In 1740, Delisle undertook an expedition to
Siberia with the object of observing from
Beryozovo the transit of
Mercury across the sun. An account of the expedition is given in Volume 72 of the ''L'Histoire générale des voyages'' (1768). Delisle and his party set out from
St. Petersburg on 28 February 1740, arriving in Beryozovo, on the bank of the
River Ob, on 9 April, having travelled via Moscow, the
Volga, and
Tyumen. On 22 April, the date of the
transit of Mercury, the sun was obscured by clouds, however, and so Delisle was unable to make any astronomical observations. Delisle arrived back in St. Petersburg on 29 December 1740, having sojourned in
Tobolsk and Moscow en route.
Non-astronomical scientific observations Throughout the expedition, Delisle recorded numerous ornithological, botanical, zoological (e.g. the
Siberian beaver), geographical, and other scientific observations. In the "Extrait d'un voyage fait en 1740 à Beresow en Sibérie" published in the
Histoire Générale des Voyages, Delisle's ethnographic observations on the native peoples he encountered (the
Votyaks,
Ostyaks,
Tartars,
Voguls, and
Chuvash) include details of their religious beliefs, marital customs, means of subsistence, diet, and costume. It seems that Delisle even planned to write a general study of the peoples of Siberia. In Delisle's unpublished papers there is a document entitled "Ordre des informations à faire sur chaque différente nation", which gives a structured outline of the ethnographic data to be collected for each particular Siberian nation: its history, geographical area, relations with other ruling powers, system of government, religion (e.g. belief in God, the Devil, life after death), knowledge in the arts and sciences, physical characteristics, costume, occupations, tools, mores, dwellings, and language. The abbot recounted to Delisle that the previous year (1739) a Siberian merchant by the name of Fugla, already famous for his prodigious strength (he had fought and killed a bear with his bare hands), further added to his fame when he found near
Yeniseisk an intact mammoth head "d'une grosseur étonnante." ==The
Atlas Rossicus==