Across Unknown South America

Arnold Henry Savage Landor
Across Unknown South America,
by

Arnold Henry Savage Landor This eBook is for the use of anyone
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Title: Across Unknown South America
Author: Arnold Henry Savage Landor
Release Date: August 31, 2007 [EBook #22483]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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[Illustration: The Author.]

ACROSS UNKNOWN
SOUTH AMERICA
BY
A. HENRY SAVAGE-LANDOR
WITH 2 MAPS, 8 COLOURED PLATES, AND 260
ILLUSTRATIONS FROM PHOTOGRAPHS BY THE AUTHOR
IN TWO VOLUMES
VOL. I
HODDER AND STOUGHTON
LONDON NEW YORK TORONTO
Printed in 1913
Copyright in the United States of America
by A. Henry Savage-Landor
THIS WORK IS DEDICATED
TO
THE PEOPLE
OF THE
GREAT BRAZILIAN REPUBLIC

PREFACE
SOUTH America is, to my mind, "the Coming Continent"--the

Continent of the future. Everybody knows the wealth of the Argentine,
Peru, Chile, and Bolivia; but the interior of Brazil, the largest and
richest country of all, not unlike forbidden Tibet, was perhaps better
known a century or two ago than now. Few people realize that Brazil is
larger than the United States of North America, Germany, Portugal, and
a few other countries taken together. The interior is practically a terra
incognita--although the ancient Jesuits and, at a later date, escaped
slaves and native rubber collectors have perhaps found their way inland
to a considerable distance.
When I started on the transcontinental journey I did not take Europeans
with me. It is not easy to find men who can stand the strain of so long a
journey. I was also not surprised, although I was disappointed, not to be
able to obtain suitable officers in Brazil to go part of the journey with
me, so that I might be relieved of a portion of the tedious scientific
work of the expedition, especially taking and computing daily
astronomical observations, to which much time has to be devoted. All
the work of all kinds eventually fell upon my shoulders, and after
departing I found myself filling the posts of surveyor, hydrographer,
cartographer, geologist, meteorologist, anthropologist, botanist, doctor,
veterinary surgeon, painter, photographer, boat-builder, guide,
navigator, etc. The muleteers who accompanied me--only six, all
counted--were of little help to me--perhaps the reverse. So that,
considering all the adventures and misfortunes we had, I am sure the
reader, after perusing this book, will wonder that we got back at all, and
will be indulgent enough to give me a little credit for saving, through
innumerable disasters--and perhaps not altogether by mere luck--all my
photographs (800 of them), all my note-books, all my scientific
observations, as well as all the vocabularies I made of the various
Indian languages of tribes found on my way. Also for bringing all my
men out alive.
Here are, briefly, a few results of the expedition:--
(a) First of all it has proved that, far from South America's being an
impenetrable continent--as was believed--it is possible for any
experienced traveller to cross Brazil in any direction, if he could obtain

suitable followers.
(b) It has proved that the "millions of savage Indians" supposed to be
swarming all over the interior of Brazil do not exist at all. All the pure
Indians of Central Brazil taken together may number a few hundreds,
or including half-castes (negroes and Portuguese), a few thousands. As
for the wild beasts and snakes, no one ever need fear being troubled by
them. They are more afraid of you than you of them, you can take my
word for it. So that the terror which has so far prevented people
penetrating the interior has no reasonable ground, and this book ought
to be the means of making European people some day swarm to
develop that marvellous land now absolutely uninhabited.
(c) Meteorological observations were recorded daily right across Brazil.
(d) Altitude observations, forming a complete chain and including all
minor undulations, were registered across the entire South American
continent from the Atlantic coast at Rio de Janeiro as far as Callao on
the Pacific coast. The observations were taken with a hypsometer and
several excellent aneroids. These show that many of the elevations
marked on the existing maps of Brazil are inaccurate, the error
amounting sometimes to several hundred feet.
(e) A complete survey was made of new country between the Araguaya
river and the Madeira, including a careful survey of the Arinos river
and the river Arinos-Juruena, one of the most powerful tributaries of
the Amazon. In the small map, reproduced from the best existing maps,
at the end of the first volume,
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