Exploration of the Valley of the Amazon, made under direction of the Navy Department : part II / by WM. Lewis Herndon and Lardner Gibbon, lieutenants United States Navy, part II by Lt. Lardner Gibbon

He said that a deceased midshipman, suddenly retired from his service at the National Observatory, in Washington, to undertake an exploration of distant lands and rivers, among strange and diverse people, will not be expected to provide a polished account of observations made under many handicaps. I...

Full description

Autores:
Herndon, William Lewis, 1813-1857
Gibbon, Lardner
United States. Navy Department
Tipo de recurso:
Fecha de publicación:
1854
Institución:
Universidad EAFIT
Repositorio:
Repositorio EAFIT
Idioma:
eng
OAI Identifier:
oai:repository.eafit.edu.co:10784/30656
Acceso en línea:
http://hdl.handle.net/10784/30656
Palabra clave:
AMAZONAS (VALLE) - DESCRIPCIONES Y VIAJES - SIGLO XIX
AMAZONAS (VALLE) - DESCUBRIMIENTOS Y EXPLORACIONES - SIGLO XIX
BRASIL - DESCRIPCIONES Y VIAJES - SIGLO XIX
PERÚ - DESCRIPCIONES Y VIAJES - SIGLO XIX
BOLIVIA - DESCRIPCIONES Y VIAJES - SIGLO XIX
AMÉRICA DEL SUR - DESCRIPCIONES Y VIAJES - SIGLO XIX
INDÍGENAS DE AMÉRICA DEL SUR - VIDA SOCIAL Y COSTUMBRES - SIGLO XIX
PERÚ - DIBUJOS - SIGLO XIX
AMÉRICA DEL SUR - DIBUJOS - XIX
Descriptions and trips of the Amazon Valley
Discoveries and explorations of the Amazon Valley
Descriptions and travel of Brazil
Descriptions and trips of Bolivia
Descriptions and trips Peru
Descriptions and trips of Latin America
Indigenous people of South America
Drawings of Peru
Drawings of Bolivia
Rights
License
Acceso abierto
Description
Summary:He said that a deceased midshipman, suddenly retired from his service at the National Observatory, in Washington, to undertake an exploration of distant lands and rivers, among strange and diverse people, will not be expected to provide a polished account of observations made under many handicaps. In revising notes, hastily scribbled upon a mule´s back, on mountains, or in a canoe, the writer has endeavored to present familiar images of the objects he saw, as they impressed him at the time, leaving intelligent readers to draw their own conclusions from his facts, or the best information he could gain from reliable sources on the route. the statesman, the planter, the merchant, the farmer, the manufacturer, or the artisan, can estimate, from every-day occurrences, in what manner habits and customs of inhabitants of the southern continent, or productions of its climates, lands, rivers, forests, and mines, may advantage the industry or promote the enterprise of the people of the United States of North America. Being limited by instructions, the writer commences his observations at the division of the naval party at tarma, in Peru and closes them on reaching the mouth of the madeira river, in Brazil. Descriptions of fishes collected from snow-water lakes and streams in Peru or Bolivia, and from rivers in Brazil, botanical specimens, varieties of birds, different ores, earth, and metals procured on the journey, are unavoidably omitted