On October 1, 1762 (October 14 New Style), Glotov embarked on another expedition from the coast of Kamchatka to the Aleutian Islands and the northwestern coast of North America, on the vessel
Adrian and Natalia, belonging to the merchant Lapin. Glotov had a crew of 38 Russians and eight
Kamchadals (Kamchatka natives). Glotov and his men again wintered on Medny Island, setting forth from there on July 26, 1763 (August 8 New Style). Glotov discovered several more islands, including
Kodiak Island (the
80th largest island in the world, slightly larger than Cyprus, Puerto Rico, or Corsica). During this expedition, Glotov and his men suppressed a revolt of the
Aleut natives of the
Fox Islands. The Aleuts were unhappy with the depredations of
Promyshlenniks (Russian fur workers) who followed on the heels of the explorers, and who were brutal and avaricious and pursued a policy of forcing natives to work and pay the
Yasak (tax paid in furs) by taking their families hostage. The Aleuts had consequently revolted against the Russian occupation, killing many Russians and driving most of the rest from the islands, and destroying most of the Russian vessels in the area. Glotov and his men destroyed all the Aleut villages on the southern part of Umnak, and with the assistance of other forces the revolt was ended, with several hundred Aleuts being killed directly and many more perishing from related causes (wounds, hunger, cold and disease). This effectively ended Aleutian independence. Ethnographer and missionary
I. E. Veniaminov, relying on the accounts of eyewitnesses of these events, wrote of Glotov: "He, under the pretext of revenge for the death of his compatriots, as well as for rebellion itself, destroyed almost all the villages that were on the southern side of Umnak, and the inhabitants of the islands of
Samalga and the
Islands of Four Mountains." In the course of this expedition, Glotov collected valuable ethnographic information about the Aleuts, in addition to killing them. ==Final voyage and death==