The Last Secrets: The Final Mysteries Of Exploration
John Buchan
11 chapters
4 hour read
Selected Chapters
11 chapters
THE LAST SECRETS
THE LAST SECRETS
The Final Mysteries of Exploration By JOHN BUCHAN THOMAS NELSON AND SONS, LTD. LONDON, EDINBURGH, AND NEW YORK First Impression, September 1923 PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN AT THE PRESS OF THE PUBLISHERS TO THE MEMORY OF BRIG.-GEN. CECIL RAWLING, C.M.G., C.I.E. WHO FELL AT THE THIRD BATTLE OF YPRES AN INTREPID EXPLORER A GALLANT SOLDIER AND THE BEST OF FRIENDS...
29 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
PREFACE
PREFACE
The first two decades of the twentieth century will rank as a most distinguished era in the history of exploration, for during them many of the great geographical riddles of the world have been solved. This book contains a record of some of the main achievements. What Nansen said of Polar exploration is true of all exploration; its story is a "mighty manifestation of the power of the Unknown over the mind of man." The Unknown, happily, will be always with us, for there are infinite secrets in a
5 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
I LHASA
I LHASA
LHASA ( Map , p. 24. ) Till the summer of 1904 if one had been asked what was the most mysterious spot on the earth's surface the reply would have been Lhasa. It was a place on which no Englishman had cast an eye for a hundred years and no white man for more than half a century. In our prosaic modern world there remained one city among the clouds about which no tale was too strange for belief. The greatest of mountain barriers shut it off from the south, and on the north it was guarded by league
26 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
II THE GORGES OF THE BRAHMAPUTRA
II THE GORGES OF THE BRAHMAPUTRA
THE GORGES OF THE BRAHMAPUTRA ( Map , p. 48. ) Fifty years ago one of the questions most debated among geographers was the origin of the Brahmaputra. The great river, navigable for 800 miles from its mouth, was familiar enough in its course through the plains of India; but it flowed from the wild Abor country, and no part of the Indian borders was less known than those north-eastern foothills. Meantime in Tibet, north of the main chain of the Himalayas, there was a large river, the Tsangpo, flow
11 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
III THE NORTH POLE
III THE NORTH POLE
THE NORTH POLE ( Map , p. 80. ) I When sceptical people say that Polar exploration has been of no benefit to mankind, it is permissible to think that their judgment is as unsound as their point of view is limited. Not only have Polar explorers added enormously to the scientific knowledge of the world, but they have also materially aided commerce. But even if these voyages had been barren of scientific and commercial results, they would have been infinitely worth making. For among Polar explorers
40 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
IV THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON
IV THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON
THE MOUNTAINS OF THE MOON ( Map , p. 112. ) Twenty-four centuries ago a line of Æschylus—"Egypt nurtured by the snow"—embodied a geographical theory which descended from Heaven knows what early folk-wandering. Aristotle with his 'aryuroun oros , the Mountain of Silver from which the Nile flowed, continued the tradition in literature. Meantime Sabæan Arabs, trading along the east coast of Africa, and making expeditions to the interior, came back with stories of great inland seas and snow mountain
21 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
V THE SOUTH POLE
V THE SOUTH POLE
THE SOUTH POLE ( Map , p. 144. ) I The imaginations of bold men were captured by the idea of Arctic exploration for centuries before the Antarctic was even thought of as a field for discovery. The Arctic regions have a history dating back to the days of King Alfred; the Antarctic can make no such boast as this, and it is true to say that attention was first drawn to the Far South by the map-makers. Much praise is due to the early map-makers; but as regards the Far South it must be admitted that
46 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VI MOUNT McKINLEY
VI MOUNT McKINLEY
MOUNT McKINLEY ( Map , p. 184. ) The ascent of Ruwenzori unriddled the mystery of equatorial snows. There now remained the question of great peaks in the extreme North, where the mountaineering problems must obviously be very different from those found at a similar altitude in the temperate zones. Something had been done to solve the problem by the ascent of Mount St. Elias, in Alaska, on July 31, 1897. But Mount St. Elias was only just over 18,000 feet, and it was peculiarly accessible, for it
30 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VII THE HOLY CITIES OF ISLAM
VII THE HOLY CITIES OF ISLAM
THE HOLY CITIES OF ISLAM ( Map , p. 216. ) The "spell of far Arabia" has been a potent thing from the days when the Egyptians drew wealth from the spice-land of Punt, and Greek traders brought stories of the gums and jewels of Araby the Blessed. But ever since it became the Holy Land of Islam a veil of secrecy, other than that of its stern climate and inhospitable deserts, has descended upon it. It is one of the oldest of arenas of adventure, and it is still one of the least exploited; indeed, i
26 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
VIII THE EXPLORATION OF NEW GUINEA
VIII THE EXPLORATION OF NEW GUINEA
THE EXPLORATION OF NEW GUINEA ( Map , p. 248. ) Almost every part of the globe has suffered some change in the past century. It may have altered its appearance by settlement and cultivation and the growth of cities; or, if it still remains a wilderness, there are routes of commerce through it which bring it to the knowledge of the world. But the great island of New Guinea is almost as little changed to-day by the advent of white adventurers as when, in the year 1527, Jorge de Meneses, the Portug
20 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter
IX MOUNT EVEREST
IX MOUNT EVEREST
MOUNT EVEREST ( Map , p. 272. ) I The Himalaya not only contain the loftiest peaks on the globe, but can boast at least eighty summits loftier than those of any other range. The Andes come next, but their highest point, Aconcagua, is only 23,060 feet. In the huge mountain land which bounds India on the north, and which stretches as great a distance as from the English Channel to the Caspian, there are more than eighty peaks above 24,000 feet, some twenty above 26,000, and six above 27,000. Mount
4 minute read
Read Chapter
Read Chapter