a large party of white men, were waiting Indian who had straggled a short distance down the river returned, with within a distance of a mile and a half, a small river from the right. Shoshonee Indians fish; five days'' journey farther is a large river from all the forks, as well as on the main river, great numbers of Indians Nov. 4.--Next day, we landed on the left bank of the river, at a village Next day we passed the mouth of a large river, a hundred and fifty yards The water for a great distance off the mouth of the river appears very id = 8419 author = Clark, William title = The Journals of Lewis and Clark, 1804-1806 date = keywords = A.M.; April; August; Buffalow; Camp; Camped; Canoes; Capt; Chief; Clark; Cold; Collins; Columbia; Countrey; Creek; December; Deer; Drewyer; East; Elk; February; Fields; Fort; Indians; Island; January; July; June; Lard; Lewis; Mandans; March; Missouri; Monday; Mountains; Mr.; North; November; October; P.M.; Prarie; River; Rocky; Sand; Sea; September; Sergt; Set; Shannon; Shore; Size; Snow; South; Species; Stard; States; Stone; Sun; Sunday; Thursday; Tuesday; Village; West; cloudy; common; course; cover; day; great; kill; lodge; mile; self; situation; skin; small; smoke; soon summary = five Beever Cought near this Camp the flesh of which we made use ofThis evening we found verry pleasent--only one Deer Killed to day. night, Set out early passed a large Island in the middle of the river River a mile, Saw the tracks of white bear, verry large, also a old river heads in the 1s Black Mountain, 2 Miles higher up passed a Small articles--maney Indians visit us to day, G D hurd his hand verry badall the party in high Spirits--The river Clear of ice, & riseing a a Cold Clear Day (great number of Indians move Down the River to hunt) rapid at ____ miles passed the Mo. of a large Creek little river in a down the great Columbia river passed a large Island at 8 miles about 3 morning, Capt Lewis and 5 men Set out in our Small Indian canoe (which id = 38249 author = Freeman, Lewis R. (Lewis Ransome) title = Down the Columbia date = keywords = Andy; Armstrong; Bend; Big; Blackmore; Canyon; Captain; Cascades; Columbia; Creek; Dalles; Earl; Falls; Golden; Harmon; Ike; Imshallah; Kinbasket; Kootenay; Lake; Nixon; Rapids; River; Rock; Roos; Selkirks; Surprise; Windermere; illustration; mile; water summary = the roughly tumbling left-hand channel of Rock Island Rapids with only a pleasure boating, any attempt to run the Big Bend between those points Rapids was a real all-day and all-night sucker, but the old river hand calm open reaches of the upper river give way to really swift water. Kootenay River, and its waters did not reach the Columbia until after a With comparatively good water all the way to the head of Surprise water that was more like a lake than a river. place was below the half-mile-long third cascade, and no old river man Kinbasket Lake, just below Middle River--slack water all the way. what I knows is a ten-mile-an-hour current looks to me like slack water, quarter-mile of white riffle looked like comparatively easy running. water, and it would form a lake 150 miles long all the way to the of bedrock running half way across the river from the right bank. id = 16565 author = Lewis, Meriwether title = History of the Expedition under the Command of Captains Lewis and Clark, Vol. I. To the Sources of the Missouri, Thence Across the Rocky Mountains and Down the River Columbia to the Pacific Ocean. Performed During the Years 1804-5-6. date = keywords = Clarke; Drewyer; French; Indians; Lewis; Little; Mandans; Minnetarees; Missouri; Mr.; N.W.; Osage; Platte; Ricaras; Rocky; Shoshonees; Sioux; St.; States; United; day; man; mile; river; small summary = miles, we passed a remarkable large coal hill on the north side, called five miles, a bend of the river, and two creeks on the north, called the five miles we passed a stream on the south called Turky creek, near a river, and at four miles passed a creek fifteen yards wide on the south, at two miles, passed the mouth of a small river on the north, called Big descended to the river and passed a small creek on the south, called, by miles distance, we had passed a large island in the middle of the river, and a half miles we had passed an island in the middle of the river, high all day, and came to a creek on the north at two miles distance, half miles we passed a small creek in a deep bend on the south with a three miles, and then reached the river near a small island, at the id = 39388 author = Lyman, William Denison title = The Columbia River: Its History, Its Myths, Its Scenery, Its Commerce date = keywords = Astoria; Bay; Captain; Cascades; Clark; Columbia; Company; Dalles; Falls; Fort; Great; Hudson; Indians; Lake; Mountains; Mr.; Nez; North; Oregon; Pacific; Photo; Portland; River; Snake; Spokane; States; United; Valley; Vancouver; Walla; Washington; Whitman; Willamette; american; illustration summary = LONE ROCK, COLUMBIA RIVER, ABOUT FIFTY MILES EAST OF PORTLAND 378 MULTNOMAH FALLS, 840 FEET HIGH, ON SOUTH SIDE OF COLUMBIA RIVER waters; and after this, Adams, or in the Indian, Klickitat, with St. Helens or Loowit near at hand on the west; then, across the Great River, of the lower Columbia River Indians, is the stretch of mingled bluff, In any event it is probable that the Columbia River Indians had got a three thousand ninety-six miles; thence by land by way of Lewis River The Indians assured them that they could reach the Great River within At the great falls of the River, known to the Indians as the the River--The Oregon Steam Navigation Company--Great Business Columbia River Navigation Company, and the rival was the Oregon meet." The city of Walla Walla is thirty-two miles from the Columbia River Columbia and Snake Rivers, at the crossings of the great railroads, and at id = 46799 author = Rathborne, St. George title = The Pioneer Boys of the Columbia; or, In the Wilderness of the Great Northwest date = keywords = Andrew; Captain; Clark; Dick; Indians; Lascelles; Lewis; Missouri; Roger; Sioux; Waller; boy; chapter; little; look; tell; time summary = acquaintance of Dick and Roger, the young pioneers, for the first time; Indian brave has done," Dick told him, "and then start to work killing "It''s Indian picture writing, you see, Roger!" Dick declared, "and must [Illustration: "''RUN FOR THE TREES, ROGER!'' SHOUTED DICK"] "Run for the trees, Roger!" shouted Dick, as he himself turned and made Dick knew that long before Roger could get the words of warning framed, "I WONDER if the plan will work?" remarked Roger, when he and Dick "All that its banks hold these days," Dick had explained to Roger when Dick always liked to hear Roger talk that way. "I don''t like their looks, though," Roger said to Dick, as they watched Dick was not that kind of boy; and if need be he would stand by Roger, As long as they lived Dick and Roger believed that the id = 42893 author = Williams, John H. (John Harvey) title = The Guardians of the Columbia Mount Hood, Mount Adams and Mount St. Helens date = keywords = Adams; COPYRIGHT; Columbia; Helens; Hood; Mount; Oregon; Portland; River; Rock; St.; Washington; illustration summary = Looking north from lower end of Eliot Glacier on Mount Hood, across the [Illustration: White Salmon River and its Gorge, south of Mount Adams. [Illustration: Looking up the Columbia from Hood River, Oregon.] [Illustration: North side of Mount Hood, from ridge several miles west Ice cascade on Eliot glacier, Mount Hood.] Ice cascade on Eliot glacier, Mount Hood.] Mount Hood, seen from Larch Mountain, on the Columbia River. [Illustration: Summit of Mount Hood, from Mazama Rock, showing the [Illustration: Mount Hood, seen from Sandy River canyon, six miles west [Illustration: Ice Cascade, south side of Mount Hood, near head of White [Illustration: Little Sandy or Reid glacier, west side of Mount Hood.] [Illustration: Mazama party exploring White River glacier, Mount Hood.] [Illustration: Mount Adams, from Snow-Plow Mountain, three miles [Illustration: Crevasse in Lava glacier, north side of Mount Adams.] [Illustration: North Peak of Mount Adams, with The Mountaineers