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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Voyage of the Beagle, by Charles Darwin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
-almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
-re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
-
-
-Title: The Voyage of the Beagle
-
-Author: Charles Darwin
-
-Posting Date: June 24, 2013 [EBook #944]
-Release Date: June, 1997
-First Posted: June 15, 1997
-Last Updated: September 12, 2003
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: ASCII
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by John Hamm
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- The Internet Wiretap Online Edition
- of THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE BY
- CHARLES DARWIN
-
-
-
-
-
-About the online edition.
-
-The degree symbol is represented as "degs." Italics are represented as
-_italics_. Footnotes are collected at the end of each chapter.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-I have stated in the preface to the first Edition of this work, and in
-the Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, that it was in consequence of
-a wish expressed by Captain Fitz Roy, of having some scientific person
-on board, accompanied by an offer from him of giving up part of his own
-accommodations, that I volunteered my services, which received, through
-the kindness of the hydrographer, Captain Beaufort, the sanction of the
-Lords of the Admiralty. As I feel that the opportunities which I
-enjoyed of studying the Natural History of the different countries we
-visited, have been wholly due to Captain Fitz Roy, I hope I may here be
-permitted to repeat my expression of gratitude to him; and to add that,
-during the five years we were together, I received from him the most
-cordial friendship and steady assistance. Both to Captain Fitz Roy and
-to all the Officers of the Beagle [1] I shall ever feel most thankful
-for the undeviating kindness with which I was treated during our long
-voyage.
-
-This volume contains, in the form of a Journal, a history of our
-voyage, and a sketch of those observations in Natural History and
-Geology, which I think will possess some interest for the general
-reader. I have in this edition largely condensed and corrected some
-parts, and have added a little to others, in order to render the volume
-more fitted for popular reading; but I trust that naturalists will
-remember, that they must refer for details to the larger publications
-which comprise the scientific results of the Expedition. The Zoology
-of the Voyage of the Beagle includes an account of the Fossil Mammalia,
-by Professor Owen; of the Living Mammalia, by Mr. Waterhouse; of the
-Birds, by Mr. Gould; of the Fish, by the Rev. L. Jenyns; and of the
-Reptiles, by Mr. Bell. I have appended to the descriptions of each
-species an account of its habits and range. These works, which I owe
-to the high talents and disinterested zeal of the above distinguished
-authors, could not have been undertaken, had it not been for the
-liberality of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury, who,
-through the representation of the Right Honourable the Chancellor of
-the Exchequer, have been pleased to grant a sum of one thousand pounds
-towards defraying part of the expenses of publication.
-
-I have myself published separate volumes on the 'Structure and
-Distribution of Coral Reefs;' on the 'Volcanic Islands visited during
-the Voyage of the Beagle;' and on the 'Geology of South America.' The
-sixth volume of the 'Geological Transactions' contains two papers of
-mine on the Erratic Boulders and Volcanic Phenomena of South America.
-Messrs. Waterhouse, Walker, Newman, and White, have published several
-able papers on the Insects which were collected, and I trust that many
-others will hereafter follow. The plants from the southern parts of
-America will be given by Dr. J. Hooker, in his great work on the Botany
-of the Southern Hemisphere. The Flora of the Galapagos Archipelago is
-the subject of a separate memoir by him, in the 'Linnean Transactions.'
-The Reverend Professor Henslow has published a list of the plants
-collected by me at the Keeling Islands; and the Reverend J. M. Berkeley
-has described my cryptogamic plants.
-
-I shall have the pleasure of acknowledging the great assistance which I
-have received from several other naturalists, in the course of this and
-my other works; but I must be here allowed to return my most sincere
-thanks to the Reverend Professor Henslow, who, when I was an
-undergraduate at Cambridge, was one chief means of giving me a taste
-for Natural History,--who, during my absence, took charge of the
-collections I sent home, and by his correspondence directed my
-endeavours,--and who, since my return, has constantly rendered me every
-assistance which the kindest friend could offer.
-
-DOWN, BROMLEY, KENT, June 9, 1845
-
-[1] I must take this opportunity of returning my sincere thanks to Mr.
-Bynoe, the surgeon of the Beagle, for his very kind attention to me
-when I was ill at Valparaiso.
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-ST. JAGO--CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
-
-Porto Praya--Ribeira Grande--Atmospheric Dust with Infusoria--Habits of
-a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish--St. Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic--Singular
-Incrustations--Insects the first Colonists of Islands--Fernando
-Noronha--Bahia--Burnished Rocks--Habits of a Diodon--Pelagic Confervae
-and Infusoria--Causes of discoloured Sea.
-
-
-AFTER having been twice driven back by heavy southwestern gales, Her
-Majesty's ship Beagle, a ten-gun brig, under the command of Captain
-Fitz Roy, R. N., sailed from Devonport on the 27th of December, 1831.
-The object of the expedition was to complete the survey of Patagonia
-and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under Captain King in 1826 to 1830,--to
-survey the shores of Chile, Peru, and of some islands in the
-Pacific--and to carry a chain of chronometrical measurements round the
-World. On the 6th of January we reached Teneriffe, but were prevented
-landing, by fears of our bringing the cholera: the next morning we saw
-the sun rise behind the rugged outline of the Grand Canary island, and
-suddenly illuminate the Peak of Teneriffe, whilst the lower parts were
-veiled in fleecy clouds. This was the first of many delightful days
-never to be forgotten. On the 16th of January, 1832, we anchored at
-Porto Praya, in St. Jago, the chief island of the Cape de Verd
-archipelago.
-
-The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea, wears a desolate
-aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age, and the scorching heat of a
-tropical sun, have in most places rendered the soil unfit for
-vegetation. The country rises in successive steps of table-land,
-interspersed with some truncate conical hills, and the horizon is
-bounded by an irregular chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as
-beheld through the hazy atmosphere of this climate, is one of great
-interest; if, indeed, a person, fresh from sea, and who has just
-walked, for the first time, in a grove of cocoa-nut trees, can be a
-judge of anything but his own happiness. The island would generally be
-considered as very uninteresting, but to anyone accustomed only to an
-English landscape, the novel aspect of an utterly sterile land
-possesses a grandeur which more vegetation might spoil. A single green
-leaf can scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of the lava plains;
-yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive to exist. It
-rains very seldom, but during a short portion of the year heavy
-torrents fall, and immediately afterwards a light vegetation springs
-out of every crevice. This soon withers; and upon such naturally
-formed hay the animals live. It had not now rained for an entire year.
-When the island was discovered, the immediate neighbourhood of Porto
-Praya was clothed with trees, [1] the reckless destruction of which has
-caused here, as at St. Helena, and at some of the Canary islands,
-almost entire sterility. The broad, flat-bottomed valleys, many of
-which serve during a few days only in the season as water-courses, are
-clothed with thickets of leafless bushes. Few living creatures inhabit
-these valleys. The commonest bird is a kingfisher (Dacelo Iagoensis),
-which tamely sits on the branches of the castor-oil plant, and thence
-darts on grasshoppers and lizards. It is brightly coloured, but not so
-beautiful as the European species: in its flight, manners, and place of
-habitation, which is generally in the driest valley, there is also a
-wide difference.
-
-One day, two of the officers and myself rode to Ribeira Grande, a
-village a few miles eastward of Porto Praya. Until we reached the
-valley of St. Martin, the country presented its usual dull brown
-appearance; but here, a very small rill of water produces a most
-refreshing margin of luxuriant vegetation. In the course of an hour we
-arrived at Ribeira Grande, and were surprised at the sight of a large
-ruined fort and cathedral. This little town, before its harbour was
-filled up, was the principal place in the island: it now presents a
-melancholy, but very picturesque appearance. Having procured a black
-Padre for a guide, and a Spaniard who had served in the Peninsular war
-as an interpreter, we visited a collection of buildings, of which an
-ancient church formed the principal part. It is here the governors and
-captain-generals of the islands have been buried. Some of the
-tombstones recorded dates of the sixteenth century. [2]
-
-The heraldic ornaments were the only things in this retired place that
-reminded us of Europe. The church or chapel formed one side of a
-quadrangle, in the middle of which a large clump of bananas were
-growing. On another side was a hospital, containing about a dozen
-miserable-looking inmates.
-
-We returned to the Venda to eat our dinners. A considerable number of
-men, women, and children, all as black as jet, collected to watch us.
-Our companions were extremely merry; and everything we said or did was
-followed by their hearty laughter. Before leaving the town we visited
-the cathedral. It does not appear so rich as the smaller church, but
-boasts of a little organ, which sent forth singularly inharmonious
-cries. We presented the black priest with a few shillings, and the
-Spaniard, patting him on the head, said, with much candour, he thought
-his colour made no great difference. We then returned, as fast as the
-ponies would go, to Porto Praya.
-
-Another day we rode to the village of St. Domingo, situated near the
-centre of the island. On a small plain which we crossed, a few stunted
-acacias were growing; their tops had been bent by the steady
-trade-wind, in a singular manner--some of them even at right angles to
-their trunks. The direction of the branches was exactly N. E. by N.,
-and S. W. by S., and these natural vanes must indicate the prevailing
-direction of the force of the trade-wind. The travelling had made so
-little impression on the barren soil, that we here missed our track,
-and took that to Fuentes. This we did not find out till we arrived
-there; and we were afterwards glad of our mistake. Fuentes is a pretty
-village, with a small stream; and everything appeared to prosper well,
-excepting, indeed, that which ought to do so most--its inhabitants. The
-black children, completely naked, and looking very wretched, were
-carrying bundles of firewood half as big as their own bodies.
-
-Near Fuentes we saw a large flock of guinea-fowl--probably fifty or
-sixty in number. They were extremely wary, and could not be
-approached. They avoided us, like partridges on a rainy day in
-September, running with their heads cocked up; and if pursued, they
-readily took to the wing.
-
-The scenery of St. Domingo possesses a beauty totally unexpected, from
-the prevalent gloomy character of the rest of the island. The village
-is situated at the bottom of a valley, bounded by lofty and jagged
-walls of stratified lava. The black rocks afford a most striking
-contrast with the bright green vegetation, which follows the banks of a
-little stream of clear water. It happened to be a grand feast-day, and
-the village was full of people. On our return we overtook a party of
-about twenty young black girls, dressed in excellent taste; their black
-skins and snow-white linen being set off by coloured turbans and large
-shawls. As soon as we approached near, they suddenly all turned round,
-and covering the path with their shawls, sung with great energy a wild
-song, beating time with their hands upon their legs. We threw them some
-vintems, which were received with screams of laughter, and we left them
-redoubling the noise of their song.
-
-One morning the view was singularly clear; the distant mountains being
-projected with the sharpest outline on a heavy bank of dark blue
-clouds. Judging from the appearance, and from similar cases in
-England, I supposed that the air was saturated with moisture. The
-fact, however, turned out quite the contrary. The hygrometer gave a
-difference of 29.6 degs., between the temperature of the air, and the
-point at which dew was precipitated. This difference was nearly double
-that which I had observed on the previous mornings. This unusual
-degree of atmospheric dryness was accompanied by continual flashes of
-lightning. Is it not an uncommon case, thus to find a remarkable
-degree of aerial transparency with such a state of weather?
-
-Generally the atmosphere is hazy; and this is caused by the falling of
-impalpably fine dust, which was found to have slightly injured the
-astronomical instruments. The morning before we anchored at Porto
-Praya, I collected a little packet of this brown-coloured fine dust,
-which appeared to have been filtered from the wind by the gauze of the
-vane at the mast-head. Mr. Lyell has also given me four packets of
-dust which fell on a vessel a few hundred miles northward of these
-islands. Professor Ehrenberg [3] finds that this dust consists in
-great part of infusoria with siliceous shields, and of the siliceous
-tissue of plants. In five little packets which I sent him, he has
-ascertained no less than sixty-seven different organic forms! The
-infusoria, with the exception of two marine species, are all
-inhabitants of fresh-water. I have found no less than fifteen
-different accounts of dust having fallen on vessels when far out in the
-Atlantic. From the direction of the wind whenever it has fallen, and
-from its having always fallen during those months when the harmattan is
-known to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere, we may feel
-sure that it all comes from Africa. It is, however, a very singular
-fact, that, although Professor Ehrenberg knows many species of
-infusoria peculiar to Africa, he finds none of these in the dust which
-I sent him. On the other hand, he finds in it two species which
-hitherto he knows as living only in South America. The dust falls in
-such quantities as to dirty everything on board, and to hurt people's
-eyes; vessels even have run on shore owing to the obscurity of the
-atmosphere. It has often fallen on ships when several hundred, and
-even more than a thousand miles from the coast of Africa, and at points
-sixteen hundred miles distant in a north and south direction. In some
-dust which was collected on a vessel three hundred miles from the land,
-I was much surprised to find particles of stone above the thousandth of
-an inch square, mixed with finer matter. After this fact one need not
-be surprised at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules
-of cryptogamic plants.
-
-The geology of this island is the most interesting part of its natural
-history. On entering the harbour, a perfectly horizontal white band,
-in the face of the sea cliff, may be seen running for some miles along
-the coast, and at the height of about forty-five feet above the water.
-Upon examination this white stratum is found to consist of calcareous
-matter with numerous shells embedded, most or all of which now exist on
-the neighbouring coast. It rests on ancient volcanic rocks, and has
-been covered by a stream of basalt, which must have entered the sea
-when the white shelly bed was lying at the bottom. It is interesting
-to trace the changes produced by the heat of the overlying lava, on the
-friable mass, which in parts has been converted into a crystalline
-limestone, and in other parts into a compact spotted stone Where the
-lime has been caught up by the scoriaceous fragments of the lower
-surface of the stream, it is converted into groups of beautifully
-radiated fibres resembling arragonite. The beds of lava rise in
-successive gently-sloping plains, towards the interior, whence the
-deluges of melted stone have originally proceeded. Within historical
-times, no signs of volcanic activity have, I believe, been manifested
-in any part of St. Jago. Even the form of a crater can but rarely be
-discovered on the summits of the many red cindery hills; yet the more
-recent streams can be distinguished on the coast, forming lines of
-cliffs of less height, but stretching out in advance of those belonging
-to an older series: the height of the cliffs thus affording a rude
-measure of the age of the streams.
-
-During our stay, I observed the habits of some marine animals. A large
-Aplysia is very common. This sea-slug is about five inches long; and
-is of a dirty yellowish colour veined with purple. On each side of the
-lower surface, or foot, there is a broad membrane, which appears
-sometimes to act as a ventilator, in causing a current of water to flow
-over the dorsal branchiae or lungs. It feeds on the delicate sea-weeds
-which grow among the stones in muddy and shallow water; and I found in
-its stomach several small pebbles, as in the gizzard of a bird. This
-slug, when disturbed, emits a very fine purplish-red fluid, which
-stains the water for the space of a foot around. Besides this means of
-defence, an acrid secretion, which is spread over its body, causes a
-sharp, stinging sensation, similar to that produced by the Physalia, or
-Portuguese man-of-war.
-
-I was much interested, on several occasions, by watching the habits of
-an Octopus, or cuttle-fish. Although common in the pools of water left
-by the retiring tide, these animals were not easily caught. By means
-of their long arms and suckers, they could drag their bodies into very
-narrow crevices; and when thus fixed, it required great force to remove
-them. At other times they darted tail first, with the rapidity of an
-arrow, from one side of the pool to the other, at the same instant
-discolouring the water with a dark chestnut-brown ink. These animals
-also escape detection by a very extraordinary, chameleon-like power of
-changing their colour. They appear to vary their tints according to the
-nature of the ground over which they pass: when in deep water, their
-general shade was brownish purple, but when placed on the land, or in
-shallow water, this dark tint changed into one of a yellowish green.
-The colour, examined more carefully, was a French grey, with numerous
-minute spots of bright yellow: the former of these varied in intensity;
-the latter entirely disappeared and appeared again by turns. These
-changes were effected in such a manner, that clouds, varying in tint
-between a hyacinth red and a chestnut-brown, [4] were continually
-passing over the body. Any part, being subjected to a slight shock of
-galvanism, became almost black: a similar effect, but in a less degree,
-was produced by scratching the skin with a needle. These clouds, or
-blushes as they may be called, are said to be produced by the alternate
-expansion and contraction of minute vesicles containing variously
-coloured fluids. [5]
-
-This cuttle-fish displayed its chameleon-like power both during the act
-of swimming and whilst remaining stationary at the bottom. I was much
-amused by the various arts to escape detection used by one individual,
-which seemed fully aware that I was watching it. Remaining for a time
-motionless, it would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a cat
-after a mouse; sometimes changing its colour: it thus proceeded, till
-having gained a deeper part, it darted away, leaving a dusky train of
-ink to hide the hole into which it had crawled.
-
-While looking for marine animals, with my head about two feet above the
-rocky shore, I was more than once saluted by a jet of water,
-accompanied by a slight grating noise. At first I could not think what
-it was, but afterwards I found out that it was this cuttle-fish, which,
-though concealed in a hole, thus often led me to its discovery. That
-it possesses the power of ejecting water there is no doubt, and it
-appeared to me that it could certainly take good aim by directing the
-tube or siphon on the under side of its body. From the difficulty
-which these animals have in carrying their heads, they cannot crawl
-with ease when placed on the ground. I observed that one which I kept
-in the cabin was slightly phosphorescent in the dark.
-
-ST. PAUL'S ROCKS.--In crossing the Atlantic we hove-to during the
-morning of February 16th, close to the island of St. Paul's. This
-cluster of rocks is situated in 0 degs. 58' north latitude, and 29
-degs. 15' west longitude. It is 540 miles distant from the coast of
-America, and 350 from the island of Fernando Noronha. The highest
-point is only fifty feet above the level of the sea, and the entire
-circumference is under three-quarters of a mile. This small point
-rises abruptly out of the depths of the ocean. Its mineralogical
-constitution is not simple; in some parts the rock is of a cherty, in
-others of a felspathic nature, including thin veins of serpentine. It
-is a remarkable fact, that all the many small islands, lying far from
-any continent, in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic Oceans, with the
-exception of the Seychelles and this little point of rock, are, I
-believe, composed either of coral or of erupted matter. The volcanic
-nature of these oceanic islands is evidently an extension of that law,
-and the effect of those same causes, whether chemical or mechanical,
-from which it results that a vast majority of the volcanoes now in
-action stand either near sea-coasts or as islands in the midst of the
-sea.
-
-The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly white
-colour. This is partly owing to the dung of a vast multitude of
-seafowl, and partly to a coating of a hard glossy substance with a
-pearly lustre, which is intimately united to the surface of the rocks.
-This, when examined with a lens, is found to consist of numerous
-exceedingly thin layers, its total thickness being about the tenth of
-an inch. It contains much animal matter, and its origin, no doubt, is
-due to the action of the rain or spray on the birds' dung. Below some
-small masses of guano at Ascension, and on the Abrolhos Islets, I found
-certain stalactitic branching bodies, formed apparently in the same
-manner as the thin white coating on these rocks. The branching bodies
-so closely resembled in general appearance certain nulliporae (a family
-of hard calcareous sea-plants), that in lately looking hastily over my
-collection I did not perceive the difference. The globular extremities
-of the branches are of a pearly texture, like the enamel of teeth, but
-so hard as just to scratch plate-glass. I may here mention, that on a
-part of the coast of Ascension, where there is a vast accumulation of
-shelly sand, an incrustation is deposited on the tidal rocks by the
-water of the sea, resembling, as represented in the woodcut, certain
-cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often seen on damp walls. The surface
-of the fronds is beautifully glossy; and those parts formed where fully
-exposed to the light are of a jet black colour, but those shaded under
-ledges are only grey. I have shown specimens of this incrustation to
-several geologists, and they all thought that they were of volcanic or
-igneous origin! In its hardness and translucency--in its polish, equal
-to that of the finest oliva-shell--in the bad smell given out, and loss
-of colour under the blowpipe--it shows a close similarity with living
-sea-shells. Moreover, in sea-shells, it is known that the parts
-habitually covered and shaded by the mantle of the animal, are of a
-paler colour than those fully exposed to the light, just as is the case
-with this incrustation. When we remember that lime, either as a
-phosphate or carbonate, enters into the composition of the hard parts,
-such as bones and shells, of all living animals, it is an interesting
-physiological fact [6] to find substances harder than the enamel of
-teeth, and coloured surfaces as well polished as those of a fresh
-shell, reformed through inorganic means from dead organic
-matter--mocking, also, in shape, some of the lower vegetable
-productions.
-
-We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds--the booby and the
-noddy. The former is a species of gannet, and the latter a tern. Both
-are of a tame and stupid disposition, and are so unaccustomed to
-visitors, that I could have killed any number of them with my
-geological hammer. The booby lays her eggs on the bare rock; but the
-tern makes a very simple nest with sea-weed. By the side of many of
-these nests a small flying-fish was placed; which I suppose, had been
-brought by the male bird for its partner. It was amusing to watch how
-quickly a large and active crab (Graspus), which inhabits the crevices
-of the rock, stole the fish from the side of the nest, as soon as we
-had disturbed the parent birds. Sir W. Symonds, one of the few persons
-who have landed here, informs me that he saw the crabs dragging even
-the young birds out of their nests, and devouring them. Not a single
-plant, not even a lichen, grows on this islet; yet it is inhabited by
-several insects and spiders. The following list completes, I believe,
-the terrestrial fauna: a fly (Olfersia) living on the booby, and a tick
-which must have come here as a parasite on the birds; a small brown
-moth, belonging to a genus that feeds on feathers; a beetle (Quedius)
-and a woodlouse from beneath the dung; and lastly, numerous spiders,
-which I suppose prey on these small attendants and scavengers of the
-water-fowl. The often repeated description of the stately palm and
-other noble tropical plants, then birds, and lastly man, taking
-possession of the coral islets as soon as formed, in the Pacific, is
-probably not correct; I fear it destroys the poetry of this story, that
-feather and dirt-feeding and parasitic insects and spiders should be
-the first inhabitants of newly formed oceanic land.
-
-The smallest rock in the tropical seas, by giving a foundation for the
-growth of innumerable kinds of sea-weed and compound animals, supports
-likewise a large number of fish. The sharks and the seamen in the boats
-maintained a constant struggle which should secure the greater share of
-the prey caught by the fishing-lines. I have heard that a rock near
-the Bermudas, lying many miles out at sea, and at a considerable depth,
-was first discovered by the circumstance of fish having been observed
-in the neighbourhood.
-
-FERNANDO NORONHA, Feb. 20th.--As far as I was enabled to observe,
-during the few hours we stayed at this place, the constitution of the
-island is volcanic, but probably not of a recent date. The most
-remarkable feature is a conical hill, about one thousand feet high, the
-upper part of which is exceedingly steep, and on one side overhangs its
-base. The rock is phonolite, and is divided into irregular columns. On
-viewing one of these isolated masses, at first one is inclined to
-believe that it has been suddenly pushed up in a semi-fluid state. At
-St. Helena, however, I ascertained that some pinnacles, of a nearly
-similar figure and constitution, had been formed by the injection of
-melted rock into yielding strata, which thus had formed the moulds for
-these gigantic obelisks. The whole island is covered with wood; but
-from the dryness of the climate there is no appearance of luxuriance.
-Half-way up the mountain, some great masses of the columnar rock,
-shaded by laurel-like trees, and ornamented by others covered with fine
-pink flowers but without a single leaf, gave a pleasing effect to the
-nearer parts of the scenery.
-
-BAHIA, OR SAN SALVADOR. BRAZIL, Feb. 29th.--The day has passed
-delightfully. Delight itself, however, is a weak term to express the
-feelings of a naturalist who, for the first time, has wandered by
-himself in a Brazilian forest. The elegance of the grasses, the
-novelty of the parasitical plants, the beauty of the flowers, the
-glossy green of the foliage, but above all the general luxuriance of
-the vegetation, filled me with admiration. A most paradoxical mixture
-of sound and silence pervades the shady parts of the wood. The noise
-from the insects is so loud, that it may be heard even in a vessel
-anchored several hundred yards from the shore; yet within the recesses
-of the forest a universal silence appears to reign. To a person fond
-of natural history, such a day as this brings with it a deeper pleasure
-than he can ever hope to experience again. After wandering about for
-some hours, I returned to the landing-place; but, before reaching it, I
-was overtaken by a tropical storm. I tried to find shelter under a
-tree, which was so thick that it would never have been penetrated by
-common English rain; but here, in a couple of minutes, a little torrent
-flowed down the trunk. It is to this violence of the rain that we must
-attribute the verdure at the bottom of the thickest woods: if the
-showers were like those of a colder climate, the greater part would be
-absorbed or evaporated before it reached the ground. I will not at
-present attempt to describe the gaudy scenery of this noble bay,
-because, in our homeward voyage, we called here a second time, and I
-shall then have occasion to remark on it.
-
-Along the whole coast of Brazil, for a length of at least 2000 miles,
-and certainly for a considerable space inland, wherever solid rock
-occurs, it belongs to a granitic formation. The circumstance of this
-enormous area being constituted of materials which most geologists
-believe to have been crystallized when heated under pressure, gives
-rise to many curious reflections. Was this effect produced beneath the
-depths of a profound ocean? or did a covering of strata formerly extend
-over it, which has since been removed? Can we believe that any power,
-acting for a time short of infinity, could have denuded the granite
-over so many thousand square leagues?
-
-On a point not far from the city, where a rivulet entered the sea, I
-observed a fact connected with a subject discussed by Humboldt. [7] At
-the cataracts of the great rivers Orinoco, Nile, and Congo, the
-syenitic rocks are coated by a black substance, appearing as if they
-had been polished with plumbago. The layer is of extreme thinness; and
-on analysis by Berzelius it was found to consist of the oxides of
-manganese and iron. In the Orinoco it occurs on the rocks periodically
-washed by the floods, and in those parts alone where the stream is
-rapid; or, as the Indians say, "the rocks are black where the waters
-are white." Here the coating is of a rich brown instead of a black
-colour, and seems to be composed of ferruginous matter alone. Hand
-specimens fail to give a just idea of these brown burnished stones
-which glitter in the sun's rays. They occur only within the limits of
-the tidal waves; and as the rivulet slowly trickles down, the surf must
-supply the polishing power of the cataracts in the great rivers. In
-like manner, the rise and fall of the tide probably answer to the
-periodical inundations; and thus the same effects are produced under
-apparently different but really similar circumstances. The origin,
-however, of these coatings of metallic oxides, which seem as if
-cemented to the rocks, is not understood; and no reason, I believe, can
-be assigned for their thickness remaining the same.
-
-One day I was amused by watching the habits of the Diodon antennatus,
-which was caught swimming near the shore. This fish, with its flabby
-skin, is well known to possess the singular power of distending itself
-into a nearly spherical form. After having been taken out of water for
-a short time, and then again immersed in it, a considerable quantity
-both of water and air is absorbed by the mouth, and perhaps likewise by
-the branchial orifices. This process is effected by two methods: the
-air is swallowed, and is then forced into the cavity of the body, its
-return being prevented by a muscular contraction which is externally
-visible: but the water enters in a gentle stream through the mouth,
-which is kept wide open and motionless; this latter action must,
-therefore, depend on suction. The skin about the abdomen is much
-looser than that on the back; hence, during the inflation, the lower
-surface becomes far more distended than the upper; and the fish, in
-consequence, floats with its back downwards. Cuvier doubts whether the
-Diodon in this position is able to swim; but not only can it thus move
-forward in a straight line, but it can turn round to either side. This
-latter movement is effected solely by the aid of the pectoral fins; the
-tail being collapsed, and not used. From the body being buoyed up with
-so much air, the branchial openings are out of water, but a stream
-drawn in by the mouth constantly flows through them.
-
-The fish, having remained in this distended state for a short time,
-generally expelled the air and water with considerable force from the
-branchial apertures and mouth. It could emit, at will, a certain
-portion of the water, and it appears, therefore, probable that this
-fluid is taken in partly for the sake of regulating its specific
-gravity. This Diodon possessed several means of defence. It could
-give a severe bite, and could eject water from its mouth to some
-distance, at the same time making a curious noise by the movement of
-its jaws. By the inflation of its body, the papillae, with which the
-skin is covered, become erect and pointed. But the most curious
-circumstance is, that it secretes from the skin of its belly, when
-handled, a most beautiful carmine-red fibrous matter, which stains
-ivory and paper in so permanent a manner that the tint is retained with
-all its brightness to the present day: I am quite ignorant of the
-nature and use of this secretion. I have heard from Dr. Allan of
-Forres, that he has frequently found a Diodon, floating alive and
-distended, in the stomach of the shark, and that on several occasions
-he has known it eat its way, not only through the coats of the stomach,
-but through the sides of the monster, which has thus been killed. Who
-would ever have imagined that a little soft fish could have destroyed
-the great and savage shark?
-
-March 18th.--We sailed from Bahia. A few days afterwards, when not far
-distant from the Abrolhos Islets, my attention was called to a
-reddish-brown appearance in the sea. The whole surface of the water,
-as it appeared under a weak lens, seemed as if covered by chopped bits
-of hay, with their ends jagged. These are minute cylindrical
-confervae, in bundles or rafts of from twenty to sixty in each. Mr.
-Berkeley informs me that they are the same species (Trichodesmium
-erythraeum) with that found over large spaces in the Red Sea, and
-whence its name of Red Sea is derived. [8] Their numbers must be
-infinite: the ship passed through several bands of them, one of which
-was about ten yards wide, and, judging from the mud-like colour of the
-water, at least two and a half miles long. In almost every long voyage
-some account is given of these confervae. They appear especially
-common in the sea near Australia; and off Cape Leeuwin I found an
-allied but smaller and apparently different species. Captain Cook, in
-his third voyage, remarks, that the sailors gave to this appearance the
-name of sea-sawdust.
-
-Near Keeling Atoll, in the Indian Ocean, I observed many little masses
-of confervae a few inches square, consisting of long cylindrical
-threads of excessive thinness, so as to be barely visible to the naked
-eye, mingled with other rather larger bodies, finely conical at both
-ends. Two of these are shown in the woodcut united together. They
-vary in length from .04 to .06, and even to .08 of an inch in length;
-and in diameter from .006 to .008 of an inch. Near one extremity of
-the cylindrical part, a green septum, formed of granular matter, and
-thickest in the middle, may generally be seen. This, I believe, is the
-bottom of a most delicate, colourless sac, composed of a pulpy
-substance, which lines the exterior case, but does not extend within
-the extreme conical points. In some specimens, small but perfect
-spheres of brownish granular matter supplied the places of the septa;
-and I observed the curious process by which they were produced. The
-pulpy matter of the internal coating suddenly grouped itself into
-lines, some of which assumed a form radiating from a common centre; it
-then continued, with an irregular and rapid movement, to contract
-itself, so that in the course of a second the whole was united into a
-perfect little sphere, which occupied the position of the septum at one
-end of the now quite hollow case. The formation of the granular sphere
-was hastened by any accidental injury. I may add, that frequently a
-pair of these bodies were attached to each other, as represented above,
-cone beside cone, at that end where the septum occurs.
-
-I will add here a few other observations connected with the
-discoloration of the sea from organic causes. On the coast of Chile, a
-few leagues north of Concepcion, the Beagle one day passed through
-great bands of muddy water, exactly like that of a swollen river; and
-again, a degree south of Valparaiso, when fifty miles from the land,
-the same appearance was still more extensive. Some of the water placed
-in a glass was of a pale reddish tint; and, examined under a
-microscope, was seen to swarm with minute animalcula darting about, and
-often exploding. Their shape is oval, and contracted in the middle by
-a ring of vibrating curved ciliae. It was, however, very difficult to
-examine them with care, for almost the instant motion ceased, even
-while crossing the field of vision, their bodies burst. Sometimes both
-ends burst at once, sometimes only one, and a quantity of coarse,
-brownish, granular matter was ejected. The animal an instant before
-bursting expanded to half again its natural size; and the explosion
-took place about fifteen seconds after the rapid progressive motion had
-ceased: in a few cases it was preceded for a short interval by a
-rotatory movement on the longer axis. About two minutes after any
-number were isolated in a drop of water, they thus perished. The
-animals move with the narrow apex forwards, by the aid of their
-vibratory ciliae, and generally by rapid starts. They are exceedingly
-minute, and quite invisible to the naked eye, only covering a space
-equal to the square of the thousandth of an inch. Their numbers were
-infinite; for the smallest drop of water which I could remove contained
-very many. In one day we passed through two spaces of water thus
-stained, one of which alone must have extended over several square
-miles. What incalculable numbers of these microscopical animals! The
-colour of the water, as seen at some distance, was like that of a river
-which has flowed through a red clay district, but under the shade of
-the vessel's side it was quite as dark as chocolate. The line where
-the red and blue water joined was distinctly defined. The weather for
-some days previously had been calm, and the ocean abounded, to an
-unusual degree, with living creatures. [9]
-
-In the sea around Tierra del Fuego, and at no great distance from the
-land, I have seen narrow lines of water of a bright red colour, from
-the number of crustacea, which somewhat resemble in form large prawns.
-The sealers call them whale-food. Whether whales feed on them I do not
-know; but terns, cormorants, and immense herds of great unwieldy seals
-derive, on some parts of the coast, their chief sustenance from these
-swimming crabs. Seamen invariably attribute the discoloration of the
-water to spawn; but I found this to be the case only on one occasion.
-At the distance of several leagues from the Archipelago of the
-Galapagos, the ship sailed through three strips of a dark yellowish, or
-mud-like water; these strips were some miles long, but only a few yards
-wide, and they were separated from the surrounding water by a sinuous
-yet distinct margin. The colour was caused by little gelatinous balls,
-about the fifth of an inch in diameter, in which numerous minute
-spherical ovules were imbedded: they were of two distinct kinds, one
-being of a reddish colour and of a different shape from the other. I
-cannot form a conjecture as to what two kinds of animals these
-belonged. Captain Colnett remarks, that this appearance is very common
-among the Galapagos Islands, and that the directions of the bands
-indicate that of the currents; in the described case, however, the line
-was caused by the wind. The only other appearance which I have to
-notice, is a thin oily coat on the water which displays iridescent
-colours. I saw a considerable tract of the ocean thus covered on the
-coast of Brazil; the seamen attributed it to the putrefying carcase of
-some whale, which probably was floating at no great distance. I do not
-here mention the minute gelatinous particles, hereafter to be referred
-to, which are frequently dispersed throughout the water, for they are
-not sufficiently abundant to create any change of colour.
-
-There are two circumstances in the above accounts which appear
-remarkable: first, how do the various bodies which form the bands with
-defined edges keep together? In the case of the prawn-like crabs,
-their movements were as co-instantaneous as in a regiment of soldiers;
-but this cannot happen from anything like voluntary action with the
-ovules, or the confervae, nor is it probable among the infusoria.
-Secondly, what causes the length and narrowness of the bands? The
-appearance so much resembles that which may be seen in every torrent,
-where the stream uncoils into long streaks the froth collected in the
-eddies, that I must attribute the effect to a similar action either of
-the currents of the air or sea. Under this supposition we must believe
-that the various organized bodies are produced in certain favourable
-places, and are thence removed by the set of either wind or water. I
-confess, however, there is a very great difficulty in imagining any one
-spot to be the birthplace of the millions of millions of animalcula and
-confervae: for whence come the germs at such points?--the parent bodies
-having been distributed by the winds and waves over the immense ocean.
-But on no other hypothesis can I understand their linear grouping. I
-may add that Scoresby remarks that green water abounding with pelagic
-animals is invariably found in a certain part of the Arctic Sea.
-
-[1] I state this on the authority of Dr. E. Dieffenbach, in his German
-translation of the first edition of this Journal.
-
-[2] The Cape de Verd Islands were discovered in 1449. There was a
-tombstone of a bishop with the date of 1571; and a crest of a hand and
-dagger, dated 1497.
-
-[3] I must take this opportunity of acknowledging the great kindness
-with which this illustrious naturalist has examined many of my
-specimens. I have sent (June, 1845) a full account of the falling of
-this dust to the Geological Society.
-
-[4] So named according to Patrick Symes's nomenclature.
-
-[5] See Encyclop. of Anat. and Physiol., article Cephalopoda
-
-[6] Mr. Horner and Sir David Brewster have described (Philosophical
-Transactions, 1836, p. 65) a singular "artificial substance resembling
-shell." It is deposited in fine, transparent, highly polished,
-brown-coloured laminae, possessing peculiar optical properties, on the
-inside of a vessel, in which cloth, first prepared with glue and then
-with lime, is made to revolve rapidly in water. It is much softer,
-more transparent, and contains more animal matter, than the natural
-incrustation at Ascension; but we here again see the strong tendency
-which carbonate of lime and animal matter evince to form a solid
-substance allied to shell.
-
-[7] Pers. Narr., vol. v., pt. 1., p. 18.
-
-[8] M. Montagne, in Comptes Rendus, etc., Juillet, 1844; and Annal. des
-Scienc. Nat., Dec. 1844
-
-[9] M. Lesson (Voyage de la Coquille, tom. i., p. 255) mentions red
-water off Lima, apparently produced by the same cause. Peron, the
-distinguished naturalist, in the Voyage aux Terres Australes, gives no
-less than twelve references to voyagers who have alluded to the
-discoloured waters of the sea (vol. ii. p. 239). To the references
-given by Peron may be added, Humboldt's Pers. Narr., vol. vi. p. 804;
-Flinder's Voyage, vol. i. p. 92; Labillardiere, vol. i. p. 287; Ulloa's
-Voyage; Voyage of the Astrolabe and of the Coquille; Captain King's
-Survey of Australia, etc.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-RIO DE JANEIRO
-
-Rio de Janeiro--Excursion north of Cape Frio--Great
-Evaporation--Slavery--Botofogo Bay--Terrestrial Planariae--Clouds on
-the Corcovado--Heavy Rain--Musical Frogs--Phosphorescent
-Insects--Elater, springing powers of--Blue Haze--Noise made by a
-Butterfly--Entomology--Ants--Wasp killing a Spider--Parasitical
-Spider--Artifices of an Epeira--Gregarious Spider--Spider with an
-unsymmetrical Web.
-
-
-APRIL 4th to July 5th, 1832.--A few days after our arrival I became
-acquainted with an Englishman who was going to visit his estate,
-situated rather more than a hundred miles from the capital, to the
-northward of Cape Frio. I gladly accepted his kind offer of allowing
-me to accompany him.
-
-April 8th.--Our party amounted to seven. The first stage was very
-interesting. The day was powerfully hot, and as we passed through the
-woods, everything was motionless, excepting the large and brilliant
-butterflies, which lazily fluttered about. The view seen when crossing
-the hills behind Praia Grande was most beautiful; the colours were
-intense, and the prevailing tint a dark blue; the sky and the calm
-waters of the bay vied with each other in splendour. After passing
-through some cultivated country, we entered a forest, which in the
-grandeur of all its parts could not be exceeded. We arrived by midday
-at Ithacaia; this small village is situated on a plain, and round the
-central house are the huts of the negroes. These, from their regular
-form and position, reminded me of the drawings of the Hottentot
-habitations in Southern Africa. As the moon rose early, we determined
-to start the same evening for our sleeping-place at the Lagoa Marica.
-As it was growing dark we passed under one of the massive, bare, and
-steep hills of granite which are so common in this country. This spot
-is notorious from having been, for a long time, the residence of some
-runaway slaves, who, by cultivating a little ground near the top,
-contrived to eke out a subsistence. At length they were discovered,
-and a party of soldiers being sent, the whole were seized with the
-exception of one old woman, who, sooner than again be led into slavery,
-dashed herself to pieces from the summit of the mountain. In a Roman
-matron this would have been called the noble love of freedom: in a poor
-negress it is mere brutal obstinacy. We continued riding for some
-hours. For the few last miles the road was intricate, and it passed
-through a desert waste of marshes and lagoons. The scene by the dimmed
-light of the moon was most desolate. A few fireflies flitted by us;
-and the solitary snipe, as it rose, uttered its plaintive cry. The
-distant and sullen roar of the sea scarcely broke the stillness of the
-night.
-
-April 9th.--We left our miserable sleeping-place before sunrise. The
-road passed through a narrow sandy plain, lying between the sea and the
-interior salt lagoons. The number of beautiful fishing birds, such as
-egrets and cranes, and the succulent plants assuming most fantastical
-forms, gave to the scene an interest which it would not otherwise have
-possessed. The few stunted trees were loaded with parasitical plants,
-among which the beauty and delicious fragrance of some of the orchideae
-were most to be admired. As the sun rose, the day became extremely hot,
-and the reflection of the light and heat from the white sand was very
-distressing. We dined at Mandetiba; the thermometer in the shade being
-84 degs. The beautiful view of the distant wooded hills, reflected in
-the perfectly calm water of an extensive lagoon, quite refreshed us. As
-the venda [1] here was a very good one, and I have the pleasant, but
-rare remembrance, of an excellent dinner, I will be grateful and
-presently describe it, as the type of its class. These houses are
-often large, and are built of thick upright posts, with boughs
-interwoven, and afterwards plastered. They seldom have floors, and
-never glazed windows; but are generally pretty well roofed. Universally
-the front part is open, forming a kind of verandah, in which tables and
-benches are placed. The bed-rooms join on each side, and here the
-passenger may sleep as comfortably as he can, on a wooden platform,
-covered by a thin straw mat. The venda stands in a courtyard, where
-the horses are fed. On first arriving it was our custom to unsaddle
-the horses and give them their Indian corn; then, with a low bow, to
-ask the senhor to do us the favour to give up something to eat.
-"Anything you choose, sir," was his usual answer. For the few first
-times, vainly I thanked providence for having guided us to so good a
-man. The conversation proceeding, the case universally became
-deplorable. "Any fish can you do us the favour of giving ?"--"Oh! no,
-sir."--"Any soup?"--"No, sir."--"Any bread?"--"Oh! no, sir."--"Any
-dried meat?"--"Oh! no, sir." If we were lucky, by waiting a couple of
-hours, we obtained fowls, rice, and farinha. It not unfrequently
-happened, that we were obliged to kill, with stones, the poultry for
-our own supper. When, thoroughly exhausted by fatigue and hunger, we
-timorously hinted that we should be glad of our meal, the pompous, and
-(though true) most unsatisfactory answer was, "It will be ready when it
-is ready." If we had dared to remonstrate any further, we should have
-been told to proceed on our journey, as being too impertinent. The
-hosts are most ungracious and disagreeable in their manners; their
-houses and their persons are often filthily dirty; the want of the
-accommodation of forks, knives, and spoons is common; and I am sure no
-cottage or hovel in England could be found in a state so utterly
-destitute of every comfort. At Campos Novos, however, we fared
-sumptuously; having rice and fowls, biscuit, wine, and spirits, for
-dinner; coffee in the evening, and fish with coffee for breakfast. All
-this, with good food for the horses, only cost 2s. 6d. per head. Yet
-the host of this venda, being asked if he knew anything of a whip which
-one of the party had lost, gruffly answered, "How should I know? why
-did you not take care of it?--I suppose the dogs have eaten it."
-
-Leaving Mandetiba, we continued to pass through an intricate wilderness
-of lakes; in some of which were fresh, in others salt water shells. Of
-the former kinds, I found a Limnaea in great numbers in a lake, into
-which, the inhabitants assured me that the sea enters once a year, and
-sometimes oftener, and makes the water quite salt. I have no doubt
-many interesting facts, in relation to marine and fresh water animals,
-might be observed in this chain of lagoons, which skirt the coast of
-Brazil. M. Gay [2] has stated that he found in the neighbourhood of
-Rio, shells of the marine genera solen and mytilus, and fresh water
-ampullariae, living together in brackish water. I also frequently
-observed in the lagoon near the Botanic Garden, where the water is only
-a little less salt than in the sea, a species of hydrophilus, very
-similar to a water-beetle common in the ditches of England: in the same
-lake the only shell belonged to a genus generally found in estuaries.
-
-Leaving the coast for a time, we again entered the forest. The trees
-were very lofty, and remarkable, compared with those of Europe, from
-the whiteness of their trunks. I see by my note-book, "wonderful and
-beautiful, flowering parasites," invariably struck me as the most novel
-object in these grand scenes. Travelling onwards we passed through
-tracts of pasturage, much injured by the enormous conical ants' nests,
-which were nearly twelve feet high. They gave to the plain exactly the
-appearance of the mud volcanos at Jorullo, as figured by Humboldt. We
-arrived at Engenhodo after it was dark, having been ten hours on
-horseback. I never ceased, during the whole journey, to be surprised
-at the amount of labour which the horses were capable of enduring; they
-appeared also to recover from any injury much sooner than those of our
-English breed. The Vampire bat is often the cause of much trouble, by
-biting the horses on their withers. The injury is generally not so
-much owing to the loss of blood, as to the inflammation which the
-pressure of the saddle afterwards produces. The whole circumstance has
-lately been doubted in England; I was therefore fortunate in being
-present when one (Desmodus d'orbignyi, Wat.) was actually caught on a
-horse's back. We were bivouacking late one evening near Coquimbo, in
-Chile, when my servant, noticing that one of the horses was very
-restive, went to see what was the matter, and fancying he could
-distinguish something, suddenly put his hand on the beast's withers,
-and secured the vampire. In the morning the spot where the bite had
-been inflicted was easily distinguished from being slightly swollen and
-bloody. The third day afterwards we rode the horse, without any ill
-effects.
-
-April 13th.--After three days' travelling we arrived at Socego, the
-estate of Senhor Manuel Figuireda, a relation of one of our party. The
-house was simple, and, though like a barn in form, was well suited to
-the climate. In the sitting-room gilded chairs and sofas were oddly
-contrasted with the whitewashed walls, thatched roof, and windows
-without glass. The house, together with the granaries, the stables,
-and workshops for the blacks, who had been taught various trades,
-formed a rude kind of quadrangle; in the centre of which a large pile
-of coffee was drying. These buildings stand on a little hill,
-overlooking the cultivated ground, and surrounded on every side by a
-wall of dark green luxuriant forest. The chief produce of this part of
-the country is coffee. Each tree is supposed to yield annually, on an
-average, two pounds; but some give as much as eight. Mandioca or
-cassada is likewise cultivated in great quantity. Every part of this
-plant is useful; the leaves and stalks are eaten by the horses, and the
-roots are ground into a pulp, which, when pressed dry and baked, forms
-the farinha, the principal article of sustenance in the Brazils. It is
-a curious, though well-known fact, that the juice of this most
-nutritious plant is highly poisonous. A few years ago a cow died at
-this Fazenda, in consequence of having drunk some of it. Senhor
-Figuireda told me that he had planted, the year before, one bag of
-feijao or beans, and three of rice; the former of which produced
-eighty, and the latter three hundred and twenty fold. The pasturage
-supports a fine stock of cattle, and the woods are so full of game that
-a deer had been killed on each of the three previous days. This
-profusion of food showed itself at dinner, where, if the tables did not
-groan, the guests surely did; for each person is expected to eat of
-every dish. One day, having, as I thought, nicely calculated so that
-nothing should go away untasted, to my utter dismay a roast turkey and
-a pig appeared in all their substantial reality. During the meals, it
-was the employment of a man to drive out of the room sundry old hounds,
-and dozens of little black children, which crawled in together, at
-every opportunity. As long as the idea of slavery could be banished,
-there was something exceedingly fascinating in this simple and
-patriarchal style of living: it was such a perfect retirement and
-independence from the rest of the world.
-
-As soon as any stranger is seen arriving, a large bell is set tolling,
-and generally some small cannon are fired. The event is thus announced
-to the rocks and woods, but to nothing else. One morning I walked out
-an hour before daylight to admire the solemn stillness of the scene; at
-last, the silence was broken by the morning hymn, raised on high by the
-whole body of the blacks; and in this manner their daily work is
-generally begun. On such fazendas as these, I have no doubt the slaves
-pass happy and contented lives. On Saturday and Sunday they work for
-themselves, and in this fertile climate the labour of two days is
-sufficient to support a man and his family for the whole week.
-
-April 14th.--Leaving Socego, we rode to another estate on the Rio
-Macae, which was the last patch of cultivated ground in that direction.
-The estate was two and a half miles long, and the owner had forgotten
-how many broad. Only a very small piece had been cleared, yet almost
-every acre was capable of yielding all the various rich productions of
-a tropical land. Considering the enormous area of Brazil, the
-proportion of cultivated ground can scarcely be considered as anything,
-compared to that which is left in the state of nature: at some future
-age, how vast a population it will support! During the second day's
-journey we found the road so shut up, that it was necessary that a man
-should go ahead with a sword to cut away the creepers. The forest
-abounded with beautiful objects; among which the tree ferns, though not
-large, were, from their bright green foliage, and the elegant curvature
-of their fronds, most worthy of admiration. In the evening it rained
-very heavily, and although the thermometer stood at 65 degs., I felt
-very cold. As soon as the rain ceased, it was curious to observe the
-extraordinary evaporation which commenced over the whole extent of the
-forest. At the height of a hundred feet the hills were buried in a
-dense white vapour, which rose like columns of smoke from the most
-thickly wooded parts, and especially from the valleys. I observed this
-phenomenon on several occasions. I suppose it is owing to the large
-surface of foliage, previously heated by the sun's rays.
-
-While staying at this estate, I was very nearly being an eye-witness to
-one of those atrocious acts which can only take place in a slave
-country. Owing to a quarrel and a lawsuit, the owner was on the point
-of taking all the women and children from the male slaves, and selling
-them separately at the public auction at Rio. Interest, and not any
-feeling of compassion, prevented this act. Indeed, I do not believe
-the inhumanity of separating thirty families, who had lived together
-for many years, even occurred to the owner. Yet I will pledge myself,
-that in humanity and good feeling he was superior to the common run of
-men. It may be said there exists no limit to the blindness of interest
-and selfish habit. I may mention one very trifling anecdote, which at
-the time struck me more forcibly than any story of cruelty. I was
-crossing a ferry with a negro, who was uncommonly stupid. In
-endeavouring to make him understand, I talked loud, and made signs, in
-doing which I passed my hand near his face. He, I suppose, thought I
-was in a passion, and was going to strike him; for instantly, with a
-frightened look and half-shut eyes, he dropped his hands. I shall
-never forget my feelings of surprise, disgust, and shame, at seeing a
-great powerful man afraid even to ward off a blow, directed, as he
-thought, at his face. This man had been trained to a degradation lower
-than the slavery of the most helpless animal.
-
-April 18th.--In returning we spent two days at Socego, and I employed
-them in collecting insects in the forest. The greater number of trees,
-although so lofty, are not more than three or four feet in
-circumference. There are, of course, a few of much greater dimensions.
-Senhor Manuel was then making a canoe 70 feet in length from a solid
-trunk, which had originally been 110 feet long, and of great thickness.
-The contrast of palm trees, growing amidst the common branching kinds,
-never fails to give the scene an intertropical character. Here the
-woods were ornamented by the Cabbage Palm--one of the most beautiful of
-its family. With a stem so narrow that it might be clasped with the
-two hands, it waves its elegant head at the height of forty or fifty
-feet above the ground. The woody creepers, themselves covered by other
-creepers, were of great thickness: some which I measured were two feet
-in circumference. Many of the older trees presented a very curious
-appearance from the tresses of a liana hanging from their boughs, and
-resembling bundles of hay. If the eye was turned from the world of
-foliage above, to the ground beneath, it was attracted by the extreme
-elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae. The latter, in some
-parts, covered the surface with a brushwood only a few inches high. In
-walking across these thick beds of mimosae, a broad track was marked by
-the change of shade, produced by the drooping of their sensitive
-petioles. It is easy to specify the individual objects of admiration in
-these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an adequate idea of
-the higher feelings of wonder, astonishment, and devotion, which fill
-and elevate the mind.
-
-April 19th.--Leaving Socego, during the two first days, we retraced our
-steps. It was very wearisome work, as the road generally ran across a
-glaring hot sandy plain, not far from the coast. I noticed that each
-time the horse put its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle
-chirping noise was produced. On the third day we took a different
-line, and passed through the gay little village of Madre de Deos. This
-is one of the principal lines of road in Brazil; yet it was in so bad a
-state that no wheeled vehicle, excepting the clumsy bullock-wagon,
-could pass along. In our whole journey we did not cross a single
-bridge built of stone; and those made of logs of wood were frequently
-so much out of repair, that it was necessary to go on one side to avoid
-them. All distances are inaccurately known. The road is often marked
-by crosses, in the place of milestones, to signify where human blood
-has been spilled. On the evening of the 23rd we arrived at Rio, having
-finished our pleasant little excursion.
-
-During the remainder of my stay at Rio, I resided in a cottage at
-Botofogo Bay. It was impossible to wish for anything more delightful
-than thus to spend some weeks in so magnificent a country. In England
-any person fond of natural history enjoys in his walks a great
-advantage, by always having something to attract his attention; but in
-these fertile climates, teeming with life, the attractions are so
-numerous, that he is scarcely able to walk at all.
-
-The few observations which I was enabled to make were almost
-exclusively confined to the invertebrate animals. The existence of a
-division of the genus Planaria, which inhabits the dry land, interested
-me much. These animals are of so simple a structure, that Cuvier has
-arranged them with the intestinal worms, though never found within the
-bodies of other animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh
-water; but those to which I allude were found, even in the drier parts
-of the forest, beneath logs of rotten wood, on which I believe they
-feed. In general form they resemble little slugs, but are very much
-narrower in proportion, and several of the species are beautifully
-coloured with longitudinal stripes. Their structure is very simple:
-near the middle of the under or crawling surface there are two small
-transverse slits, from the anterior one of which a funnel-shaped and
-highly irritable mouth can be protruded. For some time after the rest
-of the animal was completely dead from the effects of salt water or any
-other cause, this organ still retained its vitality.
-
-I found no less than twelve different species of terrestrial Planariae
-in different parts of the southern hemisphere. [3] Some specimens which
-I obtained at Van Dieman's Land, I kept alive for nearly two months,
-feeding them on rotten wood. Having cut one of them transversely into
-two nearly equal parts, in the course of a fortnight both had the shape
-of perfect animals. I had, however, so divided the body, that one of
-the halves contained both the inferior orifices, and the other, in
-consequence, none. In the course of twenty-five days from the
-operation, the more perfect half could not have been distinguished from
-any other specimen. The other had increased much in size; and towards
-its posterior end, a clear space was formed in the parenchymatous mass,
-in which a rudimentary cup-shaped mouth could clearly be distinguished;
-on the under surface, however, no corresponding slit was yet open. If
-the increased heat of the weather, as we approached the equator, had
-not destroyed all the individuals, there can be no doubt that this last
-step would have completed its structure. Although so well-known an
-experiment, it was interesting to watch the gradual production of every
-essential organ, out of the simple extremity of another animal. It is
-extremely difficult to preserve these Planariae; as soon as the
-cessation of life allows the ordinary laws of change to act, their
-entire bodies become soft and fluid, with a rapidity which I have never
-seen equalled.
-
-I first visited the forest in which these Planariae were found, in
-company with an old Portuguese priest who took me out to hunt with him.
-The sport consisted in turning into the cover a few dogs, and then
-patiently waiting to fire at any animal which might appear. We were
-accompanied by the son of a neighbouring farmer--a good specimen of a
-wild Brazilian youth. He was dressed in a tattered old shirt and
-trousers, and had his head uncovered: he carried an old-fashioned gun
-and a large knife. The habit of carrying the knife is universal; and
-in traversing a thick wood it is almost necessary, on account of the
-creeping plants. The frequent occurrence of murder may be partly
-attributed to this habit. The Brazilians are so dexterous with the
-knife, that they can throw it to some distance with precision, and with
-sufficient force to cause a fatal wound. I have seen a number of
-little boys practising this art as a game of play and from their skill
-in hitting an upright stick, they promised well for more earnest
-attempts. My companion, the day before, had shot two large bearded
-monkeys. These animals have prehensile tails, the extremity of which,
-even after death, can support the whole weight of the body. One of
-them thus remained fast to a branch, and it was necessary to cut down a
-large tree to procure it. This was soon effected, and down came tree
-and monkey with an awful crash. Our day's sport, besides the monkey,
-was confined to sundry small green parrots and a few toucans. I
-profited, however, by my acquaintance with the Portuguese padre, for on
-another occasion he gave me a fine specimen of the Yagouaroundi cat.
-
-Every one has heard of the beauty of the scenery near Botofogo. The
-house in which I lived was seated close beneath the well-known mountain
-of the Corcovado. It has been remarked, with much truth, that abruptly
-conical hills are characteristic of the formation which Humboldt
-designates as gneiss-granite. Nothing can be more striking than the
-effect of these huge rounded masses of naked rock rising out of the
-most luxuriant vegetation.
-
-I was often interested by watching the clouds, which, rolling in from
-seaward, formed a bank just beneath the highest point of the Corcovado.
-This mountain, like most others, when thus partly veiled, appeared to
-rise to a far prouder elevation than its real height of 2300 feet. Mr.
-Daniell has observed, in his meteorological essays, that a cloud
-sometimes appears fixed on a mountain summit, while the wind continues
-to blow over it. The same phenomenon here presented a slightly
-different appearance. In this case the cloud was clearly seen to curl
-over, and rapidly pass by the summit, and yet was neither diminished
-nor increased in size. The sun was setting, and a gentle southerly
-breeze, striking against the southern side of the rock, mingled its
-current with the colder air above; and the vapour was thus condensed;
-but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over the ridge, and came
-within the influence of the warmer atmosphere of the northern sloping
-bank, they were immediately re-dissolved.
-
-The climate, during the months of May and June, or the beginning of
-winter, was delightful. The mean temperature, from observations taken
-at nine o'clock, both morning and evening, was only 72 degs. It often
-rained heavily, but the drying southerly winds soon again rendered the
-walks pleasant. One morning, in the course of six hours, 1.6 inches of
-rain fell. As this storm passed over the forests which surround the
-Corcovado, the sound produced by the drops pattering on the countless
-multitude of leaves was very remarkable, it could be heard at the
-distance of a quarter of a mile, and was like the rushing of a great
-body of water. After the hotter days, it was delicious to sit quietly
-in the garden and watch the evening pass into night. Nature, in these
-climes, chooses her vocalists from more humble performers than in
-Europe. A small frog, of the genus Hyla, sits on a blade of grass
-about an inch above the surface of the water, and sends forth a
-pleasing chirp: when several are together they sing in harmony on
-different notes. I had some difficulty in catching a specimen of this
-frog. The genus Hyla has its toes terminated by small suckers; and I
-found this animal could crawl up a pane of glass, when placed
-absolutely perpendicular. Various cicidae and crickets, at the same
-time, keep up a ceaseless shrill cry, but which, softened by the
-distance, is not unpleasant. Every evening after dark this great
-concert commenced; and often have I sat listening to it, until my
-attention has been drawn away by some curious passing insect.
-
-At these times the fireflies are seen flitting about from hedge to
-hedge. On a dark night the light can be seen at about two hundred
-paces distant. It is remarkable that in all the different kinds of
-glowworms, shining elaters, and various marine animals (such as the
-crustacea, medusae, nereidae, a coralline of the genus Clytia, and
-Pyrosma), which I have observed, the light has been of a well-marked
-green colour. All the fireflies, which I caught here, belonged to the
-Lampyridae (in which family the English glowworm is included), and the
-greater number of specimens were of Lampyris occidentalis. [4] I found
-that this insect emitted the most brilliant flashes when irritated: in
-the intervals, the abdominal rings were obscured. The flash was almost
-co-instantaneous in the two rings, but it was just perceptible first in
-the anterior one. The shining matter was fluid and very adhesive:
-little spots, where the skin had been torn, continued bright with a
-slight scintillation, whilst the uninjured parts were obscured. When
-the insect was decapitated the rings remained uninterruptedly bright,
-but not so brilliant as before: local irritation with a needle always
-increased the vividness of the light. The rings in one instance
-retained their luminous property nearly twenty-four hours after the
-death of the insect. From these facts it would appear probable, that
-the animal has only the power of concealing or extinguishing the light
-for short intervals, and that at other times the display is
-involuntary. On the muddy and wet gravel-walks I found the larvae of
-this lampyris in great numbers: they resembled in general form the
-female of the English glowworm. These larvae possessed but feeble
-luminous powers; very differently from their parents, on the slightest
-touch they feigned death and ceased to shine; nor did irritation excite
-any fresh display. I kept several of them alive for some time: their
-tails are very singular organs, for they act, by a well-fitted
-contrivance, as suckers or organs of attachment, and likewise as
-reservoirs for saliva, or some such fluid. I repeatedly fed them on
-raw meat; and I invariably observed, that every now and then the
-extremity of the tail was applied to the mouth, and a drop of fluid
-exuded on the meat, which was then in the act of being consumed. The
-tail, notwithstanding so much practice, does not seem to be able to
-find its way to the mouth; at least the neck was always touched first,
-and apparently as a guide.
-
-When we were at Bahia, an elater or beetle (Pyrophorus luminosus,
-Illig.) seemed the most common luminous insect. The light in this case
-was also rendered more brilliant by irritation. I amused myself one
-day by observing the springing powers of this insect, which have not,
-as it appears to me, been properly described. [5] The elater, when
-placed on its back and preparing to spring, moved its head and thorax
-backwards, so that the pectoral spine was drawn out, and rested on the
-edge of its sheath. The same backward movement being continued, the
-spine, by the full action of the muscles, was bent like a spring; and
-the insect at this moment rested on the extremity of its head and
-wing-cases. The effort being suddenly relaxed, the head and thorax flew
-up, and in consequence, the base of the wing-cases struck the
-supporting surface with such force, that the insect by the reaction was
-jerked upwards to the height of one or two inches. The projecting
-points of the thorax, and the sheath of the spine, served to steady the
-whole body during the spring. In the descriptions which I have read,
-sufficient stress does not appear to have been laid on the elasticity
-of the spine: so sudden a spring could not be the result of simple
-muscular contraction, without the aid of some mechanical contrivance.
-
-On several occasions I enjoyed some short but most pleasant excursions
-in the neighbouring country. One day I went to the Botanic Garden,
-where many plants, well known for their great utility, might be seen
-growing. The leaves of the camphor, pepper, cinnamon, and clove trees
-were delightfully aromatic; and the bread-fruit, the jaca, and the
-mango, vied with each other in the magnificence of their foliage. The
-landscape in the neighbourhood of Bahia almost takes its character from
-the two latter trees. Before seeing them, I had no idea that any trees
-could cast so black a shade on the ground. Both of them bear to the
-evergreen vegetation of these climates the same kind of relation which
-laurels and hollies in England do to the lighter green of the deciduous
-trees. It may be observed, that the houses within the tropics are
-surrounded by the most beautiful forms of vegetation, because many of
-them are at the same time most useful to man. Who can doubt that these
-qualities are united in the banana, the cocoa-nut, the many kinds of
-palm, the orange, and the bread-fruit tree?
-
-During this day I was particularly struck with a remark of Humboldt's,
-who often alludes to "the thin vapour which, without changing the
-transparency of the air, renders its tints more harmonious, and softens
-its effects." This is an appearance which I have never observed in the
-temperate zones. The atmosphere, seen through a short space of half or
-three-quarters of a mile, was perfectly lucid, but at a greater
-distance all colours were blended into a most beautiful haze, of a pale
-French grey, mingled with a little blue. The condition of the
-atmosphere between the morning and about noon, when the effect was most
-evident, had undergone little change, excepting in its dryness. In the
-interval, the difference between the dew point and temperature had
-increased from 7.5 to 17 degs.
-
-On another occasion I started early and walked to the Gavia, or topsail
-mountain. The air was delightfully cool and fragrant; and the drops of
-dew still glittered on the leaves of the large liliaceous plants, which
-shaded the streamlets of clear water. Sitting down on a block of
-granite, it was delightful to watch the various insects and birds as
-they flew past. The humming-bird seems particularly fond of such shady
-retired spots. Whenever I saw these little creatures buzzing round a
-flower, with their wings vibrating so rapidly as to be scarcely
-visible, I was reminded of the sphinx moths: their movements and habits
-are indeed in many respects very similar.
-
-Following a pathway, I entered a noble forest, and from a height of
-five or six hundred feet, one of those splendid views was presented,
-which are so common on every side of Rio. At this elevation the
-landscape attains its most brilliant tint; and every form, every shade,
-so completely surpasses in magnificence all that the European has ever
-beheld in his own country, that he knows not how to express his
-feelings. The general effect frequently recalled to my mind the gayest
-scenery of the Opera-house or the great theatres. I never returned
-from these excursions empty-handed. This day I found a specimen of a
-curious fungus, called Hymenophallus. Most people know the English
-Phallus, which in autumn taints the air with its odious smell: this,
-however, as the entomologist is aware, is, to some of our beetles a
-delightful fragrance. So was it here; for a Strongylus, attracted by
-the odour, alighted on the fungus as I carried it in my hand. We here
-see in two distant countries a similar relation between plants and
-insects of the same families, though the species of both are different.
-When man is the agent in introducing into a country a new species, this
-relation is often broken: as one instance of this I may mention, that
-the leaves of the cabbages and lettuces, which in England afford food
-to such a multitude of slugs and caterpillars, in the gardens near Rio
-are untouched.
-
-During our stay at Brazil I made a large collection of insects. A few
-general observations on the comparative importance of the different
-orders may be interesting to the English entomologist. The large and
-brilliantly coloured Lepidoptera bespeak the zone they inhabit, far
-more plainly than any other race of animals. I allude only to the
-butterflies; for the moths, contrary to what might have been expected
-from the rankness of the vegetation, certainly appeared in much fewer
-numbers than in our own temperate regions. I was much surprised at the
-habits of Papilio feronia. This butterfly is not uncommon, and
-generally frequents the orange-groves. Although a high flier, yet it
-very frequently alights on the trunks of trees. On these occasions its
-head is invariably placed downwards; and its wings are expanded in a
-horizontal plane, instead of being folded vertically, as is commonly
-the case. This is the only butterfly which I have ever seen, that uses
-its legs for running. Not being aware of this fact, the insect, more
-than once, as I cautiously approached with my forceps, shuffled on one
-side just as the instrument was on the point of closing, and thus
-escaped. But a far more singular fact is the power which this species
-possesses of making a noise. [6] Several times when a pair, probably
-male and female, were chasing each other in an irregular course, they
-passed within a few yards of me; and I distinctly heard a clicking
-noise, similar to that produced by a toothed wheel passing under a
-spring catch. The noise was continued at short intervals, and could be
-distinguished at about twenty yards' distance: I am certain there is no
-error in the observation.
-
-I was disappointed in the general aspect of the Coleoptera. The number
-of minute and obscurely coloured beetles is exceedingly great. [7] The
-cabinets of Europe can, as yet, boast only of the larger species from
-tropical climates. It is sufficient to disturb the composure of an
-entomologist's mind, to look forward to the future dimensions of a
-complete catalogue. The carnivorous beetles, or Carabidae, appear in
-extremely few numbers within the tropics: this is the more remarkable
-when compared to the case of the carnivorous quadrupeds, which are so
-abundant in hot countries. I was struck with this observation both on
-entering Brazil, and when I saw the many elegant and active forms of
-the Harpalidae re-appearing on the temperate plains of La Plata. Do
-the very numerous spiders and rapacious Hymenoptera supply the place of
-the carnivorous beetles? The carrion-feeders and Brachelytra are very
-uncommon; on the other hand, the Rhyncophora and Chrysomelidae, all of
-which depend on the vegetable world for subsistence, are present in
-astonishing numbers. I do not here refer to the number of different
-species, but to that of the individual insects; for on this it is that
-the most striking character in the entomology of different countries
-depends. The orders Orthoptera and Hemiptera are particularly
-numerous; as likewise is the stinging division of the Hymenoptera the
-bees, perhaps, being excepted. A person, on first entering a tropical
-forest, is astonished at the labours of the ants: well-beaten paths
-branch off in every direction, on which an army of never-failing
-foragers may be seen, some going forth, and others returning, burdened
-with pieces of green leaf, often larger than their own bodies.
-
-A small dark-coloured ant sometimes migrates in countless numbers. One
-day, at Bahia, my attention was drawn by observing many spiders,
-cockroaches, and other insects, and some lizards, rushing in the
-greatest agitation across a bare piece of ground. A little way behind,
-every stalk and leaf was blackened by a small ant. The swarm having
-crossed the bare space, divided itself, and descended an old wall. By
-this means many insects were fairly enclosed; and the efforts which the
-poor little creatures made to extricate themselves from such a death
-were wonderful. When the ants came to the road they changed their
-course, and in narrow files reascended the wall. Having placed a small
-stone so as to intercept one of the lines, the whole body attacked it,
-and then immediately retired. Shortly afterwards another body came to
-the charge, and again having failed to make any impression, this line
-of march was entirely given up. By going an inch round, the file might
-have avoided the stone, and this doubtless would have happened, if it
-had been originally there: but having been attacked, the lion-hearted
-little warriors scorned the idea of yielding.
-
-Certain wasp-like insects, which construct in the corners of the
-verandahs clay cells for their larvae, are very numerous in the
-neighbourhood of Rio. These cells they stuff full of half-dead spiders
-and caterpillars, which they seem wonderfully to know how to sting to
-that degree as to leave them paralysed but alive, until their eggs are
-hatched; and the larvae feed on the horrid mass of powerless,
-half-killed victims--a sight which has been described by an
-enthusiastic naturalist [8] as curious and pleasing! I was much
-interested one day by watching a deadly contest between a Pepsis and a
-large spider of the genus Lycosa. The wasp made a sudden dash at its
-prey, and then flew away: the spider was evidently wounded, for, trying
-to escape, it rolled down a little slope, but had still strength
-sufficient to crawl into a thick tuft of grass. The wasp soon
-returned, and seemed surprised at not immediately finding its victim.
-It then commenced as regular a hunt as ever hound did after fox; making
-short semicircular casts, and all the time rapidly vibrating its wings
-and antennae. The spider, though well concealed, was soon discovered,
-and the wasp, evidently still afraid of its adversary's jaws, after
-much manoeuvring, inflicted two stings on the under side of its thorax.
-At last, carefully examining with its antennae the now motionless
-spider, it proceeded to drag away the body. But I stopped both tyrant
-and prey. [9]
-
-The number of spiders, in proportion to other insects, is here compared
-with England very much larger; perhaps more so than with any other
-division of the articulate animals. The variety of species among the
-jumping spiders appears almost infinite. The genus, or rather family,
-of Epeira, is here characterized by many singular forms; some species
-have pointed coriaceous shells, others enlarged and spiny tibiae. Every
-path in the forest is barricaded with the strong yellow web of a
-species, belonging to the same division with the Epeira clavipes of
-Fabricius, which was formerly said by Sloane to make, in the West
-Indies, webs so strong as to catch birds. A small and pretty kind of
-spider, with very long fore-legs, and which appears to belong to an
-undescribed genus, lives as a parasite on almost every one of these
-webs. I suppose it is too insignificant to be noticed by the great
-Epeira, and is therefore allowed to prey on the minute insects, which,
-adhering to the lines, would otherwise be wasted. When frightened,
-this little spider either feigns death by extending its front legs, or
-suddenly drops from the web. A large Epeira of the same division with
-Epeira tuberculata and conica is extremely common, especially in dry
-situations. Its web, which is generally placed among the great leaves
-of the common agave, is sometimes strengthened near the centre by a
-pair or even four zigzag ribbons, which connect two adjoining rays.
-When any large insect, as a grasshopper or wasp, is caught, the spider,
-by a dexterous movement, makes it revolve very rapidly, and at the same
-time emitting a band of threads from its spinners, soon envelops its
-prey in a case like the cocoon of a silkworm. The spider now examines
-the powerless victim, and gives the fatal bite on the hinder part of
-its thorax; then retreating, patiently waits till the poison has taken
-effect. The virulence of this poison may be judged of from the fact
-that in half a minute I opened the mesh, and found a large wasp quite
-lifeless. This Epeira always stands with its head downwards near the
-centre of the web. When disturbed, it acts differently according to
-circumstances: if there is a thicket below, it suddenly falls down; and
-I have distinctly seen the thread from the spinners lengthened by the
-animal while yet stationary, as preparatory to its fall. If the ground
-is clear beneath, the Epeira seldom falls, but moves quickly through a
-central passage from one to the other side. When still further
-disturbed, it practises a most curious manoeuvre: standing in the
-middle, it violently jerks the web, which it attached to elastic twigs,
-till at last the whole acquires such a rapid vibratory movement, that
-even the outline of the spider's body becomes indistinct.
-
-It is well known that most of the British spiders, when a large insect
-is caught in their webs, endeavour to cut the lines and liberate their
-prey, to save their nets from being entirely spoiled. I once, however,
-saw in a hothouse in Shropshire a large female wasp caught in the
-irregular web of a quite small spider; and this spider, instead of
-cutting the web, most perseveringly continued to entangle the body, and
-especially the wings, of its prey. The wasp at first aimed in vain
-repeated thrusts with its sting at its little antagonist. Pitying the
-wasp, after allowing it to struggle for more than an hour, I killed it
-and put it back into the web. The spider soon returned; and an hour
-afterwards I was much surprised to find it with its jaws buried in the
-orifice, through which the sting is protruded by the living wasp. I
-drove the spider away two or three times, but for the next twenty-four
-hours I always found it again sucking at the same place. The spider
-became much distended by the juices of its prey, which was many times
-larger than itself.
-
-I may here just mention, that I found, near St. Fe Bajada, many large
-black spiders, with ruby-coloured marks on their backs, having
-gregarious habits. The webs were placed vertically, as is invariably
-the case with the genus Epeira: they were separated from each other by
-a space of about two feet, but were all attached to certain common
-lines, which were of great length, and extended to all parts of the
-community. In this manner the tops of some large bushes were
-encompassed by the united nets. Azara [10] has described a gregarious
-spider in Paraguay, which Walckanaer thinks must be a Theridion, but
-probably it is an Epeira, and perhaps even the same species with mine.
-I cannot, however, recollect seeing a central nest as large as a hat,
-in which, during autumn, when the spiders die, Azara says the eggs are
-deposited. As all the spiders which I saw were of the same size, they
-must have been nearly of the same age. This gregarious habit, in so
-typical a genus as Epeira, among insects, which are so bloodthirsty and
-solitary that even the two sexes attack each other, is a very singular
-fact.
-
-In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found another
-spider with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines radiated in a
-vertical plane from a common centre, where the insect had its station;
-but only two of the rays were connected by a symmetrical mesh-work; so
-that the net, instead of being, as is generally the case, circular,
-consisted of a wedge-shaped segment. All the webs were similarly
-constructed.
-
-[1] Venda, the Portuguese name for an inn.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles for 1833.
-
-[3] I have described and named these species in the Annals of Nat.
-Hist., vol. xiv. p. 241.
-
-[4] I am greatly indebted to Mr. Waterhouse for his kindness in naming
-for me this and many other insects, and giving me much valuable
-assistance.
-
-[5] Kirby's Entomology, vol. ii. p. 317.
-
-[6] Mr. Doubleday has lately described (before the Entomological
-Society, March 3rd, 1845) a peculiar structure in the wings of this
-butterfly, which seems to be the means of its making its noise. He
-says, "It is remarkable for having a sort of drum at the base of the
-fore wings, between the costal nervure and the subcostal. These two
-nervures, moreover, have a peculiar screw-like diaphragm or vessel in
-the interior." I find in Langsdorff's travels (in the years 1803-7, p.
-74) it is said, that in the island of St. Catherine's on the coast of
-Brazil, a butterfly called Februa Hoffmanseggi, makes a noise, when
-flying away, like a rattle.
-
-[7] I may mention, as a common instance of one day's (June 23rd)
-collecting, when I was not attending particularly to the Coleoptera,
-that I caught sixty-eight species of that order. Among these, there
-were only two of the Carabidae, four Brachelytra, fifteen Rhyncophora,
-and fourteen of the Chrysomelidae. Thirty-seven species of Arachnidae,
-which I brought home, will be sufficient to prove that I was not paying
-overmuch attention to the generally favoured order of Coleoptera.
-
-[8] In a MS. in the British Museum by Mr. Abbott, who made his
-observations in Georgia; see Mr. A. White's paper in the "Annals of
-Nat. Hist.," vol. vii. p. 472. Lieut. Hutton has described a sphex with
-similar habits in India, in the "Journal of the Asiatic Society," vol.
-i. p. 555.
-
-[9] Don Felix Azara (vol. i. p. 175), mentioning a hymenopterous
-insect, probably of the same genus, says he saw it dragging a dead
-spider through tall grass, in a straight line to its nest, which was
-one hundred and sixty-three paces distant. He adds that the wasp, in
-order to find the road, every now and then made "demi-tours d'environ
-trois palmes."
-
-[10] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 213
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MALDONADO
-
-Monte Video--Excursion to R. Polanco--Lazo and
-Bolas--Partridges--Absence of Trees--Deer--Capybara, or River
-Hog--Tucutuco--Molothrus, cuckoo-like
-habits--Tyrant-flycatcher--Mocking-bird--Carrion Hawks--Tubes formed by
-Lightning--House struck.
-
-
-July 5th, 1832--In the morning we got under way, and stood out of the
-splendid harbour of Rio de Janeiro. In our passage to the Plata, we
-saw nothing particular, excepting on one day a great shoal of
-porpoises, many hundreds in number. The whole sea was in places
-furrowed by them; and a most extraordinary spectacle was presented, as
-hundreds, proceeding together by jumps, in which their whole bodies
-were exposed, thus cut the water. When the ship was running nine knots
-an hour, these animals could cross and recross the bows with the
-greatest of ease, and then dash away right ahead. As soon as we
-entered the estuary of the Plata, the weather was very unsettled. One
-dark night we were surrounded by numerous seals and penguins, which
-made such strange noises, that the officer on watch reported he could
-hear the cattle bellowing on shore. On a second night we witnessed a
-splendid scene of natural fireworks; the mast-head and yard-arm-ends
-shone with St. Elmo's light; and the form of the vane could almost be
-traced, as if it had been rubbed with phosphorus. The sea was so
-highly luminous, that the tracks of the penguins were marked by a fiery
-wake, and the darkness of the sky was momentarily illuminated by the
-most vivid lightning.
-
-When within the mouth of the river, I was interested by observing how
-slowly the waters of the sea and river mixed. The latter, muddy and
-discoloured, from its less specific gravity, floated on the surface of
-the salt water. This was curiously exhibited in the wake of the
-vessel, where a line of blue water was seen mingling in little eddies,
-with the adjoining fluid.
-
-July 26th.--We anchored at Monte Video. The Beagle was employed in
-surveying the extreme southern and eastern coasts of America, south of
-the Plata, during the two succeeding years. To prevent useless
-repetitions, I will extract those parts of my journal which refer to
-the same districts without always attending to the order in which we
-visited them.
-
-MALDONADO is situated on the northern bank of the Plata, and not very
-far from the mouth of the estuary. It is a most quiet, forlorn, little
-town; built, as is universally the case in these countries, with the
-streets running at right angles to each other, and having in the middle
-a large plaza or square, which, from its size, renders the scantiness
-of the population more evident. It possesses scarcely any trade; the
-exports being confined to a few hides and living cattle. The
-inhabitants are chiefly landowners, together with a few shopkeepers and
-the necessary tradesmen, such as blacksmiths and carpenters, who do
-nearly all the business for a circuit of fifty miles round. The town
-is separated from the river by a band of sand-hillocks, about a mile
-broad: it is surrounded, on all other sides, by an open
-slightly-undulating country, covered by one uniform layer of fine green
-turf, on which countless herds of cattle, sheep, and horses graze.
-There is very little land cultivated even close to the town. A few
-hedges, made of cacti and agave, mark out where some wheat or Indian
-corn has been planted. The features of the country are very similar
-along the whole northern bank of the Plata. The only difference is,
-that here the granitic hills are a little bolder. The scenery is very
-uninteresting; there is scarcely a house, an enclosed piece of ground,
-or even a tree, to give it an air of cheerfulness Yet, after being
-imprisoned for some time in a ship, there is a charm in the unconfined
-feeling of walking over boundless plains of turf. Moreover, if your
-view is limited to a small space, many objects possess beauty. Some of
-the smaller birds are brilliantly coloured; and the bright green sward,
-browsed short by the cattle, is ornamented by dwarf flowers, among
-which a plant, looking like the daisy, claimed the place of an old
-friend. What would a florist say to whole tracts, so thickly covered
-by the Verbena melindres, as, even at a distance, to appear of the most
-gaudy scarlet?
-
-I stayed ten weeks at Maldonado, in which time a nearly perfect
-collection of the animals, birds, and reptiles, was procured. Before
-making any observations respecting them, I will give an account of a
-little excursion I made as far as the river Polanco, which is about
-seventy miles distant, in a northerly direction. I may mention, as a
-proof how cheap everything is in this country, that I paid only two
-dollars a day, or eight shillings, for two men, together with a troop
-of about a dozen riding-horses. My companions were well armed with
-pistols and sabres; a precaution which I thought rather unnecessary but
-the first piece of news we heard was, that, the day before, a traveller
-from Monte Video had been found dead on the road, with his throat cut.
-This happened close to a cross, the record of a former murder.
-
-On the first night we slept at a retired little country-house; and
-there I soon found out that I possessed two or three articles,
-especially a pocket compass, which created unbounded astonishment. In
-every house I was asked to show the compass, and by its aid, together
-with a map, to point out the direction of various places. It excited
-the liveliest admiration that I, a perfect stranger, should know the
-road (for direction and road are synonymous in this open country) to
-places where I had never been. At one house a young woman, who was ill
-in bed, sent to entreat me to come and show her the compass. If their
-surprise was great, mine was greater, to find such ignorance among
-people who possessed their thousands of cattle, and "estancias" of
-great extent. It can only be accounted for by the circumstance that
-this retired part of the country is seldom visited by foreigners. I
-was asked whether the earth or sun moved; whether it was hotter or
-colder to the north; where Spain was, and many other such questions.
-The greater number of the inhabitants had an indistinct idea that
-England, London, and North America, were different names for the same
-place; but the better informed well knew that London and North America
-were separate countries close together, and that England was a large
-town in London! I carried with me some promethean matches, which I
-ignited by biting; it was thought so wonderful that a man should strike
-fire with his teeth, that it was usual to collect the whole family to
-see it: I was once offered a dollar for a single one. Washing my face
-in the morning caused much speculation at the village of Las Minas; a
-superior tradesman closely cross-questioned me about so singular a
-practice; and likewise why on board we wore our beards; for he had
-heard from my guide that we did so. He eyed me with much suspicion;
-perhaps he had heard of ablutions in the Mahomedan religion, and
-knowing me to be a heretick, probably he came to the conclusion that
-all hereticks were Turks. It is the general custom in this country to
-ask for a night's lodging at the first convenient house. The
-astonishment at the compass, and my other feats of jugglery, was to a
-certain degree advantageous, as with that, and the long stories my
-guides told of my breaking stones, knowing venomous from harmless
-snakes, collecting insects, etc., I repaid them for their hospitality.
-I am writing as if I had been among the inhabitants of central Africa:
-Banda Oriental would not be flattered by the comparison; but such were
-my feelings at the time.
-
-The next day we rode to the village of Las Minas. The country was
-rather more hilly, but otherwise continued the same; an inhabitant of
-the Pampas no doubt would have considered it as truly Alpine. The
-country is so thinly inhabited, that during the whole day we scarcely
-met a single person. Las Minas is much smaller even than Maldonado. It
-is seated on a little plain, and is surrounded by low rocky mountains.
-It is of the usual symmetrical form, and with its whitewashed church
-standing in the centre, had rather a pretty appearance. The
-outskirting houses rose out of the plain like isolated beings, without
-the accompaniment of gardens or courtyards. This is generally the case
-in the country, and all the houses have, in consequence an
-uncomfortable aspect. At night we stopped at a pulperia, or
-drinking-shop. During the evening a great number of Gauchos came in to
-drink spirits and smoke cigars: their appearance is very striking; they
-are generally tall and handsome, but with a proud and dissolute
-expression of countenance. They frequently wear their moustaches and
-long black hair curling down their backs. With their brightly coloured
-garments, great spurs clanking about their heels, and knives stuck as
-daggers (and often so used) at their waists, they look a very different
-race of men from what might be expected from their name of Gauchos, or
-simple countrymen. Their politeness is excessive; they never drink
-their spirits without expecting you to taste it; but whilst making
-their exceedingly graceful bow, they seem quite as ready, if occasion
-offered, to cut your throat.
-
-On the third day we pursued rather an irregular course, as I was
-employed in examining some beds of marble. On the fine plains of turf
-we saw many ostriches (Struthio rhea). Some of the flocks contained as
-many as twenty or thirty birds. These, when standing on any little
-eminence, and seen against the clear sky, presented a very noble
-appearance. I never met with such tame ostriches in any other part of
-the country: it was easy to gallop up within a short distance of them;
-but then, expanding their wings, they made all sail right before the
-wind, and soon left the horse astern.
-
-At night we came to the house of Don Juan Fuentes, a rich landed
-proprietor, but not personally known to either of my companions. On
-approaching the house of a stranger, it is usual to follow several
-little points of etiquette: riding up slowly to the door, the
-salutation of Ave Maria is given, and until somebody comes out and asks
-you to alight, it is not customary even to get off your horse: the
-formal answer of the owner is, "sin pecado concebida"--that is,
-conceived without sin. Having entered the house, some general
-conversation is kept up for a few minutes, till permission is asked to
-pass the night there. This is granted as a matter of course. The
-stranger then takes his meals with the family, and a room is assigned
-him, where with the horsecloths belonging to his recado (or saddle of
-the Pampas) he makes his bed. It is curious how similar circumstances
-produce such similar results in manners. At the Cape of Good Hope the
-same hospitality, and very nearly the same points of etiquette, are
-universally observed. The difference, however, between the character
-of the Spaniard and that of the Dutch boer is shown, by the former
-never asking his guest a single question beyond the strictest rule of
-politeness, whilst the honest Dutchman demands where he has been, where
-he is going, what is his business, and even how many brothers sisters,
-or children he may happen to have.
-
-Shortly after our arrival at Don Juan's, one of the largest herds of
-cattle was driven in towards the house, and three beasts were picked
-out to be slaughtered for the supply of the establishment. These
-half-wild cattle are very active; and knowing full well the fatal lazo,
-they led the horses a long and laborious chase. After witnessing the
-rude wealth displayed in the number of cattle, men, and horses, Don
-Juan's miserable house was quite curious. The floor consisted of
-hardened mud, and the windows were without glass; the sitting-room
-boasted only of a few of the roughest chairs and stools, with a couple
-of tables. The supper, although several strangers were present,
-consisted of two huge piles, one of roast beef, the other of boiled,
-with some pieces of pumpkin: besides this latter there was no other
-vegetable, and not even a morsel of bread. For drinking, a large
-earthenware jug of water served the whole party. Yet this man was the
-owner of several square miles of land, of which nearly every acre would
-produce corn, and, with a little trouble, all the common vegetables.
-The evening was spent in smoking, with a little impromptu singing,
-accompanied by the guitar. The signoritas all sat together in one
-corner of the room, and did not sup with the men.
-
-So many works have been written about these countries, that it is
-almost superfluous to describe either the lazo or the bolas. The lazo
-consists of a very strong, but thin, well-plaited rope, made of raw
-hide. One end is attached to the broad surcingle, which fastens
-together the complicated gear of the recado, or saddle used in the
-Pampas; the other is terminated by a small ring of iron or brass, by
-which a noose can be formed. The Gaucho, when he is going to use the
-lazo, keeps a small coil in his bridle-hand, and in the other holds the
-running noose which is made very large, generally having a diameter of
-about eight feet. This he whirls round his head, and by the dexterous
-movement of his wrist keeps the noose open; then, throwing it, he
-causes it to fall on any particular spot he chooses. The lazo, when
-not used, is tied up in a small coil to the after part of the recado.
-The bolas, or balls, are of two kinds: the simplest, which is chiefly
-used for catching ostriches, consists of two round stones, covered with
-leather, and united by a thin plaited thong, about eight feet long. The
-other kind differs only in having three balls united by the thongs to a
-common centre. The Gaucho holds the smallest of the three in his hand,
-and whirls the other two round and round his head; then, taking aim,
-sends them like chain shot revolving through the air. The balls no
-sooner strike any object, than, winding round it, they cross each
-other, and become firmly hitched. The size and weight of the balls
-vary, according to the purpose for which they are made: when of stone,
-although not larger than an apple, they are sent with such force as
-sometimes to break the leg even of a horse. I have seen the balls made
-of wood, and as large as a turnip, for the sake of catching these
-animals without injuring them. The balls are sometimes made of iron,
-and these can be hurled to the greatest distance. The main difficulty
-in using either lazo or bolas is to ride so well as to be able at full
-speed, and while suddenly turning about, to whirl them so steadily
-round the head, as to take aim: on foot any person would soon learn the
-art. One day, as I was amusing myself by galloping and whirling the
-balls round my head, by accident the free one struck a bush, and its
-revolving motion being thus destroyed, it immediately fell to the
-ground, and, like magic, caught one hind leg of my horse; the other
-ball was then jerked out of my hand, and the horse fairly secured.
-Luckily he was an old practised animal, and knew what it meant;
-otherwise he would probably have kicked till he had thrown himself
-down. The Gauchos roared with laughter; they cried out that they had
-seen every sort of animal caught, but had never before seen a man
-caught by himself.
-
-During the two succeeding days, I reached the furthest point which I
-was anxious to examine. The country wore the same aspect, till at last
-the fine green turf became more wearisome than a dusty turnpike road.
-We everywhere saw great numbers of partridges (Nothura major). These
-birds do not go in coveys, nor do they conceal themselves like the
-English kind. It appears a very silly bird. A man on horseback by
-riding round and round in a circle, or rather in a spire, so as to
-approach closer each time, may knock on the head as many as he pleases.
-The more common method is to catch them with a running noose, or little
-lazo, made of the stem of an ostrich's feather, fastened to the end of
-a long stick. A boy on a quiet old horse will frequently thus catch
-thirty or forty in a day. In Arctic North America [1] the Indians
-catch the Varying Hare by walking spirally round and round it, when on
-its form: the middle of the day is reckoned the best time, when the sun
-is high, and the shadow of the hunter not very long.
-
-On our return to Maldonado, we followed rather a different line of
-road. Near Pan de Azucar, a landmark well known to all those who have
-sailed up the Plata, I stayed a day at the house of a most hospitable
-old Spaniard. Early in the morning we ascended the Sierra de las
-Animas. By the aid of the rising sun the scenery was almost
-picturesque. To the westward the view extended over an immense level
-plain as far as the Mount, at Monte Video, and to the eastward, over
-the mammillated country of Maldonado. On the summit of the mountain
-there were several small heaps of stones, which evidently had lain
-there for many years. My companion assured me that they were the work
-of the Indians in the old time. The heaps were similar, but on a much
-smaller scale, to those so commonly found on the mountains of Wales.
-The desire to signalize any event, on the highest point of the
-neighbouring land, seems an universal passion with mankind. At the
-present day, not a single Indian, either civilized or wild, exists in
-this part of the province; nor am I aware that the former inhabitants
-have left behind them any more permanent records than these
-insignificant piles on the summit of the Sierra de las Animas.
-
-
-The general, and almost entire absence of trees in Banda Oriental is
-remarkable. Some of the rocky hills are partly covered by thickets,
-and on the banks of the larger streams, especially to the north of Las
-Minas, willow-trees are not uncommon. Near the Arroyo Tapes I heard of
-a wood of palms; and one of these trees, of considerable size, I saw
-near the Pan de Azucar, in lat. 35 degs. These, and the trees planted
-by the Spaniards, offer the only exceptions to the general scarcity of
-wood. Among the introduced kinds may be enumerated poplars, olives,
-peach, and other fruit trees: the peaches succeed so well, that they
-afford the main supply of firewood to the city of Buenos Ayres.
-Extremely level countries, such as the Pampas, seldom appear favourable
-to the growth of trees. This may possibly be attributed either to the
-force of the winds, or the kind of drainage. In the nature of the
-land, however, around Maldonado, no such reason is apparent; the rocky
-mountains afford protected situations; enjoying various kinds of soil;
-streamlets of water are common at the bottoms of nearly every valley;
-and the clayey nature of the earth seems adapted to retain moisture. It
-has been inferred with much probability, that the presence of woodland
-is generally determined [2] by the annual amount of moisture; yet in
-this province abundant and heavy rain falls during the winter; and the
-summer, though dry, is not so in any excessive degree. [3] We see
-nearly the whole of Australia covered by lofty trees, yet that country
-possesses a far more arid climate. Hence we must look to some other
-and unknown cause.
-
-Confining our view to South America, we should certainly be tempted to
-believe that trees flourished only under a very humid climate; for the
-limit of the forest-land follows, in a most remarkable manner, that of
-the damp winds. In the southern part of the continent, where the
-western gales, charged with moisture from the Pacific, prevail, every
-island on the broken west coast, from lat. 38 degs. to the extreme
-point of Tierra del Fuego, is densely covered by impenetrable forests.
-On the eastern side of the Cordillera, over the same extent of
-latitude, where a blue sky and a fine climate prove that the atmosphere
-has been deprived of its moisture by passing over the mountains, the
-arid plains of Patagonia support a most scanty vegetation. In the more
-northern parts of the continent, within the limits of the constant
-south-eastern trade-wind, the eastern side is ornamented by magnificent
-forests; whilst the western coast, from lat. 4 degs. S. to lat. 32
-degs. S., may be described as a desert; on this western coast,
-northward of lat. 4 degs. S., where the trade-wind loses its
-regularity, and heavy torrents of rain fall periodically, the shores of
-the Pacific, so utterly desert in Peru, assume near Cape Blanco the
-character of luxuriance so celebrated at Guyaquil and Panama. Hence in
-the southern and northern parts of the continent, the forest and desert
-lands occupy reversed positions with respect to the Cordillera, and
-these positions are apparently determined by the direction of the
-prevalent winds. In the middle of the continent there is a broad
-intermediate band, including central Chile and the provinces of La
-Plata, where the rain-bringing winds have not to pass over lofty
-mountains, and where the land is neither a desert nor covered by
-forests. But even the rule, if confined to South America, of trees
-flourishing only in a climate rendered humid by rain-bearing winds, has
-a strongly marked exception in the case of the Falkland Islands. These
-islands, situated in the same latitude with Tierra del Fuego and only
-between two and three hundred miles distant from it, having a nearly
-similar climate, with a geological formation almost identical, with
-favourable situations and the same kind of peaty soil, yet can boast of
-few plants deserving even the title of bushes; whilst in Tierra del
-Fuego it is impossible to find an acre of land not covered by the
-densest forest. In this case, both the direction of the heavy gales of
-wind and of the currents of the sea are favourable to the transport of
-seeds from Tierra del Fuego, as is shown by the canoes and trunks of
-trees drifted from that country, and frequently thrown on the shores of
-the Western Falkland. Hence perhaps it is, that there are many plants
-in common to the two countries but with respect to the trees of Tierra
-del Fuego, even attempts made to transplant them have failed.
-
-During our stay at Maldonado I collected several quadrupeds, eighty
-kinds of birds, and many reptiles, including nine species of snakes. Of
-the indigenous mammalia, the only one now left of any size, which is
-common, is the Cervus campestris. This deer is exceedingly abundant,
-often in small herds, throughout the countries bordering the Plata and
-in Northern Patagonia. If a person crawling close along the ground,
-slowly advances towards a herd, the deer frequently, out of curiosity,
-approach to reconnoitre him. I have by this means, killed from one
-spot, three out of the same herd. Although so tame and inquisitive,
-yet when approached on horseback, they are exceedingly wary. In this
-country nobody goes on foot, and the deer knows man as its enemy only
-when he is mounted and armed with the bolas. At Bahia Blanca, a recent
-establishment in Northern Patagonia, I was surprised to find how little
-the deer cared for the noise of a gun: one day I fired ten times from
-within eighty yards at one animal; and it was much more startled at the
-ball cutting up the ground than at the report of the rifle. My powder
-being exhausted, I was obliged to get up (to my shame as a sportsman be
-it spoken, though well able to kill birds on the wing) and halloo till
-the deer ran away.
-
-The most curious fact with respect to this animal, is the
-overpoweringly strong and offensive odour which proceeds from the buck.
-It is quite indescribable: several times whilst skinning the specimen
-which is now mounted at the Zoological Museum, I was almost overcome by
-nausea. I tied up the skin in a silk pocket-handkerchief, and so
-carried it home: this handkerchief, after being well washed, I
-continually used, and it was of course as repeatedly washed; yet every
-time, for a space of one year and seven months, when first unfolded, I
-distinctly perceived the odour. This appears an astonishing instance
-of the permanence of some matter, which nevertheless in its nature must
-be most subtile and volatile. Frequently, when passing at the distance
-of half a mile to leeward of a herd, I have perceived the whole air
-tainted with the effluvium. I believe the smell from the buck is most
-powerful at the period when its horns are perfect, or free from the
-hairy skin. When in this state the meat is, of course, quite
-uneatable; but the Gauchos assert, that if buried for some time in
-fresh earth, the taint is removed. I have somewhere read that the
-islanders in the north of Scotland treat the rank carcasses of the
-fish-eating birds in the same manner.
-
-The order Rodentia is here very numerous in species: of mice alone I
-obtained no less than eight kinds. [4] The largest gnawing animal in
-the world, the Hydrochaerus capybara (the water-hog), is here also
-common. One which I shot at Monte Video weighed ninety-eight pounds:
-its length from the end of the snout to the stump-like tail, was three
-feet two inches; and its girth three feet eight. These great Rodents
-occasionally frequent the islands in the mouth of the Plata, where the
-water is quite salt, but are far more abundant on the borders of
-fresh-water lakes and rivers. Near Maldonado three or four generally
-live together. In the daytime they either lie among the aquatic
-plants, or openly feed on the turf plain. [5] When viewed at a
-distance, from their manner of walking and colour they resemble pigs:
-but when seated on their haunches, and attentively watching any object
-with one eye, they reassume the appearance of their congeners, cavies
-and rabbits. Both the front and side view of their head has quite a
-ludicrous aspect, from the great depth of their jaw. These animals, at
-Maldonado, were very tame; by cautiously walking, I approached within
-three yards of four old ones. This tameness may probably be accounted
-for, by the Jaguar having been banished for some years, and by the
-Gaucho not thinking it worth his while to hunt them. As I approached
-nearer and nearer they frequently made their peculiar noise, which is a
-low abrupt grunt, not having much actual sound, but rather arising from
-the sudden expulsion of air: the only noise I know at all like it, is
-the first hoarse bark of a large dog. Having watched the four from
-almost within arm's length (and they me) for several minutes, they
-rushed into the water at full gallop with the greatest impetuosity, and
-emitted at the same time their bark. After diving a short distance
-they came again to the surface, but only just showed the upper part of
-their heads. When the female is swimming in the water, and has young
-ones, they are said to sit on her back. These animals are easily killed
-in numbers; but their skins are of trifling value, and the meat is very
-indifferent. On the islands in the Rio Parana they are exceedingly
-abundant, and afford the ordinary prey to the Jaguar.
-
-The Tucutuco (Ctenomys Brasiliensis) is a curious small animal, which
-may be briefly described as a Gnawer, with the habits of a mole. It is
-extremely numerous in some parts of the country, but it is difficult to
-be procured, and never, I believe, comes out of the ground. It throws
-up at the mouth of its burrows hillocks of earth like those of the
-mole, but smaller. Considerable tracts of country are so completely
-undermined by these animals, that horses in passing over, sink above
-their fetlocks. The tucutucos appear, to a certain degree, to be
-gregarious: the man who procured the specimens for me had caught six
-together, and he said this was a common occurrence. They are nocturnal
-in their habits; and their principal food is the roots of plants, which
-are the object of their extensive and superficial burrows. This animal
-is universally known by a very peculiar noise which it makes when
-beneath the ground. A person, the first time he hears it, is much
-surprised; for it is not easy to tell whence it comes, nor is it
-possible to guess what kind of creature utters it. The noise consists
-in a short, but not rough, nasal grunt, which is monotonously repeated
-about four times in quick succession: [6] the name Tucutuco is given in
-imitation of the sound. Where this animal is abundant, it may be heard
-at all times of the day, and sometimes directly beneath one's feet.
-When kept in a room, the tucutucos move both slowly and clumsily, which
-appears owing to the outward action of their hind legs; and they are
-quite incapable, from the socket of the thigh-bone not having a certain
-ligament, of jumping even the smallest vertical height. They are very
-stupid in making any attempt to escape; when angry or frightened they
-utter the tucutuco. Of those I kept alive several, even the first day,
-became quite tame, not attempting to bite or to run away; others were a
-little wilder.
-
-The man who caught them asserted that very many are invariably found
-blind. A specimen which I preserved in spirits was in this state; Mr.
-Reid considers it to be the effect of inflammation in the nictitating
-membrane. When the animal was alive I placed my finger within half an
-inch of its head, and not the slightest notice was taken: it made its
-way, however, about the room nearly as well as the others. Considering
-the strictly subterranean habits of the tucutuco, the blindness, though
-so common, cannot be a very serious evil; yet it appears strange that
-any animal should possess an organ frequently subject to be injured.
-Lamarck would have been delighted with this fact, had he known it, when
-speculating [7] (probably with more truth than usual with him) on the
-gradually _acquired_ blindness of the Asphalax, a Gnawer living under
-ground, and of the Proteus, a reptile living in dark caverns filled
-with water; in both of which animals the eye is in an almost
-rudimentary state, and is covered by a tendinous membrane and skin. In
-the common mole the eye is extraordinarily small but perfect, though
-many anatomists doubt whether it is connected with the true optic
-nerve; its vision must certainly be imperfect, though probably useful
-to the animal when it leaves its burrow. In the tucutuco, which I
-believe never comes to the surface of the ground, the eye is rather
-larger, but often rendered blind and useless, though without apparently
-causing any inconvenience to the animal; no doubt Lamarck would have
-said that the tucutuco is now passing into the state of the Asphalax
-and Proteus.
-
-Birds of many kinds are extremely abundant on the undulating, grassy
-plains around Maldonado. There are several species of a family allied
-in structure and manners to our Starling: one of these (Molothrus
-niger) is remarkable from its habits. Several may often be seen
-standing together on the back of a cow or horse; and while perched on a
-hedge, pluming themselves in the sun, they sometimes attempt to sing,
-or rather to hiss; the noise being very peculiar, resembling that of
-bubbles of air passing rapidly from a small orifice under water, so as
-to produce an acute sound. According to Azara, this bird, like the
-cuckoo, deposits its eggs in other birds' nests. I was several times
-told by the country people that there certainly is some bird having
-this habit; and my assistant in collecting, who is a very accurate
-person, found a nest of the sparrow of this country (Zonotrichia
-matutina), with one egg in it larger than the others, and of a
-different colour and shape. In North America there is another species
-of Molothrus (M. pecoris), which has a similar cuckoo-like habit, and
-which is most closely allied in every respect to the species from the
-Plata, even in such trifling peculiarities as standing on the backs of
-cattle; it differs only in being a little smaller, and in its plumage
-and eggs being of a slightly different shade of colour. This close
-agreement in structure and habits, in representative species coming
-from opposite quarters of a great continent, always strikes one as
-interesting, though of common occurrence.
-
-Mr. Swainson has well remarked, [8] that with the exception of the
-Molothrus pecoris, to which must be added the M. niger, the cuckoos are
-the only birds which can be called truly parasitical; namely, such as
-"fasten themselves, as it were, on another living animal, whose animal
-heat brings their young into life, whose food they live upon, and whose
-death would cause theirs during the period of infancy." It is
-remarkable that some of the species, but not all, both of the Cuckoo
-and Molothrus, should agree in this one strange habit of their
-parasitical propagation, whilst opposed to each other in almost every
-other habit: the molothrus, like our starling, is eminently sociable,
-and lives on the open plains without art or disguise: the cuckoo, as
-every one knows, is a singularly shy bird; it frequents the most
-retired thickets, and feeds on fruit and caterpillars. In structure
-also these two genera are widely removed from each other. Many
-theories, even phrenological theories, have been advanced to explain
-the origin of the cuckoo laying its eggs in other birds' nests. M.
-Prevost alone, I think, has thrown light by his observations [9] on
-this puzzle: he finds that the female cuckoo, which, according to most
-observers, lays at least from four to six eggs, must pair with the male
-each time after laying only one or two eggs. Now, if the cuckoo was
-obliged to sit on her own eggs, she would either have to sit on all
-together, and therefore leave those first laid so long, that they
-probably would become addled; or she would have to hatch separately
-each egg, or two eggs, as soon as laid: but as the cuckoo stays a
-shorter time in this country than any other migratory bird, she
-certainly would not have time enough for the successive hatchings.
-Hence we can perceive in the fact of the cuckoo pairing several times,
-and laying her eggs at intervals, the cause of her depositing her eggs
-in other birds' nests, and leaving them to the care of foster-parents.
-I am strongly inclined to believe that this view is correct, from
-having been independently led (as we shall hereafter see) to an
-analogous conclusion with regard to the South American ostrich, the
-females of which are parasitical, if I may so express it, on each
-other; each female laying several eggs in the nests of several other
-females, and the male ostrich undertaking all the cares of incubation,
-like the strange foster-parents with the cuckoo.
-
-I will mention only two other birds, which are very common, and render
-themselves prominent from their habits. The Saurophagus sulphuratus is
-typical of the great American tribe of tyrant-flycatchers. In its
-structure it closely approaches the true shrikes, but in its habits may
-be compared to many birds. I have frequently observed it, hunting a
-field, hovering over one spot like a hawk, and then proceeding on to
-another. When seen thus suspended in the air, it might very readily at
-a short distance be mistaken for one of the Rapacious order; its stoop,
-however, is very inferior in force and rapidity to that of a hawk. At
-other times the Saurophagus haunts the neighbourhood of water, and
-there, like a kingfisher, remaining stationary, it catches any small
-fish which may come near the margin. These birds are not unfrequently
-kept either in cages or in courtyards, with their wings cut. They soon
-become tame, and are very amusing from their cunning odd manners, which
-were described to me as being similar to those of the common magpie.
-Their flight is undulatory, for the weight of the head and bill appears
-too great for the body. In the evening the Saurophagus takes its stand
-on a bush, often by the roadside, and continually repeats without a
-change a shrill and rather agreeable cry, which somewhat resembles
-articulate words: the Spaniards say it is like the words "Bien te veo"
-(I see you well), and accordingly have given it this name.
-
-A mocking-bird (Mimus orpheus), called by the inhabitants Calandria, is
-remarkable, from possessing a song far superior to that of any other
-bird in the country: indeed, it is nearly the only bird in South
-America which I have observed to take its stand for the purpose of
-singing. The song may be compared to that of the Sedge warbler, but is
-more powerful; some harsh notes and some very high ones, being mingled
-with a pleasant warbling. It is heard only during the spring. At
-other times its cry is harsh and far from harmonious. Near Maldonado
-these birds were tame and bold; they constantly attended the country
-houses in numbers, to pick the meat which was hung up on the posts or
-walls: if any other small bird joined the feast, the Calandria soon
-chased it away. On the wide uninhabited plains of Patagonia another
-closely allied species, O. Patagonica of d'Orbigny, which frequents the
-valleys clothed with spiny bushes, is a wilder bird, and has a slightly
-different tone of voice. It appears to me a curious circumstance, as
-showing the fine shades of difference in habits, that judging from this
-latter respect alone, when I first saw this second species, I thought
-it was different from the Maldonado kind. Having afterwards procured a
-specimen, and comparing the two without particular care, they appeared
-so very similar, that I changed my opinion; but now Mr. Gould says that
-they are certainly distinct; a conclusion in conformity with the
-trifling difference of habit, of which, of course, he was not aware.
-
-The number, tameness, and disgusting habits of the carrion-feeding
-hawks of South America make them pre-eminently striking to any one
-accustomed only to the birds of Northern Europe. In this list may be
-included four species of the Caracara or Polyborus, the Turkey buzzard,
-the Gallinazo, and the Condor. The Caracaras are, from their
-structure, placed among the eagles: we shall soon see how ill they
-become so high a rank. In their habits they well supply the place of
-our carrion-crows, magpies, and ravens; a tribe of birds widely
-distributed over the rest of the world, but entirely absent in South
-America. To begin with the Polyborus Brasiliensis: this is a common
-bird, and has a wide geographical range; it is most numerous on the
-grassy savannahs of La Plata (where it goes by the name of Carrancha),
-and is far from unfrequent throughout the sterile plains of Patagonia.
-In the desert between the rivers Negro and Colorado, numbers constantly
-attend the line of road to devour the carcasses of the exhausted
-animals which chance to perish from fatigue and thirst. Although thus
-common in these dry and open countries, and likewise on the arid shores
-of the Pacific, it is nevertheless found inhabiting the damp impervious
-forests of West Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. The Carranchas,
-together with the Chimango, constantly attend in numbers the estancias
-and slaughtering-houses. If an animal dies on the plain the Gallinazo
-commences the feast, and then the two species of Polyborus pick the
-bones clean. These birds, although thus commonly feeding together, are
-far from being friends. When the Carrancha is quietly seated on the
-branch of a tree or on the ground, the Chimango often continues for a
-long time flying backwards and forwards, up and down, in a semicircle,
-trying each time at the bottom of the curve to strike its larger
-relative. The Carrancha takes little notice, except by bobbing its
-head. Although the Carranchas frequently assemble in numbers, they are
-not gregarious; for in desert places they may be seen solitary, or more
-commonly by pairs.
-
-The Carranchas are said to be very crafty, and to steal great numbers
-of eggs. They attempt, also, together with the Chimango, to pick off
-the scabs from the sore backs of horses and mules. The poor animal, on
-the one hand, with its ears down and its back arched; and, on the
-other, the hovering bird, eyeing at the distance of a yard the
-disgusting morsel, form a picture, which has been described by Captain
-Head with his own peculiar spirit and accuracy. These false eagles
-most rarely kill any living bird or animal; and their vulture-like,
-necrophagous habits are very evident to any one who has fallen asleep
-on the desolate plains of Patagonia, for when he wakes, he will see, on
-each surrounding hillock, one of these birds patiently watching him
-with an evil eye: it is a feature in the landscape of these countries,
-which will be recognised by every one who has wandered over them. If a
-party of men go out hunting with dogs and horses, they will be
-accompanied, during the day, by several of these attendants. After
-feeding, the uncovered craw protrudes; at such times, and indeed
-generally, the Carrancha is an inactive, tame, and cowardly bird. Its
-flight is heavy and slow, like that of an English rook. It seldom
-soars; but I have twice seen one at a great height gliding through the
-air with much ease. It runs (in contradistinction to hopping), but not
-quite so quickly as some of its congeners. At times the Carrancha is
-noisy, but is not generally so: its cry is loud, very harsh and
-peculiar, and may be likened to the sound of the Spanish guttural g,
-followed by a rough double r r; when uttering this cry it elevates its
-head higher and higher, till at last, with its beak wide open, the
-crown almost touches the lower part of the back. This fact, which has
-been doubted, is quite true; I have seen them several times with their
-heads backwards in a completely inverted position. To these
-observations I may add, on the high authority of Azara, that the
-Carrancha feeds on worms, shells, slugs, grasshoppers, and frogs; that
-it destroys young lambs by tearing the umbilical cord; and that it
-pursues the Gallinazo, till that bird is compelled to vomit up the
-carrion it may have recently gorged. Lastly, Azara states that several
-Carranchas, five or six together, will unite in chase of large birds,
-even such as herons. All these facts show that it is a bird of very
-versatile habits and considerable ingenuity.
-
-The Polyborus Chimango is considerably smaller than the last species.
-It is truly omnivorous, and will eat even bread; and I was assured that
-it materially injures the potato crops in Chiloe, by stocking up the
-roots when first planted. Of all the carrion-feeders it is generally
-the last which leaves the skeleton of a dead animal, and may often be
-seen within the ribs of a cow or horse, like a bird in a cage. Another
-species is the Polyborus Novae Zelandiae, which is exceedingly common
-in the Falkland Islands. These birds in many respects resemble in
-their habits the Carranchas. They live on the flesh of dead animals
-and on marine productions; and on the Ramirez rocks their whole
-sustenance must depend on the sea. They are extraordinarily tame and
-fearless, and haunt the neighborhood of houses for offal. If a hunting
-party kills an animal, a number soon collect and patiently await,
-standing on the ground on all sides. After eating, their uncovered
-craws are largely protruded, giving them a disgusting appearance. They
-readily attack wounded birds: a cormorant in this state having taken to
-the shore, was immediately seized on by several, and its death hastened
-by their blows. The Beagle was at the Falklands only during the
-summer, but the officers of the Adventure, who were there in the
-winter, mention many extraordinary instances of the boldness and
-rapacity of these birds. They actually pounced on a dog that was lying
-fast asleep close by one of the party; and the sportsmen had difficulty
-in preventing the wounded geese from being seized before their eyes. It
-is said that several together (in this respect resembling the
-Carranchas) wait at the mouth of a rabbit-hole, and together seize on
-the animal when it comes out. They were constantly flying on board the
-vessel when in the harbour; and it was necessary to keep a good look
-out to prevent the leather being torn from the rigging, and the meat or
-game from the stern. These birds are very mischievous and inquisitive;
-they will pick up almost anything from the ground; a large black glazed
-hat was carried nearly a mile, as was a pair of the heavy balls used in
-catching cattle. Mr. Usborne experienced during the survey a more
-severe loss, in their stealing a small Kater's compass in a red morocco
-leather case, which was never recovered. These birds are, moreover,
-quarrelsome and very passionate; tearing up the grass with their bills
-from rage. They are not truly gregarious; they do not soar, and their
-flight is heavy and clumsy; on the ground they run extremely fast, very
-much like pheasants. They are noisy, uttering several harsh cries, one
-of which is like that of the English rook, hence the sealers always
-call them rooks. It is a curious circumstance that, when crying out,
-they throw their heads upwards and backwards, after the same manner as
-the Carrancha. They build in the rocky cliffs of the sea-coast, but
-only on the small adjoining islets, and not on the two main islands:
-this is a singular precaution in so tame and fearless a bird. The
-sealers say that the flesh of these birds, when cooked, is quite white,
-and very good eating; but bold must the man be who attempts such a meal.
-
-We have now only to mention the turkey-buzzard (Vultur aura), and the
-Gallinazo. The former is found wherever the country is moderately
-damp, from Cape Horn to North America. Differently from the Polyborus
-Brasiliensis and Chimango, it has found its way to the Falkland
-Islands. The turkey-buzzard is a solitary bird, or at most goes in
-pairs. It may at once be recognised from a long distance, by its
-lofty, soaring, and most elegant flight. It is well known to be a true
-carrion-feeder. On the west coast of Patagonia, among the
-thickly-wooded islets and broken land, it lives exclusively on what the
-sea throws up, and on the carcasses of dead seals. Wherever these
-animals are congregated on the rocks, there the vultures may be seen.
-The Gallinazo (Cathartes atratus) has a different range from the last
-species, as it never occurs southward of lat. 41 degs. Azara states
-that there exists a tradition that these birds, at the time of the
-conquest, were not found near Monte Video, but that they subsequently
-followed the inhabitants from more northern districts. At the present
-day they are numerous in the valley of the Colorado, which is three
-hundred miles due south of Monte Video. It seems probable that this
-additional migration has happened since the time of Azara. The
-Gallinazo generally prefers a humid climate, or rather the
-neighbourhood of fresh water; hence it is extremely abundant in Brazil
-and La Plata, while it is never found on the desert and arid plains of
-Northern Patagonia, excepting near some stream. These birds frequent
-the whole Pampas to the foot of the Cordillera, but I never saw or
-heard of one in Chile; in Peru they are preserved as scavengers. These
-vultures certainly may be called gregarious, for they seem to have
-pleasure in society, and are not solely brought together by the
-attraction of a common prey. On a fine day a flock may often be
-observed at a great height, each bird wheeling round and round without
-closing its wings, in the most graceful evolutions. This is clearly
-performed for the mere pleasure of the exercise, or perhaps is
-connected with their matrimonial alliances.
-
-I have now mentioned all the carrion-feeders, excepting the condor, an
-account of which will be more appropriately introduced when we visit a
-country more congenial to its habits than the plains of La Plata.
-
-
-In a broad band of sand-hillocks which separate the Laguna del Potrero
-from the shores of the Plata, at the distance of a few miles from
-Maldonado, I found a group of those vitrified, siliceous tubes, which
-are formed by lightning entering loose sand. These tubes resemble in
-every particular those from Drigg in Cumberland, described in the
-Geological Transactions. [10] The sand-hillocks of Maldonado not being
-protected by vegetation, are constantly changing their position. From
-this cause the tubes projected above the surface, and numerous
-fragments lying near, showed that they had formerly been buried to a
-greater depth. Four sets entered the sand perpendicularly: by working
-with my hands I traced one of them two feet deep; and some fragments
-which evidently had belonged to the same tube, when added to the other
-part, measured five feet three inches. The diameter of the whole tube
-was nearly equal, and therefore we must suppose that originally it
-extended to a much greater depth. These dimensions are however small,
-compared to those of the tubes from Drigg, one of which was traced to a
-depth of not less than thirty feet.
-
-The internal surface is completely vitrified, glossy, and smooth. A
-small fragment examined under the microscope appeared, from the number
-of minute entangled air or perhaps steam bubbles, like an assay fused
-before the blowpipe. The sand is entirely, or in greater part,
-siliceous; but some points are of a black colour, and from their glossy
-surface possess a metallic lustre. The thickness of the wall of the
-tube varies from a thirtieth to a twentieth of an inch, and
-occasionally even equals a tenth. On the outside the grains of sand
-are rounded, and have a slightly glazed appearance: I could not
-distinguish any signs of crystallization. In a similar manner to that
-described in the Geological Transactions, the tubes are generally
-compressed, and have deep longitudinal furrows, so as closely to
-resemble a shrivelled vegetable stalk, or the bark of the elm or cork
-tree. Their circumference is about two inches, but in some fragments,
-which are cylindrical and without any furrows, it is as much as four
-inches. The compression from the surrounding loose sand, acting while
-the tube was still softened from the effects of the intense heat, has
-evidently caused the creases or furrows. Judging from the uncompressed
-fragments, the measure or bore of the lightning (if such a term may be
-used) must have been about one inch and a quarter. At Paris, M.
-Hachette and M. Beudant [11] succeeded in making tubes, in most
-respects similar to these fulgurites, by passing very strong shocks of
-galvanism through finely-powdered glass: when salt was added, so as to
-increase its fusibility, the tubes were larger in every dimension. They
-failed both with powdered felspar and quartz. One tube, formed with
-pounded glass, was very nearly an inch long, namely .982, and had an
-internal diameter of .019 of an inch. When we hear that the strongest
-battery in Paris was used, and that its power on a substance of such
-easy fusibility as glass was to form tubes so diminutive, we must feel
-greatly astonished at the force of a shock of lightning, which,
-striking the sand in several places, has formed cylinders, in one
-instance of at least thirty feet long, and having an internal bore,
-where not compressed, of full an inch and a half; and this in a
-material so extraordinarily refractory as quartz!
-
-The tubes, as I have already remarked, enter the sand nearly in a
-vertical direction. One, however, which was less regular than the
-others, deviated from a right line, at the most considerable bend, to
-the amount of thirty-three degrees. From this same tube, two small
-branches, about a foot apart, were sent off; one pointed downwards, and
-the other upwards. This latter case is remarkable, as the electric
-fluid must have turned back at the acute angle of 26 degs., to the line
-of its main course. Besides the four tubes which I found vertical, and
-traced beneath the surface, there were several other groups of
-fragments, the original sites of which without doubt were near. All
-occurred in a level area of shifting sand, sixty yards by twenty,
-situated among some high sand-hillocks, and at the distance of about
-half a mile from a chain of hills four or five hundred feet in height.
-The most remarkable circumstance, as it appears to me, in this case as
-well as in that of Drigg, and in one described by M. Ribbentrop in
-Germany, is the number of tubes found within such limited spaces. At
-Drigg, within an area of fifteen yards, three were observed, and the
-same number occurred in Germany. In the case which I have described,
-certainly more than four existed within the space of the sixty by
-twenty yards. As it does not appear probable that the tubes are
-produced by successive distinct shocks, we must believe that the
-lightning, shortly before entering the ground, divides itself into
-separate branches.
-
-The neighbourhood of the Rio Plata seems peculiarly subject to electric
-phenomena. In the year 1793, [12] one of the most destructive
-thunderstorms perhaps on record happened at Buenos Ayres: thirty-seven
-places within the city were struck by lightning, and nineteen people
-killed. From facts stated in several books of travels, I am inclined
-to suspect that thunderstorms are very common near the mouths of great
-rivers. Is it not possible that the mixture of large bodies of fresh
-and salt water may disturb the electrical equilibrium? Even during our
-occasional visits to this part of South America, we heard of a ship,
-two churches, and a house having been struck. Both the church and the
-house I saw shortly afterwards: the house belonged to Mr. Hood, the
-consul-general at Monte Video. Some of the effects were curious: the
-paper, for nearly a foot on each side of the line where the bell-wires
-had run, was blackened. The metal had been fused, and although the
-room was about fifteen feet high, the globules, dropping on the chairs
-and furniture, had drilled in them a chain of minute holes. A part of
-the wall was shattered, as if by gunpowder, and the fragments had been
-blown off with force sufficient to dent the wall on the opposite side
-of the room. The frame of a looking-glass was blackened, and the
-gilding must have been volatilized, for a smelling-bottle, which stood
-on the chimney-piece, was coated with bright metallic particles, which
-adhered as firmly as if they had been enamelled.
-
-[1] Hearne's Journey, p. 383.
-
-[2] Maclaren, art. "America," Encyclop. Brittann.
-
-[3] Azara says, "Je crois que la quantite annuelle des pluies est, dans
-toutes ces contrees, plus considerable qu'en Espagne."--Vol. i. p. 36.
-
-[4] In South America I collected altogether twenty-seven species of
-mice, and thirteen more are known from the works of Azara and other
-authors. Those collected by myself have been named and described by
-Mr. Waterhouse at the meetings of the Zoological Society. I must be
-allowed to take this opportunity of returning my cordial thanks to Mr.
-Waterhouse, and to the other gentleman attached to that Society, for
-their kind and most liberal assistance on all occasions.
-
-[5] In the stomach and duodenum of a capybara which I opened I found a
-very large quantity of a thin yellowish fluid, in which scarcely a
-fibre could be distinguished. Mr. Owen informs me that a part of the
-oesophagus is so constructed that nothing much larger than a crowquill
-can be passed down. Certainly the broad teeth and strong jaws of this
-animal are well fitted to grind into pulp the aquatic plants on which
-it feeds.
-
-[6] At the R. Negro, in Northern Patagonia, there is an animal of the
-same habits, and probably a closely allied species, but which I never
-saw. Its noise is different from that of the Maldonado kind; it is
-repeated only twice instead of three or four times, and is more
-distinct and sonorous; when heard from a distance it so closely
-resembles the sound made in cutting down a small tree with an axe, that
-I have sometimes remained in doubt concerning it.
-
-[7] Philosoph. Zoolog., tom. i. p. 242.
-
-[8] Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 217.
-
-[9] Read before the Academy of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut, 1834, p.
-418.
-
-[10] Geolog. Transact. vol. ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph. Transact.
-(1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has described some imperfect siliceous
-tubes and a melted pebble of quartz, found in digging into the ground,
-under a tree, where a man had been killed by lightning.
-
-[11] Annals de Chimie et de Physique, tom. xxxvii. p. 319.
-
-[12] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 36.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Rio Negro--Estancias attacked by the
-Indians--Salt-Lakes--Flamingoes--R. Negro to R. Colorado--Sacred
-Tree--Patagonian Hare--Indian Families--General Rosas--Proceed to
-Bahia Blanca--Sand Dunes--Negro Lieutenant--Bahia Blanca--Saline
-Incrustations--Punta Alta--Zorillo.
-
-
-JULY 24th, 1833.--The Beagle sailed from Maldonado, and on August the
-3rd she arrived off the mouth of the Rio Negro. This is the principal
-river on the whole line of coast between the Strait of Magellan and the
-Plata. It enters the sea about three hundred miles south of the
-estuary of the Plata. About fifty years ago, under the old Spanish
-government, a small colony was established here; and it is still the
-most southern position (lat. 41 degs.) on this eastern coast of America
-inhabited by civilized man.
-
-The country near the mouth of the river is wretched in the extreme: on
-the south side a long line of perpendicular cliffs commences, which
-exposes a section of the geological nature of the country. The strata
-are of sandstone, and one layer was remarkable from being composed of a
-firmly-cemented conglomerate of pumice pebbles, which must have
-travelled more than four hundred miles, from the Andes. The surface is
-everywhere covered up by a thick bed of gravel, which extends far and
-wide over the open plain. Water is extremely scarce, and, where found,
-is almost invariably brackish. The vegetation is scanty; and although
-there are bushes of many kinds, all are armed with formidable thorns,
-which seem to warn the stranger not to enter on these inhospitable
-regions.
-
-The settlement is situated eighteen miles up the river. The road
-follows the foot of the sloping cliff, which forms the northern
-boundary of the great valley, in which the Rio Negro flows. On the way
-we passed the ruins of some fine "estancias," which a few years since
-had been destroyed by the Indians. They withstood several attacks. A
-man present at one gave me a very lively description of what took
-place. The inhabitants had sufficient notice to drive all the cattle
-and horses into the "corral" [1] which surrounded the house, and
-likewise to mount some small cannon. The Indians were Araucanians from
-the south of Chile; several hundreds in number, and highly disciplined.
-They first appeared in two bodies on a neighbouring hill; having there
-dismounted, and taken off their fur mantles, they advanced naked to the
-charge. The only weapon of an Indian is a very long bamboo or chuzo,
-ornamented with ostrich feathers, and pointed by a sharp spearhead. My
-informer seemed to remember with the greatest horror the quivering of
-these chuzos as they approached near. When close, the cacique
-Pincheira hailed the besieged to give up their arms, or he would cut
-all their throats. As this would probably have been the result of
-their entrance under any circumstances, the answer was given by a
-volley of musketry. The Indians, with great steadiness, came to the
-very fence of the corral: but to their surprise they found the posts
-fastened together by iron nails instead of leather thongs, and, of
-course, in vain attempted to cut them with their knives. This saved
-the lives of the Christians: many of the wounded Indians were carried
-away by their companions, and at last, one of the under caciques being
-wounded, the bugle sounded a retreat. They retired to their horses,
-and seemed to hold a council of war. This was an awful pause for the
-Spaniards, as all their ammunition, with the exception of a few
-cartridges, was expended. In an instant the Indians mounted their
-horses, and galloped out of sight. Another attack was still more
-quickly repulsed. A cool Frenchman managed the gun; he stopped till the
-Indians approached close, and then raked their line with grape-shot: he
-thus laid thirty-nine of them on the ground; and, of course, such a
-blow immediately routed the whole party.
-
-The town is indifferently called El Carmen or Patagones. It is built on
-the face of a cliff which fronts the river, and many of the houses are
-excavated even in the sandstone. The river is about two or three
-hundred yards wide, and is deep and rapid. The many islands, with
-their willow-trees, and the flat headlands, seen one behind the other
-on the northern boundary of the broad green valley, form, by the aid of
-a bright sun, a view almost picturesque. The number of inhabitants
-does not exceed a few hundreds. These Spanish colonies do not, like
-our British ones, carry within themselves the elements of growth. Many
-Indians of pure blood reside here: the tribe of the Cacique Lucanee
-constantly have their Toldos [2] on the outskirts of the town. The
-local government partly supplies them with provisions, by giving them
-all the old worn-out horses, and they earn a little by making
-horse-rugs and other articles of riding-gear. These Indians are
-considered civilized; but what their character may have gained by a
-lesser degree of ferocity, is almost counterbalanced by their entire
-immorality. Some of the younger men are, however, improving; they are
-willing to labour, and a short time since a party went on a
-sealing-voyage, and behaved very well. They were now enjoying the
-fruits of their labour, by being dressed in very gay, clean clothes,
-and by being very idle. The taste they showed in their dress was
-admirable; if you could have turned one of these young Indians into a
-statue of bronze, his drapery would have been perfectly graceful.
-
-One day I rode to a large salt-lake, or Salina, which is distant
-fifteen miles from the town. During the winter it consists of a
-shallow lake of brine, which in summer is converted into a field of
-snow-white salt. The layer near the margin is from four to five inches
-thick, but towards the centre its thickness increases. This lake was
-two and a half miles long, and one broad. Others occur in the
-neighbourhood many times larger, and with a floor of salt, two and
-three feet in thickness, even when under water during the winter. One
-of these brilliantly white and level expanses in the midst of the brown
-and desolate plain, offers an extraordinary spectacle. A large
-quantity of salt is annually drawn from the salina: and great piles,
-some hundred tons in weight, were lying ready for exportation. The
-season for working the salinas forms the harvest of Patagones; for on
-it the prosperity of the place depends. Nearly the whole population
-encamps on the bank of the river, and the people are employed in
-drawing out the salt in bullock-waggons, This salt is crystallized in
-great cubes, and is remarkably pure: Mr. Trenham Reeks has kindly
-analyzed some for me, and he finds in it only 0.26 of gypsum and 0.22
-of earthy matter. It is a singular fact, that it does not serve so
-well for preserving meat as sea-salt from the Cape de Verd islands; and
-a merchant at Buenos Ayres told me that he considered it as fifty per
-cent. less valuable. Hence the Cape de Verd salt is constantly
-imported, and is mixed with that from these salinas. The purity of the
-Patagonian salt, or absence from it of those other saline bodies found
-in all sea-water, is the only assignable cause for this inferiority: a
-conclusion which no one, I think, would have suspected, but which is
-supported by the fact lately ascertained, [3] that those salts answer
-best for preserving cheese which contain most of the deliquescent
-chlorides.
-
-The border of this lake is formed of mud: and in this numerous large
-crystals of gypsum, some of which are three inches long, lie embedded;
-whilst on the surface others of sulphate of soda lie scattered about.
-The Gauchos call the former the "Padre del sal," and the latter the
-"Madre;" they state that these progenitive salts always occur on the
-borders of the salinas, when the water begins to evaporate. The mud is
-black, and has a fetid odour. I could not at first imagine the cause
-of this, but I afterwards perceived that the froth which the wind
-drifted on shore was coloured green, as if by confervae; I attempted to
-carry home some of this green matter, but from an accident failed.
-Parts of the lake seen from a short distance appeared of a reddish
-colour, and this perhaps was owing to some infusorial animalcula. The
-mud in many places was thrown up by numbers of some kind of worm, or
-annelidous animal. How surprising it is that any creatures should be
-able to exist in brine, and that they should be crawling among crystals
-of sulphate of soda and lime! And what becomes of these worms when,
-during the long summer, the surface is hardened into a solid layer of
-salt? Flamingoes in considerable numbers inhabit this lake, and breed
-here, throughout Patagonia, in Northern Chile, and at the Galapagos
-Islands, I met with these birds wherever there were lakes of brine. I
-saw them here wading about in search of food--probably for the worms
-which burrow in the mud; and these latter probably feed on infusoria or
-confervae. Thus we have a little living world within itself adapted to
-these inland lakes of brine. A minute crustaceous animal (Cancer
-salinus) is said [4] to live in countless numbers in the brine-pans at
-Lymington: but only in those in which the fluid has attained, from
-evaporation, considerable strength--namely, about a quarter of a pound
-of salt to a pint of water. Well may we affirm that every part of the
-world is habitable! Whether lakes of brine, or those subterranean ones
-hidden beneath volcanic mountains--warm mineral springs--the wide
-expanse and depths of the ocean--the upper regions of the atmosphere,
-and even the surface of perpetual snow--all support organic beings.
-
-
-To the northward of the Rio Negro, between it and the inhabited country
-near Buenos Ayres, the Spaniards have only one small settlement,
-recently established at Bahia Blanca. The distance in a straight line
-to Buenos Ayres is very nearly five hundred British miles. The
-wandering tribes of horse Indians, which have always occupied the
-greater part of this country, having of late much harassed the outlying
-estancias, the government at Buenos Ayres equipped some time since an
-army under the command of General Rosas for the purpose of
-exterminating them. The troops were now encamped on the banks of the
-Colorado; a river lying about eighty miles northward of the Rio Negro.
-When General Rosas left Buenos Ayres he struck in a direct line across
-the unexplored plains: and as the country was thus pretty well cleared
-of Indians, he left behind him, at wide intervals, a small party of
-soldiers with a troop of horses (a posta), so as to be enabled to keep
-up a communication with the capital. As the Beagle intended to call at
-Bahia Blanca, I determined to proceed there by land; and ultimately I
-extended my plan to travel the whole way by the postas to Buenos Ayres.
-
-August 11th.--Mr. Harris, an Englishman residing at Patagones, a guide,
-and five Gauchos who were proceeding to the army on business, were my
-companions on the journey. The Colorado, as I have already said, is
-nearly eighty miles distant: and as we travelled slowly, we were two
-days and a half on the road. The whole line of country deserves
-scarcely a better name than that of a desert. Water is found only in
-two small wells; it is called fresh; but even at this time of the year,
-during the rainy season, it was quite brackish. In the summer this must
-be a distressing passage; for now it was sufficiently desolate. The
-valley of the Rio Negro, broad as it is, has merely been excavated out
-of the sandstone plain; for immediately above the bank on which the
-town stands, a level country commences, which is interrupted only by a
-few trifling valleys and depressions. Everywhere the landscape wears
-the same sterile aspect; a dry gravelly soil supports tufts of brown
-withered grass, and low scattered bushes, armed with thorns.
-
-Shortly after passing the first spring we came in sight of a famous
-tree, which the Indians reverence as the altar of Walleechu. It is
-situated on a high part of the plain; and hence is a landmark visible
-at a great distance. As soon as a tribe of Indians come in sight of
-it, they offer their adorations by loud shouts. The tree itself is
-low, much branched, and thorny: just above the root it has a diameter
-of about three feet. It stands by itself without any neighbour, and
-was indeed the first tree we saw; afterwards we met with a few others
-of the same kind, but they were far from common. Being winter the tree
-had no leaves, but in their place numberless threads, by which the
-various offerings, such as cigars, bread, meat, pieces of cloth, etc.,
-had been suspended. Poor Indians, not having anything better, only pull
-a thread out of their ponchos, and fasten it to the tree. Richer
-Indians are accustomed to pour spirits and mate into a certain hole,
-and likewise to smoke upwards, thinking thus to afford all possible
-gratification to Walleechu. To complete the scene, the tree was
-surrounded by the bleached bones of horses which had been slaughtered
-as sacrifices. All Indians of every age and sex make their offerings;
-they then think that their horses will not tire, and that they
-themselves shall be prosperous. The Gaucho who told me this, said that
-in the time of peace he had witnessed this scene, and that he and
-others used to wait till the Indians had passed by, for the sake of
-stealing from Walleechu the offerings.
-
-The Gauchos think that the Indians consider the tree as the god itself,
-but it seems far more probable that they regard it as the altar. The
-only cause which I can imagine for this choice, is its being a landmark
-in a dangerous passage. The Sierra de la Ventana is visible at an
-immense distance; and a Gaucho told me that he was once riding with an
-Indian a few miles to the north of the Rio Colorado when the Indian
-commenced making the same loud noise which is usual at the first sight
-of the distant tree, putting his hand to his head, and then pointing in
-the direction of the Sierra. Upon being asked the reason of this, the
-Indian said in broken Spanish, "First see the Sierra." About two
-leagues beyond this curious tree we halted for the night: at this
-instant an unfortunate cow was spied by the lynx-eyed Gauchos, who set
-off in full chase, and in a few minutes dragged her in with their
-lazos, and slaughtered her. We here had the four necessaries of life
-"en el campo,"--pasture for the horses, water (only a muddy puddle),
-meat and firewood. The Gauchos were in high spirits at finding all
-these luxuries; and we soon set to work at the poor cow. This was the
-first night which I passed under the open sky, with the gear of the
-recado for my bed. There is high enjoyment in the independence of the
-Gaucho life--to be able at any moment to pull up your horse, and say,
-"Here we will pass the night." The death-like stillness of the plain,
-the dogs keeping watch, the gipsy-group of Gauchos making their beds
-round the fire, have left in my mind a strongly-marked picture of this
-first night, which will never be forgotten.
-
-The next day the country continued similar to that above described. It
-is inhabited by few birds or animals of any kind. Occasionally a deer,
-or a Guanaco (wild Llama) may be seen; but the Agouti (Cavia
-Patagonica) is the commonest quadruped. This animal here represents
-our hares. It differs, however, from that genus in many essential
-respects; for instance, it has only three toes behind. It is also
-nearly twice the size, weighing from twenty to twenty-five pounds. The
-Agouti is a true friend of the desert; it is a common feature of the
-landscape to see two or three hopping quickly one after the other in a
-straight line across these wild plains. They are found as far north as
-the Sierra Tapalguen (lat. 37 degs. 30'), where the plain rather
-suddenly becomes greener and more humid; and their southern limit is
-between Port Desire and St. Julian, where there is no change in the
-nature of the country. It is a singular fact, that although the Agouti
-is not now found as far south as Port St. Julian, yet that Captain
-Wood, in his voyage in 1670, talks of them as being numerous there.
-What cause can have altered, in a wide, uninhabited, and rarely-visited
-country, the range of an animal like this? It appears also, from the
-number shot by Captain Wood in one day at Port Desire, that they must
-have been considerably more abundant there formerly than at present.
-Where the Bizcacha lives and makes its burrows, the Agouti uses them;
-but where, as at Bahia Blanca, the Bizcacha is not found, the Agouti
-burrows for itself. The same thing occurs with the little owl of the
-Pampas (Athene cunicularia), which has so often been described as
-standing like a sentinel at the mouth of the burrows; for in Banda
-Oriental, owing to the absence of the Bizcacha, it is obliged to hollow
-out its own habitation.
-
-The next morning, as we approached the Rio Colorado, the appearance of
-the country changed; we soon came on a plain covered with turf, which,
-from its flowers, tall clover, and little owls, resembled the Pampas.
-We passed also a muddy swamp of considerable extent, which in summer
-dries, and becomes incrusted with various salts; and hence is called a
-salitral. It was covered by low succulent plants, of the same kind
-with those growing on the sea-shore. The Colorado, at the pass where
-we crossed it, is only about sixty yards wide; generally it must be
-nearly double that width. Its course is very tortuous, being marked by
-willow-trees and beds of reeds: in a direct line the distance to the
-mouth of the river is said to be nine leagues, but by water
-twenty-five. We were delayed crossing in the canoe by some immense
-troops of mares, which were swimming the river in order to follow a
-division of troops into the interior. A more ludicrous spectacle I
-never beheld than the hundreds and hundreds of heads, all directed one
-way, with pointed ears and distended snorting nostrils, appearing just
-above the water like a great shoal of some amphibious animal. Mare's
-flesh is the only food which the soldiers have when on an expedition.
-This gives them a great facility of movement; for the distance to which
-horses can be driven over these plains is quite surprising: I have been
-assured that an unloaded horse can travel a hundred miles a day for
-many days successively.
-
-The encampment of General Rosas was close to the river. It consisted of
-a square formed by waggons, artillery, straw huts, etc. The soldiers
-were nearly all cavalry; and I should think such a villainous,
-banditti-like army was never before collected together. The greater
-number of men were of a mixed breed, between Negro, Indian, and
-Spaniard. I know not the reason, but men of such origin seldom have a
-good expression of countenance. I called on the Secretary to show my
-passport. He began to cross-question me in the most dignified and
-mysterious manner. By good luck I had a letter of recommendation from
-the government of Buenos Ayres [5] to the commandant of Patagones. This
-was taken to General Rosas, who sent me a very obliging message; and
-the Secretary returned all smiles and graciousness. We took up our
-residence in the _rancho_, or hovel, of a curious old Spaniard, who had
-served with Napoleon in the expedition against Russia.
-
-We stayed two days at the Colorado; I had little to do, for the
-surrounding country was a swamp, which in summer (December), when the
-snow melts on the Cordillera, is over-flowed by the river. My chief
-amusement was watching the Indian families as they came to buy little
-articles at the rancho where we stayed. It was supposed that General
-Rosas had about six hundred Indian allies. The men were a tall, fine
-race, yet it was afterwards easy to see in the Fuegian savage the same
-countenance rendered hideous by cold, want of food, and less
-civilization. Some authors, in defining the primary races of mankind,
-have separated these Indians into two classes; but this is certainly
-incorrect. Among the young women or chinas, some deserve to be called
-even beautiful. Their hair was coarse, but bright and black; and they
-wore it in two plaits hanging down to the waist. They had a high
-colour, and eyes that glistened with brilliancy; their legs, feet, and
-arms were small and elegantly formed; their ankles, and sometimes their
-wrists, were ornamented by broad bracelets of blue beads. Nothing
-could be more interesting than some of the family groups. A mother
-with one or two daughters would often come to our rancho, mounted on
-the same horse. They ride like men, but with their knees tucked up
-much higher. This habit, perhaps, arises from their being accustomed,
-when travelling, to ride the loaded horses. The duty of the women is
-to load and unload the horses; to make the tents for the night; in
-short to be, like the wives of all savages, useful slaves. The men
-fight, hunt, take care of the horses, and make the riding gear. One of
-their chief indoor occupations is to knock two stones together till
-they become round, in order to make the bolas. With this important
-weapon the Indian catches his game, and also his horse, which roams
-free over the plain. In fighting, his first attempt is to throw down
-the horse of his adversary with the bolas, and when entangled by the
-fall to kill him with the chuzo. If the balls only catch the neck or
-body of an animal, they are often carried away and lost. As the making
-the stones round is the labour of two days, the manufacture of the
-balls is a very common employment. Several of the men and women had
-their faces painted red, but I never saw the horizontal bands which are
-so common among the Fuegians. Their chief pride consists in having
-everything made of silver; I have seen a cacique with his spurs,
-stirrups, handle of his knife, and bridle made of this metal: the
-head-stall and reins being of wire, were not thicker than whipcord; and
-to see a fiery steed wheeling about under the command of so light a
-chain, gave to the horsemanship a remarkable character of elegance.
-
-General Rosas intimated a wish to see me; a circumstance which I was
-afterwards very glad of. He is a man of an extraordinary character,
-and has a most predominant influence in the country, which it seems he
-will use to its prosperity and advancement. [6] He is said to be the
-owner of seventy-four square leagues of land, and to have about three
-hundred thousand head of cattle. His estates are admirably managed,
-and are far more productive of corn than those of others. He first
-gained his celebrity by his laws for his own estancias, and by
-disciplining several hundred men, so as to resist with success the
-attacks of the Indians. There are many stories current about the rigid
-manner in which his laws were enforced. One of these was, that no man,
-on penalty of being put into the stocks, should carry his knife on a
-Sunday: this being the principal day for gambling and drinking, many
-quarrels arose, which from the general manner of fighting with the
-knife often proved fatal. One Sunday the Governor came in great form
-to pay the estancia a visit, and General Rosas, in his hurry, walked
-out to receive him with his knife, as usual, stuck in his belt. The
-steward touched his arm, and reminded him of the law; upon which
-turning to the Governor, he said he was extremely sorry, but that he
-must go into the stocks, and that till let out, he possessed no power
-even in his own house. After a little time the steward was persuaded
-to open the stocks, and to let him out, but no sooner was this done,
-than he turned to the steward and said, "You now have broken the laws,
-so you must take my place in the stocks." Such actions as these
-delighted the Gauchos, who all possess high notions of their own
-equality and dignity.
-
-General Rosas is also a perfect horseman--an accomplishment of no small
-consequence In a country where an assembled army elected its general by
-the following trial: A troop of unbroken horses being driven into a
-corral, were let out through a gateway, above which was a cross-bar: it
-was agreed whoever should drop from the bar on one of these wild
-animals, as it rushed out, and should be able, without saddle or
-bridle, not only to ride it, but also to bring it back to the door of
-the corral, should be their general. The person who succeeded was
-accordingly elected; and doubtless made a fit general for such an army.
-This extraordinary feat has also been performed by Rosas.
-
-By these means, and by conforming to the dress and habits of the
-Gauchos, he has obtained an unbounded popularity in the country, and in
-consequence a despotic power. I was assured by an English merchant,
-that a man who had murdered another, when arrested and questioned
-concerning his motive, answered, "He spoke disrespectfully of General
-Rosas, so I killed him." At the end of a week the murderer was at
-liberty. This doubtless was the act of the general's party, and not of
-the general himself.
-
-In conversation he is enthusiastic, sensible, and very grave. His
-gravity is carried to a high pitch: I heard one of his mad buffoons
-(for he keeps two, like the barons of old) relate the following
-anecdote. "I wanted very much to hear a certain piece of music, so I
-went to the general two or three times to ask him; he said to me, 'Go
-about your business, for I am engaged.' I went a second time; he said,
-'If you come again I will punish you.' A third time I asked, and he
-laughed. I rushed out of the tent, but it was too late--he ordered two
-soldiers to catch and stake me. I begged by all the saints in heaven
-he would let me off; but it would not do,--when the general laughs he
-spares neither mad man nor sound." The poor flighty gentleman looked
-quite dolorous, at the very recollection of the staking. This is a
-very severe punishment; four posts are driven into the ground, and the
-man is extended by his arms and legs horizontally, and there left to
-stretch for several hours. The idea is evidently taken from the usual
-method of drying hides. My interview passed away, without a smile, and
-I obtained a passport and order for the government post-horses, and
-this he gave me in the most obliging and ready manner.
-
-In the morning we started for Bahia Blanca, which we reached in two
-days. Leaving the regular encampment, we passed by the toldos of the
-Indians. These are round like ovens, and covered with hides; by the
-mouth of each, a tapering chuzo was stuck in the ground. The toldos
-were divided into separate groups, which belong to the different
-caciques' tribes, and the groups were again divided into smaller ones,
-according to the relationship of the owners. For several miles we
-travelled along the valley of the Colorado. The alluvial plains on the
-side appeared fertile, and it is supposed that they are well adapted to
-the growth of corn. Turning northward from the river, we soon entered
-on a country, differing from the plains south of the river. The land
-still continued dry and sterile: but it supported many different kinds
-of plants, and the grass, though brown and withered, was more abundant,
-as the thorny bushes were less so. These latter in a short space
-entirely disappeared, and the plains were left without a thicket to
-cover their nakedness. This change in the vegetation marks the
-commencement of the grand calcareo argillaceous deposit, which forms
-the wide extent of the Pampas, and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental. From the Strait of Magellan to the Colorado, a distance of
-about eight hundred miles, the face of the country is everywhere
-composed of shingle: the pebbles are chiefly of porphyry, and probably
-owe their origin to the rocks of the Cordillera. North of the Colorado
-this bed thins out, and the pebbles become exceedingly small, and here
-the characteristic vegetation of Patagonia ceases.
-
-Having ridden about twenty-five miles, we came to a broad belt of
-sand-dunes, which stretches, as far as the eye can reach, to the east
-and west. The sand-hillocks resting on the clay, allow small pools of
-water to collect, and thus afford in this dry country an invaluable
-supply of fresh water. The great advantage arising from depressions
-and elevations of the soil, is not often brought home to the mind. The
-two miserable springs in the long passage between the Rio Negro and
-Colorado were caused by trifling inequalities in the plain, without
-them not a drop of water would have been found. The belt of sand-dunes
-is about eight miles wide; at some former period, it probably formed
-the margin of a grand estuary, where the Colorado now flows. In this
-district, where absolute proofs of the recent elevation of the land
-occur, such speculations can hardly be neglected by any one, although
-merely considering the physical geography of the country. Having
-crossed the sandy tract, we arrived in the evening at one of the
-post-houses; and, as the fresh horses were grazing at a distance we
-determined to pass the night there.
-
-The house was situated at the base of a ridge between one and two
-hundred feet high--a most remarkable feature in this country. This
-posta was commanded by a negro lieutenant, born in Africa: to his
-credit be it said, there was not a ranche between the Colorado and
-Buenos Ayres in nearly such neat order as his. He had a little room
-for strangers, and a small corral for the horses, all made of sticks
-and reeds; he had also dug a ditch round his house as a defence in case
-of being attacked. This would, however, have been of little avail, if
-the Indians had come; but his chief comfort seemed to rest in the
-thought of selling his life dearly. A short time before, a body of
-Indians had travelled past in the night; if they had been aware of the
-posta, our black friend and his four soldiers would assuredly have been
-slaughtered. I did not anywhere meet a more civil and obliging man
-than this negro; it was therefore the more painful to see that he would
-not sit down and eat with us.
-
-In the morning we sent for the horses very early, and started for
-another exhilarating gallop. We passed the Cabeza del Buey, an old
-name given to the head of a large marsh, which extends from Bahia
-Blanca. Here we changed horses, and passed through some leagues of
-swamps and saline marshes. Changing horses for the last time, we again
-began wading through the mud. My animal fell and I was well soused in
-black mire--a very disagreeable accident when one does not possess a
-change of clothes. Some miles from the fort we met a man, who told us
-that a great gun had been fired, which is a signal that Indians are
-near. We immediately left the road, and followed the edge of a marsh,
-which when chased offers the best mode of escape. We were glad to
-arrive within the walls, when we found all the alarm was about nothing,
-for the Indians turned out to be friendly ones, who wished to join
-General Rosas.
-
-Bahia Blanca scarcely deserves the name of a village. A few houses and
-the barracks for the troops are enclosed by a deep ditch and fortified
-wall. The settlement is only of recent standing (since 1828); and its
-growth has been one of trouble. The government of Buenos Ayres
-unjustly occupied it by force, instead of following the wise example of
-the Spanish Viceroys, who purchased the land near the older settlement
-of the Rio Negro, from the Indians. Hence the need of the
-fortifications; hence the few houses and little cultivated land without
-the limits of the walls; even the cattle are not safe from the attacks
-of the Indians beyond the boundaries of the plain, on which the
-fortress stands.
-
-The part of the harbour where the Beagle intended to anchor being
-distant twenty-five miles, I obtained from the Commandant a guide and
-horses, to take me to see whether she had arrived. Leaving the plain
-of green turf, which extended along the course of a little brook, we
-soon entered on a wide level waste consisting either of sand, saline
-marshes, or bare mud. Some parts were clothed by low thickets, and
-others with those succulent plants, which luxuriate only where salt
-abounds. Bad as the country was, ostriches, deer, agoutis, and
-armadilloes, were abundant. My guide told me, that two months before
-he had a most narrow escape of his life: he was out hunting with two
-other men, at no great distance from this part of the country, when
-they were suddenly met by a party of Indians, who giving chase, soon
-overtook and killed his two friends. His own horse's legs were also
-caught by the bolas, but he jumped off, and with his knife cut them
-free: while doing this he was obliged to dodge round his horse, and
-received two severe wounds from their chuzos. Springing on the saddle,
-he managed, by a most wonderful exertion, just to keep ahead of the
-long spears of his pursuers, who followed him to within sight of the
-fort. From that time there was an order that no one should stray far
-from the settlement. I did not know of this when I started, and was
-surprised to observe how earnestly my guide watched a deer, which
-appeared to have been frightened from a distant quarter.
-
-We found the Beagle had not arrived, and consequently set out on our
-return, but the horses soon tiring, we were obliged to bivouac on the
-plain. In the morning we had caught an armadillo, which although a
-most excellent dish when roasted in its shell, did not make a very
-substantial breakfast and dinner for two hungry men. The ground at the
-place where we stopped for the night, was incrusted with a layer of
-sulphate of soda, and hence, of course, was without water. Yet many of
-the smaller rodents managed to exist even here, and the tucutuco was
-making its odd little grunt beneath my head, during half the night. Our
-horses were very poor ones, and in the morning they were soon exhausted
-from not having had anything to drink, so that we were obliged to walk.
-About noon the dogs killed a kid, which we roasted. I ate some of it,
-but it made me intolerably thirsty. This was the more distressing as
-the road, from some recent rain, was full of little puddles of clear
-water, yet not a drop was drinkable. I had scarcely been twenty hours
-without water, and only part of the time under a hot sun, yet the
-thirst rendered me very weak. How people survive two or three days
-under such circumstances, I cannot imagine: at the same time, I must
-confess that my guide did not suffer at all, and was astonished that
-one day's deprivation should be so troublesome to me.
-
-I have several times alluded to the surface of the ground being
-incrusted with salt. This phenomenon is quite different from that of
-the salinas, and more extraordinary. In many parts of South America,
-wherever the climate is moderately dry, these incrustations occur; but
-I have nowhere seen them so abundant as near Bahia Blanca. The salt
-here, and in other parts of Patagonia, consists chiefly of sulphate of
-soda with some common salt. As long as the ground remains moist in the
-salitrales (as the Spaniards improperly call them, mistaking this
-substance for saltpeter), nothing is to be seen but an extensive plain
-composed of a black, muddy soil, supporting scattered tufts of
-succulent plants. On returning through one of these tracts, after a
-week's hot weather, one is surprised to see square miles of the plain
-white, as if from a slight fall of snow, here and there heaped up by
-the wind into little drifts. This latter appearance is chiefly caused
-by the salts being drawn up, during the slow evaporation of the
-moisture, round blades of dead grass, stumps of wood, and pieces of
-broken earth, instead of being crystallized at the bottoms of the
-puddles of water. The salitrales occur either on level tracts elevated
-only a few feet above the level of the sea, or on alluvial land
-bordering rivers. M. Parchappe [7] found that the saline incrustation
-on the plain, at the distance of some miles from the sea, consisted
-chiefly of sulphate of soda, with only seven per cent. of common salt;
-whilst nearer to the coast, the common salt increased to 37 parts in a
-hundred. This circumstance would tempt one to believe that the
-sulphate of soda is generated in the soil, from the muriate, left on
-the surface during the slow and recent elevation of this dry country.
-The whole phenomenon is well worthy the attention of naturalists. Have
-the succulent, salt-loving plants, which are well known to contain much
-soda, the power of decomposing the muriate? Does the black fetid mud,
-abounding with organic matter, yield the sulphur and ultimately the
-sulphuric acid?
-
-Two days afterwards I again rode to the harbour: when not far from our
-destination, my companion, the same man as before, spied three people
-hunting on horseback. He immediately dismounted, and watching them
-intently, said, "They don't ride like Christians, and nobody can leave
-the fort." The three hunters joined company, and likewise dismounted
-from their horses. At last one mounted again and rode over the hill
-out of sight. My companion said, "We must now get on our horses: load
-your pistol;" and he looked to his own sword. I asked, "Are they
-Indians?"--"Quien sabe? (who knows?) if there are no more than three,
-it does not signify." It then struck me, that the one man had gone over
-the hill to fetch the rest of his tribe. I suggested this; but all the
-answer I could extort was, "Quien sabe?" His head and eye never for a
-minute ceased scanning slowly the distant horizon. I thought his
-uncommon coolness too good a joke, and asked him why he did not return
-home. I was startled when he answered, "We are returning, but in a
-line so as to pass near a swamp, into which we can gallop the horses as
-far as they can go, and then trust to our own legs; so that there is no
-danger." I did not feel quite so confident of this, and wanted to
-increase our pace. He said, "No, not until they do." When any little
-inequality concealed us, we galloped; but when in sight, continued
-walking. At last we reached a valley, and turning to the left,
-galloped quickly to the foot of a hill; he gave me his horse to hold,
-made the dogs lie down, and then crawled on his hands and knees to
-reconnoitre. He remained in this position for some time, and at last,
-bursting out in laughter, exclaimed, "Mugeres!" (women!). He knew them
-to be the wife and sister-in-law of the major's son, hunting for
-ostrich's eggs. I have described this man's conduct, because he acted
-under the full impression that they were Indians. As soon, however, as
-the absurd mistake was found out, he gave me a hundred reasons why they
-could not have been Indians; but all these were forgotten at the time.
-We then rode on in peace and quietness to a low point called Punta
-Alta, whence we could see nearly the whole of the great harbour of
-Bahia Blanca.
-
-The wide expanse of water is choked up by numerous great mud-banks,
-which the inhabitants call Cangrejales, or _crabberies_, from the
-number of small crabs. The mud is so soft that it is impossible to
-walk over them, even for the shortest distance. Many of the banks have
-their surfaces covered with long rushes, the tops of which alone are
-visible at high water. On one occasion, when in a boat, we were so
-entangled by these shallows that we could hardly find our way. Nothing
-was visible but the flat beds of mud; the day was not very clear, and
-there was much refraction, or as the sailors expressed it, "things
-loomed high." The only object within our view which was not level was
-the horizon; rushes looked like bushes unsupported in the air, and
-water like mud-banks, and mud-banks like water.
-
-We passed the night in Punta Alta, and I employed myself in searching
-for fossil bones; this point being a perfect catacomb for monsters of
-extinct races. The evening was perfectly calm and clear; the extreme
-monotony of the view gave it an interest even in the midst of mud-banks
-and gulls sand-hillocks and solitary vultures. In riding back in the
-morning we came across a very fresh track of a Puma, but did not
-succeed in finding it. We saw also a couple of Zorillos, or
-skunks,--odious animals, which are far from uncommon. In general
-appearance, the Zorillo resembles a polecat, but it is rather larger,
-and much thicker in proportion. Conscious of its power, it roams by day
-about the open plain, and fears neither dog nor man. If a dog is urged
-to the attack, its courage is instantly checked by a few drops of the
-fetid oil, which brings on violent sickness and running at the nose.
-Whatever is once polluted by it, is for ever useless. Azara says the
-smell can be perceived at a league distant; more than once, when
-entering the harbour of Monte Video, the wind being off shore, we have
-perceived the odour on board the Beagle. Certain it is, that every
-animal most willingly makes room for the Zorillo.
-
-[1] The corral is an enclosure made of tall and strong stakes. Every
-estancia, or farming estate, has one attached to it.
-
-[2] The hovels of the Indians are thus called.
-
-[3] Report of the Agricult. Chem. Assoc. in the Agricult. Gazette,
-1845, p. 93.
-
-[4] Linnaean Trans., vol. xi. p. 205. It is remarkable how all the
-circumstances connected with the salt-lakes in Siberia and Patagonia
-are similar. Siberia, like Patagonia, appears to have been recently
-elevated above the waters of the sea. In both countries the salt-lakes
-occupy shallow depressions in the plains; in both the mud on the
-borders is black and fetid; beneath the crust of common salt, sulphate
-of soda or of magnesium occurs, imperfectly crystallized; and in both,
-the muddy sand is mixed with lentils of gypsum. The Siberian
-salt-lakes are inhabited by small crustaceous animals; and flamingoes
-(Edin. New Philos. Jour., Jan 1830) likewise frequent them. As these
-circumstances, apparently so trifling, occur in two distant continents,
-we may feel sure that they are the necessary results of a common
-cause--See Pallas's Travels, 1793 to 1794, pp. 129 - 134.
-
-[5] I am bound to express in the strongest terms, my obligation to the
-government of Buenos Ayres for the obliging manner in which passports
-to all parts of the country were given me, as naturalist of the Beagle.
-
-[6] This prophecy has turned out entirely and miserably wrong. 1845.
-
-[7] Voyage dans l'Amerique Merid. par M. A. d'Orbigny. Part. Hist. tom.
-i. p. 664.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Bahia Blanca--Geology--Numerous gigantic Quadrupeds--Recent
-Extinction--Longevity of species--Large Animals do not require a
-luxuriant vegetation--Southern Africa--Siberian Fossils--Two Species of
-Ostrich--Habits of Oven-bird--Armadilloes--Venomous Snake, Toad,
-Lizard--Hybernation of Animal--Habits of Sea-Pen--Indian Wars and
-Massacres--Arrow-head, antiquarian Relic.
-
-
-The Beagle arrived here on the 24th of August, and a week afterwards
-sailed for the Plata. With Captain Fitz Roy's consent I was left
-behind, to travel by land to Buenos Ayres. I will here add some
-observations, which were made during this visit and on a previous
-occasion, when the Beagle was employed in surveying the harbour.
-
-The plain, at the distance of a few miles from the coast, belongs to
-the great Pampean formation, which consists in part of a reddish clay,
-and in part of a highly calcareous marly rock. Nearer the coast there
-are some plains formed from the wreck of the upper plain, and from mud,
-gravel, and sand thrown up by the sea during the slow elevation of the
-land, of which elevation we have evidence in upraised beds of recent
-shells, and in rounded pebbles of pumice scattered over the country. At
-Punta Alta we have a section of one of these later-formed little
-plains, which is highly interesting from the number and extraordinary
-character of the remains of gigantic land-animals embedded in it. These
-have been fully described by Professor Owen, in the Zoology of the
-voyage of the Beagle, and are deposited in the College of Surgeons. I
-will here give only a brief outline of their nature.
-
-First, parts of three heads and other bones of the Megatherium, the
-huge dimensions of which are expressed by its name. Secondly, the
-Megalonyx, a great allied animal. Thirdly, the Scelidotherium, also an
-allied animal, of which I obtained a nearly perfect skeleton. It must
-have been as large as a rhinoceros: in the structure of its head it
-comes according to Mr. Owen, nearest to the Cape Anteater, but in some
-other respects it approaches to the armadilloes. Fourthly, the Mylodon
-Darwinii, a closely related genus of little inferior size. Fifthly,
-another gigantic edental quadruped. Sixthly, a large animal, with an
-osseous coat in compartments, very like that of an armadillo.
-Seventhly, an extinct kind of horse, to which I shall have again to
-refer. Eighthly, a tooth of a Pachydermatous animal, probably the same
-with the Macrauchenia, a huge beast with a long neck like a camel,
-which I shall also refer to again. Lastly, the Toxodon, perhaps one of
-the strangest animals ever discovered: in size it equalled an elephant
-or megatherium, but the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen states,
-proves indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers, the
-order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest
-quadrupeds: in many details it is allied to the Pachydermata: judging
-from the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils, it was probably
-aquatic, like the Dugong and Manatee, to which it is also allied. How
-wonderfully are the different Orders, at the present time so well
-separated, blended together in different points of the structure of the
-Toxodon!
-
-The remains of these nine great quadrupeds, and many detached bones,
-were found embedded on the beach, within the space of about 200 yards
-square. It is a remarkable circumstance that so many different species
-should be found together; and it proves how numerous in kind the
-ancient inhabitants of this country must have been. At the distance of
-about thirty miles from Punta Alta, in a cliff of red earth, I found
-several fragments of bones, some of large size. Among them were the
-teeth of a gnawer, equalling in size and closely resembling those of
-the Capybara, whose habits have been described; and therefore,
-probably, an aquatic animal. There was also part of the head of a
-Ctenomys; the species being different from the Tucutuco, but with a
-close general resemblance. The red earth, like that of the Pampas, in
-which these remains were embedded, contains, according to Professor
-Ehrenberg, eight fresh-water and one salt-water infusorial animalcule;
-therefore, probably, it was an estuary deposit.
-
-The remains at Punta Alta were embedded in stratified gravel and
-reddish mud, just such as the sea might now wash up on a shallow bank.
-They were associated with twenty-three species of shells, of which
-thirteen are recent and four others very closely related to recent
-forms. [1] From the bones of the Scelidotherium, including even the
-knee-cap, being intombed in their proper relative positions, and from
-the osseous armour of the great armadillo-like animal being so well
-preserved, together with the bones of one of its legs, we may feel
-assured that these remains were fresh and united by their ligaments,
-when deposited in the gravel together with the shells. [2] Hence we
-have good evidence that the above enumerated gigantic quadrupeds, more
-different from those of the present day than the oldest of the tertiary
-quadrupeds of Europe, lived whilst the sea was peopled with most of its
-present inhabitants; and we have confirmed that remarkable law so often
-insisted on by Mr. Lyell, namely, that the "longevity of the species in
-the mammalia is upon the whole inferior to that of the testacea." [3]
-
-The great size of the bones of the Megatheroid animals, including the
-Megatherium, Megalonyx, Scelidotherium, and Mylodon, is truly
-wonderful. The habits of life of these animals were a complete puzzle
-to naturalists, until Professor Owen [4] solved the problem with
-remarkable ingenuity. The teeth indicate, by their simple structure,
-that these Megatheroid animals lived on vegetable food, and probably on
-the leaves and small twigs of trees; their ponderous forms and great
-strong curved claws seem so little adapted for locomotion, that some
-eminent naturalists have actually believed, that, like the sloths, to
-which they are intimately related, they subsisted by climbing back
-downwards on trees, and feeding on the leaves. It was a bold, not to
-say preposterous, idea to conceive even antediluvian trees, with
-branches strong enough to bear animals as large as elephants. Professor
-Owen, with far more probability, believes that, instead of climbing on
-the trees, they pulled the branches down to them, and tore up the
-smaller ones by the roots, and so fed on the leaves. The colossal
-breadth and weight of their hinder quarters, which can hardly be
-imagined without having been seen, become on this view, of obvious
-service, instead of being an incumbrance: their apparent clumsiness
-disappears. With their great tails and their huge heels firmly fixed
-like a tripod on the ground, they could freely exert the full force of
-their most powerful arms and great claws. Strongly rooted, indeed,
-must that tree have been, which could have resisted such force! The
-Mylodon, moreover, was furnished with a long extensile tongue like that
-of the giraffe, which, by one of those beautiful provisions of nature,
-thus reaches with the aid of its long neck its leafy food. I may
-remark, that in Abyssinia the elephant, according to Bruce, when it
-cannot reach with its proboscis the branches, deeply scores with its
-tusks the trunk of the tree, up and down and all round, till it is
-sufficiently weakened to be broken down.
-
-The beds including the above fossil remains, stand only from fifteen to
-twenty feet above the level of high-water; and hence the elevation of
-the land has been small (without there has been an intercalated period
-of subsidence, of which we have no evidence) since the great quadrupeds
-wandered over the surrounding plains; and the external features of the
-country must then have been very nearly the same as now. What, it may
-naturally be asked, was the character of the vegetation at that period;
-was the country as wretchedly sterile as it now is? As so many of the
-co-embedded shells are the same with those now living in the bay, I was
-at first inclined to think that the former vegetation was probably
-similar to the existing one; but this would have been an erroneous
-inference for some of these same shells live on the luxuriant coast of
-Brazil; and generally, the character of the inhabitants of the sea are
-useless as guides to judge of those on the land. Nevertheless, from
-the following considerations, I do not believe that the simple fact of
-many gigantic quadrupeds having lived on the plains round Bahia Blanca,
-is any sure guide that they formerly were clothed with a luxuriant
-vegetation: I have no doubt that the sterile country a little
-southward, near the Rio Negro, with its scattered thorny trees, would
-support many and large quadrupeds.
-
-
-That large animals require a luxuriant vegetation, has been a general
-assumption which has passed from one work to another; but I do not
-hesitate to say that it is completely false, and that it has vitiated
-the reasoning of geologists on some points of great interest in the
-ancient history of the world. The prejudice has probably been derived
-from India, and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants, noble
-forests, and impenetrable jungles, are associated together in every
-one's mind. If, however, we refer to any work of travels through the
-southern parts of Africa, we shall find allusions in almost every page
-either to the desert character of the country, or to the numbers of
-large animals inhabiting it. The same thing is rendered evident by the
-many engravings which have been published of various parts of the
-interior. When the Beagle was at Cape Town, I made an excursion of
-some days' length into the country, which at least was sufficient to
-render that which I had read more fully intelligible.
-
-Dr. Andrew Smith, who, at the head of his adventurous party, has lately
-succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn, informs me that, taking
-into consideration the whole of the southern part of Africa, there can
-be no doubt of its being a sterile country. On the southern and
-south-eastern coasts there are some fine forests, but with these
-exceptions, the traveller may pass for days together through open
-plains, covered by a poor and scanty vegetation. It is difficult to
-convey any accurate idea of degrees of comparative fertility; but it
-may be safely said that the amount of vegetation supported at any one
-time [5] by Great Britain, exceeds, perhaps even tenfold, the quantity
-on an equal area, in the interior parts of Southern Africa. The fact
-that bullock-waggons can travel in any direction, excepting near the
-coast, without more than occasionally half an hour's delay in cutting
-down bushes, gives, perhaps, a more definite notion of the scantiness
-of the vegetation. Now, if we look to the animals inhabiting these
-wide plains, we shall find their numbers extraordinarily great, and
-their bulk immense. We must enumerate the elephant, three species of
-rhinoceros, and probably, according to Dr. Smith, two others, the
-hippopotamus, the giraffe, the bos caffer--as large as a full-grown
-bull, and the elan--but little less, two zebras, and the quaccha, two
-gnus, and several antelopes even larger than these latter animals. It
-may be supposed that although the species are numerous, the individuals
-of each kind are few. By the kindness of Dr. Smith, I am enabled to
-show that the case is very different. He informs me, that in lat. 24
-degs., in one day's march with the bullock-waggons, he saw, without
-wandering to any great distance on either side, between one hundred and
-one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses, which belonged to three species:
-the same day he saw several herds of giraffes, amounting together to
-nearly a hundred; and that although no elephant was observed, yet they
-are found in this district. At the distance of a little more than one
-hour's march from their place of encampment on the previous night, his
-party actually killed at one spot eight hippopotamuses, and saw many
-more. In this same river there were likewise crocodiles. Of course it
-was a case quite extraordinary, to see so many great animals crowded
-together, but it evidently proves that they must exist in great
-numbers. Dr. Smith describes the country passed through that day, as
-"being thinly covered with grass, and bushes about four feet high, and
-still more thinly with mimosa-trees." The waggons were not prevented
-travelling in a nearly straight line.
-
-Besides these large animals, every one the least acquainted with the
-natural history of the Cape, has read of the herds of antelopes, which
-can be compared only with the flocks of migratory birds. The numbers
-indeed of the lion, panther, and hyaena, and the multitude of birds of
-prey, plainly speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds: one
-evening seven lions were counted at the same time prowling round Dr.
-Smith's encampment. As this able naturalist remarked to me, the
-carnage each day in Southern Africa must indeed be terrific! I confess
-it is truly surprising how such a number of animals can find support in
-a country producing so little food. The larger quadrupeds no doubt
-roam over wide tracts in search of it; and their food chiefly consists
-of underwood, which probably contains much nutriment in a small bulk.
-Dr. Smith also informs me that the vegetation has a rapid growth; no
-sooner is a part consumed, than its place is supplied by a fresh stock.
-There can be no doubt, however, that our ideas respecting the apparent
-amount of food necessary for the support of large quadrupeds are much
-exaggerated: it should have been remembered that the camel, an animal
-of no mean bulk, has always been considered as the emblem of the desert.
-
-The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation must
-necessarily be luxuriant, is the more remarkable, because the converse
-is far from true. Mr. Burchell observed to me that when entering
-Brazil, nothing struck him more forcibly than the splendour of the
-South American vegetation contrasted with that of South Africa,
-together with the absence of all large quadrupeds. In his Travels, [6]
-he has suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if
-there were sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest
-herbivorous quadrupeds of each country would be extremely curious. If
-we take on the one side, the elephant, [7] hippopotamus, giraffe, bos
-caffer, elan, certainly three, and probably five species of rhinoceros;
-and on the American side, two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the
-vicuna, peccari, capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys
-to complete the number), and then place these two groups alongside each
-other, it is not easy to conceive ranks more disproportionate in size.
-After the above facts, we are compelled to conclude, against anterior
-probability, [8] that among the mammalia there exists no close relation
-between the bulk of the species, and the _quantity_ of the vegetation,
-in the countries which they inhabit.
-
-With regard to the number of large quadrupeds, there certainly exists
-no quarter of the globe which will bear comparison with Southern
-Africa. After the different statements which have been given, the
-extremely desert character of that region will not be disputed. In the
-European division of the world, we must look back to the tertiary
-epochs, to find a condition of things among the mammalia, resembling
-that now existing at the Cape of Good Hope. Those tertiary epochs,
-which we are apt to consider as abounding to an astonishing degree with
-large animals, because we find the remains of many ages accumulated at
-certain spots, could hardly boast of more large quadrupeds than
-Southern Africa does at present. If we speculate on the condition of
-the vegetation during these epochs we are at least bound so far to
-consider existing analogies, as not to urge as absolutely necessary a
-luxuriant vegetation, when we see a state of things so totally
-different at the Cape of Good Hope.
-
-We know [9] that the extreme regions of North America, many degrees
-beyond the limit where the ground at the depth of a few feet remains
-perpetually congealed, are covered by forests of large and tall trees.
-In a like manner, in Siberia, we have woods of birch, fir, aspen, and
-larch, growing in a latitude [10] (64 degs.) where the mean temperature
-of the air falls below the freezing point, and where the earth is so
-completely frozen, that the carcass of an animal embedded in it is
-perfectly preserved. With these facts we must grant, as far as
-_quantity alone_ of vegetation is concerned, that the great quadrupeds
-of the later tertiary epochs might, in most parts of Northern Europe
-and Asia, have lived on the spots where their remains are now found. I
-do not here speak of the kind of vegetation necessary for their
-support; because, as there is evidence of physical changes, and as the
-animals have become extinct, so may we suppose that the species of
-plants have likewise been changed.
-
-These remarks, I may be permitted to add, directly bear on the case of
-the Siberian animals preserved in ice. The firm conviction of the
-necessity of a vegetation possessing a character of tropical
-luxuriance, to support such large animals, and the impossibility of
-reconciling this with the proximity of perpetual congelation, was one
-chief cause of the several theories of sudden revolutions of climate,
-and of overwhelming catastrophes, which were invented to account for
-their entombment. I am far from supposing that the climate has not
-changed since the period when those animals lived, which now lie buried
-in the ice. At present I only wish to show, that as far as _quantity_
-of food _alone_ is concerned, the ancient rhinoceroses might have
-roamed over the _steppes_ of central Siberia (the northern parts
-probably being under water) even in their present condition, as well as
-the living rhinoceroses and elephants over the _Karros_ of Southern
-Africa.
-
-
-I will now give an account of the habits of some of the more
-interesting birds which are common on the wild plains of Northern
-Patagonia: and first for the largest, or South American ostrich. The
-ordinary habits of the ostrich are familiar to every one. They live on
-vegetable matter, such as roots and grass; but at Bahia Blanca I have
-repeatedly seen three or four come down at low water to the extensive
-mud-banks which are then dry, for the sake, as the Gauchos say, of
-feeding on small fish. Although the ostrich in its habits is so shy,
-wary, and solitary, and although so fleet in its pace, it is caught
-without much difficulty by the Indian or Gaucho armed with the bolas.
-When several horsemen appear in a semicircle, it becomes confounded,
-and does not know which way to escape. They generally prefer running
-against the wind; yet at the first start they expand their wings, and
-like a vessel make all sail. On one fine hot day I saw several
-ostriches enter a bed of tall rushes, where they squatted concealed,
-till quite closely approached. It is not generally known that ostriches
-readily take to the water. Mr. King informs me that at the Bay of San
-Blas, and at Port Valdes in Patagonia, he saw these birds swimming
-several times from island to island. They ran into the water both when
-driven down to a point, and likewise of their own accord when not
-frightened: the distance crossed was about two hundred yards. When
-swimming, very little of their bodies appear above water; their necks
-are extended a little forward, and their progress is slow. On two
-occasions I saw some ostriches swimming across the Santa Cruz river,
-where its course was about four hundred yards wide, and the stream
-rapid. Captain Sturt, [11] when descending the Murrumbidgee, in
-Australia, saw two emus in the act of swimming.
-
-The inhabitants of the country readily distinguish, even at a distance,
-the cock bird from the hen. The former is larger and darker-coloured,
-[12] and has a bigger head. The ostrich, I believe the cock, emits a
-singular, deep-toned, hissing note: when first I heard it, standing in
-the midst of some sand-hillocks, I thought it was made by some wild
-beast, for it is a sound that one cannot tell whence it comes, or from
-how far distant. When we were at Bahia Blanca in the months of
-September and October, the eggs, in extraordinary numbers, were found
-all over the country. They lie either scattered and single, in which
-case they are never hatched, and are called by the Spaniards huachos;
-or they are collected together into a shallow excavation, which forms
-the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three contained
-twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven. In one day's hunting
-on horseback sixty-four eggs were found; forty-four of these were in
-two nests, and the remaining twenty, scattered huachos. The Gauchos
-unanimously affirm, and there is no reason to doubt their statement,
-that the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for some time afterwards
-accompanies the young. The cock when on the nest lies very close; I
-have myself almost ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times
-they are occasionally fierce, and even dangerous, and that they have
-been known to attack a man on horseback, trying to kick and leap on
-him. My informer pointed out to me an old man, whom he had seen much
-terrified by one chasing him. I observe in Burchell's travels in South
-Africa, that he remarks, "Having killed a male ostrich, and the
-feathers being dirty, it was said by the Hottentots to be a nest bird."
-I understand that the male emu in the Zoological Gardens takes charge
-of the nest: this habit, therefore, is common to the family.
-
-The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females lay in one nest. I
-have been positively told that four or five hen birds have been watched
-to go in the middle of the day, one after the other, to the same nest.
-I may add, also, that it is believed in Africa, that two or more
-females lay in one nest. [13] Although this habit at first appears very
-strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple manner. The
-number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty to forty, and even to
-fifty; and according to Azara, some times to seventy or eighty. Now,
-although it is most probable, from the number of eggs found in one
-district being so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent
-birds, and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that she
-may in the course of the season lay a large number, yet the time
-required must be very long. Azara states, [14] that a female in a
-state of domestication laid seventeen eggs, each at the interval of
-three days one from another. If the hen was obliged to hatch her own
-eggs, before the last was laid the first probably would be addled; but
-if each laid a few eggs at successive periods, in different nests, and
-several hens, as is stated to be the case, combined together, then the
-eggs in one collection would be nearly of the same age. If the number
-of eggs in one of these nests is, as I believe, not greater on an
-average than the number laid by one female in the season, then there
-must be as many nests as females, and each cock bird will have its fair
-share of the labour of incubation; and that during a period when the
-females probably could not sit, from not having finished laying. [15] I
-have before mentioned the great numbers of huachos, or deserted eggs;
-so that in one day's hunting twenty were found in this state. It
-appears odd that so many should be wasted. Does it not arise from the
-difficulty of several females associating together, and finding a male
-ready to undertake the office of incubation? It is evident that there
-must at first be some degree of association between at least two
-females; otherwise the eggs would remain scattered over the wide plain,
-at distances far too great to allow of the male collecting them into
-one nest: some authors have believed that the scattered eggs were
-deposited for the young birds to feed on. This can hardly be the case
-in America, because the huachos, although often found addled and
-putrid, are generally whole.
-
-When at the Rio Negro in Northern Patagonia, I repeatedly heard the
-Gauchos talking of a very rare bird which they called Avestruz Petise.
-They described it as being less than the common ostrich (which is there
-abundant), but with a very close general resemblance. They said its
-colour was dark and mottled, and that its legs were shorter, and
-feathered lower down than those of the common ostrich. It is more
-easily caught by the bolas than the other species. The few inhabitants
-who had seen both kinds, affirmed they could distinguish them apart
-from a long distance. The eggs of the small species appeared, however,
-more generally known; and it was remarked, with surprise, that they
-were very little less than those of the Rhea, but of a slightly
-different form, and with a tinge of pale blue. This species occurs
-most rarely on the plains bordering the Rio Negro; but about a degree
-and a half further south they are tolerably abundant. When at Port
-Desire, in Patagonia (lat. 48 degs.), Mr. Martens shot an ostrich; and
-I looked at it, forgetting at the moment, in the most unaccountable
-manner, the whole subject of the Petises, and thought it was a not
-full-grown bird of the common sort. It was cooked and eaten before my
-memory returned. Fortunately the head, neck, legs, wings, many of the
-larger feathers, and a large part of the skin, had been preserved; and
-from these a very nearly perfect specimen has been put together, and is
-now exhibited in the museum of the Zoological Society. Mr. Gould, in
-describing this new species, has done me the honour of calling it after
-my name.
-
-Among the Patagonian Indians in the Strait of Magellan, we found a half
-Indian, who had lived some years with the tribe, but had been born in
-the northern provinces. I asked him if he had ever heard of the
-Avestruz Petise? He answered by saying, "Why, there are none others in
-these southern countries." He informed me that the number of eggs in
-the nest of the petise is considerably less than in that of the other
-kind, namely, not more than fifteen on an average, but he asserted that
-more than one female deposited them. At Santa Cruz we saw several of
-these birds. They were excessively wary: I think they could see a
-person approaching when too far off to be distinguished themselves. In
-ascending the river few were seen; but in our quiet and rapid descent,
-many, in pairs and by fours or fives, were observed. It was remarked
-that this bird did not expand its wings, when first starting at full
-speed, after the manner of the northern kind. In conclusion I may
-observe, that the Struthio rhea inhabits the country of La Plata as far
-as a little south of the Rio Negro in lat. 41 degs., and that the
-Struthio Darwinii takes its place in Southern Patagonia; the part about
-the Rio Negro being neutral territory. M. A. d'Orbigny, [16] when at
-the Rio Negro, made great exertions to procure this bird, but never had
-the good fortune to succeed. Dobrizhoffer [17] long ago was aware of
-there being two kinds of ostriches, he says, "You must know, moreover,
-that Emus differ in size and habits in different tracts of land; for
-those that inhabit the plains of Buenos Ayres and Tucuman are larger,
-and have black, white and grey feathers; those near to the Strait of
-Magellan are smaller and more beautiful, for their white feathers are
-tipped with black at the extremity, and their black ones in like manner
-terminate in white."
-
-A very singular little bird, Tinochorus rumicivorus, is here common: in
-its habits and general appearance, it nearly equally partakes of the
-characters, different as they are, of the quail and snipe. The
-Tinochorus is found in the whole of southern South America, wherever
-there are sterile plains, or open dry pasture land. It frequents in
-pairs or small flocks the most desolate places, where scarcely another
-living creature can exist. Upon being approached they squat close, and
-then are very difficult to be distinguished from the ground. When
-feeding they walk rather slowly, with their legs wide apart. They dust
-themselves in roads and sandy places, and frequent particular spots,
-where they may be found day after day: like partridges, they take wing
-in a flock. In all these respects, in the muscular gizzard adapted for
-vegetable food, in the arched beak and fleshy nostrils, short legs and
-form of foot, the Tinochorus has a close affinity with quails. But as
-soon as the bird is seen flying, its whole appearance changes; the long
-pointed wings, so different from those in the gallinaceous order, the
-irregular manner of flight, and plaintive cry uttered at the moment of
-rising, recall the idea of a snipe. The sportsmen of the Beagle
-unanimously called it the short-billed snipe. To this genus, or rather
-to the family of the Waders, its skeleton shows that it is really
-related.
-
-The Tinochorus is closely related to some other South American birds.
-Two species of the genus Attagis are in almost every respect ptarmigans
-in their habits; one lives in Tierra del Fuego, above the limits of the
-forest land; and the other just beneath the snow-line on the Cordillera
-of Central Chile. A bird of another closely allied genus, Chionis
-alba, is an inhabitant of the antarctic regions; it feeds on sea-weed
-and shells on the tidal rocks. Although not web footed, from some
-unaccountable habit, it is frequently met with far out at sea. This
-small family of birds is one of those which, from its varied relations
-to other families, although at present offering only difficulties to
-the systematic naturalist, ultimately may assist in revealing the grand
-scheme, common to the present and past ages, on which organized beings
-have been created.
-
-The genus Furnarius contains several species, all small birds, living
-on the ground, and inhabiting open dry countries. In structure they
-cannot be compared to any European form. Ornithologists have generally
-included them among the creepers, although opposed to that family in
-every habit. The best known species is the common oven-bird of La
-Plata, the Casara or housemaker of the Spaniards. The nest, whence it
-takes its name, is placed in the most exposed situations, as on the top
-of a post, a bare rock, or on a cactus. It is composed of mud and bits
-of straw, and has strong thick walls: in shape it precisely resembles
-an oven, or depressed beehive. The opening is large and arched, and
-directly in front, within the nest, there is a partition, which reaches
-nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage or antechamber to the true
-nest.
-
-Another and smaller species of Furnarius (F. cunicularius), resembles
-the oven-bird in the general reddish tint of its plumage, in a peculiar
-shrill reiterated cry, and in an odd manner of running by starts. From
-its affinity, the Spaniards call it Casarita (or little housebuilder),
-although its nidification is quite different. The Casarita builds its
-nest at the bottom of a narrow cylindrical hole, which is said to
-extend horizontally to nearly six feet under ground. Several of the
-country people told me, that when boys, they had attempted to dig out
-the nest, but had scarcely ever succeeded in getting to the end of the
-passage. The bird chooses any low bank of firm sandy soil by the side
-of a road or stream. Here (at Bahia Blanca) the walls round the houses
-are built of hardened mud, and I noticed that one, which enclosed a
-courtyard where I lodged, was bored through by round holes in a score
-of places. On asking the owner the cause of this he bitterly
-complained of the little casarita, several of which I afterwards
-observed at work. It is rather curious to find how incapable these
-birds must be of acquiring any notion of thickness, for although they
-were constantly flitting over the low wall, they continued vainly to
-bore through it, thinking it an excellent bank for their nests. I do
-not doubt that each bird, as often as it came to daylight on the
-opposite side, was greatly surprised at the marvellous fact.
-
-I have already mentioned nearly all the mammalia common in this
-country. Of armadilloes three species occur namely, the Dasypus
-minutus or _pichy_, the D. villosus or _peludo_, and the _apar_. The
-first extends ten degrees further south than any other kind; a fourth
-species, the _Mulita_, does not come as far south as Bahia Blanca. The
-four species have nearly similar habits; the _peludo_, however, is
-nocturnal, while the others wander by day over the open plains, feeding
-on beetles, larvae, roots, and even small snakes. The _apar_, commonly
-called _mataco_, is remarkable by having only three moveable bands; the
-rest of its tesselated covering being nearly inflexible. It has the
-power of rolling itself into a perfect sphere, like one kind of English
-woodlouse. In this state it is safe from the attack of dogs; for the
-dog not being able to take the whole in its mouth, tries to bite one
-side, and the ball slips away. The smooth hard covering of the
-_mataco_ offers a better defence than the sharp spines of the hedgehog.
-The _pichy_ prefers a very dry soil; and the sand-dunes near the coast,
-where for many months it can never taste water, is its favourite
-resort: it often tries to escape notice, by squatting close to the
-ground. In the course of a day's ride, near Bahia Blanca, several were
-generally met with. The instant one was perceived, it was necessary,
-in order to catch it, almost to tumble off one's horse; for in soft
-soil the animal burrowed so quickly, that its hinder quarters would
-almost disappear before one could alight. It seems almost a pity to
-kill such nice little animals, for as a Gaucho said, while sharpening
-his knife on the back of one, "Son tan mansos" (they are so quiet).
-
-Of reptiles there are many kinds: one snake (a Trigonocephalus, or
-Cophias [18]), from the size of the poison channel in its fangs, must
-be very deadly. Cuvier, in opposition to some other naturalists, makes
-this a sub-genus of the rattlesnake, and intermediate between it and
-the viper. In confirmation of this opinion, I observed a fact, which
-appears to me very curious and instructive, as showing how every
-character, even though it may be in some degree independent of
-structure, has a tendency to vary by slow degrees. The extremity of the
-tail of this snake is terminated by a point, which is very slightly
-enlarged; and as the animal glides along, it constantly vibrates the
-last inch; and this part striking against the dry grass and brushwood,
-produces a rattling noise, which can be distinctly heard at the
-distance of six feet. As often as the animal was irritated or
-surprised, its tail was shaken; and the vibrations were extremely
-rapid. Even as long as the body retained its irritability, a tendency
-to this habitual movement was evident. This Trigonocephalus has,
-therefore, in some respects the structure of a viper, with the habits
-of a rattlesnake: the noise, however, being produced by a simpler
-device. The expression of this snake's face was hideous and fierce;
-the pupil consisted of a vertical slit in a mottled and coppery iris;
-the jaws were broad at the base, and the nose terminated in a
-triangular projection. I do not think I ever saw anything more ugly,
-excepting, perhaps, some of the vampire bats. I imagine this repulsive
-aspect originates from the features being placed in positions, with
-respect to each other, somewhat proportional to those of the human
-face; and thus we obtain a scale of hideousness.
-
-Amongst the Batrachian reptiles, I found only one little toad
-(Phryniscus nigricans), which was most singular from its colour. If we
-imagine, first, that it had been steeped in the blackest ink, and then,
-when dry, allowed to crawl over a board, freshly painted with the
-brightest vermilion, so as to colour the soles of its feet and parts of
-its stomach, a good idea of its appearance will be gained. If it had
-been an unnamed species, surely it ought to have been called
-_Diabolicus_, for it is a fit toad to preach in the ear of Eve. Instead
-of being nocturnal in its habits, as other toads are, and living in
-damp obscure recesses, it crawls during the heat of the day about the
-dry sand-hillocks and arid plains, where not a single drop of water can
-be found. It must necessarily depend on the dew for its moisture; and
-this probably is absorbed by the skin, for it is known, that these
-reptiles possess great powers of cutaneous absorption. At Maldonado, I
-found one in a situation nearly as dry as at Bahia Blanca, and thinking
-to give it a great treat, carried it to a pool of water; not only was
-the little animal unable to swim, but I think without help it would
-soon have been drowned. Of lizards there were many kinds, but only one
-(Proctotretus multimaculatus) remarkable from its habits. It lives on
-the bare sand near the sea coast, and from its mottled colour, the
-brownish scales being speckled with white, yellowish red, and dirty
-blue, can hardly be distinguished from the surrounding surface. When
-frightened, it attempts to avoid discovery by feigning death, with
-outstretched legs, depressed body, and closed eyes: if further
-molested, it buries itself with great quickness in the loose sand. This
-lizard, from its flattened body and short legs, cannot run quickly.
-
-I will here add a few remarks on the hybernation of animals in this
-part of South America. When we first arrived at Bahia Blanca,
-September 7th, 1832, we thought nature had granted scarcely a living
-creature to this sandy and dry country. By digging, however, in the
-ground, several insects, large spiders, and lizards were found in a
-half-torpid state. On the 15th, a few animals began to appear, and by
-the 18th (three days from the equinox), everything announced the
-commencement of spring. The plains were ornamented by the flowers of a
-pink wood-sorrel, wild peas, cenotherae, and geraniums; and the birds
-began to lay their eggs. Numerous Lamellicorn and Heteromerous
-insects, the latter remarkable for their deeply sculptured bodies, were
-slowly crawling about; while the lizard tribe, the constant inhabitants
-of a sandy soil, darted about in every direction. During the first
-eleven days, whilst nature was dormant, the mean temperature taken from
-observations made every two hours on board the Beagle, was 51 degs.;
-and in the middle of the day the thermometer seldom ranged above 55
-degs. On the eleven succeeding days, in which all living things became
-so animated, the mean was 58 degs., and the range in the middle of the
-day between 60 and 70 degs. Here, then, an increase of seven degrees
-in mean temperature, but a greater one of extreme heat, was sufficient
-to awake the functions of life. At Monte Video, from which we had just
-before sailed, in the twenty-three days included between the 26th of
-July and the 19th of August, the mean temperature from 276 observations
-was 58.4 degs.; the mean hottest day being 65.5 degs., and the coldest
-46 degs. The lowest point to which the thermometer fell was 41.5
-degs., and occasionally in the middle of the day it rose to 69 or 70
-degs. Yet with this high temperature, almost every beetle, several
-genera of spiders, snails, and land-shells, toads and lizards were all
-lying torpid beneath stones. But we have seen that at Bahia Blanca,
-which is four degrees southward and therefore with a climate only a
-very little colder, this same temperature with a rather less extreme
-heat, was sufficient to awake all orders of animated beings. This shows
-how nicely the stimulus required to arouse hybernating animals is
-governed by the usual climate of the district, and not by the absolute
-heat. It is well known that within the tropics, the hybernation, or
-more properly aestivation, of animals is determined not by the
-temperature, but by the times of drought. Near Rio de Janeiro, I was
-at first surprised to observe, that, a few days after some little
-depressions had been filled with water, they were peopled by numerous
-full-grown shells and beetles, which must have been lying dormant.
-Humboldt has related the strange accident of a hovel having been
-erected over a spot where a young crocodile lay buried in the hardened
-mud. He adds, "The Indians often find enormous boas, which they call
-Uji or water serpents, in the same lethargic state. To reanimate them,
-they must be irritated or wetted with water."
-
-I will only mention one other animal, a zoophyte (I believe Virgularia
-Patagonica), a kind of sea-pen. It consists of a thin, straight,
-fleshy stem, with alternate rows of polypi on each side, and
-surrounding an elastic stony axis, varying in length from eight inches
-to two feet. The stem at one extremity is truncate, but at the other
-is terminated by a vermiform fleshy appendage. The stony axis which
-gives strength to the stem may be traced at this extremity into a mere
-vessel filled with granular matter. At low water hundreds of these
-zoophytes might be seen, projecting like stubble, with the truncate end
-upwards, a few inches above the surface of the muddy sand. When
-touched or pulled they suddenly drew themselves in with force, so as
-nearly or quite to disappear. By this action, the highly elastic axis
-must be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly
-curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the zoophyte
-is enabled to rise again through the mud. Each polypus, though closely
-united to its brethren, has a distinct mouth, body, and tentacula. Of
-these polypi, in a large specimen, there must be many thousands; yet we
-see that they act by one movement: they have also one central axis
-connected with a system of obscure circulation, and the ova are
-produced in an organ distinct from the separate individuals. [19] Well
-may one be allowed to ask, what is an individual? It is always
-interesting to discover the foundation of the strange tales of the old
-voyagers; and I have no doubt but that the habits of this Virgularia
-explain one such case. Captain Lancaster, in his voyage [20] in 1601,
-narrates that on the sea-sands of the Island of Sombrero, in the East
-Indies, he "found a small twig growing up like a young tree, and on
-offering to pluck it up it shrinks down to the ground, and sinks,
-unless held very hard. On being plucked up, a great worm is found to
-be its root, and as the tree groweth in greatness, so doth the worm
-diminish, and as soon as the worm is entirely turned into a tree it
-rooteth in the earth, and so becomes great. This transformation is one
-of the strangest wonders that I saw in all my travels: for if this tree
-is plucked up, while young, and the leaves and bark stripped off, it
-becomes a hard stone when dry, much like white coral: thus is this worm
-twice transformed into different natures. Of these we gathered and
-brought home many."
-
-
-During my stay at Bahia Blanca, while waiting for the Beagle, the place
-was in a constant state of excitement, from rumours of wars and
-victories, between the troops of Rosas and the wild Indians. One day
-an account came that a small party forming one of the postas on the
-line to Buenos Ayres, had been found all murdered. The next day three
-hundred men arrived from the Colorado, under the command of Commandant
-Miranda. A large portion of these men were Indians (mansos, or tame),
-belonging to the tribe of the Cacique Bernantio. They passed the night
-here; and it was impossible to conceive anything more wild and savage
-than the scene of their bivouac. Some drank till they were
-intoxicated; others swallowed the steaming blood of the cattle
-slaughtered for their suppers, and then, being sick from drunkenness,
-they cast it up again, and were besmeared with filth and gore.
-
-Nam simul expletus dapibus, vinoque sepultus Cervicem inflexam posuit,
-jacuitque per antrum Immensus, saniem eructans, ac frusta cruenta Per
-somnum commixta mero.
-
-In the morning they started for the scene of the murder, with orders to
-follow the "rastro," or track, even if it led them to Chile. We
-subsequently heard that the wild Indians had escaped into the great
-Pampas, and from some cause the track had been missed. One glance at
-the rastro tells these people a whole history. Supposing they examine
-the track of a thousand horses, they will soon guess the number of
-mounted ones by seeing how many have cantered; by the depth of the
-other impressions, whether any horses were loaded with cargoes; by the
-irregularity of the footsteps, how far tired; by the manner in which
-the food has been cooked, whether the pursued travelled in haste; by
-the general appearance, how long it has been since they passed. They
-consider a rastro of ten days or a fortnight, quite recent enough to be
-hunted out. We also heard that Miranda struck from the west end of the
-Sierra Ventana, in a direct line to the island of Cholechel, situated
-seventy leagues up the Rio Negro. This is a distance of between two
-and three hundred miles, through a country completely unknown. What
-other troops in the world are so independent? With the sun for their
-guide, mare's flesh for food, their saddle-cloths for beds,--as long as
-there is a little water, these men would penetrate to the end of the
-world.
-
-A few days afterwards I saw another troop of these banditti-like
-soldiers start on an expedition against a tribe of Indians at the small
-Salinas, who had been betrayed by a prisoner cacique. The Spaniard who
-brought the orders for this expedition was a very intelligent man. He
-gave me an account of the last engagement at which he was present. Some
-Indians, who had been taken prisoners, gave information of a tribe
-living north of the Colorado. Two hundred soldiers were sent; and they
-first discovered the Indians by a cloud of dust from their horses'
-feet, as they chanced to be travelling. The country was mountainous
-and wild, and it must have been far in the interior, for the Cordillera
-were in sight. The Indians, men, women, and children, were about one
-hundred and ten in number, and they were nearly all taken or killed,
-for the soldiers sabre every man. The Indians are now so terrified
-that they offer no resistance in a body, but each flies, neglecting
-even his wife and children; but when overtaken, like wild animals, they
-fight against any number to the last moment. One dying Indian seized
-with his teeth the thumb of his adversary, and allowed his own eye to
-be forced out sooner than relinquish his hold. Another, who was
-wounded, feigned death, keeping a knife ready to strike one more fatal
-blow. My informer said, when he was pursuing an Indian, the man cried
-out for mercy, at the same time that he was covertly loosing the bolas
-from his waist, meaning to whirl it round his head and so strike his
-pursuer. "I however struck him with my sabre to the ground, and then
-got off my horse, and cut his throat with my knife." This is a dark
-picture; but how much more shocking is the unquestionable fact, that
-all the women who appear above twenty years old are massacred in cold
-blood! When I exclaimed that this appeared rather inhuman, he answered,
-"Why, what can be done? they breed so!"
-
-Every one here is fully convinced that this is the most just war,
-because it is against barbarians. Who would believe in this age that
-such atrocities could be committed in a Christian civilized country?
-The children of the Indians are saved, to be sold or given away as
-servants, or rather slaves for as long a time as the owners can make
-them believe themselves slaves; but I believe in their treatment there
-is little to complain of.
-
-In the battle four men ran away together. They were pursued, one was
-killed, and the other three were taken alive. They turned out to be
-messengers or ambassadors from a large body of Indians, united in the
-common cause of defence, near the Cordillera. The tribe to which they
-had been sent was on the point of holding a grand council, the feast of
-mare's flesh was ready, and the dance prepared: in the morning the
-ambassadors were to have returned to the Cordillera. They were
-remarkably fine men, very fair, above six feet high, and all under
-thirty years of age. The three survivors of course possessed very
-valuable information and to extort this they were placed in a line. The
-two first being questioned, answered, "No se" (I do not know), and were
-one after the other shot. The third also said "No se;" adding, "Fire,
-I am a man, and can die!" Not one syllable would they breathe to injure
-the united cause of their country! The conduct of the above-mentioned
-cacique was very different; he saved his life by betraying the intended
-plan of warfare, and the point of union in the Andes. It was believed
-that there were already six or seven hundred Indians together, and that
-in summer their numbers would be doubled. Ambassadors were to have been
-sent to the Indians at the small Salinas, near Bahia Blanca, whom I
-have mentioned that this same cacique had betrayed. The communication,
-therefore, between the Indians, extends from the Cordillera to the
-coast of the Atlantic.
-
-General Rosas's plan is to kill all stragglers, and having driven the
-remainder to a common point, to attack them in a body, in the summer,
-with the assistance of the Chilenos. This operation is to be repeated
-for three successive years. I imagine the summer is chosen as the time
-for the main attack, because the plains are then without water, and the
-Indians can only travel in particular directions. The escape of the
-Indians to the south of the Rio Negro, where in such a vast unknown
-country they would be safe, is prevented by a treaty with the
-Tehuelches to this effect;--that Rosas pays them so much to slaughter
-every Indian who passes to the south of the river, but if they fail in
-so doing, they themselves are to be exterminated. The war is waged
-chiefly against the Indians near the Cordillera; for many of the tribes
-on this eastern side are fighting with Rosas. The general, however,
-like Lord Chesterfield, thinking that his friends may in a future day
-become his enemies, always places them in the front ranks, so that
-their numbers may be thinned. Since leaving South America we have
-heard that this war of extermination completely failed.
-
-Among the captive girls taken in the same engagement, there were two
-very pretty Spanish ones, who had been carried away by the Indians when
-young, and could now only speak the Indian tongue. From their account
-they must have come from Salta, a distance in a straight line of nearly
-one thousand miles. This gives one a grand idea of the immense
-territory over which the Indians roam: yet, great as it is, I think
-there will not, in another half-century, be a wild Indian northward of
-the Rio Negro. The warfare is too bloody to last; the Christians
-killing every Indian, and the Indians doing the same by the Christians.
-It is melancholy to trace how the Indians have given way before the
-Spanish invaders. Schirdel [21] says that in 1535, when Buenos Ayres
-was founded, there were villages containing two and three thousand
-inhabitants. Even in Falconer's time (1750) the Indians made inroads
-as far as Luxan, Areco, and Arrecife, but now they are driven beyond
-the Salado. Not only have whole tribes been exterminated, but the
-remaining Indians have become more barbarous: instead of living in
-large villages, and being employed in the arts of fishing, as well as
-of the chase, they now wander about the open plains, without home or
-fixed occupation.
-
-I heard also some account of an engagement which took place, a few
-weeks previously to the one mentioned, at Cholechel. This is a very
-important station on account of being a pass for horses; and it was, in
-consequence, for some time the head-quarters of a division of the army.
-When the troops first arrived there they found a tribe of Indians, of
-whom they killed twenty or thirty. The cacique escaped in a manner
-which astonished every one. The chief Indians always have one or two
-picked horses, which they keep ready for any urgent occasion. On one
-of these, an old white horse, the cacique sprung, taking with him his
-little son. The horse had neither saddle nor bridle. To avoid the
-shots, the Indian rode in the peculiar method of his nation namely,
-with an arm round the horse's neck, and one leg only on its back. Thus
-hanging on one side, he was seen patting the horse's head, and talking
-to him. The pursuers urged every effort in the chase; the Commandant
-three times changed his horse, but all in vain. The old Indian father
-and his son escaped, and were free. What a fine picture one can form
-in one's mind,--the naked, bronze-like figure of the old man with his
-little boy, riding like a Mazeppa on the white horse, thus leaving far
-behind him the host of his pursuers!
-
-I saw one day a soldier striking fire with a piece of flint, which I
-immediately recognised as having been a part of the head of an arrow.
-He told me it was found near the island of Cholechel, and that they are
-frequently picked up there. It was between two and three inches long,
-and therefore twice as large as those now used in Tierra del Fuego: it
-was made of opaque cream-coloured flint, but the point and barbs had
-been intentionally broken off. It is well known that no Pampas Indians
-now use bows and arrows. I believe a small tribe in Banda Oriental
-must be excepted; but they are widely separated from the Pampas
-Indians, and border close on those tribes that inhabit the forest, and
-live on foot. It appears, therefore, that these arrow-heads are
-antiquarian [22] relics of the Indians, before the great change in
-habits consequent on the introduction of the horse into South America.
-
-[1] Since this was written, M. Alcide d'Orbingy has examined these
-shells, and pronounces them all to be recent.
-
-[2] M. Aug. Bravard has described, in a Spanish work ('Observaciones
-Geologicas,' 1857), this district, and he believes that the bones of
-the extinct mammals were washed out of the underlying Pampean deposit,
-and subsequently became embedded with the still existing shells; but I
-am not convinced by his remarks. M. Bravard believes that the whole
-enormous Pampean deposit is a sub-aerial formation, like sand-dunes:
-this seems to me to be an untenable doctrine.
-
-[3] Principles of Geology, vol. iv. p. 40.
-
-[4] This theory was first developed in the Zoology of the Voyage of the
-Beagle, and subsequently in Professor Owen's Memoir on Mylodon robustus.
-
-[5] I mean this to exclude the total amount which may have been
-successively produced and consumed during a given period.
-
-[6] Travels in the Interior of South Africa, vol. ii. p. 207
-
-[7] The elephant which was killed at Exeter Change was estimated (being
-partly weighed) at five tons and a half. The elephant actress, as I was
-informed, weighed one ton less; so that we may take five as the average
-of a full-grown elephant. I was told at the Surry Gardens, that a
-hippopotamus which was sent to England cut up into pieces was estimated
-at three tons and a half; we will call it three. From these premises
-we may give three tons and a half to each of the five rhinoceroses;
-perhaps a ton to the giraffe, and half to the bos caffer as well as to
-the elan (a large ox weighs from 1200 to 1500 pounds). This will give
-an average (from the above estimates) of 2.7 of a ton for the ten
-largest herbivorous animals of Southern Africa. In South America,
-allowing 1200 pounds for the two tapirs together, 550 for the guanaco
-and vicuna, 500 for three deer, 300 for the capybara, peccari, and a
-monkey, we shall have an average of 250 pounds, which I believe is
-overstating the result. The ratio will therefore be as 6048 to 250, or
-24 to 1, for the ten largest animals from the two continents.
-
-[8] If we suppose the case of the discovery of a skeleton of a
-Greenland whale in a fossil state, not a single cetaceous animal being
-known to exist, what naturalist would have ventured conjecture on the
-possibility of a carcass so gigantic being supported on the minute
-crustacea and mollusca living in the frozen seas of the extreme North?
-
-[9] See Zoological Remarks to Capt. Back's Expedition, by Dr.
-Richardson. He says, "The subsoil north of latitude 56 degs. is
-perpetually frozen, the thaw on the coast not penetrating above three
-feet, and at Bear Lake, in latitude 64 degs., not more than twenty
-inches. The frozen substratum does not of itself destroy vegetation,
-for forests flourish on the surface, at a distance from the coast."
-
-[10] See Humboldt, Fragments Asiatiques, p. 386: Barton's Geography of
-Plants: and Malte Brun. In the latter work it is said that the limit
-of the growth of trees in Siberia may be drawn under the parallel of 70
-degs.
-
-[11] Sturt's Travels, vol. ii. p. 74.
-
-[12] A Gaucho assured me that he had once seen a snow-white or Albino
-variety, and that it was a most beautiful bird.
-
-[13] Burchell's Travels, vol. i. p. 280.
-
-[14] Azara, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[15] Lichtenstein, however, asserts (Travels, vol. ii. p. 25) that the
-hens begin sitting when they have laid ten or twelve eggs; and that
-they continue laying, I presume, in another nest. This appears to me
-very improbable. He asserts that four or five hens associate for
-incubation with one cock, who sits only at night.
-
-[16] When at the Rio Negro, we heard much of the indefatigable labours
-of this naturalist. M. Alcide d'Orbigny, during the years 1825 to
-1833, traversed several large portions of South America, and has made a
-collection, and is now publishing the results on a scale of
-magnificence, which at once places himself in the list of American
-travellers second only to Humboldt.
-
-[17] Account of the Abipones, A.D. 1749, vol. i. (English Translation)
-p. 314
-
-[18] M. Bibron calls it T. crepitans.
-
-
-[19] The cavities leading from the fleshy compartments of the
-extremity, were filled with a yellow pulpy matter, which, examined
-under a microscope, presented an extraordinary appearance. The mass
-consisted of rounded, semi-transparent, irregular grains, aggregated
-together into particles of various sizes. All such particles, and the
-separate grains, possessed the power of rapid movement; generally
-revolving around different axes, but sometimes progressive. The
-movement was visible with a very weak power, but even with the highest
-its cause could not be perceived. It was very different from the
-circulation of the fluid in the elastic bag, containing the thin
-extremity of the axis. On other occasions, when dissecting small
-marine animals beneath the microscope, I have seen particles of pulpy
-matter, some of large size, as soon as they were disengaged, commence
-revolving. I have imagined, I know not with how much truth, that this
-granulo-pulpy matter was in process of being converted into ova.
-Certainly in this zoophyte such appeared to be the case.
-
-[20] Kerr's Collection of Voyages, vol. viii. p. 119.
-
-[21] Purchas's Collection of Voyages. I believe the date was really
-1537.
-
-[22] Azara has even doubted whether the Pampas Indians ever used bows.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
-
-Set out for Buenos Ayres--Rio Sauce--Sierra Ventana--Third
-Posta--Driving Horses--Bolas--Partridges and Foxes--Features of the
-Country--Long-legged Plover--Teru-tero--Hail-storm--Natural Enclosures
-in the Sierra Tapalguen--Flesh of Puma--Meat Diet--Guardia del
-Monte--Effects of Cattle on the Vegetation--Cardoon--Buenos
-Ayres--Corral where Cattle are Slaughtered.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 18th.--I hired a Gaucho to accompany me on my ride to Buenos
-Ayres, though with some difficulty, as the father of one man was afraid
-to let him go, and another, who seemed willing, was described to me as
-so fearful, that I was afraid to take him, for I was told that even if
-he saw an ostrich at a distance, he would mistake it for an Indian, and
-would fly like the wind away. The distance to Buenos Ayres is about
-four hundred miles, and nearly the whole way through an uninhabited
-country. We started early in the morning; ascending a few hundred feet
-from the basin of green turf on which Bahia Blanca stands, we entered
-on a wide desolate plain. It consists of a crumbling
-argillaceo-calcareous rock, which, from the dry nature of the climate,
-supports only scattered tufts of withered grass, without a single bush
-or tree to break the monotonous uniformity. The weather was fine, but
-the atmosphere remarkably hazy; I thought the appearance foreboded a
-gale, but the Gauchos said it was owing to the plain, at some great
-distance in the interior, being on fire. After a long gallop, having
-changed horses twice, we reached the Rio Sauce: it is a deep, rapid,
-little stream, not above twenty-five feet wide. The second posta on
-the road to Buenos Ayres stands on its banks, a little above there is a
-ford for horses, where the water does not reach to the horses' belly;
-but from that point, in its course to the sea, it is quite impassable,
-and hence makes a most useful barrier against the Indians.
-
-Insignificant as this stream is, the Jesuit Falconer, whose information
-is generally so very correct, figures it as a considerable river,
-rising at the foot of the Cordillera. With respect to its source, I do
-not doubt that this is the case for the Gauchos assured me, that in the
-middle of the dry summer, this stream, at the same time with the
-Colorado has periodical floods; which can only originate in the snow
-melting on the Andes. It is extremely improbable that a stream so
-small as the Sauce then was, should traverse the entire width of the
-continent; and indeed, if it were the residue of a large river, its
-waters, as in other ascertained cases, would be saline. During the
-winter we must look to the springs round the Sierra Ventana as the
-source of its pure and limpid stream. I suspect the plains of
-Patagonia like those of Australia, are traversed by many water-courses
-which only perform their proper parts at certain periods. Probably this
-is the case with the water which flows into the head of Port Desire,
-and likewise with the Rio Chupat, on the banks of which masses of
-highly cellular scoriae were found by the officers employed in the
-survey.
-
-As it was early in the afternoon when we arrived, we took fresh horses,
-and a soldier for a guide, and started for the Sierra de la Ventana.
-This mountain is visible from the anchorage at Bahia Blanca; and Capt.
-Fitz Roy calculates its height to be 3340 feet--an altitude very
-remarkable on this eastern side of the continent. I am not aware that
-any foreigner, previous to my visit, had ascended this mountain; and
-indeed very few of the soldiers at Bahia Blanca knew anything about it.
-Hence we heard of beds of coal, of gold and silver, of caves, and of
-forests, all of which inflamed my curiosity, only to disappoint it. The
-distance from the posta was about six leagues over a level plain of the
-same character as before. The ride was, however, interesting, as the
-mountain began to show its true form. When we reached the foot of the
-main ridge, we had much difficulty in finding any water, and we thought
-we should have been obliged to have passed the night without any. At
-last we discovered some by looking close to the mountain, for at the
-distance even of a few hundred yards the streamlets were buried and
-entirely lost in the friable calcareous stone and loose detritus. I do
-not think Nature ever made a more solitary, desolate pile of rock;--it
-well deserves its name of _Hurtado_, or separated. The mountain is
-steep, extremely rugged, and broken, and so entirely destitute of
-trees, and even bushes, that we actually could not make a skewer to
-stretch out our meat over the fire of thistle-stalks. [1] The strange
-aspect of this mountain is contrasted by the sea-like plain, which not
-only abuts against its steep sides, but likewise separates the parallel
-ranges. The uniformity of the colouring gives an extreme quietness to
-the view,--the whitish grey of the quartz rock, and the light brown of
-the withered grass of the plain, being unrelieved by any brighter tint.
-From custom, one expects to see in the neighbourhood of a lofty and
-bold mountain, a broken country strewed over with huge fragments. Here
-nature shows that the last movement before the bed of the sea is
-changed into dry land may sometimes be one of tranquillity. Under these
-circumstances I was curious to observe how far from the parent rock any
-pebbles could be found. On the shores of Bahia Blanca, and near the
-settlement, there were some of quartz, which certainly must have come
-from this source: the distance is forty-five miles.
-
-The dew, which in the early part of the night wetted the saddle-cloths
-under which we slept, was in the morning frozen. The plain, though
-appearing horizontal, had insensibly sloped up to a height of between
-800 and 900 feet above the sea. In the morning (9th of September) the
-guide told me to ascend the nearest ridge, which he thought would lead
-me to the four peaks that crown the summit. The climbing up such rough
-rocks was very fatiguing; the sides were so indented, that what was
-gained in one five minutes was often lost in the next. At last, when I
-reached the ridge, my disappointment was extreme in finding a
-precipitous valley as deep as the plain, which cut the chain
-transversely in two, and separated me from the four points. This
-valley is very narrow, but flat-bottomed, and it forms a fine
-horse-pass for the Indians, as it connects the plains on the northern
-and southern sides of the range. Having descended, and while crossing
-it, I saw two horses grazing: I immediately hid myself in the long
-grass, and began to reconnoitre; but as I could see no signs of Indians
-I proceeded cautiously on my second ascent. It was late in the day,
-and this part of the mountain, like the other, was steep and rugged. I
-was on the top of the second peak by two o'clock, but got there with
-extreme difficulty; every twenty yards I had the cramp in the upper
-part of both thighs, so that I was afraid I should not have been able
-to have got down again. It was also necessary to return by another
-road, as it was out of the question to pass over the saddle-back. I
-was therefore obliged to give up the two higher peaks. Their altitude
-was but little greater, and every purpose of geology had been answered;
-so that the attempt was not worth the hazard of any further exertion. I
-presume the cause of the cramp was the great change in the kind of
-muscular action, from that of hard riding to that of still harder
-climbing. It is a lesson worth remembering, as in some cases it might
-cause much difficulty.
-
-I have already said the mountain is composed of white quartz rock, and
-with it a little glossy clay-slate is associated. At the height of a
-few hundred feet above the plain patches of conglomerate adhered in
-several places to the solid rock. They resembled in hardness, and in
-the nature of the cement, the masses which may be seen daily forming on
-some coasts. I do not doubt these pebbles were in a similar manner
-aggregated, at a period when the great calcareous formation was
-depositing beneath the surrounding sea. We may believe that the jagged
-and battered forms of the hard quartz yet show the effects of the waves
-of an open ocean.
-
-I was, on the whole, disappointed with this ascent. Even the view was
-insignificant;--a plain like the sea, but without its beautiful colour
-and defined outline. The scene, however, was novel, and a little
-danger, like salt to meat, gave it a relish. That the danger was very
-little was certain, for my two companions made a good fire--a thing
-which is never done when it is suspected that Indians are near. I
-reached the place of our bivouac by sunset, and drinking much mate, and
-smoking several cigaritos, soon made up my bed for the night. The wind
-was very strong and cold, but I never slept more comfortably.
-
-September 10th.--In the morning, having fairly scudded before the gale,
-we arrived by the middle of the day at the Sauce posta. In the road we
-saw great numbers of deer, and near the mountain a guanaco. The plain,
-which abuts against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gullies,
-of which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty deep; we
-were obliged in consequence to make a considerable circuit before we
-could find a pass. We stayed the night at the posta, the conversation,
-as was generally the case, being about the Indians. The Sierra Ventana
-was formerly a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there
-was much fighting there. My guide had been present when many Indians
-were killed: the women escaped to the top of the ridge, and fought most
-desperately with great stones; many thus saving themselves.
-
-September 11th.--Proceeded to the third posta in company with the
-lieutenant who commanded it. The distance is called fifteen leagues;
-but it is only guess-work, and is generally overstated. The road was
-uninteresting, over a dry grassy plain; and on our left hand at a
-greater or less distance there were some low hills; a continuation of
-which we crossed close to the posta. Before our arrival we met a large
-herd of cattle and horses, guarded by fifteen soldiers; but we were
-told many had been lost. It is very difficult to drive animals across
-the plains; for if in the night a puma, or even a fox, approaches,
-nothing can prevent the horses dispersing in every direction; and a
-storm will have the same effect. A short time since, an officer left
-Buenos Ayres with five hundred horses, and when he arrived at the army
-he had under twenty.
-
-Soon afterwards we perceived by the cloud of dust, that a party of
-horsemen were coming towards us; when far distant my companions knew
-them to be Indians, by their long hair streaming behind their backs.
-The Indians generally have a fillet round their heads, but never any
-covering; and their black hair blowing across their swarthy faces,
-heightens to an uncommon degree the wildness of their appearance. They
-turned out to be a party of Bernantio's friendly tribe, going to a
-salina for salt. The Indians eat much salt, their children sucking it
-like sugar. This habit is very different from that of the Spanish
-Gauchos, who, leading the same kind of life, eat scarcely any;
-according to Mungo Park, [2] it is people who live on vegetable food
-who have an unconquerable desire for salt. The Indians gave us
-good-humoured nods as they passed at full gallop, driving before them a
-troop of horses, and followed by a train of lanky dogs.
-
-September 12th and 13th.--I stayed at this posta two days, waiting for
-a troop of soldiers, which General Rosas had the kindness to send to
-inform me, would shortly travel to Buenos Ayres; and he advised me to
-take the opportunity of the escort. In the morning we rode to some
-neighbouring hills to view the country, and to examine the geology.
-After dinner the soldiers divided themselves into two parties for a
-trial of skill with the bolas. Two spears were stuck in the ground
-twenty-five yards apart, but they were struck and entangled only once
-in four or five times. The balls can be thrown fifty or sixty yards,
-but with little certainty. This, however, does not apply to a man on
-horseback; for when the speed of the horse is added to the force of the
-arm, it is said, that they can be whirled with effect to the distance
-of eighty yards. As a proof of their force, I may mention, that at the
-Falkland Islands, when the Spaniards murdered some of their own
-countrymen and all the Englishmen, a young friendly Spaniard was
-running away, when a great tall man, by name Luciano, came at full
-gallop after him, shouting to him to stop, and saying that he only
-wanted to speak to him. Just as the Spaniard was on the point of
-reaching the boat, Luciano threw the balls: they struck him on the legs
-with such a jerk, as to throw him down and to render him for some time
-insensible. The man, after Luciano had had his talk, was allowed to
-escape. He told us that his legs were marked by great weals, where the
-thong had wound round, as if he had been flogged with a whip. In the
-middle of the day two men arrived, who brought a parcel from the next
-posta to be forwarded to the general: so that besides these two, our
-party consisted this evening of my guide and self, the lieutenant, and
-his four soldiers. The latter were strange beings; the first a fine
-young negro; the second half Indian and negro; and the two others
-non-descripts; namely, an old Chilian miner, the colour of mahogany,
-and another partly a mulatto; but two such mongrels with such
-detestable expressions, I never saw before. At night, when they were
-sitting round the fire, and playing at cards, I retired to view such a
-Salvator Rosa scene. They were seated under a low cliff, so that I
-could look down upon them; around the party were lying dogs, arms,
-remnants of deer and ostriches; and their long spears were stuck in the
-turf. Further in the dark background, their horses were tied up, ready
-for any sudden danger. If the stillness of the desolate plain was
-broken by one of the dogs barking, a soldier, leaving the fire, would
-place his head close to the ground, and thus slowly scan the horizon.
-Even if the noisy teru-tero uttered its scream, there would be a pause
-in the conversation, and every head, for a moment, a little inclined.
-
-What a life of misery these men appear to us to lead! They were at
-least ten leagues from the Sauce posta, and since the murder committed
-by the Indians, twenty from another. The Indians are supposed to have
-made their attack in the middle of the night; for very early in the
-morning after the murder, they were luckily seen approaching this
-posta. The whole party here, however, escaped, together with the troop
-of horses; each one taking a line for himself, and driving with him as
-many animals as he was able to manage.
-
-The little hovel, built of thistle-stalks, in which they slept, neither
-kept out the wind nor rain; indeed in the latter case the only effect
-the roof had, was to condense it into larger drops. They had nothing
-to eat excepting what they could catch, such as ostriches, deer,
-armadilloes, etc., and their only fuel was the dry stalks of a small
-plant, somewhat resembling an aloe. The sole luxury which these men
-enjoyed was smoking the little paper cigars, and sucking mate. I used
-to think that the carrion vultures, man's constant attendants on these
-dreary plains, while seated on the little neighbouring cliffs seemed by
-their very patience to say, "Ah! when the Indians come we shall have a
-feast."
-
-In the morning we all sallied forth to hunt, and although we had not
-much success, there were some animated chases. Soon after starting the
-party separated, and so arranged their plans, that at a certain time of
-the day (in guessing which they show much skill) they should all meet
-from different points of the compass on a plain piece of ground, and
-thus drive together the wild animals. One day I went out hunting at
-Bahia Blanca, but the men there merely rode in a crescent, each being
-about a quarter of a mile apart from the other. A fine male ostrich
-being turned by the headmost riders, tried to escape on one side. The
-Gauchos pursued at a reckless pace, twisting their horses about with
-the most admirable command, and each man whirling the balls round his
-head. At length the foremost threw them, revolving through the air: in
-an instant the ostrich rolled over and over, its legs fairly lashed
-together by the thong. The plains abound with three kinds of partridge,
-[3] two of which are as large as hen pheasants. Their destroyer, a
-small and pretty fox, was also singularly numerous; in the course of
-the day we could not have seen less than forty or fifty. They were
-generally near their earths, but the dogs killed one. When we returned
-to the posta, we found two of the party returned who had been hunting
-by themselves. They had killed a puma, and had found an ostrich's nest
-with twenty-seven eggs in it. Each of these is said to equal in weight
-eleven hen's eggs; so that we obtained from this one nest as much food
-as 297 hen's eggs would have given.
-
-September 14th.--As the soldiers belonging to the next posta meant to
-return, and we should together make a party of five, and all armed, I
-determined not to wait for the expected troops. My host, the
-lieutenant, pressed me much to stop. As he had been very obliging--not
-only providing me with food, but lending me his private horses--I
-wanted to make him some remuneration. I asked my guide whether I might
-do so, but he told me certainly not; that the only answer I should
-receive, probably would be, "We have meat for the dogs in our country,
-and therefore do not grudge it to a Christian." It must not be supposed
-that the rank of lieutenant in such an army would at all prevent the
-acceptance of payment: it was only the high sense of hospitality, which
-every traveller is bound to acknowledge as nearly universal throughout
-these provinces. After galloping some leagues, we came to a low swampy
-country, which extends for nearly eighty miles northward, as far as the
-Sierra Tapalguen. In some parts there were fine damp plains, covered
-with grass, while others had a soft, black, and peaty soil. There were
-also many extensive but shallow lakes, and large beds of reeds. The
-country on the whole resembled the better parts of the Cambridgeshire
-fens. At night we had some difficulty in finding amidst the swamps, a
-dry place for our bivouac.
-
-September 15th.--Rose very early in the morning and shortly after
-passed the posta where the Indians had murdered the five soldiers. The
-officer had eighteen chuzo wounds in his body. By the middle of the
-day, after a hard gallop, we reached the fifth posta: on account of
-some difficulty in procuring horses we stayed there the night. As this
-point was the most exposed on the whole line, twenty-one soldiers were
-stationed here; at sunset they returned from hunting, bringing with
-them seven deer, three ostriches, and many armadilloes and partridges.
-When riding through the country, it is a common practice to set fire to
-the plain; and hence at night, as on this occasion, the horizon was
-illuminated in several places by brilliant conflagrations. This is done
-partly for the sake of puzzling any stray Indians, but chiefly for
-improving the pasture. In grassy plains unoccupied by the larger
-ruminating quadrupeds, it seems necessary to remove the superfluous
-vegetation by fire, so as to render the new year's growth serviceable.
-
-The rancho at this place did not boast even of a roof, but merely
-consisted of a ring of thistle-stalks, to break the force of the wind.
-It was situated on the borders of an extensive but shallow lake,
-swarming with wild fowl, among which the black-necked swan was
-conspicuous.
-
-The kind of plover, which appears as if mounted on stilts (Himantopus
-nigricollis), is here common in flocks of considerable size. It has
-been wrongfully accused of inelegance; when wading about in shallow
-water, which is its favourite resort, its gait is far from awkward.
-These birds in a flock utter a noise, that singularly resembles the cry
-of a pack of small dogs in full chase: waking in the night, I have more
-than once been for a moment startled at the distant sound. The
-teru-tero (Vanellus cayanus) is another bird, which often disturbs the
-stillness of the night. In appearance and habits it resembles in many
-respects our peewits; its wings, however, are armed with sharp spurs,
-like those on the legs of the common cock. As our peewit takes its
-name from the sound of its voice, so does the teru-tero. While riding
-over the grassy plains, one is constantly pursued by these birds, which
-appear to hate mankind, and I am sure deserve to be hated for their
-never-ceasing, unvaried, harsh screams. To the sportsman they are most
-annoying, by telling every other bird and animal of his approach: to
-the traveller in the country, they may possibly, as Molina says, do
-good, by warning him of the midnight robber. During the breeding
-season, they attempt, like our peewits, by feigning to be wounded, to
-draw away from their nests dogs and other enemies. The eggs of this
-bird are esteemed a great delicacy.
-
-September 16th.--To the seventh posta at the foot of the Sierra
-Tapalguen. The country was quite level, with a coarse herbage and a
-soft peaty soil. The hovel was here remarkably neat, the posts and
-rafters being made of about a dozen dry thistle-stalks bound together
-with thongs of hide; and by the support of these Ionic-like columns,
-the roof and sides were thatched with reeds. We were here told a fact,
-which I would not have credited, if I had not had partly ocular proof
-of it; namely, that, during the previous night hail as large as small
-apples, and extremely hard, had fallen with such violence, as to kill
-the greater number of the wild animals. One of the men had already
-found thirteen deer (Cervus campestris) lying dead, and I saw their
-_fresh_ hides; another of the party, a few minutes after my arrival
-brought in seven more. Now I well know, that one man without dogs
-could hardly have killed seven deer in a week. The men believed they
-had seen about fifteen ostriches (part of one of which we had for
-dinner); and they said that several were running about evidently blind
-in one eye. Numbers of smaller birds, as ducks, hawks, and partridges,
-were killed. I saw one of the latter with a black mark on its back, as
-if it had been struck with a paving-stone. A fence of thistle-stalks
-round the hovel was nearly broken down, and my informer, putting his
-head out to see what was the matter, received a severe cut, and now
-wore a bandage. The storm was said to have been of limited extent: we
-certainly saw from our last night's bivouac a dense cloud and lightning
-in this direction. It is marvellous how such strong animals as deer
-could thus have been killed; but I have no doubt, from the evidence I
-have given, that the story is not in the least exaggerated. I am glad,
-however, to have its credibility supported by the Jesuit Dobrizhoffen,
-[4] who, speaking of a country much to the northward, says, hail fell
-of an enormous size and killed vast numbers of cattle: the Indians
-hence called the place _Lalegraicavalca_, meaning "the little white
-things." Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me that he witnessed in 1831 in
-India, a hail-storm, which killed numbers of large birds and much
-injured the cattle. These hailstones were flat, and one was ten inches
-in circumference, and another weighed two ounces. They ploughed up a
-gravel-walk like musket-balls, and passed through glass-windows, making
-round holes, but not cracking them.
-
-Having finished our dinner, of hail-stricken meat, we crossed the
-Sierra Tapalguen; a low range of hills, a few hundred feet in height,
-which commences at Cape Corrientes. The rock in this part is pure
-quartz; further eastward I understand it is granitic. The hills are of
-a remarkable form; they consist of flat patches of table-land,
-surrounded by low perpendicular cliffs, like the outliers of a
-sedimentary deposit. The hill which I ascended was very small, not
-above a couple of hundred yards in diameter; but I saw others larger.
-One which goes by the name of the "Corral," is said to be two or three
-miles in diameter, and encompassed by perpendicular cliffs, between
-thirty and forty feet high, excepting at one spot, where the entrance
-lies. Falconer [5] gives a curious account of the Indians driving
-troops of wild horses into it, and then by guarding the entrance,
-keeping them secure. I have never heard of any other instance of
-table-land in a formation of quartz, and which, in the hill I examined,
-had neither cleavage nor stratification. I was told that the rock of
-the "Corral" was white, and would strike fire.
-
-We did not reach the posta on the Rio Tapalguen till after it was dark.
-At supper, from something which was said, I was suddenly struck with
-horror at thinking that I was eating one of the favourite dishes of the
-country namely, a half-formed calf, long before its proper time of
-birth. It turned out to be Puma; the meat is very white and remarkably
-like veal in taste. Dr. Shaw was laughed at for stating that "the
-flesh of the lion is in great esteem having no small affinity with
-veal, both in colour, taste, and flavour." Such certainly is the case
-with the Puma. The Gauchos differ in their opinion, whether the Jaguar
-is good eating, but are unanimous in saying that cat is excellent.
-
-September 17th.--We followed the course of the Rio Tapalguen, through a
-very fertile country, to the ninth posta. Tapalguen, itself, or the
-town of Tapalguen, if it may be so called, consists of a perfectly
-level plain, studded over, as far as the eye can reach, with the toldos
-or oven-shaped huts of the Indians. The families of the friendly
-Indians, who were fighting on the side of Rosas, resided here. We met
-and passed many young Indian women, riding by two or three together on
-the same horse: they, as well as many of the young men, were strikingly
-handsome,--their fine ruddy complexions being the picture of health.
-Besides the toldos, there were three ranchos; one inhabited by the
-Commandant, and the two others by Spaniards with small shops.
-
-We were here able to buy some biscuit. I had now been several days
-without tasting anything besides meat: I did not at all dislike this
-new regimen; but I felt as if it would only have agreed with me with
-hard exercise. I have heard that patients in England, when desired to
-confine themselves exclusively to an animal diet, even with the hope of
-life before their eyes, have hardly been able to endure it. Yet the
-Gaucho in the Pampas, for months together, touches nothing but beef.
-But they eat, I observe, a very large proportion of fat, which is of a
-less animalized nature; and they particularly dislike dry meat, such as
-that of the Agouti. Dr. Richardson [6] also, has remarked, "that when
-people have fed for a long time solely upon lean animal food, the
-desire for fat becomes so insatiable, that they can consume a large
-quantity of unmixed and even oily fat without nausea:" this appears to
-me a curious physiological fact. It is, perhaps, from their meat
-regimen that the Gauchos, like other carnivorous animals, can abstain
-long from food. I was told that at Tandeel, some troops voluntarily
-pursued a party of Indians for three days, without eating or drinking.
-
-We saw in the shops many articles, such as horsecloths, belts, and
-garters, woven by the Indian women. The patterns were very pretty, and
-the colours brilliant; the workmanship of the garters was so good that
-an English merchant at Buenos Ayres maintained they must have been
-manufactured in England, till he found the tassels had been fastened by
-split sinew.
-
-September 18th.--We had a very long ride this day. At the twelfth
-posta, which is seven leagues south of the Rio Salado, we came to the
-first estancia with cattle and white women. Afterwards we had to ride
-for many miles through a country flooded with water above our horses'
-knees. By crossing the stirrups, and riding Arab-like with our legs
-bent up, we contrived to keep tolerably dry. It was nearly dark when
-we arrived at the Salado; the stream was deep, and about forty yards
-wide; in summer, however, its bed becomes almost dry, and the little
-remaining water nearly as salt as that of the sea. We slept at one of
-the great estancias of General Rosas. It was fortified, and of such an
-extent, that arriving in the dark I thought it was a town and fortress.
-In the morning we saw immense herds of cattle, the general here having
-seventy-four square leagues of land. Formerly nearly three hundred men
-were employed about this estate, and they defied all the attacks of the
-Indians.
-
-September 19th.--Passed the Guardia del Monte. This is a nice
-scattered little town, with many gardens, full of peach and quince
-trees. The plain here looked like that around Buenos Ayres; the turf
-being short and bright green, with beds of clover and thistles, and
-with bizcacha holes. I was very much struck with the marked change in
-the aspect of the country after having crossed the Salado. From a
-coarse herbage we passed on to a carpet of fine green verdure. I at
-first attributed this to some change in the nature of the soil, but the
-inhabitants assured me that here, as well as in Banda Oriental, where
-there is as great a difference between the country round Monte Video
-and the thinly-inhabited savannahs of Colonia, the whole was to be
-attributed to the manuring and grazing of the cattle. Exactly the same
-fact has been observed in the prairies [7] of North America, where
-coarse grass, between five and six feet high, when grazed by cattle,
-changes into common pasture land. I am not botanist enough to say
-whether the change here is owing to the introduction of new species, to
-the altered growth of the same, or to a difference in their
-proportional numbers. Azara has also observed with astonishment this
-change: he is likewise much perplexed by the immediate appearance of
-plants not occurring in the neighbourhood, on the borders of any track
-that leads to a newly-constructed hovel. In another part he says, [8]
-"ces chevaux (sauvages) ont la manie de preferer les chemins, et le
-bord des routes pour deposer leurs excremens, dont on trouve des
-monceaux dans ces endroits." Does this not partly explain the
-circumstance? We thus have lines of richly manured land serving as
-channels of communication across wide districts.
-
-Near the Guardia we find the southern limit of two European plants, now
-become extraordinarily common. The fennel in great profusion covers
-the ditch-banks in the neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, and
-other towns. But the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus) has a far wider
-range: [9] it occurs in these latitudes on both sides of the,
-Cordillera, across the continent. I saw it in unfrequented spots in
-Chile, Entre Rios, and Banda Oriental. In the latter country alone,
-very many (probably several hundred) square miles are covered by one
-mass of these prickly plants, and are impenetrable by man or beast.
-Over the undulating plains, where these great beds occur, nothing else
-can now live. Before their introduction, however, the surface must
-have supported, as in other parts, a rank herbage. I doubt whether any
-case is on record of an invasion on so grand a scale of one plant over
-the aborigines. As I have already said, I nowhere saw the cardoon
-south of the Salado; but it is probable that in proportion as that
-country becomes inhabited, the cardoon will extend its limits. The
-case is different with the giant thistle (with variegated leaves) of
-the Pampas, for I met with it in the valley of the Sauce. According to
-the principles so well laid down by Mr. Lyell, few countries have
-undergone more remarkable changes, since the year 1535, when the first
-colonist of La Plata landed with seventy-two horses. The countless
-herds of horses, cattle, and sheep, not only have altered the whole
-aspect of the vegetation, but they have almost banished the guanaco,
-deer and ostrich. Numberless other changes must likewise have taken
-place; the wild pig in some parts probably replaces the peccari; packs
-of wild dogs may be heard howling on the wooded banks of the
-less-frequented streams; and the common cat, altered into a large and
-fierce animal, inhabits rocky hills. As M. d'Orbigny has remarked, the
-increase in numbers of the carrion-vulture, since the introduction of
-the domestic animals, must have been infinitely great; and we have
-given reasons for believing that they have extended their southern
-range. No doubt many plants, besides the cardoon and fennel, are
-naturalized; thus the islands near the mouth of the Parana, are thickly
-clothed with peach and orange trees, springing from seeds carried there
-by the waters of the river.
-
-While changing horses at the Guardia several people questioned us much
-about the army,--I never saw anything like the enthusiasm for Rosas,
-and for the success of the "most just of all wars, because against
-barbarians." This expression, it must be confessed, is very natural,
-for till lately, neither man, woman nor horse, was safe from the
-attacks of the Indians. We had a long day's ride over the same rich
-green plain, abounding with various flocks, and with here and there a
-solitary estancia, and its one _ombu_ tree. In the evening it rained
-heavily: on arriving at a posthouse we were told by the owner, that if
-we had not a regular passport we must pass on, for there were so many
-robbers he would trust no one. When he read, however, my passport,
-which began with "El Naturalista Don Carlos," his respect and civility
-were as unbounded as his suspicions had been before. What a naturalist
-might be, neither he nor his countrymen, I suspect, had any idea; but
-probably my title lost nothing of its value from that cause.
-
-September 20th.--We arrived by the middle of the day at Buenos Ayres.
-The outskirts of the city looked quite pretty, with the agave hedges,
-and groves of olive, peach and willow trees, all just throwing out
-their fresh green leaves. I rode to the house of Mr. Lumb, an English
-merchant, to whose kindness and hospitality, during my stay in the
-country, I was greatly indebted.
-
-The city of Buenos Ayres is large; [10] and I should think one of the
-most regular in the world. Every street is at right angles to the one
-it crosses, and the parallel ones being equidistant, the houses are
-collected into solid squares of equal dimensions, which are called
-quadras. On the other hand, the houses themselves are hollow squares;
-all the rooms opening into a neat little courtyard. They are generally
-only one story high, with flat roofs, which are fitted with seats and
-are much frequented by the inhabitants in summer. In the centre of the
-town is the Plaza, where the public offices, fortress, cathedral, etc.,
-stand. Here also, the old viceroys, before the revolution, had their
-palaces. The general assemblage of buildings possesses considerable
-architectural beauty, although none individually can boast of any.
-
-The great _corral_, where the animals are kept for slaughter to supply
-food to this beef-eating population, is one of the spectacles best
-worth seeing. The strength of the horse as compared to that of the
-bullock is quite astonishing: a man on horseback having thrown his lazo
-round the horns of a beast, can drag it anywhere he chooses. The
-animal ploughing up the ground with outstretched legs, in vain efforts
-to resist the force, generally dashes at full speed to one side; but
-the horse immediately turning to receive the shock, stands so firmly
-that the bullock is almost thrown down, and it is surprising that their
-necks are not broken. The struggle is not, however, one of fair
-strength; the horse's girth being matched against the bullock's
-extended neck. In a similar manner a man can hold the wildest horse,
-if caught with the lazo, just behind the ears. When the bullock has
-been dragged to the spot where it is to be slaughtered, the matador
-with great caution cuts the hamstrings. Then is given the death bellow;
-a noise more expressive of fierce agony than any I know. I have often
-distinguished it from a long distance, and have always known that the
-struggle was then drawing to a close. The whole sight is horrible and
-revolting: the ground is almost made of bones; and the horses and
-riders are drenched with gore.
-
-[1] I call these thistle-stalks for the want of a more correct name. I
-believe it is a species of Eryngium.
-
-[2] Travels in Africa, p. 233.
-
-[3] Two species of Tinamus and Eudromia elegans of A. d'Orbigny, which
-can only be called a partridge with regard to its habits.
-
-[4] History of the Abipones, vol. ii. p. 6.
-
-[5] Falconer's Patagonia, p. 70.
-
-[6] Fauna Boreali-Americana, vol. i. p. 35.
-
-[7] See Mr. Atwater's account of the Prairies, in Silliman's N. A.
-Journal, vol. i. p. 117.
-
-[8] Azara's Voyages, vol. i. p. 373.
-
-[9] M. A. d'Orbigny (vol. i. p. 474) says that the cardoon and
-artichoke are both found wild. Dr. Hooker (Botanical Magazine, vol.
-iv. p. 2862), has described a variety of the Cynara from this part of
-South America under the name of inermis. He states that botanists are
-now generally agreed that the cardoon and the artichoke are varieties
-of one plant. I may add, that an intelligent farmer assured me that he
-had observed in a deserted garden some artichokes changing into the
-common cardoon. Dr. Hooker believes that Head's vivid description of
-the thistle of the Pampas applies to the cardoon, but this is a
-mistake. Captain Head referred to the plant, which I have mentioned a
-few lines lower down, under the title of giant thistle. Whether it is
-a true thistle I do not know; but it is quite different from the
-cardoon; and more like a thistle properly so called.
-
-[10] It is said to contain 60,000 inhabitants. Monte Video, the second
-town of importance on the banks of the Plata, has 15,000.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
-
-Excursion to St. Fe--Thistle Beds--Habits of the Bizcacha--Little
-Owl--Saline Streams--Level Plain--Mastodon--St. Fe--Change in
-Landscape--Geology--Tooth of extinct Horse--Relation of the Fossil and
-recent Quadrupeds of North and South America--Effects of a great
-Drought--Parana--Habits of the Jaguar--Scissor-beak--Kingfisher,
-Parrot, and Scissor-tail--Revolution--Buenos Ayres State of Government.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 27th.--In the evening I set out on an excursion to St. Fe,
-which is situated nearly three hundred English miles from Buenos Ayres,
-on the banks of the Parana. The roads in the neighbourhood of the city
-after the rainy weather, were extraordinarily bad. I should never have
-thought it possible for a bullock waggon to have crawled along: as it
-was, they scarcely went at the rate of a mile an hour, and a man was
-kept ahead, to survey the best line for making the attempt. The
-bullocks were terribly jaded: it is a great mistake to suppose that
-with improved roads, and an accelerated rate of travelling, the
-sufferings of the animals increase in the same proportion. We passed a
-train of waggons and a troop of beasts on their road to Mendoza. The
-distance is about 580 geographical miles, and the journey is generally
-performed in fifty days. These waggons are very long, narrow, and
-thatched with reeds; they have only two wheels, the diameter of which
-in some cases is as much as ten feet. Each is drawn by six bullocks,
-which are urged on by a goad at least twenty feet long: this is
-suspended from within the roof; for the wheel bullocks a smaller one is
-kept; and for the intermediate pair, a point projects at right angles
-from the middle of the long one.
-
-The whole apparatus looked like some implement of war.
-
-September 28th.--We passed the small town of Luxan where there is a
-wooden bridge over the river--a most unusual convenience in this
-country. We passed also Areco. The plains appeared level, but were not
-so in fact; for in various places the horizon was distant. The
-estancias are here wide apart; for there is little good pasture, owing
-to the land being covered by beds either of an acrid clover, or of the
-great thistle. The latter, well known from the animated description
-given by Sir F. Head, were at this time of the year two-thirds grown;
-in some parts they were as high as the horse's back, but in others they
-had not yet sprung up, and the ground was bare and dusty as on a
-turnpike-road. The clumps were of the most brilliant green, and they
-made a pleasing miniature-likeness of broken forest land. When the
-thistles are full grown, the great beds are impenetrable, except by a
-few tracts, as intricate as those in a labyrinth. These are only known
-to the robbers, who at this season inhabit them, and sally forth at
-night to rob and cut throats with impunity. Upon asking at a house
-whether robbers were numerous, I was answered, "The thistles are not up
-yet;"--the meaning of which reply was not at first very obvious. There
-is little interest in passing over these tracts, for they are inhabited
-by few animals or birds, excepting the bizcacha and its friend the
-little owl.
-
-The bizcacha [1] is well known to form a prominent feature in the
-zoology of the Pampas. It is found as far south as the Rio Negro, in
-lat. 41 degs., but not beyond. It cannot, like the agouti, subsist on
-the gravelly and desert plains of Patagonia, but prefers a clayey or
-sandy soil, which produces a different and more abundant vegetation.
-Near Mendoza, at the foot of the Cordillera, it occurs in close
-neighbourhood with the allied alpine species. It is a very curious
-circumstance in its geographical distribution, that it has never been
-seen, fortunately for the inhabitants of Banda Oriental, to the
-eastward of the river Uruguay: yet in this province there are plains
-which appear admirably adapted to its habits. The Uruguay has formed an
-insuperable obstacle to its migration: although the broader barrier of
-the Parana has been passed, and the bizcacha is common in Entre Rios,
-the province between these two great rivers. Near Buenos Ayres these
-animals are exceedingly common. Their most favourite resort appears to
-be those parts of the plain which during one-half of the year are
-covered with giant thistles, to the exclusion of other plants. The
-Gauchos affirm that it lives on roots; which, from the great strength
-of its gnawing teeth, and the kind of places frequented by it, seems
-probable. In the evening the bizcachas come out in numbers, and quietly
-sit at the mouths of their burrows on their haunches. At such times
-they are very tame, and a man on horseback passing by seems only to
-present an object for their grave contemplation. They run very
-awkwardly, and when running out of danger, from their elevated tails
-and short front legs much resemble great rats. Their flesh, when
-cooked, is very white and good, but it is seldom used.
-
-The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging every hard
-object to the mouth of its burrow: around each group of holes many
-bones of cattle, stones, thistle-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung,
-etc., are collected into an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to
-as much as a wheelbarrow would contain. I was credibly informed that a
-gentleman, when riding on a dark night, dropped his watch; he returned
-in the morning, and by searching the neighbourhood of every bizcacha
-hole on the line of road, as he expected, he soon found it. This habit
-of picking up whatever may be lying on the ground anywhere near its
-habitation, must cost much trouble. For what purpose it is done, I am
-quite unable to form even the most remote conjecture: it cannot be for
-defence, because the rubbish is chiefly placed above the mouth of the
-burrow, which enters the ground at a very small inclination. No doubt
-there must exist some good reason; but the inhabitants of the country
-are quite ignorant of it. The only fact which I know analogous to it,
-is the habit of that extraordinary Australian bird, the Calodera
-maculata, which makes an elegant vaulted passage of twigs for playing
-in, and which collects near the spot, land and sea-shells, bones and
-the feathers of birds, especially brightly coloured ones. Mr. Gould,
-who has described these facts, informs me, that the natives, when they
-lose any hard object, search the playing passages, and he has known a
-tobacco-pipe thus recovered.
-
-The little owl (Athene cunicularia), which has been so often mentioned,
-on the plains of Buenos Ayres exclusively inhabits the holes of the
-bizcacha; but in Banda Oriental it is its own workman. During the open
-day, but more especially in the evening, these birds may be seen in
-every direction standing frequently by pairs on the hillock near their
-burrows. If disturbed they either enter the hole, or, uttering a
-shrill harsh cry, move with a remarkably undulatory flight to a short
-distance, and then turning round, steadily gaze at their pursuer.
-Occasionally in the evening they may be heard hooting. I found in the
-stomachs of two which I opened the remains of mice, and I one day saw a
-small snake killed and carried away. It is said that snakes are their
-common prey during the daytime. I may here mention, as showing on what
-various kinds of food owls subsist, that a species killed among the
-islets of the Chonos Archipelago, had its stomach full of good-sized
-crabs. In India [2] there is a fishing genus of owls, which likewise
-catches crabs.
-
-In the evening we crossed the Rio Arrecife on a simple raft made of
-barrels lashed together, and slept at the post-house on the other side.
-I this day paid horse-hire for thirty-one leagues; and although the sun
-was glaring hot I was but little fatigued. When Captain Head talks of
-riding fifty leagues a day, I do not imagine the distance is equal to
-150 English miles. At all events, the thirty-one leagues was only 76
-miles in a straight line, and in an open country I should think four
-additional miles for turnings would be a sufficient allowance.
-
-29th and 30th.--We continued to ride over plains of the same character.
-At San Nicolas I first saw the noble river of the Parana. At the foot
-of the cliff on which the town stands, some large vessels were at
-anchor. Before arriving at Rozario, we crossed the Saladillo, a stream
-of fine clear running water, but too saline to drink. Rozario is a
-large town built on a dead level plain, which forms a cliff about sixty
-feet high over the Parana. The river here is very broad, with many
-islands, which are low and wooded, as is also the opposite shore. The
-view would resemble that of a great lake, if it were not for the
-linear-shaped islets, which alone give the idea of running water. The
-cliffs are the most picturesque part; sometimes they are absolutely
-perpendicular, and of a red colour; at other times in large broken
-masses, covered with cacti and mimosa-trees. The real grandeur,
-however, of an immense river like this, is derived from reflecting how
-important a means of communication and commerce it forms between one
-nation and another; to what a distance it travels, and from how vast a
-territory it drains the great body of fresh water which flows past your
-feet.
-
-For many leagues north and south of San Nicolas and Rozario, the
-country is really level. Scarcely anything which travellers have
-written about its extreme flatness, can be considered as exaggeration.
-Yet I could never find a spot where, by slowly turning round, objects
-were not seen at greater distances in some directions than in others;
-and this manifestly proves inequality in the plain. At sea, a person's
-eye being six feet above the surface of the water, his horizon is two
-miles and four-fifths distant. In like manner, the more level the
-plain, the more nearly does the horizon approach within these narrow
-limits; and this, in my opinion, entirely destroys that grandeur which
-one would have imagined that a vast level plain would have possessed.
-
-October 1st.--We started by moonlight and arrived at the Rio Tercero by
-sunrise. The river is also called the Saladillo, and it deserves the
-name, for the water is brackish. I stayed here the greater part of the
-day, searching for fossil bones. Besides a perfect tooth of the
-Toxodon, and many scattered bones, I found two immense skeletons near
-each other, projecting in bold relief from the perpendicular cliff of
-the Parana. They were, however, so completely decayed, that I could
-only bring away small fragments of one of the great molar teeth; but
-these are sufficient to show that the remains belonged to a Mastodon,
-probably to the same species with that, which formerly must have
-inhabited the Cordillera in Upper Peru in such great numbers. The men
-who took me in the canoe, said they had long known of these skeletons,
-and had often wondered how they had got there: the necessity of a
-theory being felt, they came to the conclusion that, like the bizcacha,
-the mastodon was formerly a burrowing animal! In the evening we rode
-another stage, and crossed the Monge, another brackish stream, bearing
-the dregs of the washings of the Pampas.
-
-October 2nd.--We passed through Corunda, which, from the luxuriance of
-its gardens, was one of the prettiest villages I saw. From this point
-to St. Fe the road is not very safe. The western side of the Parana
-northward, ceases to be inhabited; and hence the Indians sometimes come
-down thus far, and waylay travellers. The nature of the country also
-favours this, for instead of a grassy plain, there is an open woodland,
-composed of low prickly mimosas. We passed some houses that had been
-ransacked and since deserted; we saw also a spectacle, which my guides
-viewed with high satisfaction; it was the skeleton of an Indian with
-the dried skin hanging on the bones, suspended to the branch of a tree.
-
-In the morning we arrived at St. Fe. I was surprised to observe how
-great a change of climate a difference of only three degrees of
-latitude between this place and Buenos Ayres had caused. This was
-evident from the dress and complexion of the men--from the increased
-size of the ombu-trees--the number of new cacti and other plants--and
-especially from the birds. In the course of an hour I remarked
-half-a-dozen birds, which I had never seen at Buenos Ayres. Considering
-that there is no natural boundary between the two places, and that the
-character of the country is nearly similar, the difference was much
-greater than I should have expected.
-
-October 3rd and 4th.--I was confined for these two days to my bed by a
-headache. A good-natured old woman, who attended me, wished me to try
-many odd remedies. A common practice is, to bind an orange-leaf or a
-bit of black plaster to each temple: and a still more general plan is,
-to split a bean into halves, moisten them, and place one on each
-temple, where they will easily adhere. It is not thought proper ever
-to remove the beans or plaster, but to allow them to drop off, and
-sometimes, if a man, with patches on his head, is asked, what is the
-matter? he will answer, "I had a headache the day before yesterday."
-Many of the remedies used by the people of the country are ludicrously
-strange, but too disgusting to be mentioned. One of the least nasty is
-to kill and cut open two puppies and bind them on each side of a broken
-limb. Little hairless dogs are in great request to sleep at the feet
-of invalids.
-
-St. Fe is a quiet little town, and is kept clean and in good order. The
-governor, Lopez, was a common soldier at the time of the revolution;
-but has now been seventeen years in power. This stability of
-government is owing to his tyrannical habits; for tyranny seems as yet
-better adapted to these countries than republicanism. The governor's
-favourite occupation is hunting Indians: a short time since he
-slaughtered forty-eight, and sold the children at the rate of three or
-four pounds apiece.
-
-October 5th.--We crossed the Parana to St. Fe Bajada, a town on the
-opposite shore. The passage took some hours, as the river here
-consisted of a labyrinth of small streams, separated by low wooded
-islands. I had a letter of introduction to an old Catalonian Spaniard,
-who treated me with the most uncommon hospitality. The Bajada is the
-capital of Entre Rios. In 1825 the town contained 6000 inhabitants,
-and the province 30,000; yet, few as the inhabitants are, no province
-has suffered more from bloody and desperate revolutions. They boast
-here of representatives, ministers, a standing army, and governors: so
-it is no wonder that they have their revolutions. At some future day
-this must be one of the richest countries of La Plata. The soil is
-varied and productive; and its almost insular form gives it two grand
-lines of communication by the rivers Parana and Uruguay.
-
-
-I was delayed here five days, and employed myself in examining the
-geology of the surrounding country, which was very interesting. We
-here see at the bottom of the cliffs, beds containing sharks' teeth and
-sea-shells of extinct species, passing above into an indurated marl,
-and from that into the red clayey earth of the Pampas, with its
-calcareous concretions and the bones of terrestrial quadrupeds. This
-vertical section clearly tells us of a large bay of pure salt-water,
-gradually encroached on, and at last converted into the bed of a muddy
-estuary, into which floating carcasses were swept. At Punta Gorda, in
-Banda Oriental, I found an alternation of the Pampaean estuary deposit,
-with a limestone containing some of the same extinct sea-shells; and
-this shows either a change in the former currents, or more probably an
-oscillation of level in the bottom of the ancient estuary. Until
-lately, my reasons for considering the Pampaean formation to be an
-estuary deposit were, its general appearance, its position at the mouth
-of the existing great river the Plata, and the presence of so many
-bones of terrestrial quadrupeds: but now Professor Ehrenberg has had
-the kindness to examine for me a little of the red earth, taken from
-low down in the deposit, close to the skeletons of the mastodon, and he
-finds in it many infusoria, partly salt-water and partly fresh-water
-forms, with the latter rather preponderating; and therefore, as he
-remarks, the water must have been brackish. M. A. d'Orbigny found on
-the banks of the Parana, at the height of a hundred feet, great beds of
-an estuary shell, now living a hundred miles lower down nearer the sea;
-and I found similar shells at a less height on the banks of the
-Uruguay; this shows that just before the Pampas was slowly elevated
-into dry land, the water covering it was brackish. Below Buenos Ayres
-there are upraised beds of sea-shells of existing species, which also
-proves that the period of elevation of the Pampas was within the recent
-period.
-
-In the Pampaean deposit at the Bajada I found the osseous armour of a
-gigantic armadillo-like animal, the inside of which, when the earth was
-removed, was like a great cauldron; I found also teeth of the Toxodon
-and Mastodon, and one tooth of a Horse, in the same stained and decayed
-state. This latter tooth greatly interested me, [3] and I took
-scrupulous care in ascertaining that it had been embedded
-contemporaneously with the other remains; for I was not then aware that
-amongst the fossils from Bahia Blanca there was a horse's tooth hidden
-in the matrix: nor was it then known with certainty that the remains of
-horses are common in North America. Mr. Lyell has lately brought from
-the United States a tooth of a horse; and it is an interesting fact,
-that Professor Owen could find in no species, either fossil or recent,
-a slight but peculiar curvature characterizing it, until he thought of
-comparing it with my specimen found here: he has named this American
-horse Equus curvidens. Certainly it is a marvellous fact in the
-history of the Mammalia, that in South America a native horse should
-have lived and disappeared, to be succeeded in after-ages by the
-countless herds descended from the few introduced with the Spanish
-colonists!
-
-The existence in South America of a fossil horse, of the mastodon,
-possibly of an elephant, [4] and of a hollow-horned ruminant,
-discovered by MM. Lund and Clausen in the caves of Brazil, are highly
-interesting facts with respect to the geographical distribution of
-animals. At the present time, if we divide America, not by the Isthmus
-of Panama, but by the southern part of Mexico [5] in lat. 20 degs.,
-where the great table-land presents an obstacle to the migration of
-species, by affecting the climate, and by forming, with the exception
-of some valleys and of a fringe of low land on the coast, a broad
-barrier; we shall then have the two zoological provinces of North and
-South America strongly contrasted with each other. Some few species
-alone have passed the barrier, and may be considered as wanderers from
-the south, such as the puma, opossum, kinkajou, and peccari. South
-America is characterized by possessing many peculiar gnawers, a family
-of monkeys, the llama, peccari, tapir, opossums, and, especially,
-several genera of Edentata, the order which includes the sloths,
-ant-eaters, and armadilloes. North America, on the other hand, is
-characterized (putting on one side a few wandering species) by numerous
-peculiar gnawers, and by four genera (the ox, sheep, goat, and
-antelope) of hollow-horned ruminants, of which great division South
-America is not known to possess a single species. Formerly, but within
-the period when most of the now existing shells were living, North
-America possessed, besides hollow-horned ruminants, the elephant,
-mastodon, horse, and three genera of Edentata, namely, the Megatherium,
-Megalonyx, and Mylodon. Within nearly this same period (as proved by
-the shells at Bahia Blanca) South America possessed, as we have just
-seen, a mastodon, horse, hollow-horned ruminant, and the same three
-genera (as well as several others) of the Edentata. Hence it is
-evident that North and South America, in having within a late
-geological period these several genera in common, were much more
-closely related in the character of their terrestrial inhabitants than
-they now are. The more I reflect on this case, the more interesting it
-appears: I know of no other instance where we can almost mark the
-period and manner of the splitting up of one great region into two
-well-characterized zoological provinces. The geologist, who is fully
-impressed with the vast oscillations of level which have affected the
-earth's crust within late periods, will not fear to speculate on the
-recent elevation of the Mexican platform, or, more probably, on the
-recent submergence of land in the West Indian Archipelago, as the cause
-of the present zoological separation of North and South America. The
-South American character of the West Indian mammals [6] seems to
-indicate that this archipelago was formerly united to the southern
-continent, and that it has subsequently been an area of subsidence.
-
-When America, and especially North America, possessed its elephants,
-mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants, it was much more closely
-related in its zoological characters to the temperate parts of Europe
-and Asia than it now is. As the remains of these genera are found on
-both sides of Behring's Straits [7] and on the plains of Siberia, we
-are led to look to the north-western side of North America as the
-former point of communication between the Old and so-called New World.
-And as so many species, both living and extinct, of these same genera
-inhabit and have inhabited the Old World, it seems most probable that
-the North American elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned
-ruminants migrated, on land since submerged near Behring's Straits,
-from Siberia into North America, and thence, on land since submerged in
-the West Indies, into South America, where for a time they mingled with
-the forms characteristic of that southern continent, and have since
-become extinct.
-
-
-While travelling through the country, I received several vivid
-descriptions of the effects of a late great drought; and the account of
-this may throw some light on the cases where vast numbers of animals of
-all kinds have been embedded together. The period included between the
-years 1827 and 1830 is called the "gran seco," or the great drought.
-During this time so little rain fell, that the vegetation, even to the
-thistles, failed; the brooks were dried up, and the whole country
-assumed the appearance of a dusty high road. This was especially the
-case in the northern part of the province of Buenos Ayres and the
-southern part of St. Fe. Very great numbers of birds, wild animals,
-cattle, and horses perished from the want of food and water. A man
-told me that the deer [8] used to come into his courtyard to the well,
-which he had been obliged to dig to supply his own family with water;
-and that the partridges had hardly strength to fly away when pursued.
-The lowest estimation of the loss of cattle in the province of Buenos
-Ayres alone, was taken at one million head. A proprietor at San Pedro
-had previously to these years 20,000 cattle; at the end not one
-remained. San Pedro is situated in the middle of the finest country;
-and even now abounds again with animals; yet during the latter part of
-the "gran seco," live cattle were brought in vessels for the
-consumption of the inhabitants. The animals roamed from their
-estancias, and, wandering far southward, were mingled together in such
-multitudes, that a government commission was sent from Buenos Ayres to
-settle the disputes of the owners. Sir Woodbine Parish informed me of
-another and very curious source of dispute; the ground being so long
-dry, such quantities of dust were blown about, that in this open
-country the landmarks became obliterated, and people could not tell the
-limits of their estates.
-
-I was informed by an eye-witness that the cattle in herds of thousands
-rushed into the Parana, and being exhausted by hunger they were unable
-to crawl up the muddy banks, and thus were drowned. The arm of the
-river which runs by San Pedro was so full of putrid carcasses, that the
-master of a vessel told me that the smell rendered it quite impassable.
-Without doubt several hundred thousand animals thus perished in the
-river: their bodies when putrid were seen floating down the stream; and
-many in all probability were deposited in the estuary of the Plata. All
-the small rivers became highly saline, and this caused the death of
-vast numbers in particular spots; for when an animal drinks of such
-water it does not recover. Azara describes [9] the fury of the wild
-horses on a similar occasion, rushing into the marshes, those which
-arrived first being overwhelmed and crushed by those which followed. He
-adds that more than once he has seen the carcasses of upwards of a
-thousand wild horses thus destroyed. I noticed that the smaller
-streams in the Pampas were paved with a breccia of bones but this
-probably is the effect of a gradual increase, rather than of the
-destruction at any one period. Subsequently to the drought of 1827 to
-1832, a very rainy season followed which caused great floods. Hence it
-is almost certain that some thousands of the skeletons were buried by
-the deposits of the very next year. What would be the opinion of a
-geologist, viewing such an enormous collection of bones, of all kinds
-of animals and of all ages, thus embedded in one thick earthy mass?
-Would he not attribute it to a flood having swept over the surface of
-the land, rather than to the common order of things? [10]
-
-October 12th.--I had intended to push my excursion further, but not
-being quite well, I was compelled to return by a balandra, or
-one-masted vessel of about a hundred tons' burden, which was bound to
-Buenos Ayres. As the weather was not fair, we moored early in the day
-to a branch of a tree on one of the islands. The Parana is full of
-islands, which undergo a constant round of decay and renovation. In the
-memory of the master several large ones had disappeared, and others
-again had been formed and protected by vegetation. They are composed
-of muddy sand, without even the smallest pebble, and were then about
-four feet above the level of the river; but during the periodical
-floods they are inundated. They all present one character; numerous
-willows and a few other trees are bound together by a great variety of
-creeping plants, thus forming a thick jungle. These thickets afford a
-retreat for capybaras and jaguars. The fear of the latter animal quite
-destroyed all pleasure in scrambling through the woods. This evening I
-had not proceeded a hundred yards, before finding indubitable signs of
-the recent presence of the tiger, I was obliged to come back. On every
-island there were tracks; and as on the former excursion "el rastro de
-los Indios" had been the subject of conversation, so in this was "el
-rastro del tigre." The wooded banks of the great rivers appear to be
-the favourite haunts of the jaguar; but south of the Plata, I was told
-that they frequented the reeds bordering lakes: wherever they are, they
-seem to require water. Their common prey is the capybara, so that it
-is generally said, where capybaras are numerous there is little danger
-from the jaguar. Falconer states that near the southern side of the
-mouth of the Plata there are many jaguars, and that they chiefly live
-on fish; this account I have heard repeated. On the Parana they have
-killed many wood-cutters, and have even entered vessels at night. There
-is a man now living in the Bajada, who, coming up from below when it
-was dark, was seized on the deck; he escaped, however, with the loss of
-the use of one arm. When the floods drive these animals from the
-islands, they are most dangerous. I was told that a few years since a
-very large one found its way into a church at St. Fe: two padres
-entering one after the other were killed, and a third, who came to see
-what was the matter, escaped with difficulty. The beast was destroyed
-by being shot from a corner of the building which was unroofed. They
-commit also at these times great ravages among cattle and horses. It
-is said that they kill their prey by breaking their necks. If driven
-from the carcass, they seldom return to it. The Gauchos say that the
-jaguar, when wandering about at night, is much tormented by the foxes
-yelping as they follow him. This is a curious coincidence with the
-fact which is generally affirmed of the jackals accompanying, in a
-similarly officious manner, the East Indian tiger. The jaguar is a
-noisy animal, roaring much by night, and especially before bad weather.
-
-One day, when hunting on the banks of the Uruguay, I was shown certain
-trees, to which these animals constantly recur for the purpose, as it
-is said, of sharpening their claws. I saw three well-known trees; in
-front, the bark was worn smooth, as if by the breast of the animal, and
-on each side there were deep scratches, or rather grooves, extending in
-an oblique line, nearly a yard in length. The scars were of different
-ages. A common method of ascertaining whether a jaguar is in the
-neighbourhood is to examine these trees. I imagine this habit of the
-jaguar is exactly similar to one which may any day be seen in the
-common cat, as with outstretched legs and exserted claws it scrapes the
-leg of a chair; and I have heard of young fruit-trees in an orchard in
-England having been thus much injured. Some such habit must also be
-common to the puma, for on the bare hard soil of Patagonia I have
-frequently seen scores so deep that no other animal could have made
-them. The object of this practice is, I believe, to tear off the
-ragged points of their claws, and not, as the Gauchos think, to sharpen
-them. The jaguar is killed, without much difficulty, by the aid of
-dogs baying and driving him up a tree, where he is despatched with
-bullets.
-
-Owing to bad weather we remained two days at our moorings. Our only
-amusement was catching fish for our dinner: there were several kinds,
-and all good eating. A fish called the "armado" (a Silurus) is
-remarkable from a harsh grating noise which it makes when caught by
-hook and line, and which can be distinctly heard when the fish is
-beneath the water. This same fish has the power of firmly catching
-hold of any object, such as the blade of an oar or the fishing-line,
-with the strong spine both of its pectoral and dorsal fin. In the
-evening the weather was quite tropical, the thermometer standing at 79
-degs. Numbers of fireflies were hovering about, and the musquitoes
-were very troublesome. I exposed my hand for five minutes, and it was
-soon black with them; I do not suppose there could have been less than
-fifty, all busy sucking.
-
-October 15th.--We got under way and passed Punta Gorda, where there is
-a colony of tame Indians from the province of Missiones. We sailed
-rapidly down the current, but before sunset, from a silly fear of bad
-weather, we brought-to in a narrow arm of the river. I took the boat
-and rowed some distance up this creek. It was very narrow, winding,
-and deep; on each side a wall thirty or forty feet high, formed by
-trees intwined with creepers, gave to the canal a singularly gloomy
-appearance. I here saw a very extraordinary bird, called the
-Scissor-beak (Rhynchops nigra). It has short legs, web feet, extremely
-long-pointed wings, and is of about the size of a tern. The beak is
-flattened laterally, that is, in a plane at right angles to that of a
-spoonbill or duck. It is as flat and elastic as an ivory paper-cutter,
-and the lower mandible, differing from every other bird, is an inch and
-a half longer than the upper. In a lake near Maldonado, from which the
-water had been nearly drained, and which, in consequence, swarmed with
-small fry, I saw several of these birds, generally in small flocks,
-flying rapidly backwards and forwards close to the surface of the lake.
-They kept their bills wide open, and the lower mandible half buried in
-the water. Thus skimming the surface, they ploughed it in their
-course: the water was quite smooth, and it formed a most curious
-spectacle to behold a flock, each bird leaving its narrow wake on the
-mirror-like surface. In their flight they frequently twist about with
-extreme quickness, and dexterously manage with their projecting lower
-mandible to plough up small fish, which are secured by the upper and
-shorter half of their scissor-like
-
-[picture]
-
-bills. This fact I repeatedly saw, as, like swallows, they continued
-to fly backwards and forwards close before me. Occasionally when
-leaving the surface of the water their flight was wild, irregular, and
-rapid; they then uttered loud harsh cries. When these birds are
-fishing, the advantage of the long primary feathers of their wings, in
-keeping them dry, is very evident. When thus employed, their forms
-resemble the symbol by which many artists represent marine birds. Their
-tails are much used in steering their irregular course.
-
-These birds are common far inland along the course of the Rio Parana;
-it is said that they remain here during the whole year, and breed in
-the marshes. During the day they rest in flocks on the grassy plains
-at some distance from the water. Being at anchor, as I have said, in
-one of the deep creeks between the islands of the Parana, as the
-evening drew to a close, one of these scissor-beaks suddenly appeared.
-The water was quite still, and many little fish were rising. The bird
-continued for a long time to skim the surface, flying in its wild and
-irregular manner up and down the narrow canal, now dark with the
-growing night and the shadows of the overhanging trees. At Monte
-Video, I observed that some large flocks during the day remained on the
-mud-banks at the head of the harbour, in the same manner as on the
-grassy plains near the Parana; and every evening they took flight
-seaward. From these facts I suspect that the Rhynchops generally
-fishes by night, at which time many of the lower animals come most
-abundantly to the surface. M. Lesson states that he has seen these
-birds opening the shells of the mactrae buried in the sand-banks on the
-coast of Chile: from their weak bills, with the lower mandible so much
-projecting, their short legs and long wings, it is very improbable that
-this can be a general habit.
-
-In our course down the Parana, I observed only three other birds, whose
-habits are worth mentioning. One is a small kingfisher (Ceryle
-Americana); it has a longer tail than the European species, and hence
-does not sit in so stiff and upright a position. Its flight also,
-instead of being direct and rapid, like the course of an arrow, is weak
-and undulatory, as among the soft-billed birds. It utters a low note,
-like the clicking together of two small stones. A small green parrot
-(Conurus murinus), with a grey breast, appears to prefer the tall trees
-on the islands to any other situation for its building-place. A number
-of nests are placed so close together as to form one great mass of
-sticks. These parrots always live in flocks, and commit great ravages
-on the corn-fields. I was told, that near Colonia 2500 were killed in
-the course of one year. A bird with a forked tail, terminated by two
-long feathers (Tyrannus savana), and named by the Spaniards
-scissor-tail, is very common near Buenos Ayres: it commonly sits on a
-branch of the _ombu_ tree, near a house, and thence takes a short
-flight in pursuit of insects, and returns to the same spot. When on
-the wing it presents in its manner of flight and general appearance a
-caricature-likeness of the common swallow. It has the power of turning
-very shortly in the air, and in so doing opens and shuts its tail,
-sometimes in a horizontal or lateral and sometimes in a vertical
-direction, just like a pair of scissors.
-
-October 16th.--Some leagues below Rozario, the western shore of the
-Parana is bounded by perpendicular cliffs, which extend in a long line
-to below San Nicolas; hence it more resembles a sea-coast than that of
-a fresh-water river. It is a great drawback to the scenery of the
-Parana, that, from the soft nature of its banks, the water is very
-muddy. The Uruguay, flowing through a granitic country, is much
-clearer; and where the two channels unite at the head of the Plata, the
-waters may for a long distance be distinguished by their black and red
-colours. In the evening, the wind being not quite fair, as usual we
-immediately moored, and the next day, as it blew rather freshly, though
-with a favouring current, the master was much too indolent to think of
-starting. At Bajada, he was described to me as "hombre muy aflicto"--a
-man always miserable to get on; but certainly he bore all delays with
-admirable resignation. He was an old Spaniard, and had been many years
-in this country. He professed a great liking to the English, but
-stoutly maintained that the battle of Trafalgar was merely won by the
-Spanish captains having been all bought over; and that the only really
-gallant action on either side was performed by the Spanish admiral. It
-struck me as rather characteristic, that this man should prefer his
-countrymen being thought the worst of traitors, rather than unskilful
-or cowardly.
-
-18th and 19th.--We continued slowly to sail down the noble stream: the
-current helped us but little. We met, during our descent, very few
-vessels. One of the best gifts of nature, in so grand a channel of
-communication, seems here wilfully thrown away--a river in which ships
-might navigate from a temperate country, as surprisingly abundant in
-certain productions as destitute of others, to another possessing a
-tropical climate, and a soil which, according to the best of judges, M.
-Bonpland, is perhaps unequalled in fertility in any part of the world.
-How different would have been the aspect of this river if English
-colonists had by good fortune first sailed up the Plata! What noble
-towns would now have occupied its shores! Till the death of Francia,
-the Dictator of Paraguay, these two countries must remain distinct, as
-if placed on opposite sides of the globe. And when the old
-bloody-minded tyrant is gone to his long account, Paraguay will be torn
-by revolutions, violent in proportion to the previous unnatural calm.
-That country will have to learn, like every other South American state,
-that a republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body of men
-imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
-
-October 20th.--Being arrived at the mouth of the Parana, and as I was
-very anxious to reach Buenos Ayres, I went on shore at Las Conchas,
-with the intention of riding there. Upon landing, I found to my great
-surprise that I was to a certain degree a prisoner. A violent
-revolution having broken out, all the ports were laid under an embargo.
-I could not return to my vessel, and as for going by land to the city,
-it was out of the question. After a long conversation with the
-commandant, I obtained permission to go the next day to General Rolor,
-who commanded a division of the rebels on this side the capital. In
-the morning I rode to the encampment. The general, officers, and
-soldiers, all appeared, and I believe really were, great villains. The
-general, the very evening before he left the city, voluntarily went to
-the Governor, and with his hand to his heart, pledged his word of
-honour that he at least would remain faithful to the last. The general
-told me that the city was in a state of close blockade, and that all he
-could do was to give me a passport to the commander-in-chief of the
-rebels at Quilmes. We had therefore to take a great sweep round the
-city, and it was with much difficulty that we procured horses. My
-reception at the encampment was quite civil, but I was told it was
-impossible that I could be allowed to enter the city. I was very
-anxious about this, as I anticipated the Beagle's departure from the
-Rio Plata earlier than it took place. Having mentioned, however,
-General Rosas's obliging kindness to me when at the Colorado, magic
-itself could not have altered circumstances quicker than did this
-conversation. I was instantly told that though they could not give me
-a passport, if I chose to leave my guide and horses, I might pass their
-sentinels. I was too glad to accept of this, and an officer was sent
-with me to give directions that I should not be stopped at the bridge.
-The road for the space of a league was quite deserted. I met one party
-of soldiers, who were satisfied by gravely looking at an old passport:
-and at length I was not a little pleased to find myself within the city.
-
-This revolution was supported by scarcely any pretext of grievances:
-but in a state which, in the course of nine months (from February to
-October, 1820), underwent fifteen changes in its government--each
-governor, according to the constitution, being elected for three
-years--it would be very unreasonable to ask for pretexts. In this
-case, a party of men--who, being attached to Rosas, were disgusted with
-the governor Balcarce--to the number of seventy left the city, and with
-the cry of Rosas the whole country took arms. The city was then
-blockaded, no provisions, cattle or horses, were allowed to enter;
-besides this, there was only a little skirmishing, and a few men daily
-killed. The outside party well knew that by stopping the supply of
-meat they would certainly be victorious. General Rosas could not have
-known of this rising; but it appears to be quite consonant with the
-plans of his party. A year ago he was elected governor, but he refused
-it, unless the Sala would also confer on him extraordinary powers. This
-was refused, and since then his party have shown that no other governor
-can keep his place. The warfare on both sides was avowedly protracted
-till it was possible to hear from Rosas. A note arrived a few days
-after I left Buenos Ayres, which stated that the General disapproved of
-peace having been broken, but that he thought the outside party had
-justice on their side. On the bare reception of this, the Governor,
-ministers, and part of the military, to the number of some hundreds,
-fled from the city. The rebels entered, elected a new governor, and
-were paid for their services to the number of 5500 men. From these
-proceedings, it was clear that Rosas ultimately would become the
-dictator: to the term king, the people in this, as in other republics,
-have a particular dislike. Since leaving South America, we have heard
-that Rosas has been elected, with powers and for a time altogether
-opposed to the constitutional principles of the republic.
-
-[1] The bizcacha (Lagostomus trichodactylus) somewhat resembles a large
-rabbit, but with bigger gnawing teeth and a long tail; it has, however,
-only three toes behind, like the agouti. During the last three or four
-years the skins of these animals have been sent to England for the sake
-of the fur.
-
-[2] Journal of Asiatic Soc., vol. v. p. 363.
-
-[3] I need hardly state here that there is good evidence against any
-horse living in America at the time of Columbus.
-
-[4] Cuvier. Ossemens Fossils, tom. i. p. 158.
-
-[5] This is the geographical division followed by Lichtenstein,
-Swainson, Erichson, and Richardson. The section from Vera Cruz to
-Acapulco, given by Humboldt in the Polit. Essay on Kingdom of N. Spain
-will show how immense a barrier the Mexican table-land forms. Dr.
-Richardson, in his admirable Report on the Zoology of N. America read
-before the Brit. Assoc. 1836 (p. 157), talking of the identification of
-a Mexican animal with the Synetheres prehensilis, says, "We do not know
-with what propriety, but if correct, it is, if not a solitary instance,
-at least very nearly so, of a rodent animal being common to North and
-South America."
-
-[6] See Dr. Richardson's Report, p. 157; also L'Institut, 1837, p. 253.
-Cuvier says the kinkajou is found in the larger Antilles, but this is
-doubtful. M. Gervais states that the Didelphis crancrivora is found
-there. It is certain that the West Indies possess some mammifers
-peculiar to themselves. A tooth of a mastadon has been brought from
-Bahama; Edin. New Phil. Journ., 1826, p. 395.
-
-[7] See the admirable Appendix by Dr. Buckland to Beechey's Voyage;
-also the writings of Chamisso in Kotzebue's Voyage.
-
-[8] In Captain Owen's Surveying Voyage (vol. ii. p. 274) there is a
-curious account of the effects of a drought on the elephants, at
-Benguela (west coast of Africa). "A number of these animals had some
-time since entered the town, in a body, to possess themselves of the
-wells, not being able to procure any water in the country. The
-inhabitants mustered, when a desperate conflict ensued, which
-terminated in the ultimate discomfiture of the invaders, but not until
-they had killed one man, and wounded several others." The town is said
-to have a population of nearly three thousand! Dr. Malcolmson informs
-me that, during a great drought in India, the wild animals entered the
-tents of some troops at Ellore, and that a hare drank out of a vessel
-held by the adjutant of the regiment.
-
-[9] Travels, vol. i. p. 374.
-
-[10] These droughts to a certain degree seem to be almost periodical; I
-was told the dates of several others, and the intervals were about
-fifteen years.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
-
-Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento--Value of an Estancia--Cattle, how
-counted--Singular Breed of Oxen--Perforated Pebbles--Shepherd
-Dogs--Horses broken-in, Gauchos riding--Character of Inhabitants--Rio
-Plata--Flocks of Butterflies--Aeronaut Spiders--Phosphorescence of the
-Sea--Port Desire--Guanaco--Port St. Julian--Geology of
-Patagonia--Fossil gigantic Animal--Types of Organization
-constant--Change in the Zoology of America--Causes of Extinction.
-
-
-HAVING been delayed for nearly a fortnight in the city, I was glad to
-escape on board a packet bound for Monte Video. A town in a state of
-blockade must always be a disagreeable place of residence; in this case
-moreover there were constant apprehensions from robbers within. The
-sentinels were the worst of all; for, from their office and from having
-arms in their hands, they robbed with a degree of authority which other
-men could not imitate.
-
-Our passage was a very long and tedious one. The Plata looks like a
-noble estuary on the map; but is in truth a poor affair. A wide
-expanse of muddy water has neither grandeur nor beauty. At one time of
-the day, the two shores, both of which are extremely low, could just be
-distinguished from the deck. On arriving at Monte Video I found that
-the Beagle would not sail for some time, so I prepared for a short
-excursion in this part of Banda Oriental. Everything which I have said
-about the country near Maldonado is applicable to Monte Video; but the
-land, with the one exception of the Green Mount 450 feet high, from
-which it takes its name, is far more level. Very little of the
-undulating grassy plain is enclosed; but near the town there are a few
-hedge-banks, covered with agaves, cacti, and fennel.
-
-November 14th.--We left Monte Video in the afternoon. I intended to
-proceed to Colonia del Sacramiento, situated on the northern bank of
-the Plata and opposite to Buenos Ayres, and thence, following up the
-Uruguay, to the village of Mercedes on the Rio Negro (one of the many
-rivers of this name in South America), and from this point to return
-direct to Monte Video. We slept at the house of my guide at Canelones.
-In the morning we rose early, in the hopes of being able to ride a good
-distance; but it was a vain attempt, for all the rivers were flooded.
-We passed in boats the streams of Canelones, St. Lucia, and San Jose,
-and thus lost much time. On a former excursion I crossed the Lucia
-near its mouth, and I was surprised to observe how easily our horses,
-although not used to swim, passed over a width of at least six hundred
-yards. On mentioning this at Monte Video, I was told that a vessel
-containing some mountebanks and their horses, being wrecked in the
-Plata, one horse swam seven miles to the shore. In the course of the
-day I was amused by the dexterity with which a Gaucho forced a restive
-horse to swim a river. He stripped off his clothes, and jumping on its
-back, rode into the water till it was out of its depth; then slipping
-off over the crupper, he caught hold of the tail, and as often as the
-horse turned round the man frightened it back by splashing water in its
-face. As soon as the horse touched the bottom on the other side, the
-man pulled himself on, and was firmly seated, bridle in hand, before
-the horse gained the bank. A naked man on a naked horse is a fine
-spectacle; I had no idea how well the two animals suited each other.
-The tail of a horse is a very useful appendage; I have passed a river
-in a boat with four people in it, which was ferried across in the same
-way as the Gaucho. If a man and horse have to cross a broad river, the
-best plan is for the man to catch hold of the pommel or mane, and help
-himself with the other arm.
-
-We slept and stayed the following day at the post of Cufre. In the
-evening the postman or letter-carrier arrived. He was a day after his
-time, owing to the Rio Rozario being flooded. It would not, however,
-be of much consequence; for, although he had passed through some of the
-principal towns in Banda Oriental, his luggage consisted of two
-letters! The view from the house was pleasing; an undulating green
-surface, with distant glimpses of the Plata. I find that I look at
-this province with very different eyes from what I did upon my first
-arrival. I recollect I then thought it singularly level; but now,
-after galloping over the Pampas, my only surprise is, what could have
-induced me ever to call it level. The country is a series of
-undulations, in themselves perhaps not absolutely great, but, as
-compared to the plains of St. Fe, real mountains. From these
-inequalities there is an abundance of small rivulets, and the turf is
-green and luxuriant.
-
-November 17th.--We crossed the Rozario, which was deep and rapid, and
-passing the village of Colla, arrived at midday at Colonia del
-Sacramiento. The distance is twenty leagues, through a country covered
-with fine grass, but poorly stocked with cattle or inhabitants. I was
-invited to sleep at Colonia, and to accompany on the following day a
-gentleman to his estancia, where there were some limestone rocks. The
-town is built on a stony promontory something in the same manner as at
-Monte Video. It is strongly fortified, but both fortifications and
-town suffered much in the Brazilian war. It is very ancient; and the
-irregularity of the streets, and the surrounding groves of old orange
-and peach trees, gave it a pretty appearance. The church is a curious
-ruin; it was used as a powder-magazine, and was struck by lightning in
-one of the ten thousand thunderstorms of the Rio Plata. Two-thirds of
-the building were blown away to the very foundation; and the rest
-stands a shattered and curious monument of the united powers of
-lightning and gunpowder. In the evening I wandered about the
-half-demolished walls of the town. It was the chief seat of the
-Brazilian war;--a war most injurious to this country, not so much in
-its immediate effects, as in being the origin of a multitude of
-generals and all other grades of officers. More generals are numbered
-(but not paid) in the United Provinces of La Plata than in the United
-Kingdom of Great Britain. These gentlemen have learned to like power,
-and do not object to a little skirmishing. Hence there are many always
-on the watch to create disturbance and to overturn a government which
-as yet has never rested on any staple foundation. I noticed, however,
-both here and in other places, a very general interest in the ensuing
-election for the President; and this appears a good sign for the
-prosperity of this little country. The inhabitants do not require much
-education in their representatives; I heard some men discussing the
-merits of those for Colonia; and it was said that, "although they were
-not men of business, they could all sign their names:" with this they
-seemed to think every reasonable man ought to be satisfied.
-
-18th.--Rode with my host to his estancia, at the Arroyo de San Juan. In
-the evening we took a ride round the estate: it contained two square
-leagues and a half, and was situated in what is called a rincon; that
-is, one side was fronted by the Plata, and the two others guarded by
-impassable brooks. There was an excellent port for little vessels, and
-an abundance of small wood, which is valuable as supplying fuel to
-Buenos Ayres. I was curious to know the value of so complete an
-estancia. Of cattle there were 3000, and it would well support three
-or four times that number; of mares 800, together with 150 broken-in
-horses, and 600 sheep. There was plenty of water and limestone, a
-rough house, excellent corrals, and a peach orchard. For all this he
-had been offered 2000 Pounds, and he only wanted 500 Pounds additional,
-and probably would sell it for less. The chief trouble with an
-estancia is driving the cattle twice a week to a central spot, in order
-to make them tame, and to count them. This latter operation would be
-thought difficult, where there are ten or fifteen thousand head
-together. It is managed on the principle that the cattle invariably
-divide themselves into little troops of from forty to one hundred. Each
-troop is recognized by a few peculiarly marked animals, and its number
-is known: so that, one being lost out of ten thousand, it is perceived
-by its absence from one of the tropillas. During a stormy night the
-cattle all mingle together; but the next morning the tropillas separate
-as before; so that each animal must know its fellow out of ten thousand
-others.
-
-On two occasions I met with in this province some oxen of a very
-curious breed, called nata or niata. They appear externally to hold
-nearly the same relation to other cattle, which bull or pug dogs do to
-other dogs. Their forehead is very short and broad, with the nasal end
-turned up, and the upper lip much drawn back; their lower jaws project
-beyond the upper, and have a corresponding upward curve; hence their
-teeth are always exposed. Their nostrils are seated high up and are
-very open; their eyes project outwards. When walking they carry their
-heads low, on a short neck; and their hinder legs are rather longer
-compared with the front legs than is usual. Their bare teeth, their
-short heads, and upturned nostrils give them the most ludicrous
-self-confident air of defiance imaginable.
-
-Since my return, I have procured a skeleton head, through the kindness
-of my friend Captain Sulivan, R. N., which is now deposited in the
-College of Surgeons. [1] Don F. Muniz, of Luxan, has kindly collected
-for me all the information which he could respecting this breed. From
-his account it seems that about eighty or ninety years ago, they were
-rare and kept as curiosities at Buenos Ayres. The breed is universally
-believed to have originated amongst the Indians southward of the Plata;
-and that it was with them the commonest kind. Even to this day, those
-reared in the provinces near the Plata show their less civilized
-origin, in being fiercer than common cattle, and in the cow easily
-deserting her first calf, if visited too often or molested. It is a
-singular fact that an almost similar structure to the abnormal [2] one
-of the niata breed, characterizes, as I am informed by Dr. Falconer,
-that great extinct ruminant of India, the Sivatherium. The breed is
-very _true_; and a niata bull and cow invariably produce niata calves.
-A niata bull with a common cow, or the reverse cross, produces
-offspring having an intermediate character, but with the niata
-characters strongly displayed: according to Senor Muniz, there is the
-clearest evidence, contrary to the common belief of agriculturists in
-analogous cases, that the niata cow when crossed with a common bull
-transmits her peculiarities more strongly than the niata bull when
-crossed with a common cow. When the pasture is tolerably long, the
-niata cattle feed with the tongue and palate as well as common cattle;
-but during the great droughts, when so many animals perish, the niata
-breed is under a great disadvantage, and would be exterminated if not
-attended to; for the common cattle, like horses, are able just to keep
-alive, by browsing with their lips on twigs of trees and reeds; this
-the niatas cannot so well do, as their lips do not join, and hence they
-are found to perish before the common cattle. This strikes me as a
-good illustration of how little we are able to judge from the ordinary
-habits of life, on what circumstances, occurring only at long
-intervals, the rarity or extinction of a species may be determined.
-
-November 19th.--Passing the valley of Las Vacas, we slept at a house of
-a North American, who worked a lime-kiln on the Arroyo de las Vivoras.
-In the morning we rode to a protecting headland on the banks of the
-river, called Punta Gorda. On the way we tried to find a jaguar. There
-were plenty of fresh tracks, and we visited the trees, on which they
-are said to sharpen their claws; but we did not succeed in disturbing
-one. From this point the Rio Uruguay presented to our view a noble
-volume of water. From the clearness and rapidity of the stream, its
-appearance was far superior to that of its neighbour the Parana. On
-the opposite coast, several branches from the latter river entered the
-Uruguay. As the sun was shining, the two colours of the waters could
-be seen quite distinct.
-
-In the evening we proceeded on our road towards Mercedes on the Rio
-Negro. At night we asked permission to sleep at an estancia at which
-we happened to arrive. It was a very large estate, being ten leagues
-square, and the owner is one of the greatest landowners in the country.
-His nephew had charge of it, and with him there was a captain in the
-army, who the other day ran away from Buenos Ayres. Considering their
-station, their conversation was rather amusing. They expressed, as was
-usual, unbounded astonishment at the globe being round, and could
-scarcely credit that a hole would, if deep enough, come out on the
-other side. They had, however, heard of a country where there were six
-months of light and six of darkness, and where the inhabitants were
-very tall and thin! They were curious about the price and condition of
-horses and cattle in England. Upon finding out we did not catch our
-animals with the lazo, they cried out, "Ah, then, you use nothing but
-the bolas:" the idea of an enclosed country was quite new to them. The
-captain at last said, he had one question to ask me, which he should be
-very much obliged if I would answer with all truth. I trembled to
-think how deeply scientific it would be: it was, "Whether the ladies of
-Buenos Ayres were not the handsomest in the world." I replied, like a
-renegade, "Charmingly so." He added, "I have one other question: Do
-ladies in any other part of the world wear such large combs?" I
-solemnly assured him that they did not. They were absolutely
-delighted. The captain exclaimed, "Look there! a man who has seen half
-the world says it is the case; we always thought so, but now we know
-it." My excellent judgment in combs and beauty procured me a most
-hospitable reception; the captain forced me to take his bed, and he
-would sleep on his recado.
-
-21st.--Started at sunrise, and rode slowly during the whole day. The
-geological nature of this part of the province was different from the
-rest, and closely resembled that of the Pampas. In consequence, there
-were immense beds of the thistle, as well as of the cardoon: the whole
-country, indeed, may be called one great bed of these plants. The two
-sorts grow separate, each plant in company with its own kind. The
-cardoon is as high as a horse's back, but the Pampas thistle is often
-higher than the crown of the rider's head. To leave the road for a
-yard is out of the question; and the road itself is partly, and in some
-cases entirely closed. Pasture, of course there is none; if cattle or
-horses once enter the bed, they are for the time completely lost. Hence
-it is very hazardous to attempt to drive cattle at this season of the
-year; for when jaded enough to face the thistles, they rush among them,
-and are seen no more. In these districts there are very few estancias,
-and these few are situated in the neighbourhood of damp valleys, where
-fortunately neither of these overwhelming plants can exist. As night
-came on before we arrived at our journey's end, we slept at a miserable
-little hovel inhabited by the poorest people. The extreme though
-rather formal courtesy of our host and hostess, considering their grade
-of life, was quite delightful.
-
-November 22nd.--Arrived at an estancia on the Berquelo belonging to a
-very hospitable Englishman, to whom I had a letter of introduction from
-my friend Mr. Lumb. I stayed here three days. One morning I rode with
-my host to the Sierra del Pedro Flaco, about twenty miles up the Rio
-Negro. Nearly the whole country was covered with good though coarse
-grass, which was as high as a horse's belly; yet there were square
-leagues without a single head of cattle. The province of Banda
-Oriental, if well stocked, would support an astonishing number of
-animals, at present the annual export of hides from Monte Video amounts
-to three hundred thousand; and the home consumption, from waste, is
-very considerable. An "estanciero" told me that he often had to send
-large herds of cattle a long journey to a salting establishment, and
-that the tired beasts were frequently obliged to be killed and skinned;
-but that he could never persuade the Gauchos to eat of them, and every
-evening a fresh beast was slaughtered for their suppers! The view of
-the Rio Negro from the Sierra was more picturesque than any other which
-I saw in this province. The river, broad, deep, and rapid, wound at
-the foot of a rocky precipitous cliff: a belt of wood followed its
-course, and the horizon terminated in the distant undulations of the
-turf-plain.
-
-When in this neighbourhood, I several times heard of the Sierra de las
-Cuentas: a hill distant many miles to the northward. The name
-signifies hill of beads. I was assured that vast numbers of little
-round stones, of various colours, each with a small cylindrical hole,
-are found there. Formerly the Indians used to collect them, for the
-purpose of making necklaces and bracelets--a taste, I may observe,
-which is common to all savage nations, as well as to the most polished.
-I did not know what to understand from this story, but upon mentioning
-it at the Cape of Good Hope to Dr. Andrew Smith, he told me that he
-recollected finding on the south-eastern coast of Africa, about one
-hundred miles to the eastward of St. John's river, some quartz
-crystals with their edges blunted from attrition, and mixed with gravel
-on the sea-beach. Each crystal was about five lines in diameter, and
-from an inch to an inch and a half in length. Many of them had a small
-canal extending from one extremity to the other, perfectly cylindrical,
-and of a size that readily admitted a coarse thread or a piece of fine
-catgut. Their colour was red or dull white. The natives were
-acquainted with this structure in crystals. I have mentioned these
-circumstances because, although no crystallized body is at present
-known to assume this form, it may lead some future traveller to
-investigate the real nature of such stones.
-
-
-While staying at this estancia, I was amused with what I saw and heard
-of the shepherd-dogs of the country. [3] When riding, it is a common
-thing to meet a large flock of sheep guarded by one or two dogs, at the
-distance of some miles from any house or man. I often wondered how so
-firm a friendship had been established. The method of education
-consists in separating the puppy, while very young, from the bitch, and
-in accustoming it to its future companions. An ewe is held three or
-four times a day for the little thing to suck, and a nest of wool is
-made for it in the sheep-pen; at no time is it allowed to associate
-with other dogs, or with the children of the family. The puppy is,
-moreover, generally castrated; so that, when grown up, it can scarcely
-have any feelings in common with the rest of its kind. From this
-education it has no wish to leave the flock, and just as another dog
-will defend its master, man, so will these the sheep. It is amusing to
-observe, when approaching a flock, how the dog immediately advances
-barking, and the sheep all close in his rear, as if round the oldest
-ram. These dogs are also easily taught to bring home the flock, at a
-certain hour in the evening. Their most troublesome fault, when young,
-is their desire of playing with the sheep; for in their sport they
-sometimes gallop their poor subjects most unmercifully.
-
-The shepherd-dog comes to the house every day for some meat, and as
-soon as it is given him, he skulks away as if ashamed of himself. On
-these occasions the house-dogs are very tyrannical, and the least of
-them will attack and pursue the stranger. The minute, however, the
-latter has reached the flock, he turns round and begins to bark, and
-then all the house-dogs take very quickly to their heels. In a similar
-manner a whole pack of the hungry wild dogs will scarcely ever (and I
-was told by some never) venture to attack a flock guarded by even one
-of these faithful shepherds. The whole account appears to me a curious
-instance of the pliability of the affections in the dog; and yet,
-whether wild or however educated, he has a feeling of respect or fear
-for those that are fulfilling their instinct of association. For we
-can understand on no principle the wild dogs being driven away by the
-single one with its flock, except that they consider, from some
-confused notion, that the one thus associated gains power, as if in
-company with its own kind. F. Cuvier has observed that all animals that
-readily enter into domestication, consider man as a member of their own
-society, and thus fulfil their instinct of association. In the above
-case the shepherd-dog ranks the sheep as its fellow-brethren, and thus
-gains confidence; and the wild dogs, though knowing that the individual
-sheep are not dogs, but are good to eat, yet partly consent to this
-view when seeing them in a flock with a shepherd-dog at their head.
-
-One evening a "domidor" (a subduer of horses) came for the purpose of
-breaking-in some colts. I will describe the preparatory steps, for I
-believe they have not been mentioned by other travellers. A troop of
-wild young horses is driven into the corral, or large enclosure of
-stakes, and the door is shut. We will suppose that one man alone has
-to catch and mount a horse, which as yet had never felt bridle or
-saddle. I conceive, except by a Gaucho, such a feat would be utterly
-impracticable. The Gaucho picks out a full-grown colt; and as the
-beast rushes round the circus he throws his lazo so as to catch both
-the front legs. Instantly the horse rolls over with a heavy shock, and
-whilst struggling on the ground, the Gaucho, holding the lazo tight,
-makes a circle, so as to catch one of the hind legs just beneath the
-fetlock, and draws it close to the two front legs: he then hitches the
-lazo, so that the three are bound together. Then sitting on the
-horse's neck, he fixes a strong bridle, without a bit, to the lower
-jaw: this he does by passing a narrow thong through the eye-holes at
-the end of the reins, and several times round both jaw and tongue. The
-two front legs are now tied closely together with a strong leathern
-thong, fastened by a slip-knot. The lazo, which bound the three
-together, being then loosed, the horse rises with difficulty. The
-Gaucho now holding fast the bridle fixed to the lower jaw, leads the
-horse outside the corral. If a second man is present (otherwise the
-trouble is much greater) he holds the animal's head, whilst the first
-puts on the horsecloths and saddle, and girths the whole together.
-During this operation, the horse, from dread and astonishment at thus
-being bound round the waist, throws himself over and over again on the
-ground, and, till beaten, is unwilling to rise. At last, when the
-saddling is finished, the poor animal can hardly breathe from fear, and
-is white with foam and sweat. The man now prepares to mount by
-pressing heavily on the stirrup, so that the horse may not lose its
-balance; and at the moment that he throws his leg over the animal's
-back, he pulls the slip-knot binding the front legs, and the beast is
-free. Some "domidors" pull the knot while the animal is lying on the
-ground, and, standing over the saddle, allow him to rise beneath them.
-The horse, wild with dread, gives a few most violent bounds, and then
-starts off at full gallop: when quite exhausted, the man, by patience,
-brings him back to the corral, where, reeking hot and scarcely alive,
-the poor beast is let free. Those animals which will not gallop away,
-but obstinately throw themselves on the ground, are by far the most
-troublesome. This process is tremendously severe, but in two or three
-trials the horse is tamed. It is not, however, for some weeks that the
-animal is ridden with the iron bit and solid ring, for it must learn to
-associate the will of its rider with the feel of the rein, before the
-most powerful bridle can be of any service.
-
-Animals are so abundant in these countries, that humanity and
-self-interest are not closely united; therefore I fear it is that the
-former is here scarcely known. One day, riding in the Pampas with a
-very respectable "estanciero," my horse, being tired, lagged behind.
-The man often shouted to me to spur him. When I remonstrated that it
-was a pity, for the horse was quite exhausted, he cried out, "Why
-not?--never mind--spur him--it is my horse." I had then some difficulty
-in making him comprehend that it was for the horse's sake, and not on
-his account, that I did not choose to use my spurs. He exclaimed, with
-a look of great surprise, "Ah, Don Carlos, que cosa!" It was clear that
-such an idea had never before entered his head.
-
-The Gauchos are well known to be perfect riders. The idea of being
-thrown, let the horse do what it likes; never enters their head. Their
-criterion of a good rider is, a man who can manage an untamed colt, or
-who, if his horse falls, alights on his own feet, or can perform other
-such exploits. I have heard of a man betting that he would throw his
-horse down twenty times, and that nineteen times he would not fall
-himself. I recollect seeing a Gaucho riding a very stubborn horse,
-which three times successively reared so high as to fall backwards with
-great violence. The man judged with uncommon coolness the proper
-moment for slipping off, not an instant before or after the right time;
-and as soon as the horse got up, the man jumped on his back, and at
-last they started at a gallop. The Gaucho never appears to exert any
-muscular force. I was one day watching a good rider, as we were
-galloping along at a rapid pace, and thought to myself, "Surely if the
-horse starts, you appear so careless on your seat, you must fall." At
-this moment, a male ostrich sprang from its nest right beneath the
-horse's nose: the young colt bounded on one side like a stag; but as
-for the man, all that could be said was, that he started and took
-fright with his horse.
-
-In Chile and Peru more pains are taken with the mouth of the horse than
-in La Plata, and this is evidently a consequence of the more intricate
-nature of the country. In Chile a horse is not considered perfectly
-broken, till he can be brought up standing, in the midst of his full
-speed, on any particular spot,--for instance, on a cloak thrown on the
-ground: or, again, he will charge a wall, and rearing, scrape the
-surface with his hoofs. I have seen an animal bounding with spirit,
-yet merely reined by a fore-finger and thumb, taken at full gallop
-across a courtyard, and then made to wheel round the post of a veranda
-with great speed, but at so equal a distance, that the rider, with
-outstretched arm, all the while kept one finger rubbing the post. Then
-making a demi-volte in the air, with the other arm outstretched in a
-like manner, he wheeled round, with astonishing force, in an opposite
-direction.
-
-Such a horse is well broken; and although this at first may appear
-useless, it is far otherwise. It is only carrying that which is daily
-necessary into perfection. When a bullock is checked and caught by the
-lazo, it will sometimes gallop round and round in a circle, and the
-horse being alarmed at the great strain, if not well broken, will not
-readily turn like the pivot of a wheel. In consequence many men have
-been killed; for if the lazo once takes a twist round a man's body, it
-will instantly, from the power of the two opposed animals, almost cut
-him in twain. On the same principle the races are managed; the course
-is only two or three hundred yards long, the wish being to have horses
-that can make a rapid dash. The race-horses are trained not only to
-stand with their hoofs touching a line, but to draw all four feet
-together, so as at the first spring to bring into play the full action
-of the hind-quarters. In Chile I was told an anecdote, which I believe
-was true; and it offers a good illustration of the use of a well-broken
-animal. A respectable man riding one day met two others, one of whom
-was mounted on a horse, which he knew to have been stolen from himself.
-He challenged them; they answered him by drawing their sabres and
-giving chase. The man, on his good and fleet beast, kept just ahead:
-as he passed a thick bush he wheeled round it, and brought up his horse
-to a dead check. The pursuers were obliged to shoot on one side and
-ahead. Then instantly dashing on, right behind them, he buried his
-knife in the back of one, wounded the other, recovered his horse from
-the dying robber, and rode home. For these feats of horsemanship two
-things are necessary: a most severe bit, like the Mameluke, the power
-of which, though seldom used, the horse knows full well; and large
-blunt spurs, that can be applied either as a mere touch, or as an
-instrument of extreme pain. I conceive that with English spurs, the
-slightest touch of which pricks the skin, it would be impossible to
-break in a horse after the South American fashion.
-
-At an estancia near Las Vacas large numbers of mares are weekly
-slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although worth only five paper
-dollars, or about half a crown apiece. It seems at first strange that
-it can answer to kill mares for such a trifle; but as it is thought
-ridiculous in this country ever to break in or ride a mare, they are of
-no value except for breeding. The only thing for which I ever saw
-mares used, was to tread out wheat from the ear, for which purpose they
-were driven round a circular enclosure, where the wheat-sheaves were
-strewed. The man employed for slaughtering the mares happened to be
-celebrated for his dexterity with the lazo. Standing at the distance
-of twelve yards from the mouth of the corral, he has laid a wager that
-he would catch by the legs every animal, without missing one, as it
-rushed past him. There was another man who said he would enter the
-corral on foot, catch a mare, fasten her front legs together, drive her
-out, throw her down, kill, skin, and stake the hide for drying (which
-latter is a tedious job); and he engaged that he would perform this
-whole operation on twenty-two animals in one day. Or he would kill and
-take the skin off fifty in the same time. This would have been a
-prodigious task, for it is considered a good day's work to skin and
-stake the hides of fifteen or sixteen animals.
-
-November 26th.--I set out on my return in a direct line for Monte
-Video. Having heard of some giant's bones at a neighbouring farm-house
-on the Sarandis, a small stream entering the Rio Negro, I rode there
-accompanied by my host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence
-the head of the Toxodon. [4] When found it was quite perfect; but the
-boys knocked out some of the teeth with stones, and then set up the
-head as a mark to throw at. By a most fortunate chance I found a
-perfect tooth, which exactly fitted one of the sockets in this skull,
-embedded by itself on the banks of the Rio Tercero, at the distance of
-about 180 miles from this place. I found remains of this extraordinary
-animal at two other places, so that it must formerly have been common.
-I found here, also, some large portions of the armour of a gigantic
-armadillo-like animal, and part of the great head of a Mylodon. The
-bones of this head are so fresh, that they contain, according to the
-analysis by Mr. T. Reeks, seven per cent of animal matter; and when
-placed in a spirit-lamp, they burn with a small flame. The number of
-the remains embedded in the grand estuary deposit which forms the
-Pampas and covers the granitic rocks of Banda Oriental, must be
-extraordinarily great. I believe a straight line drawn in any
-direction through the Pampas would cut through some skeleton or bones.
-Besides those which I found during my short excursions, I heard of many
-others, and the origin of such names as "the stream of the animal,"
-"the hill of the giant," is obvious. At other times I heard of the
-marvellous property of certain rivers, which had the power of changing
-small bones into large; or, as some maintained, the bones themselves
-grew. As far as I am aware, not one of these animals perished, as was
-formerly supposed, in the marshes or muddy river-beds of the present
-land, but their bones have been exposed by the streams intersecting the
-subaqueous deposit in which they were originally embedded. We may
-conclude that the whole area of the Pampas is one wide sepulchre of
-these extinct gigantic quadrupeds.
-
-By the middle of the day, on the 28th, we arrived at Monte Video,
-having been two days and a half on the road. The country for the whole
-way was of a very uniform character, some parts being rather more rocky
-and hilly than near the Plata. Not far from Monte Video we passed
-through the village of Las Pietras, so named from some large rounded
-masses of syenite. Its appearance was rather pretty. In this country
-a few fig-trees round a group of houses, and a site elevated a hundred
-feet above the general level, ought always to be called picturesque.
-
-
-During the last six months I have had an opportunity of seeing a little
-of the character of the inhabitants of these provinces. The Gauchos,
-or countryrmen, are very superior to those who reside in the towns. The
-Gaucho is invariably most obliging, polite, and hospitable: I did not
-meet with even one instance of rudeness or inhospitality. He is
-modest, both respecting himself and country, but at the same time a
-spirited, bold fellow. On the other hand, many robberies are
-committed, and there is much bloodshed: the habit of constantly wearing
-the knife is the chief cause of the latter. It is lamentable to hear
-how many lives are lost in trifling quarrels. In fighting, each party
-tries to mark the face of his adversary by slashing his nose or eyes;
-as is often attested by deep and horrid-looking scars. Robberies are a
-natural consequence of universal gambling, much drinking, and extreme
-indolence. At Mercedes I asked two men why they did not work. One
-gravely said the days were too long; the other that he was too poor.
-The number of horses and the profusion of food are the destruction of
-all industry. Moreover, there are so many feast-days; and again,
-nothing can succeed without it be begun when the moon is on the
-increase; so that half the month is lost from these two causes.
-
-Police and justice are quite inefficient. If a man who is poor commits
-murder and is taken, he will be imprisoned, and perhaps even shot; but
-if he is rich and has friends, he may rely on it no very severe
-consequence will ensue. It is curious that the most respectable
-inhabitants of the country invariably assist a murderer to escape: they
-seem to think that the individual sins against the government, and not
-against the people. A traveller has no protection besides his
-fire-arms; and the constant habit of carrying them is the main check to
-more frequent robberies. The character of the higher and more educated
-classes who reside in the towns, partakes, but perhaps in a lesser
-degree, of the good parts of the Gaucho, but is, I fear, stained by
-many vices of which he is free. Sensuality, mockery of all religion,
-and the grossest corruption, are far from uncommon. Nearly every
-public officer can be bribed. The head man in the post-office sold
-forged government franks. The governor and prime minister openly
-combined to plunder the state. Justice, where gold came into play, was
-hardly expected by any one. I knew an Englishman, who went to the
-Chief Justice (he told me, that not then understanding the ways of the
-place, he trembled as he entered the room), and said, "Sir, I have come
-to offer you two hundred (paper) dollars (value about five pounds
-sterling) if you will arrest before a certain time a man who has
-cheated me. I know it is against the law, but my lawyer (naming him)
-recommended me to take this step." The Chief Justice smiled
-acquiescence, thanked him, and the man before night was safe in prison.
-With this entire want of principle in many of the leading men, with the
-country full of ill-paid turbulent officers, the people yet hope that a
-democratic form of government can succeed!
-
-On first entering society in these countries, two or three features
-strike one as particularly remarkable. The polite and dignified
-manners pervading every rank of life, the excellent taste displayed by
-the women in their dresses, and the equality amongst all ranks. At the
-Rio Colorado some men who kept the humblest shops used to dine with
-General Rosas. A son of a major at Bahia Blanca gained his livelihood
-by making paper cigars, and he wished to accompany me, as guide or
-servant, to Buenos Ayres, but his father objected on the score of the
-danger alone. Many officers in the army can neither read nor write,
-yet all meet in society as equals. In Entre Rios, the Sala consisted
-of only six representatives. One of them kept a common shop, and
-evidently was not degraded by the office. All this is what would be
-expected in a new country; nevertheless the absence of gentlemen by
-profession appears to an Englishman something strange.
-
-When speaking of these countries, the manner in which they have been
-brought up by their unnatural parent, Spain, should always be borne in
-mind. On the whole, perhaps, more credit is due for what has been
-done, than blame for that which may be deficient. It is impossible to
-doubt but that the extreme liberalism of these countries must
-ultimately lead to good results. The very general toleration of
-foreign religions, the regard paid to the means of education, the
-freedom of the press, the facilities offered to all foreigners, and
-especially, as I am bound to add, to every one professing the humblest
-pretensions to science, should be recollected with gratitude by those
-who have visited Spanish South America.
-
-December 6th.--The Beagle sailed from the Rio Plata, never again to
-enter its muddy stream. Our course was directed to Port Desire, on the
-coast of Patagonia. Before proceeding any further, I will here put
-together a few observations made at sea.
-
-Several times when the ship has been some miles off the mouth of the
-Plata, and at other times when off the shores of Northern Patagonia, we
-have been surrounded by insects. One evening, when we were about ten
-miles from the Bay of San Blas, vast numbers of butterflies, in bands
-or flocks of countless myriads, extended as far as the eye could range.
-Even by the aid of a telescope it was not possible to see a space free
-from butterflies. The seamen cried out "it was snowing butterflies,"
-and such in fact was the appearance. More species than one were
-present, but the main part belonged to a kind very similar to, but not
-identical with, the common English Colias edusa. Some moths and
-hymenoptera accompanied the butterflies; and a fine beetle (Calosoma)
-flew on board. Other instances are known of this beetle having been
-caught far out at sea; and this is the more remarkable, as the greater
-number of the Carabidae seldom or never take wing. The day had been
-fine and calm, and the one previous to it equally so, with light and
-variable airs. Hence we cannot suppose that the insects were blown off
-the land, but we must conclude that they voluntarily took flight. The
-great bands of the Colias seem at first to afford an instance like
-those on record of the migrations of another butterfly, Vanessa cardui;
-[5] but the presence of other insects makes the case distinct, and even
-less intelligible. Before sunset a strong breeze sprung up from the
-north, and this must have caused tens of thousands of the butterflies
-and other insects to have perished.
-
-On another occasion, when seventeen miles off Cape Corrientes, I had a
-net overboard to catch pelagic animals. Upon drawing it up, to my
-surprise, I found a considerable number of beetles in it, and although
-in the open sea, they did not appear much injured by the salt water. I
-lost some of the specimens, but those which I preserved belonged to the
-genera Colymbetes, Hydroporus, Hydrobius (two species), Notaphus,
-Cynucus, Adimonia, and Scarabaeus. At first I thought that these
-insects had been blown from the shore; but upon reflecting that out of
-the eight species four were aquatic, and two others partly so in their
-habits, it appeared to me most probable that they were floated into the
-sea by a small stream which drains a lake near Cape Corrientes. On any
-supposition it is an interesting circumstance to find live insects
-swimming in the open ocean seventeen miles from the nearest point of
-land. There are several accounts of insects having been blown off the
-Patagonian shore. Captain Cook observed it, as did more lately Captain
-King of the Adventure. The cause probably is due to the want of
-shelter, both of trees and hills, so that an insect on the wing with an
-off-shore breeze, would be very apt to be blown out to sea. The most
-remarkable instance I have known of an insect being caught far from the
-land, was that of a large grasshopper (Acrydium), which flew on board,
-when the Beagle was to windward of the Cape de Verd Islands, and when
-the nearest point of land, not directly opposed to the trade-wind, was
-Cape Blanco on the coast of Africa, 370 miles distant. [6]
-
-On several occasions, when the Beagle has been within the mouth of the
-Plata, the rigging has been coated with the web of the Gossamer Spider.
-One day (November 1st, 1832) I paid particular attention to this
-subject. The weather had been fine and clear, and in the morning the
-air was full of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in
-England. The ship was sixty miles distant from the land, in the
-direction of a steady though light breeze. Vast numbers of a small
-spider, about one-tenth of an inch in length, and of a dusky red
-colour, were attached to the webs. There must have been, I should
-suppose, some thousands on the ship. The little spider, when first
-coming in contact with the rigging, was always seated on a single
-thread, and not on the flocculent mass. This latter seems merely to be
-produced by the entanglement of the single threads. The spiders were
-all of one species, but of both sexes, together with young ones. These
-latter were distinguished by their smaller size and more dusky colour.
-I will not give the description of this spider, but merely state that
-it does not appear to me to be included in any of Latreille's genera.
-The little aeronaut as soon as it arrived on board was very active,
-running about, sometimes letting itself fall, and then reascending the
-same thread; sometimes employing itself in making a small and very
-irregular mesh in the corners between the ropes. It could run with
-facility on the surface of the water. When disturbed it lifted up its
-front legs, in the attitude of attention. On its first arrival it
-appeared very thirsty, and with exserted maxillae drank eagerly of
-drops of water, this same circumstance has been observed by Strack: may
-it not be in consequence of the little insect having passed through a
-dry and rarefied atmosphere? Its stock of web seemed inexhaustible.
-While watching some that were suspended by a single thread, I several
-times observed that the slightest breath of air bore them away out of
-sight, in a horizontal line.
-
-On another occasion (25th) under similar circumstances, I repeatedly
-observed the same kind of small spider, either when placed or having
-crawled on some little eminence, elevate its abdomen, send forth a
-thread, and then sail away horizontally, but with a rapidity which was
-quite unaccountable. I thought I could perceive that the spider,
-before performing the above preparatory steps, connected its legs
-together with the most delicate threads, but I am not sure whether this
-observation was correct.
-
-One day, at St. Fe, I had a better opportunity of observing some
-similar facts. A spider which was about three-tenths of an inch in
-length, and which in its general appearance resembled a Citigrade
-(therefore quite different from the gossamer), while standing on the
-summit of a post, darted forth four or five threads from its spinners.
-These, glittering in the sunshine, might be compared to diverging rays
-of light; they were not, however, straight, but in undulations like
-films of silk blown by the wind. They were more than a yard in length,
-and diverged in an ascending direction from the orifices. The spider
-then suddenly let go its hold of the post, and was quickly borne out of
-sight. The day was hot and apparently calm; yet under such
-circumstances, the atmosphere can never be so tranquil as not to affect
-a vane so delicate as the thread of a spider's web. If during a warm
-day we look either at the shadow of any object cast on a bank, or over
-a level plain at a distant landmark, the effect of an ascending current
-of heated air is almost always evident: such upward currents, it has
-been remarked, are also shown by the ascent of soap-bubbles, which will
-not rise in an in-doors room. Hence I think there is not much
-difficulty in understanding the ascent of the fine lines projected from
-a spider's spinners, and afterwards of the spider itself; the
-divergence of the lines has been attempted to be explained, I believe
-by Mr. Murray, by their similar electrical condition. The circumstance
-of spiders of the same species, but of different sexes and ages, being
-found on several occasions at the distance of many leagues from the
-land, attached in vast numbers to the lines, renders it probable that
-the habit of sailing through the air is as characteristic of this
-tribe, as that of diving is of the Argyroneta. We may then reject
-Latreille's supposition, that the gossamer owes its origin
-indifferently to the young of several genera of spiders: although, as
-we have seen, the young of other spiders do possess the power of
-performing aerial voyages. [7]
-
-During our different passages south of the Plata, I often towed astern
-a net made of bunting, and thus caught many curious animals. Of
-Crustacea there were many strange and undescribed genera. One, which
-in some respects is allied to the Notopods (or those crabs which have
-their posterior legs placed almost on their backs, for the purpose of
-adhering to the under side of rocks), is very remarkable from the
-structure of its hind pair of legs. The penultimate joint, instead of
-terminating in a simple claw, ends in three bristle-like appendages of
-dissimilar lengths--the longest equalling that of the entire leg. These
-claws are very thin, and are serrated with the finest teeth, directed
-backwards: their curved extremities are flattened, and on this part
-five most minute cups are placed which seem to act in the same manner
-as the suckers on the arms of the cuttle-fish. As the animal lives in
-the open sea, and probably wants a place of rest, I suppose this
-beautiful and most anomalous structure is adapted to take hold of
-floating marine animals.
-
-In deep water, far from the land, the number of living creatures is
-extremely small: south of the latitude 35 degs., I never succeeded in
-catching anything besides some beroe, and a few species of minute
-entomostracous crustacea. In shoaler water, at the distance of a few
-miles from the coast, very many kinds of crustacea and some other
-animals are numerous, but only during the night. Between latitudes 56
-and 57 degs. south of Cape Horn, the net was put astern several times;
-it never, however, brought up anything besides a few of two extremely
-minute species of Entomostraca. Yet whales and seals, petrels and
-albatross, are exceedingly abundant throughout this part of the ocean.
-It has always been a mystery to me on what the albatross, which lives
-far from the shore, can subsist; I presume that, like the condor, it is
-able to fast long; and that one good feast on the carcass of a putrid
-whale lasts for a long time. The central and intertropical parts of
-the Atlantic swarm with Pteropoda, Crustacea, and Radiata, and with
-their devourers the flying-fish, and again with their devourers the
-bonitos and albicores; I presume that the numerous lower pelagic
-animals feed on the Infusoria, which are now known, from the researches
-of Ehrenberg, to abound in the open ocean: but on what, in the clear
-blue water, do these Infusoria subsist?
-
-While sailing a little south of the Plata on one very dark night, the
-sea presented a wonderful and most beautiful spectacle. There was a
-fresh breeze, and every part of the surface, which during the day is
-seen as foam, now glowed with a pale light. The vessel drove before
-her bows two billows of liquid phosphorus, and in her wake she was
-followed by a milky train. As far as the eye reached, the crest of
-every wave was bright, and the sky above the horizon, from the
-reflected glare of these livid flames, was not so utterly obscure as
-over the vault of the heavens.
-
-As we proceed further southward the sea is seldom phosphorescent; and
-off Cape Horn I do not recollect more than once having seen it so, and
-then it was far from being brilliant. This circumstance probably has a
-close connection with the scarcity of organic beings in that part of
-the ocean. After the elaborate paper, [8] by Ehrenberg, on the
-phosphorescence of the sea, it is almost superfluous on my part to make
-any observations on the subject. I may however add, that the same torn
-and irregular particles of gelatinous matter, described by Ehrenberg,
-seem in the southern as well as in the northern hemisphere, to be the
-common cause of this phenomenon. The particles were so minute as
-easily to pass through fine gauze; yet many were distinctly visible by
-the naked eye. The water when placed in a tumbler and agitated, gave
-out sparks, but a small portion in a watch-glass scarcely ever was
-luminous. Ehrenberg states that these particles all retain a certain
-degree of irritability. My observations, some of which were made
-directly after taking up the water, gave a different result. I may
-also mention, that having used the net during one night, I allowed it
-to become partially dry, and having occasion twelve hours afterwards to
-employ it again, I found the whole surface sparkled as brightly as when
-first taken out of the water. It does not appear probable in this case,
-that the particles could have remained so long alive. On one occasion
-having kept a jelly-fish of the genus Dianaea till it was dead, the
-water in which it was placed became luminous. When the waves
-scintillate with bright green sparks, I believe it is generally owing
-to minute crustacea. But there can be no doubt that very many other
-pelagic animals, when alive, are phosphorescent.
-
-On two occasions I have observed the sea luminous at considerable
-depths beneath the surface. Near the mouth of the Plata some circular
-and oval patches, from two to four yards in diameter, and with defined
-outlines, shone with a steady but pale light; while the surrounding
-water only gave out a few sparks. The appearance resembled the
-reflection of the moon, or some luminous body; for the edges were
-sinuous from the undulations of the surface. The ship, which drew
-thirteen feet of water, passed over, without disturbing these patches.
-Therefore we must suppose that some animals were congregated together
-at a greater depth than the bottom of the vessel.
-
-Near Fernando Noronha the sea gave out light in flashes. The appearance
-was very similar to that which might be expected from a large fish
-moving rapidly through a luminous fluid. To this cause the sailors
-attributed it; at the time, however, I entertained some doubts, on
-account of the frequency and rapidity of the flashes. I have already
-remarked that the phenomenon is very much more common in warm than in
-cold countries; and I have sometimes imagined that a disturbed
-electrical condition of the atmosphere was most favourable to its
-production. Certainly I think the sea is most luminous after a few
-days of more calm weather than ordinary, during which time it has
-swarmed with various animals. Observing that the water charged with
-gelatinous particles is in an impure state, and that the luminous
-appearance in all common cases is produced by the agitation of the
-fluid in contact with the atmosphere, I am inclined to consider that
-the phosphorescence is the result of the decomposition of the organic
-particles, by which process (one is tempted almost to call it a kind of
-respiration) the ocean becomes purified.
-
-December 23rd.--We arrived at Port Desire, situated in lat. 47 degs.,
-on the coast of Patagonia. The creek runs for about twenty miles
-inland, with an irregular width. The Beagle anchored a few miles
-within the entrance, in front of the ruins of an old Spanish settlement.
-
-The same evening I went on shore. The first landing in any new country
-is very interesting, and especially when, as in this case, the whole
-aspect bears the stamp of a marked and individual character. At the
-height of between two and three hundred feet above some masses of
-porphyry a wide plain extends, which is truly characteristic of
-Patagonia. The surface is quite level, and is composed of well-rounded
-shingle mixed with a whitish earth. Here and there scattered tufts of
-brown wiry grass are supported, and still more rarely, some low thorny
-bushes. The weather is dry and pleasant, and the fine blue sky is but
-seldom obscured. When standing in the middle of one of these desert
-plains and looking towards the interior, the view is generally bounded
-by the escarpment of another plain, rather higher, but equally level
-and desolate; and in every other direction the horizon is indistinct
-from the trembling mirage which seems to rise from the heated surface.
-
-In such a country the fate of the Spanish settlement was soon decided;
-the dryness of the climate during the greater part of the year, and the
-occasional hostile attacks of the wandering Indians, compelled the
-colonists to desert their half-finished buildings. The style, however,
-in which they were commenced shows the strong and liberal hand of Spain
-in the old time. The result of all the attempts to colonize this side
-of America south of 41 degs., has been miserable. Port Famine
-expresses by its name the lingering and extreme sufferings of several
-hundred wretched people, of whom one alone survived to relate their
-misfortunes. At St. Joseph's Bay, on the coast of Patagonia, a small
-settlement was made; but during one Sunday the Indians made an attack
-and massacred the whole party, excepting two men, who remained captives
-during many years. At the Rio Negro I conversed with one of these men,
-now in extreme old age.
-
-The zoology of Patagonia is as limited as its flora. [9] On the arid
-plains a few black beetles (Heteromera) might be seen slowly crawling
-about, and occasionally a lizard darted from side to side. Of birds we
-have three carrion hawks and in the valleys a few finches and
-insect-feeders. An ibis (Theristicus melanops--a species said to be
-found in central Africa) is not uncommon on the most desert parts: in
-their stomachs I found grasshoppers, cicadae, small lizards, and even
-scorpions. [10] At one time of the year these birds go in flocks, at
-another in pairs, their cry is very loud and singular, like the
-neighing of the guanaco.
-
-The guanaco, or wild llama, is the characteristic quadruped of the
-plains of Patagonia; it is the South American representative of the
-camel of the East. It is an elegant animal in a state of nature, with
-a long slender neck and fine legs. It is very common over the whole of
-the temperate parts of the continent, as far south as the islands near
-Cape Horn. It generally lives in small herds of from half a dozen to
-thirty in each; but on the banks of the St. Cruz we saw one herd which
-must have contained at least five hundred.
-
-They are generally wild and extremely wary. Mr. Stokes told me, that
-he one day saw through a glass a herd of these animals which evidently
-had been frightened, and were running away at full speed, although
-their distance was so great that he could not distinguish them with his
-naked eye. The sportsman frequently receives the first notice of their
-presence, by hearing from a long distance their peculiar shrill
-neighing note of alarm. If he then looks attentively, he will probably
-see the herd standing in a line on the side of some distant hill. On
-approaching nearer, a few more squeals are given, and off they set at
-an apparently slow, but really quick canter, along some narrow beaten
-track to a neighbouring hill. If, however, by chance he abruptly meets
-a single animal, or several together, they will generally stand
-motionless and intently gaze at him; then perhaps move on a few yards,
-turn round, and look again. What is the cause of this difference in
-their shyness? Do they mistake a man in the distance for their chief
-enemy the puma? Or does curiosity overcome their timidity? That they
-are curious is certain; for if a person lies on the ground, and plays
-strange antics, such as throwing up his feet in the air, they will
-almost always approach by degrees to reconnoitre him. It was an
-artifice that was repeatedly practised by our sportsmen with success,
-and it had moreover the advantage of allowing several shots to be
-fired, which were all taken as parts of the performance. On the
-mountains of Tierra del Fuego, I have more than once seen a guanaco, on
-being approached, not only neigh and squeal, but prance and leap about
-in the most ridiculous manner, apparently in defiance as a challenge.
-These animals are very easily domesticated, and I have seen some thus
-kept in northern Patagonia near a house, though not under any
-restraint. They are in this state very bold, and readily attack a man
-by striking him from behind with both knees. It is asserted that the
-motive for these attacks is jealousy on account of their females. The
-wild guanacos, however, have no idea of defence; even a single dog will
-secure one of these large animals, till the huntsman can come up. In
-many of their habits they are like sheep in a flock. Thus when they see
-men approaching in several directions on horseback, they soon become
-bewildered, and know not which way to run. This greatly facilitates
-the Indian method of hunting, for they are thus easily driven to a
-central point, and are encompassed.
-
-The guanacos readily take to the water: several times at Port Valdes
-they were seen swimming from island to island. Byron, in his voyage
-says he saw them drinking salt water. Some of our officers likewise saw
-a herd apparently drinking the briny fluid from a salina near Cape
-Blanco. I imagine in several parts of the country, if they do not
-drink salt water, they drink none at all. In the middle of the day
-they frequently roll in the dust, in saucer-shaped hollows. The males
-fight together; two one day passed quite close to me, squealing and
-trying to bite each other; and several were shot with their hides
-deeply scored. Herds sometimes appear to set out on exploring parties:
-at Bahia Blanca, where, within thirty miles of the coast, these animals
-are extremely unfrequent, I one day saw the tracks of thirty or forty,
-which had come in a direct line to a muddy salt-water creek. They then
-must have perceived that they were approaching the sea, for they had
-wheeled with the regularity of cavalry, and had returned back in as
-straight a line as they had advanced. The guanacos have one singular
-habit, which is to me quite inexplicable; namely, that on successive
-days they drop their dung in the same defined heap. I saw one of these
-heaps which was eight feet in diameter, and was composed of a large
-quantity. This habit, according to M. A. d'Orbigny, is common to all
-the species of the genus; it is very useful to the Peruvian Indians,
-who use the dung for fuel, and are thus saved the trouble of collecting
-it.
-
-The guanacos appear to have favourite spots for lying down to die. On
-the banks of the St. Cruz, in certain circumscribed spaces, which were
-generally bushy and all near the river, the ground was actually white
-with bones. On one such spot I counted between ten and twenty heads. I
-particularly examined the bones; they did not appear, as some scattered
-ones which I had seen, gnawed or broken, as if dragged together by
-beasts of prey. The animals in most cases must have crawled, before
-dying, beneath and amongst the bushes. Mr. Bynoe informs me that
-during a former voyage he observed the same circumstance on the banks
-of the Rio Gallegos. I do not at all understand the reason of this,
-but I may observe, that the wounded guanacos at the St. Cruz invariably
-walked towards the river. At St. Jago in the Cape de Verd Islands, I
-remember having seen in a ravine a retired corner covered with bones of
-the goat; we at the time exclaimed that it was the burial ground of all
-the goats in the island. I mention these trifling circumstances,
-because in certain cases they might explain the occurrence of a number
-of uninjured bones in a cave, or buried under alluvial accumulations;
-and likewise the cause why certain animals are more commonly embedded
-than others in sedimentary deposits.
-
-One day the yawl was sent under the command of Mr. Chaffers with three
-days' provisions to survey the upper part of the harbour. In the
-morning we searched for some watering-places mentioned in an old
-Spanish chart. We found one creek, at the head of which there was a
-trickling rill (the first we had seen) of brackish water. Here the
-tide compelled us to wait several hours; and in the interval I walked
-some miles into the interior. The plain as usual consisted of gravel,
-mingled with soil resembling chalk in appearance, but very different
-from it in nature. From the softness of these materials it was worn
-into many gulleys. There was not a tree, and, excepting the guanaco,
-which stood on the hill-top a watchful sentinel over its herd, scarcely
-an animal or a bird. All was stillness and desolation. Yet in passing
-over these scenes, without one bright object near, an ill-defined but
-strong sense of pleasure is vividly excited. One asked how many ages
-the plain had thus lasted, and how many more it was doomed thus to
-continue.
-
-"None can reply--all seems eternal now. The wilderness has a mysterious
-tongue, Which teaches awful doubt." [11]
-
-In the evening we sailed a few miles further up, and then pitched the
-tents for the night. By the middle of the next day the yawl was
-aground, and from the shoalness of the water could not proceed any
-higher. The water being found partly fresh, Mr. Chaffers took the
-dingey and went up two or three miles further, where she also grounded,
-but in a fresh-water river. The water was muddy, and though the stream
-was most insignificant in size, it would be difficult to account for
-its origin, except from the melting snow on the Cordillera. At the
-spot where we bivouacked, we were surrounded by bold cliffs and steep
-pinnacles of porphyry. I do not think I ever saw a spot which appeared
-more secluded from the rest of the world, than this rocky crevice in
-the wide plain.
-
-The second day after our return to the anchorage, a party of officers
-and myself went to ransack an old Indian grave, which I had found on
-the summit of a neighbouring hill. Two immense stones, each probably
-weighing at least a couple of tons, had been placed in front of a ledge
-of rock about six feet high. At the bottom of the grave on the hard
-rock there was a layer of earth about a foot deep, which must have been
-brought up from the plain below. Above it a pavement of flat stones
-was placed, on which others were piled, so as to fill up the space
-between the ledge and the two great blocks. To complete the grave, the
-Indians had contrived to detach from the ledge a huge fragment, and to
-throw it over the pile so as to rest on the two blocks. We undermined
-the grave on both sides, but could not find any relics, or even bones.
-The latter probably had decayed long since (in which case the grave
-must have been of extreme antiquity), for I found in another place some
-smaller heaps beneath which a very few crumbling fragments could yet be
-distinguished as having belonged to a man. Falconer states, that where
-an Indian dies he is buried, but that subsequently his bones are
-carefully taken up and carried, let the distance be ever so great, to
-be deposited near the sea-coast. This custom, I think, may be
-accounted for by recollecting, that before the introduction of horses,
-these Indians must have led nearly the same life as the Fuegians now
-do, and therefore generally have resided in the neighbourhood of the
-sea. The common prejudice of lying where one's ancestors have lain,
-would make the now roaming Indians bring the less perishable part of
-their dead to their ancient burial-ground on the coast.
-
-January 9th, 1834.--Before it was dark the Beagle anchored in the fine
-spacious harbour of Port St. Julian, situated about one hundred and ten
-miles to the south of Port Desire. We remained here eight days. The
-country is nearly similar to that of Port Desire, but perhaps rather
-more sterile. One day a party accompanied Captain Fitz Roy on a long
-walk round the head of the harbour. We were eleven hours without
-tasting any water, and some of the party were quite exhausted. From
-the summit of a hill (since well named Thirsty Hill) a fine lake was
-spied, and two of the party proceeded with concerted signals to show
-whether it was fresh water. What was our disappointment to find a
-snow-white expanse of salt, crystallized in great cubes! We attributed
-our extreme thirst to the dryness of the atmosphere; but whatever the
-cause might be, we were exceedingly glad late in the evening to get
-back to the boats. Although we could nowhere find, during our whole
-visit, a single drop of fresh water, yet some must exist; for by an odd
-chance I found on the surface of the salt water, near the head of the
-bay, a Colymbetes not quite dead, which must have lived in some not far
-distant pool. Three other insects (a Cincindela, like hybrida, a
-Cymindis, and a Harpalus, which all live on muddy flats occasionally
-overflowed by the sea), and one other found dead on the plain, complete
-the list of the beetles. A good-sized fly (Tabanus) was extremely
-numerous, and tormented us by its painful bite. The common horsefly,
-which is so troublesome in the shady lanes of England, belongs to this
-same genus. We here have the puzzle that so frequently occurs in the
-case of musquitoes--on the blood of what animals do these insects
-commonly feed? The guanaco is nearly the only warm-blooded quadruped,
-and it is found in quite inconsiderable numbers compared with the
-multitude of flies.
-
-The geology of Patagonia is interesting. Differently from Europe,
-where the tertiary formations appear to have accumulated in bays, here
-along hundreds of miles of coast we have one great deposit, including
-many tertiary shells, all apparently extinct. The most common shell is
-a massive gigantic oyster, sometimes even a foot in diameter. These
-beds are covered by others of a peculiar soft white stone, including
-much gypsum, and resembling chalk, but really of a pumiceous nature. It
-is highly remarkable, from being composed, to at least one-tenth of its
-bulk, of Infusoria. Professor Ehrenberg has already ascertained in it
-thirty oceanic forms. This bed extends for 500 miles along the coast,
-and probably for a considerably greater distance. At Port St. Julian
-its thickness is more than 800 feet! These white beds are everywhere
-capped by a mass of gravel, forming probably one of the largest beds of
-shingle in the world: it certainly extends from near the Rio Colorado
-to between 600 and 700 nautical miles southward, at Santa Cruz (a river
-a little south of St. Julian), it reaches to the foot of the
-Cordillera; half way up the river, its thickness is more than 200 feet;
-it probably everywhere extends to this great chain, whence the
-well-rounded pebbles of porphyry have been derived: we may consider its
-average breadth as 200 miles, and its average thickness as about 50
-feet. If this great bed of pebbles, without including the mud
-necessarily derived from their attrition, was piled into a mound, it
-would form a great mountain chain! When we consider that all these
-pebbles, countless as the grains of sand in the desert, have been
-derived from the slow falling of masses of rock on the old coast-lines
-and banks of rivers, and that these fragments have been dashed into
-smaller pieces, and that each of them has since been slowly rolled,
-rounded, and far transported the mind is stupefied in thinking over the
-long, absolutely necessary, lapse of years. Yet all this gravel has
-been transported, and probably rounded, subsequently to the deposition
-of the white beds, and long subsequently to the underlying beds with
-the tertiary shells.
-
-Everything in this southern continent has been effected on a grand
-scale: the land, from the Rio Plata to Tierra del Fuego, a distance of
-1200 miles, has been raised in mass (and in Patagonia to a height of
-between 300 and 400 feet), within the period of the now existing
-sea-shells. The old and weathered shells left on the surface of the
-upraised plain still partially retain their colours. The uprising
-movement has been interrupted by at least eight long periods of rest,
-during which the sea ate, deeply back into the land, forming at
-successive levels the long lines of cliffs, or escarpments, which
-separate the different plains as they rise like steps one behind the
-other. The elevatory movement, and the eating-back power of the sea
-during the periods of rest, have been equable over long lines of coast;
-for I was astonished to find that the step-like plains stand at nearly
-corresponding heights at far distant points. The lowest plain is 90
-feet high; and the highest, which I ascended near the coast, is 950
-feet; and of this, only relics are left in the form of flat
-gravel-capped hills. The upper plain of Santa Cruz slopes up to a
-height of 3000 feet at the foot of the Cordillera. I have said that
-within the period of existing sea-shells, Patagonia has been upraised
-300 to 400 feet: I may add, that within the period when icebergs
-transported boulders over the upper plain of Santa Cruz, the elevation
-has been at least 1500 feet. Nor has Patagonia been affected only by
-upward movements: the extinct tertiary shells from Port St. Julian and
-Santa Cruz cannot have lived, according to Professor E. Forbes, in a
-greater depth of water than from 40 to 250 feet; but they are now
-covered with sea-deposited strata from 800 to 1000 feet in thickness:
-hence the bed of the sea, on which these shells once lived, must have
-sunk downwards several hundred feet, to allow of the accumulation of
-the superincumbent strata. What a history of geological changes does
-the simply-constructed coast of Patagonia reveal!
-
-At Port St. Julian, [12] in some red mud capping the gravel on the
-90-feet plain, I found half the skeleton of the Macrauchenia
-Patachonica, a remarkable quadruped, full as large as a camel. It
-belongs to the same division of the Pachydermata with the rhinoceros,
-tapir, and palaeotherium; but in the structure of the bones of its long
-neck it shows a clear relation to the camel, or rather to the guanaco
-and llama. From recent sea-shells being found on two of the higher
-step-formed plains, which must have been modelled and upraised before
-the mud was deposited in which the Macrauchenia was entombed, it is
-certain that this curious quadruped lived long after the sea was
-inhabited by its present shells. I was at first much surprised how a
-large quadruped could so lately have subsisted, in lat. 49 degs. 15',
-on these wretched gravel plains, with their stunted vegetation; but the
-relationship of the Macrauchenia to the Guanaco, now an inhabitant of
-the most sterile parts, partly explains this difficulty.
-
-The relationship, though distant, between the Macrauchenia and the
-Guanaco, between the Toxodon and the Capybara,--the closer relationship
-between the many extinct Edentata and the living sloths, ant-eaters,
-and armadillos, now so eminently characteristic of South American
-zoology,--and the still closer relationship between the fossil and
-living species of Ctenomys and Hydrochaerus, are most interesting
-facts. This relationship is shown wonderfully--as wonderfully as
-between the fossil and extinct Marsupial animals of Australia--by the
-great collection lately brought to Europe from the caves of Brazil by
-MM. Lund and Clausen. In this collection there are extinct species of
-all the thirty-two genera, excepting four, of the terrestrial
-quadrupeds now inhabiting the provinces in which the caves occur; and
-the extinct species are much more numerous than those now living: there
-are fossil ant-eaters, armadillos, tapirs, peccaries, guanacos,
-opossums, and numerous South American gnawers and monkeys, and other
-animals. This wonderful relationship in the same continent between the
-dead and the living, will, I do not doubt, hereafter throw more light
-on the appearance of organic beings on our earth, and their
-disappearance from it, than any other class of facts.
-
-It is impossible to reflect on the changed state of the American
-continent without the deepest astonishment. Formerly it must have
-swarmed with great monsters: now we find mere pigmies, compared with
-the antecedent, allied races. If Buffon had known of the gigantic
-sloth and armadillo-like animals, and of the lost Pachydermata, he
-might have said with a greater semblance of truth that the creative
-force in America had lost its power, rather than that it had never
-possessed great vigour. The greater number, if not all, of these
-extinct quadrupeds lived at a late period, and were the contemporaries
-of most of the existing sea-shells. Since they lived, no very great
-change in the form of the land can have taken place. What, then, has
-exterminated so many species and whole genera? The mind at first is
-irresistibly hurried into the belief of some great catastrophe; but
-thus to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patagonia,
-in Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America up to Behring's
-Straits, we must shake the entire framework of the globe. An
-examination, moreover, of the geology of La Plata and Patagonia, leads
-to the belief that all the features of the land result from slow and
-gradual changes. It appears from the character of the fossils in
-Europe, Asia, Australia, and in North and South America, that those
-conditions which favour the life of the _larger_ quadrupeds were lately
-co-extensive with the world: what those conditions were, no one has yet
-even conjectured. It could hardly have been a change of temperature,
-which at about the same time destroyed the inhabitants of tropical,
-temperate, and arctic latitudes on both sides of the globe. In North
-America we positively know from Mr. Lyell, that the large quadrupeds
-lived subsequently to that period, when boulders were brought into
-latitudes at which icebergs now never arrive: from conclusive but
-indirect reasons we may feel sure, that in the southern hemisphere the
-Macrauchenia, also, lived long subsequently to the ice-transporting
-boulder-period. Did man, after his first inroad into South America,
-destroy, as has been suggested, the unwieldy Megatherium and the other
-Edentata? We must at least look to some other cause for the
-destruction of the little tucutuco at Bahia Blanca, and of the many
-fossil mice and other small quadrupeds in Brazil. No one will imagine
-that a drought, even far severer than those which cause such losses in
-the provinces of La Plata, could destroy every individual of every
-species from Southern Patagonia to Behring's Straits. What shall we
-say of the extinction of the horse? Did those plains fail of pasture,
-which have since been overrun by thousands and hundreds of thousands of
-the descendants of the stock introduced by the Spaniards? Have the
-subsequently introduced species consumed the food of the great
-antecedent races? Can we believe that the Capybara has taken the food
-of the Toxodon, the Guanaco of the Macrauchenia, the existing small
-Edentata of their numerous gigantic prototypes? Certainly, no fact in
-the long history of the world is so startling as the wide and repeated
-exterminations of its inhabitants.
-
-Nevertheless, if we consider the subject under another point of view,
-it will appear less perplexing. We do not steadily bear in mind, how
-profoundly ignorant we are of the conditions of existence of every
-animal; nor do we always remember, that some check is constantly
-preventing the too rapid increase of every organized being left in a
-state of nature. The supply of food, on an average, remains constant,
-yet the tendency in every animal to increase by propagation is
-geometrical; and its surprising effects have nowhere been more
-astonishingly shown, than in the case of the European animals run wild
-during the last few centuries in America. Every animal in a state of
-nature regularly breeds; yet in a species long established, any _great_
-increase in numbers is obviously impossible, and must be checked by
-some means. We are, nevertheless, seldom able with certainty to tell in
-any given species, at what period of life, or at what period of the
-year, or whether only at long intervals, the check falls; or, again,
-what is the precise nature of the check. Hence probably it is, that we
-feel so little surprise at one, of two species closely allied in
-habits, being rare and the other abundant in the same district; or,
-again, that one should be abundant in one district, and another,
-filling the same place in the economy of nature, should be abundant in
-a neighbouring district, differing very little in its conditions. If
-asked how this is, one immediately replies that it is determined by
-some slight difference, in climate, food, or the number of enemies: yet
-how rarely, if ever, we can point out the precise cause and manner of
-action of the check! We are therefore, driven to the conclusion, that
-causes generally quite inappreciable by us, determine whether a given
-species shall be abundant or scanty in numbers.
-
-In the cases where we can trace the extinction of a species through
-man, either wholly or in one limited district, we know that it becomes
-rarer and rarer, and is then lost: it would be difficult to point out
-any just distinction [13] between a species destroyed by man or by the
-increase of its natural enemies. The evidence of rarity preceding
-extinction, is more striking in the successive tertiary strata, as
-remarked by several able observers; it has often been found that a
-shell very common in a tertiary stratum is now most rare, and has even
-long been thought extinct. If then, as appears probable, species first
-become rare and then extinct--if the too rapid increase of every
-species, even the most favoured, is steadily checked, as we must admit,
-though how and when it is hard to say--and if we see, without the
-smallest surprise, though unable to assign the precise reason, one
-species abundant and another closely allied species rare in the same
-district--why should we feel such great astonishment at the rarity
-being carried one step further to extinction? An action going on, on
-every side of us, and yet barely appreciable, might surely be carried a
-little further, without exciting our observation. Who would feel any
-great surprise at hearing that the Magalonyx was formerly rare compared
-with the Megatherium, or that one of the fossil monkeys was few in
-number compared with one of the now living monkeys? and yet in this
-comparative rarity, we should have the plainest evidence of less
-favourable conditions for their existence. To admit that species
-generally become rare before they become extinct--to feel no surprise
-at the comparative rarity of one species with another, and yet to call
-in some extraordinary agent and to marvel greatly when a species ceases
-to exist, appears to me much the same as to admit that sickness in the
-individual is the prelude to death--to feel no surprise at
-sickness--but when the sick man dies to wonder, and to believe that he
-died through violence.
-
-[1] Mr. Waterhouse has drawn up a detailed description of this head,
-which I hope he will publish in some Journal.
-
-[2] A nearly similar abnormal, but I do not know whether hereditary,
-structure has been observed in the carp, and likewise in the crocodile
-of the Ganges: Histoire des Anomalies, par M. Isid. Geoffroy St.
-Hilaire, tom. i. p. 244.
-
-[3] M. A. d'Orbigny has given nearly a similar account of these dogs,
-tom. i. p. 175.
-
-[4] I must express my obligations to Mr. Keane, at whose house I was
-staying on the Berquelo, and to Mr. Lumb at Buenos Ayres, for without
-their assistance these valuable remains would never have reached
-England.
-
-[5] Lyell's Principles of Geology, vol. iii. p. 63.
-
-[6] The flies which frequently accompany a ship for some days on its
-passage from harbour to harbour, wandering from the vessel, are soon
-lost, and all disappear.
-
-[7] Mr. Blackwall, in his Researches in Zoology, has many excellent
-observations on the habits of spiders.
-
-[8] An abstract is given in No. IV. of the Magazine of Zoology and
-Botany.
-
-[9] I found here a species of cactus, described by Professor Henslow,
-under the name of Opuntia Darwinii (Magazine of Zoology and Botany,
-vol. i. p. 466), which was remarkable for the irritability of the
-stamens, when I inserted either a piece of stick or the end of my
-finger in the flower. The segments of the perianth also closed on the
-pistil, but more slowly than the stamens. Plants of this family,
-generally considered as tropical, occur in North America (Lewis and
-Clarke's Travels, p. 221), in the same high latitude as here, namely,
-in both cases, in 47 degs.
-
-[10] These insects were not uncommon beneath stones. I found one
-cannibal scorpion quietly devouring another.
-
-[11] Shelley, Lines on Mt. Blanc.
-
-[12] I have lately heard that Capt. Sulivan, R.N., has found numerous
-fossil bones, embedded in regular strata, on the banks of the R.
-Gallegos, in lat. 51 degs. 4'. Some of the bones are large; others are
-small, and appear to have belonged to an armadillo. This is a most
-interesting and important discovery.
-
-[13] See the excellent remarks on this subject by Mr. Lyell, in his
-Principles of Geology.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
-
-Santa Cruz--Expedition up the River--Indians--Immense Streams of
-Basaltic Lava--Fragments not transported by the River--Excavations of
-the Valley--Condor, Habits of--Cordillera--Erratic Boulders of great
-size--Indian Relics--Return to the Ship--Falkland Islands--Wild
-Horses, Cattle, Rabbits--Wolf-like Fox--Fire made of Bones--Manner of
-Hunting Wild Cattle--Geology--Streams of Stones--Scenes of
-Violence--Penguins--Geese--Eggs of Doris--Compound Animals.
-
-
-APRIL 13, 1834.--The Beagle anchored within the mouth of the Santa
-Cruz. This river is situated about sixty miles south of Port St.
-Julian. During the last voyage Captain Stokes proceeded thirty miles
-up it, but then, from the want of provisions, was obliged to return.
-Excepting what was discovered at that time, scarcely anything was known
-about this large river. Captain Fitz Roy now determined to follow its
-course as far as time would allow. On the 18th three whale-boats
-started, carrying three weeks' provisions; and the party consisted of
-twenty-five souls--a force which would have been sufficient to have
-defied a host of Indians. With a strong flood-tide and a fine day we
-made a good run, soon drank some of the fresh water, and were at night
-nearly above the tidal influence.
-
-The river here assumed a size and appearance which, even at the highest
-point we ultimately reached, was scarcely diminished. It was generally
-from three to four hundred yards broad, and in the middle about
-seventeen feet deep. The rapidity of the current, which in its whole
-course runs at the rate of from four to six knots an hour, is perhaps
-its most remarkable feature. The water is of a fine blue colour, but
-with a slight milky tinge, and not so transparent as at first sight
-would have been expected. It flows over a bed of pebbles, like those
-which compose the beach and the surrounding plains. It runs in a
-winding course through a valley, which extends in a direct line
-westward. This valley varies from five to ten miles in breadth; it is
-bounded by step-formed terraces, which rise in most parts, one above
-the other, to the height of five hundred feet, and have on the opposite
-sides a remarkable correspondence.
-
-April 19th.--Against so strong a current it was, of course, quite
-impossible to row or sail: consequently the three boats were fastened
-together head and stern, two hands left in each, and the rest came on
-shore to track. As the general arrangements made by Captain Fitz Roy
-were very good for facilitating the work of all, and as all had a share
-in it, I will describe the system. The party including every one, was
-divided into two spells, each of which hauled at the tracking line
-alternately for an hour and a half. The officers of each boat lived
-with, ate the same food, and slept in the same tent with their crew, so
-that each boat was quite independent of the others. After sunset the
-first level spot where any bushes were growing, was chosen for our
-night's lodging. Each of the crew took it in turns to be cook.
-Immediately the boat was hauled up, the cook made his fire; two others
-pitched the tent; the coxswain handed the things out of the boat; the
-rest carried them up to the tents and collected firewood. By this
-order, in half an hour everything was ready for the night. A watch of
-two men and an officer was always kept, whose duty it was to look after
-the boats, keep up the fire, and guard against Indians. Each in the
-party had his one hour every night.
-
-During this day we tracked but a short distance, for there were many
-islets, covered by thorny bushes, and the channels between them were
-shallow.
-
-April 20th.--We passed the islands and set to work. Our regular day's
-march, although it was hard enough, carried us on an average only ten
-miles in a straight line, and perhaps fifteen or twenty altogether.
-Beyond the place where we slept last night, the country is completely
-_terra incognita_, for it was there that Captain Stokes turned back. We
-saw in the distance a great smoke, and found the skeleton of a horse,
-so we knew that Indians were in the neighbourhood. On the next morning
-(21st) tracks of a party of horse and marks left by the trailing of the
-chuzos, or long spears, were observed on the ground. It was generally
-thought that the Indians had reconnoitred us during the night. Shortly
-afterwards we came to a spot where, from the fresh footsteps of men,
-children, and horses, it was evident that the party had crossed the
-river.
-
-April 22nd.--The country remained the same, and was extremely
-uninteresting. The complete similarity of the productions throughout
-Patagonia is one of its most striking characters. The level plains of
-arid shingle support the same stunted and dwarf plants; and in the
-valleys the same thorn-bearing bushes grow. Everywhere we see the same
-birds and insects. Even the very banks of the river and of the clear
-streamlets which entered it, were scarcely enlivened by a brighter tint
-of green. The curse of sterility is on the land, and the water flowing
-over a bed of pebbles partakes of the same curse. Hence the number of
-water-fowls is very scanty; for there is nothing to support life in the
-stream of this barren river.
-
-Patagonia, poor as she is in some respects, can however boast of a
-greater stock of small rodents [1] than perhaps any other country in
-the world. Several species of mice are externally characterized by
-large thin ears and a very fine fur. These little animals swarm
-amongst the thickets in the valleys, where they cannot for months
-together taste a drop of water excepting the dew. They all seem to be
-cannibals for no sooner was a mouse caught in one of my traps that it
-was devoured by others. A small and delicately shaped fox, which is
-likewise very abundant, probably derives its entire support from these
-small animals. The guanaco is also in his proper district, herds of
-fifty or a hundred were common; and, as I have stated, we saw one which
-must have contained at least five hundred. The puma, with the condor
-and other carrion-hawks in its train, follows and preys upon these
-animals. The footsteps of the puma were to be seen almost everywhere
-on the banks of the river; and the remains of several guanacos, with
-their necks dislocated and bones broken, showed how they had met their
-death.
-
-April 24th.--Like the navigators of old when approaching an unknown
-land, we examined and watched for the most trivial sign of a change.
-The drifted trunk of a tree, or a boulder of primitive rock, was hailed
-with joy, as if we had seen a forest growing on the flanks of the
-Cordillera. The top, however, of a heavy bank of clouds, which
-remained almost constantly in one position, was the most promising
-sign, and eventually turned out a true harbinger. At first the clouds
-were mistaken for the mountains themselves, instead of the masses of
-vapour condensed by their icy summits.
-
-April 26th.--We this day met with a marked change in the geological
-structure of the plains. From the first starting I had carefully
-examined the gravel in the river, and for the two last days had noticed
-the presence of a few small pebbles of a very cellular basalt. These
-gradually increased in number and in size, but none were as large as a
-man's head. This morning, however, pebbles of the same rock, but more
-compact, suddenly became abundant, and in the course of half an hour we
-saw, at the distance of five of six miles, the angular edge of a great
-basaltic platform. When we arrived at its base we found the stream
-bubbling among the fallen blocks. For the next twenty-eight miles the
-river-course was encumbered with these basaltic masses. Above that
-limit immense fragments of primitive rocks, derived from its
-surrounding boulder-formation, were equally numerous. None of the
-fragments of any considerable size had been washed more than three or
-four miles down the river below their parent-source: considering the
-singular rapidity of the great body of water in the Santa Cruz, and
-that no still reaches occur in any part, this example is a most
-striking one, of the inefficiency of rivers in transporting even
-moderately-sized fragments.
-
-The basalt is only lava, which has flowed beneath the sea; but the
-eruptions must have been on the grandest scale. At the point where we
-first met this formation it was 120 feet in thickness; following up the
-river course, the surface imperceptibly rose and the mass became
-thicker, so that at forty miles above the first station it was 320 feet
-thick. What the thickness may be close to the Cordillera, I have no
-means of knowing, but the platform there attains a height of about
-three thousand feet above the level of the sea; we must therefore look
-to the mountains of that great chain for its source; and worthy of such
-a source are streams that have flowed over the gently inclined bed of
-the sea to a distance of one hundred miles. At the first glance of the
-basaltic cliffs on the opposite sides of the valley, it was evident
-that the strata once were united. What power, then, has removed along
-a whole line of country, a solid mass of very hard rock, which had an
-average thickness of nearly three hundred feet, and a breadth varying
-from rather less than two miles to four miles? The river, though it
-has so little power in transporting even inconsiderable fragments, yet
-in the lapse of ages might produce by its gradual erosion an effect of
-which it is difficult to judge the amount. But in this case,
-independently of the insignificance of such an agency, good reasons can
-be assigned for believing that this valley was formerly occupied by an
-arm of the sea. It is needless in this work to detail the arguments
-leading to this conclusion, derived from the form and the nature of the
-step-formed terraces on both sides of the valley, from the manner in
-which the bottom of the valley near the Andes expands into a great
-estuary-like plain with sand-hillocks on it, and from the occurrence of
-a few sea-shells lying in the bed of the river. If I had space I could
-prove that South America was formerly here cut off by a strait, joining
-the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, like that of Magellan. But it may yet
-be asked, how has the solid basalt been moved? Geologists formerly
-would have brought into play the violent action of some overwhelming
-debacle; but in this case such a supposition would have been quite
-inadmissible, because, the same step-like plains with existing
-sea-shells lying on their surface, which front the long line of the
-Patagonian coast, sweep up on each side of the valley of Santa Cruz. No
-possible action of any flood could thus have modelled the land, either
-within the valley or along the open coast; and by the formation of such
-step-like plains or terraces the valley itself had been hollowed out.
-Although we know that there are tides, which run within the Narrows of
-the Strait of Magellan at the rate of eight knots an hour, yet we must
-confess that it makes the head almost giddy to reflect on the number of
-years, century after century, which the tides, unaided by a heavy surf,
-must have required to have corroded so vast an area and thickness of
-solid basaltic lava. Nevertheless, we must believe that the strata
-undermined by the waters of this ancient strait, were broken up into
-huge fragments, and these lying scattered on the beach were reduced
-first to smaller blocks, then to pebbles and lastly to the most
-impalpable mud, which the tides drifted far into the Eastern or Western
-Ocean.
-
-With the change in the geological structure of the plains the character
-of the landscape likewise altered. While rambling up some of the
-narrow and rocky defiles, I could almost have fancied myself
-transported back again to the barren valleys of the island of St. Jago.
-Among the basaltic cliffs I found some plants which I had seen nowhere
-else, but others I recognised as being wanderers from Tierra del Fuego.
-These porous rocks serve as a reservoir for the scanty rain-water; and
-consequently on the line where the igneous and sedimentary formations
-unite, some small springs (most rare occurrences in Patagonia) burst
-forth; and they could be distinguished at a distance by the
-circumscribed patches of bright green herbage.
-
-April 27th.--The bed of the river became rather narrower and hence the
-stream more rapid. It here ran at the rate of six knots an hour. From
-this cause, and from the many great angular fragments, tracking the
-boats became both dangerous and laborious.
-
-
-This day I shot a condor. It measured from tip to tip of the wings,
-eight and a half feet, and from beak to tail, four feet. This bird is
-known to have a wide geographical range, being found on the west coast
-of South America, from the Strait of Magellan along the Cordillera as
-far as eight degrees north of the equator. The steep cliff near the
-mouth of the Rio Negro is its northern limit on the Patagonian coast;
-and they have there wandered about four hundred miles from the great
-central line of their habitations in the Andes. Further south, among
-the bold precipices at the head of Port Desire, the condor is not
-uncommon; yet only a few stragglers occasionally visit the sea-coast. A
-line of cliff near the mouth of the Santa Cruz is frequented by these
-birds, and about eighty miles up the river, where the sides of the
-valley are formed by steep basaltic precipices, the condor reappears.
-From these facts it seems that the condors require perpendicular
-cliffs. In Chile, they haunt, during the greater part of the year, the
-lower country near the shores of the Pacific, and at night several
-roost together in one tree; but in the early part of summer, they
-retire to the most inaccessible parts of the inner Cordillera, there to
-breed in peace.
-
-With respect to their propagation, I was told by the country people in
-Chile, that the condor makes no sort of nest, but in the months of
-November and December lays two large white eggs on a shelf of bare
-rock. It is said that the young condors cannot fly for an entire year;
-and long after they are able, they continue to roost by night, and hunt
-by day with their parents. The old birds generally live in pairs; but
-among the inland basaltic cliffs of the Santa Cruz, I found a spot,
-where scores must usually haunt. On coming suddenly to the brow of the
-precipice, it was a grand spectacle to see between twenty and thirty of
-these great birds start heavily from their resting-place, and wheel
-away in majestic circles. From the quantity of dung on the rocks they
-must long have frequented this cliff for roosting and breeding. Having
-gorged themselves with carrion on the plains below, they retire to
-these favourite ledges to digest their food. From these facts, the
-condor, like the gallinazo, must to a certain degree be considered as a
-gregarious bird. In this part of the country they live altogether on
-the guanacos which have died a natural death, or as more commonly
-happens, have been killed by the pumas. I believe, from what I saw in
-Patagonia, that they do not on ordinary occasions extend their daily
-excursions to any great distance from their regular sleeping-places.
-
-The condors may oftentimes be seen at a great height, soaring over a
-certain spot in the most graceful circles. On some occasions I am sure
-that they do this only for pleasure, but on others, the Chileno
-countryman tells you that they are watching a dying animal, or the puma
-devouring its prey. If the condors glide down, and then suddenly all
-rise together, the Chileno knows that it is the puma which, watching
-the carcass, has sprung out to drive away the robbers. Besides feeding
-on carrion, the condors frequently attack young goats and lambs; and
-the shepherd-dogs are trained, whenever they pass over, to run out, and
-looking upwards to bark violently. The Chilenos destroy and catch
-numbers. Two methods are used; one is to place a carcass on a level
-piece of ground within an enclosure of sticks with an opening, and when
-the condors are gorged to gallop up on horseback to the entrance, and
-thus enclose them: for when this bird has not space to run, it cannot
-give its body sufficient momentum to rise from the ground. The second
-method is to mark the trees in which, frequently to the number of five
-or six together, they roost, and they at night to climb up and noose
-them. They are such heavy sleepers, as I have myself witnessed, that
-this is not a difficult task. At Valparaiso, I have seen a living
-condor sold for sixpence, but the common price is eight or ten
-shillings. One which I saw brought in, had been tied with rope, and was
-much injured; yet, the moment the line was cut by which its bill was
-secured, although surrounded by people, it began ravenously to tear a
-piece of carrion. In a garden at the same place, between twenty and
-thirty were kept alive. They were fed only once a week, but they
-appeared in pretty good health. [2] The Chileno countrymen assert that
-the condor will live, and retain its vigour, between five and six weeks
-without eating: I cannot answer for the truth of this, but it is a
-cruel experiment, which very likely has been tried.
-
-When an animal is killed in the country, it is well known that the
-condors, like other carrion-vultures, soon gain intelligence of it, and
-congregate in an inexplicable manner. In most cases it must not be
-overlooked, that the birds have discovered their prey, and have picked
-the skeleton clean, before the flesh is in the least degree tainted.
-Remembering the experiments of M. Audubon, on the little smelling
-powers of carrion-hawks, I tried in the above mentioned garden the
-following experiment: the condors were tied, each by a rope, in a long
-row at the bottom of a wall; and having folded up a piece of meat in
-white paper, I walked backwards and forwards, carrying it in my hand at
-the distance of about three yards from them, but no notice whatever was
-taken. I then threw it on the ground, within one yard of an old male
-bird; he looked at it for a moment with attention, but then regarded it
-no more. With a stick I pushed it closer and closer, until at last he
-touched it with his beak; the paper was then instantly torn off with
-fury, and at the same moment, every bird in the long row began
-struggling and flapping its wings. Under the same circumstances, it
-would have been quite impossible to have deceived a dog. The evidence
-in favour of and against the acute smelling powers of carrion-vultures
-is singularly balanced. Professor Owen has demonstrated that the
-olfactory nerves of the turkey-buzzard (Cathartes aura) are highly
-developed, and on the evening when Mr. Owen's paper was read at the
-Zoological Society, it was mentioned by a gentleman that he had seen
-the carrion-hawks in the West Indies on two occasions collect on the
-roof of a house, when a corpse had become offensive from not having
-been buried, in this case, the intelligence could hardly have been
-acquired by sight. On the other hand, besides the experiments of
-Audubon and that one by myself, Mr. Bachman has tried in the United
-States many varied plans, showing that neither the turkey-buzzard (the
-species dissected by Professor Owen) nor the gallinazo find their food
-by smell. He covered portions of highly-offensive offal with a thin
-canvas cloth, and strewed pieces of meat on it: these the
-carrion-vultures ate up, and then remained quietly standing, with their
-beaks within the eighth of an inch of the putrid mass, without
-discovering it. A small rent was made in the canvas, and the offal was
-immediately discovered; the canvas was replaced by a fresh piece, and
-meat again put on it, and was again devoured by the vultures without
-their discovering the hidden mass on which they were trampling. These
-facts are attested by the signatures of six gentlemen, besides that of
-Mr. Bachman. [3]
-
-Often when lying down to rest on the open plains, on looking upwards, I
-have seen carrion-hawks sailing through the air at a great height.
-Where the country is level I do not believe a space of the heavens, of
-more than fifteen degrees above the horizon, is commonly viewed with
-any attention by a person either walking or on horseback. If such be
-the case, and the vulture is on the wing at a height of between three
-and four thousand feet, before it could come within the range of
-vision, its distance in a straight line from the beholder's eye, would
-be rather more than two British miles. Might it not thus readily be
-overlooked? When an animal is killed by the sportsman in a lonely
-valley, may he not all the while be watched from above by the
-sharp-sighted bird? And will not the manner of its descend proclaim
-throughout the district to the whole family of carrion-feeders, that
-their prey is at hand?
-
-When the condors are wheeling in a flock round and round any spot,
-their flight is beautiful. Except when rising from the ground, I do
-not recollect ever having seen one of these birds flap its wings. Near
-Lima, I watched several for nearly half an hour, without once taking
-off my eyes, they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles,
-descending and ascending without giving a single flap. As they glided
-close over my head, I intently watched from an oblique position, the
-outlines of the separate and great terminal feathers of each wing; and
-these separate feathers, if there had been the least vibratory
-movement, would have appeared as if blended together; but they were
-seen distinct against the blue sky. The head and neck were moved
-frequently, and apparently with force; and the extended wings seemed to
-form the fulcrum on which the movements of the neck, body, and tail
-acted. If the bird wished to descend, the wings were for a moment
-collapsed; and when again expanded with an altered inclination, the
-momentum gained by the rapid descent seemed to urge the bird upwards
-with the even and steady movement of a paper kite. In the case of any
-bird soaring, its motion must be sufficiently rapid so that the action
-of the inclined surface of its body on the atmosphere may
-counterbalance its gravity. The force to keep up the momentum of a
-body moving in a horizontal plane in the air (in which there is so
-little friction) cannot be great, and this force is all that is wanted.
-The movements of the neck and body of the condor, we must suppose, is
-sufficient for this. However this may be, it is truly wonderful and
-beautiful to see so great a bird, hour after hour, without any apparent
-exertion, wheeling and gliding over mountain and river.
-
-April 29th.--From some high land we hailed with joy the white summits
-of the Cordillera, as they were seen occasionally peeping through their
-dusky envelope of clouds. During the few succeeding days we continued
-to get on slowly, for we found the river-course very tortuous, and
-strewed with immense fragments of various ancient slate rocks, and of
-granite. The plain bordering the valley has here attained an elevation
-of about 1100 feet above the river, and its character was much altered.
-The well-rounded pebbles of porphyry were mingled with many immense
-angular fragments of basalt and of primary rocks. The first of these
-erratic boulders which I noticed, was sixty-seven miles distant from
-the nearest mountain; another which I measured was five yards square,
-and projected five feet above the gravel. Its edges were so angular,
-and its size so great, that I at first mistook it for a rock _in situ_,
-and took out my compass to observe the direction of its cleavage. The
-plain here was not quite so level as that nearer the coast, but yet in
-betrayed no signs of any great violence. Under these circumstances it
-is, I believe, quite impossible to explain the transportal of these
-gigantic masses of rock so many miles from their parent-source, on any
-theory except by that of floating icebergs.
-
-During the two last days we met with signs of horses, and with several
-small articles which had belonged to the Indians--such as parts of a
-mantle and a bunch of ostrich feathers--, but they appeared to have
-been lying long on the ground. Between the place where the Indians had
-so lately crossed the river and this neighbourhood, though so many
-miles apart, the country appears to be quite unfrequented. At first,
-considering the abundance of the guanacos, I was surprised at this; but
-it is explained by the stony nature of the plains, which would soon
-disable an unshod horse from taking part in the chase. Nevertheless,
-in two places in this very central region, I found small heaps of
-stones, which I do not think could have been accidentally thrown
-together. They were placed on points, projecting over the edge of the
-highest lava cliff, and they resembled, but on a small scale, those
-near Port Desire.
-
-May 4th.--Captain Fitz Roy determined to take the boats no higher. The
-river had a winding course, and was very rapid; and the appearance of
-the country offered no temptation to proceed any further. Everywhere we
-met with the same productions, and the same dreary landscape. We were
-now one hundred and forty miles distant from the Atlantic and about
-sixty from the nearest arm of the Pacific. The valley in this upper
-part expanded into a wide basin, bounded on the north and south by the
-basaltic platforms, and fronted by the long range of the snow-clad
-Cordillera. But we viewed these grand mountains with regret, for we
-were obliged to imagine their nature and productions, instead of
-standing, as we had hoped, on their summits. Besides the useless loss
-of time which an attempt to ascend the river and higher would have cost
-us, we had already been for some days on half allowance of bread. This,
-although really enough for reasonable men, was, after a hard day's
-march, rather scanty food: a light stomach and an easy digestion are
-good things to talk about, but very unpleasant in practice.
-
-5th.--Before sunrise we commenced our descent. We shot down the stream
-with great rapidity, generally at the rate of ten knots an hour. In
-this one day we effected what had cost us five-and-a-half hard days'
-labour in ascending. On the 8th, we reached the Beagle after our
-twenty-one days' expedition. Every one, excepting myself, had cause to
-be dissatisfied; but to me the ascent afforded a most interesting
-section of the great tertiary formation of Patagonia.
-
-On March 1st, 1833, and again on March 16th, 1834, the Beagle anchored
-in Berkeley Sound, in East Falkland Island. This archipelago is
-situated in nearly the same latitude with the mouth of the Strait of
-Magellan; it covers a space of one hundred and twenty by sixty
-geographical miles, and is little more than half the size of Ireland.
-After the possession of these miserable islands had been contested by
-France, Spain, and England, they were left uninhabited. The government
-of Buenos Ayres then sold them to a private individual, but likewise
-used them, as old Spain had done before, for a penal settlement.
-England claimed her right and seized them. The Englishman who was left
-in charge of the flag was consequently murdered. A British officer was
-next sent, unsupported by any power: and when we arrived, we found him
-in charge of a population, of which rather more than half were runaway
-rebels and murderers.
-
-The theatre is worthy of the scenes acted on it. An undulating land,
-with a desolate and wretched aspect, is everywhere covered by a peaty
-soil and wiry grass, of one monotonous brown colour. Here and there a
-peak or ridge of grey quartz rock breaks through the smooth surface
-Every one has heard of the climate of these regions; it may be compared
-to that which is experienced at the height of between one and two
-thousand feet, on the mountains of North Wales; having however less
-sunshine and less frost but more wind and rain. [4]
-
-16th.--I will now describe a short excursion which made round a part of
-this island. In the morning I started with six horses and two Gauchos:
-the latter were capital men for the purpose, and well accustomed to
-living on their own resources. The weather was very boisterous and
-cold with heavy hail-storms. We got on, however, pretty well but,
-except the geology, nothing could be less interesting than our day's
-ride. The country is uniformly the same undulating moorland; the
-surface being covered by light brown withered grass and a few very
-small shrubs, all springing out of an elastic peaty soil. In the
-valleys here and there might be seen a small flock of wild geese, and
-everywhere the ground was so soft that the snipe were able to feed.
-Besides these two birds there were few others. There is one main range
-of hills, nearly two thousand feet in height, and composed of quartz
-rock, the rugged and barren crests of which gave us some trouble to
-cross. On the south side we came to the best country for wild cattle;
-we met, however, no great number, for they had been lately much
-harassed.
-
-In the evening we came across a small herd. One of my companions, St.
-Jago by name, soon separated a fat cow: he threw the bolas, and it
-struck her legs, but failed in becoming entangled. Then dropping his
-hat to mark the spot where the balls were left, while at full gallop,
-he uncoiled his lazo, and after a most severe chase, again came up to
-the cow, and caught her round the horns. The other Gaucho had gone on
-ahead with the spare horses, so that St. Jago had some difficulty in
-killing the furious beast. He managed to get her on a level piece of
-ground, by taking advantage of her as often as she rushed at him; and
-when she would not move, my horse, from having been trained, would
-canter up, and with his chest give her a violent push. But when on
-level ground it does not appear an easy job for one man to kill a beast
-mad with terror. Nor would it be so, if the horse, when left to itself
-without its rider, did not soon learn, for its own safety, to keep the
-lazo tight, so that, if the cow or ox moves forward, the horse moves
-just as quickly forward; otherwise, it stands motionless leaning on one
-side. This horse, however, was a young one, and would not stand still,
-but gave in to the cow as she struggled. It was admirable to see with
-what dexterity St. Jago dodged behind the beast, till at last he
-contrived to give the fatal touch to the main tendon of the hind leg
-after which, without much difficulty, he drove his knife into the head
-of the spinal marrow, and the cow dropped as if struck by lightning. He
-cut off pieces of flesh with the skin to it, but without any bones,
-sufficient for our expedition. We then rode on to our sleeping-place,
-and had for supper "carne con cuero," or meat roasted with the skin on
-it. This is as superior to common beef as venison is to mutton. A
-large circular piece taken from the back is roasted on the embers with
-the hide downwards and is the form of a saucer, so that none of the
-gravy is lost. If any worthy alderman had supped with us that evening,
-"carne con cuero," without doubt, would soon have been celebrated in
-London.
-
-During the night it rained, and the next day (17th) was very stormy,
-with much hail and snow. We rode across the island to the neck of land
-which joins the Rincon del Toro (the great peninsula at the S. W.
-extremity) to the rest of the island. From the great number of cows
-which have been killed, there is a large proportion of bulls. These
-wander about single, or two and three together, and are very savage. I
-never saw such magnificent beasts; they equalled in the size of their
-huge heads and necks the Grecian marble sculptures. Capt. Sulivan
-informs me that the hide of an average-sized bull weighs forty-seven
-pounds, whereas a hide of this weight, less thoroughly dried, is
-considered as a very heavy one at Monte Video. The young bulls
-generally run away, for a short distance; but the old ones do not stir
-a step, except to rush at man and horse; and many horses have been thus
-killed. An old bull crossed a boggy stream, and took his stand on the
-opposite side to us; we in vain tried to drive him away, and failing,
-were obliged to make a large circuit. The Gauchos in revenge
-determined to emasculate him and render him for the future harmless. It
-was very interesting to see how art completely mastered force. One
-lazo was thrown over his horns as he rushed at the horse, and another
-round his hind legs: in a minute the monster was stretched powerless on
-the ground. After the lazo has once been drawn tightly round the horns
-of a furious animal, it does not at first appear an easy thing to
-disengage it again without killing the beast: nor, I apprehend, would
-it be so if the man was by himself. By the aid, however, of a second
-person throwing his lazo so as to catch both hind legs, it is quickly
-managed: for the animal, as long as its hind legs are kept
-outstretched, is quite helpless, and the first man can with his hands
-loosen his lazo from the horns, and then quietly mount his horse; but
-the moment the second man, by backing ever so little, relaxes the
-strain, the lazo slips off the legs of the struggling beast, which then
-rises free, shakes himself, and vainly rushes at his antagonist.
-
-During our whole ride we saw only one troop of wild horses. These
-animals, as well as the cattle, were introduced by the French in 1764,
-since which time both have greatly increased. It is a curious fact,
-that the horses have never left the eastern end of the island, although
-there is no natural boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that
-part of the island is not more tempting than the rest. The Gauchos
-whom I asked, though asserting this to be the case, were unable to
-account for it, except from the strong attachment which horses have to
-any locality to which they are accustomed. Considering that the island
-does not appear fully stocked, and that there are no beasts of prey, I
-was particularly curious to know what has checked their originally
-rapid increase. That in a limited island some check would sooner or
-later supervene, is inevitable; but why had the increase of the horse
-been checked sooner than that of the cattle? Capt. Sulivan has taken
-much pains for me in this inquiry. The Gauchos employed here attribute
-it chiefly to the stallions constantly roaming from place to place, and
-compelling the mares to accompany them, whether or not the young foals
-are able to follow. One Gaucho told Capt. Sulivan that he had watched
-a stallion for a whole hour, violently kicking and biting a mare till
-he forced her to leave her foal to its fate. Capt. Sulivan can so far
-corroborate this curious account, that he has several times found young
-foals dead, whereas he has never found a dead calf. Moreover, the dead
-bodies of full-grown horses are more frequently found, as if more
-subject to disease or accidents, than those of the cattle. From the
-softness of the ground their hoofs often grow irregularly to a great
-length, and this causes lameness. The predominant colours are roan and
-iron-grey. All the horses bred here, both tame and wild, are rather
-small-sized, though generally in good condition; and they have lost so
-much strength, that they are unfit to be used in taking wild cattle
-with the lazo: in consequence, it is necessary to go to the great
-expense of importing fresh horses from the Plata. At some future
-period the southern hemisphere probably will have its breed of Falkland
-ponies, as the northern has its Shetland breed.
-
-The cattle, instead of having degenerated like the horses seem, as
-before remarked, to have increased in size; and they are much more
-numerous than the horses. Capt. Sulivan informs me that they vary much
-less in the general form of their bodies and in the shape of their
-horns than English cattle. In colour they differ much; and it is a
-remarkable circumstance, that in different parts of this one small
-island, different colours predominate. Round Mount Usborne, at a
-height of from 1000 to 1500 feet above the sea, about half of some of
-the herds are mouse or lead-coloured, a tint which is not common in
-other parts of the island. Near Port Pleasant dark brown prevails,
-whereas south of Choiseul Sound (which almost divides the island into
-two parts), white beasts with black heads and feet are the most common:
-in all parts black, and some spotted animals may be observed. Capt.
-Sulivan remarks, that the difference in the prevailing colours was so
-obvious, that in looking for the herds near Port Pleasant, they
-appeared from a long distance like black spots, whilst south of
-Choiseul Sound they appeared like white spots on the hill-sides. Capt.
-Sulivan thinks that the herds do not mingle; and it is a singular fact,
-that the mouse-coloured cattle, though living on the high land, calve
-about a month earlier in the season than the other coloured beasts on
-the lower land. It is interesting thus to find the once domesticated
-cattle breaking into three colours, of which some one colour would in
-all probability ultimately prevail over the others, if the herds were
-left undisturbed for the next several centuries.
-
-The rabbit is another animal which has been introduced; and has
-succeeded very well; so that they abound over large parts of the
-island. Yet, like the horses, they are confined within certain limits;
-for they have not crossed the central chain of hills, nor would they
-have extended even so far as its base, if, as the Gauchos informed me,
-small colonies has not been carried there. I should not have supposed
-that these animals, natives of northern Africa, could have existed in a
-climate so humid as this, and which enjoys so little sunshine that even
-wheat ripens only occasionally. It is asserted that in Sweden, which
-any one would have thought a more favourable climate, the rabbit cannot
-live out of doors. The first few pairs, moreover, had here to content
-against pre-existing enemies, in the fox and some large hawks. The
-French naturalists have considered the black variety a distinct
-species, and called it Lepus Magellanicus. [5] They imagined that
-Magellan, when talking of an animal under the name of "conejos" in the
-Strait of Magellan, referred to this species; but he was alluding to a
-small cavy, which to this day is thus called by the Spaniards. The
-Gauchos laughed at the idea of the black kind being different from the
-grey, and they said that at all events it had not extended its range
-any further than the grey kind; that the two were never found separate;
-and that they readily bred together, and produced piebald offspring. Of
-the latter I now possess a specimen, and it is marked about the head
-differently from the French specific description. This circumstance
-shows how cautious naturalists should be in making species; for even
-Cuvier, on looking at the skull of one of these rabbits, thought it was
-probably distinct!
-
-The only quadruped native to the island [6]; is a large wolf-like fox
-(Canis antarcticus), which is common to both East and West Falkland. I
-have no doubt it is a peculiar species, and confined to this
-archipelago; because many sealers, Gauchos, and Indians, who have
-visited these islands, all maintain that no such animal is found in any
-part of South America.
-
-Molina, from a similarity in habits, thought that this was the same
-with his "culpeu;" [7] but I have seen both, and they are quite
-distinct. These wolves are well known from Byron's account of their
-tameness and curiosity, which the sailors, who ran into the water to
-avoid them, mistook for fierceness. To this day their manners remain
-the same. They have been observed to enter a tent, and actually pull
-some meat from beneath the head of a sleeping seaman. The Gauchos also
-have frequently in the evening killed them, by holding out a piece of
-meat in one hand, and in the other a knife ready to stick them. As far
-as I am aware, there is no other instance in any part of the world, of
-so small a mass of broken land, distant from a continent, possessing so
-large an aboriginal quadruped peculiar to itself. Their numbers have
-rapidly decreased; they are already banished from that half of the
-island which lies to the eastward of the neck of land between St.
-Salvador Bay and Berkeley Sound. Within a very few years after these
-islands shall have become regularly settled, in all probability this
-for will be classed with the dodo, as an animal which has perished from
-the face of the earth.
-
-At night (17th) we slept on the neck of land at the head of Choiseul
-Sound, which forms the south-west peninsula. The valley was pretty well
-sheltered from the cold wind, but there was very little brushwood for
-fuel. The Gauchos, however, soon found what, to my great surprise,
-made nearly as hot a fire as coals; this was the skeleton of a bullock
-lately killed, from which the flesh had been picked by the
-carrion-hawks. They told me that in winter they often killed a beast,
-cleaned the flesh from the bones with their knives, and then with these
-same bones roasted the meat for their suppers.
-
-18th.--It rained during nearly the whole day. At night we managed,
-however, with our saddle-cloths to keep ourselves pretty well dry and
-warm; but the ground on which we slept was on each occasion nearly in
-the state of a bog, and there was not a dry spot to sit down on after
-our day's ride. I have in another part stated how singular it is that
-there should be absolutely no trees on these islands, although Tierra
-del Fuego is covered by one large forest. The largest bush in the
-island (belonging to the family of Compositae) is scarcely so tall as
-our gorse. The best fuel is afforded by a green little bush about the
-size of common heath, which has the useful property of burning while
-fresh and green. It was very surprising to see the Gauchos, in the
-midst of rain and everything soaking wet, with nothing more than a
-tinder-box and a piece of rag, immediately make a fire. They sought
-beneath the tufts of grass and bushel for a few dry twigs, and these
-they rubbed into fibres; then surrounding them with coarser twigs,
-something like a bird's nest, they put the rag with its spark of fire
-in the middle and covered it up. The nest being then held up to the
-wind, by degrees it smoked more and more, and at last burst out in
-flames. I do not think any other method would have had a chance of
-succeeding with such damp materials.
-
-19th.--Each morning, from not having ridden for some time previously, I
-was very stiff. I was surprised to hear the Gauchos, who have from
-infancy almost lived on horseback, say that, under similar
-circumstances, they always suffer. St. Jago told me, that having been
-confined for three months by illness, he went out hunting wild cattle,
-and in consequence, for the next two days, his thighs were so stiff
-that he was obliged to lie in bed. This shows that the Gauchos,
-although they do not appear to do so, yet really must exert much
-muscular effort in riding. The hunting wild cattle, in a country so
-difficult to pass as this is on account of the swampy ground, must be
-very hard work. The Gauchos say they often pass at full speed over
-ground which would be impassable at a slower pace; in the same manner
-as a man is able to skate over thin ice. When hunting, the party
-endeavours to get as close as possible to the herd without being
-discovered. Each man carries four or five pair of the bolas; these he
-throws one after the other at as many cattle, which, when once
-entangled, are left for some days till they become a little exhausted
-by hunger and struggling. They are then let free and driven towards a
-small herd of tame animals, which have been brought to the spot on
-purpose. From their previous treatment, being too much terrified to
-leave the herd, they are easily driven, if their strength last out, to
-the settlement.
-
-The weather continued so very bad that we determine to make a push, and
-try to reach the vessel before night. From the quantity of rain which
-had fallen, the surface of the whole country was swampy. I suppose my
-horse fell at least a dozen times, and sometimes the whole six horses
-were floundering in the mud together. All the little streams are
-bordered by soft peat, which makes it very difficult for the horses to
-leap them without falling. To complete our discomforts we were obliged
-to cross the head of a creek of the sea, in which the water was as high
-as our horses' backs; and the little waves, owing to the violence of
-the wind, broke over us, and made us very wet and cold. Even the
-iron-framed Gauchos professed themselves glad when they reached the
-settlement, after our little excursion.
-
-The geological structure of these islands is in most respects simple.
-The lower country consists of clay-slate and sandstone, containing
-fossils, very closely related to, but not identical with, those found
-in the Silurian formations of Europe; the hills are formed of white
-granular quartz rock. The strata of the latter are frequently arched
-with perfect symmetry, and the appearance of some of the masses is in
-consequence most singular. Pernety [8] has devoted several pages to
-the description of a Hill of Ruins, the successive strata of which he
-has justly compared to the seats of an amphitheatre. The quartz rock
-must have been quite pasty when it underwent such remarkable flexures
-without being shattered into fragments. As the quartz insensibly
-passes into the sandstone, it seems probable that the former owes its
-origin to the sandstone having been heated to such a degree that it
-became viscid, and upon cooling crystallized. While in the soft state
-it must have been pushed up through the overlying beds.
-
-In many parts of the island the bottoms of the valleys are covered in
-an extraordinary manner by myriads of great loose angular fragments of
-the quartz rock, forming "streams of stones." These have been mentioned
-with surprise by every voyager since the time of Pernety. The blocks
-are not water-worn, their angles being only a little blunted; they vary
-in size from one or two feet in diameter to ten, or even more than
-twenty times as much. They are not thrown together into irregular
-piles, but are spread out into level sheets or great streams. It is
-not possible to ascertain their thickness, but the water of small
-streamlets can be heard trickling through the stones many feet below
-the surface. The actual depth is probably great, because the crevices
-between the lower fragments must long ago have been filled up with
-sand. The width of these sheets of stones varied from a few hundred
-feet to a mile; but the peaty soil daily encroaches on the borders, and
-even forms islets wherever a few fragments happen to lie close
-together. In a valley south of Berkeley Sound, which some of our party
-called the "great valley of fragments," it was necessary to cross an
-uninterrupted band half a mile wide, by jumping from one pointed stone
-to another. So large were the fragments, that being overtaken by a
-shower of rain, I readily found shelter beneath one of them.
-
-Their little inclination is the most remarkable circumstance in these
-"streams of stones." On the hill-sides I have seen them sloping at an
-angle of ten degrees with the horizon; but in some of the level,
-broad-bottomed valleys, the inclination is only just sufficient to be
-clearly perceived. On so rugged a surface there was no means of
-measuring the angle, but to give a common illustration, I may say that
-the slope would not have checked the speed of an English mail-coach. In
-some places, a continuous stream of these fragments followed up the
-course of a valley, and even extended to the very crest of the hill. On
-these crests huge masses, exceeding in dimensions any small building,
-seemed to stand arrested in their headlong course: there, also, the
-curved strata of the archways lay piled on each other, like the ruins
-of some vast and ancient cathedral. In endeavouring to describe these
-scenes of violence one is tempted to pass from one simile to another.
-We may imagine that streams of white lava had flowed from many parts of
-the mountains into the lower country, and that when solidified they had
-been rent by some enormous convulsion into myriads of fragments. The
-expression "streams of stones," which immediately occurred to every
-one, conveys the same idea. These scenes are on the spot rendered more
-striking by the contrast of the low rounded forms of the neighbouring
-hills.
-
-I was interested by finding on the highest peak of one range (about 700
-feet above the sea) a great arched fragment, lying on its convex side,
-or back downwards. Must we believe that it was fairly pitched up in
-the air, and thus turned? Or, with more probability, that there
-existed formerly a part of the same range more elevated than the point
-on which this monument of a great convulsion of nature now lies. As
-the fragments in the valleys are neither rounded nor the crevices
-filled up with sand, we must infer that the period of violence was
-subsequent to the land having been raised above the waters of the sea.
-In a transverse section within these valleys, the bottom is nearly
-level, or rises but very little towards either side. Hence the
-fragments appear to have travelled from the head of the valley; but in
-reality it seems more probable that they have been hurled down from the
-nearest slopes; and that since, by a vibratory movement of overwhelming
-force, [9] the fragments have been levelled into one continuous sheet.
-If during the earthquake [10] which in 1835 overthrew Concepcion, in
-Chile, it was thought wonderful that small bodies should have been
-pitched a few inches from the ground, what must we say to a movement
-which has caused fragments many tons in weight, to move onwards like so
-much sand on a vibrating board, and find their level? I have seen, in
-the Cordillera of the Andes, the evident marks where stupendous
-mountains have been broken into pieces like so much thin crust, and the
-strata thrown of their vertical edges; but never did any scene, like
-these "streams of stones," so forcibly convey to my mind the idea of a
-convulsion, of which in historical records we might in vain seek for
-any counterpart: yet the progress of knowledge will probably some day
-give a simple explanation of this phenomenon, as it already has of the
-so long-thought inexplicable transportal of the erratic boulders, which
-are strewed over the plains of Europe.
-
-I have little to remark on the zoology of these islands. have before
-described the carrion-vulture of Polyborus. There are some other hawks,
-owls, and a few small land-birds. The water-fowl are particularly
-numerous, and they must formerly, from the accounts of the old
-navigators, have been much more so. One day I observed a cormorant
-playing with a fish which it had caught. Eight times successively the
-bird let its prey go, then dived after it, and although in deep water,
-brought it each time to the surface. In the Zoological Gardens I have
-seen the otter treat a fish in the same manner, much as a cat does a
-mouse: I do not know of any other instance where dame Nature appears so
-wilfully cruel. Another day, having placed myself between a penguin
-(Aptenodytes demersa) and the water, I was much amused by watching its
-habits. It was a brave bird; and till reaching the sea, it regularly
-fought and drove me backwards. Nothing less than heavy blows would have
-stopped him; every inch he gained he firmly kept, standing close before
-me erect and determined. When thus opposed he continually rolled his
-head from side to side, in a very odd manner, as if the power of
-distinct vision lay only in the anterior and basal part of each eye.
-This bird is commonly called the jackass penguin, from its habit, while
-on shore, of throwing its head backwards, and making a loud strange
-noise, very like the braying of an ass; but while at sea, and
-undisturbed, its note is very deep and solemn, and is often heard in
-the night-time. In diving, its little wings are used as fins; but on
-the land, as front legs. When crawling, it may be said on four legs,
-through the tussocks or on the side of a grassy cliff, it moves so very
-quickly that it might easily be mistaken for a quadruped. When at sea
-and fishing, it comes to the surface for the purpose of breathing with
-such a spring, and dives again so instantaneously, that I defy any one
-at first sight to be sure that it was not a fish leaping for sport.
-
-Two kinds of geese frequent the Falklands. The upland species (Anas
-Magellanica) is common, in pairs and in small flocks, throughout the
-island. They do not migrate, but build on the small outlying islets.
-This is supposed to be from fear of the foxes: and it is perhaps from
-the same cause that these birds, though very tame by day, are shy and
-wild in the dusk of the evening. They live entirely on vegetable
-matter.
-
-The rock-goose, so called from living exclusively on the sea-beach
-(Anas antarctica), is common both here and on the west coast of
-America, as far north as Chile. In the deep and retired channels of
-Tierra del Fuego, the snow-white gander, invariably accompanied by his
-darker consort, and standing close by each other on some distant rocky
-point, is a common feature in the landscape.
-
-In these islands a great loggerheaded duck or goose (Anas brachyptera),
-which sometimes weighs twenty-two pounds, is very abundant. These
-birds were in former days called, from their extraordinary manner of
-paddling and splashing upon the water, race-horses; but now they are
-named, much more appropriately, steamers. Their wings are too small
-and weak to allow of flight, but by their aid, partly swimming and
-partly flapping the surface of the water, they move very quickly. The
-manner is something like that by which the common house-duck escapes
-when pursued by a dog; but I am nearly sure that the steamer moves its
-wings alternately, instead of both together, as in other birds. These
-clumsy, loggerheaded ducks make such a noise and splashing, that the
-effect is exceedingly curious.
-
-Thus we find in South America three birds which use their wings for
-other purposes besides flight; the penguins as fins, the steamer as
-paddles, and the ostrich as sails: and the Apteryz of New Zealand, as
-well as its gigantic extinct prototype the Deinornis, possess only
-rudimentary representatives of wings. The steamer is able to dive only
-to a very short distance. It feeds entirely on shell-fish from the
-kelp and tidal rocks: hence the beak and head, for the purpose of
-breaking them, are surprisingly heavy and strong: the head is so strong
-that I have scarcely been able to fracture it with my geological
-hammer; and all our sportsmen soon discovered how tenacious these birds
-were of life. When in the evening pluming themselves in a flock, they
-make the same odd mixture of sounds which bull-frogs do within the
-tropics.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the Falkland Islands, made many
-observations on the lower marine animals, [11] but they are of little
-general interest. I will mention only one class of facts, relating to
-certain zoophytes in the more highly organized division of that class.
-Several genera (Flustra, Eschara, Cellaria, Crisia, and others) agree
-in having singular moveable organs (like those of Flustra avicularia,
-found in the European seas) attached to their cells. The organ, in the
-greater number of cases, very closely resembles the head of a vulture;
-but the lower mandible can be opened much wider than in a real bird's
-beak. The head itself possessed considerable powers of movement, by
-means of a short neck. In one zoophyte the head itself was fixed, but
-the lower jaw free: in another it was replaced by a triangular hood,
-with beautifully-fitted trap-door, which evidently answered to the
-lower mandible. In the greater number of species, each cell was
-provided with one head, but in others each cell had two.
-
-The young cells at the end of the branches of these corallines contain
-quite immature polypi, yet the vulture-head attached to them, though
-small, are in every respect perfect When the polypus was removed by a
-needle from any of the cells, these organs did not appear in the least
-affected. When one of the vulture-like heads was cut off from the
-cell, the lower mandible retained its power of opening and closing.
-Perhaps the most singular part of their structure is, that when there
-were more than two rows of cells on a branch, the central cells were
-furnished with these appendages, of only one-fourth the size of the
-outside ones. Their movements varied according to the species; but in
-some I never saw the least motion; while others, with the lower
-mandible generally wide open, oscillated backwards and forwards at the
-rate of about five seconds each turn, others moved rapidly and by
-starts. When touched with a needle, the beak generally seized the
-point so firmly, that the whole branch might be shaken.
-
-These bodies have no relation whatever with the production of the eggs
-or gemmules, as they are formed before the young polypi appear in the
-cells at the end of the growing branches; as they move independently of
-the polypi, and do not appear to be in any way connected with them; and
-as they differ in size on the outer and inner rows of cells, I have
-little doubt, that in their functions, they are related rather to the
-horny axis of the branches than to the polypi in the cells. The fleshy
-appendage at the lower extremity of the sea-pen (described at Bahia
-Blanca) also forms part of the zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner
-as the roots of a tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the
-individual leaf or flower-buds.
-
-In another elegant little coralline (Crisia?), each cell was furnished
-with a long-toothed bristle, which had the power of moving quickly.
-Each of these bristles and each of the vulture-like heads generally
-moved quite independently of the others, but sometimes all on both
-sides of a branch, sometimes only those on one side, moved together
-coinstantaneously, sometimes each moved in regular order one after
-another. In these actions we apparently behold as perfect a
-transmission of will in the zoophyte, though composed of thousands of
-distinct polypi, as in any single animal. The case, indeed, is not
-different from that of the sea-pens, which, when touched, drew
-themselves into the sand on the coast of Bahia Blanca. I will state
-one other instance of uniform action, though of a very different
-nature, in a zoophyte closely allied to Clytia, and therefore very
-simply organized. Having kept a large tuft of it in a basin of
-salt-water, when it was dark I found that as often as I rubbed any part
-of a branch, the whole became strongly phosphorescent with a green
-light: I do not think I ever saw any object more beautifully so. But
-the remarkable circumstance was, that the flashes of light always
-proceeded up the branches, from the base towards the extremities.
-
-The examination of these compound animals was always very interesting
-to me. What can be more remarkable that to see a plant-like body
-producing an egg, capable of swimming about and of choosing a proper
-place to adhere to, which then sprouts into branches, each crowded with
-innumerable distinct animals, often of complicated organizations. The
-branches, moreover, as we have just seen, sometimes possess organs
-capable of movement and independent of the polypi. Surprising as this
-union of separate individuals in common stock must always appear, every
-tree displays the same fact, for buds must be considered as individual
-plants. It is, however, natural to consider a polypus, furnished with a
-mouth, intestines, and other organs, as a distinct individual, whereas
-the individuality of a leaf-bud is not easily realised, so that the
-union of separate individuals in a common body is more striking in a
-coralline than in a tree. Our conception of a compound animal, where
-in some respects the individuality of each is not completed, may be
-aided, by reflecting on the production of two distinct creatures by
-bisecting a single one with a knife, or where Nature herself performs
-the task of bisection. We may consider the polypi in a zoophyte, or
-the buds in a tree, as cases where the division of the individual has
-not been completely effected. Certainly in the case of trees, and
-judging from analogy in that of corallines, the individuals propagated
-by buds seem more intimately related to each other, than eggs or seeds
-are to their parents. It seems now pretty well established that plants
-propagated by buds all partake of a common duration of life; and it is
-familiar to every one, what singular and numerous peculiarities are
-transmitted with certainty, by buds, layers, and grafts, which by
-seminal propagation never or only casually reappear.
-
-[1] The desserts of Syria are characterized, according to Volney (tom.
-i. p. 351), by woody bushes, numerous rats, gazelles and hares. In the
-landscape of Patagonia, the guanaco replaces the gazelle, and the
-agouti the hare.
-
-[2] I noticed that several hours before any one of the condors died,
-all the lice, with which it was infested, crawled to the outside
-feathers. I was assured that this always happens.
-
-[3] London's Magazine of Nat. Hist., vol. vii.
-
-[4] From accounts published since our voyage, and more especially from
-several interesting letters from Capt. Sulivan, R. N., employed on the
-survey, it appears that we took an exaggerated view of the badness of
-the climate on these islands. But when I reflect on the almost
-universal covering of peat, and on the fact of wheat seldom ripening
-here, I can hardly believe that the climate in summer is so fine and
-dry as it has lately been represented.
-
-[5] Lesson's Zoology of the Voyage of the Coquille, tom. i. p. 168. All
-the early voyagers, and especially Bougainville, distinctly state that
-the wolf-like fox was the only native animal on the island. The
-distinction of the rabbit as a species, is taken from peculiarities in
-the fur, from the shape of the head, and from the shortness of the
-ears. I may here observe that the difference between the Irish and
-English hare rests upon nearly similar characters, only more strongly
-marked.
-
-[6] I have reason, however, to suspect that there is a field-mouse. The
-common European rat and mouse have roamed far from the habitations of
-the settlers. The common hog has also run wild on one islet; all are
-of a black colour: the boars are very fierce, and have great trunks.
-
-[7] The "culpeu" is the Canis Magellanicus brought home by Captain King
-from the Strait of Magellan. It is common in Chile.
-
-[8] Pernety, Voyage aux Isles Malouines, p. 526.
-
-[9] "Nous n'avons pas ete moins saisis d'etonnement a la vue de
-l'innombrable quantite de pierres de touts grandeurs, bouleversees les
-unes sur les autres, et cependent rangees, comme si elles avoient ete
-amoncelees negligemment pour remplir des ravins. On ne se lassoit pas
-d'admirer les effets prodigieux de la nature."--Pernety, p. 526.
-
-[10] An inhabitant of Mendoza, and hence well capable of judging,
-assured me that, during the several years he had resided on these
-islands, he had never felt the slightest shock of an earthquake.
-
-[11] I was surprised to find, on counting the eggs of a large white
-Doris (this sea-slug was three and a half inches long), how
-extraordinarily numerous they were. From two to five eggs (each
-three-thousandths of an inch in diameter) were contained in spherical
-little case. These were arranged two deep in transverse rows forming a
-ribbon. The ribbon adhered by its edge to the rock in an oval spire.
-One which I found, measured nearly twenty inches in length and half in
-breadth. By counting how many balls were contained in a tenth of an
-inch in the row, and how many rows in an equal length of the ribbon, on
-the most moderate computation there were six hundred thousand eggs. Yet
-this Doris was certainly not very common; although I was often
-searching under the stones, I saw only seven individuals. No fallacy
-is more common with naturalists, than that the numbers of an individual
-species depend on its powers of propagation.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TIERRA DEL FUEGO
-
-Tierra del Fuego, first arrival--Good Success Bay--An Account of the
-Fuegians on board--Interview With the Savages--Scenery of the
-Forests--Cape Horn--Wigwam Cove--Miserable Condition of the
-Savages--Famines--Cannibals--Matricide--Religious Feelings--Great
-Gale--Beagle Channel--Ponsonby Sound--Build Wigwams and settle the
-Fuegians--Bifurcation of the Beagle Channel--Glaciers--Return to the
-Ship--Second Visit in the Ship to the Settlement--Equality of Condition
-amongst the Natives.
-
-
-DECEMBER 17th, 1832.--Having now finished with Patagonia and the
-Falkland Islands, I will describe our first arrival in Tierra del
-Fuego. A little after noon we doubled Cape St. Diego, and entered the
-famous strait of Le Maire. We kept close to the Fuegian shore, but the
-outline of the rugged, inhospitable Statenland was visible amidst the
-clouds. In the afternoon we anchored in the Bay of Good Success. While
-entering we were saluted in a manner becoming the inhabitants of this
-savage land. A group of Fuegians partly concealed by the entangled
-forest, were perched on a wild point overhanging the sea; and as we
-passed by, they sprang up and waving their tattered cloaks sent forth a
-loud and sonorous shout. The savages followed the ship, and just
-before dark we saw their fire, and again heard their wild cry. The
-harbour consists of a fine piece of water half surrounded by low
-rounded mountains of clay-slate, which are covered to the water's edge
-by one dense gloomy forest. A single glance at the landscape was
-sufficient to show me how widely different it was from anything I had
-ever beheld. At night it blew a gale of wind, and heavy squalls from
-the mountains swept past us. It would have been a bad time out at sea,
-and we, as well as others, may call this Good Success Bay.
-
-In the morning the Captain sent a party to communicate with the
-Fuegians. When we came within hail, one of the four natives who were
-present advanced to receive us, and began to shout most vehemently,
-wishing to direct us where to land. When we were on shore the party
-looked rather alarmed, but continued talking and making gestures with
-great rapidity. It was without exception the most curious and
-interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have believed how wide
-was the difference between savage and civilized man: it is greater than
-between a wild and domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a
-greater power of improvement. The chief spokesman was old, and
-appeared to be the head of the family; the three others were powerful
-young men, about six feet high. The women and children had been sent
-away. These Fuegians are a very different race from the stunted,
-miserable wretches farther westward; and they seem closely allied to
-the famous Patagonians of the Strait of Magellan. Their only garment
-consists of a mantle made of guanaco skin, with the wool outside: this
-they wear just thrown over their shoulders, leaving their persons as
-often exposed as covered. Their skin is of a dirty coppery-red colour.
-
-The old man had a fillet of white feathers tied round his head, which
-partly confined his black, coarse, and entangled hair. His face was
-crossed by two broad transverse bars; one, painted bright red, reached
-from ear to ear and included the upper lip; the other, white like
-chalk, extended above and parallel to the first, so that even his
-eyelids were thus coloured. The other two men were ornamented by
-streaks of black powder, made of charcoal. The party altogether
-closely resembled the devils which come on the stage in plays like Der
-Freischutz.
-
-Their very attitudes were abject, and the expression of their
-countenances distrustful, surprised, and startled. After we had
-presented them with some scarlet cloth, which they immediately tied
-round their necks, they became good friends. This was shown by the old
-man patting our breasts, and making a chuckling kind of noise, as
-people do when feeding chickens. I walked with the old man, and this
-demonstration of friendship was repeated several times; it was
-concluded by three hard slaps, which were given me on the breast and
-back at the same time. He then bared his bosom for me to return the
-compliment, which being done, he seemed highly pleased. The language
-of these people, according to our notions, scarcely deserves to be
-called articulate. Captain Cook has compared it to a man clearing his
-throat, but certainly no European ever cleared his throat with so many
-hoarse, guttural, and clicking sounds.
-
-They are excellent mimics: as often as we coughed or yawned, or made
-any odd motion, they immediately imitated us. Some of our party began
-to squint and look awry; but one of the young Fuegians (whose whole
-face was painted black, excepting a white band across his eyes)
-succeeded in making far more hideous grimaces. They could repeat with
-perfect correctness each word in any sentence we addressed them, and
-they remembered such words for some time. Yet we Europeans all know
-how difficult it is to distinguish apart the sounds in a foreign
-language. Which of us, for instance, could follow an American Indian
-through a sentence of more than three words? All savages appear to
-possess, to an uncommon degree, this power of mimicry. I was told,
-almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among the
-Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious for being
-able to imitate and describe the gait of any man, so that he may be
-recognized. How can this faculty be explained? is it a consequence of
-the more practised habits of perception and keener senses, common to
-all men in a savage state, as compared with those long civilized?
-
-When a song was struck up by our party, I thought the Fuegians would
-have fallen down with astonishment. With equal surprise they viewed
-our dancing; but one of the young men, when asked, had no objection to
-a little waltzing. Little accustomed to Europeans as they appeared to
-be, yet they knew and dreaded our fire-arms; nothing would tempt them
-to take a gun in their hands. They begged for knives, calling them by
-the Spanish word "cuchilla." They explained also what they wanted, by
-acting as if they had a piece of blubber in their mouth, and then
-pretending to cut instead of tear it.
-
-I have not as yet noticed the Fuegians whom we had on board. During
-the former voyage of the Adventure and Beagle in 1826 to 1830, Captain
-Fitz Roy seized on a party of natives, as hostages for the loss of a
-boat, which had been stolen, to the great jeopardy of a party employed
-on the survey; and some of these natives, as well as a child whom he
-bought for a pearl-button, he took with him to England, determining to
-educate them and instruct them in religion at his own expense. To
-settle these natives in their own country, was one chief inducement to
-Captain Fitz Roy to undertake our present voyage; and before the
-Admiralty had resolved to send out this expedition, Captain Fitz Roy
-had generously chartered a vessel, and would himself have taken them
-back. The natives were accompanied by a missionary, R. Matthews; of
-whom and of the natives, Captain Fitz Roy has published a full and
-excellent account. Two men, one of whom died in England of the
-small-pox, a boy and a little girl, were originally taken; and we had
-now on board, York Minster, Jemmy Button (whose name expresses his
-purchase-money), and Fuegia Basket. York Minster was a full-grown,
-short, thick, powerful man: his disposition was reserved, taciturn,
-morose, and when excited violently passionate; his affections were very
-strong towards a few friends on board; his intellect good. Jemmy
-Button was a universal favourite, but likewise passionate; the
-expression of his face at once showed his nice disposition. He was
-merry and often laughed, and was remarkably sympathetic with any one in
-pain: when the water was rough, I was often a little sea-sick, and he
-used to come to me and say in a plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!"
-but the notion, after his aquatic life, of a man being sea-sick, was
-too ludicrous, and he was generally obliged to turn on one side to hide
-a smile or laugh, and then he would repeat his "Poor, poor fellow!" He
-was of a patriotic disposition; and he liked to praise his own tribe
-and country, in which he truly said there were "plenty of trees," and
-he abused all the other tribes: he stoutly declared that there was no
-Devil in his land. Jemmy was short, thick, and fat, but vain of his
-personal appearance; he used always to wear gloves, his hair was neatly
-cut, and he was distressed if his well-polished shoes were dirtied. He
-was fond of admiring himself in a looking glass; and a merry-faced
-little Indian boy from the Rio Negro, whom we had for some months on
-board, soon perceived this, and used to mock him: Jemmy, who was always
-rather jealous of the attention paid to this little boy, did not at all
-like this, and used to say, with rather a contemptuous twist of his
-head, "Too much skylark." It seems yet wonderful to me, when I think
-over all his many good qualities that he should have been of the same
-race, and doubtless partaken of the same character, with the miserable,
-degraded savages whom we first met here. Lastly, Fuegia Basket was a
-nice, modest, reserved young girl, with a rather pleasing but sometimes
-sullen expression, and very quick in learning anything, especially
-languages. This she showed in picking up some Portuguese and Spanish,
-when left on shore for only a short time at Rio de Janeiro and Monte
-Video, and in her knowledge of English. York Minster was very jealous
-of any attention paid to her; for it was clear he determined to marry
-her as soon as they were settled on shore.
-
-Although all three could both speak and understand a good deal of
-English, it was singularly difficult to obtain much information from
-them, concerning the habits of their countrymen; this was partly owing
-to their apparent difficulty in understanding the simplest alternative.
-Every one accustomed to very young children, knows how seldom one can
-get an answer even to so simple a question as whether a thing is black
-or white; the idea of black or white seems alternately to fill their
-minds. So it was with these Fuegians, and hence it was generally
-impossible to find out, by cross questioning, whether one had rightly
-understood anything which they had asserted. Their sight was
-remarkably acute; it is well known that sailors, from long practice,
-can make out a distant object much better than a landsman; but both
-York and Jemmy were much superior to any sailor on board: several times
-they have declared what some distant object has been, and though
-doubted by every one, they have proved right, when it has been examined
-through a telescope. They were quite conscious of this power; and
-Jemmy, when he had any little quarrel with the officer on watch, would
-say, "Me see ship, me no tell."
-
-It was interesting to watch the conduct of the savages, when we landed,
-towards Jemmy Button: they immediately perceived the difference between
-him and ourselves, and held much conversation one with another on the
-subject. The old man addressed a long harangue to Jemmy, which it
-seems was to invite him to stay with them. But Jemmy understood very
-little of their language, and was, moreover, thoroughly ashamed of his
-countrymen. When York Minster afterwards came on shore, they noticed
-him in the same way, and told him he ought to shave; yet he had not
-twenty dwarf hairs on his face, whilst we all wore our untrimmed
-beards. They examined the colour of his skin, and compared it with
-ours. One of our arms being bared, they expressed the liveliest
-surprise and admiration at its whiteness, just in the same way in which
-I have seen the ourangoutang do at the Zoological Gardens. We thought
-that they mistook two or three of the officers, who were rather shorter
-and fairer, though adorned with large beards, for the ladies of our
-party. The tallest amongst the Fuegians was evidently much pleased at
-his height being noticed. When placed back to back with the tallest of
-the boat's crew, he tried his best to edge on higher ground, and to
-stand on tiptoe. He opened his mouth to show his teeth, and turned his
-face for a side view; and all this was done with such alacrity, that I
-dare say he thought himself the handsomest man in Tierra del Fuego.
-After our first feeling of grave astonishment was over, nothing could
-be more ludicrous than the odd mixture of surprise and imitation which
-these savages every moment exhibited.
-
-
-The next day I attempted to penetrate some way into the country. Tierra
-del Fuego may be described as a mountainous land, partly submerged in
-the sea, so that deep inlets and bays occupy the place where valleys
-should exist. The mountain sides, except on the exposed western coast,
-are covered from the water's edge upwards by one great forest. The
-trees reach to an elevation of between 1000 and 1500 feet, and are
-succeeded by a band of peat, with minute alpine plants; and this again
-is succeeded by the line of perpetual snow, which, according to Captain
-King, in the Strait of Magellan descends to between 3000 and 4000 feet.
-To find an acre of level land in any part of the country is most rare.
-I recollect only one little flat piece near Port Famine, and another of
-rather larger extent near Goeree Road. In both places, and everywhere
-else, the surface is covered by a thick bed of swampy peat. Even within
-the forest, the ground is concealed by a mass of slowly putrefying
-vegetable matter, which, from being soaked with water, yields to the
-foot.
-
-Finding it nearly hopeless to push my way through the wood, I followed
-the course of a mountain torrent. At first, from the waterfalls and
-number of dead trees, I could hardly crawl along; but the bed of the
-stream soon became a little more open, from the floods having swept the
-sides. I continued slowly to advance for an hour along the broken and
-rocky banks, and was amply repaid by the grandeur of the scene. The
-gloomy depth of the ravine well accorded with the universal signs of
-violence. On every side were lying irregular masses of rock and
-torn-up trees; other trees, though still erect, were decayed to the
-heart and ready to fall. The entangled mass of the thriving and the
-fallen reminded me of the forests within the tropics--yet there was a
-difference: for in these still solitudes, Death, instead of Life,
-seemed the predominant spirit. I followed the water-course till I came
-to a spot where a great slip had cleared a straight space down the
-mountain side. By this road I ascended to a considerable elevation,
-and obtained a good view of the surrounding woods. The trees all
-belong to one kind, the Fagus betuloides; for the number of the other
-species of Fagus and of the Winter's Bark, is quite inconsiderable.
-This beech keeps its leaves throughout the year; but its foliage is of
-a peculiar brownish-green colour, with a tinge of yellow. As the whole
-landscape is thus coloured, it has a sombre, dull appearance; nor is it
-often enlivened by the rays of the sun.
-
-December 20th.--One side of the harbour is formed by a hill about 1500
-feet high, which Captain Fitz Roy has called after Sir J. Banks, in
-commemoration of his disastrous excursion, which proved fatal to two
-men of his party, and nearly so to Dr. Solander. The snow-storm, which
-was the cause of their misfortune, happened in the middle of January,
-corresponding to our July, and in the latitude of Durham! I was anxious
-to reach the summit of this mountain to collect alpine plants; for
-flowers of any kind in the lower parts are few in number. We followed
-the same water-course as on the previous day, till it dwindled away,
-and we were then compelled to crawl blindly among the trees. These,
-from the effects of the elevation and of the impetuous winds, were low,
-thick and crooked. At length we reached that which from a distance
-appeared like a carpet of fine green turf, but which, to our vexation,
-turned out to be a compact mass of little beech-trees about four or
-five feet high. They were as thick together as box in the border of a
-garden, and we were obliged to struggle over the flat but treacherous
-surface. After a little more trouble we gained the peat, and then the
-bare slate rock.
-
-A ridge connected this hill with another, distant some miles, and more
-lofty, so that patches of snow were lying on it. As the day was not
-far advanced, I determined to walk there and collect plants along the
-road. It would have been very hard work, had it not been for a
-well-beaten and straight path made by the guanacos; for these animals,
-like sheep, always follow the same line. When we reached the hill we
-found it the highest in the immediate neighbourhood, and the waters
-flowed to the sea in opposite directions. We obtained a wide view over
-the surrounding country: to the north a swampy moorland extended, but
-to the south we had a scene of savage magnificence, well becoming
-Tierra del Fuego. There was a degree of mysterious grandeur in
-mountain behind mountain, with the deep intervening valleys, all
-covered by one thick, dusky mass of forest. The atmosphere, likewise,
-in this climate, where gale succeeds gale, with rain, hail, and sleet,
-seems blacker than anywhere else. In the Strait of Magellan looking
-due southward from Port Famine, the distant channels between the
-mountains appeared from their gloominess to lead beyond the confines of
-this world.
-
-December 21st.--The Beagle got under way: and on the succeeding day,
-favoured to an uncommon degree by a fine easterly breeze, we closed in
-with the Barnevelts, and running past Cape Deceit with its stony peaks,
-about three o'clock doubled the weather-beaten Cape Horn. The evening
-was calm and bright, and we enjoyed a fine view of the surrounding
-isles. Cape Horn, however, demanded his tribute, and before night sent
-us a gale of wind directly in our teeth. We stood out to sea, and on
-the second day again made the land, when we saw on our weather-bow this
-notorious promontory in its proper form--veiled in a mist, and its dim
-outline surrounded by a storm of wind and water. Great black clouds
-were rolling across the heavens, and squalls of rain, with hail, swept
-by us with such extreme violence, that the Captain determined to run
-into Wigwam Cove. This is a snug little harbour, not far from Cape
-Horn; and here, at Christmas-eve, we anchored in smooth water. The
-only thing which reminded us of the gale outside, was every now and
-then a puff from the mountains, which made the ship surge at her
-anchors.
-
-December 25th.--Close by the Cove, a pointed hill, called Kater's Peak,
-rises to the height of 1700 feet. The surrounding islands all consist
-of conical masses of greenstone, associated sometimes with less regular
-hills of baked and altered clay-slate. This part of Tierra del Fuego
-may be considered as the extremity of the submerged chain of mountains
-already alluded to. The cove takes its name of "Wigwam" from some of
-the Fuegian habitations; but every bay in the neighbourhood might be so
-called with equal propriety. The inhabitants, living chiefly upon
-shell-fish, are obliged constantly to change their place of residence;
-but they return at intervals to the same spots, as is evident from the
-piles of old shells, which must often amount to many tons in freight.
-These heaps can be distinguished at a long distance by the bright green
-colour of certain plants, which invariably grow on them. Among these
-may be enumerated the wild celery and scurvy grass, two very
-serviceable plants, the use of which has not been discovered by the
-natives.
-
-The Fuegian wigwam resembles, in size and dimensions, a haycock. It
-merely consists of a few broken branches stuck in the ground, and very
-imperfectly thatched on one side with a few tufts of grass and rushes.
-The whole cannot be the work of an hour, and it is only used for a few
-days. At Goeree Roads I saw a place where one of these naked men had
-slept, which absolutely offered no more cover than the form of a hare.
-The man was evidently living by himself, and York Minster said he was
-"very bad man," and that probably he had stolen something. On the west
-coast, however, the wigwams are rather better, for they are covered
-with seal-skins. We were detained here several days by the bad
-weather. The climate is certainly wretched: the summer solstice was
-now passed, yet every day snow fell on the hills, and in the valleys
-there was rain, accompanied by sleet. The thermometer generally stood
-about 45 degs., but in the night fell to 38 or 40 degs. From the damp
-and boisterous state of the atmosphere, not cheered by a gleam of
-sunshine, one fancied the climate even worse than it really was.
-
-While going one day on shore near Wollaston Island, we pulled alongside
-a canoe with six Fuegians. These were the most abject and miserable
-creatures I anywhere beheld. On the east coast the natives, as we have
-seen, have guanaco cloaks, and on the west they possess seal-skins.
-Amongst these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or
-some small scrap about as large as a pocket-handkerchief, which is
-barely sufficient to cover their backs as low down as their loins. It
-is laced across the breast by strings, and according as the wind blows,
-it is shifted from side to side. But these Fuegians in the canoe were
-quite naked, and even one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was
-raining heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled
-down her body. In another harbour not far distant, a woman, who was
-suckling a recently-born child, came one day alongside the vessel, and
-remained there out of mere curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed
-on her naked bosom, and on the skin of her naked baby! These poor
-wretches were stunted in their growth, their hideous faces bedaubed
-with white paint, their skins filthy and greasy, their hair entangled,
-their voices discordant, and their gestures violent. Viewing such men,
-one can hardly make one's self believe that they are fellow-creatures,
-and inhabitants of the same world. It is a common subject of
-conjecture what pleasure in life some of the lower animals can enjoy:
-how much more reasonably the same question may be asked with respect to
-these barbarians! At night, five or six human beings, naked and
-scarcely protected from the wind and rain of this tempestuous climate,
-sleep on the wet ground coiled up like animals. Whenever it is low
-water, winter or summer, night or day, they must rise to pick
-shell-fish from the rocks; and the women either dive to collect
-sea-eggs, or sit patiently in their canoes, and with a baited hair-line
-without any hook, jerk out little fish. If a seal is killed, or the
-floating carcass of a putrid whale is discovered, it is a feast; and
-such miserable food is assisted by a few tasteless berries and fungi.
-
-They often suffer from famine: I heard Mr. Low, a sealing-master
-intimately acquainted with the natives of this country, give a curious
-account of the state of a party of one hundred and fifty natives on the
-west coast, who were very thin and in great distress. A succession of
-gales prevented the women from getting shell-fish on the rocks, and
-they could not go out in their canoes to catch seal. A small party of
-these men one morning set out, and the other Indians explained to him,
-that they were going a four days' journey for food: on their return,
-Low went to meet them, and he found them excessively tired, each man
-carrying a great square piece of putrid whale's-blubber with a hole in
-the middle, through which they put their heads, like the Gauchos do
-through their ponchos or cloaks. As soon as the blubber was brought
-into a wigwam, an old man cut off thin slices, and muttering over them,
-broiled them for a minute, and distributed them to the famished party,
-who during this time preserved a profound silence. Mr. Low believes
-that whenever a whale is cast on shore, the natives bury large pieces
-of it in the sand, as a resource in time of famine; and a native boy,
-whom he had on board, once found a stock thus buried. The different
-tribes when at war are cannibals. From the concurrent, but quite
-independent evidence of the boy taken by Mr. Low, and of Jemmy Button,
-it is certainly true, that when pressed in winter by hunger, they kill
-and devour their old women before they kill their dogs: the boy, being
-asked by Mr. Low why they did this, answered, "Doggies catch otters,
-old women no." This boy described the manner in which they are killed
-by being held over smoke and thus choked; he imitated their screams as
-a joke, and described the parts of their bodies which are considered
-best to eat. Horrid as such a death by the hands of their friends and
-relatives must be, the fears of the old women, when hunger begins to
-press, are more painful to think of; we are told that they then often
-run away into the mountains, but that they are pursued by the men and
-brought back to the slaughter-house at their own firesides!
-
-Captain Fitz Roy could never ascertain that the Fuegians have any
-distinct belief in a future life. They sometimes bury their dead in
-caves, and sometimes in the mountain forests; we do not know what
-ceremonies they perform. Jemmy Button would not eat land-birds, because
-"eat dead men": they are unwilling even to mention their dead friends.
-We have no reason to believe that they perform any sort of religious
-worship; though perhaps the muttering of the old man before he
-distributed the putrid blubber to his famished party, may be of this
-nature. Each family or tribe has a wizard or conjuring doctor, whose
-office we could never clearly ascertain. Jemmy believed in dreams,
-though not, as I have said, in the devil: I do not think that our
-Fuegians were much more superstitious than some of the sailors; for an
-old quartermaster firmly believed that the successive heavy gales,
-which we encountered off Cape Horn, were caused by our having the
-Fuegians on board. The nearest approach to a religious feeling which I
-heard of, was shown by York Minster, who, when Mr. Bynoe shot some very
-young ducklings as specimens, declared in the most solemn manner, "Oh,
-Mr. Bynoe, much rain, snow, blow much." This was evidently a
-retributive punishment for wasting human food. In a wild and excited
-manner he also related, that his brother, one day whilst returning to
-pick up some dead birds which he had left on the coast, observed some
-feathers blown by the wind. His brother said (York imitating his
-manner), "What that?" and crawling onwards, he peeped over the cliff,
-and saw "wild man" picking his birds; he crawled a little nearer, and
-then hurled down a great stone and killed him. York declared for a
-long time afterwards storms raged, and much rain and snow fell. As far
-as we could make out, he seemed to consider the elements themselves as
-the avenging agents: it is evident in this case, how naturally, in a
-race a little more advanced in culture, the elements would become
-personified. What the "bad wild men" were, has always appeared to me
-most mysterious: from what York said, when we found the place like the
-form of a hare, where a single man had slept the night before, I should
-have thought that they were thieves who had been driven from their
-tribes; but other obscure speeches made me doubt this; I have sometimes
-imagined that the most probable explanation was that they were insane.
-
-The different tribes have no government or chief; yet each is
-surrounded by other hostile tribes, speaking different dialects, and
-separated from each other only by a deserted border or neutral
-territory: the cause of their warfare appears to be the means of
-subsistence. Their country is a broken mass of wild rocks, lofty
-hills, and useless forests: and these are viewed through mists and
-endless storms. The habitable land is reduced to the stones on the
-beach; in search of food they are compelled unceasingly to wander from
-spot to spot, and so steep is the coast, that they can only move about
-in their wretched canoes. They cannot know the feeling of having a
-home, and still less that of domestic affection; for the husband is to
-the wife a brutal master to a laborious slave. Was a more horrid deed
-ever perpetrated, than that witnessed on the west coast by Byron, who
-saw a wretched mother pick up her bleeding dying infant-boy, whom her
-husband had mercilessly dashed on the stones for dropping a basket of
-sea-eggs! How little can the higher powers of the mind be brought into
-play: what is there for imagination to picture, for reason to compare,
-or judgment to decide upon? to knock a limpet from the rock does not
-require even cunning, that lowest power of the mind. Their skill in
-some respects may be compared to the instinct of animals; for it is not
-improved by experience: the canoe, their most ingenious work, poor as
-it is, has remained the same, as we know from Drake, for the last two
-hundred and fifty years.
-
-Whilst beholding these savages, one asks, whence have they come? What
-could have tempted, or what change compelled a tribe of men, to leave
-the fine regions of the north, to travel down the Cordillera or
-backbone of America, to invent and build canoes, which are not used by
-the tribes of Chile, Peru, and Brazil, and then to enter on one of the
-most inhospitable countries within the limits of the globe? Although
-such reflections must at first seize on the mind, yet we may feel sure
-that they are partly erroneous. There is no reason to believe that the
-Fuegians decrease in number; therefore we must suppose that they enjoy
-a sufficient share of happiness, of whatever kind it may be, to render
-life worth having. Nature by making habit omnipotent, and its effects
-hereditary, has fitted the Fuegian to the climate and the productions
-of his miserable country.
-
-
-After having been detained six days in Wigwam Cove by very bad weather,
-we put to sea on the 30th of December. Captain Fitz Roy wished to get
-westward to land York and Fuegia in their own country. When at sea we
-had a constant succession of gales, and the current was against us: we
-drifted to 57 degs. 23' south. On the 11th of January, 1833, by
-carrying a press of sail, we fetched within a few miles of the great
-rugged mountain of York Minster (so called by Captain Cook, and the
-origin of the name of the elder Fuegian), when a violent squall
-compelled us to shorten sail and stand out to sea. The surf was
-breaking fearfully on the coast, and the spray was carried over a cliff
-estimated to 200 feet in height. On the 12th the gale was very heavy,
-and we did not know exactly where we were: it was a most unpleasant
-sound to hear constantly repeated, "keep a good look-out to leeward."
-On the 13th the storm raged with its full fury: our horizon was
-narrowly limited by the sheets of spray borne by the wind. The sea
-looked ominous, like a dreary waving plain with patches of drifted
-snow: whilst the ship laboured heavily, the albatross glided with its
-expanded wings right up the wind. At noon a great sea broke over us,
-and filled one of the whale boats, which was obliged to be instantly
-cut away. The poor Beagle trembled at the shock, and for a few minutes
-would not obey her helm; but soon, like a good ship that she was, she
-righted and came up to the wind again. Had another sea followed the
-first, our fate would have been decided soon, and for ever. We had now
-been twenty-four days trying in vain to get westward; the men were worn
-out with fatigue, and they had not had for many nights or days a dry
-thing to put on. Captain Fitz Roy gave up the attempt to get westward
-by the outside coast. In the evening we ran in behind False Cape Horn,
-and dropped our anchor in forty-seven fathoms, fire flashing from the
-windlass as the chain rushed round it. How delightful was that still
-night, after having been so long involved in the din of the warring
-elements!
-
-January 15th, 1833.--The Beagle anchored in Goeree Roads. Captain Fitz
-Roy having resolved to settle the Fuegians, according to their wishes,
-in Ponsonby Sound, four boats were equipped to carry them there through
-the Beagle Channel. This channel, which was discovered by Captain Fitz
-Roy during the last voyage, is a most remarkable feature in the
-geography of this, or indeed of any other country: it may be compared
-to the valley of Lochness in Scotland, with its chain of lakes and
-friths. It is about one hundred and twenty miles long, with an average
-breadth, not subject to any very great variation, of about two miles;
-and is throughout the greater part so perfectly straight, that the
-view, bounded on each side by a line of mountains, gradually becomes
-indistinct in the long distance. It crosses the southern part of
-Tierra del Fuego in an east and west line, and in the middle is joined
-at right angles on the south side by an irregular channel, which has
-been called Ponsonby Sound. This is the residence of Jemmy Button's
-tribe and family.
-
-19th.--Three whale-boats and the yawl, with a party of twenty-eight,
-started under the command of Captain Fitz Roy. In the afternoon we
-entered the eastern mouth of the channel, and shortly afterwards found
-a snug little cove concealed by some surrounding islets. Here we
-pitched our tents and lighted our fires. Nothing could look more
-comfortable than this scene. The glassy water of the little harbour,
-with the branches of the trees hanging over the rocky beach, the boats
-at anchor, the tents supported by the crossed oars, and the smoke
-curling up the wooded valley, formed a picture of quiet retirement. The
-next day (20th) we smoothly glided onwards in our little fleet, and
-came to a more inhabited district. Few if any of these natives could
-ever have seen a white man; certainly nothing could exceed their
-astonishment at the apparition of the four boats. Fires were lighted
-on every point (hence the name of Tierra del Fuego, or the land of
-fire), both to attract our attention and to spread far and wide the
-news. Some of the men ran for miles along the shore. I shall never
-forget how wild and savage one group appeared: suddenly four or five
-men came to the edge of an overhanging cliff; they were absolutely
-naked, and their long hair streamed about their faces; they held rugged
-staffs in their hands, and, springing from the ground, they waved their
-arms round their heads, and sent forth the most hideous yells.
-
-At dinner-time we landed among a party of Fuegians. At first they were
-not inclined to be friendly; for until the Captain pulled in ahead of
-the other boats, they kept their slings in their hands. We soon,
-however, delighted them by trifling presents, such as tying red tape
-round their heads. They liked our biscuit: but one of the savages
-touched with his finger some of the meat preserved in tin cases which I
-was eating, and feeling it soft and cold, showed as much disgust at it,
-as I should have done at putrid blubber. Jemmy was thoroughly ashamed
-of his countrymen, and declared his own tribe were quite different, in
-which he was wofully mistaken. It was as easy to please as it was
-difficult to satisfy these savages. Young and old, men and children,
-never ceased repeating the word "yammerschooner," which means "give
-me." After pointing to almost every object, one after the other, even
-to the buttons on our coats, and saying their favourite word in as many
-intonations as possible, they would then use it in a neuter sense, and
-vacantly repeat "yammerschooner." After yammerschoonering for any
-article very eagerly, they would by a simple artifice point to their
-young women or little children, as much as to say, "If you will not
-give it me, surely you will to such as these."
-
-At night we endeavoured in vain to find an uninhabited cove; and at
-last were obliged to bivouac not far from a party of natives. They
-were very inoffensive as long as they were few in numbers, but in the
-morning (21st) being joined by others they showed symptoms of
-hostility, and we thought that we should have come to a skirmish. An
-European labours under great disadvantages when treating with savages
-like these, who have not the least idea of the power of fire-arms. In
-the very act of levelling his musket he appears to the savage far
-inferior to a man armed with a bow and arrow, a spear, or even a sling.
-Nor is it easy to teach them our superiority except by striking a fatal
-blow. Like wild beasts, they do not appear to compare numbers; for
-each individual, if attacked, instead of retiring, will endeavour to
-dash your brains out with a stone, as certainly as a tiger under
-similar circumstances would tear you. Captain Fitz Roy on one occasion
-being very anxious, from good reasons, to frighten away a small party,
-first flourished a cutlass near them, at which they only laughed; he
-then twice fired his pistol close to a native. The man both times
-looked astounded, and carefully but quickly rubbed his head; he then
-stared awhile, and gabbled to his companions, but he never seemed to
-think of running away. We can hardly put ourselves in the position of
-these savages, and understand their actions. In the case of this
-Fuegian, the possibility of such a sound as the report of a gun close
-to his ear could never have entered his mind. He perhaps literally did
-not for a second know whether it was a sound or a blow, and therefore
-very naturally rubbed his head. In a similar manner, when a savage
-sees a mark struck by a bullet, it may be some time before he is able
-at all to understand how it is effected; for the fact of a body being
-invisible from its velocity would perhaps be to him an idea totally
-inconceivable. Moreover, the extreme force of a bullet, that
-penetrates a hard substance without tearing it, may convince the savage
-that it has no force at all. Certainly I believe that many savages of
-the lowest grade, such as these of Tierra del Fuego, have seen objects
-struck, and even small animals killed by the musket, without being in
-the least aware how deadly an instrument it is.
-
-22nd.--After having passed an unmolested night, in what would appear to
-be neutral territory between Jemmy's tribe and the people whom we saw
-yesterday, we sailed pleasantly along. I do not know anything which
-shows more clearly the hostile state of the different tribes, than
-these wide border or neutral tracts. Although Jemmy Button well knew
-the force of our party, he was, at first, unwilling to land amidst the
-hostile tribe nearest to his own. He often told us how the savage Oens
-men "when the leaf red," crossed the mountains from the eastern coast
-of Tierra del Fuego, and made inroads on the natives of this part of
-the country. It was most curious to watch him when thus talking, and
-see his eyes gleaming and his whole face assume a new and wild
-expression. As we proceeded along the Beagle Channel, the scenery
-assumed a peculiar and very magnificent character; but the effect was
-much lessened from the lowness of the point of view in a boat, and from
-looking along the valley, and thus losing all the beauty of a
-succession of ridges. The mountains were here about three thousand
-feet high, and terminated in sharp and jagged points. They rose in one
-unbroken sweep from the water's edge, and were covered to the height of
-fourteen or fifteen hundred feet by the dusky-coloured forest. It was
-most curious to observe, as far as the eye could range, how level and
-truly horizontal the line on the mountain side was, at which trees
-ceased to grow: it precisely resembled the high-water mark of
-drift-weed on a sea-beach.
-
-At night we slept close to the junction of Ponsonby Sound with the
-Beagle Channel. A small family of Fuegians, who were living in the
-cove, were quiet and inoffensive, and soon joined our party round a
-blazing fire. We were well clothed, and though sitting close to the
-fire were far from too warm; yet these naked savages, though further
-off, were observed, to our great surprise, to be streaming with
-perspiration at undergoing such a roasting. They seemed, however, very
-well pleased, and all joined in the chorus of the seamen's songs: but
-the manner in which they were invariably a little behindhand was quite
-ludicrous.
-
-During the night the news had spread, and early in the morning (23rd) a
-fresh party arrived, belonging to the Tekenika, or Jemmy's tribe.
-Several of them had run so fast that their noses were bleeding, and
-their mouths frothed from the rapidity with which they talked; and with
-their naked bodies all bedaubed with black, white, [1] and red, they
-looked like so many demoniacs who had been fighting. We then proceeded
-(accompanied by twelve canoes, each holding four or five people) down
-Ponsonby Sound to the spot where poor Jemmy expected to find his mother
-and relatives. He had already heard that his father was dead; but as
-he had had a "dream in his head" to that effect, he did not seem to
-care much about it, and repeatedly comforted himself with the very
-natural reflection--"Me no help it." He was not able to learn any
-particulars regarding his father's death, as his relations would not
-speak about it.
-
-Jemmy was now in a district well known to him, and guided the boats to
-a quiet pretty cove named Woollya, surrounded by islets, every one of
-which and every point had its proper native name. We found here a
-family of Jemmy's tribe, but not his relations: we made friends with
-them; and in the evening they sent a canoe to inform Jemmy's mother and
-brothers. The cove was bordered by some acres of good sloping land,
-not covered (as elsewhere) either by peat or by forest-trees. Captain
-Fitz Roy originally intended, as before stated, to have taken York
-Minster and Fuegia to their own tribe on the west coast; but as they
-expressed a wish to remain here, and as the spot was singularly
-favourable, Captain Fitz Roy determined to settle here the whole party,
-including Matthews, the missionary. Five days were spent in building
-for them three large wigwams, in landing their goods, in digging two
-gardens, and sowing seeds.
-
-The next morning after our arrival (the 24th) the Fuegians began to
-pour in, and Jemmy's mother and brothers arrived. Jemmy recognised the
-stentorian voice of one of his brothers at a prodigious distance. The
-meeting was less interesting than that between a horse, turned out into
-a field, when he joins an old companion. There was no demonstration of
-affection; they simply stared for a short time at each other; and the
-mother immediately went to look after her canoe. We heard, however,
-through York that the mother has been inconsolable for the loss of
-Jemmy and had searched everywhere for him, thinking that he might have
-been left after having been taken in the boat. The women took much
-notice of and were very kind to Fuegia. We had already perceived that
-Jemmy had almost forgotten his own language. I should think there was
-scarcely another human being with so small a stock of language, for his
-English was very imperfect. It was laughable, but almost pitiable, to
-hear him speak to his wild brother in English, and then ask him in
-Spanish ("no sabe?") whether he did not understand him.
-
-Everything went on peaceably during the three next days whilst the
-gardens were digging and wigwams building. We estimated the number of
-natives at about one hundred and twenty. The women worked hard, whilst
-the men lounged about all day long, watching us. They asked for
-everything they saw, and stole what they could. They were delighted at
-our dancing and singing, and were particularly interested at seeing us
-wash in a neighbouring brook; they did not pay much attention to
-anything else, not even to our boats. Of all the things which York
-saw, during his absence from his country, nothing seems more to have
-astonished him than an ostrich, near Maldonado: breathless with
-astonishment he came running to Mr. Bynoe, with whom he was out
-walking--"Oh, Mr. Bynoe, oh, bird all same horse!" Much as our white
-skins surprised the natives, by Mr. Low's account a negro-cook to a
-sealing vessel, did so more effectually, and the poor fellow was so
-mobbed and shouted at that he would never go on shore again.
-Everything went on so quietly that some of the officers and myself took
-long walks in the surrounding hills and woods. Suddenly, however, on
-the 27th, every woman and child disappeared. We were all uneasy at
-this, as neither York nor Jemmy could make out the cause. It was
-thought by some that they had been frightened by our cleaning and
-firing off our muskets on the previous evening; by others, that it was
-owing to offence taken by an old savage, who, when told to keep further
-off, had coolly spit in the sentry's face, and had then, by gestures
-acted over a sleeping Fuegian, plainly showed, as it was said, that he
-should like to cut up and eat our man. Captain Fitz Roy, to avoid the
-chance of an encounter, which would have been fatal to so many of the
-Fuegians, thought it advisable for us to sleep at a cove a few miles
-distant. Matthews, with his usual quiet fortitude (remarkable in a man
-apparently possessing little energy of character), determined to stay
-with the Fuegians, who evinced no alarm for themselves; and so we left
-them to pass their first awful night.
-
-On our return in the morning (28th) we were delighted to find all
-quiet, and the men employed in their canoes spearing fish. Captain
-Fitz Roy determined to send the yawl and one whale-boat back to the
-ship; and to proceed with the two other boats, one under his own
-command (in which he most kindly allowed me to accompany him), and one
-under Mr. Hammond, to survey the western parts of the Beagle Channel,
-and afterwards to return and visit the settlement. The day to our
-astonishment was overpoweringly hot, so that our skins were scorched:
-with this beautiful weather, the view in the middle of the Beagle
-Channel was very remarkable. Looking towards either hand, no object
-intercepted the vanishing points of this long canal between the
-mountains. The circumstance of its being an arm of the sea was
-rendered very evident by several huge whales [2] spouting in different
-directions. On one occasion I saw two of these monsters, probably male
-and female, slowly swimming one after the other, within less than a
-stone's throw of the shore, over which the beech-tree extended its
-branches. We sailed on till it was dark, and then pitched our tents in
-a quiet creek. The greatest luxury was to find for our beds a beach of
-pebbles, for they were dry and yielded to the body. Peaty soil is
-damp; rock is uneven and hard; sand gets into one's meat, when cooked
-and eaten boat-fashion; but when lying in our blanket-bags, on a good
-bed of smooth pebbles, we passed most comfortable nights.
-
-It was my watch till one o'clock. There is something very solemn in
-these scenes. At no time does the consciousness in what a remote
-corner of the world you are then standing, come so strongly before the
-mind. Everything tends to this effect; the stillness of the night is
-interrupted only by the heavy breathing of the seamen beneath the
-tents, and sometimes by the cry of a night-bird. The occasional
-barking of a dog, heard in the distance, reminds one that it is the
-land of the savage.
-
-January 20th.--Early in the morning we arrived at the point where the
-Beagle Channel divides into two arms; and we entered the northern one.
-The scenery here becomes even grander than before. The lofty mountains
-on the north side compose the granitic axis, or backbone of the country
-and boldly rise to a height of between three and four thousand feet,
-with one peak above six thousand feet. They are covered by a wide
-mantle of perpetual snow, and numerous cascades pour their waters,
-through the woods, into the narrow channel below. In many parts,
-magnificent glaciers extend from the mountain side to the water's edge.
-It is scarcely possible to imagine anything more beautiful than the
-beryl-like blue of these glaciers, and especially as contrasted with
-the dead white of the upper expanse of snow. The fragments which had
-fallen from the glacier into the water were floating away, and the
-channel with its icebergs presented, for the space of a mile, a
-miniature likeness of the Polar Sea. The boats being hauled on shore
-at our dinner-hour, we were admiring from the distance of half a mile a
-perpendicular cliff of ice, and were wishing that some more fragments
-would fall. At last, down came a mass with a roaring noise, and
-immediately we saw the smooth outline of a wave travelling towards us.
-The men ran down as quickly as they could to the boats; for the chance
-of their being dashed to pieces was evident. One of the seamen just
-caught hold of the bows, as the curling breaker reached it: he was
-knocked over and over, but not hurt, and the boats though thrice lifted
-on high and let fall again, received no damage. This was most
-fortunate for us, for we were a hundred miles distant from the ship,
-and we should have been left without provisions or fire-arms. I had
-previously observed that some large fragments of rock on the beach had
-been lately displaced; but until seeing this wave, I did not understand
-the cause. One side of the creek was formed by a spur of mica-slate;
-the head by a cliff of ice about forty feet high; and the other side by
-a promontory fifty feet high, built up of huge rounded fragments of
-granite and mica-slate, out of which old trees were growing. This
-promontory was evidently a moraine, heaped up at a period when the
-glacier had greater dimensions.
-
-When we reached the western mouth of this northern branch of the Beagle
-Channel, we sailed amongst many unknown desolate islands, and the
-weather was wretchedly bad. We met with no natives. The coast was
-almost everywhere so steep, that we had several times to pull many
-miles before we could find space enough to pitch our two tents: one
-night we slept on large round boulders, with putrefying sea-weed
-between them; and when the tide rose, we had to get up and move our
-blanket-bags. The farthest point westward which we reached was Stewart
-Island, a distance of about one hundred and fifty miles from our ship.
-We returned into the Beagle Channel by the southern arm, and thence
-proceeded, with no adventure, back to Ponsonby Sound.
-
-February 6th.--We arrived at Woollya. Matthews gave so bad an account
-of the conduct of the Fuegians, that Captain Fitz Roy determined to
-take him back to the Beagle; and ultimately he was left at New Zealand,
-where his brother was a missionary. From the time of our leaving, a
-regular system of plunder commenced; fresh parties of the natives kept
-arriving: York and Jemmy lost many things, and Matthews almost
-everything which had not been concealed underground. Every article
-seemed to have been torn up and divided by the natives. Matthews
-described the watch he was obliged always to keep as most harassing;
-night and day he was surrounded by the natives, who tried to tire him
-out by making an incessant noise close to his head. One day an old
-man, whom Matthews asked to leave his wigwam, immediately returned with
-a large stone in his hand: another day a whole party came armed with
-stones and stakes, and some of the younger men and Jemmy's brother were
-crying: Matthews met them with presents. Another party showed by signs
-that they wished to strip him naked and pluck all the hairs out of his
-face and body. I think we arrived just in time to save his life.
-Jemmy's relatives had been so vain and foolish, that they had showed to
-strangers their plunder, and their manner of obtaining it. It was
-quite melancholy leaving the three Fuegians with their savage
-countrymen; but it was a great comfort that they had no personal fears.
-York, being a powerful resolute man, was pretty sure to get on well,
-together with his wife Fuegia. Poor Jemmy looked rather disconsolate,
-and would then, I have little doubt, have been glad to have returned
-with us. His own brother had stolen many things from him; and as he
-remarked, "What fashion call that:" he abused his countrymen, "all bad
-men, no sabe (know) nothing" and, though I never heard him swear
-before, "damned fools." Our three Fuegians, though they had been only
-three years with civilized men, would, I am sure, have been glad to
-have retained their new habits; but this was obviously impossible. I
-fear it is more than doubtful, whether their visit will have been of
-any use to them.
-
-In the evening, with Matthews on board, we made sail back to the ship,
-not by the Beagle Channel, but by the southern coast. The boats were
-heavily laden and the sea rough, and we had a dangerous passage. By
-the evening of the 7th we were on board the Beagle after an absence of
-twenty days, during which time we had gone three hundred miles in the
-open boats. On the 11th, Captain Fitz Roy paid a visit by himself to
-the Fuegians and found them going on well; and that they had lost very
-few more things.
-
-
-On the last day of February in the succeeding year (1834) the Beagle
-anchored in a beautiful little cove at the eastern entrance of the
-Beagle Channel. Captain Fitz Roy determined on the bold, and as it
-proved successful, attempt to beat against the westerly winds by the
-same route, which we had followed in the boats to the settlement at
-Woollya. We did not see many natives until we were near Ponsonby Sound,
-where we were followed by ten or twelve canoes. The natives did not at
-all understand the reason of our tacking, and, instead of meeting us at
-each tack, vainly strove to follow us in our zigzag course. I was
-amused at finding what a difference the circumstance of being quite
-superior in force made, in the interest of beholding these savages.
-While in the boats I got to hate the very sound of their voices, so
-much trouble did they give us. The first and last word was
-"yammerschooner." When, entering some quiet little cove, we have looked
-round and thought to pass a quiet night, the odious word
-"yammerschooner" has shrilly sounded from some gloomy nook, and then
-the little signal-smoke has curled up to spread the news far and wide.
-On leaving some place we have said to each other, "Thank heaven, we
-have at last fairly left these wretches!" when one more faint hallo
-from an all-powerful voice, heard at a prodigious distance, would reach
-our ears, and clearly could we distinguish--"yammerschooner." But now,
-the more Fuegians the merrier; and very merry work it was. Both
-parties laughing, wondering, gaping at each other; we pitying them, for
-giving us good fish and crabs for rags, etc.; they grasping at the
-chance of finding people so foolish as to exchange such splendid
-ornaments for a good supper. It was most amusing to see the
-undisguised smile of satisfaction with which one young woman with her
-face painted black, tied several bits of scarlet cloth round her head
-with rushes. Her husband, who enjoyed the very universal privilege in
-this country of possessing two wives, evidently became jealous of all
-the attention paid to his young wife; and, after a consultation with
-his naked beauties, was paddled away by them.
-
-Some of the Fuegians plainly showed that they had a fair notion of
-barter. I gave one man a large nail (a most valuable present) without
-making any signs for a return; but he immediately picked out two fish,
-and handed them up on the point of his spear. If any present was
-designed for one canoe, and it fell near another, it was invariably
-given to the right owner. The Fuegian boy, whom Mr. Low had on board
-showed, by going into the most violent passion, that he quite
-understood the reproach of being called a liar, which in truth he was.
-We were this time, as on all former occasions, much surprised at the
-little notice, or rather none whatever, which was taken of many things,
-the use of which must have been evident to the natives. Simple
-circumstances--such as the beauty of scarlet cloth or blue beads, the
-absence of women, our care in washing ourselves,--excited their
-admiration far more than any grand or complicated object, such as our
-ship. Bougainville has well remarked concerning these people, that
-they treat the "chefs d'oeuvre de l'industrie humaine, comme ils
-traitent les loix de la nature et ses phenomenes."
-
-On the 5th of March, we anchored in a cove at Woollya, but we saw not a
-soul there. We were alarmed at this, for the natives in Ponsonby Sound
-showed by gestures, that there had been fighting; and we afterwards
-heard that the dreaded Oens men had made a descent. Soon a canoe, with
-a little flag flying, was seen approaching, with one of the men in it
-washing the paint off his face. This man was poor Jemmy,--now a thin,
-haggard savage, with long disordered hair, and naked, except a bit of
-blanket round his waist. We did not recognize him till he was close to
-us, for he was ashamed of himself, and turned his back to the ship. We
-had left him plump, fat, clean, and well-dressed;--I never saw so
-complete and grievous a change. As soon, however, as he was clothed,
-and the first flurry was over, things wore a good appearance. He dined
-with Captain Fitz Roy, and ate his dinner as tidily as formerly. He
-told us that he had "too much" (meaning enough) to eat, that he was not
-cold, that his relations were very good people, and that he did not
-wish to go back to England: in the evening we found out the cause of
-this great change in Jemmy's feelings, in the arrival of his young and
-nice-looking wife. With his usual good feeling he brought two
-beautiful otter-skins for two of his best friends, and some spear-heads
-and arrows made with his own hands for the Captain. He said he had
-built a canoe for himself, and he boasted that he could talk a little
-of his own language! But it is a most singular fact, that he appears
-to have taught all his tribe some English: an old man spontaneously
-announced "Jemmy Button's wife." Jemmy had lost all his property. He
-told us that York Minster had built a large canoe, and with his wife
-Fuegia, [3] had several months since gone to his own country, and had
-taken farewell by an act of consummate villainy; he persuaded Jemmy and
-his mother to come with him, and then on the way deserted them by
-night, stealing every article of their property.
-
-Jemmy went to sleep on shore, and in the morning returned, and remained
-on board till the ship got under way, which frightened his wife, who
-continued crying violently till he got into his canoe. He returned
-loaded with valuable property. Every soul on board was heartily sorry
-to shake hands with him for the last time. I do not now doubt that he
-will be as happy as, perhaps happier than, if he had never left his own
-country. Every one must sincerely hope that Captain Fitz Roy's noble
-hope may be fulfilled, of being rewarded for the many generous
-sacrifices which he made for these Fuegians, by some shipwrecked sailor
-being protected by the descendants of Jemmy Button and his tribe! When
-Jemmy reached the shore, he lighted a signal fire, and the smoke curled
-up, bidding us a last and long farewell, as the ship stood on her
-course into the open sea.
-
-The perfect equality among the individuals composing the Fuegian tribes
-must for a long time retard their civilization. As we see those
-animals, whose instinct compels them to live in society and obey a
-chief, are most capable of improvement, so is it with the races of
-mankind. Whether we look at it as a cause or a consequence, the more
-civilized always have the most artificial governments. For instance,
-the inhabitants of Otaheite, who, when first discovered, were governed
-by hereditary kings, had arrived at a far higher grade than another
-branch of the same people, the New Zealanders,--who, although benefited
-by being compelled to turn their attention to agriculture, were
-republicans in the most absolute sense. In Tierra del Fuego, until
-some chief shall arise with power sufficient to secure any acquired
-advantage, such as the domesticated animals, it seems scarcely possible
-that the political state of the country can be improved. At present,
-even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds and distributed;
-and no one individual becomes richer than another. On the other hand,
-it is difficult to understand how a chief can arise till there is
-property of some sort by which he might manifest his superiority and
-increase his power.
-
-I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man exists in a lower
-state of improvement than in any other part of the world. The South
-Sea Islanders, of the two races inhabiting the Pacific, are
-comparatively civilized. The Esquimau in his subterranean hut, enjoys
-some of the comforts of life, and in his canoe, when fully equipped,
-manifests much skill. Some of the tribes of Southern Africa prowling
-about in search of roots, and living concealed on the wild and arid
-plains, are sufficiently wretched. The Australian, in the simplicity
-of the arts of life, comes nearest the Fuegian: he can, however, boast
-of his boomerang, his spear and throwing-stick, his method of climbing
-trees, of tracking animals, and of hunting. Although the Australian
-may be superior in acquirements, it by no means follows that he is
-likewise superior in mental capacity: indeed, from what I saw of the
-Fuegians when on board and from what I have read of the Australians, I
-should think the case was exactly the reverse.
-
-[1] This substance, when dry, is tolerably compact, and of little
-specific gravity: Professor Ehrenberg has examined it: he states (Konig
-Akad. der Wissen: Berlin, Feb. 1845) that it is composed of infusoria,
-including fourteen polygastrica, and four phytolitharia. He says that
-they are all inhabitants of fresh-water; this is a beautiful example of
-the results obtainable through Professor Ehrenberg's microscopic
-researches; for Jemmy Button told me that it is always collected at the
-bottoms of mountain-brooks. It is, moreover, a striking fact that in
-the geographical distribution of the infusoria, which are well known to
-have very wide ranges, that all the species in this substance, although
-brought from the extreme southern point of Tierra del Fuego, are old,
-known forms.
-
-[2] One day, off the East coast of Tierra del Fuego, we saw a grand
-sight in several spermaceti whales jumping upright quite out of the
-water, with the exception of their tail-fins. As they fell down
-sideways, they splashed the water high up, and the sound reverberated
-like a distant broadside.
-
-[3] Captain Sulivan, who, since his voyage in the Beagle, has been
-employed on the survey of the Falkland Islands, heard from a sealer in
-(1842?), that when in the western part of the Strait of Magellan, he
-was astonished by a native woman coming on board, who could talk some
-English. Without doubt this was Fuega Basket. She lived (I fear the
-term probably bears a double interpretation) some days on board.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-STRAIT OF MAGELLAN.--CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS
-
-Strait of Magellan--Port Famine--Ascent of Mount Tarn--Forests--Edible
-Fungus--Zoology--Great Sea-weed--Leave Tierra del
-Fuego--Climate--Fruit-trees and Productions of the Southern
-Coasts--Height of Snow-line on the Cordillera--Descent of Glaciers to
-the Sea--Icebergs formed--Transportal of Boulders--Climate and
-Productions of the Antarctic Islands--Preservation of Frozen
-Carcasses--Recapitulation.
-
-
-IN THE end of May, 1834, we entered for a second time the eastern mouth
-of the Strait of Magellan. The country on both sides of this part of
-the Strait consists of nearly level plains, like those of Patagonia.
-Cape Negro, a little within the second Narrows, may be considered as
-the point where the land begins to assume the marked features of Tierra
-del Fuego. On the east coast, south of the Strait, broken park-like
-scenery in a like manner connects these two countries, which are
-opposed to each other in almost every feature. It is truly surprising
-to find in a space of twenty miles such a change in the landscape. If
-we take a rather greater distance, as between Port Famine and Gregory
-Bay, that is about sixty miles, the difference is still more wonderful.
-At the former place, we have rounded mountains concealed by impervious
-forests, which are drenched with the rain, brought by an endless
-succession of gales; while at Cape Gregory, there is a clear and bright
-blue sky over the dry and sterile plains. The atmospheric currents,
-[1] although rapid, turbulent, and unconfined by any apparent limits,
-yet seem to follow, like a river in its bed, a regularly determined
-course.
-
-During our previous visit (in January), we had an interview at Cape
-Gregory with the famous so-called gigantic Patagonians, who gave us a
-cordial reception. Their height appears greater than it really is,
-from their large guanaco mantles, their long flowing hair, and general
-figure: on an average, their height is about six feet, with some men
-taller and only a few shorter; and the women are also tall; altogether
-they are certainly the tallest race which we anywhere saw. In features
-they strikingly resemble the more northern Indians whom I saw with
-Rosas, but they have a wilder and more formidable appearance: their
-faces were much painted with red and black, and one man was ringed and
-dotted with white like a Fuegian. Captain Fitz Roy offered to take any
-three of them on board, and all seemed determined to be of the three.
-It was long before we could clear the boat; at last we got on board
-with our three giants, who dined with the Captain, and behaved quite
-like gentlemen, helping themselves with knives, forks, and spoons:
-nothing was so much relished as sugar. This tribe has had so much
-communication with sealers and whalers that most of the men can speak a
-little English and Spanish; and they are half civilized, and
-proportionally demoralized.
-
-The next morning a large party went on shore, to barter for skins and
-ostrich-feathers; fire-arms being refused, tobacco was in greatest
-request, far more so than axes or tools. The whole population of the
-toldos, men, women, and children, were arranged on a bank. It was an
-amusing scene, and it was impossible not to like the so-called giants,
-they were so thoroughly good-humoured and unsuspecting: they asked us
-to come again. They seem to like to have Europeans to live with them;
-and old Maria, an important woman in the tribe, once begged Mr. Low to
-leave any one of his sailors with them. They spend the greater part of
-the year here; but in summer they hunt along the foot of the
-Cordillera: sometimes they travel as far as the Rio Negro 750 miles to
-the north. They are well stocked with horses, each man having,
-according to Mr. Low, six or seven, and all the women, and even
-children, their one own horse. In the time of Sarmiento (1580), these
-Indians had bows and arrows, now long since disused; they then also
-possessed some horses. This is a very curious fact, showing the
-extraordinarily rapid multiplication of horses in South America. The
-horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and the colony being
-then for a time deserted, the horse ran wild; [2] in 1580, only
-forty-three years afterwards, we hear of them at the Strait of
-Magellan! Mr. Low informs me, that a neighbouring tribe of
-foot-Indians is now changing into horse-Indians: the tribe at Gregory
-Bay giving them their worn-out horses, and sending in winter a few of
-their best skilled men to hunt for them.
-
-June 1st.--We anchored in the fine bay of Port Famine. It was now the
-beginning of winter, and I never saw a more cheerless prospect; the
-dusky woods, piebald with snow, could be only seen indistinctly,
-through a drizzling hazy atmosphere. We were, however, lucky in
-getting two fine days. On one of these, Mount Sarmiento, a distant
-mountain 6800 feet high, presented a very noble spectacle. I was
-frequently surprised in the scenery of Tierra del Fuego, at the little
-apparent elevation of mountains really lofty. I suspect it is owing to
-a cause which would not at first be imagined, namely, that the whole
-mass, from the summit to the water's edge, is generally in full view. I
-remember having seen a mountain, first from the Beagle Channel, where
-the whole sweep from the summit to the base was full in view, and then
-from Ponsonby Sound across several successive ridges; and it was
-curious to observe in the latter case, as each fresh ridge afforded
-fresh means of judging of the distance, how the mountain rose in height.
-
-Before reaching Port Famine, two men were seen running along the shore
-and hailing the ship. A boat was sent for them. They turned out to be
-two sailors who had run away from a sealing-vessel, and had joined the
-Patagonians. These Indians had treated them with their usual
-disinterested hospitality. They had parted company through accident,
-and were then proceeding to Port Famine in hopes of finding some ship.
-I dare say they were worthless vagabonds, but I never saw more
-miserable-looking ones. They had been living for some days on
-mussel-shells and berries, and their tattered clothes had been burnt by
-sleeping so near their fires. They had been exposed night and day,
-without any shelter, to the late incessant gales, with rain, sleet, and
-snow, and yet they were in good health.
-
-During our stay at Port Famine, the Fuegians twice came and plagued us.
-As there were many instruments, clothes, and men on shore, it was
-thought necessary to frighten them away. The first time a few great
-guns were fired, when they were far distant. It was most ludicrous to
-watch through a glass the Indians, as often as the shot struck the
-water, take up stones, and, as a bold defiance, throw them towards the
-ship, though about a mile and a half distant! A boat was sent with
-orders to fire a few musket-shots wide of them. The Fuegians hid
-themselves behind the trees, and for every discharge of the muskets
-they fired their arrows; all, however, fell short of the boat, and the
-officer as he pointed at them laughed. This made the Fuegians frantic
-with passion, and they shook their mantles in vain rage. At last,
-seeing the balls cut and strike the trees, they ran away, and we were
-left in peace and quietness. During the former voyage the Fuegians
-were here very troublesome, and to frighten them a rocket was fired at
-night over their wigwams; it answered effectually, and one of the
-officers told me that the clamour first raised, and the barking of the
-dogs, was quite ludicrous in contrast with the profound silence which
-in a minute or two afterwards prevailed. The next morning not a single
-Fuegian was in the neighbourhood.
-
-When the Beagle was here in the month of February, I started one
-morning at four o'clock to ascend Mount Tarn, which is 2600 feet high,
-and is the most elevated point in this immediate district. We went in
-a boat to the foot of the mountain (but unluckily not to the best
-part), and then began our ascent. The forest commences at the line of
-high-water mark, and during the first two hours I gave over all hopes
-of reaching the summit. So thick was the wood, that it was necessary
-to have constant recourse to the compass; for every landmark, though in
-a mountainous country, was completely shut out. In the deep ravines,
-the death-like scene of desolation exceeded all description; outside it
-was blowing a gale, but in these hollows, not even a breath of wind
-stirred the leaves of the tallest trees. So gloomy, cold, and wet was
-every part, that not even the fungi, mosses, or ferns could flourish.
-In the valleys it was scarcely possible to crawl along, they were so
-completely barricaded by great mouldering trunks, which had fallen down
-in every direction. When passing over these natural bridges, one's
-course was often arrested by sinking knee deep into the rotten wood; at
-other times, when attempting to lean against a firm tree, one was
-startled by finding a mass of decayed matter ready to fall at the
-slightest touch. We at last found ourselves among the stunted trees,
-and then soon reached the bare ridge, which conducted us to the summit.
-Here was a view characteristic of Tierra del Fuego; irregular chains of
-hills, mottled with patches of snow, deep yellowish-green valleys, and
-arms of the sea intersecting the land in many directions. The strong
-wind was piercingly cold, and the atmosphere rather hazy, so that we
-did not stay long on the top of the mountain. Our descent was not
-quite so laborious as our ascent, for the weight of the body forced a
-passage, and all the slips and falls were in the right direction.
-
-I have already mentioned the sombre and dull character of the evergreen
-forests, [3] in which two or three species of trees grow, to the
-exclusion of all others. Above the forest land, there are many dwarf
-alpine plants, which all spring from the mass of peat, and help to
-compose it: these plants are very remarkable from their close alliance
-with the species growing on the mountains of Europe, though so many
-thousand miles distant. The central part of Tierra del Fuego, where
-the clay-slate formation occurs, is most favourable to the growth of
-trees; on the outer coast the poorer granitic soil, and a situation
-more exposed to the violent winds, do not allow of their attaining any
-great size. Near Port Famine I have seen more large trees than
-anywhere else: I measured a Winter's Bark which was four feet six
-inches in girth, and several of the beech were as much as thirteen
-feet. Captain King also mentions a beech which was seven feet in
-diameter, seventeen feet above the roots.
-
-There is one vegetable production deserving notice from its importance
-as an article of food to the Fuegians. It is a globular, bright-yellow
-fungus, which grows in vast numbers on the beech-trees. When young it
-is elastic and turgid, with
-
-[picture]
-
-a smooth surface; but when mature it shrinks, becomes tougher, and has
-its entire surface deeply pitted or honey-combed, as represented in the
-accompanying woodcut. This fungus belongs to a new and curious genus,
-[4] I found a second species on another species of beech in Chile: and
-Dr. Hooker informs me, that just lately a third species has been
-discovered on a third species of beech in Van Diernan's Land. How
-singular is this relationship between parasitical fungi and the trees
-on which they grow, in distant parts of the world! In Tierra del Fuego
-the fungus in its tough and mature state is collected in large
-quantities by the women and children, and is eaten un-cooked. It has a
-mucilaginous, slightly sweet taste, with a faint smell like that of a
-mushroom. With the exception of a few berries, chiefly of a dwarf
-arbutus, the natives eat no vegetable food besides this fungus. In New
-Zealand, before the introduction of the potato, the roots of the fern
-were largely consumed; at the present time, I believe, Tierra del Fuego
-is the only country in the world where a cryptogamic plant affords a
-staple article of food.
-
-The zoology of Tierra del Fuego, as might have been expected from the
-nature of its climate and vegetation, is very poor. Of mammalia,
-besides whales and seals, there is one bat, a kind of mouse (Reithrodon
-chinchilloides), two true mice, a ctenomys allied to or identical with
-the tucutuco, two foxes (Canis Magellanicus and C. Azarae), a
-sea-otter, the guanaco, and a deer. Most of these animals inhabit only
-the drier eastern parts of the country; and the deer has never been
-seen south of the Strait of Magellan. Observing the general
-correspondence of the cliffs of soft sandstone, mud, and shingle, on
-the opposite sides of the Strait, and on some intervening islands, one
-is strongly tempted to believe that the land was once joined, and thus
-allowed animals so delicate and helpless as the tucutuco and Reithrodon
-to pass over. The correspondence of the cliffs is far from proving any
-junction; because such cliffs generally are formed by the intersection
-of sloping deposits, which, before the elevation of the land, had been
-accumulated near the then existing shores. It is, however, a
-remarkable coincidence, that in the two large islands cut off by the
-Beagle Channel from the rest of Tierra del Fuego, one has cliffs
-composed of matter that may be called stratified alluvium, which front
-similar ones on the opposite side of the channel,--while the other is
-exclusively bordered by old crystalline rocks: in the former, called
-Navarin Island, both foxes and guanacos occur; but in the latter, Hoste
-Island, although similar in every respect, and only separated by a
-channel a little more than half a mile wide, I have the word of Jemmy
-Button for saying that neither of these animals are found.
-
-The gloomy woods are inhabited by few birds: occasionally the plaintive
-note of a white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius albiceps) may be
-heard, concealed near the summit of the most lofty trees; and more
-rarely the loud strange cry of a black wood-pecker, with a fine scarlet
-crest on its head. A little, dusky-coloured wren (Scytalopus
-Magellanicus) hops in a skulking manner among the entangled mass of the
-fallen and decaying trunks. But the creeper (Oxyurus tupinieri) is the
-commonest bird in the country. Throughout the beech forests, high up
-and low down, in the most gloomy, wet, and impenetrable ravines, it may
-be met with. This little bird no doubt appears more numerous than it
-really is, from its habit of following with seeming curiosity any
-person who enters these silent woods: continually uttering a harsh
-twitter, it flutters from tree to tree, within a few feet of the
-intruder's face. It is far from wishing for the modest concealment of
-the true creeper (Certhia familiaris); nor does it, like that bird, run
-up the trunks of trees, but industriously, after the manner of a
-willow-wren, hops about, and searches for insects on every twig and
-branch. In the more open parts, three or four species of finches, a
-thrush, a starling (or Icterus), two Opetiorhynchi, and several hawks
-and owls occur.
-
-The absence of any species whatever in the whole class of Reptiles, is
-a marked feature in the zoology of this country, as well as in that of
-the Falkland Islands. I do not ground this statement merely on my own
-observation, but I heard it from the Spanish inhabitants of the latter
-place, and from Jemmy Button with regard to Tierra del Fuego. On the
-banks of the Santa Cruz, in 50 degs. south, I saw a frog; and it is
-not improbable that these animals, as well as lizards, may be found as
-far south as the Strait of Magellan, where the country retains the
-character of Patagonia; but within the damp and cold limit of Tierra
-del Fuego not one occurs. That the climate would not have suited some
-of the orders, such as lizards, might have been foreseen; but with
-respect to frogs, this was not so obvious.
-
-Beetles occur in very small numbers: it was long before I could believe
-that a country as large as Scotland, covered with vegetable productions
-and with a variety of stations, could be so unproductive. The few
-which I found were alpine species (Harpalidae and Heteromidae) living
-under stones. The vegetable-feeding Chrysomelidae, so eminently
-characteristic of the Tropics, are here almost entirely absent; [5] I
-saw very few flies, butterflies, or bees, and no crickets or
-Orthoptera. In the pools of water I found but a few aquatic beetles,
-and not any fresh-water shells: Succinea at first appears an exception;
-but here it must be called a terrestrial shell, for it lives on the
-damp herbage far from the water. Land-shells could be procured only in
-the same alpine situations with the beetles. I have already contrasted
-the climate as well as the general appearance of Tierra del Fuego with
-that of Patagonia; and the difference is strongly exemplified in the
-entomology. I do not believe they have one species in common;
-certainly the general character of the insects is widely different.
-
-If we turn from the land to the sea, we shall find the latter as
-abundantly stocked with living creatures as the former is poorly so. In
-all parts of the world a rocky and partially protected shore perhaps
-supports, in a given space, a greater number of individual animals than
-any other station. There is one marine production which, from its
-importance, is worthy of a particular history. It is the kelp, or
-Macrocystis pyrifera. This plant grows on every rock from low-water
-mark to a great depth, both on the outer coast and within the channels.
-[6] I believe, during the voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, not one
-rock near the surface was discovered which was not buoyed by this
-floating weed. The good service it thus affords to vessels navigating
-near this stormy land is evident; and it certainly has saved many a one
-from being wrecked. I know few things more surprising than to see this
-plant growing and flourishing amidst those great breakers of the
-western ocean, which no mass of rock, let it be ever so hard, can long
-resist. The stem is round, slimy, and smooth, and seldom has a
-diameter of so much as an inch. A few taken together are sufficiently
-strong to support the weight of the large loose stones, to which in the
-inland channels they grow attached; and yet some of these stones were
-so heavy that when drawn to the surface, they could scarcely be lifted
-into a boat by one person. Captain Cook, in his second voyage, says,
-that this plant at Kerguelen Land rises from a greater depth than
-twenty-four fathoms; "and as it does not grow in a perpendicular
-direction, but makes a very acute angle with the bottom, and much of it
-afterwards spreads many fathoms on the surface of the sea, I am well
-warranted to say that some of it grows to the length of sixty fathoms
-and upwards." I do not suppose the stem of any other plant attains so
-great a length as three hundred and sixty feet, as stated by Captain
-Cook. Captain Fitz Roy, moreover, found it growing [7] up from the
-greater depth of forty-five fathoms. The beds of this sea-weed, even
-when of not great breadth, make excellent natural floating breakwaters.
-It is quite curious to see, in an exposed harbour, how soon the waves
-from the open sea, as they travel through the straggling stems, sink in
-height, and pass into smooth water.
-
-The number of living creatures of all Orders, whose existence
-intimately depends on the kelp, is wonderful. A great volume might be
-written, describing the inhabitants of one of these beds of sea-weed.
-Almost all the leaves, excepting those that float on the surface, are
-so thickly incrusted with corallines as to be of a white colour. We
-find exquisitely delicate structures, some inhabited by simple
-hydra-like polypi, others by more organized kinds, and beautiful
-compound Ascidiae. On the leaves, also, various patelliform shells,
-Trochi, uncovered molluscs, and some bivalves are attached. Innumerable
-crustacea frequent every part of the plant. On shaking the great
-entangled roots, a pile of small fish, shells, cuttle-fish, crabs of
-all orders, sea-eggs, star-fish, beautiful Holuthuriae, Planariae, and
-crawling nereidous animals of a multitude of forms, all fall out
-together. Often as I recurred to a branch of the kelp, I never failed
-to discover animals of new and curious structures. In Chiloe, where
-the kelp does not thrive very well, the numerous shells, corallines,
-and crustacea are absent; but there yet remain a few of the
-Flustraceae, and some compound Ascidiae; the latter, however, are of
-different species from those in Tierra del Fuego: we see here the fucus
-possessing a wider range than the animals which use it as an abode. I
-can only compare these great aquatic forests of the southern hemisphere
-with the terrestrial ones in the intertropical regions. Yet if in any
-country a forest was destroyed, I do not believe nearly so many species
-of animals would perish as would here, from the destruction of the
-kelp. Amidst the leaves of this plant numerous species of fish live,
-which nowhere else could find food or shelter; with their destruction
-the many cormorants and other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and
-porpoises, would soon perish also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage, the
-miserable lord of this miserable land, would redouble his cannibal
-feast, decrease in numbers, and perhaps cease to exist.
-
-June 8th.--We weighed anchor early in the morning and left Port Famine.
-Captain Fitz Roy determined to leave the Strait of Magellan by the
-Magdalen Channel, which had not long been discovered. Our course lay
-due south, down that gloomy passage which I have before alluded to as
-appearing to lead to another and worse world. The wind was fair, but
-the atmosphere was very thick; so that we missed much curious scenery.
-The dark ragged clouds were rapidly driven over the mountains, from
-their summits nearly down to their bases. The glimpses which we caught
-through the dusky mass were highly interesting; jagged points, cones of
-snow, blue glaciers, strong outlines, marked on a lurid sky, were seen
-at different distances and heights. In the midst of such scenery we
-anchored at Cape Turn, close to Mount Sarmiento, which was then hidden
-in the clouds. At the base of the lofty and almost perpendicular sides
-of our little cove there was one deserted wigwam, and it alone reminded
-us that man sometimes wandered into these desolate regions. But it
-would be difficult to imagine a scene where he seemed to have fewer
-claims or less authority. The inanimate works of nature--rock, ice,
-snow, wind, and water--all warring with each other, yet combined
-against man--here reigned in absolute sovereignty.
-
-June 9th.--In the morning we were delighted by seeing the veil of mist
-gradually rise from Sarmiento, and display it to our view. This
-mountain, which is one of the highest in Tierra del Fuego, has an
-altitude of 6800 feet. Its base, for about an eighth of its total
-height, is clothed by dusky woods, and above this a field of snow
-extends to the summit. These vast piles of snow, which never melt, and
-seem destined to last as long as the world holds together, present a
-noble and even sublime spectacle. The outline of the mountain was
-admirably clear and defined. Owing to the abundance of light reflected
-from the white and glittering surface, no shadows were cast on any
-part; and those lines which intersected the sky could alone be
-distinguished: hence the mass stood out in the boldest relief. Several
-glaciers descended in a winding course from the upper great expanse of
-snow to the sea-coast: they may be likened to great frozen Niagaras;
-and perhaps these cataracts of blue ice are full as beautiful as the
-moving ones of water. By night we reached the western part of the
-channel; but the water was so deep that no anchorage could be found. We
-were in consequence obliged to stand off and on in this narrow arm of
-the sea, during a pitch-dark night of fourteen hours long.
-
-June 10th.--In the morning we made the best of our way into the open
-Pacific. The western coast generally consists of low, rounded, quite
-barren hills of granite and greenstone. Sir J. Narborough called one
-part South Desolation, because it is "so desolate a land to behold:"
-and well indeed might he say so. Outside the main islands, there are
-numberless scattered rocks on which the long swell of the open ocean
-incessantly rages. We passed out between the East and West Furies; and
-a little farther northward there are so many breakers that the sea is
-called the Milky Way. One sight of such a coast is enough to make a
-landsman dream for a week about shipwrecks, peril, and death; and with
-this sight we bade farewell for ever to Tierra del Fuego.
-
-The following discussion on the climate of the southern parts of the
-continent with relation to its productions, on the snow-line, on the
-extraordinarily low descent of the glaciers, and on the zone of
-perpetual congelation in the antarctic islands, may be passed over by
-any one not interested in these curious subjects, or the final
-recapitulation alone may be read. I shall, however, here give only an
-abstract, and must refer for details to the Thirteenth Chapter and the
-Appendix of the former edition of this work.
-
-On the Climate and Productions of Tierra del Fuego and of the
-South-west Coast.--The following table gives the mean temperature of
-Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands, and, for comparison, that of
-Dublin:--
-
- Summer Winter Mean of Summer
- Latitude Temp. Temp. and Winter
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Tierra del Fuego 53 38' S. 50 33.08 41.54
- Falkland Islands 51 38' S. 51 -- --
- Dublin 53 21' N. 59.54 39.2 49.37
-
-
-Hence we see that the central part of Tierra del Fuego is colder in
-winter, and no less than 9.5 degs. less hot in summer, than Dublin.
-According to von Buch, the mean temperature of July (not the hottest
-month in the year) at Saltenfiord in Norway, is as high as 57.8 degs.,
-and this place is actually 13 degs. nearer the pole than Port Famine!
-[8] Inhospitable as this climate appears to our feelings evergreen
-trees flourish luxuriantly under it. Humming-birds may be seen sucking
-the flowers, and parrots feeding on the seeds of the Winter's Bark, in
-lat. 55 degs. S. I have already remarked to what a degree the sea
-swarms with living creatures; and the shells (such as the Patellae,
-Fissurellae, Chitons, and Barnacles), according to Mr. G. B. Sowerby,
-are of a much larger size and of a more vigorous growth, than the
-analogous species in the northern hemisphere. A large Voluta is
-abundant in southern Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. At
-Bahia Blanca, in lat. 39 degs. S., the most abundant shells were three
-species of Oliva (one of large size), one or two Volutas, and a
-Terebra. Now, these are amongst the best characterized tropical forms.
-It is doubtful whether even one small species of Oliva exists on the
-southern shores of Europe, and there are no species of the two other
-genera. If a geologist were to find in lat 39 degs. on the coast of
-Portugal a bed containing numerous shells belonging to three species of
-Oliva, to a Voluta and Terebra, he would probably assert that the
-climate at the period of their existence must have been tropical; but
-judging from South America, such an inference might be erroneous.
-
-The equable, humid, and windy climate of Tierra del Fuego extends, with
-only a small increase of heat, for many degrees along the west coast of
-the continent. The forests for 600 miles northward of Cape Horn, have
-a very similar aspect. As a proof of the equable climate, even for 300
-or 400 miles still further northward, I may mention that in Chiloe
-(corresponding in latitude with the northern parts of Spain) the peach
-seldom produces fruit, whilst strawberries and apples thrive to
-perfection. Even the crops of barley and wheat [9] are often brought
-into the houses to be dried and ripened. At Valdivia (in the same
-latitude of 40 degs., with Madrid) grapes and figs ripen, but are not
-common; olives seldom ripen even partially, and oranges not at all.
-These fruits, in corresponding latitudes in Europe, are well known to
-succeed to perfection; and even in this continent, at the Rio Negro,
-under nearly the same parallel with Valdivia, sweet potatoes
-(convolvulus) are cultivated; and grapes, figs, olives, oranges, water
-and musk melons, produce abundant fruit. Although the humid and
-equable climate of Chiloe, and of the coast northward and southward of
-it, is so unfavourable to our fruits, yet the native forests, from lat.
-45 to 38 degs., almost rival in luxuriance those of the glowing
-intertropical regions. Stately trees of many kinds, with smooth and
-highly coloured barks, are loaded by parasitical monocotyledonous
-plants; large and elegant ferns are numerous, and arborescent grasses
-entwine the trees into one entangled mass to the height of thirty or
-forty feet above the ground. Palm-trees grow in lat 37 degs.; an
-arborescent grass, very like a bamboo, in 40 degs.; and another closely
-allied kind, of great length, but not erect, flourishes even as far
-south as 45 degs. S.
-
-An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea compared
-with the land, seems to extend over the greater part of the southern
-hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the vegetation partakes of a
-semi-tropical character. Tree-ferns thrive luxuriantly in Van Diemen's
-Land (lat. 45 degs.), and I measured one trunk no less than six feet in
-circumference. An arborescent fern was found by Forster in New Zealand
-in 46 degs., where orchideous plants are parasitical on the trees. In
-the Auckland Islands, ferns, according to Dr. Dieffenbach [10] have
-trunks so thick and high that they may be almost called tree-ferns; and
-in these islands, and even as far south as lat. 55 degs. in the
-Macquarrie Islands, parrots abound.
-
-On the Height of the Snow-line, and on the Descent of the Glaciers in
-South America.--For the detailed authorities for the following table, I
-must refer to the former edition:--
-
- Height in feet
- Latitude of Snow-line Observer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Equatorial region; mean result 15,748 Humboldt. Bolivia,
- lat. 16 to 18 degs. S. 17,000 Pentland. Central Chile,
- lat. 33 degs. S. 14,500 - 15,000 Gillies, and
- the Author.
- Chiloe, lat. 41 to 43 degs. S. 6,000 Officers of the
- Beagle and the
- Author.
- Tierra del Fuego, 54 degs. S. 3,500 - 4,000 King.
-
-
-As the height of the plane of perpetual snow seems chiefly to be
-determined by the extreme heat of the summer, rather than by the mean
-temperature of the year, we ought not to be surprised at its descent in
-the Strait of Magellan, where the summer is so cool, to only 3500 or
-4000 feet above the level of the sea; although in Norway, we must
-travel to between lat. 67 and 70 degs. N., that is, about 14 degs.
-nearer the pole, to meet with perpetual snow at this low level. The
-difference in height, namely, about 9000 feet, between the snow-line on
-the Cordillera behind Chiloe (with its highest points ranging from only
-5600 to 7500 feet) and in central Chile [11] (a distance of only 9
-degs. of latitude), is truly wonderful. The land from the southward of
-Chiloe to near Concepcion (lat. 37 degs.) is hidden by one dense forest
-dripping with moisture. The sky is cloudy, and we have seen how badly
-the fruits of southern Europe succeed. In central Chile, on the other
-hand, a little northward of Concepcion, the sky is generally clear,
-rain does not fall for the seven summer months, and southern European
-fruits succeed admirably; and even the sugar-cane has been cultivated.
-[12] No doubt the plane of perpetual snow undergoes the above
-remarkable flexure of 9000 feet, unparalleled in other parts of the
-world, not far from the latitude of Concepcion, where the land ceases
-to be covered with forest-trees; for trees in South America indicate a
-rainy climate, and rain a clouded sky and little heat in summer.
-
-The descent of glaciers to the sea must, I conceive, mainly depend
-(subject, of course, to a proper supply of snow in the upper region) on
-the lowness of the line of perpetual snow on steep mountains near the
-coast. As the snow-line is so low in Tierra del Fuego, we might have
-expected that many of the glaciers would have reached the sea.
-Nevertheless, I was astonished when I first saw a range, only from 3000
-to 4000 feet in height, in the latitude of Cumberland, with every
-valley filled with streams of ice descending to the sea-coast. Almost
-every arm of the sea, which penetrates to the interior higher chain,
-not only in Tierra del Fuego, but on the coast for 650 miles
-northwards, is terminated by "tremendous and astonishing glaciers," as
-described by one of the officers on the survey. Great masses of ice
-frequently fall from these icy cliffs, and the crash reverberates like
-the broadside of a man-of-war through the lonely channels. These
-falls, as noticed in the last chapter, produce great waves which break
-on the adjoining coasts. It is known that earthquakes frequently cause
-masses of earth to fall from sea-cliffs: how terrific, then, would be
-the effect of a severe shock (and such occur here [13]) on a body like
-a glacier, already in motion, and traversed by fissures! I can readily
-believe that the water would be fairly beaten back out of the deepest
-channel, and then, returning with an overwhelming force, would whirl
-about huge masses of rock like so much chaff. In Eyre's Sound, in the
-latitude of Paris, there are immense glaciers, and yet the loftiest
-neighbouring mountain is only 6200 feet high. In this Sound, about
-fifty icebergs were seen at one time floating outwards, and one of them
-must have been at least 168 feet in total height. Some of the icebergs
-were loaded with blocks of no inconsiderable size, of granite and other
-rocks, different from the clay-slate of the surrounding mountains. The
-glacier furthest from the pole, surveyed during the voyages of the
-Adventure and Beagle, is in lat. 46 degs. 50', in the Gulf of Penas. It
-is 15 miles long, and in one part 7 broad and descends to the
-sea-coast. But even a few miles northward of this glacier, in Laguna
-de San
-
-[picture]
-
-Rafael, some Spanish missionaries [14] encountered "many icebergs, some
-great, some small, and others middle-sized," in a narrow arm of the
-sea, on the 22nd of the month corresponding with our June, and in a
-latitude corresponding with that of the Lake of Geneva!
-
-In Europe, the most southern glacier which comes down to the sea is met
-with, according to Von Buch, on the coast of Norway, in lat. 67 degs.
-Now, this is more than 20 degs. of latitude, or 1230 miles, nearer the
-pole than the Laguna de San Rafael. The position of the glaciers at
-this place and in the Gulf of Penas may be put even in a more striking
-point of view, for they descend to the sea-coast within 7.5 degs. of
-latitude, or 450 miles, of a harbour, where three species of Oliva, a
-Voluta, and a Terebra, are the commonest shells, within less than 9
-degs. from where palms grow, within 4.5 degs. of a region where the
-jaguar and puma range over the plains, less than 2.5 degs. from
-arborescent grasses, and (looking to the westward in the same
-hemisphere) less than 2 degs. from orchideous parasites, and within a
-single degree of tree-ferns!
-
-These facts are of high geological interest with respect to the climate
-of the northern hemisphere at the period when boulders were
-transported. I will not here detail how simply the theory of icebergs
-being charged with fragments of rock, explain the origin and position
-of the gigantic boulders of eastern Tierra del Fuego, on the high plain
-of Santa Cruz, and on the island of Chiloe. In Tierra del Fuego, the
-greater number of boulders lie on the lines of old sea-channels, now
-converted into dry valleys by the elevation of the land. They are
-associated with a great unstratified formation of mud and sand,
-containing rounded and angular fragments of all sizes, which has
-originated [15] in the repeated ploughing up of the sea-bottom by the
-stranding of icebergs, and by the matter transported on them. Few
-geologists now doubt that those erratic boulders which lie near lofty
-mountains have been pushed forward by the glaciers themselves, and that
-those distant from mountains, and embedded in subaqueous deposits, have
-been conveyed thither either on icebergs or frozen in coast-ice. The
-connection between the transportal of boulders and the presence of ice
-in some form, is strikingly shown by their geographical distribution
-over the earth. In South America they are not found further than 48
-degs. of latitude, measured from the southern pole; in North America it
-appears that the limit of their transportal extends to 53.5 degs. from
-the northern pole; but in Europe to not more than 40 degs. of latitude,
-measured from the same point. On the other hand, in the intertropical
-parts of America, Asia, and Africa, they have never been observed; nor
-at the Cape of Good Hope, nor in Australia. [16]
-
-On the Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands.--Considering
-the rankness of the vegetation in Tierra del Fuego, and on the coast
-northward of it, the condition of the islands south and south-west of
-America is truly surprising. Sandwich Land, in the latitude of the
-north part of Scotland, was found by Cook, during the hottest month of
-the year, "covered many fathoms thick with everlasting snow;" and there
-seems to be scarcely any vegetation. Georgia, an island 96 miles long
-and 10 broad, in the latitude of Yorkshire, "in the very height of
-summer, is in a manner wholly covered with frozen snow." It can boast
-only of moss, some tufts of grass, and wild burnet; it has only one
-land-bird (Anthus correndera), yet Iceland, which is 10 degs. nearer
-the pole, has, according to Mackenzie, fifteen land-birds. The South
-Shetland Islands, in the same latitude as the southern half of Norway,
-possess only some lichens, moss, and a little grass; and Lieut. Kendall
-[17] found the bay, in which he was at anchor, beginning to freeze at a
-period corresponding with our 8th of September. The soil here consists
-of ice and volcanic ashes interstratified; and at a little depth
-beneath the surface it must remain perpetually congealed, for Lieut.
-Kendall found the body of a foreign sailor which had long been buried,
-with the flesh and all the features perfectly preserved. It is a
-singular fact, that on the two great continents in the northern
-hemisphere (but not in the broken land of Europe between them ), we
-have the zone of perpetually frozen under-soil in a low
-latitude--namely, in 56 degs. in North America at the depth of three
-feet, [18] and in 62 degs. in Siberia at the depth of twelve to fifteen
-feet--as the result of a directly opposite condition of things to those
-of the southern hemisphere. On the northern continents, the winter is
-rendered excessively cold by the radiation from a large area of land
-into a clear sky, nor is it moderated by the warmth-bringing currents
-of the sea; the short summer, on the other hand, is hot. In the
-Southern Ocean the winter is not so excessively cold, but the summer is
-far less hot, for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun to warm the
-ocean, itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean temperature
-of the year, which regulates the zone of perpetually congealed
-under-soil, is low. It is evident that a rank vegetation, which does
-not so much require heat as it does protection from intense cold, would
-approach much nearer to this zone of perpetual congelation under the
-equable climate of the southern hemisphere, than under the extreme
-climate of the northern continents.
-
-The case of the sailor's body perfectly preserved in the icy soil of
-the South Shetland Islands (lat. 62 to 63 degs. S.), in a rather lower
-latitude than that (lat. 64 degs. N.) under which Pallas found the
-frozen rhinoceros in Siberia, is very interesting. Although it is a
-fallacy, as I have endeavoured to show in a former chapter, to suppose
-that the larger quadrupeds require a luxuriant vegetation for their
-support, nevertheless it is important to find in the South Shetland
-Islands a frozen under-soil within 360 miles of the forest-clad islands
-near Cape Horn, where, as far as the _bulk_ of vegetation is concerned,
-any number of great quadrupeds might be supported. The perfect
-preservation of the carcasses of the Siberian elephants and
-rhinoceroses is certainly one of the most wonderful facts in geology;
-but independently of the imagined difficulty of supplying them with
-food from the adjoining countries, the whole case is not, I think, so
-perplexing as it has generally been considered. The plains of Siberia,
-like those of the Pampas, appear to have been formed under the sea,
-into which rivers brought down the bodies of many animals; of the
-greater number of these, only the skeletons have been preserved, but of
-others the perfect carcass. Now, it is known that in the shallow sea
-on the Arctic coast of America the bottom freezes, [19] and does not
-thaw in spring so soon as the surface of the land, moreover at greater
-depths, where the bottom of the sea does not freeze the mud a few feet
-beneath the top layer might remain even in summer below 32 degs., as in
-the case on the land with the soil at the depth of a few feet. At
-still greater depths, the temperature of the mud and water would
-probably not be low enough to preserve the flesh; and hence, carcasses
-drifted beyond the shallow parts near an Arctic coast, would have only
-their skeletons preserved: now in the extreme northern parts of Siberia
-bones are infinitely numerous, so that even islets are said to be
-almost composed of them; [20] and those islets lie no less than ten
-degrees of latitude north of the place where Pallas found the frozen
-rhinoceros. On the other hand, a carcass washed by a flood into a
-shallow part of the Arctic Sea, would be preserved for an indefinite
-period, if it were soon afterwards covered with mud sufficiently thick
-to prevent the heat of the summer-water penetrating to it; and if, when
-the sea-bottom was upraised into land, the covering was sufficiently
-thick to prevent the heat of the summer air and sun thawing and
-corrupting it.
-
-Recapitulation.--I will recapitulate the principal facts with regard to
-the climate, ice-action, and organic productions of the southern
-hemisphere, transposing the places in imagination to Europe, with which
-we are so much better acquainted. Then, near Lisbon, the commonest
-sea-shells, namely, three species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra,
-would have a tropical character. In the southern provinces of France,
-magnificent forests, intwined by arborescent grasses and with the trees
-loaded with parasitical plants, would hide the face of the land. The
-puma and the jaguar would haunt the Pyrenees. In the latitude of Mont
-Blanc, but on an island as far westward as Central North America,
-tree-ferns and parasitical Orchideae would thrive amidst the thick
-woods. Even as far north as central Denmark, humming-birds would be
-seen fluttering about delicate flowers, and parrots feeding amidst the
-evergreen woods; and in the sea there, we should have a Voluta, and all
-the shells of large size and vigorous growth. Nevertheless, on some
-islands only 360 miles northward of our new Cape Horn in Denmark, a
-carcass buried in the soil (or if washed into a shallow sea, and
-covered up with mud) would be preserved perpetually frozen. If some
-bold navigator attempted to penetrate northward of these islands, he
-would run a thousand dangers amidst gigantic icebergs, on some of which
-he would see great blocks of rock borne far away from their original
-site. Another island of large size in the latitude of southern
-Scotland, but twice as far to the west, would be "almost wholly covered
-with everlasting snow," and would have each bay terminated by
-ice-cliffs, whence great masses would be yearly detached: this island
-would boast only of a little moss, grass, and burnet, and a titlark
-would be its only land inhabitant. From our new Cape Horn in Denmark,
-a chain of mountains, scarcely half the height of the Alps, would run
-in a straight line due southward; and on its western flank every deep
-creek of the sea, or fiord, would end in "bold and astonishing
-glaciers." These lonely channels would frequently reverberate with the
-falls of ice, and so often would great waves rush along their coasts;
-numerous icebergs, some as tall as cathedrals, and occasionally loaded
-with "no inconsiderable blocks of rock," would be stranded on the
-outlying islets; at intervals violent earthquakes would shoot
-prodigious masses of ice into the waters below. Lastly, some
-missionaries attempting to penetrate a long arm of the sea, would
-behold the not lofty surrounding mountains, sending down their many
-grand icy streams to the sea-coast, and their progress in the boats
-would be checked by the innumerable floating icebergs, some small and
-some great; and this would have occurred on our twenty-second of June,
-and where the Lake of Geneva is now spread out! [21]
-
-[1] The south-westerly breezes are generally very dry. January 29th,
-being at anchor under Cape Gregory: a very hard gale from W. by S.,
-clear sky with few cumuli; temperature 57 degs., dew-point 36
-degs.,--difference 21 degs. On January 15th, at Port St. Julian: in the
-morning, light winds with much rain, followed by a very heavy squall
-with rain,--settled into heavy gale with large cumuli,--cleared up,
-blowing very strong from S.S.W. Temperature 60 degs., dew-point 42
-degs.,--difference 18 degs.
-
-[2] Rengger, Natur. der Saeugethiere von Paraguay. S. 334.
-
-[3] Captain Fitz Roy informs me that in April (our October), the leaves
-of those trees which grow near the base of the mountains change colour,
-but not those on the more elevated parts. I remember having read some
-observations, showing that in England the leaves fall earlier in a warm
-and fine autumn than in a late and cold one, The change in the colour
-being here retarded in the more elevated, and therefore colder
-situations, must be owing to the same general law of vegetation. The
-trees of Tierra del Fuego during no part of the year entirely shed
-their leaves.
-
-[4] Described from my specimens and notes by the Rev. J. M. Berkeley,
-in the Linnean Transactions (vol. xix. p. 37), under the name of
-Cyttaria Darwinii; the Chilean species is the C. Berteroii. This genus
-is allied to Bulgaria.
-
-[5] I believe I must except one alpine Haltica, and a single specimen
-of a Melasoma. Mr. Waterhouse informs me, that of the Harpalidae there
-are eight or nine species--the forms of the greater number being very
-peculiar; of Heteromera, four or five species; of Rhyncophora, six or
-seven; and of the following families one species in each:
-Staphylinidae, Elateridae, Cebrionidae, Melolonthidae. The species in
-the other orders are even fewer. In all the orders, the scarcity of
-the individuals is even more remarkable than that of the species. Most
-of the Coleoptera have been carefully described by Mr. Waterhouse in
-the Annals of Nat. Hist.
-
-[6] Its geographical range is remarkably wide; it is found from the
-extreme southern islets near Cape Horn, as far north on the eastern
-coast (according to information given me by Mr. Stokes) as lat. 43
-degs.,--but on the western coast, as Dr. Hooker tells me, it extends to
-the R. San Francisco in California, and perhaps even to Kamtschatka. We
-thus have an immense range in latitude; and as Cook, who must have been
-well acquainted with the species, found it at Kerguelen Land, no less
-than 140 degs. in longitude.
-
-[7] Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, vol. i. p. 363.--It appears
-that sea-weed grows extremely quick.--Mr. Stephenson found (Wilson's
-Voyage round Scotland, vol. ii. p. 228) that a rock uncovered only at
-spring-tides, which had been chiselled smooth in November, on the
-following May, that is, within six months afterwards, was thickly
-covered with Fucus digitatus two feet, and F. esculentus six feet, in
-length.
-
-[8] With regard to Tierra del Fuego, the results are deduced from the
-observations of Capt. King (Geographical Journal, 1830), and those
-taken on board the Beagle. For the Falkland Islands, I am indebted to
-Capt. Sulivan for the mean of the mean temperature (reduced from
-careful observations at midnight, 8 A.M., noon, and 8 P.M.) of the
-three hottest months, viz., December, January, and February. The
-temperature of Dublin is taken from Barton.
-
-[9] Agueros, Descrip. Hist. de la Prov. de Chiloe, 1791, p. 94.
-
-[10] See the German Translation of this Journal; and for the other
-facts, Mr. Brown's Appendix to Flinders's Voyage.
-
-
-[11] On the Cordillera of central Chile, I believe the snow-line varies
-exceedingly in height in different summers. I was assured that during
-one very dry and long summer, all the snow disappeared from Aconcagua,
-although it attains the prodigious height of 23,000 feet. It is
-probable that much of the snow at these great heights is evaporated
-rather than thawed.
-
-[12] Miers's Chile, vol. i. p. 415. It is said that the sugar-cane grew
-at Ingenio, lat. 32 to 33 degs., but not in sufficient quantity to make
-the manufacture profitable. In the valley of Quillota, south of
-Ingenio, I saw some large date palm trees.
-
-[13] Bulkeley's and Cummin's Faithful Narrative of the Loss of the
-Wager. The earthquake happened August 25, 1741.
-
-[14] Agueros, Desc. Hist. de Chiloe, p. 227.
-
-[15] Geological Transactions, vol. vi. p. 415.
-
-[16] I have given details (the first, I believe, published) on this
-subject in the first edition, and in the Appendix to it. I have there
-shown that the apparent exceptions to the absence of erratic boulders
-in certain countries, are due to erroneous observations; several
-statements there given I have since found confirmed by various authors.
-
-[17] Geographical Journal, 1830, pp. 65, 66.
-
-[18] Richardson's Append. to Back's Exped., and Humboldt's Fragm.
-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 386.
-
-[19] Messrs. Dease and Simpson, in Geograph. Journ., vol. viii. pp. 218
-and 220.
-
-[20] Cuvier (Ossemens Fossiles, tom. i. p. 151), from Billing's Voyage.
-
-[21] In the former edition and Appendix, I have given some facts on the
-transportal of erratic boulders and icebergs in the Atlantic Ocean.
-This subject has lately been treated excellently by Mr. Hayes, in the
-Boston Journal (vol. iv. p. 426). The author does not appear aware of
-a case published by me (Geographical Journal, vol. ix. p. 528) of a
-gigantic boulder embedded in an iceberg in the Antarctic Ocean, almost
-certainly one hundred miles distant from any land, and perhaps much
-more distant. In the Appendix I have discussed at length the
-probability (at that time hardly thought of) of icebergs, when
-stranded, grooving and polishing rocks, like glaciers. This is now a
-very commonly received opinion; and I cannot still avoid the suspicion
-that it is applicable even to such cases as that of the Jura. Dr.
-Richardson has assured me that the icebergs off North America push
-before them pebbles and sand, and leave the submarine rocky flats quite
-bare; it is hardly possible to doubt that such ledges must be polished
-and scored in the direction of the set of the prevailing currents.
-Since writing that Appendix, I have seen in North Wales (London Phil.
-Mag., vol. xxi. p. 180) the adjoining action of glaciers and floating
-icebergs.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-CENTRAL CHILE
-
-Valparaiso--Excursion to the Foot of the Andes--Structure of the
-Land--Ascend the Bell of Quillota--Shattered Masses of
-Greenstone--Immense Valleys--Mines--State of
-Miners--Santiago--Hot-baths of
-Cauquenes--Gold-mines--Grinding-mills--Perforated Stones--Habits of the
-Puma--El Turco and Tapacolo--Humming-birds.
-
-
-JULY 23rd.--The Beagle anchored late at night in the bay of Valparaiso,
-the chief seaport of Chile. When morning came, everything appeared
-delightful. After Tierra del Fuego, the climate felt quite
-delicious--the atmosphere so dry, and the heavens so clear and blue
-with the sun shining brightly, that all nature seemed sparkling with
-life. The view from the anchorage is very pretty. The town is built
-at the very foot of a range of hills, about 1600 feet high, and rather
-steep. From its position, it consists of one long, straggling street,
-which runs parallel to the beach, and wherever a ravine comes down, the
-houses are piled up on each side of it. The rounded hills, being only
-partially protected by a very scanty vegetation, are worn into
-numberless little gullies, which expose a singularly bright red soil.
-From this cause, and from the low whitewashed houses with tile roofs,
-the view reminded me of St. Cruz in Teneriffe. In a north-westerly
-direction there are some fine glimpses of the Andes: but these
-mountains appear much grander when viewed from the neighbouring hills:
-the great distance at which they are situated can then more readily be
-perceived. The volcano of Aconcagua is particularly magnificent. This
-huge and irregularly conical mass has an elevation greater than that of
-Chimborazo; for, from measurements made by the officers in the Beagle,
-its height is no less than 23,000 feet. The Cordillera, however,
-viewed from this point, owe the greater part of their beauty to the
-atmosphere through which they are seen. When the sun was setting in
-the Pacific, it was admirable to watch how clearly their rugged
-outlines could be distinguished, yet how varied and how delicate were
-the shades of their colour.
-
-I had the good fortune to find living here Mr. Richard Corfield, an old
-schoolfellow and friend, to whose hospitality and kindness I was
-greatly indebted, in having afforded me a most pleasant residence
-during the Beagle's stay in Chile. The immediate neighbourhood of
-Valparaiso is not very productive to the naturalist. During the long
-summer the wind blows steadily from the southward, and a little off
-shore, so that rain never falls; during the three winter months,
-however, it is sufficiently abundant. The vegetation in consequence is
-very scanty: except in some deep valleys, there are no trees, and only
-a little grass and a few low bushes are scattered over the less steep
-parts of the hills. When we reflect, that at the distance of 350 miles
-to the south, this side of the Andes is completely hidden by one
-impenetrable forest, the contrast is very remarkable. I took several
-long walks while collecting objects of natural history. The country is
-pleasant for exercise. There are many very beautiful flowers; and, as
-in most other dry climates, the plants and shrubs possess strong and
-peculiar odours--even one's clothes by brushing through them became
-scented. I did not cease from wonder at finding each succeeding day as
-fine as the foregoing. What a difference does climate make in the
-enjoyment of life! How opposite are the sensations when viewing black
-mountains half enveloped in clouds, and seeing another range through
-the light blue haze of a fine day! The one for a time may be very
-sublime; the other is all gaiety and happy life.
-
-August 14th.--I set out on a riding excursion, for the purpose of
-geologizing the basal parts of the Andes, which alone at this time of
-the year are not shut up by the winter snow. Our first day's ride was
-northward along the sea-coast. After dark we reached the Hacienda of
-Quintero, the estate which formerly belonged to Lord Cochrane. My
-object in coming here was to see the great beds of shells, which stand
-some yards above the level of the sea, and are burnt for lime. The
-proofs of the elevation of this whole line of coast are unequivocal: at
-the height of a few hundred feet old-looking shells are numerous, and I
-found some at 1300 feet. These shells either lie loose on the surface,
-or are embedded in a reddish-black vegetable mould. I was much
-surprised to find under the microscope that this vegetable mould is
-really marine mud, full of minute particles of organic bodies.
-
-15th.--We returned towards the valley of Quillota. The country was
-exceedingly pleasant; just such as poets would call pastoral: green
-open lawns, separated by small valleys with rivulets, and the cottages,
-we may suppose of the shepherds scattered on the hill-sides. We were
-obliged to cross the ridge of the Chilicauquen. At its base there were
-many fine evergreen forest-trees, but these flourished only in the
-ravines, where there was running water. Any person who had seen only
-the country near Valparaiso, would never have imagined that there had
-been such picturesque spots in Chile. As soon as we reached the brow of
-the Sierra, the valley of Quillota was immediately under our feet. The
-prospect was one of remarkable artificial luxuriance. The valley is
-very broad and quite flat, and is thus easily irrigated in all parts.
-The little square gardens are crowded with orange and olive trees, and
-every sort of vegetable. On each side huge bare mountains rise, and
-this from the contrast renders the patchwork valley the more pleasing.
-Whoever called "Valparaiso" the "Valley of Paradise," must have been
-thinking of Quillota. We crossed over to the Hacienda de San Isidro,
-situated at the very foot of the Bell Mountain.
-
-Chile, as may be seen in the maps, is a narrow strip of land between
-the Cordillera and the Pacific; and this strip is itself traversed by
-several mountain-lines, which in this part run parallel to the great
-range. Between these outer lines and the main Cordillera, a succession
-of level basins, generally opening into each other by narrow passages,
-extend far to the southward: in these, the principal towns are
-situated, as San Felipe, Santiago, San Fernando. These basins or
-plains, together with the transverse flat valleys (like that of
-Quillota) which connect them with the coast, I have no doubt are the
-bottoms of ancient inlets and deep bays, such as at the present day
-intersect every part of Tierra del Fuego and the western coast. Chile
-must formerly have resembled the latter country in the configuration of
-its land and water. The resemblance was occasionally shown strikingly
-when a level fog-bank covered, as with a mantle, all the lower parts of
-the country: the white vapour curling into the ravines, beautifully
-represented little coves and bays; and here and there a solitary
-hillock peeping up, showed that it had formerly stood there as an
-islet. The contrast of these flat valleys and basins with the
-irregular mountains, gave the scenery a character which to me was new
-and very interesting.
-
-From the natural slope to seaward of these plains, they are very easily
-irrigated, and in consequence singularly fertile. Without this process
-the land would produce scarcely anything, for during the whole summer
-the sky is cloudless. The mountains and hills are dotted over with
-bushes and low trees, and excepting these the vegetation is very
-scanty. Each landowner in the valley possesses a certain portion of
-hill-country, where his half-wild cattle, in considerable numbers,
-manage to find sufficient pasture. Once every year there is a grand
-"rodeo," when all the cattle are driven down, counted, and marked, and
-a certain number separated to be fattened in the irrigated fields.
-Wheat is extensively cultivated, and a good deal of Indian corn: a kind
-of bean is, however, the staple article of food for the common
-labourers. The orchards produce an overflowing abundance of peaches
-figs, and grapes. With all these advantages, the inhabitants of the
-country ought to be much more prosperous than they are.
-
-16th.--The mayor-domo of the Hacienda was good enough to give me a
-guide and fresh horses; and in the morning we set out to ascend the
-Campana, or Bell Mountain, which is 6400 feet high. The paths were
-very bad, but both the geology and scenery amply repaid the trouble. We
-reached by the evening, a spring called the Agua del Guanaco, which is
-situated at a great height. This must be an old name, for it is very
-many years since a guanaco drank its waters. During the ascent I
-noticed that nothing but bushes grew on the northern slope, whilst on
-the southern slope there was a bamboo about fifteen feet high. In a
-few places there were palms, and I was surprised to see one at an
-elevation of at least 4500 feet. These palms are, for their family,
-ugly trees. Their stem is very large, and of a curious form, being
-thicker in the middle than at the base or top. They are excessively
-numerous in some parts of Chile, and valuable on account of a sort of
-treacle made from the sap. On one estate near Petorca they tried to
-count them, but failed, after having numbered several hundred thousand.
-Every year in the early spring, in August, very many are cut down, and
-when the trunk is lying on the ground, the crown of leaves is lopped
-off. The sap then immediately begins to flow from the upper end, and
-continues so doing for some months: it is, however, necessary that a
-thin slice should be shaved off from that end every morning, so as to
-expose a fresh surface. A good tree will give ninety gallons, and all
-this must have been contained in the vessels of the apparently dry
-trunk. It is said that the sap flows much more quickly on those days
-when the sun is powerful; and likewise, that it is absolutely necessary
-to take care, in cutting down the tree, that it should fall with its
-head upwards on the side of the hill; for if it falls down the slope,
-scarcely any sap will flow; although in that case one would have
-thought that the action would have been aided, instead of checked, by
-the force of gravity. The sap is concentrated by boiling, and is then
-called treacle, which it very much resembles in taste.
-
-We unsaddled our horses near the spring, and prepared to pass the
-night. The evening was fine, and the atmosphere so clear, that the
-masts of the vessels at anchor in the bay of Valparaiso, although no
-less than twenty-six geographical miles distant, could be distinguished
-clearly as little black streaks. A ship doubling the point under sail,
-appeared as a bright white speck. Anson expresses much surprise, in
-his voyage, at the distance at which his vessels were discovered from
-the coast; but he did not sufficiently allow for the height of the
-land, and the great transparency of the air.
-
-The setting of the sun was glorious; the valleys being black whilst the
-snowy peaks of the Andes yet retained a ruby tint. When it was dark,
-we made a fire beneath a little arbour of bamboos, fried our charqui
-(or dried slips of beef), took our mate, and were quite comfortable.
-There is an inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air. The
-evening was calm and still;--the shrill noise of the mountain bizcacha,
-and the faint cry of a goatsucker, were occasionally to be heard.
-Besides these, few birds, or even insects, frequent these dry, parched
-mountains.
-
-August 17th.--In the morning we climbed up the rough mass of greenstone
-which crowns the summit. This rock, as frequently happens, was much
-shattered and broken into huge angular fragments. I observed, however,
-one remarkable circumstance, namely, that many of the surfaces
-presented every degree of freshness some appearing as if broken the day
-before, whilst on others lichens had either just become, or had long
-grown, attached. I so fully believed that this was owing to the
-frequent earthquakes, that I felt inclined to hurry from below each
-loose pile. As one might very easily be deceived in a fact of this
-kind, I doubted its accuracy, until ascending Mount Wellington, in Van
-Diemen's Land, where earthquakes do not occur; and there I saw the
-summit of the mountain similarly composed and similarly shattered, but
-all the blocks appeared as if they had been hurled into their present
-position thousands of years ago.
-
-We spent the day on the summit, and I never enjoyed one more
-thoroughly. Chile, bounded by the Andes and the Pacific, was seen as
-in a map. The pleasure from the scenery, in itself beautiful, was
-heightened by the many reflections which arose from the mere view of
-the Campana range with its lesser parallel ones, and of the broad
-valley of Quillota directly intersecting them. Who can avoid wondering
-at the force which has upheaved these mountains, and even more so at
-the countless ages which it must have required to have broken through,
-removed, and levelled whole masses of them? It is well in this case to
-call to mind the vast shingle and sedimentary beds of Patagonia, which,
-if heaped on the Cordillera, would increase its height by so many
-thousand feet. When in that country, I wondered how any mountain-chain
-could have supplied such masses, and not have been utterly obliterated.
-We must not now reverse the wonder, and doubt whether all-powerful time
-can grind down mountains--even the gigantic Cordillera--into-gravel and
-mud.
-
-The appearance of the Andes was different from that which I had
-expected. The lower line of the snow was of course horizontal, and to
-this line the even summits of the range seemed quite parallel. Only at
-long intervals, a group of points or a single cone showed where a
-volcano had existed, or does now exist. Hence the range resembled a
-great solid wall, surmounted here and there by a tower, and making a
-most perfect barrier to the country.
-
-Almost every part of the hill had been drilled by attempts to open
-gold-mines: the rage for mining has left scarcely a spot in Chile
-unexamined. I spent the evening as before, talking round the fire with
-my two companions. The Guasos of Chile, who correspond to the Gauchos
-of the Pampas, are, however, a very different set of beings. Chile is
-the more civilized of the two countries, and the inhabitants, in
-consequence, have lost much individual character. Gradations in rank
-are much more strongly marked: the Guaso does not by any means consider
-every man his equal; and I was quite surprised to find that my
-companions did not like to eat at the same time with myself. This
-feeling of inequality is a necessary consequence of the existence of an
-aristocracy of wealth. It is said that some few of the greater
-landowners possess from five to ten thousand pounds sterling per annum:
-an inequality of riches which I believe is not met with in any of the
-cattle-breeding countries eastward of the Andes. A traveller does not
-here meet that unbounded hospitality which refuses all payment, but yet
-is so kindly offered that no scruples can be raised in accepting it.
-Almost every house in Chile will receive you for the night, but a
-trifle is expected to be given in the morning; even a rich man will
-accept two or three shillings. The Gaucho, although he may be a
-cutthroat, is a gentleman; the Guaso is in few respects better, but at
-the same time a vulgar, ordinary fellow. The two men, although
-employed much in the same manner, are different in their habits and
-attire; and the peculiarities of each are universal in their respective
-countries. The Gaucho seems part of his horse, and scorns to exert
-himself except when on his back: the Guaso may be hired to work as a
-labourer in the fields. The former lives entirely on animal food; the
-latter almost wholly on vegetable. We do not here see the white boots,
-the broad drawers and scarlet chilipa; the picturesque costume of the
-Pampas. Here, common trousers are protected by black and green worsted
-leggings. The poncho, however, is common to both. The chief pride of
-the Guaso lies in his spurs, which are absurdly large. I measured one
-which was six inches in the _diameter_ of the rowel, and the rowel
-itself contained upwards of thirty points. The stirrups are on the
-same scale, each consisting of a square, carved block of wood, hollowed
-out, yet weighing three or four pounds. The Guaso is perhaps more
-expert with the lazo than the Gaucho; but, from the nature of the
-country, he does not know the use of the bolas.
-
-August 18th.--We descended the mountain, and passed some beautiful
-little spots, with rivulets and fine trees. Having slept at the same
-hacienda as before, we rode during the two succeeding days up the
-valley, and passed through Quillota, which is more like a collection of
-nursery-gardens than a town. The orchards were beautiful, presenting
-one mass of peach-blossoms. I saw, also, in one or two places the
-date-palm; it is a most stately tree; and I should think a group of
-them in their native Asiatic or African deserts must be superb. We
-passed likewise San Felipe, a pretty straggling town like Quillota. The
-valley in this part expands into one of those great bays or plains,
-reaching to the foot of the Cordillera, which have been mentioned as
-forming so curious a part of the scenery of Chile. In the evening we
-reached the mines of Jajuel, situated in a ravine at the flank of the
-great chain. I stayed here five days. My host the superintendent of
-the mine, was a shrewd but rather ignorant Cornish miner. He had
-married a Spanish woman, and did not mean to return home; but his
-admiration for the mines of Cornwall remained unbounded. Amongst many
-other questions, he asked me, "Now that George Rex is dead, how many
-more of the family of Rexes are yet alive?" This Rex certainly must be
-a relation of the great author Finis, who wrote all books!
-
-These mines are of copper, and the ore is all shipped to Swansea, to be
-smelted. Hence the mines have an aspect singularly quiet, as compared
-to those in England: here no smoke, furnaces, or great steam-engines,
-disturb the solitude of the surrounding mountains.
-
-The Chilian government, or rather the old Spanish law, encourages by
-every method the searching for mines. The discoverer may work a mine
-on any ground, by paying five shillings; and before paying this he may
-try, even in the garden of another man, for twenty days.
-
-It is now well known that the Chilian method of mining is the cheapest.
-My host says that the two principal improvements introduced by
-foreigners have been, first, reducing by previous roasting the copper
-pyrites--which, being the common ore in Cornwall, the English miners
-were astounded on their arrival to find thrown away as useless:
-secondly, stamping and washing the scoriae from the old furnaces--by
-which process particles of metal are recovered in abundance. I have
-actually seen mules carrying to the coast, for transportation to
-England, a cargo of such cinders. But the first case is much the most
-curious. The Chilian miners were so convinced that copper pyrites
-contained not a particle of copper, that they laughed at the Englishmen
-for their ignorance, who laughed in turn, and bought their richest
-veins for a few dollars. It is very odd that, in a country where
-mining had been extensively carried on for many years, so simple a
-process as gently roasting the ore to expel the sulphur previous to
-smelting it, had never been discovered. A few improvements have
-likewise been introduced in some of the simple machinery; but even to
-the present day, water is removed from some mines by men carrying it up
-the shaft in leathern bags!
-
-The labouring men work very hard. They have little time allowed for
-their meals, and during summer and winter they begin when it is light,
-and leave off at dark. They are paid one pound sterling a month, and
-their food is given them: this for breakfast consists of sixteen figs
-and two small loaves of bread; for dinner, boiled beans; for supper,
-broken roasted wheat grain. They scarcely ever taste meat; as, with
-the twelve pounds per annum, they have to clothe themselves, and
-support their families. The miners who work in the mine itself have
-twenty-five shillings per month, and are allowed a little charqui. But
-these men come down from their bleak habitations only once in every
-fortnight or three weeks.
-
-During my stay here I thoroughly enjoyed scrambling about these huge
-mountains. The geology, as might have been expected, was very
-interesting. The shattered and baked rocks, traversed by innumerable
-dykes of greenstone, showed what commotions had formerly taken place.
-The scenery was much the same as that near the Bell of Quillota--dry
-barren mountains, dotted at intervals by bushes with a scanty foliage.
-The cactuses, or rather opuntias were here very numerous. I measured
-one of a spherical figure, which, including the spines, was six feet
-and four inches in circumference. The height of the common
-cylindrical, branching kind, is from twelve to fifteen feet, and the
-girth (with spines) of the branches between three and four feet.
-
-A heavy fall of snow on the mountains prevented me during the last two
-days, from making some interesting excursions. I attempted to reach a
-lake which the inhabitants, from some unaccountable reason, believe to
-be an arm of the sea. During a very dry season, it was proposed to
-attempt cutting a channel from it for the sake of the water, but the
-padre, after a consultation, declared it was too dangerous, as all
-Chile would be inundated, if, as generally supposed, the lake was
-connected with the Pacific. We ascended to a great height, but
-becoming involved in the snow-drifts failed in reaching this wonderful
-lake, and had some difficulty in returning. I thought we should have
-lost our horses; for there was no means of guessing how deep the drifts
-were, and the animals, when led, could only move by jumping. The black
-sky showed that a fresh snow-storm was gathering, and we therefore were
-not a little glad when we escaped. By the time we reached the base the
-storm commenced, and it was lucky for us that this did not happen three
-hours earlier in the day.
-
-August 26th.--We left Jajuel and again crossed the basin of San Felipe.
-The day was truly Chilian: glaringly bright, and the atmosphere quite
-clear. The thick and uniform covering of newly fallen snow rendered
-the view of the volcano of Aconcagua and the main chain quite glorious.
-We were now on the road to Santiago, the capital of Chile. We crossed
-the Cerro del Talguen, and slept at a little rancho. The host, talking
-about the state of Chile as compared to other countries, was very
-humble: "Some see with two eyes, and some with one, but for my part I
-do not think that Chile sees with any."
-
-August 27th.--After crossing many low hills we descended into the small
-land-locked plain of Guitron. In the basins, such as this one, which
-are elevated from one thousand to two thousand feet above the sea, two
-species of acacia, which are stunted in their forms, and stand wide
-apart from each other, grow in large numbers. These trees are never
-found near the sea-coast; and this gives another characteristic feature
-to the scenery of these basins. We crossed a low ridge which separates
-Guitron from the great plain on which Santiago stands. The view was
-here pre-eminently striking: the dead level surface, covered in parts
-by woods of acacia, and with the city in the distance, abutting
-horizontally against the base of the Andes, whose snowy peaks were
-bright with the evening sun. At the first glance of this view, it was
-quite evident that the plain represented the extent of a former inland
-sea. As soon as we gained the level road we pushed our horses into a
-gallop, and reached the city before it was dark.
-
-I stayed a week in Santiago, and enjoyed myself very much. In the
-morning I rode to various places on the plain, and in the evening dined
-with several of the English merchants, whose hospitality at this place
-is well known. A never-failing source of pleasure was to ascend the
-little hillock of rock (St. Lucia) which projects in the middle of the
-city. The scenery certainly is most striking, and, as I have said,
-very peculiar. I am informed that this same character is common to the
-cities on the great Mexican platform. Of the town I have nothing to
-say in detail: it is not so fine or so large as Buenos Ayres, but is
-built after the same model. I arrived here by a circuit to the north;
-so I resolved to return to Valparaiso by a rather longer excursion to
-the south of the direct road.
-
-September 5th.--By the middle of the day we arrived at one of the
-suspension bridges, made of hide, which cross the Maypu, a large
-turbulent river a few leagues southward of Santiago. These bridges are
-very poor affairs. The road, following the curvature of the suspending
-ropes, is made of bundles of sticks placed close together. It was full
-of holes, and oscillated rather fearfully, even with the weight of a
-man leading his horse. In the evening we reached a comfortable
-farm-house, where there were several very pretty senoritas. They were
-much horrified at my having entered one of their churches out of mere
-curiosity. They asked me, "Why do you not become a Christian--for our
-religion is certain?" I assured them I was a sort of Christian; but
-they would not hear of it--appealing to my own words, "Do not your
-padres, your very bishops, marry?" The absurdity of a bishop having a
-wife particularly struck them: they scarcely knew whether to be most
-amused or horror-struck at such an enormity.
-
-6th.--We proceeded due south, and slept at Rancagua. The road passed
-over the level but narrow plain, bounded on one side by lofty hills,
-and on the other by the Cordillera. The next day we turned up the
-valley of the Rio Cachapual, in which the hot-baths of Cauquenes, long
-celebrated for their medicinal properties, are situated. The
-suspension bridges, in the less frequented parts, are generally taken
-down during the winter when the rivers are low. Such was the case in
-this valley, and we were therefore obliged to cross the stream on
-horseback. This is rather disagreeable, for the foaming water, though
-not deep, rushes so quickly over the bed of large rounded stones, that
-one's head becomes quite confused, and it is difficult even to perceive
-whether the horse is moving onward or standing still. In summer, when
-the snow melts, the torrents are quite impassable; their strength and
-fury are then extremely great, as might be plainly seen by the marks
-which they had left. We reached the baths in the evening, and stayed
-there five days, being confined the two last by heavy rain. The
-buildings consist of a square of miserable little hovels, each with a
-single table and bench. They are situated in a narrow deep valley just
-without the central Cordillera. It is a quiet, solitary spot, with a
-good deal of wild beauty.
-
-The mineral springs of Cauquenes burst forth on a line of dislocation,
-crossing a mass of stratified rock, the whole of which betrays the
-action of heat. A considerable quantity of gas is continually escaping
-from the same orifices with the water. Though the springs are only a
-few yards apart, they have very different temperature; and this appears
-to be the result of an unequal mixture of cold water: for those with
-the lowest temperature have scarcely any mineral taste. After the great
-earthquake of 1822 the springs ceased, and the water did not return for
-nearly a year. They were also much affected by the earthquake of 1835;
-the temperature being suddenly changed from 118 to 92 degs. [1] It
-seems probable that mineral waters rising deep from the bowels of the
-earth, would always be more deranged by subterranean disturbances than
-those nearer the surface. The man who had charge of the baths assured
-me that in summer the water is hotter and more plentiful than in
-winter. The former circumstance I should have expected, from the less
-mixture, during the dry season, of cold water; but the latter statement
-appears very strange and contradictory. The periodical increase during
-the summer, when rain never falls, can, I think, only be accounted for
-by the melting of the snow: yet the mountains which are covered by snow
-during that season, are three or four leagues distant from the springs.
-I have no reason to doubt the accuracy of my informer, who, having
-lived on the spot for several years, ought to be well acquainted with
-the circumstance,--which, if true, certainly is very curious: for we
-must suppose that the snow-water, being conducted through porous strata
-to the regions of heat, is again thrown up to the surface by the line
-of dislocated and injected rocks at Cauquenes; and the regularity of
-the phenomenon would seem to indicate that in this district heated rock
-occurred at a depth not very great.
-
-One day I rode up the valley to the farthest inhabited spot. Shortly
-above that point, the Cachapual divides into two deep tremendous
-ravines, which penetrate directly into the great range. I scrambled up
-a peaked mountain, probably more than six thousand feet high. Here, as
-indeed everywhere else, scenes of the highest interest presented
-themselves. It was by one of these ravines, that Pincheira entered
-Chile and ravaged the neighbouring country. This is the same man whose
-attack on an estancia at the Rio Negro I have described. He was a
-renegade half-caste Spaniard, who collected a great body of Indians
-together and established himself by a stream in the Pampas, which place
-none of the forces sent after him could ever discover. From this point
-he used to sally forth, and crossing the Cordillera by passes hitherto
-unattempted, he ravaged the farm-houses and drove the cattle to his
-secret rendezvous. Pincheira was a capital horseman, and he made all
-around him equally good, for he invariably shot any one who hesitated
-to follow him. It was against this man, and other wandering Indian
-tribes, that Rosas waged the war of extermination.
-
-September 13th.--We left the baths of Cauquenes, and, rejoining the
-main road, slept at the Rio Clara. From this place we rode to the town
-of San Fernando. Before arriving there, the last land-locked basin had
-expanded into a great plain, which extended so far to the south, that
-the snowy summits of the more distant Andes were seen as if above the
-horizon of the sea. San Fernando is forty leagues from Santiago; and
-it was my farthest point southward; for we here turned at right angles
-towards the coast. We slept at the gold-mines of Yaquil, which are
-worked by Mr. Nixon, an American gentleman, to whose kindness I was
-much indebted during the four days I stayed at his house. The next
-morning we rode to the mines, which are situated at the distance of
-some leagues, near the summit of a lofty hill. On the way we had a
-glimpse of the lake Tagua-tagua, celebrated for its floating islands,
-which have been described by M. Gay. [2] They are composed of the
-stalks of various dead plants intertwined together, and on the surface
-of which other living ones take root. Their form is generally
-circular, and their thickness from four to six feet, of which the
-greater part is immersed in the water. As the wind blows, they pass
-from one side of the lake to the other, and often carry cattle and
-horses as passengers.
-
-When we arrived at the mine, I was struck by the pale appearance of
-many of the men, and inquired from Mr. Nixon respecting their
-condition. The mine is 450 feet deep, and each man brings up about 200
-pounds weight of stone. With this load they have to climb up the
-alternate notches cut in the trunks of trees, placed in a zigzag line
-up the shaft. Even beardless young men, eighteen and twenty years old,
-with little muscular development of their bodies (they are quite naked
-excepting drawers) ascend with this great load from nearly the same
-depth. A strong man, who is not accustomed to this labour, perspires
-most profusely, with merely carrying up his own body. With this very
-severe labour, they live entirely on boiled beans and bread. They
-would prefer having bread alone; but their masters, finding that they
-cannot work so hard upon this, treat them like horses, and make them
-eat the beans. Their pay is here rather more than at the mines of
-Jajuel, being from 24 to 28 shillings per month. They leave the mine
-only once in three weeks; when they stay with their families for two
-days. One of the rules of this mine sounds very harsh, but answers
-pretty well for the master. The only method of stealing gold is to
-secrete pieces of the ore, and take them out as occasion may offer.
-Whenever the major-domo finds a lump thus hidden, its full value is
-stopped out of the wages of all the men; who thus, without they all
-combine, are obliged to keep watch over each other.
-
-When the ore is brought to the mill, it is ground into an impalpable
-powder; the process of washing removes all the lighter particles, and
-amalgamation finally secures the gold-dust. The washing, when
-described, sounds a very simple process; but it is beautiful to see how
-the exact adaptation of the current of water to the specific gravity of
-the gold, so easily separates the powdered matrix from the metal. The
-mud which passes from the mills is collected into pools, where it
-subsides, and every now and then is cleared out, and thrown into a
-common heap. A great deal of chemical action then commences, salts of
-various kinds effloresce on the surface, and the mass becomes hard.
-After having been left for a year or two, and then rewashed, it yields
-gold; and this process may be repeated even six or seven times; but the
-gold each time becomes less in quantity, and the intervals required (as
-the inhabitants say, to generate the metal) are longer. There can be
-no doubt that the chemical action, already mentioned, each time
-liberates fresh gold from some combination. The discovery of a method
-to effect this before the first grinding would without doubt raise the
-value of gold-ores many fold.
-
-It is curious to find how the minute particles of gold, being scattered
-about and not corroding, at last accumulate in some quantity. A short
-time since a few miners, being out of work, obtained permission to
-scrape the ground round the house and mills; they washed the earth thus
-got together, and so procured thirty dollars' worth of gold. This is
-an exact counterpart of what takes place in nature. Mountains suffer
-degradation and wear away, and with them the metallic veins which they
-contain. The hardest rock is worn into impalpable mud, the ordinary
-metals oxidate, and both are removed; but gold, platina, and a few
-others are nearly indestructible, and from their weight, sinking to the
-bottom, are left behind. After whole mountains have passed through this
-grinding mill, and have been washed by the hand of nature, the residue
-becomes metalliferous, and man finds it worth his while to complete the
-task of separation.
-
-Bad as the above treatment of the miners appears, it is gladly accepted
-of by them; for the condition of the labouring agriculturists is much
-worse. Their wages are lower, and they live almost exclusively on
-beans. This poverty must be chiefly owing to the feudal-like system on
-which the land is tilled: the landowner gives a small plot of ground to
-the labourer for building on and cultivating, and in return has his
-services (or those of a proxy) for every day of his life, without any
-wages. Until a father has a grown-up son, who can by his labour pay
-the rent, there is no one, except on occasional days, to take care of
-his own patch of ground. Hence extreme poverty is very common among the
-labouring classes in this country.
-
-There are some old Indian ruins in this neighbourhood, and I was shown
-one of the perforated stones, which Molina mentions as being found in
-many places in considerable numbers. They are of a circular flattened
-form, from five to six inches in diameter, with a hole passing quite
-through the centre. It has generally been supposed that they were used
-as heads to clubs, although their form does not appear at all well
-adapted for that purpose. Burchell [3] states that some of the tribes
-in Southern Africa dig up roots by the aid of a stick pointed at one
-end, the force and weight of which are increased by a round stone with
-a hole in it, into which the other end is firmly wedged. It appears
-probable that the Indians of Chile formerly used some such rude
-agricultural instrument.
-
-One day, a German collector in natural history, of the name of Renous,
-called, and nearly at the same time an old Spanish lawyer. I was
-amused at being told the conversation which took place between them.
-Renous speaks Spanish so well, that the old lawyer mistook him for a
-Chilian. Renous alluding to me, asked him what he thought of the King
-of England sending out a collector to their country, to pick up lizards
-and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentleman thought seriously
-for some time, and then said, "It is not well,--_hay un gato encerrado
-aqui_ (there is a cat shut up here). No man is so rich as to send out
-people to pick up such rubbish. I do not like it: if one of us were to
-go and do such things in England, do not you think the King of England
-would very soon send us out of his country?" And this old gentleman,
-from his profession, belongs to the better informed and more
-intelligent classes! Renous himself, two or three years before, left
-in a house at San Fernando some caterpillars, under charge of a girl to
-feed, that they might turn into butterflies. This was rumoured through
-the town, and at last the padres and governor consulted together, and
-agreed it must be some heresy. Accordingly, when Renous returned, he
-was arrested.
-
-September 19th.--We left Yaquil, and followed the flat valley, formed
-like that of Quillota, in which the Rio Tinderidica flows. Even at
-these few miles south of Santiago the climate is much damper; in
-consequence there are fine tracts of pasturage, which are not
-irrigated. (20th.) We followed this valley till it expanded into a
-great plain, which reaches from the sea to the mountains west of
-Rancagua. We shortly lost all trees and even bushes; so that the
-inhabitants are nearly as badly off for firewood as those in the
-Pampas. Never having heard of these plains, I was much surprised at
-meeting with such scenery in Chile. The plains belong to more than one
-series of different elevations, and they are traversed by broad
-flat-bottomed valleys; both of which circumstances, as in Patagonia,
-bespeak the action of the sea on gently rising land. In the steep
-cliffs bordering these valleys, there are some large caves, which no
-doubt were originally formed by the waves: one of these is celebrated
-under the name of Cueva del Obispo; having formerly been consecrated.
-During the day I felt very unwell, and from that time till the end of
-October did not recover.
-
-September 22nd.--We continued to pass over green plains without a tree.
-The next day we arrived at a house near Navedad, on the sea-coast,
-where a rich Haciendero gave us lodgings. I stayed here the two
-ensuing days, and although very unwell, managed to collect from the
-tertiary formation some marine shells.
-
-24th.--Our course was now directed towards Valparaiso, which with great
-difficulty I reached on the 27th, and was there confined to my bed till
-the end of October. During this time I was an inmate in Mr. Corfield's
-house, whose kindness to me I do not know how to express.
-
-
-I will here add a few observations on some of the animals and birds of
-Chile. The Puma, or South American Lion, is not uncommon. This animal
-has a wide geographical range; being found from the equatorial forests,
-throughout the deserts of Patagonia as far south as the damp and cold
-latitudes (53 to 54 degs.) of Tierra del Fuego. I have seen its
-footsteps in the Cordillera of central Chile, at an elevation of at
-least 10,000 feet. In La Plata the puma preys chiefly on deer,
-ostriches, bizcacha, and other small quadrupeds; it there seldom
-attacks cattle or horses, and most rarely man. In Chile, however, it
-destroys many young horses and cattle, owing probably to the scarcity
-of other quadrupeds: I heard, likewise, of two men and a woman who had
-been thus killed. It is asserted that the puma always kills its prey by
-springing on the shoulders, and then drawing back the head with one of
-its paws, until the vertebrae break: I have seen in Patagonia the
-skeletons of guanacos, with their necks thus dislocated.
-
-The puma, after eating its fill, covers the carcass with many large
-bushes, and lies down to watch it. This habit is often the cause of
-its being discovered; for the condors wheeling in the air every now and
-then descend to partake of the feast, and being angrily driven away,
-rise all together on the wing. The Chileno Guaso then knows there is a
-lion watching his prey--the word is given--and men and dogs hurry to
-the chase. Sir F. Head says that a Gaucho in the pampas, upon merely
-seeing some condors wheeling in the air, cried "A lion!" I could never
-myself meet with any one who pretended to such powers of
-discrimination. It is asserted that, if a puma has once been betrayed
-by thus watching the carcass, and has then been hunted, it never
-resumes this habit; but that, having gorged itself, it wanders far
-away. The puma is easily killed. In an open country, it is first
-entangled with the bolas, then lazoed, and dragged along the ground
-till rendered insensible. At Tandeel (south of the plata), I was told
-that within three months one hundred were thus destroyed. In Chile
-they are generally driven up bushes or trees, and are then either shot,
-or baited to death by dogs. The dogs employed in this chase belong to
-a particular breed, called Leoneros: they are weak, slight animals,
-like long-legged terriers, but are born with a particular instinct for
-this sport. The puma is described as being very crafty: when pursued,
-it often returns on its former track, and then suddenly making a spring
-on one side, waits there till the dogs have passed by. It is a very
-silent animal, uttering no cry even when wounded, and only rarely
-during the breeding season.
-
-Of birds, two species of the genus Pteroptochos (megapodius and
-albicollis of Kittlitz) are perhaps the most conspicuous. The former,
-called by the Chilenos "el Turco," is as large as a fieldfare, to which
-bird it has some alliance; but its legs are much longer, tail shorter,
-and beak stronger: its colour is a reddish brown. The Turco is not
-uncommon. It lives on the ground, sheltered among the thickets which
-are scattered over the dry and sterile hills. With its tail erect, and
-stilt-like legs, it may be seen every now and then popping from one
-bush to another with uncommon quickness. It really requires little
-imagination to believe that the bird is ashamed of itself, and is aware
-of its most ridiculous figure. On first seeing it, one is tempted to
-exclaim, "A vilely stuffed specimen has escaped from some museum, and
-has come to life again!" It cannot be made to take flight without the
-greatest trouble, nor does it run, but only hops. The various loud
-cries which it utters when concealed amongst the bushes, are as strange
-as its appearance. It is said to build its nest in a deep hole beneath
-the ground. I dissected several specimens: the gizzard, which was very
-muscular, contained beetles, vegetable fibres, and pebbles. From this
-character, from the length of its legs, scratching feet, membranous
-covering to the nostrils, short and arched wings, this bird seems in a
-certain degree to connect the thrushes with the gallinaceous order.
-
-The second species (or P. albicollis) is allied to the first in its
-general form. It is called Tapacolo, or "cover your posterior;" and
-well does the shameless little bird deserve its name; for it carries
-its tail more than erect, that is, inclined backwards towards its head.
-It is very common, and frequents the bottoms of hedge-rows, and the
-bushes scattered over the barren hills, where scarcely another bird can
-exist. In its general manner of feeding, of quickly hopping out of the
-thickets and back again, in its desire of concealment, unwillingness to
-take flight, and nidification, it bears a close resemblance to the
-Turco; but its appearance is not quite so ridiculous. The Tapacolo is
-very crafty: when frightened by any person, it will remain motionless
-at the bottom of a bush, and will then, after a little while, try with
-much address to crawl away on the opposite side. It is also an active
-bird, and continually making a noise: these noises are various and
-strangely odd; some are like the cooing of doves, others like the
-bubbling of water, and many defy all similes. The country people say
-it changes its cry five times in the year--according to some change of
-season, I suppose. [4]
-
-Two species of humming-birds are common; Trochilus forficatus is found
-over a space of 2500 miles on the west coast, from the hot dry country
-of Lima, to the forests of Tierra del Fuego--where it may be seen
-flitting about in snow-storms. In the wooded island of Chiloe, which
-has an extremely humid climate, this little bird, skipping from side to
-side amidst the dripping foliage, is perhaps more abundant than almost
-any other kind. I opened the stomachs of several specimens, shot in
-different parts of the continent, and in all, remains of insects were
-as numerous as in the stomach of a creeper. When this species migrates
-in the summer southward, it is replaced by the arrival of another
-species coming from the north. This second kind (Trochilus gigas) is a
-very large bird for the delicate family to which it belongs: when on
-the wing its appearance is singular. Like others of the genus, it
-moves from place to place with a rapidity which may be compared to that
-of Syrphus amongst flies, and Sphinx among moths; but whilst hovering
-over a flower, it flaps its wings with a very slow and powerful
-movement, totally different from that vibratory one common to most of
-the species, which produces the humming noise. I never saw any other
-bird where the force of its wings appeared (as in a butterfly) so
-powerful in proportion to the weight of its body. When hovering by a
-flower, its tail is constantly expanded and shut like a fan, the body
-being kept in a nearly vertical position. This action appears to
-steady and support the bird, between the slow movements of its wings.
-Although flying from flower to flower in search of food, its stomach
-generally contained abundant remains of insects, which I suspect are
-much more the object of its search than honey. The note of this
-species, like that of nearly the whole family, is extremely shrill.
-
-[1] Caldeleugh, in Philosoph. Transact. for 1836.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles, March, 1833. M. Gay, a zealous and
-able naturalist, was then occupied in studying every branch of natural
-history throughout the kingdom of Chile.
-
-[3] Burchess's Travels, vol. ii. p. 45.
-
-[4] It is a remarkable fact, that Molina, though describing in detail
-all the birds and animals of Chile, never once mentions this genus, the
-species of which are so common, and so remarkable in their habits. Was
-he at a loss how to classify them, and did he consequently think that
-silence was the more prudent course? It is one more instance of the
-frequency of omissions by authors, on those very subjects where it
-might have been least expected.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
-
-Chiloe--General Aspect--Boat Excursion--Native Indians--Castro--Tame
-Fox--Ascend San Pedro--Chonos Archipelago--Peninsula of Tres
-Montes--Granitic Range--Boat-wrecked Sailors--Low's Harbour--Wild
-Potato--Formation of Peat--Myopotamus, Otter and Mice--Cheucau and
-Barking-bird--Opetiorhynchus--Singular Character of
-Ornithology--Petrels.
-
-
-NOVEMBER 10th.--The Beagle sailed from Valparaiso to the south, for the
-purpose of surveying the southern part of Chile, the island of Chiloe,
-and the broken land called the Chonos Archipelago, as far south as the
-Peninsula of Tres Montes. On the 21st we anchored in the bay of S.
-Carlos, the capital of Chiloe.
-
-This island is about ninety miles long, with a breadth of rather less
-than thirty. The land is hilly, but not mountainous, and is covered by
-one great forest, except where a few green patches have been cleared
-round the thatched cottages. From a distance the view somewhat
-resembles that of Tierra del Fuego; but the woods, when seen nearer,
-are incomparably more beautiful. Many kinds of fine evergreen trees,
-and plants with a tropical character, here take the place of the gloomy
-beech of the southern shores. In winter the climate is detestable, and
-in summer it is only a little better. I should think there are few
-parts of the world, within the temperate regions, where so much rain
-falls. The winds are very boisterous, and the sky almost always
-clouded: to have a week of fine weather is something wonderful. It is
-even difficult to get a single glimpse of the Cordillera: during our
-first visit, once only the volcano of Osorno stood out in bold relief,
-and that was before sunrise; it was curious to watch, as the sun rose,
-the outline gradually fading away in the glare of the eastern sky.
-
-The inhabitants, from their complexion and low stature; appear to have
-three-fourths of Indian blood in their veins. They are an humble,
-quiet, industrious set of men. Although the fertile soil, resulting
-from the decomposition of the volcanic rocks, supports a rank
-vegetation, yet the climate is not favourable to any production which
-requires much sunshine to ripen it. There is very little pasture for
-the larger quadrupeds; and in consequence, the staple articles of food
-are pigs, potatoes, and fish. The people all dress in strong woollen
-garments, which each family makes for itself, and dyes with indigo of a
-dark blue colour. The arts, however, are in the rudest state;--as may
-be seen in their strange fashion of ploughing, their method of
-spinning, grinding corn, and in the construction of their boats. The
-forests are so impenetrable, that the land is nowhere cultivated except
-near the coast and on the adjoining islets. Even where paths exist,
-they are scarcely passable from the soft and swampy state of the soil.
-The inhabitants, like those of Tierra del Fuego, move about chiefly on
-the beach or in boats. Although with plenty to eat, the people are
-very poor: there is no demand for labour, and consequently the lower
-orders cannot scrape together money sufficient to purchase even the
-smallest luxuries. There is also a great deficiency of a circulating
-medium. I have seen a man bringing on his back a bag of charcoal, with
-which to buy some trifle, and another carrying a plank to exchange for
-a bottle of wine. Hence every tradesman must also be a merchant, and
-again sell the goods which he takes in exchange.
-
-November 24th.--The yawl and whale-boat were sent under the command of
-Mr. (now Captain) Sulivan, to survey the eastern or inland coast of
-Chiloe; and with orders to meet the Beagle at the southern extremity of
-the island; to which point she would proceed by the outside, so as thus
-to circumnavigate the whole. I accompanied this expedition, but
-instead of going in the boats the first day, I hired horses to take me
-to Chacao, at the northern extremity of the island. The road followed
-the coast; every now and then crossing promontories covered by fine
-forests. In these shaded paths it is absolutely necessary that the
-whole road should be made of logs of wood, which are squared and placed
-by the side of each other. From the rays of the sun never penetrating
-the evergreen foliage, the ground is so damp and soft, that except by
-this means neither man nor horse would be able to pass along. I
-arrived at the village of Chacao shortly after the tents belonging to
-the boats were pitched for the night.
-
-The land in this neighbourhood has been extensively cleared, and there
-were many quiet and most picturesque nooks in the forest. Chacao was
-formerly the principal port in the island; but many vessels having been
-lost, owing to the dangerous currents and rocks in the straits, the
-Spanish government burnt the church, and thus arbitrarily compelled the
-greater number of inhabitants to migrate to S. Carlos. We had not long
-bivouacked, before the barefooted son of the governor came down to
-reconnoitre us. Seeing the English flag hoisted at the yawl's
-mast-head, he asked with the utmost indifference, whether it was always
-to fly at Chacao. In several places the inhabitants were much
-astonished at the appearance of men-of-war's boats, and hoped and
-believed it was the forerunner of a Spanish fleet, coming to recover
-the island from the patriot government of Chile. All the men in power,
-however, had been informed of our intended visit, and were exceedingly
-civil. While we were eating our supper, the governor paid us a visit.
-He had been a lieutenant-colonel in the Spanish service, but now was
-miserably poor. He gave us two sheep, and accepted in return two
-cotton handkerchiefs, some brass trinkets, and a little tobacco.
-
-25th.--Torrents of rain: we managed, however, to run down the coast as
-far as Huapi-lenou. The whole of this eastern side of Chiloe has one
-aspect; it is a plain, broken by valleys and divided into little
-islands, and the whole thickly covered with one impervious
-blackish-green forest. On the margins there are some cleared spaces,
-surrounding the high-roofed cottages.
-
-26th--The day rose splendidly clear. The volcano of Orsono was
-spouting out volumes of smoke. This most beautiful mountain, formed
-like a perfect cone, and white with snow, stands out in front of the
-Cordillera. Another great volcano, with a saddle-shaped summit, also
-emitted from its immense crater little jets of steam. Subsequently we
-saw the lofty-peaked Corcovado--well deserving the name of "el famoso
-Corcovado." Thus we beheld, from one point of view, three great active
-volcanoes, each about seven thousand feet high. In addition to this,
-far to the south, there were other lofty cones covered with snow,
-which, although not known to be active, must be in their origin
-volcanic. The line of the Andes is not, in this neighbourhood, nearly
-so elevated as in Chile; neither does it appear to form so perfect a
-barrier between the regions of the earth. This great range, although
-running in a straight north and south line, owing to an optical
-deception, always appeared more or less curved; for the lines drawn
-from each peak to the beholder's eye, necessarily converged like the
-radii of a semicircle, and as it was not possible (owing to the
-clearness of the atmosphere and the absence of all intermediate
-objects) to judge how far distant the farthest peaks were off, they
-appeared to stand in a flattish semicircle.
-
-Landing at midday, we saw a family of pure Indian extraction. The
-father was singularly like York Minster; and some of the younger boys,
-with their ruddy complexions, might have been mistaken for Pampas
-Indians. Everything I have seen, convinces me of the close connexion
-of the different American tribes, who nevertheless speak distinct
-languages. This party could muster but little Spanish, and talked to
-each other in their own tongue. It is a pleasant thing to see the
-aborigines advanced to the same degree of civilization, however low
-that may be, which their white conquerors have attained. More to the
-south we saw many pure Indians: indeed, all the inhabitants of some of
-the islets retain their Indian surnames. In the census of 1832, there
-were in Chiloe and its dependencies forty-two thousand souls; the
-greater number of these appear to be of mixed blood. Eleven thousand
-retain their Indian surnames, but it is probable that not nearly all of
-these are of a pure breed. Their manner of life is the same with that
-of the other poor inhabitants, and they are all Christians; but it is
-said that they yet retain some strange superstitious ceremonies, and
-that they pretend to hold communication with the devil in certain
-caves. Formerly, every one convicted of this offence was sent to the
-Inquisition at Lima. Many of the inhabitants who are not included in
-the eleven thousand with Indian surnames, cannot be distinguished by
-their appearance from Indians. Gomez, the governor of Lemuy, is
-descended from noblemen of Spain on both sides; but by constant
-intermarriages with the natives the present man is an Indian. On the
-other hand the governor of Quinchao boasts much of his purely kept
-Spanish blood.
-
-We reached at night a beautiful little cove, north of the island of
-Caucahue. The people here complained of want of land. This is partly
-owing to their own negligence in not clearing the woods, and partly to
-restrictions by the government, which makes it necessary, before buying
-ever so small a piece, to pay two shillings to the surveyor for
-measuring each quadra (150 yards square), together with whatever price
-he fixes for the value of the land. After his valuation the land must
-be put up three times to auction, and if no one bids more, the
-purchaser can have it at that rate. All these exactions must be a
-serious check to clearing the ground, where the inhabitants are so
-extremely poor. In most countries, forests are removed without much
-difficulty by the aid of fire; but in Chiloe, from the damp nature of
-the climate, and the sort of trees, it is necessary first to cut them
-down. This is a heavy drawback to the prosperity of Chiloe. In the
-time of the Spaniards the Indians could not hold land; and a family,
-after having cleared a piece of ground, might be driven away, and the
-property seized by the government. The Chilian authorities are now
-performing an act of justice by making retribution to these poor
-Indians, giving to each man, according to his grade of life, a certain
-portion of land. The value of uncleared ground is very little. The
-government gave Mr. Douglas (the present surveyor, who informed me of
-these circumstances) eight and a half square miles of forest near S.
-Carlos, in lieu of a debt; and this he sold for 350 dollars, or about
-70 pounds sterling.
-
-The two succeeding days were fine, and at night we reached the island
-of Quinchao. This neighbourhood is the most cultivated part of the
-Archipelago; for a broad strip of land on the coast of the main island,
-as well as on many of the smaller adjoining ones, is almost completely
-cleared. Some of the farm-houses seemed very comfortable. I was
-curious to ascertain how rich any of these people might be, but Mr.
-Douglas says that no one can be considered as possessing a regular
-income. One of the richest landowners might possibly accumulate, in a
-long industrious life, as much as 1000 pounds sterling; but should this
-happen, it would all be stowed away in some secret corner, for it is
-the custom of almost every family to have a jar or treasure-chest
-buried in the ground.
-
-November 30th.--Early on Sunday morning we reached Castro, the ancient
-capital of Chiloe, but now a most forlorn and deserted place. The usual
-quadrangular arrangement of Spanish towns could be traced, but the
-streets and plaza were coated with fine green turf, on which sheep were
-browsing. The church, which stands in the middle, is entirely built of
-plank, and has a picturesque and venerable appearance. The poverty of
-the place may be conceived from the fact, that although containing some
-hundreds of inhabitants, one of our party was unable anywhere to
-purchase either a pound of sugar or an ordinary knife. No individual
-possessed either a watch or a clock; and an old man, who was supposed
-to have a good idea of time, was employed to strike the church bell by
-guess. The arrival of our boats was a rare event in this quiet retired
-corner of the world; and nearly all the inhabitants came down to the
-beach to see us pitch our tents. They were very civil, and offered us
-a house; and one man even sent us a cask of cider as a present. In the
-afternoon we paid our respects to the governor--a quiet old man, who,
-in his appearance and manner of life, was scarcely superior to an
-English cottager. At night heavy rain set in, which was hardly
-sufficient to drive away from our tents the large circle of lookers-on.
-An Indian family, who had come to trade in a canoe from Caylen,
-bivouacked near us. They had no shelter during the rain. In the
-morning I asked a young Indian, who was wet to the skin, how he had
-passed the night. He seemed perfectly content, and answered, "Muy
-bien, senor."
-
-December 1st.--We steered for the island of Lemuy. I was anxious to
-examine a reported coal-mine which turned out to be lignite of little
-value, in the sandstone (probably of an ancient tertiary epoch) of
-which these islands are composed. When we reached Lemuy we had much
-difficulty in finding any place to pitch our tents, for it was
-spring-tide, and the land was wooded down to the water's edge. In a
-short time we were surrounded by a large group of the nearly pure
-Indian inhabitants. They were much surprised at our arrival, and said
-one to the other, "This is the reason we have seen so many parrots
-lately; the cheucau (an odd red-breasted little bird, which inhabits
-the thick forest, and utters very peculiar noises) has not cried
-'beware' for nothing." They were soon anxious for barter. Money was
-scarcely worth anything, but their eagerness for tobacco was something
-quite extraordinary. After tobacco, indigo came next in value; then
-capsicum, old clothes, and gunpowder. The latter article was required
-for a very innocent purpose: each parish has a public musket, and the
-gunpowder was wanted for making a noise on their saint or feast days.
-
-The people here live chiefly on shell-fish and potatoes. At certain
-seasons they catch also, in "corrales," or hedges under water, many
-fish which are left on the mud-banks as the tide falls. They
-occasionally possess fowls, sheep, goats, pigs, horses, and cattle; the
-order in which they are here mentioned, expressing their respective
-numbers. I never saw anything more obliging and humble than the
-manners of these people. They generally began with stating that they
-were poor natives of the place, and not Spaniards and that they were in
-sad want of tobacco and other comforts. At Caylen, the most southern
-island, the sailors bought with a stick of tobacco, of the value of
-three-halfpence, two fowls, one of which, the Indian stated, had skin
-between its toes, and turned out to be a fine duck; and with some
-cotton handkerchiefs, worth three shillings, three sheep and a large
-bunch of onions were procured. The yawl at this place was anchored
-some way from the shore, and we had fears for her safety from robbers
-during the night. Our pilot, Mr. Douglas, accordingly told the
-constable of the district that we always placed sentinels with loaded
-arms and not understanding Spanish, if we saw any person in the dark,
-we should assuredly shoot him. The constable, with much humility,
-agreed to the perfect propriety of this arrangement, and promised us
-that no one should stir out of his house during that night.
-
-During the four succeeding days we continued sailing southward. The
-general features of the country remained the same, but it was much less
-thickly inhabited. On the large island of Tanqui there was scarcely
-one cleared spot, the trees on every side extending their branches over
-the sea-beach. I one day noticed, growing on the sandstone cliffs,
-some very fine plants of the panke (Gunnera scabra), which somewhat
-resembles the rhubarb on a gigantic scale. The inhabitants eat the
-stalks, which are subacid, and tan leather with the roots, and prepare
-a black dye from them. The leaf is nearly circular, but deeply indented
-on its margin. I measured one which was nearly eight feet in diameter,
-and therefore no less than twenty-four in circumference! The stalk is
-rather more than a yard high, and each plant sends out four or five of
-these enormous leaves, presenting together a very noble appearance.
-
-December 6th.--We reached Caylen, called "el fin del Cristiandad." In
-the morning we stopped for a few minutes at a house on the northern end
-of Laylec, which was the extreme point of South American Christendom,
-and a miserable hovel it was. The latitude is 43 degs. 10', which is
-two degrees farther south than the Rio Negro on the Atlantic coast.
-These extreme Christians were very poor, and, under the plea of their
-situation, begged for some tobacco. As a proof of the poverty of these
-Indians, I may mention that shortly before this, we had met a man, who
-had travelled three days and a half on foot, and had as many to return,
-for the sake of recovering the value of a small axe and a few fish. How
-very difficult it must be to buy the smallest article, when such
-trouble is taken to recover so small a debt.
-
-In the evening we reached the island of San Pedro, where we found the
-Beagle at anchor. In doubling the point, two of the officers landed to
-take a round of angles with the theodolite. A fox (Canis fulvipes), of
-a kind said to be peculiar to the island, and very rare in it, and
-which is a new species, was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently
-absorbed in watching the work of the officers, that I was able, by
-quietly walking up behind, to knock him on the head with my geological
-hammer. This fox, more curious or more scientific, but less wise, than
-the generality of his brethren, is now mounted in the museum of the
-Zoological Society.
-
-We stayed three days in this harbour, on one of which Captain Fitz
-Roy, with a party, attempted to ascend to the summit of San Pedro. The
-woods here had rather a different appearance from those on the northern
-part of the island. The rock, also, being micaceous slate, there was no
-beach, but the steep sides dipped directly beneath the water. The
-general aspect in consequence was more like that of Tierra del Fuego
-than of Chiloe. In vain we tried to gain the summit: the forest was so
-impenetrable, that no one who has not beheld it can imagine so
-entangled a mass of dying and dead trunks. I am sure that often, for
-more than ten minutes together, our feet never touched the ground, and
-we were frequently ten or fifteen feet above it, so that the seamen as
-a joke called out the soundings. At other times we crept one after
-another on our hands and knees, under the rotten trunks. In the lower
-part of the mountain, noble trees of the Winter's Bark, and a laurel
-like the sassafras with fragrant leaves, and others, the names of which
-I do not know, were matted together by a trailing bamboo or cane. Here
-we were more like fishes struggling in a net than any other animal. On
-the higher parts, brushwood takes the place of larger trees, with here
-and there a red cedar or an alerce pine. I was also pleased to see, at
-an elevation of a little less than 1000 feet, our old friend the
-southern beech. They were, however, poor stunted trees, and I should
-think that this must be nearly their northern limit. We ultimately
-gave up the attempt in despair.
-
-December 10th.--The yawl and whale-boat, with Mr. Sulivan, proceeded on
-their survey, but I remained on board the Beagle, which the next day
-left San Pedro for the southward. On the 13th we ran into an opening in
-the southern part of Guayatecas, or the Chonos Archipelago; and it was
-fortunate we did so, for on the following day a storm, worthy of Tierra
-del Fuego, raged with great fury. White massive clouds were piled up
-against a dark blue sky, and across them black ragged sheets of vapour
-were rapidly driven. The successive mountain ranges appeared like dim
-shadows, and the setting sun cast on the woodland a yellow gleam, much
-like that produced by the flame of spirits of wine. The water was
-white with the flying spray, and the wind lulled and roared again
-through the rigging: it was an ominous, sublime scene. During a few
-minutes there was a bright rainbow, and it was curious to observe the
-effect of the spray, which being carried along the surface of the
-water, changed the ordinary semicircle into a circle--a band of
-prismatic colours being continued, from both feet of the common arch
-across the bay, close to the vessel's side: thus forming a distorted,
-but very nearly entire ring.
-
-We stayed here three days. The weather continued bad: but this did not
-much signify, for the surface of the land in all these islands is all
-but impassable. The coast is so very rugged that to attempt to walk in
-that direction requires continued scrambling up and down over the sharp
-rocks of mica-slate; and as for the woods, our faces, hands, and
-shin-bones all bore witness to the maltreatment we received, in merely
-attempting to penetrate their forbidden recesses.
-
-December 18th.--We stood out to sea. On the 20th we bade farewell to
-the south, and with a fair wind turned the ship's head northward. From
-Cape Tres Montes we sailed pleasantly along the lofty weather-beaten
-coast, which is remarkable for the bold outline of its hills, and the
-thick covering of forest even on the almost precipitous flanks. The
-next day a harbour was discovered, which on this dangerous coast might
-be of great service to a distressed vessel. It can easily be
-recognized by a hill 1600 feet high, which is even more perfectly
-conical than the famous sugar-loaf at Rio de Janeiro. The next day,
-after anchoring, I succeeded in reaching the summit of this hill. It
-was a laborious undertaking, for the sides were so steep that in some
-parts it was necessary to use the trees as ladders. There were also
-several extensive brakes of the Fuchsia, covered with its beautiful
-drooping flowers, but very difficult to crawl through. In these wild
-countries it gives much delight to gain the summit of any mountain.
-There is an indefinite expectation of seeing something very strange,
-which, however often it may be balked, never failed with me to recur on
-each successive attempt. Every one must know the feeling of triumph
-and pride which a grand view from a height communicates to the mind. In
-these little frequented countries there is also joined to it some
-vanity, that you perhaps are the first man who ever stood on this
-pinnacle or admired this view.
-
-A strong desire is always felt to ascertain whether any human being has
-previously visited an unfrequented spot. A bit of wood with a nail in
-it, is picked up and studied as if it were covered with hieroglyphics.
-Possessed with this feeling, I was much interested by finding, on a
-wild part of the coast, a bed made of grass beneath a ledge of rock.
-Close by it there had been a fire, and the man had used an axe. The
-fire, bed, and situation showed the dexterity of an Indian; but he
-could scarcely have been an Indian, for the race is in this part
-extinct, owing to the Catholic desire of making at one blow Christians
-and Slaves. I had at the time some misgivings that the solitary man
-who had made his bed on this wild spot, must have been some poor
-shipwrecked sailor, who, in trying to travel up the coast, had here
-laid himself down for his dreary night.
-
-December 28th.--The weather continued very bad, but it at last
-permitted us to proceed with the survey. The time hung heavy on our
-hands, as it always did when we were delayed from day to day by
-successive gales of wind. In the evening another harbour was
-discovered, where we anchored. Directly afterwards a man was seen
-waving a shirt, and a boat was sent which brought back two seamen. A
-party of six had run away from an American whaling vessel, and had
-landed a little to the southward in a boat, which was shortly
-afterwards knocked to pieces by the surf. They had now been wandering
-up and down the coast for fifteen months, without knowing which way to
-go, or where they were. What a singular piece of good fortune it was
-that this harbour was now discovered! Had it not been for this one
-chance, they might have wandered till they had grown old men, and at
-last have perished on this wild coast. Their sufferings had been very
-great, and one of their party had lost his life by falling from the
-cliffs. They were sometimes obliged to separate in search of food, and
-this explained the bed of the solitary man. Considering what they had
-undergone, I think they had kept a very good reckoning of time, for
-they had lost only four days.
-
-December 30th.--We anchored in a snug little cove at the foot of some
-high hills, near the northern extremity of Tres Montes. After
-breakfast the next morning, a party ascended one of these mountains,
-which was 2400 feet high. The scenery was remarkable The chief part of
-the range was composed of grand, solid, abrupt masses of granite, which
-appeared as if they had been coeval with the beginning of the world.
-The granite was capped with mica-slate, and this in the lapse of ages
-had been worn into strange finger-shaped points. These two formations,
-thus differing in their outlines, agree in being almost destitute of
-vegetation. This barrenness had to our eyes a strange appearance, from
-having been so long accustomed to the sight of an almost universal
-forest of dark-green trees. I took much delight in examining the
-structure of these mountains. The complicated and lofty ranges bore a
-noble aspect of durability--equally profitless, however, to man and to
-all other animals. Granite to the geologist is classic ground: from
-its widespread limits, and its beautiful and compact texture, few rocks
-have been more anciently recognised. Granite has given rise, perhaps,
-to more discussion concerning its origin than any other formation. We
-generally see it constituting the fundamental rock, and, however
-formed, we know it is the deepest layer in the crust of this globe to
-which man has penetrated. The limit of man's knowledge in any subject
-possesses a high interest, which is perhaps increased by its close
-neighbourhood to the realms of imagination.
-
-January 1st 1835.--The new year is ushered in with the ceremonies
-proper to it in these regions. She lays out no false hopes: a heavy
-north-western gale, with steady rain, bespeaks the rising year. Thank
-God, we are not destined here to see the end of it, but hope then to be
-in the Pacific Ocean, where a blue sky tells one there is a heaven,--a
-something beyond the clouds above our heads.
-
-The north-west winds prevailing for the next four days, we only managed
-to cross a great bay, and then anchored in another secure harbour. I
-accompanied the Captain in a boat to the head of a deep creek. On the
-way the number of seals which we saw was quite astonishing: every bit
-of flat rock, and parts of the beach, were covered with them. There
-appeared to be of a loving disposition, and lay huddled together, fast
-asleep, like so many pigs; but even pigs would have been ashamed of
-their dirt, and of the foul smell which came from them. Each herd was
-watched by the patient but inauspicious eyes of the turkey-buzzard.
-This disgusting bird, with its bald scarlet head, formed to wallow in
-putridity, is very common on the west coast, and their attendance on
-the seals shows on what they rely for their food. We found the water
-(probably only that of the surface) nearly fresh: this was caused by
-the number of torrents which, in the form of cascades, came tumbling
-over the bold granite mountains into the sea. The fresh water attracts
-the fish, and these bring many terns, gulls, and two kinds of
-cormorant. We saw also a pair of the beautiful black-necked swans, and
-several small sea-otters, the fur of which is held in such high
-estimation. In returning, we were again amused by the impetuous manner
-in which the heap of seals, old and young, tumbled into the water as
-the boat passed. They did not remain long under water, but rising,
-followed us with outstretched necks, expressing great wonder and
-curiosity.
-
-7th.--Having run up the coast, we anchored near the northern end of the
-Chonos Archipelago, in Low's Harbour, where we remained a week. The
-islands were here, as in Chiloe, composed of a stratified, soft,
-littoral deposit; and the vegetation in consequence was beautifully
-luxuriant. The woods came down to the sea-beach, just in the manner of
-an evergreen shrubbery over a gravel walk. We also enjoyed from the
-anchorage a splendid view of four great snowy cones of the Cordillera,
-including "el famoso Corcovado;" the range itself had in this latitude
-so little height, that few parts of it appeared above the tops of the
-neighbouring islets. We found here a party of five men from Caylen,
-"el fin del Cristiandad," who had most adventurously crossed in their
-miserable boat-canoe, for the purpose of fishing, the open space of sea
-which separates Chonos from Chiloe. These islands will, in all
-probability, in a short time become peopled like those adjoining the
-coast of Chiloe.
-
-
-The wild potato grows on these islands in great abundance, on the
-sandy, shelly soil near the sea-beach. The tallest plant was four feet
-in height. The tubers were generally small, but I found one, of an
-oval shape, two inches in diameter: they resembled in every respect,
-and had the same smell as English potatoes; but when boiled they shrunk
-much, and were watery and insipid, without any bitter taste. They are
-undoubtedly here indigenous: they grow as far south, according to Mr.
-Low, as lat. 50 degs., and are called Aquinas by the wild Indians of
-that part: the Chilotan Indians have a different name for them.
-Professor Henslow, who has examined the dried specimens which I brought
-home, says that they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine
-[1] from Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some
-botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It is
-remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains
-of central Chile, where a drop of rain does not fall for more than six
-months, and within the damp forests of these southern islands.
-
-In the central parts of the Chonos Archipelago (lat. 45 degs.), the
-forest has very much the same character with that along the whole west
-coast, for 600 miles southward to Cape Horn. The arborescent grass of
-Chiloe is not found here; while the beech of Tierra del Fuego grows to
-a good size, and forms a considerable proportion of the wood; not,
-however, in the same exclusive manner as it does farther southward.
-Cryptogamic plants here find a most congenial climate. In the Strait
-of Magellan, as I have before remarked, the country appears too cold
-and wet to allow of their arriving at perfection; but in these islands,
-within the forest, the number of species and great abundance of mosses,
-lichens, and small ferns, is quite extraordinary. [2] In Tierra del
-Fuego trees grow only on the hill-sides; every level piece of land
-being invariably covered by a thick bed of peat; but in Chiloe flat
-land supports the most luxuriant forests. Here, within the Chonos
-Archipelago, the nature of the climate more closely approaches that of
-Tierra del Fuego than that of northern Chiloe; for every patch of level
-ground is covered by two species of plants (Astelia pumila and Donatia
-magellanica), which by their joint decay compose a thick bed of elastic
-peat.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, above the region of woodland, the former of these
-eminently sociable plants is the chief agent in the production of peat.
-Fresh leaves are always succeeding one to the other round the central
-tap-root, the lower ones soon decay, and in tracing a root downwards in
-the peat, the leaves, yet holding their place, can be observed passing
-through every stage of decomposition, till the whole becomes blended in
-one confused mass. The Astelia is assisted by a few other
-plants,--here and there a small creeping Myrtus (M. nummularia), with a
-woody stem like our cranberry and with a sweet berry,--an Empetrum (E.
-rubrum), like our heath,--a rush (Juncus grandiflorus), are nearly the
-only ones that grow on the swampy surface. These plants, though
-possessing a very close general resemblance to the English species of
-the same genera, are different. In the more level parts of the
-country, the surface of the peat is broken up into little pools of
-water, which stand at different heights, and appear as if artificially
-excavated. Small streams of water, flowing underground, complete the
-disorganization of the vegetable matter, and consolidate the whole.
-
-The climate of the southern part of America appears particularly
-favourable to the production of peat. In the Falkland Islands almost
-every kind of plant, even the coarse grass which covers the whole
-surface of the land, becomes converted into this substance: scarcely
-any situation checks its growth; some of the beds are as much as twelve
-feet thick, and the lower part becomes so solid when dry, that it will
-hardly burn. Although every plant lends its aid, yet in most parts the
-Astelia is the most efficient. It is rather a singular circumstance,
-as being so very different from what occurs in Europe, that I nowhere
-saw moss forming by its decay any portion of the peat in South America.
-With respect to the northern limit, at which the climate allows of that
-peculiar kind of slow decomposition which is necessary for its
-production, I believe that in Chiloe (lat. 41 to 42 degs.), although
-there is much swampy ground, no well-characterized peat occurs: but in
-the Chonos Islands, three degrees farther southward, we have seen that
-it is abundant. On the eastern coast in La Plata (lat. 35 degs.) I was
-told by a Spanish resident who had visited Ireland, that he had often
-sought for this substance, but had never been able to find any. He
-showed me, as the nearest approach to it which he had discovered, a
-black peaty soil, so penetrated with roots as to allow of an extremely
-slow and imperfect combustion.
-
-
-The zoology of these broken islets of the Chonos Archipelago is, as
-might have been expected, very poor. Of quadrupeds two aquatic kinds
-are common. The Myopotamus Coypus (like a beaver, but with a round
-tail) is well known from its fine fur, which is an object of trade
-throughout the tributaries of La Plata. It here, however, exclusively
-frequents salt water; which same circumstance has been mentioned as
-sometimes occurring with the great rodent, the Capybara. A small
-sea-otter is very numerous; this animal does not feed exclusively on
-fish, but, like the seals, draws a large supply from a small red crab,
-which swims in shoals near the surface of the water. Mr. Bynoe saw one
-in Tierra del Fuego eating a cuttle-fish; and at Low's Harbour, another
-was killed in the act of carrying to its hole a large volute shell. At
-one place I caught in a trap a singular little mouse (M. brachiotis);
-it appeared common on several of the islets, but the Chilotans at Low's
-Harbour said that it was not found in all. What a succession of
-chances, [3] or what changes of level must have been brought into play,
-thus to spread these small animals throughout this broken archipelago!
-
-In all parts of Chiloe and Chonos, two very strange birds occur, which
-are allied to, and replace, the Turco and Tapacolo of central Chile.
-One is called by the inhabitants "Cheucau" (Pteroptochos rubecula): it
-frequents the most gloomy and retired spots within the damp forests.
-Sometimes, although its cry may be heard close at hand, let a person
-watch ever so attentively he will not see the cheucau; at other times,
-let him stand motionless and the red-breasted little bird will approach
-within a few feet in the most familiar manner. It then busily hops
-about the entangled mass of rotting cones and branches, with its little
-tail cocked upwards. The cheucau is held in superstitious fear by the
-Chilotans, on account of its strange and varied cries. There are three
-very distinct cries: One is called "chiduco," and is an omen of good;
-another, "huitreu," which is extremely unfavourable; and a third, which
-I have forgotten. These words are given in imitation of the noises;
-and the natives are in some things absolutely governed by them. The
-Chilotans assuredly have chosen a most comical little creature for
-their prophet. An allied species, but rather larger, is called by the
-natives "Guid-guid" (Pteroptochos Tarnii), and by the English the
-barking-bird. This latter name is well given; for I defy any one at
-first to feel certain that a small dog is not yelping somewhere in the
-forest. Just as with the cheucau, a person will sometimes hear the
-bark close by, but in vain many endeavour by watching, and with still
-less chance by beating the bushes, to see the bird; yet at other times
-the guid-guid fearlessly comes near. Its manner of feeding and its
-general habits are very similar to those of the cheucau.
-
-On the coast, [4] a small dusky-coloured bird (Opetiorhynchus
-Patagonicus) is very common. It is remarkable from its quiet habits;
-it lives entirely on the sea-beach, like a sandpiper. Besides these
-birds only few others inhabit this broken land. In my rough notes I
-describe the strange noises, which, although frequently heard within
-these gloomy forests, yet scarcely disturb the general silence. The
-yelping of the guid-guid, and the sudden whew-whew of the cheucau,
-sometimes come from afar off, and sometimes from close at hand; the
-little black wren of Tierra del Fuego occasionally adds its cry; the
-creeper (Oxyurus) follows the intruder screaming and twittering; the
-humming-bird may be seen every now and then darting from side to side,
-and emitting, like an insect, its shrill chirp; lastly, from the top of
-some lofty tree the indistinct but plaintive note of the white-tufted
-tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius) may be noticed. From the great
-preponderance in most countries of certain common genera of birds, such
-as the finches, one feels at first surprised at meeting with the
-peculiar forms above enumerated, as the commonest birds in any
-district. In central Chile two of them, namely, the Oxyurus and
-Scytalopus, occur, although most rarely. When finding, as in this
-case, animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great
-scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were created.
-
-But it should always be recollected, that in some other country perhaps
-they are essential members of society, or at some former period may
-have been so. If America south of 37 degs. were sunk beneath the
-waters of the ocean, these two birds might continue to exist in central
-Chile for a long period, but it is very improbable that their numbers
-would increase. We should then see a case which must inevitably have
-happened with very many animals.
-
-These southern seas are frequented by several species of Petrels: the
-largest kind, Procellaria gigantea, or nelly (quebrantahuesos, or
-break-bones, of the Spaniards), is a common bird, both in the inland
-channels and on the open sea. In its habits and manner of flight, there
-is a very close resemblance with the albatross; and as with the
-albatross, a person may watch it for hours together without seeing on
-what it feeds. The "break-bones" is, however, a rapacious bird, for it
-was observed by some of the officers at Port St. Antonio chasing a
-diver, which tried to escape by diving and flying, but was continually
-struck down, and at last killed by a blow on its head. At Port St.
-Julian these great petrels were seen killing and devouring young gulls.
-A second species (Puffinus cinereus), which is common to Europe, Cape
-Horn, and the coast of Peru, is of much smaller size than the P.
-gigantea, but, like it, of a dirty black colour. It generally
-frequents the inland sounds in very large flocks: I do not think I ever
-saw so many birds of any other sort together, as I once saw of these
-behind the island of Chiloe. Hundreds of thousands flew in an irregular
-line for several hours in one direction. When part of the flock
-settled on the water the surface was blackened, and a noise proceeded
-from them as of human beings talking in the distance.
-
-There are several other species of petrels, but I will only mention one
-other kind, the Pelacanoides Berardi which offers an example of those
-extraordinary cases, of a bird evidently belonging to one well-marked
-family, yet both in its habits and structure allied to a very distinct
-tribe. This bird never leaves the quiet inland sounds. When disturbed
-it dives to a distance, and on coming to the surface, with the same
-movement takes flight. After flying by a rapid movement of its short
-wings for a space in a straight line, it drops, as if struck dead, and
-dives again. The form of its beak and nostrils, length of foot, and
-even the colouring of its plumage, show that this bird is a petrel: on
-the other hand, its short wings and consequent little power of flight,
-its form of body and shape of tail, the absence of a hind toe to its
-foot, its habit of diving, and its choice of situation, make it at
-first doubtful whether its relationship is not equally close with the
-auks. It would undoubtedly be mistaken for an auk, when seen from a
-distance, either on the wing, or when diving and quietly swimming about
-the retired channels of Tierra del Fuego.
-
-[1] Horticultural Transact., vol. v. p. 249. Mr. Caldeleugh sent home
-two tubers, which, being well manured, even the first season produced
-numerous potatoes and an abundance of leaves. See Humboldt's
-interesting discussion on this plant, which it appears was unknown in
-Mexico,--in Polit. Essay on New Spain, book iv. chap. ix.
-
-[2] By sweeping with my insect-net, I procured from these situations a
-considerable number of minute insects, of the family of Staphylinidae,
-and others allied to Pselaphus, and minute Hymenoptera. But the most
-characteristic family in number, both of individuals and species,
-throughout the more open parts of Chiloe and Chonos is that of
-Telephoridae.
-
-[3] It is said that some rapacious birds bring their prey alive to
-their nests. If so, in the course of centuries, every now and then,
-one might escape from the young birds. Some such agency is necessary,
-to account for the distribution of the smaller gnawing animals on
-islands not very near each other.
-
-[4] I may mention, as a proof of how great a difference there is
-between the seasons of the wooded and the open parts of this coast,
-that on September 20th, in lat. 34 degs., these birds had young ones in
-the nest, while among the Chonos Islands, three months later in the
-summer, they were only laying, the difference in latitude between these
-two places being about 700 miles.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
-
-San Carlos, Chiloe--Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously with
-Aconcagua and Coseguina--Ride to Cucao--Impenetrable Forests--Valdivia
-Indians--Earthquake--Concepcion--Great Earthquake--Rocks
-fissured--Appearance of the former Towns--The Sea Black and
-Boiling--Direction of the Vibrations--Stones twisted round--Great
-Wave--Permanent Elevation of the Land--Area of Volcanic Phenomena--The
-connection between the Elevatory and Eruptive Forces--Cause of
-Earthquakes--Slow Elevation of Mountain-chains.
-
-
-ON JANUARY the 15th we sailed from Low's Harbour, and three days
-afterwards anchored a second time in the bay of S. Carlos in Chiloe. On
-the night of the 19th the volcano of Osorno was in action. At midnight
-the sentry observed something like a large star, which gradually
-increased in size till about three o'clock, when it presented a very
-magnificent spectacle. By the aid of a glass, dark objects, in
-constant succession, were seen, in the midst of a great glare of red
-light, to be thrown up and to fall down. The light was sufficient to
-cast on the water a long bright reflection. Large masses of molten
-matter seem very commonly to be cast out of the craters in this part of
-the Cordillera. I was assured that when the Corcovado is in eruption,
-great masses are projected upwards and are seen to burst in the air,
-assuming many fantastical forms, such as trees: their size must be
-immense, for they can be distinguished from the high land behind S.
-Carlos, which is no less than ninety-three miles from the Corcovado. In
-the morning the volcano became tranquil.
-
-I was surprised at hearing afterwards that Aconcagua in Chile, 480
-miles northwards, was in action on the same night; and still more
-surprised to hear that the great eruption of Coseguina (2700 miles
-north of Aconcagua), accompanied by an earthquake felt over a 1000
-miles, also occurred within six hours of this same time. This
-coincidence is the more remarkable, as Coseguina had been dormant for
-twenty-six years; and Aconcagua most rarely shows any signs of action.
-It is difficult even to conjecture whether this coincidence was
-accidental, or shows some subterranean connection. If Vesuvius, Etna,
-and Hecla in Iceland (all three relatively nearer each other than the
-corresponding points in South America), suddenly burst forth in
-eruption on the same night, the coincidence would be thought
-remarkable; but it is far more remarkable in this case, where the three
-vents fall on the same great mountain-chain, and where the vast plains
-along the entire eastern coast, and the upraised recent shells along
-more than 2000 miles on the western coast, show in how equable and
-connected a manner the elevatory forces have acted.
-
-Captain Fitz Roy being anxious that some bearings should be taken on
-the outer coast of Chiloe, it was planned that Mr. King and myself
-should ride to Castro, and thence across the island to the Capella de
-Cucao, situated on the west coast. Having hired horses and a guide, we
-set out on the morning of the 22nd. We had not proceeded far, before
-we were joined by a woman and two boys, who were bent on the same
-journey. Every one on this road acts on a "hail fellow well met"
-fashion; and one may here enjoy the privilege, so rare in South
-America, of travelling without fire-arms. At first, the country
-consisted of a succession of hills and valleys: nearer to Castro it
-became very level. The road itself is a curious affair; it consists in
-its whole length, with the exception of very few parts, of great logs
-of wood, which are either broad and laid longitudinally, or narrow and
-placed transversely. In summer the road is not very bad; but in
-winter, when the wood is rendered slippery from rain, travelling is
-exceedingly difficult. At that time of the year, the ground on each
-side becomes a morass, and is often overflowed: hence it is necessary
-that the longitudinal logs should be fastened down by transverse poles,
-which are pegged on each side into the earth. These pegs render a fall
-from a horse dangerous, as the chance of alighting on one of them is
-not small. It is remarkable, however, how active custom has made the
-Chilotan horses. In crossing bad parts, where the logs had been
-displaced, they skipped from one to the other, almost with the
-quickness and certainty of a dog. On both hands the road is bordered
-by the lofty forest-trees, with their bases matted together by canes.
-When occasionally a long reach of this avenue could be beheld, it
-presented a curious scene of uniformity: the white line of logs,
-narrowing in perspective, became hidden by the gloomy forest, or
-terminated in a zigzag which ascended some steep hill.
-
-Although the distance from S. Carlos to Castro is only twelve leagues
-in a straight line, the formation of the road must have been a great
-labour. I was told that several people had formerly lost their lives
-in attempting to cross the forest. The first who succeeded was an
-Indian, who cut his way through the canes in eight days, and reached S.
-Carlos: he was rewarded by the Spanish government with a grant of land.
-During the summer, many of the Indians wander about the forests (but
-chiefly in the higher parts, where the woods are not quite so thick) in
-search of the half-wild cattle which live on the leaves of the cane and
-certain trees. It was one of these huntsmen who by chance discovered,
-a few years since, an English vessel, which had been wrecked on the
-outer coast. The crew were beginning to fail in provisions, and it is
-not probable that, without the aid of this man, they would ever have
-extricated themselves from these scarcely penetrable woods. As it was,
-one seaman died on the march, from fatigue. The Indians in these
-excursions steer by the sun; so that if there is a continuance of
-cloudy weather, they can not travel.
-
-The day was beautiful, and the number of trees which were in full
-flower perfumed the air; yet even this could hardly dissipate the
-effects of the gloomy dampness of the forest. Moreover, the many dead
-trunks that stand like skeletons, never fail to give to these primeval
-woods a character of solemnity, absent in those of countries long
-civilized. Shortly after sunset we bivouacked for the night. Our
-female companion, who was rather good-looking, belonged to one of the
-most respectable families in Castro: she rode, however, astride, and
-without shoes or stockings. I was surprised at the total want of pride
-shown by her and her brother. They brought food with them, but at all
-our meals sat watching Mr. King and myself whilst eating, till we were
-fairly shamed into feeding the whole party. The night was cloudless;
-and while lying in our beds, we enjoyed the sight (and it is a high
-enjoyment) of the multitude of stars which illumined the darkness of
-the forest.
-
-January 23rd.--We rose early in the morning, and reached the pretty
-quiet town of Castro by two o'clock. The old governor had died since
-our last visit, and a Chileno was acting in his place. We had a letter
-of introduction to Don Pedro, whom we found exceedingly hospitable and
-kind, and more disinterested than is usual on this side of the
-continent. The next day Don Pedro procured us fresh horses, and
-offered to accompany us himself. We proceeded to the south--generally
-following the coast, and passing through several hamlets, each with its
-large barn-like chapel built of wood. At Vilipilli, Don Pedro asked
-the commandant to give us a guide to Cucao. The old gentleman offered
-to come himself; but for a long time nothing would persuade him that
-two Englishmen really wished to go to such an out-of-the-way place as
-Cucao. We were thus accompanied by the two greatest aristocrats in the
-country, as was plainly to be seen in the manner of all the poorer
-Indians towards them. At Chonchi we struck across the island,
-following intricate winding paths, sometimes passing through
-magnificent forests, and sometimes through pretty cleared spots,
-abounding with corn and potato crops. This undulating woody country,
-partially cultivated, reminded me of the wilder parts of England, and
-therefore had to my eye a most fascinating aspect. At Vilinco, which
-is situated on the borders of the lake of Cucao, only a few fields were
-cleared; and all the inhabitants appeared to be Indians. This lake is
-twelve miles long, and runs in an east and west direction. From local
-circumstances, the sea-breeze blows very regularly during the day, and
-during the night it falls calm: this has given rise to strange
-exaggerations, for the phenomenon, as described to us at S. Carlos, was
-quite a prodigy.
-
-The road to Cucao was so very bad that we determined to embark in a
-_periagua_. The commandant, in the most authoritative manner, ordered
-six Indians to get ready to pull us over, without deigning to tell them
-whether they would be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but
-the crew were still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got
-into a boat together. They pulled, however, very well and cheerfully.
-The stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered strange cries, much
-after the fashion of a pig-driver driving his pigs. We started with a
-light breeze against us, but yet reached the Capella de Cucao before it
-was late. The country on each side of the lake was one unbroken
-forest. In the same periagua with us, a cow was embarked. To get so
-large an animal into a small boat appears at first a difficulty, but
-the Indians managed it in a minute. They brought the cow alongside the
-boat, which was heeled towards her; then placing two oars under her
-belly, with their ends resting on the gunwale, by the aid of these
-levers they fairly tumbled the poor beast heels over head into the
-bottom of the boat, and then lashed her down with ropes. At Cucao we
-found an uninhabited hovel (which is the residence of the padre when he
-pays this Capella a visit), where, lighting a fire, we cooked our
-supper, and were very comfortable.
-
-The district of Cucao is the only inhabited part on the whole west
-coast of Chiloe. It contains about thirty or forty Indian families,
-who are scattered along four or five miles of the shore. They are very
-much secluded from the rest of Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of
-commerce, except sometimes in a little oil, which they get from
-seal-blubber. They are tolerably dressed in clothes of their own
-manufacture, and they have plenty to eat. They seemed, however,
-discontented, yet humble to a degree which it was quite painful to
-witness. These feelings are, I think, chiefly to be attributed to the
-harsh and authoritative manner in which they are treated by their
-rulers. Our companions, although so very civil to us, behaved to the
-poor Indians as if they had been slaves, rather than free men. They
-ordered provisions and the use of their horses, without ever
-condescending to say how much, or indeed whether the owners should be
-paid at all. In the morning, being left alone with these poor people,
-we soon ingratiated ourselves by presents of cigars and mate. A lump
-of white sugar was divided between all present, and tasted with the
-greatest curiosity. The Indians ended all their complaints by saying,
-"And it is only because we are poor Indians, and know nothing; but it
-was not so when we had a King."
-
-The next day after breakfast, we rode a few miles northward to Punta
-Huantamo. The road lay along a very broad beach, on which, even after
-so many fine days, a terrible surf was breaking. I was assured that
-after a heavy gale, the roar can be heard at night even at Castro, a
-distance of no less than twenty-one sea-miles across a hilly and wooded
-country. We had some difficulty in reaching the point, owing to the
-intolerably bad paths; for everywhere in the shade the ground soon
-becomes a perfect quagmire. The point itself is a bold rocky hill. It
-is covered by a plant allied, I believe, to Bromelia, and called by the
-inhabitants Chepones. In scrambling through the beds, our hands were
-very much scratched. I was amused by observing the precaution our
-Indian guide took, in turning up his trousers, thinking that they were
-more delicate than his own hard skin. This plant bears a fruit, in
-shape like an artichoke, in which a number of seed-vessels are packed:
-these contain a pleasant sweet pulp, here much esteemed. I saw at
-Low's Harbour the Chilotans making chichi, or cider, with this fruit:
-so true is it, as Humboldt remarks, that almost everywhere man finds
-means of preparing some kind of beverage from the vegetable kingdom.
-The savages, however, of Tierra del Fuego, and I believe of Australia,
-have not advanced thus far in the arts.
-
-The coast to the north of Punta Huantamo is exceedingly rugged and
-broken, and is fronted by many breakers, on which the sea is eternally
-roaring. Mr. King and myself were anxious to return, if it had been
-possible, on foot along this coast; but even the Indians said it was
-quite impracticable. We were told that men have crossed by striking
-directly through the woods from Cucao to S. Carlos, but never by the
-coast. On these expeditions, the Indians carry with them only roasted
-corn, and of this they eat sparingly twice a day.
-
-26th.--Re-embarking in the periagua, we returned across the lake, and
-then mounted our horses. The whole of Chiloe took advantage of this
-week of unusually fine weather, to clear the ground by burning. In
-every direction volumes of smoke were curling upwards. Although the
-inhabitants were so assiduous in setting fire to every part of the
-wood, yet I did not see a single fire which they had succeeded in
-making extensive. We dined with our friend the commandant, and did not
-reach Castro till after dark. The next morning we started very early.
-After having ridden for some time, we obtained from the brow of a steep
-hill an extensive view (and it is a rare thing on this road) of the
-great forest. Over the horizon of trees, the volcano of Corcovado, and
-the great flat-topped one to the north, stood out in proud
-pre-eminence: scarcely another peak in the long range showed its snowy
-summit. I hope it will be long before I forget this farewell view of
-the magnificent Cordillera fronting Chiloe. At night we bivouacked
-under a cloudless sky, and the next morning reached S. Carlos. We
-arrived on the right day, for before evening heavy rain commenced.
-
-February 4th.--Sailed from Chiloe. During the last week I made several
-short excursions. One was to examine a great bed of now-existing
-shells, elevated 350 feet above the level of the sea: from among these
-shells, large forest-trees were growing. Another ride was to P.
-Huechucucuy. I had with me a guide who knew the country far too well;
-for he would pertinaciously tell me endless Indian names for every
-little point, rivulet, and creek. In the same manner as in Tierra del
-Fuego, the Indian language appears singularly well adapted for
-attaching names to the most trivial features of the land. I believe
-every one was glad to say farewell to Chiloe; yet if we could forget
-the gloom and ceaseless rain of winter, Chiloe might pass for a
-charming island. There is also something very attractive in the
-simplicity and humble politeness of the poor inhabitants.
-
-We steered northward along shore, but owing to thick weather did not
-reach Valdivia till the night of the 8th. The next morning the boat
-proceeded to the town, which is distant about ten miles. We followed
-the course of the river, occasionally passing a few hovels, and patches
-of ground cleared out of the otherwise unbroken forest; and sometimes
-meeting a canoe with an Indian family. The town is situated on the low
-banks of the stream, and is so completely buried in a wood of
-apple-trees that the streets are merely paths in an orchard. I have
-never seen any country, where apple-trees appeared to thrive so well as
-in this damp part of South America: on the borders of the roads there
-were many young trees evidently self-grown. In Chiloe the inhabitants
-possess a marvellously short method of making an orchard. At the lower
-part of almost every branch, small, conical, brown, wrinkled points
-project: these are always ready to change into roots, as may sometimes
-be seen, where any mud has been accidentally splashed against the tree.
-A branch as thick as a man's thigh is chosen in the early spring, and
-is cut off just beneath a group of these points, all the smaller
-branches are lopped off, and it is then placed about two feet deep in
-the ground. During the ensuing summer the stump throws out long
-shoots, and sometimes even bears fruit: I was shown one which had
-produced as many as twenty-three apples, but this was thought very
-unusual. In the third season the stump is changed (as I have myself
-seen) into a well-wooded tree, loaded with fruit. An old man near
-Valdivia illustrated his motto, "Necesidad es la madre del invencion,"
-by giving an account of the several useful things he manufactured from
-his apples. After making cider, and likewise wine, he extracted from
-the refuse a white and finely flavoured spirit; by another process he
-procured a sweet treacle, or, as he called it, honey. His children and
-pigs seemed almost to live, during this season of the year, in his
-orchard.
-
-February 11th.--I set out with a guide on a short ride, in which,
-however, I managed to see singularly little, either of the geology of
-the country or of its inhabitants. There is not much cleared land near
-Valdivia: after crossing a river at the distance of a few miles, we
-entered the forest, and then passed only one miserable hovel, before
-reaching our sleeping-place for the night. The short difference in
-latitude, of 150 miles, has given a new aspect to the forest compared
-with that of Chiloe. This is owing to a slightly different proportion
-in the kinds of trees. The evergreens do not appear to be quite so
-numerous, and the forest in consequence has a brighter tint. As in
-Chiloe, the lower parts are matted together by canes: here also another
-kind (resembling the bamboo of Brazil and about twenty feet in height)
-grows in clusters, and ornaments the banks of some of the streams in a
-very pretty manner. It is with this plant that the Indians make their
-chuzos, or long tapering spears. Our resting-house was so dirty that I
-preferred sleeping outside: on these journeys the first night is
-generally very uncomfortable, because one is not accustomed to the
-tickling and biting of the fleas. I am sure, in the morning, there was
-not a space on my legs the size of a shilling which had not its little
-red mark where the flea had feasted.
-
-12th.--We continued to ride through the uncleared forest; only
-occasionally meeting an Indian on horseback, or a troop of fine mules
-bringing alerce-planks and corn from the southern plains. In the
-afternoon one of the horses knocked up: we were then on a brow of a
-hill, which commanded a fine view of the Llanos. The view of these
-open plains was very refreshing, after being hemmed in and buried in
-the wilderness of trees. The uniformity of a forest soon becomes very
-wearisome. This west coast makes me remember with pleasure the free,
-unbounded plains of Patagonia; yet, with the true spirit of
-contradiction, I cannot forget how sublime is the silence of the
-forest. The Llanos are the most fertile and thickly peopled parts of
-the country, as they possess the immense advantage of being nearly free
-from trees. Before leaving the forest we crossed some flat little
-lawns, around which single trees stood, as in an English park: I have
-often noticed with surprise, in wooded undulatory districts, that the
-quite level parts have been destitute of trees. On account of the
-tired horse, I determined to stop at the Mission of Cudico, to the
-friar of which I had a letter of introduction. Cudico is an
-intermediate district between the forest and the Llanos. There are a
-good many cottages, with patches of corn and potatoes, nearly all
-belonging to Indians. The tribes dependent on Valdivia are "reducidos y
-cristianos." The Indians farther northward, about Arauco and Imperial,
-are still very wild, and not converted; but they have all much
-intercourse with the Spaniards. The padre said that the Christian
-Indians did not much like coming to mass, but that otherwise they
-showed respect for religion. The greatest difficulty is in making them
-observe the ceremonies of marriage. The wild Indians take as many
-wives as they can support, and a cacique will sometimes have more than
-ten: on entering his house, the number may be told by that of the
-separate fires. Each wife lives a week in turn with the cacique; but
-all are employed in weaving ponchos, etc., for his profit. To be the
-wife of a cacique, is an honour much sought after by the Indian women.
-
-The men of all these tribes wear a coarse woolen poncho: those south of
-Valdivia wear short trousers, and those north of it a petticoat, like
-the chilipa of the Gauchos. All have their long hair bound by a
-scarlet fillet, but with no other covering on their heads. These
-Indians are good-sized men; their cheek-bones are prominent, and in
-general appearance they resemble the great American family to which
-they belong; but their physiognomy seemed to me to be slightly
-different from that of any other tribe which I had before seen. Their
-expression is generally grave, and even austere, and possesses much
-character: this may pass either for honest bluntness or fierce
-determination. The long black hair, the grave and much-lined features,
-and the dark complexion, called to my mind old portraits of James I. On
-the road we met with none of that humble politeness so universal in
-Chiloe. Some gave their "mari-mari" (good morning) with promptness,
-but the greater number did not seem inclined to offer any salute. This
-independence of manners is probably a consequence of their long wars,
-and the repeated victories which they alone, of all the tribes in
-America, have gained over the Spaniards.
-
-I spent the evening very pleasantly, talking with the padre. He was
-exceedingly kind and hospitable; and coming from Santiago, had
-contrived to surround himself with some few comforts. Being a man of
-some little education, he bitterly complained of the total want of
-society. With no particular zeal for religion, no business or pursuit,
-how completely must this man's life be wasted! The next day, on our
-return, we met seven very wild-looking Indians, of whom some were
-caciques that had just received from the Chilian government their
-yearly small stipend for having long remained faithful. They were
-fine-looking men, and they rode one after the other, with most gloomy
-faces. An old cacique, who headed them, had been, I suppose, more
-excessively drunk than the rest, for he seemed extremely grave and very
-crabbed. Shortly before this, two Indians joined us, who were
-travelling from a distant mission to Valdivia concerning some lawsuit.
-One was a good-humoured old man, but from his wrinkled beardless face
-looked more like an old woman than a man. I frequently presented both
-of them with cigars; and though ready to receive them, and I dare say
-grateful, they would hardly condescend to thank me. A Chilotan Indian
-would have taken off his hat, and given his "Dios le page!" The
-travelling was very tedious, both from the badness of the roads, and
-from the number of great fallen trees, which it was necessary either to
-leap over or to avoid by making long circuits. We slept on the road,
-and next morning reached Valdivia, whence I proceeded on board.
-
-A few days afterwards I crossed the bay with a party of officers, and
-landed near the fort called Niebla. The buildings were in a most
-ruinous state, and the gun-carriages quite rotten. Mr. Wickham
-remarked to the commanding officer, that with one discharge they would
-certainly all fall to pieces. The poor man, trying to put a good face
-upon it, gravely replied, "No, I am sure, sir, they would stand two!"
-The Spaniards must have intended to have made this place impregnable.
-There is now lying in the middle of the courtyard a little mountain of
-mortar, which rivals in hardness the rock on which it is placed. It
-was brought from Chile, and cost 7000 dollars. The revolution having
-broken out, prevented its being applied to any purpose, and now it
-remains a monument of the fallen greatness of Spain.
-
-I wanted to go to a house about a mile and a half distant, but my guide
-said it was quite impossible to penetrate the wood in a straight line.
-He offered, however, to lead me, by following obscure cattle-tracks,
-the shortest way: the walk, nevertheless, took no less than three
-hours! This man is employed in hunting strayed cattle; yet, well as he
-must know the woods, he was not long since lost for two whole days, and
-had nothing to eat. These facts convey a good idea of the
-impracticability of the forests of these countries. A question often
-occurred to me--how long does any vestige of a fallen tree remain? This
-man showed me one which a party of fugitive royalists had cut down
-fourteen years ago; and taking this as a criterion, I should think a
-bole a foot and a half in diameter would in thirty years be changed
-into a heap of mould.
-
-February 20th.--This day has been memorable in the annals of Valdivia,
-for the most severe earthquake experienced by the oldest inhabitant. I
-happened to be on shore, and was lying down in the wood to rest myself.
-It came on suddenly, and lasted two minutes, but the time appeared much
-longer. The rocking of the ground was very sensible. The undulations
-appeared to my companion and myself to come from due east, whilst
-others thought they proceeded from south-west: this shows how difficult
-it sometimes is to perceive the directions of the vibrations. There
-was no difficulty in standing upright, but the motion made me almost
-giddy: it was something like the movement of a vessel in a little
-cross-ripple, or still more like that felt by a person skating over
-thin ice, which bends under the weight of his body. A bad earthquake at
-once destroys our oldest associations: the earth, the very emblem of
-solidity, has moved beneath our feet like a thin crust over a
-fluid;--one second of time has created in the mind a strange idea of
-insecurity, which hours of reflection would not have produced. In the
-forest, as a breeze moved the trees, I felt only the earth tremble, but
-saw no other effect. Captain Fitz Roy and some officers were at the
-town during the shock, and there the scene was more striking; for
-although the houses, from being built of wood, did not fall, they were
-violently shaken, and the boards creaked and rattled together. The
-people rushed out of doors in the greatest alarm. It is these
-accompaniments that create that perfect horror of earthquakes,
-experienced by all who have thus seen, as well as felt, their effects.
-Within the forest it was a deeply interesting, but by no means an
-awe-exciting phenomenon. The tides were very curiously affected. The
-great shock took place at the time of low water; and an old woman who
-was on the beach told me that the water flowed very quickly, but not in
-great waves, to high-water mark, and then as quickly returned to its
-proper level; this was also evident by the line of wet sand. The same
-kind of quick but quiet movement in the tide happened a few years since
-at Chiloe, during a slight earthquake, and created much causeless
-alarm. In the course of the evening there were many weaker shocks,
-which seemed to produce in the harbour the most complicated currents,
-and some of great strength.
-
-
-March 4th.--We entered the harbour of Concepcion. While the ship was
-beating up to the anchorage, I landed on the island of Quiriquina. The
-mayor-domo of the estate quickly rode down to tell me the terrible news
-of the great earthquake of the 20th:--"That not a house in Concepcion
-or Talcahuano (the port) was standing; that seventy villages were
-destroyed; and that a great wave had almost washed away the ruins of
-Talcahuano." Of this latter statement I soon saw abundant proofs--the
-whole coast being strewed over with timber and furniture as if a
-thousand ships had been wrecked. Besides chairs, tables, book-shelves,
-etc., in great numbers, there were several roofs of cottages, which had
-been transported almost whole. The storehouses at Talcahuano had been
-burst open, and great bags of cotton, yerba, and other valuable
-merchandise were scattered on the shore. During my walk round the
-island, I observed that numerous fragments of rock, which, from the
-marine productions adhering to them, must recently have been lying in
-deep water, had been cast up high on the beach; one of these was six
-feet long, three broad, and two thick.
-
-The island itself as plainly showed the overwhelming power of the
-earthquake, as the beach did that of the consequent great wave. The
-ground in many parts was fissured in north and south lines, perhaps
-caused by the yielding of the parallel and steep sides of this narrow
-island. Some of the fissures near the cliffs were a yard wide. Many
-enormous masses had already fallen on the beach; and the inhabitants
-thought that when the rains commenced far greater slips would happen.
-The effect of the vibration on the hard primary slate, which composes
-the foundation of the island, was still more curious: the superficial
-parts of some narrow ridges were as completely shivered as if they had
-been blasted by gunpowder. This effect, which was rendered conspicuous
-by the fresh fractures and displaced soil, must be confined to near the
-surface, for otherwise there would not exist a block of solid rock
-throughout Chile; nor is this improbable, as it is known that the
-surface of a vibrating body is affected differently from the central
-part. It is, perhaps, owing to this same reason, that earthquakes do
-not cause quite such terrific havoc within deep mines as would be
-expected. I believe this convulsion has been more effectual in
-lessening the size of the island of Quiriquina, than the ordinary
-wear-and-tear of the sea and weather during the course of a whole
-century.
-
-The next day I landed at Talcahuano, and afterwards rode to Concepcion.
-Both towns presented the most awful yet interesting spectacle I ever
-beheld. To a person who had formerly known them, it possibly might have
-been still more impressive; for the ruins were so mingled together, and
-the whole scene possessed so little the air of a habitable place, that
-it was scarcely possible to imagine its former condition. The
-earthquake commenced at half-past eleven o'clock in the forenoon. If
-it had happened in the middle of the night, the greater number of the
-inhabitants (which in this one province must amount to many thousands)
-must have perished, instead of less than a hundred: as it was, the
-invariable practice of running out of doors at the first trembling of
-the ground, alone saved them. In Concepcion each house, or row of
-houses, stood by itself, a heap or line of ruins; but in Talcahuano,
-owing to the great wave, little more than one layer of bricks, tiles,
-and timber with here and there part of a wall left standing, could be
-distinguished. From this circumstance Concepcion, although not so
-completely desolated, was a more terrible, and if I may so call it,
-picturesque sight. The first shock was very sudden. The mayor-domo at
-Quiriquina told me, that the first notice he received of it, was
-finding both the horse he rode and himself, rolling together on the
-ground. Rising up, he was again thrown down. He also told me that
-some cows which were standing on the steep side of the island were
-rolled into the sea. The great wave caused the destruction of many
-cattle; on one low island near the head of the bay, seventy animals
-were washed off and drowned. It is generally thought that this has
-been the worst earthquake ever recorded in Chile; but as the very
-severe ones occur only after long intervals, this cannot easily be
-known; nor indeed would a much worse shock have made any difference,
-for the ruin was now complete. Innumerable small tremblings followed
-the great earthquake, and within the first twelve days no less than
-three hundred were counted.
-
-After viewing Concepcion, I cannot understand how the greater number of
-inhabitants escaped unhurt. The houses in many parts fell outwards;
-thus forming in the middle of the streets little hillocks of brickwork
-and rubbish. Mr. Rouse, the English consul, told us that he was at
-breakfast when the first movement warned him to run out. He had
-scarcely reached the middle of the courtyard, when one side of his
-house came thundering down. He retained presence of mind to remember,
-that if he once got on the top of that part which had already fallen,
-he would be safe. Not being able from the motion of the ground to
-stand, he crawled up on his hands and knees; and no sooner had he
-ascended this little eminence, than the other side of the house fell
-in, the great beams sweeping close in front of his head. With his eyes
-blinded, and his mouth choked with the cloud of dust which darkened the
-sky, at last he gained the street. As shock succeeded shock, at the
-interval of a few minutes, no one dared approach the shattered ruins,
-and no one knew whether his dearest friends and relations were not
-perishing from the want of help. Those who had saved any property were
-obliged to keep a constant watch, for thieves prowled about, and at
-each little trembling of the ground, with one hand they beat their
-breasts and cried "Misericordia!" and then with the other filched what
-they could from the ruins. The thatched roofs fell over the fires, and
-flames burst forth in all parts. Hundreds knew themselves ruined, and
-few had the means of providing food for the day.
-
-Earthquakes alone are sufficient to destroy the prosperity of any
-country. If beneath England the now inert subterranean forces should
-exert those powers, which most assuredly in former geological ages they
-have exerted, how completely would the entire condition of the country
-be changed! What would become of the lofty houses, thickly packed
-cities, great manufactories, the beautiful public and private edifices?
-If the new period of disturbance were first to commence by some great
-earthquake in the dead of the night, how terrific would be the carnage!
-England would at once be bankrupt; all papers, records, and accounts
-would from that moment be lost. Government being unable to collect the
-taxes, and failing to maintain its authority, the hand of violence and
-rapine would remain uncontrolled. In every large town famine would go
-forth, pestilence and death following in its train.
-
-Shortly after the shock, a great wave was seen from the distance of
-three or four miles, approaching in the middle of the bay with a smooth
-outline; but along the shore it tore up cottages and trees, as it swept
-onwards with irresistible force. At the head of the bay it broke in a
-fearful line of white breakers, which rushed up to a height of 23
-vertical feet above the highest spring-tides. Their force must have
-been prodigious; for at the Fort a cannon with its carriage, estimated
-at four tons in weight, was moved 15 feet inwards. A schooner was left
-in the midst of the ruins, 200 yards from the beach. The first wave
-was followed by two others, which in their retreat carried away a vast
-wreck of floating objects. In one part of the bay, a ship was pitched
-high and dry on shore, was carried off, again driven on shore, and
-again carried off. In another part, two large vessels anchored near
-together were whirled about, and their cables were thrice wound round
-each other; though anchored at a depth of 36 feet, they were for some
-minutes aground. The great wave must have travelled slowly, for the
-inhabitants of Talcahuano had time to run up the hills behind the town;
-and some sailors pulled out seaward, trusting successfully to their
-boat riding securely over the swell, if they could reach it before it
-broke. One old woman with a little boy, four or five years old, ran
-into a boat, but there was nobody to row it out: the boat was
-consequently dashed against an anchor and cut in twain; the old woman
-was drowned, but the child was picked up some hours afterwards clinging
-to the wreck. Pools of salt-water were still standing amidst the ruins
-of the houses, and children, making boats with old tables and chairs,
-appeared as happy as their parents were miserable. It was, however,
-exceedingly interesting to observe, how much more active and cheerful
-all appeared than could have been expected. It was remarked with much
-truth, that from the destruction being universal, no one individual was
-humbled more than another, or could suspect his friends of
-coldness--that most grievous result of the loss of wealth. Mr. Rouse,
-and a large party whom he kindly took under his protection, lived for
-the first week in a garden beneath some apple-trees. At first they were
-as merry as if it had been a picnic; but soon afterwards heavy rain
-caused much discomfort, for they were absolutely without shelter.
-
-In Captain Fitz Roy's excellent account of the earthquake, it is said
-that two explosions, one like a column of smoke and another like the
-blowing of a great whale, were seen in the bay. The water also
-appeared everywhere to be boiling; and it "became black, and exhaled a
-most disagreeable sulphureous smell." These latter circumstances were
-observed in the Bay of Valparaiso during the earthquake of 1822; they
-may, I think, be accounted for, by the disturbance of the mud at the
-bottom of the sea containing organic matter in decay. In the Bay of
-Callao, during a calm day, I noticed, that as the ship dragged her
-cable over the bottom, its course was marked by a line of bubbles. The
-lower orders in Talcahuano thought that the earthquake was caused by
-some old Indian women, who two years ago, being offended, stopped the
-volcano of Antuco. This silly belief is curious, because it shows that
-experience has taught them to observe, that there exists a relation
-between the suppressed action of the volcanos, and the trembling of the
-ground. It was necessary to apply the witchcraft to the point where
-their perception of cause and effect failed; and this was the closing
-of the volcanic vent. This belief is the more singular in this
-particular instance, because, according to Captain Fitz Roy, there is
-reason to believe that Antuco was noways affected.
-
-The town of Concepcion was built in the usual Spanish fashion, with all
-the streets running at right angles to each other; one set ranging S.W.
-by W., and the other set N.W. by N. The walls in the former direction
-certainly stood better than those in the latter; the greater number of
-the masses of brickwork were thrown down towards the N.E. Both these
-circumstances perfectly agree with the general idea, of the undulations
-having come from the S.W., in which quarter subterranean noises were
-also heard; for it is evident that the walls running S.W. and N.E.
-which presented their ends to the point whence the undulations came,
-would be much less likely to fall than those walls which, running N.W.
-and S.E., must in their whole lengths have been at the same instant
-thrown out of the perpendicular; for the undulations, coming from the
-S.W., must have extended in N.W. and S.E. waves, as they passed under
-the foundations. This may be illustrated by placing books edgeways on
-a carpet, and then, after the manner suggested by Michell, imitating
-the undulations of an earthquake: it will be found that they fall with
-more or less readiness, according as their direction more or less
-nearly coincides with the line of the waves. The fissures in the
-ground generally, though not uniformly, extended in a S.E. and N.W.
-direction, and therefore corresponded to the lines of undulation or of
-principal flexure. Bearing in mind all these circumstances, which so
-clearly point to the S.W. as the chief focus of disturbance, it is a
-very interesting fact that the island of S. Maria, situated in that
-quarter, was, during the general uplifting of the land, raised to
-nearly three times the height of any other part of the coast.
-
-The different resistance offered by the walls, according to their
-direction, was well exemplified in the case of the Cathedral. The side
-which fronted the N.E. presented a grand pile of ruins, in the midst of
-which door-cases and masses of timber stood up, as if floating in a
-stream. Some of the angular blocks of brickwork were of great
-dimensions; and they were rolled to a distance on the level plaza, like
-fragments of rock at the base of some high mountain. The side walls
-(running S.W. and N.E.), though exceedingly fractured, yet remained
-standing; but the vast buttresses (at right angles to them, and
-therefore parallel to the walls that fell) were in many cases cut clean
-off, as if by a chisel, and hurled to the ground. Some square
-ornaments on the coping of these same walls, were moved by the
-earthquake into a diagonal position. A similar circumstance was
-observed after an earthquake at Valparaiso, Calabria, and other places,
-including some of the ancient Greek temples. [1] This twisting
-displacement, at first appears to indicate a vorticose movement beneath
-each point thus affected; but this is highly improbable. May it not be
-caused by a tendency in each stone to arrange itself in some particular
-position, with respect to the lines of vibration,--in a manner somewhat
-similar to pins on a sheet of paper when shaken? Generally speaking,
-arched doorways or windows stood much better than any other part of the
-buildings. Nevertheless, a poor lame old man, who had been in the
-habit, during trifling shocks, of crawling to a certain doorway, was
-this time crushed to pieces.
-
-I have not attempted to give any detailed description of the appearance
-of Concepcion, for I feel that it is quite impossible to convey the
-mingled feelings which I experienced. Several of the officers visited
-it before me, but their strongest language failed to give a just idea
-of the scene of desolation. It is a bitter and humiliating thing to
-see works, which have cost man so much time and labour, overthrown in
-one minute; yet compassion for the inhabitants was almost instantly
-banished, by the surprise in seeing a state of things produced in a
-moment of time, which one was accustomed to attribute to a succession
-of ages. In my opinion, we have scarcely beheld, since leaving
-England, any sight so deeply interesting.
-
-In almost every severe earthquake, the neighbouring waters of the sea
-are said to have been greatly agitated. The disturbance seems
-generally, as in the case of Concepcion, to have been of two kinds:
-first, at the instant of the shock, the water swells high up on the
-beach with a gentle motion, and then as quietly retreats; secondly,
-some time afterwards, the whole body of the sea retires from the coast,
-and then returns in waves of overwhelming force. The first movement
-seems to be an immediate consequence of the earthquake affecting
-differently a fluid and a solid, so that their respective levels are
-slightly deranged: but the second case is a far more important
-phenomenon. During most earthquakes, and especially during those on
-the west coast of America, it is certain that the first great movement
-of the waters has been a retirement. Some authors have attempted to
-explain this, by supposing that the water retains its level, whilst the
-land oscillates upwards; but surely the water close to the land, even
-on a rather steep coast, would partake of the motion of the bottom:
-moreover, as urged by Mr. Lyell, similar movements of the sea have
-occurred at islands far distant from the chief line of disturbance, as
-was the case with Juan Fernandez during this earthquake, and with
-Madeira during the famous Lisbon shock. I suspect (but the subject is
-a very obscure one) that a wave, however produced, first draws the
-water from the shore, on which it is advancing to break: I have
-observed that this happens with the little waves from the paddles of a
-steam-boat. It is remarkable that whilst Talcahuano and Callao (near
-Lima), both situated at the head of large shallow bays, have suffered
-during every severe earthquake from great waves, Valparaiso, seated
-close to the edge of profoundly deep water, has never been overwhelmed,
-though so often shaken by the severest shocks. From the great wave not
-immediately following the earthquake, but sometimes after the interval
-of even half an hour, and from distant islands being affected similarly
-with the coasts near the focus of the disturbance, it appears that the
-wave first rises in the offing; and as this is of general occurrence,
-the cause must be general: I suspect we must look to the line, where
-the less disturbed waters of the deep ocean join the water nearer the
-coast, which has partaken of the movements of the land, as the place
-where the great wave is first generated; it would also appear that the
-wave is larger or smaller, according to the extent of shoal water which
-has been agitated together with the bottom on which it rested.
-
-
-The most remarkable effect of this earthquake was the permanent
-elevation of the land, it would probably be far more correct to speak
-of it as the cause. There can be no doubt that the land round the Bay
-of Concepcion was upraised two or three feet; but it deserves notice,
-that owing to the wave having obliterated the old lines of tidal action
-on the sloping sandy shores, I could discover no evidence of this fact,
-except in the united testimony of the inhabitants, that one little
-rocky shoal, now exposed, was formerly covered with water. At the
-island of S. Maria (about thirty miles distant) the elevation was
-greater; on one part, Captain Fitz Roy founds beds of putrid
-mussel-shells _still adhering to the rocks_, ten feet above high-water
-mark: the inhabitants had formerly dived at lower-water spring-tides
-for these shells. The elevation of this province is particularly
-interesting, from its having been the theatre of several other violent
-earthquakes, and from the vast numbers of sea-shells scattered over the
-land, up to a height of certainly 600, and I believe, of 1000 feet. At
-Valparaiso, as I have remarked, similar shells are found at the height
-of 1300 feet: it is hardly possible to doubt that this great elevation
-has been effected by successive small uprisings, such as that which
-accompanied or caused the earthquake of this year, and likewise by an
-insensibly slow rise, which is certainly in progress on some parts of
-this coast.
-
-The island of Juan Fernandez, 360 miles to the N.E., was, at the time
-of the great shock of the 20th, violently shaken, so that the trees
-beat against each other, and a volcano burst forth under water close to
-the shore: these facts are remarkable because this island, during the
-earthquake of 1751, was then also affected more violently than other
-places at an equal distance from Concepcion, and this seems to show
-some subterranean connection between these two points. Chiloe, about
-340 miles southward of Concepcion, appears to have been shaken more
-strongly than the intermediate district of Valdivia, where the volcano
-of Villarica was noways affected, whilst in the Cordillera in front of
-Chiloe, two of the volcanos burst-forth at the same instant in violent
-action. These two volcanos, and some neighbouring ones, continued for
-a long time in eruption, and ten months afterwards were again
-influenced by an earthquake at Concepcion. Some men, cutting wood near
-the base of one of these volcanos, did not perceive the shock of the
-20th, although the whole surrounding Province was then trembling; here
-we have an eruption relieving and taking the place of an earthquake, as
-would have happened at Concepcion, according to the belief of the lower
-orders, if the volcano at Antuco had not been closed by witchcraft. Two
-years and three-quarters afterwards, Valdivia and Chiloe were again
-shaken, more violently than on the 20th, and an island in the Chonos
-Archipelago was permanently elevated more than eight feet. It will give
-a better idea of the scale of these phenomena, if (as in the case of
-the glaciers) we suppose them to have taken place at corresponding
-distances in Europe:--then would the land from the North Sea to the
-Mediterranean have been violently shaken, and at the same instant of
-time a large tract of the eastern coast of England would have been
-permanently elevated, together with some outlying islands,--a train of
-volcanos on the coast of Holland would have burst forth in action, and
-an eruption taken place at the bottom of the sea, near the northern
-extremity of Ireland--and lastly, the ancient vents of Auvergne,
-Cantal, and Mont d'Or would each have sent up to the sky a dark column
-of smoke, and have long remained in fierce action. Two years and
-three-quarters afterwards, France, from its centre to the English
-Channel, would have been again desolated by an earthquake and an island
-permanently upraised in the Mediterranean.
-
-The space, from under which volcanic matter on the 20th was actually
-erupted, is 720 miles in one line, and 400 miles in another line at
-right angles to the first: hence, in all probability, a subterranean
-lake of lava is here stretched out, of nearly double the area of the
-Black Sea. From the intimate and complicated manner in which the
-elevatory and eruptive forces were shown to be connected during this
-train of phenomena, we may confidently come to the conclusion, that the
-forces which slowly and by little starts uplift continents, and those
-which at successive periods pour forth volcanic matter from open
-orifices, are identical. From many reasons, I believe that the
-frequent quakings of the earth on this line of coast are caused by the
-rending of the strata, necessarily consequent on the tension of the
-land when upraised, and their injection by fluidified rock. This
-rending and injection would, if repeated often enough (and we know that
-earthquakes repeatedly affect the same areas in the same manner), form
-a chain of hills;--and the linear island of S. Mary, which was upraised
-thrice the height of the neighbouring country, seems to be undergoing
-this process. I believe that the solid axis of a mountain, differs in
-its manner of formation from a volcanic hill, only in the molten stone
-having been repeatedly injected, instead of having been repeatedly
-ejected. Moreover, I believe that it is impossible to explain the
-structure of great mountain-chains, such as that of the Cordillera,
-were the strata, capping the injected axis of plutonic rock, have been
-thrown on their edges along several parallel and neighbouring lines of
-elevation, except on this view of the rock of the axis having been
-repeatedly injected, after intervals sufficiently long to allow the
-upper parts or wedges to cool and become solid;--for if the strata had
-been thrown into their present highly inclined, vertical, and even
-inverted positions, by a single blow, the very bowels of the earth
-would have gushed out; and instead of beholding abrupt mountain-axes of
-rock solidified under great pressure, deluges of lava would have flowed
-out at innumerable points on every line of elevation. [2]
-
-[1] M. Arago in L'Institut, 1839, p. 337. See also Miers's Chile, vol.
-i. p. 392; also Lyell's Principles of Geology, chap. xv., book ii.
-
-[2] For a full account of the volcanic phenomena which accompanied the
-earthquake of the 20th, and for the conclusions deducible from them, I
-must refer to Volume V. of the Geological Transactions.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
-
-Valparaiso--Portillo Pass--Sagacity of Mules--Mountain-torrents--Mines,
-how discovered--Proofs of the gradual Elevation of the
-Cordillera--Effect of Snow on Rocks--Geological Structure of the two
-main Ranges, their distinct Origin and Upheaval--Great Subsidence--Red
-Snow--Winds--Pinnacles of Snow--Dry and clear
-Atmosphere--Electricity--Pampas--Zoology of the opposite Side of the
-Andes--Locusts--Great Bugs--Mendoza--Uspallata Pass--Silicified Trees
-buried as they grew--Incas Bridge--Badness of the Passes
-exaggerated--Cumbre--Casuchas--Valparaiso.
-
-
-MARCH 7th, 1835.--We stayed three days at Concepcion, and then sailed
-for Valparaiso. The wind being northerly, we only reached the mouth of
-the harbour of Concepcion before it was dark. Being very near the
-land, and a fog coming on, the anchor was dropped. Presently a large
-American whaler appeared alongside of us; and we heard the Yankee
-swearing at his men to keep quiet, whilst he listened for the breakers.
-Captain Fitz Roy hailed him, in a loud clear voice, to anchor where he
-then was. The poor man must have thought the voice came from the
-shore: such a Babel of cries issued at once from the ship--every one
-hallooing out, "Let go the anchor! veer cable! shorten sail!" It was
-the most laughable thing I ever heard. If the ship's crew had been all
-captains, and no men, there could not have been a greater uproar of
-orders. We afterwards found that the mate stuttered: I suppose all
-hands were assisting him in giving his orders.
-
-On the 11th we anchored at Valparaiso, and two days afterwards I set
-out to cross the Cordillera. I proceeded to Santiago, where Mr.
-Caldcleugh most kindly assisted me in every possible way in making the
-little preparations which were necessary. In this part of Chile there
-are two passes across the Andes to Mendoza: the one most commonly used,
-namely, that of Aconcagua or Uspallata--is situated some way to the
-north; the other, called the Portillo, is to the south, and nearer, but
-more lofty and dangerous.
-
-March 18th.--We set out for the Portillo pass. Leaving Santiago we
-crossed the wide burnt-up plain on which that city stands, and in the
-afternoon arrived at the Maypu, one of the principal rivers in Chile.
-The valley, at the point where it enters the first Cordillera, is
-bounded on each side by lofty barren mountains; and although not broad,
-it is very fertile. Numerous cottages were surrounded by vines, and by
-orchards of apple, nectarine, and peach-trees--their boughs breaking
-with the weight of the beautiful ripe fruit. In the evening we passed
-the custom-house, where our luggage was examined. The frontier of
-Chile is better guarded by the Cordillera, than by the waters of the
-sea. There are very few valleys which lead to the central ranges, and
-the mountains are quite impassable in other parts by beasts of burden.
-The custom-house officers were very civil, which was perhaps partly
-owing to the passport which the President of the Republic had given me;
-but I must express my admiration at the natural politeness of almost
-every Chileno. In this instance, the contrast with the same class of
-men in most other countries was strongly marked. I may mention an
-anecdote with which I was at the time much pleased: we met near Mendoza
-a little and very fat negress, riding astride on a mule. She had a
-_goitre_ so enormous that it was scarcely possible to avoid gazing at
-her for a moment; but my two companions almost instantly, by way of
-apology, made the common salute of the country by taking off their
-hats. Where would one of the lower or higher classes in Europe, have
-shown such feeling politeness to a poor and miserable object of a
-degraded race?
-
-At night we slept at a cottage. Our manner of travelling was
-delightfully independent. In the inhabited parts we bought a little
-firewood, hired pasture for the animals, and bivouacked in the corner
-of the same field with them. Carrying an iron pot, we cooked and ate
-our supper under a cloudless sky, and knew no trouble. My companions
-were Mariano Gonzales, who had formerly accompanied me in Chile, and an
-"arriero," with his ten mules and a "madrina." The madrina (or
-godmother) is a most important personage:
-
-She is an old steady mare, with a little bell round her neck; and
-wherever she goes, the mules, like good children, follow her. The
-affection of these animals for their madrinas saves infinite trouble.
-If several large troops are turned into one field to graze, in the
-morning the muleteers have only to lead the madrinas a little apart,
-and tinkle their bells; although there may be two or three hundred
-together, each mule immediately knows the bell of its own madrina, and
-comes to her. It is nearly impossible to lose an old mule; for if
-detained for several hours by force, she will, by the power of smell,
-like a dog, track out her companions, or rather the madrina, for,
-according to the muleteer, she is the chief object of affection. The
-feeling, however, is not of an individual nature; for I believe I am
-right in saying that any animal with a bell will serve as a madrina. In
-a troop each animal carries on a level road, a cargo weighing 416
-pounds (more than 29 stone), but in a mountainous country 100 pounds
-less; yet with what delicate slim limbs, without any proportional bulk
-of muscle, these animals support so great a burden! The mule always
-appears to me a most surprising animal. That a hybrid should possess
-more reason, memory, obstinacy, social affection, powers of muscular
-endurance, and length of life, than either of its parents, seems to
-indicate that art has here outdone nature. Of our ten animals, six
-were intended for riding, and four for carrying cargoes, each taking
-turn about. We carried a good deal of food in case we should be snowed
-up, as the season was rather late for passing the Portillo.
-
-March 19th.--We rode during this day to the last, and therefore most
-elevated, house in the valley. The number of inhabitants became
-scanty; but wherever water could be brought on the land, it was very
-fertile. All the main valleys in the Cordillera are characterized by
-having, on both sides, a fringe or terrace of shingle and sand, rudely
-stratified, and generally of considerable thickness. These fringes
-evidently once extended across the valleys and were united; and the
-bottoms of the valleys in northern Chile, where there are no streams,
-are thus smoothly filled up. On these fringes the roads are generally
-carried, for their surfaces are even, and they rise, with a very gentle
-slope up the valleys: hence, also, they are easily cultivated by
-irrigation. They may be traced up to a height of between 7000 and 9000
-feet, where they become hidden by the irregular piles of debris. At
-the lower end or mouths of the valleys, they are continuously united to
-those land-locked plains (also formed of shingle) at the foot of the
-main Cordillera, which I have described in a former chapter as
-characteristic of the scenery of Chile, and which were undoubtedly
-deposited when the sea penetrated Chile, as it now does the more
-southern coasts. No one fact in the geology of South America,
-interested me more than these terraces of rudely-stratified shingle.
-They precisely resemble in composition the matter which the torrents in
-each valley would deposit, if they were checked in their course by any
-cause, such as entering a lake or arm of the sea; but the torrents,
-instead of depositing matter, are now steadily at work wearing away
-both the solid rock and these alluvial deposits, along the whole line
-of every main valley and side valley. It is impossible here to give
-the reasons, but I am convinced that the shingle terraces were
-accumulated, during the gradual elevation of the Cordillera, by the
-torrents delivering, at successive levels, their detritus on the
-beachheads of long narrow arms of the sea, first high up the valleys,
-then lower and lower down as the land slowly rose. If this be so, and
-I cannot doubt it, the grand and broken chain of the Cordillera,
-instead of having been suddenly thrown up, as was till lately the
-universal, and still is the common opinion of geologists, has been
-slowly upheaved in mass, in the same gradual manner as the coasts of
-the Atlantic and Pacific have risen within the recent period. A
-multitude of facts in the structure of the Cordillera, on this view
-receive a simple explanation.
-
-The rivers which flow in these valleys ought rather to be called
-mountain-torrents. Their inclination is very great, and their water
-the colour of mud. The roar which the Maypu made, as it rushed over
-the great rounded fragments, was like that of the sea. Amidst the din
-of rushing waters, the noise from the stones, as they rattled one over
-another, was most distinctly audible even from a distance. This
-rattling noise, night and day, may be heard along the whole course of
-the torrent. The sound spoke eloquently to the geologist; the
-thousands and thousands of stones, which, striking against each other,
-made the one dull uniform sound, were all hurrying in one direction. It
-was like thinking on time, where the minute that now glides past is
-irrevocable. So was it with these stones; the ocean is their eternity,
-and each note of that wild music told of one more step towards their
-destiny.
-
-It is not possible for the mind to comprehend, except by a slow
-process, any effect which is produced by a cause repeated so often,
-that the multiplier itself conveys an idea, not more definite than the
-savage implies when he points to the hairs of his head. As often as I
-have seen beds of mud, sand, and shingle, accumulated to the thickness
-of many thousand feet, I have felt inclined to exclaim that causes,
-such as the present rivers and the present beaches, could never have
-ground down and produced such masses. But, on the other hand, when
-listening to the rattling noise of these torrents, and calling to mind
-that whole races of animals have passed away from the face of the
-earth, and that during this whole period, night and day, these stones
-have gone rattling onwards in their course, I have thought to myself,
-can any mountains, any continent, withstand such waste?
-
-In this part of the valley, the mountains on each side were from 3000
-to 6000 or 8000 feet high, with rounded outlines and steep bare flanks.
-The general colour of the rock was dullish purple, and the
-stratification very distinct. If the scenery was not beautiful, it was
-remarkable and grand. We met during the day several herds of cattle,
-which men were driving down from the higher valleys in the Cordillera.
-This sign of the approaching winter hurried our steps, more than was
-convenient for geologizing. The house where we slept was situated at
-the foot of a mountain, on the summit of which are the mines of S.
-Pedro de Nolasko. Sir F. Head marvels how mines have been discovered
-in such extraordinary situations, as the bleak summit of the mountain
-of S. Pedro de Nolasko. In the first place, metallic veins in this
-country are generally harder than the surrounding strata: hence, during
-the gradual wear of the hills, they project above the surface of the
-ground. Secondly, almost every labourer, especially in the northern
-parts of Chile, understands something about the appearance of ores. In
-the great mining provinces of Coquimbo and Copiapo, firewood is very
-scarce, and men search for it over every hill and dale; and by this
-means nearly all the richest mines have there been discovered.
-Chanuncillo, from which silver to the value of many hundred thousand
-pounds has been raised in the course of a few years, was discovered by
-a man who threw a stone at his loaded donkey, and thinking that it was
-very heavy, he picked it up, and found it full of pure silver: the vein
-occurred at no great distance, standing up like a wedge of metal. The
-miners, also, taking a crowbar with them, often wander on Sundays over
-the mountains. In this south part of Chile, the men who drive cattle
-into the Cordillera, and who frequent every ravine where there is a
-little pasture, are the usual discoverers.
-
-20th.--As we ascended the valley, the vegetation, with the exception of
-a few pretty alpine flowers, became exceedingly scanty, and of
-quadrupeds, birds, or insects, scarcely one could be seen. The lofty
-mountains, their summits marked with a few patches of snow, stood well
-separated from each other, the valleys being filled up with an immense
-thickness of stratified alluvium. The features in the scenery of the
-Andes which struck me most, as contrasted with the other mountain
-chains with which I am acquainted, were,--the flat fringes sometimes
-expanding into narrow plains on each side of the valleys,--the bright
-colours, chiefly red and purple, of the utterly bare and precipitous
-hills of porphyry, the grand and continuous wall-like dykes,--the
-plainly-divided strata which, where nearly vertical, formed the
-picturesque and wild central pinnacles, but where less inclined,
-composed the great massive mountains on the outskirts of the
-range,--and lastly, the smooth conical piles of fine and brightly
-coloured detritus, which sloped up at a high angle from the base of the
-mountains, sometimes to a height of more than 2000 feet.
-
-I frequently observed, both in Tierra del Fuego and within the Andes,
-that where the rock was covered during the greater part of the year
-with snow, it was shivered in a very extraordinary manner into small
-angular fragments. Scoresby [1] has observed the same fact in
-Spitzbergen. The case appears to me rather obscure: for that part of
-the mountain which is protected by a mantle of snow, must be less
-subject to repeated and great changes of temperature than any other
-part. I have sometimes thought, that the earth and fragments of stone
-on the surface, were perhaps less effectually removed by slowly
-percolating snow-water [2] than by rain, and therefore that the
-appearance of a quicker disintegration of the solid rock under the
-snow, was deceptive. Whatever the cause may be, the quantity of
-crumbling stone on the Cordillera is very great. Occasionally in the
-spring, great masses of this detritus slide down the mountains, and
-cover the snow-drifts in the valleys, thus forming natural ice-houses.
-We rode over one, the height of which was far below the limit of
-perpetual snow.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, we reached a singular basin-like plain,
-called the Valle del Yeso. It was covered by a little dry pasture, and
-we had the pleasant sight of a herd of cattle amidst the surrounding
-rocky deserts. The valley takes its name of Yeso from a great bed, I
-should think at least 2000 feet thick, of white, and in some parts
-quite pure, gypsum. We slept with a party of men, who were employed in
-loading mules with this substance, which is used in the manufacture of
-wine. We set out early in the morning (21st), and continued to follow
-the course of the river, which had become very small, till we arrived
-at the foot of the ridge, that separates the waters flowing into the
-Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The road, which as yet had been good with
-a steady but very gradual ascent, now changed into a steep zigzag track
-up the great range, dividing the republics of Chile and Mendoza.
-
-I will here give a very brief sketch of the geology of the several
-parallel lines forming the Cordillera. Of these lines, there are two
-considerably higher than the others; namely, on the Chilian side, the
-Peuquenes ridge, which, where the road crosses it, is 13,210 feet above
-the sea; and the Portillo ridge, on the Mendoza side, which is 14,305
-feet. The lower beds of the Peuquenes ridge, and of the several great
-lines to the westward of it, are composed of a vast pile, many thousand
-feet in thickness, of porphyries which have flowed as submarine lavas,
-alternating with angular and rounded fragments of the same rocks,
-thrown out of the submarine craters. These alternating masses are
-covered in the central parts, by a great thickness of red sandstone,
-conglomerate, and calcareous clay-slate, associated with, and passing
-into, prodigious beds of gypsum. In these upper beds shells are
-tolerably frequent; and they belong to about the period of the lower
-chalk of Europe. It is an old story, but not the less wonderful, to
-hear of shells which were once crawling on the bottom of the sea, now
-standing nearly 14,000 feet above its level. The lower beds in this
-great pile of strata, have been dislocated, baked, crystallized and
-almost blended together, through the agency of mountain masses of a
-peculiar white soda-granitic rock.
-
-The other main line, namely, that of the Portillo, is of a totally
-different formation: it consists chiefly of grand bare pinnacles of a
-red potash-granite, which low down on the western flank are covered by
-a sandstone, converted by the former heat into a quartz-rock. On the
-quartz, there rest beds of a conglomerate several thousand feet in
-thickness, which have been upheaved by the red granite, and dip at an
-angle of 45 degs. towards the Peuquenes line. I was astonished to find
-that this conglomerate was partly composed of pebbles, derived from the
-rocks, with their fossil shells, of the Peuquenes range; and partly of
-red potash-granite, like that of the Portillo. Hence we must conclude,
-that both the Peuquenes and Portillo ranges were partially upheaved and
-exposed to wear and tear, when the conglomerate was forming; but as the
-beds of the conglomerate have been thrown off at an angle of 45 degs.
-by the red Portillo granite (with the underlying sandstone baked by
-it), we may feel sure, that the greater part of the injection and
-upheaval of the already partially formed Portillo line, took place
-after the accumulation of the conglomerate, and long after the
-elevation of the Peuquenes ridge. So that the Portillo, the loftiest
-line in this part of the Cordillera, is not so old as the less lofty
-line of the Peuquenes. Evidence derived from an inclined stream of
-lava at the eastern base of the Portillo, might be adduced to show,
-that it owes part of its great height to elevations of a still later
-date. Looking to its earliest origin, the red granite seems to have
-been injected on an ancient pre-existing line of white granite and
-mica-slate. In most parts, perhaps in all parts, of the Cordillera, it
-may be concluded that each line has been formed by repeated upheavals
-and injections; and that the several parallel lines are of different
-ages. Only thus can we gain time, at all sufficient to explain the
-truly astonishing amount of denudation, which these great, though
-comparatively with most other ranges recent, mountains have suffered.
-
-Finally, the shells in the Peuquenes or oldest ridge, prove, as before
-remarked, that it has been upraised 14,000 feet since a Secondary
-period, which in Europe we are accustomed to consider as far from
-ancient; but since these shells lived in a moderately deep sea, it can
-be shown that the area now occupied by the Cordillera, must have
-subsided several thousand feet--in northern Chile as much as 6000
-feet--so as to have allowed that amount of submarine strata to have
-been heaped on the bed on which the shells lived. The proof is the
-same with that by which it was shown, that at a much later period,
-since the tertiary shells of Patagonia lived, there must have been
-there a subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing
-elevation. Daily it is forced home on the mind of the geologist, that
-nothing, not even the wind that blows, is so unstable as the level of
-the crust of this earth.
-
-I will make only one other geological remark: although the Portillo
-chain is here higher than the Peuquenes, the waters draining the
-intermediate valleys, have burst through it. The same fact, on a
-grander scale, has been remarked in the eastern and loftiest line of
-the Bolivian Cordillera, through which the rivers pass: analogous facts
-have also been observed in other quarters of the world. On the
-supposition of the subsequent and gradual elevation of the Portillo
-line, this can be understood; for a chain of islets would at first
-appear, and, as these were lifted up, the tides would be always wearing
-deeper and broader channels between them. At the present day, even in
-the most retired Sounds on the coast of Tierra del Fuego, the currents
-in the transverse breaks which connect the longitudinal channels, are
-very strong, so that in one transverse channel even a small vessel
-under sail was whirled round and round.
-
-
-About noon we began the tedious ascent of the Peuquenes ridge, and then
-for the first time experienced some little difficulty in our
-respiration. The mules would halt every fifty yards, and after resting
-for a few seconds the poor willing animals started of their own accord
-again. The short breathing from the rarefied atmosphere is called by
-the Chilenos "puna;" and they have most ridiculous notions concerning
-its origin. Some say "all the waters here have puna;" others that
-"where there is snow there is puna;"--and this no doubt is true. The
-only sensation I experienced was a slight tightness across the head and
-chest, like that felt on leaving a warm room and running quickly in
-frosty weather. There was some imagination even in this; for upon
-finding fossil shells on the highest ridge, I entirely forgot the puna
-in my delight. Certainly the exertion of walking was extremely great,
-and the respiration became deep and laborious: I am told that in Potosi
-(about 13,000 feet above the sea) strangers do not become thoroughly
-accustomed to the atmosphere for an entire year. The inhabitants all
-recommend onions for the puna; as this vegetable has sometimes been
-given in Europe for pectoral complaints, it may possibly be of real
-service:--for my part I found nothing so good as the fossil shells!
-
-When about half-way up we met a large party with seventy loaded mules.
-It was interesting to hear the wild cries of the muleteers, and to
-watch the long descending string of the animals; they appeared so
-diminutive, there being nothing but the black mountains with which they
-could be compared. When near the summit, the wind, as generally
-happens, was impetuous and extremely cold. On each side of the ridge,
-we had to pass over broad bands of perpetual snow, which were now soon
-to be covered by a fresh layer. When we reached the crest and looked
-backwards, a glorious view was presented. The atmosphere resplendently
-clear; the sky an intense blue; the profound valleys; the wild broken
-forms: the heaps of ruins, piled up during the lapse of ages; the
-bright-coloured rocks, contrasted with the quiet mountains of snow, all
-these together produced a scene no one could have imagined. Neither
-plant nor bird, excepting a few condors wheeling around the higher
-pinnacles, distracted my attention from the inanimate mass. I felt
-glad that I was alone: it was like watching a thunderstorm, or hearing
-in full orchestra a chorus of the Messiah.
-
-On several patches of the snow I found the Protococcus nivalis, or red
-snow, so well known from the accounts of Arctic navigators. My
-attention was called to it, by observing the footsteps of the mules
-stained a pale red, as if their hoofs had been slightly bloody. I at
-first thought that it was owing to dust blown from the surrounding
-mountains of red porphyry; for from the magnifying power of the
-crystals of snow, the groups of these microscopical plants appeared
-like coarse particles. The snow was coloured only where it had thawed
-very rapidly, or had been accidentally crushed. A little rubbed on
-paper gave it a faint rose tinge mingled with a little brick-red. I
-afterwards scraped some off the paper, and found that it consisted of
-groups of little spheres in colourless cases, each of the thousandth
-part of an inch in diameter.
-
-The wind on the crest of the Peuquenes, as just remarked, is generally
-impetuous and very cold: it is said [3] to blow steadily from the
-westward or Pacific side. As the observations have been chiefly made
-in summer, this wind must be an upper and return current. The Peak of
-Teneriffe, with a less elevation, and situated in lat. 28 degs., in
-like manner falls within an upper return stream. At first it appears
-rather surprising, that the trade-wind along the northern parts of
-Chile and on the coast of Peru, should blow in so very southerly a
-direction as it does; but when we reflect that the Cordillera, running
-in a north and south line, intercepts, like a great wall, the entire
-depth of the lower atmospheric current, we can easily see that the
-trade-wind must be drawn northward, following the line of mountains,
-towards the equatorial regions, and thus lose part of that easterly
-movement which it otherwise would have gained from the earth's
-rotation. At Mendoza, on the eastern foot of the Andes, the climate is
-said to be subject to long calms, and to frequent though false
-appearances of gathering rain-storms: we may imagine that the wind,
-which coming from the eastward is thus banked up by the line of
-mountains, would become stagnant and irregular in its movements.
-
-Having crossed the Peuquenes, we descended into a mountainous country,
-intermediate between the two main ranges, and then took up our quarters
-for the night. We were now in the republic of Mendoza. The elevation
-was probably not under 11,000 feet, and the vegetation in consequence
-exceedingly scanty. The root of a small scrubby plant served as fuel,
-but it made a miserable fire, and the wind was piercingly cold. Being
-quite tired with my days work, I made up my bed as quickly as I could,
-and went to sleep. About midnight I observed the sky became suddenly
-clouded: I awakened the arriero to know if there was any danger of bad
-weather; but he said that without thunder and lightning there was no
-risk of a heavy snow-storm. The peril is imminent, and the difficulty
-of subsequent escape great, to any one overtaken by bad weather between
-the two ranges. A certain cave offers the only place of refuge: Mr.
-Caldcleugh, who crossed on this same day of the month, was detained
-there for some time by a heavy fall of snow. Casuchas, or houses of
-refuge, have not been built in this pass as in that of Uspallata, and,
-therefore, during the autumn, the Portillo is little frequented. I may
-here remark that within the main Cordillera rain never falls, for
-during the summer the sky is cloudless, and in winter snow-storms alone
-occur.
-
-At the place where we slept water necessarily boiled, from the
-diminished pressure of the atmosphere, at a lower temperature than it
-does in a less lofty country; the case being the converse of that of a
-Papin's digester. Hence the potatoes, after remaining for some hours
-in the boiling water, were nearly as hard as ever. The pot was left on
-the fire all night, and next morning it was boiled again, but yet the
-potatoes were not cooked. I found out this, by overhearing my two
-companions discussing the cause, they had come to the simple
-conclusion, "that the cursed pot [which was a new one] did not choose
-to boil potatoes."
-
-March 22nd.--After eating our potatoless breakfast, we travelled
-across the intermediate tract to the foot of the Portillo range. In
-the middle of summer cattle are brought up here to graze; but they had
-now all been removed: even the greater number of the Guanacos had
-decamped, knowing well that if overtaken here by a snow-storm, they
-would be caught in a trap. We had a fine view of a mass of mountains
-called Tupungato, the whole clothed with unbroken snow, in the midst of
-which there was a blue patch, no doubt a glacier;--a circumstance of
-rare occurrence in these mountains. Now commenced a heavy and long
-climb, similar to that of the Peuquenes. Bold conical hills of red
-granite rose on each hand; in the valleys there were several broad
-fields of perpetual snow. These frozen masses, during the process of
-thawing, had in some parts been converted into pinnacles or columns,
-[4] which, as they were high and close together, made it difficult for
-the cargo mules to pass. On one of these columns of ice, a frozen horse
-was sticking as on a pedestal, but with its hind legs straight up in
-the air. The animal, I suppose, must have fallen with its head
-downward into a hole, when the snow was continuous, and afterwards the
-surrounding parts must have been removed by the thaw.
-
-When nearly on the crest of the Portillo, we were enveloped in a
-falling cloud of minute frozen spicula. This was very unfortunate, as
-it continued the whole day, and quite intercepted our view. The pass
-takes its name of Portillo, from a narrow cleft or doorway on the
-highest ridge, through which the road passes. From this point, on a
-clear day, those vast plains which uninterruptedly extend to the
-Atlantic Ocean can be seen. We descended to the upper limit of
-vegetation, and found good quarters for the night under the shelter of
-some large fragments of rock. We met here some passengers, who made
-anxious inquiries about the state of the road. Shortly after it was
-dark the clouds suddenly cleared away, and the effect was quite
-magical. The great mountains, bright with the full moon, seemed
-impending over us on all sides, as over a deep crevice: one morning,
-very early, I witnessed the same striking effect. As soon as the
-clouds were dispersed it froze severely; but as there was no wind, we
-slept very comfortably.
-
-The increased brilliancy of the moon and stars at this elevation, owing
-to the perfect transparency of the atmosphere, was very remarkable.
-Travelers having observed the difficulty of judging heights and
-distances amidst lofty mountains, have generally attributed it to the
-absence of objects of comparison. It appears to me, that it is fully
-as much owing to the transparency of the air confounding objects at
-different distances, and likewise partly to the novelty of an unusual
-degree of fatigue arising from a little exertion,--habit being thus
-opposed to the evidence of the senses. I am sure that this extreme
-clearness of the air gives a peculiar character to the landscape, all
-objects appearing to be brought nearly into one plane, as in a drawing
-or panorama. The transparency is, I presume, owing to the equable and
-high state of atmospheric dryness. This dryness was shown by the
-manner in which woodwork shrank (as I soon found by the trouble my
-geological hammer gave me); by articles of food, such as bread and
-sugar, becoming extremely hard; and by the preservation of the skin and
-parts of the flesh of the beasts, which had perished on the road. To
-the same cause we must attribute the singular facility with which
-electricity is excited. My flannel waistcoat, when rubbed in the dark,
-appeared as if it had been washed with phosphorus,--every hair on a
-dog's back crackled;--even the linen sheets, and leathern straps of the
-saddle, when handled, emitted sparks.
-
-March 23rd.--The descent on the eastern side of the Cordillera is much
-shorter or steeper than on the Pacific side; in other words, the
-mountains rise more abruptly from the plains than from the alpine
-country of Chile. A level and brilliantly white sea of clouds was
-stretched out beneath our feet, shutting out the view of the equally
-level Pampas. We soon entered the band of clouds, and did not again
-emerge from it that day. About noon, finding pasture for the animals
-and bushes for firewood at Los Arenales, we stopped for the night. This
-was near the uppermost limit of bushes, and the elevation, I suppose,
-was between seven and eight thousand feet.
-
-I was much struck with the marked difference between the vegetation of
-these eastern valleys and those on the Chilian side: yet the climate,
-as well as the kind of soil, is nearly the same, and the difference of
-longitude very trifling. The same remark holds good with the
-quadrupeds, and in a lesser degree with the birds and insects. I may
-instance the mice, of which I obtained thirteen species on the shores
-of the Atlantic, and five on the Pacific, and not one of them is
-identical. We must except all those species, which habitually or
-occasionally frequent elevated mountains; and certain birds, which
-range as far south as the Strait of Magellan. This fact is in perfect
-accordance with the geological history of the Andes; for these
-mountains have existed as a great barrier since the present races of
-animals have appeared; and therefore, unless we suppose the same
-species to have been created in two different places, we ought not to
-expect any closer similarity between the organic beings on the opposite
-sides of the Andes than on the opposite shores of the ocean. In both
-cases, we must leave out of the question those kinds which have been
-able to cross the barrier, whether of solid rock or salt-water. [5]
-
-A great number of the plants and animals were absolutely the same as,
-or most closely allied to, those of Patagonia. We here have the agouti,
-bizcacha, three species of armadillo, the ostrich, certain kinds of
-partridges and other birds, none of which are ever seen in Chile, but
-are the characteristic animals of the desert plains of Patagonia. We
-have likewise many of the same (to the eyes of a person who is not a
-botanist) thorny stunted bushes, withered grass, and dwarf plants. Even
-the black slowly crawling beetles are closely similar, and some, I
-believe, on rigorous examination, absolutely identical. It had always
-been to me a subject of regret, that we were unavoidably compelled to
-give up the ascent of the S. Cruz river before reaching the mountains:
-I always had a latent hope of meeting with some great change in the
-features of the country; but I now feel sure, that it would only have
-been following the plains of Patagonia up a mountainous ascent.
-
-March 24th.--Early in the morning I climbed up a mountain on one side
-of the valley, and enjoyed a far extended view over the Pampas. This
-was a spectacle to which I had always looked forward with interest, but
-I was disappointed: at the first glance it much resembled a distant
-view of the ocean, but in the northern parts many irregularities were
-soon distinguishable. The most striking feature consisted in the
-rivers, which, facing the rising sun, glittered like silver threads,
-till lost in the immensity of the distance. At midday we descended the
-valley, and reached a hovel, where an officer and three soldiers were
-posted to examine passports. One of these men was a thoroughbred Pampas
-Indian: he was kept much for the same purpose as a bloodhound, to track
-out any person who might pass by secretly, either on foot or horseback.
-Some years ago, a passenger endeavoured to escape detection, by making
-a long circuit over a neighbouring mountain; but this Indian, having by
-chance crossed his track, followed it for the whole day over dry and
-very stony hills, till at last he came on his prey hidden in a gully.
-We here heard that the silvery clouds, which we had admired from the
-bright region above, had poured down torrents of rain. The valley from
-this point gradually opened, and the hills became mere water-worn
-hillocks compared to the giants behind: it then expanded into a gently
-sloping plain of shingle, covered with low trees and bushes. This
-talus, although appearing narrow, must be nearly ten miles wide before
-it blends into the apparently dead level Pampas. We passed the only
-house in this neighbourhood, the Estancia of Chaquaio: and at sunset we
-pulled up in the first snug corner, and there bivouacked.
-
-March 25th.--I was reminded of the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, by seeing
-the disk of the rising sun, intersected by an horizon level as that of
-the ocean. During the night a heavy dew fell, a circumstance which we
-did not experience within the Cordillera. The road proceeded for some
-distance due east across a low swamp; then meeting the dry plain, it
-turned to the north towards Mendoza. The distance is two very long
-days' journey. Our first day's journey was called fourteen leagues to
-Estacado, and the second seventeen to Luxan, near Mendoza. The whole
-distance is over a level desert plain, with not more than two or three
-houses. The sun was exceedingly powerful, and the ride devoid of all
-interest. There is very little water in this "traversia," and in our
-second day's journey we found only one little pool. Little water flows
-from the mountains, and it soon becomes absorbed by the dry and porous
-soil; so that, although we travelled at the distance of only ten or
-fifteen miles from the outer range of the Cordillera, we did not cross
-a single stream. In many parts the ground was incrusted with a saline
-efflorescence; hence we had the same salt-loving plants which are
-common near Bahia Blanca. The landscape has a uniform character from
-the Strait of Magellan, along the whole eastern coast of Patagonia, to
-the Rio Colorado; and it appears that the same kind of country extends
-inland from this river, in a sweeping line as far as San Luis and
-perhaps even further north. To the eastward of this curved line lies
-the basin of the comparatively damp and green plains of Buenos Ayres.
-The sterile plains of Mendoza and Patagonia consist of a bed of
-shingle, worn smooth and accumulated by the waves of the sea while the
-Pampas, covered by thistles, clover, and grass, have been formed by the
-ancient estuary mud of the Plata.
-
-After our two days' tedious journey, it was refreshing to see in the
-distance the rows of poplars and willows growing round the village and
-river of Luxan. Shortly before we arrived at this place, we observed
-to the south a ragged cloud of dark reddish-brown colour. At first we
-thought that it was smoke from some great fire on the plains; but we
-soon found that it was a swarm of locusts. They were flying northward;
-and with the aid of a light breeze, they overtook us at a rate of ten
-or fifteen miles an hour. The main body filled the air from a height
-of twenty feet, to that, as it appeared, of two or three thousand above
-the ground; "and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots
-of many horses running to battle:" or rather, I should say, like a
-strong breeze passing through the rigging of a ship. The sky, seen
-through the advanced guard, appeared like a mezzotinto engraving, but
-the main body was impervious to sight; they were not, however, so thick
-together, but that they could escape a stick waved backwards and
-forwards. When they alighted, they were more numerous than the leaves
-in the field, and the surface became reddish instead of being green:
-the swarm having once alighted, the individuals flew from side to side
-in all directions. Locusts are not an uncommon pest in this country:
-already during the season, several smaller swarms had come up from the
-south, where, as apparently in all other parts of the world, they are
-bred in the deserts. The poor cottagers in vain attempted by lighting
-fires, by shouts, and by waving branches to avert the attack. This
-species of locust closely resembles, and perhaps is identical with, the
-famous Gryllus migratorius of the East.
-
-We crossed the Luxan, which is a river of considerable size, though its
-course towards the sea-coast is very imperfectly known: it is even
-doubtful whether, in passing over the plains, it is not evaporated and
-lost. We slept in the village of Luxan, which is a small place
-surrounded by gardens, and forms the most southern cultivated district
-in the Province of Mendoza; it is five leagues south of the capital. At
-night I experienced an attack (for it deserves no less a name) of the
-_Benchuca_, a species of Reduvius, the great black bug of the Pampas.
-It is most disgusting to feel soft wingless insects, about an inch
-long, crawling over one's body. Before sucking they are quite thin,
-but afterwards they become round and bloated with blood, and in this
-state are easily crushed. One which I caught at Iquique, (for they are
-found in Chile and Peru,) was very empty. When placed on a table, and
-though surrounded by people, if a finger was presented, the bold insect
-would immediately protrude its sucker, make a charge, and if allowed,
-draw blood. No pain was caused by the wound. It was curious to watch
-its body during the act of sucking, as in less than ten minutes it
-changed from being as flat as a wafer to a globular form. This one
-feast, for which the benchuca was indebted to one of the officers, kept
-it fat during four whole months; but, after the first fortnight, it was
-quite ready to have another suck.
-
-March 27th.--We rode on to Mendoza. The country was beautifully
-cultivated, and resembled Chile. This neighbourhood is celebrated for
-its fruit; and certainly nothing could appear more flourishing than the
-vineyards and the orchards of figs, peaches, and olives. We bought
-water-melons nearly twice as large as a man's head, most deliciously
-cool and well-flavoured, for a halfpenny apiece; and for the value of
-threepence, half a wheelbarrowful of peaches. The cultivated and
-enclosed part of this province is very small; there is little more than
-that which we passed through between Luxan and the capital. The land,
-as in Chile, owes its fertility entirely to artificial irrigation; and
-it is really wonderful to observe how extraordinarily productive a
-barren traversia is thus rendered.
-
-We stayed the ensuing day in Mendoza. The prosperity of the place has
-much declined of late years. The inhabitants say "it is good to live
-in, but very bad to grow rich in." The lower orders have the lounging,
-reckless manners of the Gauchos of the Pampas; and their dress,
-riding-gear, and habits of life, are nearly the same. To my mind the
-town had a stupid, forlorn aspect. Neither the boasted alameda, nor
-the scenery, is at all comparable with that of Santiago; but to those
-who, coming from Buenos Ayres, have just crossed the unvaried Pampas,
-the gardens and orchards must appear delightful. Sir F. Head, speaking
-of the inhabitants, says, "They eat their dinners, and it is so very
-hot, they go to sleep--and could they do better?" I quite agree with
-Sir F. Head: the happy doom of the Mendozinos is to eat, sleep and be
-idle.
-
-
-March 29th.--We set out on our return to Chile, by the Uspallata pass
-situated north of Mendoza. We had to cross a long and most sterile
-traversia of fifteen leagues. The soil in parts was absolutely bare,
-in others covered by numberless dwarf cacti, armed with formidable
-spines, and called by the inhabitants "little lions." There were, also,
-a few low bushes. Although the plain is nearly three thousand feet
-above the sea, the sun was very powerful; and the heat as well as the
-clouds of impalpable dust, rendered the travelling extremely irksome.
-Our course during the day lay nearly parallel to the Cordillera, but
-gradually approaching them. Before sunset we entered one of the wide
-valleys, or rather bays, which open on the plain: this soon narrowed
-into a ravine, where a little higher up the house of Villa Vicencio is
-situated. As we had ridden all day without a drop of water, both our
-mules and selves were very thirsty, and we looked out anxiously for the
-stream which flows down this valley. It was curious to observe how
-gradually the water made its appearance: on the plain the course was
-quite dry; by degrees it became a little damper; then puddles of water
-appeared; these soon became connected; and at Villa Vicencio there was
-a nice little rivulet.
-
-30th.--The solitary hovel which bears the imposing name of Villa
-Vicencio, has been mentioned by every traveller who has crossed the
-Andes. I stayed here and at some neighbouring mines during the two
-succeeding days. The geology of the surrounding country is very
-curious. The Uspallata range is separated from the main Cordillera by
-a long narrow plain or basin, like those so often mentioned in Chile,
-but higher, being six thousand feet above the sea. This range has
-nearly the same geographical position with respect to the Cordillera,
-which the gigantic Portillo line has, but it is of a totally different
-origin: it consists of various kinds of submarine lava, alternating
-with volcanic sandstones and other remarkable sedimentary deposits; the
-whole having a very close resemblance to some of the tertiary beds on
-the shores of the Pacific. From this resemblance I expected to find
-silicified wood, which is generally characteristic of those formations.
-I was gratified in a very extraordinary manner. In the central part of
-the range, at an elevation of about seven thousand feet, I observed on
-a bare slope some snow-white projecting columns. These were petrified
-trees, eleven being silicified, and from thirty to forty converted into
-coarsely-crystallized white calcareous spar. They were abruptly broken
-off, the upright stumps projecting a few feet above the ground. The
-trunks measured from three to five feet each in circumference. They
-stood a little way apart from each other, but the whole formed one
-group. Mr. Robert Brown has been kind enough to examine the wood: he
-says it belongs to the fir tribe, partaking of the character of the
-Araucarian family, but with some curious points of affinity with the
-yew. The volcanic sandstone in which the trees were embedded, and from
-the lower part of which they must have sprung, had accumulated in
-successive thin layers around their trunks; and the stone yet retained
-the impression of the bark.
-
-It required little geological practice to interpret the marvellous
-story which this scene at once unfolded; though I confess I was at
-first so much astonished that I could scarcely believe the plainest
-evidence. I saw the spot where a cluster of fine trees once waved
-their branches on the shores of the Atlantic, when that ocean (now
-driven back 700 miles) came to the foot of the Andes. I saw that they
-had sprung from a volcanic soil which had been raised above the level
-of the sea, and that subsequently this dry land, with its upright
-trees, had been let down into the depths of the ocean. In these
-depths, the formerly dry land was covered by sedimentary beds, and
-these again by enormous streams of submarine lava--one such mass
-attaining the thickness of a thousand feet; and these deluges of molten
-stone and aqueous deposits five times alternately had been spread out.
-The ocean which received such thick masses, must have been profoundly
-deep; but again the subterranean forces exerted themselves, and I now
-beheld the bed of that ocean, forming a chain of mountains more than
-seven thousand feet in height. Nor had those antagonistic forces been
-dormant, which are always at work wearing down the surface of the land;
-the great piles of strata had been intersected by many wide valleys,
-and the trees now changed into silex, were exposed projecting from the
-volcanic soil, now changed into rock, whence formerly, in a green and
-budding state, they had raised their lofty heads. Now, all is utterly
-irreclaimable and desert; even the lichen cannot adhere to the stony
-casts of former trees. Vast, and scarcely comprehensible as such
-changes must ever appear, yet they have all occurred within a period,
-recent when compared with the history of the Cordillera; and the
-Cordillera itself is absolutely modern as compared with many of the
-fossiliferous strata of Europe and America.
-
-April 1st.--We crossed the Upsallata range, and at night slept at the
-custom-house--the only inhabited spot on the plain. Shortly before
-leaving the mountains, there was a very extraordinary view; red,
-purple, green, and quite white sedimentary rocks, alternating with
-black lavas, were broken up and thrown into all kinds of disorder by
-masses of porphyry of every shade of colour, from dark brown to the
-brightest lilac. It was the first view I ever saw, which really
-resembled those pretty sections which geologists make of the inside of
-the earth.
-
-The next day we crossed the plain, and followed the course of the same
-great mountain stream which flows by Luxan. Here it was a furious
-torrent, quite impassable, and appeared larger than in the low country,
-as was the case with the rivulet of Villa Vicencio. On the evening of
-the succeeding day, we reached the Rio de las Vacas, which is
-considered the worst stream in the Cordillera to cross. As all these
-rivers have a rapid and short course, and are formed by the melting of
-the snow, the hour of the day makes a considerable difference in their
-volume. In the evening the stream is muddy and full, but about
-daybreak it becomes clearer, and much less impetuous. This we found to
-be the case with the Rio Vacas, and in the morning we crossed it with
-little difficulty.
-
-The scenery thus far was very uninteresting, compared with that of the
-Portillo pass. Little can be seen beyond the bare walls of the one
-grand flat-bottomed valley, which the road follows up to the highest
-crest. The valley and the huge rocky mountains are extremely barren:
-during the two previous nights the poor mules had absolutely nothing to
-eat, for excepting a few low resinous bushes, scarcely a plant can be
-seen. In the course of this day we crossed some of the worst passes in
-the Cordillera, but their danger has been much exaggerated. I was told
-that if I attempted to pass on foot, my head would turn giddy, and that
-there was no room to dismount; but I did not see a place where any one
-might not have walked over backwards, or got off his mule on either
-side. One of the bad passes, called _las Animas_ (the souls), I had
-crossed, and did not find out till a day afterwards, that it was one of
-the awful dangers. No doubt there are many parts in which, if the mule
-should stumble, the rider would be hurled down a great precipice; but
-of this there is little chance. I dare say, in the spring, the
-"laderas," or roads, which each year are formed anew across the piles
-of fallen detritus, are very bad; but from what I saw, I suspect the
-real danger is nothing. With cargo-mules the case is rather different,
-for the loads project so far, that the animals, occasionally running
-against each other, or against a point of rock, lose their balance, and
-are thrown down the precipices. In crossing the rivers I can well
-believe that the difficulty may be very great: at this season there was
-little trouble, but in the summer they must be very hazardous. I can
-quite imagine, as Sir F. Head describes, the different expressions of
-those who _have_ passed the gulf, and those who _are_ passing. I never
-heard of any man being drowned, but with loaded mules it frequently
-happens. The arriero tells you to show your mule the best line, and
-then allow her to cross as she likes: the cargo-mule takes a bad line,
-and is often lost.
-
-April 4th.--From the Rio de las Vacas to the Puente del Incas, half a
-day's journey. As there was pasture for the mules, and geology for me,
-we bivouacked here for the night. When one hears of a natural Bridge,
-one pictures to one's self some deep and narrow ravine, across which a
-bold mass of rock has fallen; or a great arch hollowed out like the
-vault of a cavern. Instead of this, the Incas Bridge consists of a
-crust of stratified shingle cemented together by the deposits of the
-neighbouring hot springs. It appears, as if the stream had scooped out
-a channel on one side, leaving an overhanging ledge, which was met by
-earth and stones falling down from the opposite cliff. Certainly an
-oblique junction, as would happen in such a case, was very distinct on
-one side. The Bridge of the Incas is by no means worthy of the great
-monarchs whose name it bears.
-
-5th.--We had a long day's ride across the central ridge, from the Incas
-Bridge to the Ojos del Agua, which are situated near the lowest
-_casucha_ on the Chilian side. These casuchas are round little towers,
-with steps outside to reach the floor, which is raised some feet above
-the ground on account of the snow-drifts. They are eight in number,
-and under the Spanish government were kept during the winter well
-stored with food and charcoal, and each courier had a master-key. Now
-they only answer the purpose of caves, or rather dungeons. Seated on
-some little eminence, they are not, however, ill suited to the
-surrounding scene of desolation. The zigzag ascent of the Cumbre, or
-the partition of the waters, was very steep and tedious; its height,
-according to Mr. Pentland, is 12,454 feet. The road did not pass over
-any perpetual snow, although there were patches of it on both hands.
-The wind on the summit was exceedingly cold, but it was impossible not
-to stop for a few minutes to admire, again and again, the colour of the
-heavens, and the brilliant transparency of the atmosphere. The scenery
-was grand: to the westward there was a fine chaos of mountains, divided
-by profound ravines. Some snow generally falls before this period of
-the season, and it has even happened that the Cordillera have been
-finally closed by this time. But we were most fortunate. The sky, by
-night and by day, was cloudless, excepting a few round little masses of
-vapour, that floated over the highest pinnacles. I have often seen
-these islets in the sky, marking the position of the Cordillera, when
-the far-distant mountains have been hidden beneath the horizon.
-
-April 6th.--In the morning we found some thief had stolen one of our
-mules, and the bell of the madrina. We therefore rode only two or
-three miles down the valley, and stayed there the ensuing day in hopes
-of recovering the mule, which the arriero thought had been hidden in
-some ravine. The scenery in this part had assumed a Chilian character:
-the lower sides of the mountains, dotted over with the pale evergreen
-Quillay tree, and with the great chandelier-like cactus, are certainly
-more to be admired than the bare eastern valleys; but I cannot quite
-agree with the admiration expressed by some travellers. The extreme
-pleasure, I suspect, is chiefly owing to the prospect of a good fire
-and of a good supper, after escaping from the cold regions above: and I
-am sure I most heartily participated in these feelings.
-
-8th.--We left the valley of the Aconcagua, by which we had descended,
-and reached in the evening a cottage near the Villa del St. Rosa. The
-fertility of the plain was delightful: the autumn being advanced, the
-leaves of many of the fruit-trees were falling; and of the
-labourers,--some were busy in drying figs and peaches on the roofs of
-their cottages, while others were gathering the grapes from the
-vineyards. It was a pretty scene; but I missed that pensive stillness
-which makes the autumn in England indeed the evening of the year. On
-the 10th we reached Santiago, where I received a very kind and
-hospitable reception from Mr. Caldcleugh. My excursion only cost me
-twenty-four days, and never did I more deeply enjoy an equal space of
-time. A few days afterwards I returned to Mr. Corfield's house at
-Valparaiso.
-
-[1] Scoresby's Arctic Regions, vol. i. p. 122.
-
-[2] I have heard it remarked in Shropshire that the water, when the
-Severn is flooded from long-continued rain, is much more turbid than
-when it proceeds from the snow melting in the Welsh mountains.
-D'Orbigny (tom. i. p. 184), in explaining the cause of the various
-colours of the rivers in South America, remarks that those with blue or
-clear water have there source in the Cordillera, where the snow melts.
-
-[3] Dr. Gillies in Journ. of Nat. and Geograph. Science, Aug., 1830.
-This author gives the heights of the Passes.
-
-[4] This structure in frozen snow was long since observed by Scoresby
-in the icebergs near Spitzbergen, and, lately, with more care, by
-Colonel Jackson (Journ. of Geograph. Soc., vol. v. p. 12) on the Neva.
-Mr. Lyell (Principles, vol. iv. p. 360) has compared the fissures by
-which the columnar structure seems to be determined, to the joints that
-traverse nearly all rocks, but which are best seen in the
-non-stratified masses. I may observe, that in the case of the frozen
-snow, the columnar structure must be owing to a "metamorphic" action,
-and not to a process during deposition.
-
-[5] This is merely an illustration of the admirable laws, first laid
-down by Mr. Lyell, on the geographical distribution of animals, as
-influenced by geological changes. The whole reasoning, of course, is
-founded on the assumption of the immutability of species; otherwise the
-difference in the species in the two regions might be considered as
-superinduced during a length of time.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
-
-Coast-road to Coquimbo--Great Loads carried by the
-Miners--Coquimbo--Earthquake--Step-formed Terrace--Absence of recent
-Deposits--Contemporaneousness of the Tertiary Formations--Excursion up
-the Valley--Road to Guasco--Deserts--Valley of Copiapo--Rain and
-Earthquakes--Hydrophobia--The Despoblado--Indian Ruins--Probable Change
-of Climate--River-bed arched by an Earthquake--Cold Gales of
-Wind--Noises from a Hill--Iquique--Salt Alluvium--Nitrate of
-Soda--Lima--Unhealthy Country--Ruins of Callao, overthrown by an
-Earthquake--Recent Subsidence--Elevated Shells on San Lorenzo, their
-decomposition--Plain with embedded Shells and fragments of
-Pottery--Antiquity of the Indian Race.
-
-
-APRIL 27th.--I set out on a journey to Coquimbo, and thence through
-Guasco to Copiapo, where Captain Fitz Roy kindly offered to pick me up
-in the Beagle. The distance in a straight line along the shore
-northward is only 420 miles; but my mode of travelling made it a very
-long journey. I bought four horses and two mules, the latter carrying
-the luggage on alternate days. The six animals together only cost the
-value of twenty-five pounds sterling, and at Copiapo I sold them again
-for twenty-three. We travelled in the same independent manner as
-before, cooking our own meals, and sleeping in the open air. As we
-rode towards the Vino del Mar, I took a farewell view of Valparaiso,
-and admired its picturesque appearance. For geological purposes I made
-a detour from the high road to the foot of the Bell of Quillota. We
-passed through an alluvial district rich in gold, to the neighbourhood
-of Limache, where we slept. Washing for gold supports the inhabitants
-of numerous hovels, scattered along the sides of each little rivulet;
-but, like all those whose gains are uncertain, they are unthrifty in
-all their habits, and consequently poor.
-
-28th.--In the afternoon we arrived at a cottage at the foot of the Bell
-mountain. The inhabitants were freeholders, which is not very usual in
-Chile. They supported themselves on the produce of a garden and a
-little field, but were very poor. Capital is here so deficient, that
-the people are obliged to sell their green corn while standing in the
-field, in order to buy necessaries for the ensuing year. Wheat in
-consequence was dearer in the very district of its production than at
-Valparaiso, where the contractors live. The next day we joined the
-main road to Coquimbo. At night there was a very light shower of rain:
-this was the first drop that had fallen since the heavy rain of
-September 11th and 12th, which detained me a prisoner at the Baths of
-Cauquenes. The interval was seven and a half months; but the rain this
-year in Chile was rather later than usual. The distant Andes were now
-covered by a thick mass of snow, and were a glorious sight.
-
-May 2nd.--The road continued to follow the coast, at no great distance
-from the sea. The few trees and bushes which are common in central
-Chile decreased rapidly in numbers, and were replaced by a tall plant,
-something like a yucca in appearance. The surface of the country, on a
-small scale, was singularly broken and irregular; abrupt little peaks
-of rock rising out of small plains or basins. The indented coast and
-the bottom of the neighbouring sea, studded with breakers, would, if
-converted into dry land, present similar forms; and such a conversion
-without doubt has taken place in the part over which we rode.
-
-3rd.--Quilimari to Conchalee. The country became more and more barren.
-In the valleys there was scarcely sufficient water for any irrigation;
-and the intermediate land was quite bare, not supporting even goats. In
-the spring, after the winter showers, a thin pasture rapidly springs
-up, and cattle are then driven down from the Cordillera to graze for a
-short time. It is curious to observe how the seeds of the grass and
-other plants seem to accommodate themselves, as if by an acquired
-habit, to the quantity of rain which falls upon different parts of this
-coast. One shower far northward at Copiapo produces as great an effect
-on the vegetation, as two at Guasco, and three or four in this
-district. At Valparaiso a winter so dry as greatly to injure the
-pasture, would at Guasco produce the most unusual abundance. Proceeding
-northward, the quantity of rain does not appear to decrease in strict
-proportion to the latitude. At Conchalee, which is only 67 miles north
-of Valparaiso, rain is not expected till the end of May; whereas at
-Valparaiso some generally falls early in April: the annual quantity is
-likewise small in proportion to the lateness of the season at which it
-commences.
-
-4th.--Finding the coast-road devoid of interest of any kind, we turned
-inland towards the mining district and valley of Illapel. This valley,
-like every other in Chile, is level, broad, and very fertile: it is
-bordered on each side, either by cliffs of stratified shingle, or by
-bare rocky mountains. Above the straight line of the uppermost
-irrigating ditch, all is brown as on a high road; while all below is of
-as bright a green as verdigris, from the beds of alfalfa, a kind of
-clover. We proceeded to Los Hornos, another mining district, where the
-principal hill was drilled with holes, like a great ants'-nest. The
-Chilian miners are a peculiar race of men in their habits. Living for
-weeks together in the most desolate spots, when they descend to the
-villages on feast-days, there is no excess of extravagance into which
-they do not run. They sometimes gain a considerable sum, and then,
-like sailors with prize-money, they try how soon they can contrive to
-squander it. They drink excessively, buy quantities of clothes, and in
-a few days return penniless to their miserable abodes, there to work
-harder than beasts of burden. This thoughtlessness, as with sailors,
-is evidently the result of a similar manner of life. Their daily food
-is found them, and they acquire no habits of carefulness: moreover,
-temptation and the means of yielding to it are placed in their power at
-the same time. On the other hand, in Cornwall, and some other parts of
-England, where the system of selling part of the vein is followed, the
-miners, from being obliged to act and think for themselves, are a
-singularly intelligent and well-conducted set of men.
-
-The dress of the Chilian miner is peculiar and rather picturesque He
-wears a very long shirt of some dark-coloured baize, with a leathern
-apron; the whole being fastened round his waist by a bright-coloured
-sash. His trousers are very broad, and his small cap of scarlet cloth
-is made to fit the head closely. We met a party of these miners in
-full costume, carrying the body of one of their companions to be
-buried. They marched at a very quick trot, four men supporting the
-corpse. One set having run as hard as they could for about two hundred
-yards, were relieved by four others, who had previously dashed on ahead
-on horseback. Thus they proceeded, encouraging each other by wild
-cries: altogether the scene formed a most strange funeral.
-
-We continued travelling northward, in a zigzag line; sometimes stopping
-a day to geologize. The country was so thinly inhabited, and the track
-so obscure, that we often had difficulty in finding our way. On the
-12th I stayed at some mines. The ore in this case was not considered
-particularly good, but from being abundant it was supposed the mine
-would sell for about thirty or forty thousand dollars (that is, 6000 or
-8000 pounds sterling); yet it had been bought by one of the English
-Associations for an ounce of gold (3l. 8s.). The ore is yellow
-pyrites, which, as I have already remarked, before the arrival of the
-English, was not supposed to contain a particle of copper. On a scale
-of profits nearly as great as in the above instance, piles of cinders,
-abounding with minute globules of metallic copper, were purchased; yet
-with these advantages, the mining associations, as is well known,
-contrived to lose immense sums of money. The folly of the greater
-number of the commissioners and shareholders amounted to
-infatuation;--a thousand pounds per annum given in some cases to
-entertain the Chilian authorities; libraries of well-bound geological
-books; miners brought out for particular metals, as tin, which are not
-found in Chile; contracts to supply the miners with milk, in parts
-where there are no cows; machinery, where it could not possibly be
-used; and a hundred similar arrangements, bore witness to our
-absurdity, and to this day afford amusement to the natives. Yet there
-can be no doubt, that the same capital well employed in these mines
-would have yielded an immense return, a confidential man of business, a
-practical miner and assayer, would have been all that was required.
-
-Captain Head has described the wonderful load which the "Apires," truly
-beasts of burden, carry up from the deepest mines. I confess I thought
-the account exaggerated: so that I was glad to take an opportunity of
-weighing one of the loads, which I picked out by hazard. It required
-considerable exertion on my part, when standing directly over it, to
-lift it from the ground. The load was considered under weight when
-found to be 197 pounds. The apire had carried this up eighty
-perpendicular yards,--part of the way by a steep passage, but the
-greater part up notched poles, placed in a zigzag line up the shaft.
-According to the general regulation, the apire is not allowed to halt
-for breath, except the mine is six hundred feet deep. The average load
-is considered as rather more than 200 pounds, and I have been assured
-that one of 300 pounds (twenty-two stone and a half) by way of a trial
-has been brought up from the deepest mine! At this time the apires were
-bringing up the usual load twelve times in the day; that is 2400 pounds
-from eighty yards deep; and they were employed in the intervals in
-breaking and picking ore.
-
-These men, excepting from accidents, are healthy, and appear cheerful.
-Their bodies are not very muscular. They rarely eat meat once a week,
-and never oftener, and then only the hard dry charqui. Although with a
-knowledge that the labour was voluntary, it was nevertheless quite
-revolting to see the state in which they reached the mouth of the mine;
-their bodies bent forward, leaning with their arms on the steps, their
-legs bowed, their muscles quivering, the perspiration streaming from
-their faces over their breasts, their nostrils distended, the corners
-of their mouth forcibly drawn back, and the expulsion of their breath
-most laborious. Each time they draw their breath, they utter an
-articulate cry of "ay-ay," which ends in a sound rising from deep in
-the chest, but shrill like the note of a fife. After staggering to the
-pile of ore, they emptied the "carpacho;" in two or three seconds
-recovering their breath, they wiped the sweat from their brows, and
-apparently quite fresh descended the mine again at a quick pace. This
-appears to me a wonderful instance of the amount of labour which habit,
-for it can be nothing else, will enable a man to endure.
-
-In the evening, talking with the _mayor-domo_ of these mines about the
-number of foreigners now scattered over the whole country, he told me
-that, though quite a young man, he remembers when he was a boy at
-school at Coquimbo, a holiday being given to see the captain of an
-English ship, who was brought to the city to speak to the governor. He
-believes that nothing would have induced any boy in the school, himself
-included, to have gone close to the Englishman; so deeply had they been
-impressed with an idea of the heresy, contamination, and evil to be
-derived from contact with such a person. To this day they relate the
-atrocious actions of the bucaniers; and especially of one man, who took
-away the figure of the Virgin Mary, and returned the year after for
-that of St. Joseph, saying it was a pity the lady should not have a
-husband. I heard also of an old lady who, at a dinner at Coquimbo,
-remarked how wonderfully strange it was that she should have lived to
-dine in the same room with an Englishman; for she remembered as a girl,
-that twice, at the mere cry of "Los Ingleses," every soul, carrying
-what valuables they could, had taken to the mountains.
-
-14th.--We reached Coquimbo, where we stayed a few days. The town is
-remarkable for nothing but its extreme quietness. It is said to
-contain from 6000 to 8000 inhabitants. On the morning of the 17th it
-rained lightly, the first time this year, for about five hours. The
-farmers, who plant corn near the sea-coast where the atmosphere is most
-humid, taking advantage of this shower, would break up the ground;
-after a second they would put the seed in; and if a third shower should
-fall, they would reap a good harvest in the spring. It was interesting
-to watch the effect of this trifling amount of moisture. Twelve hours
-afterwards the ground appeared as dry as ever; yet after an interval of
-ten days, all the hills were faintly tinged with green patches; the
-grass being sparingly scattered in hair-like fibres a full inch in
-length. Before this shower every part of the surface was bare as on a
-high road.
-
-In the evening, Captain Fitz Roy and myself were dining with Mr.
-Edwards, an English resident well known for his hospitality by all who
-have visited Coquimbo, when a sharp earthquake happened. I heard the
-forecoming rumble, but from the screams of the ladies, the running of
-the servants, and the rush of several of the gentlemen to the doorway,
-I could not distinguish the motion. Some of the women afterwards were
-crying with terror, and one gentleman said he should not be able to
-sleep all night, or if he did, it would only be to dream of falling
-houses. The father of this person had lately lost all his property at
-Talcahuano, and he himself had only just escaped a falling roof at
-Valparaiso, in 1822. He mentioned a curious coincidence which then
-happened: he was playing at cards, when a German, one of the party, got
-up, and said he would never sit in a room in these countries with the
-door shut, as owing to his having done so, he had nearly lost his life
-at Copiapo. Accordingly he opened the door; and no sooner had he done
-this, than he cried out, "Here it comes again!" and the famous shock
-commenced. The whole party escaped. The danger in an earthquake is
-not from the time lost in opening the door, but from the chance of its
-becoming jammed by the movement of the walls.
-
-It is impossible to be much surprised at the fear which natives and old
-residents, though some of them known to be men of great command of
-mind, so generally experience during earthquakes. I think, however,
-this excess of panic may be partly attributed to a want of habit in
-governing their fear, as it is not a feeling they are ashamed of.
-Indeed, the natives do not like to see a person indifferent. I heard
-of two Englishmen who, sleeping in the open air during a smart shock,
-knowing that there was no danger, did not rise. The natives cried out
-indignantly, "Look at those heretics, they do not even get out of their
-beds!"
-
-
-I spent some days in examining the step-formed terraces of shingle,
-first noticed by Captain B. Hall, and believed by Mr. Lyell to have
-been formed by the sea, during the gradual rising of the land. This
-certainly is the true explanation, for I found numerous shells of
-existing species on these terraces. Five narrow, gently sloping,
-fringe-like terraces rise one behind the other, and where best
-developed are formed of shingle: they front the bay, and sweep up both
-sides of the valley. At Guasco, north of Coquimbo, the phenomenon is
-displayed on a much grander scale, so as to strike with surprise even
-some of the inhabitants. The terraces are there much broader, and may
-be called plains, in some parts there are six of them, but generally
-only five; they run up the valley for thirty-seven miles from the
-coast. These step-formed terraces or fringes closely resemble those in
-the valley of S. Cruz, and, except in being on a smaller scale, those
-great ones along the whole coast-line of Patagonia. They have
-undoubtedly been formed by the denuding power of the sea, during long
-periods of rest in the gradual elevation of the continent.
-
-Shells of many existing species not only lie on the surface of the
-terraces at Coquimbo (to a height of 250 feet), but are embedded in a
-friable calcareous rock, which in some places is as much as between
-twenty and thirty feet in thickness, but is of little extent. These
-modern beds rest on an ancient tertiary formation containing shells,
-apparently all extinct. Although I examined so many hundred miles of
-coast on the Pacific, as well as Atlantic side of the continent, I
-found no regular strata containing sea-shells of recent species,
-excepting at this place, and at a few points northward on the road to
-Guasco. This fact appears to me highly remarkable; for the explanation
-generally given by geologists, of the absence in any district of
-stratified fossiliferous deposits of a given period, namely, that the
-surface then existed as dry land, is not here applicable; for we know
-from the shells strewed on the surface and embedded in loose sand or
-mould that the land for thousands of miles along both coasts has lately
-been submerged. The explanation, no doubt, must be sought in the fact,
-that the whole southern part of the continent has been for a long time
-slowly rising; and therefore that all matter deposited along shore in
-shallow water, must have been soon brought up and slowly exposed to the
-wearing action of the sea-beach; and it is only in comparatively
-shallow water that the greater number of marine organic beings can
-flourish, and in such water it is obviously impossible that strata of
-any great thickness can accumulate. To show the vast power of the
-wearing action of sea-beaches, we need only appeal to the great cliffs
-along the present coast of Patagonia, and to the escarpments or ancient
-sea-cliffs at different levels, one above another, on that same line of
-coast.
-
-The old underlying tertiary formation at Coquimbo, appears to be of
-about the same age with several deposits on the coast of Chile (of
-which that of Navedad is the principal one), and with the great
-formation of Patagonia. Both at Navedad and in Patagonia there is
-evidence, that since the shells (a list of which has been seen by
-Professor E. Forbes) there entombed were living, there has been a
-subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing elevation. It
-may naturally be asked, how it comes that, although no extensive
-fossiliferous deposits of the recent period, nor of any period
-intermediate between it and the ancient tertiary epoch, have been
-preserved on either side of the continent, yet that at this ancient
-tertiary epoch, sedimentary matter containing fossil remains, should
-have been deposited and preserved at different points in north and
-south lines, over a space of 1100 miles on the shores of the Pacific,
-and of at least 1350 miles on the shores of the Atlantic, and in an
-east and west line of 700 miles across the widest part of the
-continent? I believe the explanation is not difficult, and that it is
-perhaps applicable to nearly analogous facts observed in other quarters
-of the world. Considering the enormous power of denudation which the
-sea possesses, as shown by numberless facts, it is not probable that a
-sedimentary deposit, when being upraised, could pass through the ordeal
-of the beach, so as to be preserved in sufficient masses to last to a
-distant period, without it were originally of wide extent and of
-considerable thickness: now it is impossible on a moderately shallow
-bottom, which alone is favourable to most living creatures, that a
-thick and widely extended covering of sediment could be spread out,
-without the bottom sank down to receive the successive layers. This
-seems to have actually taken place at about the same period in southern
-Patagonia and Chile, though these places are a thousand miles apart.
-Hence, if prolonged movements of approximately contemporaneous
-subsidence are generally widely extensive, as I am strongly inclined to
-believe from my examination of the Coral Reefs of the great oceans--or
-if, confining our view to South America, the subsiding movements have
-been co-extensive with those of elevation, by which, within the same
-period of existing shells, the shores of Peru, Chile, Tierra del Fuego,
-Patagonia, and La Plata have been upraised--then we can see that at the
-same time, at far distant points, circumstances would have been
-favourable to the formation of fossiliferous deposits of wide extent
-and of considerable thickness; and such deposits, consequently, would
-have a good chance of resisting the wear and tear of successive
-beach-lines, and of lasting to a future epoch.
-
-
-May 21st.--I set out in company with Don Jose Edwards to the
-silver-mine of Arqueros, and thence up the valley of Coquimbo. Passing
-through a mountainous country, we reached by nightfall the mines
-belonging to Mr. Edwards. I enjoyed my night's rest here from a reason
-which will not be fully appreciated in England, namely, the absence of
-fleas! The rooms in Coquimbo swarm with them; but they will not live
-here at the height of only three or four thousand feet: it can scarcely
-be the trifling diminution of temperature, but some other cause which
-destroys these troublesome insects at this place. The mines are now in
-a bad state, though they formerly yielded about 2000 pounds in weight
-of silver a year. It has been said that "a person with a copper-mine
-will gain; with silver he may gain; but with gold he is sure to lose."
-This is not true: all the large Chilian fortunes have been made by
-mines of the more precious metals. A short time since an English
-physician returned to England from Copiapo, taking with him the profits
-of one share of a silver-mine, which amounted to about 24,000 pounds
-sterling. No doubt a copper-mine with care is a sure game, whereas the
-other is gambling, or rather taking a ticket in a lottery. The owners
-lose great quantities of rich ores; for no precautions can prevent
-robberies. I heard of a gentleman laying a bet with another, that one
-of his men should rob him before his face. The ore when brought out of
-the mine is broken into pieces, and the useless stone thrown on one
-side. A couple of the miners who were thus employed, pitched, as if by
-accident, two fragments away at the same moment, and then cried out for
-a joke "Let us see which rolls furthest." The owner, who was standing
-by, bet a cigar with his friend on the race. The miner by this means
-watched the very point amongst the rubbish where the stone lay. In the
-evening he picked it up and carried it to his master, showing him a
-rich mass of silver-ore, and saying, "This was the stone on which you
-won a cigar by its rolling so far."
-
-May 23rd.--We descended into the fertile valley of Coquimbo, and
-followed it till we reached an Hacienda belonging to a relation of Don
-Jose, where we stayed the next day. I then rode one day's journey
-further, to see what were declared to be some petrified shells and
-beans, which latter turned out to be small quartz pebbles. We passed
-through several small villages; and the valley was beautifully
-cultivated, and the whole scenery very grand. We were here near the
-main Cordillera, and the surrounding hills were lofty. In all parts of
-northern Chile, fruit trees produce much more abundantly at a
-considerable height near the Andes than in the lower country. The figs
-and grapes of this district are famous for their excellence, and are
-cultivated to a great extent. This valley is, perhaps, the most
-productive one north of Quillota. I believe it contains, including
-Coquimbo, 25,000 inhabitants. The next day I returned to the Hacienda,
-and thence, together with Don Jose, to Coquimbo.
-
-June 2nd.--We set out for the valley of Guasco, following the
-coast-road, which was considered rather less desert than the other. Our
-first day's ride was to a solitary house, called Yerba Buena, where
-there was pasture for our horses. The shower mentioned as having
-fallen, a fortnight ago, only reached about half-way to Guasco; we had,
-therefore, in the first part of our journey a most faint tinge of
-green, which soon faded quite away. Even where brightest, it was
-scarcely sufficient to remind one of the fresh turf and budding flowers
-of the spring of other countries. While travelling through these
-deserts one feels like a prisoner shut up in a gloomy court, who longs
-to see something green and to smell a moist atmosphere.
-
-June 3rd.--Yerba Buena to Carizal. During the first part of the day we
-crossed a mountainous rocky desert, and afterwards a long deep sandy
-plain, strewed with broken sea-shells. There was very little water, and
-that little saline: the whole country, from the coast to the
-Cordillera, is an uninhabited desert. I saw traces only of one living
-animal in abundance, namely, the shells of a Bulimus, which were
-collected together in extraordinary numbers on the driest spots. In
-the spring one humble little plant sends out a few leaves, and on these
-the snails feed. As they are seen only very early in the morning, when
-the ground is slightly damp with dew, the Guascos believe that they are
-bred from it. I have observed in other places that extremely dry and
-sterile districts, where the soil is calcareous, are extraordinarily
-favourable to land-shells. At Carizal there were a few cottages, some
-brackish water, and a trace of cultivation: but it was with difficulty
-that we purchased a little corn and straw for our horses.
-
-4th.--Carizal to Sauce. We continued to ride over desert plains,
-tenanted by large herds of guanaco. We crossed also the valley of
-Chaneral; which, although the most fertile one between Guasco and
-Coquimbo, is very narrow, and produces so little pasture, that we could
-not purchase any for our horses. At Sauce we found a very civil old
-gentleman, superintendent of a copper-smelting furnace. As an especial
-favour, he allowed me to purchase at a high price an armful of dirty
-straw, which was all the poor horses had for supper after their long
-day's journey. Few smelting-furnaces are now at work in any part of
-Chile; it is found more profitable, on account of the extreme scarcity
-of firewood, and from the Chilian method of reduction being so
-unskilful, to ship the ore for Swansea. The next day we crossed some
-mountains to Freyrina, in the valley of Guasco. During each day's ride
-further northward, the vegetation became more and more scanty; even the
-great chandelier-like cactus was here replaced by a different and much
-smaller species. During the winter months, both in northern Chile and
-in Peru, a uniform bank of clouds hangs, at no great height, over the
-Pacific. From the mountains we had a very striking view of this white
-and brilliant aerial-field, which sent arms up the valleys, leaving
-islands and promontories in the same manner, as the sea does in the
-Chonos archipelago and in Tierra del Fuego.
-
-We stayed two days at Freyrina. In the valley of Guasco there are four
-small towns. At the mouth there is the port, a spot entirely desert,
-and without any water in the immediate neighbourhood. Five leagues
-higher up stands Freyrina, a long straggling village, with decent
-whitewashed houses. Again, ten leagues further up Ballenar is situated,
-and above this Guasco Alto, a horticultural village, famous for its
-dried fruit. On a clear day the view up the valley is very fine; the
-straight opening terminates in the far-distant snowy Cordillera; on
-each side an infinity of crossing-lines are blended together in a
-beautiful haze. The foreground is singular from the number of parallel
-and step-formed terraces; and the included strip of green valley, with
-its willow-bushes, is contrasted on both hands with the naked hills.
-That the surrounding country was most barren will be readily believed,
-when it is known that a shower of rain had not fallen during the last
-thirteen months. The inhabitants heard with the greatest envy of the
-rain at Coquimbo; from the appearance of the sky they had hopes of
-equally good fortune, which, a fortnight afterwards, were realized. I
-was at Copiapo at the time; and there the people, with equal envy,
-talked of the abundant rain at Guasco. After two or three very dry
-years, perhaps with not more than one shower during the whole time, a
-rainy year generally follows; and this does more harm than even the
-drought. The rivers swell, and cover with gravel and sand the narrow
-strips of ground, which alone are fit for cultivation. The floods also
-injure the irrigating ditches. Great devastation had thus been caused
-three years ago.
-
-June 8th.--We rode on to Ballenar, which takes its name from Ballenagh
-in Ireland, the birthplace of the family of O'Higgins, who, under the
-Spanish government, were presidents and generals in Chile. As the rocky
-mountains on each hand were concealed by clouds, the terrace-like
-plains gave to the valley an appearance like that of Santa Cruz in
-Patagonia. After spending one day at Ballenar I set out, on the 10th,
-for the upper part of the valley of Copiapo. We rode all day over an
-uninteresting country. I am tired of repeating the epithets barren and
-sterile. These words, however, as commonly used, are comparative; I
-have always applied them to the plains of Patagonia, which can boast of
-spiny bushes and some tufts of grass; and this is absolute fertility,
-as compared with northern Chile. Here again, there are not many spaces
-of two hundred yards square, where some little bush, cactus or lichen,
-may not be discovered by careful examination; and in the soil seeds lie
-dormant ready to spring up during the first rainy winter. In Peru real
-deserts occur over wide tracts of country. In the evening we arrived at
-a valley, in which the bed of the streamlet was damp: following it up,
-we came to tolerably good water. During the night, the stream, from not
-being evaporated and absorbed so quickly, flows a league lower down
-than during the day. Sticks were plentiful for firewood, so that it
-was a good place to bivouac for us; but for the poor animals there was
-not a mouthful to eat.
-
-June 11th.--We rode without stopping for twelve hours till we reached
-an old smelting-furnace, where there was water and firewood; but our
-horses again had nothing to eat, being shut up in an old courtyard. The
-line of road was hilly, and the distant views interesting, from the
-varied colours of the bare mountains. It was almost a pity to see the
-sun shining constantly over so useless a country; such splendid weather
-ought to have brightened fields and pretty gardens. The next day we
-reached the valley of Copiapo. I was heartily glad of it; for the whole
-journey was a continued source of anxiety; it was most disagreeable to
-hear, whilst eating our own suppers, our horses gnawing the posts to
-which they were tied, and to have no means of relieving their hunger.
-To all appearance, however, the animals were quite fresh; and no one
-could have told that they had eaten nothing for the last fifty-five
-hours.
-
-I had a letter of introduction to Mr. Bingley, who received me very
-kindly at the Hacienda of Potrero Seco. This estate is between twenty
-and thirty miles long, but very narrow, being generally only two fields
-wide, one on each side the river. In some parts the estate is of no
-width, that is to say, the land cannot be irrigated, and therefore is
-valueless, like the surrounding rocky desert. The small quantity of
-cultivated land in the whole line of valley, does not so much depend on
-inequalities of level, and consequent unfitness for irrigation, as on
-the small supply of water. The river this year was remarkably full:
-here, high up the valley, it reached to the horse's belly, and was
-about fifteen yards wide, and rapid; lower down it becomes smaller and
-smaller, and is generally quite lost, as happened during one period of
-thirty years, so that not a drop entered the sea. The inhabitants
-watch a storm over the Cordillera with great interest; as one good fall
-of snow provides them with water for the ensuing year. This is of
-infinitely more consequence than rain in the lower country. Rain, as
-often as it falls, which is about once in every two or three years, is
-a great advantage, because the cattle and mules can for some time
-afterwards find a little pasture in the mountains. But without snow on
-the Andes, desolation extends throughout the valley. It is on record
-that three times nearly all the inhabitants have been obliged to
-emigrate to the south. This year there was plenty of water, and every
-man irrigated his ground as much as he chose; but it has frequently
-been necessary to post soldiers at the sluices, to see that each estate
-took only its proper allowance during so many hours in the week. The
-valley is said to contain 12,000 souls, but its produce is sufficient
-only for three months in the year; the rest of the supply being drawn
-from Valparaiso and the south. Before the discovery of the famous
-silver-mines of Chanuncillo, Copiapo was in a rapid state of decay; but
-now it is in a very thriving condition; and the town, which was
-completely overthrown by an earthquake, has been rebuilt.
-
-The valley of Copiapo, forming a mere ribbon of green in a desert, runs
-in a very southerly direction; so that it is of considerable length to
-its source in the Cordillera. The valleys of Guasco and Copiapo may
-both be considered as long narrow islands, separated from the rest of
-Chile by deserts of rock instead of by salt water. Northward of these,
-there is one other very miserable valley, called Paposo, which contains
-about two hundred souls; and then there extends the real desert of
-Atacama--a barrier far worse than the most turbulent ocean. After
-staying a few days at Potrero Seco, I proceeded up the valley to the
-house of Don Benito Cruz, to whom I had a letter of introduction. I
-found him most hospitable; indeed it is impossible to bear too strong
-testimony to the kindness with which travellers are received in almost
-every part of South America. The next day I hired some mules to take
-me by the ravine of Jolquera into the central Cordillera. On the
-second night the weather seemed to foretell a storm of snow or rain,
-and whilst lying in our beds we felt a trifling shock of an earthquake.
-
-The connection between earthquakes and the weather has been often
-disputed: it appears to me to be a point of great interest, which is
-little understood. Humboldt has remarked in one part of the Personal
-Narrative, [1] that it would be difficult for any person who had long
-resided in New Andalusia, or in Lower Peru, to deny that there exists
-some connection between these phenomena: in another part, however he
-seems to think the connection fanciful. At Guayaquil it is said that a
-heavy shower in the dry season is invariably followed by an earthquake.
-In Northern Chile, from the extreme infrequency of rain, or even of
-weather foreboding rain, the probability of accidental coincidences
-becomes very small; yet the inhabitants are here most firmly convinced
-of some connection between the state of the atmosphere and of the
-trembling of the ground: I was much struck by this when mentioning to
-some people at Copiapo that there had been a sharp shock at Coquimbo:
-they immediately cried out, "How fortunate! there will be plenty of
-pasture there this year." To their minds an earthquake foretold rain as
-surely as rain foretold abundant pasture. Certainly it did so happen
-that on the very day of the earthquake, that shower of rain fell, which
-I have described as in ten days' time producing a thin sprinkling of
-grass. At other times rain has followed earthquakes at a period of the
-year when it is a far greater prodigy than the earthquake itself: this
-happened after the shock of November, 1822, and again in 1829, at
-Valparaiso; also after that of September, 1833, at Tacna. A person must
-be somewhat habituated to the climate of these countries to perceive
-the extreme improbability of rain falling at such seasons, except as a
-consequence of some law quite unconnected with the ordinary course of
-the weather. In the cases of great volcanic eruptions, as that of
-Coseguina, where torrents of rain fell at a time of the year most
-unusual for it, and "almost unprecedented in Central America," it is
-not difficult to understand that the volumes of vapour and clouds of
-ashes might have disturbed the atmospheric equilibrium. Humboldt
-extends this view to the case of earthquakes unaccompanied by
-eruptions; but I can hardly conceive it possible, that the small
-quantity of aeriform fluids which then escape from the fissured ground,
-can produce such remarkable effects. There appears much probability in
-the view first proposed by Mr. P. Scrope, that when the barometer is
-low, and when rain might naturally be expected to fall, the diminished
-pressure of the atmosphere over a wide extent of country, might well
-determine the precise day on which the earth, already stretched to the
-utmost by the subterranean forces, should yield, crack, and
-consequently tremble. It is, however, doubtful how far this idea will
-explain the circumstances of torrents of rain falling in the dry season
-during several days, after an earthquake unaccompanied by an eruption;
-such cases seem to bespeak some more intimate connection between the
-atmospheric and subterranean regions.
-
-Finding little of interest in this part of the ravine, we retraced our
-steps to the house of Don Benito, where I stayed two days collecting
-fossil shells and wood. Great prostrate silicified trunks of trees,
-embedded in a conglomerate, were extraordinarily numerous. I measured
-one, which was fifteen feet in circumference: how surprising it is that
-every atom of the woody matter in this great cylinder should have been
-removed and replaced by silex so perfectly, that each vessel and pore
-is preserved! These trees flourished at about the period of our lower
-chalk; they all belonged to the fir-tribe. It was amusing to hear the
-inhabitants discussing the nature of the fossil shells which I
-collected, almost in the same terms as were used a century ago in
-Europe,--namely, whether or not they had been thus "born by nature." My
-geological examination of the country generally created a good deal of
-surprise amongst the Chilenos: it was long before they could be
-convinced that I was not hunting for mines. This was sometimes
-troublesome: I found the most ready way of explaining my employment,
-was to ask them how it was that they themselves were not curious
-concerning earthquakes and volcanos?--why some springs were hot and
-others cold?--why there were mountains in Chile, and not a hill in La
-Plata? These bare questions at once satisfied and silenced the greater
-number; some, however (like a few in England who are a century
-behindhand), thought that all such inquiries were useless and impious;
-and that it was quite sufficient that God had thus made the mountains.
-
-An order had recently been issued that all stray dogs should be killed,
-and we saw many lying dead on the road. A great number had lately gone
-mad, and several men had been bitten and had died in consequence. On
-several occasions hydrophobia has prevailed in this valley. It is
-remarkable thus to find so strange and dreadful a disease, appearing
-time after time in the same isolated spot. It has been remarked that
-certain villages in England are in like manner much more subject to
-this visitation than others. Dr. Unanue states that hydrophobia was
-first known in South America in 1803: this statement is corroborated by
-Azara and Ulloa having never heard of it in their time. Dr. Unanue
-says that it broke out in Central America, and slowly travelled
-southward. It reached Arequipa in 1807; and it is said that some men
-there, who had not been bitten, were affected, as were some negroes,
-who had eaten a bullock which had died of hydrophobia. At Ica
-forty-two people thus miserably perished. The disease came on between
-twelve and ninety days after the bite; and in those cases where it did
-come on, death ensued invariably within five days. After 1808, a long
-interval ensued without any cases. On inquiry, I did not hear of
-hydrophobia in Van Diemen's Land, or in Australia; and Burchell says,
-that during the five years he was at the Cape of Good Hope, he never
-heard of an instance of it. Webster asserts that at the Azores
-hydrophobia has never occurred; and the same assertion has been made
-with respect to Mauritius and St. Helena. [2] In so strange a disease
-some information might possibly be gained by considering the
-circumstances under which it originates in distant climates; for it is
-improbable that a dog already bitten, should have been brought to these
-distant countries.
-
-At night, a stranger arrived at the house of Don Benito, and asked
-permission to sleep there. He said he had been wandering about the
-mountains for seventeen days, having lost his way. He started from
-Guasco, and being accustomed to travelling in the Cordillera, did not
-expect any difficulty in following the track to Copiapo; but he soon
-became involved in a labyrinth of mountains, whence he could not
-escape. Some of his mules had fallen over precipices, and he had been
-in great distress. His chief difficulty arose from not knowing where
-to find water in the lower country, so that he was obliged to keep
-bordering the central ranges.
-
-We returned down the valley, and on the 22nd reached the town of
-Copiapo. The lower part of the valley is broad, forming a fine plain
-like that of Quillota. The town covers a considerable space of ground,
-each house possessing a garden: but it is an uncomfortable place, and
-the dwellings are poorly furnished. Every one seems bent on the one
-object of making money, and then migrating as quickly as possible. All
-the inhabitants are more or less directly concerned with mines; and
-mines and ores are the sole subjects of conversation. Necessaries of
-all sorts are extremely dear; as the distance from the town to the port
-is eighteen leagues, and the land carriage very expensive. A fowl
-costs five or six shillings; meat is nearly as dear as in England;
-firewood, or rather sticks, are brought on donkeys from a distance of
-two and three days' journey within the Cordillera; and pasturage for
-animals is a shilling a day: all this for South America is wonderfully
-exorbitant.
-
-
-June 26th.--I hired a guide and eight mules to take me into the
-Cordillera by a different line from my last excursion. As the country
-was utterly desert, we took a cargo and a half of barley mixed with
-chopped straw. About two leagues above the town a broad valley called
-the "Despoblado," or uninhabited, branches off from that one by which
-we had arrived. Although a valley of the grandest dimensions, and
-leading to a pass across the Cordillera, yet it is completely dry,
-excepting perhaps for a few days during some very rainy winter. The
-sides of the crumbling mountains were furrowed by scarcely any ravines;
-and the bottom of the main valley, filled with shingle, was smooth and
-nearly level. No considerable torrent could ever have flowed down this
-bed of shingle; for if it had, a great cliff-bounded channel, as in all
-the southern valleys, would assuredly have been formed. I feel little
-doubt that this valley, as well as those mentioned by travellers in
-Peru, were left in the state we now see them by the waves of the sea,
-as the land slowly rose. I observed in one place, where the Despoblado
-was joined by a ravine (which in almost any other chain would have been
-called a grand valley), that its bed, though composed merely of sand
-and gravel, was higher than that of its tributary. A mere rivulet of
-water, in the course of an hour, would have cut a channel for itself;
-but it was evident that ages had passed away, and no such rivulet had
-drained this great tributary. It was curious to behold the machinery,
-if such a term may be used, for the drainage, all, with the last
-trifling exception, perfect, yet without any signs of action. Every
-one must have remarked how mud-banks, left by the retiring tide,
-imitate in miniature a country with hill and dale; and here we have the
-original model in rock, formed as the continent rose during the secular
-retirement of the ocean, instead of during the ebbing and flowing of
-the tides. If a shower of rain falls on the mud-bank, when left dry,
-it deepens the already-formed shallow lines of excavation; and so it is
-with the rain of successive centuries on the bank of rock and soil,
-which we call a continent.
-
-We rode on after it was dark, till we reached a side ravine with a
-small well, called "Agua amarga." The water deserved its name, for
-besides being saline it was most offensively putrid and bitter; so that
-we could not force ourselves to drink either tea or mate. I suppose
-the distance from the river of Copiapo to this spot was at least
-twenty-five or thirty English miles; in the whole space there was not a
-single drop of water, the country deserving the name of desert in the
-strictest sense. Yet about half way we passed some old Indian ruins
-near Punta Gorda: I noticed also in front of some of the valleys, which
-branch off from the Despoblado, two piles of stones placed a little way
-apart, and directed so as to point up the mouths of these small
-valleys. My companions knew nothing about them, and only answered my
-queries by their imperturbable "quien sabe?"
-
-I observed Indian ruins in several parts of the Cordillera: the most
-perfect which I saw, were the Ruinas de Tambillos, in the Uspallata
-Pass. Small square rooms were there huddled together in separate
-groups: some of the doorways were yet standing; they were formed by a
-cross slab of stone only about three feet high. Ulloa has remarked on
-the lowness of the doors in the ancient Peruvian dwellings. These
-houses, when perfect, must have been capable of containing a
-considerable number of persons. Tradition says, that they were used as
-halting-places for the Incas, when they crossed the mountains. Traces
-of Indian habitations have been discovered in many other parts, where
-it does not appear probable that they were used as mere resting-places,
-but yet where the land is as utterly unfit for any kind of cultivation,
-as it is near the Tambillos or at the Incas Bridge, or in the Portillo
-Pass, at all which places I saw ruins. In the ravine of Jajuel, near
-Aconcagua, where there is no pass, I heard of remains of houses
-situated at a great height, where it is extremely cold and sterile. At
-first I imagined that these buildings had been places of refuge, built
-by the Indians on the first arrival of the Spaniards; but I have since
-been inclined to speculate on the probability of a small change of
-climate.
-
-In this northern part of Chile, within the Cordillera, old Indian
-houses are said to be especially numerous: by digging amongst the
-ruins, bits of woollen articles, instruments of precious metals, and
-heads of Indian corn, are not unfrequently discovered: an arrow-head
-made of agate, and of precisely the same form with those now used in
-Tierra del Fuego, was given me. I am aware that the Peruvian Indians
-now frequently inhabit most lofty and bleak situations; but at Copiapo
-I was assured by men who had spent their lives in travelling through
-the Andes, that there were very many (muchisimas) buildings at heights
-so great as almost to border upon the perpetual snow, and in parts
-where there exist no passes, and where the land produces absolutely
-nothing, and what is still more extraordinary, where there is no water.
-Nevertheless it is the opinion of the people of the country (although
-they are much puzzled by the circumstance), that, from the appearance
-of the houses, the Indians must have used them as places of residence.
-In this valley, at Punta Gorda, the remains consisted of seven or eight
-square little rooms, which were of a similar form with those at
-Tambillos, but built chiefly of mud, which the present inhabitants
-cannot, either here or, according to Ulloa, in Peru, imitate in
-durability. They were situated in the most conspicuous and defenceless
-position, at the bottom of the flat broad valley. There was no water
-nearer than three or four leagues, and that only in very small
-quantity, and bad: the soil was absolutely sterile; I looked in vain
-even for a lichen adhering to the rocks. At the present day, with the
-advantage of beasts of burden, a mine, unless it were very rich, could
-scarcely be worked here with profit. Yet the Indians formerly chose it
-as a place of residence! If at the present time two or three showers
-of rain were to fall annually, instead of one, as now is the case
-during as many years, a small rill of water would probably be formed in
-this great valley; and then, by irrigation (which was formerly so well
-understood by the Indians), the soil would easily be rendered
-sufficiently productive to support a few families.
-
-I have convincing proofs that this part of the continent of South
-America has been elevated near the coast at least from 400 to 500, and
-in some parts from 1000 to 1300 feet, since the epoch of existing
-shells; and further inland the rise possibly may have been greater. As
-the peculiarly arid character of the climate is evidently a consequence
-of the height of the Cordillera, we may feel almost sure that before
-the later elevations, the atmosphere could not have been so completely
-drained of its moisture as it now is; and as the rise has been gradual,
-so would have been the change in climate. On this notion of a change
-of climate since the buildings were inhabited, the ruins must be of
-extreme antiquity, but I do not think their preservation under the
-Chilian climate any great difficulty. We must also admit on this
-notion (and this perhaps is a greater difficulty) that man has
-inhabited South America for an immensely long period, inasmuch as any
-change of climate effected by the elevation of the land must have been
-extremely gradual. At Valparaiso, within the last 220 years, the rise
-has been somewhat less than 19 feet: at Lima a sea-beach has certainly
-been upheaved from 80 to 90 feet, within the Indo-human period: but
-such small elevations could have had little power in deflecting the
-moisture-bringing atmospheric currents. Dr. Lund, however, found human
-skeletons in the caves of Brazil, the appearance of which induced him
-to believe that the Indian race has existed during a vast lapse of time
-in South America.
-
-When at Lima, I conversed on these subjects [3] with Mr. Gill, a civil
-engineer, who had seen much of the interior country. He told me that a
-conjecture of a change of climate had sometimes crossed his mind; but
-that he thought that the greater portion of land, now incapable of
-cultivation, but covered with Indian ruins, had been reduced to this
-state by the water-conduits, which the Indians formerly constructed on
-so wonderful a scale, having been injured by neglect and by
-subterranean movements. I may here mention, that the Peruvians
-actually carried their irrigating streams in tunnels through hills of
-solid rock. Mr. Gill told me, he had been employed professionally to
-examine one: he found the passage low, narrow, crooked, and not of
-uniform breadth, but of very considerable length. Is it not most
-wonderful that men should have attempted such operations, without the
-use of iron or gunpowder? Mr. Gill also mentioned to me a most
-interesting, and, as far as I am aware, quite unparalleled case, of a
-subterranean disturbance having changed the drainage of a country.
-Travelling from Casma to Huaraz (not very far distant from Lima), he
-found a plain covered with ruins and marks of ancient cultivation but
-now quite barren. Near it was the dry course of a considerable river,
-whence the water for irrigation had formerly been conducted. There was
-nothing in the appearance of the water-course to indicate that the
-river had not flowed there a few years previously; in some parts, beds
-of sand and gravel were spread out; in others, the solid rock had been
-worn into a broad channel, which in one spot was about 40 yards in
-breadth and 8 feet deep. It is self-evident that a person following up
-the course of a stream, will always ascend at a greater or less
-inclination: Mr. Gill, therefore, was much astonished, when walking up
-the bed of this ancient river, to find himself suddenly going down
-hill. He imagined that the downward slope had a fall of about 40 or 50
-feet perpendicular. We here have unequivocal evidence that a ridge had
-been uplifted right across the old bed of a stream. From the moment
-the river-course was thus arched, the water must necessarily have been
-thrown back, and a new channel formed. From that moment, also, the
-neighbouring plain must have lost its fertilizing stream, and become a
-desert.
-
-June 27th.--We set out early in the morning, and by midday reached the
-ravine of Paypote, where there is a tiny rill of water, with a little
-vegetation, and even a few algarroba trees, a kind of mimosa. From
-having firewood, a smelting-furnace had formerly been built here: we
-found a solitary man in charge of it, whose sole employment was hunting
-guanacos. At night it froze sharply; but having plenty of wood for our
-fire, we kept ourselves warm.
-
-28th.--We continued gradually ascending, and the valley now changed
-into a ravine. During the day we saw several guanacos, and the track
-of the closely-allied species, the Vicuna: this latter animal is
-pre-eminently alpine in its habits; it seldom descends much below the
-limit of perpetual snow, and therefore haunts even a more lofty and
-sterile situation than the guanaco. The only other animal which we saw
-in any number was a small fox: I suppose this animal preys on the mice
-and other small rodents, which, as long as there is the least
-vegetation, subsist in considerable numbers in very desert places. In
-Patagonia, even on the borders of the salinas, where a drop of fresh
-water can never be found, excepting dew, these little animals swarm.
-Next to lizards, mice appear to be able to support existence on the
-smallest and driest portions of the earth--even on islets in the midst
-of great oceans.
-
-The scene on all sides showed desolation, brightened and made palpable
-by a clear, unclouded sky. For a time such scenery is sublime, but
-this feeling cannot last, and then it becomes uninteresting. We
-bivouacked at the foot of the "primera linea," or the first line of the
-partition of waters. The streams, however, on the east side do not flow
-to the Atlantic, but into an elevated district, in the middle of which
-there is a large saline, or salt lake; thus forming a little Caspian
-Sea at the height, perhaps, of ten thousand feet. Where we slept,
-there were some considerable patches of snow, but they do not remain
-throughout the year. The winds in these lofty regions obey very
-regular laws. Every day a fresh breeze blows up the valley, and at
-night, an hour or two after sunset, the air from the cold regions above
-descends as through a funnel. This night it blew a gale of wind, and
-the temperature must have been considerably below the freezing-point,
-for water in a vessel soon became a block of ice. No clothes seemed to
-pose any obstacle to the air; I suffered very much from the cold, so
-that I could not sleep, and in the morning rose with my body quite dull
-and benumbed.
-
-In the Cordillera further southward, people lose their lives from
-snow-storms; here, it sometimes happens from another cause. My guide,
-when a boy of fourteen years old, was passing the Cordillera with a
-party in the month of May; and while in the central parts, a furious
-gale of wind arose, so that the men could hardly cling on their mules,
-and stones were flying along the ground. The day was cloudless, and
-not a speck of snow fell, but the temperature was low. It is probable
-that the thermometer could not have stood very many degrees below the
-freezing-point, but the effect on their bodies, ill protected by
-clothing, must have been in proportion to the rapidity of the current
-of cold air. The gale lasted for more than a day; the men began to
-lose their strength, and the mules would not move onwards. My guide's
-brother tried to return, but he perished, and his body was found two
-years afterwards. Lying by the side of his mule near the road, with the
-bridle still in his hand. Two other men in the party lost their
-fingers and toes; and out of two hundred mules and thirty cows, only
-fourteen mules escaped alive. Many years ago the whole of a large
-party are supposed to have perished from a similar cause, but their
-bodies to this day have never been discovered. The union of a
-cloudless sky, low temperature, and a furious gale of wind, must be, I
-should think, in all parts of the world an unusual occurrence.
-
-June 29th--We gladly travelled down the valley to our former night's
-lodging, and thence to near the Agua amarga. On July 1st we reached the
-valley of Copiapo. The smell of the fresh clover was quite delightful,
-after the scentless air of the dry, sterile Despoblado. Whilst staying
-in the town I heard an account from several of the inhabitants, of a
-hill in the neighbourhood which they called "El Bramador,"--the roarer
-or bellower. I did not at the time pay sufficient attention to the
-account; but, as far as I understood, the hill was covered by sand, and
-the noise was produced only when people, by ascending it, put the sand
-in motion. The same circumstances are described in detail on the
-authority of Seetzen and Ehrenberg, [4] as the cause of the sounds
-which have been heard by many travellers on Mount Sinai near the Red
-Sea. One person with whom I conversed had himself heard the noise: he
-described it as very surprising; and he distinctly stated that,
-although he could not understand how it was caused, yet it was
-necessary to set the sand rolling down the acclivity. A horse walking
-over dry coarse sand, causes a peculiar chirping noise from the
-friction of the particles; a circumstance which I several times noticed
-on the coast of Brazil.
-
-Three days afterwards I heard of the Beagle's arrival at the Port,
-distant eighteen leagues from the town. There is very little land
-cultivated down the valley; its wide expanse supports a wretched wiry
-grass, which even the donkeys can hardly eat. This poorness of the
-vegetation is owing to the quantity of saline matter with which the
-soil is impregnated. The Port consists of an assemblage of miserable
-little hovels, situated at the foot of a sterile plain. At present, as
-the river contains water enough to reach the sea, the inhabitants enjoy
-the advantage of having fresh water within a mile and a half. On the
-beach there were large piles of merchandise, and the little place had
-an air of activity. In the evening I gave my adios, with a hearty
-good-will, to my companion Mariano Gonzales, with whom I had ridden so
-many leagues in Chile. The next morning the Beagle sailed for Iquique.
-
-July 12th.--We anchored in the port of Iquique, in lat. 20 degs. 12',
-on the coast of Peru. The town contains about a thousand inhabitants,
-and stands on a little plain of sand at the foot of a great wall of
-rock, 2000 feet in height, here forming the coast. The whole is
-utterly desert. A light shower of rain falls only once in very many
-years; and the ravines consequently are filled with detritus, and the
-mountain-sides covered by piles of fine white sand, even to a height of
-a thousand feet. During this season of the year a heavy bank of
-clouds, stretched over the ocean, seldom rises above the wall of rocks
-on the coast. The aspect of the place was most gloomy; the little
-port, with its few vessels, and small group of wretched houses, seemed
-overwhelmed and out of all proportion with the rest of the scene.
-
-The inhabitants live like persons on board a ship: every necessary
-comes from a distance: water is brought in boats from Pisagua, about
-forty miles northward, and is sold at the rate of nine reals (4s. 6d.)
-an eighteen-gallon cask: I bought a wine-bottle full for threepence. In
-like manner firewood, and of course every article of food, is imported.
-Very few animals can be maintained in such a place: on the ensuing
-morning I hired with difficulty, at the price of four pounds sterling,
-two mules and a guide to take me to the nitrate of soda works. These
-are at present the support of Iquique. This salt was first exported in
-1830: in one year an amount in value of one hundred thousand pounds
-sterling, was sent to France and England. It is principally used as a
-manure and in the manufacture of nitric acid: owing to its deliquescent
-property it will not serve for gunpowder. Formerly there were two
-exceedingly rich silver-mines in this neighbourhood, but their produce
-is now very small.
-
-Our arrival in the offing caused some little apprehension. Peru was in
-a state of anarchy; and each party having demanded a contribution, the
-poor town of Iquique was in tribulation, thinking the evil hour was
-come. The people had also their domestic troubles; a short time
-before, three French carpenters had broken open, during the same night,
-the two churches, and stolen all the plate: one of the robbers,
-however, subsequently confessed, and the plate was recovered. The
-convicts were sent to Arequipa, which though the capital of this
-province, is two hundred leagues distant, the government there thought
-it a pity to punish such useful workmen, who could make all sorts of
-furniture; and accordingly liberated them. Things being in this state,
-the churches were again broken open, but this time the plate was not
-recovered. The inhabitants became dreadfully enraged, and declaring
-that none but heretics would thus "eat God Almighty," proceeded to
-torture some Englishmen, with the intention of afterwards shooting
-them. At last the authorities interfered, and peace was established.
-
-
-13th.--In the morning I started for the saltpetre-works, a distance of
-fourteen leagues. Having ascended the steep coast-mountains by a
-zigzag sandy track, we soon came in view of the mines of Guantajaya and
-St. Rosa. These two small villages are placed at the very mouths of
-the mines; and being perched up on hills, they had a still more
-unnatural and desolate appearance than the town of Iquique. We did not
-reach the saltpetre-works till after sunset, having ridden all day
-across an undulating country, a complete and utter desert. The road
-was strewed with the bones and dried skins of many beasts of burden
-which had perished on it from fatigue. Excepting the Vultur aura,
-which preys on the carcasses, I saw neither bird, quadruped, reptile,
-nor insect. On the coast-mountains, at the height of about 2000 feet
-where during this season the clouds generally hang, a very few cacti
-were growing in the clefts of rock; and the loose sand was strewed over
-with a lichen, which lies on the surface quite unattached. This plant
-belongs to the genus Cladonia, and somewhat resembles the reindeer
-lichen. In some parts it was in sufficient quantity to tinge the sand,
-as seen from a distance, of a pale yellowish colour. Further inland,
-during the whole ride of fourteen leagues, I saw only one other
-vegetable production, and that was a most minute yellow lichen, growing
-on the bones of the dead mules. This was the first true desert which I
-had seen: the effect on me was not impressive; but I believe this was
-owing to my having become gradually accustomed to such scenes, as I
-rode northward from Valparaiso, through Coquimbo, to Copiapo. The
-appearance of the country was remarkable, from being covered by a thick
-crust of common salt, and of a stratified saliferous alluvium, which
-seems to have been deposited as the land slowly rose above the level of
-the sea. The salt is white, very hard, and compact: it occurs in water
-worn nodules projecting from the agglutinated sand, and is associated
-with much gypsum. The appearance of this superficial mass very closely
-resembled that of a country after snow, before the last dirty patches
-are thawed. The existence of this crust of a soluble substance over
-the whole face of the country, shows how extraordinarily dry the
-climate must have been for a long period.
-
-At night I slept at the house of the owner of one of the saltpetre
-mines. The country is here as unproductive as near the coast; but
-water, having rather a bitter and brackish taste, can be procured by
-digging wells. The well at this house was thirty-six yards deep: as
-scarcely any rain falls, it is evident the water is not thus derived;
-indeed if it were, it could not fail to be as salt as brine, for the
-whole surrounding country is incrusted with various saline substances.
-We must therefore conclude that it percolates under ground from the
-Cordillera, though distant many leagues. In that direction there are a
-few small villages, where the inhabitants, having more water, are
-enabled to irrigate a little land, and raise hay, on which the mules
-and asses, employed in carrying the saltpetre, are fed. The nitrate of
-soda was now selling at the ship's side at fourteen shillings per
-hundred pounds: the chief expense is its transport to the sea-coast.
-The mine consists of a hard stratum, between two and three feet thick,
-of the nitrate mingled with a little of the sulphate of soda and a good
-deal of common salt. It lies close beneath the surface, and follows
-for a length of one hundred and fifty miles the margin of a grand basin
-or plain; this, from its outline, manifestly must once have been a
-lake, or more probably an inland arm of the sea, as may be inferred
-from the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. The surface of
-the plain is 3300 feet above the Pacific.
-
-
-19th.--We anchored in the Bay of Callao, the seaport of Lima, the
-capital of Peru. We stayed here six weeks but from the troubled state
-of public affairs, I saw very little of the country. During our whole
-visit the climate was far from being so delightful, as it is generally
-represented. A dull heavy bank of clouds constantly hung over the
-land, so that during the first sixteen days I had only one view of the
-Cordillera behind Lima. These mountains, seen in stages, one above the
-other, through openings in the clouds, had a very grand appearance. It
-is almost become a proverb, that rain never falls in the lower part of
-Peru. Yet this can hardly be considered correct; for during almost
-every day of our visit there was a thick drizzling mist, which was
-sufficient to make the streets muddy and one's clothes damp: this the
-people are pleased to call Peruvian dew. That much rain does not fall
-is very certain, for the houses are covered only with flat roofs made
-of hardened mud; and on the mole shiploads of wheat were piled up,
-being thus left for weeks together without any shelter.
-
-I cannot say I liked the very little I saw of Peru: in summer, however,
-it is said that the climate is much pleasanter. In all seasons, both
-inhabitants and foreigners suffer from severe attacks of ague. This
-disease is common on the whole coast of Peru, but is unknown in the
-interior. The attacks of illness which arise from miasma never fail to
-appear most mysterious. So difficult is it to judge from the aspect of
-a country, whether or not it is healthy, that if a person had been told
-to choose within the tropics a situation appearing favourable for
-health, very probably he would have named this coast. The plain round
-the outskirts of Callao is sparingly covered with a coarse grass, and
-in some parts there are a few stagnant, though very small, pools of
-water. The miasma, in all probability, arises from these: for the town
-of Arica was similarly circumstanced, and its healthiness was much
-improved by the drainage of some little pools. Miasma is not always
-produced by a luxuriant vegetation with an ardent climate; for many
-parts of Brazil, even where there are marshes and a rank vegetation,
-are much more healthy than this sterile coast of Peru. The densest
-forests in a temperate climate, as in Chiloe, do not seem in the
-slightest degree to affect the healthy condition of the atmosphere.
-
-The island of St. Jago, at the Cape de Verds, offers another strongly
-marked instance of a country, which any one would have expected to find
-most healthy, being very much the contrary. I have described the bare
-and open plains as supporting, during a few weeks after the rainy
-season, a thin vegetation, which directly withers away and dries up: at
-this period the air appears to become quite poisonous; both natives and
-foreigners often being affected with violent fevers. On the other hand,
-the Galapagos Archipelago, in the Pacific, with a similar soil, and
-periodically subject to the same process of vegetation, is perfectly
-healthy. Humboldt has observed, that, "under the torrid zone, the
-smallest marshes are the most dangerous, being surrounded, as at Vera
-Cruz and Carthagena, with an arid and sandy soil, which raises the
-temperature of the ambient air." [5] On the coast of Peru, however, the
-temperature is not hot to any excessive degree; and perhaps in
-consequence, the intermittent fevers are not of the most malignant
-order. In all unhealthy countries the greatest risk is run by sleeping
-on shore. Is this owing to the state of the body during sleep, or to a
-greater abundance of miasma at such times? It appears certain that
-those who stay on board a vessel, though anchored at only a short
-distance from the coast, generally suffer less than those actually on
-shore. On the other hand, I have heard of one remarkable case where a
-fever broke out among the crew of a man-of-war some hundred miles off
-the coast of Africa, and at the same time one of those fearful periods
-[6] of death commenced at Sierra Leone.
-
-No state in South America, since the declaration of independence, has
-suffered more from anarchy than Peru. At the time of our visit, there
-were four chiefs in arms contending for supremacy in the government: if
-one succeeded in becoming for a time very powerful, the others
-coalesced against him; but no sooner were they victorious, than they
-were again hostile to each other. The other day, at the Anniversary of
-the Independence, high mass was performed, the President partaking of
-the sacrament: during the _Te Deum laudamus_, instead of each regiment
-displaying the Peruvian flag, a black one with death's head was
-unfurled. Imagine a government under which such a scene could be
-ordered, on such an occasion, to be typical of their determination of
-fighting to death! This state of affairs happened at a time very
-unfortunately for me, as I was precluded from taking any excursions
-much beyond the limits of the town. The barren island of St. Lorenzo,
-which forms the harbour, was nearly the only place where one could walk
-securely. The upper part, which is upwards of 1000 feet in height,
-during this season of the year (winter), comes within the lower limit
-of the clouds; and in consequence, an abundant cryptogamic vegetation,
-and a few flowers cover the summit. On the hills near Lima, at a
-height but little greater, the ground is carpeted with moss, and beds
-of beautiful yellow lilies, called Amancaes. This indicates a very
-much greater degree of humidity, than at a corresponding height at
-Iquique. Proceeding northward of Lima, the climate becomes damper, till
-on the banks of the Guayaquil, nearly under the equator, we find the
-most luxuriant forests. The change, however, from the sterile coast of
-Peru to that fertile land is described as taking place rather abruptly
-in the latitude of Cape Blanco, two degrees south of Guayaquil.
-
-Callao is a filthy, ill-built, small seaport. The inhabitants, both
-here and at Lima, present every imaginable shade of mixture, between
-European, Negro, and Indian blood. They appear a depraved, drunken set
-of people. The atmosphere is loaded with foul smells, and that
-peculiar one, which may be perceived in almost every town within the
-tropics, was here very strong. The fortress, which withstood Lord
-Cochrane's long siege, has an imposing appearance. But the President,
-during our stay, sold the brass guns, and proceeded to dismantle parts
-of it. The reason assigned was, that he had not an officer to whom he
-could trust so important a charge. He himself had good reason for
-thinking so, as he had obtained the presidentship by rebelling while in
-charge of this same fortress. After we left South America, he paid the
-penalty in the usual manner, by being conquered, taken prisoner, and
-shot.
-
-Lima stands on a plain in a valley, formed during the gradual retreat
-of the sea. It is seven miles from Callao, and is elevated 500 feet
-above it; but from the slope being very gradual, the road appears
-absolutely level; so that when at Lima it is difficult to believe one
-has ascended even one hundred feet: Humboldt has remarked on this
-singularly deceptive case. Steep barren hills rise like islands from
-the plain, which is divided, by straight mud-walls, into large green
-fields. In these scarcely a tree grows excepting a few willows, and an
-occasional clump of bananas and of oranges. The city of Lima is now in
-a wretched state of decay: the streets are nearly unpaved; and heaps of
-filth are piled up in all directions, where the black gallinazos, tame
-as poultry, pick up bits of carrion. The houses have generally an
-upper story, built on account of the earthquakes, of plastered woodwork
-but some of the old ones, which are now used by several families, are
-immensely large, and would rival in suites of apartments the most
-magnificent in any place. Lima, the City of the Kings, must formerly
-have been a splendid town. The extraordinary number of churches gives
-it, even at the present day, a peculiar and striking character,
-especially when viewed from a short distance.
-
-One day I went out with some merchants to hunt in the immediate
-vicinity of the city. Our sport was very poor; but I had an
-opportunity of seeing the ruins of one of the ancient Indian villages,
-with its mound like a natural hill in the centre. The remains of
-houses, enclosures, irrigating streams, and burial mounds, scattered
-over this plain, cannot fail to give one a high idea of the condition
-and number of the ancient population. When their earthenware, woollen
-clothes, utensils of elegant forms cut out of the hardest rocks, tools
-of copper, ornaments of precious stones, palaces, and hydraulic works,
-are considered, it is impossible not to respect the considerable
-advance made by them in the arts of civilization. The burial mounds,
-called Huacas, are really stupendous; although in some places they
-appear to be natural hills incased and modelled.
-
-There is also another and very different class of ruins, which
-possesses some interest, namely, those of old Callao, overwhelmed by
-the great earthquake of 1746, and its accompanying wave. The
-destruction must have been more complete even than at Talcahuano.
-Quantities of shingle almost conceal the foundations of the walls, and
-vast masses of brickwork appear to have been whirled about like pebbles
-by the retiring waves. It has been stated that the land subsided
-during this memorable shock: I could not discover any proof of this;
-yet it seems far from improbable, for the form of the coast must
-certainly have undergone some change since the foundation of the old
-town; as no people in their senses would willingly have chosen for
-their building place, the narrow spit of shingle on which the ruins now
-stand. Since our voyage, M. Tschudi has come to the conclusion, by the
-comparison of old and modern maps, that the coast both north and south
-of Lima has certainly subsided.
-
-On the island of San Lorenzo, there are very satisfactory proofs of
-elevation within the recent period; this of course is not opposed to
-the belief, of a small sinking of the ground having subsequently taken
-place. The side of this island fronting the Bay of Callao, is worn
-into three obscure terraces, the lower one of which is covered by a bed
-a mile in length, almost wholly composed of shells of eighteen species,
-now living in the adjoining sea. The height of this bed is eighty-five
-feet. Many of the shells are deeply corroded, and have a much older
-and more decayed appearance than those at the height of 500 or 600 feet
-on the coast of Chile. These shells are associated with much common
-salt, a little sulphate of lime (both probably left by the evaporation
-of the spray, as the land slowly rose), together with sulphate of soda
-and muriate of lime. They rest on fragments of the underlying
-sandstone, and are covered by a few inches thick of detritus. The
-shells, higher up on this terrace could be traced scaling off in
-flakes, and falling into an impalpable powder; and on an upper terrace,
-at the height of 170 feet, and likewise at some considerably higher
-points, I found a layer of saline powder of exactly similar appearance,
-and lying in the same relative position. I have no doubt that this
-upper layer originally existed as a bed of shells, like that on the
-eighty-five-feet ledge; but it does not now contain even a trace of
-organic structure. The powder has been analyzed for me by Mr. T.
-Reeks; it consists of sulphates and muriates both of lime and soda,
-with very little carbonate of lime. It is known that common salt and
-carbonate of lime left in a mass for some time together, partly
-decompose each other; though this does not happen with small quantities
-in solution. As the half-decomposed shells in the lower parts are
-associated with much common salt, together with some of the saline
-substances composing the upper saline layer, and as these shells are
-corroded and decayed in a remarkable manner, I strongly suspect that
-this double decomposition has here taken place. The resultant salts,
-however, ought to be carbonate of soda and muriate of lime, the latter
-is present, but not the carbonate of soda. Hence I am led to imagine
-that by some unexplained means, the carbonate of soda becomes changed
-into the sulphate. It is obvious that the saline layer could not have
-been preserved in any country in which abundant rain occasionally fell:
-on the other hand, this very circumstance, which at first sight appears
-so highly favourable to the long preservation of exposed shells, has
-probably been the indirect means, through the common salt not having
-been washed away, of their decomposition and early decay.
-
-I was much interested by finding on the terrace, at the height of
-eighty-five feet, _embedded_ amidst the shells and much sea-drifted
-rubbish, some bits of cotton thread, plaited rush, and the head of a
-stalk of Indian corn: I compared these relics with similar ones taken
-out of the Huacas, or old Peruvian tombs, and found them identical in
-appearance. On the mainland in front of San Lorenzo, near Bellavista,
-there is an extensive and level plain about a hundred feet high, of
-which the lower part is formed of alternating layers of sand and impure
-clay, together with some gravel, and the surface, to the depth of from
-three to six feet, of a reddish loam, containing a few scattered
-sea-shells and numerous small fragments of coarse red earthenware, more
-abundant at certain spots than at others. At first I was inclined to
-believe that this superficial bed, from its wide extent and smoothness,
-must have been deposited beneath the sea; but I afterwards found in one
-spot, that it lay on an artificial floor of round stones. It seems,
-therefore, most probable that at a period when the land stood at a
-lower level there was a plain very similar to that now surrounding
-Callao, which being protected by a shingle beach, is raised but very
-little above the level of the sea. On this plain, with its underlying
-red-clay beds, I imagine that the Indians manufactured their earthen
-vessels; and that, during some violent earthquake, the sea broke over
-the beach, and converted the plain into a temporary lake, as happened
-round Callao in 1713 and 1746. The water would then have deposited
-mud, containing fragments of pottery from the kilns, more abundant at
-some spots than at others, and shells from the sea. This bed, with
-fossil earthenware, stands at about the same height with the shells on
-the lower terrace of San Lorenzo, in which the cotton-thread and other
-relics were embedded.
-
-Hence we may safely conclude, that within the Indo-human period there
-has been an elevation, as before alluded to, of more than eighty-five
-feet; for some little elevation must have been lost by the coast having
-subsided since the old maps were engraved. At Valparaiso, although in
-the 220 years before our visit, the elevation cannot have exceeded
-nineteen feet, yet subsequently to 1817, there has been a rise, partly
-insensible and partly by a start during the shock of 1822, of ten or
-eleven feet. The antiquity of the Indo-human race here, judging by the
-eighty-five feet rise of the land since the relics were embedded, is
-the more remarkable, as on the coast of Patagonia, when the land stood
-about the same number of feet lower, the Macrauchenia was a living
-beast; but as the Patagonian coast is some way distant from the
-Cordillera, the rising there may have been slower than here. At Bahia
-Blanca, the elevation has been only a few feet since the numerous
-gigantic quadrupeds were there entombed; and, according to the
-generally received opinion, when these extinct animals were living, man
-did not exist. But the rising of that part of the coast of Patagonia,
-is perhaps no way connected with the Cordillera, but rather with a line
-of old volcanic rocks in Banda Oriental, so that it may have been
-infinitely slower than on the shores of Peru. All these speculations,
-however, must be vague; for who will pretend to say that there may not
-have been several periods of subsidence, intercalated between the
-movements of elevation; for we know that along the whole coast of
-Patagonia, there have certainly been many and long pauses in the upward
-action of the elevatory forces.
-
-[1] Vol. iv. p. 11, and vol. ii. p. 217. For the remarks on Guayaquil,
-see Silliman's Journ., vol. xxiv. p. 384. For those on Tacna by Mr.
-Hamilton, see Trans. of British Association, 1840. For those on
-Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil. Trans., 1835. In the former
-edition I collected several references on the coincidences between
-sudden falls in the barometer and earthquakes; and between earthquakes
-and meteors.
-
-[2] Observa. sobre el Clima de Lima, p. 67.--Azara's Travels, vol. i.
-p. 381.--Ulloa's Voyage, vol. ii. p. 28.--Burchell's Travels, vol. ii.
-p. 524.--Webster's Description of the Azores, p. 124.--Voyage a l'Isle
-de France par un Officer du Roi, tom. i. p. 248.--Description of St.
-Helena, p. 123.
-
-[3] Temple, in his travels through Upper Peru, or Bolivia, in going
-from Potosi to Oruro, says, "I saw many Indian villages or dwellings in
-ruins, up even to the very tops of the mountains, attesting a former
-population where now all is desolate." He makes similar remarks in
-another place; but I cannot tell whether this desolation has been
-caused by a want of population, or by an altered condition of the land.
-
-[4] Edinburgh, Phil. Journ., Jan., 1830, p. 74; and April, 1830, p.
-258--also Daubeny on Volcanoes, p. 438; and Bengal Journ., vol. vii. p.
-324.
-
-[5] Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, vol. iv. p. 199.
-
-[6] A similar interesting case is recorded in the Madras Medical Quart.
-Journ., 1839, p. 340. Dr. Ferguson, in his admirable Paper (see 9th
-vol. of Edinburgh Royal Trans.), shows clearly that the poison is
-generated in the drying process; and hence that dry hot countries are
-often the most unhealthy.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
-
-The whole Group Volcanic--Numbers of Craters--Leafless Bushes Colony at
-Charles Island--James Island--Salt-lake in Crater--Natural History of
-the Group--Ornithology, curious Finches--Reptiles--Great Tortoises,
-habits of--Marine Lizard, feeds on Sea-weed--Terrestrial Lizard,
-burrowing habits, herbivorous--Importance of Reptiles in the
-Archipelago--Fish, Shells, Insects--Botany--American Type of
-Organization--Differences in the Species or Races on different
-Islands--Tameness of the Birds--Fear of Man, an acquired Instinct.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 15th.--This archipelago consists of ten principal islands, of
-which five exceed the others in size. They are situated under the
-Equator, and between five and six hundred miles westward of the coast
-of America. They are all formed of volcanic rocks; a few fragments of
-granite curiously glazed and altered by the heat, can hardly be
-considered as an exception. Some of the craters, surmounting the
-larger islands, are of immense size, and they rise to a height of
-between three and four thousand feet. Their flanks are studded by
-innumerable smaller orifices. I scarcely hesitate to affirm, that
-there must be in the whole archipelago at least two thousand craters.
-These consist either of lava or scoriae, or of finely-stratified,
-sandstone-like tuff. Most of the latter are beautifully symmetrical;
-they owe their origin to eruptions of volcanic mud without any lava: it
-is a remarkable circumstance that every one of the twenty-eight
-tuff-craters which were examined, had their southern sides either much
-lower than the other sides, or quite broken down and removed. As all
-these craters apparently have been formed when standing in the sea, and
-as the waves from the trade wind and the swell from the open Pacific
-here unite their forces on the southern coasts of all the islands, this
-singular uniformity in the broken state of the craters, composed of the
-soft and yielding tuff, is easily explained.
-
-Considering that these islands are placed directly under the equator,
-the climate is far from being excessively hot; this seems chiefly
-caused by the singularly low temperature of the surrounding water,
-brought here by the great southern
-
-
-[map]
-
-
-Polar current. Excepting during one short season, very little rain
-falls, and even then it is irregular; but the clouds generally hang
-low. Hence, whilst the lower parts of the islands are very sterile,
-the upper parts, at a height of a thousand feet and upwards, possess a
-damp climate and a tolerably luxuriant vegetation. This is especially
-the case on the windward sides of the islands, which first receive and
-condense the moisture from the atmosphere.
-
-In the morning (17th) we landed on Chatham Island, which, like the
-others, rises with a tame and rounded outline, broken here and there by
-scattered hillocks, the remains of former craters. Nothing could be
-less inviting than the first appearance. A broken field of black
-basaltic lava, thrown into the most rugged waves, and crossed by great
-fissures, is everywhere covered by stunted, sun-burnt brushwood, which
-shows little signs of life. The dry and parched surface, being heated
-by the noon-day sun, gave to the air a close and sultry feeling, like
-that from a stove: we fancied even that the bushes smelt unpleasantly.
-Although I diligently tried to collect as many plants as possible, I
-succeeded in getting very few; and such wretched-looking little weeds
-would have better become an arctic than an equatorial Flora. The
-brushwood appears, from a short distance, as leafless as our trees
-during winter; and it was some time before I discovered that not only
-almost every plant was now in full leaf, but that the greater number
-were in flower. The commonest bush is one of the Euphorbiaceae: an
-acacia and a great odd-looking cactus are the only trees which afford
-any shade. After the season of heavy rains, the islands are said to
-appear for a short time partially green. The volcanic island of
-Fernando Noronha, placed in many respects under nearly similar
-conditions, is the only other country where I have seen a vegetation at
-all like this of the Galapagos Islands.
-
-The Beagle sailed round Chatham Island, and anchored in several bays.
-One night I slept on shore on a part of the island, where black
-truncated cones were extraordinarily numerous: from one small eminence
-I counted sixty of them, all surmounted by craters more or less
-perfect. The greater number consisted merely of a ring of red scoriae
-or slags, cemented together: and their height above the plain of lava
-was not more than from fifty to a hundred feet; none had been very
-lately active. The entire surface of this part of the island seems to
-have been permeated, like a sieve, by the subterranean vapours: here
-and there the lava, whilst soft, has been blown into great bubbles; and
-in other parts, the tops of caverns similarly formed have fallen in,
-leaving circular pits with steep sides. From the regular form of the
-many craters, they gave to the country an artificial appearance, which
-vividly reminded me of those parts of Staffordshire, where the great
-iron-foundries are most numerous. The day was glowing hot, and the
-scrambling over the rough surface and through the intricate thickets,
-was very fatiguing; but I was well repaid by the strange Cyclopean
-scene. As I was walking along I met two large tortoises, each of which
-must have weighed at least two hundred pounds: one was eating a piece
-of cactus, and as I approached, it stared at me and slowly walked away;
-the other gave a deep hiss, and drew in its head. These huge reptiles,
-surrounded by the black lava, the leafless shrubs, and large cacti,
-seemed to my fancy like some antediluvian animals. The few
-dull-coloured birds cared no more for me than they did for the great
-tortoises.
-
-23rd.--The Beagle proceeded to Charles Island. This archipelago has
-long been frequented, first by the bucaniers, and latterly by whalers,
-but it is only within the last six years, that a small colony has been
-established here. The inhabitants are between two and three hundred in
-number; they are nearly all people of colour, who have been banished
-for political crimes from the Republic of the Equator, of which Quito
-is the capital. The settlement is placed about four and a half miles
-inland, and at a height probably of a thousand feet. In the first part
-of the road we passed through leafless thickets, as in Chatham Island.
-Higher up, the woods gradually became greener; and as soon as we
-crossed the ridge of the island, we were cooled by a fine southerly
-breeze, and our sight refreshed by a green and thriving vegetation. In
-this upper region coarse grasses and ferns abound; but there are no
-tree-ferns: I saw nowhere any member of the palm family, which is the
-more singular, as 360 miles northward, Cocos Island takes its name from
-the number of cocoa-nuts. The houses are irregularly scattered over a
-flat space of ground, which is cultivated with sweet potatoes and
-bananas. It will not easily be imagined how pleasant the sight of
-black mud was to us, after having been so long, accustomed to the
-parched soil of Peru and northern Chile. The inhabitants, although
-complaining of poverty, obtain, without much trouble, the means of
-subsistence. In the woods there are many wild pigs and goats; but the
-staple article of animal food is supplied by the tortoises. Their
-numbers have of course been greatly reduced in this island, but the
-people yet count on two days' hunting giving them food for the rest of
-the week. It is said that formerly single vessels have taken away as
-many as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a frigate some
-years since brought down in one day two hundred tortoises to the beach.
-
-September 29th.--We doubled the south-west extremity of Albemarle
-Island, and the next day were nearly becalmed between it and Narborough
-Island. Both are covered with immense deluges of black naked lava,
-which have flowed either over the rims of the great caldrons, like
-pitch over the rim of a pot in which it has been boiled, or have burst
-forth from smaller orifices on the flanks; in their descent they have
-spread over miles of the sea-coast. On both of these islands,
-eruptions are known to have taken place; and in Albemarle, we saw a
-small jet of smoke curling from the summit of one of the great craters.
-In the evening we anchored in Bank's Cove, in Albemarle Island. The
-next morning I went out walking. To the south of the broken
-tuff-crater, in which the Beagle was anchored, there was another
-beautifully symmetrical one of an elliptic form; its longer axis was a
-little less than a mile, and its depth about 500 feet. At its bottom
-there was a shallow lake, in the middle of which a tiny crater formed
-an islet. The day was overpoweringly hot, and the lake looked clear
-and blue: I hurried down the cindery slope, and, choked with dust,
-eagerly tasted the water--but, to my sorrow, I found it salt as brine.
-
-The rocks on the coast abounded with great black lizards, between three
-and four feet long; and on the hills, an ugly yellowish-brown species
-was equally common. We saw many of this latter kind, some clumsily
-running out of the way, and others shuffling into their burrows. I
-shall presently describe in more detail the habits of both these
-reptiles. The whole of this northern part of Albemarle Island is
-miserably sterile.
-
-October 8th.--We arrived at James Island: this island, as well as
-Charles Island, were long since thus named after our kings of the
-Stuart line. Mr. Bynoe, myself, and our servants were left here for a
-week, with provisions and a tent, whilst the Beagle went for water. We
-found here a party of Spaniards, who had been sent from Charles Island
-to dry fish, and to salt tortoise-meat. About six miles inland, and at
-the height of nearly 2000 feet, a hovel had been built in which two men
-lived, who were employed in catching tortoises, whilst the others were
-fishing on the coast. I paid this party two visits, and slept there
-one night. As in the other islands, the lower region was covered by
-nearly leafless bushes, but the trees were here of a larger growth than
-elsewhere, several being two feet and some even two feet nine inches in
-diameter. The upper region being kept damp by the clouds, supports a
-green and flourishing vegetation. So damp was the ground, that there
-were large beds of a coarse cyperus, in which great numbers of a very
-small water-rail lived and bred. While staying in this upper region,
-we lived entirely upon tortoise-meat: the breast-plate roasted (as the
-Gauchos do _carne con cuero_), with the flesh on it, is very good; and
-the young tortoises make excellent soup; but otherwise the meat to my
-taste is indifferent.
-
-One day we accompanied a party of the Spaniards in their whale-boat to
-a salina, or lake from which salt is procured. After landing, we had a
-very rough walk over a rugged field of recent lava, which has almost
-surrounded a tuff-crater, at the bottom of which the salt-lake lies.
-The water is only three or four inches deep, and rests on a layer of
-beautifully crystallized, white salt. The lake is quite circular, and
-is fringed with a border of bright green succulent plants; the almost
-precipitous walls of the crater are clothed with wood, so that the
-scene was altogether both picturesque and curious. A few years since,
-the sailors belonging to a sealing-vessel murdered their captain in
-this quiet spot; and we saw his skull lying among the bushes.
-
-During the greater part of our stay of a week, the sky was cloudless,
-and if the trade-wind failed for an hour, the heat became very
-oppressive. On two days, the thermometer within the tent stood for
-some hours at 93 degs.; but in the open air, in the wind and sun, at
-only 85 degs. The sand was extremely hot; the thermometer placed in
-some of a brown colour immediately rose to 137 degs., and how much
-above that it would have risen, I do not know, for it was not graduated
-any higher. The black sand felt much hotter, so that even in thick
-boots it was quite disagreeable to walk over it.
-
-
-The natural history of these islands is eminently curious, and well
-deserves attention. Most of the organic productions are aboriginal
-creations, found nowhere else; there is even a difference between the
-inhabitants of the different islands; yet all show a marked
-relationship with those of America, though separated from that
-continent by an open space of ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in
-width. The archipelago is a little world within itself, or rather a
-satellite attached to America, whence it has derived a few stray
-colonists, and has received the general character of its indigenous
-productions. Considering the small size of the islands, we feel the
-more astonished at the number of their aboriginal beings, and at their
-confined range. Seeing every height crowned with its crater, and the
-boundaries of most of the lava-streams still distinct, we are led to
-believe that within a period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was
-here spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be brought
-somewhat near to that great fact--that mystery of mysteries--the first
-appearance of new beings on this earth.
-
-Of terrestrial mammals, there is only one which must be considered as
-indigenous, namely, a mouse (Mus Galapagoensis), and this is confined,
-as far as I could ascertain, to Chatham Island, the most easterly
-island of the group. It belongs, as I am informed by Mr. Waterhouse,
-to a division of the family of mice characteristic of America. At
-James Island, there is a rat sufficiently distinct from the common kind
-to have been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse; but as it belongs
-to the old-world division of the family, and as this island has been
-frequented by ships for the last hundred and fifty years, I can hardly
-doubt that this rat is merely a variety produced by the new and
-peculiar climate, food, and soil, to which it has been subjected.
-Although no one has a right to speculate without distinct facts, yet
-even with respect to the Chatham Island mouse, it should be borne in
-mind, that it may possibly be an American species imported here; for I
-have seen, in a most unfrequented part of the Pampas, a native mouse
-living in the roof of a newly built hovel, and therefore its
-transportation in a vessel is not improbable: analogous facts have been
-observed by Dr. Richardson in North America.
-
-Of land-birds I obtained twenty-six kinds, all peculiar to the group
-and found nowhere else, with the exception of one lark-like finch from
-North America (Dolichonyx oryzivorus), which ranges on that continent
-as far north as 54 degs., and generally frequents marshes. The other
-twenty-five birds consist, firstly, of a hawk, curiously intermediate
-in structure between a buzzard and the American group of
-carrion-feeding Polybori; and with these latter birds it agrees most
-closely in every habit and even tone of voice. Secondly, there are two
-owls, representing the short-eared and white barn-owls of Europe.
-Thirdly, a wren, three tyrant-flycatchers (two of them species of
-Pyrocephalus, one or both of which would be ranked by some
-ornithologists as only varieties), and a dove--all analogous to, but
-distinct from, American species. Fourthly, a swallow, which though
-differing from the Progne purpurea of both Americas, only in being
-rather duller colored, smaller, and slenderer, is considered by Mr.
-Gould as specifically distinct. Fifthly, there are three species of
-mocking thrush--a form highly characteristic of America. The remaining
-land-birds form a most singular group of finches, related to each other
-in the structure of their beaks, short tails, form of body and plumage:
-there are thirteen species, which Mr. Gould has divided into four
-sub-groups. All these species are peculiar to this archipelago; and so
-is the whole group, with the exception of one species of the sub-group
-Cactornis, lately brought from Bow Island, in the Low Archipelago. Of
-Cactornis, the two species may be often seen climbing about the flowers
-of the great cactus-trees; but all the other species of this group of
-finches, mingled together in flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground
-of the lower districts. The males of all, or certainly of the greater
-number, are jet black; and the females (with perhaps one or two
-exceptions) are brown. The most curious fact is the perfect gradation
-in the size of the beaks in the different species of Geospiza, from one
-as large as that of a hawfinch to that of a chaffinch, and (if Mr.
-Gould is right in including his sub-group, Certhidea, in the main
-group) even to that of a warbler. The largest beak in the genus
-Geospiza is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but instead of
-there being only one intermediate species, with a beak of the size
-shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species with insensibly
-graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group Certhidea, is shown in Fig.
-4. The beak of Cactornis is
-
-
-[picture]
-
-1. Geospiza magnirostris. 2. Geospiza fortis. 3. Geospiza parvula.
-4. Certhidea olivasea.
-
-
-somewhat like that of a starling, and that of the fourth sub-group,
-Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped. Seeing this gradation and
-diversity of structure in one small, intimately related group of birds,
-one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this
-archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different
-ends. In a like manner it might be fancied that a bird originally a
-buzzard, had been induced here to undertake the office of the
-carrion-feeding Polybori of the American continent.
-
-Of waders and water-birds I was able to get only eleven kinds, and of
-these only three (including a rail confined to the damp summits of the
-islands) are new species. Considering the wandering habits of the
-gulls, I was surprised to find that the species inhabiting these
-islands is peculiar, but allied to one from the southern parts of South
-America. The far greater peculiarity of the land-birds, namely,
-twenty-five out of twenty-six, being new species, or at least new
-races, compared with the waders and web-footed birds, is in accordance
-with the greater range which these latter orders have in all parts of
-the world. We shall hereafter see this law of aquatic forms, whether
-marine or fresh-water, being less peculiar at any given point of the
-earth's surface than the terrestrial forms of the same classes,
-strikingly illustrated in the shells, and in a lesser degree in the
-insects of this archipelago.
-
-Two of the waders are rather smaller than the same species brought from
-other places: the swallow is also smaller, though it is doubtful
-whether or not it is distinct from its analogue. The two owls, the two
-tyrant-catchers (Pyrocephalus) and the dove, are also smaller than the
-analogous but distinct species, to which they are most nearly related;
-on the other hand, the gull is rather larger. The two owls, the
-swallow, all three species of mocking-thrush, the dove in its separate
-colours though not in its whole plumage, the Totanus, and the gull, are
-likewise duskier coloured than their analogous species; and in the case
-of the mocking-thrush and Totanus, than any other species of the two
-genera. With the exception of a wren with a fine yellow breast, and of
-a tyrant-flycatcher with a scarlet tuft and breast, none of the birds
-are brilliantly coloured, as might have been expected in an equatorial
-district. Hence it would appear probable, that the same causes which
-here make the immigrants of some peculiar species smaller, make most of
-the peculiar Galapageian species also smaller, as well as very
-generally more dusky coloured. All the plants have a wretched, weedy
-appearance, and I did not see one beautiful flower. The insects,
-again, are small-sized and dull-coloured, and, as Mr. Waterhouse
-informs me, there is nothing in their general appearance which would
-have led him to imagine that they had come from under the equator. [1]
-The birds, plants, and insects have a desert character, and are not
-more brilliantly coloured than those from southern Patagonia; we may,
-therefore, conclude that the usual gaudy colouring of the intertropical
-productions, is not related either to the heat or light of those zones,
-but to some other cause, perhaps to the conditions of existence being
-generally favourable to life.
-
-
-We will now turn to the order of reptiles, which gives the most
-striking character to the zoology of these islands. The species are not
-numerous, but the numbers of individuals of each species are
-extraordinarily great. There is one small lizard belonging to a South
-American genus, and two species (and probably more) of the
-Amblyrhynchus--a genus confined to the Galapagos Islands. There is one
-snake which is numerous; it is identical, as I am informed by M.
-Bibron, with the Psammophis Temminckii from Chile. [2] Of sea-turtle I
-believe there are more than one species, and of tortoises there are, as
-we shall presently show, two or three species or races. Of toads and
-frogs there are none: I was surprised at this, considering how well
-suited for them the temperate and damp upper woods appeared to be. It
-recalled to my mind the remark made by Bory St. Vincent, [3] namely,
-that none of this family are found on any of the volcanic islands in
-the great oceans. As far as I can ascertain from various works, this
-seems to hold good throughout the Pacific, and even in the large
-islands of the Sandwich archipelago. Mauritius offers an apparent
-exception, where I saw the Rana Mascariensis in abundance: this frog is
-said now to inhabit the Seychelles, Madagascar, and Bourbon; but on the
-other hand, Du Bois, in his voyage in 1669, states that there were no
-reptiles in Bourbon except tortoises; and the Officier du Roi asserts
-that before 1768 it had been attempted, without success, to introduce
-frogs into Mauritius--I presume for the purpose of eating: hence it may
-be well doubted whether this frog is an aboriginal of these islands.
-The absence of the frog family in the oceanic islands is the more
-remarkable, when contrasted with the case of lizards, which swarm on
-most of the smallest islands. May this difference not be caused, by
-the greater facility with which the eggs of lizards, protected by
-calcareous shells might be transported through salt-water, than could
-the slimy spawn of frogs?
-
-I will first describe the habits of the tortoise (Testudo nigra,
-formerly called Indica), which has been so frequently alluded to. These
-animals are found, I believe, on all the islands of the archipelago;
-certainly on the greater number. They frequent in preference the high
-damp parts, but they likewise live in the lower and arid districts. I
-have already shown, from the numbers which have been caught in a single
-day, how very numerous they must be. Some grow to an immense size: Mr.
-Lawson, an Englishman, and vice-governor of the colony, told us that he
-had seen several so large, that it required six or eight men to lift
-them from the ground; and that some had afforded as much as two hundred
-pounds of meat. The old males are the largest, the females rarely
-growing to so great a size: the male can readily be distinguished from
-the female by the greater length of its tail. The tortoises which live
-on those islands where there is no water, or in the lower and arid
-parts of the others, feed chiefly on the succulent cactus. Those which
-frequent the higher and damp regions, eat the leaves of various trees,
-a kind of berry (called guayavita) which is acid and austere, and
-likewise a pale green filamentous lichen (Usnera plicata), that hangs
-from the boughs of the trees.
-
-The tortoise is very fond of water, drinking large quantities, and
-wallowing in the mud. The larger islands alone possess springs, and
-these are always situated towards the central parts, and at a
-considerable height. The tortoises, therefore, which frequent the
-lower districts, when thirsty, are obliged to travel from a long
-distance. Hence broad and well-beaten paths branch off in every
-direction from the wells down to the sea-coast; and the Spaniards by
-following them up, first discovered the watering-places. When I landed
-at Chatham Island, I could not imagine what animal travelled so
-methodically along well-chosen tracks. Near the springs it was a
-curious spectacle to behold many of these huge creatures, one set
-eagerly travelling onwards with outstretched necks, and another set
-returning, after having drunk their fill. When the tortoise arrives at
-the spring, quite regardless of any spectator, he buries his head in
-the water above his eyes, and greedily swallows great mouthfuls, at the
-rate of about ten in a minute. The inhabitants say each animal stays
-three or four days in the neighbourhood of the water, and then returns
-to the lower country; but they differed respecting the frequency of
-these visits. The animal probably regulates them according to the
-nature of the food on which it has lived. It is, however, certain,
-that tortoises can subsist even on these islands where there is no
-other water than what falls during a few rainy days in the year.
-
-I believe it is well ascertained, that the bladder of the frog acts as
-a reservoir for the moisture necessary to its existence: such seems to
-be the case with the tortoise. For some time after a visit to the
-springs, their urinary bladders are distended with fluid, which is said
-gradually to decrease in volume, and to become less pure. The
-inhabitants, when walking in the lower district, and overcome with
-thirst, often take advantage of this circumstance, and drink the
-contents of the bladder if full: in one I saw killed, the fluid was
-quite limpid, and had only a very slightly bitter taste. The
-inhabitants, however, always first drink the water in the pericardium,
-which is described as being best.
-
-The tortoises, when purposely moving towards any point, travel by night
-and day, and arrive at their journey's end much sooner than would be
-expected. The inhabitants, from observing marked individuals, consider
-that they travel a distance of about eight miles in two or three days.
-One large tortoise, which I watched, walked at the rate of sixty yards
-in ten minutes, that is 360 yards in the hour, or four miles a
-day,--allowing a little time for it to eat on the road. During the
-breeding season, when the male and female are together, the male utters
-a hoarse roar or bellowing, which, it is said, can be heard at the
-distance of more than a hundred yards. The female never uses her voice,
-and the male only at these times; so that when the people hear this
-noise, they know that the two are together. They were at this time
-(October) laying their eggs. The female, where the soil is sandy,
-deposits them together, and covers them up with sand; but where the
-ground is rocky she drops them indiscriminately in any hole: Mr. Bynoe
-found seven placed in a fissure. The egg is white and spherical; one
-which I measured was seven inches and three-eighths in circumference,
-and therefore larger than a hen's egg. The young tortoises, as soon as
-they are hatched, fall a prey in great numbers to the carrion-feeding
-buzzard. The old ones seem generally to die from accidents, as from
-falling down precipices: at least, several of the inhabitants told me,
-that they never found one dead without some evident cause.
-
-The inhabitants believe that these animals are absolutely deaf;
-certainly they do not overhear a person walking close behind them. I
-was always amused when overtaking one of these great monsters, as it
-was quietly pacing along, to see how suddenly, the instant I passed, it
-would draw in its head and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the
-ground with a heavy sound, as if struck dead. I frequently got on
-their backs, and then giving a few raps on the hinder part of their
-shells, they would rise up and walk away;--but I found it very
-difficult to keep my balance. The flesh of this animal is largely
-employed, both fresh and salted; and a beautifully clear oil is
-prepared from the fat. When a tortoise is caught, the man makes a slit
-in the skin near its tail, so as to see inside its body, whether the
-fat under the dorsal plate is thick. If it is not, the animal is
-liberated and it is said to recover soon from this strange operation.
-In order to secure the tortoise, it is not sufficient to turn them like
-turtle, for they are often able to get on their legs again.
-
-There can be little doubt that this tortoise is an aboriginal
-inhabitant of the Galapagos; for it is found on all, or nearly all, the
-islands, even on some of the smaller ones where there is no water; had
-it been an imported species, this would hardly have been the case in a
-group which has been so little frequented. Moreover, the old Bucaniers
-found this tortoise in greater numbers even than at present: Wood and
-Rogers also, in 1708, say that it is the opinion of the Spaniards, that
-it is found nowhere else in this quarter of the world. It is now
-widely distributed; but it may be questioned whether it is in any other
-place an aboriginal. The bones of a tortoise at Mauritius, associated
-with those of the extinct Dodo, have generally been considered as
-belonging to this tortoise; if this had been so, undoubtedly it must
-have been there indigenous; but M. Bibron informs me that he believes
-that it was distinct, as the species now living there certainly is.
-
-The Amblyrhynchus, a remarkable genus of lizards, is confined to this
-archipelago; there are two species, resembling
-
-[picture]
-
-each other in general form, one being terrestrial and the other
-aquatic. This latter species (A. cristatus) was first characterized by
-Mr. Bell, who well foresaw, from its short, broad head, and strong
-claws of equal length, that its habits of life would turn out very
-peculiar, and different from those of its nearest ally, the Iguana. It
-is extremely common on all the islands throughout the group, and lives
-exclusively on the rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I
-never saw one, even ten yards in-shore. It is a hideous-looking
-creature, of a dirty black colour, stupid, and sluggish in its
-movements. The usual length of a full-grown one is about a yard, but
-there are some even four feet long; a large one weighed twenty pounds:
-on the island of Albemarle they seem to grow to a greater size than
-elsewhere. Their tails are flattened sideways, and all four feet
-partially webbed. They are occasionally seen some hundred yards from
-the shore, swimming about; and Captain Collnett, in his Voyage says,
-"They go to sea in herds a-fishing, and sun themselves on the rocks;
-and may be called alligators in miniature." It must not, however, be
-supposed that they live on fish. When in the water this lizard swims
-with perfect ease and quickness, by a serpentine movement of its body
-and flattened tail--the legs being motionless and closely collapsed on
-its sides. A seaman on board sank one, with a heavy weight attached to
-it, thinking thus to kill it directly; but when, an hour afterwards, he
-drew up the line, it was quite active. Their limbs and strong claws
-are admirably adapted for crawling over the rugged and fissured masses
-of lava, which everywhere form the coast. In such situations, a group
-of six or seven of these hideous reptiles may oftentimes be seen on the
-black rocks, a few feet above the surf, basking in the sun with
-outstretched legs.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them largely distended with
-minced sea-weed (Ulvae), which grows in thin foliaceous expansions of a
-bright green or a dull red colour. I do not recollect having observed
-this sea-weed in any quantity on the tidal rocks; and I have reason to
-believe it grows at the bottom of the sea, at some little distance from
-the coast. If such be the case, the object of these animals
-occasionally going out to sea is explained. The stomach contained
-nothing but the sea-weed. Mr. Baynoe, however, found a piece of crab
-in one; but this might have got in accidentally, in the same manner as
-I have seen a caterpillar, in the midst of some lichen, in the paunch
-of a tortoise. The intestines were large, as in other herbivorous
-animals. The nature of this lizard's food, as well as the structure of
-its tail and feet, and the fact of its having been seen voluntarily
-swimming out at sea, absolutely prove its aquatic habits; yet there is
-in this respect one strange anomaly, namely, that when frightened it
-will not enter the water. Hence it is easy to drive these lizards down
-to any little point overhanging the sea, where they will sooner allow a
-person to catch hold of their tails than jump into the water. They do
-not seem to have any notion of biting; but when much frightened they
-squirt a drop of fluid from each nostril. I threw one several times as
-far as I could, into a deep pool left by the retiring tide; but it
-invariably returned in a direct line to the spot where I stood. It
-swam near the bottom, with a very graceful and rapid movement, and
-occasionally aided itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As
-soon as it arrived near the edge, but still being under water, it tried
-to conceal itself in the tufts of sea-weed, or it entered some crevice.
-As soon as it thought the danger was past, it crawled out on the dry
-rocks, and shuffled away as quickly as it could. I several times
-caught this same lizard, by driving it down to a point, and though
-possessed of such perfect powers of diving and swimming, nothing would
-induce it to enter the water; and as often as I threw it in, it
-returned in the manner above described. Perhaps this singular piece of
-apparent stupidity may be accounted for by the circumstance, that this
-reptile has no enemy whatever on shore, whereas at sea it must often
-fall a prey to the numerous sharks. Hence, probably, urged by a fixed
-and hereditary instinct that the shore is its place of safety, whatever
-the emergency may be, it there takes refuge.
-
-During our visit (in October), I saw extremely few small individuals of
-this species, and none I should think under a year old. From this
-circumstance it seems probable that the breeding season had not then
-commenced. I asked several of the inhabitants if they knew where it
-laid its eggs: they said that they knew nothing of its propagation,
-although well acquainted with the eggs of the land kind--a fact,
-considering how very common this lizard is, not a little extraordinary.
-
-We will now turn to the terrestrial species (A. Demarlii), with a round
-tail, and toes without webs. This lizard, instead of being found like
-the other on all the islands, is confined to the central part of the
-archipelago, namely to Albemarle, James, Barrington, and Indefatigable
-islands. To the southward, in Charles, Hood, and Chatham islands, and
-to the northward, in Towers, Bindloes, and Abingdon, I neither saw nor
-heard of any. It would appear as if it had been created in the centre
-of the archipelago, and thence had been dispersed only to a certain
-distance. Some of these lizards inhabit the high and damp parts of the
-islands, but they are much more numerous in the lower and sterile
-districts near the coast. I cannot give a more forcible proof of their
-numbers, than by stating that when we were left at James Island, we
-could not for some time find a spot free from their burrows on which to
-pitch our single tent. Like their brothers the sea-kind, they are ugly
-animals, of a yellowish orange beneath, and of a brownish red colour
-above: from their low facial angle they have a singularly stupid
-appearance. They are, perhaps, of a rather less size than the marine
-species; but several of them weighed between ten and fifteen pounds. In
-their movements they are lazy and half torpid. When not frightened,
-they slowly crawl along with their tails and bellies dragging on the
-ground. They often stop, and doze for a minute or two, with closed
-eyes and hind legs spread out on the parched soil.
-
-They inhabit burrows, which they sometimes make between fragments of
-lava, but more generally on level patches of the soft sandstone-like
-tuff. The holes do not appear to be very deep, and they enter the
-ground at a small angle; so that when walking over these
-lizard-warrens, the soil is constantly giving way, much to the
-annoyance of the tired walker. This animal, when making its burrow,
-works alternately the opposite sides of its body. One front leg for a
-short time scratches up the soil, and throws it towards the hind foot,
-which is well placed so as to heave it beyond the mouth of the hole.
-That side of the body being tired, the other takes up the task, and so
-on alternately. I watched one for a long time, till half its body was
-buried; I then walked up and pulled it by the tail, at this it was
-greatly astonished, and soon shuffled up to see what was the matter;
-and then stared me in the face, as much as to say, "What made you pull
-my tail?"
-
-They feed by day, and do not wander far from their burrows; if
-frightened, they rush to them with a most awkward gait. Except when
-running down hill, they cannot move very fast, apparently from the
-lateral position of their legs. They are not at all timorous: when
-attentively watching any one, they curl their tails, and, raising
-themselves on their front legs, nod their heads vertically, with a
-quick movement, and try to look very fierce; but in reality they are
-not at all so: if one just stamps on the ground, down go their tails,
-and off they shuffle as quickly as they can. I have frequently
-observed small fly-eating lizards, when watching anything, nod their
-heads in precisely the same manner; but I do not at all know for what
-purpose. If this Amblyrhynchus is held and plagued with a stick, it
-will bite it very severely; but I caught many by the tail, and they
-never tried to bite me. If two are placed on the ground and held
-together, they will fight, and bite each other till blood is drawn.
-
-The individuals, and they are the greater number, which inhabit the
-lower country, can scarcely taste a drop of water throughout the year;
-but they consume much of the succulent cactus, the branches of which
-are occasionally broken off by the wind. I several times threw a piece
-to two or three of them when together; and it was amusing enough to see
-them trying to seize and carry it away in their mouths, like so many
-hungry dogs with a bone. They eat very deliberately, but do not chew
-their food. The little birds are aware how harmless these creatures
-are: I have seen one of the thick-billed finches picking at one end of
-a piece of cactus (which is much relished by all the animals of the
-lower region), whilst a lizard was eating at the other end; and
-afterwards the little bird with the utmost indifference hopped on the
-back of the reptile.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them full of vegetable
-fibres and leaves of different trees, especially of an acacia. In the
-upper region they live chiefly on the acid and astringent berries of
-the guayavita, under which trees I have seen these lizards and the huge
-tortoises feeding together. To obtain the acacia-leaves they crawl up
-the low stunted trees; and it is not uncommon to see a pair quietly
-browsing, whilst seated on a branch several feet above the ground.
-These lizards, when cooked, yield a white meat, which is liked by those
-whose stomachs soar above all prejudices.
-
-Humboldt has remarked that in intertropical South America, all lizards
-which inhabit dry regions are esteemed delicacies for the table. The
-inhabitants state that those which inhabit the upper damp parts drink
-water, but that the others do not, like the tortoises, travel up for it
-from the lower sterile country. At the time of our visit, the females
-had within their bodies numerous, large, elongated eggs, which they lay
-in their burrows: the inhabitants seek them for food.
-
-These two species of Amblyrhynchus agree, as I have already stated, in
-their general structure, and in many of their habits. Neither have
-that rapid movement, so characteristic of the genera Lacerta and
-Iguana. They are both herbivorous, although the kind of vegetation on
-which they feed is so very different. Mr. Bell has given the name to
-the genus from the shortness of the snout: indeed, the form of the
-mouth may almost be compared to that of the tortoise: one is led to
-suppose that this is an adaptation to their herbivorous appetites. It
-is very interesting thus to find a well-characterized genus, having its
-marine and terrestrial species, belonging to so confined a portion of
-the world. The aquatic species is by far the most remarkable, because
-it is the only existing lizard which lives on marine vegetable
-productions. As I at first observed, these islands are not so
-remarkable for the number of the species of reptiles, as for that of
-the individuals, when we remember the well-beaten paths made by the
-thousands of huge tortoises--the many turtles--the great warrens of the
-terrestrial Amblyrhynchus--and the groups of the marine species basking
-on the coast-rocks of every island--we must admit that there is no
-other quarter of the world where this Order replaces the herbivorous
-mammalia in so extraordinary a manner. The geologist on hearing this
-will probably refer back in his mind to the Secondary epochs, when
-lizards, some herbivorous, some carnivorous, and of dimensions
-comparable only with our existing whales, swarmed on the land and in
-the sea. It is, therefore, worthy of his observation, that this
-archipelago, instead of possessing a humid climate and rank vegetation,
-cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and, for an
-equatorial region, remarkably temperate.
-
-To finish with the zoology: the fifteen kinds of sea-fish which I
-procured here are all new species; they belong to twelve genera, all
-widely distributed, with the exception of Prionotus, of which the four
-previously known species live on the eastern side of America. Of
-land-shells I collected sixteen kinds (and two marked varieties), of
-which, with the exception of one Helix found at Tahiti, all are
-peculiar to this archipelago: a single fresh-water shell (Paludina) is
-common to Tahiti and Van Diemen's Land. Mr. Cuming, before our voyage
-procured here ninety species of sea-shells, and this does not include
-several species not yet specifically examined, of Trochus, Turbo,
-Monodonta, and Nassa. He has been kind enough to give me the following
-interesting results: Of the ninety shells, no less than forty-seven are
-unknown elsewhere--a wonderful fact, considering how widely distributed
-sea-shells generally are. Of the forty-three shells found in other
-parts of the world, twenty-five inhabit the western coast of America,
-and of these eight are distinguishable as varieties; the remaining
-eighteen (including one variety) were found by Mr. Cuming in the Low
-Archipelago, and some of them also at the Philippines. This fact of
-shells from islands in the central parts of the Pacific occurring here,
-deserves notice, for not one single sea-shell is known to be common to
-the islands of that ocean and to the west coast of America. The space
-of open sea running north and south off the west coast, separates two
-quite distinct conchological provinces; but at the Galapagos
-Archipelago we have a halting-place, where many new forms have been
-created, and whither these two great conchological provinces have each
-sent up several colonists. The American province has also sent here
-representative species; for there is a Galapageian species of
-Monoceros, a genus only found on the west coast of America; and there
-are Galapageian species of Fissurella and Cancellaria, genera common on
-the west coast, but not found (as I am informed by Mr. Cuming) in the
-central islands of the Pacific. On the other hand, there are
-Galapageian species of Oniscia and Stylifer, genera common to the West
-Indies and to the Chinese and Indian seas, but not found either on the
-west coast of America or in the central Pacific. I may here add, that
-after the comparison by Messrs. Cuming and Hinds of about 2000 shells
-from the eastern and western coasts of America, only one single shell
-was found in common, namely, the Purpura patula, which inhabits the
-West Indies, the coast of Panama, and the Galapagos. We have,
-therefore, in this quarter of the world, three great conchological
-sea-provinces, quite distinct, though surprisingly near each other,
-being separated by long north and south spaces either of land or of
-open sea.
-
-I took great pains in collecting the insects, but excepting Tierra del
-Fuego, I never saw in this respect so poor a country. Even in the upper
-and damp region I procured very few, excepting some minute Diptera and
-Hymenoptera, mostly of common mundane forms. As before remarked, the
-insects, for a tropical region, are of very small size and dull
-colours. Of beetles I collected twenty-five species (excluding a
-Dermestes and Corynetes imported, wherever a ship touches); of these,
-two belong to the Harpalidae, two to the Hydrophilidae, nine to three
-families of the Heteromera, and the remaining twelve to as many
-different families. This circumstance of insects (and I may add
-plants), where few in number, belonging to many different families, is,
-I believe, very general. Mr. Waterhouse, who has published [4] an
-account of the insects of this archipelago, and to whom I am indebted
-for the above details, informs me that there are several new genera:
-and that of the genera not new, one or two are American, and the rest
-of mundane distribution. With the exception of a wood-feeding Apate,
-and of one or probably two water-beetles from the American continent,
-all the species appear to be new.
-
-The botany of this group is fully as interesting as the zoology. Dr.
-J. Hooker will soon publish in the "Linnean Transactions" a full
-account of the Flora, and I am much indebted to him for the following
-details. Of flowering plants there are, as far as at present is known,
-185 species, and 40 cryptogamic species, making altogether 225; of this
-number I was fortunate enough to bring home 193. Of the flowering
-plants, 100 are new species, and are probably confined to this
-archipelago. Dr. Hooker conceives that, of the plants not so confined,
-at least 10 species found near the cultivated ground at Charles Island,
-have been imported. It is, I think, surprising that more American
-species have not been introduced naturally, considering that the
-distance is only between 500 and 600 miles from the continent, and that
-(according to Collnet, p. 58) drift-wood, bamboos, canes, and the nuts
-of a palm, are often washed on the south-eastern shores. The
-proportion of 100 flowering plants out of 183 (or 175 excluding the
-imported weeds) being new, is sufficient, I conceive, to make the
-Galapagos Archipelago a distinct botanical province; but this Flora is
-not nearly so peculiar as that of St. Helena, nor, as I am informed by
-Dr. Hooker, of Juan Fernandez. The peculiarity of the Galapageian
-Flora is best shown in certain families;--thus there are 21 species of
-Compositae, of which 20 are peculiar to this archipelago; these belong
-to twelve genera, and of these genera no less than ten are confined to
-the archipelago! Dr. Hooker informs me that the Flora has an
-undoubtedly Western American character; nor can he detect in it any
-affinity with that of the Pacific. If, therefore, we except the
-eighteen marine, the one fresh-water, and one land-shell, which have
-apparently come here as colonists from the central islands of the
-Pacific, and likewise the one distinct Pacific species of the
-Galapageian group of finches, we see that this archipelago, though
-standing in the Pacific Ocean, is zoologically part of America.
-
-If this character were owing merely to immigrants from America, there
-would be little remarkable in it; but we see that a vast majority of
-all the land animals, and that more than half of the flowering plants,
-are aboriginal productions. It was most striking to be surrounded by new
-birds, new reptiles, new shells, new insects, new plants, and yet by
-innumerable trifling details of structure, and even by the tones of
-voice and plumage of the birds, to have the temperate plains of
-Patagonia, or rather the hot dry deserts of Northern Chile, vividly
-brought before my eyes. Why, on these small points of land, which
-within a late geological period must have been covered by the ocean,
-which are formed by basaltic lava, and therefore differ in geological
-character from the American continent, and which are placed under a
-peculiar climate,--why were their aboriginal inhabitants, associated, I
-may add, in different proportions both in kind and number from those on
-the continent, and therefore acting on each other in a different
-manner--why were they created on American types of organization? It is
-probable that the islands of the Cape de Verd group resemble, in all
-their physical conditions, far more closely the Galapagos Islands, than
-these latter physically resemble the coast of America, yet the
-aboriginal inhabitants of the two groups are totally unlike; those of
-the Cape de Verd Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as the
-inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped with that of
-America.
-
-I have not as yet noticed by far the most remarkable feature in the
-natural history of this archipelago; it is, that the different islands
-to a considerable extent are inhabited by a different set of beings. My
-attention was first called to this fact by the Vice-Governor, Mr.
-Lawson, declaring that the tortoises differed from the different
-islands, and that he could with certainty tell from which island any
-one was brought. I did not for some time pay sufficient attention to
-this statement, and I had already partially mingled together the
-collections from two of the islands. I never dreamed that islands,
-about 50 or 60 miles apart, and most of them in sight of each other,
-formed of precisely the same rocks, placed under a quite similar
-climate, rising to a nearly equal height, would have been differently
-tenanted; but we shall soon see that this is the case. It is the fate
-of most voyagers, no sooner to discover what is most interesting in any
-locality, than they are hurried from it; but I ought, perhaps, to be
-thankful that I obtained sufficient materials to establish this most
-remarkable fact in the distribution of organic beings.
-
-The inhabitants, as I have said, state that they can distinguish the
-tortoises from the different islands; and that they differ not only in
-size, but in other characters. Captain Porter has described [5] those
-from Charles and from the nearest island to it, namely, Hood Island, as
-having their shells in front thick and turned up like a Spanish saddle,
-whilst the tortoises from James Island are rounder, blacker, and have a
-better taste when cooked. M. Bibron, moreover, informs me that he has
-seen what he considers two distinct species of tortoise from the
-Galapagos, but he does not know from which islands. The specimens that
-I brought from three islands were young ones: and probably owing to
-this cause neither Mr. Gray nor myself could find in them any specific
-differences. I have remarked that the marine Amblyrhynchus was larger
-at Albemarle Island than elsewhere; and M. Bibron informs me that he
-has seen two distinct aquatic species of this genus; so that the
-different islands probably have their representative species or races
-of the Amblyrhynchus, as well as of the tortoise. My attention was
-first thoroughly aroused, by comparing together the numerous specimens,
-shot by myself and several other parties on board, of the
-mocking-thrushes, when, to my astonishment, I discovered that all those
-from Charles Island belonged to one species (Mimus trifasciatus) all
-from Albemarle Island to M. parvulus; and all from James and Chatham
-Islands (between which two other islands are situated, as connecting
-links) belonged to M. melanotis. These two latter species are closely
-allied, and would by some ornithologists be considered as only
-well-marked races or varieties; but the Mimus trifasciatus is very
-distinct. Unfortunately most of the specimens of the finch tribe were
-mingled together; but I have strong reasons to suspect that some of the
-species of the sub-group Geospiza are confined to separate islands. If
-the different islands have their representatives of Geospiza, it may
-help to explain the singularly large number of the species of this
-sub-group in this one small archipelago, and as a probable consequence
-of their numbers, the perfectly graduated series in the size of their
-beaks. Two species of the sub-group Cactornis, and two of the
-Camarhynchus, were procured in the archipelago; and of the numerous
-specimens of these two sub-groups shot by four collectors at James
-Island, all were found to belong to one species of each; whereas the
-numerous specimens shot either on Chatham or Charles Island (for the
-two sets were mingled together) all belonged to the two other species:
-hence we may feel almost sure that these islands possess their
-respective species of these two sub-groups. In land-shells this law of
-distribution does not appear to hold good. In my very small collection
-of insects, Mr. Waterhouse remarks, that of those which were ticketed
-with their locality, not one was common to any two of the islands.
-
-If we now turn to the Flora, we shall find the aboriginal plants of the
-different islands wonderfully different. I give all the following
-results on the high authority of my friend Dr. J. Hooker. I may
-premise that I indiscriminately collected everything in flower on the
-different islands, and fortunately kept my collections separate. Too
-much confidence, however, must not be placed in the proportional
-results, as the small collections brought home by some other
-naturalists though in some respects confirming the results, plainly
-show that much remains to be done in the botany of this group: the
-Leguminosae, moreover, has as yet been only approximately worked out:--
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Number of
- Species
- confined
- to the
- Number of Number of Galapagos
- species species Number Archipelago
- Total found in confined confined but found
- Name Number other to the to the on more
- of of parts of Galapagos one than the
- Island Species the world Archipelago island one island
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- James 71 33 38 30 8
- Albemarle 46 18 26 22 4
- Chatham 32 16 16 12 4
- Charles 68 39 29 21 8
- (or 29, if
- the probably
- imported
- plants be
- subtracted.)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Hence we have the truly wonderful fact, that in James Island, of the
-thirty-eight Galapageian plants, or those found in no other part of the
-world, thirty are exclusively confined to this one island; and in
-Albemarle Island, of the twenty-six aboriginal Galapageian plants,
-twenty-two are confined to this one island, that is, only four are at
-present known to grow in the other islands of the archipelago; and so
-on, as shown in the above table, with the plants from Chatham and
-Charles Islands. This fact will, perhaps, be rendered even more
-striking, by giving a few illustrations:--thus, Scalesia, a remarkable
-arborescent genus of the Compositae, is confined to the archipelago: it
-has six species: one from Chatham, one from Albemarle, one from Charles
-Island, two from James Island, and the sixth from one of the three
-latter islands, but it is not known from which: not one of these six
-species grows on any two islands. Again, Euphorbia, a mundane or
-widely distributed genus, has here eight species, of which seven are
-confined to the archipelago, and not one found on any two islands:
-Acalypha and Borreria, both mundane genera, have respectively six and
-seven species, none of which have the same species on two islands, with
-the exception of one Borreria, which does occur on two islands. The
-species of the Compositae are particularly local; and Dr. Hooker has
-furnished me with several other most striking illustrations of the
-difference of the species on the different islands. He remarks that
-this law of distribution holds good both with those genera confined to
-the archipelago, and those distributed in other quarters of the world:
-in like manner we have seen that the different islands have their
-proper species of the mundane genus of tortoise, and of the widely
-distributed American genus of the mocking-thrush, as well as of two of
-the Galapageian sub-groups of finches, and almost certainly of the
-Galapageian genus Amblyrhynchus.
-
-The distribution of the tenants of this archipelago would not be nearly
-so wonderful, if, for instance, one island had a mocking-thrush, and a
-second island some other quite distinct genus,--if one island had its
-genus of lizard, and a second island another distinct genus, or none
-whatever;--or if the different islands were inhabited, not by
-representative species of the same genera of plants, but by totally
-different genera, as does to a certain extent hold good: for, to give
-one instance, a large berry-bearing tree at James Island has no
-representative species in Charles Island. But it is the circumstance,
-that several of the islands possess their own species of the tortoise,
-mocking-thrush, finches, and numerous plants, these species having the
-same general habits, occupying analogous situations, and obviously
-filling the same place in the natural economy of this archipelago, that
-strikes me with wonder. It may be suspected that some of these
-representative species, at least in the case of the tortoise and of
-some of the birds, may hereafter prove to be only well-marked races;
-but this would be of equally great interest to the philosophical
-naturalist. I have said that most of the islands are in sight of each
-other: I may specify that Charles Island is fifty miles from the
-nearest part of Chatham Island, and thirty-three miles from the nearest
-part of Albemarle Island. Chatham Island is sixty miles from the
-nearest part of James Island, but there are two intermediate islands
-between them which were not visited by me. James Island is only ten
-miles from the nearest part of Albemarle Island, but the two points
-where the collections were made are thirty-two miles apart. I must
-repeat, that neither the nature of the soil, nor height of the land,
-nor the climate, nor the general character of the associated beings,
-and therefore their action one on another, can differ much in the
-different islands. If there be any sensible difference in their
-climates, it must be between the Windward group (namely, Charles and
-Chatham Islands), and that to leeward; but there seems to be no
-corresponding difference in the productions of these two halves of the
-archipelago.
-
-The only light which I can throw on this remarkable difference in the
-inhabitants of the different islands, is, that very strong currents of
-the sea running in a westerly and W.N.W. direction must separate, as
-far as transportal by the sea is concerned, the southern islands from
-the northern ones; and between these northern islands a strong N.W.
-current was observed, which must effectually separate James and
-Albemarle Islands. As the archipelago is free to a most remarkable
-degree from gales of wind, neither the birds, insects, nor lighter
-seeds, would be blown from island to island. And lastly, the profound
-depth of the ocean between the islands, and their apparently recent (in
-a geological sense) volcanic origin, render it highly unlikely that
-they were ever united; and this, probably, is a far more important
-consideration than any other, with respect to the geographical
-distribution of their inhabitants. Reviewing the facts here given, one
-is astonished at the amount of creative force, if such an expression
-may be used, displayed on these small, barren, and rocky islands; and
-still more so, at its diverse yet analogous action on points so near
-each other. I have said that the Galapagos Archipelago might be called
-a satellite attached to America, but it should rather be called a group
-of satellites, physically similar, organically distinct, yet intimately
-related to each other, and all related in a marked, though much lesser
-degree, to the great American continent.
-
-I will conclude my description of the natural history of these islands,
-by giving an account of the extreme tameness of the birds.
-
-This disposition is common to all the terrestrial species; namely, to
-the mocking-thrushes, the finches, wrens, tyrant-flycatchers, the dove,
-and carrion-buzzard. All of them are often approached sufficiently
-near to be killed with a switch, and sometimes, as I myself tried, with
-a cap or hat. A gun is here almost superfluous; for with the muzzle I
-pushed a hawk off the branch of a tree. One day, whilst lying down, a
-mocking-thrush alighted on the edge of a pitcher, made of the shell of
-a tortoise, which I held in my hand, and began very quietly to sip the
-water; it allowed me to lift it from the ground whilst seated on the
-vessel: I often tried, and very nearly succeeded, in catching these
-birds by their legs. Formerly the birds appear to have been even tamer
-than at present. Cowley (in the year 1684) says that the "Turtledoves
-were so tame, that they would often alight on our hats and arms, so as
-that we could take them alive, they not fearing man, until such time as
-some of our company did fire at them, whereby they were rendered more
-shy." Dampier also, in the same year, says that a man in a morning's
-walk might kill six or seven dozen of these doves. At present,
-although certainly very tame, they do not alight on people's arms, nor
-do they suffer themselves to be killed in such large numbers. It is
-surprising that they have not become wilder; for these islands during
-the last hundred and fifty years have been frequently visited by
-bucaniers and whalers; and the sailors, wandering through the wood in
-search of tortoises, always take cruel delight in knocking down the
-little birds. These birds, although now still more persecuted, do not
-readily become wild. In Charles Island, which had then been colonized
-about six years, I saw a boy sitting by a well with a switch in his
-hand, with which he killed the doves and finches as they came to drink.
-He had already procured a little heap of them for his dinner, and he
-said that he had constantly been in the habit of waiting by this well
-for the same purpose. It would appear that the birds of this
-archipelago, not having as yet learnt that man is a more dangerous
-animal than the tortoise or the Amblyrhynchus, disregard him, in the
-same manner as in England shy birds, such as magpies, disregard the
-cows and horses grazing in our fields.
-
-The Falkland Islands offer a second instance of birds with a similar
-disposition. The extraordinary tameness of the little Opetiorhynchus
-has been remarked by Pernety, Lesson, and other voyagers. It is not,
-however, peculiar to that bird: the Polyborus, snipe, upland and
-lowland goose, thrush, bunting, and even some true hawks, are all more
-or less tame. As the birds are so tame there, where foxes, hawks, and
-owls occur, we may infer that the absence of all rapacious animals at
-the Galapagos, is not the cause of their tameness here. The upland
-geese at the Falklands show, by the precaution they take in building on
-the islets, that they are aware of their danger from the foxes; but
-they are not by this rendered wild towards man. This tameness of the
-birds, especially of the water-fowl, is strongly contrasted with the
-habits of the same species in Tierra del Fuego, where for ages past
-they have been persecuted by the wild inhabitants. In the Falklands,
-the sportsman may sometimes kill more of the upland geese in one day
-than he can carry home; whereas in Tierra del Fuego it is nearly as
-difficult to kill one, as it is in England to shoot the common wild
-goose.
-
-In the time of Pernety (1763), all the birds there appear to have been
-much tamer than at present; he states that the Opetiorhynchus would
-almost perch on his finger; and that with a wand he killed ten in half
-an hour. At that period the birds must have been about as tame as they
-now are at the Galapagos. They appear to have learnt caution more
-slowly at these latter islands than at the Falklands, where they have
-had proportionate means of experience; for besides frequent visits from
-vessels, those islands have been at intervals colonized during the
-entire period. Even formerly, when all the birds were so tame, it was
-impossible by Pernety's account to kill the black-necked swan--a bird
-of passage, which probably brought with it the wisdom learnt in foreign
-countries.
-
-I may add that, according to Du Bois, all the birds at Bourbon in
-1571-72, with the exception of the flamingoes and geese, were so
-extremely tame, that they could be caught by the hand, or killed in any
-number with a stick. Again, at Tristan d'Acunha in the Atlantic,
-Carmichael [6] states that the only two land-birds, a thrush and a
-bunting, were "so tame as to suffer themselves to be caught with a
-hand-net." From these several facts we may, I think, conclude, first,
-that the wildness of birds with regard to man, is a particular instinct
-directed against _him_, and not dependent upon any general degree of
-caution arising from other sources of danger; secondly, that it is not
-acquired by individual birds in a short time, even when much
-persecuted; but that in the course of successive generations it becomes
-hereditary. With domesticated animals we are accustomed to see new
-mental habits or instincts acquired or rendered hereditary; but with
-animals in a state of nature, it must always be most difficult to
-discover instances of acquired hereditary knowledge. In regard to the
-wildness of birds towards man, there is no way of accounting for it,
-except as an inherited habit: comparatively few young birds, in any one
-year, have been injured by man in England, yet almost all, even
-nestlings, are afraid of him; many individuals, on the other hand, both
-at the Galapagos and at the Falklands, have been pursued and injured by
-man, yet have not learned a salutary dread of him. We may infer from
-these facts, what havoc the introduction of any new beast of prey must
-cause in a country, before the instincts of the indigenous inhabitants
-have become adapted to the stranger's craft or power.
-
-[1] The progress of research has shown that some of these birds, which
-were then thought to be confined to the islands, occur on the American
-continent. The eminent ornithologist, Mr. Sclater, informs me that
-this is the case with the Strix punctatissima and Pyrocephalus nanus;
-and probably with the Otus Galapagoensis and Zenaida Galapagoensis: so
-that the number of endemic birds is reduced to twenty-three, or
-probably to twenty-one. Mr. Sclater thinks that one or two of these
-endemic forms should be ranked rather as varieties than species, which
-always seemed to me probable.
-
-[2] This is stated by Dr. Gunther (Zoolog. Soc. Jan 24th, 1859) to be a
-peculiar species, not known to inhabit any other country.
-
-[3] Voyage aux Quatre Iles d'Afrique. With respect to the Sandwich
-Islands, see Tyerman and Bennett's Journal, vol. i. p. 434. For
-Mauritius, see Voyage par un Officier, etc., part i. p. 170. There are
-no frogs in the Canary Islands (Webb et Berthelot, Hist. Nat. des Iles
-Canaries). I saw none at St. Jago in the Cape de Verds. There are
-none at St. Helena.
-
-[4] Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 19.
-
-[5] Voyage in the U. S. ship Essex, vol. i. p. 215.
-
-[6] Linn. Trans., vol. xii. p. 496. The most anomalous fact on this
-subject which I have met with is the wildness of the small birds in the
-Arctic parts of North America (as described by Richardson, Fauna Bor.,
-vol. ii. p. 332), where they are said never to be persecuted. This
-case is the more strange, because it is asserted that some of the same
-species in their winter-quarters in the United States are tame. There
-is much, as Dr. Richardson well remarks, utterly inexplicable connected
-with the different degrees of shyness and care with which birds conceal
-their nests. How strange it is that the English wood-pigeon, generally
-so wild a bird, should very frequently rear its young in shrubberies
-close to houses!
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
-
-Pass through the Low Archipelago--Tahiti--Aspect--Vegetation on the
-Mountains--View of Eimeo--Excursion into the Interior--Profound
-Ravines--Succession of Waterfalls--Number of wild useful
-Plants--Temperance of the Inhabitants--Their moral state--Parliament
-convened--New Zealand--Bay of Islands--Hippahs--Excursion to
-Waimate--Missionary Establishment--English Weeds now run
-wild--Waiomio--Funeral of a New Zealand Woman--Sail for Australia.
-
-
-OCTOBER 20th.--The survey of the Galapagos Archipelago being concluded,
-we steered towards Tahiti and commenced our long passage of 3200 miles.
-In the course of a few days we sailed out of the gloomy and clouded
-ocean-district which extends during the winter far from the coast of
-South America. We then enjoyed bright and clear weather, while running
-pleasantly along at the rate of 150 or 160 miles a day before the
-steady trade-wind. The temperature in this more central part of the
-Pacific is higher than near the American shore. The thermometer in the
-poop cabin, by night and day, ranged between 80 and 83 degs., which
-feels very pleasant; but with one degree or two higher, the heat
-becomes oppressive. We passed through the Low or Dangerous
-Archipelago, and saw several of those most curious rings of coral land,
-just rising above the water's edge, which have been called Lagoon
-Islands. A long and brilliantly white beach is capped by a margin of
-green vegetation; and the strip, looking either way, rapidly narrows
-away in the distance, and sinks beneath the horizon From the mast-head
-a wide expanse of smooth water can be seen within the ring. These low
-hollow coral islands bear no proportion to the vast ocean out of which
-they abruptly rise; and it seems wonderful, that such weak invaders are
-not overwhelmed, by the all-powerful and never-tiring waves of that
-great sea, miscalled the Pacific.
-
-November 15th.--At daylight, Tahiti, an island which must for ever
-remain classical to the voyager in the South Sea, was in view. At a
-distance the appearance was not attractive. The luxuriant vegetation
-of the lower part could not yet be seen, and as the clouds rolled past,
-the wildest and most precipitous peaks showed themselves towards the
-centre of the island. As soon as we anchored in Matavai Bay, we were
-surrounded by canoes. This was our Sunday, but the Monday of Tahiti:
-if the case had been reversed, we should not have received a single
-visit; for the injunction not to launch a canoe on the sabbath is
-rigidly obeyed. After dinner we landed to enjoy all the delights
-produced by the first impressions of a new country, and that country
-the charming Tahiti. A crowd of men, women, and children, was
-collected on the memorable Point Venus, ready to receive us with
-laughing, merry faces. They marshalled us towards the house of Mr.
-Wilson, the missionary of the district, who met us on the road, and
-gave us a very friendly reception. After sitting a very short time in
-his house, we separated to walk about, but returned there in the
-evening.
-
-The land capable of cultivation, is scarcely in any part more than a
-fringe of low alluvial soil, accumulated round the base of the
-mountains, and protected from the waves of the sea by a coral reef,
-which encircles the entire line of coast. Within the reef there is an
-expanse of smooth water, like that of a lake, where the canoes of the
-natives can ply with safety and where ships anchor. The low land which
-comes down to the beach of coral-sand, is covered by the most beautiful
-productions of the intertropical regions. In the midst of bananas,
-orange, cocoa-nut, and bread-fruit trees, spots are cleared where yams,
-sweet potatoes, and sugar-cane, and pine-apples are cultivated. Even
-the brushwood is an imported fruit-tree, namely, the guava, which from
-its abundance has become as noxious as a weed. In Brazil I have often
-admired the varied beauty of the bananas, palms, and orange-trees
-contrasted together; and here we also have the bread-fruit, conspicuous
-from its large, glossy, and deeply digitated leaf. It is admirable to
-behold groves of a tree, sending forth its branches with the vigour of
-an English oak, loaded with large and most nutritious fruit. However
-seldom the usefulness of an object can account for the pleasure of
-beholding it, in the case of these beautiful woods, the knowledge of
-their high productiveness no doubt enters largely into the feeling of
-admiration. The little winding paths, cool from the surrounding shade,
-led to the scattered houses; the owners of which everywhere gave us a
-cheerful and most hospitable reception.
-
-I was pleased with nothing so much as with the inhabitants. There is a
-mildness in the expression of their countenances which at once banishes
-the idea of a savage; and intelligence which shows that they are
-advancing in civilization. The common people, when working, keep the
-upper part of their bodies quite naked; and it is then that the
-Tahitians are seen to advantage. They are very tall, broad-shouldered,
-athletic, and well-proportioned. It has been remarked, that it
-requires little habit to make a dark skin more pleasing and natural to
-the eye of an European than his own colour. A white man bathing by the
-side of a Tahitian, was like a plant bleached by the gardener's art
-compared with a fine dark green one growing vigorously in the open
-fields. Most of the men are tattooed, and the ornaments follow the
-curvature of the body so gracefully, that they have a very elegant
-effect. One common pattern, varying in its details, is somewhat like
-the crown of a palm-tree. It springs from the central line of the back,
-and gracefully curls round both sides. The simile may be a fanciful
-one, but I thought the body of a man thus ornamented was like the trunk
-of a noble tree embraced by a delicate creeper.
-
-Many of the elder people had their feet covered with small figures, so
-placed as to resemble a sock. This fashion, however, is partly gone
-by, and has been succeeded by others. Here, although fashion is far
-from immutable, every one must abide by that prevailing in his youth.
-An old man has thus his age for ever stamped on his body, and he cannot
-assume the airs of a young dandy. The women are tattooed in the same
-manner as the men, and very commonly on their fingers. One unbecoming
-fashion is now almost universal: namely, shaving the hair from the
-upper part of the head, in a circular form, so as to leave only an
-outer ring. The missionaries have tried to persuade the people to
-change this habit; but it is the fashion, and that is a sufficient
-answer at Tahiti, as well as at Paris. I was much disappointed in the
-personal appearance of the women: they are far inferior in every
-respect to the men. The custom of wearing a white or scarlet flower in
-the back of the head, or through a small hole in each ear, is pretty. A
-crown of woven cocoa-nut leaves is also worn as a shade for the eyes.
-The women appear to be in greater want of some becoming costume even
-than the men.
-
-Nearly all the natives understand a little English--that is, they know
-the names of common things; and by the aid of this, together with
-signs, a lame sort of conversation could be carried on. In returning
-in the evening to the boat, we stopped to witness a very pretty scene.
-Numbers of children were playing on the beach, and had lighted bonfires
-which illumined the placid sea and surrounding trees; others, in
-circles, were singing Tahitian verses. We seated ourselves on the
-sand, and joined their party. The songs were impromptu, and I believe
-related to our arrival: one little girl sang a line, which the rest
-took up in parts, forming a very pretty chorus. The whole scene made
-us unequivocally aware that we were seated on the shores of an island
-in the far-famed South Sea.
-
-17th.--This day is reckoned in the log-book as Tuesday the 17th,
-instead of Monday the 16th, owing to our, so far, successful chase of
-the sun. Before breakfast the ship was hemmed in by a flotilla of
-canoes; and when the natives were allowed to come on board, I suppose
-there could not have been less than two hundred. It was the opinion of
-every one that it would have been difficult to have picked out an equal
-number from any other nation, who would have given so little trouble.
-Everybody brought something for sale: shells were the main articles of
-trade. The Tahitians now fully understand the value of money, and
-prefer it to old clothes or other articles. The various coins,
-however, of English and Spanish denomination puzzle them, and they
-never seemed to think the small silver quite secure until changed into
-dollars. Some of the chiefs have accumulated considerable sums of
-money. One chief, not long since, offered 800 dollars (about 160
-pounds sterling) for a small vessel; and frequently they purchase
-whale-boats and horses at the rate of from 50 to 100 dollars.
-
-After breakfast I went on shore, and ascended the nearest slope to a
-height of between two and three thousand feet. The outer mountains are
-smooth and conical, but steep; and the old volcanic rocks, of which
-they are formed, have been cut through by many profound ravines,
-diverging from the central broken parts of the island to the coast.
-Having crossed the narrow low girt of inhabited and fertile land, I
-followed a smooth steep ridge between two of the deep ravines. The
-vegetation was singular, consisting almost exclusively of small dwarf
-ferns, mingled higher up, with coarse grass; it was not very dissimilar
-from that on some of the Welsh hills, and this so close above the
-orchard of tropical plants on the coast was very surprising. At the
-highest point, which I reached, trees again appeared. Of the three
-zones of comparative luxuriance, the lower one owes its moisture, and
-therefore fertility, to its flatness; for, being scarcely raised above
-the level of the sea, the water from the higher land drains away
-slowly. The intermediate zone does not, like the upper one, reach into
-a damp and cloudy atmosphere, and therefore remains sterile. The woods
-in the upper zone are very pretty, tree-ferns replacing the cocoa-nuts
-on the coast. It must not, however, be supposed that these woods at
-all equal in splendour the forests of Brazil. The vast numbers of
-productions, which characterize a continent, cannot be expected to
-occur in an island.
-
-From the highest point which I attained, there was a good view of the
-distant island of Eimeo, dependent on the same sovereign with Tahiti.
-On the lofty and broken pinnacles, white massive clouds were piled up,
-which formed an island in the blue sky, as Eimeo itself did in the blue
-ocean. The island, with the exception of one small gateway, is
-completely encircled by a reef. At this distance, a narrow but
-well-defined brilliantly white line was alone visible, where the waves
-first encountered the wall of coral. The mountains rose abruptly out
-of the glassy expanse of the lagoon, included within this narrow white
-line, outside which the heaving waters of the ocean were dark-coloured.
-The view was striking: it may aptly be compared to a framed engraving,
-where the frame represents the breakers, the marginal paper the smooth
-lagoon, and the drawing the island itself. When in the evening I
-descended from the mountain, a man, whom I had pleased with a trifling
-gift, met me, bringing with him hot roasted bananas, a pine-apple, and
-cocoa-nuts. After walking under a burning sun, I do not know anything
-more delicious than the milk of a young cocoa-nut. Pine-apples are
-here so abundant that the people eat them in the same wasteful manner
-as we might turnips. They are of an excellent flavor--perhaps even
-better than those cultivated in England; and this I believe is the
-highest compliment which can be paid to any fruit. Before going on
-board, Mr. Wilson interpreted for me to the Tahitian who had paid me so
-adroit an attention, that I wanted him and another man to accompany me
-on a short excursion into the mountains.
-
-18th.--In the morning I came on shore early, bringing with me some
-provisions in a bag, and two blankets for myself and servant. These
-were lashed to each end of a long pole, which was alternately carried
-by my Tahitian companions on their shoulders. These men are accustomed
-thus to carry, for a whole day, as much as fifty pounds at each end of
-their poles. I told my guides to provide themselves with food and
-clothing; but they said that there was plenty of food in the mountains,
-and for clothing, that their skins were sufficient. Our line of march
-was the valley of Tiaauru, down which a river flows into the sea by
-Point Venus. This is one of the principal streams in the island, and
-its source lies at the base of the loftiest central pinnacles, which
-rise to a height of about 7000 feet. The whole island is so
-mountainous that the only way to penetrate into the interior is to
-follow up the valleys. Our road, at first, lay through woods which
-bordered each side of the river; and the glimpses of the lofty central
-peaks, seen as through an avenue, with here and there a waving
-cocoa-nut tree on one side, were extremely picturesque. The valley
-soon began to narrow, and the sides to grow lofty and more precipitous.
-After having walked between three and four hours, we found the width of
-the ravine scarcely exceeded that of the bed of the stream. On each
-hand the walls were nearly vertical, yet from the soft nature of the
-volcanic strata, trees and a rank vegetation sprung from every
-projecting ledge. These precipices must have been some thousand feet
-high; and the whole formed a mountain gorge far more magnificent than
-anything which I had ever before beheld. Until the midday sun stood
-vertically over the ravine, the air felt cool and damp, but now it
-became very sultry. Shaded by a ledge of rock, beneath a facade of
-columnar lava, we ate our dinner. My guides had already procured a
-dish of small fish and fresh-water prawns. They carried with them a
-small net stretched on a hoop; and where the water was deep and in
-eddies, they dived, and like otters, with their eyes open followed the
-fish into holes and corners, and thus caught them.
-
-The Tahitians have the dexterity of amphibious animals in the water. An
-anecdote mentioned by Ellis shows how much they feel at home in this
-element. When a horse was landing for Pomarre in 1817, the slings
-broke, and it fell into the water; immediately the natives jumped
-overboard, and by their cries and vain efforts at assistance almost
-drowned it. As soon, however, as it reached the shore, the whole
-population took to flight, and tried to hide themselves from the
-man-carrying pig, as they christened the horse.
-
-A little higher up, the river divided itself into three little streams.
-The two northern ones were impracticable, owing to a succession of
-waterfalls which descended from the jagged summit of the highest
-mountain; the other to all appearance was equally inaccessible, but we
-managed to ascend it by a most extraordinary road. The sides of the
-valley were here nearly precipitous, but, as frequently happens with
-stratified rocks, small ledges projected, which were thickly covered by
-wild bananas, lilaceous plants, and other luxuriant productions of the
-tropics. The Tahitians, by climbing amongst these ledges, searching
-for fruit, had discovered a track by which the whole precipice could be
-scaled. The first ascent from the valley was very dangerous; for it was
-necessary to pass a steeply inclined face of naked rock, by the aid of
-ropes which we brought with us. How any person discovered that this
-formidable spot was the only point where the side of the mountain was
-practicable, I cannot imagine. We then cautiously walked along one of
-the ledges till we came to one of the three streams. This ledge formed
-a flat spot, above which a beautiful cascade, some hundred feet in
-height, poured down its waters, and beneath, another high cascade fell
-into the main stream in the valley below. From this cool and shady
-recess we made a circuit to avoid the overhanging waterfall. As
-before, we followed little projecting ledges, the danger being partly
-concealed by the thickness of the vegetation. In passing from one of
-the ledges to another, there was a vertical wall of rock. One of the
-Tahitians, a fine active man, placed the trunk of a tree against this,
-climbed up it, and then by the aid of crevices reached the summit. He
-fixed the ropes to a projecting point, and lowered them for our dog and
-luggage, and then we clambered up ourselves. Beneath the ledge on
-which the dead tree was placed, the precipice must have been five or
-six hundred feet deep; and if the abyss had not been partly concealed
-by the overhanging ferns and lilies my head would have turned giddy,
-and nothing should have induced me to have attempted it. We continued
-to ascend, sometimes along ledges, and sometimes along knife-edged
-ridges, having on each hand profound ravines. In the Cordillera I have
-seen mountains on a far grander scale, but for abruptness, nothing at
-all comparable with this. In the evening we reached a flat little spot
-on the banks of the same stream, which we had continued to follow, and
-which descends in a chain of waterfalls: here we bivouacked for the
-night. On each side of the ravine there were great beds of the
-mountain-banana, covered with ripe fruit. Many of these plants were
-from twenty to twenty-five feet high, and from three to four in
-circumference. By the aid of strips of bark for rope, the stems of
-bamboos for rafters, and the large leaf of the banana for a thatch, the
-Tahitians in a few minutes built us an excellent house; and with
-withered leaves made a soft bed.
-
-They then proceeded to make a fire, and cook our evening meal. A light
-was procured, by rubbing a blunt pointed stick in a groove made in
-another, as if with intention of deepening it, until by the friction
-the dust became ignited. A peculiarly white and very light wood (the
-Hibiscus tiliareus) is alone used for this purpose: it is the same
-which serves for poles to carry any burden, and for the floating
-out-riggers to their canoes. The fire was produced in a few seconds:
-but to a person who does not understand the art, it requires, as I
-found, the greatest exertion; but at last, to my great pride, I
-succeeded in igniting the dust. The Gaucho in the Pampas uses a
-different method: taking an elastic stick about eighteen inches long,
-he presses one end on his breast, and the other pointed end into a hole
-in a piece of wood, and then rapidly turns the curved part, like a
-carpenter's centre-bit. The Tahitians having made a small fire of
-sticks, placed a score of stones, of about the size of cricket-balls,
-on the burning wood. In about ten minutes the sticks were consumed,
-and the stones hot. They had previously folded up in small parcels of
-leaves, pieces of beef, fish, ripe and unripe bananas, and the tops of
-the wild arum. These green parcels were laid in a layer between two
-layers of the hot stones, and the whole then covered up with earth, so
-that no smoke or steam could escape. In about a quarter of an hour,
-the whole was most deliciously cooked. The choice green parcels were
-now laid on a cloth of banana leaves, and with a cocoa-nut shell we
-drank the cool water of the running stream; and thus we enjoyed our
-rustic meal.
-
-I could not look on the surrounding plants without admiration. On every
-side were forests of banana; the fruit of which, though serving for
-food in various ways, lay in heaps decaying on the ground. In front of
-us there was an extensive brake of wild sugar-cane; and the stream was
-shaded by the dark green knotted stem of the Ava,--so famous in former
-days for its powerful intoxicating effects. I chewed a piece, and
-found that it had an acrid and unpleasant taste, which would have
-induced any one at once to have pronounced it poisonous. Thanks to the
-missionaries, this plant now thrives only in these deep ravines,
-innocuous to every one. Close by I saw the wild arum, the roots of
-which, when well baked, are good to eat, and the young leaves better
-than spinach. There was the wild yam, and a liliaceous plant called
-Ti, which grows in abundance, and has a soft brown root, in shape and
-size like a huge log of wood: this served us for dessert, for it is as
-sweet as treacle, and with a pleasant taste. There were, moreover,
-several other wild fruits, and useful vegetables. The little stream,
-besides its cool water, produced eels, and cray-fish. I did indeed
-admire this scene, when I compared it with an uncultivated one in the
-temperate zones. I felt the force of the remark, that man, at least
-savage man, with his reasoning powers only partly developed, is the
-child of the tropics.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, I strolled beneath the gloomy shade of
-the bananas up the course of the stream. My walk was soon brought to a
-close, by coming to a waterfall between two and three hundred feet
-high; and again above this there was another. I mention all these
-waterfalls in this one brook, to give a general idea of the inclination
-of the land. In the little recess where the water fell, it did not
-appear that a breath of wind had ever blown. The thin edges of the
-great leaves of the banana, damp with spray, were unbroken, instead of
-being, as is so generally the case, split into a thousand shreds. From
-our position, almost suspended on the mountain side, there were
-glimpses into the depths of the neighbouring valleys; and the lofty
-points of the central mountains, towering up within sixty degrees of
-the zenith, hid half the evening sky. Thus seated, it was a sublime
-spectacle to watch the shades of night gradually obscuring the last and
-highest pinnacles.
-
-Before we laid ourselves down to sleep, the elder Tahitian fell on his
-knees, and with closed eyes repeated a long prayer in his native
-tongue. He prayed as a Christian should do, with fitting reverence,
-and without the fear of ridicule or any ostentation of piety. At our
-meals neither of the men would taste food, without saying beforehand a
-short grace. Those travellers who think that a Tahitian prays only when
-the eyes of the missionary are fixed on him, should have slept with us
-that night on the mountain-side. Before morning it rained very
-heavily; but the good thatch of banana-leaves kept us dry.
-
-November 19th.--At daylight my friends, after their morning prayer,
-prepared an excellent breakfast in the same manner as in the evening.
-They themselves certainly partook of it largely; indeed I never saw any
-men eat near so much. I suppose such enormously capacious stomachs
-must be the effect of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit
-and vegetables, which contain, in a given bulk, a comparatively small
-portion of nutriment. Unwittingly, I was the means of my companions
-breaking, as I afterwards learned, one of their own laws, and
-resolutions: I took with me a flask of spirits, which they could not
-refuse to partake of; but as often as they drank a little, they put
-their fingers before their mouths, and uttered the word "Missionary."
-About two years ago, although the use of the ava was prevented,
-drunkenness from the introduction of spirits became very prevalent. The
-missionaries prevailed on a few good men, who saw that their country
-was rapidly going to ruin, to join with them in a Temperance Society.
-From good sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen were at last
-persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed, that no spirits
-should be allowed to be introduced into the island, and that he who
-sold and he who bought the forbidden article should be punished by a
-fine. With remarkable justice, a certain period was allowed for stock
-in hand to be sold, before the law came into effect. But when it did,
-a general search was made, in which even the houses of the missionaries
-were not exempted, and all the ava (as the natives call all ardent
-spirits) was poured on the ground. When one reflects on the effect of
-intemperance on the aborigines of the two Americas, I think it will be
-acknowledged that every well-wisher of Tahiti owes no common debt of
-gratitude to the missionaries. As long as the little island of St.
-Helena remained under the government of the East India Company,
-spirits, owing to the great injury they had produced, were not allowed
-to be imported; but wine was supplied from the Cape of Good Hope. It
-is rather a striking and not very gratifying fact, that in the same
-year that spirits were allowed to be sold in Helena, their use was
-banished from Tahiti by the free will of the people.
-
-After breakfast we proceeded on our Journey. As my object was merely
-to see a little of the interior scenery, we returned by another track,
-which descended into the main valley lower down. For some distance we
-wound, by a most intricate path, along the side of the mountain which
-formed the valley. In the less precipitous parts we passed through
-extensive groves of the wild banana. The Tahitians, with their naked,
-tattooed bodies, their heads ornamented with flowers, and seen in the
-dark shade of these groves, would have formed a fine picture of man
-inhabiting some primeval land. In our descent we followed the line of
-ridges; these were exceedingly narrow, and for considerable lengths
-steep as a ladder; but all clothed with vegetation. The extreme care
-necessary in poising each step rendered the walk fatiguing. I did not
-cease to wonder at these ravines and precipices: when viewing the
-country from one of the knife-edged ridges, the point of support was so
-small, that the effect was nearly the same as it must be from a
-balloon. In this descent we had occasion to use the ropes only once,
-at the point where we entered the main valley. We slept under the same
-ledge of rock where we had dined the day before: the night was fine,
-but from the depth and narrowness of the gorge, profoundly dark.
-
-Before actually seeing this country, I found it difficult to understand
-two facts mentioned by Ellis; namely, that after the murderous battles
-of former times, the survivors on the conquered side retired into the
-mountains, where a handful of men could resist a multitude. Certainly
-half a dozen men, at the spot where the Tahitian reared the old tree,
-could easily have repulsed thousands. Secondly, that after the
-introduction of Christianity, there were wild men who lived in the
-mountains, and whose retreats were unknown to the more civilized
-inhabitants.
-
-November 20th.--In the morning we started early, and reached Matavai at
-noon. On the road we met a large party of noble athletic men, going
-for wild bananas. I found that the ship, on account of the difficulty
-in watering, had moved to the harbour of Papawa, to which place I
-immediately walked. This is a very pretty spot. The cove is
-surrounded by reefs, and the water as smooth as in a lake. The
-cultivated ground, with its beautiful productions, interspersed with
-cottages, comes close down to the water's edge. From the varying
-accounts which I had read before reaching these islands, I was very
-anxious to form, from my own observation, a judgment of their moral
-state,--although such judgment would necessarily be very imperfect.
-First impressions at all times very much depend on one's previously
-acquired ideas. My notions were drawn from Ellis's "Polynesian
-Researches"--an admirable and most interesting work, but naturally
-looking at everything under a favourable point of view, from Beechey's
-Voyage; and from that of Kotzebue, which is strongly adverse to the
-whole missionary system. He who compares these three accounts will, I
-think, form a tolerably accurate conception of the present state of
-Tahiti. One of my impressions which I took from the two last
-authorities, was decidedly incorrect; viz., that the Tahitians had
-become a gloomy race, and lived in fear of the missionaries. Of the
-latter feeling I saw no trace, unless, indeed, fear and respect be
-confounded under one name. Instead of discontent being a common
-feeling, it would be difficult in Europe to pick out of a crowd half so
-many merry and happy faces. The prohibition of the flute and dancing
-is inveighed against as wrong and foolish;--the more than presbyterian
-manner of keeping the sabbath is looked at in a similar light. On
-these points I will not pretend to offer any opinion to men who have
-resided as many years as I was days on the island.
-
-On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and religion of the
-inhabitants are highly creditable. There are many who attack, even
-more acrimoniously than Kotzebue, both the missionaries, their system,
-and the effects produced by it. Such reasoners never compare the
-present state with that of the island only twenty years ago; nor even
-with that of Europe at this day; but they compare it with the high
-standard of Gospel perfection. They expect the missionaries to effect
-that which the Apostles themselves failed to do. Inasmuch as the
-condition of the people falls short of this high standard, blame is
-attached to the missionary, instead of credit for that which he has
-effected. They forget, or will not remember, that human sacrifices,
-and the power of an idolatrous priesthood--a system of profligacy
-unparalleled in any other part of the world--infanticide a consequence
-of that system--bloody wars, where the conquerors spared neither women
-nor children--that all these have been abolished; and that dishonesty,
-intemperance, and licentiousness have been greatly reduced by the
-introduction of Christianity. In a voyager to forget these things is
-base ingratitude; for should he chance to be at the point of shipwreck
-on some unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that the lesson of
-the missionary may have extended thus far.
-
-In point of morality, the virtue of the women, it has been often said,
-is most open to exception. But before they are blamed too severely, it
-will be well distinctly to call to mind the scenes described by Captain
-Cook and Mr. Banks, in which the grandmothers and mothers of the
-present race played a part. Those who are most severe, should consider
-how much of the morality of the women in Europe is owing to the system
-early impressed by mothers on their daughters, and how much in each
-individual case to the precepts of religion. But it is useless to
-argue against such reasoners;--I believe that, disappointed in not
-finding the field of licentiousness quite so open as formerly, they
-will not give credit to a morality which they do not wish to practise,
-or to a religion which they undervalue, if not despise.
-
-Sunday, 22nd.--The harbour of Papiete, where the queen resides, may be
-considered as the capital of the island: it is also the seat of
-government, and the chief resort of shipping. Captain Fitz Roy took a
-party there this day to hear divine service, first in the Tahitian
-language, and afterwards in our own. Mr. Pritchard, the leading
-missionary in the island, performed the service. The chapel consisted
-of a large airy framework of wood; and it was filled to excess by tidy,
-clean people, of all ages and both sexes. I was rather disappointed in
-the apparent degree of attention; but I believe my expectations were
-raised too high. At all events the appearance was quite equal to that
-in a country church in England. The singing of the hymns was decidedly
-very pleasing, but the language from the pulpit, although fluently
-delivered, did not sound well: a constant repetition of words, like
-"tata ta, mata mai," rendered it monotonous. After English service, a
-party returned on foot to Matavai. It was a pleasant walk, sometimes
-along the sea-beach and sometimes under the shade of the many beautiful
-trees.
-
-About two years ago, a small vessel under English colours was plundered
-by some of the inhabitants of the Low Islands, which were then under
-the dominion of the Queen of Tahiti. It was believed that the
-perpetrators were instigated to this act by some indiscreet laws issued
-by her majesty. The British government demanded compensation; which
-was acceded to, and the sum of nearly three thousand dollars was agreed
-to be paid on the first of last September. The Commodore at Lima
-ordered Captain Fitz Roy to inquire concerning this debt, and to demand
-satisfaction if it were not paid. Captain Fitz Roy accordingly
-requested an interview with the Queen Pomarre, since famous from the
-ill-treatment she had received from the French; and a parliament was
-held to consider the question, at which all the principal chiefs of the
-island and the queen were assembled. I will not attempt to describe
-what took place, after the interesting account given by Captain Fitz
-Roy. The money, it appeared, had not been paid; perhaps the alleged
-reasons were rather equivocal; but otherwise I cannot sufficiently
-express our general surprise at the extreme good sense, the reasoning
-powers, moderation, candour, and prompt resolution, which were
-displayed on all sides. I believe we all left the meeting with a very
-different opinion of the Tahitians, from what we entertained when we
-entered. The chiefs and people resolved to subscribe and complete the
-sum which was wanting; Captain Fitz Roy urged that it was hard that
-their private property should be sacrificed for the crimes of distant
-islanders. They replied, that they were grateful for his
-consideration, but that Pomarre was their Queen, and that they were
-determined to help her in this her difficulty. This resolution and its
-prompt execution, for a book was opened early the next morning, made a
-perfect conclusion to this very remarkable scene of loyalty and good
-feeling.
-
-After the main discussion was ended, several of the chiefs took the
-opportunity of asking Captain Fitz Roy many intelligent questions on
-international customs and laws, relating to the treatment of ships and
-foreigners. On some points, as soon as the decision was made, the law
-was issued verbally on the spot. This Tahitian parliament lasted for
-several hours; and when it was over Captain Fitz Roy invited Queen
-Pomarre to pay the Beagle a visit.
-
-November 25th.--In the evening four boats were sent for her majesty;
-the ship was dressed with flags, and the yards manned on her coming on
-board. She was accompanied by most of the chiefs. The behaviour of
-all was very proper: they begged for nothing, and seemed much pleased
-with Captain Fitz Roy's presents. The queen is a large awkward woman,
-without any beauty, grace or dignity. She has only one royal
-attribute: a perfect immovability of expression under all
-circumstances, and that rather a sullen one. The rockets were most
-admired, and a deep "Oh!" could be heard from the shore, all round the
-dark bay, after each explosion. The sailors' songs were also much
-admired; and the queen said she thought that one of the most boisterous
-ones certainly could not be a hymn! The royal party did not return on
-shore till past midnight.
-
-26th.--In the evening, with a gentle land-breeze, a course was steered
-for New Zealand; and as the sun set, we had a farewell view of the
-mountains of Tahiti--the island to which every voyager has offered up
-his tribute of admiration.
-
-December 19th.--In the evening we saw in the distance New Zealand. We
-may now consider that we have nearly crossed the Pacific. It is
-necessary to sail over this great ocean to comprehend its immensity.
-Moving quickly onwards for weeks together, we meet with nothing but the
-same blue, profoundly deep, ocean. Even within the archipelagoes, the
-islands are mere specks, and far distant one from the other. Accustomed
-to look at maps drawn on a small scale, where dots, shading, and names
-are crowded together, we do not rightly judge how infinitely small the
-proportion of dry land is to water of this vast expanse. The meridian
-of the Antipodes has likewise been passed; and now every league, it
-made us happy to think, was one league nearer to England. These
-Antipodes call to one's mind old recollections of childish doubt and
-wonder. Only the other day I looked forward to this airy barrier as a
-definite point in our voyage homewards; but now I find it, and all such
-resting-places for the imagination, are like shadows, which a man
-moving onwards cannot catch. A gale of wind lasting for some days, has
-lately given us full leisure to measure the future stages in our
-homeward voyage, and to wish most earnestly for its termination.
-
-December 21st.--Early in the morning we entered the Bay of Islands, and
-being becalmed for some hours near the mouth, we did not reach the
-anchorage till the middle of the day. The country is hilly, with a
-smooth outline, and is deeply intersected by numerous arms of the sea
-extending from the bay. The surface appears from a distance as if
-clothed with coarse pasture, but this in truth is nothing but fern. On
-the more distant hills, as well as in parts of the valleys, there is a
-good deal of woodland. The general tint of the landscape is not a
-bright green; and it resembles the country a short distance to the
-south of Concepcion in Chile. In several parts of the bay, little
-villages of square tidy looking houses are scattered close down to the
-water's edge. Three whaling-ships were lying at anchor, and a canoe
-every now and then crossed from shore to shore; with these exceptions,
-an air of extreme quietness reigned over the whole district. Only a
-single canoe came alongside. This, and the aspect of the whole scene,
-afforded a remarkable, and not very pleasing contrast, with our joyful
-and boisterous welcome at Tahiti.
-
-In the afternoon we went on shore to one of the larger groups of
-houses, which yet hardly deserves the title of a village. Its name is
-Pahia: it is the residence of the missionaries; and there are no native
-residents except servants and labourers. In the vicinity of the Bay of
-Islands, the number of Englishmen, including their families, amounts to
-between two and three hundred. All the cottages, many of which are
-whitewashed and look very neat, are the property of the English. The
-hovels of the natives are so diminutive and paltry, that they can
-scarcely be perceived from a distance. At Pahia, it was quite pleasing
-to behold the English flowers in the gardens before the houses; there
-were roses of several kinds, honeysuckle, jasmine, stocks, and whole
-hedges of sweetbrier.
-
-December 22nd.--In the morning I went out walking; but I soon found
-that the country was very impracticable. All the hills are thickly
-covered with tall fern, together with a low bush which grows like a
-cypress; and very little ground has been cleared or cultivated. I then
-tried the sea-beach; but proceeding towards either hand, my walk was
-soon stopped by salt-water creeks and deep brooks. The communication
-between the inhabitants of the different parts of the bay, is (as in
-Chiloe) almost entirely kept up by boats. I was surprised to find that
-almost every hill which I ascended, had been at some former time more
-or less fortified. The summits were cut into steps or successive
-terraces, and frequently they had been protected by deep trenches. I
-afterwards observed that the principal hills inland in like manner
-showed an artificial outline. These are the Pas, so frequently
-mentioned by Captain Cook under the name of "hippah;" the difference of
-sound being owing to the prefixed article.
-
-That the Pas had formerly been much used, was evident from the piles of
-shells, and the pits in which, as I was informed, sweet potatoes used
-to be kept as a reserve. As there was no water on these hills, the
-defenders could never have anticipated a long siege, but only a hurried
-attack for plunder, against which the successive terraces would have
-afforded good protection. The general introduction of fire-arms has
-changed the whole system of warfare; and an exposed situation on the
-top of a hill is now worse than useless. The Pas in consequence are, at
-the present day, always built on a level piece of ground. They consist
-of a double stockade of thick and tall posts, placed in a zigzag line,
-so that every part can be flanked. Within the stockade a mound of
-earth is thrown up, behind which the defenders can rest in safety, or
-use their fire-arms over it. On the level of the ground little
-archways sometimes pass through this breastwork, by which means the
-defenders can crawl out to the stockade and reconnoitre their enemies.
-The Rev. W. Williams, who gave me this account, added, that in one Pas
-he had noticed spurs or buttresses projecting on the inner and
-protected side of the mound of earth. On asking the chief the use of
-them, he replied, that if two or three of his men were shot, their
-neighbours would not see the bodies, and so be discouraged.
-
-These Pas are considered by the New Zealanders as very perfect means of
-defence: for the attacking force is never so well disciplined as to
-rush in a body to the stockade, cut it down, and effect their entry.
-When a tribe goes to war, the chief cannot order one party to go here
-and another there; but every man fights in the manner which best
-pleases himself; and to each separate individual to approach a stockade
-defended by fire-arms must appear certain death. I should think a more
-warlike race of inhabitants could not be found in any part of the world
-than the New Zealanders. Their conduct on first seeing a ship, as
-described by Captain Cook, strongly illustrates this: the act of
-throwing volleys of stones at so great and novel an object, and their
-defiance of "Come on shore and we will kill and eat you all," shows
-uncommon boldness. This warlike spirit is evident in many of their
-customs, and even in their smallest actions. If a New Zealander is
-struck, although but in joke, the blow must be returned and of this I
-saw an instance with one of our officers.
-
-At the present day, from the progress of civilization, there is much
-less warfare, except among some of the southern tribes. I heard a
-characteristic anecdote of what took place some time ago in the south.
-A missionary found a chief and his tribe in preparation for war;--their
-muskets clean and bright, and their ammunition ready. He reasoned long
-on the inutility of the war, and the little provocation which had been
-given for it. The chief was much shaken in his resolution, and seemed
-in doubt: but at length it occurred to him that a barrel of his
-gunpowder was in a bad state, and that it would not keep much longer.
-This was brought forward as an unanswerable argument for the necessity
-of immediately declaring war: the idea of allowing so much good
-gunpowder to spoil was not to be thought of; and this settled the
-point. I was told by the missionaries that in the life of Shongi, the
-chief who visited England, the love of war was the one and lasting
-spring of every action. The tribe in which he was a principal chief
-had at one time been oppressed by another tribe from the Thames River.
-A solemn oath was taken by the men that when their boys should grow up,
-and they should be powerful enough, they would never forget or forgive
-these injuries. To fulfil this oath appears to have been Shongi's
-chief motive for going to England; and when there it was his sole
-object. Presents were valued only as they could be converted into
-arms; of the arts, those alone interested him which were connected with
-the manufacture of arms. When at Sydney, Shongi, by a strange
-coincidence, met the hostile chief of the Thames River at the house of
-Mr. Marsden: their conduct was civil to each other; but Shongi told him
-that when again in New Zealand he would never cease to carry war into
-his country. The challenge was accepted; and Shongi on his return
-fulfilled the threat to the utmost letter. The tribe on the Thames
-River was utterly overthrown, and the chief to whom the challenge had
-been given was himself killed. Shongi, although harbouring such deep
-feelings of hatred and revenge, is described as having been a
-good-natured person.
-
-In the evening I went with Captain Fitz Roy and Mr. Baker, one of the
-missionaries, to pay a visit to Kororadika: we wandered about the
-village, and saw and conversed with many of the people, both men,
-women, and children. Looking at the New Zealander, one naturally
-compares him with the Tahitian; both belonging to the same family of
-mankind. The comparison, however, tells heavily against the New
-Zealander. He may, perhaps be superior in energy, but in every other
-respect his character is of a much lower order. One glance at their
-respective expressions, brings conviction to the mind that one is a
-savage, the other a civilized man. It would be vain to seek in the
-whole of New Zealand a person with the face and mien of the old
-Tahitian chief Utamme. No doubt the extraordinary manner in which
-tattooing is here practised, gives a disagreeable expression to their
-countenances. The complicated but symmetrical figures covering the
-whole face, puzzle and mislead an unaccustomed eye: it is moreover
-probable, that the deep incisions, by destroying the play of the
-superficial muscles, give an air of rigid inflexibility. But, besides
-this, there is a twinkling in the eye, which cannot indicate anything
-but cunning and ferocity. Their figures are tall and bulky; but not
-comparable in elegance with those of the working-classes in Tahiti.
-
-But their persons and houses are filthily dirty and offensive: the idea
-of washing either their bodies or their clothes never seems to enter
-their heads. I saw a chief, who was wearing a shirt black and matted
-with filth, and when asked how it came to be so dirty, he replied, with
-surprise, "Do not you see it is an old one?" Some of the men have
-shirts; but the common dress is one or two large blankets, generally
-black with dirt, which are thrown over their shoulders in a very
-inconvenient and awkward fashion. A few of the principal chiefs have
-decent suits of English clothes; but these are only worn on great
-occasions.
-
-December 23rd.--At a place called Waimate, about fifteen miles from the
-Bay of Islands, and midway between the eastern and western coasts, the
-missionaries have purchased some land for agricultural purposes. I had
-been introduced to the Rev. W. Williams, who, upon my expressing a
-wish, invited me to pay him a visit there. Mr. Bushby, the British
-resident, offered to take me in his boat by a creek, where I should see
-a pretty waterfall, and by which means my walk would be shortened. He
-likewise procured for me a guide.
-
-Upon asking a neighbouring chief to recommend a man, the chief himself
-offered to go; but his ignorance of the value of money was so complete,
-that at first he asked how many pounds I would give him, but afterwards
-was well contented with two dollars. When I showed the chief a very
-small bundle, which I wanted carried, it became absolutely necessary
-for him to take a slave. These feelings of pride are beginning to wear
-away; but formerly a leading man would sooner have died, than undergone
-the indignity of carrying the smallest burden. My companion was a
-light active man, dressed in a dirty blanket, and with his face
-completely tattooed. He had formerly been a great warrior. He
-appeared to be on very cordial terms with Mr. Bushby; but at various
-times they had quarrelled violently. Mr. Bushby remarked that a little
-quiet irony would frequently silence any one of these natives in their
-most blustering moments. This chief has come and harangued Mr. Bushby
-in a hectoring manner, saying, "great chief, a great man, a friend of
-mine, has come to pay me a visit--you must give him something good to
-eat, some fine presents, etc." Mr. Bushby has allowed him to finish his
-discourse, and then has quietly replied by some answer such as, "What
-else shall your slave do for you?" The man would then instantly, with a
-very comical expression, cease his braggadocio.
-
-Some time ago, Mr. Bushby suffered a far more serious attack. A chief
-and a party of men tried to break into his house in the middle of the
-night, and not finding this so easy, commenced a brisk firing with
-their muskets. Mr. Bushby was slightly wounded, but the party was at
-length driven away. Shortly afterwards it was discovered who was the
-aggressor; and a general meeting of the chiefs was convened to consider
-the case. It was considered by the New Zealanders as very atrocious,
-inasmuch as it was a night attack, and that Mrs. Bushby was lying ill
-in the house: this latter circumstance, much to their honour, being
-considered in all cases as a protection. The chiefs agreed to
-confiscate the land of the aggressor to the King of England. The whole
-proceeding, however, in thus trying and punishing a chief was entirely
-without precedent. The aggressor, moreover, lost caste in the
-estimation of his equals and this was considered by the British as of
-more consequence than the confiscation of his land.
-
-As the boat was shoving off, a second chief stepped into her, who only
-wanted the amusement of the passage up and down the creek. I never saw
-a more horrid and ferocious expression than this man had. It
-immediately struck me I had somewhere seen his likeness: it will be
-found in Retzch's outlines to Schiller's ballad of Fridolin, where two
-men are pushing Robert into the burning iron furnace. It is the man
-who has his arm on Robert's breast. Physiognomy here spoke the truth;
-this chief had been a notorious murderer, and was an arrant coward to
-boot. At the point where the boat landed, Mr. Bushby accompanied me a
-few hundred yards on the road: I could not help admiring the cool
-impudence of the hoary old villain, whom we left lying in the boat,
-when he shouted to Mr. Bushby, "Do not you stay long, I shall be tired
-of waiting here."
-
-We now commenced our walk. The road lay along a well beaten path,
-bordered on each side by the tall fern, which covers the whole country.
-After travelling some miles, we came to a little country village, where
-a few hovels were collected together, and some patches of ground
-cultivated with potatoes. The introduction of the potato has been the
-most essential benefit to the island; it is now much more used than any
-native vegetable. New Zealand is favoured by one great natural
-advantage; namely, that the inhabitants can never perish from famine.
-The whole country abounds with fern: and the roots of this plant, if
-not very palatable, yet contain much nutriment. A native can always
-subsist on these, and on the shell-fish, which are abundant on all
-parts of the sea-coast. The villages are chiefly conspicuous by the
-platforms which are raised on four posts ten or twelve feet above the
-ground, and on which the produce of the fields is kept secure from all
-accidents.
-
-On coming near one of the huts I was much amused by seeing in due form
-the ceremony of rubbing, or, as it ought to be called, pressing noses.
-The women, on our first approach, began uttering something in a most
-dolorous voice; they then squatted themselves down and held up their
-faces; my companion standing over them, one after another, placed the
-bridge of his nose at right angles to theirs, and commenced pressing.
-This lasted rather longer than a cordial shake of the hand with us, and
-as we vary the force of the grasp of the hand in shaking, so do they in
-pressing. During the process they uttered comfortable little grunts,
-very much in the same manner as two pigs do, when rubbing against each
-other. I noticed that the slave would press noses with any one he met,
-indifferently either before or after his master the chief. Although
-among the savages, the chief has absolute power of life and death over
-his slave, yet there is an entire absence of ceremony between them. Mr.
-Burchell has remarked the same thing in Southern Africa, with the rude
-Bachapins. Where civilization has arrived at a certain point, complex
-formalities soon arise between the different grades of society: thus at
-Tahiti all were formerly obliged to uncover themselves as low as the
-waist in presence of the king.
-
-The ceremony of pressing noses having been duly completed with all
-present, we seated ourselves in a circle in the front of one of the
-hovels, and rested there half-an-hour. All the hovels have nearly the
-same form and dimensions, and all agree in being filthily dirty. They
-resemble a cow-shed with one end open, but having a partition a little
-way within, with a square hole in it, making a small gloomy chamber. In
-this the inhabitants keep all their property, and when the weather is
-cold they sleep there. They eat, however, and pass their time in the
-open part in front. My guides having finished their pipes, we
-continued our walk. The path led through the same undulating country,
-the whole uniformly clothed as before with fern. On our right hand we
-had a serpentine river, the banks of which were fringed with trees, and
-here and there on the hill sides there was a clump of wood. The whole
-scene, in spite of its green colour, had rather a desolate aspect. The
-sight of so much fern impresses the mind with an idea of sterility:
-this, however, is not correct; for wherever the fern grows thick and
-breast-high, the land by tillage becomes productive. Some of the
-residents think that all this extensive open country originally was
-covered with forests, and that it has been cleared by fire. It is said,
-that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the kind of resin which
-flows from the kauri pine are frequently found. The natives had an
-evident motive in clearing the country; for the fern, formerly a staple
-article of food, flourishes only in the open cleared tracks. The
-almost entire absence of associated grasses, which forms so remarkable
-a feature in the vegetation of this island, may perhaps be accounted
-for by the land having been aboriginally covered with forest-trees.
-
-The soil is volcanic; in several parts we passed over shaggy lavas, and
-craters could clearly be distinguished on several of the neighbouring
-hills. Although the scenery is nowhere beautiful, and only
-occasionally pretty, I enjoyed my walk. I should have enjoyed it more,
-if my companion, the chief, had not possessed extraordinary
-conversational powers. I knew only three words: "good," "bad," and
-"yes:" and with these I answered all his remarks, without of course
-having understood one word he said. This, however, was quite
-sufficient: I was a good listener, an agreeable person, and he never
-ceased talking to me.
-
-At length we reached Waimate. After having passed over so many miles
-of an uninhabited useless country, the sudden appearance of an English
-farm-house, and its well-dressed fields, placed there as if by an
-enchanter's wand, was exceedingly pleasant. Mr. Williams not being at
-home, I received in Mr. Davies's house a cordial welcome. After
-drinking tea with his family party, we took a stroll about the farm. At
-Waimate there are three large houses, where the missionary gentlemen,
-Messrs. Williams, Davies, and Clarke, reside; and near them are the
-huts of the native labourers. On an adjoining slope, fine crops of
-barley and wheat were standing in full ear; and in another part, fields
-of potatoes and clover. But I cannot attempt to describe all I saw;
-there were large gardens, with every fruit and vegetable which England
-produces; and many belonging to a warmer clime. I may instance
-asparagus, kidney beans, cucumbers, rhubarb, apples, pears, figs,
-peaches, apricots, grapes, olives, gooseberries, currants, hops, gorse
-for fences, and English oaks; also many kinds of flowers. Around the
-farm-yard there were stables, a thrashing-barn with its winnowing
-machine, a blacksmith's forge, and on the ground ploughshares and other
-tools: in the middle was that happy mixture of pigs and poultry, lying
-comfortably together, as in every English farm-yard. At the distance
-of a few hundred yards, where the water of a little rill had been
-dammed up into a pool, there was a large and substantial water-mill.
-
-All this is very surprising, when it is considered that five years ago
-nothing but the fern flourished here. Moreover, native workmanship,
-taught by the missionaries, has effected this change;--the lesson of
-the missionary is the enchanter's wand. The house had been built, the
-windows framed, the fields ploughed, and even the trees grafted, by a
-New Zealander. At the mill, a New Zealander was seen powdered white
-with flower, like his brother miller in England. When I looked at this
-whole scene, I thought it admirable. It was not merely that England
-was brought vividly before my mind; yet, as the evening drew to a
-close, the domestic sounds, the fields of corn, the distant undulating
-country with its trees might well have been mistaken for our
-fatherland: nor was it the triumphant feeling at seeing what Englishmen
-could effect; but rather the high hopes thus inspired for the future
-progress of this fine island.
-
-
-Several young men, redeemed by the missionaries from slavery, were
-employed on the farm. They were dressed in a shirt, jacket, and
-trousers, and had a respectable appearance. Judging from one trifling
-anecdote, I should think they must be honest. When walking in the
-fields, a young labourer came up to Mr. Davies, and gave him a knife
-and gimlet, saying that he had found them on the road, and did not know
-to whom they belonged! These young men and boys appeared very merry
-and good-humoured. In the evening I saw a party of them at cricket:
-when I thought of the austerity of which the missionaries have been
-accused, I was amused by observing one of their own sons taking an
-active part in the game. A more decided and pleasing change was
-manifested in the young women, who acted as servants within the houses.
-Their clean, tidy, and healthy appearance, like that of the dairy-maids
-in England, formed a wonderful contrast with the women of the filthy
-hovels in Kororadika. The wives of the missionaries tried to persuade
-them not to be tattooed; but a famous operator having arrived from the
-south, they said, "We really must just have a few lines on our lips;
-else when we grow old, our lips will shrivel, and we shall be so very
-ugly." There is not nearly so much tattooing as formerly; but as it is
-a badge of distinction between the chief and the slave, it will
-probably long be practised. So soon does any train of ideas become
-habitual, that the missionaries told me that even in their eyes a plain
-face looked mean, and not like that of a New Zealand gentleman.
-
-Late in the evening I went to Mr. Williams's house, where I passed the
-night. I found there a large party of children, collected together for
-Christmas Day, and all sitting round a table at tea. I never saw a
-nicer or more merry group; and to think that this was in the centre of
-the land of cannibalism, murder, and all atrocious crimes! The
-cordiality and happiness so plainly pictured in the faces of the little
-circle, appeared equally felt by the older persons of the mission.
-
-December 24th.--In the morning, prayers were read in the native tongue
-to the whole family. After breakfast I rambled about the gardens and
-farm. This was a market-day, when the natives of the surrounding
-hamlets bring their potatoes, Indian corn, or pigs, to exchange for
-blankets, tobacco, and sometimes, through the persuasions of the
-missionaries, for soap. Mr. Davies's eldest son, who manages a farm of
-his own, is the man of business in the market. The children of the
-missionaries, who came while young to the island, understand the
-language better than their parents, and can get anything more readily
-done by the natives.
-
-A little before noon Messrs. Williams and Davies walked with me to a
-part of a neighbouring forest, to show me the famous kauri pine. I
-measured one of the noble trees, and found it thirty-one feet in
-circumference above the roots. There was another close by, which I did
-not see, thirty-three feet; and I heard of one no less than forty feet.
-These trees are remarkable for their smooth cylindrical boles, which
-run up to a height of sixty, and even ninety feet, with a nearly equal
-diameter, and without a single branch. The crown of branches at the
-summit is out of all proportion small to the trunk; and the leaves are
-likewise small compared with the branches. The forest was here almost
-composed of the kauri; and the largest trees, from the parallelism of
-their sides, stood up like gigantic columns of wood. The timber of the
-kauri is the most valuable production of the island; moreover, a
-quantity of resin oozes from the bark, which is sold at a penny a pound
-to the Americans, but its use was then unknown. Some of the New
-Zealand forest must be impenetrable to an extraordinary degree. Mr.
-Matthews informed me that one forest only thirty-four miles in width,
-and separating two inhabited districts, had only lately, for the first
-time, been crossed. He and another missionary, each with a party of
-about fifty men, undertook to open a road, but it cost more than a
-fortnight's labour! In the woods I saw very few birds. With regard to
-animals, it is a most remarkable fact, that so large an island,
-extending over more than 700 miles in latitude, and in many parts
-ninety broad, with varied stations, a fine climate, and land of all
-heights, from 14,000 feet downwards, with the exception of a small rat,
-did not possess one indigenous animal. The several species of that
-gigantic genus of birds, the Deinornis seem here to have replaced
-mammiferous quadrupeds, in the same manner as the reptiles still do at
-the Galapagos archipelago. It is said that the common Norway rat, in
-the short space of two years, annihilated in this northern end of the
-island, the New Zealand species. In many places I noticed several
-sorts of weeds, which, like the rats, I was forced to own as
-countrymen. A leek has overrun whole districts, and will prove very
-troublesome, but it was imported as a favour by a French vessel. The
-common dock is also widely disseminated, and will, I fear, for ever
-remain a proof of the rascality of an Englishman, who sold the seeds
-for those of the tobacco plant.
-
-On returning from our pleasant walk to the house, I dined with Mr.
-Williams; and then, a horse being lent me, I returned to the Bay of
-Islands. I took leave of the missionaries with thankfulness for their
-kind welcome, and with feelings of high respect for their
-gentlemanlike, useful, and upright characters. I think it would be
-difficult to find a body of men better adapted for the high office
-which they fulfil.
-
-Christmas Day.--In a few more days the fourth year of our absence from
-England will be completed. Our first Christmas Day was spent at
-Plymouth, the second at St. Martin's Cove, near Cape Horn; the third at
-Port Desire, in Patagonia; the fourth at anchor in a wild harbour in
-the peninsula of Tres Montes, this fifth here, and the next, I trust in
-Providence, will be in England. We attended divine service in the
-chapel of Pahia; part of the service being read in English, and part in
-the native language. Whilst at New Zealand we did not hear of any
-recent acts of cannibalism; but Mr. Stokes found burnt human bones
-strewed round a fire-place on a small island near the anchorage; but
-these remains of a comfortable banquet might have been lying there for
-several years. It is probable that the moral state of the people will
-rapidly improve. Mr. Bushby mentioned one pleasing anecdote as a proof
-of the sincerity of some, at least, of those who profess Christianity.
-One of his young men left him, who had been accustomed to read prayers
-to the rest of the servants. Some weeks afterwards, happening to pass
-late in the evening by an outhouse, he saw and heard one of his men
-reading the Bible with difficulty by the light of the fire, to the
-others. After this the party knelt and prayed: in their prayers they
-mentioned Mr. Bushby and his family, and the missionaries, each
-separately in his respective district.
-
-December 26th.--Mr. Bushby offered to take Mr. Sulivan and myself in
-his boat some miles up the river to Cawa-Cawa, and proposed afterwards
-to walk on to the village of Waiomio, where there are some curious
-rocks. Following one of the arms of the bay, we enjoyed a pleasant
-row, and passed through pretty scenery, until we came to a village,
-beyond which the boat could not pass. From this place a chief and a
-party of men volunteered to walk with us to Waiomio, a distance of four
-miles. The chief was at this time rather notorious from having lately
-hung one of his wives and a slave for adultery. When one of the
-missionaries remonstrated with him he seemed surprised, and said he
-thought he was exactly following the English method. Old Shongi, who
-happened to be in England during the Queen's trial, expressed great
-disapprobation at the whole proceeding: he said he had five wives, and
-he would rather cut off all their heads than be so much troubled about
-one. Leaving this village, we crossed over to another, seated on a
-hill-side at a little distance. The daughter of a chief, who was still
-a heathen, had died there five days before. The hovel in which she had
-expired had been burnt to the ground: her body being enclosed between
-two small canoes, was placed upright on the ground, and protected by an
-enclosure bearing wooden images of their gods, and the whole was
-painted bright red, so as to be conspicuous from afar. Her gown was
-fastened to the coffin, and her hair being cut off was cast at its
-foot. The relatives of the family had torn the flesh of their arms,
-bodies, and faces, so that they were covered with clotted blood; and
-the old women looked most filthy, disgusting objects. On the following
-day some of the officers visited this place, and found the women still
-howling and cutting themselves.
-
-We continued our walk, and soon reached Waiomio. Here there are some
-singular masses of limestone, resembling ruined castles. These rocks
-have long served for burial places, and in consequence are held too
-sacred to be approached. One of the young men, however, cried out, "Let
-us all be brave," and ran on ahead; but when within a hundred yards,
-the whole party thought better of it, and stopped short. With perfect
-indifference, however, they allowed us to examine the whole place. At
-this village we rested some hours, during which time there was a long
-discussion with Mr. Bushby, concerning the right of sale of certain
-lands. One old man, who appeared a perfect genealogist, illustrated the
-successive possessors by bits of stick driven into the ground. Before
-leaving the houses a little basketful of roasted sweet potatoes was
-given to each of our party; and we all, according to the custom,
-carried them away to eat on the road. I noticed that among the women
-employed in cooking, there was a man-slave: it must be a humiliating
-thing for a man in this warlike country to be employed in doing that
-which is considered as the lowest woman's work. Slaves are not allowed
-to go to war; but this perhaps can hardly be considered as a hardship.
-I heard of one poor wretch who, during hostilities, ran away to the
-opposite party; being met by two men, he was immediately seized; but as
-they could not agree to whom he should belong, each stood over him with
-a stone hatchet, and seemed determined that the other at least should
-not take him away alive. The poor man, almost dead with fright, was
-only saved by the address of a chief's wife. We afterwards enjoyed a
-pleasant walk back to the boat, but did not reach the ship till late in
-the evening.
-
-December 30th.--In the afternoon we stood out of the Bay of Islands, on
-our course to Sydney. I believe we were all glad to leave New Zealand.
-It is not a pleasant place. Amongst the natives there is absent that
-charming simplicity which is found in Tahiti; and the greater part of
-the English are the very refuse of society. Neither is the country
-itself attractive. I look back but to one bright spot, and that is
-Waimate, with its Christian inhabitants.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-AUSTRALIA
-
-Sydney--Excursion to Bathurst--Aspect of the Woods--Party of
-Natives--Gradual Extinction of the Aborigines--Infection generated by
-associated Men in health--Blue Mountains--View of the grand gulf-like
-Valleys--Their origin and formation--Bathurst, general civility of the
-Lower Orders--State of Society--Van Diemen's Land--Hobart
-Town--Aborigines all banished--Mount Wellington--King George's
-Sound--Cheerless Aspect of the Country--Bald Head, calcareous casts of
-branches of Trees--Party of Natives--Leave Australia.
-
-
-JANUARY 12th, 1836.--Early in the morning a light air carried us
-towards the entrance of Port Jackson. Instead of beholding a verdant
-country, interspersed with fine houses, a straight line of yellowish
-cliff brought to our minds the coast of Patagonia. A solitary
-lighthouse, built of white stone, alone told us that we were near a
-great and populous city. Having entered the harbour, it appears fine
-and spacious, with cliff-formed shores of horizontally stratified
-sandstone. The nearly level country is covered with thin scrubby
-trees, bespeaking the curse of sterility. Proceeding further inland,
-the country improves: beautiful villas and nice cottages are here and
-there scattered along the beach. In the distance stone houses, two and
-three stories high, and windmills standing on the edge of a bank,
-pointed out to us the neighbourhood of the capital of Australia.
-
-At last we anchored within Sydney Cove. We found the little basin
-occupied by many large ships, and surrounded by warehouses. In the
-evening I walked through the town, and returned full of admiration at
-the whole scene. It is a most magnificent testimony to the power of
-the British nation. Here, in a less promising country, scores of years
-have done many more times more than an equal number of centuries have
-effected in South America. My first feeling was to congratulate myself
-that I was born an Englishman. Upon seeing more of the town
-afterwards, perhaps my admiration fell a little; but yet it is a fine
-town. The streets are regular, broad, clean, and kept in excellent
-order; the houses are of a good size, and the shops well furnished. It
-may be faithfully compared to the large suburbs which stretch out from
-London and a few other great towns in England; but not even near London
-or Birmingham is there an appearance of such rapid growth. The number
-of large houses and other buildings just finished was truly surprising;
-nevertheless, every one complained of the high rents and difficulty in
-procuring a house. Coming from South America, where in the towns every
-man of property is known, no one thing surprised me more than not being
-able to ascertain at once to whom this or that carriage belonged.
-
-I hired a man and two horses to take me to Bathurst, a village about
-one hundred and twenty miles in the interior, and the centre of a great
-pastoral district. By this means I hoped to gain a general idea of the
-appearance of the country. On the morning of the 16th (January) I set
-out on my excursion. The first stage took us to Paramatta, a small
-country town, next to Sydney in importance. The roads were excellent,
-and made upon the MacAdam principle, whinstone having been brought for
-the purpose from the distance of several miles. In all respects there
-was a close resemblance to England: perhaps the alehouses here were
-more numerous. The iron gangs, or parties of convicts who have
-committed here some offense, appeared the least like England: they were
-working in chains, under the charge of sentries with loaded arms.
-
-The power which the government possesses, by means of forced labour, of
-at once opening good roads throughout the country, has been, I believe,
-one main cause of the early prosperity of this colony. I slept at
-night at a very comfortable inn at Emu ferry, thirty-five miles from
-Sydney, and near the ascent of the Blue Mountains. This line of road
-is the most frequented, and has been the longest inhabited of any in
-the colony. The whole land is enclosed with high railings, for the
-farmers have not succeeded in rearing hedges. There are many
-substantial houses and good cottages scattered about; but although
-considerable pieces of land are under cultivation, the greater part yet
-remains as when first discovered.
-
-The extreme uniformity of the vegetation is the most remarkable feature
-in the landscape of the greater part of New South Wales. Everywhere we
-have an open woodland, the ground being partially covered with a very
-thin pasture, with little appearance of verdure. The trees nearly all
-belong to one family, and mostly have their leaves placed in a
-vertical, instead of as in Europe, in a nearly horizontal position: the
-foliage is scanty, and of a peculiar pale green tint, without any
-gloss. Hence the woods appear light and shadowless: this, although a
-loss of comfort to the traveller under the scorching rays of summer, is
-of importance to the farmer, as it allows grass to grow where it
-otherwise would not. The leaves are not shed periodically: this
-character appears common to the entire southern hemisphere, namely,
-South America, Australia, and the Cape of Good Hope. The inhabitants
-of this hemisphere, and of the intertropical regions, thus lose perhaps
-one of the most glorious, though to our eyes common, spectacles in the
-world--the first bursting into full foliage of the leafless tree. They
-may, however, say that we pay dearly for this by having the land
-covered with mere naked skeletons for so many months. This is too true
-but our senses thus acquire a keen relish for the exquisite green of
-the spring, which the eyes of those living within the tropics, sated
-during the long year with the gorgeous productions of those glowing
-climates, can never experience. The greater number of the trees, with
-the exception of some of the Blue-gums, do not attain a large size; but
-they grow tall and tolerably straight, and stand well apart. The bark
-of some of the Eucalypti falls annually, or hangs dead in long shreds
-which swing about with the wind, and give to the woods a desolate and
-untidy appearance. I cannot imagine a more complete contrast, in every
-respect, than between the forests of Valdivia or Chiloe, and the woods
-of Australia.
-
-At sunset, a party of a score of the black aborigines passed by, each
-carrying, in their accustomed manner, a bundle of spears and other
-weapons. By giving a leading young man a shilling, they were easily
-detained, and threw their spears for my amusement. They were all
-partly clothed, and several could speak a little English: their
-countenances were good-humoured and pleasant, and they appeared far
-from being such utterly degraded beings as they have usually been
-represented. In their own arts they are admirable. A cap being fixed
-at thirty yards distance, they transfixed it with a spear, delivered by
-the throwing-stick with the rapidity of an arrow from the bow of a
-practised archer. In tracking animals or men they show most wonderful
-sagacity; and I heard of several of their remarks which manifested
-considerable acuteness. They will not, however, cultivate the ground,
-or build houses and remain stationary, or even take the trouble of
-tending a flock of sheep when given to them. On the whole they appear
-to me to stand some few degrees higher in the scale of civilization
-than the Fuegians.
-
-It is very curious thus to see in the midst of a civilized people, a
-set of harmless savages wandering about without knowing where they
-shall sleep at night, and gaining their livelihood by hunting in the
-woods. As the white man has travelled onwards, he has spread over the
-country belonging to several tribes. These, although thus enclosed by
-one common people, keep up their ancient distinctions, and sometimes go
-to war with each other. In an engagement which took place lately, the
-two parties most singularly chose the centre of the village of Bathurst
-for the field of battle. This was of service to the defeated side, for
-the runaway warriors took refuge in the barracks.
-
-The number of aborigines is rapidly decreasing. In my whole ride, with
-the exception of some boys brought up by Englishmen, I saw only one
-other party. This decrease, no doubt, must be partly owing to the
-introduction of spirits, to European diseases (even the milder ones of
-which, such as the measles, [1] prove very destructive), and to the
-gradual extinction of the wild animals. It is said that numbers of
-their children invariably perish in very early infancy from the effects
-of their wandering life; and as the difficulty of procuring food
-increases, so must their wandering habits increase; and hence the
-population, without any apparent deaths from famine, is repressed in a
-manner extremely sudden compared to what happens in civilized
-countries, where the father, though in adding to his labour he may
-injure himself, does not destroy his offspring.
-
-Besides the several evident causes of destruction, there appears to be
-some more mysterious agency generally at work. Wherever the European
-has trod, death seems to pursue the aboriginal. We may look to the
-wide extent of the Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and
-Australia, and we find the same result. Nor is it the white man alone
-that thus acts the destroyer; the Polynesian of Malay extraction has in
-parts of the East Indian archipelago, thus driven before him the
-dark-coloured native. The varieties of man seem to act on each other
-in the same way as different species of animals--the stronger always
-extirpating the weaker. It was melancholy at New Zealand to hear the
-fine energetic natives saying that they knew the land was doomed to
-pass from their children. Every one has heard of the inexplicable
-reduction of the population in the beautiful and healthy island of
-Tahiti since the date of Captain Cook's voyages: although in that case
-we might have expected that it would have been increased; for
-infanticide, which formerly prevailed to so extraordinary a degree, has
-ceased; profligacy has greatly diminished, and the murderous wars
-become less frequent.
-
-The Rev. J. Williams, in his interesting work, [2] says, that the first
-intercourse between natives and Europeans, "is invariably attended with
-the introduction of fever, dysentery, or some other disease, which
-carries off numbers of the people." Again he affirms, "It is certainly
-a fact, which cannot be controverted, that most of the diseases which
-have raged in the islands during my residence there, have been
-introduced by ships; [3] and what renders this fact remarkable is, that
-there might be no appearance of disease among the crew of the ship
-which conveyed this destructive importation." This statement is not
-quite so extraordinary as it at first appears; for several cases are on
-record of the most malignant fevers having broken out, although the
-parties themselves, who were the cause, were not affected. In the
-early part of the reign of George III., a prisoner who had been
-confined in a dungeon, was taken in a coach with four constables before
-a magistrate; and although the man himself was not ill, the four
-constables died from a short putrid fever; but the contagion extended
-to no others. From these facts it would almost appear as if the
-effluvium of one set of men shut up for some time together was
-poisonous when inhaled by others; and possibly more so, if the men be
-of different races. Mysterious as this circumstance appears to be, it
-is not more surprising than that the body of one's fellow-creature,
-directly after death, and before putrefaction has commenced, should
-often be of so deleterious a quality, that the mere puncture from an
-instrument used in its dissection, should prove fatal.
-
-17th.--Early in the morning we passed the Nepean in a ferry-boat. The
-river, although at this spot both broad and deep, had a very small body
-of running water. Having crossed a low piece of land on the opposite
-side, we reached the slope of the Blue Mountains. The ascent is not
-steep, the road having been cut with much care on the side of a
-sandstone cliff. On the summit an almost level plain extends, which,
-rising imperceptibly to the westward, at last attains a height of more
-than 3000 feet. From so grand a title as Blue Mountains, and from
-their absolute altitude, I expected to have seen a bold chain of
-mountains crossing the country; but instead of this, a sloping plain
-presents merely an inconsiderable front to the low land near the coast.
-From this first slope, the view of the extensive woodland to the east
-was striking, and the surrounding trees grew bold and lofty. But when
-once on the sandstone platform, the scenery becomes exceedingly
-monotonous; each side of the road is bordered by scrubby trees of the
-never-failing Eucalyptus family; and with the exception of two or three
-small inns, there are no houses or cultivated land: the road, moreover,
-is solitary; the most frequent object being a bullock-waggon, piled up
-with bales of wool.
-
-In the middle of the day we baited our horses at a little inn, called
-the Weatherboard. The country here is elevated 2800 feet above the
-sea. About a mile and a half from this place there is a view
-exceedingly well worth visiting. Following down a little valley and
-its tiny rill of water, an immense gulf unexpectedly opens through the
-trees which border the pathway, at the depth of perhaps 1500 feet.
-Walking on a few yards, one stands on the brink of a vast precipice,
-and below one sees a grand bay or gulf, for I know not what other name
-to give it, thickly covered with forest. The point of view is situated
-as if at the head of a bay, the line of cliff diverging on each side,
-and showing headland behind headland, as on a bold sea-coast. These
-cliffs are composed of horizontal strata of whitish sandstone; and are
-so absolutely vertical, that in many places a person standing on the
-edge and throwing down a stone, can see it strike the trees in the
-abyss below. So unbroken is the line of cliff, that in order to reach
-the foot of the waterfall, formed by this little stream, it is said to
-be necessary to go sixteen miles round. About five miles distant in
-front, another line of cliff extends, which thus appears completely to
-encircle the valley; and hence the name of bay is justified, as applied
-to this grand amphitheatrical depression. If we imagine a winding
-harbour, with its deep water surrounded by bold cliff-like shores, to
-be laid dry, and a forest to spring up on its sandy bottom, we should
-then have the appearance and structure here exhibited. This kind of
-view was to me quite novel, and extremely magnificent.
-
-In the evening we reached the Blackheath. The sandstone plateau has
-here attained the height of 3400 feet; and is covered, as before, with
-the same scrubby woods. From the road, there were occasional glimpses
-into a profound valley, of the same character as the one described; but
-from the steepness and depth of its sides, the bottom was scarcely ever
-to be seen. The Blackheath is a very comfortable inn, kept by an old
-soldier; and it reminded me of the small inns in North Wales.
-
-18th.--Very early in the morning, I walked about three miles to see
-Govett's Leap; a view of a similar character with that near the
-Weatherboard, but perhaps even more stupendous. So early in the day
-the gulf was filled with a thin blue haze, which, although destroying
-the general effect of the view added to the apparent depth at which the
-forest was stretched out beneath our feet. These valleys, which so
-long presented an insuperable barrier to the attempts of the most
-enterprising of the colonists to reach the interior, are most
-remarkable. Great arm-like bays, expanding at their upper ends, often
-branch from the main valleys and penetrate the sandstone platform; on
-the other hand, the platform often sends promontories into the valleys,
-and even leaves in them great, almost insulated, masses. To descend
-into some of these valleys, it is necessary to go round twenty miles;
-and into others, the surveyors have only lately penetrated, and the
-colonists have not yet been able to drive in their cattle. But the
-most remarkable feature in their structure is, that although several
-miles wide at their heads, they generally contract towards their mouths
-to such a degree as to become impassable. The Surveyor-General, Sir T.
-Mitchell, [4] endeavoured in vain, first walking and then by crawling
-between the great fallen fragments of sandstone, to ascend through the
-gorge by which the river Grose joins the Nepean, yet the valley of the
-Grose in its upper part, as I saw, forms a magnificent level basin some
-miles in width, and is on all sides surrounded by cliffs, the summits
-of which are believed to be nowhere less than 3000 feet above the level
-of the sea. When cattle are driven into the valley of the Wolgan by a
-path (which I descended), partly natural and partly made by the owner
-of the land, they cannot escape; for this valley is in every other part
-surrounded by perpendicular cliffs, and eight miles lower down, it
-contracts from an average width of half a mile, to a mere chasm,
-impassable to man or beast. Sir T. Mitchell states that the great
-valley of the Cox river with all its branches, contracts, where it
-unites with the Nepean, into a gorge 2200 yards in width, and about
-1000 feet in depth. Other similar cases might have been added.
-
-The first impression, on seeing the correspondence of the horizontal
-strata on each side of these valleys and great amphitheatrical
-depressions, is that they have been hollowed out, like other valleys,
-by the action of water; but when one reflects on the enormous amount of
-stone, which on this view must have been removed through mere gorges or
-chasms, one is led to ask whether these spaces may not have subsided.
-But considering the form of the irregularly branching valleys, and of
-the narrow promontories projecting into them from the platforms, we are
-compelled to abandon this notion. To attribute these hollows to the
-present alluvial action would be preposterous; nor does the drainage
-from the summit-level always fall, as I remarked near the Weatherboard,
-into the head of these valleys, but into one side of their bay-like
-recesses. Some of the inhabitants remarked to me that they never
-viewed one of those bay-like recesses, with the headlands receding on
-both hands, without being struck with their resemblance to a bold
-sea-coast. This is certainly the case; moreover, on the present coast
-of New South Wales, the numerous, fine, widely-branching harbours,
-which are generally connected with the sea by a narrow mouth worn
-through the sandstone coast-cliffs, varying from one mile in width to a
-quarter of a mile, present a likeness, though on a miniature scale, to
-the great valleys of the interior. But then immediately occurs the
-startling difficulty, why has the sea worn out these great, though
-circumscribed depressions on a wide platform, and left mere gorges at
-the openings, through which the whole vast amount of triturated matter
-must have been carried away? The only light I can throw upon this
-enigma, is by remarking that banks of the most irregular forms appear
-to be now forming in some seas, as in parts of the West Indies and in
-the Red Sea, and that their sides are exceedingly steep. Such banks, I
-have been led to suppose, have been formed by sediment heaped by strong
-currents on an irregular bottom. That in some cases the sea, instead
-of spreading out sediment in a uniform sheet, heaps it round submarine
-rocks and islands, it is hardly possible to doubt, after examining the
-charts of the West Indies; and that the waves have power to form high
-and precipitous cliffs, even in land-locked harbours, I have noticed in
-many parts of South America. To apply these ideas to the sandstone
-platforms of New South Wales, I imagine that the strata were heaped by
-the action of strong currents, and of the undulations of an open sea,
-on an irregular bottom; and that the valley-like spaces thus left
-unfilled had their steeply sloping flanks worn into cliffs, during a
-slow elevation of the land; the worn-down sandstone being removed,
-either at the time when the narrow gorges were cut by the retreating
-sea, or subsequently by alluvial action.
-
-
-Soon after leaving the Blackheath, we descended from the sandstone
-platform by the pass of Mount Victoria. To effect this pass, an
-enormous quantity of stone has been cut through; the design, and its
-manner of execution, being worthy of any line of road in England. We
-now entered upon a country less elevated by nearly a thousand feet, and
-consisting of granite. With the change of rock, the vegetation
-improved, the trees were both finer and stood farther apart; and the
-pasture between them was a little greener and more plentiful. At
-Hassan's Walls, I left the high road, and made a short detour to a farm
-called Walerawang; to the superintendent of which I had a letter of
-introduction from the owner in Sydney. Mr. Browne had the kindness to
-ask me to stay the ensuing day, which I had much pleasure in doing.
-This place offers an example of one of the large farming, or rather
-sheep-grazing establishments of the colony. Cattle and horses are,
-however, in this case rather more numerous than usual, owing to some of
-the valleys being swampy and producing a coarser pasture. Two or three
-flat pieces of ground near the house were cleared and cultivated with
-corn, which the harvest-men were now reaping: but no more wheat is sown
-than sufficient for the annual support of the labourers employed on the
-establishment. The usual number of assigned convict-servants here is
-about forty, but at the present time there were rather more. Although
-the farm was well stocked with every necessary, there was an apparent
-absence of comfort; and not one single woman resided here. The sunset
-of a fine day will generally cast an air of happy contentment on any
-scene; but here, at this retired farm-house, the brightest tints on the
-surrounding woods could not make me forget that forty hardened,
-profligate men were ceasing from their daily labours, like the slaves
-from Africa, yet without their holy claim for compassion.
-
-Early on the next morning, Mr. Archer, the joint superintendent, had
-the kindness to take me out kangaroo-hunting. We continued riding the
-greater part of the day, but had very bad sport, not seeing a kangaroo,
-or even a wild dog. The greyhounds pursued a kangaroo rat into a hollow
-tree, out of which we dragged it: it is an animal as large as a rabbit,
-but with the figure of a kangaroo. A few years since this country
-abounded with wild animals; but now the emu is banished to a long
-distance, and the kangaroo is become scarce; to both the English
-greyhound has been highly destructive. It may be long before these
-animals are altogether exterminated, but their doom is fixed. The
-aborigines are always anxious to borrow the dogs from the farm-houses:
-the use of them, the offal when an animal is killed, and some milk from
-the cows, are the peace-offerings of the settlers, who push farther and
-farther towards the interior. The thoughtless aboriginal, blinded by
-these trifling advantages, is delighted at the approach of the white
-man, who seems predestined to inherit the country of his children.
-
-Although having poor sport, we enjoyed a pleasant ride. The woodland is
-generally so open that a person on horseback can gallop through it. It
-is traversed by a few flat-bottomed valleys, which are green and free
-from trees: in such spots the scenery was pretty like that of a park.
-In the whole country I scarcely saw a place without the marks of a
-fire; whether these had been more or less recent--whether the stumps
-were more or less black, was the greatest change which varied the
-uniformity, so wearisome to the traveller's eye. In these woods there
-are not many birds; I saw, however, some large flocks of the white
-cockatoo feeding in a corn-field, and a few most beautiful parrots;
-crows, like our jackdaws were not uncommon, and another bird something
-like the magpie. In the dusk of the evening I took a stroll along a
-chain of ponds, which in this dry country represented the course of a
-river, and had the good fortune to see several of the famous
-Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. They were diving and playing about the
-surface of the water, but showed so little of their bodies, that they
-might easily have been mistaken for water-rats. Mr. Browne shot one:
-certainly it is a most extraordinary animal; a stuffed specimen does
-not at all give a good idea of the appearance of the head and beak when
-fresh; the latter becoming hard and contracted. [5]
-
-20th.--A long day's ride to Bathurst. Before joining the highroad we
-followed a mere path through the forest; and the country, with the
-exception of a few squatters' huts, was very solitary. We experienced
-this day the sirocco-like wind of Australia, which comes from the
-parched deserts of the interior. Clouds of dust were travelling in
-every direction; and the wind felt as if it had passed over a fire. I
-afterwards heard that the thermometer out of doors had stood at 119
-degs., and in a closed room at 96 degs. In the afternoon we came in
-view of the downs of Bathurst. These undulating but nearly smooth
-plains are very remarkable in this country, from being absolutely
-destitute of trees. They support only a thin brown pasture. We rode
-some miles over this country, and then reached the township of
-Bathurst, seated in the middle of what may be called either a very
-broad valley, or narrow plain. I was told at Sydney not to form too
-bad an opinion of Australia by judging of the country from the
-roadside, nor too good a one from Bathurst; in this latter respect, I
-did not feel myself in the least danger of being prejudiced. The
-season, it must be owned, had been one of great drought, and the
-country did not wear a favourable aspect; although I understand it was
-incomparably worse two or three months before. The secret of the
-rapidly growing prosperity of Bathurst is, that the brown pasture which
-appears to the stranger's eye so wretched, is excellent for
-sheep-grazing. The town stands, at the height of 2200 feet above the
-sea, on the banks of the Macquarie. This is one of the rivers flowing
-into the vast and scarcely known interior. The line of water-shed,
-which divides the inland streams from those on the coast, has a height
-of about 3000 feet, and runs in a north and south direction at the
-distance of from eighty to a hundred miles from the sea-side. The
-Macquarie figures in the map as a respectable river, and it is the
-largest of those draining this part of the water-shed; yet to my
-surprise I found it a mere chain of ponds, separated from each other by
-spaces almost dry. Generally a small stream is running; and sometimes
-there are high and impetuous floods. Scanty as the supply of the water
-is throughout this district, it becomes still scantier further inland.
-
-22nd.--I commenced my return, and followed a new road called Lockyer's
-Line, along which the country is rather more hilly and picturesque.
-This was a long day's ride; and the house where I wished to sleep was
-some way off the road, and not easily found. I met on this occasion,
-and indeed on all others, a very general and ready civility among the
-lower orders, which, when one considers what they are, and what they
-have been, would scarcely have been expected. The farm where I passed
-the night, was owned by two young men who had only lately come out, and
-were beginning a settler's life. The total want of almost every
-comfort was not attractive; but future and certain prosperity was
-before their eyes, and that not far distant.
-
-The next day we passed through large tracts of country in flames,
-volumes of smoke sweeping across the road. Before noon we joined our
-former road, and ascended Mount Victoria. I slept at the Weatherboard,
-and before dark took another walk to the amphitheatre. On the road to
-Sydney I spent a very pleasant evening with Captain King at Dunheved;
-and thus ended my little excursion in the colony of New South Wales.
-
-Before arriving here the three things which interested me most
-were--the state of society amongst the higher classes, the condition of
-the convicts, and the degree of attraction sufficient to induce persons
-to emigrate. Of course, after so very short a visit, one's opinion is
-worth scarcely anything; but it is as difficult not to form some
-opinion, as it is to form a correct judgment. On the whole, from what
-I heard, more than from what I saw, I was disappointed in the state of
-society. The whole community is rancorously divided into parties on
-almost every subject. Among those who, from their station in life,
-ought to be the best, many live in such open profligacy that
-respectable people cannot associate with them. There is much jealousy
-between the children of the rich emancipist and the free settlers, the
-former being pleased to consider honest men as interlopers. The whole
-population, poor and rich, are bent on acquiring wealth: amongst the
-higher orders, wool and sheep-grazing form the constant subject of
-conversation. There are many serious drawbacks to the comforts of a
-family, the chief of which, perhaps, is being surrounded by convict
-servants. How thoroughly odious to every feeling, to be waited on by a
-man who the day before, perhaps, was flogged, from your representation,
-for some trifling misdemeanor. The female servants are of course, much
-worse: hence children learn the vilest expressions, and it is
-fortunate, if not equally vile ideas.
-
-On the other hand, the capital of a person, without any trouble on his
-part, produces him treble interest to what it will in England; and with
-care he is sure to grow rich. The luxuries of life are in abundance,
-and very little dearer than in England, and most articles of food are
-cheaper. The climate is splendid, and perfectly healthy; but to my
-mind its charms are lost by the uninviting aspect of the country.
-Settlers possess a great advantage in finding their sons of service
-when very young. At the age of from sixteen to twenty, they frequently
-take charge of distant farming stations. This, however, must happen at
-the expense of their boys associating entirely with convict servants. I
-am not aware that the tone of society has assumed any peculiar
-character; but with such habits, and without intellectual pursuits, it
-can hardly fail to deteriorate. My opinion is such, that nothing but
-rather sharp necessity should compel me to emigrate.
-
-The rapid prosperity and future prospects of this colony are to me, not
-understanding these subjects, very puzzling. The two main exports are
-wool and whale-oil, and to both of these productions there is a limit.
-The country is totally unfit for canals, therefore there is a not very
-distant point, beyond which the land-carriage of wool will not repay
-the expense of shearing and tending sheep. Pasture everywhere is so
-thin that settlers have already pushed far into the interior: moreover,
-the country further inland becomes extremely poor. Agriculture, on
-account of the droughts, can never succeed on an extended scale:
-therefore, so far as I can see, Australia must ultimately depend upon
-being the centre of commerce for the southern hemisphere, and perhaps
-on her future manufactories. Possessing coal, she always has the
-moving power at hand. From the habitable country extending along the
-coast, and from her English extraction, she is sure to be a maritime
-nation. I formerly imagined that Australia would rise to be as grand
-and powerful a country as North America, but now it appears to me that
-such future grandeur is rather problematical.
-
-With respect to the state of the convicts, I had still fewer
-opportunities of judging than on other points. The first question is,
-whether their condition is at all one of punishment: no one will
-maintain that it is a very severe one. This, however, I suppose, is of
-little consequence as long as it continues to be an object of dread to
-criminals at home. The corporeal wants of the convicts are tolerably
-well supplied: their prospect of future liberty and comfort is not
-distant, and, after good conduct, certain. A "ticket of leave," which,
-as long as a man keeps clear of suspicion as well as of crime, makes
-him free within a certain district, is given upon good conduct, after
-years proportional to the length of the sentence; yet with all this,
-and overlooking the previous imprisonment and wretched passage out, I
-believe the years of assignment are passed away with discontent and
-unhappiness. As an intelligent man remarked to me, the convicts know
-no pleasure beyond sensuality, and in this they are not gratified. The
-enormous bribe which Government possesses in offering free pardons,
-together with the deep horror of the secluded penal settlements,
-destroys confidence between the convicts, and so prevents crime. As to
-a sense of shame, such a feeling does not appear to be known, and of
-this I witnessed some very singular proofs. Though it is a curious
-fact, I was universally told that the character of the convict
-population is one of arrant cowardice: not unfrequently some become
-desperate, and quite indifferent as to life, yet a plan requiring cool
-or continued courage is seldom put into execution. The worst feature
-in the whole case is, that although there exists what may be called a
-legal reform, and comparatively little is committed which the law can
-touch, yet that any moral reform should take place appears to be quite
-out of the question. I was assured by well-informed people, that a man
-who should try to improve, could not while living with other assigned
-servants;--his life would be one of intolerable misery and persecution.
-Nor must the contamination of the convict-ships and prisons, both here
-and in England, be forgotten. On the whole, as a place of punishment,
-the object is scarcely gained; as a real system of reform it has
-failed, as perhaps would every other plan; but as a means of making men
-outwardly honest,--of converting vagabonds, most useless in one
-hemisphere, into active citizens of another, and thus giving birth to a
-new and splendid country--a grand centre of civilization--it has
-succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history.
-
-
-30th.--The Beagle sailed for Hobart Town in Van Diemen's Land. On the
-5th of February, after a six days' passage, of which the first part was
-fine, and the latter very cold and squally, we entered the mouth of
-Storm Bay: the weather justified this awful name. The bay should
-rather be called an estuary, for it receives at its head the waters of
-the Derwent. Near the mouth, there are some extensive basaltic
-platforms; but higher up the land becomes mountainous, and is covered
-by a light wood. The lower parts of the hills which skirt the bay are
-cleared; and the bright yellow fields of corn, and dark green ones of
-potatoes, appear very luxuriant. Late in the evening we anchored in the
-snug cove, on the shores of which stands the capital of Tasmania. The
-first aspect of the place was very inferior to that of Sydney; the
-latter might be called a city, this is only a town. It stands at the
-base of Mount Wellington, a mountain 3100 feet high, but of little
-picturesque beauty; from this source, however, it receives a good
-supply of water. Round the cove there are some fine warehouses and on
-one side a small fort. Coming from the Spanish settlements, where such
-magnificent care has generally been paid to the fortifications, the
-means of defence in these colonies appeared very contemptible.
-Comparing the town with Sydney, I was chiefly struck with the
-comparative fewness of the large houses, either built or building.
-Hobart Town, from the census of 1835, contained 13,826 inhabitants, and
-the whole of Tasmania 36,505.
-
-All the aborigines have been removed to an island in Bass's Straits, so
-that Van Diemen's Land enjoys the great advantage of being free from a
-native population. This most cruel step seems to have been quite
-unavoidable, as the only means of stopping a fearful succession of
-robberies, burnings, and murders, committed by the blacks; and which
-sooner or later would have ended in their utter destruction. I fear
-there is no doubt, that this train of evil and its consequences,
-originated in the infamous conduct of some of our countrymen. Thirty
-years is a short period, in which to have banished the last aboriginal
-from his native island,--and that island nearly as large as Ireland.
-The correspondence on this subject, which took place between the
-government at home and that of Van Diemen's Land, is very interesting.
-Although numbers of natives were shot and taken prisoners in the
-skirmishing, which was going on at intervals for several years; nothing
-seems fully to have impressed them with the idea of our overwhelming
-power, until the whole island, in 1830, was put under martial law, and
-by proclamation the whole population commanded to assist in one great
-attempt to secure the entire race. The plan adopted was nearly similar
-to that of the great hunting-matches in India: a line was formed
-reaching across the island, with the intention of driving the natives
-into a _cul-de-sac_ on Tasman's peninsula. The attempt failed; the
-natives, having tied up their dogs, stole during one night through the
-lines. This is far from surprising, when their practised senses, and
-usual manner of crawling after wild animals is considered. I have been
-assured that they can conceal themselves on almost bare ground, in a
-manner which until witnessed is scarcely credible; their dusky bodies
-being easily mistaken for the blackened stumps which are scattered all
-over the country. I was told of a trial between a party of Englishmen
-and a native, who was to stand in full view on the side of a bare hill;
-if the Englishmen closed their eyes for less than a minute, he would
-squat down, and then they were never able to distinguish him from the
-surrounding stumps. But to return to the hunting-match; the natives
-understanding this kind of warfare, were terribly alarmed, for they at
-once perceived the power and numbers of the whites. Shortly afterwards
-a party of thirteen belonging to two tribes came in; and, conscious of
-their unprotected condition, delivered themselves up in despair.
-Subsequently by the intrepid exertions of Mr. Robinson, an active and
-benevolent man, who fearlessly visited by himself the most hostile of
-the natives, the whole were induced to act in a similar manner. They
-were then removed to an island, where food and clothes were provided
-them. Count Strzelecki states, [6] that "at the epoch of their
-deportation in 1835, the number of natives amounted to 210. In 1842,
-that is, after the interval of seven years, they mustered only
-fifty-four individuals; and, while each family of the interior of New
-South Wales, uncontaminated by contact with the whites, swarms with
-children, those of Flinders' Island had during eight years an accession
-of only fourteen in number!"
-
-The Beagle stayed here ten days, and in this time I made several
-pleasant little excursions, chiefly with the object of examining the
-geological structure of the immediate neighbourhood. The main points
-of interest consist, first in some highly fossiliferous strata,
-belonging to the Devonian or Carboniferous period; secondly, in proofs
-of a late small rise of the land; and lastly, in a solitary and
-superficial patch of yellowish limestone or travertin, which contains
-numerous impressions of leaves of trees, together with land-shells, not
-now existing. It is not improbable that this one small quarry includes
-the only remaining record of the vegetation of Van Diemen's Land during
-one former epoch.
-
-The climate here is damper than in New South Wales, and hence the land
-is more fertile. Agriculture flourishes; the cultivated fields look
-well, and the gardens abound with thriving vegetables and fruit-trees.
-Some of the farm-houses, situated in retired spots, had a very
-attractive appearance. The general aspect of the vegetation is similar
-to that of Australia; perhaps it is a little more green and cheerful;
-and the pasture between the trees rather more abundant. One day I took
-a long walk on the side of the bay opposite to the town: I crossed in a
-steam-boat, two of which are constantly plying backwards and forwards.
-The machinery of one of these vessels was entirely manufactured in this
-colony, which, from its very foundation, then numbered only three and
-thirty years! Another day I ascended Mount Wellington; I took with me
-a guide, for I failed in a first attempt, from the thickness of the
-wood. Our guide, however, was a stupid fellow, and conducted us to the
-southern and damp side of the mountain, where the vegetation was very
-luxuriant; and where the labour of the ascent, from the number of
-rotten trunks, was almost as great as on a mountain in Tierra del Fuego
-or in Chiloe. It cost us five and a half hours of hard climbing before
-we reached the summit. In many parts the Eucalypti grew to a great
-size, and composed a noble forest. In some of the dampest ravines,
-tree-ferns flourished in an extraordinary manner; I saw one which must
-have been at least twenty feet high to the base of the fronds, and was
-in girth exactly six feet. The fronds forming the most elegant
-parasols, produced a gloomy shade, like that of the first hour of the
-night. The summit of the mountain is broad and flat, and is composed
-of huge angular masses of naked greenstone. Its elevation is 3100 feet
-above the level of the sea. The day was splendidly clear, and we
-enjoyed a most extensive view; to the north, the country appeared a
-mass of wooded mountains, of about the same height with that on which
-we were standing, and with an equally tame outline: to the south the
-broken land and water, forming many intricate bays, was mapped with
-clearness before us. After staying some hours on the summit, we found
-a better way to descend, but did not reach the Beagle till eight
-o'clock, after a severe day's work.
-
-February 7th.--The Beagle sailed from Tasmania, and, on the 6th of the
-ensuing month, reached King George's Sound, situated close to the S. W.
-corner of Australia. We stayed there eight days; and we did not during
-our voyage pass a more dull and uninteresting time. The country,
-viewed from an eminence, appears a woody plain, with here and there
-rounded and partly bare hills of granite protruding. One day I went out
-with a party, in hopes of seeing a kangaroo hunt, and walked over a
-good many miles of country. Everywhere we found the soil sandy, and
-very poor; it supported either a coarse vegetation of thin, low
-brushwood and wiry grass, or a forest of stunted trees. The scenery
-resembled that of the high sandstone platform of the Blue Mountains;
-the Casuarina (a tree somewhat resembling a Scotch fir) is, however,
-here in greater number, and the Eucalyptus in rather less. In the open
-parts there were many grass-trees,--a plant which, in appearance, has
-some affinity with the palm; but, instead of being surmounted by a
-crown of noble fronds, it can boast merely of a tuft of very coarse
-grass-like leaves. The general bright green colour of the brushwood
-and other plants, viewed from a distance, seemed to promise fertility.
-A single walk, however, was enough to dispel such an illusion; and he
-who thinks with me will never wish to walk again in so uninviting a
-country.
-
-One day I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to Bald Head; the place
-mentioned by so many navigators, where some imagined that they saw
-corals, and others that they saw petrified trees, standing in the
-position in which they had grown. According to our view, the beds have
-been formed by the wind having heaped up fine sand, composed of minute
-rounded particles of shells and corals, during which process branches
-and roots of trees, together with many land-shells, became enclosed.
-The whole then became consolidated by the percolation of calcareous
-matter; and the cylindrical cavities left by the decaying of the wood,
-were thus also filled up with a hard pseudo-stalactical stone. The
-weather is now wearing away the softer parts, and in consequence the
-hard casts of the roots and branches of the trees project above the
-surface, and, in a singularly deceptive manner, resemble the stumps of
-a dead thicket.
-
-A large tribe of natives, called the White Cockatoo men happened to pay
-the settlement a visit while we were there. These men, as well as those
-of the tribe belonging to King George's Sound, being tempted by the
-offer of some tubs of rice and sugar, were persuaded to hold a
-"corrobery," or great dancing-party. As soon as it grew dark, small
-fires were lighted, and the men commenced their toilet, which consisted
-in painting themselves white in spots and lines. As soon as all was
-ready, large fires were kept blazing, round which the women and
-children were collected as spectators; the Cockatoo and King George's
-men formed two distinct parties, and generally danced in answer to each
-other. The dancing consisted in their running either sideways or in
-Indian file into an open space, and stamping the ground with great
-force as they marched together. Their heavy footsteps were accompanied
-by a kind of grunt, by beating their clubs and spears together, and by
-various other gesticulations, such as extending their arms and
-wriggling their bodies. It was a most rude, barbarous scene, and, to
-our ideas, without any sort of meaning; but we observed that the black
-women and children watched it with the greatest pleasure. Perhaps
-these dances originally represented actions, such as wars and
-victories; there was one called the Emu dance, in which each man
-extended his arm in a bent manner, like the neck of that bird. In
-another dance, one man imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in
-the woods, whilst a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him. When
-both tribes mingled in the dance, the ground trembled with the
-heaviness of their steps, and the air resounded with their wild cries.
-Every one appeared in high spirits, and the group of nearly naked
-figures, viewed by the light of the blazing fires, all moving in
-hideous harmony, formed a perfect display of a festival amongst the
-lowest barbarians. In Tierra del Fuego, we have beheld many curious
-scenes in savage life, but never, I think, one where the natives were
-in such high spirits, and so perfectly at their ease. After the
-dancing was over, the whole party formed a great circle on the ground,
-and the boiled rice and sugar was distributed, to the delight of all.
-
-After several tedious delays from clouded weather, on the 14th of
-March, we gladly stood out of King George's Sound on our course to
-Keeling Island. Farewell, Australia! you are a rising child, and
-doubtless some day will reign a great princess in the South: but you
-are too great and ambitious for affection, yet not great enough for
-respect. I leave your shores without sorrow or regret.
-
-[1] It is remarkable how the same disease is modified in different
-climates. At the little island of St. Helena the introduction of
-scarlet fever is dreaded as a plague. In some countries, foreigners
-and natives are as differently affected by certain contagious disorders
-as if they had been different animals; of which fact some instances
-have occurred in Chile; and, according to Humboldt, in Mexico (Polit.
-Essay, New Spain, vol. iv.).
-
-[2] Narrative of Missionary Enterprise, p. 282.
-
-[3] Captain Beechey (chap. iv., vol. i.) states that the inhabitants of
-Pitcairn Island are firmly convinced that after the arrival of every
-ship they suffer cutaneous and other disorders. Captain Beechey
-attributes this to the change of diet during the time of the visit. Dr.
-Macculloch (Western Isles, vol. ii. p. 32) says: "It is asserted, that
-on the arrival of a stranger (at St. Kilda) all the inhabitants, in the
-common phraseology, catch a cold." Dr. Macculloch considers the whole
-case, although often previously affirmed, as ludicrous. He adds,
-however, that "the question was put by us to the inhabitants who
-unanimously agreed in the story." In Vancouver's Voyage, there is a
-somewhat similar statement with respect to Otaheite. Dr. Dieffenbach,
-in a note to his translation of the Journal, states that the same fact
-is universally believed by the inhabitants of the Chatham Islands, and
-in parts of New Zealand. It is impossible that such a belief should
-have become universal in the northern hemisphere, at the Antipodes, and
-in the Pacific, without some good foundation. Humboldt (Polit. Essay
-on King of New Spain, vol. iv.) says, that the great epidemics of
-Panama and Callao are "marked" by the arrival of ships from Chile,
-because the people from that temperate region, first experience the
-fatal effects of the torrid zones. I may add, that I have heard it
-stated in Shropshire, that sheep, which have been imported from
-vessels, although themselves in a healthy condition, if placed in the
-same fold with others, frequently produce sickness in the flock.
-
-[4] Travels in Australia, vol. i. p. 154. I must express my obligation
-to Sir T. Mitchell, for several interesting personal communications on
-the subject of these great valleys of New South Wales.
-
-[5] I was interested by finding here the hollow conical pitfall of the
-lion-ant, or some other insect; first a fly fell down the treacherous
-slope and immediately disappeared; then came a large but unwary ant;
-its struggles to escape being very violent, those curious little jets
-of sand, described by Kirby and Spence (Entomol., vol. i. p. 425) as
-being flirted by the insect's tail, were promptly directed against the
-expected victim. But the ant enjoyed a better fate than the fly, and
-escaped the fatal jaws which lay concealed at the base of the conical
-hollow. This Australian pitfall was only about half the size of that
-made by the European lion-ant.
-
-[6] Physical Description of New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land, p.
-354.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-KEELING ISLAND:--CORAL FORMATIONS
-
-Keeling Island--Singular appearance--Scanty Flora--Transport of
-Seeds--Birds and Insects--Ebbing and flowing Springs--Fields of dead
-Coral--Stones transported in the roots of Trees--Great Crab--Stinging
-Corals--Coral eating Fish--Coral Formations--Lagoon Islands, or
-Atolls--Depth at which reef-building Corals can live--Vast Areas
-interspersed with low Coral Islands--Subsidence of their
-foundations--Barrier Reefs--Fringing Reefs--Conversion of Fringing
-Reefs into Barrier Reefs, and into Atolls--Evidence of changes in
-Level--Breaches in Barrier Reefs--Maldiva Atolls, their peculiar
-structure--Dead and submerged Reefs--Areas of subsidence and
-elevation--Distribution of Volcanoes--Subsidence slow, and vast in
-amount.
-
-
-APRIL 1st.--We arrived in view of the Keeling or Cocos Islands,
-situated in the Indian Ocean, and about six hundred miles distant from
-the coast of Sumatra. This is one of the lagoon-islands (or atolls) of
-coral formation, similar to those in the Low Archipelago which we
-passed near. When the ship was in the channel at the entrance, Mr.
-Liesk, an English resident, came off in his boat. The history of the
-inhabitants of this place, in as few words as possible, is as follows.
-About nine years ago, Mr. Hare, a worthless character, brought from the
-East Indian archipelago a number of Malay slaves, which now including
-children, amount to more than a hundred. Shortly afterwards, Captain
-Ross, who had before visited these islands in his merchant-ship,
-arrived from England, bringing with him his family and goods for
-settlement: along with him came Mr. Liesk, who had been a mate in his
-vessel. The Malay slaves soon ran away from the islet on which Mr. Hare
-was settled, and joined Captain Ross's party. Mr. Hare upon this was
-ultimately obliged to leave the place.
-
-The Malays are now nominally in a state of freedom, and certainly are
-so, as far as regards their personal treatment; but in most other
-points they are considered as slaves. From their discontented state,
-from the repeated removals from islet to islet, and perhaps also from a
-little mismanagement, things are not very prosperous. The island has
-no domestic quadruped, excepting the pig, and the main vegetable
-production is the cocoa-nut. The whole prosperity of the place depends
-on this tree: the only exports being oil from the nut, and the nuts
-themselves, which are taken to Singapore and Mauritius, where they are
-chiefly used, when grated, in making curries. On the cocoa-nut, also,
-the pigs, which are loaded with fat, almost entirely subsist, as do the
-ducks and poultry. Even a huge land-crab is furnished by nature with
-the means to open and feed on this most useful production.
-
-The ring-formed reef of the lagoon-island is surmounted in the greater
-part of its length by linear islets. On the northern or leeward side,
-there is an opening through which vessels can pass to the anchorage
-within. On entering, the scene was very curious and rather pretty; its
-beauty, however, entirely depended on the brilliancy of the surrounding
-colours. The shallow, clear, and still water of the lagoon, resting in
-its greater part on white sand, is, when illumined by a vertical sun,
-of the most vivid green. This brilliant expanse, several miles in
-width, is on all sides divided, either by a line of snow-white breakers
-from the dark heaving waters of the ocean, or from the blue vault of
-heaven by the strips of land, crowned by the level tops of the
-cocoa-nut trees. As a white cloud here and there affords a pleasing
-contrast with the azure sky, so in the lagoon, bands of living coral
-darken the emerald green water.
-
-The next morning after anchoring, I went on shore on Direction Island.
-The strip of dry land is only a few hundred yards in width; on the
-lagoon side there is a white calcareous beach, the radiation from which
-under this sultry climate was very oppressive; and on the outer coast,
-a solid broad flat of coral-rock served to break the violence of the
-open sea. Excepting near the lagoon, where there is some sand, the
-land is entirely composed of rounded fragments of coral. In such a
-loose, dry, stony soil, the climate of the intertropical regions alone
-could produce a vigorous vegetation. On some of the smaller islets,
-nothing could be more elegant than the manner in which the young and
-full-grown cocoa-nut trees, without destroying each other's symmetry,
-were mingled into one wood. A beach of glittering white sand formed a
-border to these fairy spots.
-
-I will now give a sketch of the natural history of these islands,
-which, from its very paucity, possesses a peculiar interest. The
-cocoa-nut tree, at first glance, seems to compose the whole wood; there
-are however, five or six other trees. One of these grows to a very
-large size, but from the extremes of softness of its wood, is useless;
-another sort affords excellent timber for ship-building. Besides the
-trees, the number of plants is exceedingly limited, and consists of
-insignificant weeds. In my collection, which includes, I believe,
-nearly the perfect Flora, there are twenty species, without reckoning a
-moss, lichen, and fungus. To this number two trees must be added; one
-of which was not in flower, and the other I only heard of. The latter
-is a solitary tree of its kind, and grows near the beach, where,
-without doubt, the one seed was thrown up by the waves. A Guilandina
-also grows on only one of the islets. I do not include in the above
-list the sugar-cane, banana, some other vegetables, fruit-trees, and
-imported grasses. As the islands consist entirely of coral, and at one
-time must have existed as mere water-washed reefs, all their
-terrestrial productions must have been transported here by the waves of
-the sea. In accordance with this, the Florula has quite the character
-of a refuge for the destitute: Professor Henslow informs me that of the
-twenty species nineteen belong to different genera, and these again to
-no less than sixteen families! [1]
-
-In Holman's [2] Travels an account is given, on the authority of Mr. A.
-S. Keating, who resided twelve months on these islands, of the various
-seeds and other bodies which have been known to have been washed on
-shore. "Seeds and plants from Sumatra and Java have been driven up by
-the surf on the windward side of the islands. Among them have been
-found the Kimiri, native of Sumatra and the peninsula of Malacca; the
-cocoa-nut of Balci, known by its shape and size; the Dadass, which is
-planted by the Malays with the pepper-vine, the latter intwining round
-its trunk, and supporting itself by the prickles on its stem; the
-soap-tree; the castor-oil plant; trunks of the sago palm; and various
-kinds of seeds unknown to the Malays settled on the islands. These are
-all supposed to have been driven by the N. W. monsoon to the coast of
-New Holland, and thence to these islands by the S. E. trade-wind. Large
-masses of Java teak and Yellow wood have also been found, besides
-immense trees of red and white cedar, and the blue gumwood of New
-Holland, in a perfectly sound condition. All the hardy seeds, such as
-creepers, retain their germinating power, but the softer kinds, among
-which is the mangostin, are destroyed in the passage. Fishing-canoes,
-apparently from Java, have at times been washed on shore." It is
-interesting thus to discover how numerous the seeds are, which, coming
-from several countries, are drifted over the wide ocean. Professor
-Henslow tells me, he believes that nearly all the plants which I
-brought from these islands, are common littoral species in the East
-Indian archipelago. From the direction, however, of the winds and
-currents, it seems scarcely possible that they could have come here in
-a direct line. If, as suggested with much probability by Mr. Keating,
-they were first carried towards the coast of New Holland, and thence
-drifted back together with the productions of that country, the seeds,
-before germinating, must have travelled between 1800 and 2400 miles.
-
-Chamisso, [3] when describing the Radack Archipelago, situated in the
-western part of the Pacific, states that "the sea brings to these
-islands the seeds and fruits of many trees, most of which have yet not
-grown here. The greater part of these seeds appear to have not yet
-lost the capability of growing."
-
-It is also said that palms and bamboos from somewhere in the torrid
-zone, and trunks of northern firs, are washed on shore: these firs must
-have come from an immense distance. These facts are highly
-interesting. It cannot be doubted that if there were land-birds to
-pick up the seeds when first cast on shore, and a soil better adapted
-for their growth than the loose blocks of coral, that the most isolated
-of the lagoon-islands would in time possess a far more abundant Flora
-than they now have.
-
-The list of land animals is even poorer than that of the plants. Some
-of the islets are inhabited by rats, which were brought in a ship from
-the Mauritius, wrecked here. These rats are considered by Mr.
-Waterhouse as identical with the English kind, but they are smaller,
-and more brightly coloured. There are no true land-birds, for a snipe
-and a rail (Rallus Phillippensis), though living entirely in the dry
-herbage, belong to the order of Waders. Birds of this order are said
-to occur on several of the small low islands in the Pacific. At
-Ascension, where there is no land-bird, a rail (Porphyrio simplex) was
-shot near the summit of the mountain, and it was evidently a solitary
-straggler. At Tristan d'Acunha, where, according to Carmichael, there
-are only two land-birds, there is a coot. From these facts I believe
-that the waders, after the innumerable web-footed species, are
-generally the first colonists of small isolated islands. I may add,
-that whenever I noticed birds, not of oceanic species, very far out at
-sea, they always belonged to this order; and hence they would naturally
-become the earliest colonists of any remote point of land.
-
-Of reptiles I saw only one small lizard. Of insects I took pains to
-collect every kind. Exclusive of spiders, which were numerous, there
-were thirteen species. [4] Of these, one only was a beetle. A small
-ant swarmed by thousands under the loose dry blocks of coral, and was
-the only true insect which was abundant. Although the productions of
-the land are thus scanty, if we look to the waters of the surrounding
-sea, the number of organic beings is indeed infinite. Chamisso has
-described [5] the natural history of a lagoon-island in the Radack
-Archipelago; and it is remarkable how closely its inhabitants, in
-number and kind, resemble those of Keeling Island. There is one lizard
-and two waders, namely, a snipe and curlew. Of plants there are
-nineteen species, including a fern; and some of these are the same with
-those growing here, though on a spot so immensely remote, and in a
-different ocean.
-
-The long strips of land, forming the linear islets, have been raised
-only to that height to which the surf can throw fragments of coral, and
-the wind heap up calcareous sand. The solid flat of coral rock on the
-outside, by its breadth, breaks the first violence of the waves, which
-otherwise, in a day, would sweep away these islets and all their
-productions. The ocean and the land seem here struggling for mastery:
-although terra firma has obtained a footing, the denizens of the water
-think their claim at least equally good. In every part one meets
-hermit crabs of more than one species, [6] carrying on their backs the
-shells which they have stolen from the neighbouring beach. Overhead,
-numerous gannets, frigate-birds, and terns, rest on the trees; and the
-wood, from the many nests and from the smell of the atmosphere, might
-be called a sea-rookery. The gannets, sitting on their rude nests,
-gaze at one with a stupid yet angry air. The noddies, as their name
-expresses, are silly little creatures. But there is one charming bird:
-it is a small, snow-white tern, which smoothly hovers at the distance
-of a few feet above one's head, its large black eye scanning, with
-quiet curiosity, your expression. Little imagination is required to
-fancy that so light and delicate a body must be tenanted by some
-wandering fairy spirit.
-
-Sunday, April 3rd.--After service I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to the
-settlement, situated at the distance of some miles, on the point of an
-islet thickly covered with tall cocoa-nut trees. Captain Ross and Mr.
-Liesk live in a large barn-like house open at both ends, and lined with
-mats made of woven bark. The houses of the Malays are arranged along
-the shore of the lagoon. The whole place had rather a desolate aspect,
-for there were no gardens to show the signs of care and cultivation.
-The natives belong to different islands in the East Indian archipelago,
-but all speak the same language: we saw the inhabitants of Borneo,
-Celebes, Java, and Sumatra. In colour they resemble the Tahitians,
-from whom they do not widely differ in features. Some of the women,
-however, show a good deal of the Chinese character. I liked both their
-general expressions and the sound of their voices. They appeared poor,
-and their houses were destitute of furniture; but it was evident, from
-the plumpness of the little children, that cocoa-nuts and turtle afford
-no bad sustenance.
-
-On this island the wells are situated, from which ships obtain water.
-At first sight it appears not a little remarkable that the fresh water
-should regularly ebb and flow with the tides; and it has even been
-imagined, that sand has the power of filtering the salt from the
-sea-water. These ebbing wells are common on some of the low islands in
-the West Indies. The compressed sand, or porous coral rock, is
-permeated like a sponge with the salt water, but the rain which falls
-on the surface must sink to the level of the surrounding sea, and must
-accumulate there, displacing an equal bulk of the salt water. As the
-water in the lower part of the great sponge-like coral mass rises and
-falls with the tides, so will the water near the surface; and this will
-keep fresh, if the mass be sufficiently compact to prevent much
-mechanical admixture; but where the land consists of great loose blocks
-of coral with open interstices, if a well be dug, the water, as I have
-seen, is brackish.
-
-After dinner we stayed to see a curious half superstitious scene acted
-by the Malay women. A large wooden spoon dressed in garments, and
-which had been carried to the grave of a dead man, they pretend becomes
-inspired at the full of the moon, and will dance and jump about. After
-the proper preparations, the spoon, held by two women, became
-convulsed, and danced in good time to the song of the surrounding
-children and women. It was a most foolish spectacle; but Mr. Liesk
-maintained that many of the Malays believed in its spiritual movements.
-The dance did not commence till the moon had risen, and it was well
-worth remaining to behold her bright orb so quietly shining through the
-long arms of the cocoa-nut trees as they waved in the evening breeze.
-These scenes of the tropics are in themselves so delicious, that they
-almost equal those dearer ones at home, to which we are bound by each
-best feeling of the mind.
-
-The next day I employed myself in examining the very interesting, yet
-simple structure and origin of these islands. The water being unusually
-smooth, I waded over the outer flat of dead rock as far as the living
-mounds of coral, on which the swell of the open sea breaks. In some of
-the gullies and hollows there were beautiful green and other coloured
-fishes, and the form and tints of many of the zoophytes were admirable.
-It is excusable to grow enthusiastic over the infinite numbers of
-organic beings with which the sea of the tropics, so prodigal of life,
-teems; yet I must confess I think those naturalists who have described,
-in well-known words, the submarine grottoes decked with a thousand
-beauties, have indulged in rather exuberant language.
-
-April 6th.--I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to an island at the head of
-the lagoon: the channel was exceedingly intricate, winding through
-fields of delicately branched corals. We saw several turtle and two
-boats were then employed in catching them. The water was so clear and
-shallow, that although at first a turtle quickly dives out of sight,
-yet in a canoe or boat under sail, the pursuers after no very long
-chase come up to it. A man standing ready in the bow, at this moment
-dashes through the water upon the turtle's back; then clinging with
-both hands by the shell of its neck, he is carried away till the animal
-becomes exhausted and is secured. It was quite an interesting chase to
-see the two boats thus doubling about, and the men dashing head
-foremost into the water trying to seize their prey. Captain Moresby
-informs me that in the Chagos archipelago in this same ocean, the
-natives, by a horrible process, take the shell from the back of the
-living turtle. "It is covered with burning charcoal, which causes the
-outer shell to curl upwards, it is then forced off with a knife, and
-before it becomes cold flattened between boards. After this barbarous
-process the animal is suffered to regain its native element, where,
-after a certain time, a new shell is formed; it is, however, too thin
-to be of any service, and the animal always appears languishing and
-sickly."
-
-When we arrived at the head of the lagoon, we crossed a narrow islet,
-and found a great surf breaking on the windward coast. I can hardly
-explain the reason, but there is to my mind much grandeur in the view
-of the outer shores of these lagoon-islands. There is a simplicity in
-the barrier-like beach, the margin of green bushes and tall cocoa-nuts,
-the solid flat of dead coral-rock, strewed here and there with great
-loose fragments, and the line of furious breakers, all rounding away
-towards either hand. The ocean throwing its waters over the broad reef
-appears an invincible, all-powerful enemy; yet we see it resisted, and
-even conquered, by means which at first seem most weak and inefficient.
-It is not that the ocean spares the rock of coral; the great fragments
-scattered over the reef, and heaped on the beach, whence the tall
-cocoa-nut springs, plainly bespeak the unrelenting power of the waves.
-Nor are any periods of repose granted. The long swell caused by the
-gentle but steady action of the trade-wind, always blowing in one
-direction over a wide area, causes breakers, almost equalling in force
-those during a gale of wind in the temperate regions, and which never
-cease to rage. It is impossible to behold these waves without feeling
-a conviction that an island, though built of the hardest rock, let it
-be porphyry, granite, or quartz, would ultimately yield and be
-demolished by such an irresistible power. Yet these low, insignificant
-coral-islets stand and are victorious: for here another power, as an
-antagonist, takes part in the contest. The organic forces separate the
-atoms of carbonate of lime, one by one, from the foaming breakers, and
-unite them into a symmetrical structure. Let the hurricane tear up its
-thousand huge fragments; yet what will that tell against the
-accumulated labour of myriads of architects at work night and day,
-month after month? Thus do we see the soft and gelatinous body of a
-polypus, through the agency of the vital laws, conquering the great
-mechanical power of the waves of an ocean which neither the art of man
-nor the inanimate works of nature could successfully resist.
-
-We did not return on board till late in the evening, for we stayed a
-long time in the lagoon, examining the fields of coral and the gigantic
-shells of the chama, into which, if a man were to put his hand, he
-would not, as long as the animal lived, be able to withdraw it. Near
-the head of the lagoon I was much surprised to find a wide area,
-considerably more than a mile square, covered with a forest of
-delicately branching corals, which, though standing upright, were all
-dead and rotten. At first I was quite at a loss to understand the
-cause afterwards it occurred to me that it was owing to the following
-rather curious combination of circumstances. It should, however, first
-be stated, that corals are not able to survive even a short exposure in
-the air to the sun's rays, so that their upward limit of growth is
-determined by that of lowest water at spring tides. It appears, from
-some old charts, that the long island to windward was formerly
-separated by wide channels into several islets; this fact is likewise
-indicated by the trees being younger on these portions. Under the
-former condition of the reef, a strong breeze, by throwing more water
-over the barrier, would tend to raise the level of the lagoon. Now it
-acts in a directly contrary manner; for the water within the lagoon not
-only is not increased by currents from the outside, but is itself blown
-outwards by the force of the wind. Hence it is observed, that the tide
-near the head of the lagoon does not rise so high during a strong
-breeze as it does when it is calm. This difference of level, although
-no doubt very small, has, I believe, caused the death of those
-coral-groves, which under the former and more open condition of the
-outer reef has attained the utmost possible limit of upward growth.
-
-A few miles north of Keeling there is another small atoll, the lagoon
-of which is nearly filled up with coral-mud. Captain Ross found
-embedded in the conglomerate on the outer coast, a well-rounded
-fragment of greenstone, rather larger than a man's head: he and the men
-with him were so much surprised at this, that they brought it away and
-preserved it as a curiosity. The occurrence of this one stone, where
-every other particle of matter is calcareous, certainly is very
-puzzling. The island has scarcely ever been visited, nor is it
-probable that a ship had been wrecked there. From the absence of any
-better explanation, I came to the conclusion that it must have come
-entangled in the roots of some large tree: when, however, I considered
-the great distance from the nearest land, the combination of chances
-against a stone thus being entangled, the tree washed into the sea,
-floated so far, then landed safely, and the stone finally so embedded
-as to allow of its discovery, I was almost afraid of imagining a means
-of transport apparently so improbable. It was therefore with great
-interest that I found Chamisso, the justly distinguished naturalist who
-accompanied Kotzebue, stating that the inhabitants of the Radack
-archipelago, a group of lagoon-islands in the midst of the Pacific,
-obtained stones for sharpening their instruments by searching the roots
-of trees which are cast upon the beach. It will be evident that this
-must have happened several times, since laws have been established that
-such stones belong to the chief, and a punishment is inflicted on any
-one who attempts to steal them. When the isolated position of these
-small islands in the midst of a vast ocean--their great distance from
-any land excepting that of coral formation, attested by the value which
-the inhabitants, who are such bold navigators, attach to a stone of any
-kind, [7]--and the slowness of the currents of the open sea, are all
-considered, the occurrence of pebbles thus transported does appear
-wonderful. Stones may often be thus carried; and if the island on
-which they are stranded is constructed of any other substance besides
-coral, they would scarcely attract attention, and their origin at least
-would never be guessed. Moreover, this agency may long escape
-discovery from the probability of trees, especially those loaded with
-stones, floating beneath the surface. In the channels of Tierra del
-Fuego large quantities of drift timber are cast upon the beach, yet it
-is extremely rare to meet a tree swimming on the water. These facts
-may possibly throw light on single stones, whether angular or rounded,
-occasionally found embedded in fine sedimentary masses.
-
-During another day I visited West Islet, on which the vegetation was
-perhaps more luxuriant than on any other. The cocoa-nut trees generally
-grow separate, but here the young ones flourished beneath their tall
-parents, and formed with their long and curved fronds the most shady
-arbours. Those alone who have tried it, know how delicious it is to be
-seated in such shade, and drink the cool pleasant fluid of the
-cocoa-nut. In this island there is a large bay-like space, composed of
-the finest white sand: it is quite level and is only covered by the
-tide at high water; from this large bay smaller creeks penetrate the
-surrounding woods. To see a field of glittering white sand,
-representing water, with the cocoa-nut trees extending their tall and
-waving trunks around the margin, formed a singular and very pretty view.
-
-I have before alluded to a crab which lives on the cocoa-nuts; it is
-very common on all parts of the dry land, and grows to a monstrous
-size: it is closely allied or identical with the Birgos latro. The
-front pair of legs terminate in very strong and heavy pincers, and the
-last pair are fitted with others weaker and much narrower. It would at
-first be thought quite impossible for a crab to open a strong cocoa-nut
-covered with the husk; but Mr. Liesk assures me that he has repeatedly
-seen this effected. The crab begins by tearing the husk, fibre by
-fibre, and always from that end under which the three eye-holes are
-situated; when this is completed, the crab commences hammering with its
-heavy claws on one of the eye-holes till an opening is made. Then
-turning round its body, by the aid of its posterior and narrow pair of
-pincers, it extracts the white albuminous substance. I think this is as
-curious a case of instinct as ever I heard of, and likewise of
-adaptation in structure between two objects apparently so remote from
-each other in the scheme of nature, as a crab and a cocoa-nut tree. The
-Birgos is diurnal in its habits; but every night it is said to pay a
-visit to the sea, no doubt for the purpose of moistening its branchiae.
-The young are likewise hatched, and live for some time, on the coast.
-These crabs inhabit deep burrows, which they hollow out beneath the
-roots of trees; and where they accumulate surprising quantities of the
-picked fibres of the cocoa-nut husk, on which they rest as on a bed.
-The Malays sometimes take advantage of this, and collect the fibrous
-mass to use as junk. These crabs are very good to eat; moreover, under
-the tail of the larger ones there is a mass of fat, which, when melted,
-sometimes yields as much as a quart bottle full of limpid oil. It has
-been stated by some authors that the Birgos crawls up the cocoa-nut
-trees for the purpose of stealing the nuts: I very much doubt the
-possibility of this; but with the Pandanus [8] the task would be very
-much easier. I was told by Mr. Liesk that on these islands the Birgos
-lives only on the nuts which have fallen to the ground.
-
-Captain Moresby informs me that this crab inhabits the Chagos and
-Seychelle groups, but not the neighbouring Maldiva archipelago. It
-formerly abounded at Mauritius, but only a few small ones are now found
-there. In the Pacific, this species, or one with closely allied
-habits, is said [9] to inhabit a single coral island, north of the
-Society group. To show the wonderful strength of the front pair of
-pincers, I may mention, that Captain Moresby confined one in a strong
-tin-box, which had held biscuits, the lid being secured with wire; but
-the crab turned down the edges and escaped. In turning down the edges,
-it actually punched many small holes quite through the tin!
-
-I was a good deal surprised by finding two species of coral of the
-genus Millepora (M. complanata and alcicornis), possessed of the power
-of stinging. The stony branches or plates, when taken fresh from the
-water, have a harsh feel and are not slimy, although possessing a
-strong and disagreeable smell. The stinging property seems to vary in
-different specimens: when a piece was pressed or rubbed on the tender
-skin of the face or arm, a pricking sensation was usually caused, which
-came on after the interval of a second, and lasted only for a few
-minutes. One day, however, by merely touching my face with one of the
-branches, pain was instantaneously caused; it increased as usual after
-a few seconds, and remaining sharp for some minutes, was perceptible
-for half an hour afterwards. The sensation was as bad as that from a
-nettle, but more like that caused by the Physalia or Portuguese
-man-of-war. Little red spots were produced on the tender skin of the
-arm, which appeared as if they would have formed watery pustules, but
-did not. M. Quoy mentions this case of the Millepora; and I have heard
-of stinging corals in the West Indies. Many marine animals seem to
-have this power of stinging: besides the Portuguese man-of-war, many
-jelly-fish, and the Aplysia or sea-slug of the Cape de Verd Islands, it
-is stated in the voyage of the Astrolabe, that an Actinia or
-sea-anemone, as well as a flexible coralline allied to Sertularia, both
-possess this means of offence or defence. In the East Indian sea, a
-stinging sea-weed is said to be found.
-
-Two species of fish, of the genus Scarus, which are common here,
-exclusively feed on coral: both are coloured of a splendid
-bluish-green, one living invariably in the lagoon, and the other
-amongst the outer breakers. Mr. Liesk assured us, that he had
-repeatedly seen whole shoals grazing with their strong bony jaws on the
-tops of the coral branches: I opened the intestines of several, and
-found them distended with yellowish calcareous sandy mud. The slimy
-disgusting Holuthuriae (allied to our star-fish), which the Chinese
-gourmands are so fond of, also feed largely, as I am informed by Dr.
-Allan, on corals; and the bony apparatus within their bodies seems well
-adapted for this end. These Holuthuriae, the fish, the numerous
-burrowing shells, and nereidous worms, which perforate every block of
-dead coral, must be very efficient agents in producing the fine white
-mud which lies at the bottom and on the shores of the lagoon. A
-portion, however, of this mud, which when wet resembled pounded chalk,
-was found by Professor Ehrenberg to be partly composed of
-siliceous-shielded infusoria.
-
-April 12th.--In the morning we stood out of the lagoon on our passage
-to the Isle of France. I am glad we have visited these islands: such
-formations surely rank high amongst the wonderful objects of this
-world. Captain Fitz Roy found no bottom with a line 7200 feet in
-length, at the distance of only 2200 yards from the shore; hence this
-island forms a lofty submarine mountain, with sides steeper even than
-those of the most abrupt volcanic cone. The saucer-shaped summit is
-nearly ten miles across; and every single atom, [10] from the least
-particle to the largest fragment of rock, in this great pile, which
-however is small compared with very many other lagoon-islands, bears
-the stamp of having been subjected to organic arrangement. We feel
-surprise when travellers tell us of the vast dimensions of the Pyramids
-and other great ruins, but how utterly insignificant are the greatest
-of these, when compared to these mountains of stone accumulated by the
-agency of various minute and tender animals! This is a wonder which
-does not at first strike the eye of the body, but, after reflection,
-the eye of reason.
-
-I will now give a very brief account of the three great classes of
-coral-reefs; namely, Atolls, Barrier, and Fringing-reefs, and will
-explain my views [11] on their formation. Almost every voyager who has
-crossed the Pacific has expressed his unbounded astonishment at the
-lagoon-islands, or as I shall for the future call them by their Indian
-name of atolls, and has attempted some explanation. Even as long ago
-as the year 1605, Pyrard de Laval well exclaimed, "C'est
-
-[picture]
-
-une merveille de voir chacun de ces atollons, environne d'un grand banc
-de pierre tout autour, n'y ayant point d'artifice humain." The
-accompanying sketch of Whitsunday Island in the Pacific, copied from,
-Capt. Beechey's admirable Voyage, gives but a faint idea of the
-singular aspect of an atoll: it is one of the smallest size, and has
-its narrow islets united together in a ring. The immensity of the
-ocean, the fury of the breakers, contrasted with the lowness of the
-land and the smoothness of the bright green water within the lagoon,
-can hardly be imagined without having been seen.
-
-The earlier voyagers fancied that the coral-building animals
-instinctively built up their great circles to afford themselves
-protection in the inner parts; but so far is this from the truth, that
-those massive kinds, to whose growth on the exposed outer shores the
-very existence of the reef depends, cannot live within the lagoon,
-where other delicately-branching kinds flourish. Moreover, on this
-view, many species of distinct genera and families are supposed to
-combine for one end; and of such a combination, not a single instance
-can be found in the whole of nature. The theory that has been most
-generally received is, that atolls are based on submarine craters; but
-when we consider the form and size of some, the number, proximity, and
-relative positions of others, this idea loses its plausible character:
-thus Suadiva atoll is 44 geographical miles in diameter in one line, by
-34 miles in another line; Rimsky is 54 by 20 miles across, and it has a
-strangely sinuous margin; Bow atoll is 30 miles long, and on an average
-only 6 in width; Menchicoff atoll consists of three atolls united or
-tied together. This theory, moreover, is totally inapplicable to the
-northern Maldiva atolls in the Indian Ocean (one of which is 88 miles
-in length, and between 10 and 20 in breadth), for they are not bounded
-like ordinary atolls by narrow reefs, but by a vast number of separate
-little atolls; other little atolls rising out of the great central
-lagoon-like spaces. A third and better theory was advanced by
-Chamisso, who thought that from the corals growing more vigorously
-where exposed to the open sea, as undoubtedly is the case, the outer
-edges would grow up from the general foundation before any other part,
-and that this would account for the ring or cup-shaped structure. But
-we shall immediately see, that in this, as well as in the
-crater-theory, a most important consideration has been overlooked,
-namely, on what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at a
-great depth, based their massive structures?
-
-Numerous soundings were carefully taken by Captain Fitz Roy on the
-steep outside of Keeling atoll, and it was found that within ten
-fathoms, the prepared tallow at the bottom of the lead, invariably came
-up marked with the impression of living corals, but as perfectly clean
-as if it had been dropped on a carpet of turf; as the depth increased,
-the impressions became less numerous, but the adhering particles of
-sand more and more numerous, until at last it was evident that the
-bottom consisted of a smooth sandy layer: to carry on the analogy of
-the turf, the blades of grass grew thinner and thinner, till at last
-the soil was so sterile, that nothing sprang from it. From these
-observations, confirmed by many others, it may be safely inferred that
-the utmost depth at which corals can construct reefs is between 20 and
-30 fathoms. Now there are enormous areas in the Pacific and Indian
-Ocean, in which every single island is of coral formation, and is
-raised only to that height to which the waves can throw up fragments,
-and the winds pile up sand. Thus Radack group of atolls is an
-irregular square, 520 miles long and 240 broad; the Low Archipelago is
-elliptic-formed, 840 miles in its longer, and 420 in its shorter axis:
-there are other small groups and single low islands between these two
-archipelagoes, making a linear space of ocean actually more than 4000
-miles in length, in which not one single island rises above the
-specified height. Again, in the Indian Ocean there is a space of ocean
-1500 miles in length, including three archipelagoes, in which every
-island is low and of coral formation. From the fact of the
-reef-building corals not living at great depths, it is absolutely
-certain that throughout these vast areas, wherever there is now an
-atoll, a foundation must have originally existed within a depth of from
-20 to 30 fathoms from the surface. It is improbable in the highest
-degree that broad, lofty, isolated, steep-sided banks of sediment,
-arranged in groups and lines hundreds of leagues in length, could have
-been deposited in the central and profoundest parts of the Pacific and
-Indian Oceans, at an immense distance from any continent, and where the
-water is perfectly limpid. It is equally improbable that the elevatory
-forces should have uplifted throughout the above vast areas,
-innumerable great rocky banks within 20 to 30 fathoms, or 120 to 180
-feet, of the surface of the sea, and not one single point above that
-level; for where on the whole surface of the globe can we find a single
-chain of mountains, even a few hundred miles in length, with their many
-summits rising within a few feet of a given level, and not one pinnacle
-above it? If then the foundations, whence the atoll-building corals
-sprang, were not formed of sediment, and if they were not lifted up to
-the required level, they must of necessity have subsided into it; and
-this at once solves the difficulty. For as mountain after mountain,
-and island after island, slowly sank beneath the water, fresh bases
-would be successively afforded for the growth of the corals. It is
-impossible here to enter into all the necessary details, but I venture
-to defy [12] any one to explain in any other manner how it is possible
-that numerous islands should be distributed throughout vast areas--all
-the islands being low--all being built of corals, absolutely requiring
-a foundation within a limited depth from the surface.
-
-Before explaining how atoll-formed reefs acquire their peculiar
-structure, we must turn to the second great class, namely,
-Barrier-reefs. These either extend in straight lines in front of the
-shores of a continent or of a large island, or they encircle smaller
-islands; in both cases, being separated from the land by a broad and
-rather deep channel of water, analogous to the lagoon within an atoll.
-It is remarkable how little attention has been paid to encircling
-barrier-reefs; yet they are truly wonderful structures. The following
-sketch represents part of the barrier encircling the island of Bolabola
-in the Pacific, as seen from one of the central peaks. In this instance
-the whole line of reef has been converted into land; but usually a
-snow-white line of great breakers, with only here and there a single
-low islet crowned with cocoa-nut trees, divides the dark heaving waters
-of the ocean from the light-green expanse of the lagoon-channel. And
-the quiet waters of this channel generally bathe a fringe of low
-alluvial soil, loaded with the most beautiful productions of the
-tropics, and lying at the foot of the wild, abrupt, central mountains.
-
-Encircling barrier-reefs are of all sizes, from three miles to no less
-than forty-four miles in diameter; and that which fronts one side, and
-encircles both ends, of New Caledonia, is 400 miles long. Each reef
-includes one, two, or several rocky islands of various heights; and in
-one instance, even as many as twelve separate islands. The reef runs
-at a greater or less distance from the included land; in the Society
-archipelago generally from one to three or four miles; but at Hogoleu
-the reef is 20 miles on the southern side, and 14 miles on the opposite
-or northern side, from the included islands. The depth within the
-lagoon-channel also varies much; from 10 to 30 fathoms may be taken as
-an average; but at Vanikoro there are spaces no less than 56 fathoms or
-363 feet deep. Internally the reef either slopes gently into the
-lagoon-channel, or ends in a perpendicular wall sometimes between two
-and three hundred feet under water in height: externally the reef
-rises, like an atoll, with extreme abruptness out of the profound
-depths of the ocean.
-
-What can be more singular than these structures? We see
-
-[picture]
-
-an island, which may be compared to a castle situated on the summit of
-a lofty submarine mountain, protected by a great wall of coral-rock,
-always steep externally and sometimes internally, with a broad level
-summit, here and there breached by a narrow gateway, through which the
-largest ships can enter the wide and deep encircling moat.
-
-As far as the actual reef of coral is concerned, there is not the
-smallest difference, in general size, outline, grouping, and even in
-quite trifling details of structure, between a barrier and an atoll.
-The geographer Balbi has well remarked, that an encircled island is an
-atoll with high land rising out of its lagoon; remove the land from
-within, and a perfect atoll is left.
-
-But what has caused these reefs to spring up at such great distances
-from the shores of the included islands? It cannot be that the corals
-will not grow close to the land; for the shores within the
-lagoon-channel, when not surrounded by alluvial soil, are often fringed
-by living reefs; and we shall presently see that there is a whole
-class, which I have called Fringing Reefs from their close attachment
-to the shores both of continents and of islands. Again, on what have
-the reef-building corals, which cannot live at great depths, based
-their encircling structures? This is a great apparent difficulty,
-analogous to that in the case of atolls, which has generally been
-overlooked. It will be perceived more clearly by inspecting the
-following sections which are real ones, taken in north and south lines,
-through the islands with their barrier-reefs, of Vanikoro, Gambier, and
-Maurua; and they are laid down, both vertically and horizontally, on
-the same scale of a quarter of an inch to a mile.
-
-It should be observed that the sections might have been taken in any
-direction through these islands, or through
-
-[picture]
-
-many other encircled islands, and the general features would have been
-the same. Now, bearing in mind that reef-building coral cannot live at
-a greater depth than from 20 to 30 fathoms, and that the scale is so
-small that the plummets on the right hand show a depth of 200 fathoms,
-on what are these barrier-reefs based? Are we to suppose that each
-island is surrounded by a collar-like submarine ledge of rock, or by a
-great bank of sediment, ending abruptly where the reef ends?
-
-If the sea had formerly eaten deeply into the islands, before they were
-protected by the reefs, thus having left a shallow ledge round them
-under water, the present shores would have been invariably bounded by
-great precipices, but this is most rarely the case. Moreover, on this
-notion, it is not possible to explain why the corals should have sprung
-up, like a wall, from the extreme outer margin of the ledge, often
-leaving a broad space of water within, too deep for the growth of
-corals. The accumulation of a wide bank of sediment all round these
-islands, and generally widest where the included islands are smallest,
-is highly improbable, considering their exposed positions in the
-central and deepest parts of the ocean. In the case of the
-barrier-reef of New Caledonia, which extends for 150 miles beyond the
-northern point of the islands, in the same straight line with which it
-fronts the west coast, it is hardly possible to believe that a bank of
-sediment could thus have been straightly deposited in front of a lofty
-island, and so far beyond its termination in the open sea. Finally, if
-we look to other oceanic islands of about the same height and of
-similar geological constitution, but not encircled by coral-reefs, we
-may in vain search for so trifling a circumambient depth as 30 fathoms,
-except quite near to their shores; for usually land that rises abruptly
-out of water, as do most of the encircled and non-encircled oceanic
-islands, plunges abruptly under it. On what then, I repeat, are these
-barrier reefs based? Why, with their wide and deep moat-like channels,
-do they stand so far from the included land? We shall soon see how
-easily these difficulties disappear.
-
-We come now to our third class of Fringing-reefs, which will require a
-very short notice. Where the land slopes abruptly under water, these
-reefs are only a few yards in width, forming a mere ribbon or fringe
-round the shores: where the land slopes gently under the water the reef
-extends further, sometimes even as much as a mile from the land; but in
-such cases the soundings outside the reef always show that the
-submarine prolongation of the land is gently inclined. In fact, the
-reefs extend only to that distance from the shore, at which a
-foundation within the requisite depth from 20 to 30 fathoms is found.
-As far as the actual reef is concerned, there is no essential
-difference between it and that forming a barrier or an atoll: it is,
-however, generally of less width, and consequently few islets have been
-formed on it. From the corals growing more vigorously on the outside,
-and from the noxious effect of the sediment washed inwards, the outer
-edge of the reef is the highest part, and between it and the land there
-is generally a shallow sandy channel a few feet in depth. Where banks
-or sediments have accumulated near to the surface, as in parts of the
-West Indies, they sometimes become fringed with corals, and hence in
-some degree resemble lagoon-islands or atolls, in the same manner as
-fringing-reefs, surrounding gently sloping islands, in some degree
-resemble barrier-reefs.
-
-
-No theory on the formation of coral-reefs can be considered
-satisfactory which does not include the three great
-
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-
-classes. We have seen that we are driven to believe in the subsidence
-of those vast areas, interspersed with low islands, of which not one
-rises above the height to which the wind and waves can throw up matter,
-and yet are constructed by animals requiring a foundation, and that
-foundation to lie at no great depth. Let us then take an island
-surrounded by fringing-reefs, which offer no difficulty in their
-structure; and let this island with its reefs, represented by the
-unbroken lines in the woodcut, slowly subside. Now, as the island
-sinks down, either a few feet at a time or quite insensibly, we may
-safely infer, from what is known of the conditions favourable to the
-growth of coral, that the living masses, bathed by the surf on the
-margin of the reef, will soon regain the surface. The water, however,
-will encroach little by little on the shore, the island becoming lower
-and smaller, and the space between the inner edge of the reef and the
-beach proportionately broader. A section of the reef and island in
-this state, after a subsidence of several hundred feet, is given by the
-dotted lines. Coral islets are supposed to have been formed on the
-reef; and a ship is anchored in the lagoon-channel. This channel will
-be more or less deep, according to the rate of subsidence, to the
-amount of sediment accumulated in it, and to the growth of the
-delicately branched corals which can live there. The section in this
-state resembles in every respect one drawn through an encircled island:
-in fact, it is a real section (on the scale of .517 of an inch to a
-mile) through Bolabola in the Pacific. We can now at once see why
-encircling barrier-reefs stand so far from the shores which they front.
-We can also perceive, that a line drawn perpendicularly down from the
-outer edge of the new reef, to the foundation of solid rock beneath the
-old fringing-reef, will exceed by as many feet as there have been feet
-of subsidence, that small limit of depth at which the effective corals
-can live:--the little architects having built up their great wall-like
-mass, as the whole sank down, upon a basis formed of other corals and
-their consolidated fragments. Thus the difficulty on this head, which
-appeared so great, disappears.
-
-If, instead of an island, we had taken the shore of a continent fringed
-with reefs, and had imagined it to have subsided, a great straight
-barrier, like that of Australia or New Caledonia, separated from the
-land by a wide and deep channel, would evidently have been the result.
-
-Let us take our new encircling barrier-reef, of which the section is
-now represented by unbroken lines, and which, as I have said, is a real
-section through Bolabola, and let it go on subsiding. As the
-barrier-reef slowly sinks down, the corals will go on vigorously
-growing upwards; but as the island sinks, the water will gain inch by
-inch on the shore--the separate mountains first forming separate
-islands within
-
-[picture]
-
-one great reef--and finally, the last and highest pinnacle
-disappearing. The instant this takes place, a perfect atoll is formed:
-I have said, remove the high land from within an encircling
-barrier-reef, and an atoll is left, and the land has been removed. We
-can now perceive how it comes that atolls, having sprung from
-encircling barrier-reefs, resemble them in general size, form, in the
-manner in which they are grouped together, and in their arrangement in
-single or double lines; for they may be called rude outline charts of
-the sunken islands over which they stand. We can further see how it
-arises that the atolls in the Pacific and Indian Oceans extend in lines
-parallel to the generally prevailing strike of the high islands and
-great coast-lines of those oceans. I venture, therefore, to affirm,
-that on the theory of the upward growth of the corals during the
-sinking of the land, [13] all the leading features in those wonderful
-structures, the lagoon-islands or atolls, which have so long excited
-the attention of voyagers, as well as in the no less wonderful
-barrier-reefs, whether encircling small islands or stretching for
-hundreds of miles along the shores of a continent, are simply explained.
-
-It may be asked, whether I can offer any direct evidence of the
-subsidence of barrier-reefs or atolls; but it must be borne in mind how
-difficult it must ever be to detect a movement, the tendency of which
-is to hide under water the part affected. Nevertheless, at Keeling
-atoll I observed on all sides of the lagoon old cocoa-nut trees
-undermined and falling; and in one place the foundation-posts of a
-shed, which the inhabitants asserted had stood seven years before just
-above high-water mark, but now was daily washed by every tide: on
-inquiry I found that three earthquakes, one of them severe, had been
-felt here during the last ten years. At Vanikoro, the lagoon-channel
-is remarkably deep, scarcely any alluvial soil has accumulated at the
-foot of the lofty included mountains, and remarkably few islets have
-been formed by the heaping of fragments and sand on the wall-like
-barrier reef; these facts, and some analogous ones, led me to believe
-that this island must lately have subsided and the reef grown upwards:
-here again earthquakes are frequent and very severe. In the Society
-archipelago, on the other hand, where the lagoon-channels are almost
-choked up, where much low alluvial land has accumulated, and where in
-some cases long islets have been formed on the barrier-reefs--facts
-all showing that the islands have not very lately subsided--only feeble
-shocks are most rarely felt. In these coral formations, where the land
-and water seem struggling for mastery, it must be ever difficult to
-decide between the effects of a change in the set of the tides and of a
-slight subsidence: that many of these reefs and atolls are subject to
-changes of some kind is certain; on some atolls the islets appear to
-have increased greatly within a late period; on others they have been
-partially or wholly washed away. The inhabitants of parts of the
-Maldiva archipelago know the date of the first formation of some
-islets; in other parts, the corals are now flourishing on water-washed
-reefs, where holes made for graves attest the former existence of
-inhabited land. It is difficult to believe in frequent changes in the
-tidal currents of an open ocean; whereas, we have in the earthquakes
-recorded by the natives on some atolls, and in the great fissures
-observed on other atolls, plain evidence of changes and disturbances in
-progress in the subterranean regions.
-
-It is evident, on our theory, that coasts merely fringed by reefs
-cannot have subsided to any perceptible amount; and therefore they
-must, since the growth of their corals, either have remained stationary
-or have been upheaved. Now, it is remarkable how generally it can be
-shown, by the presence of upraised organic remains, that the fringed
-islands have been elevated: and so far, this is indirect evidence in
-favour of our theory. I was particularly struck with this fact, when I
-found, to my surprise, that the descriptions given by MM. Quoy and
-Gaimard were applicable, not to reefs in general as implied by them,
-but only to those of the fringing class; my surprise, however, ceased
-when I afterwards found that, by a strange chance, all the several
-islands visited by these eminent naturalists, could be shown by their
-own statements to have been elevated within a recent geological era.
-
-Not only the grand features in the structure of barrier-reefs and of
-atolls, and to their likeness to each other in form, size, and other
-characters, are explained on the theory of subsidence--which theory we
-are independently forced to admit in the very areas in question, from
-the necessity of finding bases for the corals within the requisite
-depth--but many details in structure and exceptional cases can thus
-also be simply explained. I will give only a few instances. In
-barrier-reefs it has long been remarked with surprise, that the
-passages through the reef exactly face valleys in the included land,
-even in cases where the reef is separated from the land by a
-lagoon-channel so wide and so much deeper than the actual passage
-itself, that it seems hardly possible that the very small quantity of
-water or sediment brought down could injure the corals on the reef.
-Now, every reef of the fringing class is breached by a narrow gateway
-in front of the smallest rivulet, even if dry during the greater part
-of the year, for the mud, sand, or gravel, occasionally washed down
-kills the corals on which it is deposited. Consequently, when an
-island thus fringed subsides, though most of the narrow gateways will
-probably become closed by the outward and upward growth of the corals,
-yet any that are not closed (and some must always be kept open by the
-sediment and impure water flowing out of the lagoon-channel) will still
-continue to front exactly the upper parts of those valleys, at the
-mouths of which the original basal fringing-reef was breached.
-
-We can easily see how an island fronted only on one side, or on one
-side with one end or both ends encircled by barrier-reefs, might after
-long-continued subsidence be converted either into a single wall-like
-reef, or into an atoll with a great straight spur projecting from it,
-or into two or three atolls tied together by straight reefs--all of
-which exceptional cases actually occur. As the reef-building corals
-require food, are preyed upon by other animals, are killed by sediment,
-cannot adhere to a loose bottom, and may be easily carried down to a
-depth whence they cannot spring up again, we need feel no surprise at
-the reefs both of atolls and barriers becoming in parts imperfect. The
-great barrier of New Caledonia is thus imperfect and broken in many
-parts; hence, after long subsidence, this great reef would not produce
-one great atoll 400 miles in length, but a chain or archipelago of
-atolls, of very nearly the same dimension with those in the Maldiva
-archipelago. Moreover, in an atoll once breached on opposite sides,
-from the likelihood of the oceanic and tidal currents passing straight
-through the breaches, it is extremely improbable that the corals,
-especially during continued subsidence, would ever be able again to
-unite the rim; if they did not, as the whole sank downwards, one atoll
-would be divided into two or more. In the Maldiva archipelago there
-are distinct atolls so related to each other in position, and separated
-by channels either unfathomable or very deep (the channel between Ross
-and Ari atolls is 150 fathoms, and that between the north and south
-Nillandoo atolls is 200 fathoms in depth), that it is impossible to
-look at a map of them without believing that they were once more
-intimately related. And in this same archipelago, Mahlos-Mahdoo atoll
-is divided by a bifurcating channel from 100 to 132 fathoms in depth,
-in such a manner, that it is scarcely possible to say whether it ought
-strictly to be called three separate atolls, or one great atoll not yet
-finally divided.
-
-I will not enter on many more details; but I must remark that the
-curious structure of the northern Maldiva atolls receives (taking into
-consideration the free entrance of the sea through their broken
-margins) a simple explanation in the upward and outward growth of the
-corals, originally based both on small detached reefs in their lagoons,
-such as occur in common atolls, and on broken portions of the linear
-marginal reef, such as bounds every atoll of the ordinary form. I
-cannot refrain from once again remarking on the singularity of these
-complex structures--a great sandy and generally concave disk rises
-abruptly from the unfathomable ocean, with its central expanse studded,
-and its edge symmetrically bordered with oval basins of coral-rock just
-lipping the surface of the sea, sometimes clothed with vegetation, and
-each containing a lake of clear water!
-
-One more point in detail: as in the two neighbouring archipelagoes
-corals flourish in one and not in the other, and as so many conditions
-before enumerated must affect their existence, it would be an
-inexplicable fact if, during the changes to which earth, air, and water
-are subjected, the reef-building corals were to keep alive for
-perpetuity on any one spot or area. And as by our theory the areas
-including atolls and barrier-reefs are subsiding, we ought occasionally
-to find reefs both dead and submerged. In all reefs, owing to the
-sediment being washed out of the lagoon-channel to leeward, that side
-is least favourable to the long-continued vigorous growth of the
-corals; hence dead portions of reef not unfrequently occur on the
-leeward side; and these, though still retaining their proper wall-like
-form, are now in several instances sunk several fathoms beneath the
-surface. The Chagos group appears from some cause, possibly from the
-subsidence having been too rapid, at present to be much less favourably
-circumstanced for the growth of reefs than formerly: one atoll has a
-portion of its marginal reef, nine miles in length, dead and submerged;
-a second has only a few quite small living points which rise to the
-surface, a third and fourth are entirely dead and submerged; a fifth is
-a mere wreck, with its structure almost obliterated. It is remarkable
-that in all these cases, the dead reefs and portions of reef lie at
-nearly the same depth, namely, from six to eight fathoms beneath the
-surface, as if they had been carried down by one uniform movement. One
-of these "half-drowned atolls," so called by Capt. Moresby (to whom I
-am indebted for much invaluable information), is of vast size, namely,
-ninety nautical miles across in one direction, and seventy miles in
-another line; and is in many respects eminently curious. As by our
-theory it follows that new atolls will generally be formed in each new
-area of subsidence, two weighty objections might have been raised,
-namely, that atolls must be increasing indefinitely in number; and
-secondly, that in old areas of subsidence each separate atoll must be
-increasing indefinitely in thickness, if proofs of their occasional
-destruction could not have been adduced. Thus have we traced the
-history of these great rings of coral-rock, from their first origin
-through their normal changes, and through the occasional accidents of
-their existence, to their death and final obliteration.
-
-
-In my volume on "Coral Formations" I have published a map, in which I
-have coloured all the atolls dark-blue, the barrier-reefs pale-blue,
-and the fringing reefs red. These latter reefs have been formed whilst
-the land has been stationary, or, as appears from the frequent presence
-of upraised organic remains, whilst it has been slowly rising: atolls
-and barrier-reefs, on the other hand, have grown up during the directly
-opposite movement of subsidence, which movement must have been very
-gradual, and in the case of atolls so vast in amount as to have buried
-every mountain-summit over wide ocean-spaces. Now in this map we see
-that the reefs tinted pale and dark-blue, which have been produced by
-the same order of movement, as a general rule manifestly stand near
-each other. Again we see, that the areas with the two blue tints are
-of wide extent; and that they lie separate from extensive lines of
-coast coloured red, both of which circumstances might naturally have
-been inferred, on the theory of the nature of the reefs having been
-governed by the nature of the earth's movement. It deserves notice
-that in more than one instance where single red and blue circles
-approach near each other, I can show that there have been oscillations
-of level; for in such cases the red or fringed circles consist of
-atolls, originally by our theory formed during subsidence, but
-subsequently upheaved; and on the other hand, some of the pale-blue or
-encircled islands are composed of coral-rock, which must have been
-uplifted to its present height before that subsidence took place,
-during which the existing barrier-reefs grew upwards.
-
-Authors have noticed with surprise, that although atolls are the
-commonest coral-structures throughout some enormous oceanic tracts,
-they are entirely absent in other seas, as in the West Indies: we can
-now at once perceive the cause, for where there has not been
-subsidence, atolls cannot have been formed; and in the case of the West
-Indies and parts of the East Indies, these tracts are known to have
-been rising within the recent period. The larger areas, coloured red
-and blue, are all elongated; and between the two colours there is a
-degree of rude alternation, as if the rising of one had balanced the
-sinking of the other. Taking into consideration the proofs of recent
-elevation both on the fringed coasts and on some others (for instance,
-in South America) where there are no reefs, we are led to conclude that
-the great continents are for the most part rising areas: and from the
-nature of the coral-reefs, that the central parts of the great oceans
-are sinking areas. The East Indian archipelago, the most broken land
-in the world, is in most parts an area of elevation, but surrounded and
-penetrated, probably in more lines than one, by narrow areas of
-subsidence.
-
-I have marked with vermilion spots all the many known active volcanos
-within the limits of this same map. Their entire absence from every
-one of the great subsiding areas, coloured either pale or dark blue, is
-most striking and not less so is the coincidence of the chief volcanic
-chains with the parts coloured red, which we are led to conclude have
-either long remained stationary, or more generally have been recently
-upraised. Although a few of the vermilion spots occur within no great
-distance of single circles tinted blue, yet not one single active
-volcano is situated within several hundred miles of an archipelago, or
-even small group of atolls. It is, therefore, a striking fact that in
-the Friendly archipelago, which consists of a group of atolls upheaved
-and since partially worn down, two volcanos, and perhaps more, are
-historically known to have been in action. On the other hand, although
-most of the islands in the Pacific which are encircled by
-barrier-reefs, are of volcanic origin, often with the remnants of
-craters still distinguishable, not one of them is known to have ever
-been in eruption. Hence in these cases it would appear, that volcanos
-burst forth into action and become extinguished on the same spots,
-accordingly as elevatory or subsiding movements prevail there.
-Numberless facts could be adduced to prove that upraised organic
-remains are common wherever there are active volcanos; but until it
-could be shown that in areas of subsidence, volcanos were either absent
-or inactive, the inference, however probable in itself, that their
-distribution depended on the rising or falling of the earth's surface,
-would have been hazardous. But now, I think, we may freely admit this
-important deduction.
-
-Taking a final view of the map, and bearing in mind the statements made
-with respect to the upraised organic remains, we must feel astonished
-at the vastness of the areas, which have suffered changes in level
-either downwards or upwards, within a period not geologically remote.
-It would appear also, that the elevatory and subsiding movements follow
-nearly the same laws. Throughout the spaces interspersed with atolls,
-where not a single peak of high land has been left above the level of
-the sea, the sinking must have been immense in amount. The sinking,
-moreover, whether continuous, or recurrent with intervals sufficiently
-long for the corals again to bring up their living edifices to the
-surface, must necessarily have been extremely slow. This conclusion is
-probably the most important one which can be deduced from the study of
-coral formations;--and it is one which it is difficult to imagine how
-otherwise could ever have been arrived at. Nor can I quite pass over
-the probability of the former existence of large archipelagoes of lofty
-islands, where now only rings of coral-rock scarcely break the open
-expanse of the sea, throwing some light on the distribution of the
-inhabitants of the other high islands, now left standing so immensely
-remote from each other in the midst of the great oceans. The
-reef-constructing corals have indeed reared and preserved wonderful
-memorials of the subterranean oscillations of level; we see in each
-barrier-reef a proof that the land has there subsided, and in each
-atoll a monument over an island now lost. We may thus, like unto a
-geologist who had lived his ten thousand years and kept a record of the
-passing changes, gain some insight into the great system by which the
-surface of this globe has been broken up, and land and water
-interchanged.
-
-[1] These Plants are described in the Annals of Nat. Hist., vol. i.,
-1838, p. 337.
-
-[2] Holman's Travels, vol. iv. p. 378.
-
-[3] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 155.
-
-[4] The thirteen species belong to the following orders:--In the
-Coleoptera, a minute Elater; Orthoptera, a Gryllus and a Blatta;
-Hemiptera, one species; Homoptera, two; Neuroptera a Chrysopa;
-Hymenoptera, two ants; Lepidoptera nocturna, a Diopaea, and a
-Pterophorus (?); Diptera, two species.
-
-[5] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 222.
-
-[6] The large claws or pincers of some of these crabs are most
-beautifully adapted, when drawn back, to form an operculum to the
-shell, nearly as perfect as the proper one originally belonging to the
-molluscous animal. I was assured, and as far as my observations went I
-found it so, that certain species of the hermit-crab always use certain
-species of shells.
-
-[7] Some natives carried by Kotzebue to Kamtschatka collected stones to
-take back to their country.
-
-[8] See Proceedings of Zoological Society, 1832, p. 17.
-
-[9] Tyerman and Bennett. Voyage, etc. vol. ii. p. 33.
-
-[10] I exclude, of course, some soil which has been imported here in
-vessels from Malacca and Java, and likewise, some small fragments of
-pumice, drifted here by the waves. The one block of greenstone,
-moreover, on the northern island must be excepted.
-
-[11] These were first read before the Geological Society in May, 1837,
-and have since been developed in a separate volume on the "Structure
-and Distribution of Coral Reefs."
-
-[12] It is remarkable that Mr. Lyell, even in the first edition of his
-"Principles of Geology," inferred that the amount of subsidence in the
-Pacific must have exceeded that of elevation, from the area of land
-being very small relatively to the agents there tending to form it,
-namely, the growth of coral and volcanic action.
-
-[13] It has been highly satisfactory to me to find the following
-passage in a pamphlet by Mr. Couthouy, one of the naturalists in the
-great Antarctic Expedition of the United States:--"Having personally
-examined a large number of coral-islands and resided eight months among
-the volcanic class having shore and partially encircling reefs. I may
-be permitted to state that my own observations have impressed a
-conviction of the correctness of the theory of Mr. Darwin."--The
-naturalists, however, of this expedition differ with me on some points
-respecting coral formations.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
-
-Mauritius, beautiful appearance of--Great crateriform ring of
-Mountains--Hindoos--St. Helena--History of the changes in the
-Vegetation--Cause of the extinction of
-Land-shells--Ascension--Variation in the imported Rats--Volcanic
-Bombs--Beds of Infusoria--Bahia--Brazil--Splendour of Tropical
-Scenery--Pernambuco--Singular Reef--Slavery--Return to
-England--Retrospect on our Voyage.
-
-
-APRIL 29th.--In the morning we passed round the northern end of
-Mauritius, or the Isle of France. From this point of view the aspect of
-the island equalled the expectations raised by the many well-known
-descriptions of its beautiful scenery. The sloping plain of the
-Pamplemousses, interspersed with houses, and coloured by the large
-fields of sugar-cane of a bright green, composed the foreground. The
-brilliancy of the green was the more remarkable because it is a colour
-which generally is conspicuous only from a very short distance. Towards
-the centre of the island groups of wooded mountains rose out of this
-highly cultivated plain; their summits, as so commonly happens with
-ancient volcanic rocks, being jagged into the sharpest points. Masses
-of white clouds were collected around these pinnacles, as if for the
-sake of pleasing the stranger's eye. The whole island, with its
-sloping border and central mountains, was adorned with an air of
-perfect elegance: the scenery, if I may use such an expression,
-appeared to the sight harmonious.
-
-I spent the greater part of the next day in walking about the town and
-visiting different people. The town is of considerable size, and is
-said to contain 20,000 inhabitants; the streets are very clean and
-regular. Although the island has been so many years under the English
-Government, the general character of the place is quite French:
-Englishmen speak to their servants in French, and the shops are all
-French; indeed, I should think that Calais or Boulogne was much more
-Anglified. There is a very pretty little theatre, in which operas are
-excellently performed. We were also surprised at seeing large
-booksellers' shops, with well-stored shelves;--music and reading
-bespeak our approach to the old world of civilization; for in truth
-both Australia and America are new worlds.
-
-The various races of men walking in the streets afford the most
-interesting spectacle in Port Louis. Convicts from India are banished
-here for life; at present there are about 800, and they are employed in
-various public works. Before seeing these people, I had no idea that
-the inhabitants of India were such noble-looking figures. Their skin
-is extremely dark, and many of the older men had large mustaches and
-beards of a snow-white colour; this, together with the fire of their
-expression, gave them quite an imposing aspect. The greater number had
-been banished for murder and the worst crimes; others for causes which
-can scarcely be considered as moral faults, such as for not obeying,
-from superstitious motives, the English laws. These men are generally
-quiet and well-conducted; from their outward conduct, their
-cleanliness, and faithful observance of their strange religious rites,
-it was impossible to look at them with the same eyes as on our wretched
-convicts in New South Wales.
-
-May 1st.--Sunday. I took a quiet walk along the sea-coast to the north
-of the town. The plain in this part is quite uncultivated; it consists
-of a field of black lava, smoothed over with coarse grass and bushes,
-the latter being chiefly Mimosas. The scenery may be described as
-intermediate in character between that of the Galapagos and of Tahiti;
-but this will convey a definite idea to very few persons. It is a very
-pleasant country, but it has not the charms of Tahiti, or the grandeur
-of Brazil. The next day I ascended La Pouce, a mountain so called from
-a thumb-like projection, which rises close behind the town to a height
-of 2,600 feet. The centre of the island consists of a great platform,
-surrounded by old broken basaltic mountains, with their strata dipping
-seawards. The central platform, formed of comparatively recent streams
-of lava, is of an oval shape, thirteen geographical miles across, in
-the line of its shorter axis. The exterior bounding mountains come
-into that class of structures called Craters of Elevation, which are
-supposed to have been formed not like ordinary craters, but by a great
-and sudden upheaval. There appears to me to be insuperable objections
-to this view: on the other hand, I can hardly believe, in this and in
-some other cases, that these marginal crateriform mountains are merely
-the basal remnants of immense volcanos, of which the summits either
-have been blown off, or swallowed up in subterranean abysses.
-
-From our elevated position we enjoyed an excellent view over the
-island. The country on this side appears pretty well cultivated, being
-divided into fields and studded with farm-houses. I was, however,
-assured that of the whole land, not more than half is yet in a
-productive state; if such be the case, considering the present large
-export of sugar, this island, at some future period when thickly
-peopled, will be of great value. Since England has taken possession of
-it, a period of only twenty-five years, the export of sugar is said to
-have increased seventy-five fold. One great cause of its prosperity is
-the excellent state of the roads. In the neighbouring Isle of Bourbon,
-which remains under the French government, the roads are still in the
-same miserable state as they were here only a few years ago. Although
-the French residents must have largely profited by the increased
-prosperity of their island, yet the English government is far from
-popular.
-
-3rd.--In the evening Captain Lloyd, the Surveyor-general, so well known
-from his examination of the Isthmus of Panama, invited Mr. Stokes and
-myself to his country-house, which is situated on the edge of Wilheim
-Plains, and about six miles from the Port. We stayed at this
-delightful place two days; standing nearly 800 feet above the sea, the
-air was cool and fresh, and on every side there were delightful walks.
-Close by, a grand ravine has been worn to a depth of about 500 feet
-through the slightly inclined streams of lava, which have flowed from
-the central platform.
-
-5th.--Captain Lloyd took us to the Riviere Noire, which is several
-miles to the southward, that I might examine some rocks of elevated
-coral. We passed through pleasant gardens, and fine fields of
-sugar-cane growing amidst huge blocks of lava. The roads were bordered
-by hedges of Mimosa, and near many of the houses there were avenues of
-the mango. Some of the views, where the peaked hills and the
-cultivated farms were seen together, were exceedingly picturesque; and
-we were constantly tempted to exclaim, "How pleasant it would be to
-pass one's life in such quiet abodes!" Captain Lloyd possessed an
-elephant, and he sent it half way with us, that we might enjoy a ride
-in true Indian fashion. The circumstance which surprised me most was
-its quite noiseless step. This elephant is the only one at present on
-the island; but it is said others will be sent for.
-
-
-May 9th.--We sailed from Port Louis, and, calling at the Cape of Good
-Hope, on the 8th of July, we arrived off St. Helena. This island, the
-forbidding aspect of which has been so often described, rises abruptly
-like a huge black castle from the ocean. Near the town, as if to
-complete nature's defence, small forts and guns fill up every gap in
-the rugged rocks. The town runs up a flat and narrow valley; the
-houses look respectable, and are interspersed with a very few green
-trees. When approaching the anchorage there was one striking view: an
-irregular castle perched on the summit of a lofty hill, and surrounded
-by a few scattered fir-trees, boldly projected against the sky.
-
-The next day I obtained lodgings within a stone's throw of Napoleon's
-tomb; [1] it was a capital central situation, whence I could make
-excursions in every direction. During the four days I stayed here, I
-wandered over the island from morning to night, and examined its
-geological history. My lodgings were situated at a height of about
-2000 feet; here the weather was cold and boisterous, with constant
-showers of rain; and every now and then the whole scene was veiled in
-thick clouds.
-
-Near the coast the rough lava is quite bare: in the central and higher
-parts, feldspathic rocks by their decomposition have produced a clayey
-soil, which, where not covered by vegetation, is stained in broad bands
-of many bright colours. At this season, the land moistened by constant
-showers, produces a singularly bright green pasture, which lower and
-lower down, gradually fades away and at last disappears. In latitude
-16 degs., and at the trifling elevation of 1500 feet, it is surprising
-to behold a vegetation possessing a character decidedly British. The
-hills are crowned with irregular plantations of Scotch firs; and the
-sloping banks are thickly scattered over with thickets of gorse,
-covered with its bright yellow flowers. Weeping-willows are common on
-the banks of the rivulets, and the hedges are made of the blackberry,
-producing its well-known fruit. When we consider that the number of
-plants now found on the island is 746, and that out of these fifty-two
-alone are indigenous species, the rest having been imported, and most
-of them from England, we see the reason of the British character of the
-vegetation. Many of these English plants appear to flourish better than
-in their native country; some also from the opposite quarter of
-Australia succeed remarkably well. The many imported species must have
-destroyed some of the native kinds; and it is only on the highest and
-steepest ridges that the indigenous Flora is now predominant.
-
-The English, or rather Welsh character of the scenery, is kept up by
-the numerous cottages and small white houses; some buried at the bottom
-of the deepest valleys, and others mounted on the crests of the lofty
-hills. Some of the views are striking, for instance that from near Sir
-W. Doveton's house, where the bold peak called Lot is seen over a dark
-wood of firs, the whole being backed by the red water-worn mountains of
-the southern coast. On viewing the island from an eminence, the first
-circumstance which strikes one, is the number of the roads and forts:
-the labour bestowed on the public works, if one forgets its character
-as a prison, seems out of all proportion to its extent or value. There
-is so little level or useful land, that it seems surprising how so many
-people, about 5000, can subsist here. The lower orders, or the
-emancipated slaves, are I believe extremely poor: they complain of the
-want of work. From the reduction in the number of public servants
-owing to the island having been given up by the East Indian Company,
-and the consequent emigration of many of the richer people, the poverty
-probably will increase. The chief food of the working class is rice
-with a little salt meat; as neither of these articles are the products
-of the island, but must be purchased with money, the low wages tell
-heavily on the poor people. Now that the people are blessed with
-freedom, a right which I believe they value fully, it seems probable
-that their numbers will quickly increase: if so, what is to become of
-the little state of St. Helena?
-
-My guide was an elderly man, who had been a goatherd when a boy, and
-knew every step amongst the rocks. He was of a race many times
-crossed, and although with a dusky skin, he had not the disagreeable
-expression of a mulatto. He was a very civil, quiet old man, and such
-appears the character of the greater number of the lower classes. It
-was strange to my ears to hear a man, nearly white and respectably
-dressed, talking with indifference of the times when he was a slave.
-With my companion, who carried our dinners and a horn of water, which
-is quite necessary, as all the water in the lower valleys is saline, I
-every day took long walks.
-
-Beneath the upper and central green circle, the wild valleys are quite
-desolate and untenanted. Here, to the geologist, there were scenes of
-high interest, showing successive changes and complicated disturbances.
-According to my views, St. Helena has existed as an island from a very
-remote epoch: some obscure proofs, however, of the elevation of the
-land are still extant. I believe that the central and highest peaks
-form parts of the rim of a great crater, the southern half of which has
-been entirely removed by the waves of the sea: there is, moreover, an
-external wall of black basaltic rocks, like the coast-mountains of
-Mauritius, which are older than the central volcanic streams. On the
-higher parts of the island, considerable numbers of a shell, long
-thought to be a marine species occur imbedded in the soil.
-
-It proved to be a Cochlogena, or land-shell of a very peculiar form;
-[2] with it I found six other kinds; and in another spot an eighth
-species. It is remarkable that none of them are now found living.
-Their extinction has probably been caused by the entire destruction of
-the woods, and the consequent loss of food and shelter, which occurred
-during the early part of the last century.
-
-The history of the changes, which the elevated plains of Longwood and
-Deadwood have undergone, as given in General Beatson's account of the
-island, is extremely curious. Both plains, it is said in former times
-were covered with wood, and were therefore called the Great Wood. So
-late as the year 1716 there were many trees, but in 1724 the old trees
-had mostly fallen; and as goats and hogs had been suffered to range
-about, all the young trees had been killed. It appears also from the
-official records, that the trees were unexpectedly, some years
-afterwards, succeeded by a wire grass which spread over the whole
-surface. [3] General Beatson adds that now this plain "is covered with
-fine sward, and is become the finest piece of pasture on the island."
-The extent of surface, probably covered by wood at a former period, is
-estimated at no less than two thousand acres; at the present day
-scarcely a single tree can be found there. It is also said that in
-1709 there were quantities of dead trees in Sandy Bay; this place is
-now so utterly desert, that nothing but so well attested an account
-could have made me believe that they could ever have grown there. The
-fact, that the goats and hogs destroyed all the young trees as they
-sprang up, and that in the course of time the old ones, which were safe
-from their attacks, perished from age, seems clearly made out. Goats
-were introduced in the year 1502; eighty-six years afterwards, in the
-time of Cavendish, it is known that they were exceedingly numerous.
-More than a century afterwards, in 1731, when the evil was complete and
-irretrievable, an order was issued that all stray animals should be
-destroyed. It is very interesting thus to find, that the arrival of
-animals at St. Helena in 1501, did not change the whole aspect of the
-island, until a period of two hundred and twenty years had elapsed: for
-the goats were introduced in 1502, and in 1724 it is said "the old
-trees had mostly fallen." There can be little doubt that this great
-change in the vegetation affected not only the land-shells, causing
-eight species to become extinct, but likewise a multitude of insects.
-
-St. Helena, situated so remote from any continent, in the midst of a
-great ocean, and possessing a unique Flora, excites our curiosity. The
-eight land-shells, though now extinct, and one living Succinea, are
-peculiar species found nowhere else. Mr. Cuming, however, informs me
-that an English Helix is common here, its eggs no doubt having been
-imported in some of the many introduced plants. Mr. Cuming collected
-on the coast sixteen species of sea-shells, of which seven, as far as
-he knows, are confined to this island. Birds and insects, [4] as might
-have been expected, are very few in number; indeed I believe all the
-birds have been introduced within late years. Partridges and pheasants
-are tolerably abundant; the island is much too English not to be
-subject to strict game-laws. I was told of a more unjust sacrifice to
-such ordinances than I ever heard of even in England. The poor people
-formerly used to burn a plant, which grows on the coast-rocks, and
-export the soda from its ashes; but a peremptory order came out
-prohibiting this practice, and giving as a reason that the partridges
-would have nowhere to build.
-
-In my walks I passed more than once over the grassy plain bounded by
-deep valleys, on which Longwood stands. Viewed from a short distance,
-it appears like a respectable gentleman's country-seat. In front there
-are a few cultivated fields, and beyond them the smooth hill of
-coloured rocks called the Flagstaff, and the rugged square black mass
-of the Barn. On the whole the view was rather bleak and uninteresting.
-The only inconvenience I suffered during my walks was from the
-impetuous winds. One day I noticed a curious circumstance; standing on
-the edge of a plain, terminated by a great cliff of about a thousand
-feet in depth, I saw at the distance of a few yards right to windward,
-some tern, struggling against a very strong breeze, whilst, where I
-stood, the air was quite calm. Approaching close to the brink, where
-the current seemed to be deflected upwards from the face of the cliff,
-I stretched out my arm, and immediately felt the full force of the
-wind: an invisible barrier, two yards in width, separated perfectly
-calm air from a strong blast.
-
-I so much enjoyed my rambles among the rocks and mountains of St.
-Helena, that I felt almost sorry on the morning of the 14th to descend
-to the town. Before noon I was on board, and the Beagle made sail.
-
-On the 19th of July we reached Ascension. Those who have beheld a
-volcanic island, situated under an arid climate, will at once be able
-to picture to themselves the appearance of Ascension. They will
-imagine smooth conical hills of a bright red colour, with their summits
-generally truncated, rising separately out of a level surface of black
-rugged lava. A principal mound in the centre of the island, seems the
-father of the lesser cones. It is called Green Hill: its name being
-taken from the faintest tinge of that colour, which at this time of the
-year is barely perceptible from the anchorage. To complete the
-desolate scene, the black rocks on the coast are lashed by a wild and
-turbulent sea.
-
-The settlement is near the beach; it consists of several houses and
-barracks placed irregularly, but well built of white freestone. The
-only inhabitants are marines, and some negroes liberated from
-slave-ships, who are paid and victualled by government. There is not a
-private person on the island. Many of the marines appeared well
-contented with their situation; they think it better to serve their
-one-and-twenty years on shore, let it be what it may, than in a ship;
-in this choice, if I were a marine, I should most heartily agree.
-
-The next morning I ascended Green Hill, 2840 feet high, and thence
-walked across the island to the windward point. A good cart-road leads
-from the coast-settlement to the houses, gardens, and fields, placed
-near the summit of the central mountain. On the roadside there are
-milestones, and likewise cisterns, where each thirsty passer-by can
-drink some good water. Similar care is displayed in each part of the
-establishment, and especially in the management of the springs, so that
-a single drop of water may not be lost: indeed the whole island may be
-compared to a huge ship kept in first-rate order. I could not help,
-when admiring the active industry, which had created such effects out
-of such means, at the same time regretting that it had been wasted on
-so poor and trifling an end. M. Lesson has remarked with justice, that
-the English nation would have thought of making the island of Ascension
-a productive spot, any other people would have held it as a mere
-fortress in the ocean.
-
-Near this coast nothing grows; further inland, an occasional green
-castor-oil plant, and a few grasshoppers, true friends of the desert,
-may be met with. Some grass is scattered over the surface of the
-central elevated region, and the whole much resembles the worse parts
-of the Welsh mountains. But scanty as the pasture appears, about six
-hundred sheep, many goats, a few cows and horses, all thrive well on
-it. Of native animals, land-crabs and rats swarm in numbers. Whether
-the rat is really indigenous, may well be doubted; there are two
-varieties as described by Mr. Waterhouse; one is of a black colour,
-with fine glossy fur, and lives on the grassy summit, the other is
-brown-coloured and less glossy, with longer hairs, and lives near the
-settlement on the coast. Both these varieties are one-third smaller
-than the common black rat (M. rattus); and they differ from it both in
-the colour and character of their fur, but in no other essential
-respect. I can hardly doubt that these rats (like the common mouse,
-which has also run wild) have been imported, and, as at the Galapagos,
-have varied from the effect of the new conditions to which they have
-been exposed: hence the variety on the summit of the island differs
-from that on the coast. Of native birds there are none; but the
-guinea-fowl, imported from the Cape de Verd Islands, is abundant, and
-the common fowl has likewise run wild. Some cats, which were
-originally turned out to destroy the rats and mice, have increased, so
-as to become a great plague. The island is entirely without trees, in
-which, and in every other respect, it is very far inferior to St.
-Helena.
-
-One of my excursions took me towards the S. W. extremity of the island.
-The day was clear and hot, and I saw the island, not smiling with
-beauty, but staring with naked hideousness. The lava streams are
-covered with hummocks, and are rugged to a degree which, geologically
-speaking, is not of easy explanation. The intervening spaces are
-concealed with layers of pumice, ashes and volcanic tuff. Whilst
-passing this end of the island at sea, I could not imagine what the
-white patches were with which the whole plain was mottled; I now found
-that they were seafowl, sleeping in such full confidence, that even in
-midday a man could walk up and seize hold of them. These birds were
-the only living creatures I saw during the whole day. On the beach a
-great surf, although the breeze was light, came tumbling over the
-broken lava rocks.
-
-The geology of this island is in many respects interesting. In several
-places I noticed volcanic bombs, that is, masses of lava which have
-been shot through the air whilst fluid, and have consequently assumed a
-spherical or pear-shape. Not only their external form, but, in several
-cases, their internal structure shows in a very curious manner that
-they have revolved in their aerial course. The internal structure of
-one of these bombs, when broken, is represented very accurately in the
-woodcut. The central part is coarsely cellular, the cells decreasing
-in size towards the exterior; where there is a shell-like case about
-the third of an inch in thickness, of compact stone, which again is
-overlaid by the outside crust of finely cellular lava. I think there
-can be little doubt, first that the external crust cooled rapidly in
-the state in which we now see it; secondly, that the still fluid lava
-within, was packed by the centrifugal force, generated by
-
-[picture]
-
-the revolving of the bomb, against the external cooled crust, and so
-produced the solid shell of stone; and lastly, that the centrifugal
-force, by relieving the pressure in the more central parts of the bomb,
-allowed the heated vapours to expand their cells, thus forming the
-coarse cellular mass of the centre.
-
-A hill, formed of the older series of volcanic rocks, and which has
-been incorrectly considered as the crater of a volcano, is remarkable
-from its broad, slightly hollowed, and circular summit having been
-filled up with many successive layers of ashes and fine scoriae. These
-saucer-shaped layers crop out on the margin, forming perfect rings of
-many different colours, giving to the summit a most fantastic
-appearance; one of these rings is white and broad, and resembles a
-course round which horses have been exercised; hence the hill has been
-called the Devil's Riding School. I brought away specimens of one of
-the tufaceous layers of a pinkish colour and it is a most extraordinary
-fact, that Professor Ehrenberg [5] finds it almost wholly composed of
-matter which has been organized: he detects in it some
-siliceous-shielded fresh-water infusoria, and no less than twenty-five
-different kinds of the siliceous tissue of plants, chiefly of grasses.
-From the absence of all carbonaceous matter, Professor Ehrenberg
-believes that these organic bodies have passed through the volcanic
-fire, and have been erupted in the state in which we now see them. The
-appearance of the layers induced me to believe that they had been
-deposited under water, though from the extreme dryness of the climate I
-was forced to imagine, that torrents of rain had probably fallen during
-some great eruption, and that thus a temporary lake had been formed
-into which the ashes fell. But it may now be suspected that the lake
-was not a temporary one. Anyhow, we may feel sure, that at some former
-epoch the climate and productions of Ascension were very different from
-what they now are. Where on the face of the earth can we find a spot,
-on which close investigation will not discover signs of that endless
-cycle of change, to which this earth has been, is, and will be
-subjected?
-
-On leaving Ascension, we sailed for Bahia, on the coast of Brazil, in
-order to complete the chronometrical measurement of the world. We
-arrived there on August 1st, and stayed four days, during which I took
-several long walks. I was glad to find my enjoyment in tropical scenery
-had not decreased from the want of novelty, even in the slightest
-degree. The elements of the scenery are so simple, that they are worth
-mentioning, as a proof on what trifling circumstances exquisite natural
-beauty depends.
-
-The country may be described as a level plain of about three hundred
-feet in elevation, which in all parts has been worn into flat-bottomed
-valleys. This structure is remarkable in a granitic land, but is
-nearly universal in all those softer formations of which plains are
-usually composed. The whole surface is covered by various kinds of
-stately trees, interspersed with patches of cultivated ground, out of
-which houses, convents, and chapels arise. It must be remembered that
-within the tropics, the wild luxuriance of nature is not lost even in
-the vicinity of large cities: for the natural vegetation of the hedges
-and hill-sides overpowers in picturesque effect the artificial labour
-of man. Hence, there are only a few spots where the bright red soil
-affords a strong contrast with the universal clothing of green. From
-the edges of the plain there are distant views either of the ocean, or
-of the great Bay with its low-wooded shores, and on which numerous
-boats and canoes show their white sails. Excepting from these points,
-the scene is extremely limited; following the level pathways, on each
-hand, only glimpses into the wooded valleys below can be obtained. The
-houses I may add, and especially the sacred edifices, are built in a
-peculiar and rather fantastic style of architecture. They are all
-whitewashed; so that when illumined by the brilliant sun of midday, and
-as seen against the pale blue sky of the horizon, they stand out more
-like shadows than real buildings.
-
-Such are the elements of the scenery, but it is a hopeless attempt to
-paint the general effect. Learned naturalists describe these scenes of
-the tropics by naming a multitude of objects, and mentioning some
-characteristic feature of each. To a learned traveller this possibly
-may communicate some definite ideas: but who else from seeing a plant
-in an herbarium can imagine its appearance when growing in its native
-soil? Who from seeing choice plants in a hothouse, can magnify some
-into the dimensions of forest trees, and crowd others into an entangled
-jungle? Who when examining in the cabinet of the entomologist the gay
-exotic butterflies, and singular cicadas, will associate with these
-lifeless objects, the ceaseless harsh music of the latter, and the lazy
-flight of the former,--the sure accompaniments of the still, glowing
-noon-day of the tropics? It is when the sun has attained its greatest
-height, that such scenes should be viewed: then the dense splendid
-foliage of the mango hides the ground with its darkest shade, whilst
-the upper branches are rendered from the profusion of light of the most
-brilliant green. In the temperate zones the case is different--the
-vegetation there is not so dark or so rich, and hence the rays of the
-declining sun, tinged of a red, purple, or bright yellow color, add
-most to the beauties of those climes.
-
-When quietly walking along the shady pathways, and admiring each
-successive view, I wished to find language to express my ideas. Epithet
-after epithet was found too weak to convey to those who have not
-visited the intertropical regions, the sensation of delight which the
-mind experiences. I have said that the plants in a hothouse fail to
-communicate a just idea of the vegetation, yet I must recur to it. The
-land is one great wild, untidy, luxuriant hothouse, made by Nature for
-herself, but taken possession of by man, who has studded it with gay
-houses and formal gardens. How great would be the desire in every
-admirer of nature to behold, if such were possible, the scenery of
-another planet! yet to every person in Europe, it may be truly said,
-that at the distance of only a few degrees from his native soil, the
-glories of another world are opened to him. In my last walk I stopped
-again and again to gaze on these beauties, and endeavoured to fix in my
-mind for ever, an impression which at the time I knew sooner or later
-must fail. The form of the orange-tree, the cocoa-nut, the palm, the
-mango, the tree-fern, the banana, will remain clear and separate; but
-the thousand beauties which unite these into one perfect scene must
-fade away: yet they will leave, like a tale heard in childhood, a
-picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful figures.
-
-August 6th.--In the afternoon we stood out to sea, with the intention
-of making a direct course to the Cape de Verd Islands. Unfavourable
-winds, however, delayed us, and on the 12th we ran into Pernambuco,--a
-large city on the coast of Brazil, in latitude 8 degs. south. We
-anchored outside the reef; but in a short time a pilot came on board
-and took us into the inner harbour, where we lay close to the town.
-
-Pernambuco is built on some narrow and low sand-banks, which are
-separated from each other by shoal channels of salt water. The three
-parts of the town are connected together by two long bridges built on
-wooden piles. The town is in all parts disgusting, the streets being
-narrow, ill-paved, and filthy; the houses, tall and gloomy. The season
-of heavy rains had hardly come to an end, and hence the surrounding
-country, which is scarcely raised above the level of the sea, was
-flooded with water; and I failed in all my attempts to take walks.
-
-The flat swampy land on which Pernambuco stands is surrounded, at the
-distance of a few miles, by a semicircle of low hills, or rather by the
-edge of a country elevated perhaps two hundred feet above the sea. The
-old city of Olinda stands on one extremity of this range. One day I
-took a canoe, and proceeded up one of the channels to visit it; I found
-the old town from its situation both sweeter and cleaner than that of
-Pernambuco. I must here commemorate what happened for the first time
-during our nearly five years' wandering, namely, having met with a want
-of politeness. I was refused in a sullen manner at two different
-houses, and obtained with difficulty from a third, permission to pass
-through their gardens to an uncultivated hill, for the purpose of
-viewing the country. I feel glad that this happened in the land of the
-Brazilians, for I bear them no good will--a land also of slavery, and
-therefore of moral debasement. A Spaniard would have felt ashamed at
-the very thought of refusing such a request, or of behaving to a
-stranger with rudeness. The channel by which we went to and returned
-from Olinda, was bordered on each side by mangroves, which sprang like
-a miniature forest out of the greasy mud-banks. The bright green
-colour of these bushes always reminded me of the rank grass in a
-church-yard: both are nourished by putrid exhalations; the one speaks
-of death past, and the other too often of death to come.
-
-The most curious object which I saw in this neighbourhood, was the reef
-that forms the harbour. I doubt whether in the whole world any other
-natural structure has so artificial an appearance. [6] It runs for a
-length of several miles in an absolutely straight line, parallel to,
-and not far distant from, the shore. It varies in width from thirty to
-sixty yards, and its surface is level and smooth; it is composed of
-obscurely stratified hard sandstone. At high water the waves break
-over it; at low water its summit is left dry, and it might then be
-mistaken for a breakwater erected by Cyclopean workmen. On this coast
-the currents of the sea tend to throw up in front of the land, long
-spits and bars of loose sand, and on one of these, part of the town of
-Pernambuco stands. In former times a long spit of this nature seems to
-have become consolidated by the percolation of calcareous matter, and
-afterwards to have been gradually upheaved; the outer and loose parts
-during this process having been worn away by the action of the sea, and
-the solid nucleus left as we now see it. Although night and day the
-waves of the open Atlantic, turbid with sediment, are driven against
-the steep outside edges of this wall of stone, yet the oldest pilots
-know of no tradition of any change in its appearance. This durability
-is much the most curious fact in its history: it is due to a tough
-layer, a few inches thick, of calcareous matter, wholly formed by the
-successive growth and death of the small shells of Serpulae, together
-with some few barnacles and nulliporae. These nulliporae, which are
-hard, very simply-organized sea-plants, play an analogous and important
-part in protecting the upper surfaces of coral-reefs, behind and within
-the breakers, where the true corals, during the outward growth of the
-mass, become killed by exposure to the sun and air. These
-insignificant organic beings, especially the Serpulae, have done good
-service to the people of Pernambuco; for without their protective aid
-the bar of sandstone would inevitably have been long ago worn away and
-without the bar, there would have been no harbour.
-
-On the 19th of August we finally left the shores of Brazil. I thank
-God, I shall never again visit a slave-country. To this day, if I hear
-a distant scream, it recalls with painful vividness my feelings, when
-passing a house near Pernambuco, I heard the most pitiable moans, and
-could not but suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew
-that I was as powerless as a child even to remonstrate. I suspected
-that these moans were from a tortured slave, for I was told that this
-was the case in another instance. Near Rio de Janeiro I lived opposite
-to an old lady, who kept screws to crush the fingers of her female
-slaves. I have stayed in a house where a young household mulatto,
-daily and hourly, was reviled, beaten, and persecuted enough to break
-the spirit of the lowest animal. I have seen a little boy, six or
-seven years old, struck thrice with a horse-whip (before I could
-interfere) on his naked head, for having handed me a glass of water not
-quite clean; I saw his father tremble at a mere glance from his
-master's eye. These latter cruelties were witnessed by me in a Spanish
-colony, in which it has always been said, that slaves are better
-treated than by the Portuguese, English, or other European nations. I
-have seen at Rio de Janeiro a powerful negro afraid to ward off a blow
-directed, as he thought, at his face. I was present when a
-kind-hearted man was on the point of separating forever the men, women,
-and little children of a large number of families who had long lived
-together. I will not even allude to the many heart-sickening
-atrocities which I authentically heard of;--nor would I have mentioned
-the above revolting details, had I not met with several people, so
-blinded by the constitutional gaiety of the negro as to speak of
-slavery as a tolerable evil. Such people have generally visited at the
-houses of the upper classes, where the domestic slaves are usually well
-treated, and they have not, like myself, lived amongst the lower
-classes. Such inquirers will ask slaves about their condition; they
-forget that the slave must indeed be dull, who does not calculate on
-the chance of his answer reaching his master's ears.
-
-It is argued that self-interest will prevent excessive cruelty; as if
-self-interest protected our domestic animals, which are far less likely
-than degraded slaves, to stir up the rage of their savage masters. It
-is an argument long since protested against with noble feeling, and
-strikingly exemplified, by the ever-illustrious Humboldt. It is often
-attempted to palliate slavery by comparing the state of slaves with our
-poorer countrymen: if the misery of our poor be caused not by the laws
-of nature, but by our institutions, great is our sin; but how this
-bears on slavery, I cannot see; as well might the use of the
-thumb-screw be defended in one land, by showing that men in another
-land suffered from some dreadful disease. Those who look tenderly at
-the slave owner, and with a cold heart at the slave, never seem to put
-themselves into the position of the latter; what a cheerless prospect,
-with not even a hope of change! picture to yourself the chance, ever
-hanging over you, of your wife and your little children--those objects
-which nature urges even the slave to call his own--being torn from you
-and sold like beasts to the first bidder! And these deeds are done and
-palliated by men, who profess to love their neighbours as themselves,
-who believe in God, and pray that his Will be done on earth! It makes
-one's blood boil, yet heart tremble, to think that we Englishmen and
-our American descendants, with their boastful cry of liberty, have been
-and are so guilty: but it is a consolation to reflect, that we at least
-have made a greater sacrifice, than ever made by any nation, to expiate
-our sin.
-
-
-On the last day of August we anchored for the second time at Porto
-Praya in the Cape de Verd archipelago; thence we proceeded to the
-Azores, where we stayed six days. On the 2nd of October we made the
-shore, of England; and at Falmouth I left the Beagle, having lived on
-board the good little vessel nearly five years.
-
-
-Our Voyage having come to an end, I will take a short retrospect of the
-advantages and disadvantages, the pains and pleasures, of our
-circumnavigation of the world. If a person asked my advice, before
-undertaking a long voyage, my answer would depend upon his possessing a
-decided taste for some branch of knowledge, which could by this means
-be advanced. No doubt it is a high satisfaction to behold various
-countries and the many races of mankind, but the pleasures gained at
-the time do not counterbalance the evils. It is necessary to look
-forward to a harvest, however distant that may be, when some fruit will
-be reaped, some good effected.
-
-Many of the losses which must be experienced are obvious; such as that
-of the society of every old friend, and of the sight of those places
-with which every dearest remembrance is so intimately connected. These
-losses, however, are at the time partly relieved by the exhaustless
-delight of anticipating the long wished-for day of return. If, as
-poets say, life is a dream, I am sure in a voyage these are the visions
-which best serve to pass away the long night. Other losses, although
-not at first felt, tell heavily after a period: these are the want of
-room, of seclusion, of rest; the jading feeling of constant hurry; the
-privation of small luxuries, the loss of domestic society and even of
-music and the other pleasures of imagination. When such trifles are
-mentioned, it is evident that the real grievances, excepting from
-accidents, of a sea-life are at an end. The short space of sixty years
-has made an astonishing difference in the facility of distant
-navigation. Even in the time of Cook, a man who left his fireside for
-such expeditions underwent severe privations. A yacht now, with every
-luxury of life, can circumnavigate the globe. Besides the vast
-improvements in ships and naval resources, the whole western shores of
-America are thrown open, and Australia has become the capital of a
-rising continent. How different are the circumstances to a man
-shipwrecked at the present day in the Pacific, to what they were in the
-time of Cook! Since his voyage a hemisphere has been added to the
-civilized world.
-
-If a person suffer much from sea-sickness, let him weigh it heavily in
-the balance. I speak from experience: it is no trifling evil, cured in
-a week. If, on the other hand, he take pleasure in naval tactics, he
-will assuredly have full scope for his taste. But it must be borne in
-mind, how large a proportion of the time, during a long voyage, is
-spent on the water, as compared with the days in harbour. And what are
-the boasted glories of the illimitable ocean. A tedious waste, a
-desert of water, as the Arabian calls it. No doubt there are some
-delightful scenes. A moonlight night, with the clear heavens and the
-dark glittering sea, and the white sails filled by the soft air of a
-gently blowing trade-wind, a dead calm, with the heaving surface
-polished like a mirror, and all still except the occasional flapping of
-the canvas. It is well once to behold a squall with its rising arch and
-coming fury, or the heavy gale of wind and mountainous waves. I
-confess, however, my imagination had painted something more grand, more
-terrific in the full-grown storm. It is an incomparably finer spectacle
-when beheld on shore, where the waving trees, the wild flight of the
-birds, the dark shadows and bright lights, the rushing of the torrents
-all proclaim the strife of the unloosed elements. At sea the albatross
-and little petrel fly as if the storm were their proper sphere, the
-water rises and sinks as if fulfilling its usual task, the ship alone
-and its inhabitants seem the objects of wrath. On a forlorn and
-weather-beaten coast, the scene is indeed different, but the feelings
-partake more of horror than of wild delight.
-
-Let us now look at the brighter side of the past time. The pleasure
-derived from beholding the scenery and the general aspect of the
-various countries we have visited, has decidedly been the most constant
-and highest source of enjoyment. It is probable that the picturesque
-beauty of many parts of Europe exceeds anything which we beheld. But
-there is a growing pleasure in comparing the character of the scenery
-in different countries, which to a certain degree is distinct from
-merely admiring its beauty. It depends chiefly on an acquaintance with
-the individual parts of each view. I am strongly induced to believe
-that as in music, the person who understands every note will, if he
-also possesses a proper taste, more thoroughly enjoy the whole, so he
-who examines each part of a fine view, may also thoroughly comprehend
-the full and combined effect. Hence, a traveller should be a botanist,
-for in all views plants form the chief embellishment. Group masses of
-naked rock, even in the wildest forms, and they may for a time afford a
-sublime spectacle, but they will soon grow monotonous. Paint them with
-bright and varied colours, as in Northern Chile, they will become
-fantastic; clothe them with vegetation, they must form a decent, if not
-a beautiful picture.
-
-When I say that the scenery of parts of Europe is probably superior to
-anything which we beheld, I except, as a class by itself, that of the
-intertropical zones. The two classes cannot be compared together; but
-I have already often enlarged on the grandeur of those regions. As the
-force of impressions generally depends on preconceived ideas, I may
-add, that mine were taken from the vivid descriptions in the Personal
-Narrative of Humboldt, which far exceed in merit anything else which I
-have read. Yet with these high-wrought ideas, my feelings were far
-from partaking of a tinge of disappointment on my first and final
-landing on the shores of Brazil.
-
-Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind, none exceed in
-sublimity the primeval forests undefaced by the hand of man; whether
-those of Brazil, where the powers of Life are predominant, or those of
-Tierra del Fuego, where Death and decay prevail. Both are temples
-filled with the varied productions of the God of Nature:--no one can
-stand in these solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is more in
-man than the mere breath of his body. In calling up images of the
-past, I find that the plains of Patagonia frequently cross before my
-eyes; yet these plains are pronounced by all wretched and useless. They
-can be described only by negative characters; without habitations,
-without water, without trees, without mountains, they support merely a
-few dwarf plants. Why, then, and the case is not peculiar to myself,
-have these arid wastes taken so firm a hold on my memory? Why have not
-the still more level, the greener and more fertile Pampas, which are
-serviceable to mankind, produced an equal impression? I can scarcely
-analyze these feelings: but it must be partly owing to the free scope
-given to the imagination. The plains of Patagonia are boundless, for
-they are scarcely passable, and hence unknown: they bear the stamp of
-having lasted, as they are now, for ages, and there appears no limit to
-their duration through future time. If, as the ancients supposed, the
-flat earth was surrounded by an impassable breadth of water, or by
-deserts heated to an intolerable excess, who would not look at these
-last boundaries to man's knowledge with deep but ill-defined sensations?
-
-Lastly, of natural scenery, the views from lofty mountains, through
-certainly in one sense not beautiful, are very memorable. When looking
-down from the highest crest of the Cordillera, the mind, undisturbed by
-minute details, was filled with the stupendous dimensions of the
-surrounding masses.
-
-Of individual objects, perhaps nothing is more certain to create
-astonishment than the first sight in his native haunt of a
-barbarian--of man in his lowest and most savage state. One's mind
-hurries back over past centuries, and then asks, could our progenitors
-have been men like these?--men, whose very signs and expressions are
-less intelligible to us than those of the domesticated animals; men,
-who do not possess the instinct of those animals, nor yet appear to
-boast of human reason, or at least of arts consequent on that reason. I
-do not believe it is possible to describe or paint the difference
-between savage and civilized man. It is the difference between a wild
-and tame animal: and part of the interest in beholding a savage, is the
-same which would lead every one to desire to see the lion in his
-desert, the tiger tearing his prey in the jungle, or the rhinoceros
-wandering over the wild plains of Africa.
-
-Among the other most remarkable spectacles which we have beheld, may be
-ranked, the Southern Cross, the cloud of Magellan, and the other
-constellations of the southern hemisphere--the water-spout--the glacier
-leading its blue stream of ice, overhanging the sea in a bold
-precipice--a lagoon-island raised by the reef-building corals--an
-active volcano--and the overwhelming effects of a violent earthquake.
-These latter phenomena, perhaps, possess for me a peculiar interest,
-from their intimate connection with the geological structure of the
-world. The earthquake, however, must be to every one a most impressive
-event: the earth, considered from our earliest childhood as the type of
-solidity, has oscillated like a thin crust beneath our feet; and in
-seeing the laboured works of man in a moment overthrown, we feel the
-insignificance of his boasted power.
-
-It has been said, that the love of the chase is an inherent delight in
-man--a relic of an instinctive passion. If so, I am sure the pleasure
-of living in the open air, with the sky for a roof and the ground for a
-table, is part of the same feeling, it is the savage returning to his
-wild and native habits. I always look back to our boat cruises, and my
-land journeys, when through unfrequented countries, with an extreme
-delight, which no scenes of civilization could have created. I do not
-doubt that every traveller must remember the glowing sense of happiness
-which he experienced, when he first breathed in a foreign clime, where
-the civilized man had seldom or never trod.
-
-There are several other sources of enjoyment in a long voyage, which
-are of a more reasonable nature. The map of the world ceases to be a
-blank; it becomes a picture full of the most varied and animated
-figures. Each part assumes its proper dimensions: continents are not
-looked at in the light of islands, or islands considered as mere
-specks, which are, in truth, larger than many kingdoms of Europe.
-Africa, or North and South America, are well-sounding names, and easily
-pronounced; but it is not until having sailed for weeks along small
-portions of their shores, that one is thoroughly convinced what vast
-spaces on our immense world these names imply.
-
-From seeing the present state, it is impossible not to look forward
-with high expectations to the future progress of nearly an entire
-hemisphere. The march of improvement, consequent on the introduction
-of Christianity throughout the South Sea, probably stands by itself in
-the records of history. It is the more striking when we remember that
-only sixty years since, Cook, whose excellent judgment none will
-dispute, could foresee no prospect of a change. Yet these changes have
-now been effected by the philanthropic spirit of the British nation.
-
-In the same quarter of the globe Australia is rising, or indeed may be
-said to have risen, into a grand centre of civilization, which, at some
-not very remote period, will rule as empress over the southern
-hemisphere. It is impossible for an Englishman to behold these distant
-colonies, without a high pride and satisfaction. To hoist the British
-flag, seems to draw with it as a certain consequence, wealth,
-prosperity, and civilization.
-
-In conclusion, it appears to me that nothing can be more improving to a
-young naturalist, than a journey in distant countries. It both
-sharpens, and partly allays that want and craving, which, as Sir J.
-Herschel remarks, a man experiences although every corporeal sense be
-fully satisfied. The excitement from the novelty of objects, and the
-chance of success, stimulate him to increased activity. Moreover, as a
-number of isolated facts soon become uninteresting, the habit of
-comparison leads to generalization. On the other hand, as the
-traveller stays but a short time in each place, his descriptions must
-generally consist of mere sketches, instead of detailed observations.
-Hence arises, as I have found to my cost, a constant tendency to fill
-up the wide gaps of knowledge, by inaccurate and superficial hypotheses.
-
-But I have too deeply enjoyed the voyage, not to recommend any
-naturalist, although he must not expect to be so fortunate in his
-companions as I have been, to take all chances, and to start, on
-travels by land if possible, if otherwise, on a long voyage. He may
-feel assured, he will meet with no difficulties or dangers, excepting
-in rare cases, nearly so bad as he beforehand anticipates. In a moral
-point of view, the effect ought to be, to teach him good-humoured
-patience, freedom from selfishness, the habit of acting for himself,
-and of making the best of every occurrence. In short, he ought to
-partake of the characteristic qualities of most sailors. Travelling
-ought also to teach him distrust; but at the same time he will
-discover, how many truly kind-hearted people there are, with whom he
-never before had, or ever again will have any further communication,
-who yet are ready to offer him the most disinterested assistance.
-
-[1] After the volumes of eloquence which have poured forth on this
-subject, it is dangerous even to mention the tomb. A modern traveller,
-in twelve lines, burdens the poor little island with the following
-titles,--it is a grave, tomb, pyramid, cemetery, sepulchre, catacomb,
-sarcophagus, minaret, and mausoleum!
-
-[2] It deserves notice, that all the many specimens of this shell found
-by me in one spot, differ as a marked variety, from another set of
-specimens procured from a different spot.
-
-[3] Beatson's St. Helena. Introductory chapter, p. 4.
-
-[4] Among these few insects, I was surprised to find a small Aphodius
-(nov. spec.) and an Oryctes, both extremely numerous under dung. When
-the island was discovered it certainly possessed no quadruped,
-excepting perhaps a mouse: it becomes, therefore, a difficult point to
-ascertain, whether these stercovorous insects have since been imported
-by accident, or if aborigines, on what food they formerly subsisted. On
-the banks of the Plata, where, from the vast number of cattle and
-horses, the fine plains of turf are richly manured, it is vain to seek
-the many kinds of dung-feeding beetles, which occur so abundantly in
-Europe. I observed only an Oryctes (the insects of this genus in
-Europe generally feed on decayed vegetable matter) and two species of
-Phanaeus, common in such situations. On the opposite side of the
-Cordillera in Chiloe, another species of Phanaeus is exceedingly
-abundant, and it buries the dung of the cattle in large earthen balls
-beneath the ground. There is reason to believe that the genus
-Phanaeus, before the introduction of cattle, acted as scavengers to
-man. In Europe, beetles, which find support in the matter which has
-already contributed towards the life of other and larger animals, are
-so numerous that there must be considerably more than one hundred
-different species. Considering this, and observing what a quantity of
-food of this kind is lost on the plains of La Plata, I imagined I saw
-an instance where man had disturbed that chain, by which so many
-animals are linked together in their native country. In Van Diemen's
-Land, however, I found four species of Onthophagus, two of Aphodius,
-and one of a third genus, very abundantly under the dung of cows; yet
-these latter animals had been then introduced only thirty-three years.
-Previous to that time the kangaroo and some other small animals were
-the only quadrupeds; and their dung is of a very different quality from
-that of their successors introduced by man. In England the greater
-number of stercovorous beetles are confined in their appetites; that
-is, they do not depend indifferently on any quadruped for the means of
-subsistence. The change, therefore, in habits which must have taken
-place in Van Diemen's Land is highly remarkable. I am indebted to the
-Rev. F. W. Hope, who, I hope, will permit me to call him my master in
-Entomology, for giving me the names of the foregoing insects.
-
-[5] Monats. der Konig. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin. Vom April, 1845.
-
-[6] I have described this Bar in detail, in the Lond. and Edin. Phil.
-Mag., vol. xix. (1841), p. 257.
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's The Voyage of the Beagle, by Charles Darwin
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Voyage of the Beagle, by Charles Darwin
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
-whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
-of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at
-www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The Voyage of the Beagle
-
-Author: Charles Darwin
-
-Release Date: June 15, 1997 [eBook #944]
-[Most recently updated: March 27, 2021]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-Produced by: John Hamm and David Widger
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE ***
-
-
-
-
- THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE BY
- CHARLES DARWIN
-
-
-
-
-
-About the online edition.
-
-The degree symbol is represented as "degs." Italics are represented as
-_italics_. Footnotes are collected at the end of each chapter.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-I have stated in the preface to the first Edition of this work, and in
-the Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, that it was in consequence of
-a wish expressed by Captain Fitz Roy, of having some scientific person
-on board, accompanied by an offer from him of giving up part of his own
-accommodations, that I volunteered my services, which received, through
-the kindness of the hydrographer, Captain Beaufort, the sanction of the
-Lords of the Admiralty. As I feel that the opportunities which I
-enjoyed of studying the Natural History of the different countries we
-visited, have been wholly due to Captain Fitz Roy, I hope I may here be
-permitted to repeat my expression of gratitude to him; and to add that,
-during the five years we were together, I received from him the most
-cordial friendship and steady assistance. Both to Captain Fitz Roy and
-to all the Officers of the Beagle [1] I shall ever feel most thankful
-for the undeviating kindness with which I was treated during our long
-voyage.
-
-This volume contains, in the form of a Journal, a history of our
-voyage, and a sketch of those observations in Natural History and
-Geology, which I think will possess some interest for the general
-reader. I have in this edition largely condensed and corrected some
-parts, and have added a little to others, in order to render the volume
-more fitted for popular reading; but I trust that naturalists will
-remember, that they must refer for details to the larger publications
-which comprise the scientific results of the Expedition. The Zoology
-of the Voyage of the Beagle includes an account of the Fossil Mammalia,
-by Professor Owen; of the Living Mammalia, by Mr. Waterhouse; of the
-Birds, by Mr. Gould; of the Fish, by the Rev. L. Jenyns; and of the
-Reptiles, by Mr. Bell. I have appended to the descriptions of each
-species an account of its habits and range. These works, which I owe
-to the high talents and disinterested zeal of the above distinguished
-authors, could not have been undertaken, had it not been for the
-liberality of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's Treasury, who,
-through the representation of the Right Honourable the Chancellor of
-the Exchequer, have been pleased to grant a sum of one thousand pounds
-towards defraying part of the expenses of publication.
-
-I have myself published separate volumes on the 'Structure and
-Distribution of Coral Reefs;' on the 'Volcanic Islands visited during
-the Voyage of the Beagle;' and on the 'Geology of South America.' The
-sixth volume of the 'Geological Transactions' contains two papers of
-mine on the Erratic Boulders and Volcanic Phenomena of South America.
-Messrs. Waterhouse, Walker, Newman, and White, have published several
-able papers on the Insects which were collected, and I trust that many
-others will hereafter follow. The plants from the southern parts of
-America will be given by Dr. J. Hooker, in his great work on the Botany
-of the Southern Hemisphere. The Flora of the Galapagos Archipelago is
-the subject of a separate memoir by him, in the 'Linnean Transactions.'
-The Reverend Professor Henslow has published a list of the plants
-collected by me at the Keeling Islands; and the Reverend J. M. Berkeley
-has described my cryptogamic plants.
-
-I shall have the pleasure of acknowledging the great assistance which I
-have received from several other naturalists, in the course of this and
-my other works; but I must be here allowed to return my most sincere
-thanks to the Reverend Professor Henslow, who, when I was an
-undergraduate at Cambridge, was one chief means of giving me a taste
-for Natural History,--who, during my absence, took charge of the
-collections I sent home, and by his correspondence directed my
-endeavours,--and who, since my return, has constantly rendered me every
-assistance which the kindest friend could offer.
-
-DOWN, BROMLEY, KENT, June 9, 1845
-
-[1] I must take this opportunity of returning my sincere thanks to Mr.
-Bynoe, the surgeon of the Beagle, for his very kind attention to me
-when I was ill at Valparaiso.
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-ST. JAGO--CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
-
-Porto Praya--Ribeira Grande--Atmospheric Dust with Infusoria--Habits of
-a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish--St. Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic--Singular
-Incrustations--Insects the first Colonists of Islands--Fernando
-Noronha--Bahia--Burnished Rocks--Habits of a Diodon--Pelagic Confervae
-and Infusoria--Causes of discoloured Sea.
-
-
-AFTER having been twice driven back by heavy southwestern gales, Her
-Majesty's ship Beagle, a ten-gun brig, under the command of Captain
-Fitz Roy, R. N., sailed from Devonport on the 27th of December, 1831.
-The object of the expedition was to complete the survey of Patagonia
-and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under Captain King in 1826 to 1830,--to
-survey the shores of Chile, Peru, and of some islands in the
-Pacific--and to carry a chain of chronometrical measurements round the
-World. On the 6th of January we reached Teneriffe, but were prevented
-landing, by fears of our bringing the cholera: the next morning we saw
-the sun rise behind the rugged outline of the Grand Canary island, and
-suddenly illuminate the Peak of Teneriffe, whilst the lower parts were
-veiled in fleecy clouds. This was the first of many delightful days
-never to be forgotten. On the 16th of January, 1832, we anchored at
-Porto Praya, in St. Jago, the chief island of the Cape de Verd
-archipelago.
-
-The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea, wears a desolate
-aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age, and the scorching heat of a
-tropical sun, have in most places rendered the soil unfit for
-vegetation. The country rises in successive steps of table-land,
-interspersed with some truncate conical hills, and the horizon is
-bounded by an irregular chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as
-beheld through the hazy atmosphere of this climate, is one of great
-interest; if, indeed, a person, fresh from sea, and who has just
-walked, for the first time, in a grove of cocoa-nut trees, can be a
-judge of anything but his own happiness. The island would generally be
-considered as very uninteresting, but to anyone accustomed only to an
-English landscape, the novel aspect of an utterly sterile land
-possesses a grandeur which more vegetation might spoil. A single green
-leaf can scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of the lava plains;
-yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive to exist. It
-rains very seldom, but during a short portion of the year heavy
-torrents fall, and immediately afterwards a light vegetation springs
-out of every crevice. This soon withers; and upon such naturally
-formed hay the animals live. It had not now rained for an entire year.
-When the island was discovered, the immediate neighbourhood of Porto
-Praya was clothed with trees, [1] the reckless destruction of which has
-caused here, as at St. Helena, and at some of the Canary islands,
-almost entire sterility. The broad, flat-bottomed valleys, many of
-which serve during a few days only in the season as water-courses, are
-clothed with thickets of leafless bushes. Few living creatures inhabit
-these valleys. The commonest bird is a kingfisher (Dacelo Iagoensis),
-which tamely sits on the branches of the castor-oil plant, and thence
-darts on grasshoppers and lizards. It is brightly coloured, but not so
-beautiful as the European species: in its flight, manners, and place of
-habitation, which is generally in the driest valley, there is also a
-wide difference.
-
-One day, two of the officers and myself rode to Ribeira Grande, a
-village a few miles eastward of Porto Praya. Until we reached the
-valley of St. Martin, the country presented its usual dull brown
-appearance; but here, a very small rill of water produces a most
-refreshing margin of luxuriant vegetation. In the course of an hour we
-arrived at Ribeira Grande, and were surprised at the sight of a large
-ruined fort and cathedral. This little town, before its harbour was
-filled up, was the principal place in the island: it now presents a
-melancholy, but very picturesque appearance. Having procured a black
-Padre for a guide, and a Spaniard who had served in the Peninsular war
-as an interpreter, we visited a collection of buildings, of which an
-ancient church formed the principal part. It is here the governors and
-captain-generals of the islands have been buried. Some of the
-tombstones recorded dates of the sixteenth century. [2]
-
-The heraldic ornaments were the only things in this retired place that
-reminded us of Europe. The church or chapel formed one side of a
-quadrangle, in the middle of which a large clump of bananas were
-growing. On another side was a hospital, containing about a dozen
-miserable-looking inmates.
-
-We returned to the Venda to eat our dinners. A considerable number of
-men, women, and children, all as black as jet, collected to watch us.
-Our companions were extremely merry; and everything we said or did was
-followed by their hearty laughter. Before leaving the town we visited
-the cathedral. It does not appear so rich as the smaller church, but
-boasts of a little organ, which sent forth singularly inharmonious
-cries. We presented the black priest with a few shillings, and the
-Spaniard, patting him on the head, said, with much candour, he thought
-his colour made no great difference. We then returned, as fast as the
-ponies would go, to Porto Praya.
-
-Another day we rode to the village of St. Domingo, situated near the
-centre of the island. On a small plain which we crossed, a few stunted
-acacias were growing; their tops had been bent by the steady
-trade-wind, in a singular manner--some of them even at right angles to
-their trunks. The direction of the branches was exactly N. E. by N.,
-and S. W. by S., and these natural vanes must indicate the prevailing
-direction of the force of the trade-wind. The travelling had made so
-little impression on the barren soil, that we here missed our track,
-and took that to Fuentes. This we did not find out till we arrived
-there; and we were afterwards glad of our mistake. Fuentes is a pretty
-village, with a small stream; and everything appeared to prosper well,
-excepting, indeed, that which ought to do so most--its inhabitants. The
-black children, completely naked, and looking very wretched, were
-carrying bundles of firewood half as big as their own bodies.
-
-Near Fuentes we saw a large flock of guinea-fowl--probably fifty or
-sixty in number. They were extremely wary, and could not be
-approached. They avoided us, like partridges on a rainy day in
-September, running with their heads cocked up; and if pursued, they
-readily took to the wing.
-
-The scenery of St. Domingo possesses a beauty totally unexpected, from
-the prevalent gloomy character of the rest of the island. The village
-is situated at the bottom of a valley, bounded by lofty and jagged
-walls of stratified lava. The black rocks afford a most striking
-contrast with the bright green vegetation, which follows the banks of a
-little stream of clear water. It happened to be a grand feast-day, and
-the village was full of people. On our return we overtook a party of
-about twenty young black girls, dressed in excellent taste; their black
-skins and snow-white linen being set off by coloured turbans and large
-shawls. As soon as we approached near, they suddenly all turned round,
-and covering the path with their shawls, sung with great energy a wild
-song, beating time with their hands upon their legs. We threw them some
-vintems, which were received with screams of laughter, and we left them
-redoubling the noise of their song.
-
-One morning the view was singularly clear; the distant mountains being
-projected with the sharpest outline on a heavy bank of dark blue
-clouds. Judging from the appearance, and from similar cases in
-England, I supposed that the air was saturated with moisture. The
-fact, however, turned out quite the contrary. The hygrometer gave a
-difference of 29.6 degs., between the temperature of the air, and the
-point at which dew was precipitated. This difference was nearly double
-that which I had observed on the previous mornings. This unusual
-degree of atmospheric dryness was accompanied by continual flashes of
-lightning. Is it not an uncommon case, thus to find a remarkable
-degree of aerial transparency with such a state of weather?
-
-Generally the atmosphere is hazy; and this is caused by the falling of
-impalpably fine dust, which was found to have slightly injured the
-astronomical instruments. The morning before we anchored at Porto
-Praya, I collected a little packet of this brown-coloured fine dust,
-which appeared to have been filtered from the wind by the gauze of the
-vane at the mast-head. Mr. Lyell has also given me four packets of
-dust which fell on a vessel a few hundred miles northward of these
-islands. Professor Ehrenberg [3] finds that this dust consists in
-great part of infusoria with siliceous shields, and of the siliceous
-tissue of plants. In five little packets which I sent him, he has
-ascertained no less than sixty-seven different organic forms! The
-infusoria, with the exception of two marine species, are all
-inhabitants of fresh-water. I have found no less than fifteen
-different accounts of dust having fallen on vessels when far out in the
-Atlantic. From the direction of the wind whenever it has fallen, and
-from its having always fallen during those months when the harmattan is
-known to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere, we may feel
-sure that it all comes from Africa. It is, however, a very singular
-fact, that, although Professor Ehrenberg knows many species of
-infusoria peculiar to Africa, he finds none of these in the dust which
-I sent him. On the other hand, he finds in it two species which
-hitherto he knows as living only in South America. The dust falls in
-such quantities as to dirty everything on board, and to hurt people's
-eyes; vessels even have run on shore owing to the obscurity of the
-atmosphere. It has often fallen on ships when several hundred, and
-even more than a thousand miles from the coast of Africa, and at points
-sixteen hundred miles distant in a north and south direction. In some
-dust which was collected on a vessel three hundred miles from the land,
-I was much surprised to find particles of stone above the thousandth of
-an inch square, mixed with finer matter. After this fact one need not
-be surprised at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules
-of cryptogamic plants.
-
-The geology of this island is the most interesting part of its natural
-history. On entering the harbour, a perfectly horizontal white band,
-in the face of the sea cliff, may be seen running for some miles along
-the coast, and at the height of about forty-five feet above the water.
-Upon examination this white stratum is found to consist of calcareous
-matter with numerous shells embedded, most or all of which now exist on
-the neighbouring coast. It rests on ancient volcanic rocks, and has
-been covered by a stream of basalt, which must have entered the sea
-when the white shelly bed was lying at the bottom. It is interesting
-to trace the changes produced by the heat of the overlying lava, on the
-friable mass, which in parts has been converted into a crystalline
-limestone, and in other parts into a compact spotted stone Where the
-lime has been caught up by the scoriaceous fragments of the lower
-surface of the stream, it is converted into groups of beautifully
-radiated fibres resembling arragonite. The beds of lava rise in
-successive gently-sloping plains, towards the interior, whence the
-deluges of melted stone have originally proceeded. Within historical
-times, no signs of volcanic activity have, I believe, been manifested
-in any part of St. Jago. Even the form of a crater can but rarely be
-discovered on the summits of the many red cindery hills; yet the more
-recent streams can be distinguished on the coast, forming lines of
-cliffs of less height, but stretching out in advance of those belonging
-to an older series: the height of the cliffs thus affording a rude
-measure of the age of the streams.
-
-During our stay, I observed the habits of some marine animals. A large
-Aplysia is very common. This sea-slug is about five inches long; and
-is of a dirty yellowish colour veined with purple. On each side of the
-lower surface, or foot, there is a broad membrane, which appears
-sometimes to act as a ventilator, in causing a current of water to flow
-over the dorsal branchiae or lungs. It feeds on the delicate sea-weeds
-which grow among the stones in muddy and shallow water; and I found in
-its stomach several small pebbles, as in the gizzard of a bird. This
-slug, when disturbed, emits a very fine purplish-red fluid, which
-stains the water for the space of a foot around. Besides this means of
-defence, an acrid secretion, which is spread over its body, causes a
-sharp, stinging sensation, similar to that produced by the Physalia, or
-Portuguese man-of-war.
-
-I was much interested, on several occasions, by watching the habits of
-an Octopus, or cuttle-fish. Although common in the pools of water left
-by the retiring tide, these animals were not easily caught. By means
-of their long arms and suckers, they could drag their bodies into very
-narrow crevices; and when thus fixed, it required great force to remove
-them. At other times they darted tail first, with the rapidity of an
-arrow, from one side of the pool to the other, at the same instant
-discolouring the water with a dark chestnut-brown ink. These animals
-also escape detection by a very extraordinary, chameleon-like power of
-changing their colour. They appear to vary their tints according to the
-nature of the ground over which they pass: when in deep water, their
-general shade was brownish purple, but when placed on the land, or in
-shallow water, this dark tint changed into one of a yellowish green.
-The colour, examined more carefully, was a French grey, with numerous
-minute spots of bright yellow: the former of these varied in intensity;
-the latter entirely disappeared and appeared again by turns. These
-changes were effected in such a manner, that clouds, varying in tint
-between a hyacinth red and a chestnut-brown, [4] were continually
-passing over the body. Any part, being subjected to a slight shock of
-galvanism, became almost black: a similar effect, but in a less degree,
-was produced by scratching the skin with a needle. These clouds, or
-blushes as they may be called, are said to be produced by the alternate
-expansion and contraction of minute vesicles containing variously
-coloured fluids. [5]
-
-This cuttle-fish displayed its chameleon-like power both during the act
-of swimming and whilst remaining stationary at the bottom. I was much
-amused by the various arts to escape detection used by one individual,
-which seemed fully aware that I was watching it. Remaining for a time
-motionless, it would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a cat
-after a mouse; sometimes changing its colour: it thus proceeded, till
-having gained a deeper part, it darted away, leaving a dusky train of
-ink to hide the hole into which it had crawled.
-
-While looking for marine animals, with my head about two feet above the
-rocky shore, I was more than once saluted by a jet of water,
-accompanied by a slight grating noise. At first I could not think what
-it was, but afterwards I found out that it was this cuttle-fish, which,
-though concealed in a hole, thus often led me to its discovery. That
-it possesses the power of ejecting water there is no doubt, and it
-appeared to me that it could certainly take good aim by directing the
-tube or siphon on the under side of its body. From the difficulty
-which these animals have in carrying their heads, they cannot crawl
-with ease when placed on the ground. I observed that one which I kept
-in the cabin was slightly phosphorescent in the dark.
-
-ST. PAUL'S ROCKS.--In crossing the Atlantic we hove-to during the
-morning of February 16th, close to the island of St. Paul's. This
-cluster of rocks is situated in 0 degs. 58' north latitude, and 29
-degs. 15' west longitude. It is 540 miles distant from the coast of
-America, and 350 from the island of Fernando Noronha. The highest
-point is only fifty feet above the level of the sea, and the entire
-circumference is under three-quarters of a mile. This small point
-rises abruptly out of the depths of the ocean. Its mineralogical
-constitution is not simple; in some parts the rock is of a cherty, in
-others of a felspathic nature, including thin veins of serpentine. It
-is a remarkable fact, that all the many small islands, lying far from
-any continent, in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic Oceans, with the
-exception of the Seychelles and this little point of rock, are, I
-believe, composed either of coral or of erupted matter. The volcanic
-nature of these oceanic islands is evidently an extension of that law,
-and the effect of those same causes, whether chemical or mechanical,
-from which it results that a vast majority of the volcanoes now in
-action stand either near sea-coasts or as islands in the midst of the
-sea.
-
-The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly white
-colour. This is partly owing to the dung of a vast multitude of
-seafowl, and partly to a coating of a hard glossy substance with a
-pearly lustre, which is intimately united to the surface of the rocks.
-This, when examined with a lens, is found to consist of numerous
-exceedingly thin layers, its total thickness being about the tenth of
-an inch. It contains much animal matter, and its origin, no doubt, is
-due to the action of the rain or spray on the birds' dung. Below some
-small masses of guano at Ascension, and on the Abrolhos Islets, I found
-certain stalactitic branching bodies, formed apparently in the same
-manner as the thin white coating on these rocks. The branching bodies
-so closely resembled in general appearance certain nulliporae (a family
-of hard calcareous sea-plants), that in lately looking hastily over my
-collection I did not perceive the difference. The globular extremities
-of the branches are of a pearly texture, like the enamel of teeth, but
-so hard as just to scratch plate-glass. I may here mention, that on a
-part of the coast of Ascension, where there is a vast accumulation of
-shelly sand, an incrustation is deposited on the tidal rocks by the
-water of the sea, resembling, as represented in the woodcut, certain
-cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often seen on damp walls. The surface
-of the fronds is beautifully glossy; and those parts formed where fully
-exposed to the light are of a jet black colour, but those shaded under
-ledges are only grey. I have shown specimens of this incrustation to
-several geologists, and they all thought that they were of volcanic or
-igneous origin! In its hardness and translucency--in its polish, equal
-to that of the finest oliva-shell--in the bad smell given out, and loss
-of colour under the blowpipe--it shows a close similarity with living
-sea-shells. Moreover, in sea-shells, it is known that the parts
-habitually covered and shaded by the mantle of the animal, are of a
-paler colour than those fully exposed to the light, just as is the case
-with this incrustation. When we remember that lime, either as a
-phosphate or carbonate, enters into the composition of the hard parts,
-such as bones and shells, of all living animals, it is an interesting
-physiological fact [6] to find substances harder than the enamel of
-teeth, and coloured surfaces as well polished as those of a fresh
-shell, reformed through inorganic means from dead organic
-matter--mocking, also, in shape, some of the lower vegetable
-productions.
-
-We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds--the booby and the
-noddy. The former is a species of gannet, and the latter a tern. Both
-are of a tame and stupid disposition, and are so unaccustomed to
-visitors, that I could have killed any number of them with my
-geological hammer. The booby lays her eggs on the bare rock; but the
-tern makes a very simple nest with sea-weed. By the side of many of
-these nests a small flying-fish was placed; which I suppose, had been
-brought by the male bird for its partner. It was amusing to watch how
-quickly a large and active crab (Graspus), which inhabits the crevices
-of the rock, stole the fish from the side of the nest, as soon as we
-had disturbed the parent birds. Sir W. Symonds, one of the few persons
-who have landed here, informs me that he saw the crabs dragging even
-the young birds out of their nests, and devouring them. Not a single
-plant, not even a lichen, grows on this islet; yet it is inhabited by
-several insects and spiders. The following list completes, I believe,
-the terrestrial fauna: a fly (Olfersia) living on the booby, and a tick
-which must have come here as a parasite on the birds; a small brown
-moth, belonging to a genus that feeds on feathers; a beetle (Quedius)
-and a woodlouse from beneath the dung; and lastly, numerous spiders,
-which I suppose prey on these small attendants and scavengers of the
-water-fowl. The often repeated description of the stately palm and
-other noble tropical plants, then birds, and lastly man, taking
-possession of the coral islets as soon as formed, in the Pacific, is
-probably not correct; I fear it destroys the poetry of this story, that
-feather and dirt-feeding and parasitic insects and spiders should be
-the first inhabitants of newly formed oceanic land.
-
-The smallest rock in the tropical seas, by giving a foundation for the
-growth of innumerable kinds of sea-weed and compound animals, supports
-likewise a large number of fish. The sharks and the seamen in the boats
-maintained a constant struggle which should secure the greater share of
-the prey caught by the fishing-lines. I have heard that a rock near
-the Bermudas, lying many miles out at sea, and at a considerable depth,
-was first discovered by the circumstance of fish having been observed
-in the neighbourhood.
-
-FERNANDO NORONHA, Feb. 20th.--As far as I was enabled to observe,
-during the few hours we stayed at this place, the constitution of the
-island is volcanic, but probably not of a recent date. The most
-remarkable feature is a conical hill, about one thousand feet high, the
-upper part of which is exceedingly steep, and on one side overhangs its
-base. The rock is phonolite, and is divided into irregular columns. On
-viewing one of these isolated masses, at first one is inclined to
-believe that it has been suddenly pushed up in a semi-fluid state. At
-St. Helena, however, I ascertained that some pinnacles, of a nearly
-similar figure and constitution, had been formed by the injection of
-melted rock into yielding strata, which thus had formed the moulds for
-these gigantic obelisks. The whole island is covered with wood; but
-from the dryness of the climate there is no appearance of luxuriance.
-Half-way up the mountain, some great masses of the columnar rock,
-shaded by laurel-like trees, and ornamented by others covered with fine
-pink flowers but without a single leaf, gave a pleasing effect to the
-nearer parts of the scenery.
-
-BAHIA, OR SAN SALVADOR. BRAZIL, Feb. 29th.--The day has passed
-delightfully. Delight itself, however, is a weak term to express the
-feelings of a naturalist who, for the first time, has wandered by
-himself in a Brazilian forest. The elegance of the grasses, the
-novelty of the parasitical plants, the beauty of the flowers, the
-glossy green of the foliage, but above all the general luxuriance of
-the vegetation, filled me with admiration. A most paradoxical mixture
-of sound and silence pervades the shady parts of the wood. The noise
-from the insects is so loud, that it may be heard even in a vessel
-anchored several hundred yards from the shore; yet within the recesses
-of the forest a universal silence appears to reign. To a person fond
-of natural history, such a day as this brings with it a deeper pleasure
-than he can ever hope to experience again. After wandering about for
-some hours, I returned to the landing-place; but, before reaching it, I
-was overtaken by a tropical storm. I tried to find shelter under a
-tree, which was so thick that it would never have been penetrated by
-common English rain; but here, in a couple of minutes, a little torrent
-flowed down the trunk. It is to this violence of the rain that we must
-attribute the verdure at the bottom of the thickest woods: if the
-showers were like those of a colder climate, the greater part would be
-absorbed or evaporated before it reached the ground. I will not at
-present attempt to describe the gaudy scenery of this noble bay,
-because, in our homeward voyage, we called here a second time, and I
-shall then have occasion to remark on it.
-
-Along the whole coast of Brazil, for a length of at least 2000 miles,
-and certainly for a considerable space inland, wherever solid rock
-occurs, it belongs to a granitic formation. The circumstance of this
-enormous area being constituted of materials which most geologists
-believe to have been crystallized when heated under pressure, gives
-rise to many curious reflections. Was this effect produced beneath the
-depths of a profound ocean? or did a covering of strata formerly extend
-over it, which has since been removed? Can we believe that any power,
-acting for a time short of infinity, could have denuded the granite
-over so many thousand square leagues?
-
-On a point not far from the city, where a rivulet entered the sea, I
-observed a fact connected with a subject discussed by Humboldt. [7] At
-the cataracts of the great rivers Orinoco, Nile, and Congo, the
-syenitic rocks are coated by a black substance, appearing as if they
-had been polished with plumbago. The layer is of extreme thinness; and
-on analysis by Berzelius it was found to consist of the oxides of
-manganese and iron. In the Orinoco it occurs on the rocks periodically
-washed by the floods, and in those parts alone where the stream is
-rapid; or, as the Indians say, "the rocks are black where the waters
-are white." Here the coating is of a rich brown instead of a black
-colour, and seems to be composed of ferruginous matter alone. Hand
-specimens fail to give a just idea of these brown burnished stones
-which glitter in the sun's rays. They occur only within the limits of
-the tidal waves; and as the rivulet slowly trickles down, the surf must
-supply the polishing power of the cataracts in the great rivers. In
-like manner, the rise and fall of the tide probably answer to the
-periodical inundations; and thus the same effects are produced under
-apparently different but really similar circumstances. The origin,
-however, of these coatings of metallic oxides, which seem as if
-cemented to the rocks, is not understood; and no reason, I believe, can
-be assigned for their thickness remaining the same.
-
-One day I was amused by watching the habits of the Diodon antennatus,
-which was caught swimming near the shore. This fish, with its flabby
-skin, is well known to possess the singular power of distending itself
-into a nearly spherical form. After having been taken out of water for
-a short time, and then again immersed in it, a considerable quantity
-both of water and air is absorbed by the mouth, and perhaps likewise by
-the branchial orifices. This process is effected by two methods: the
-air is swallowed, and is then forced into the cavity of the body, its
-return being prevented by a muscular contraction which is externally
-visible: but the water enters in a gentle stream through the mouth,
-which is kept wide open and motionless; this latter action must,
-therefore, depend on suction. The skin about the abdomen is much
-looser than that on the back; hence, during the inflation, the lower
-surface becomes far more distended than the upper; and the fish, in
-consequence, floats with its back downwards. Cuvier doubts whether the
-Diodon in this position is able to swim; but not only can it thus move
-forward in a straight line, but it can turn round to either side. This
-latter movement is effected solely by the aid of the pectoral fins; the
-tail being collapsed, and not used. From the body being buoyed up with
-so much air, the branchial openings are out of water, but a stream
-drawn in by the mouth constantly flows through them.
-
-The fish, having remained in this distended state for a short time,
-generally expelled the air and water with considerable force from the
-branchial apertures and mouth. It could emit, at will, a certain
-portion of the water, and it appears, therefore, probable that this
-fluid is taken in partly for the sake of regulating its specific
-gravity. This Diodon possessed several means of defence. It could
-give a severe bite, and could eject water from its mouth to some
-distance, at the same time making a curious noise by the movement of
-its jaws. By the inflation of its body, the papillae, with which the
-skin is covered, become erect and pointed. But the most curious
-circumstance is, that it secretes from the skin of its belly, when
-handled, a most beautiful carmine-red fibrous matter, which stains
-ivory and paper in so permanent a manner that the tint is retained with
-all its brightness to the present day: I am quite ignorant of the
-nature and use of this secretion. I have heard from Dr. Allan of
-Forres, that he has frequently found a Diodon, floating alive and
-distended, in the stomach of the shark, and that on several occasions
-he has known it eat its way, not only through the coats of the stomach,
-but through the sides of the monster, which has thus been killed. Who
-would ever have imagined that a little soft fish could have destroyed
-the great and savage shark?
-
-March 18th.--We sailed from Bahia. A few days afterwards, when not far
-distant from the Abrolhos Islets, my attention was called to a
-reddish-brown appearance in the sea. The whole surface of the water,
-as it appeared under a weak lens, seemed as if covered by chopped bits
-of hay, with their ends jagged. These are minute cylindrical
-confervae, in bundles or rafts of from twenty to sixty in each. Mr.
-Berkeley informs me that they are the same species (Trichodesmium
-erythraeum) with that found over large spaces in the Red Sea, and
-whence its name of Red Sea is derived. [8] Their numbers must be
-infinite: the ship passed through several bands of them, one of which
-was about ten yards wide, and, judging from the mud-like colour of the
-water, at least two and a half miles long. In almost every long voyage
-some account is given of these confervae. They appear especially
-common in the sea near Australia; and off Cape Leeuwin I found an
-allied but smaller and apparently different species. Captain Cook, in
-his third voyage, remarks, that the sailors gave to this appearance the
-name of sea-sawdust.
-
-Near Keeling Atoll, in the Indian Ocean, I observed many little masses
-of confervae a few inches square, consisting of long cylindrical
-threads of excessive thinness, so as to be barely visible to the naked
-eye, mingled with other rather larger bodies, finely conical at both
-ends. Two of these are shown in the woodcut united together. They
-vary in length from .04 to .06, and even to .08 of an inch in length;
-and in diameter from .006 to .008 of an inch. Near one extremity of
-the cylindrical part, a green septum, formed of granular matter, and
-thickest in the middle, may generally be seen. This, I believe, is the
-bottom of a most delicate, colourless sac, composed of a pulpy
-substance, which lines the exterior case, but does not extend within
-the extreme conical points. In some specimens, small but perfect
-spheres of brownish granular matter supplied the places of the septa;
-and I observed the curious process by which they were produced. The
-pulpy matter of the internal coating suddenly grouped itself into
-lines, some of which assumed a form radiating from a common centre; it
-then continued, with an irregular and rapid movement, to contract
-itself, so that in the course of a second the whole was united into a
-perfect little sphere, which occupied the position of the septum at one
-end of the now quite hollow case. The formation of the granular sphere
-was hastened by any accidental injury. I may add, that frequently a
-pair of these bodies were attached to each other, as represented above,
-cone beside cone, at that end where the septum occurs.
-
-I will add here a few other observations connected with the
-discoloration of the sea from organic causes. On the coast of Chile, a
-few leagues north of Concepcion, the Beagle one day passed through
-great bands of muddy water, exactly like that of a swollen river; and
-again, a degree south of Valparaiso, when fifty miles from the land,
-the same appearance was still more extensive. Some of the water placed
-in a glass was of a pale reddish tint; and, examined under a
-microscope, was seen to swarm with minute animalcula darting about, and
-often exploding. Their shape is oval, and contracted in the middle by
-a ring of vibrating curved ciliae. It was, however, very difficult to
-examine them with care, for almost the instant motion ceased, even
-while crossing the field of vision, their bodies burst. Sometimes both
-ends burst at once, sometimes only one, and a quantity of coarse,
-brownish, granular matter was ejected. The animal an instant before
-bursting expanded to half again its natural size; and the explosion
-took place about fifteen seconds after the rapid progressive motion had
-ceased: in a few cases it was preceded for a short interval by a
-rotatory movement on the longer axis. About two minutes after any
-number were isolated in a drop of water, they thus perished. The
-animals move with the narrow apex forwards, by the aid of their
-vibratory ciliae, and generally by rapid starts. They are exceedingly
-minute, and quite invisible to the naked eye, only covering a space
-equal to the square of the thousandth of an inch. Their numbers were
-infinite; for the smallest drop of water which I could remove contained
-very many. In one day we passed through two spaces of water thus
-stained, one of which alone must have extended over several square
-miles. What incalculable numbers of these microscopical animals! The
-colour of the water, as seen at some distance, was like that of a river
-which has flowed through a red clay district, but under the shade of
-the vessel's side it was quite as dark as chocolate. The line where
-the red and blue water joined was distinctly defined. The weather for
-some days previously had been calm, and the ocean abounded, to an
-unusual degree, with living creatures. [9]
-
-In the sea around Tierra del Fuego, and at no great distance from the
-land, I have seen narrow lines of water of a bright red colour, from
-the number of crustacea, which somewhat resemble in form large prawns.
-The sealers call them whale-food. Whether whales feed on them I do not
-know; but terns, cormorants, and immense herds of great unwieldy seals
-derive, on some parts of the coast, their chief sustenance from these
-swimming crabs. Seamen invariably attribute the discoloration of the
-water to spawn; but I found this to be the case only on one occasion.
-At the distance of several leagues from the Archipelago of the
-Galapagos, the ship sailed through three strips of a dark yellowish, or
-mud-like water; these strips were some miles long, but only a few yards
-wide, and they were separated from the surrounding water by a sinuous
-yet distinct margin. The colour was caused by little gelatinous balls,
-about the fifth of an inch in diameter, in which numerous minute
-spherical ovules were imbedded: they were of two distinct kinds, one
-being of a reddish colour and of a different shape from the other. I
-cannot form a conjecture as to what two kinds of animals these
-belonged. Captain Colnett remarks, that this appearance is very common
-among the Galapagos Islands, and that the directions of the bands
-indicate that of the currents; in the described case, however, the line
-was caused by the wind. The only other appearance which I have to
-notice, is a thin oily coat on the water which displays iridescent
-colours. I saw a considerable tract of the ocean thus covered on the
-coast of Brazil; the seamen attributed it to the putrefying carcase of
-some whale, which probably was floating at no great distance. I do not
-here mention the minute gelatinous particles, hereafter to be referred
-to, which are frequently dispersed throughout the water, for they are
-not sufficiently abundant to create any change of colour.
-
-There are two circumstances in the above accounts which appear
-remarkable: first, how do the various bodies which form the bands with
-defined edges keep together? In the case of the prawn-like crabs,
-their movements were as co-instantaneous as in a regiment of soldiers;
-but this cannot happen from anything like voluntary action with the
-ovules, or the confervae, nor is it probable among the infusoria.
-Secondly, what causes the length and narrowness of the bands? The
-appearance so much resembles that which may be seen in every torrent,
-where the stream uncoils into long streaks the froth collected in the
-eddies, that I must attribute the effect to a similar action either of
-the currents of the air or sea. Under this supposition we must believe
-that the various organized bodies are produced in certain favourable
-places, and are thence removed by the set of either wind or water. I
-confess, however, there is a very great difficulty in imagining any one
-spot to be the birthplace of the millions of millions of animalcula and
-confervae: for whence come the germs at such points?--the parent bodies
-having been distributed by the winds and waves over the immense ocean.
-But on no other hypothesis can I understand their linear grouping. I
-may add that Scoresby remarks that green water abounding with pelagic
-animals is invariably found in a certain part of the Arctic Sea.
-
-[1] I state this on the authority of Dr. E. Dieffenbach, in his German
-translation of the first edition of this Journal.
-
-[2] The Cape de Verd Islands were discovered in 1449. There was a
-tombstone of a bishop with the date of 1571; and a crest of a hand and
-dagger, dated 1497.
-
-[3] I must take this opportunity of acknowledging the great kindness
-with which this illustrious naturalist has examined many of my
-specimens. I have sent (June, 1845) a full account of the falling of
-this dust to the Geological Society.
-
-[4] So named according to Patrick Symes's nomenclature.
-
-[5] See Encyclop. of Anat. and Physiol., article Cephalopoda
-
-[6] Mr. Horner and Sir David Brewster have described (Philosophical
-Transactions, 1836, p. 65) a singular "artificial substance resembling
-shell." It is deposited in fine, transparent, highly polished,
-brown-coloured laminae, possessing peculiar optical properties, on the
-inside of a vessel, in which cloth, first prepared with glue and then
-with lime, is made to revolve rapidly in water. It is much softer,
-more transparent, and contains more animal matter, than the natural
-incrustation at Ascension; but we here again see the strong tendency
-which carbonate of lime and animal matter evince to form a solid
-substance allied to shell.
-
-[7] Pers. Narr., vol. v., pt. 1., p. 18.
-
-[8] M. Montagne, in Comptes Rendus, etc., Juillet, 1844; and Annal. des
-Scienc. Nat., Dec. 1844
-
-[9] M. Lesson (Voyage de la Coquille, tom. i., p. 255) mentions red
-water off Lima, apparently produced by the same cause. Peron, the
-distinguished naturalist, in the Voyage aux Terres Australes, gives no
-less than twelve references to voyagers who have alluded to the
-discoloured waters of the sea (vol. ii. p. 239). To the references
-given by Peron may be added, Humboldt's Pers. Narr., vol. vi. p. 804;
-Flinder's Voyage, vol. i. p. 92; Labillardiere, vol. i. p. 287; Ulloa's
-Voyage; Voyage of the Astrolabe and of the Coquille; Captain King's
-Survey of Australia, etc.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-RIO DE JANEIRO
-
-Rio de Janeiro--Excursion north of Cape Frio--Great
-Evaporation--Slavery--Botofogo Bay--Terrestrial Planariae--Clouds on
-the Corcovado--Heavy Rain--Musical Frogs--Phosphorescent
-Insects--Elater, springing powers of--Blue Haze--Noise made by a
-Butterfly--Entomology--Ants--Wasp killing a Spider--Parasitical
-Spider--Artifices of an Epeira--Gregarious Spider--Spider with an
-unsymmetrical Web.
-
-
-APRIL 4th to July 5th, 1832.--A few days after our arrival I became
-acquainted with an Englishman who was going to visit his estate,
-situated rather more than a hundred miles from the capital, to the
-northward of Cape Frio. I gladly accepted his kind offer of allowing
-me to accompany him.
-
-April 8th.--Our party amounted to seven. The first stage was very
-interesting. The day was powerfully hot, and as we passed through the
-woods, everything was motionless, excepting the large and brilliant
-butterflies, which lazily fluttered about. The view seen when crossing
-the hills behind Praia Grande was most beautiful; the colours were
-intense, and the prevailing tint a dark blue; the sky and the calm
-waters of the bay vied with each other in splendour. After passing
-through some cultivated country, we entered a forest, which in the
-grandeur of all its parts could not be exceeded. We arrived by midday
-at Ithacaia; this small village is situated on a plain, and round the
-central house are the huts of the negroes. These, from their regular
-form and position, reminded me of the drawings of the Hottentot
-habitations in Southern Africa. As the moon rose early, we determined
-to start the same evening for our sleeping-place at the Lagoa Marica.
-As it was growing dark we passed under one of the massive, bare, and
-steep hills of granite which are so common in this country. This spot
-is notorious from having been, for a long time, the residence of some
-runaway slaves, who, by cultivating a little ground near the top,
-contrived to eke out a subsistence. At length they were discovered,
-and a party of soldiers being sent, the whole were seized with the
-exception of one old woman, who, sooner than again be led into slavery,
-dashed herself to pieces from the summit of the mountain. In a Roman
-matron this would have been called the noble love of freedom: in a poor
-negress it is mere brutal obstinacy. We continued riding for some
-hours. For the few last miles the road was intricate, and it passed
-through a desert waste of marshes and lagoons. The scene by the dimmed
-light of the moon was most desolate. A few fireflies flitted by us;
-and the solitary snipe, as it rose, uttered its plaintive cry. The
-distant and sullen roar of the sea scarcely broke the stillness of the
-night.
-
-April 9th.--We left our miserable sleeping-place before sunrise. The
-road passed through a narrow sandy plain, lying between the sea and the
-interior salt lagoons. The number of beautiful fishing birds, such as
-egrets and cranes, and the succulent plants assuming most fantastical
-forms, gave to the scene an interest which it would not otherwise have
-possessed. The few stunted trees were loaded with parasitical plants,
-among which the beauty and delicious fragrance of some of the orchideae
-were most to be admired. As the sun rose, the day became extremely hot,
-and the reflection of the light and heat from the white sand was very
-distressing. We dined at Mandetiba; the thermometer in the shade being
-84 degs. The beautiful view of the distant wooded hills, reflected in
-the perfectly calm water of an extensive lagoon, quite refreshed us. As
-the venda [1] here was a very good one, and I have the pleasant, but
-rare remembrance, of an excellent dinner, I will be grateful and
-presently describe it, as the type of its class. These houses are
-often large, and are built of thick upright posts, with boughs
-interwoven, and afterwards plastered. They seldom have floors, and
-never glazed windows; but are generally pretty well roofed. Universally
-the front part is open, forming a kind of verandah, in which tables and
-benches are placed. The bed-rooms join on each side, and here the
-passenger may sleep as comfortably as he can, on a wooden platform,
-covered by a thin straw mat. The venda stands in a courtyard, where
-the horses are fed. On first arriving it was our custom to unsaddle
-the horses and give them their Indian corn; then, with a low bow, to
-ask the senhor to do us the favour to give up something to eat.
-"Anything you choose, sir," was his usual answer. For the few first
-times, vainly I thanked providence for having guided us to so good a
-man. The conversation proceeding, the case universally became
-deplorable. "Any fish can you do us the favour of giving ?"--"Oh! no,
-sir."--"Any soup?"--"No, sir."--"Any bread?"--"Oh! no, sir."--"Any
-dried meat?"--"Oh! no, sir." If we were lucky, by waiting a couple of
-hours, we obtained fowls, rice, and farinha. It not unfrequently
-happened, that we were obliged to kill, with stones, the poultry for
-our own supper. When, thoroughly exhausted by fatigue and hunger, we
-timorously hinted that we should be glad of our meal, the pompous, and
-(though true) most unsatisfactory answer was, "It will be ready when it
-is ready." If we had dared to remonstrate any further, we should have
-been told to proceed on our journey, as being too impertinent. The
-hosts are most ungracious and disagreeable in their manners; their
-houses and their persons are often filthily dirty; the want of the
-accommodation of forks, knives, and spoons is common; and I am sure no
-cottage or hovel in England could be found in a state so utterly
-destitute of every comfort. At Campos Novos, however, we fared
-sumptuously; having rice and fowls, biscuit, wine, and spirits, for
-dinner; coffee in the evening, and fish with coffee for breakfast. All
-this, with good food for the horses, only cost 2s. 6d. per head. Yet
-the host of this venda, being asked if he knew anything of a whip which
-one of the party had lost, gruffly answered, "How should I know? why
-did you not take care of it?--I suppose the dogs have eaten it."
-
-Leaving Mandetiba, we continued to pass through an intricate wilderness
-of lakes; in some of which were fresh, in others salt water shells. Of
-the former kinds, I found a Limnaea in great numbers in a lake, into
-which, the inhabitants assured me that the sea enters once a year, and
-sometimes oftener, and makes the water quite salt. I have no doubt
-many interesting facts, in relation to marine and fresh water animals,
-might be observed in this chain of lagoons, which skirt the coast of
-Brazil. M. Gay [2] has stated that he found in the neighbourhood of
-Rio, shells of the marine genera solen and mytilus, and fresh water
-ampullariae, living together in brackish water. I also frequently
-observed in the lagoon near the Botanic Garden, where the water is only
-a little less salt than in the sea, a species of hydrophilus, very
-similar to a water-beetle common in the ditches of England: in the same
-lake the only shell belonged to a genus generally found in estuaries.
-
-Leaving the coast for a time, we again entered the forest. The trees
-were very lofty, and remarkable, compared with those of Europe, from
-the whiteness of their trunks. I see by my note-book, "wonderful and
-beautiful, flowering parasites," invariably struck me as the most novel
-object in these grand scenes. Travelling onwards we passed through
-tracts of pasturage, much injured by the enormous conical ants' nests,
-which were nearly twelve feet high. They gave to the plain exactly the
-appearance of the mud volcanos at Jorullo, as figured by Humboldt. We
-arrived at Engenhodo after it was dark, having been ten hours on
-horseback. I never ceased, during the whole journey, to be surprised
-at the amount of labour which the horses were capable of enduring; they
-appeared also to recover from any injury much sooner than those of our
-English breed. The Vampire bat is often the cause of much trouble, by
-biting the horses on their withers. The injury is generally not so
-much owing to the loss of blood, as to the inflammation which the
-pressure of the saddle afterwards produces. The whole circumstance has
-lately been doubted in England; I was therefore fortunate in being
-present when one (Desmodus d'orbignyi, Wat.) was actually caught on a
-horse's back. We were bivouacking late one evening near Coquimbo, in
-Chile, when my servant, noticing that one of the horses was very
-restive, went to see what was the matter, and fancying he could
-distinguish something, suddenly put his hand on the beast's withers,
-and secured the vampire. In the morning the spot where the bite had
-been inflicted was easily distinguished from being slightly swollen and
-bloody. The third day afterwards we rode the horse, without any ill
-effects.
-
-April 13th.--After three days' travelling we arrived at Socego, the
-estate of Senhor Manuel Figuireda, a relation of one of our party. The
-house was simple, and, though like a barn in form, was well suited to
-the climate. In the sitting-room gilded chairs and sofas were oddly
-contrasted with the whitewashed walls, thatched roof, and windows
-without glass. The house, together with the granaries, the stables,
-and workshops for the blacks, who had been taught various trades,
-formed a rude kind of quadrangle; in the centre of which a large pile
-of coffee was drying. These buildings stand on a little hill,
-overlooking the cultivated ground, and surrounded on every side by a
-wall of dark green luxuriant forest. The chief produce of this part of
-the country is coffee. Each tree is supposed to yield annually, on an
-average, two pounds; but some give as much as eight. Mandioca or
-cassada is likewise cultivated in great quantity. Every part of this
-plant is useful; the leaves and stalks are eaten by the horses, and the
-roots are ground into a pulp, which, when pressed dry and baked, forms
-the farinha, the principal article of sustenance in the Brazils. It is
-a curious, though well-known fact, that the juice of this most
-nutritious plant is highly poisonous. A few years ago a cow died at
-this Fazenda, in consequence of having drunk some of it. Senhor
-Figuireda told me that he had planted, the year before, one bag of
-feijao or beans, and three of rice; the former of which produced
-eighty, and the latter three hundred and twenty fold. The pasturage
-supports a fine stock of cattle, and the woods are so full of game that
-a deer had been killed on each of the three previous days. This
-profusion of food showed itself at dinner, where, if the tables did not
-groan, the guests surely did; for each person is expected to eat of
-every dish. One day, having, as I thought, nicely calculated so that
-nothing should go away untasted, to my utter dismay a roast turkey and
-a pig appeared in all their substantial reality. During the meals, it
-was the employment of a man to drive out of the room sundry old hounds,
-and dozens of little black children, which crawled in together, at
-every opportunity. As long as the idea of slavery could be banished,
-there was something exceedingly fascinating in this simple and
-patriarchal style of living: it was such a perfect retirement and
-independence from the rest of the world.
-
-As soon as any stranger is seen arriving, a large bell is set tolling,
-and generally some small cannon are fired. The event is thus announced
-to the rocks and woods, but to nothing else. One morning I walked out
-an hour before daylight to admire the solemn stillness of the scene; at
-last, the silence was broken by the morning hymn, raised on high by the
-whole body of the blacks; and in this manner their daily work is
-generally begun. On such fazendas as these, I have no doubt the slaves
-pass happy and contented lives. On Saturday and Sunday they work for
-themselves, and in this fertile climate the labour of two days is
-sufficient to support a man and his family for the whole week.
-
-April 14th.--Leaving Socego, we rode to another estate on the Rio
-Macae, which was the last patch of cultivated ground in that direction.
-The estate was two and a half miles long, and the owner had forgotten
-how many broad. Only a very small piece had been cleared, yet almost
-every acre was capable of yielding all the various rich productions of
-a tropical land. Considering the enormous area of Brazil, the
-proportion of cultivated ground can scarcely be considered as anything,
-compared to that which is left in the state of nature: at some future
-age, how vast a population it will support! During the second day's
-journey we found the road so shut up, that it was necessary that a man
-should go ahead with a sword to cut away the creepers. The forest
-abounded with beautiful objects; among which the tree ferns, though not
-large, were, from their bright green foliage, and the elegant curvature
-of their fronds, most worthy of admiration. In the evening it rained
-very heavily, and although the thermometer stood at 65 degs., I felt
-very cold. As soon as the rain ceased, it was curious to observe the
-extraordinary evaporation which commenced over the whole extent of the
-forest. At the height of a hundred feet the hills were buried in a
-dense white vapour, which rose like columns of smoke from the most
-thickly wooded parts, and especially from the valleys. I observed this
-phenomenon on several occasions. I suppose it is owing to the large
-surface of foliage, previously heated by the sun's rays.
-
-While staying at this estate, I was very nearly being an eye-witness to
-one of those atrocious acts which can only take place in a slave
-country. Owing to a quarrel and a lawsuit, the owner was on the point
-of taking all the women and children from the male slaves, and selling
-them separately at the public auction at Rio. Interest, and not any
-feeling of compassion, prevented this act. Indeed, I do not believe
-the inhumanity of separating thirty families, who had lived together
-for many years, even occurred to the owner. Yet I will pledge myself,
-that in humanity and good feeling he was superior to the common run of
-men. It may be said there exists no limit to the blindness of interest
-and selfish habit. I may mention one very trifling anecdote, which at
-the time struck me more forcibly than any story of cruelty. I was
-crossing a ferry with a negro, who was uncommonly stupid. In
-endeavouring to make him understand, I talked loud, and made signs, in
-doing which I passed my hand near his face. He, I suppose, thought I
-was in a passion, and was going to strike him; for instantly, with a
-frightened look and half-shut eyes, he dropped his hands. I shall
-never forget my feelings of surprise, disgust, and shame, at seeing a
-great powerful man afraid even to ward off a blow, directed, as he
-thought, at his face. This man had been trained to a degradation lower
-than the slavery of the most helpless animal.
-
-April 18th.--In returning we spent two days at Socego, and I employed
-them in collecting insects in the forest. The greater number of trees,
-although so lofty, are not more than three or four feet in
-circumference. There are, of course, a few of much greater dimensions.
-Senhor Manuel was then making a canoe 70 feet in length from a solid
-trunk, which had originally been 110 feet long, and of great thickness.
-The contrast of palm trees, growing amidst the common branching kinds,
-never fails to give the scene an intertropical character. Here the
-woods were ornamented by the Cabbage Palm--one of the most beautiful of
-its family. With a stem so narrow that it might be clasped with the
-two hands, it waves its elegant head at the height of forty or fifty
-feet above the ground. The woody creepers, themselves covered by other
-creepers, were of great thickness: some which I measured were two feet
-in circumference. Many of the older trees presented a very curious
-appearance from the tresses of a liana hanging from their boughs, and
-resembling bundles of hay. If the eye was turned from the world of
-foliage above, to the ground beneath, it was attracted by the extreme
-elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae. The latter, in some
-parts, covered the surface with a brushwood only a few inches high. In
-walking across these thick beds of mimosae, a broad track was marked by
-the change of shade, produced by the drooping of their sensitive
-petioles. It is easy to specify the individual objects of admiration in
-these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an adequate idea of
-the higher feelings of wonder, astonishment, and devotion, which fill
-and elevate the mind.
-
-April 19th.--Leaving Socego, during the two first days, we retraced our
-steps. It was very wearisome work, as the road generally ran across a
-glaring hot sandy plain, not far from the coast. I noticed that each
-time the horse put its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle
-chirping noise was produced. On the third day we took a different
-line, and passed through the gay little village of Madre de Deos. This
-is one of the principal lines of road in Brazil; yet it was in so bad a
-state that no wheeled vehicle, excepting the clumsy bullock-wagon,
-could pass along. In our whole journey we did not cross a single
-bridge built of stone; and those made of logs of wood were frequently
-so much out of repair, that it was necessary to go on one side to avoid
-them. All distances are inaccurately known. The road is often marked
-by crosses, in the place of milestones, to signify where human blood
-has been spilled. On the evening of the 23rd we arrived at Rio, having
-finished our pleasant little excursion.
-
-During the remainder of my stay at Rio, I resided in a cottage at
-Botofogo Bay. It was impossible to wish for anything more delightful
-than thus to spend some weeks in so magnificent a country. In England
-any person fond of natural history enjoys in his walks a great
-advantage, by always having something to attract his attention; but in
-these fertile climates, teeming with life, the attractions are so
-numerous, that he is scarcely able to walk at all.
-
-The few observations which I was enabled to make were almost
-exclusively confined to the invertebrate animals. The existence of a
-division of the genus Planaria, which inhabits the dry land, interested
-me much. These animals are of so simple a structure, that Cuvier has
-arranged them with the intestinal worms, though never found within the
-bodies of other animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh
-water; but those to which I allude were found, even in the drier parts
-of the forest, beneath logs of rotten wood, on which I believe they
-feed. In general form they resemble little slugs, but are very much
-narrower in proportion, and several of the species are beautifully
-coloured with longitudinal stripes. Their structure is very simple:
-near the middle of the under or crawling surface there are two small
-transverse slits, from the anterior one of which a funnel-shaped and
-highly irritable mouth can be protruded. For some time after the rest
-of the animal was completely dead from the effects of salt water or any
-other cause, this organ still retained its vitality.
-
-I found no less than twelve different species of terrestrial Planariae
-in different parts of the southern hemisphere. [3] Some specimens which
-I obtained at Van Dieman's Land, I kept alive for nearly two months,
-feeding them on rotten wood. Having cut one of them transversely into
-two nearly equal parts, in the course of a fortnight both had the shape
-of perfect animals. I had, however, so divided the body, that one of
-the halves contained both the inferior orifices, and the other, in
-consequence, none. In the course of twenty-five days from the
-operation, the more perfect half could not have been distinguished from
-any other specimen. The other had increased much in size; and towards
-its posterior end, a clear space was formed in the parenchymatous mass,
-in which a rudimentary cup-shaped mouth could clearly be distinguished;
-on the under surface, however, no corresponding slit was yet open. If
-the increased heat of the weather, as we approached the equator, had
-not destroyed all the individuals, there can be no doubt that this last
-step would have completed its structure. Although so well-known an
-experiment, it was interesting to watch the gradual production of every
-essential organ, out of the simple extremity of another animal. It is
-extremely difficult to preserve these Planariae; as soon as the
-cessation of life allows the ordinary laws of change to act, their
-entire bodies become soft and fluid, with a rapidity which I have never
-seen equalled.
-
-I first visited the forest in which these Planariae were found, in
-company with an old Portuguese priest who took me out to hunt with him.
-The sport consisted in turning into the cover a few dogs, and then
-patiently waiting to fire at any animal which might appear. We were
-accompanied by the son of a neighbouring farmer--a good specimen of a
-wild Brazilian youth. He was dressed in a tattered old shirt and
-trousers, and had his head uncovered: he carried an old-fashioned gun
-and a large knife. The habit of carrying the knife is universal; and
-in traversing a thick wood it is almost necessary, on account of the
-creeping plants. The frequent occurrence of murder may be partly
-attributed to this habit. The Brazilians are so dexterous with the
-knife, that they can throw it to some distance with precision, and with
-sufficient force to cause a fatal wound. I have seen a number of
-little boys practising this art as a game of play and from their skill
-in hitting an upright stick, they promised well for more earnest
-attempts. My companion, the day before, had shot two large bearded
-monkeys. These animals have prehensile tails, the extremity of which,
-even after death, can support the whole weight of the body. One of
-them thus remained fast to a branch, and it was necessary to cut down a
-large tree to procure it. This was soon effected, and down came tree
-and monkey with an awful crash. Our day's sport, besides the monkey,
-was confined to sundry small green parrots and a few toucans. I
-profited, however, by my acquaintance with the Portuguese padre, for on
-another occasion he gave me a fine specimen of the Yagouaroundi cat.
-
-Every one has heard of the beauty of the scenery near Botofogo. The
-house in which I lived was seated close beneath the well-known mountain
-of the Corcovado. It has been remarked, with much truth, that abruptly
-conical hills are characteristic of the formation which Humboldt
-designates as gneiss-granite. Nothing can be more striking than the
-effect of these huge rounded masses of naked rock rising out of the
-most luxuriant vegetation.
-
-I was often interested by watching the clouds, which, rolling in from
-seaward, formed a bank just beneath the highest point of the Corcovado.
-This mountain, like most others, when thus partly veiled, appeared to
-rise to a far prouder elevation than its real height of 2300 feet. Mr.
-Daniell has observed, in his meteorological essays, that a cloud
-sometimes appears fixed on a mountain summit, while the wind continues
-to blow over it. The same phenomenon here presented a slightly
-different appearance. In this case the cloud was clearly seen to curl
-over, and rapidly pass by the summit, and yet was neither diminished
-nor increased in size. The sun was setting, and a gentle southerly
-breeze, striking against the southern side of the rock, mingled its
-current with the colder air above; and the vapour was thus condensed;
-but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over the ridge, and came
-within the influence of the warmer atmosphere of the northern sloping
-bank, they were immediately re-dissolved.
-
-The climate, during the months of May and June, or the beginning of
-winter, was delightful. The mean temperature, from observations taken
-at nine o'clock, both morning and evening, was only 72 degs. It often
-rained heavily, but the drying southerly winds soon again rendered the
-walks pleasant. One morning, in the course of six hours, 1.6 inches of
-rain fell. As this storm passed over the forests which surround the
-Corcovado, the sound produced by the drops pattering on the countless
-multitude of leaves was very remarkable, it could be heard at the
-distance of a quarter of a mile, and was like the rushing of a great
-body of water. After the hotter days, it was delicious to sit quietly
-in the garden and watch the evening pass into night. Nature, in these
-climes, chooses her vocalists from more humble performers than in
-Europe. A small frog, of the genus Hyla, sits on a blade of grass
-about an inch above the surface of the water, and sends forth a
-pleasing chirp: when several are together they sing in harmony on
-different notes. I had some difficulty in catching a specimen of this
-frog. The genus Hyla has its toes terminated by small suckers; and I
-found this animal could crawl up a pane of glass, when placed
-absolutely perpendicular. Various cicidae and crickets, at the same
-time, keep up a ceaseless shrill cry, but which, softened by the
-distance, is not unpleasant. Every evening after dark this great
-concert commenced; and often have I sat listening to it, until my
-attention has been drawn away by some curious passing insect.
-
-At these times the fireflies are seen flitting about from hedge to
-hedge. On a dark night the light can be seen at about two hundred
-paces distant. It is remarkable that in all the different kinds of
-glowworms, shining elaters, and various marine animals (such as the
-crustacea, medusae, nereidae, a coralline of the genus Clytia, and
-Pyrosma), which I have observed, the light has been of a well-marked
-green colour. All the fireflies, which I caught here, belonged to the
-Lampyridae (in which family the English glowworm is included), and the
-greater number of specimens were of Lampyris occidentalis. [4] I found
-that this insect emitted the most brilliant flashes when irritated: in
-the intervals, the abdominal rings were obscured. The flash was almost
-co-instantaneous in the two rings, but it was just perceptible first in
-the anterior one. The shining matter was fluid and very adhesive:
-little spots, where the skin had been torn, continued bright with a
-slight scintillation, whilst the uninjured parts were obscured. When
-the insect was decapitated the rings remained uninterruptedly bright,
-but not so brilliant as before: local irritation with a needle always
-increased the vividness of the light. The rings in one instance
-retained their luminous property nearly twenty-four hours after the
-death of the insect. From these facts it would appear probable, that
-the animal has only the power of concealing or extinguishing the light
-for short intervals, and that at other times the display is
-involuntary. On the muddy and wet gravel-walks I found the larvae of
-this lampyris in great numbers: they resembled in general form the
-female of the English glowworm. These larvae possessed but feeble
-luminous powers; very differently from their parents, on the slightest
-touch they feigned death and ceased to shine; nor did irritation excite
-any fresh display. I kept several of them alive for some time: their
-tails are very singular organs, for they act, by a well-fitted
-contrivance, as suckers or organs of attachment, and likewise as
-reservoirs for saliva, or some such fluid. I repeatedly fed them on
-raw meat; and I invariably observed, that every now and then the
-extremity of the tail was applied to the mouth, and a drop of fluid
-exuded on the meat, which was then in the act of being consumed. The
-tail, notwithstanding so much practice, does not seem to be able to
-find its way to the mouth; at least the neck was always touched first,
-and apparently as a guide.
-
-When we were at Bahia, an elater or beetle (Pyrophorus luminosus,
-Illig.) seemed the most common luminous insect. The light in this case
-was also rendered more brilliant by irritation. I amused myself one
-day by observing the springing powers of this insect, which have not,
-as it appears to me, been properly described. [5] The elater, when
-placed on its back and preparing to spring, moved its head and thorax
-backwards, so that the pectoral spine was drawn out, and rested on the
-edge of its sheath. The same backward movement being continued, the
-spine, by the full action of the muscles, was bent like a spring; and
-the insect at this moment rested on the extremity of its head and
-wing-cases. The effort being suddenly relaxed, the head and thorax flew
-up, and in consequence, the base of the wing-cases struck the
-supporting surface with such force, that the insect by the reaction was
-jerked upwards to the height of one or two inches. The projecting
-points of the thorax, and the sheath of the spine, served to steady the
-whole body during the spring. In the descriptions which I have read,
-sufficient stress does not appear to have been laid on the elasticity
-of the spine: so sudden a spring could not be the result of simple
-muscular contraction, without the aid of some mechanical contrivance.
-
-On several occasions I enjoyed some short but most pleasant excursions
-in the neighbouring country. One day I went to the Botanic Garden,
-where many plants, well known for their great utility, might be seen
-growing. The leaves of the camphor, pepper, cinnamon, and clove trees
-were delightfully aromatic; and the bread-fruit, the jaca, and the
-mango, vied with each other in the magnificence of their foliage. The
-landscape in the neighbourhood of Bahia almost takes its character from
-the two latter trees. Before seeing them, I had no idea that any trees
-could cast so black a shade on the ground. Both of them bear to the
-evergreen vegetation of these climates the same kind of relation which
-laurels and hollies in England do to the lighter green of the deciduous
-trees. It may be observed, that the houses within the tropics are
-surrounded by the most beautiful forms of vegetation, because many of
-them are at the same time most useful to man. Who can doubt that these
-qualities are united in the banana, the cocoa-nut, the many kinds of
-palm, the orange, and the bread-fruit tree?
-
-During this day I was particularly struck with a remark of Humboldt's,
-who often alludes to "the thin vapour which, without changing the
-transparency of the air, renders its tints more harmonious, and softens
-its effects." This is an appearance which I have never observed in the
-temperate zones. The atmosphere, seen through a short space of half or
-three-quarters of a mile, was perfectly lucid, but at a greater
-distance all colours were blended into a most beautiful haze, of a pale
-French grey, mingled with a little blue. The condition of the
-atmosphere between the morning and about noon, when the effect was most
-evident, had undergone little change, excepting in its dryness. In the
-interval, the difference between the dew point and temperature had
-increased from 7.5 to 17 degs.
-
-On another occasion I started early and walked to the Gavia, or topsail
-mountain. The air was delightfully cool and fragrant; and the drops of
-dew still glittered on the leaves of the large liliaceous plants, which
-shaded the streamlets of clear water. Sitting down on a block of
-granite, it was delightful to watch the various insects and birds as
-they flew past. The humming-bird seems particularly fond of such shady
-retired spots. Whenever I saw these little creatures buzzing round a
-flower, with their wings vibrating so rapidly as to be scarcely
-visible, I was reminded of the sphinx moths: their movements and habits
-are indeed in many respects very similar.
-
-Following a pathway, I entered a noble forest, and from a height of
-five or six hundred feet, one of those splendid views was presented,
-which are so common on every side of Rio. At this elevation the
-landscape attains its most brilliant tint; and every form, every shade,
-so completely surpasses in magnificence all that the European has ever
-beheld in his own country, that he knows not how to express his
-feelings. The general effect frequently recalled to my mind the gayest
-scenery of the Opera-house or the great theatres. I never returned
-from these excursions empty-handed. This day I found a specimen of a
-curious fungus, called Hymenophallus. Most people know the English
-Phallus, which in autumn taints the air with its odious smell: this,
-however, as the entomologist is aware, is, to some of our beetles a
-delightful fragrance. So was it here; for a Strongylus, attracted by
-the odour, alighted on the fungus as I carried it in my hand. We here
-see in two distant countries a similar relation between plants and
-insects of the same families, though the species of both are different.
-When man is the agent in introducing into a country a new species, this
-relation is often broken: as one instance of this I may mention, that
-the leaves of the cabbages and lettuces, which in England afford food
-to such a multitude of slugs and caterpillars, in the gardens near Rio
-are untouched.
-
-During our stay at Brazil I made a large collection of insects. A few
-general observations on the comparative importance of the different
-orders may be interesting to the English entomologist. The large and
-brilliantly coloured Lepidoptera bespeak the zone they inhabit, far
-more plainly than any other race of animals. I allude only to the
-butterflies; for the moths, contrary to what might have been expected
-from the rankness of the vegetation, certainly appeared in much fewer
-numbers than in our own temperate regions. I was much surprised at the
-habits of Papilio feronia. This butterfly is not uncommon, and
-generally frequents the orange-groves. Although a high flier, yet it
-very frequently alights on the trunks of trees. On these occasions its
-head is invariably placed downwards; and its wings are expanded in a
-horizontal plane, instead of being folded vertically, as is commonly
-the case. This is the only butterfly which I have ever seen, that uses
-its legs for running. Not being aware of this fact, the insect, more
-than once, as I cautiously approached with my forceps, shuffled on one
-side just as the instrument was on the point of closing, and thus
-escaped. But a far more singular fact is the power which this species
-possesses of making a noise. [6] Several times when a pair, probably
-male and female, were chasing each other in an irregular course, they
-passed within a few yards of me; and I distinctly heard a clicking
-noise, similar to that produced by a toothed wheel passing under a
-spring catch. The noise was continued at short intervals, and could be
-distinguished at about twenty yards' distance: I am certain there is no
-error in the observation.
-
-I was disappointed in the general aspect of the Coleoptera. The number
-of minute and obscurely coloured beetles is exceedingly great. [7] The
-cabinets of Europe can, as yet, boast only of the larger species from
-tropical climates. It is sufficient to disturb the composure of an
-entomologist's mind, to look forward to the future dimensions of a
-complete catalogue. The carnivorous beetles, or Carabidae, appear in
-extremely few numbers within the tropics: this is the more remarkable
-when compared to the case of the carnivorous quadrupeds, which are so
-abundant in hot countries. I was struck with this observation both on
-entering Brazil, and when I saw the many elegant and active forms of
-the Harpalidae re-appearing on the temperate plains of La Plata. Do
-the very numerous spiders and rapacious Hymenoptera supply the place of
-the carnivorous beetles? The carrion-feeders and Brachelytra are very
-uncommon; on the other hand, the Rhyncophora and Chrysomelidae, all of
-which depend on the vegetable world for subsistence, are present in
-astonishing numbers. I do not here refer to the number of different
-species, but to that of the individual insects; for on this it is that
-the most striking character in the entomology of different countries
-depends. The orders Orthoptera and Hemiptera are particularly
-numerous; as likewise is the stinging division of the Hymenoptera the
-bees, perhaps, being excepted. A person, on first entering a tropical
-forest, is astonished at the labours of the ants: well-beaten paths
-branch off in every direction, on which an army of never-failing
-foragers may be seen, some going forth, and others returning, burdened
-with pieces of green leaf, often larger than their own bodies.
-
-A small dark-coloured ant sometimes migrates in countless numbers. One
-day, at Bahia, my attention was drawn by observing many spiders,
-cockroaches, and other insects, and some lizards, rushing in the
-greatest agitation across a bare piece of ground. A little way behind,
-every stalk and leaf was blackened by a small ant. The swarm having
-crossed the bare space, divided itself, and descended an old wall. By
-this means many insects were fairly enclosed; and the efforts which the
-poor little creatures made to extricate themselves from such a death
-were wonderful. When the ants came to the road they changed their
-course, and in narrow files reascended the wall. Having placed a small
-stone so as to intercept one of the lines, the whole body attacked it,
-and then immediately retired. Shortly afterwards another body came to
-the charge, and again having failed to make any impression, this line
-of march was entirely given up. By going an inch round, the file might
-have avoided the stone, and this doubtless would have happened, if it
-had been originally there: but having been attacked, the lion-hearted
-little warriors scorned the idea of yielding.
-
-Certain wasp-like insects, which construct in the corners of the
-verandahs clay cells for their larvae, are very numerous in the
-neighbourhood of Rio. These cells they stuff full of half-dead spiders
-and caterpillars, which they seem wonderfully to know how to sting to
-that degree as to leave them paralysed but alive, until their eggs are
-hatched; and the larvae feed on the horrid mass of powerless,
-half-killed victims--a sight which has been described by an
-enthusiastic naturalist [8] as curious and pleasing! I was much
-interested one day by watching a deadly contest between a Pepsis and a
-large spider of the genus Lycosa. The wasp made a sudden dash at its
-prey, and then flew away: the spider was evidently wounded, for, trying
-to escape, it rolled down a little slope, but had still strength
-sufficient to crawl into a thick tuft of grass. The wasp soon
-returned, and seemed surprised at not immediately finding its victim.
-It then commenced as regular a hunt as ever hound did after fox; making
-short semicircular casts, and all the time rapidly vibrating its wings
-and antennae. The spider, though well concealed, was soon discovered,
-and the wasp, evidently still afraid of its adversary's jaws, after
-much manoeuvring, inflicted two stings on the under side of its thorax.
-At last, carefully examining with its antennae the now motionless
-spider, it proceeded to drag away the body. But I stopped both tyrant
-and prey. [9]
-
-The number of spiders, in proportion to other insects, is here compared
-with England very much larger; perhaps more so than with any other
-division of the articulate animals. The variety of species among the
-jumping spiders appears almost infinite. The genus, or rather family,
-of Epeira, is here characterized by many singular forms; some species
-have pointed coriaceous shells, others enlarged and spiny tibiae. Every
-path in the forest is barricaded with the strong yellow web of a
-species, belonging to the same division with the Epeira clavipes of
-Fabricius, which was formerly said by Sloane to make, in the West
-Indies, webs so strong as to catch birds. A small and pretty kind of
-spider, with very long fore-legs, and which appears to belong to an
-undescribed genus, lives as a parasite on almost every one of these
-webs. I suppose it is too insignificant to be noticed by the great
-Epeira, and is therefore allowed to prey on the minute insects, which,
-adhering to the lines, would otherwise be wasted. When frightened,
-this little spider either feigns death by extending its front legs, or
-suddenly drops from the web. A large Epeira of the same division with
-Epeira tuberculata and conica is extremely common, especially in dry
-situations. Its web, which is generally placed among the great leaves
-of the common agave, is sometimes strengthened near the centre by a
-pair or even four zigzag ribbons, which connect two adjoining rays.
-When any large insect, as a grasshopper or wasp, is caught, the spider,
-by a dexterous movement, makes it revolve very rapidly, and at the same
-time emitting a band of threads from its spinners, soon envelops its
-prey in a case like the cocoon of a silkworm. The spider now examines
-the powerless victim, and gives the fatal bite on the hinder part of
-its thorax; then retreating, patiently waits till the poison has taken
-effect. The virulence of this poison may be judged of from the fact
-that in half a minute I opened the mesh, and found a large wasp quite
-lifeless. This Epeira always stands with its head downwards near the
-centre of the web. When disturbed, it acts differently according to
-circumstances: if there is a thicket below, it suddenly falls down; and
-I have distinctly seen the thread from the spinners lengthened by the
-animal while yet stationary, as preparatory to its fall. If the ground
-is clear beneath, the Epeira seldom falls, but moves quickly through a
-central passage from one to the other side. When still further
-disturbed, it practises a most curious manoeuvre: standing in the
-middle, it violently jerks the web, which it attached to elastic twigs,
-till at last the whole acquires such a rapid vibratory movement, that
-even the outline of the spider's body becomes indistinct.
-
-It is well known that most of the British spiders, when a large insect
-is caught in their webs, endeavour to cut the lines and liberate their
-prey, to save their nets from being entirely spoiled. I once, however,
-saw in a hothouse in Shropshire a large female wasp caught in the
-irregular web of a quite small spider; and this spider, instead of
-cutting the web, most perseveringly continued to entangle the body, and
-especially the wings, of its prey. The wasp at first aimed in vain
-repeated thrusts with its sting at its little antagonist. Pitying the
-wasp, after allowing it to struggle for more than an hour, I killed it
-and put it back into the web. The spider soon returned; and an hour
-afterwards I was much surprised to find it with its jaws buried in the
-orifice, through which the sting is protruded by the living wasp. I
-drove the spider away two or three times, but for the next twenty-four
-hours I always found it again sucking at the same place. The spider
-became much distended by the juices of its prey, which was many times
-larger than itself.
-
-I may here just mention, that I found, near St. Fe Bajada, many large
-black spiders, with ruby-coloured marks on their backs, having
-gregarious habits. The webs were placed vertically, as is invariably
-the case with the genus Epeira: they were separated from each other by
-a space of about two feet, but were all attached to certain common
-lines, which were of great length, and extended to all parts of the
-community. In this manner the tops of some large bushes were
-encompassed by the united nets. Azara [10] has described a gregarious
-spider in Paraguay, which Walckanaer thinks must be a Theridion, but
-probably it is an Epeira, and perhaps even the same species with mine.
-I cannot, however, recollect seeing a central nest as large as a hat,
-in which, during autumn, when the spiders die, Azara says the eggs are
-deposited. As all the spiders which I saw were of the same size, they
-must have been nearly of the same age. This gregarious habit, in so
-typical a genus as Epeira, among insects, which are so bloodthirsty and
-solitary that even the two sexes attack each other, is a very singular
-fact.
-
-In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found another
-spider with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines radiated in a
-vertical plane from a common centre, where the insect had its station;
-but only two of the rays were connected by a symmetrical mesh-work; so
-that the net, instead of being, as is generally the case, circular,
-consisted of a wedge-shaped segment. All the webs were similarly
-constructed.
-
-[1] Venda, the Portuguese name for an inn.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles for 1833.
-
-[3] I have described and named these species in the Annals of Nat.
-Hist., vol. xiv. p. 241.
-
-[4] I am greatly indebted to Mr. Waterhouse for his kindness in naming
-for me this and many other insects, and giving me much valuable
-assistance.
-
-[5] Kirby's Entomology, vol. ii. p. 317.
-
-[6] Mr. Doubleday has lately described (before the Entomological
-Society, March 3rd, 1845) a peculiar structure in the wings of this
-butterfly, which seems to be the means of its making its noise. He
-says, "It is remarkable for having a sort of drum at the base of the
-fore wings, between the costal nervure and the subcostal. These two
-nervures, moreover, have a peculiar screw-like diaphragm or vessel in
-the interior." I find in Langsdorff's travels (in the years 1803-7, p.
-74) it is said, that in the island of St. Catherine's on the coast of
-Brazil, a butterfly called Februa Hoffmanseggi, makes a noise, when
-flying away, like a rattle.
-
-[7] I may mention, as a common instance of one day's (June 23rd)
-collecting, when I was not attending particularly to the Coleoptera,
-that I caught sixty-eight species of that order. Among these, there
-were only two of the Carabidae, four Brachelytra, fifteen Rhyncophora,
-and fourteen of the Chrysomelidae. Thirty-seven species of Arachnidae,
-which I brought home, will be sufficient to prove that I was not paying
-overmuch attention to the generally favoured order of Coleoptera.
-
-[8] In a MS. in the British Museum by Mr. Abbott, who made his
-observations in Georgia; see Mr. A. White's paper in the "Annals of
-Nat. Hist.," vol. vii. p. 472. Lieut. Hutton has described a sphex with
-similar habits in India, in the "Journal of the Asiatic Society," vol.
-i. p. 555.
-
-[9] Don Felix Azara (vol. i. p. 175), mentioning a hymenopterous
-insect, probably of the same genus, says he saw it dragging a dead
-spider through tall grass, in a straight line to its nest, which was
-one hundred and sixty-three paces distant. He adds that the wasp, in
-order to find the road, every now and then made "demi-tours d'environ
-trois palmes."
-
-[10] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 213
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MALDONADO
-
-Monte Video--Excursion to R. Polanco--Lazo and
-Bolas--Partridges--Absence of Trees--Deer--Capybara, or River
-Hog--Tucutuco--Molothrus, cuckoo-like
-habits--Tyrant-flycatcher--Mocking-bird--Carrion Hawks--Tubes formed by
-Lightning--House struck.
-
-
-July 5th, 1832--In the morning we got under way, and stood out of the
-splendid harbour of Rio de Janeiro. In our passage to the Plata, we
-saw nothing particular, excepting on one day a great shoal of
-porpoises, many hundreds in number. The whole sea was in places
-furrowed by them; and a most extraordinary spectacle was presented, as
-hundreds, proceeding together by jumps, in which their whole bodies
-were exposed, thus cut the water. When the ship was running nine knots
-an hour, these animals could cross and recross the bows with the
-greatest of ease, and then dash away right ahead. As soon as we
-entered the estuary of the Plata, the weather was very unsettled. One
-dark night we were surrounded by numerous seals and penguins, which
-made such strange noises, that the officer on watch reported he could
-hear the cattle bellowing on shore. On a second night we witnessed a
-splendid scene of natural fireworks; the mast-head and yard-arm-ends
-shone with St. Elmo's light; and the form of the vane could almost be
-traced, as if it had been rubbed with phosphorus. The sea was so
-highly luminous, that the tracks of the penguins were marked by a fiery
-wake, and the darkness of the sky was momentarily illuminated by the
-most vivid lightning.
-
-When within the mouth of the river, I was interested by observing how
-slowly the waters of the sea and river mixed. The latter, muddy and
-discoloured, from its less specific gravity, floated on the surface of
-the salt water. This was curiously exhibited in the wake of the
-vessel, where a line of blue water was seen mingling in little eddies,
-with the adjoining fluid.
-
-July 26th.--We anchored at Monte Video. The Beagle was employed in
-surveying the extreme southern and eastern coasts of America, south of
-the Plata, during the two succeeding years. To prevent useless
-repetitions, I will extract those parts of my journal which refer to
-the same districts without always attending to the order in which we
-visited them.
-
-MALDONADO is situated on the northern bank of the Plata, and not very
-far from the mouth of the estuary. It is a most quiet, forlorn, little
-town; built, as is universally the case in these countries, with the
-streets running at right angles to each other, and having in the middle
-a large plaza or square, which, from its size, renders the scantiness
-of the population more evident. It possesses scarcely any trade; the
-exports being confined to a few hides and living cattle. The
-inhabitants are chiefly landowners, together with a few shopkeepers and
-the necessary tradesmen, such as blacksmiths and carpenters, who do
-nearly all the business for a circuit of fifty miles round. The town
-is separated from the river by a band of sand-hillocks, about a mile
-broad: it is surrounded, on all other sides, by an open
-slightly-undulating country, covered by one uniform layer of fine green
-turf, on which countless herds of cattle, sheep, and horses graze.
-There is very little land cultivated even close to the town. A few
-hedges, made of cacti and agave, mark out where some wheat or Indian
-corn has been planted. The features of the country are very similar
-along the whole northern bank of the Plata. The only difference is,
-that here the granitic hills are a little bolder. The scenery is very
-uninteresting; there is scarcely a house, an enclosed piece of ground,
-or even a tree, to give it an air of cheerfulness Yet, after being
-imprisoned for some time in a ship, there is a charm in the unconfined
-feeling of walking over boundless plains of turf. Moreover, if your
-view is limited to a small space, many objects possess beauty. Some of
-the smaller birds are brilliantly coloured; and the bright green sward,
-browsed short by the cattle, is ornamented by dwarf flowers, among
-which a plant, looking like the daisy, claimed the place of an old
-friend. What would a florist say to whole tracts, so thickly covered
-by the Verbena melindres, as, even at a distance, to appear of the most
-gaudy scarlet?
-
-I stayed ten weeks at Maldonado, in which time a nearly perfect
-collection of the animals, birds, and reptiles, was procured. Before
-making any observations respecting them, I will give an account of a
-little excursion I made as far as the river Polanco, which is about
-seventy miles distant, in a northerly direction. I may mention, as a
-proof how cheap everything is in this country, that I paid only two
-dollars a day, or eight shillings, for two men, together with a troop
-of about a dozen riding-horses. My companions were well armed with
-pistols and sabres; a precaution which I thought rather unnecessary but
-the first piece of news we heard was, that, the day before, a traveller
-from Monte Video had been found dead on the road, with his throat cut.
-This happened close to a cross, the record of a former murder.
-
-On the first night we slept at a retired little country-house; and
-there I soon found out that I possessed two or three articles,
-especially a pocket compass, which created unbounded astonishment. In
-every house I was asked to show the compass, and by its aid, together
-with a map, to point out the direction of various places. It excited
-the liveliest admiration that I, a perfect stranger, should know the
-road (for direction and road are synonymous in this open country) to
-places where I had never been. At one house a young woman, who was ill
-in bed, sent to entreat me to come and show her the compass. If their
-surprise was great, mine was greater, to find such ignorance among
-people who possessed their thousands of cattle, and "estancias" of
-great extent. It can only be accounted for by the circumstance that
-this retired part of the country is seldom visited by foreigners. I
-was asked whether the earth or sun moved; whether it was hotter or
-colder to the north; where Spain was, and many other such questions.
-The greater number of the inhabitants had an indistinct idea that
-England, London, and North America, were different names for the same
-place; but the better informed well knew that London and North America
-were separate countries close together, and that England was a large
-town in London! I carried with me some promethean matches, which I
-ignited by biting; it was thought so wonderful that a man should strike
-fire with his teeth, that it was usual to collect the whole family to
-see it: I was once offered a dollar for a single one. Washing my face
-in the morning caused much speculation at the village of Las Minas; a
-superior tradesman closely cross-questioned me about so singular a
-practice; and likewise why on board we wore our beards; for he had
-heard from my guide that we did so. He eyed me with much suspicion;
-perhaps he had heard of ablutions in the Mahomedan religion, and
-knowing me to be a heretick, probably he came to the conclusion that
-all hereticks were Turks. It is the general custom in this country to
-ask for a night's lodging at the first convenient house. The
-astonishment at the compass, and my other feats of jugglery, was to a
-certain degree advantageous, as with that, and the long stories my
-guides told of my breaking stones, knowing venomous from harmless
-snakes, collecting insects, etc., I repaid them for their hospitality.
-I am writing as if I had been among the inhabitants of central Africa:
-Banda Oriental would not be flattered by the comparison; but such were
-my feelings at the time.
-
-The next day we rode to the village of Las Minas. The country was
-rather more hilly, but otherwise continued the same; an inhabitant of
-the Pampas no doubt would have considered it as truly Alpine. The
-country is so thinly inhabited, that during the whole day we scarcely
-met a single person. Las Minas is much smaller even than Maldonado. It
-is seated on a little plain, and is surrounded by low rocky mountains.
-It is of the usual symmetrical form, and with its whitewashed church
-standing in the centre, had rather a pretty appearance. The
-outskirting houses rose out of the plain like isolated beings, without
-the accompaniment of gardens or courtyards. This is generally the case
-in the country, and all the houses have, in consequence an
-uncomfortable aspect. At night we stopped at a pulperia, or
-drinking-shop. During the evening a great number of Gauchos came in to
-drink spirits and smoke cigars: their appearance is very striking; they
-are generally tall and handsome, but with a proud and dissolute
-expression of countenance. They frequently wear their moustaches and
-long black hair curling down their backs. With their brightly coloured
-garments, great spurs clanking about their heels, and knives stuck as
-daggers (and often so used) at their waists, they look a very different
-race of men from what might be expected from their name of Gauchos, or
-simple countrymen. Their politeness is excessive; they never drink
-their spirits without expecting you to taste it; but whilst making
-their exceedingly graceful bow, they seem quite as ready, if occasion
-offered, to cut your throat.
-
-On the third day we pursued rather an irregular course, as I was
-employed in examining some beds of marble. On the fine plains of turf
-we saw many ostriches (Struthio rhea). Some of the flocks contained as
-many as twenty or thirty birds. These, when standing on any little
-eminence, and seen against the clear sky, presented a very noble
-appearance. I never met with such tame ostriches in any other part of
-the country: it was easy to gallop up within a short distance of them;
-but then, expanding their wings, they made all sail right before the
-wind, and soon left the horse astern.
-
-At night we came to the house of Don Juan Fuentes, a rich landed
-proprietor, but not personally known to either of my companions. On
-approaching the house of a stranger, it is usual to follow several
-little points of etiquette: riding up slowly to the door, the
-salutation of Ave Maria is given, and until somebody comes out and asks
-you to alight, it is not customary even to get off your horse: the
-formal answer of the owner is, "sin pecado concebida"--that is,
-conceived without sin. Having entered the house, some general
-conversation is kept up for a few minutes, till permission is asked to
-pass the night there. This is granted as a matter of course. The
-stranger then takes his meals with the family, and a room is assigned
-him, where with the horsecloths belonging to his recado (or saddle of
-the Pampas) he makes his bed. It is curious how similar circumstances
-produce such similar results in manners. At the Cape of Good Hope the
-same hospitality, and very nearly the same points of etiquette, are
-universally observed. The difference, however, between the character
-of the Spaniard and that of the Dutch boer is shown, by the former
-never asking his guest a single question beyond the strictest rule of
-politeness, whilst the honest Dutchman demands where he has been, where
-he is going, what is his business, and even how many brothers sisters,
-or children he may happen to have.
-
-Shortly after our arrival at Don Juan's, one of the largest herds of
-cattle was driven in towards the house, and three beasts were picked
-out to be slaughtered for the supply of the establishment. These
-half-wild cattle are very active; and knowing full well the fatal lazo,
-they led the horses a long and laborious chase. After witnessing the
-rude wealth displayed in the number of cattle, men, and horses, Don
-Juan's miserable house was quite curious. The floor consisted of
-hardened mud, and the windows were without glass; the sitting-room
-boasted only of a few of the roughest chairs and stools, with a couple
-of tables. The supper, although several strangers were present,
-consisted of two huge piles, one of roast beef, the other of boiled,
-with some pieces of pumpkin: besides this latter there was no other
-vegetable, and not even a morsel of bread. For drinking, a large
-earthenware jug of water served the whole party. Yet this man was the
-owner of several square miles of land, of which nearly every acre would
-produce corn, and, with a little trouble, all the common vegetables.
-The evening was spent in smoking, with a little impromptu singing,
-accompanied by the guitar. The signoritas all sat together in one
-corner of the room, and did not sup with the men.
-
-So many works have been written about these countries, that it is
-almost superfluous to describe either the lazo or the bolas. The lazo
-consists of a very strong, but thin, well-plaited rope, made of raw
-hide. One end is attached to the broad surcingle, which fastens
-together the complicated gear of the recado, or saddle used in the
-Pampas; the other is terminated by a small ring of iron or brass, by
-which a noose can be formed. The Gaucho, when he is going to use the
-lazo, keeps a small coil in his bridle-hand, and in the other holds the
-running noose which is made very large, generally having a diameter of
-about eight feet. This he whirls round his head, and by the dexterous
-movement of his wrist keeps the noose open; then, throwing it, he
-causes it to fall on any particular spot he chooses. The lazo, when
-not used, is tied up in a small coil to the after part of the recado.
-The bolas, or balls, are of two kinds: the simplest, which is chiefly
-used for catching ostriches, consists of two round stones, covered with
-leather, and united by a thin plaited thong, about eight feet long. The
-other kind differs only in having three balls united by the thongs to a
-common centre. The Gaucho holds the smallest of the three in his hand,
-and whirls the other two round and round his head; then, taking aim,
-sends them like chain shot revolving through the air. The balls no
-sooner strike any object, than, winding round it, they cross each
-other, and become firmly hitched. The size and weight of the balls
-vary, according to the purpose for which they are made: when of stone,
-although not larger than an apple, they are sent with such force as
-sometimes to break the leg even of a horse. I have seen the balls made
-of wood, and as large as a turnip, for the sake of catching these
-animals without injuring them. The balls are sometimes made of iron,
-and these can be hurled to the greatest distance. The main difficulty
-in using either lazo or bolas is to ride so well as to be able at full
-speed, and while suddenly turning about, to whirl them so steadily
-round the head, as to take aim: on foot any person would soon learn the
-art. One day, as I was amusing myself by galloping and whirling the
-balls round my head, by accident the free one struck a bush, and its
-revolving motion being thus destroyed, it immediately fell to the
-ground, and, like magic, caught one hind leg of my horse; the other
-ball was then jerked out of my hand, and the horse fairly secured.
-Luckily he was an old practised animal, and knew what it meant;
-otherwise he would probably have kicked till he had thrown himself
-down. The Gauchos roared with laughter; they cried out that they had
-seen every sort of animal caught, but had never before seen a man
-caught by himself.
-
-During the two succeeding days, I reached the furthest point which I
-was anxious to examine. The country wore the same aspect, till at last
-the fine green turf became more wearisome than a dusty turnpike road.
-We everywhere saw great numbers of partridges (Nothura major). These
-birds do not go in coveys, nor do they conceal themselves like the
-English kind. It appears a very silly bird. A man on horseback by
-riding round and round in a circle, or rather in a spire, so as to
-approach closer each time, may knock on the head as many as he pleases.
-The more common method is to catch them with a running noose, or little
-lazo, made of the stem of an ostrich's feather, fastened to the end of
-a long stick. A boy on a quiet old horse will frequently thus catch
-thirty or forty in a day. In Arctic North America [1] the Indians
-catch the Varying Hare by walking spirally round and round it, when on
-its form: the middle of the day is reckoned the best time, when the sun
-is high, and the shadow of the hunter not very long.
-
-On our return to Maldonado, we followed rather a different line of
-road. Near Pan de Azucar, a landmark well known to all those who have
-sailed up the Plata, I stayed a day at the house of a most hospitable
-old Spaniard. Early in the morning we ascended the Sierra de las
-Animas. By the aid of the rising sun the scenery was almost
-picturesque. To the westward the view extended over an immense level
-plain as far as the Mount, at Monte Video, and to the eastward, over
-the mammillated country of Maldonado. On the summit of the mountain
-there were several small heaps of stones, which evidently had lain
-there for many years. My companion assured me that they were the work
-of the Indians in the old time. The heaps were similar, but on a much
-smaller scale, to those so commonly found on the mountains of Wales.
-The desire to signalize any event, on the highest point of the
-neighbouring land, seems an universal passion with mankind. At the
-present day, not a single Indian, either civilized or wild, exists in
-this part of the province; nor am I aware that the former inhabitants
-have left behind them any more permanent records than these
-insignificant piles on the summit of the Sierra de las Animas.
-
-
-The general, and almost entire absence of trees in Banda Oriental is
-remarkable. Some of the rocky hills are partly covered by thickets,
-and on the banks of the larger streams, especially to the north of Las
-Minas, willow-trees are not uncommon. Near the Arroyo Tapes I heard of
-a wood of palms; and one of these trees, of considerable size, I saw
-near the Pan de Azucar, in lat. 35 degs. These, and the trees planted
-by the Spaniards, offer the only exceptions to the general scarcity of
-wood. Among the introduced kinds may be enumerated poplars, olives,
-peach, and other fruit trees: the peaches succeed so well, that they
-afford the main supply of firewood to the city of Buenos Ayres.
-Extremely level countries, such as the Pampas, seldom appear favourable
-to the growth of trees. This may possibly be attributed either to the
-force of the winds, or the kind of drainage. In the nature of the
-land, however, around Maldonado, no such reason is apparent; the rocky
-mountains afford protected situations; enjoying various kinds of soil;
-streamlets of water are common at the bottoms of nearly every valley;
-and the clayey nature of the earth seems adapted to retain moisture. It
-has been inferred with much probability, that the presence of woodland
-is generally determined [2] by the annual amount of moisture; yet in
-this province abundant and heavy rain falls during the winter; and the
-summer, though dry, is not so in any excessive degree. [3] We see
-nearly the whole of Australia covered by lofty trees, yet that country
-possesses a far more arid climate. Hence we must look to some other
-and unknown cause.
-
-Confining our view to South America, we should certainly be tempted to
-believe that trees flourished only under a very humid climate; for the
-limit of the forest-land follows, in a most remarkable manner, that of
-the damp winds. In the southern part of the continent, where the
-western gales, charged with moisture from the Pacific, prevail, every
-island on the broken west coast, from lat. 38 degs. to the extreme
-point of Tierra del Fuego, is densely covered by impenetrable forests.
-On the eastern side of the Cordillera, over the same extent of
-latitude, where a blue sky and a fine climate prove that the atmosphere
-has been deprived of its moisture by passing over the mountains, the
-arid plains of Patagonia support a most scanty vegetation. In the more
-northern parts of the continent, within the limits of the constant
-south-eastern trade-wind, the eastern side is ornamented by magnificent
-forests; whilst the western coast, from lat. 4 degs. S. to lat. 32
-degs. S., may be described as a desert; on this western coast,
-northward of lat. 4 degs. S., where the trade-wind loses its
-regularity, and heavy torrents of rain fall periodically, the shores of
-the Pacific, so utterly desert in Peru, assume near Cape Blanco the
-character of luxuriance so celebrated at Guyaquil and Panama. Hence in
-the southern and northern parts of the continent, the forest and desert
-lands occupy reversed positions with respect to the Cordillera, and
-these positions are apparently determined by the direction of the
-prevalent winds. In the middle of the continent there is a broad
-intermediate band, including central Chile and the provinces of La
-Plata, where the rain-bringing winds have not to pass over lofty
-mountains, and where the land is neither a desert nor covered by
-forests. But even the rule, if confined to South America, of trees
-flourishing only in a climate rendered humid by rain-bearing winds, has
-a strongly marked exception in the case of the Falkland Islands. These
-islands, situated in the same latitude with Tierra del Fuego and only
-between two and three hundred miles distant from it, having a nearly
-similar climate, with a geological formation almost identical, with
-favourable situations and the same kind of peaty soil, yet can boast of
-few plants deserving even the title of bushes; whilst in Tierra del
-Fuego it is impossible to find an acre of land not covered by the
-densest forest. In this case, both the direction of the heavy gales of
-wind and of the currents of the sea are favourable to the transport of
-seeds from Tierra del Fuego, as is shown by the canoes and trunks of
-trees drifted from that country, and frequently thrown on the shores of
-the Western Falkland. Hence perhaps it is, that there are many plants
-in common to the two countries but with respect to the trees of Tierra
-del Fuego, even attempts made to transplant them have failed.
-
-During our stay at Maldonado I collected several quadrupeds, eighty
-kinds of birds, and many reptiles, including nine species of snakes. Of
-the indigenous mammalia, the only one now left of any size, which is
-common, is the Cervus campestris. This deer is exceedingly abundant,
-often in small herds, throughout the countries bordering the Plata and
-in Northern Patagonia. If a person crawling close along the ground,
-slowly advances towards a herd, the deer frequently, out of curiosity,
-approach to reconnoitre him. I have by this means, killed from one
-spot, three out of the same herd. Although so tame and inquisitive,
-yet when approached on horseback, they are exceedingly wary. In this
-country nobody goes on foot, and the deer knows man as its enemy only
-when he is mounted and armed with the bolas. At Bahia Blanca, a recent
-establishment in Northern Patagonia, I was surprised to find how little
-the deer cared for the noise of a gun: one day I fired ten times from
-within eighty yards at one animal; and it was much more startled at the
-ball cutting up the ground than at the report of the rifle. My powder
-being exhausted, I was obliged to get up (to my shame as a sportsman be
-it spoken, though well able to kill birds on the wing) and halloo till
-the deer ran away.
-
-The most curious fact with respect to this animal, is the
-overpoweringly strong and offensive odour which proceeds from the buck.
-It is quite indescribable: several times whilst skinning the specimen
-which is now mounted at the Zoological Museum, I was almost overcome by
-nausea. I tied up the skin in a silk pocket-handkerchief, and so
-carried it home: this handkerchief, after being well washed, I
-continually used, and it was of course as repeatedly washed; yet every
-time, for a space of one year and seven months, when first unfolded, I
-distinctly perceived the odour. This appears an astonishing instance
-of the permanence of some matter, which nevertheless in its nature must
-be most subtile and volatile. Frequently, when passing at the distance
-of half a mile to leeward of a herd, I have perceived the whole air
-tainted with the effluvium. I believe the smell from the buck is most
-powerful at the period when its horns are perfect, or free from the
-hairy skin. When in this state the meat is, of course, quite
-uneatable; but the Gauchos assert, that if buried for some time in
-fresh earth, the taint is removed. I have somewhere read that the
-islanders in the north of Scotland treat the rank carcasses of the
-fish-eating birds in the same manner.
-
-The order Rodentia is here very numerous in species: of mice alone I
-obtained no less than eight kinds. [4] The largest gnawing animal in
-the world, the Hydrochaerus capybara (the water-hog), is here also
-common. One which I shot at Monte Video weighed ninety-eight pounds:
-its length from the end of the snout to the stump-like tail, was three
-feet two inches; and its girth three feet eight. These great Rodents
-occasionally frequent the islands in the mouth of the Plata, where the
-water is quite salt, but are far more abundant on the borders of
-fresh-water lakes and rivers. Near Maldonado three or four generally
-live together. In the daytime they either lie among the aquatic
-plants, or openly feed on the turf plain. [5] When viewed at a
-distance, from their manner of walking and colour they resemble pigs:
-but when seated on their haunches, and attentively watching any object
-with one eye, they reassume the appearance of their congeners, cavies
-and rabbits. Both the front and side view of their head has quite a
-ludicrous aspect, from the great depth of their jaw. These animals, at
-Maldonado, were very tame; by cautiously walking, I approached within
-three yards of four old ones. This tameness may probably be accounted
-for, by the Jaguar having been banished for some years, and by the
-Gaucho not thinking it worth his while to hunt them. As I approached
-nearer and nearer they frequently made their peculiar noise, which is a
-low abrupt grunt, not having much actual sound, but rather arising from
-the sudden expulsion of air: the only noise I know at all like it, is
-the first hoarse bark of a large dog. Having watched the four from
-almost within arm's length (and they me) for several minutes, they
-rushed into the water at full gallop with the greatest impetuosity, and
-emitted at the same time their bark. After diving a short distance
-they came again to the surface, but only just showed the upper part of
-their heads. When the female is swimming in the water, and has young
-ones, they are said to sit on her back. These animals are easily killed
-in numbers; but their skins are of trifling value, and the meat is very
-indifferent. On the islands in the Rio Parana they are exceedingly
-abundant, and afford the ordinary prey to the Jaguar.
-
-The Tucutuco (Ctenomys Brasiliensis) is a curious small animal, which
-may be briefly described as a Gnawer, with the habits of a mole. It is
-extremely numerous in some parts of the country, but it is difficult to
-be procured, and never, I believe, comes out of the ground. It throws
-up at the mouth of its burrows hillocks of earth like those of the
-mole, but smaller. Considerable tracts of country are so completely
-undermined by these animals, that horses in passing over, sink above
-their fetlocks. The tucutucos appear, to a certain degree, to be
-gregarious: the man who procured the specimens for me had caught six
-together, and he said this was a common occurrence. They are nocturnal
-in their habits; and their principal food is the roots of plants, which
-are the object of their extensive and superficial burrows. This animal
-is universally known by a very peculiar noise which it makes when
-beneath the ground. A person, the first time he hears it, is much
-surprised; for it is not easy to tell whence it comes, nor is it
-possible to guess what kind of creature utters it. The noise consists
-in a short, but not rough, nasal grunt, which is monotonously repeated
-about four times in quick succession: [6] the name Tucutuco is given in
-imitation of the sound. Where this animal is abundant, it may be heard
-at all times of the day, and sometimes directly beneath one's feet.
-When kept in a room, the tucutucos move both slowly and clumsily, which
-appears owing to the outward action of their hind legs; and they are
-quite incapable, from the socket of the thigh-bone not having a certain
-ligament, of jumping even the smallest vertical height. They are very
-stupid in making any attempt to escape; when angry or frightened they
-utter the tucutuco. Of those I kept alive several, even the first day,
-became quite tame, not attempting to bite or to run away; others were a
-little wilder.
-
-The man who caught them asserted that very many are invariably found
-blind. A specimen which I preserved in spirits was in this state; Mr.
-Reid considers it to be the effect of inflammation in the nictitating
-membrane. When the animal was alive I placed my finger within half an
-inch of its head, and not the slightest notice was taken: it made its
-way, however, about the room nearly as well as the others. Considering
-the strictly subterranean habits of the tucutuco, the blindness, though
-so common, cannot be a very serious evil; yet it appears strange that
-any animal should possess an organ frequently subject to be injured.
-Lamarck would have been delighted with this fact, had he known it, when
-speculating [7] (probably with more truth than usual with him) on the
-gradually _acquired_ blindness of the Asphalax, a Gnawer living under
-ground, and of the Proteus, a reptile living in dark caverns filled
-with water; in both of which animals the eye is in an almost
-rudimentary state, and is covered by a tendinous membrane and skin. In
-the common mole the eye is extraordinarily small but perfect, though
-many anatomists doubt whether it is connected with the true optic
-nerve; its vision must certainly be imperfect, though probably useful
-to the animal when it leaves its burrow. In the tucutuco, which I
-believe never comes to the surface of the ground, the eye is rather
-larger, but often rendered blind and useless, though without apparently
-causing any inconvenience to the animal; no doubt Lamarck would have
-said that the tucutuco is now passing into the state of the Asphalax
-and Proteus.
-
-Birds of many kinds are extremely abundant on the undulating, grassy
-plains around Maldonado. There are several species of a family allied
-in structure and manners to our Starling: one of these (Molothrus
-niger) is remarkable from its habits. Several may often be seen
-standing together on the back of a cow or horse; and while perched on a
-hedge, pluming themselves in the sun, they sometimes attempt to sing,
-or rather to hiss; the noise being very peculiar, resembling that of
-bubbles of air passing rapidly from a small orifice under water, so as
-to produce an acute sound. According to Azara, this bird, like the
-cuckoo, deposits its eggs in other birds' nests. I was several times
-told by the country people that there certainly is some bird having
-this habit; and my assistant in collecting, who is a very accurate
-person, found a nest of the sparrow of this country (Zonotrichia
-matutina), with one egg in it larger than the others, and of a
-different colour and shape. In North America there is another species
-of Molothrus (M. pecoris), which has a similar cuckoo-like habit, and
-which is most closely allied in every respect to the species from the
-Plata, even in such trifling peculiarities as standing on the backs of
-cattle; it differs only in being a little smaller, and in its plumage
-and eggs being of a slightly different shade of colour. This close
-agreement in structure and habits, in representative species coming
-from opposite quarters of a great continent, always strikes one as
-interesting, though of common occurrence.
-
-Mr. Swainson has well remarked, [8] that with the exception of the
-Molothrus pecoris, to which must be added the M. niger, the cuckoos are
-the only birds which can be called truly parasitical; namely, such as
-"fasten themselves, as it were, on another living animal, whose animal
-heat brings their young into life, whose food they live upon, and whose
-death would cause theirs during the period of infancy." It is
-remarkable that some of the species, but not all, both of the Cuckoo
-and Molothrus, should agree in this one strange habit of their
-parasitical propagation, whilst opposed to each other in almost every
-other habit: the molothrus, like our starling, is eminently sociable,
-and lives on the open plains without art or disguise: the cuckoo, as
-every one knows, is a singularly shy bird; it frequents the most
-retired thickets, and feeds on fruit and caterpillars. In structure
-also these two genera are widely removed from each other. Many
-theories, even phrenological theories, have been advanced to explain
-the origin of the cuckoo laying its eggs in other birds' nests. M.
-Prevost alone, I think, has thrown light by his observations [9] on
-this puzzle: he finds that the female cuckoo, which, according to most
-observers, lays at least from four to six eggs, must pair with the male
-each time after laying only one or two eggs. Now, if the cuckoo was
-obliged to sit on her own eggs, she would either have to sit on all
-together, and therefore leave those first laid so long, that they
-probably would become addled; or she would have to hatch separately
-each egg, or two eggs, as soon as laid: but as the cuckoo stays a
-shorter time in this country than any other migratory bird, she
-certainly would not have time enough for the successive hatchings.
-Hence we can perceive in the fact of the cuckoo pairing several times,
-and laying her eggs at intervals, the cause of her depositing her eggs
-in other birds' nests, and leaving them to the care of foster-parents.
-I am strongly inclined to believe that this view is correct, from
-having been independently led (as we shall hereafter see) to an
-analogous conclusion with regard to the South American ostrich, the
-females of which are parasitical, if I may so express it, on each
-other; each female laying several eggs in the nests of several other
-females, and the male ostrich undertaking all the cares of incubation,
-like the strange foster-parents with the cuckoo.
-
-I will mention only two other birds, which are very common, and render
-themselves prominent from their habits. The Saurophagus sulphuratus is
-typical of the great American tribe of tyrant-flycatchers. In its
-structure it closely approaches the true shrikes, but in its habits may
-be compared to many birds. I have frequently observed it, hunting a
-field, hovering over one spot like a hawk, and then proceeding on to
-another. When seen thus suspended in the air, it might very readily at
-a short distance be mistaken for one of the Rapacious order; its stoop,
-however, is very inferior in force and rapidity to that of a hawk. At
-other times the Saurophagus haunts the neighbourhood of water, and
-there, like a kingfisher, remaining stationary, it catches any small
-fish which may come near the margin. These birds are not unfrequently
-kept either in cages or in courtyards, with their wings cut. They soon
-become tame, and are very amusing from their cunning odd manners, which
-were described to me as being similar to those of the common magpie.
-Their flight is undulatory, for the weight of the head and bill appears
-too great for the body. In the evening the Saurophagus takes its stand
-on a bush, often by the roadside, and continually repeats without a
-change a shrill and rather agreeable cry, which somewhat resembles
-articulate words: the Spaniards say it is like the words "Bien te veo"
-(I see you well), and accordingly have given it this name.
-
-A mocking-bird (Mimus orpheus), called by the inhabitants Calandria, is
-remarkable, from possessing a song far superior to that of any other
-bird in the country: indeed, it is nearly the only bird in South
-America which I have observed to take its stand for the purpose of
-singing. The song may be compared to that of the Sedge warbler, but is
-more powerful; some harsh notes and some very high ones, being mingled
-with a pleasant warbling. It is heard only during the spring. At
-other times its cry is harsh and far from harmonious. Near Maldonado
-these birds were tame and bold; they constantly attended the country
-houses in numbers, to pick the meat which was hung up on the posts or
-walls: if any other small bird joined the feast, the Calandria soon
-chased it away. On the wide uninhabited plains of Patagonia another
-closely allied species, O. Patagonica of d'Orbigny, which frequents the
-valleys clothed with spiny bushes, is a wilder bird, and has a slightly
-different tone of voice. It appears to me a curious circumstance, as
-showing the fine shades of difference in habits, that judging from this
-latter respect alone, when I first saw this second species, I thought
-it was different from the Maldonado kind. Having afterwards procured a
-specimen, and comparing the two without particular care, they appeared
-so very similar, that I changed my opinion; but now Mr. Gould says that
-they are certainly distinct; a conclusion in conformity with the
-trifling difference of habit, of which, of course, he was not aware.
-
-The number, tameness, and disgusting habits of the carrion-feeding
-hawks of South America make them pre-eminently striking to any one
-accustomed only to the birds of Northern Europe. In this list may be
-included four species of the Caracara or Polyborus, the Turkey buzzard,
-the Gallinazo, and the Condor. The Caracaras are, from their
-structure, placed among the eagles: we shall soon see how ill they
-become so high a rank. In their habits they well supply the place of
-our carrion-crows, magpies, and ravens; a tribe of birds widely
-distributed over the rest of the world, but entirely absent in South
-America. To begin with the Polyborus Brasiliensis: this is a common
-bird, and has a wide geographical range; it is most numerous on the
-grassy savannahs of La Plata (where it goes by the name of Carrancha),
-and is far from unfrequent throughout the sterile plains of Patagonia.
-In the desert between the rivers Negro and Colorado, numbers constantly
-attend the line of road to devour the carcasses of the exhausted
-animals which chance to perish from fatigue and thirst. Although thus
-common in these dry and open countries, and likewise on the arid shores
-of the Pacific, it is nevertheless found inhabiting the damp impervious
-forests of West Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. The Carranchas,
-together with the Chimango, constantly attend in numbers the estancias
-and slaughtering-houses. If an animal dies on the plain the Gallinazo
-commences the feast, and then the two species of Polyborus pick the
-bones clean. These birds, although thus commonly feeding together, are
-far from being friends. When the Carrancha is quietly seated on the
-branch of a tree or on the ground, the Chimango often continues for a
-long time flying backwards and forwards, up and down, in a semicircle,
-trying each time at the bottom of the curve to strike its larger
-relative. The Carrancha takes little notice, except by bobbing its
-head. Although the Carranchas frequently assemble in numbers, they are
-not gregarious; for in desert places they may be seen solitary, or more
-commonly by pairs.
-
-The Carranchas are said to be very crafty, and to steal great numbers
-of eggs. They attempt, also, together with the Chimango, to pick off
-the scabs from the sore backs of horses and mules. The poor animal, on
-the one hand, with its ears down and its back arched; and, on the
-other, the hovering bird, eyeing at the distance of a yard the
-disgusting morsel, form a picture, which has been described by Captain
-Head with his own peculiar spirit and accuracy. These false eagles
-most rarely kill any living bird or animal; and their vulture-like,
-necrophagous habits are very evident to any one who has fallen asleep
-on the desolate plains of Patagonia, for when he wakes, he will see, on
-each surrounding hillock, one of these birds patiently watching him
-with an evil eye: it is a feature in the landscape of these countries,
-which will be recognised by every one who has wandered over them. If a
-party of men go out hunting with dogs and horses, they will be
-accompanied, during the day, by several of these attendants. After
-feeding, the uncovered craw protrudes; at such times, and indeed
-generally, the Carrancha is an inactive, tame, and cowardly bird. Its
-flight is heavy and slow, like that of an English rook. It seldom
-soars; but I have twice seen one at a great height gliding through the
-air with much ease. It runs (in contradistinction to hopping), but not
-quite so quickly as some of its congeners. At times the Carrancha is
-noisy, but is not generally so: its cry is loud, very harsh and
-peculiar, and may be likened to the sound of the Spanish guttural g,
-followed by a rough double r r; when uttering this cry it elevates its
-head higher and higher, till at last, with its beak wide open, the
-crown almost touches the lower part of the back. This fact, which has
-been doubted, is quite true; I have seen them several times with their
-heads backwards in a completely inverted position. To these
-observations I may add, on the high authority of Azara, that the
-Carrancha feeds on worms, shells, slugs, grasshoppers, and frogs; that
-it destroys young lambs by tearing the umbilical cord; and that it
-pursues the Gallinazo, till that bird is compelled to vomit up the
-carrion it may have recently gorged. Lastly, Azara states that several
-Carranchas, five or six together, will unite in chase of large birds,
-even such as herons. All these facts show that it is a bird of very
-versatile habits and considerable ingenuity.
-
-The Polyborus Chimango is considerably smaller than the last species.
-It is truly omnivorous, and will eat even bread; and I was assured that
-it materially injures the potato crops in Chiloe, by stocking up the
-roots when first planted. Of all the carrion-feeders it is generally
-the last which leaves the skeleton of a dead animal, and may often be
-seen within the ribs of a cow or horse, like a bird in a cage. Another
-species is the Polyborus Novae Zelandiae, which is exceedingly common
-in the Falkland Islands. These birds in many respects resemble in
-their habits the Carranchas. They live on the flesh of dead animals
-and on marine productions; and on the Ramirez rocks their whole
-sustenance must depend on the sea. They are extraordinarily tame and
-fearless, and haunt the neighborhood of houses for offal. If a hunting
-party kills an animal, a number soon collect and patiently await,
-standing on the ground on all sides. After eating, their uncovered
-craws are largely protruded, giving them a disgusting appearance. They
-readily attack wounded birds: a cormorant in this state having taken to
-the shore, was immediately seized on by several, and its death hastened
-by their blows. The Beagle was at the Falklands only during the
-summer, but the officers of the Adventure, who were there in the
-winter, mention many extraordinary instances of the boldness and
-rapacity of these birds. They actually pounced on a dog that was lying
-fast asleep close by one of the party; and the sportsmen had difficulty
-in preventing the wounded geese from being seized before their eyes. It
-is said that several together (in this respect resembling the
-Carranchas) wait at the mouth of a rabbit-hole, and together seize on
-the animal when it comes out. They were constantly flying on board the
-vessel when in the harbour; and it was necessary to keep a good look
-out to prevent the leather being torn from the rigging, and the meat or
-game from the stern. These birds are very mischievous and inquisitive;
-they will pick up almost anything from the ground; a large black glazed
-hat was carried nearly a mile, as was a pair of the heavy balls used in
-catching cattle. Mr. Usborne experienced during the survey a more
-severe loss, in their stealing a small Kater's compass in a red morocco
-leather case, which was never recovered. These birds are, moreover,
-quarrelsome and very passionate; tearing up the grass with their bills
-from rage. They are not truly gregarious; they do not soar, and their
-flight is heavy and clumsy; on the ground they run extremely fast, very
-much like pheasants. They are noisy, uttering several harsh cries, one
-of which is like that of the English rook, hence the sealers always
-call them rooks. It is a curious circumstance that, when crying out,
-they throw their heads upwards and backwards, after the same manner as
-the Carrancha. They build in the rocky cliffs of the sea-coast, but
-only on the small adjoining islets, and not on the two main islands:
-this is a singular precaution in so tame and fearless a bird. The
-sealers say that the flesh of these birds, when cooked, is quite white,
-and very good eating; but bold must the man be who attempts such a meal.
-
-We have now only to mention the turkey-buzzard (Vultur aura), and the
-Gallinazo. The former is found wherever the country is moderately
-damp, from Cape Horn to North America. Differently from the Polyborus
-Brasiliensis and Chimango, it has found its way to the Falkland
-Islands. The turkey-buzzard is a solitary bird, or at most goes in
-pairs. It may at once be recognised from a long distance, by its
-lofty, soaring, and most elegant flight. It is well known to be a true
-carrion-feeder. On the west coast of Patagonia, among the
-thickly-wooded islets and broken land, it lives exclusively on what the
-sea throws up, and on the carcasses of dead seals. Wherever these
-animals are congregated on the rocks, there the vultures may be seen.
-The Gallinazo (Cathartes atratus) has a different range from the last
-species, as it never occurs southward of lat. 41 degs. Azara states
-that there exists a tradition that these birds, at the time of the
-conquest, were not found near Monte Video, but that they subsequently
-followed the inhabitants from more northern districts. At the present
-day they are numerous in the valley of the Colorado, which is three
-hundred miles due south of Monte Video. It seems probable that this
-additional migration has happened since the time of Azara. The
-Gallinazo generally prefers a humid climate, or rather the
-neighbourhood of fresh water; hence it is extremely abundant in Brazil
-and La Plata, while it is never found on the desert and arid plains of
-Northern Patagonia, excepting near some stream. These birds frequent
-the whole Pampas to the foot of the Cordillera, but I never saw or
-heard of one in Chile; in Peru they are preserved as scavengers. These
-vultures certainly may be called gregarious, for they seem to have
-pleasure in society, and are not solely brought together by the
-attraction of a common prey. On a fine day a flock may often be
-observed at a great height, each bird wheeling round and round without
-closing its wings, in the most graceful evolutions. This is clearly
-performed for the mere pleasure of the exercise, or perhaps is
-connected with their matrimonial alliances.
-
-I have now mentioned all the carrion-feeders, excepting the condor, an
-account of which will be more appropriately introduced when we visit a
-country more congenial to its habits than the plains of La Plata.
-
-
-In a broad band of sand-hillocks which separate the Laguna del Potrero
-from the shores of the Plata, at the distance of a few miles from
-Maldonado, I found a group of those vitrified, siliceous tubes, which
-are formed by lightning entering loose sand. These tubes resemble in
-every particular those from Drigg in Cumberland, described in the
-Geological Transactions. [10] The sand-hillocks of Maldonado not being
-protected by vegetation, are constantly changing their position. From
-this cause the tubes projected above the surface, and numerous
-fragments lying near, showed that they had formerly been buried to a
-greater depth. Four sets entered the sand perpendicularly: by working
-with my hands I traced one of them two feet deep; and some fragments
-which evidently had belonged to the same tube, when added to the other
-part, measured five feet three inches. The diameter of the whole tube
-was nearly equal, and therefore we must suppose that originally it
-extended to a much greater depth. These dimensions are however small,
-compared to those of the tubes from Drigg, one of which was traced to a
-depth of not less than thirty feet.
-
-The internal surface is completely vitrified, glossy, and smooth. A
-small fragment examined under the microscope appeared, from the number
-of minute entangled air or perhaps steam bubbles, like an assay fused
-before the blowpipe. The sand is entirely, or in greater part,
-siliceous; but some points are of a black colour, and from their glossy
-surface possess a metallic lustre. The thickness of the wall of the
-tube varies from a thirtieth to a twentieth of an inch, and
-occasionally even equals a tenth. On the outside the grains of sand
-are rounded, and have a slightly glazed appearance: I could not
-distinguish any signs of crystallization. In a similar manner to that
-described in the Geological Transactions, the tubes are generally
-compressed, and have deep longitudinal furrows, so as closely to
-resemble a shrivelled vegetable stalk, or the bark of the elm or cork
-tree. Their circumference is about two inches, but in some fragments,
-which are cylindrical and without any furrows, it is as much as four
-inches. The compression from the surrounding loose sand, acting while
-the tube was still softened from the effects of the intense heat, has
-evidently caused the creases or furrows. Judging from the uncompressed
-fragments, the measure or bore of the lightning (if such a term may be
-used) must have been about one inch and a quarter. At Paris, M.
-Hachette and M. Beudant [11] succeeded in making tubes, in most
-respects similar to these fulgurites, by passing very strong shocks of
-galvanism through finely-powdered glass: when salt was added, so as to
-increase its fusibility, the tubes were larger in every dimension. They
-failed both with powdered felspar and quartz. One tube, formed with
-pounded glass, was very nearly an inch long, namely .982, and had an
-internal diameter of .019 of an inch. When we hear that the strongest
-battery in Paris was used, and that its power on a substance of such
-easy fusibility as glass was to form tubes so diminutive, we must feel
-greatly astonished at the force of a shock of lightning, which,
-striking the sand in several places, has formed cylinders, in one
-instance of at least thirty feet long, and having an internal bore,
-where not compressed, of full an inch and a half; and this in a
-material so extraordinarily refractory as quartz!
-
-The tubes, as I have already remarked, enter the sand nearly in a
-vertical direction. One, however, which was less regular than the
-others, deviated from a right line, at the most considerable bend, to
-the amount of thirty-three degrees. From this same tube, two small
-branches, about a foot apart, were sent off; one pointed downwards, and
-the other upwards. This latter case is remarkable, as the electric
-fluid must have turned back at the acute angle of 26 degs., to the line
-of its main course. Besides the four tubes which I found vertical, and
-traced beneath the surface, there were several other groups of
-fragments, the original sites of which without doubt were near. All
-occurred in a level area of shifting sand, sixty yards by twenty,
-situated among some high sand-hillocks, and at the distance of about
-half a mile from a chain of hills four or five hundred feet in height.
-The most remarkable circumstance, as it appears to me, in this case as
-well as in that of Drigg, and in one described by M. Ribbentrop in
-Germany, is the number of tubes found within such limited spaces. At
-Drigg, within an area of fifteen yards, three were observed, and the
-same number occurred in Germany. In the case which I have described,
-certainly more than four existed within the space of the sixty by
-twenty yards. As it does not appear probable that the tubes are
-produced by successive distinct shocks, we must believe that the
-lightning, shortly before entering the ground, divides itself into
-separate branches.
-
-The neighbourhood of the Rio Plata seems peculiarly subject to electric
-phenomena. In the year 1793, [12] one of the most destructive
-thunderstorms perhaps on record happened at Buenos Ayres: thirty-seven
-places within the city were struck by lightning, and nineteen people
-killed. From facts stated in several books of travels, I am inclined
-to suspect that thunderstorms are very common near the mouths of great
-rivers. Is it not possible that the mixture of large bodies of fresh
-and salt water may disturb the electrical equilibrium? Even during our
-occasional visits to this part of South America, we heard of a ship,
-two churches, and a house having been struck. Both the church and the
-house I saw shortly afterwards: the house belonged to Mr. Hood, the
-consul-general at Monte Video. Some of the effects were curious: the
-paper, for nearly a foot on each side of the line where the bell-wires
-had run, was blackened. The metal had been fused, and although the
-room was about fifteen feet high, the globules, dropping on the chairs
-and furniture, had drilled in them a chain of minute holes. A part of
-the wall was shattered, as if by gunpowder, and the fragments had been
-blown off with force sufficient to dent the wall on the opposite side
-of the room. The frame of a looking-glass was blackened, and the
-gilding must have been volatilized, for a smelling-bottle, which stood
-on the chimney-piece, was coated with bright metallic particles, which
-adhered as firmly as if they had been enamelled.
-
-[1] Hearne's Journey, p. 383.
-
-[2] Maclaren, art. "America," Encyclop. Brittann.
-
-[3] Azara says, "Je crois que la quantite annuelle des pluies est, dans
-toutes ces contrees, plus considerable qu'en Espagne."--Vol. i. p. 36.
-
-[4] In South America I collected altogether twenty-seven species of
-mice, and thirteen more are known from the works of Azara and other
-authors. Those collected by myself have been named and described by
-Mr. Waterhouse at the meetings of the Zoological Society. I must be
-allowed to take this opportunity of returning my cordial thanks to Mr.
-Waterhouse, and to the other gentleman attached to that Society, for
-their kind and most liberal assistance on all occasions.
-
-[5] In the stomach and duodenum of a capybara which I opened I found a
-very large quantity of a thin yellowish fluid, in which scarcely a
-fibre could be distinguished. Mr. Owen informs me that a part of the
-oesophagus is so constructed that nothing much larger than a crowquill
-can be passed down. Certainly the broad teeth and strong jaws of this
-animal are well fitted to grind into pulp the aquatic plants on which
-it feeds.
-
-[6] At the R. Negro, in Northern Patagonia, there is an animal of the
-same habits, and probably a closely allied species, but which I never
-saw. Its noise is different from that of the Maldonado kind; it is
-repeated only twice instead of three or four times, and is more
-distinct and sonorous; when heard from a distance it so closely
-resembles the sound made in cutting down a small tree with an axe, that
-I have sometimes remained in doubt concerning it.
-
-[7] Philosoph. Zoolog., tom. i. p. 242.
-
-[8] Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 217.
-
-[9] Read before the Academy of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut, 1834, p.
-418.
-
-[10] Geolog. Transact. vol. ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph. Transact.
-(1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has described some imperfect siliceous
-tubes and a melted pebble of quartz, found in digging into the ground,
-under a tree, where a man had been killed by lightning.
-
-[11] Annals de Chimie et de Physique, tom. xxxvii. p. 319.
-
-[12] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 36.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Rio Negro--Estancias attacked by the
-Indians--Salt-Lakes--Flamingoes--R. Negro to R. Colorado--Sacred
-Tree--Patagonian Hare--Indian Families--General Rosas--Proceed to
-Bahia Blanca--Sand Dunes--Negro Lieutenant--Bahia Blanca--Saline
-Incrustations--Punta Alta--Zorillo.
-
-
-JULY 24th, 1833.--The Beagle sailed from Maldonado, and on August the
-3rd she arrived off the mouth of the Rio Negro. This is the principal
-river on the whole line of coast between the Strait of Magellan and the
-Plata. It enters the sea about three hundred miles south of the
-estuary of the Plata. About fifty years ago, under the old Spanish
-government, a small colony was established here; and it is still the
-most southern position (lat. 41 degs.) on this eastern coast of America
-inhabited by civilized man.
-
-The country near the mouth of the river is wretched in the extreme: on
-the south side a long line of perpendicular cliffs commences, which
-exposes a section of the geological nature of the country. The strata
-are of sandstone, and one layer was remarkable from being composed of a
-firmly-cemented conglomerate of pumice pebbles, which must have
-travelled more than four hundred miles, from the Andes. The surface is
-everywhere covered up by a thick bed of gravel, which extends far and
-wide over the open plain. Water is extremely scarce, and, where found,
-is almost invariably brackish. The vegetation is scanty; and although
-there are bushes of many kinds, all are armed with formidable thorns,
-which seem to warn the stranger not to enter on these inhospitable
-regions.
-
-The settlement is situated eighteen miles up the river. The road
-follows the foot of the sloping cliff, which forms the northern
-boundary of the great valley, in which the Rio Negro flows. On the way
-we passed the ruins of some fine "estancias," which a few years since
-had been destroyed by the Indians. They withstood several attacks. A
-man present at one gave me a very lively description of what took
-place. The inhabitants had sufficient notice to drive all the cattle
-and horses into the "corral" [1] which surrounded the house, and
-likewise to mount some small cannon. The Indians were Araucanians from
-the south of Chile; several hundreds in number, and highly disciplined.
-They first appeared in two bodies on a neighbouring hill; having there
-dismounted, and taken off their fur mantles, they advanced naked to the
-charge. The only weapon of an Indian is a very long bamboo or chuzo,
-ornamented with ostrich feathers, and pointed by a sharp spearhead. My
-informer seemed to remember with the greatest horror the quivering of
-these chuzos as they approached near. When close, the cacique
-Pincheira hailed the besieged to give up their arms, or he would cut
-all their throats. As this would probably have been the result of
-their entrance under any circumstances, the answer was given by a
-volley of musketry. The Indians, with great steadiness, came to the
-very fence of the corral: but to their surprise they found the posts
-fastened together by iron nails instead of leather thongs, and, of
-course, in vain attempted to cut them with their knives. This saved
-the lives of the Christians: many of the wounded Indians were carried
-away by their companions, and at last, one of the under caciques being
-wounded, the bugle sounded a retreat. They retired to their horses,
-and seemed to hold a council of war. This was an awful pause for the
-Spaniards, as all their ammunition, with the exception of a few
-cartridges, was expended. In an instant the Indians mounted their
-horses, and galloped out of sight. Another attack was still more
-quickly repulsed. A cool Frenchman managed the gun; he stopped till the
-Indians approached close, and then raked their line with grape-shot: he
-thus laid thirty-nine of them on the ground; and, of course, such a
-blow immediately routed the whole party.
-
-The town is indifferently called El Carmen or Patagones. It is built on
-the face of a cliff which fronts the river, and many of the houses are
-excavated even in the sandstone. The river is about two or three
-hundred yards wide, and is deep and rapid. The many islands, with
-their willow-trees, and the flat headlands, seen one behind the other
-on the northern boundary of the broad green valley, form, by the aid of
-a bright sun, a view almost picturesque. The number of inhabitants
-does not exceed a few hundreds. These Spanish colonies do not, like
-our British ones, carry within themselves the elements of growth. Many
-Indians of pure blood reside here: the tribe of the Cacique Lucanee
-constantly have their Toldos [2] on the outskirts of the town. The
-local government partly supplies them with provisions, by giving them
-all the old worn-out horses, and they earn a little by making
-horse-rugs and other articles of riding-gear. These Indians are
-considered civilized; but what their character may have gained by a
-lesser degree of ferocity, is almost counterbalanced by their entire
-immorality. Some of the younger men are, however, improving; they are
-willing to labour, and a short time since a party went on a
-sealing-voyage, and behaved very well. They were now enjoying the
-fruits of their labour, by being dressed in very gay, clean clothes,
-and by being very idle. The taste they showed in their dress was
-admirable; if you could have turned one of these young Indians into a
-statue of bronze, his drapery would have been perfectly graceful.
-
-One day I rode to a large salt-lake, or Salina, which is distant
-fifteen miles from the town. During the winter it consists of a
-shallow lake of brine, which in summer is converted into a field of
-snow-white salt. The layer near the margin is from four to five inches
-thick, but towards the centre its thickness increases. This lake was
-two and a half miles long, and one broad. Others occur in the
-neighbourhood many times larger, and with a floor of salt, two and
-three feet in thickness, even when under water during the winter. One
-of these brilliantly white and level expanses in the midst of the brown
-and desolate plain, offers an extraordinary spectacle. A large
-quantity of salt is annually drawn from the salina: and great piles,
-some hundred tons in weight, were lying ready for exportation. The
-season for working the salinas forms the harvest of Patagones; for on
-it the prosperity of the place depends. Nearly the whole population
-encamps on the bank of the river, and the people are employed in
-drawing out the salt in bullock-waggons, This salt is crystallized in
-great cubes, and is remarkably pure: Mr. Trenham Reeks has kindly
-analyzed some for me, and he finds in it only 0.26 of gypsum and 0.22
-of earthy matter. It is a singular fact, that it does not serve so
-well for preserving meat as sea-salt from the Cape de Verd islands; and
-a merchant at Buenos Ayres told me that he considered it as fifty per
-cent. less valuable. Hence the Cape de Verd salt is constantly
-imported, and is mixed with that from these salinas. The purity of the
-Patagonian salt, or absence from it of those other saline bodies found
-in all sea-water, is the only assignable cause for this inferiority: a
-conclusion which no one, I think, would have suspected, but which is
-supported by the fact lately ascertained, [3] that those salts answer
-best for preserving cheese which contain most of the deliquescent
-chlorides.
-
-The border of this lake is formed of mud: and in this numerous large
-crystals of gypsum, some of which are three inches long, lie embedded;
-whilst on the surface others of sulphate of soda lie scattered about.
-The Gauchos call the former the "Padre del sal," and the latter the
-"Madre;" they state that these progenitive salts always occur on the
-borders of the salinas, when the water begins to evaporate. The mud is
-black, and has a fetid odour. I could not at first imagine the cause
-of this, but I afterwards perceived that the froth which the wind
-drifted on shore was coloured green, as if by confervae; I attempted to
-carry home some of this green matter, but from an accident failed.
-Parts of the lake seen from a short distance appeared of a reddish
-colour, and this perhaps was owing to some infusorial animalcula. The
-mud in many places was thrown up by numbers of some kind of worm, or
-annelidous animal. How surprising it is that any creatures should be
-able to exist in brine, and that they should be crawling among crystals
-of sulphate of soda and lime! And what becomes of these worms when,
-during the long summer, the surface is hardened into a solid layer of
-salt? Flamingoes in considerable numbers inhabit this lake, and breed
-here, throughout Patagonia, in Northern Chile, and at the Galapagos
-Islands, I met with these birds wherever there were lakes of brine. I
-saw them here wading about in search of food--probably for the worms
-which burrow in the mud; and these latter probably feed on infusoria or
-confervae. Thus we have a little living world within itself adapted to
-these inland lakes of brine. A minute crustaceous animal (Cancer
-salinus) is said [4] to live in countless numbers in the brine-pans at
-Lymington: but only in those in which the fluid has attained, from
-evaporation, considerable strength--namely, about a quarter of a pound
-of salt to a pint of water. Well may we affirm that every part of the
-world is habitable! Whether lakes of brine, or those subterranean ones
-hidden beneath volcanic mountains--warm mineral springs--the wide
-expanse and depths of the ocean--the upper regions of the atmosphere,
-and even the surface of perpetual snow--all support organic beings.
-
-
-To the northward of the Rio Negro, between it and the inhabited country
-near Buenos Ayres, the Spaniards have only one small settlement,
-recently established at Bahia Blanca. The distance in a straight line
-to Buenos Ayres is very nearly five hundred British miles. The
-wandering tribes of horse Indians, which have always occupied the
-greater part of this country, having of late much harassed the outlying
-estancias, the government at Buenos Ayres equipped some time since an
-army under the command of General Rosas for the purpose of
-exterminating them. The troops were now encamped on the banks of the
-Colorado; a river lying about eighty miles northward of the Rio Negro.
-When General Rosas left Buenos Ayres he struck in a direct line across
-the unexplored plains: and as the country was thus pretty well cleared
-of Indians, he left behind him, at wide intervals, a small party of
-soldiers with a troop of horses (a posta), so as to be enabled to keep
-up a communication with the capital. As the Beagle intended to call at
-Bahia Blanca, I determined to proceed there by land; and ultimately I
-extended my plan to travel the whole way by the postas to Buenos Ayres.
-
-August 11th.--Mr. Harris, an Englishman residing at Patagones, a guide,
-and five Gauchos who were proceeding to the army on business, were my
-companions on the journey. The Colorado, as I have already said, is
-nearly eighty miles distant: and as we travelled slowly, we were two
-days and a half on the road. The whole line of country deserves
-scarcely a better name than that of a desert. Water is found only in
-two small wells; it is called fresh; but even at this time of the year,
-during the rainy season, it was quite brackish. In the summer this must
-be a distressing passage; for now it was sufficiently desolate. The
-valley of the Rio Negro, broad as it is, has merely been excavated out
-of the sandstone plain; for immediately above the bank on which the
-town stands, a level country commences, which is interrupted only by a
-few trifling valleys and depressions. Everywhere the landscape wears
-the same sterile aspect; a dry gravelly soil supports tufts of brown
-withered grass, and low scattered bushes, armed with thorns.
-
-Shortly after passing the first spring we came in sight of a famous
-tree, which the Indians reverence as the altar of Walleechu. It is
-situated on a high part of the plain; and hence is a landmark visible
-at a great distance. As soon as a tribe of Indians come in sight of
-it, they offer their adorations by loud shouts. The tree itself is
-low, much branched, and thorny: just above the root it has a diameter
-of about three feet. It stands by itself without any neighbour, and
-was indeed the first tree we saw; afterwards we met with a few others
-of the same kind, but they were far from common. Being winter the tree
-had no leaves, but in their place numberless threads, by which the
-various offerings, such as cigars, bread, meat, pieces of cloth, etc.,
-had been suspended. Poor Indians, not having anything better, only pull
-a thread out of their ponchos, and fasten it to the tree. Richer
-Indians are accustomed to pour spirits and mate into a certain hole,
-and likewise to smoke upwards, thinking thus to afford all possible
-gratification to Walleechu. To complete the scene, the tree was
-surrounded by the bleached bones of horses which had been slaughtered
-as sacrifices. All Indians of every age and sex make their offerings;
-they then think that their horses will not tire, and that they
-themselves shall be prosperous. The Gaucho who told me this, said that
-in the time of peace he had witnessed this scene, and that he and
-others used to wait till the Indians had passed by, for the sake of
-stealing from Walleechu the offerings.
-
-The Gauchos think that the Indians consider the tree as the god itself,
-but it seems far more probable that they regard it as the altar. The
-only cause which I can imagine for this choice, is its being a landmark
-in a dangerous passage. The Sierra de la Ventana is visible at an
-immense distance; and a Gaucho told me that he was once riding with an
-Indian a few miles to the north of the Rio Colorado when the Indian
-commenced making the same loud noise which is usual at the first sight
-of the distant tree, putting his hand to his head, and then pointing in
-the direction of the Sierra. Upon being asked the reason of this, the
-Indian said in broken Spanish, "First see the Sierra." About two
-leagues beyond this curious tree we halted for the night: at this
-instant an unfortunate cow was spied by the lynx-eyed Gauchos, who set
-off in full chase, and in a few minutes dragged her in with their
-lazos, and slaughtered her. We here had the four necessaries of life
-"en el campo,"--pasture for the horses, water (only a muddy puddle),
-meat and firewood. The Gauchos were in high spirits at finding all
-these luxuries; and we soon set to work at the poor cow. This was the
-first night which I passed under the open sky, with the gear of the
-recado for my bed. There is high enjoyment in the independence of the
-Gaucho life--to be able at any moment to pull up your horse, and say,
-"Here we will pass the night." The death-like stillness of the plain,
-the dogs keeping watch, the gipsy-group of Gauchos making their beds
-round the fire, have left in my mind a strongly-marked picture of this
-first night, which will never be forgotten.
-
-The next day the country continued similar to that above described. It
-is inhabited by few birds or animals of any kind. Occasionally a deer,
-or a Guanaco (wild Llama) may be seen; but the Agouti (Cavia
-Patagonica) is the commonest quadruped. This animal here represents
-our hares. It differs, however, from that genus in many essential
-respects; for instance, it has only three toes behind. It is also
-nearly twice the size, weighing from twenty to twenty-five pounds. The
-Agouti is a true friend of the desert; it is a common feature of the
-landscape to see two or three hopping quickly one after the other in a
-straight line across these wild plains. They are found as far north as
-the Sierra Tapalguen (lat. 37 degs. 30'), where the plain rather
-suddenly becomes greener and more humid; and their southern limit is
-between Port Desire and St. Julian, where there is no change in the
-nature of the country. It is a singular fact, that although the Agouti
-is not now found as far south as Port St. Julian, yet that Captain
-Wood, in his voyage in 1670, talks of them as being numerous there.
-What cause can have altered, in a wide, uninhabited, and rarely-visited
-country, the range of an animal like this? It appears also, from the
-number shot by Captain Wood in one day at Port Desire, that they must
-have been considerably more abundant there formerly than at present.
-Where the Bizcacha lives and makes its burrows, the Agouti uses them;
-but where, as at Bahia Blanca, the Bizcacha is not found, the Agouti
-burrows for itself. The same thing occurs with the little owl of the
-Pampas (Athene cunicularia), which has so often been described as
-standing like a sentinel at the mouth of the burrows; for in Banda
-Oriental, owing to the absence of the Bizcacha, it is obliged to hollow
-out its own habitation.
-
-The next morning, as we approached the Rio Colorado, the appearance of
-the country changed; we soon came on a plain covered with turf, which,
-from its flowers, tall clover, and little owls, resembled the Pampas.
-We passed also a muddy swamp of considerable extent, which in summer
-dries, and becomes incrusted with various salts; and hence is called a
-salitral. It was covered by low succulent plants, of the same kind
-with those growing on the sea-shore. The Colorado, at the pass where
-we crossed it, is only about sixty yards wide; generally it must be
-nearly double that width. Its course is very tortuous, being marked by
-willow-trees and beds of reeds: in a direct line the distance to the
-mouth of the river is said to be nine leagues, but by water
-twenty-five. We were delayed crossing in the canoe by some immense
-troops of mares, which were swimming the river in order to follow a
-division of troops into the interior. A more ludicrous spectacle I
-never beheld than the hundreds and hundreds of heads, all directed one
-way, with pointed ears and distended snorting nostrils, appearing just
-above the water like a great shoal of some amphibious animal. Mare's
-flesh is the only food which the soldiers have when on an expedition.
-This gives them a great facility of movement; for the distance to which
-horses can be driven over these plains is quite surprising: I have been
-assured that an unloaded horse can travel a hundred miles a day for
-many days successively.
-
-The encampment of General Rosas was close to the river. It consisted of
-a square formed by waggons, artillery, straw huts, etc. The soldiers
-were nearly all cavalry; and I should think such a villainous,
-banditti-like army was never before collected together. The greater
-number of men were of a mixed breed, between Negro, Indian, and
-Spaniard. I know not the reason, but men of such origin seldom have a
-good expression of countenance. I called on the Secretary to show my
-passport. He began to cross-question me in the most dignified and
-mysterious manner. By good luck I had a letter of recommendation from
-the government of Buenos Ayres [5] to the commandant of Patagones. This
-was taken to General Rosas, who sent me a very obliging message; and
-the Secretary returned all smiles and graciousness. We took up our
-residence in the _rancho_, or hovel, of a curious old Spaniard, who had
-served with Napoleon in the expedition against Russia.
-
-We stayed two days at the Colorado; I had little to do, for the
-surrounding country was a swamp, which in summer (December), when the
-snow melts on the Cordillera, is over-flowed by the river. My chief
-amusement was watching the Indian families as they came to buy little
-articles at the rancho where we stayed. It was supposed that General
-Rosas had about six hundred Indian allies. The men were a tall, fine
-race, yet it was afterwards easy to see in the Fuegian savage the same
-countenance rendered hideous by cold, want of food, and less
-civilization. Some authors, in defining the primary races of mankind,
-have separated these Indians into two classes; but this is certainly
-incorrect. Among the young women or chinas, some deserve to be called
-even beautiful. Their hair was coarse, but bright and black; and they
-wore it in two plaits hanging down to the waist. They had a high
-colour, and eyes that glistened with brilliancy; their legs, feet, and
-arms were small and elegantly formed; their ankles, and sometimes their
-wrists, were ornamented by broad bracelets of blue beads. Nothing
-could be more interesting than some of the family groups. A mother
-with one or two daughters would often come to our rancho, mounted on
-the same horse. They ride like men, but with their knees tucked up
-much higher. This habit, perhaps, arises from their being accustomed,
-when travelling, to ride the loaded horses. The duty of the women is
-to load and unload the horses; to make the tents for the night; in
-short to be, like the wives of all savages, useful slaves. The men
-fight, hunt, take care of the horses, and make the riding gear. One of
-their chief indoor occupations is to knock two stones together till
-they become round, in order to make the bolas. With this important
-weapon the Indian catches his game, and also his horse, which roams
-free over the plain. In fighting, his first attempt is to throw down
-the horse of his adversary with the bolas, and when entangled by the
-fall to kill him with the chuzo. If the balls only catch the neck or
-body of an animal, they are often carried away and lost. As the making
-the stones round is the labour of two days, the manufacture of the
-balls is a very common employment. Several of the men and women had
-their faces painted red, but I never saw the horizontal bands which are
-so common among the Fuegians. Their chief pride consists in having
-everything made of silver; I have seen a cacique with his spurs,
-stirrups, handle of his knife, and bridle made of this metal: the
-head-stall and reins being of wire, were not thicker than whipcord; and
-to see a fiery steed wheeling about under the command of so light a
-chain, gave to the horsemanship a remarkable character of elegance.
-
-General Rosas intimated a wish to see me; a circumstance which I was
-afterwards very glad of. He is a man of an extraordinary character,
-and has a most predominant influence in the country, which it seems he
-will use to its prosperity and advancement. [6] He is said to be the
-owner of seventy-four square leagues of land, and to have about three
-hundred thousand head of cattle. His estates are admirably managed,
-and are far more productive of corn than those of others. He first
-gained his celebrity by his laws for his own estancias, and by
-disciplining several hundred men, so as to resist with success the
-attacks of the Indians. There are many stories current about the rigid
-manner in which his laws were enforced. One of these was, that no man,
-on penalty of being put into the stocks, should carry his knife on a
-Sunday: this being the principal day for gambling and drinking, many
-quarrels arose, which from the general manner of fighting with the
-knife often proved fatal. One Sunday the Governor came in great form
-to pay the estancia a visit, and General Rosas, in his hurry, walked
-out to receive him with his knife, as usual, stuck in his belt. The
-steward touched his arm, and reminded him of the law; upon which
-turning to the Governor, he said he was extremely sorry, but that he
-must go into the stocks, and that till let out, he possessed no power
-even in his own house. After a little time the steward was persuaded
-to open the stocks, and to let him out, but no sooner was this done,
-than he turned to the steward and said, "You now have broken the laws,
-so you must take my place in the stocks." Such actions as these
-delighted the Gauchos, who all possess high notions of their own
-equality and dignity.
-
-General Rosas is also a perfect horseman--an accomplishment of no small
-consequence In a country where an assembled army elected its general by
-the following trial: A troop of unbroken horses being driven into a
-corral, were let out through a gateway, above which was a cross-bar: it
-was agreed whoever should drop from the bar on one of these wild
-animals, as it rushed out, and should be able, without saddle or
-bridle, not only to ride it, but also to bring it back to the door of
-the corral, should be their general. The person who succeeded was
-accordingly elected; and doubtless made a fit general for such an army.
-This extraordinary feat has also been performed by Rosas.
-
-By these means, and by conforming to the dress and habits of the
-Gauchos, he has obtained an unbounded popularity in the country, and in
-consequence a despotic power. I was assured by an English merchant,
-that a man who had murdered another, when arrested and questioned
-concerning his motive, answered, "He spoke disrespectfully of General
-Rosas, so I killed him." At the end of a week the murderer was at
-liberty. This doubtless was the act of the general's party, and not of
-the general himself.
-
-In conversation he is enthusiastic, sensible, and very grave. His
-gravity is carried to a high pitch: I heard one of his mad buffoons
-(for he keeps two, like the barons of old) relate the following
-anecdote. "I wanted very much to hear a certain piece of music, so I
-went to the general two or three times to ask him; he said to me, 'Go
-about your business, for I am engaged.' I went a second time; he said,
-'If you come again I will punish you.' A third time I asked, and he
-laughed. I rushed out of the tent, but it was too late--he ordered two
-soldiers to catch and stake me. I begged by all the saints in heaven
-he would let me off; but it would not do,--when the general laughs he
-spares neither mad man nor sound." The poor flighty gentleman looked
-quite dolorous, at the very recollection of the staking. This is a
-very severe punishment; four posts are driven into the ground, and the
-man is extended by his arms and legs horizontally, and there left to
-stretch for several hours. The idea is evidently taken from the usual
-method of drying hides. My interview passed away, without a smile, and
-I obtained a passport and order for the government post-horses, and
-this he gave me in the most obliging and ready manner.
-
-In the morning we started for Bahia Blanca, which we reached in two
-days. Leaving the regular encampment, we passed by the toldos of the
-Indians. These are round like ovens, and covered with hides; by the
-mouth of each, a tapering chuzo was stuck in the ground. The toldos
-were divided into separate groups, which belong to the different
-caciques' tribes, and the groups were again divided into smaller ones,
-according to the relationship of the owners. For several miles we
-travelled along the valley of the Colorado. The alluvial plains on the
-side appeared fertile, and it is supposed that they are well adapted to
-the growth of corn. Turning northward from the river, we soon entered
-on a country, differing from the plains south of the river. The land
-still continued dry and sterile: but it supported many different kinds
-of plants, and the grass, though brown and withered, was more abundant,
-as the thorny bushes were less so. These latter in a short space
-entirely disappeared, and the plains were left without a thicket to
-cover their nakedness. This change in the vegetation marks the
-commencement of the grand calcareo argillaceous deposit, which forms
-the wide extent of the Pampas, and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental. From the Strait of Magellan to the Colorado, a distance of
-about eight hundred miles, the face of the country is everywhere
-composed of shingle: the pebbles are chiefly of porphyry, and probably
-owe their origin to the rocks of the Cordillera. North of the Colorado
-this bed thins out, and the pebbles become exceedingly small, and here
-the characteristic vegetation of Patagonia ceases.
-
-Having ridden about twenty-five miles, we came to a broad belt of
-sand-dunes, which stretches, as far as the eye can reach, to the east
-and west. The sand-hillocks resting on the clay, allow small pools of
-water to collect, and thus afford in this dry country an invaluable
-supply of fresh water. The great advantage arising from depressions
-and elevations of the soil, is not often brought home to the mind. The
-two miserable springs in the long passage between the Rio Negro and
-Colorado were caused by trifling inequalities in the plain, without
-them not a drop of water would have been found. The belt of sand-dunes
-is about eight miles wide; at some former period, it probably formed
-the margin of a grand estuary, where the Colorado now flows. In this
-district, where absolute proofs of the recent elevation of the land
-occur, such speculations can hardly be neglected by any one, although
-merely considering the physical geography of the country. Having
-crossed the sandy tract, we arrived in the evening at one of the
-post-houses; and, as the fresh horses were grazing at a distance we
-determined to pass the night there.
-
-The house was situated at the base of a ridge between one and two
-hundred feet high--a most remarkable feature in this country. This
-posta was commanded by a negro lieutenant, born in Africa: to his
-credit be it said, there was not a ranche between the Colorado and
-Buenos Ayres in nearly such neat order as his. He had a little room
-for strangers, and a small corral for the horses, all made of sticks
-and reeds; he had also dug a ditch round his house as a defence in case
-of being attacked. This would, however, have been of little avail, if
-the Indians had come; but his chief comfort seemed to rest in the
-thought of selling his life dearly. A short time before, a body of
-Indians had travelled past in the night; if they had been aware of the
-posta, our black friend and his four soldiers would assuredly have been
-slaughtered. I did not anywhere meet a more civil and obliging man
-than this negro; it was therefore the more painful to see that he would
-not sit down and eat with us.
-
-In the morning we sent for the horses very early, and started for
-another exhilarating gallop. We passed the Cabeza del Buey, an old
-name given to the head of a large marsh, which extends from Bahia
-Blanca. Here we changed horses, and passed through some leagues of
-swamps and saline marshes. Changing horses for the last time, we again
-began wading through the mud. My animal fell and I was well soused in
-black mire--a very disagreeable accident when one does not possess a
-change of clothes. Some miles from the fort we met a man, who told us
-that a great gun had been fired, which is a signal that Indians are
-near. We immediately left the road, and followed the edge of a marsh,
-which when chased offers the best mode of escape. We were glad to
-arrive within the walls, when we found all the alarm was about nothing,
-for the Indians turned out to be friendly ones, who wished to join
-General Rosas.
-
-Bahia Blanca scarcely deserves the name of a village. A few houses and
-the barracks for the troops are enclosed by a deep ditch and fortified
-wall. The settlement is only of recent standing (since 1828); and its
-growth has been one of trouble. The government of Buenos Ayres
-unjustly occupied it by force, instead of following the wise example of
-the Spanish Viceroys, who purchased the land near the older settlement
-of the Rio Negro, from the Indians. Hence the need of the
-fortifications; hence the few houses and little cultivated land without
-the limits of the walls; even the cattle are not safe from the attacks
-of the Indians beyond the boundaries of the plain, on which the
-fortress stands.
-
-The part of the harbour where the Beagle intended to anchor being
-distant twenty-five miles, I obtained from the Commandant a guide and
-horses, to take me to see whether she had arrived. Leaving the plain
-of green turf, which extended along the course of a little brook, we
-soon entered on a wide level waste consisting either of sand, saline
-marshes, or bare mud. Some parts were clothed by low thickets, and
-others with those succulent plants, which luxuriate only where salt
-abounds. Bad as the country was, ostriches, deer, agoutis, and
-armadilloes, were abundant. My guide told me, that two months before
-he had a most narrow escape of his life: he was out hunting with two
-other men, at no great distance from this part of the country, when
-they were suddenly met by a party of Indians, who giving chase, soon
-overtook and killed his two friends. His own horse's legs were also
-caught by the bolas, but he jumped off, and with his knife cut them
-free: while doing this he was obliged to dodge round his horse, and
-received two severe wounds from their chuzos. Springing on the saddle,
-he managed, by a most wonderful exertion, just to keep ahead of the
-long spears of his pursuers, who followed him to within sight of the
-fort. From that time there was an order that no one should stray far
-from the settlement. I did not know of this when I started, and was
-surprised to observe how earnestly my guide watched a deer, which
-appeared to have been frightened from a distant quarter.
-
-We found the Beagle had not arrived, and consequently set out on our
-return, but the horses soon tiring, we were obliged to bivouac on the
-plain. In the morning we had caught an armadillo, which although a
-most excellent dish when roasted in its shell, did not make a very
-substantial breakfast and dinner for two hungry men. The ground at the
-place where we stopped for the night, was incrusted with a layer of
-sulphate of soda, and hence, of course, was without water. Yet many of
-the smaller rodents managed to exist even here, and the tucutuco was
-making its odd little grunt beneath my head, during half the night. Our
-horses were very poor ones, and in the morning they were soon exhausted
-from not having had anything to drink, so that we were obliged to walk.
-About noon the dogs killed a kid, which we roasted. I ate some of it,
-but it made me intolerably thirsty. This was the more distressing as
-the road, from some recent rain, was full of little puddles of clear
-water, yet not a drop was drinkable. I had scarcely been twenty hours
-without water, and only part of the time under a hot sun, yet the
-thirst rendered me very weak. How people survive two or three days
-under such circumstances, I cannot imagine: at the same time, I must
-confess that my guide did not suffer at all, and was astonished that
-one day's deprivation should be so troublesome to me.
-
-I have several times alluded to the surface of the ground being
-incrusted with salt. This phenomenon is quite different from that of
-the salinas, and more extraordinary. In many parts of South America,
-wherever the climate is moderately dry, these incrustations occur; but
-I have nowhere seen them so abundant as near Bahia Blanca. The salt
-here, and in other parts of Patagonia, consists chiefly of sulphate of
-soda with some common salt. As long as the ground remains moist in the
-salitrales (as the Spaniards improperly call them, mistaking this
-substance for saltpeter), nothing is to be seen but an extensive plain
-composed of a black, muddy soil, supporting scattered tufts of
-succulent plants. On returning through one of these tracts, after a
-week's hot weather, one is surprised to see square miles of the plain
-white, as if from a slight fall of snow, here and there heaped up by
-the wind into little drifts. This latter appearance is chiefly caused
-by the salts being drawn up, during the slow evaporation of the
-moisture, round blades of dead grass, stumps of wood, and pieces of
-broken earth, instead of being crystallized at the bottoms of the
-puddles of water. The salitrales occur either on level tracts elevated
-only a few feet above the level of the sea, or on alluvial land
-bordering rivers. M. Parchappe [7] found that the saline incrustation
-on the plain, at the distance of some miles from the sea, consisted
-chiefly of sulphate of soda, with only seven per cent. of common salt;
-whilst nearer to the coast, the common salt increased to 37 parts in a
-hundred. This circumstance would tempt one to believe that the
-sulphate of soda is generated in the soil, from the muriate, left on
-the surface during the slow and recent elevation of this dry country.
-The whole phenomenon is well worthy the attention of naturalists. Have
-the succulent, salt-loving plants, which are well known to contain much
-soda, the power of decomposing the muriate? Does the black fetid mud,
-abounding with organic matter, yield the sulphur and ultimately the
-sulphuric acid?
-
-Two days afterwards I again rode to the harbour: when not far from our
-destination, my companion, the same man as before, spied three people
-hunting on horseback. He immediately dismounted, and watching them
-intently, said, "They don't ride like Christians, and nobody can leave
-the fort." The three hunters joined company, and likewise dismounted
-from their horses. At last one mounted again and rode over the hill
-out of sight. My companion said, "We must now get on our horses: load
-your pistol;" and he looked to his own sword. I asked, "Are they
-Indians?"--"Quien sabe? (who knows?) if there are no more than three,
-it does not signify." It then struck me, that the one man had gone over
-the hill to fetch the rest of his tribe. I suggested this; but all the
-answer I could extort was, "Quien sabe?" His head and eye never for a
-minute ceased scanning slowly the distant horizon. I thought his
-uncommon coolness too good a joke, and asked him why he did not return
-home. I was startled when he answered, "We are returning, but in a
-line so as to pass near a swamp, into which we can gallop the horses as
-far as they can go, and then trust to our own legs; so that there is no
-danger." I did not feel quite so confident of this, and wanted to
-increase our pace. He said, "No, not until they do." When any little
-inequality concealed us, we galloped; but when in sight, continued
-walking. At last we reached a valley, and turning to the left,
-galloped quickly to the foot of a hill; he gave me his horse to hold,
-made the dogs lie down, and then crawled on his hands and knees to
-reconnoitre. He remained in this position for some time, and at last,
-bursting out in laughter, exclaimed, "Mugeres!" (women!). He knew them
-to be the wife and sister-in-law of the major's son, hunting for
-ostrich's eggs. I have described this man's conduct, because he acted
-under the full impression that they were Indians. As soon, however, as
-the absurd mistake was found out, he gave me a hundred reasons why they
-could not have been Indians; but all these were forgotten at the time.
-We then rode on in peace and quietness to a low point called Punta
-Alta, whence we could see nearly the whole of the great harbour of
-Bahia Blanca.
-
-The wide expanse of water is choked up by numerous great mud-banks,
-which the inhabitants call Cangrejales, or _crabberies_, from the
-number of small crabs. The mud is so soft that it is impossible to
-walk over them, even for the shortest distance. Many of the banks have
-their surfaces covered with long rushes, the tops of which alone are
-visible at high water. On one occasion, when in a boat, we were so
-entangled by these shallows that we could hardly find our way. Nothing
-was visible but the flat beds of mud; the day was not very clear, and
-there was much refraction, or as the sailors expressed it, "things
-loomed high." The only object within our view which was not level was
-the horizon; rushes looked like bushes unsupported in the air, and
-water like mud-banks, and mud-banks like water.
-
-We passed the night in Punta Alta, and I employed myself in searching
-for fossil bones; this point being a perfect catacomb for monsters of
-extinct races. The evening was perfectly calm and clear; the extreme
-monotony of the view gave it an interest even in the midst of mud-banks
-and gulls sand-hillocks and solitary vultures. In riding back in the
-morning we came across a very fresh track of a Puma, but did not
-succeed in finding it. We saw also a couple of Zorillos, or
-skunks,--odious animals, which are far from uncommon. In general
-appearance, the Zorillo resembles a polecat, but it is rather larger,
-and much thicker in proportion. Conscious of its power, it roams by day
-about the open plain, and fears neither dog nor man. If a dog is urged
-to the attack, its courage is instantly checked by a few drops of the
-fetid oil, which brings on violent sickness and running at the nose.
-Whatever is once polluted by it, is for ever useless. Azara says the
-smell can be perceived at a league distant; more than once, when
-entering the harbour of Monte Video, the wind being off shore, we have
-perceived the odour on board the Beagle. Certain it is, that every
-animal most willingly makes room for the Zorillo.
-
-[1] The corral is an enclosure made of tall and strong stakes. Every
-estancia, or farming estate, has one attached to it.
-
-[2] The hovels of the Indians are thus called.
-
-[3] Report of the Agricult. Chem. Assoc. in the Agricult. Gazette,
-1845, p. 93.
-
-[4] Linnaean Trans., vol. xi. p. 205. It is remarkable how all the
-circumstances connected with the salt-lakes in Siberia and Patagonia
-are similar. Siberia, like Patagonia, appears to have been recently
-elevated above the waters of the sea. In both countries the salt-lakes
-occupy shallow depressions in the plains; in both the mud on the
-borders is black and fetid; beneath the crust of common salt, sulphate
-of soda or of magnesium occurs, imperfectly crystallized; and in both,
-the muddy sand is mixed with lentils of gypsum. The Siberian
-salt-lakes are inhabited by small crustaceous animals; and flamingoes
-(Edin. New Philos. Jour., Jan 1830) likewise frequent them. As these
-circumstances, apparently so trifling, occur in two distant continents,
-we may feel sure that they are the necessary results of a common
-cause--See Pallas's Travels, 1793 to 1794, pp. 129 - 134.
-
-[5] I am bound to express in the strongest terms, my obligation to the
-government of Buenos Ayres for the obliging manner in which passports
-to all parts of the country were given me, as naturalist of the Beagle.
-
-[6] This prophecy has turned out entirely and miserably wrong. 1845.
-
-[7] Voyage dans l'Amerique Merid. par M. A. d'Orbigny. Part. Hist. tom.
-i. p. 664.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Bahia Blanca--Geology--Numerous gigantic Quadrupeds--Recent
-Extinction--Longevity of species--Large Animals do not require a
-luxuriant vegetation--Southern Africa--Siberian Fossils--Two Species of
-Ostrich--Habits of Oven-bird--Armadilloes--Venomous Snake, Toad,
-Lizard--Hybernation of Animal--Habits of Sea-Pen--Indian Wars and
-Massacres--Arrow-head, antiquarian Relic.
-
-
-The Beagle arrived here on the 24th of August, and a week afterwards
-sailed for the Plata. With Captain Fitz Roy's consent I was left
-behind, to travel by land to Buenos Ayres. I will here add some
-observations, which were made during this visit and on a previous
-occasion, when the Beagle was employed in surveying the harbour.
-
-The plain, at the distance of a few miles from the coast, belongs to
-the great Pampean formation, which consists in part of a reddish clay,
-and in part of a highly calcareous marly rock. Nearer the coast there
-are some plains formed from the wreck of the upper plain, and from mud,
-gravel, and sand thrown up by the sea during the slow elevation of the
-land, of which elevation we have evidence in upraised beds of recent
-shells, and in rounded pebbles of pumice scattered over the country. At
-Punta Alta we have a section of one of these later-formed little
-plains, which is highly interesting from the number and extraordinary
-character of the remains of gigantic land-animals embedded in it. These
-have been fully described by Professor Owen, in the Zoology of the
-voyage of the Beagle, and are deposited in the College of Surgeons. I
-will here give only a brief outline of their nature.
-
-First, parts of three heads and other bones of the Megatherium, the
-huge dimensions of which are expressed by its name. Secondly, the
-Megalonyx, a great allied animal. Thirdly, the Scelidotherium, also an
-allied animal, of which I obtained a nearly perfect skeleton. It must
-have been as large as a rhinoceros: in the structure of its head it
-comes according to Mr. Owen, nearest to the Cape Anteater, but in some
-other respects it approaches to the armadilloes. Fourthly, the Mylodon
-Darwinii, a closely related genus of little inferior size. Fifthly,
-another gigantic edental quadruped. Sixthly, a large animal, with an
-osseous coat in compartments, very like that of an armadillo.
-Seventhly, an extinct kind of horse, to which I shall have again to
-refer. Eighthly, a tooth of a Pachydermatous animal, probably the same
-with the Macrauchenia, a huge beast with a long neck like a camel,
-which I shall also refer to again. Lastly, the Toxodon, perhaps one of
-the strangest animals ever discovered: in size it equalled an elephant
-or megatherium, but the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen states,
-proves indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers, the
-order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest
-quadrupeds: in many details it is allied to the Pachydermata: judging
-from the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils, it was probably
-aquatic, like the Dugong and Manatee, to which it is also allied. How
-wonderfully are the different Orders, at the present time so well
-separated, blended together in different points of the structure of the
-Toxodon!
-
-The remains of these nine great quadrupeds, and many detached bones,
-were found embedded on the beach, within the space of about 200 yards
-square. It is a remarkable circumstance that so many different species
-should be found together; and it proves how numerous in kind the
-ancient inhabitants of this country must have been. At the distance of
-about thirty miles from Punta Alta, in a cliff of red earth, I found
-several fragments of bones, some of large size. Among them were the
-teeth of a gnawer, equalling in size and closely resembling those of
-the Capybara, whose habits have been described; and therefore,
-probably, an aquatic animal. There was also part of the head of a
-Ctenomys; the species being different from the Tucutuco, but with a
-close general resemblance. The red earth, like that of the Pampas, in
-which these remains were embedded, contains, according to Professor
-Ehrenberg, eight fresh-water and one salt-water infusorial animalcule;
-therefore, probably, it was an estuary deposit.
-
-The remains at Punta Alta were embedded in stratified gravel and
-reddish mud, just such as the sea might now wash up on a shallow bank.
-They were associated with twenty-three species of shells, of which
-thirteen are recent and four others very closely related to recent
-forms. [1] From the bones of the Scelidotherium, including even the
-knee-cap, being intombed in their proper relative positions, and from
-the osseous armour of the great armadillo-like animal being so well
-preserved, together with the bones of one of its legs, we may feel
-assured that these remains were fresh and united by their ligaments,
-when deposited in the gravel together with the shells. [2] Hence we
-have good evidence that the above enumerated gigantic quadrupeds, more
-different from those of the present day than the oldest of the tertiary
-quadrupeds of Europe, lived whilst the sea was peopled with most of its
-present inhabitants; and we have confirmed that remarkable law so often
-insisted on by Mr. Lyell, namely, that the "longevity of the species in
-the mammalia is upon the whole inferior to that of the testacea." [3]
-
-The great size of the bones of the Megatheroid animals, including the
-Megatherium, Megalonyx, Scelidotherium, and Mylodon, is truly
-wonderful. The habits of life of these animals were a complete puzzle
-to naturalists, until Professor Owen [4] solved the problem with
-remarkable ingenuity. The teeth indicate, by their simple structure,
-that these Megatheroid animals lived on vegetable food, and probably on
-the leaves and small twigs of trees; their ponderous forms and great
-strong curved claws seem so little adapted for locomotion, that some
-eminent naturalists have actually believed, that, like the sloths, to
-which they are intimately related, they subsisted by climbing back
-downwards on trees, and feeding on the leaves. It was a bold, not to
-say preposterous, idea to conceive even antediluvian trees, with
-branches strong enough to bear animals as large as elephants. Professor
-Owen, with far more probability, believes that, instead of climbing on
-the trees, they pulled the branches down to them, and tore up the
-smaller ones by the roots, and so fed on the leaves. The colossal
-breadth and weight of their hinder quarters, which can hardly be
-imagined without having been seen, become on this view, of obvious
-service, instead of being an incumbrance: their apparent clumsiness
-disappears. With their great tails and their huge heels firmly fixed
-like a tripod on the ground, they could freely exert the full force of
-their most powerful arms and great claws. Strongly rooted, indeed,
-must that tree have been, which could have resisted such force! The
-Mylodon, moreover, was furnished with a long extensile tongue like that
-of the giraffe, which, by one of those beautiful provisions of nature,
-thus reaches with the aid of its long neck its leafy food. I may
-remark, that in Abyssinia the elephant, according to Bruce, when it
-cannot reach with its proboscis the branches, deeply scores with its
-tusks the trunk of the tree, up and down and all round, till it is
-sufficiently weakened to be broken down.
-
-The beds including the above fossil remains, stand only from fifteen to
-twenty feet above the level of high-water; and hence the elevation of
-the land has been small (without there has been an intercalated period
-of subsidence, of which we have no evidence) since the great quadrupeds
-wandered over the surrounding plains; and the external features of the
-country must then have been very nearly the same as now. What, it may
-naturally be asked, was the character of the vegetation at that period;
-was the country as wretchedly sterile as it now is? As so many of the
-co-embedded shells are the same with those now living in the bay, I was
-at first inclined to think that the former vegetation was probably
-similar to the existing one; but this would have been an erroneous
-inference for some of these same shells live on the luxuriant coast of
-Brazil; and generally, the character of the inhabitants of the sea are
-useless as guides to judge of those on the land. Nevertheless, from
-the following considerations, I do not believe that the simple fact of
-many gigantic quadrupeds having lived on the plains round Bahia Blanca,
-is any sure guide that they formerly were clothed with a luxuriant
-vegetation: I have no doubt that the sterile country a little
-southward, near the Rio Negro, with its scattered thorny trees, would
-support many and large quadrupeds.
-
-
-That large animals require a luxuriant vegetation, has been a general
-assumption which has passed from one work to another; but I do not
-hesitate to say that it is completely false, and that it has vitiated
-the reasoning of geologists on some points of great interest in the
-ancient history of the world. The prejudice has probably been derived
-from India, and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants, noble
-forests, and impenetrable jungles, are associated together in every
-one's mind. If, however, we refer to any work of travels through the
-southern parts of Africa, we shall find allusions in almost every page
-either to the desert character of the country, or to the numbers of
-large animals inhabiting it. The same thing is rendered evident by the
-many engravings which have been published of various parts of the
-interior. When the Beagle was at Cape Town, I made an excursion of
-some days' length into the country, which at least was sufficient to
-render that which I had read more fully intelligible.
-
-Dr. Andrew Smith, who, at the head of his adventurous party, has lately
-succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn, informs me that, taking
-into consideration the whole of the southern part of Africa, there can
-be no doubt of its being a sterile country. On the southern and
-south-eastern coasts there are some fine forests, but with these
-exceptions, the traveller may pass for days together through open
-plains, covered by a poor and scanty vegetation. It is difficult to
-convey any accurate idea of degrees of comparative fertility; but it
-may be safely said that the amount of vegetation supported at any one
-time [5] by Great Britain, exceeds, perhaps even tenfold, the quantity
-on an equal area, in the interior parts of Southern Africa. The fact
-that bullock-waggons can travel in any direction, excepting near the
-coast, without more than occasionally half an hour's delay in cutting
-down bushes, gives, perhaps, a more definite notion of the scantiness
-of the vegetation. Now, if we look to the animals inhabiting these
-wide plains, we shall find their numbers extraordinarily great, and
-their bulk immense. We must enumerate the elephant, three species of
-rhinoceros, and probably, according to Dr. Smith, two others, the
-hippopotamus, the giraffe, the bos caffer--as large as a full-grown
-bull, and the elan--but little less, two zebras, and the quaccha, two
-gnus, and several antelopes even larger than these latter animals. It
-may be supposed that although the species are numerous, the individuals
-of each kind are few. By the kindness of Dr. Smith, I am enabled to
-show that the case is very different. He informs me, that in lat. 24
-degs., in one day's march with the bullock-waggons, he saw, without
-wandering to any great distance on either side, between one hundred and
-one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses, which belonged to three species:
-the same day he saw several herds of giraffes, amounting together to
-nearly a hundred; and that although no elephant was observed, yet they
-are found in this district. At the distance of a little more than one
-hour's march from their place of encampment on the previous night, his
-party actually killed at one spot eight hippopotamuses, and saw many
-more. In this same river there were likewise crocodiles. Of course it
-was a case quite extraordinary, to see so many great animals crowded
-together, but it evidently proves that they must exist in great
-numbers. Dr. Smith describes the country passed through that day, as
-"being thinly covered with grass, and bushes about four feet high, and
-still more thinly with mimosa-trees." The waggons were not prevented
-travelling in a nearly straight line.
-
-Besides these large animals, every one the least acquainted with the
-natural history of the Cape, has read of the herds of antelopes, which
-can be compared only with the flocks of migratory birds. The numbers
-indeed of the lion, panther, and hyaena, and the multitude of birds of
-prey, plainly speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds: one
-evening seven lions were counted at the same time prowling round Dr.
-Smith's encampment. As this able naturalist remarked to me, the
-carnage each day in Southern Africa must indeed be terrific! I confess
-it is truly surprising how such a number of animals can find support in
-a country producing so little food. The larger quadrupeds no doubt
-roam over wide tracts in search of it; and their food chiefly consists
-of underwood, which probably contains much nutriment in a small bulk.
-Dr. Smith also informs me that the vegetation has a rapid growth; no
-sooner is a part consumed, than its place is supplied by a fresh stock.
-There can be no doubt, however, that our ideas respecting the apparent
-amount of food necessary for the support of large quadrupeds are much
-exaggerated: it should have been remembered that the camel, an animal
-of no mean bulk, has always been considered as the emblem of the desert.
-
-The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation must
-necessarily be luxuriant, is the more remarkable, because the converse
-is far from true. Mr. Burchell observed to me that when entering
-Brazil, nothing struck him more forcibly than the splendour of the
-South American vegetation contrasted with that of South Africa,
-together with the absence of all large quadrupeds. In his Travels, [6]
-he has suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if
-there were sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest
-herbivorous quadrupeds of each country would be extremely curious. If
-we take on the one side, the elephant, [7] hippopotamus, giraffe, bos
-caffer, elan, certainly three, and probably five species of rhinoceros;
-and on the American side, two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the
-vicuna, peccari, capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys
-to complete the number), and then place these two groups alongside each
-other, it is not easy to conceive ranks more disproportionate in size.
-After the above facts, we are compelled to conclude, against anterior
-probability, [8] that among the mammalia there exists no close relation
-between the bulk of the species, and the _quantity_ of the vegetation,
-in the countries which they inhabit.
-
-With regard to the number of large quadrupeds, there certainly exists
-no quarter of the globe which will bear comparison with Southern
-Africa. After the different statements which have been given, the
-extremely desert character of that region will not be disputed. In the
-European division of the world, we must look back to the tertiary
-epochs, to find a condition of things among the mammalia, resembling
-that now existing at the Cape of Good Hope. Those tertiary epochs,
-which we are apt to consider as abounding to an astonishing degree with
-large animals, because we find the remains of many ages accumulated at
-certain spots, could hardly boast of more large quadrupeds than
-Southern Africa does at present. If we speculate on the condition of
-the vegetation during these epochs we are at least bound so far to
-consider existing analogies, as not to urge as absolutely necessary a
-luxuriant vegetation, when we see a state of things so totally
-different at the Cape of Good Hope.
-
-We know [9] that the extreme regions of North America, many degrees
-beyond the limit where the ground at the depth of a few feet remains
-perpetually congealed, are covered by forests of large and tall trees.
-In a like manner, in Siberia, we have woods of birch, fir, aspen, and
-larch, growing in a latitude [10] (64 degs.) where the mean temperature
-of the air falls below the freezing point, and where the earth is so
-completely frozen, that the carcass of an animal embedded in it is
-perfectly preserved. With these facts we must grant, as far as
-_quantity alone_ of vegetation is concerned, that the great quadrupeds
-of the later tertiary epochs might, in most parts of Northern Europe
-and Asia, have lived on the spots where their remains are now found. I
-do not here speak of the kind of vegetation necessary for their
-support; because, as there is evidence of physical changes, and as the
-animals have become extinct, so may we suppose that the species of
-plants have likewise been changed.
-
-These remarks, I may be permitted to add, directly bear on the case of
-the Siberian animals preserved in ice. The firm conviction of the
-necessity of a vegetation possessing a character of tropical
-luxuriance, to support such large animals, and the impossibility of
-reconciling this with the proximity of perpetual congelation, was one
-chief cause of the several theories of sudden revolutions of climate,
-and of overwhelming catastrophes, which were invented to account for
-their entombment. I am far from supposing that the climate has not
-changed since the period when those animals lived, which now lie buried
-in the ice. At present I only wish to show, that as far as _quantity_
-of food _alone_ is concerned, the ancient rhinoceroses might have
-roamed over the _steppes_ of central Siberia (the northern parts
-probably being under water) even in their present condition, as well as
-the living rhinoceroses and elephants over the _Karros_ of Southern
-Africa.
-
-
-I will now give an account of the habits of some of the more
-interesting birds which are common on the wild plains of Northern
-Patagonia: and first for the largest, or South American ostrich. The
-ordinary habits of the ostrich are familiar to every one. They live on
-vegetable matter, such as roots and grass; but at Bahia Blanca I have
-repeatedly seen three or four come down at low water to the extensive
-mud-banks which are then dry, for the sake, as the Gauchos say, of
-feeding on small fish. Although the ostrich in its habits is so shy,
-wary, and solitary, and although so fleet in its pace, it is caught
-without much difficulty by the Indian or Gaucho armed with the bolas.
-When several horsemen appear in a semicircle, it becomes confounded,
-and does not know which way to escape. They generally prefer running
-against the wind; yet at the first start they expand their wings, and
-like a vessel make all sail. On one fine hot day I saw several
-ostriches enter a bed of tall rushes, where they squatted concealed,
-till quite closely approached. It is not generally known that ostriches
-readily take to the water. Mr. King informs me that at the Bay of San
-Blas, and at Port Valdes in Patagonia, he saw these birds swimming
-several times from island to island. They ran into the water both when
-driven down to a point, and likewise of their own accord when not
-frightened: the distance crossed was about two hundred yards. When
-swimming, very little of their bodies appear above water; their necks
-are extended a little forward, and their progress is slow. On two
-occasions I saw some ostriches swimming across the Santa Cruz river,
-where its course was about four hundred yards wide, and the stream
-rapid. Captain Sturt, [11] when descending the Murrumbidgee, in
-Australia, saw two emus in the act of swimming.
-
-The inhabitants of the country readily distinguish, even at a distance,
-the cock bird from the hen. The former is larger and darker-coloured,
-[12] and has a bigger head. The ostrich, I believe the cock, emits a
-singular, deep-toned, hissing note: when first I heard it, standing in
-the midst of some sand-hillocks, I thought it was made by some wild
-beast, for it is a sound that one cannot tell whence it comes, or from
-how far distant. When we were at Bahia Blanca in the months of
-September and October, the eggs, in extraordinary numbers, were found
-all over the country. They lie either scattered and single, in which
-case they are never hatched, and are called by the Spaniards huachos;
-or they are collected together into a shallow excavation, which forms
-the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three contained
-twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven. In one day's hunting
-on horseback sixty-four eggs were found; forty-four of these were in
-two nests, and the remaining twenty, scattered huachos. The Gauchos
-unanimously affirm, and there is no reason to doubt their statement,
-that the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for some time afterwards
-accompanies the young. The cock when on the nest lies very close; I
-have myself almost ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times
-they are occasionally fierce, and even dangerous, and that they have
-been known to attack a man on horseback, trying to kick and leap on
-him. My informer pointed out to me an old man, whom he had seen much
-terrified by one chasing him. I observe in Burchell's travels in South
-Africa, that he remarks, "Having killed a male ostrich, and the
-feathers being dirty, it was said by the Hottentots to be a nest bird."
-I understand that the male emu in the Zoological Gardens takes charge
-of the nest: this habit, therefore, is common to the family.
-
-The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females lay in one nest. I
-have been positively told that four or five hen birds have been watched
-to go in the middle of the day, one after the other, to the same nest.
-I may add, also, that it is believed in Africa, that two or more
-females lay in one nest. [13] Although this habit at first appears very
-strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple manner. The
-number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty to forty, and even to
-fifty; and according to Azara, some times to seventy or eighty. Now,
-although it is most probable, from the number of eggs found in one
-district being so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent
-birds, and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that she
-may in the course of the season lay a large number, yet the time
-required must be very long. Azara states, [14] that a female in a
-state of domestication laid seventeen eggs, each at the interval of
-three days one from another. If the hen was obliged to hatch her own
-eggs, before the last was laid the first probably would be addled; but
-if each laid a few eggs at successive periods, in different nests, and
-several hens, as is stated to be the case, combined together, then the
-eggs in one collection would be nearly of the same age. If the number
-of eggs in one of these nests is, as I believe, not greater on an
-average than the number laid by one female in the season, then there
-must be as many nests as females, and each cock bird will have its fair
-share of the labour of incubation; and that during a period when the
-females probably could not sit, from not having finished laying. [15] I
-have before mentioned the great numbers of huachos, or deserted eggs;
-so that in one day's hunting twenty were found in this state. It
-appears odd that so many should be wasted. Does it not arise from the
-difficulty of several females associating together, and finding a male
-ready to undertake the office of incubation? It is evident that there
-must at first be some degree of association between at least two
-females; otherwise the eggs would remain scattered over the wide plain,
-at distances far too great to allow of the male collecting them into
-one nest: some authors have believed that the scattered eggs were
-deposited for the young birds to feed on. This can hardly be the case
-in America, because the huachos, although often found addled and
-putrid, are generally whole.
-
-When at the Rio Negro in Northern Patagonia, I repeatedly heard the
-Gauchos talking of a very rare bird which they called Avestruz Petise.
-They described it as being less than the common ostrich (which is there
-abundant), but with a very close general resemblance. They said its
-colour was dark and mottled, and that its legs were shorter, and
-feathered lower down than those of the common ostrich. It is more
-easily caught by the bolas than the other species. The few inhabitants
-who had seen both kinds, affirmed they could distinguish them apart
-from a long distance. The eggs of the small species appeared, however,
-more generally known; and it was remarked, with surprise, that they
-were very little less than those of the Rhea, but of a slightly
-different form, and with a tinge of pale blue. This species occurs
-most rarely on the plains bordering the Rio Negro; but about a degree
-and a half further south they are tolerably abundant. When at Port
-Desire, in Patagonia (lat. 48 degs.), Mr. Martens shot an ostrich; and
-I looked at it, forgetting at the moment, in the most unaccountable
-manner, the whole subject of the Petises, and thought it was a not
-full-grown bird of the common sort. It was cooked and eaten before my
-memory returned. Fortunately the head, neck, legs, wings, many of the
-larger feathers, and a large part of the skin, had been preserved; and
-from these a very nearly perfect specimen has been put together, and is
-now exhibited in the museum of the Zoological Society. Mr. Gould, in
-describing this new species, has done me the honour of calling it after
-my name.
-
-Among the Patagonian Indians in the Strait of Magellan, we found a half
-Indian, who had lived some years with the tribe, but had been born in
-the northern provinces. I asked him if he had ever heard of the
-Avestruz Petise? He answered by saying, "Why, there are none others in
-these southern countries." He informed me that the number of eggs in
-the nest of the petise is considerably less than in that of the other
-kind, namely, not more than fifteen on an average, but he asserted that
-more than one female deposited them. At Santa Cruz we saw several of
-these birds. They were excessively wary: I think they could see a
-person approaching when too far off to be distinguished themselves. In
-ascending the river few were seen; but in our quiet and rapid descent,
-many, in pairs and by fours or fives, were observed. It was remarked
-that this bird did not expand its wings, when first starting at full
-speed, after the manner of the northern kind. In conclusion I may
-observe, that the Struthio rhea inhabits the country of La Plata as far
-as a little south of the Rio Negro in lat. 41 degs., and that the
-Struthio Darwinii takes its place in Southern Patagonia; the part about
-the Rio Negro being neutral territory. M. A. d'Orbigny, [16] when at
-the Rio Negro, made great exertions to procure this bird, but never had
-the good fortune to succeed. Dobrizhoffer [17] long ago was aware of
-there being two kinds of ostriches, he says, "You must know, moreover,
-that Emus differ in size and habits in different tracts of land; for
-those that inhabit the plains of Buenos Ayres and Tucuman are larger,
-and have black, white and grey feathers; those near to the Strait of
-Magellan are smaller and more beautiful, for their white feathers are
-tipped with black at the extremity, and their black ones in like manner
-terminate in white."
-
-A very singular little bird, Tinochorus rumicivorus, is here common: in
-its habits and general appearance, it nearly equally partakes of the
-characters, different as they are, of the quail and snipe. The
-Tinochorus is found in the whole of southern South America, wherever
-there are sterile plains, or open dry pasture land. It frequents in
-pairs or small flocks the most desolate places, where scarcely another
-living creature can exist. Upon being approached they squat close, and
-then are very difficult to be distinguished from the ground. When
-feeding they walk rather slowly, with their legs wide apart. They dust
-themselves in roads and sandy places, and frequent particular spots,
-where they may be found day after day: like partridges, they take wing
-in a flock. In all these respects, in the muscular gizzard adapted for
-vegetable food, in the arched beak and fleshy nostrils, short legs and
-form of foot, the Tinochorus has a close affinity with quails. But as
-soon as the bird is seen flying, its whole appearance changes; the long
-pointed wings, so different from those in the gallinaceous order, the
-irregular manner of flight, and plaintive cry uttered at the moment of
-rising, recall the idea of a snipe. The sportsmen of the Beagle
-unanimously called it the short-billed snipe. To this genus, or rather
-to the family of the Waders, its skeleton shows that it is really
-related.
-
-The Tinochorus is closely related to some other South American birds.
-Two species of the genus Attagis are in almost every respect ptarmigans
-in their habits; one lives in Tierra del Fuego, above the limits of the
-forest land; and the other just beneath the snow-line on the Cordillera
-of Central Chile. A bird of another closely allied genus, Chionis
-alba, is an inhabitant of the antarctic regions; it feeds on sea-weed
-and shells on the tidal rocks. Although not web footed, from some
-unaccountable habit, it is frequently met with far out at sea. This
-small family of birds is one of those which, from its varied relations
-to other families, although at present offering only difficulties to
-the systematic naturalist, ultimately may assist in revealing the grand
-scheme, common to the present and past ages, on which organized beings
-have been created.
-
-The genus Furnarius contains several species, all small birds, living
-on the ground, and inhabiting open dry countries. In structure they
-cannot be compared to any European form. Ornithologists have generally
-included them among the creepers, although opposed to that family in
-every habit. The best known species is the common oven-bird of La
-Plata, the Casara or housemaker of the Spaniards. The nest, whence it
-takes its name, is placed in the most exposed situations, as on the top
-of a post, a bare rock, or on a cactus. It is composed of mud and bits
-of straw, and has strong thick walls: in shape it precisely resembles
-an oven, or depressed beehive. The opening is large and arched, and
-directly in front, within the nest, there is a partition, which reaches
-nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage or antechamber to the true
-nest.
-
-Another and smaller species of Furnarius (F. cunicularius), resembles
-the oven-bird in the general reddish tint of its plumage, in a peculiar
-shrill reiterated cry, and in an odd manner of running by starts. From
-its affinity, the Spaniards call it Casarita (or little housebuilder),
-although its nidification is quite different. The Casarita builds its
-nest at the bottom of a narrow cylindrical hole, which is said to
-extend horizontally to nearly six feet under ground. Several of the
-country people told me, that when boys, they had attempted to dig out
-the nest, but had scarcely ever succeeded in getting to the end of the
-passage. The bird chooses any low bank of firm sandy soil by the side
-of a road or stream. Here (at Bahia Blanca) the walls round the houses
-are built of hardened mud, and I noticed that one, which enclosed a
-courtyard where I lodged, was bored through by round holes in a score
-of places. On asking the owner the cause of this he bitterly
-complained of the little casarita, several of which I afterwards
-observed at work. It is rather curious to find how incapable these
-birds must be of acquiring any notion of thickness, for although they
-were constantly flitting over the low wall, they continued vainly to
-bore through it, thinking it an excellent bank for their nests. I do
-not doubt that each bird, as often as it came to daylight on the
-opposite side, was greatly surprised at the marvellous fact.
-
-I have already mentioned nearly all the mammalia common in this
-country. Of armadilloes three species occur namely, the Dasypus
-minutus or _pichy_, the D. villosus or _peludo_, and the _apar_. The
-first extends ten degrees further south than any other kind; a fourth
-species, the _Mulita_, does not come as far south as Bahia Blanca. The
-four species have nearly similar habits; the _peludo_, however, is
-nocturnal, while the others wander by day over the open plains, feeding
-on beetles, larvae, roots, and even small snakes. The _apar_, commonly
-called _mataco_, is remarkable by having only three moveable bands; the
-rest of its tesselated covering being nearly inflexible. It has the
-power of rolling itself into a perfect sphere, like one kind of English
-woodlouse. In this state it is safe from the attack of dogs; for the
-dog not being able to take the whole in its mouth, tries to bite one
-side, and the ball slips away. The smooth hard covering of the
-_mataco_ offers a better defence than the sharp spines of the hedgehog.
-The _pichy_ prefers a very dry soil; and the sand-dunes near the coast,
-where for many months it can never taste water, is its favourite
-resort: it often tries to escape notice, by squatting close to the
-ground. In the course of a day's ride, near Bahia Blanca, several were
-generally met with. The instant one was perceived, it was necessary,
-in order to catch it, almost to tumble off one's horse; for in soft
-soil the animal burrowed so quickly, that its hinder quarters would
-almost disappear before one could alight. It seems almost a pity to
-kill such nice little animals, for as a Gaucho said, while sharpening
-his knife on the back of one, "Son tan mansos" (they are so quiet).
-
-Of reptiles there are many kinds: one snake (a Trigonocephalus, or
-Cophias [18]), from the size of the poison channel in its fangs, must
-be very deadly. Cuvier, in opposition to some other naturalists, makes
-this a sub-genus of the rattlesnake, and intermediate between it and
-the viper. In confirmation of this opinion, I observed a fact, which
-appears to me very curious and instructive, as showing how every
-character, even though it may be in some degree independent of
-structure, has a tendency to vary by slow degrees. The extremity of the
-tail of this snake is terminated by a point, which is very slightly
-enlarged; and as the animal glides along, it constantly vibrates the
-last inch; and this part striking against the dry grass and brushwood,
-produces a rattling noise, which can be distinctly heard at the
-distance of six feet. As often as the animal was irritated or
-surprised, its tail was shaken; and the vibrations were extremely
-rapid. Even as long as the body retained its irritability, a tendency
-to this habitual movement was evident. This Trigonocephalus has,
-therefore, in some respects the structure of a viper, with the habits
-of a rattlesnake: the noise, however, being produced by a simpler
-device. The expression of this snake's face was hideous and fierce;
-the pupil consisted of a vertical slit in a mottled and coppery iris;
-the jaws were broad at the base, and the nose terminated in a
-triangular projection. I do not think I ever saw anything more ugly,
-excepting, perhaps, some of the vampire bats. I imagine this repulsive
-aspect originates from the features being placed in positions, with
-respect to each other, somewhat proportional to those of the human
-face; and thus we obtain a scale of hideousness.
-
-Amongst the Batrachian reptiles, I found only one little toad
-(Phryniscus nigricans), which was most singular from its colour. If we
-imagine, first, that it had been steeped in the blackest ink, and then,
-when dry, allowed to crawl over a board, freshly painted with the
-brightest vermilion, so as to colour the soles of its feet and parts of
-its stomach, a good idea of its appearance will be gained. If it had
-been an unnamed species, surely it ought to have been called
-_Diabolicus_, for it is a fit toad to preach in the ear of Eve. Instead
-of being nocturnal in its habits, as other toads are, and living in
-damp obscure recesses, it crawls during the heat of the day about the
-dry sand-hillocks and arid plains, where not a single drop of water can
-be found. It must necessarily depend on the dew for its moisture; and
-this probably is absorbed by the skin, for it is known, that these
-reptiles possess great powers of cutaneous absorption. At Maldonado, I
-found one in a situation nearly as dry as at Bahia Blanca, and thinking
-to give it a great treat, carried it to a pool of water; not only was
-the little animal unable to swim, but I think without help it would
-soon have been drowned. Of lizards there were many kinds, but only one
-(Proctotretus multimaculatus) remarkable from its habits. It lives on
-the bare sand near the sea coast, and from its mottled colour, the
-brownish scales being speckled with white, yellowish red, and dirty
-blue, can hardly be distinguished from the surrounding surface. When
-frightened, it attempts to avoid discovery by feigning death, with
-outstretched legs, depressed body, and closed eyes: if further
-molested, it buries itself with great quickness in the loose sand. This
-lizard, from its flattened body and short legs, cannot run quickly.
-
-I will here add a few remarks on the hybernation of animals in this
-part of South America. When we first arrived at Bahia Blanca,
-September 7th, 1832, we thought nature had granted scarcely a living
-creature to this sandy and dry country. By digging, however, in the
-ground, several insects, large spiders, and lizards were found in a
-half-torpid state. On the 15th, a few animals began to appear, and by
-the 18th (three days from the equinox), everything announced the
-commencement of spring. The plains were ornamented by the flowers of a
-pink wood-sorrel, wild peas, cenotherae, and geraniums; and the birds
-began to lay their eggs. Numerous Lamellicorn and Heteromerous
-insects, the latter remarkable for their deeply sculptured bodies, were
-slowly crawling about; while the lizard tribe, the constant inhabitants
-of a sandy soil, darted about in every direction. During the first
-eleven days, whilst nature was dormant, the mean temperature taken from
-observations made every two hours on board the Beagle, was 51 degs.;
-and in the middle of the day the thermometer seldom ranged above 55
-degs. On the eleven succeeding days, in which all living things became
-so animated, the mean was 58 degs., and the range in the middle of the
-day between 60 and 70 degs. Here, then, an increase of seven degrees
-in mean temperature, but a greater one of extreme heat, was sufficient
-to awake the functions of life. At Monte Video, from which we had just
-before sailed, in the twenty-three days included between the 26th of
-July and the 19th of August, the mean temperature from 276 observations
-was 58.4 degs.; the mean hottest day being 65.5 degs., and the coldest
-46 degs. The lowest point to which the thermometer fell was 41.5
-degs., and occasionally in the middle of the day it rose to 69 or 70
-degs. Yet with this high temperature, almost every beetle, several
-genera of spiders, snails, and land-shells, toads and lizards were all
-lying torpid beneath stones. But we have seen that at Bahia Blanca,
-which is four degrees southward and therefore with a climate only a
-very little colder, this same temperature with a rather less extreme
-heat, was sufficient to awake all orders of animated beings. This shows
-how nicely the stimulus required to arouse hybernating animals is
-governed by the usual climate of the district, and not by the absolute
-heat. It is well known that within the tropics, the hybernation, or
-more properly aestivation, of animals is determined not by the
-temperature, but by the times of drought. Near Rio de Janeiro, I was
-at first surprised to observe, that, a few days after some little
-depressions had been filled with water, they were peopled by numerous
-full-grown shells and beetles, which must have been lying dormant.
-Humboldt has related the strange accident of a hovel having been
-erected over a spot where a young crocodile lay buried in the hardened
-mud. He adds, "The Indians often find enormous boas, which they call
-Uji or water serpents, in the same lethargic state. To reanimate them,
-they must be irritated or wetted with water."
-
-I will only mention one other animal, a zoophyte (I believe Virgularia
-Patagonica), a kind of sea-pen. It consists of a thin, straight,
-fleshy stem, with alternate rows of polypi on each side, and
-surrounding an elastic stony axis, varying in length from eight inches
-to two feet. The stem at one extremity is truncate, but at the other
-is terminated by a vermiform fleshy appendage. The stony axis which
-gives strength to the stem may be traced at this extremity into a mere
-vessel filled with granular matter. At low water hundreds of these
-zoophytes might be seen, projecting like stubble, with the truncate end
-upwards, a few inches above the surface of the muddy sand. When
-touched or pulled they suddenly drew themselves in with force, so as
-nearly or quite to disappear. By this action, the highly elastic axis
-must be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly
-curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the zoophyte
-is enabled to rise again through the mud. Each polypus, though closely
-united to its brethren, has a distinct mouth, body, and tentacula. Of
-these polypi, in a large specimen, there must be many thousands; yet we
-see that they act by one movement: they have also one central axis
-connected with a system of obscure circulation, and the ova are
-produced in an organ distinct from the separate individuals. [19] Well
-may one be allowed to ask, what is an individual? It is always
-interesting to discover the foundation of the strange tales of the old
-voyagers; and I have no doubt but that the habits of this Virgularia
-explain one such case. Captain Lancaster, in his voyage [20] in 1601,
-narrates that on the sea-sands of the Island of Sombrero, in the East
-Indies, he "found a small twig growing up like a young tree, and on
-offering to pluck it up it shrinks down to the ground, and sinks,
-unless held very hard. On being plucked up, a great worm is found to
-be its root, and as the tree groweth in greatness, so doth the worm
-diminish, and as soon as the worm is entirely turned into a tree it
-rooteth in the earth, and so becomes great. This transformation is one
-of the strangest wonders that I saw in all my travels: for if this tree
-is plucked up, while young, and the leaves and bark stripped off, it
-becomes a hard stone when dry, much like white coral: thus is this worm
-twice transformed into different natures. Of these we gathered and
-brought home many."
-
-
-During my stay at Bahia Blanca, while waiting for the Beagle, the place
-was in a constant state of excitement, from rumours of wars and
-victories, between the troops of Rosas and the wild Indians. One day
-an account came that a small party forming one of the postas on the
-line to Buenos Ayres, had been found all murdered. The next day three
-hundred men arrived from the Colorado, under the command of Commandant
-Miranda. A large portion of these men were Indians (mansos, or tame),
-belonging to the tribe of the Cacique Bernantio. They passed the night
-here; and it was impossible to conceive anything more wild and savage
-than the scene of their bivouac. Some drank till they were
-intoxicated; others swallowed the steaming blood of the cattle
-slaughtered for their suppers, and then, being sick from drunkenness,
-they cast it up again, and were besmeared with filth and gore.
-
-Nam simul expletus dapibus, vinoque sepultus Cervicem inflexam posuit,
-jacuitque per antrum Immensus, saniem eructans, ac frusta cruenta Per
-somnum commixta mero.
-
-In the morning they started for the scene of the murder, with orders to
-follow the "rastro," or track, even if it led them to Chile. We
-subsequently heard that the wild Indians had escaped into the great
-Pampas, and from some cause the track had been missed. One glance at
-the rastro tells these people a whole history. Supposing they examine
-the track of a thousand horses, they will soon guess the number of
-mounted ones by seeing how many have cantered; by the depth of the
-other impressions, whether any horses were loaded with cargoes; by the
-irregularity of the footsteps, how far tired; by the manner in which
-the food has been cooked, whether the pursued travelled in haste; by
-the general appearance, how long it has been since they passed. They
-consider a rastro of ten days or a fortnight, quite recent enough to be
-hunted out. We also heard that Miranda struck from the west end of the
-Sierra Ventana, in a direct line to the island of Cholechel, situated
-seventy leagues up the Rio Negro. This is a distance of between two
-and three hundred miles, through a country completely unknown. What
-other troops in the world are so independent? With the sun for their
-guide, mare's flesh for food, their saddle-cloths for beds,--as long as
-there is a little water, these men would penetrate to the end of the
-world.
-
-A few days afterwards I saw another troop of these banditti-like
-soldiers start on an expedition against a tribe of Indians at the small
-Salinas, who had been betrayed by a prisoner cacique. The Spaniard who
-brought the orders for this expedition was a very intelligent man. He
-gave me an account of the last engagement at which he was present. Some
-Indians, who had been taken prisoners, gave information of a tribe
-living north of the Colorado. Two hundred soldiers were sent; and they
-first discovered the Indians by a cloud of dust from their horses'
-feet, as they chanced to be travelling. The country was mountainous
-and wild, and it must have been far in the interior, for the Cordillera
-were in sight. The Indians, men, women, and children, were about one
-hundred and ten in number, and they were nearly all taken or killed,
-for the soldiers sabre every man. The Indians are now so terrified
-that they offer no resistance in a body, but each flies, neglecting
-even his wife and children; but when overtaken, like wild animals, they
-fight against any number to the last moment. One dying Indian seized
-with his teeth the thumb of his adversary, and allowed his own eye to
-be forced out sooner than relinquish his hold. Another, who was
-wounded, feigned death, keeping a knife ready to strike one more fatal
-blow. My informer said, when he was pursuing an Indian, the man cried
-out for mercy, at the same time that he was covertly loosing the bolas
-from his waist, meaning to whirl it round his head and so strike his
-pursuer. "I however struck him with my sabre to the ground, and then
-got off my horse, and cut his throat with my knife." This is a dark
-picture; but how much more shocking is the unquestionable fact, that
-all the women who appear above twenty years old are massacred in cold
-blood! When I exclaimed that this appeared rather inhuman, he answered,
-"Why, what can be done? they breed so!"
-
-Every one here is fully convinced that this is the most just war,
-because it is against barbarians. Who would believe in this age that
-such atrocities could be committed in a Christian civilized country?
-The children of the Indians are saved, to be sold or given away as
-servants, or rather slaves for as long a time as the owners can make
-them believe themselves slaves; but I believe in their treatment there
-is little to complain of.
-
-In the battle four men ran away together. They were pursued, one was
-killed, and the other three were taken alive. They turned out to be
-messengers or ambassadors from a large body of Indians, united in the
-common cause of defence, near the Cordillera. The tribe to which they
-had been sent was on the point of holding a grand council, the feast of
-mare's flesh was ready, and the dance prepared: in the morning the
-ambassadors were to have returned to the Cordillera. They were
-remarkably fine men, very fair, above six feet high, and all under
-thirty years of age. The three survivors of course possessed very
-valuable information and to extort this they were placed in a line. The
-two first being questioned, answered, "No se" (I do not know), and were
-one after the other shot. The third also said "No se;" adding, "Fire,
-I am a man, and can die!" Not one syllable would they breathe to injure
-the united cause of their country! The conduct of the above-mentioned
-cacique was very different; he saved his life by betraying the intended
-plan of warfare, and the point of union in the Andes. It was believed
-that there were already six or seven hundred Indians together, and that
-in summer their numbers would be doubled. Ambassadors were to have been
-sent to the Indians at the small Salinas, near Bahia Blanca, whom I
-have mentioned that this same cacique had betrayed. The communication,
-therefore, between the Indians, extends from the Cordillera to the
-coast of the Atlantic.
-
-General Rosas's plan is to kill all stragglers, and having driven the
-remainder to a common point, to attack them in a body, in the summer,
-with the assistance of the Chilenos. This operation is to be repeated
-for three successive years. I imagine the summer is chosen as the time
-for the main attack, because the plains are then without water, and the
-Indians can only travel in particular directions. The escape of the
-Indians to the south of the Rio Negro, where in such a vast unknown
-country they would be safe, is prevented by a treaty with the
-Tehuelches to this effect;--that Rosas pays them so much to slaughter
-every Indian who passes to the south of the river, but if they fail in
-so doing, they themselves are to be exterminated. The war is waged
-chiefly against the Indians near the Cordillera; for many of the tribes
-on this eastern side are fighting with Rosas. The general, however,
-like Lord Chesterfield, thinking that his friends may in a future day
-become his enemies, always places them in the front ranks, so that
-their numbers may be thinned. Since leaving South America we have
-heard that this war of extermination completely failed.
-
-Among the captive girls taken in the same engagement, there were two
-very pretty Spanish ones, who had been carried away by the Indians when
-young, and could now only speak the Indian tongue. From their account
-they must have come from Salta, a distance in a straight line of nearly
-one thousand miles. This gives one a grand idea of the immense
-territory over which the Indians roam: yet, great as it is, I think
-there will not, in another half-century, be a wild Indian northward of
-the Rio Negro. The warfare is too bloody to last; the Christians
-killing every Indian, and the Indians doing the same by the Christians.
-It is melancholy to trace how the Indians have given way before the
-Spanish invaders. Schirdel [21] says that in 1535, when Buenos Ayres
-was founded, there were villages containing two and three thousand
-inhabitants. Even in Falconer's time (1750) the Indians made inroads
-as far as Luxan, Areco, and Arrecife, but now they are driven beyond
-the Salado. Not only have whole tribes been exterminated, but the
-remaining Indians have become more barbarous: instead of living in
-large villages, and being employed in the arts of fishing, as well as
-of the chase, they now wander about the open plains, without home or
-fixed occupation.
-
-I heard also some account of an engagement which took place, a few
-weeks previously to the one mentioned, at Cholechel. This is a very
-important station on account of being a pass for horses; and it was, in
-consequence, for some time the head-quarters of a division of the army.
-When the troops first arrived there they found a tribe of Indians, of
-whom they killed twenty or thirty. The cacique escaped in a manner
-which astonished every one. The chief Indians always have one or two
-picked horses, which they keep ready for any urgent occasion. On one
-of these, an old white horse, the cacique sprung, taking with him his
-little son. The horse had neither saddle nor bridle. To avoid the
-shots, the Indian rode in the peculiar method of his nation namely,
-with an arm round the horse's neck, and one leg only on its back. Thus
-hanging on one side, he was seen patting the horse's head, and talking
-to him. The pursuers urged every effort in the chase; the Commandant
-three times changed his horse, but all in vain. The old Indian father
-and his son escaped, and were free. What a fine picture one can form
-in one's mind,--the naked, bronze-like figure of the old man with his
-little boy, riding like a Mazeppa on the white horse, thus leaving far
-behind him the host of his pursuers!
-
-I saw one day a soldier striking fire with a piece of flint, which I
-immediately recognised as having been a part of the head of an arrow.
-He told me it was found near the island of Cholechel, and that they are
-frequently picked up there. It was between two and three inches long,
-and therefore twice as large as those now used in Tierra del Fuego: it
-was made of opaque cream-coloured flint, but the point and barbs had
-been intentionally broken off. It is well known that no Pampas Indians
-now use bows and arrows. I believe a small tribe in Banda Oriental
-must be excepted; but they are widely separated from the Pampas
-Indians, and border close on those tribes that inhabit the forest, and
-live on foot. It appears, therefore, that these arrow-heads are
-antiquarian [22] relics of the Indians, before the great change in
-habits consequent on the introduction of the horse into South America.
-
-[1] Since this was written, M. Alcide d'Orbingy has examined these
-shells, and pronounces them all to be recent.
-
-[2] M. Aug. Bravard has described, in a Spanish work ('Observaciones
-Geologicas,' 1857), this district, and he believes that the bones of
-the extinct mammals were washed out of the underlying Pampean deposit,
-and subsequently became embedded with the still existing shells; but I
-am not convinced by his remarks. M. Bravard believes that the whole
-enormous Pampean deposit is a sub-aerial formation, like sand-dunes:
-this seems to me to be an untenable doctrine.
-
-[3] Principles of Geology, vol. iv. p. 40.
-
-[4] This theory was first developed in the Zoology of the Voyage of the
-Beagle, and subsequently in Professor Owen's Memoir on Mylodon robustus.
-
-[5] I mean this to exclude the total amount which may have been
-successively produced and consumed during a given period.
-
-[6] Travels in the Interior of South Africa, vol. ii. p. 207
-
-[7] The elephant which was killed at Exeter Change was estimated (being
-partly weighed) at five tons and a half. The elephant actress, as I was
-informed, weighed one ton less; so that we may take five as the average
-of a full-grown elephant. I was told at the Surry Gardens, that a
-hippopotamus which was sent to England cut up into pieces was estimated
-at three tons and a half; we will call it three. From these premises
-we may give three tons and a half to each of the five rhinoceroses;
-perhaps a ton to the giraffe, and half to the bos caffer as well as to
-the elan (a large ox weighs from 1200 to 1500 pounds). This will give
-an average (from the above estimates) of 2.7 of a ton for the ten
-largest herbivorous animals of Southern Africa. In South America,
-allowing 1200 pounds for the two tapirs together, 550 for the guanaco
-and vicuna, 500 for three deer, 300 for the capybara, peccari, and a
-monkey, we shall have an average of 250 pounds, which I believe is
-overstating the result. The ratio will therefore be as 6048 to 250, or
-24 to 1, for the ten largest animals from the two continents.
-
-[8] If we suppose the case of the discovery of a skeleton of a
-Greenland whale in a fossil state, not a single cetaceous animal being
-known to exist, what naturalist would have ventured conjecture on the
-possibility of a carcass so gigantic being supported on the minute
-crustacea and mollusca living in the frozen seas of the extreme North?
-
-[9] See Zoological Remarks to Capt. Back's Expedition, by Dr.
-Richardson. He says, "The subsoil north of latitude 56 degs. is
-perpetually frozen, the thaw on the coast not penetrating above three
-feet, and at Bear Lake, in latitude 64 degs., not more than twenty
-inches. The frozen substratum does not of itself destroy vegetation,
-for forests flourish on the surface, at a distance from the coast."
-
-[10] See Humboldt, Fragments Asiatiques, p. 386: Barton's Geography of
-Plants: and Malte Brun. In the latter work it is said that the limit
-of the growth of trees in Siberia may be drawn under the parallel of 70
-degs.
-
-[11] Sturt's Travels, vol. ii. p. 74.
-
-[12] A Gaucho assured me that he had once seen a snow-white or Albino
-variety, and that it was a most beautiful bird.
-
-[13] Burchell's Travels, vol. i. p. 280.
-
-[14] Azara, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[15] Lichtenstein, however, asserts (Travels, vol. ii. p. 25) that the
-hens begin sitting when they have laid ten or twelve eggs; and that
-they continue laying, I presume, in another nest. This appears to me
-very improbable. He asserts that four or five hens associate for
-incubation with one cock, who sits only at night.
-
-[16] When at the Rio Negro, we heard much of the indefatigable labours
-of this naturalist. M. Alcide d'Orbigny, during the years 1825 to
-1833, traversed several large portions of South America, and has made a
-collection, and is now publishing the results on a scale of
-magnificence, which at once places himself in the list of American
-travellers second only to Humboldt.
-
-[17] Account of the Abipones, A.D. 1749, vol. i. (English Translation)
-p. 314
-
-[18] M. Bibron calls it T. crepitans.
-
-
-[19] The cavities leading from the fleshy compartments of the
-extremity, were filled with a yellow pulpy matter, which, examined
-under a microscope, presented an extraordinary appearance. The mass
-consisted of rounded, semi-transparent, irregular grains, aggregated
-together into particles of various sizes. All such particles, and the
-separate grains, possessed the power of rapid movement; generally
-revolving around different axes, but sometimes progressive. The
-movement was visible with a very weak power, but even with the highest
-its cause could not be perceived. It was very different from the
-circulation of the fluid in the elastic bag, containing the thin
-extremity of the axis. On other occasions, when dissecting small
-marine animals beneath the microscope, I have seen particles of pulpy
-matter, some of large size, as soon as they were disengaged, commence
-revolving. I have imagined, I know not with how much truth, that this
-granulo-pulpy matter was in process of being converted into ova.
-Certainly in this zoophyte such appeared to be the case.
-
-[20] Kerr's Collection of Voyages, vol. viii. p. 119.
-
-[21] Purchas's Collection of Voyages. I believe the date was really
-1537.
-
-[22] Azara has even doubted whether the Pampas Indians ever used bows.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
-
-Set out for Buenos Ayres--Rio Sauce--Sierra Ventana--Third
-Posta--Driving Horses--Bolas--Partridges and Foxes--Features of the
-Country--Long-legged Plover--Teru-tero--Hail-storm--Natural Enclosures
-in the Sierra Tapalguen--Flesh of Puma--Meat Diet--Guardia del
-Monte--Effects of Cattle on the Vegetation--Cardoon--Buenos
-Ayres--Corral where Cattle are Slaughtered.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 18th.--I hired a Gaucho to accompany me on my ride to Buenos
-Ayres, though with some difficulty, as the father of one man was afraid
-to let him go, and another, who seemed willing, was described to me as
-so fearful, that I was afraid to take him, for I was told that even if
-he saw an ostrich at a distance, he would mistake it for an Indian, and
-would fly like the wind away. The distance to Buenos Ayres is about
-four hundred miles, and nearly the whole way through an uninhabited
-country. We started early in the morning; ascending a few hundred feet
-from the basin of green turf on which Bahia Blanca stands, we entered
-on a wide desolate plain. It consists of a crumbling
-argillaceo-calcareous rock, which, from the dry nature of the climate,
-supports only scattered tufts of withered grass, without a single bush
-or tree to break the monotonous uniformity. The weather was fine, but
-the atmosphere remarkably hazy; I thought the appearance foreboded a
-gale, but the Gauchos said it was owing to the plain, at some great
-distance in the interior, being on fire. After a long gallop, having
-changed horses twice, we reached the Rio Sauce: it is a deep, rapid,
-little stream, not above twenty-five feet wide. The second posta on
-the road to Buenos Ayres stands on its banks, a little above there is a
-ford for horses, where the water does not reach to the horses' belly;
-but from that point, in its course to the sea, it is quite impassable,
-and hence makes a most useful barrier against the Indians.
-
-Insignificant as this stream is, the Jesuit Falconer, whose information
-is generally so very correct, figures it as a considerable river,
-rising at the foot of the Cordillera. With respect to its source, I do
-not doubt that this is the case for the Gauchos assured me, that in the
-middle of the dry summer, this stream, at the same time with the
-Colorado has periodical floods; which can only originate in the snow
-melting on the Andes. It is extremely improbable that a stream so
-small as the Sauce then was, should traverse the entire width of the
-continent; and indeed, if it were the residue of a large river, its
-waters, as in other ascertained cases, would be saline. During the
-winter we must look to the springs round the Sierra Ventana as the
-source of its pure and limpid stream. I suspect the plains of
-Patagonia like those of Australia, are traversed by many water-courses
-which only perform their proper parts at certain periods. Probably this
-is the case with the water which flows into the head of Port Desire,
-and likewise with the Rio Chupat, on the banks of which masses of
-highly cellular scoriae were found by the officers employed in the
-survey.
-
-As it was early in the afternoon when we arrived, we took fresh horses,
-and a soldier for a guide, and started for the Sierra de la Ventana.
-This mountain is visible from the anchorage at Bahia Blanca; and Capt.
-Fitz Roy calculates its height to be 3340 feet--an altitude very
-remarkable on this eastern side of the continent. I am not aware that
-any foreigner, previous to my visit, had ascended this mountain; and
-indeed very few of the soldiers at Bahia Blanca knew anything about it.
-Hence we heard of beds of coal, of gold and silver, of caves, and of
-forests, all of which inflamed my curiosity, only to disappoint it. The
-distance from the posta was about six leagues over a level plain of the
-same character as before. The ride was, however, interesting, as the
-mountain began to show its true form. When we reached the foot of the
-main ridge, we had much difficulty in finding any water, and we thought
-we should have been obliged to have passed the night without any. At
-last we discovered some by looking close to the mountain, for at the
-distance even of a few hundred yards the streamlets were buried and
-entirely lost in the friable calcareous stone and loose detritus. I do
-not think Nature ever made a more solitary, desolate pile of rock;--it
-well deserves its name of _Hurtado_, or separated. The mountain is
-steep, extremely rugged, and broken, and so entirely destitute of
-trees, and even bushes, that we actually could not make a skewer to
-stretch out our meat over the fire of thistle-stalks. [1] The strange
-aspect of this mountain is contrasted by the sea-like plain, which not
-only abuts against its steep sides, but likewise separates the parallel
-ranges. The uniformity of the colouring gives an extreme quietness to
-the view,--the whitish grey of the quartz rock, and the light brown of
-the withered grass of the plain, being unrelieved by any brighter tint.
-From custom, one expects to see in the neighbourhood of a lofty and
-bold mountain, a broken country strewed over with huge fragments. Here
-nature shows that the last movement before the bed of the sea is
-changed into dry land may sometimes be one of tranquillity. Under these
-circumstances I was curious to observe how far from the parent rock any
-pebbles could be found. On the shores of Bahia Blanca, and near the
-settlement, there were some of quartz, which certainly must have come
-from this source: the distance is forty-five miles.
-
-The dew, which in the early part of the night wetted the saddle-cloths
-under which we slept, was in the morning frozen. The plain, though
-appearing horizontal, had insensibly sloped up to a height of between
-800 and 900 feet above the sea. In the morning (9th of September) the
-guide told me to ascend the nearest ridge, which he thought would lead
-me to the four peaks that crown the summit. The climbing up such rough
-rocks was very fatiguing; the sides were so indented, that what was
-gained in one five minutes was often lost in the next. At last, when I
-reached the ridge, my disappointment was extreme in finding a
-precipitous valley as deep as the plain, which cut the chain
-transversely in two, and separated me from the four points. This
-valley is very narrow, but flat-bottomed, and it forms a fine
-horse-pass for the Indians, as it connects the plains on the northern
-and southern sides of the range. Having descended, and while crossing
-it, I saw two horses grazing: I immediately hid myself in the long
-grass, and began to reconnoitre; but as I could see no signs of Indians
-I proceeded cautiously on my second ascent. It was late in the day,
-and this part of the mountain, like the other, was steep and rugged. I
-was on the top of the second peak by two o'clock, but got there with
-extreme difficulty; every twenty yards I had the cramp in the upper
-part of both thighs, so that I was afraid I should not have been able
-to have got down again. It was also necessary to return by another
-road, as it was out of the question to pass over the saddle-back. I
-was therefore obliged to give up the two higher peaks. Their altitude
-was but little greater, and every purpose of geology had been answered;
-so that the attempt was not worth the hazard of any further exertion. I
-presume the cause of the cramp was the great change in the kind of
-muscular action, from that of hard riding to that of still harder
-climbing. It is a lesson worth remembering, as in some cases it might
-cause much difficulty.
-
-I have already said the mountain is composed of white quartz rock, and
-with it a little glossy clay-slate is associated. At the height of a
-few hundred feet above the plain patches of conglomerate adhered in
-several places to the solid rock. They resembled in hardness, and in
-the nature of the cement, the masses which may be seen daily forming on
-some coasts. I do not doubt these pebbles were in a similar manner
-aggregated, at a period when the great calcareous formation was
-depositing beneath the surrounding sea. We may believe that the jagged
-and battered forms of the hard quartz yet show the effects of the waves
-of an open ocean.
-
-I was, on the whole, disappointed with this ascent. Even the view was
-insignificant;--a plain like the sea, but without its beautiful colour
-and defined outline. The scene, however, was novel, and a little
-danger, like salt to meat, gave it a relish. That the danger was very
-little was certain, for my two companions made a good fire--a thing
-which is never done when it is suspected that Indians are near. I
-reached the place of our bivouac by sunset, and drinking much mate, and
-smoking several cigaritos, soon made up my bed for the night. The wind
-was very strong and cold, but I never slept more comfortably.
-
-September 10th.--In the morning, having fairly scudded before the gale,
-we arrived by the middle of the day at the Sauce posta. In the road we
-saw great numbers of deer, and near the mountain a guanaco. The plain,
-which abuts against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gullies,
-of which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty deep; we
-were obliged in consequence to make a considerable circuit before we
-could find a pass. We stayed the night at the posta, the conversation,
-as was generally the case, being about the Indians. The Sierra Ventana
-was formerly a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there
-was much fighting there. My guide had been present when many Indians
-were killed: the women escaped to the top of the ridge, and fought most
-desperately with great stones; many thus saving themselves.
-
-September 11th.--Proceeded to the third posta in company with the
-lieutenant who commanded it. The distance is called fifteen leagues;
-but it is only guess-work, and is generally overstated. The road was
-uninteresting, over a dry grassy plain; and on our left hand at a
-greater or less distance there were some low hills; a continuation of
-which we crossed close to the posta. Before our arrival we met a large
-herd of cattle and horses, guarded by fifteen soldiers; but we were
-told many had been lost. It is very difficult to drive animals across
-the plains; for if in the night a puma, or even a fox, approaches,
-nothing can prevent the horses dispersing in every direction; and a
-storm will have the same effect. A short time since, an officer left
-Buenos Ayres with five hundred horses, and when he arrived at the army
-he had under twenty.
-
-Soon afterwards we perceived by the cloud of dust, that a party of
-horsemen were coming towards us; when far distant my companions knew
-them to be Indians, by their long hair streaming behind their backs.
-The Indians generally have a fillet round their heads, but never any
-covering; and their black hair blowing across their swarthy faces,
-heightens to an uncommon degree the wildness of their appearance. They
-turned out to be a party of Bernantio's friendly tribe, going to a
-salina for salt. The Indians eat much salt, their children sucking it
-like sugar. This habit is very different from that of the Spanish
-Gauchos, who, leading the same kind of life, eat scarcely any;
-according to Mungo Park, [2] it is people who live on vegetable food
-who have an unconquerable desire for salt. The Indians gave us
-good-humoured nods as they passed at full gallop, driving before them a
-troop of horses, and followed by a train of lanky dogs.
-
-September 12th and 13th.--I stayed at this posta two days, waiting for
-a troop of soldiers, which General Rosas had the kindness to send to
-inform me, would shortly travel to Buenos Ayres; and he advised me to
-take the opportunity of the escort. In the morning we rode to some
-neighbouring hills to view the country, and to examine the geology.
-After dinner the soldiers divided themselves into two parties for a
-trial of skill with the bolas. Two spears were stuck in the ground
-twenty-five yards apart, but they were struck and entangled only once
-in four or five times. The balls can be thrown fifty or sixty yards,
-but with little certainty. This, however, does not apply to a man on
-horseback; for when the speed of the horse is added to the force of the
-arm, it is said, that they can be whirled with effect to the distance
-of eighty yards. As a proof of their force, I may mention, that at the
-Falkland Islands, when the Spaniards murdered some of their own
-countrymen and all the Englishmen, a young friendly Spaniard was
-running away, when a great tall man, by name Luciano, came at full
-gallop after him, shouting to him to stop, and saying that he only
-wanted to speak to him. Just as the Spaniard was on the point of
-reaching the boat, Luciano threw the balls: they struck him on the legs
-with such a jerk, as to throw him down and to render him for some time
-insensible. The man, after Luciano had had his talk, was allowed to
-escape. He told us that his legs were marked by great weals, where the
-thong had wound round, as if he had been flogged with a whip. In the
-middle of the day two men arrived, who brought a parcel from the next
-posta to be forwarded to the general: so that besides these two, our
-party consisted this evening of my guide and self, the lieutenant, and
-his four soldiers. The latter were strange beings; the first a fine
-young negro; the second half Indian and negro; and the two others
-non-descripts; namely, an old Chilian miner, the colour of mahogany,
-and another partly a mulatto; but two such mongrels with such
-detestable expressions, I never saw before. At night, when they were
-sitting round the fire, and playing at cards, I retired to view such a
-Salvator Rosa scene. They were seated under a low cliff, so that I
-could look down upon them; around the party were lying dogs, arms,
-remnants of deer and ostriches; and their long spears were stuck in the
-turf. Further in the dark background, their horses were tied up, ready
-for any sudden danger. If the stillness of the desolate plain was
-broken by one of the dogs barking, a soldier, leaving the fire, would
-place his head close to the ground, and thus slowly scan the horizon.
-Even if the noisy teru-tero uttered its scream, there would be a pause
-in the conversation, and every head, for a moment, a little inclined.
-
-What a life of misery these men appear to us to lead! They were at
-least ten leagues from the Sauce posta, and since the murder committed
-by the Indians, twenty from another. The Indians are supposed to have
-made their attack in the middle of the night; for very early in the
-morning after the murder, they were luckily seen approaching this
-posta. The whole party here, however, escaped, together with the troop
-of horses; each one taking a line for himself, and driving with him as
-many animals as he was able to manage.
-
-The little hovel, built of thistle-stalks, in which they slept, neither
-kept out the wind nor rain; indeed in the latter case the only effect
-the roof had, was to condense it into larger drops. They had nothing
-to eat excepting what they could catch, such as ostriches, deer,
-armadilloes, etc., and their only fuel was the dry stalks of a small
-plant, somewhat resembling an aloe. The sole luxury which these men
-enjoyed was smoking the little paper cigars, and sucking mate. I used
-to think that the carrion vultures, man's constant attendants on these
-dreary plains, while seated on the little neighbouring cliffs seemed by
-their very patience to say, "Ah! when the Indians come we shall have a
-feast."
-
-In the morning we all sallied forth to hunt, and although we had not
-much success, there were some animated chases. Soon after starting the
-party separated, and so arranged their plans, that at a certain time of
-the day (in guessing which they show much skill) they should all meet
-from different points of the compass on a plain piece of ground, and
-thus drive together the wild animals. One day I went out hunting at
-Bahia Blanca, but the men there merely rode in a crescent, each being
-about a quarter of a mile apart from the other. A fine male ostrich
-being turned by the headmost riders, tried to escape on one side. The
-Gauchos pursued at a reckless pace, twisting their horses about with
-the most admirable command, and each man whirling the balls round his
-head. At length the foremost threw them, revolving through the air: in
-an instant the ostrich rolled over and over, its legs fairly lashed
-together by the thong. The plains abound with three kinds of partridge,
-[3] two of which are as large as hen pheasants. Their destroyer, a
-small and pretty fox, was also singularly numerous; in the course of
-the day we could not have seen less than forty or fifty. They were
-generally near their earths, but the dogs killed one. When we returned
-to the posta, we found two of the party returned who had been hunting
-by themselves. They had killed a puma, and had found an ostrich's nest
-with twenty-seven eggs in it. Each of these is said to equal in weight
-eleven hen's eggs; so that we obtained from this one nest as much food
-as 297 hen's eggs would have given.
-
-September 14th.--As the soldiers belonging to the next posta meant to
-return, and we should together make a party of five, and all armed, I
-determined not to wait for the expected troops. My host, the
-lieutenant, pressed me much to stop. As he had been very obliging--not
-only providing me with food, but lending me his private horses--I
-wanted to make him some remuneration. I asked my guide whether I might
-do so, but he told me certainly not; that the only answer I should
-receive, probably would be, "We have meat for the dogs in our country,
-and therefore do not grudge it to a Christian." It must not be supposed
-that the rank of lieutenant in such an army would at all prevent the
-acceptance of payment: it was only the high sense of hospitality, which
-every traveller is bound to acknowledge as nearly universal throughout
-these provinces. After galloping some leagues, we came to a low swampy
-country, which extends for nearly eighty miles northward, as far as the
-Sierra Tapalguen. In some parts there were fine damp plains, covered
-with grass, while others had a soft, black, and peaty soil. There were
-also many extensive but shallow lakes, and large beds of reeds. The
-country on the whole resembled the better parts of the Cambridgeshire
-fens. At night we had some difficulty in finding amidst the swamps, a
-dry place for our bivouac.
-
-September 15th.--Rose very early in the morning and shortly after
-passed the posta where the Indians had murdered the five soldiers. The
-officer had eighteen chuzo wounds in his body. By the middle of the
-day, after a hard gallop, we reached the fifth posta: on account of
-some difficulty in procuring horses we stayed there the night. As this
-point was the most exposed on the whole line, twenty-one soldiers were
-stationed here; at sunset they returned from hunting, bringing with
-them seven deer, three ostriches, and many armadilloes and partridges.
-When riding through the country, it is a common practice to set fire to
-the plain; and hence at night, as on this occasion, the horizon was
-illuminated in several places by brilliant conflagrations. This is done
-partly for the sake of puzzling any stray Indians, but chiefly for
-improving the pasture. In grassy plains unoccupied by the larger
-ruminating quadrupeds, it seems necessary to remove the superfluous
-vegetation by fire, so as to render the new year's growth serviceable.
-
-The rancho at this place did not boast even of a roof, but merely
-consisted of a ring of thistle-stalks, to break the force of the wind.
-It was situated on the borders of an extensive but shallow lake,
-swarming with wild fowl, among which the black-necked swan was
-conspicuous.
-
-The kind of plover, which appears as if mounted on stilts (Himantopus
-nigricollis), is here common in flocks of considerable size. It has
-been wrongfully accused of inelegance; when wading about in shallow
-water, which is its favourite resort, its gait is far from awkward.
-These birds in a flock utter a noise, that singularly resembles the cry
-of a pack of small dogs in full chase: waking in the night, I have more
-than once been for a moment startled at the distant sound. The
-teru-tero (Vanellus cayanus) is another bird, which often disturbs the
-stillness of the night. In appearance and habits it resembles in many
-respects our peewits; its wings, however, are armed with sharp spurs,
-like those on the legs of the common cock. As our peewit takes its
-name from the sound of its voice, so does the teru-tero. While riding
-over the grassy plains, one is constantly pursued by these birds, which
-appear to hate mankind, and I am sure deserve to be hated for their
-never-ceasing, unvaried, harsh screams. To the sportsman they are most
-annoying, by telling every other bird and animal of his approach: to
-the traveller in the country, they may possibly, as Molina says, do
-good, by warning him of the midnight robber. During the breeding
-season, they attempt, like our peewits, by feigning to be wounded, to
-draw away from their nests dogs and other enemies. The eggs of this
-bird are esteemed a great delicacy.
-
-September 16th.--To the seventh posta at the foot of the Sierra
-Tapalguen. The country was quite level, with a coarse herbage and a
-soft peaty soil. The hovel was here remarkably neat, the posts and
-rafters being made of about a dozen dry thistle-stalks bound together
-with thongs of hide; and by the support of these Ionic-like columns,
-the roof and sides were thatched with reeds. We were here told a fact,
-which I would not have credited, if I had not had partly ocular proof
-of it; namely, that, during the previous night hail as large as small
-apples, and extremely hard, had fallen with such violence, as to kill
-the greater number of the wild animals. One of the men had already
-found thirteen deer (Cervus campestris) lying dead, and I saw their
-_fresh_ hides; another of the party, a few minutes after my arrival
-brought in seven more. Now I well know, that one man without dogs
-could hardly have killed seven deer in a week. The men believed they
-had seen about fifteen ostriches (part of one of which we had for
-dinner); and they said that several were running about evidently blind
-in one eye. Numbers of smaller birds, as ducks, hawks, and partridges,
-were killed. I saw one of the latter with a black mark on its back, as
-if it had been struck with a paving-stone. A fence of thistle-stalks
-round the hovel was nearly broken down, and my informer, putting his
-head out to see what was the matter, received a severe cut, and now
-wore a bandage. The storm was said to have been of limited extent: we
-certainly saw from our last night's bivouac a dense cloud and lightning
-in this direction. It is marvellous how such strong animals as deer
-could thus have been killed; but I have no doubt, from the evidence I
-have given, that the story is not in the least exaggerated. I am glad,
-however, to have its credibility supported by the Jesuit Dobrizhoffen,
-[4] who, speaking of a country much to the northward, says, hail fell
-of an enormous size and killed vast numbers of cattle: the Indians
-hence called the place _Lalegraicavalca_, meaning "the little white
-things." Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me that he witnessed in 1831 in
-India, a hail-storm, which killed numbers of large birds and much
-injured the cattle. These hailstones were flat, and one was ten inches
-in circumference, and another weighed two ounces. They ploughed up a
-gravel-walk like musket-balls, and passed through glass-windows, making
-round holes, but not cracking them.
-
-Having finished our dinner, of hail-stricken meat, we crossed the
-Sierra Tapalguen; a low range of hills, a few hundred feet in height,
-which commences at Cape Corrientes. The rock in this part is pure
-quartz; further eastward I understand it is granitic. The hills are of
-a remarkable form; they consist of flat patches of table-land,
-surrounded by low perpendicular cliffs, like the outliers of a
-sedimentary deposit. The hill which I ascended was very small, not
-above a couple of hundred yards in diameter; but I saw others larger.
-One which goes by the name of the "Corral," is said to be two or three
-miles in diameter, and encompassed by perpendicular cliffs, between
-thirty and forty feet high, excepting at one spot, where the entrance
-lies. Falconer [5] gives a curious account of the Indians driving
-troops of wild horses into it, and then by guarding the entrance,
-keeping them secure. I have never heard of any other instance of
-table-land in a formation of quartz, and which, in the hill I examined,
-had neither cleavage nor stratification. I was told that the rock of
-the "Corral" was white, and would strike fire.
-
-We did not reach the posta on the Rio Tapalguen till after it was dark.
-At supper, from something which was said, I was suddenly struck with
-horror at thinking that I was eating one of the favourite dishes of the
-country namely, a half-formed calf, long before its proper time of
-birth. It turned out to be Puma; the meat is very white and remarkably
-like veal in taste. Dr. Shaw was laughed at for stating that "the
-flesh of the lion is in great esteem having no small affinity with
-veal, both in colour, taste, and flavour." Such certainly is the case
-with the Puma. The Gauchos differ in their opinion, whether the Jaguar
-is good eating, but are unanimous in saying that cat is excellent.
-
-September 17th.--We followed the course of the Rio Tapalguen, through a
-very fertile country, to the ninth posta. Tapalguen, itself, or the
-town of Tapalguen, if it may be so called, consists of a perfectly
-level plain, studded over, as far as the eye can reach, with the toldos
-or oven-shaped huts of the Indians. The families of the friendly
-Indians, who were fighting on the side of Rosas, resided here. We met
-and passed many young Indian women, riding by two or three together on
-the same horse: they, as well as many of the young men, were strikingly
-handsome,--their fine ruddy complexions being the picture of health.
-Besides the toldos, there were three ranchos; one inhabited by the
-Commandant, and the two others by Spaniards with small shops.
-
-We were here able to buy some biscuit. I had now been several days
-without tasting anything besides meat: I did not at all dislike this
-new regimen; but I felt as if it would only have agreed with me with
-hard exercise. I have heard that patients in England, when desired to
-confine themselves exclusively to an animal diet, even with the hope of
-life before their eyes, have hardly been able to endure it. Yet the
-Gaucho in the Pampas, for months together, touches nothing but beef.
-But they eat, I observe, a very large proportion of fat, which is of a
-less animalized nature; and they particularly dislike dry meat, such as
-that of the Agouti. Dr. Richardson [6] also, has remarked, "that when
-people have fed for a long time solely upon lean animal food, the
-desire for fat becomes so insatiable, that they can consume a large
-quantity of unmixed and even oily fat without nausea:" this appears to
-me a curious physiological fact. It is, perhaps, from their meat
-regimen that the Gauchos, like other carnivorous animals, can abstain
-long from food. I was told that at Tandeel, some troops voluntarily
-pursued a party of Indians for three days, without eating or drinking.
-
-We saw in the shops many articles, such as horsecloths, belts, and
-garters, woven by the Indian women. The patterns were very pretty, and
-the colours brilliant; the workmanship of the garters was so good that
-an English merchant at Buenos Ayres maintained they must have been
-manufactured in England, till he found the tassels had been fastened by
-split sinew.
-
-September 18th.--We had a very long ride this day. At the twelfth
-posta, which is seven leagues south of the Rio Salado, we came to the
-first estancia with cattle and white women. Afterwards we had to ride
-for many miles through a country flooded with water above our horses'
-knees. By crossing the stirrups, and riding Arab-like with our legs
-bent up, we contrived to keep tolerably dry. It was nearly dark when
-we arrived at the Salado; the stream was deep, and about forty yards
-wide; in summer, however, its bed becomes almost dry, and the little
-remaining water nearly as salt as that of the sea. We slept at one of
-the great estancias of General Rosas. It was fortified, and of such an
-extent, that arriving in the dark I thought it was a town and fortress.
-In the morning we saw immense herds of cattle, the general here having
-seventy-four square leagues of land. Formerly nearly three hundred men
-were employed about this estate, and they defied all the attacks of the
-Indians.
-
-September 19th.--Passed the Guardia del Monte. This is a nice
-scattered little town, with many gardens, full of peach and quince
-trees. The plain here looked like that around Buenos Ayres; the turf
-being short and bright green, with beds of clover and thistles, and
-with bizcacha holes. I was very much struck with the marked change in
-the aspect of the country after having crossed the Salado. From a
-coarse herbage we passed on to a carpet of fine green verdure. I at
-first attributed this to some change in the nature of the soil, but the
-inhabitants assured me that here, as well as in Banda Oriental, where
-there is as great a difference between the country round Monte Video
-and the thinly-inhabited savannahs of Colonia, the whole was to be
-attributed to the manuring and grazing of the cattle. Exactly the same
-fact has been observed in the prairies [7] of North America, where
-coarse grass, between five and six feet high, when grazed by cattle,
-changes into common pasture land. I am not botanist enough to say
-whether the change here is owing to the introduction of new species, to
-the altered growth of the same, or to a difference in their
-proportional numbers. Azara has also observed with astonishment this
-change: he is likewise much perplexed by the immediate appearance of
-plants not occurring in the neighbourhood, on the borders of any track
-that leads to a newly-constructed hovel. In another part he says, [8]
-"ces chevaux (sauvages) ont la manie de preferer les chemins, et le
-bord des routes pour deposer leurs excremens, dont on trouve des
-monceaux dans ces endroits." Does this not partly explain the
-circumstance? We thus have lines of richly manured land serving as
-channels of communication across wide districts.
-
-Near the Guardia we find the southern limit of two European plants, now
-become extraordinarily common. The fennel in great profusion covers
-the ditch-banks in the neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, and
-other towns. But the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus) has a far wider
-range: [9] it occurs in these latitudes on both sides of the,
-Cordillera, across the continent. I saw it in unfrequented spots in
-Chile, Entre Rios, and Banda Oriental. In the latter country alone,
-very many (probably several hundred) square miles are covered by one
-mass of these prickly plants, and are impenetrable by man or beast.
-Over the undulating plains, where these great beds occur, nothing else
-can now live. Before their introduction, however, the surface must
-have supported, as in other parts, a rank herbage. I doubt whether any
-case is on record of an invasion on so grand a scale of one plant over
-the aborigines. As I have already said, I nowhere saw the cardoon
-south of the Salado; but it is probable that in proportion as that
-country becomes inhabited, the cardoon will extend its limits. The
-case is different with the giant thistle (with variegated leaves) of
-the Pampas, for I met with it in the valley of the Sauce. According to
-the principles so well laid down by Mr. Lyell, few countries have
-undergone more remarkable changes, since the year 1535, when the first
-colonist of La Plata landed with seventy-two horses. The countless
-herds of horses, cattle, and sheep, not only have altered the whole
-aspect of the vegetation, but they have almost banished the guanaco,
-deer and ostrich. Numberless other changes must likewise have taken
-place; the wild pig in some parts probably replaces the peccari; packs
-of wild dogs may be heard howling on the wooded banks of the
-less-frequented streams; and the common cat, altered into a large and
-fierce animal, inhabits rocky hills. As M. d'Orbigny has remarked, the
-increase in numbers of the carrion-vulture, since the introduction of
-the domestic animals, must have been infinitely great; and we have
-given reasons for believing that they have extended their southern
-range. No doubt many plants, besides the cardoon and fennel, are
-naturalized; thus the islands near the mouth of the Parana, are thickly
-clothed with peach and orange trees, springing from seeds carried there
-by the waters of the river.
-
-While changing horses at the Guardia several people questioned us much
-about the army,--I never saw anything like the enthusiasm for Rosas,
-and for the success of the "most just of all wars, because against
-barbarians." This expression, it must be confessed, is very natural,
-for till lately, neither man, woman nor horse, was safe from the
-attacks of the Indians. We had a long day's ride over the same rich
-green plain, abounding with various flocks, and with here and there a
-solitary estancia, and its one _ombu_ tree. In the evening it rained
-heavily: on arriving at a posthouse we were told by the owner, that if
-we had not a regular passport we must pass on, for there were so many
-robbers he would trust no one. When he read, however, my passport,
-which began with "El Naturalista Don Carlos," his respect and civility
-were as unbounded as his suspicions had been before. What a naturalist
-might be, neither he nor his countrymen, I suspect, had any idea; but
-probably my title lost nothing of its value from that cause.
-
-September 20th.--We arrived by the middle of the day at Buenos Ayres.
-The outskirts of the city looked quite pretty, with the agave hedges,
-and groves of olive, peach and willow trees, all just throwing out
-their fresh green leaves. I rode to the house of Mr. Lumb, an English
-merchant, to whose kindness and hospitality, during my stay in the
-country, I was greatly indebted.
-
-The city of Buenos Ayres is large; [10] and I should think one of the
-most regular in the world. Every street is at right angles to the one
-it crosses, and the parallel ones being equidistant, the houses are
-collected into solid squares of equal dimensions, which are called
-quadras. On the other hand, the houses themselves are hollow squares;
-all the rooms opening into a neat little courtyard. They are generally
-only one story high, with flat roofs, which are fitted with seats and
-are much frequented by the inhabitants in summer. In the centre of the
-town is the Plaza, where the public offices, fortress, cathedral, etc.,
-stand. Here also, the old viceroys, before the revolution, had their
-palaces. The general assemblage of buildings possesses considerable
-architectural beauty, although none individually can boast of any.
-
-The great _corral_, where the animals are kept for slaughter to supply
-food to this beef-eating population, is one of the spectacles best
-worth seeing. The strength of the horse as compared to that of the
-bullock is quite astonishing: a man on horseback having thrown his lazo
-round the horns of a beast, can drag it anywhere he chooses. The
-animal ploughing up the ground with outstretched legs, in vain efforts
-to resist the force, generally dashes at full speed to one side; but
-the horse immediately turning to receive the shock, stands so firmly
-that the bullock is almost thrown down, and it is surprising that their
-necks are not broken. The struggle is not, however, one of fair
-strength; the horse's girth being matched against the bullock's
-extended neck. In a similar manner a man can hold the wildest horse,
-if caught with the lazo, just behind the ears. When the bullock has
-been dragged to the spot where it is to be slaughtered, the matador
-with great caution cuts the hamstrings. Then is given the death bellow;
-a noise more expressive of fierce agony than any I know. I have often
-distinguished it from a long distance, and have always known that the
-struggle was then drawing to a close. The whole sight is horrible and
-revolting: the ground is almost made of bones; and the horses and
-riders are drenched with gore.
-
-[1] I call these thistle-stalks for the want of a more correct name. I
-believe it is a species of Eryngium.
-
-[2] Travels in Africa, p. 233.
-
-[3] Two species of Tinamus and Eudromia elegans of A. d'Orbigny, which
-can only be called a partridge with regard to its habits.
-
-[4] History of the Abipones, vol. ii. p. 6.
-
-[5] Falconer's Patagonia, p. 70.
-
-[6] Fauna Boreali-Americana, vol. i. p. 35.
-
-[7] See Mr. Atwater's account of the Prairies, in Silliman's N. A.
-Journal, vol. i. p. 117.
-
-[8] Azara's Voyages, vol. i. p. 373.
-
-[9] M. A. d'Orbigny (vol. i. p. 474) says that the cardoon and
-artichoke are both found wild. Dr. Hooker (Botanical Magazine, vol.
-iv. p. 2862), has described a variety of the Cynara from this part of
-South America under the name of inermis. He states that botanists are
-now generally agreed that the cardoon and the artichoke are varieties
-of one plant. I may add, that an intelligent farmer assured me that he
-had observed in a deserted garden some artichokes changing into the
-common cardoon. Dr. Hooker believes that Head's vivid description of
-the thistle of the Pampas applies to the cardoon, but this is a
-mistake. Captain Head referred to the plant, which I have mentioned a
-few lines lower down, under the title of giant thistle. Whether it is
-a true thistle I do not know; but it is quite different from the
-cardoon; and more like a thistle properly so called.
-
-[10] It is said to contain 60,000 inhabitants. Monte Video, the second
-town of importance on the banks of the Plata, has 15,000.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
-
-Excursion to St. Fe--Thistle Beds--Habits of the Bizcacha--Little
-Owl--Saline Streams--Level Plain--Mastodon--St. Fe--Change in
-Landscape--Geology--Tooth of extinct Horse--Relation of the Fossil and
-recent Quadrupeds of North and South America--Effects of a great
-Drought--Parana--Habits of the Jaguar--Scissor-beak--Kingfisher,
-Parrot, and Scissor-tail--Revolution--Buenos Ayres State of Government.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 27th.--In the evening I set out on an excursion to St. Fe,
-which is situated nearly three hundred English miles from Buenos Ayres,
-on the banks of the Parana. The roads in the neighbourhood of the city
-after the rainy weather, were extraordinarily bad. I should never have
-thought it possible for a bullock waggon to have crawled along: as it
-was, they scarcely went at the rate of a mile an hour, and a man was
-kept ahead, to survey the best line for making the attempt. The
-bullocks were terribly jaded: it is a great mistake to suppose that
-with improved roads, and an accelerated rate of travelling, the
-sufferings of the animals increase in the same proportion. We passed a
-train of waggons and a troop of beasts on their road to Mendoza. The
-distance is about 580 geographical miles, and the journey is generally
-performed in fifty days. These waggons are very long, narrow, and
-thatched with reeds; they have only two wheels, the diameter of which
-in some cases is as much as ten feet. Each is drawn by six bullocks,
-which are urged on by a goad at least twenty feet long: this is
-suspended from within the roof; for the wheel bullocks a smaller one is
-kept; and for the intermediate pair, a point projects at right angles
-from the middle of the long one.
-
-The whole apparatus looked like some implement of war.
-
-September 28th.--We passed the small town of Luxan where there is a
-wooden bridge over the river--a most unusual convenience in this
-country. We passed also Areco. The plains appeared level, but were not
-so in fact; for in various places the horizon was distant. The
-estancias are here wide apart; for there is little good pasture, owing
-to the land being covered by beds either of an acrid clover, or of the
-great thistle. The latter, well known from the animated description
-given by Sir F. Head, were at this time of the year two-thirds grown;
-in some parts they were as high as the horse's back, but in others they
-had not yet sprung up, and the ground was bare and dusty as on a
-turnpike-road. The clumps were of the most brilliant green, and they
-made a pleasing miniature-likeness of broken forest land. When the
-thistles are full grown, the great beds are impenetrable, except by a
-few tracts, as intricate as those in a labyrinth. These are only known
-to the robbers, who at this season inhabit them, and sally forth at
-night to rob and cut throats with impunity. Upon asking at a house
-whether robbers were numerous, I was answered, "The thistles are not up
-yet;"--the meaning of which reply was not at first very obvious. There
-is little interest in passing over these tracts, for they are inhabited
-by few animals or birds, excepting the bizcacha and its friend the
-little owl.
-
-The bizcacha [1] is well known to form a prominent feature in the
-zoology of the Pampas. It is found as far south as the Rio Negro, in
-lat. 41 degs., but not beyond. It cannot, like the agouti, subsist on
-the gravelly and desert plains of Patagonia, but prefers a clayey or
-sandy soil, which produces a different and more abundant vegetation.
-Near Mendoza, at the foot of the Cordillera, it occurs in close
-neighbourhood with the allied alpine species. It is a very curious
-circumstance in its geographical distribution, that it has never been
-seen, fortunately for the inhabitants of Banda Oriental, to the
-eastward of the river Uruguay: yet in this province there are plains
-which appear admirably adapted to its habits. The Uruguay has formed an
-insuperable obstacle to its migration: although the broader barrier of
-the Parana has been passed, and the bizcacha is common in Entre Rios,
-the province between these two great rivers. Near Buenos Ayres these
-animals are exceedingly common. Their most favourite resort appears to
-be those parts of the plain which during one-half of the year are
-covered with giant thistles, to the exclusion of other plants. The
-Gauchos affirm that it lives on roots; which, from the great strength
-of its gnawing teeth, and the kind of places frequented by it, seems
-probable. In the evening the bizcachas come out in numbers, and quietly
-sit at the mouths of their burrows on their haunches. At such times
-they are very tame, and a man on horseback passing by seems only to
-present an object for their grave contemplation. They run very
-awkwardly, and when running out of danger, from their elevated tails
-and short front legs much resemble great rats. Their flesh, when
-cooked, is very white and good, but it is seldom used.
-
-The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging every hard
-object to the mouth of its burrow: around each group of holes many
-bones of cattle, stones, thistle-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung,
-etc., are collected into an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to
-as much as a wheelbarrow would contain. I was credibly informed that a
-gentleman, when riding on a dark night, dropped his watch; he returned
-in the morning, and by searching the neighbourhood of every bizcacha
-hole on the line of road, as he expected, he soon found it. This habit
-of picking up whatever may be lying on the ground anywhere near its
-habitation, must cost much trouble. For what purpose it is done, I am
-quite unable to form even the most remote conjecture: it cannot be for
-defence, because the rubbish is chiefly placed above the mouth of the
-burrow, which enters the ground at a very small inclination. No doubt
-there must exist some good reason; but the inhabitants of the country
-are quite ignorant of it. The only fact which I know analogous to it,
-is the habit of that extraordinary Australian bird, the Calodera
-maculata, which makes an elegant vaulted passage of twigs for playing
-in, and which collects near the spot, land and sea-shells, bones and
-the feathers of birds, especially brightly coloured ones. Mr. Gould,
-who has described these facts, informs me, that the natives, when they
-lose any hard object, search the playing passages, and he has known a
-tobacco-pipe thus recovered.
-
-The little owl (Athene cunicularia), which has been so often mentioned,
-on the plains of Buenos Ayres exclusively inhabits the holes of the
-bizcacha; but in Banda Oriental it is its own workman. During the open
-day, but more especially in the evening, these birds may be seen in
-every direction standing frequently by pairs on the hillock near their
-burrows. If disturbed they either enter the hole, or, uttering a
-shrill harsh cry, move with a remarkably undulatory flight to a short
-distance, and then turning round, steadily gaze at their pursuer.
-Occasionally in the evening they may be heard hooting. I found in the
-stomachs of two which I opened the remains of mice, and I one day saw a
-small snake killed and carried away. It is said that snakes are their
-common prey during the daytime. I may here mention, as showing on what
-various kinds of food owls subsist, that a species killed among the
-islets of the Chonos Archipelago, had its stomach full of good-sized
-crabs. In India [2] there is a fishing genus of owls, which likewise
-catches crabs.
-
-In the evening we crossed the Rio Arrecife on a simple raft made of
-barrels lashed together, and slept at the post-house on the other side.
-I this day paid horse-hire for thirty-one leagues; and although the sun
-was glaring hot I was but little fatigued. When Captain Head talks of
-riding fifty leagues a day, I do not imagine the distance is equal to
-150 English miles. At all events, the thirty-one leagues was only 76
-miles in a straight line, and in an open country I should think four
-additional miles for turnings would be a sufficient allowance.
-
-29th and 30th.--We continued to ride over plains of the same character.
-At San Nicolas I first saw the noble river of the Parana. At the foot
-of the cliff on which the town stands, some large vessels were at
-anchor. Before arriving at Rozario, we crossed the Saladillo, a stream
-of fine clear running water, but too saline to drink. Rozario is a
-large town built on a dead level plain, which forms a cliff about sixty
-feet high over the Parana. The river here is very broad, with many
-islands, which are low and wooded, as is also the opposite shore. The
-view would resemble that of a great lake, if it were not for the
-linear-shaped islets, which alone give the idea of running water. The
-cliffs are the most picturesque part; sometimes they are absolutely
-perpendicular, and of a red colour; at other times in large broken
-masses, covered with cacti and mimosa-trees. The real grandeur,
-however, of an immense river like this, is derived from reflecting how
-important a means of communication and commerce it forms between one
-nation and another; to what a distance it travels, and from how vast a
-territory it drains the great body of fresh water which flows past your
-feet.
-
-For many leagues north and south of San Nicolas and Rozario, the
-country is really level. Scarcely anything which travellers have
-written about its extreme flatness, can be considered as exaggeration.
-Yet I could never find a spot where, by slowly turning round, objects
-were not seen at greater distances in some directions than in others;
-and this manifestly proves inequality in the plain. At sea, a person's
-eye being six feet above the surface of the water, his horizon is two
-miles and four-fifths distant. In like manner, the more level the
-plain, the more nearly does the horizon approach within these narrow
-limits; and this, in my opinion, entirely destroys that grandeur which
-one would have imagined that a vast level plain would have possessed.
-
-October 1st.--We started by moonlight and arrived at the Rio Tercero by
-sunrise. The river is also called the Saladillo, and it deserves the
-name, for the water is brackish. I stayed here the greater part of the
-day, searching for fossil bones. Besides a perfect tooth of the
-Toxodon, and many scattered bones, I found two immense skeletons near
-each other, projecting in bold relief from the perpendicular cliff of
-the Parana. They were, however, so completely decayed, that I could
-only bring away small fragments of one of the great molar teeth; but
-these are sufficient to show that the remains belonged to a Mastodon,
-probably to the same species with that, which formerly must have
-inhabited the Cordillera in Upper Peru in such great numbers. The men
-who took me in the canoe, said they had long known of these skeletons,
-and had often wondered how they had got there: the necessity of a
-theory being felt, they came to the conclusion that, like the bizcacha,
-the mastodon was formerly a burrowing animal! In the evening we rode
-another stage, and crossed the Monge, another brackish stream, bearing
-the dregs of the washings of the Pampas.
-
-October 2nd.--We passed through Corunda, which, from the luxuriance of
-its gardens, was one of the prettiest villages I saw. From this point
-to St. Fe the road is not very safe. The western side of the Parana
-northward, ceases to be inhabited; and hence the Indians sometimes come
-down thus far, and waylay travellers. The nature of the country also
-favours this, for instead of a grassy plain, there is an open woodland,
-composed of low prickly mimosas. We passed some houses that had been
-ransacked and since deserted; we saw also a spectacle, which my guides
-viewed with high satisfaction; it was the skeleton of an Indian with
-the dried skin hanging on the bones, suspended to the branch of a tree.
-
-In the morning we arrived at St. Fe. I was surprised to observe how
-great a change of climate a difference of only three degrees of
-latitude between this place and Buenos Ayres had caused. This was
-evident from the dress and complexion of the men--from the increased
-size of the ombu-trees--the number of new cacti and other plants--and
-especially from the birds. In the course of an hour I remarked
-half-a-dozen birds, which I had never seen at Buenos Ayres. Considering
-that there is no natural boundary between the two places, and that the
-character of the country is nearly similar, the difference was much
-greater than I should have expected.
-
-October 3rd and 4th.--I was confined for these two days to my bed by a
-headache. A good-natured old woman, who attended me, wished me to try
-many odd remedies. A common practice is, to bind an orange-leaf or a
-bit of black plaster to each temple: and a still more general plan is,
-to split a bean into halves, moisten them, and place one on each
-temple, where they will easily adhere. It is not thought proper ever
-to remove the beans or plaster, but to allow them to drop off, and
-sometimes, if a man, with patches on his head, is asked, what is the
-matter? he will answer, "I had a headache the day before yesterday."
-Many of the remedies used by the people of the country are ludicrously
-strange, but too disgusting to be mentioned. One of the least nasty is
-to kill and cut open two puppies and bind them on each side of a broken
-limb. Little hairless dogs are in great request to sleep at the feet
-of invalids.
-
-St. Fe is a quiet little town, and is kept clean and in good order. The
-governor, Lopez, was a common soldier at the time of the revolution;
-but has now been seventeen years in power. This stability of
-government is owing to his tyrannical habits; for tyranny seems as yet
-better adapted to these countries than republicanism. The governor's
-favourite occupation is hunting Indians: a short time since he
-slaughtered forty-eight, and sold the children at the rate of three or
-four pounds apiece.
-
-October 5th.--We crossed the Parana to St. Fe Bajada, a town on the
-opposite shore. The passage took some hours, as the river here
-consisted of a labyrinth of small streams, separated by low wooded
-islands. I had a letter of introduction to an old Catalonian Spaniard,
-who treated me with the most uncommon hospitality. The Bajada is the
-capital of Entre Rios. In 1825 the town contained 6000 inhabitants,
-and the province 30,000; yet, few as the inhabitants are, no province
-has suffered more from bloody and desperate revolutions. They boast
-here of representatives, ministers, a standing army, and governors: so
-it is no wonder that they have their revolutions. At some future day
-this must be one of the richest countries of La Plata. The soil is
-varied and productive; and its almost insular form gives it two grand
-lines of communication by the rivers Parana and Uruguay.
-
-
-I was delayed here five days, and employed myself in examining the
-geology of the surrounding country, which was very interesting. We
-here see at the bottom of the cliffs, beds containing sharks' teeth and
-sea-shells of extinct species, passing above into an indurated marl,
-and from that into the red clayey earth of the Pampas, with its
-calcareous concretions and the bones of terrestrial quadrupeds. This
-vertical section clearly tells us of a large bay of pure salt-water,
-gradually encroached on, and at last converted into the bed of a muddy
-estuary, into which floating carcasses were swept. At Punta Gorda, in
-Banda Oriental, I found an alternation of the Pampaean estuary deposit,
-with a limestone containing some of the same extinct sea-shells; and
-this shows either a change in the former currents, or more probably an
-oscillation of level in the bottom of the ancient estuary. Until
-lately, my reasons for considering the Pampaean formation to be an
-estuary deposit were, its general appearance, its position at the mouth
-of the existing great river the Plata, and the presence of so many
-bones of terrestrial quadrupeds: but now Professor Ehrenberg has had
-the kindness to examine for me a little of the red earth, taken from
-low down in the deposit, close to the skeletons of the mastodon, and he
-finds in it many infusoria, partly salt-water and partly fresh-water
-forms, with the latter rather preponderating; and therefore, as he
-remarks, the water must have been brackish. M. A. d'Orbigny found on
-the banks of the Parana, at the height of a hundred feet, great beds of
-an estuary shell, now living a hundred miles lower down nearer the sea;
-and I found similar shells at a less height on the banks of the
-Uruguay; this shows that just before the Pampas was slowly elevated
-into dry land, the water covering it was brackish. Below Buenos Ayres
-there are upraised beds of sea-shells of existing species, which also
-proves that the period of elevation of the Pampas was within the recent
-period.
-
-In the Pampaean deposit at the Bajada I found the osseous armour of a
-gigantic armadillo-like animal, the inside of which, when the earth was
-removed, was like a great cauldron; I found also teeth of the Toxodon
-and Mastodon, and one tooth of a Horse, in the same stained and decayed
-state. This latter tooth greatly interested me, [3] and I took
-scrupulous care in ascertaining that it had been embedded
-contemporaneously with the other remains; for I was not then aware that
-amongst the fossils from Bahia Blanca there was a horse's tooth hidden
-in the matrix: nor was it then known with certainty that the remains of
-horses are common in North America. Mr. Lyell has lately brought from
-the United States a tooth of a horse; and it is an interesting fact,
-that Professor Owen could find in no species, either fossil or recent,
-a slight but peculiar curvature characterizing it, until he thought of
-comparing it with my specimen found here: he has named this American
-horse Equus curvidens. Certainly it is a marvellous fact in the
-history of the Mammalia, that in South America a native horse should
-have lived and disappeared, to be succeeded in after-ages by the
-countless herds descended from the few introduced with the Spanish
-colonists!
-
-The existence in South America of a fossil horse, of the mastodon,
-possibly of an elephant, [4] and of a hollow-horned ruminant,
-discovered by MM. Lund and Clausen in the caves of Brazil, are highly
-interesting facts with respect to the geographical distribution of
-animals. At the present time, if we divide America, not by the Isthmus
-of Panama, but by the southern part of Mexico [5] in lat. 20 degs.,
-where the great table-land presents an obstacle to the migration of
-species, by affecting the climate, and by forming, with the exception
-of some valleys and of a fringe of low land on the coast, a broad
-barrier; we shall then have the two zoological provinces of North and
-South America strongly contrasted with each other. Some few species
-alone have passed the barrier, and may be considered as wanderers from
-the south, such as the puma, opossum, kinkajou, and peccari. South
-America is characterized by possessing many peculiar gnawers, a family
-of monkeys, the llama, peccari, tapir, opossums, and, especially,
-several genera of Edentata, the order which includes the sloths,
-ant-eaters, and armadilloes. North America, on the other hand, is
-characterized (putting on one side a few wandering species) by numerous
-peculiar gnawers, and by four genera (the ox, sheep, goat, and
-antelope) of hollow-horned ruminants, of which great division South
-America is not known to possess a single species. Formerly, but within
-the period when most of the now existing shells were living, North
-America possessed, besides hollow-horned ruminants, the elephant,
-mastodon, horse, and three genera of Edentata, namely, the Megatherium,
-Megalonyx, and Mylodon. Within nearly this same period (as proved by
-the shells at Bahia Blanca) South America possessed, as we have just
-seen, a mastodon, horse, hollow-horned ruminant, and the same three
-genera (as well as several others) of the Edentata. Hence it is
-evident that North and South America, in having within a late
-geological period these several genera in common, were much more
-closely related in the character of their terrestrial inhabitants than
-they now are. The more I reflect on this case, the more interesting it
-appears: I know of no other instance where we can almost mark the
-period and manner of the splitting up of one great region into two
-well-characterized zoological provinces. The geologist, who is fully
-impressed with the vast oscillations of level which have affected the
-earth's crust within late periods, will not fear to speculate on the
-recent elevation of the Mexican platform, or, more probably, on the
-recent submergence of land in the West Indian Archipelago, as the cause
-of the present zoological separation of North and South America. The
-South American character of the West Indian mammals [6] seems to
-indicate that this archipelago was formerly united to the southern
-continent, and that it has subsequently been an area of subsidence.
-
-When America, and especially North America, possessed its elephants,
-mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants, it was much more closely
-related in its zoological characters to the temperate parts of Europe
-and Asia than it now is. As the remains of these genera are found on
-both sides of Behring's Straits [7] and on the plains of Siberia, we
-are led to look to the north-western side of North America as the
-former point of communication between the Old and so-called New World.
-And as so many species, both living and extinct, of these same genera
-inhabit and have inhabited the Old World, it seems most probable that
-the North American elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned
-ruminants migrated, on land since submerged near Behring's Straits,
-from Siberia into North America, and thence, on land since submerged in
-the West Indies, into South America, where for a time they mingled with
-the forms characteristic of that southern continent, and have since
-become extinct.
-
-
-While travelling through the country, I received several vivid
-descriptions of the effects of a late great drought; and the account of
-this may throw some light on the cases where vast numbers of animals of
-all kinds have been embedded together. The period included between the
-years 1827 and 1830 is called the "gran seco," or the great drought.
-During this time so little rain fell, that the vegetation, even to the
-thistles, failed; the brooks were dried up, and the whole country
-assumed the appearance of a dusty high road. This was especially the
-case in the northern part of the province of Buenos Ayres and the
-southern part of St. Fe. Very great numbers of birds, wild animals,
-cattle, and horses perished from the want of food and water. A man
-told me that the deer [8] used to come into his courtyard to the well,
-which he had been obliged to dig to supply his own family with water;
-and that the partridges had hardly strength to fly away when pursued.
-The lowest estimation of the loss of cattle in the province of Buenos
-Ayres alone, was taken at one million head. A proprietor at San Pedro
-had previously to these years 20,000 cattle; at the end not one
-remained. San Pedro is situated in the middle of the finest country;
-and even now abounds again with animals; yet during the latter part of
-the "gran seco," live cattle were brought in vessels for the
-consumption of the inhabitants. The animals roamed from their
-estancias, and, wandering far southward, were mingled together in such
-multitudes, that a government commission was sent from Buenos Ayres to
-settle the disputes of the owners. Sir Woodbine Parish informed me of
-another and very curious source of dispute; the ground being so long
-dry, such quantities of dust were blown about, that in this open
-country the landmarks became obliterated, and people could not tell the
-limits of their estates.
-
-I was informed by an eye-witness that the cattle in herds of thousands
-rushed into the Parana, and being exhausted by hunger they were unable
-to crawl up the muddy banks, and thus were drowned. The arm of the
-river which runs by San Pedro was so full of putrid carcasses, that the
-master of a vessel told me that the smell rendered it quite impassable.
-Without doubt several hundred thousand animals thus perished in the
-river: their bodies when putrid were seen floating down the stream; and
-many in all probability were deposited in the estuary of the Plata. All
-the small rivers became highly saline, and this caused the death of
-vast numbers in particular spots; for when an animal drinks of such
-water it does not recover. Azara describes [9] the fury of the wild
-horses on a similar occasion, rushing into the marshes, those which
-arrived first being overwhelmed and crushed by those which followed. He
-adds that more than once he has seen the carcasses of upwards of a
-thousand wild horses thus destroyed. I noticed that the smaller
-streams in the Pampas were paved with a breccia of bones but this
-probably is the effect of a gradual increase, rather than of the
-destruction at any one period. Subsequently to the drought of 1827 to
-1832, a very rainy season followed which caused great floods. Hence it
-is almost certain that some thousands of the skeletons were buried by
-the deposits of the very next year. What would be the opinion of a
-geologist, viewing such an enormous collection of bones, of all kinds
-of animals and of all ages, thus embedded in one thick earthy mass?
-Would he not attribute it to a flood having swept over the surface of
-the land, rather than to the common order of things? [10]
-
-October 12th.--I had intended to push my excursion further, but not
-being quite well, I was compelled to return by a balandra, or
-one-masted vessel of about a hundred tons' burden, which was bound to
-Buenos Ayres. As the weather was not fair, we moored early in the day
-to a branch of a tree on one of the islands. The Parana is full of
-islands, which undergo a constant round of decay and renovation. In the
-memory of the master several large ones had disappeared, and others
-again had been formed and protected by vegetation. They are composed
-of muddy sand, without even the smallest pebble, and were then about
-four feet above the level of the river; but during the periodical
-floods they are inundated. They all present one character; numerous
-willows and a few other trees are bound together by a great variety of
-creeping plants, thus forming a thick jungle. These thickets afford a
-retreat for capybaras and jaguars. The fear of the latter animal quite
-destroyed all pleasure in scrambling through the woods. This evening I
-had not proceeded a hundred yards, before finding indubitable signs of
-the recent presence of the tiger, I was obliged to come back. On every
-island there were tracks; and as on the former excursion "el rastro de
-los Indios" had been the subject of conversation, so in this was "el
-rastro del tigre." The wooded banks of the great rivers appear to be
-the favourite haunts of the jaguar; but south of the Plata, I was told
-that they frequented the reeds bordering lakes: wherever they are, they
-seem to require water. Their common prey is the capybara, so that it
-is generally said, where capybaras are numerous there is little danger
-from the jaguar. Falconer states that near the southern side of the
-mouth of the Plata there are many jaguars, and that they chiefly live
-on fish; this account I have heard repeated. On the Parana they have
-killed many wood-cutters, and have even entered vessels at night. There
-is a man now living in the Bajada, who, coming up from below when it
-was dark, was seized on the deck; he escaped, however, with the loss of
-the use of one arm. When the floods drive these animals from the
-islands, they are most dangerous. I was told that a few years since a
-very large one found its way into a church at St. Fe: two padres
-entering one after the other were killed, and a third, who came to see
-what was the matter, escaped with difficulty. The beast was destroyed
-by being shot from a corner of the building which was unroofed. They
-commit also at these times great ravages among cattle and horses. It
-is said that they kill their prey by breaking their necks. If driven
-from the carcass, they seldom return to it. The Gauchos say that the
-jaguar, when wandering about at night, is much tormented by the foxes
-yelping as they follow him. This is a curious coincidence with the
-fact which is generally affirmed of the jackals accompanying, in a
-similarly officious manner, the East Indian tiger. The jaguar is a
-noisy animal, roaring much by night, and especially before bad weather.
-
-One day, when hunting on the banks of the Uruguay, I was shown certain
-trees, to which these animals constantly recur for the purpose, as it
-is said, of sharpening their claws. I saw three well-known trees; in
-front, the bark was worn smooth, as if by the breast of the animal, and
-on each side there were deep scratches, or rather grooves, extending in
-an oblique line, nearly a yard in length. The scars were of different
-ages. A common method of ascertaining whether a jaguar is in the
-neighbourhood is to examine these trees. I imagine this habit of the
-jaguar is exactly similar to one which may any day be seen in the
-common cat, as with outstretched legs and exserted claws it scrapes the
-leg of a chair; and I have heard of young fruit-trees in an orchard in
-England having been thus much injured. Some such habit must also be
-common to the puma, for on the bare hard soil of Patagonia I have
-frequently seen scores so deep that no other animal could have made
-them. The object of this practice is, I believe, to tear off the
-ragged points of their claws, and not, as the Gauchos think, to sharpen
-them. The jaguar is killed, without much difficulty, by the aid of
-dogs baying and driving him up a tree, where he is despatched with
-bullets.
-
-Owing to bad weather we remained two days at our moorings. Our only
-amusement was catching fish for our dinner: there were several kinds,
-and all good eating. A fish called the "armado" (a Silurus) is
-remarkable from a harsh grating noise which it makes when caught by
-hook and line, and which can be distinctly heard when the fish is
-beneath the water. This same fish has the power of firmly catching
-hold of any object, such as the blade of an oar or the fishing-line,
-with the strong spine both of its pectoral and dorsal fin. In the
-evening the weather was quite tropical, the thermometer standing at 79
-degs. Numbers of fireflies were hovering about, and the musquitoes
-were very troublesome. I exposed my hand for five minutes, and it was
-soon black with them; I do not suppose there could have been less than
-fifty, all busy sucking.
-
-October 15th.--We got under way and passed Punta Gorda, where there is
-a colony of tame Indians from the province of Missiones. We sailed
-rapidly down the current, but before sunset, from a silly fear of bad
-weather, we brought-to in a narrow arm of the river. I took the boat
-and rowed some distance up this creek. It was very narrow, winding,
-and deep; on each side a wall thirty or forty feet high, formed by
-trees intwined with creepers, gave to the canal a singularly gloomy
-appearance. I here saw a very extraordinary bird, called the
-Scissor-beak (Rhynchops nigra). It has short legs, web feet, extremely
-long-pointed wings, and is of about the size of a tern. The beak is
-flattened laterally, that is, in a plane at right angles to that of a
-spoonbill or duck. It is as flat and elastic as an ivory paper-cutter,
-and the lower mandible, differing from every other bird, is an inch and
-a half longer than the upper. In a lake near Maldonado, from which the
-water had been nearly drained, and which, in consequence, swarmed with
-small fry, I saw several of these birds, generally in small flocks,
-flying rapidly backwards and forwards close to the surface of the lake.
-They kept their bills wide open, and the lower mandible half buried in
-the water. Thus skimming the surface, they ploughed it in their
-course: the water was quite smooth, and it formed a most curious
-spectacle to behold a flock, each bird leaving its narrow wake on the
-mirror-like surface. In their flight they frequently twist about with
-extreme quickness, and dexterously manage with their projecting lower
-mandible to plough up small fish, which are secured by the upper and
-shorter half of their scissor-like
-
-[picture]
-
-bills. This fact I repeatedly saw, as, like swallows, they continued
-to fly backwards and forwards close before me. Occasionally when
-leaving the surface of the water their flight was wild, irregular, and
-rapid; they then uttered loud harsh cries. When these birds are
-fishing, the advantage of the long primary feathers of their wings, in
-keeping them dry, is very evident. When thus employed, their forms
-resemble the symbol by which many artists represent marine birds. Their
-tails are much used in steering their irregular course.
-
-These birds are common far inland along the course of the Rio Parana;
-it is said that they remain here during the whole year, and breed in
-the marshes. During the day they rest in flocks on the grassy plains
-at some distance from the water. Being at anchor, as I have said, in
-one of the deep creeks between the islands of the Parana, as the
-evening drew to a close, one of these scissor-beaks suddenly appeared.
-The water was quite still, and many little fish were rising. The bird
-continued for a long time to skim the surface, flying in its wild and
-irregular manner up and down the narrow canal, now dark with the
-growing night and the shadows of the overhanging trees. At Monte
-Video, I observed that some large flocks during the day remained on the
-mud-banks at the head of the harbour, in the same manner as on the
-grassy plains near the Parana; and every evening they took flight
-seaward. From these facts I suspect that the Rhynchops generally
-fishes by night, at which time many of the lower animals come most
-abundantly to the surface. M. Lesson states that he has seen these
-birds opening the shells of the mactrae buried in the sand-banks on the
-coast of Chile: from their weak bills, with the lower mandible so much
-projecting, their short legs and long wings, it is very improbable that
-this can be a general habit.
-
-In our course down the Parana, I observed only three other birds, whose
-habits are worth mentioning. One is a small kingfisher (Ceryle
-Americana); it has a longer tail than the European species, and hence
-does not sit in so stiff and upright a position. Its flight also,
-instead of being direct and rapid, like the course of an arrow, is weak
-and undulatory, as among the soft-billed birds. It utters a low note,
-like the clicking together of two small stones. A small green parrot
-(Conurus murinus), with a grey breast, appears to prefer the tall trees
-on the islands to any other situation for its building-place. A number
-of nests are placed so close together as to form one great mass of
-sticks. These parrots always live in flocks, and commit great ravages
-on the corn-fields. I was told, that near Colonia 2500 were killed in
-the course of one year. A bird with a forked tail, terminated by two
-long feathers (Tyrannus savana), and named by the Spaniards
-scissor-tail, is very common near Buenos Ayres: it commonly sits on a
-branch of the _ombu_ tree, near a house, and thence takes a short
-flight in pursuit of insects, and returns to the same spot. When on
-the wing it presents in its manner of flight and general appearance a
-caricature-likeness of the common swallow. It has the power of turning
-very shortly in the air, and in so doing opens and shuts its tail,
-sometimes in a horizontal or lateral and sometimes in a vertical
-direction, just like a pair of scissors.
-
-October 16th.--Some leagues below Rozario, the western shore of the
-Parana is bounded by perpendicular cliffs, which extend in a long line
-to below San Nicolas; hence it more resembles a sea-coast than that of
-a fresh-water river. It is a great drawback to the scenery of the
-Parana, that, from the soft nature of its banks, the water is very
-muddy. The Uruguay, flowing through a granitic country, is much
-clearer; and where the two channels unite at the head of the Plata, the
-waters may for a long distance be distinguished by their black and red
-colours. In the evening, the wind being not quite fair, as usual we
-immediately moored, and the next day, as it blew rather freshly, though
-with a favouring current, the master was much too indolent to think of
-starting. At Bajada, he was described to me as "hombre muy aflicto"--a
-man always miserable to get on; but certainly he bore all delays with
-admirable resignation. He was an old Spaniard, and had been many years
-in this country. He professed a great liking to the English, but
-stoutly maintained that the battle of Trafalgar was merely won by the
-Spanish captains having been all bought over; and that the only really
-gallant action on either side was performed by the Spanish admiral. It
-struck me as rather characteristic, that this man should prefer his
-countrymen being thought the worst of traitors, rather than unskilful
-or cowardly.
-
-18th and 19th.--We continued slowly to sail down the noble stream: the
-current helped us but little. We met, during our descent, very few
-vessels. One of the best gifts of nature, in so grand a channel of
-communication, seems here wilfully thrown away--a river in which ships
-might navigate from a temperate country, as surprisingly abundant in
-certain productions as destitute of others, to another possessing a
-tropical climate, and a soil which, according to the best of judges, M.
-Bonpland, is perhaps unequalled in fertility in any part of the world.
-How different would have been the aspect of this river if English
-colonists had by good fortune first sailed up the Plata! What noble
-towns would now have occupied its shores! Till the death of Francia,
-the Dictator of Paraguay, these two countries must remain distinct, as
-if placed on opposite sides of the globe. And when the old
-bloody-minded tyrant is gone to his long account, Paraguay will be torn
-by revolutions, violent in proportion to the previous unnatural calm.
-That country will have to learn, like every other South American state,
-that a republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body of men
-imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
-
-October 20th.--Being arrived at the mouth of the Parana, and as I was
-very anxious to reach Buenos Ayres, I went on shore at Las Conchas,
-with the intention of riding there. Upon landing, I found to my great
-surprise that I was to a certain degree a prisoner. A violent
-revolution having broken out, all the ports were laid under an embargo.
-I could not return to my vessel, and as for going by land to the city,
-it was out of the question. After a long conversation with the
-commandant, I obtained permission to go the next day to General Rolor,
-who commanded a division of the rebels on this side the capital. In
-the morning I rode to the encampment. The general, officers, and
-soldiers, all appeared, and I believe really were, great villains. The
-general, the very evening before he left the city, voluntarily went to
-the Governor, and with his hand to his heart, pledged his word of
-honour that he at least would remain faithful to the last. The general
-told me that the city was in a state of close blockade, and that all he
-could do was to give me a passport to the commander-in-chief of the
-rebels at Quilmes. We had therefore to take a great sweep round the
-city, and it was with much difficulty that we procured horses. My
-reception at the encampment was quite civil, but I was told it was
-impossible that I could be allowed to enter the city. I was very
-anxious about this, as I anticipated the Beagle's departure from the
-Rio Plata earlier than it took place. Having mentioned, however,
-General Rosas's obliging kindness to me when at the Colorado, magic
-itself could not have altered circumstances quicker than did this
-conversation. I was instantly told that though they could not give me
-a passport, if I chose to leave my guide and horses, I might pass their
-sentinels. I was too glad to accept of this, and an officer was sent
-with me to give directions that I should not be stopped at the bridge.
-The road for the space of a league was quite deserted. I met one party
-of soldiers, who were satisfied by gravely looking at an old passport:
-and at length I was not a little pleased to find myself within the city.
-
-This revolution was supported by scarcely any pretext of grievances:
-but in a state which, in the course of nine months (from February to
-October, 1820), underwent fifteen changes in its government--each
-governor, according to the constitution, being elected for three
-years--it would be very unreasonable to ask for pretexts. In this
-case, a party of men--who, being attached to Rosas, were disgusted with
-the governor Balcarce--to the number of seventy left the city, and with
-the cry of Rosas the whole country took arms. The city was then
-blockaded, no provisions, cattle or horses, were allowed to enter;
-besides this, there was only a little skirmishing, and a few men daily
-killed. The outside party well knew that by stopping the supply of
-meat they would certainly be victorious. General Rosas could not have
-known of this rising; but it appears to be quite consonant with the
-plans of his party. A year ago he was elected governor, but he refused
-it, unless the Sala would also confer on him extraordinary powers. This
-was refused, and since then his party have shown that no other governor
-can keep his place. The warfare on both sides was avowedly protracted
-till it was possible to hear from Rosas. A note arrived a few days
-after I left Buenos Ayres, which stated that the General disapproved of
-peace having been broken, but that he thought the outside party had
-justice on their side. On the bare reception of this, the Governor,
-ministers, and part of the military, to the number of some hundreds,
-fled from the city. The rebels entered, elected a new governor, and
-were paid for their services to the number of 5500 men. From these
-proceedings, it was clear that Rosas ultimately would become the
-dictator: to the term king, the people in this, as in other republics,
-have a particular dislike. Since leaving South America, we have heard
-that Rosas has been elected, with powers and for a time altogether
-opposed to the constitutional principles of the republic.
-
-[1] The bizcacha (Lagostomus trichodactylus) somewhat resembles a large
-rabbit, but with bigger gnawing teeth and a long tail; it has, however,
-only three toes behind, like the agouti. During the last three or four
-years the skins of these animals have been sent to England for the sake
-of the fur.
-
-[2] Journal of Asiatic Soc., vol. v. p. 363.
-
-[3] I need hardly state here that there is good evidence against any
-horse living in America at the time of Columbus.
-
-[4] Cuvier. Ossemens Fossils, tom. i. p. 158.
-
-[5] This is the geographical division followed by Lichtenstein,
-Swainson, Erichson, and Richardson. The section from Vera Cruz to
-Acapulco, given by Humboldt in the Polit. Essay on Kingdom of N. Spain
-will show how immense a barrier the Mexican table-land forms. Dr.
-Richardson, in his admirable Report on the Zoology of N. America read
-before the Brit. Assoc. 1836 (p. 157), talking of the identification of
-a Mexican animal with the Synetheres prehensilis, says, "We do not know
-with what propriety, but if correct, it is, if not a solitary instance,
-at least very nearly so, of a rodent animal being common to North and
-South America."
-
-[6] See Dr. Richardson's Report, p. 157; also L'Institut, 1837, p. 253.
-Cuvier says the kinkajou is found in the larger Antilles, but this is
-doubtful. M. Gervais states that the Didelphis crancrivora is found
-there. It is certain that the West Indies possess some mammifers
-peculiar to themselves. A tooth of a mastadon has been brought from
-Bahama; Edin. New Phil. Journ., 1826, p. 395.
-
-[7] See the admirable Appendix by Dr. Buckland to Beechey's Voyage;
-also the writings of Chamisso in Kotzebue's Voyage.
-
-[8] In Captain Owen's Surveying Voyage (vol. ii. p. 274) there is a
-curious account of the effects of a drought on the elephants, at
-Benguela (west coast of Africa). "A number of these animals had some
-time since entered the town, in a body, to possess themselves of the
-wells, not being able to procure any water in the country. The
-inhabitants mustered, when a desperate conflict ensued, which
-terminated in the ultimate discomfiture of the invaders, but not until
-they had killed one man, and wounded several others." The town is said
-to have a population of nearly three thousand! Dr. Malcolmson informs
-me that, during a great drought in India, the wild animals entered the
-tents of some troops at Ellore, and that a hare drank out of a vessel
-held by the adjutant of the regiment.
-
-[9] Travels, vol. i. p. 374.
-
-[10] These droughts to a certain degree seem to be almost periodical; I
-was told the dates of several others, and the intervals were about
-fifteen years.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
-
-Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento--Value of an Estancia--Cattle, how
-counted--Singular Breed of Oxen--Perforated Pebbles--Shepherd
-Dogs--Horses broken-in, Gauchos riding--Character of Inhabitants--Rio
-Plata--Flocks of Butterflies--Aeronaut Spiders--Phosphorescence of the
-Sea--Port Desire--Guanaco--Port St. Julian--Geology of
-Patagonia--Fossil gigantic Animal--Types of Organization
-constant--Change in the Zoology of America--Causes of Extinction.
-
-
-HAVING been delayed for nearly a fortnight in the city, I was glad to
-escape on board a packet bound for Monte Video. A town in a state of
-blockade must always be a disagreeable place of residence; in this case
-moreover there were constant apprehensions from robbers within. The
-sentinels were the worst of all; for, from their office and from having
-arms in their hands, they robbed with a degree of authority which other
-men could not imitate.
-
-Our passage was a very long and tedious one. The Plata looks like a
-noble estuary on the map; but is in truth a poor affair. A wide
-expanse of muddy water has neither grandeur nor beauty. At one time of
-the day, the two shores, both of which are extremely low, could just be
-distinguished from the deck. On arriving at Monte Video I found that
-the Beagle would not sail for some time, so I prepared for a short
-excursion in this part of Banda Oriental. Everything which I have said
-about the country near Maldonado is applicable to Monte Video; but the
-land, with the one exception of the Green Mount 450 feet high, from
-which it takes its name, is far more level. Very little of the
-undulating grassy plain is enclosed; but near the town there are a few
-hedge-banks, covered with agaves, cacti, and fennel.
-
-November 14th.--We left Monte Video in the afternoon. I intended to
-proceed to Colonia del Sacramiento, situated on the northern bank of
-the Plata and opposite to Buenos Ayres, and thence, following up the
-Uruguay, to the village of Mercedes on the Rio Negro (one of the many
-rivers of this name in South America), and from this point to return
-direct to Monte Video. We slept at the house of my guide at Canelones.
-In the morning we rose early, in the hopes of being able to ride a good
-distance; but it was a vain attempt, for all the rivers were flooded.
-We passed in boats the streams of Canelones, St. Lucia, and San Jose,
-and thus lost much time. On a former excursion I crossed the Lucia
-near its mouth, and I was surprised to observe how easily our horses,
-although not used to swim, passed over a width of at least six hundred
-yards. On mentioning this at Monte Video, I was told that a vessel
-containing some mountebanks and their horses, being wrecked in the
-Plata, one horse swam seven miles to the shore. In the course of the
-day I was amused by the dexterity with which a Gaucho forced a restive
-horse to swim a river. He stripped off his clothes, and jumping on its
-back, rode into the water till it was out of its depth; then slipping
-off over the crupper, he caught hold of the tail, and as often as the
-horse turned round the man frightened it back by splashing water in its
-face. As soon as the horse touched the bottom on the other side, the
-man pulled himself on, and was firmly seated, bridle in hand, before
-the horse gained the bank. A naked man on a naked horse is a fine
-spectacle; I had no idea how well the two animals suited each other.
-The tail of a horse is a very useful appendage; I have passed a river
-in a boat with four people in it, which was ferried across in the same
-way as the Gaucho. If a man and horse have to cross a broad river, the
-best plan is for the man to catch hold of the pommel or mane, and help
-himself with the other arm.
-
-We slept and stayed the following day at the post of Cufre. In the
-evening the postman or letter-carrier arrived. He was a day after his
-time, owing to the Rio Rozario being flooded. It would not, however,
-be of much consequence; for, although he had passed through some of the
-principal towns in Banda Oriental, his luggage consisted of two
-letters! The view from the house was pleasing; an undulating green
-surface, with distant glimpses of the Plata. I find that I look at
-this province with very different eyes from what I did upon my first
-arrival. I recollect I then thought it singularly level; but now,
-after galloping over the Pampas, my only surprise is, what could have
-induced me ever to call it level. The country is a series of
-undulations, in themselves perhaps not absolutely great, but, as
-compared to the plains of St. Fe, real mountains. From these
-inequalities there is an abundance of small rivulets, and the turf is
-green and luxuriant.
-
-November 17th.--We crossed the Rozario, which was deep and rapid, and
-passing the village of Colla, arrived at midday at Colonia del
-Sacramiento. The distance is twenty leagues, through a country covered
-with fine grass, but poorly stocked with cattle or inhabitants. I was
-invited to sleep at Colonia, and to accompany on the following day a
-gentleman to his estancia, where there were some limestone rocks. The
-town is built on a stony promontory something in the same manner as at
-Monte Video. It is strongly fortified, but both fortifications and
-town suffered much in the Brazilian war. It is very ancient; and the
-irregularity of the streets, and the surrounding groves of old orange
-and peach trees, gave it a pretty appearance. The church is a curious
-ruin; it was used as a powder-magazine, and was struck by lightning in
-one of the ten thousand thunderstorms of the Rio Plata. Two-thirds of
-the building were blown away to the very foundation; and the rest
-stands a shattered and curious monument of the united powers of
-lightning and gunpowder. In the evening I wandered about the
-half-demolished walls of the town. It was the chief seat of the
-Brazilian war;--a war most injurious to this country, not so much in
-its immediate effects, as in being the origin of a multitude of
-generals and all other grades of officers. More generals are numbered
-(but not paid) in the United Provinces of La Plata than in the United
-Kingdom of Great Britain. These gentlemen have learned to like power,
-and do not object to a little skirmishing. Hence there are many always
-on the watch to create disturbance and to overturn a government which
-as yet has never rested on any staple foundation. I noticed, however,
-both here and in other places, a very general interest in the ensuing
-election for the President; and this appears a good sign for the
-prosperity of this little country. The inhabitants do not require much
-education in their representatives; I heard some men discussing the
-merits of those for Colonia; and it was said that, "although they were
-not men of business, they could all sign their names:" with this they
-seemed to think every reasonable man ought to be satisfied.
-
-18th.--Rode with my host to his estancia, at the Arroyo de San Juan. In
-the evening we took a ride round the estate: it contained two square
-leagues and a half, and was situated in what is called a rincon; that
-is, one side was fronted by the Plata, and the two others guarded by
-impassable brooks. There was an excellent port for little vessels, and
-an abundance of small wood, which is valuable as supplying fuel to
-Buenos Ayres. I was curious to know the value of so complete an
-estancia. Of cattle there were 3000, and it would well support three
-or four times that number; of mares 800, together with 150 broken-in
-horses, and 600 sheep. There was plenty of water and limestone, a
-rough house, excellent corrals, and a peach orchard. For all this he
-had been offered 2000 Pounds, and he only wanted 500 Pounds additional,
-and probably would sell it for less. The chief trouble with an
-estancia is driving the cattle twice a week to a central spot, in order
-to make them tame, and to count them. This latter operation would be
-thought difficult, where there are ten or fifteen thousand head
-together. It is managed on the principle that the cattle invariably
-divide themselves into little troops of from forty to one hundred. Each
-troop is recognized by a few peculiarly marked animals, and its number
-is known: so that, one being lost out of ten thousand, it is perceived
-by its absence from one of the tropillas. During a stormy night the
-cattle all mingle together; but the next morning the tropillas separate
-as before; so that each animal must know its fellow out of ten thousand
-others.
-
-On two occasions I met with in this province some oxen of a very
-curious breed, called nata or niata. They appear externally to hold
-nearly the same relation to other cattle, which bull or pug dogs do to
-other dogs. Their forehead is very short and broad, with the nasal end
-turned up, and the upper lip much drawn back; their lower jaws project
-beyond the upper, and have a corresponding upward curve; hence their
-teeth are always exposed. Their nostrils are seated high up and are
-very open; their eyes project outwards. When walking they carry their
-heads low, on a short neck; and their hinder legs are rather longer
-compared with the front legs than is usual. Their bare teeth, their
-short heads, and upturned nostrils give them the most ludicrous
-self-confident air of defiance imaginable.
-
-Since my return, I have procured a skeleton head, through the kindness
-of my friend Captain Sulivan, R. N., which is now deposited in the
-College of Surgeons. [1] Don F. Muniz, of Luxan, has kindly collected
-for me all the information which he could respecting this breed. From
-his account it seems that about eighty or ninety years ago, they were
-rare and kept as curiosities at Buenos Ayres. The breed is universally
-believed to have originated amongst the Indians southward of the Plata;
-and that it was with them the commonest kind. Even to this day, those
-reared in the provinces near the Plata show their less civilized
-origin, in being fiercer than common cattle, and in the cow easily
-deserting her first calf, if visited too often or molested. It is a
-singular fact that an almost similar structure to the abnormal [2] one
-of the niata breed, characterizes, as I am informed by Dr. Falconer,
-that great extinct ruminant of India, the Sivatherium. The breed is
-very _true_; and a niata bull and cow invariably produce niata calves.
-A niata bull with a common cow, or the reverse cross, produces
-offspring having an intermediate character, but with the niata
-characters strongly displayed: according to Senor Muniz, there is the
-clearest evidence, contrary to the common belief of agriculturists in
-analogous cases, that the niata cow when crossed with a common bull
-transmits her peculiarities more strongly than the niata bull when
-crossed with a common cow. When the pasture is tolerably long, the
-niata cattle feed with the tongue and palate as well as common cattle;
-but during the great droughts, when so many animals perish, the niata
-breed is under a great disadvantage, and would be exterminated if not
-attended to; for the common cattle, like horses, are able just to keep
-alive, by browsing with their lips on twigs of trees and reeds; this
-the niatas cannot so well do, as their lips do not join, and hence they
-are found to perish before the common cattle. This strikes me as a
-good illustration of how little we are able to judge from the ordinary
-habits of life, on what circumstances, occurring only at long
-intervals, the rarity or extinction of a species may be determined.
-
-November 19th.--Passing the valley of Las Vacas, we slept at a house of
-a North American, who worked a lime-kiln on the Arroyo de las Vivoras.
-In the morning we rode to a protecting headland on the banks of the
-river, called Punta Gorda. On the way we tried to find a jaguar. There
-were plenty of fresh tracks, and we visited the trees, on which they
-are said to sharpen their claws; but we did not succeed in disturbing
-one. From this point the Rio Uruguay presented to our view a noble
-volume of water. From the clearness and rapidity of the stream, its
-appearance was far superior to that of its neighbour the Parana. On
-the opposite coast, several branches from the latter river entered the
-Uruguay. As the sun was shining, the two colours of the waters could
-be seen quite distinct.
-
-In the evening we proceeded on our road towards Mercedes on the Rio
-Negro. At night we asked permission to sleep at an estancia at which
-we happened to arrive. It was a very large estate, being ten leagues
-square, and the owner is one of the greatest landowners in the country.
-His nephew had charge of it, and with him there was a captain in the
-army, who the other day ran away from Buenos Ayres. Considering their
-station, their conversation was rather amusing. They expressed, as was
-usual, unbounded astonishment at the globe being round, and could
-scarcely credit that a hole would, if deep enough, come out on the
-other side. They had, however, heard of a country where there were six
-months of light and six of darkness, and where the inhabitants were
-very tall and thin! They were curious about the price and condition of
-horses and cattle in England. Upon finding out we did not catch our
-animals with the lazo, they cried out, "Ah, then, you use nothing but
-the bolas:" the idea of an enclosed country was quite new to them. The
-captain at last said, he had one question to ask me, which he should be
-very much obliged if I would answer with all truth. I trembled to
-think how deeply scientific it would be: it was, "Whether the ladies of
-Buenos Ayres were not the handsomest in the world." I replied, like a
-renegade, "Charmingly so." He added, "I have one other question: Do
-ladies in any other part of the world wear such large combs?" I
-solemnly assured him that they did not. They were absolutely
-delighted. The captain exclaimed, "Look there! a man who has seen half
-the world says it is the case; we always thought so, but now we know
-it." My excellent judgment in combs and beauty procured me a most
-hospitable reception; the captain forced me to take his bed, and he
-would sleep on his recado.
-
-21st.--Started at sunrise, and rode slowly during the whole day. The
-geological nature of this part of the province was different from the
-rest, and closely resembled that of the Pampas. In consequence, there
-were immense beds of the thistle, as well as of the cardoon: the whole
-country, indeed, may be called one great bed of these plants. The two
-sorts grow separate, each plant in company with its own kind. The
-cardoon is as high as a horse's back, but the Pampas thistle is often
-higher than the crown of the rider's head. To leave the road for a
-yard is out of the question; and the road itself is partly, and in some
-cases entirely closed. Pasture, of course there is none; if cattle or
-horses once enter the bed, they are for the time completely lost. Hence
-it is very hazardous to attempt to drive cattle at this season of the
-year; for when jaded enough to face the thistles, they rush among them,
-and are seen no more. In these districts there are very few estancias,
-and these few are situated in the neighbourhood of damp valleys, where
-fortunately neither of these overwhelming plants can exist. As night
-came on before we arrived at our journey's end, we slept at a miserable
-little hovel inhabited by the poorest people. The extreme though
-rather formal courtesy of our host and hostess, considering their grade
-of life, was quite delightful.
-
-November 22nd.--Arrived at an estancia on the Berquelo belonging to a
-very hospitable Englishman, to whom I had a letter of introduction from
-my friend Mr. Lumb. I stayed here three days. One morning I rode with
-my host to the Sierra del Pedro Flaco, about twenty miles up the Rio
-Negro. Nearly the whole country was covered with good though coarse
-grass, which was as high as a horse's belly; yet there were square
-leagues without a single head of cattle. The province of Banda
-Oriental, if well stocked, would support an astonishing number of
-animals, at present the annual export of hides from Monte Video amounts
-to three hundred thousand; and the home consumption, from waste, is
-very considerable. An "estanciero" told me that he often had to send
-large herds of cattle a long journey to a salting establishment, and
-that the tired beasts were frequently obliged to be killed and skinned;
-but that he could never persuade the Gauchos to eat of them, and every
-evening a fresh beast was slaughtered for their suppers! The view of
-the Rio Negro from the Sierra was more picturesque than any other which
-I saw in this province. The river, broad, deep, and rapid, wound at
-the foot of a rocky precipitous cliff: a belt of wood followed its
-course, and the horizon terminated in the distant undulations of the
-turf-plain.
-
-When in this neighbourhood, I several times heard of the Sierra de las
-Cuentas: a hill distant many miles to the northward. The name
-signifies hill of beads. I was assured that vast numbers of little
-round stones, of various colours, each with a small cylindrical hole,
-are found there. Formerly the Indians used to collect them, for the
-purpose of making necklaces and bracelets--a taste, I may observe,
-which is common to all savage nations, as well as to the most polished.
-I did not know what to understand from this story, but upon mentioning
-it at the Cape of Good Hope to Dr. Andrew Smith, he told me that he
-recollected finding on the south-eastern coast of Africa, about one
-hundred miles to the eastward of St. John's river, some quartz
-crystals with their edges blunted from attrition, and mixed with gravel
-on the sea-beach. Each crystal was about five lines in diameter, and
-from an inch to an inch and a half in length. Many of them had a small
-canal extending from one extremity to the other, perfectly cylindrical,
-and of a size that readily admitted a coarse thread or a piece of fine
-catgut. Their colour was red or dull white. The natives were
-acquainted with this structure in crystals. I have mentioned these
-circumstances because, although no crystallized body is at present
-known to assume this form, it may lead some future traveller to
-investigate the real nature of such stones.
-
-
-While staying at this estancia, I was amused with what I saw and heard
-of the shepherd-dogs of the country. [3] When riding, it is a common
-thing to meet a large flock of sheep guarded by one or two dogs, at the
-distance of some miles from any house or man. I often wondered how so
-firm a friendship had been established. The method of education
-consists in separating the puppy, while very young, from the bitch, and
-in accustoming it to its future companions. An ewe is held three or
-four times a day for the little thing to suck, and a nest of wool is
-made for it in the sheep-pen; at no time is it allowed to associate
-with other dogs, or with the children of the family. The puppy is,
-moreover, generally castrated; so that, when grown up, it can scarcely
-have any feelings in common with the rest of its kind. From this
-education it has no wish to leave the flock, and just as another dog
-will defend its master, man, so will these the sheep. It is amusing to
-observe, when approaching a flock, how the dog immediately advances
-barking, and the sheep all close in his rear, as if round the oldest
-ram. These dogs are also easily taught to bring home the flock, at a
-certain hour in the evening. Their most troublesome fault, when young,
-is their desire of playing with the sheep; for in their sport they
-sometimes gallop their poor subjects most unmercifully.
-
-The shepherd-dog comes to the house every day for some meat, and as
-soon as it is given him, he skulks away as if ashamed of himself. On
-these occasions the house-dogs are very tyrannical, and the least of
-them will attack and pursue the stranger. The minute, however, the
-latter has reached the flock, he turns round and begins to bark, and
-then all the house-dogs take very quickly to their heels. In a similar
-manner a whole pack of the hungry wild dogs will scarcely ever (and I
-was told by some never) venture to attack a flock guarded by even one
-of these faithful shepherds. The whole account appears to me a curious
-instance of the pliability of the affections in the dog; and yet,
-whether wild or however educated, he has a feeling of respect or fear
-for those that are fulfilling their instinct of association. For we
-can understand on no principle the wild dogs being driven away by the
-single one with its flock, except that they consider, from some
-confused notion, that the one thus associated gains power, as if in
-company with its own kind. F. Cuvier has observed that all animals that
-readily enter into domestication, consider man as a member of their own
-society, and thus fulfil their instinct of association. In the above
-case the shepherd-dog ranks the sheep as its fellow-brethren, and thus
-gains confidence; and the wild dogs, though knowing that the individual
-sheep are not dogs, but are good to eat, yet partly consent to this
-view when seeing them in a flock with a shepherd-dog at their head.
-
-One evening a "domidor" (a subduer of horses) came for the purpose of
-breaking-in some colts. I will describe the preparatory steps, for I
-believe they have not been mentioned by other travellers. A troop of
-wild young horses is driven into the corral, or large enclosure of
-stakes, and the door is shut. We will suppose that one man alone has
-to catch and mount a horse, which as yet had never felt bridle or
-saddle. I conceive, except by a Gaucho, such a feat would be utterly
-impracticable. The Gaucho picks out a full-grown colt; and as the
-beast rushes round the circus he throws his lazo so as to catch both
-the front legs. Instantly the horse rolls over with a heavy shock, and
-whilst struggling on the ground, the Gaucho, holding the lazo tight,
-makes a circle, so as to catch one of the hind legs just beneath the
-fetlock, and draws it close to the two front legs: he then hitches the
-lazo, so that the three are bound together. Then sitting on the
-horse's neck, he fixes a strong bridle, without a bit, to the lower
-jaw: this he does by passing a narrow thong through the eye-holes at
-the end of the reins, and several times round both jaw and tongue. The
-two front legs are now tied closely together with a strong leathern
-thong, fastened by a slip-knot. The lazo, which bound the three
-together, being then loosed, the horse rises with difficulty. The
-Gaucho now holding fast the bridle fixed to the lower jaw, leads the
-horse outside the corral. If a second man is present (otherwise the
-trouble is much greater) he holds the animal's head, whilst the first
-puts on the horsecloths and saddle, and girths the whole together.
-During this operation, the horse, from dread and astonishment at thus
-being bound round the waist, throws himself over and over again on the
-ground, and, till beaten, is unwilling to rise. At last, when the
-saddling is finished, the poor animal can hardly breathe from fear, and
-is white with foam and sweat. The man now prepares to mount by
-pressing heavily on the stirrup, so that the horse may not lose its
-balance; and at the moment that he throws his leg over the animal's
-back, he pulls the slip-knot binding the front legs, and the beast is
-free. Some "domidors" pull the knot while the animal is lying on the
-ground, and, standing over the saddle, allow him to rise beneath them.
-The horse, wild with dread, gives a few most violent bounds, and then
-starts off at full gallop: when quite exhausted, the man, by patience,
-brings him back to the corral, where, reeking hot and scarcely alive,
-the poor beast is let free. Those animals which will not gallop away,
-but obstinately throw themselves on the ground, are by far the most
-troublesome. This process is tremendously severe, but in two or three
-trials the horse is tamed. It is not, however, for some weeks that the
-animal is ridden with the iron bit and solid ring, for it must learn to
-associate the will of its rider with the feel of the rein, before the
-most powerful bridle can be of any service.
-
-Animals are so abundant in these countries, that humanity and
-self-interest are not closely united; therefore I fear it is that the
-former is here scarcely known. One day, riding in the Pampas with a
-very respectable "estanciero," my horse, being tired, lagged behind.
-The man often shouted to me to spur him. When I remonstrated that it
-was a pity, for the horse was quite exhausted, he cried out, "Why
-not?--never mind--spur him--it is my horse." I had then some difficulty
-in making him comprehend that it was for the horse's sake, and not on
-his account, that I did not choose to use my spurs. He exclaimed, with
-a look of great surprise, "Ah, Don Carlos, que cosa!" It was clear that
-such an idea had never before entered his head.
-
-The Gauchos are well known to be perfect riders. The idea of being
-thrown, let the horse do what it likes; never enters their head. Their
-criterion of a good rider is, a man who can manage an untamed colt, or
-who, if his horse falls, alights on his own feet, or can perform other
-such exploits. I have heard of a man betting that he would throw his
-horse down twenty times, and that nineteen times he would not fall
-himself. I recollect seeing a Gaucho riding a very stubborn horse,
-which three times successively reared so high as to fall backwards with
-great violence. The man judged with uncommon coolness the proper
-moment for slipping off, not an instant before or after the right time;
-and as soon as the horse got up, the man jumped on his back, and at
-last they started at a gallop. The Gaucho never appears to exert any
-muscular force. I was one day watching a good rider, as we were
-galloping along at a rapid pace, and thought to myself, "Surely if the
-horse starts, you appear so careless on your seat, you must fall." At
-this moment, a male ostrich sprang from its nest right beneath the
-horse's nose: the young colt bounded on one side like a stag; but as
-for the man, all that could be said was, that he started and took
-fright with his horse.
-
-In Chile and Peru more pains are taken with the mouth of the horse than
-in La Plata, and this is evidently a consequence of the more intricate
-nature of the country. In Chile a horse is not considered perfectly
-broken, till he can be brought up standing, in the midst of his full
-speed, on any particular spot,--for instance, on a cloak thrown on the
-ground: or, again, he will charge a wall, and rearing, scrape the
-surface with his hoofs. I have seen an animal bounding with spirit,
-yet merely reined by a fore-finger and thumb, taken at full gallop
-across a courtyard, and then made to wheel round the post of a veranda
-with great speed, but at so equal a distance, that the rider, with
-outstretched arm, all the while kept one finger rubbing the post. Then
-making a demi-volte in the air, with the other arm outstretched in a
-like manner, he wheeled round, with astonishing force, in an opposite
-direction.
-
-Such a horse is well broken; and although this at first may appear
-useless, it is far otherwise. It is only carrying that which is daily
-necessary into perfection. When a bullock is checked and caught by the
-lazo, it will sometimes gallop round and round in a circle, and the
-horse being alarmed at the great strain, if not well broken, will not
-readily turn like the pivot of a wheel. In consequence many men have
-been killed; for if the lazo once takes a twist round a man's body, it
-will instantly, from the power of the two opposed animals, almost cut
-him in twain. On the same principle the races are managed; the course
-is only two or three hundred yards long, the wish being to have horses
-that can make a rapid dash. The race-horses are trained not only to
-stand with their hoofs touching a line, but to draw all four feet
-together, so as at the first spring to bring into play the full action
-of the hind-quarters. In Chile I was told an anecdote, which I believe
-was true; and it offers a good illustration of the use of a well-broken
-animal. A respectable man riding one day met two others, one of whom
-was mounted on a horse, which he knew to have been stolen from himself.
-He challenged them; they answered him by drawing their sabres and
-giving chase. The man, on his good and fleet beast, kept just ahead:
-as he passed a thick bush he wheeled round it, and brought up his horse
-to a dead check. The pursuers were obliged to shoot on one side and
-ahead. Then instantly dashing on, right behind them, he buried his
-knife in the back of one, wounded the other, recovered his horse from
-the dying robber, and rode home. For these feats of horsemanship two
-things are necessary: a most severe bit, like the Mameluke, the power
-of which, though seldom used, the horse knows full well; and large
-blunt spurs, that can be applied either as a mere touch, or as an
-instrument of extreme pain. I conceive that with English spurs, the
-slightest touch of which pricks the skin, it would be impossible to
-break in a horse after the South American fashion.
-
-At an estancia near Las Vacas large numbers of mares are weekly
-slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although worth only five paper
-dollars, or about half a crown apiece. It seems at first strange that
-it can answer to kill mares for such a trifle; but as it is thought
-ridiculous in this country ever to break in or ride a mare, they are of
-no value except for breeding. The only thing for which I ever saw
-mares used, was to tread out wheat from the ear, for which purpose they
-were driven round a circular enclosure, where the wheat-sheaves were
-strewed. The man employed for slaughtering the mares happened to be
-celebrated for his dexterity with the lazo. Standing at the distance
-of twelve yards from the mouth of the corral, he has laid a wager that
-he would catch by the legs every animal, without missing one, as it
-rushed past him. There was another man who said he would enter the
-corral on foot, catch a mare, fasten her front legs together, drive her
-out, throw her down, kill, skin, and stake the hide for drying (which
-latter is a tedious job); and he engaged that he would perform this
-whole operation on twenty-two animals in one day. Or he would kill and
-take the skin off fifty in the same time. This would have been a
-prodigious task, for it is considered a good day's work to skin and
-stake the hides of fifteen or sixteen animals.
-
-November 26th.--I set out on my return in a direct line for Monte
-Video. Having heard of some giant's bones at a neighbouring farm-house
-on the Sarandis, a small stream entering the Rio Negro, I rode there
-accompanied by my host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence
-the head of the Toxodon. [4] When found it was quite perfect; but the
-boys knocked out some of the teeth with stones, and then set up the
-head as a mark to throw at. By a most fortunate chance I found a
-perfect tooth, which exactly fitted one of the sockets in this skull,
-embedded by itself on the banks of the Rio Tercero, at the distance of
-about 180 miles from this place. I found remains of this extraordinary
-animal at two other places, so that it must formerly have been common.
-I found here, also, some large portions of the armour of a gigantic
-armadillo-like animal, and part of the great head of a Mylodon. The
-bones of this head are so fresh, that they contain, according to the
-analysis by Mr. T. Reeks, seven per cent of animal matter; and when
-placed in a spirit-lamp, they burn with a small flame. The number of
-the remains embedded in the grand estuary deposit which forms the
-Pampas and covers the granitic rocks of Banda Oriental, must be
-extraordinarily great. I believe a straight line drawn in any
-direction through the Pampas would cut through some skeleton or bones.
-Besides those which I found during my short excursions, I heard of many
-others, and the origin of such names as "the stream of the animal,"
-"the hill of the giant," is obvious. At other times I heard of the
-marvellous property of certain rivers, which had the power of changing
-small bones into large; or, as some maintained, the bones themselves
-grew. As far as I am aware, not one of these animals perished, as was
-formerly supposed, in the marshes or muddy river-beds of the present
-land, but their bones have been exposed by the streams intersecting the
-subaqueous deposit in which they were originally embedded. We may
-conclude that the whole area of the Pampas is one wide sepulchre of
-these extinct gigantic quadrupeds.
-
-By the middle of the day, on the 28th, we arrived at Monte Video,
-having been two days and a half on the road. The country for the whole
-way was of a very uniform character, some parts being rather more rocky
-and hilly than near the Plata. Not far from Monte Video we passed
-through the village of Las Pietras, so named from some large rounded
-masses of syenite. Its appearance was rather pretty. In this country
-a few fig-trees round a group of houses, and a site elevated a hundred
-feet above the general level, ought always to be called picturesque.
-
-
-During the last six months I have had an opportunity of seeing a little
-of the character of the inhabitants of these provinces. The Gauchos,
-or countryrmen, are very superior to those who reside in the towns. The
-Gaucho is invariably most obliging, polite, and hospitable: I did not
-meet with even one instance of rudeness or inhospitality. He is
-modest, both respecting himself and country, but at the same time a
-spirited, bold fellow. On the other hand, many robberies are
-committed, and there is much bloodshed: the habit of constantly wearing
-the knife is the chief cause of the latter. It is lamentable to hear
-how many lives are lost in trifling quarrels. In fighting, each party
-tries to mark the face of his adversary by slashing his nose or eyes;
-as is often attested by deep and horrid-looking scars. Robberies are a
-natural consequence of universal gambling, much drinking, and extreme
-indolence. At Mercedes I asked two men why they did not work. One
-gravely said the days were too long; the other that he was too poor.
-The number of horses and the profusion of food are the destruction of
-all industry. Moreover, there are so many feast-days; and again,
-nothing can succeed without it be begun when the moon is on the
-increase; so that half the month is lost from these two causes.
-
-Police and justice are quite inefficient. If a man who is poor commits
-murder and is taken, he will be imprisoned, and perhaps even shot; but
-if he is rich and has friends, he may rely on it no very severe
-consequence will ensue. It is curious that the most respectable
-inhabitants of the country invariably assist a murderer to escape: they
-seem to think that the individual sins against the government, and not
-against the people. A traveller has no protection besides his
-fire-arms; and the constant habit of carrying them is the main check to
-more frequent robberies. The character of the higher and more educated
-classes who reside in the towns, partakes, but perhaps in a lesser
-degree, of the good parts of the Gaucho, but is, I fear, stained by
-many vices of which he is free. Sensuality, mockery of all religion,
-and the grossest corruption, are far from uncommon. Nearly every
-public officer can be bribed. The head man in the post-office sold
-forged government franks. The governor and prime minister openly
-combined to plunder the state. Justice, where gold came into play, was
-hardly expected by any one. I knew an Englishman, who went to the
-Chief Justice (he told me, that not then understanding the ways of the
-place, he trembled as he entered the room), and said, "Sir, I have come
-to offer you two hundred (paper) dollars (value about five pounds
-sterling) if you will arrest before a certain time a man who has
-cheated me. I know it is against the law, but my lawyer (naming him)
-recommended me to take this step." The Chief Justice smiled
-acquiescence, thanked him, and the man before night was safe in prison.
-With this entire want of principle in many of the leading men, with the
-country full of ill-paid turbulent officers, the people yet hope that a
-democratic form of government can succeed!
-
-On first entering society in these countries, two or three features
-strike one as particularly remarkable. The polite and dignified
-manners pervading every rank of life, the excellent taste displayed by
-the women in their dresses, and the equality amongst all ranks. At the
-Rio Colorado some men who kept the humblest shops used to dine with
-General Rosas. A son of a major at Bahia Blanca gained his livelihood
-by making paper cigars, and he wished to accompany me, as guide or
-servant, to Buenos Ayres, but his father objected on the score of the
-danger alone. Many officers in the army can neither read nor write,
-yet all meet in society as equals. In Entre Rios, the Sala consisted
-of only six representatives. One of them kept a common shop, and
-evidently was not degraded by the office. All this is what would be
-expected in a new country; nevertheless the absence of gentlemen by
-profession appears to an Englishman something strange.
-
-When speaking of these countries, the manner in which they have been
-brought up by their unnatural parent, Spain, should always be borne in
-mind. On the whole, perhaps, more credit is due for what has been
-done, than blame for that which may be deficient. It is impossible to
-doubt but that the extreme liberalism of these countries must
-ultimately lead to good results. The very general toleration of
-foreign religions, the regard paid to the means of education, the
-freedom of the press, the facilities offered to all foreigners, and
-especially, as I am bound to add, to every one professing the humblest
-pretensions to science, should be recollected with gratitude by those
-who have visited Spanish South America.
-
-December 6th.--The Beagle sailed from the Rio Plata, never again to
-enter its muddy stream. Our course was directed to Port Desire, on the
-coast of Patagonia. Before proceeding any further, I will here put
-together a few observations made at sea.
-
-Several times when the ship has been some miles off the mouth of the
-Plata, and at other times when off the shores of Northern Patagonia, we
-have been surrounded by insects. One evening, when we were about ten
-miles from the Bay of San Blas, vast numbers of butterflies, in bands
-or flocks of countless myriads, extended as far as the eye could range.
-Even by the aid of a telescope it was not possible to see a space free
-from butterflies. The seamen cried out "it was snowing butterflies,"
-and such in fact was the appearance. More species than one were
-present, but the main part belonged to a kind very similar to, but not
-identical with, the common English Colias edusa. Some moths and
-hymenoptera accompanied the butterflies; and a fine beetle (Calosoma)
-flew on board. Other instances are known of this beetle having been
-caught far out at sea; and this is the more remarkable, as the greater
-number of the Carabidae seldom or never take wing. The day had been
-fine and calm, and the one previous to it equally so, with light and
-variable airs. Hence we cannot suppose that the insects were blown off
-the land, but we must conclude that they voluntarily took flight. The
-great bands of the Colias seem at first to afford an instance like
-those on record of the migrations of another butterfly, Vanessa cardui;
-[5] but the presence of other insects makes the case distinct, and even
-less intelligible. Before sunset a strong breeze sprung up from the
-north, and this must have caused tens of thousands of the butterflies
-and other insects to have perished.
-
-On another occasion, when seventeen miles off Cape Corrientes, I had a
-net overboard to catch pelagic animals. Upon drawing it up, to my
-surprise, I found a considerable number of beetles in it, and although
-in the open sea, they did not appear much injured by the salt water. I
-lost some of the specimens, but those which I preserved belonged to the
-genera Colymbetes, Hydroporus, Hydrobius (two species), Notaphus,
-Cynucus, Adimonia, and Scarabaeus. At first I thought that these
-insects had been blown from the shore; but upon reflecting that out of
-the eight species four were aquatic, and two others partly so in their
-habits, it appeared to me most probable that they were floated into the
-sea by a small stream which drains a lake near Cape Corrientes. On any
-supposition it is an interesting circumstance to find live insects
-swimming in the open ocean seventeen miles from the nearest point of
-land. There are several accounts of insects having been blown off the
-Patagonian shore. Captain Cook observed it, as did more lately Captain
-King of the Adventure. The cause probably is due to the want of
-shelter, both of trees and hills, so that an insect on the wing with an
-off-shore breeze, would be very apt to be blown out to sea. The most
-remarkable instance I have known of an insect being caught far from the
-land, was that of a large grasshopper (Acrydium), which flew on board,
-when the Beagle was to windward of the Cape de Verd Islands, and when
-the nearest point of land, not directly opposed to the trade-wind, was
-Cape Blanco on the coast of Africa, 370 miles distant. [6]
-
-On several occasions, when the Beagle has been within the mouth of the
-Plata, the rigging has been coated with the web of the Gossamer Spider.
-One day (November 1st, 1832) I paid particular attention to this
-subject. The weather had been fine and clear, and in the morning the
-air was full of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in
-England. The ship was sixty miles distant from the land, in the
-direction of a steady though light breeze. Vast numbers of a small
-spider, about one-tenth of an inch in length, and of a dusky red
-colour, were attached to the webs. There must have been, I should
-suppose, some thousands on the ship. The little spider, when first
-coming in contact with the rigging, was always seated on a single
-thread, and not on the flocculent mass. This latter seems merely to be
-produced by the entanglement of the single threads. The spiders were
-all of one species, but of both sexes, together with young ones. These
-latter were distinguished by their smaller size and more dusky colour.
-I will not give the description of this spider, but merely state that
-it does not appear to me to be included in any of Latreille's genera.
-The little aeronaut as soon as it arrived on board was very active,
-running about, sometimes letting itself fall, and then reascending the
-same thread; sometimes employing itself in making a small and very
-irregular mesh in the corners between the ropes. It could run with
-facility on the surface of the water. When disturbed it lifted up its
-front legs, in the attitude of attention. On its first arrival it
-appeared very thirsty, and with exserted maxillae drank eagerly of
-drops of water, this same circumstance has been observed by Strack: may
-it not be in consequence of the little insect having passed through a
-dry and rarefied atmosphere? Its stock of web seemed inexhaustible.
-While watching some that were suspended by a single thread, I several
-times observed that the slightest breath of air bore them away out of
-sight, in a horizontal line.
-
-On another occasion (25th) under similar circumstances, I repeatedly
-observed the same kind of small spider, either when placed or having
-crawled on some little eminence, elevate its abdomen, send forth a
-thread, and then sail away horizontally, but with a rapidity which was
-quite unaccountable. I thought I could perceive that the spider,
-before performing the above preparatory steps, connected its legs
-together with the most delicate threads, but I am not sure whether this
-observation was correct.
-
-One day, at St. Fe, I had a better opportunity of observing some
-similar facts. A spider which was about three-tenths of an inch in
-length, and which in its general appearance resembled a Citigrade
-(therefore quite different from the gossamer), while standing on the
-summit of a post, darted forth four or five threads from its spinners.
-These, glittering in the sunshine, might be compared to diverging rays
-of light; they were not, however, straight, but in undulations like
-films of silk blown by the wind. They were more than a yard in length,
-and diverged in an ascending direction from the orifices. The spider
-then suddenly let go its hold of the post, and was quickly borne out of
-sight. The day was hot and apparently calm; yet under such
-circumstances, the atmosphere can never be so tranquil as not to affect
-a vane so delicate as the thread of a spider's web. If during a warm
-day we look either at the shadow of any object cast on a bank, or over
-a level plain at a distant landmark, the effect of an ascending current
-of heated air is almost always evident: such upward currents, it has
-been remarked, are also shown by the ascent of soap-bubbles, which will
-not rise in an in-doors room. Hence I think there is not much
-difficulty in understanding the ascent of the fine lines projected from
-a spider's spinners, and afterwards of the spider itself; the
-divergence of the lines has been attempted to be explained, I believe
-by Mr. Murray, by their similar electrical condition. The circumstance
-of spiders of the same species, but of different sexes and ages, being
-found on several occasions at the distance of many leagues from the
-land, attached in vast numbers to the lines, renders it probable that
-the habit of sailing through the air is as characteristic of this
-tribe, as that of diving is of the Argyroneta. We may then reject
-Latreille's supposition, that the gossamer owes its origin
-indifferently to the young of several genera of spiders: although, as
-we have seen, the young of other spiders do possess the power of
-performing aerial voyages. [7]
-
-During our different passages south of the Plata, I often towed astern
-a net made of bunting, and thus caught many curious animals. Of
-Crustacea there were many strange and undescribed genera. One, which
-in some respects is allied to the Notopods (or those crabs which have
-their posterior legs placed almost on their backs, for the purpose of
-adhering to the under side of rocks), is very remarkable from the
-structure of its hind pair of legs. The penultimate joint, instead of
-terminating in a simple claw, ends in three bristle-like appendages of
-dissimilar lengths--the longest equalling that of the entire leg. These
-claws are very thin, and are serrated with the finest teeth, directed
-backwards: their curved extremities are flattened, and on this part
-five most minute cups are placed which seem to act in the same manner
-as the suckers on the arms of the cuttle-fish. As the animal lives in
-the open sea, and probably wants a place of rest, I suppose this
-beautiful and most anomalous structure is adapted to take hold of
-floating marine animals.
-
-In deep water, far from the land, the number of living creatures is
-extremely small: south of the latitude 35 degs., I never succeeded in
-catching anything besides some beroe, and a few species of minute
-entomostracous crustacea. In shoaler water, at the distance of a few
-miles from the coast, very many kinds of crustacea and some other
-animals are numerous, but only during the night. Between latitudes 56
-and 57 degs. south of Cape Horn, the net was put astern several times;
-it never, however, brought up anything besides a few of two extremely
-minute species of Entomostraca. Yet whales and seals, petrels and
-albatross, are exceedingly abundant throughout this part of the ocean.
-It has always been a mystery to me on what the albatross, which lives
-far from the shore, can subsist; I presume that, like the condor, it is
-able to fast long; and that one good feast on the carcass of a putrid
-whale lasts for a long time. The central and intertropical parts of
-the Atlantic swarm with Pteropoda, Crustacea, and Radiata, and with
-their devourers the flying-fish, and again with their devourers the
-bonitos and albicores; I presume that the numerous lower pelagic
-animals feed on the Infusoria, which are now known, from the researches
-of Ehrenberg, to abound in the open ocean: but on what, in the clear
-blue water, do these Infusoria subsist?
-
-While sailing a little south of the Plata on one very dark night, the
-sea presented a wonderful and most beautiful spectacle. There was a
-fresh breeze, and every part of the surface, which during the day is
-seen as foam, now glowed with a pale light. The vessel drove before
-her bows two billows of liquid phosphorus, and in her wake she was
-followed by a milky train. As far as the eye reached, the crest of
-every wave was bright, and the sky above the horizon, from the
-reflected glare of these livid flames, was not so utterly obscure as
-over the vault of the heavens.
-
-As we proceed further southward the sea is seldom phosphorescent; and
-off Cape Horn I do not recollect more than once having seen it so, and
-then it was far from being brilliant. This circumstance probably has a
-close connection with the scarcity of organic beings in that part of
-the ocean. After the elaborate paper, [8] by Ehrenberg, on the
-phosphorescence of the sea, it is almost superfluous on my part to make
-any observations on the subject. I may however add, that the same torn
-and irregular particles of gelatinous matter, described by Ehrenberg,
-seem in the southern as well as in the northern hemisphere, to be the
-common cause of this phenomenon. The particles were so minute as
-easily to pass through fine gauze; yet many were distinctly visible by
-the naked eye. The water when placed in a tumbler and agitated, gave
-out sparks, but a small portion in a watch-glass scarcely ever was
-luminous. Ehrenberg states that these particles all retain a certain
-degree of irritability. My observations, some of which were made
-directly after taking up the water, gave a different result. I may
-also mention, that having used the net during one night, I allowed it
-to become partially dry, and having occasion twelve hours afterwards to
-employ it again, I found the whole surface sparkled as brightly as when
-first taken out of the water. It does not appear probable in this case,
-that the particles could have remained so long alive. On one occasion
-having kept a jelly-fish of the genus Dianaea till it was dead, the
-water in which it was placed became luminous. When the waves
-scintillate with bright green sparks, I believe it is generally owing
-to minute crustacea. But there can be no doubt that very many other
-pelagic animals, when alive, are phosphorescent.
-
-On two occasions I have observed the sea luminous at considerable
-depths beneath the surface. Near the mouth of the Plata some circular
-and oval patches, from two to four yards in diameter, and with defined
-outlines, shone with a steady but pale light; while the surrounding
-water only gave out a few sparks. The appearance resembled the
-reflection of the moon, or some luminous body; for the edges were
-sinuous from the undulations of the surface. The ship, which drew
-thirteen feet of water, passed over, without disturbing these patches.
-Therefore we must suppose that some animals were congregated together
-at a greater depth than the bottom of the vessel.
-
-Near Fernando Noronha the sea gave out light in flashes. The appearance
-was very similar to that which might be expected from a large fish
-moving rapidly through a luminous fluid. To this cause the sailors
-attributed it; at the time, however, I entertained some doubts, on
-account of the frequency and rapidity of the flashes. I have already
-remarked that the phenomenon is very much more common in warm than in
-cold countries; and I have sometimes imagined that a disturbed
-electrical condition of the atmosphere was most favourable to its
-production. Certainly I think the sea is most luminous after a few
-days of more calm weather than ordinary, during which time it has
-swarmed with various animals. Observing that the water charged with
-gelatinous particles is in an impure state, and that the luminous
-appearance in all common cases is produced by the agitation of the
-fluid in contact with the atmosphere, I am inclined to consider that
-the phosphorescence is the result of the decomposition of the organic
-particles, by which process (one is tempted almost to call it a kind of
-respiration) the ocean becomes purified.
-
-December 23rd.--We arrived at Port Desire, situated in lat. 47 degs.,
-on the coast of Patagonia. The creek runs for about twenty miles
-inland, with an irregular width. The Beagle anchored a few miles
-within the entrance, in front of the ruins of an old Spanish settlement.
-
-The same evening I went on shore. The first landing in any new country
-is very interesting, and especially when, as in this case, the whole
-aspect bears the stamp of a marked and individual character. At the
-height of between two and three hundred feet above some masses of
-porphyry a wide plain extends, which is truly characteristic of
-Patagonia. The surface is quite level, and is composed of well-rounded
-shingle mixed with a whitish earth. Here and there scattered tufts of
-brown wiry grass are supported, and still more rarely, some low thorny
-bushes. The weather is dry and pleasant, and the fine blue sky is but
-seldom obscured. When standing in the middle of one of these desert
-plains and looking towards the interior, the view is generally bounded
-by the escarpment of another plain, rather higher, but equally level
-and desolate; and in every other direction the horizon is indistinct
-from the trembling mirage which seems to rise from the heated surface.
-
-In such a country the fate of the Spanish settlement was soon decided;
-the dryness of the climate during the greater part of the year, and the
-occasional hostile attacks of the wandering Indians, compelled the
-colonists to desert their half-finished buildings. The style, however,
-in which they were commenced shows the strong and liberal hand of Spain
-in the old time. The result of all the attempts to colonize this side
-of America south of 41 degs., has been miserable. Port Famine
-expresses by its name the lingering and extreme sufferings of several
-hundred wretched people, of whom one alone survived to relate their
-misfortunes. At St. Joseph's Bay, on the coast of Patagonia, a small
-settlement was made; but during one Sunday the Indians made an attack
-and massacred the whole party, excepting two men, who remained captives
-during many years. At the Rio Negro I conversed with one of these men,
-now in extreme old age.
-
-The zoology of Patagonia is as limited as its flora. [9] On the arid
-plains a few black beetles (Heteromera) might be seen slowly crawling
-about, and occasionally a lizard darted from side to side. Of birds we
-have three carrion hawks and in the valleys a few finches and
-insect-feeders. An ibis (Theristicus melanops--a species said to be
-found in central Africa) is not uncommon on the most desert parts: in
-their stomachs I found grasshoppers, cicadae, small lizards, and even
-scorpions. [10] At one time of the year these birds go in flocks, at
-another in pairs, their cry is very loud and singular, like the
-neighing of the guanaco.
-
-The guanaco, or wild llama, is the characteristic quadruped of the
-plains of Patagonia; it is the South American representative of the
-camel of the East. It is an elegant animal in a state of nature, with
-a long slender neck and fine legs. It is very common over the whole of
-the temperate parts of the continent, as far south as the islands near
-Cape Horn. It generally lives in small herds of from half a dozen to
-thirty in each; but on the banks of the St. Cruz we saw one herd which
-must have contained at least five hundred.
-
-They are generally wild and extremely wary. Mr. Stokes told me, that
-he one day saw through a glass a herd of these animals which evidently
-had been frightened, and were running away at full speed, although
-their distance was so great that he could not distinguish them with his
-naked eye. The sportsman frequently receives the first notice of their
-presence, by hearing from a long distance their peculiar shrill
-neighing note of alarm. If he then looks attentively, he will probably
-see the herd standing in a line on the side of some distant hill. On
-approaching nearer, a few more squeals are given, and off they set at
-an apparently slow, but really quick canter, along some narrow beaten
-track to a neighbouring hill. If, however, by chance he abruptly meets
-a single animal, or several together, they will generally stand
-motionless and intently gaze at him; then perhaps move on a few yards,
-turn round, and look again. What is the cause of this difference in
-their shyness? Do they mistake a man in the distance for their chief
-enemy the puma? Or does curiosity overcome their timidity? That they
-are curious is certain; for if a person lies on the ground, and plays
-strange antics, such as throwing up his feet in the air, they will
-almost always approach by degrees to reconnoitre him. It was an
-artifice that was repeatedly practised by our sportsmen with success,
-and it had moreover the advantage of allowing several shots to be
-fired, which were all taken as parts of the performance. On the
-mountains of Tierra del Fuego, I have more than once seen a guanaco, on
-being approached, not only neigh and squeal, but prance and leap about
-in the most ridiculous manner, apparently in defiance as a challenge.
-These animals are very easily domesticated, and I have seen some thus
-kept in northern Patagonia near a house, though not under any
-restraint. They are in this state very bold, and readily attack a man
-by striking him from behind with both knees. It is asserted that the
-motive for these attacks is jealousy on account of their females. The
-wild guanacos, however, have no idea of defence; even a single dog will
-secure one of these large animals, till the huntsman can come up. In
-many of their habits they are like sheep in a flock. Thus when they see
-men approaching in several directions on horseback, they soon become
-bewildered, and know not which way to run. This greatly facilitates
-the Indian method of hunting, for they are thus easily driven to a
-central point, and are encompassed.
-
-The guanacos readily take to the water: several times at Port Valdes
-they were seen swimming from island to island. Byron, in his voyage
-says he saw them drinking salt water. Some of our officers likewise saw
-a herd apparently drinking the briny fluid from a salina near Cape
-Blanco. I imagine in several parts of the country, if they do not
-drink salt water, they drink none at all. In the middle of the day
-they frequently roll in the dust, in saucer-shaped hollows. The males
-fight together; two one day passed quite close to me, squealing and
-trying to bite each other; and several were shot with their hides
-deeply scored. Herds sometimes appear to set out on exploring parties:
-at Bahia Blanca, where, within thirty miles of the coast, these animals
-are extremely unfrequent, I one day saw the tracks of thirty or forty,
-which had come in a direct line to a muddy salt-water creek. They then
-must have perceived that they were approaching the sea, for they had
-wheeled with the regularity of cavalry, and had returned back in as
-straight a line as they had advanced. The guanacos have one singular
-habit, which is to me quite inexplicable; namely, that on successive
-days they drop their dung in the same defined heap. I saw one of these
-heaps which was eight feet in diameter, and was composed of a large
-quantity. This habit, according to M. A. d'Orbigny, is common to all
-the species of the genus; it is very useful to the Peruvian Indians,
-who use the dung for fuel, and are thus saved the trouble of collecting
-it.
-
-The guanacos appear to have favourite spots for lying down to die. On
-the banks of the St. Cruz, in certain circumscribed spaces, which were
-generally bushy and all near the river, the ground was actually white
-with bones. On one such spot I counted between ten and twenty heads. I
-particularly examined the bones; they did not appear, as some scattered
-ones which I had seen, gnawed or broken, as if dragged together by
-beasts of prey. The animals in most cases must have crawled, before
-dying, beneath and amongst the bushes. Mr. Bynoe informs me that
-during a former voyage he observed the same circumstance on the banks
-of the Rio Gallegos. I do not at all understand the reason of this,
-but I may observe, that the wounded guanacos at the St. Cruz invariably
-walked towards the river. At St. Jago in the Cape de Verd Islands, I
-remember having seen in a ravine a retired corner covered with bones of
-the goat; we at the time exclaimed that it was the burial ground of all
-the goats in the island. I mention these trifling circumstances,
-because in certain cases they might explain the occurrence of a number
-of uninjured bones in a cave, or buried under alluvial accumulations;
-and likewise the cause why certain animals are more commonly embedded
-than others in sedimentary deposits.
-
-One day the yawl was sent under the command of Mr. Chaffers with three
-days' provisions to survey the upper part of the harbour. In the
-morning we searched for some watering-places mentioned in an old
-Spanish chart. We found one creek, at the head of which there was a
-trickling rill (the first we had seen) of brackish water. Here the
-tide compelled us to wait several hours; and in the interval I walked
-some miles into the interior. The plain as usual consisted of gravel,
-mingled with soil resembling chalk in appearance, but very different
-from it in nature. From the softness of these materials it was worn
-into many gulleys. There was not a tree, and, excepting the guanaco,
-which stood on the hill-top a watchful sentinel over its herd, scarcely
-an animal or a bird. All was stillness and desolation. Yet in passing
-over these scenes, without one bright object near, an ill-defined but
-strong sense of pleasure is vividly excited. One asked how many ages
-the plain had thus lasted, and how many more it was doomed thus to
-continue.
-
-"None can reply--all seems eternal now. The wilderness has a mysterious
-tongue, Which teaches awful doubt." [11]
-
-In the evening we sailed a few miles further up, and then pitched the
-tents for the night. By the middle of the next day the yawl was
-aground, and from the shoalness of the water could not proceed any
-higher. The water being found partly fresh, Mr. Chaffers took the
-dingey and went up two or three miles further, where she also grounded,
-but in a fresh-water river. The water was muddy, and though the stream
-was most insignificant in size, it would be difficult to account for
-its origin, except from the melting snow on the Cordillera. At the
-spot where we bivouacked, we were surrounded by bold cliffs and steep
-pinnacles of porphyry. I do not think I ever saw a spot which appeared
-more secluded from the rest of the world, than this rocky crevice in
-the wide plain.
-
-The second day after our return to the anchorage, a party of officers
-and myself went to ransack an old Indian grave, which I had found on
-the summit of a neighbouring hill. Two immense stones, each probably
-weighing at least a couple of tons, had been placed in front of a ledge
-of rock about six feet high. At the bottom of the grave on the hard
-rock there was a layer of earth about a foot deep, which must have been
-brought up from the plain below. Above it a pavement of flat stones
-was placed, on which others were piled, so as to fill up the space
-between the ledge and the two great blocks. To complete the grave, the
-Indians had contrived to detach from the ledge a huge fragment, and to
-throw it over the pile so as to rest on the two blocks. We undermined
-the grave on both sides, but could not find any relics, or even bones.
-The latter probably had decayed long since (in which case the grave
-must have been of extreme antiquity), for I found in another place some
-smaller heaps beneath which a very few crumbling fragments could yet be
-distinguished as having belonged to a man. Falconer states, that where
-an Indian dies he is buried, but that subsequently his bones are
-carefully taken up and carried, let the distance be ever so great, to
-be deposited near the sea-coast. This custom, I think, may be
-accounted for by recollecting, that before the introduction of horses,
-these Indians must have led nearly the same life as the Fuegians now
-do, and therefore generally have resided in the neighbourhood of the
-sea. The common prejudice of lying where one's ancestors have lain,
-would make the now roaming Indians bring the less perishable part of
-their dead to their ancient burial-ground on the coast.
-
-January 9th, 1834.--Before it was dark the Beagle anchored in the fine
-spacious harbour of Port St. Julian, situated about one hundred and ten
-miles to the south of Port Desire. We remained here eight days. The
-country is nearly similar to that of Port Desire, but perhaps rather
-more sterile. One day a party accompanied Captain Fitz Roy on a long
-walk round the head of the harbour. We were eleven hours without
-tasting any water, and some of the party were quite exhausted. From
-the summit of a hill (since well named Thirsty Hill) a fine lake was
-spied, and two of the party proceeded with concerted signals to show
-whether it was fresh water. What was our disappointment to find a
-snow-white expanse of salt, crystallized in great cubes! We attributed
-our extreme thirst to the dryness of the atmosphere; but whatever the
-cause might be, we were exceedingly glad late in the evening to get
-back to the boats. Although we could nowhere find, during our whole
-visit, a single drop of fresh water, yet some must exist; for by an odd
-chance I found on the surface of the salt water, near the head of the
-bay, a Colymbetes not quite dead, which must have lived in some not far
-distant pool. Three other insects (a Cincindela, like hybrida, a
-Cymindis, and a Harpalus, which all live on muddy flats occasionally
-overflowed by the sea), and one other found dead on the plain, complete
-the list of the beetles. A good-sized fly (Tabanus) was extremely
-numerous, and tormented us by its painful bite. The common horsefly,
-which is so troublesome in the shady lanes of England, belongs to this
-same genus. We here have the puzzle that so frequently occurs in the
-case of musquitoes--on the blood of what animals do these insects
-commonly feed? The guanaco is nearly the only warm-blooded quadruped,
-and it is found in quite inconsiderable numbers compared with the
-multitude of flies.
-
-The geology of Patagonia is interesting. Differently from Europe,
-where the tertiary formations appear to have accumulated in bays, here
-along hundreds of miles of coast we have one great deposit, including
-many tertiary shells, all apparently extinct. The most common shell is
-a massive gigantic oyster, sometimes even a foot in diameter. These
-beds are covered by others of a peculiar soft white stone, including
-much gypsum, and resembling chalk, but really of a pumiceous nature. It
-is highly remarkable, from being composed, to at least one-tenth of its
-bulk, of Infusoria. Professor Ehrenberg has already ascertained in it
-thirty oceanic forms. This bed extends for 500 miles along the coast,
-and probably for a considerably greater distance. At Port St. Julian
-its thickness is more than 800 feet! These white beds are everywhere
-capped by a mass of gravel, forming probably one of the largest beds of
-shingle in the world: it certainly extends from near the Rio Colorado
-to between 600 and 700 nautical miles southward, at Santa Cruz (a river
-a little south of St. Julian), it reaches to the foot of the
-Cordillera; half way up the river, its thickness is more than 200 feet;
-it probably everywhere extends to this great chain, whence the
-well-rounded pebbles of porphyry have been derived: we may consider its
-average breadth as 200 miles, and its average thickness as about 50
-feet. If this great bed of pebbles, without including the mud
-necessarily derived from their attrition, was piled into a mound, it
-would form a great mountain chain! When we consider that all these
-pebbles, countless as the grains of sand in the desert, have been
-derived from the slow falling of masses of rock on the old coast-lines
-and banks of rivers, and that these fragments have been dashed into
-smaller pieces, and that each of them has since been slowly rolled,
-rounded, and far transported the mind is stupefied in thinking over the
-long, absolutely necessary, lapse of years. Yet all this gravel has
-been transported, and probably rounded, subsequently to the deposition
-of the white beds, and long subsequently to the underlying beds with
-the tertiary shells.
-
-Everything in this southern continent has been effected on a grand
-scale: the land, from the Rio Plata to Tierra del Fuego, a distance of
-1200 miles, has been raised in mass (and in Patagonia to a height of
-between 300 and 400 feet), within the period of the now existing
-sea-shells. The old and weathered shells left on the surface of the
-upraised plain still partially retain their colours. The uprising
-movement has been interrupted by at least eight long periods of rest,
-during which the sea ate, deeply back into the land, forming at
-successive levels the long lines of cliffs, or escarpments, which
-separate the different plains as they rise like steps one behind the
-other. The elevatory movement, and the eating-back power of the sea
-during the periods of rest, have been equable over long lines of coast;
-for I was astonished to find that the step-like plains stand at nearly
-corresponding heights at far distant points. The lowest plain is 90
-feet high; and the highest, which I ascended near the coast, is 950
-feet; and of this, only relics are left in the form of flat
-gravel-capped hills. The upper plain of Santa Cruz slopes up to a
-height of 3000 feet at the foot of the Cordillera. I have said that
-within the period of existing sea-shells, Patagonia has been upraised
-300 to 400 feet: I may add, that within the period when icebergs
-transported boulders over the upper plain of Santa Cruz, the elevation
-has been at least 1500 feet. Nor has Patagonia been affected only by
-upward movements: the extinct tertiary shells from Port St. Julian and
-Santa Cruz cannot have lived, according to Professor E. Forbes, in a
-greater depth of water than from 40 to 250 feet; but they are now
-covered with sea-deposited strata from 800 to 1000 feet in thickness:
-hence the bed of the sea, on which these shells once lived, must have
-sunk downwards several hundred feet, to allow of the accumulation of
-the superincumbent strata. What a history of geological changes does
-the simply-constructed coast of Patagonia reveal!
-
-At Port St. Julian, [12] in some red mud capping the gravel on the
-90-feet plain, I found half the skeleton of the Macrauchenia
-Patachonica, a remarkable quadruped, full as large as a camel. It
-belongs to the same division of the Pachydermata with the rhinoceros,
-tapir, and palaeotherium; but in the structure of the bones of its long
-neck it shows a clear relation to the camel, or rather to the guanaco
-and llama. From recent sea-shells being found on two of the higher
-step-formed plains, which must have been modelled and upraised before
-the mud was deposited in which the Macrauchenia was entombed, it is
-certain that this curious quadruped lived long after the sea was
-inhabited by its present shells. I was at first much surprised how a
-large quadruped could so lately have subsisted, in lat. 49 degs. 15',
-on these wretched gravel plains, with their stunted vegetation; but the
-relationship of the Macrauchenia to the Guanaco, now an inhabitant of
-the most sterile parts, partly explains this difficulty.
-
-The relationship, though distant, between the Macrauchenia and the
-Guanaco, between the Toxodon and the Capybara,--the closer relationship
-between the many extinct Edentata and the living sloths, ant-eaters,
-and armadillos, now so eminently characteristic of South American
-zoology,--and the still closer relationship between the fossil and
-living species of Ctenomys and Hydrochaerus, are most interesting
-facts. This relationship is shown wonderfully--as wonderfully as
-between the fossil and extinct Marsupial animals of Australia--by the
-great collection lately brought to Europe from the caves of Brazil by
-MM. Lund and Clausen. In this collection there are extinct species of
-all the thirty-two genera, excepting four, of the terrestrial
-quadrupeds now inhabiting the provinces in which the caves occur; and
-the extinct species are much more numerous than those now living: there
-are fossil ant-eaters, armadillos, tapirs, peccaries, guanacos,
-opossums, and numerous South American gnawers and monkeys, and other
-animals. This wonderful relationship in the same continent between the
-dead and the living, will, I do not doubt, hereafter throw more light
-on the appearance of organic beings on our earth, and their
-disappearance from it, than any other class of facts.
-
-It is impossible to reflect on the changed state of the American
-continent without the deepest astonishment. Formerly it must have
-swarmed with great monsters: now we find mere pigmies, compared with
-the antecedent, allied races. If Buffon had known of the gigantic
-sloth and armadillo-like animals, and of the lost Pachydermata, he
-might have said with a greater semblance of truth that the creative
-force in America had lost its power, rather than that it had never
-possessed great vigour. The greater number, if not all, of these
-extinct quadrupeds lived at a late period, and were the contemporaries
-of most of the existing sea-shells. Since they lived, no very great
-change in the form of the land can have taken place. What, then, has
-exterminated so many species and whole genera? The mind at first is
-irresistibly hurried into the belief of some great catastrophe; but
-thus to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patagonia,
-in Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America up to Behring's
-Straits, we must shake the entire framework of the globe. An
-examination, moreover, of the geology of La Plata and Patagonia, leads
-to the belief that all the features of the land result from slow and
-gradual changes. It appears from the character of the fossils in
-Europe, Asia, Australia, and in North and South America, that those
-conditions which favour the life of the _larger_ quadrupeds were lately
-co-extensive with the world: what those conditions were, no one has yet
-even conjectured. It could hardly have been a change of temperature,
-which at about the same time destroyed the inhabitants of tropical,
-temperate, and arctic latitudes on both sides of the globe. In North
-America we positively know from Mr. Lyell, that the large quadrupeds
-lived subsequently to that period, when boulders were brought into
-latitudes at which icebergs now never arrive: from conclusive but
-indirect reasons we may feel sure, that in the southern hemisphere the
-Macrauchenia, also, lived long subsequently to the ice-transporting
-boulder-period. Did man, after his first inroad into South America,
-destroy, as has been suggested, the unwieldy Megatherium and the other
-Edentata? We must at least look to some other cause for the
-destruction of the little tucutuco at Bahia Blanca, and of the many
-fossil mice and other small quadrupeds in Brazil. No one will imagine
-that a drought, even far severer than those which cause such losses in
-the provinces of La Plata, could destroy every individual of every
-species from Southern Patagonia to Behring's Straits. What shall we
-say of the extinction of the horse? Did those plains fail of pasture,
-which have since been overrun by thousands and hundreds of thousands of
-the descendants of the stock introduced by the Spaniards? Have the
-subsequently introduced species consumed the food of the great
-antecedent races? Can we believe that the Capybara has taken the food
-of the Toxodon, the Guanaco of the Macrauchenia, the existing small
-Edentata of their numerous gigantic prototypes? Certainly, no fact in
-the long history of the world is so startling as the wide and repeated
-exterminations of its inhabitants.
-
-Nevertheless, if we consider the subject under another point of view,
-it will appear less perplexing. We do not steadily bear in mind, how
-profoundly ignorant we are of the conditions of existence of every
-animal; nor do we always remember, that some check is constantly
-preventing the too rapid increase of every organized being left in a
-state of nature. The supply of food, on an average, remains constant,
-yet the tendency in every animal to increase by propagation is
-geometrical; and its surprising effects have nowhere been more
-astonishingly shown, than in the case of the European animals run wild
-during the last few centuries in America. Every animal in a state of
-nature regularly breeds; yet in a species long established, any _great_
-increase in numbers is obviously impossible, and must be checked by
-some means. We are, nevertheless, seldom able with certainty to tell in
-any given species, at what period of life, or at what period of the
-year, or whether only at long intervals, the check falls; or, again,
-what is the precise nature of the check. Hence probably it is, that we
-feel so little surprise at one, of two species closely allied in
-habits, being rare and the other abundant in the same district; or,
-again, that one should be abundant in one district, and another,
-filling the same place in the economy of nature, should be abundant in
-a neighbouring district, differing very little in its conditions. If
-asked how this is, one immediately replies that it is determined by
-some slight difference, in climate, food, or the number of enemies: yet
-how rarely, if ever, we can point out the precise cause and manner of
-action of the check! We are therefore, driven to the conclusion, that
-causes generally quite inappreciable by us, determine whether a given
-species shall be abundant or scanty in numbers.
-
-In the cases where we can trace the extinction of a species through
-man, either wholly or in one limited district, we know that it becomes
-rarer and rarer, and is then lost: it would be difficult to point out
-any just distinction [13] between a species destroyed by man or by the
-increase of its natural enemies. The evidence of rarity preceding
-extinction, is more striking in the successive tertiary strata, as
-remarked by several able observers; it has often been found that a
-shell very common in a tertiary stratum is now most rare, and has even
-long been thought extinct. If then, as appears probable, species first
-become rare and then extinct--if the too rapid increase of every
-species, even the most favoured, is steadily checked, as we must admit,
-though how and when it is hard to say--and if we see, without the
-smallest surprise, though unable to assign the precise reason, one
-species abundant and another closely allied species rare in the same
-district--why should we feel such great astonishment at the rarity
-being carried one step further to extinction? An action going on, on
-every side of us, and yet barely appreciable, might surely be carried a
-little further, without exciting our observation. Who would feel any
-great surprise at hearing that the Magalonyx was formerly rare compared
-with the Megatherium, or that one of the fossil monkeys was few in
-number compared with one of the now living monkeys? and yet in this
-comparative rarity, we should have the plainest evidence of less
-favourable conditions for their existence. To admit that species
-generally become rare before they become extinct--to feel no surprise
-at the comparative rarity of one species with another, and yet to call
-in some extraordinary agent and to marvel greatly when a species ceases
-to exist, appears to me much the same as to admit that sickness in the
-individual is the prelude to death--to feel no surprise at
-sickness--but when the sick man dies to wonder, and to believe that he
-died through violence.
-
-[1] Mr. Waterhouse has drawn up a detailed description of this head,
-which I hope he will publish in some Journal.
-
-[2] A nearly similar abnormal, but I do not know whether hereditary,
-structure has been observed in the carp, and likewise in the crocodile
-of the Ganges: Histoire des Anomalies, par M. Isid. Geoffroy St.
-Hilaire, tom. i. p. 244.
-
-[3] M. A. d'Orbigny has given nearly a similar account of these dogs,
-tom. i. p. 175.
-
-[4] I must express my obligations to Mr. Keane, at whose house I was
-staying on the Berquelo, and to Mr. Lumb at Buenos Ayres, for without
-their assistance these valuable remains would never have reached
-England.
-
-[5] Lyell's Principles of Geology, vol. iii. p. 63.
-
-[6] The flies which frequently accompany a ship for some days on its
-passage from harbour to harbour, wandering from the vessel, are soon
-lost, and all disappear.
-
-[7] Mr. Blackwall, in his Researches in Zoology, has many excellent
-observations on the habits of spiders.
-
-[8] An abstract is given in No. IV. of the Magazine of Zoology and
-Botany.
-
-[9] I found here a species of cactus, described by Professor Henslow,
-under the name of Opuntia Darwinii (Magazine of Zoology and Botany,
-vol. i. p. 466), which was remarkable for the irritability of the
-stamens, when I inserted either a piece of stick or the end of my
-finger in the flower. The segments of the perianth also closed on the
-pistil, but more slowly than the stamens. Plants of this family,
-generally considered as tropical, occur in North America (Lewis and
-Clarke's Travels, p. 221), in the same high latitude as here, namely,
-in both cases, in 47 degs.
-
-[10] These insects were not uncommon beneath stones. I found one
-cannibal scorpion quietly devouring another.
-
-[11] Shelley, Lines on Mt. Blanc.
-
-[12] I have lately heard that Capt. Sulivan, R.N., has found numerous
-fossil bones, embedded in regular strata, on the banks of the R.
-Gallegos, in lat. 51 degs. 4'. Some of the bones are large; others are
-small, and appear to have belonged to an armadillo. This is a most
-interesting and important discovery.
-
-[13] See the excellent remarks on this subject by Mr. Lyell, in his
-Principles of Geology.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
-
-Santa Cruz--Expedition up the River--Indians--Immense Streams of
-Basaltic Lava--Fragments not transported by the River--Excavations of
-the Valley--Condor, Habits of--Cordillera--Erratic Boulders of great
-size--Indian Relics--Return to the Ship--Falkland Islands--Wild
-Horses, Cattle, Rabbits--Wolf-like Fox--Fire made of Bones--Manner of
-Hunting Wild Cattle--Geology--Streams of Stones--Scenes of
-Violence--Penguins--Geese--Eggs of Doris--Compound Animals.
-
-
-APRIL 13, 1834.--The Beagle anchored within the mouth of the Santa
-Cruz. This river is situated about sixty miles south of Port St.
-Julian. During the last voyage Captain Stokes proceeded thirty miles
-up it, but then, from the want of provisions, was obliged to return.
-Excepting what was discovered at that time, scarcely anything was known
-about this large river. Captain Fitz Roy now determined to follow its
-course as far as time would allow. On the 18th three whale-boats
-started, carrying three weeks' provisions; and the party consisted of
-twenty-five souls--a force which would have been sufficient to have
-defied a host of Indians. With a strong flood-tide and a fine day we
-made a good run, soon drank some of the fresh water, and were at night
-nearly above the tidal influence.
-
-The river here assumed a size and appearance which, even at the highest
-point we ultimately reached, was scarcely diminished. It was generally
-from three to four hundred yards broad, and in the middle about
-seventeen feet deep. The rapidity of the current, which in its whole
-course runs at the rate of from four to six knots an hour, is perhaps
-its most remarkable feature. The water is of a fine blue colour, but
-with a slight milky tinge, and not so transparent as at first sight
-would have been expected. It flows over a bed of pebbles, like those
-which compose the beach and the surrounding plains. It runs in a
-winding course through a valley, which extends in a direct line
-westward. This valley varies from five to ten miles in breadth; it is
-bounded by step-formed terraces, which rise in most parts, one above
-the other, to the height of five hundred feet, and have on the opposite
-sides a remarkable correspondence.
-
-April 19th.--Against so strong a current it was, of course, quite
-impossible to row or sail: consequently the three boats were fastened
-together head and stern, two hands left in each, and the rest came on
-shore to track. As the general arrangements made by Captain Fitz Roy
-were very good for facilitating the work of all, and as all had a share
-in it, I will describe the system. The party including every one, was
-divided into two spells, each of which hauled at the tracking line
-alternately for an hour and a half. The officers of each boat lived
-with, ate the same food, and slept in the same tent with their crew, so
-that each boat was quite independent of the others. After sunset the
-first level spot where any bushes were growing, was chosen for our
-night's lodging. Each of the crew took it in turns to be cook.
-Immediately the boat was hauled up, the cook made his fire; two others
-pitched the tent; the coxswain handed the things out of the boat; the
-rest carried them up to the tents and collected firewood. By this
-order, in half an hour everything was ready for the night. A watch of
-two men and an officer was always kept, whose duty it was to look after
-the boats, keep up the fire, and guard against Indians. Each in the
-party had his one hour every night.
-
-During this day we tracked but a short distance, for there were many
-islets, covered by thorny bushes, and the channels between them were
-shallow.
-
-April 20th.--We passed the islands and set to work. Our regular day's
-march, although it was hard enough, carried us on an average only ten
-miles in a straight line, and perhaps fifteen or twenty altogether.
-Beyond the place where we slept last night, the country is completely
-_terra incognita_, for it was there that Captain Stokes turned back. We
-saw in the distance a great smoke, and found the skeleton of a horse,
-so we knew that Indians were in the neighbourhood. On the next morning
-(21st) tracks of a party of horse and marks left by the trailing of the
-chuzos, or long spears, were observed on the ground. It was generally
-thought that the Indians had reconnoitred us during the night. Shortly
-afterwards we came to a spot where, from the fresh footsteps of men,
-children, and horses, it was evident that the party had crossed the
-river.
-
-April 22nd.--The country remained the same, and was extremely
-uninteresting. The complete similarity of the productions throughout
-Patagonia is one of its most striking characters. The level plains of
-arid shingle support the same stunted and dwarf plants; and in the
-valleys the same thorn-bearing bushes grow. Everywhere we see the same
-birds and insects. Even the very banks of the river and of the clear
-streamlets which entered it, were scarcely enlivened by a brighter tint
-of green. The curse of sterility is on the land, and the water flowing
-over a bed of pebbles partakes of the same curse. Hence the number of
-water-fowls is very scanty; for there is nothing to support life in the
-stream of this barren river.
-
-Patagonia, poor as she is in some respects, can however boast of a
-greater stock of small rodents [1] than perhaps any other country in
-the world. Several species of mice are externally characterized by
-large thin ears and a very fine fur. These little animals swarm
-amongst the thickets in the valleys, where they cannot for months
-together taste a drop of water excepting the dew. They all seem to be
-cannibals for no sooner was a mouse caught in one of my traps that it
-was devoured by others. A small and delicately shaped fox, which is
-likewise very abundant, probably derives its entire support from these
-small animals. The guanaco is also in his proper district, herds of
-fifty or a hundred were common; and, as I have stated, we saw one which
-must have contained at least five hundred. The puma, with the condor
-and other carrion-hawks in its train, follows and preys upon these
-animals. The footsteps of the puma were to be seen almost everywhere
-on the banks of the river; and the remains of several guanacos, with
-their necks dislocated and bones broken, showed how they had met their
-death.
-
-April 24th.--Like the navigators of old when approaching an unknown
-land, we examined and watched for the most trivial sign of a change.
-The drifted trunk of a tree, or a boulder of primitive rock, was hailed
-with joy, as if we had seen a forest growing on the flanks of the
-Cordillera. The top, however, of a heavy bank of clouds, which
-remained almost constantly in one position, was the most promising
-sign, and eventually turned out a true harbinger. At first the clouds
-were mistaken for the mountains themselves, instead of the masses of
-vapour condensed by their icy summits.
-
-April 26th.--We this day met with a marked change in the geological
-structure of the plains. From the first starting I had carefully
-examined the gravel in the river, and for the two last days had noticed
-the presence of a few small pebbles of a very cellular basalt. These
-gradually increased in number and in size, but none were as large as a
-man's head. This morning, however, pebbles of the same rock, but more
-compact, suddenly became abundant, and in the course of half an hour we
-saw, at the distance of five of six miles, the angular edge of a great
-basaltic platform. When we arrived at its base we found the stream
-bubbling among the fallen blocks. For the next twenty-eight miles the
-river-course was encumbered with these basaltic masses. Above that
-limit immense fragments of primitive rocks, derived from its
-surrounding boulder-formation, were equally numerous. None of the
-fragments of any considerable size had been washed more than three or
-four miles down the river below their parent-source: considering the
-singular rapidity of the great body of water in the Santa Cruz, and
-that no still reaches occur in any part, this example is a most
-striking one, of the inefficiency of rivers in transporting even
-moderately-sized fragments.
-
-The basalt is only lava, which has flowed beneath the sea; but the
-eruptions must have been on the grandest scale. At the point where we
-first met this formation it was 120 feet in thickness; following up the
-river course, the surface imperceptibly rose and the mass became
-thicker, so that at forty miles above the first station it was 320 feet
-thick. What the thickness may be close to the Cordillera, I have no
-means of knowing, but the platform there attains a height of about
-three thousand feet above the level of the sea; we must therefore look
-to the mountains of that great chain for its source; and worthy of such
-a source are streams that have flowed over the gently inclined bed of
-the sea to a distance of one hundred miles. At the first glance of the
-basaltic cliffs on the opposite sides of the valley, it was evident
-that the strata once were united. What power, then, has removed along
-a whole line of country, a solid mass of very hard rock, which had an
-average thickness of nearly three hundred feet, and a breadth varying
-from rather less than two miles to four miles? The river, though it
-has so little power in transporting even inconsiderable fragments, yet
-in the lapse of ages might produce by its gradual erosion an effect of
-which it is difficult to judge the amount. But in this case,
-independently of the insignificance of such an agency, good reasons can
-be assigned for believing that this valley was formerly occupied by an
-arm of the sea. It is needless in this work to detail the arguments
-leading to this conclusion, derived from the form and the nature of the
-step-formed terraces on both sides of the valley, from the manner in
-which the bottom of the valley near the Andes expands into a great
-estuary-like plain with sand-hillocks on it, and from the occurrence of
-a few sea-shells lying in the bed of the river. If I had space I could
-prove that South America was formerly here cut off by a strait, joining
-the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, like that of Magellan. But it may yet
-be asked, how has the solid basalt been moved? Geologists formerly
-would have brought into play the violent action of some overwhelming
-debacle; but in this case such a supposition would have been quite
-inadmissible, because, the same step-like plains with existing
-sea-shells lying on their surface, which front the long line of the
-Patagonian coast, sweep up on each side of the valley of Santa Cruz. No
-possible action of any flood could thus have modelled the land, either
-within the valley or along the open coast; and by the formation of such
-step-like plains or terraces the valley itself had been hollowed out.
-Although we know that there are tides, which run within the Narrows of
-the Strait of Magellan at the rate of eight knots an hour, yet we must
-confess that it makes the head almost giddy to reflect on the number of
-years, century after century, which the tides, unaided by a heavy surf,
-must have required to have corroded so vast an area and thickness of
-solid basaltic lava. Nevertheless, we must believe that the strata
-undermined by the waters of this ancient strait, were broken up into
-huge fragments, and these lying scattered on the beach were reduced
-first to smaller blocks, then to pebbles and lastly to the most
-impalpable mud, which the tides drifted far into the Eastern or Western
-Ocean.
-
-With the change in the geological structure of the plains the character
-of the landscape likewise altered. While rambling up some of the
-narrow and rocky defiles, I could almost have fancied myself
-transported back again to the barren valleys of the island of St. Jago.
-Among the basaltic cliffs I found some plants which I had seen nowhere
-else, but others I recognised as being wanderers from Tierra del Fuego.
-These porous rocks serve as a reservoir for the scanty rain-water; and
-consequently on the line where the igneous and sedimentary formations
-unite, some small springs (most rare occurrences in Patagonia) burst
-forth; and they could be distinguished at a distance by the
-circumscribed patches of bright green herbage.
-
-April 27th.--The bed of the river became rather narrower and hence the
-stream more rapid. It here ran at the rate of six knots an hour. From
-this cause, and from the many great angular fragments, tracking the
-boats became both dangerous and laborious.
-
-
-This day I shot a condor. It measured from tip to tip of the wings,
-eight and a half feet, and from beak to tail, four feet. This bird is
-known to have a wide geographical range, being found on the west coast
-of South America, from the Strait of Magellan along the Cordillera as
-far as eight degrees north of the equator. The steep cliff near the
-mouth of the Rio Negro is its northern limit on the Patagonian coast;
-and they have there wandered about four hundred miles from the great
-central line of their habitations in the Andes. Further south, among
-the bold precipices at the head of Port Desire, the condor is not
-uncommon; yet only a few stragglers occasionally visit the sea-coast. A
-line of cliff near the mouth of the Santa Cruz is frequented by these
-birds, and about eighty miles up the river, where the sides of the
-valley are formed by steep basaltic precipices, the condor reappears.
-From these facts it seems that the condors require perpendicular
-cliffs. In Chile, they haunt, during the greater part of the year, the
-lower country near the shores of the Pacific, and at night several
-roost together in one tree; but in the early part of summer, they
-retire to the most inaccessible parts of the inner Cordillera, there to
-breed in peace.
-
-With respect to their propagation, I was told by the country people in
-Chile, that the condor makes no sort of nest, but in the months of
-November and December lays two large white eggs on a shelf of bare
-rock. It is said that the young condors cannot fly for an entire year;
-and long after they are able, they continue to roost by night, and hunt
-by day with their parents. The old birds generally live in pairs; but
-among the inland basaltic cliffs of the Santa Cruz, I found a spot,
-where scores must usually haunt. On coming suddenly to the brow of the
-precipice, it was a grand spectacle to see between twenty and thirty of
-these great birds start heavily from their resting-place, and wheel
-away in majestic circles. From the quantity of dung on the rocks they
-must long have frequented this cliff for roosting and breeding. Having
-gorged themselves with carrion on the plains below, they retire to
-these favourite ledges to digest their food. From these facts, the
-condor, like the gallinazo, must to a certain degree be considered as a
-gregarious bird. In this part of the country they live altogether on
-the guanacos which have died a natural death, or as more commonly
-happens, have been killed by the pumas. I believe, from what I saw in
-Patagonia, that they do not on ordinary occasions extend their daily
-excursions to any great distance from their regular sleeping-places.
-
-The condors may oftentimes be seen at a great height, soaring over a
-certain spot in the most graceful circles. On some occasions I am sure
-that they do this only for pleasure, but on others, the Chileno
-countryman tells you that they are watching a dying animal, or the puma
-devouring its prey. If the condors glide down, and then suddenly all
-rise together, the Chileno knows that it is the puma which, watching
-the carcass, has sprung out to drive away the robbers. Besides feeding
-on carrion, the condors frequently attack young goats and lambs; and
-the shepherd-dogs are trained, whenever they pass over, to run out, and
-looking upwards to bark violently. The Chilenos destroy and catch
-numbers. Two methods are used; one is to place a carcass on a level
-piece of ground within an enclosure of sticks with an opening, and when
-the condors are gorged to gallop up on horseback to the entrance, and
-thus enclose them: for when this bird has not space to run, it cannot
-give its body sufficient momentum to rise from the ground. The second
-method is to mark the trees in which, frequently to the number of five
-or six together, they roost, and they at night to climb up and noose
-them. They are such heavy sleepers, as I have myself witnessed, that
-this is not a difficult task. At Valparaiso, I have seen a living
-condor sold for sixpence, but the common price is eight or ten
-shillings. One which I saw brought in, had been tied with rope, and was
-much injured; yet, the moment the line was cut by which its bill was
-secured, although surrounded by people, it began ravenously to tear a
-piece of carrion. In a garden at the same place, between twenty and
-thirty were kept alive. They were fed only once a week, but they
-appeared in pretty good health. [2] The Chileno countrymen assert that
-the condor will live, and retain its vigour, between five and six weeks
-without eating: I cannot answer for the truth of this, but it is a
-cruel experiment, which very likely has been tried.
-
-When an animal is killed in the country, it is well known that the
-condors, like other carrion-vultures, soon gain intelligence of it, and
-congregate in an inexplicable manner. In most cases it must not be
-overlooked, that the birds have discovered their prey, and have picked
-the skeleton clean, before the flesh is in the least degree tainted.
-Remembering the experiments of M. Audubon, on the little smelling
-powers of carrion-hawks, I tried in the above mentioned garden the
-following experiment: the condors were tied, each by a rope, in a long
-row at the bottom of a wall; and having folded up a piece of meat in
-white paper, I walked backwards and forwards, carrying it in my hand at
-the distance of about three yards from them, but no notice whatever was
-taken. I then threw it on the ground, within one yard of an old male
-bird; he looked at it for a moment with attention, but then regarded it
-no more. With a stick I pushed it closer and closer, until at last he
-touched it with his beak; the paper was then instantly torn off with
-fury, and at the same moment, every bird in the long row began
-struggling and flapping its wings. Under the same circumstances, it
-would have been quite impossible to have deceived a dog. The evidence
-in favour of and against the acute smelling powers of carrion-vultures
-is singularly balanced. Professor Owen has demonstrated that the
-olfactory nerves of the turkey-buzzard (Cathartes aura) are highly
-developed, and on the evening when Mr. Owen's paper was read at the
-Zoological Society, it was mentioned by a gentleman that he had seen
-the carrion-hawks in the West Indies on two occasions collect on the
-roof of a house, when a corpse had become offensive from not having
-been buried, in this case, the intelligence could hardly have been
-acquired by sight. On the other hand, besides the experiments of
-Audubon and that one by myself, Mr. Bachman has tried in the United
-States many varied plans, showing that neither the turkey-buzzard (the
-species dissected by Professor Owen) nor the gallinazo find their food
-by smell. He covered portions of highly-offensive offal with a thin
-canvas cloth, and strewed pieces of meat on it: these the
-carrion-vultures ate up, and then remained quietly standing, with their
-beaks within the eighth of an inch of the putrid mass, without
-discovering it. A small rent was made in the canvas, and the offal was
-immediately discovered; the canvas was replaced by a fresh piece, and
-meat again put on it, and was again devoured by the vultures without
-their discovering the hidden mass on which they were trampling. These
-facts are attested by the signatures of six gentlemen, besides that of
-Mr. Bachman. [3]
-
-Often when lying down to rest on the open plains, on looking upwards, I
-have seen carrion-hawks sailing through the air at a great height.
-Where the country is level I do not believe a space of the heavens, of
-more than fifteen degrees above the horizon, is commonly viewed with
-any attention by a person either walking or on horseback. If such be
-the case, and the vulture is on the wing at a height of between three
-and four thousand feet, before it could come within the range of
-vision, its distance in a straight line from the beholder's eye, would
-be rather more than two British miles. Might it not thus readily be
-overlooked? When an animal is killed by the sportsman in a lonely
-valley, may he not all the while be watched from above by the
-sharp-sighted bird? And will not the manner of its descend proclaim
-throughout the district to the whole family of carrion-feeders, that
-their prey is at hand?
-
-When the condors are wheeling in a flock round and round any spot,
-their flight is beautiful. Except when rising from the ground, I do
-not recollect ever having seen one of these birds flap its wings. Near
-Lima, I watched several for nearly half an hour, without once taking
-off my eyes, they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles,
-descending and ascending without giving a single flap. As they glided
-close over my head, I intently watched from an oblique position, the
-outlines of the separate and great terminal feathers of each wing; and
-these separate feathers, if there had been the least vibratory
-movement, would have appeared as if blended together; but they were
-seen distinct against the blue sky. The head and neck were moved
-frequently, and apparently with force; and the extended wings seemed to
-form the fulcrum on which the movements of the neck, body, and tail
-acted. If the bird wished to descend, the wings were for a moment
-collapsed; and when again expanded with an altered inclination, the
-momentum gained by the rapid descent seemed to urge the bird upwards
-with the even and steady movement of a paper kite. In the case of any
-bird soaring, its motion must be sufficiently rapid so that the action
-of the inclined surface of its body on the atmosphere may
-counterbalance its gravity. The force to keep up the momentum of a
-body moving in a horizontal plane in the air (in which there is so
-little friction) cannot be great, and this force is all that is wanted.
-The movements of the neck and body of the condor, we must suppose, is
-sufficient for this. However this may be, it is truly wonderful and
-beautiful to see so great a bird, hour after hour, without any apparent
-exertion, wheeling and gliding over mountain and river.
-
-April 29th.--From some high land we hailed with joy the white summits
-of the Cordillera, as they were seen occasionally peeping through their
-dusky envelope of clouds. During the few succeeding days we continued
-to get on slowly, for we found the river-course very tortuous, and
-strewed with immense fragments of various ancient slate rocks, and of
-granite. The plain bordering the valley has here attained an elevation
-of about 1100 feet above the river, and its character was much altered.
-The well-rounded pebbles of porphyry were mingled with many immense
-angular fragments of basalt and of primary rocks. The first of these
-erratic boulders which I noticed, was sixty-seven miles distant from
-the nearest mountain; another which I measured was five yards square,
-and projected five feet above the gravel. Its edges were so angular,
-and its size so great, that I at first mistook it for a rock _in situ_,
-and took out my compass to observe the direction of its cleavage. The
-plain here was not quite so level as that nearer the coast, but yet in
-betrayed no signs of any great violence. Under these circumstances it
-is, I believe, quite impossible to explain the transportal of these
-gigantic masses of rock so many miles from their parent-source, on any
-theory except by that of floating icebergs.
-
-During the two last days we met with signs of horses, and with several
-small articles which had belonged to the Indians--such as parts of a
-mantle and a bunch of ostrich feathers--, but they appeared to have
-been lying long on the ground. Between the place where the Indians had
-so lately crossed the river and this neighbourhood, though so many
-miles apart, the country appears to be quite unfrequented. At first,
-considering the abundance of the guanacos, I was surprised at this; but
-it is explained by the stony nature of the plains, which would soon
-disable an unshod horse from taking part in the chase. Nevertheless,
-in two places in this very central region, I found small heaps of
-stones, which I do not think could have been accidentally thrown
-together. They were placed on points, projecting over the edge of the
-highest lava cliff, and they resembled, but on a small scale, those
-near Port Desire.
-
-May 4th.--Captain Fitz Roy determined to take the boats no higher. The
-river had a winding course, and was very rapid; and the appearance of
-the country offered no temptation to proceed any further. Everywhere we
-met with the same productions, and the same dreary landscape. We were
-now one hundred and forty miles distant from the Atlantic and about
-sixty from the nearest arm of the Pacific. The valley in this upper
-part expanded into a wide basin, bounded on the north and south by the
-basaltic platforms, and fronted by the long range of the snow-clad
-Cordillera. But we viewed these grand mountains with regret, for we
-were obliged to imagine their nature and productions, instead of
-standing, as we had hoped, on their summits. Besides the useless loss
-of time which an attempt to ascend the river and higher would have cost
-us, we had already been for some days on half allowance of bread. This,
-although really enough for reasonable men, was, after a hard day's
-march, rather scanty food: a light stomach and an easy digestion are
-good things to talk about, but very unpleasant in practice.
-
-5th.--Before sunrise we commenced our descent. We shot down the stream
-with great rapidity, generally at the rate of ten knots an hour. In
-this one day we effected what had cost us five-and-a-half hard days'
-labour in ascending. On the 8th, we reached the Beagle after our
-twenty-one days' expedition. Every one, excepting myself, had cause to
-be dissatisfied; but to me the ascent afforded a most interesting
-section of the great tertiary formation of Patagonia.
-
-On March 1st, 1833, and again on March 16th, 1834, the Beagle anchored
-in Berkeley Sound, in East Falkland Island. This archipelago is
-situated in nearly the same latitude with the mouth of the Strait of
-Magellan; it covers a space of one hundred and twenty by sixty
-geographical miles, and is little more than half the size of Ireland.
-After the possession of these miserable islands had been contested by
-France, Spain, and England, they were left uninhabited. The government
-of Buenos Ayres then sold them to a private individual, but likewise
-used them, as old Spain had done before, for a penal settlement.
-England claimed her right and seized them. The Englishman who was left
-in charge of the flag was consequently murdered. A British officer was
-next sent, unsupported by any power: and when we arrived, we found him
-in charge of a population, of which rather more than half were runaway
-rebels and murderers.
-
-The theatre is worthy of the scenes acted on it. An undulating land,
-with a desolate and wretched aspect, is everywhere covered by a peaty
-soil and wiry grass, of one monotonous brown colour. Here and there a
-peak or ridge of grey quartz rock breaks through the smooth surface
-Every one has heard of the climate of these regions; it may be compared
-to that which is experienced at the height of between one and two
-thousand feet, on the mountains of North Wales; having however less
-sunshine and less frost but more wind and rain. [4]
-
-16th.--I will now describe a short excursion which made round a part of
-this island. In the morning I started with six horses and two Gauchos:
-the latter were capital men for the purpose, and well accustomed to
-living on their own resources. The weather was very boisterous and
-cold with heavy hail-storms. We got on, however, pretty well but,
-except the geology, nothing could be less interesting than our day's
-ride. The country is uniformly the same undulating moorland; the
-surface being covered by light brown withered grass and a few very
-small shrubs, all springing out of an elastic peaty soil. In the
-valleys here and there might be seen a small flock of wild geese, and
-everywhere the ground was so soft that the snipe were able to feed.
-Besides these two birds there were few others. There is one main range
-of hills, nearly two thousand feet in height, and composed of quartz
-rock, the rugged and barren crests of which gave us some trouble to
-cross. On the south side we came to the best country for wild cattle;
-we met, however, no great number, for they had been lately much
-harassed.
-
-In the evening we came across a small herd. One of my companions, St.
-Jago by name, soon separated a fat cow: he threw the bolas, and it
-struck her legs, but failed in becoming entangled. Then dropping his
-hat to mark the spot where the balls were left, while at full gallop,
-he uncoiled his lazo, and after a most severe chase, again came up to
-the cow, and caught her round the horns. The other Gaucho had gone on
-ahead with the spare horses, so that St. Jago had some difficulty in
-killing the furious beast. He managed to get her on a level piece of
-ground, by taking advantage of her as often as she rushed at him; and
-when she would not move, my horse, from having been trained, would
-canter up, and with his chest give her a violent push. But when on
-level ground it does not appear an easy job for one man to kill a beast
-mad with terror. Nor would it be so, if the horse, when left to itself
-without its rider, did not soon learn, for its own safety, to keep the
-lazo tight, so that, if the cow or ox moves forward, the horse moves
-just as quickly forward; otherwise, it stands motionless leaning on one
-side. This horse, however, was a young one, and would not stand still,
-but gave in to the cow as she struggled. It was admirable to see with
-what dexterity St. Jago dodged behind the beast, till at last he
-contrived to give the fatal touch to the main tendon of the hind leg
-after which, without much difficulty, he drove his knife into the head
-of the spinal marrow, and the cow dropped as if struck by lightning. He
-cut off pieces of flesh with the skin to it, but without any bones,
-sufficient for our expedition. We then rode on to our sleeping-place,
-and had for supper "carne con cuero," or meat roasted with the skin on
-it. This is as superior to common beef as venison is to mutton. A
-large circular piece taken from the back is roasted on the embers with
-the hide downwards and is the form of a saucer, so that none of the
-gravy is lost. If any worthy alderman had supped with us that evening,
-"carne con cuero," without doubt, would soon have been celebrated in
-London.
-
-During the night it rained, and the next day (17th) was very stormy,
-with much hail and snow. We rode across the island to the neck of land
-which joins the Rincon del Toro (the great peninsula at the S. W.
-extremity) to the rest of the island. From the great number of cows
-which have been killed, there is a large proportion of bulls. These
-wander about single, or two and three together, and are very savage. I
-never saw such magnificent beasts; they equalled in the size of their
-huge heads and necks the Grecian marble sculptures. Capt. Sulivan
-informs me that the hide of an average-sized bull weighs forty-seven
-pounds, whereas a hide of this weight, less thoroughly dried, is
-considered as a very heavy one at Monte Video. The young bulls
-generally run away, for a short distance; but the old ones do not stir
-a step, except to rush at man and horse; and many horses have been thus
-killed. An old bull crossed a boggy stream, and took his stand on the
-opposite side to us; we in vain tried to drive him away, and failing,
-were obliged to make a large circuit. The Gauchos in revenge
-determined to emasculate him and render him for the future harmless. It
-was very interesting to see how art completely mastered force. One
-lazo was thrown over his horns as he rushed at the horse, and another
-round his hind legs: in a minute the monster was stretched powerless on
-the ground. After the lazo has once been drawn tightly round the horns
-of a furious animal, it does not at first appear an easy thing to
-disengage it again without killing the beast: nor, I apprehend, would
-it be so if the man was by himself. By the aid, however, of a second
-person throwing his lazo so as to catch both hind legs, it is quickly
-managed: for the animal, as long as its hind legs are kept
-outstretched, is quite helpless, and the first man can with his hands
-loosen his lazo from the horns, and then quietly mount his horse; but
-the moment the second man, by backing ever so little, relaxes the
-strain, the lazo slips off the legs of the struggling beast, which then
-rises free, shakes himself, and vainly rushes at his antagonist.
-
-During our whole ride we saw only one troop of wild horses. These
-animals, as well as the cattle, were introduced by the French in 1764,
-since which time both have greatly increased. It is a curious fact,
-that the horses have never left the eastern end of the island, although
-there is no natural boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that
-part of the island is not more tempting than the rest. The Gauchos
-whom I asked, though asserting this to be the case, were unable to
-account for it, except from the strong attachment which horses have to
-any locality to which they are accustomed. Considering that the island
-does not appear fully stocked, and that there are no beasts of prey, I
-was particularly curious to know what has checked their originally
-rapid increase. That in a limited island some check would sooner or
-later supervene, is inevitable; but why had the increase of the horse
-been checked sooner than that of the cattle? Capt. Sulivan has taken
-much pains for me in this inquiry. The Gauchos employed here attribute
-it chiefly to the stallions constantly roaming from place to place, and
-compelling the mares to accompany them, whether or not the young foals
-are able to follow. One Gaucho told Capt. Sulivan that he had watched
-a stallion for a whole hour, violently kicking and biting a mare till
-he forced her to leave her foal to its fate. Capt. Sulivan can so far
-corroborate this curious account, that he has several times found young
-foals dead, whereas he has never found a dead calf. Moreover, the dead
-bodies of full-grown horses are more frequently found, as if more
-subject to disease or accidents, than those of the cattle. From the
-softness of the ground their hoofs often grow irregularly to a great
-length, and this causes lameness. The predominant colours are roan and
-iron-grey. All the horses bred here, both tame and wild, are rather
-small-sized, though generally in good condition; and they have lost so
-much strength, that they are unfit to be used in taking wild cattle
-with the lazo: in consequence, it is necessary to go to the great
-expense of importing fresh horses from the Plata. At some future
-period the southern hemisphere probably will have its breed of Falkland
-ponies, as the northern has its Shetland breed.
-
-The cattle, instead of having degenerated like the horses seem, as
-before remarked, to have increased in size; and they are much more
-numerous than the horses. Capt. Sulivan informs me that they vary much
-less in the general form of their bodies and in the shape of their
-horns than English cattle. In colour they differ much; and it is a
-remarkable circumstance, that in different parts of this one small
-island, different colours predominate. Round Mount Usborne, at a
-height of from 1000 to 1500 feet above the sea, about half of some of
-the herds are mouse or lead-coloured, a tint which is not common in
-other parts of the island. Near Port Pleasant dark brown prevails,
-whereas south of Choiseul Sound (which almost divides the island into
-two parts), white beasts with black heads and feet are the most common:
-in all parts black, and some spotted animals may be observed. Capt.
-Sulivan remarks, that the difference in the prevailing colours was so
-obvious, that in looking for the herds near Port Pleasant, they
-appeared from a long distance like black spots, whilst south of
-Choiseul Sound they appeared like white spots on the hill-sides. Capt.
-Sulivan thinks that the herds do not mingle; and it is a singular fact,
-that the mouse-coloured cattle, though living on the high land, calve
-about a month earlier in the season than the other coloured beasts on
-the lower land. It is interesting thus to find the once domesticated
-cattle breaking into three colours, of which some one colour would in
-all probability ultimately prevail over the others, if the herds were
-left undisturbed for the next several centuries.
-
-The rabbit is another animal which has been introduced; and has
-succeeded very well; so that they abound over large parts of the
-island. Yet, like the horses, they are confined within certain limits;
-for they have not crossed the central chain of hills, nor would they
-have extended even so far as its base, if, as the Gauchos informed me,
-small colonies has not been carried there. I should not have supposed
-that these animals, natives of northern Africa, could have existed in a
-climate so humid as this, and which enjoys so little sunshine that even
-wheat ripens only occasionally. It is asserted that in Sweden, which
-any one would have thought a more favourable climate, the rabbit cannot
-live out of doors. The first few pairs, moreover, had here to content
-against pre-existing enemies, in the fox and some large hawks. The
-French naturalists have considered the black variety a distinct
-species, and called it Lepus Magellanicus. [5] They imagined that
-Magellan, when talking of an animal under the name of "conejos" in the
-Strait of Magellan, referred to this species; but he was alluding to a
-small cavy, which to this day is thus called by the Spaniards. The
-Gauchos laughed at the idea of the black kind being different from the
-grey, and they said that at all events it had not extended its range
-any further than the grey kind; that the two were never found separate;
-and that they readily bred together, and produced piebald offspring. Of
-the latter I now possess a specimen, and it is marked about the head
-differently from the French specific description. This circumstance
-shows how cautious naturalists should be in making species; for even
-Cuvier, on looking at the skull of one of these rabbits, thought it was
-probably distinct!
-
-The only quadruped native to the island [6]; is a large wolf-like fox
-(Canis antarcticus), which is common to both East and West Falkland. I
-have no doubt it is a peculiar species, and confined to this
-archipelago; because many sealers, Gauchos, and Indians, who have
-visited these islands, all maintain that no such animal is found in any
-part of South America.
-
-Molina, from a similarity in habits, thought that this was the same
-with his "culpeu;" [7] but I have seen both, and they are quite
-distinct. These wolves are well known from Byron's account of their
-tameness and curiosity, which the sailors, who ran into the water to
-avoid them, mistook for fierceness. To this day their manners remain
-the same. They have been observed to enter a tent, and actually pull
-some meat from beneath the head of a sleeping seaman. The Gauchos also
-have frequently in the evening killed them, by holding out a piece of
-meat in one hand, and in the other a knife ready to stick them. As far
-as I am aware, there is no other instance in any part of the world, of
-so small a mass of broken land, distant from a continent, possessing so
-large an aboriginal quadruped peculiar to itself. Their numbers have
-rapidly decreased; they are already banished from that half of the
-island which lies to the eastward of the neck of land between St.
-Salvador Bay and Berkeley Sound. Within a very few years after these
-islands shall have become regularly settled, in all probability this
-for will be classed with the dodo, as an animal which has perished from
-the face of the earth.
-
-At night (17th) we slept on the neck of land at the head of Choiseul
-Sound, which forms the south-west peninsula. The valley was pretty well
-sheltered from the cold wind, but there was very little brushwood for
-fuel. The Gauchos, however, soon found what, to my great surprise,
-made nearly as hot a fire as coals; this was the skeleton of a bullock
-lately killed, from which the flesh had been picked by the
-carrion-hawks. They told me that in winter they often killed a beast,
-cleaned the flesh from the bones with their knives, and then with these
-same bones roasted the meat for their suppers.
-
-18th.--It rained during nearly the whole day. At night we managed,
-however, with our saddle-cloths to keep ourselves pretty well dry and
-warm; but the ground on which we slept was on each occasion nearly in
-the state of a bog, and there was not a dry spot to sit down on after
-our day's ride. I have in another part stated how singular it is that
-there should be absolutely no trees on these islands, although Tierra
-del Fuego is covered by one large forest. The largest bush in the
-island (belonging to the family of Compositae) is scarcely so tall as
-our gorse. The best fuel is afforded by a green little bush about the
-size of common heath, which has the useful property of burning while
-fresh and green. It was very surprising to see the Gauchos, in the
-midst of rain and everything soaking wet, with nothing more than a
-tinder-box and a piece of rag, immediately make a fire. They sought
-beneath the tufts of grass and bushel for a few dry twigs, and these
-they rubbed into fibres; then surrounding them with coarser twigs,
-something like a bird's nest, they put the rag with its spark of fire
-in the middle and covered it up. The nest being then held up to the
-wind, by degrees it smoked more and more, and at last burst out in
-flames. I do not think any other method would have had a chance of
-succeeding with such damp materials.
-
-19th.--Each morning, from not having ridden for some time previously, I
-was very stiff. I was surprised to hear the Gauchos, who have from
-infancy almost lived on horseback, say that, under similar
-circumstances, they always suffer. St. Jago told me, that having been
-confined for three months by illness, he went out hunting wild cattle,
-and in consequence, for the next two days, his thighs were so stiff
-that he was obliged to lie in bed. This shows that the Gauchos,
-although they do not appear to do so, yet really must exert much
-muscular effort in riding. The hunting wild cattle, in a country so
-difficult to pass as this is on account of the swampy ground, must be
-very hard work. The Gauchos say they often pass at full speed over
-ground which would be impassable at a slower pace; in the same manner
-as a man is able to skate over thin ice. When hunting, the party
-endeavours to get as close as possible to the herd without being
-discovered. Each man carries four or five pair of the bolas; these he
-throws one after the other at as many cattle, which, when once
-entangled, are left for some days till they become a little exhausted
-by hunger and struggling. They are then let free and driven towards a
-small herd of tame animals, which have been brought to the spot on
-purpose. From their previous treatment, being too much terrified to
-leave the herd, they are easily driven, if their strength last out, to
-the settlement.
-
-The weather continued so very bad that we determine to make a push, and
-try to reach the vessel before night. From the quantity of rain which
-had fallen, the surface of the whole country was swampy. I suppose my
-horse fell at least a dozen times, and sometimes the whole six horses
-were floundering in the mud together. All the little streams are
-bordered by soft peat, which makes it very difficult for the horses to
-leap them without falling. To complete our discomforts we were obliged
-to cross the head of a creek of the sea, in which the water was as high
-as our horses' backs; and the little waves, owing to the violence of
-the wind, broke over us, and made us very wet and cold. Even the
-iron-framed Gauchos professed themselves glad when they reached the
-settlement, after our little excursion.
-
-The geological structure of these islands is in most respects simple.
-The lower country consists of clay-slate and sandstone, containing
-fossils, very closely related to, but not identical with, those found
-in the Silurian formations of Europe; the hills are formed of white
-granular quartz rock. The strata of the latter are frequently arched
-with perfect symmetry, and the appearance of some of the masses is in
-consequence most singular. Pernety [8] has devoted several pages to
-the description of a Hill of Ruins, the successive strata of which he
-has justly compared to the seats of an amphitheatre. The quartz rock
-must have been quite pasty when it underwent such remarkable flexures
-without being shattered into fragments. As the quartz insensibly
-passes into the sandstone, it seems probable that the former owes its
-origin to the sandstone having been heated to such a degree that it
-became viscid, and upon cooling crystallized. While in the soft state
-it must have been pushed up through the overlying beds.
-
-In many parts of the island the bottoms of the valleys are covered in
-an extraordinary manner by myriads of great loose angular fragments of
-the quartz rock, forming "streams of stones." These have been mentioned
-with surprise by every voyager since the time of Pernety. The blocks
-are not water-worn, their angles being only a little blunted; they vary
-in size from one or two feet in diameter to ten, or even more than
-twenty times as much. They are not thrown together into irregular
-piles, but are spread out into level sheets or great streams. It is
-not possible to ascertain their thickness, but the water of small
-streamlets can be heard trickling through the stones many feet below
-the surface. The actual depth is probably great, because the crevices
-between the lower fragments must long ago have been filled up with
-sand. The width of these sheets of stones varied from a few hundred
-feet to a mile; but the peaty soil daily encroaches on the borders, and
-even forms islets wherever a few fragments happen to lie close
-together. In a valley south of Berkeley Sound, which some of our party
-called the "great valley of fragments," it was necessary to cross an
-uninterrupted band half a mile wide, by jumping from one pointed stone
-to another. So large were the fragments, that being overtaken by a
-shower of rain, I readily found shelter beneath one of them.
-
-Their little inclination is the most remarkable circumstance in these
-"streams of stones." On the hill-sides I have seen them sloping at an
-angle of ten degrees with the horizon; but in some of the level,
-broad-bottomed valleys, the inclination is only just sufficient to be
-clearly perceived. On so rugged a surface there was no means of
-measuring the angle, but to give a common illustration, I may say that
-the slope would not have checked the speed of an English mail-coach. In
-some places, a continuous stream of these fragments followed up the
-course of a valley, and even extended to the very crest of the hill. On
-these crests huge masses, exceeding in dimensions any small building,
-seemed to stand arrested in their headlong course: there, also, the
-curved strata of the archways lay piled on each other, like the ruins
-of some vast and ancient cathedral. In endeavouring to describe these
-scenes of violence one is tempted to pass from one simile to another.
-We may imagine that streams of white lava had flowed from many parts of
-the mountains into the lower country, and that when solidified they had
-been rent by some enormous convulsion into myriads of fragments. The
-expression "streams of stones," which immediately occurred to every
-one, conveys the same idea. These scenes are on the spot rendered more
-striking by the contrast of the low rounded forms of the neighbouring
-hills.
-
-I was interested by finding on the highest peak of one range (about 700
-feet above the sea) a great arched fragment, lying on its convex side,
-or back downwards. Must we believe that it was fairly pitched up in
-the air, and thus turned? Or, with more probability, that there
-existed formerly a part of the same range more elevated than the point
-on which this monument of a great convulsion of nature now lies. As
-the fragments in the valleys are neither rounded nor the crevices
-filled up with sand, we must infer that the period of violence was
-subsequent to the land having been raised above the waters of the sea.
-In a transverse section within these valleys, the bottom is nearly
-level, or rises but very little towards either side. Hence the
-fragments appear to have travelled from the head of the valley; but in
-reality it seems more probable that they have been hurled down from the
-nearest slopes; and that since, by a vibratory movement of overwhelming
-force, [9] the fragments have been levelled into one continuous sheet.
-If during the earthquake [10] which in 1835 overthrew Concepcion, in
-Chile, it was thought wonderful that small bodies should have been
-pitched a few inches from the ground, what must we say to a movement
-which has caused fragments many tons in weight, to move onwards like so
-much sand on a vibrating board, and find their level? I have seen, in
-the Cordillera of the Andes, the evident marks where stupendous
-mountains have been broken into pieces like so much thin crust, and the
-strata thrown of their vertical edges; but never did any scene, like
-these "streams of stones," so forcibly convey to my mind the idea of a
-convulsion, of which in historical records we might in vain seek for
-any counterpart: yet the progress of knowledge will probably some day
-give a simple explanation of this phenomenon, as it already has of the
-so long-thought inexplicable transportal of the erratic boulders, which
-are strewed over the plains of Europe.
-
-I have little to remark on the zoology of these islands. have before
-described the carrion-vulture of Polyborus. There are some other hawks,
-owls, and a few small land-birds. The water-fowl are particularly
-numerous, and they must formerly, from the accounts of the old
-navigators, have been much more so. One day I observed a cormorant
-playing with a fish which it had caught. Eight times successively the
-bird let its prey go, then dived after it, and although in deep water,
-brought it each time to the surface. In the Zoological Gardens I have
-seen the otter treat a fish in the same manner, much as a cat does a
-mouse: I do not know of any other instance where dame Nature appears so
-wilfully cruel. Another day, having placed myself between a penguin
-(Aptenodytes demersa) and the water, I was much amused by watching its
-habits. It was a brave bird; and till reaching the sea, it regularly
-fought and drove me backwards. Nothing less than heavy blows would have
-stopped him; every inch he gained he firmly kept, standing close before
-me erect and determined. When thus opposed he continually rolled his
-head from side to side, in a very odd manner, as if the power of
-distinct vision lay only in the anterior and basal part of each eye.
-This bird is commonly called the jackass penguin, from its habit, while
-on shore, of throwing its head backwards, and making a loud strange
-noise, very like the braying of an ass; but while at sea, and
-undisturbed, its note is very deep and solemn, and is often heard in
-the night-time. In diving, its little wings are used as fins; but on
-the land, as front legs. When crawling, it may be said on four legs,
-through the tussocks or on the side of a grassy cliff, it moves so very
-quickly that it might easily be mistaken for a quadruped. When at sea
-and fishing, it comes to the surface for the purpose of breathing with
-such a spring, and dives again so instantaneously, that I defy any one
-at first sight to be sure that it was not a fish leaping for sport.
-
-Two kinds of geese frequent the Falklands. The upland species (Anas
-Magellanica) is common, in pairs and in small flocks, throughout the
-island. They do not migrate, but build on the small outlying islets.
-This is supposed to be from fear of the foxes: and it is perhaps from
-the same cause that these birds, though very tame by day, are shy and
-wild in the dusk of the evening. They live entirely on vegetable
-matter.
-
-The rock-goose, so called from living exclusively on the sea-beach
-(Anas antarctica), is common both here and on the west coast of
-America, as far north as Chile. In the deep and retired channels of
-Tierra del Fuego, the snow-white gander, invariably accompanied by his
-darker consort, and standing close by each other on some distant rocky
-point, is a common feature in the landscape.
-
-In these islands a great loggerheaded duck or goose (Anas brachyptera),
-which sometimes weighs twenty-two pounds, is very abundant. These
-birds were in former days called, from their extraordinary manner of
-paddling and splashing upon the water, race-horses; but now they are
-named, much more appropriately, steamers. Their wings are too small
-and weak to allow of flight, but by their aid, partly swimming and
-partly flapping the surface of the water, they move very quickly. The
-manner is something like that by which the common house-duck escapes
-when pursued by a dog; but I am nearly sure that the steamer moves its
-wings alternately, instead of both together, as in other birds. These
-clumsy, loggerheaded ducks make such a noise and splashing, that the
-effect is exceedingly curious.
-
-Thus we find in South America three birds which use their wings for
-other purposes besides flight; the penguins as fins, the steamer as
-paddles, and the ostrich as sails: and the Apteryz of New Zealand, as
-well as its gigantic extinct prototype the Deinornis, possess only
-rudimentary representatives of wings. The steamer is able to dive only
-to a very short distance. It feeds entirely on shell-fish from the
-kelp and tidal rocks: hence the beak and head, for the purpose of
-breaking them, are surprisingly heavy and strong: the head is so strong
-that I have scarcely been able to fracture it with my geological
-hammer; and all our sportsmen soon discovered how tenacious these birds
-were of life. When in the evening pluming themselves in a flock, they
-make the same odd mixture of sounds which bull-frogs do within the
-tropics.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the Falkland Islands, made many
-observations on the lower marine animals, [11] but they are of little
-general interest. I will mention only one class of facts, relating to
-certain zoophytes in the more highly organized division of that class.
-Several genera (Flustra, Eschara, Cellaria, Crisia, and others) agree
-in having singular moveable organs (like those of Flustra avicularia,
-found in the European seas) attached to their cells. The organ, in the
-greater number of cases, very closely resembles the head of a vulture;
-but the lower mandible can be opened much wider than in a real bird's
-beak. The head itself possessed considerable powers of movement, by
-means of a short neck. In one zoophyte the head itself was fixed, but
-the lower jaw free: in another it was replaced by a triangular hood,
-with beautifully-fitted trap-door, which evidently answered to the
-lower mandible. In the greater number of species, each cell was
-provided with one head, but in others each cell had two.
-
-The young cells at the end of the branches of these corallines contain
-quite immature polypi, yet the vulture-head attached to them, though
-small, are in every respect perfect When the polypus was removed by a
-needle from any of the cells, these organs did not appear in the least
-affected. When one of the vulture-like heads was cut off from the
-cell, the lower mandible retained its power of opening and closing.
-Perhaps the most singular part of their structure is, that when there
-were more than two rows of cells on a branch, the central cells were
-furnished with these appendages, of only one-fourth the size of the
-outside ones. Their movements varied according to the species; but in
-some I never saw the least motion; while others, with the lower
-mandible generally wide open, oscillated backwards and forwards at the
-rate of about five seconds each turn, others moved rapidly and by
-starts. When touched with a needle, the beak generally seized the
-point so firmly, that the whole branch might be shaken.
-
-These bodies have no relation whatever with the production of the eggs
-or gemmules, as they are formed before the young polypi appear in the
-cells at the end of the growing branches; as they move independently of
-the polypi, and do not appear to be in any way connected with them; and
-as they differ in size on the outer and inner rows of cells, I have
-little doubt, that in their functions, they are related rather to the
-horny axis of the branches than to the polypi in the cells. The fleshy
-appendage at the lower extremity of the sea-pen (described at Bahia
-Blanca) also forms part of the zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner
-as the roots of a tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the
-individual leaf or flower-buds.
-
-In another elegant little coralline (Crisia?), each cell was furnished
-with a long-toothed bristle, which had the power of moving quickly.
-Each of these bristles and each of the vulture-like heads generally
-moved quite independently of the others, but sometimes all on both
-sides of a branch, sometimes only those on one side, moved together
-coinstantaneously, sometimes each moved in regular order one after
-another. In these actions we apparently behold as perfect a
-transmission of will in the zoophyte, though composed of thousands of
-distinct polypi, as in any single animal. The case, indeed, is not
-different from that of the sea-pens, which, when touched, drew
-themselves into the sand on the coast of Bahia Blanca. I will state
-one other instance of uniform action, though of a very different
-nature, in a zoophyte closely allied to Clytia, and therefore very
-simply organized. Having kept a large tuft of it in a basin of
-salt-water, when it was dark I found that as often as I rubbed any part
-of a branch, the whole became strongly phosphorescent with a green
-light: I do not think I ever saw any object more beautifully so. But
-the remarkable circumstance was, that the flashes of light always
-proceeded up the branches, from the base towards the extremities.
-
-The examination of these compound animals was always very interesting
-to me. What can be more remarkable that to see a plant-like body
-producing an egg, capable of swimming about and of choosing a proper
-place to adhere to, which then sprouts into branches, each crowded with
-innumerable distinct animals, often of complicated organizations. The
-branches, moreover, as we have just seen, sometimes possess organs
-capable of movement and independent of the polypi. Surprising as this
-union of separate individuals in common stock must always appear, every
-tree displays the same fact, for buds must be considered as individual
-plants. It is, however, natural to consider a polypus, furnished with a
-mouth, intestines, and other organs, as a distinct individual, whereas
-the individuality of a leaf-bud is not easily realised, so that the
-union of separate individuals in a common body is more striking in a
-coralline than in a tree. Our conception of a compound animal, where
-in some respects the individuality of each is not completed, may be
-aided, by reflecting on the production of two distinct creatures by
-bisecting a single one with a knife, or where Nature herself performs
-the task of bisection. We may consider the polypi in a zoophyte, or
-the buds in a tree, as cases where the division of the individual has
-not been completely effected. Certainly in the case of trees, and
-judging from analogy in that of corallines, the individuals propagated
-by buds seem more intimately related to each other, than eggs or seeds
-are to their parents. It seems now pretty well established that plants
-propagated by buds all partake of a common duration of life; and it is
-familiar to every one, what singular and numerous peculiarities are
-transmitted with certainty, by buds, layers, and grafts, which by
-seminal propagation never or only casually reappear.
-
-[1] The desserts of Syria are characterized, according to Volney (tom.
-i. p. 351), by woody bushes, numerous rats, gazelles and hares. In the
-landscape of Patagonia, the guanaco replaces the gazelle, and the
-agouti the hare.
-
-[2] I noticed that several hours before any one of the condors died,
-all the lice, with which it was infested, crawled to the outside
-feathers. I was assured that this always happens.
-
-[3] London's Magazine of Nat. Hist., vol. vii.
-
-[4] From accounts published since our voyage, and more especially from
-several interesting letters from Capt. Sulivan, R. N., employed on the
-survey, it appears that we took an exaggerated view of the badness of
-the climate on these islands. But when I reflect on the almost
-universal covering of peat, and on the fact of wheat seldom ripening
-here, I can hardly believe that the climate in summer is so fine and
-dry as it has lately been represented.
-
-[5] Lesson's Zoology of the Voyage of the Coquille, tom. i. p. 168. All
-the early voyagers, and especially Bougainville, distinctly state that
-the wolf-like fox was the only native animal on the island. The
-distinction of the rabbit as a species, is taken from peculiarities in
-the fur, from the shape of the head, and from the shortness of the
-ears. I may here observe that the difference between the Irish and
-English hare rests upon nearly similar characters, only more strongly
-marked.
-
-[6] I have reason, however, to suspect that there is a field-mouse. The
-common European rat and mouse have roamed far from the habitations of
-the settlers. The common hog has also run wild on one islet; all are
-of a black colour: the boars are very fierce, and have great trunks.
-
-[7] The "culpeu" is the Canis Magellanicus brought home by Captain King
-from the Strait of Magellan. It is common in Chile.
-
-[8] Pernety, Voyage aux Isles Malouines, p. 526.
-
-[9] "Nous n'avons pas ete moins saisis d'etonnement a la vue de
-l'innombrable quantite de pierres de touts grandeurs, bouleversees les
-unes sur les autres, et cependent rangees, comme si elles avoient ete
-amoncelees negligemment pour remplir des ravins. On ne se lassoit pas
-d'admirer les effets prodigieux de la nature."--Pernety, p. 526.
-
-[10] An inhabitant of Mendoza, and hence well capable of judging,
-assured me that, during the several years he had resided on these
-islands, he had never felt the slightest shock of an earthquake.
-
-[11] I was surprised to find, on counting the eggs of a large white
-Doris (this sea-slug was three and a half inches long), how
-extraordinarily numerous they were. From two to five eggs (each
-three-thousandths of an inch in diameter) were contained in spherical
-little case. These were arranged two deep in transverse rows forming a
-ribbon. The ribbon adhered by its edge to the rock in an oval spire.
-One which I found, measured nearly twenty inches in length and half in
-breadth. By counting how many balls were contained in a tenth of an
-inch in the row, and how many rows in an equal length of the ribbon, on
-the most moderate computation there were six hundred thousand eggs. Yet
-this Doris was certainly not very common; although I was often
-searching under the stones, I saw only seven individuals. No fallacy
-is more common with naturalists, than that the numbers of an individual
-species depend on its powers of propagation.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TIERRA DEL FUEGO
-
-Tierra del Fuego, first arrival--Good Success Bay--An Account of the
-Fuegians on board--Interview With the Savages--Scenery of the
-Forests--Cape Horn--Wigwam Cove--Miserable Condition of the
-Savages--Famines--Cannibals--Matricide--Religious Feelings--Great
-Gale--Beagle Channel--Ponsonby Sound--Build Wigwams and settle the
-Fuegians--Bifurcation of the Beagle Channel--Glaciers--Return to the
-Ship--Second Visit in the Ship to the Settlement--Equality of Condition
-amongst the Natives.
-
-
-DECEMBER 17th, 1832.--Having now finished with Patagonia and the
-Falkland Islands, I will describe our first arrival in Tierra del
-Fuego. A little after noon we doubled Cape St. Diego, and entered the
-famous strait of Le Maire. We kept close to the Fuegian shore, but the
-outline of the rugged, inhospitable Statenland was visible amidst the
-clouds. In the afternoon we anchored in the Bay of Good Success. While
-entering we were saluted in a manner becoming the inhabitants of this
-savage land. A group of Fuegians partly concealed by the entangled
-forest, were perched on a wild point overhanging the sea; and as we
-passed by, they sprang up and waving their tattered cloaks sent forth a
-loud and sonorous shout. The savages followed the ship, and just
-before dark we saw their fire, and again heard their wild cry. The
-harbour consists of a fine piece of water half surrounded by low
-rounded mountains of clay-slate, which are covered to the water's edge
-by one dense gloomy forest. A single glance at the landscape was
-sufficient to show me how widely different it was from anything I had
-ever beheld. At night it blew a gale of wind, and heavy squalls from
-the mountains swept past us. It would have been a bad time out at sea,
-and we, as well as others, may call this Good Success Bay.
-
-In the morning the Captain sent a party to communicate with the
-Fuegians. When we came within hail, one of the four natives who were
-present advanced to receive us, and began to shout most vehemently,
-wishing to direct us where to land. When we were on shore the party
-looked rather alarmed, but continued talking and making gestures with
-great rapidity. It was without exception the most curious and
-interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have believed how wide
-was the difference between savage and civilized man: it is greater than
-between a wild and domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a
-greater power of improvement. The chief spokesman was old, and
-appeared to be the head of the family; the three others were powerful
-young men, about six feet high. The women and children had been sent
-away. These Fuegians are a very different race from the stunted,
-miserable wretches farther westward; and they seem closely allied to
-the famous Patagonians of the Strait of Magellan. Their only garment
-consists of a mantle made of guanaco skin, with the wool outside: this
-they wear just thrown over their shoulders, leaving their persons as
-often exposed as covered. Their skin is of a dirty coppery-red colour.
-
-The old man had a fillet of white feathers tied round his head, which
-partly confined his black, coarse, and entangled hair. His face was
-crossed by two broad transverse bars; one, painted bright red, reached
-from ear to ear and included the upper lip; the other, white like
-chalk, extended above and parallel to the first, so that even his
-eyelids were thus coloured. The other two men were ornamented by
-streaks of black powder, made of charcoal. The party altogether
-closely resembled the devils which come on the stage in plays like Der
-Freischutz.
-
-Their very attitudes were abject, and the expression of their
-countenances distrustful, surprised, and startled. After we had
-presented them with some scarlet cloth, which they immediately tied
-round their necks, they became good friends. This was shown by the old
-man patting our breasts, and making a chuckling kind of noise, as
-people do when feeding chickens. I walked with the old man, and this
-demonstration of friendship was repeated several times; it was
-concluded by three hard slaps, which were given me on the breast and
-back at the same time. He then bared his bosom for me to return the
-compliment, which being done, he seemed highly pleased. The language
-of these people, according to our notions, scarcely deserves to be
-called articulate. Captain Cook has compared it to a man clearing his
-throat, but certainly no European ever cleared his throat with so many
-hoarse, guttural, and clicking sounds.
-
-They are excellent mimics: as often as we coughed or yawned, or made
-any odd motion, they immediately imitated us. Some of our party began
-to squint and look awry; but one of the young Fuegians (whose whole
-face was painted black, excepting a white band across his eyes)
-succeeded in making far more hideous grimaces. They could repeat with
-perfect correctness each word in any sentence we addressed them, and
-they remembered such words for some time. Yet we Europeans all know
-how difficult it is to distinguish apart the sounds in a foreign
-language. Which of us, for instance, could follow an American Indian
-through a sentence of more than three words? All savages appear to
-possess, to an uncommon degree, this power of mimicry. I was told,
-almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among the
-Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious for being
-able to imitate and describe the gait of any man, so that he may be
-recognized. How can this faculty be explained? is it a consequence of
-the more practised habits of perception and keener senses, common to
-all men in a savage state, as compared with those long civilized?
-
-When a song was struck up by our party, I thought the Fuegians would
-have fallen down with astonishment. With equal surprise they viewed
-our dancing; but one of the young men, when asked, had no objection to
-a little waltzing. Little accustomed to Europeans as they appeared to
-be, yet they knew and dreaded our fire-arms; nothing would tempt them
-to take a gun in their hands. They begged for knives, calling them by
-the Spanish word "cuchilla." They explained also what they wanted, by
-acting as if they had a piece of blubber in their mouth, and then
-pretending to cut instead of tear it.
-
-I have not as yet noticed the Fuegians whom we had on board. During
-the former voyage of the Adventure and Beagle in 1826 to 1830, Captain
-Fitz Roy seized on a party of natives, as hostages for the loss of a
-boat, which had been stolen, to the great jeopardy of a party employed
-on the survey; and some of these natives, as well as a child whom he
-bought for a pearl-button, he took with him to England, determining to
-educate them and instruct them in religion at his own expense. To
-settle these natives in their own country, was one chief inducement to
-Captain Fitz Roy to undertake our present voyage; and before the
-Admiralty had resolved to send out this expedition, Captain Fitz Roy
-had generously chartered a vessel, and would himself have taken them
-back. The natives were accompanied by a missionary, R. Matthews; of
-whom and of the natives, Captain Fitz Roy has published a full and
-excellent account. Two men, one of whom died in England of the
-small-pox, a boy and a little girl, were originally taken; and we had
-now on board, York Minster, Jemmy Button (whose name expresses his
-purchase-money), and Fuegia Basket. York Minster was a full-grown,
-short, thick, powerful man: his disposition was reserved, taciturn,
-morose, and when excited violently passionate; his affections were very
-strong towards a few friends on board; his intellect good. Jemmy
-Button was a universal favourite, but likewise passionate; the
-expression of his face at once showed his nice disposition. He was
-merry and often laughed, and was remarkably sympathetic with any one in
-pain: when the water was rough, I was often a little sea-sick, and he
-used to come to me and say in a plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!"
-but the notion, after his aquatic life, of a man being sea-sick, was
-too ludicrous, and he was generally obliged to turn on one side to hide
-a smile or laugh, and then he would repeat his "Poor, poor fellow!" He
-was of a patriotic disposition; and he liked to praise his own tribe
-and country, in which he truly said there were "plenty of trees," and
-he abused all the other tribes: he stoutly declared that there was no
-Devil in his land. Jemmy was short, thick, and fat, but vain of his
-personal appearance; he used always to wear gloves, his hair was neatly
-cut, and he was distressed if his well-polished shoes were dirtied. He
-was fond of admiring himself in a looking glass; and a merry-faced
-little Indian boy from the Rio Negro, whom we had for some months on
-board, soon perceived this, and used to mock him: Jemmy, who was always
-rather jealous of the attention paid to this little boy, did not at all
-like this, and used to say, with rather a contemptuous twist of his
-head, "Too much skylark." It seems yet wonderful to me, when I think
-over all his many good qualities that he should have been of the same
-race, and doubtless partaken of the same character, with the miserable,
-degraded savages whom we first met here. Lastly, Fuegia Basket was a
-nice, modest, reserved young girl, with a rather pleasing but sometimes
-sullen expression, and very quick in learning anything, especially
-languages. This she showed in picking up some Portuguese and Spanish,
-when left on shore for only a short time at Rio de Janeiro and Monte
-Video, and in her knowledge of English. York Minster was very jealous
-of any attention paid to her; for it was clear he determined to marry
-her as soon as they were settled on shore.
-
-Although all three could both speak and understand a good deal of
-English, it was singularly difficult to obtain much information from
-them, concerning the habits of their countrymen; this was partly owing
-to their apparent difficulty in understanding the simplest alternative.
-Every one accustomed to very young children, knows how seldom one can
-get an answer even to so simple a question as whether a thing is black
-or white; the idea of black or white seems alternately to fill their
-minds. So it was with these Fuegians, and hence it was generally
-impossible to find out, by cross questioning, whether one had rightly
-understood anything which they had asserted. Their sight was
-remarkably acute; it is well known that sailors, from long practice,
-can make out a distant object much better than a landsman; but both
-York and Jemmy were much superior to any sailor on board: several times
-they have declared what some distant object has been, and though
-doubted by every one, they have proved right, when it has been examined
-through a telescope. They were quite conscious of this power; and
-Jemmy, when he had any little quarrel with the officer on watch, would
-say, "Me see ship, me no tell."
-
-It was interesting to watch the conduct of the savages, when we landed,
-towards Jemmy Button: they immediately perceived the difference between
-him and ourselves, and held much conversation one with another on the
-subject. The old man addressed a long harangue to Jemmy, which it
-seems was to invite him to stay with them. But Jemmy understood very
-little of their language, and was, moreover, thoroughly ashamed of his
-countrymen. When York Minster afterwards came on shore, they noticed
-him in the same way, and told him he ought to shave; yet he had not
-twenty dwarf hairs on his face, whilst we all wore our untrimmed
-beards. They examined the colour of his skin, and compared it with
-ours. One of our arms being bared, they expressed the liveliest
-surprise and admiration at its whiteness, just in the same way in which
-I have seen the ourangoutang do at the Zoological Gardens. We thought
-that they mistook two or three of the officers, who were rather shorter
-and fairer, though adorned with large beards, for the ladies of our
-party. The tallest amongst the Fuegians was evidently much pleased at
-his height being noticed. When placed back to back with the tallest of
-the boat's crew, he tried his best to edge on higher ground, and to
-stand on tiptoe. He opened his mouth to show his teeth, and turned his
-face for a side view; and all this was done with such alacrity, that I
-dare say he thought himself the handsomest man in Tierra del Fuego.
-After our first feeling of grave astonishment was over, nothing could
-be more ludicrous than the odd mixture of surprise and imitation which
-these savages every moment exhibited.
-
-
-The next day I attempted to penetrate some way into the country. Tierra
-del Fuego may be described as a mountainous land, partly submerged in
-the sea, so that deep inlets and bays occupy the place where valleys
-should exist. The mountain sides, except on the exposed western coast,
-are covered from the water's edge upwards by one great forest. The
-trees reach to an elevation of between 1000 and 1500 feet, and are
-succeeded by a band of peat, with minute alpine plants; and this again
-is succeeded by the line of perpetual snow, which, according to Captain
-King, in the Strait of Magellan descends to between 3000 and 4000 feet.
-To find an acre of level land in any part of the country is most rare.
-I recollect only one little flat piece near Port Famine, and another of
-rather larger extent near Goeree Road. In both places, and everywhere
-else, the surface is covered by a thick bed of swampy peat. Even within
-the forest, the ground is concealed by a mass of slowly putrefying
-vegetable matter, which, from being soaked with water, yields to the
-foot.
-
-Finding it nearly hopeless to push my way through the wood, I followed
-the course of a mountain torrent. At first, from the waterfalls and
-number of dead trees, I could hardly crawl along; but the bed of the
-stream soon became a little more open, from the floods having swept the
-sides. I continued slowly to advance for an hour along the broken and
-rocky banks, and was amply repaid by the grandeur of the scene. The
-gloomy depth of the ravine well accorded with the universal signs of
-violence. On every side were lying irregular masses of rock and
-torn-up trees; other trees, though still erect, were decayed to the
-heart and ready to fall. The entangled mass of the thriving and the
-fallen reminded me of the forests within the tropics--yet there was a
-difference: for in these still solitudes, Death, instead of Life,
-seemed the predominant spirit. I followed the water-course till I came
-to a spot where a great slip had cleared a straight space down the
-mountain side. By this road I ascended to a considerable elevation,
-and obtained a good view of the surrounding woods. The trees all
-belong to one kind, the Fagus betuloides; for the number of the other
-species of Fagus and of the Winter's Bark, is quite inconsiderable.
-This beech keeps its leaves throughout the year; but its foliage is of
-a peculiar brownish-green colour, with a tinge of yellow. As the whole
-landscape is thus coloured, it has a sombre, dull appearance; nor is it
-often enlivened by the rays of the sun.
-
-December 20th.--One side of the harbour is formed by a hill about 1500
-feet high, which Captain Fitz Roy has called after Sir J. Banks, in
-commemoration of his disastrous excursion, which proved fatal to two
-men of his party, and nearly so to Dr. Solander. The snow-storm, which
-was the cause of their misfortune, happened in the middle of January,
-corresponding to our July, and in the latitude of Durham! I was anxious
-to reach the summit of this mountain to collect alpine plants; for
-flowers of any kind in the lower parts are few in number. We followed
-the same water-course as on the previous day, till it dwindled away,
-and we were then compelled to crawl blindly among the trees. These,
-from the effects of the elevation and of the impetuous winds, were low,
-thick and crooked. At length we reached that which from a distance
-appeared like a carpet of fine green turf, but which, to our vexation,
-turned out to be a compact mass of little beech-trees about four or
-five feet high. They were as thick together as box in the border of a
-garden, and we were obliged to struggle over the flat but treacherous
-surface. After a little more trouble we gained the peat, and then the
-bare slate rock.
-
-A ridge connected this hill with another, distant some miles, and more
-lofty, so that patches of snow were lying on it. As the day was not
-far advanced, I determined to walk there and collect plants along the
-road. It would have been very hard work, had it not been for a
-well-beaten and straight path made by the guanacos; for these animals,
-like sheep, always follow the same line. When we reached the hill we
-found it the highest in the immediate neighbourhood, and the waters
-flowed to the sea in opposite directions. We obtained a wide view over
-the surrounding country: to the north a swampy moorland extended, but
-to the south we had a scene of savage magnificence, well becoming
-Tierra del Fuego. There was a degree of mysterious grandeur in
-mountain behind mountain, with the deep intervening valleys, all
-covered by one thick, dusky mass of forest. The atmosphere, likewise,
-in this climate, where gale succeeds gale, with rain, hail, and sleet,
-seems blacker than anywhere else. In the Strait of Magellan looking
-due southward from Port Famine, the distant channels between the
-mountains appeared from their gloominess to lead beyond the confines of
-this world.
-
-December 21st.--The Beagle got under way: and on the succeeding day,
-favoured to an uncommon degree by a fine easterly breeze, we closed in
-with the Barnevelts, and running past Cape Deceit with its stony peaks,
-about three o'clock doubled the weather-beaten Cape Horn. The evening
-was calm and bright, and we enjoyed a fine view of the surrounding
-isles. Cape Horn, however, demanded his tribute, and before night sent
-us a gale of wind directly in our teeth. We stood out to sea, and on
-the second day again made the land, when we saw on our weather-bow this
-notorious promontory in its proper form--veiled in a mist, and its dim
-outline surrounded by a storm of wind and water. Great black clouds
-were rolling across the heavens, and squalls of rain, with hail, swept
-by us with such extreme violence, that the Captain determined to run
-into Wigwam Cove. This is a snug little harbour, not far from Cape
-Horn; and here, at Christmas-eve, we anchored in smooth water. The
-only thing which reminded us of the gale outside, was every now and
-then a puff from the mountains, which made the ship surge at her
-anchors.
-
-December 25th.--Close by the Cove, a pointed hill, called Kater's Peak,
-rises to the height of 1700 feet. The surrounding islands all consist
-of conical masses of greenstone, associated sometimes with less regular
-hills of baked and altered clay-slate. This part of Tierra del Fuego
-may be considered as the extremity of the submerged chain of mountains
-already alluded to. The cove takes its name of "Wigwam" from some of
-the Fuegian habitations; but every bay in the neighbourhood might be so
-called with equal propriety. The inhabitants, living chiefly upon
-shell-fish, are obliged constantly to change their place of residence;
-but they return at intervals to the same spots, as is evident from the
-piles of old shells, which must often amount to many tons in freight.
-These heaps can be distinguished at a long distance by the bright green
-colour of certain plants, which invariably grow on them. Among these
-may be enumerated the wild celery and scurvy grass, two very
-serviceable plants, the use of which has not been discovered by the
-natives.
-
-The Fuegian wigwam resembles, in size and dimensions, a haycock. It
-merely consists of a few broken branches stuck in the ground, and very
-imperfectly thatched on one side with a few tufts of grass and rushes.
-The whole cannot be the work of an hour, and it is only used for a few
-days. At Goeree Roads I saw a place where one of these naked men had
-slept, which absolutely offered no more cover than the form of a hare.
-The man was evidently living by himself, and York Minster said he was
-"very bad man," and that probably he had stolen something. On the west
-coast, however, the wigwams are rather better, for they are covered
-with seal-skins. We were detained here several days by the bad
-weather. The climate is certainly wretched: the summer solstice was
-now passed, yet every day snow fell on the hills, and in the valleys
-there was rain, accompanied by sleet. The thermometer generally stood
-about 45 degs., but in the night fell to 38 or 40 degs. From the damp
-and boisterous state of the atmosphere, not cheered by a gleam of
-sunshine, one fancied the climate even worse than it really was.
-
-While going one day on shore near Wollaston Island, we pulled alongside
-a canoe with six Fuegians. These were the most abject and miserable
-creatures I anywhere beheld. On the east coast the natives, as we have
-seen, have guanaco cloaks, and on the west they possess seal-skins.
-Amongst these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or
-some small scrap about as large as a pocket-handkerchief, which is
-barely sufficient to cover their backs as low down as their loins. It
-is laced across the breast by strings, and according as the wind blows,
-it is shifted from side to side. But these Fuegians in the canoe were
-quite naked, and even one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was
-raining heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled
-down her body. In another harbour not far distant, a woman, who was
-suckling a recently-born child, came one day alongside the vessel, and
-remained there out of mere curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed
-on her naked bosom, and on the skin of her naked baby! These poor
-wretches were stunted in their growth, their hideous faces bedaubed
-with white paint, their skins filthy and greasy, their hair entangled,
-their voices discordant, and their gestures violent. Viewing such men,
-one can hardly make one's self believe that they are fellow-creatures,
-and inhabitants of the same world. It is a common subject of
-conjecture what pleasure in life some of the lower animals can enjoy:
-how much more reasonably the same question may be asked with respect to
-these barbarians! At night, five or six human beings, naked and
-scarcely protected from the wind and rain of this tempestuous climate,
-sleep on the wet ground coiled up like animals. Whenever it is low
-water, winter or summer, night or day, they must rise to pick
-shell-fish from the rocks; and the women either dive to collect
-sea-eggs, or sit patiently in their canoes, and with a baited hair-line
-without any hook, jerk out little fish. If a seal is killed, or the
-floating carcass of a putrid whale is discovered, it is a feast; and
-such miserable food is assisted by a few tasteless berries and fungi.
-
-They often suffer from famine: I heard Mr. Low, a sealing-master
-intimately acquainted with the natives of this country, give a curious
-account of the state of a party of one hundred and fifty natives on the
-west coast, who were very thin and in great distress. A succession of
-gales prevented the women from getting shell-fish on the rocks, and
-they could not go out in their canoes to catch seal. A small party of
-these men one morning set out, and the other Indians explained to him,
-that they were going a four days' journey for food: on their return,
-Low went to meet them, and he found them excessively tired, each man
-carrying a great square piece of putrid whale's-blubber with a hole in
-the middle, through which they put their heads, like the Gauchos do
-through their ponchos or cloaks. As soon as the blubber was brought
-into a wigwam, an old man cut off thin slices, and muttering over them,
-broiled them for a minute, and distributed them to the famished party,
-who during this time preserved a profound silence. Mr. Low believes
-that whenever a whale is cast on shore, the natives bury large pieces
-of it in the sand, as a resource in time of famine; and a native boy,
-whom he had on board, once found a stock thus buried. The different
-tribes when at war are cannibals. From the concurrent, but quite
-independent evidence of the boy taken by Mr. Low, and of Jemmy Button,
-it is certainly true, that when pressed in winter by hunger, they kill
-and devour their old women before they kill their dogs: the boy, being
-asked by Mr. Low why they did this, answered, "Doggies catch otters,
-old women no." This boy described the manner in which they are killed
-by being held over smoke and thus choked; he imitated their screams as
-a joke, and described the parts of their bodies which are considered
-best to eat. Horrid as such a death by the hands of their friends and
-relatives must be, the fears of the old women, when hunger begins to
-press, are more painful to think of; we are told that they then often
-run away into the mountains, but that they are pursued by the men and
-brought back to the slaughter-house at their own firesides!
-
-Captain Fitz Roy could never ascertain that the Fuegians have any
-distinct belief in a future life. They sometimes bury their dead in
-caves, and sometimes in the mountain forests; we do not know what
-ceremonies they perform. Jemmy Button would not eat land-birds, because
-"eat dead men": they are unwilling even to mention their dead friends.
-We have no reason to believe that they perform any sort of religious
-worship; though perhaps the muttering of the old man before he
-distributed the putrid blubber to his famished party, may be of this
-nature. Each family or tribe has a wizard or conjuring doctor, whose
-office we could never clearly ascertain. Jemmy believed in dreams,
-though not, as I have said, in the devil: I do not think that our
-Fuegians were much more superstitious than some of the sailors; for an
-old quartermaster firmly believed that the successive heavy gales,
-which we encountered off Cape Horn, were caused by our having the
-Fuegians on board. The nearest approach to a religious feeling which I
-heard of, was shown by York Minster, who, when Mr. Bynoe shot some very
-young ducklings as specimens, declared in the most solemn manner, "Oh,
-Mr. Bynoe, much rain, snow, blow much." This was evidently a
-retributive punishment for wasting human food. In a wild and excited
-manner he also related, that his brother, one day whilst returning to
-pick up some dead birds which he had left on the coast, observed some
-feathers blown by the wind. His brother said (York imitating his
-manner), "What that?" and crawling onwards, he peeped over the cliff,
-and saw "wild man" picking his birds; he crawled a little nearer, and
-then hurled down a great stone and killed him. York declared for a
-long time afterwards storms raged, and much rain and snow fell. As far
-as we could make out, he seemed to consider the elements themselves as
-the avenging agents: it is evident in this case, how naturally, in a
-race a little more advanced in culture, the elements would become
-personified. What the "bad wild men" were, has always appeared to me
-most mysterious: from what York said, when we found the place like the
-form of a hare, where a single man had slept the night before, I should
-have thought that they were thieves who had been driven from their
-tribes; but other obscure speeches made me doubt this; I have sometimes
-imagined that the most probable explanation was that they were insane.
-
-The different tribes have no government or chief; yet each is
-surrounded by other hostile tribes, speaking different dialects, and
-separated from each other only by a deserted border or neutral
-territory: the cause of their warfare appears to be the means of
-subsistence. Their country is a broken mass of wild rocks, lofty
-hills, and useless forests: and these are viewed through mists and
-endless storms. The habitable land is reduced to the stones on the
-beach; in search of food they are compelled unceasingly to wander from
-spot to spot, and so steep is the coast, that they can only move about
-in their wretched canoes. They cannot know the feeling of having a
-home, and still less that of domestic affection; for the husband is to
-the wife a brutal master to a laborious slave. Was a more horrid deed
-ever perpetrated, than that witnessed on the west coast by Byron, who
-saw a wretched mother pick up her bleeding dying infant-boy, whom her
-husband had mercilessly dashed on the stones for dropping a basket of
-sea-eggs! How little can the higher powers of the mind be brought into
-play: what is there for imagination to picture, for reason to compare,
-or judgment to decide upon? to knock a limpet from the rock does not
-require even cunning, that lowest power of the mind. Their skill in
-some respects may be compared to the instinct of animals; for it is not
-improved by experience: the canoe, their most ingenious work, poor as
-it is, has remained the same, as we know from Drake, for the last two
-hundred and fifty years.
-
-Whilst beholding these savages, one asks, whence have they come? What
-could have tempted, or what change compelled a tribe of men, to leave
-the fine regions of the north, to travel down the Cordillera or
-backbone of America, to invent and build canoes, which are not used by
-the tribes of Chile, Peru, and Brazil, and then to enter on one of the
-most inhospitable countries within the limits of the globe? Although
-such reflections must at first seize on the mind, yet we may feel sure
-that they are partly erroneous. There is no reason to believe that the
-Fuegians decrease in number; therefore we must suppose that they enjoy
-a sufficient share of happiness, of whatever kind it may be, to render
-life worth having. Nature by making habit omnipotent, and its effects
-hereditary, has fitted the Fuegian to the climate and the productions
-of his miserable country.
-
-
-After having been detained six days in Wigwam Cove by very bad weather,
-we put to sea on the 30th of December. Captain Fitz Roy wished to get
-westward to land York and Fuegia in their own country. When at sea we
-had a constant succession of gales, and the current was against us: we
-drifted to 57 degs. 23' south. On the 11th of January, 1833, by
-carrying a press of sail, we fetched within a few miles of the great
-rugged mountain of York Minster (so called by Captain Cook, and the
-origin of the name of the elder Fuegian), when a violent squall
-compelled us to shorten sail and stand out to sea. The surf was
-breaking fearfully on the coast, and the spray was carried over a cliff
-estimated to 200 feet in height. On the 12th the gale was very heavy,
-and we did not know exactly where we were: it was a most unpleasant
-sound to hear constantly repeated, "keep a good look-out to leeward."
-On the 13th the storm raged with its full fury: our horizon was
-narrowly limited by the sheets of spray borne by the wind. The sea
-looked ominous, like a dreary waving plain with patches of drifted
-snow: whilst the ship laboured heavily, the albatross glided with its
-expanded wings right up the wind. At noon a great sea broke over us,
-and filled one of the whale boats, which was obliged to be instantly
-cut away. The poor Beagle trembled at the shock, and for a few minutes
-would not obey her helm; but soon, like a good ship that she was, she
-righted and came up to the wind again. Had another sea followed the
-first, our fate would have been decided soon, and for ever. We had now
-been twenty-four days trying in vain to get westward; the men were worn
-out with fatigue, and they had not had for many nights or days a dry
-thing to put on. Captain Fitz Roy gave up the attempt to get westward
-by the outside coast. In the evening we ran in behind False Cape Horn,
-and dropped our anchor in forty-seven fathoms, fire flashing from the
-windlass as the chain rushed round it. How delightful was that still
-night, after having been so long involved in the din of the warring
-elements!
-
-January 15th, 1833.--The Beagle anchored in Goeree Roads. Captain Fitz
-Roy having resolved to settle the Fuegians, according to their wishes,
-in Ponsonby Sound, four boats were equipped to carry them there through
-the Beagle Channel. This channel, which was discovered by Captain Fitz
-Roy during the last voyage, is a most remarkable feature in the
-geography of this, or indeed of any other country: it may be compared
-to the valley of Lochness in Scotland, with its chain of lakes and
-friths. It is about one hundred and twenty miles long, with an average
-breadth, not subject to any very great variation, of about two miles;
-and is throughout the greater part so perfectly straight, that the
-view, bounded on each side by a line of mountains, gradually becomes
-indistinct in the long distance. It crosses the southern part of
-Tierra del Fuego in an east and west line, and in the middle is joined
-at right angles on the south side by an irregular channel, which has
-been called Ponsonby Sound. This is the residence of Jemmy Button's
-tribe and family.
-
-19th.--Three whale-boats and the yawl, with a party of twenty-eight,
-started under the command of Captain Fitz Roy. In the afternoon we
-entered the eastern mouth of the channel, and shortly afterwards found
-a snug little cove concealed by some surrounding islets. Here we
-pitched our tents and lighted our fires. Nothing could look more
-comfortable than this scene. The glassy water of the little harbour,
-with the branches of the trees hanging over the rocky beach, the boats
-at anchor, the tents supported by the crossed oars, and the smoke
-curling up the wooded valley, formed a picture of quiet retirement. The
-next day (20th) we smoothly glided onwards in our little fleet, and
-came to a more inhabited district. Few if any of these natives could
-ever have seen a white man; certainly nothing could exceed their
-astonishment at the apparition of the four boats. Fires were lighted
-on every point (hence the name of Tierra del Fuego, or the land of
-fire), both to attract our attention and to spread far and wide the
-news. Some of the men ran for miles along the shore. I shall never
-forget how wild and savage one group appeared: suddenly four or five
-men came to the edge of an overhanging cliff; they were absolutely
-naked, and their long hair streamed about their faces; they held rugged
-staffs in their hands, and, springing from the ground, they waved their
-arms round their heads, and sent forth the most hideous yells.
-
-At dinner-time we landed among a party of Fuegians. At first they were
-not inclined to be friendly; for until the Captain pulled in ahead of
-the other boats, they kept their slings in their hands. We soon,
-however, delighted them by trifling presents, such as tying red tape
-round their heads. They liked our biscuit: but one of the savages
-touched with his finger some of the meat preserved in tin cases which I
-was eating, and feeling it soft and cold, showed as much disgust at it,
-as I should have done at putrid blubber. Jemmy was thoroughly ashamed
-of his countrymen, and declared his own tribe were quite different, in
-which he was wofully mistaken. It was as easy to please as it was
-difficult to satisfy these savages. Young and old, men and children,
-never ceased repeating the word "yammerschooner," which means "give
-me." After pointing to almost every object, one after the other, even
-to the buttons on our coats, and saying their favourite word in as many
-intonations as possible, they would then use it in a neuter sense, and
-vacantly repeat "yammerschooner." After yammerschoonering for any
-article very eagerly, they would by a simple artifice point to their
-young women or little children, as much as to say, "If you will not
-give it me, surely you will to such as these."
-
-At night we endeavoured in vain to find an uninhabited cove; and at
-last were obliged to bivouac not far from a party of natives. They
-were very inoffensive as long as they were few in numbers, but in the
-morning (21st) being joined by others they showed symptoms of
-hostility, and we thought that we should have come to a skirmish. An
-European labours under great disadvantages when treating with savages
-like these, who have not the least idea of the power of fire-arms. In
-the very act of levelling his musket he appears to the savage far
-inferior to a man armed with a bow and arrow, a spear, or even a sling.
-Nor is it easy to teach them our superiority except by striking a fatal
-blow. Like wild beasts, they do not appear to compare numbers; for
-each individual, if attacked, instead of retiring, will endeavour to
-dash your brains out with a stone, as certainly as a tiger under
-similar circumstances would tear you. Captain Fitz Roy on one occasion
-being very anxious, from good reasons, to frighten away a small party,
-first flourished a cutlass near them, at which they only laughed; he
-then twice fired his pistol close to a native. The man both times
-looked astounded, and carefully but quickly rubbed his head; he then
-stared awhile, and gabbled to his companions, but he never seemed to
-think of running away. We can hardly put ourselves in the position of
-these savages, and understand their actions. In the case of this
-Fuegian, the possibility of such a sound as the report of a gun close
-to his ear could never have entered his mind. He perhaps literally did
-not for a second know whether it was a sound or a blow, and therefore
-very naturally rubbed his head. In a similar manner, when a savage
-sees a mark struck by a bullet, it may be some time before he is able
-at all to understand how it is effected; for the fact of a body being
-invisible from its velocity would perhaps be to him an idea totally
-inconceivable. Moreover, the extreme force of a bullet, that
-penetrates a hard substance without tearing it, may convince the savage
-that it has no force at all. Certainly I believe that many savages of
-the lowest grade, such as these of Tierra del Fuego, have seen objects
-struck, and even small animals killed by the musket, without being in
-the least aware how deadly an instrument it is.
-
-22nd.--After having passed an unmolested night, in what would appear to
-be neutral territory between Jemmy's tribe and the people whom we saw
-yesterday, we sailed pleasantly along. I do not know anything which
-shows more clearly the hostile state of the different tribes, than
-these wide border or neutral tracts. Although Jemmy Button well knew
-the force of our party, he was, at first, unwilling to land amidst the
-hostile tribe nearest to his own. He often told us how the savage Oens
-men "when the leaf red," crossed the mountains from the eastern coast
-of Tierra del Fuego, and made inroads on the natives of this part of
-the country. It was most curious to watch him when thus talking, and
-see his eyes gleaming and his whole face assume a new and wild
-expression. As we proceeded along the Beagle Channel, the scenery
-assumed a peculiar and very magnificent character; but the effect was
-much lessened from the lowness of the point of view in a boat, and from
-looking along the valley, and thus losing all the beauty of a
-succession of ridges. The mountains were here about three thousand
-feet high, and terminated in sharp and jagged points. They rose in one
-unbroken sweep from the water's edge, and were covered to the height of
-fourteen or fifteen hundred feet by the dusky-coloured forest. It was
-most curious to observe, as far as the eye could range, how level and
-truly horizontal the line on the mountain side was, at which trees
-ceased to grow: it precisely resembled the high-water mark of
-drift-weed on a sea-beach.
-
-At night we slept close to the junction of Ponsonby Sound with the
-Beagle Channel. A small family of Fuegians, who were living in the
-cove, were quiet and inoffensive, and soon joined our party round a
-blazing fire. We were well clothed, and though sitting close to the
-fire were far from too warm; yet these naked savages, though further
-off, were observed, to our great surprise, to be streaming with
-perspiration at undergoing such a roasting. They seemed, however, very
-well pleased, and all joined in the chorus of the seamen's songs: but
-the manner in which they were invariably a little behindhand was quite
-ludicrous.
-
-During the night the news had spread, and early in the morning (23rd) a
-fresh party arrived, belonging to the Tekenika, or Jemmy's tribe.
-Several of them had run so fast that their noses were bleeding, and
-their mouths frothed from the rapidity with which they talked; and with
-their naked bodies all bedaubed with black, white, [1] and red, they
-looked like so many demoniacs who had been fighting. We then proceeded
-(accompanied by twelve canoes, each holding four or five people) down
-Ponsonby Sound to the spot where poor Jemmy expected to find his mother
-and relatives. He had already heard that his father was dead; but as
-he had had a "dream in his head" to that effect, he did not seem to
-care much about it, and repeatedly comforted himself with the very
-natural reflection--"Me no help it." He was not able to learn any
-particulars regarding his father's death, as his relations would not
-speak about it.
-
-Jemmy was now in a district well known to him, and guided the boats to
-a quiet pretty cove named Woollya, surrounded by islets, every one of
-which and every point had its proper native name. We found here a
-family of Jemmy's tribe, but not his relations: we made friends with
-them; and in the evening they sent a canoe to inform Jemmy's mother and
-brothers. The cove was bordered by some acres of good sloping land,
-not covered (as elsewhere) either by peat or by forest-trees. Captain
-Fitz Roy originally intended, as before stated, to have taken York
-Minster and Fuegia to their own tribe on the west coast; but as they
-expressed a wish to remain here, and as the spot was singularly
-favourable, Captain Fitz Roy determined to settle here the whole party,
-including Matthews, the missionary. Five days were spent in building
-for them three large wigwams, in landing their goods, in digging two
-gardens, and sowing seeds.
-
-The next morning after our arrival (the 24th) the Fuegians began to
-pour in, and Jemmy's mother and brothers arrived. Jemmy recognised the
-stentorian voice of one of his brothers at a prodigious distance. The
-meeting was less interesting than that between a horse, turned out into
-a field, when he joins an old companion. There was no demonstration of
-affection; they simply stared for a short time at each other; and the
-mother immediately went to look after her canoe. We heard, however,
-through York that the mother has been inconsolable for the loss of
-Jemmy and had searched everywhere for him, thinking that he might have
-been left after having been taken in the boat. The women took much
-notice of and were very kind to Fuegia. We had already perceived that
-Jemmy had almost forgotten his own language. I should think there was
-scarcely another human being with so small a stock of language, for his
-English was very imperfect. It was laughable, but almost pitiable, to
-hear him speak to his wild brother in English, and then ask him in
-Spanish ("no sabe?") whether he did not understand him.
-
-Everything went on peaceably during the three next days whilst the
-gardens were digging and wigwams building. We estimated the number of
-natives at about one hundred and twenty. The women worked hard, whilst
-the men lounged about all day long, watching us. They asked for
-everything they saw, and stole what they could. They were delighted at
-our dancing and singing, and were particularly interested at seeing us
-wash in a neighbouring brook; they did not pay much attention to
-anything else, not even to our boats. Of all the things which York
-saw, during his absence from his country, nothing seems more to have
-astonished him than an ostrich, near Maldonado: breathless with
-astonishment he came running to Mr. Bynoe, with whom he was out
-walking--"Oh, Mr. Bynoe, oh, bird all same horse!" Much as our white
-skins surprised the natives, by Mr. Low's account a negro-cook to a
-sealing vessel, did so more effectually, and the poor fellow was so
-mobbed and shouted at that he would never go on shore again.
-Everything went on so quietly that some of the officers and myself took
-long walks in the surrounding hills and woods. Suddenly, however, on
-the 27th, every woman and child disappeared. We were all uneasy at
-this, as neither York nor Jemmy could make out the cause. It was
-thought by some that they had been frightened by our cleaning and
-firing off our muskets on the previous evening; by others, that it was
-owing to offence taken by an old savage, who, when told to keep further
-off, had coolly spit in the sentry's face, and had then, by gestures
-acted over a sleeping Fuegian, plainly showed, as it was said, that he
-should like to cut up and eat our man. Captain Fitz Roy, to avoid the
-chance of an encounter, which would have been fatal to so many of the
-Fuegians, thought it advisable for us to sleep at a cove a few miles
-distant. Matthews, with his usual quiet fortitude (remarkable in a man
-apparently possessing little energy of character), determined to stay
-with the Fuegians, who evinced no alarm for themselves; and so we left
-them to pass their first awful night.
-
-On our return in the morning (28th) we were delighted to find all
-quiet, and the men employed in their canoes spearing fish. Captain
-Fitz Roy determined to send the yawl and one whale-boat back to the
-ship; and to proceed with the two other boats, one under his own
-command (in which he most kindly allowed me to accompany him), and one
-under Mr. Hammond, to survey the western parts of the Beagle Channel,
-and afterwards to return and visit the settlement. The day to our
-astonishment was overpoweringly hot, so that our skins were scorched:
-with this beautiful weather, the view in the middle of the Beagle
-Channel was very remarkable. Looking towards either hand, no object
-intercepted the vanishing points of this long canal between the
-mountains. The circumstance of its being an arm of the sea was
-rendered very evident by several huge whales [2] spouting in different
-directions. On one occasion I saw two of these monsters, probably male
-and female, slowly swimming one after the other, within less than a
-stone's throw of the shore, over which the beech-tree extended its
-branches. We sailed on till it was dark, and then pitched our tents in
-a quiet creek. The greatest luxury was to find for our beds a beach of
-pebbles, for they were dry and yielded to the body. Peaty soil is
-damp; rock is uneven and hard; sand gets into one's meat, when cooked
-and eaten boat-fashion; but when lying in our blanket-bags, on a good
-bed of smooth pebbles, we passed most comfortable nights.
-
-It was my watch till one o'clock. There is something very solemn in
-these scenes. At no time does the consciousness in what a remote
-corner of the world you are then standing, come so strongly before the
-mind. Everything tends to this effect; the stillness of the night is
-interrupted only by the heavy breathing of the seamen beneath the
-tents, and sometimes by the cry of a night-bird. The occasional
-barking of a dog, heard in the distance, reminds one that it is the
-land of the savage.
-
-January 20th.--Early in the morning we arrived at the point where the
-Beagle Channel divides into two arms; and we entered the northern one.
-The scenery here becomes even grander than before. The lofty mountains
-on the north side compose the granitic axis, or backbone of the country
-and boldly rise to a height of between three and four thousand feet,
-with one peak above six thousand feet. They are covered by a wide
-mantle of perpetual snow, and numerous cascades pour their waters,
-through the woods, into the narrow channel below. In many parts,
-magnificent glaciers extend from the mountain side to the water's edge.
-It is scarcely possible to imagine anything more beautiful than the
-beryl-like blue of these glaciers, and especially as contrasted with
-the dead white of the upper expanse of snow. The fragments which had
-fallen from the glacier into the water were floating away, and the
-channel with its icebergs presented, for the space of a mile, a
-miniature likeness of the Polar Sea. The boats being hauled on shore
-at our dinner-hour, we were admiring from the distance of half a mile a
-perpendicular cliff of ice, and were wishing that some more fragments
-would fall. At last, down came a mass with a roaring noise, and
-immediately we saw the smooth outline of a wave travelling towards us.
-The men ran down as quickly as they could to the boats; for the chance
-of their being dashed to pieces was evident. One of the seamen just
-caught hold of the bows, as the curling breaker reached it: he was
-knocked over and over, but not hurt, and the boats though thrice lifted
-on high and let fall again, received no damage. This was most
-fortunate for us, for we were a hundred miles distant from the ship,
-and we should have been left without provisions or fire-arms. I had
-previously observed that some large fragments of rock on the beach had
-been lately displaced; but until seeing this wave, I did not understand
-the cause. One side of the creek was formed by a spur of mica-slate;
-the head by a cliff of ice about forty feet high; and the other side by
-a promontory fifty feet high, built up of huge rounded fragments of
-granite and mica-slate, out of which old trees were growing. This
-promontory was evidently a moraine, heaped up at a period when the
-glacier had greater dimensions.
-
-When we reached the western mouth of this northern branch of the Beagle
-Channel, we sailed amongst many unknown desolate islands, and the
-weather was wretchedly bad. We met with no natives. The coast was
-almost everywhere so steep, that we had several times to pull many
-miles before we could find space enough to pitch our two tents: one
-night we slept on large round boulders, with putrefying sea-weed
-between them; and when the tide rose, we had to get up and move our
-blanket-bags. The farthest point westward which we reached was Stewart
-Island, a distance of about one hundred and fifty miles from our ship.
-We returned into the Beagle Channel by the southern arm, and thence
-proceeded, with no adventure, back to Ponsonby Sound.
-
-February 6th.--We arrived at Woollya. Matthews gave so bad an account
-of the conduct of the Fuegians, that Captain Fitz Roy determined to
-take him back to the Beagle; and ultimately he was left at New Zealand,
-where his brother was a missionary. From the time of our leaving, a
-regular system of plunder commenced; fresh parties of the natives kept
-arriving: York and Jemmy lost many things, and Matthews almost
-everything which had not been concealed underground. Every article
-seemed to have been torn up and divided by the natives. Matthews
-described the watch he was obliged always to keep as most harassing;
-night and day he was surrounded by the natives, who tried to tire him
-out by making an incessant noise close to his head. One day an old
-man, whom Matthews asked to leave his wigwam, immediately returned with
-a large stone in his hand: another day a whole party came armed with
-stones and stakes, and some of the younger men and Jemmy's brother were
-crying: Matthews met them with presents. Another party showed by signs
-that they wished to strip him naked and pluck all the hairs out of his
-face and body. I think we arrived just in time to save his life.
-Jemmy's relatives had been so vain and foolish, that they had showed to
-strangers their plunder, and their manner of obtaining it. It was
-quite melancholy leaving the three Fuegians with their savage
-countrymen; but it was a great comfort that they had no personal fears.
-York, being a powerful resolute man, was pretty sure to get on well,
-together with his wife Fuegia. Poor Jemmy looked rather disconsolate,
-and would then, I have little doubt, have been glad to have returned
-with us. His own brother had stolen many things from him; and as he
-remarked, "What fashion call that:" he abused his countrymen, "all bad
-men, no sabe (know) nothing" and, though I never heard him swear
-before, "damned fools." Our three Fuegians, though they had been only
-three years with civilized men, would, I am sure, have been glad to
-have retained their new habits; but this was obviously impossible. I
-fear it is more than doubtful, whether their visit will have been of
-any use to them.
-
-In the evening, with Matthews on board, we made sail back to the ship,
-not by the Beagle Channel, but by the southern coast. The boats were
-heavily laden and the sea rough, and we had a dangerous passage. By
-the evening of the 7th we were on board the Beagle after an absence of
-twenty days, during which time we had gone three hundred miles in the
-open boats. On the 11th, Captain Fitz Roy paid a visit by himself to
-the Fuegians and found them going on well; and that they had lost very
-few more things.
-
-
-On the last day of February in the succeeding year (1834) the Beagle
-anchored in a beautiful little cove at the eastern entrance of the
-Beagle Channel. Captain Fitz Roy determined on the bold, and as it
-proved successful, attempt to beat against the westerly winds by the
-same route, which we had followed in the boats to the settlement at
-Woollya. We did not see many natives until we were near Ponsonby Sound,
-where we were followed by ten or twelve canoes. The natives did not at
-all understand the reason of our tacking, and, instead of meeting us at
-each tack, vainly strove to follow us in our zigzag course. I was
-amused at finding what a difference the circumstance of being quite
-superior in force made, in the interest of beholding these savages.
-While in the boats I got to hate the very sound of their voices, so
-much trouble did they give us. The first and last word was
-"yammerschooner." When, entering some quiet little cove, we have looked
-round and thought to pass a quiet night, the odious word
-"yammerschooner" has shrilly sounded from some gloomy nook, and then
-the little signal-smoke has curled up to spread the news far and wide.
-On leaving some place we have said to each other, "Thank heaven, we
-have at last fairly left these wretches!" when one more faint hallo
-from an all-powerful voice, heard at a prodigious distance, would reach
-our ears, and clearly could we distinguish--"yammerschooner." But now,
-the more Fuegians the merrier; and very merry work it was. Both
-parties laughing, wondering, gaping at each other; we pitying them, for
-giving us good fish and crabs for rags, etc.; they grasping at the
-chance of finding people so foolish as to exchange such splendid
-ornaments for a good supper. It was most amusing to see the
-undisguised smile of satisfaction with which one young woman with her
-face painted black, tied several bits of scarlet cloth round her head
-with rushes. Her husband, who enjoyed the very universal privilege in
-this country of possessing two wives, evidently became jealous of all
-the attention paid to his young wife; and, after a consultation with
-his naked beauties, was paddled away by them.
-
-Some of the Fuegians plainly showed that they had a fair notion of
-barter. I gave one man a large nail (a most valuable present) without
-making any signs for a return; but he immediately picked out two fish,
-and handed them up on the point of his spear. If any present was
-designed for one canoe, and it fell near another, it was invariably
-given to the right owner. The Fuegian boy, whom Mr. Low had on board
-showed, by going into the most violent passion, that he quite
-understood the reproach of being called a liar, which in truth he was.
-We were this time, as on all former occasions, much surprised at the
-little notice, or rather none whatever, which was taken of many things,
-the use of which must have been evident to the natives. Simple
-circumstances--such as the beauty of scarlet cloth or blue beads, the
-absence of women, our care in washing ourselves,--excited their
-admiration far more than any grand or complicated object, such as our
-ship. Bougainville has well remarked concerning these people, that
-they treat the "chefs d'oeuvre de l'industrie humaine, comme ils
-traitent les loix de la nature et ses phenomenes."
-
-On the 5th of March, we anchored in a cove at Woollya, but we saw not a
-soul there. We were alarmed at this, for the natives in Ponsonby Sound
-showed by gestures, that there had been fighting; and we afterwards
-heard that the dreaded Oens men had made a descent. Soon a canoe, with
-a little flag flying, was seen approaching, with one of the men in it
-washing the paint off his face. This man was poor Jemmy,--now a thin,
-haggard savage, with long disordered hair, and naked, except a bit of
-blanket round his waist. We did not recognize him till he was close to
-us, for he was ashamed of himself, and turned his back to the ship. We
-had left him plump, fat, clean, and well-dressed;--I never saw so
-complete and grievous a change. As soon, however, as he was clothed,
-and the first flurry was over, things wore a good appearance. He dined
-with Captain Fitz Roy, and ate his dinner as tidily as formerly. He
-told us that he had "too much" (meaning enough) to eat, that he was not
-cold, that his relations were very good people, and that he did not
-wish to go back to England: in the evening we found out the cause of
-this great change in Jemmy's feelings, in the arrival of his young and
-nice-looking wife. With his usual good feeling he brought two
-beautiful otter-skins for two of his best friends, and some spear-heads
-and arrows made with his own hands for the Captain. He said he had
-built a canoe for himself, and he boasted that he could talk a little
-of his own language! But it is a most singular fact, that he appears
-to have taught all his tribe some English: an old man spontaneously
-announced "Jemmy Button's wife." Jemmy had lost all his property. He
-told us that York Minster had built a large canoe, and with his wife
-Fuegia, [3] had several months since gone to his own country, and had
-taken farewell by an act of consummate villainy; he persuaded Jemmy and
-his mother to come with him, and then on the way deserted them by
-night, stealing every article of their property.
-
-Jemmy went to sleep on shore, and in the morning returned, and remained
-on board till the ship got under way, which frightened his wife, who
-continued crying violently till he got into his canoe. He returned
-loaded with valuable property. Every soul on board was heartily sorry
-to shake hands with him for the last time. I do not now doubt that he
-will be as happy as, perhaps happier than, if he had never left his own
-country. Every one must sincerely hope that Captain Fitz Roy's noble
-hope may be fulfilled, of being rewarded for the many generous
-sacrifices which he made for these Fuegians, by some shipwrecked sailor
-being protected by the descendants of Jemmy Button and his tribe! When
-Jemmy reached the shore, he lighted a signal fire, and the smoke curled
-up, bidding us a last and long farewell, as the ship stood on her
-course into the open sea.
-
-The perfect equality among the individuals composing the Fuegian tribes
-must for a long time retard their civilization. As we see those
-animals, whose instinct compels them to live in society and obey a
-chief, are most capable of improvement, so is it with the races of
-mankind. Whether we look at it as a cause or a consequence, the more
-civilized always have the most artificial governments. For instance,
-the inhabitants of Otaheite, who, when first discovered, were governed
-by hereditary kings, had arrived at a far higher grade than another
-branch of the same people, the New Zealanders,--who, although benefited
-by being compelled to turn their attention to agriculture, were
-republicans in the most absolute sense. In Tierra del Fuego, until
-some chief shall arise with power sufficient to secure any acquired
-advantage, such as the domesticated animals, it seems scarcely possible
-that the political state of the country can be improved. At present,
-even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds and distributed;
-and no one individual becomes richer than another. On the other hand,
-it is difficult to understand how a chief can arise till there is
-property of some sort by which he might manifest his superiority and
-increase his power.
-
-I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man exists in a lower
-state of improvement than in any other part of the world. The South
-Sea Islanders, of the two races inhabiting the Pacific, are
-comparatively civilized. The Esquimau in his subterranean hut, enjoys
-some of the comforts of life, and in his canoe, when fully equipped,
-manifests much skill. Some of the tribes of Southern Africa prowling
-about in search of roots, and living concealed on the wild and arid
-plains, are sufficiently wretched. The Australian, in the simplicity
-of the arts of life, comes nearest the Fuegian: he can, however, boast
-of his boomerang, his spear and throwing-stick, his method of climbing
-trees, of tracking animals, and of hunting. Although the Australian
-may be superior in acquirements, it by no means follows that he is
-likewise superior in mental capacity: indeed, from what I saw of the
-Fuegians when on board and from what I have read of the Australians, I
-should think the case was exactly the reverse.
-
-[1] This substance, when dry, is tolerably compact, and of little
-specific gravity: Professor Ehrenberg has examined it: he states (Konig
-Akad. der Wissen: Berlin, Feb. 1845) that it is composed of infusoria,
-including fourteen polygastrica, and four phytolitharia. He says that
-they are all inhabitants of fresh-water; this is a beautiful example of
-the results obtainable through Professor Ehrenberg's microscopic
-researches; for Jemmy Button told me that it is always collected at the
-bottoms of mountain-brooks. It is, moreover, a striking fact that in
-the geographical distribution of the infusoria, which are well known to
-have very wide ranges, that all the species in this substance, although
-brought from the extreme southern point of Tierra del Fuego, are old,
-known forms.
-
-[2] One day, off the East coast of Tierra del Fuego, we saw a grand
-sight in several spermaceti whales jumping upright quite out of the
-water, with the exception of their tail-fins. As they fell down
-sideways, they splashed the water high up, and the sound reverberated
-like a distant broadside.
-
-[3] Captain Sulivan, who, since his voyage in the Beagle, has been
-employed on the survey of the Falkland Islands, heard from a sealer in
-(1842?), that when in the western part of the Strait of Magellan, he
-was astonished by a native woman coming on board, who could talk some
-English. Without doubt this was Fuega Basket. She lived (I fear the
-term probably bears a double interpretation) some days on board.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-STRAIT OF MAGELLAN.--CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS
-
-Strait of Magellan--Port Famine--Ascent of Mount Tarn--Forests--Edible
-Fungus--Zoology--Great Sea-weed--Leave Tierra del
-Fuego--Climate--Fruit-trees and Productions of the Southern
-Coasts--Height of Snow-line on the Cordillera--Descent of Glaciers to
-the Sea--Icebergs formed--Transportal of Boulders--Climate and
-Productions of the Antarctic Islands--Preservation of Frozen
-Carcasses--Recapitulation.
-
-
-IN THE end of May, 1834, we entered for a second time the eastern mouth
-of the Strait of Magellan. The country on both sides of this part of
-the Strait consists of nearly level plains, like those of Patagonia.
-Cape Negro, a little within the second Narrows, may be considered as
-the point where the land begins to assume the marked features of Tierra
-del Fuego. On the east coast, south of the Strait, broken park-like
-scenery in a like manner connects these two countries, which are
-opposed to each other in almost every feature. It is truly surprising
-to find in a space of twenty miles such a change in the landscape. If
-we take a rather greater distance, as between Port Famine and Gregory
-Bay, that is about sixty miles, the difference is still more wonderful.
-At the former place, we have rounded mountains concealed by impervious
-forests, which are drenched with the rain, brought by an endless
-succession of gales; while at Cape Gregory, there is a clear and bright
-blue sky over the dry and sterile plains. The atmospheric currents,
-[1] although rapid, turbulent, and unconfined by any apparent limits,
-yet seem to follow, like a river in its bed, a regularly determined
-course.
-
-During our previous visit (in January), we had an interview at Cape
-Gregory with the famous so-called gigantic Patagonians, who gave us a
-cordial reception. Their height appears greater than it really is,
-from their large guanaco mantles, their long flowing hair, and general
-figure: on an average, their height is about six feet, with some men
-taller and only a few shorter; and the women are also tall; altogether
-they are certainly the tallest race which we anywhere saw. In features
-they strikingly resemble the more northern Indians whom I saw with
-Rosas, but they have a wilder and more formidable appearance: their
-faces were much painted with red and black, and one man was ringed and
-dotted with white like a Fuegian. Captain Fitz Roy offered to take any
-three of them on board, and all seemed determined to be of the three.
-It was long before we could clear the boat; at last we got on board
-with our three giants, who dined with the Captain, and behaved quite
-like gentlemen, helping themselves with knives, forks, and spoons:
-nothing was so much relished as sugar. This tribe has had so much
-communication with sealers and whalers that most of the men can speak a
-little English and Spanish; and they are half civilized, and
-proportionally demoralized.
-
-The next morning a large party went on shore, to barter for skins and
-ostrich-feathers; fire-arms being refused, tobacco was in greatest
-request, far more so than axes or tools. The whole population of the
-toldos, men, women, and children, were arranged on a bank. It was an
-amusing scene, and it was impossible not to like the so-called giants,
-they were so thoroughly good-humoured and unsuspecting: they asked us
-to come again. They seem to like to have Europeans to live with them;
-and old Maria, an important woman in the tribe, once begged Mr. Low to
-leave any one of his sailors with them. They spend the greater part of
-the year here; but in summer they hunt along the foot of the
-Cordillera: sometimes they travel as far as the Rio Negro 750 miles to
-the north. They are well stocked with horses, each man having,
-according to Mr. Low, six or seven, and all the women, and even
-children, their one own horse. In the time of Sarmiento (1580), these
-Indians had bows and arrows, now long since disused; they then also
-possessed some horses. This is a very curious fact, showing the
-extraordinarily rapid multiplication of horses in South America. The
-horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and the colony being
-then for a time deserted, the horse ran wild; [2] in 1580, only
-forty-three years afterwards, we hear of them at the Strait of
-Magellan! Mr. Low informs me, that a neighbouring tribe of
-foot-Indians is now changing into horse-Indians: the tribe at Gregory
-Bay giving them their worn-out horses, and sending in winter a few of
-their best skilled men to hunt for them.
-
-June 1st.--We anchored in the fine bay of Port Famine. It was now the
-beginning of winter, and I never saw a more cheerless prospect; the
-dusky woods, piebald with snow, could be only seen indistinctly,
-through a drizzling hazy atmosphere. We were, however, lucky in
-getting two fine days. On one of these, Mount Sarmiento, a distant
-mountain 6800 feet high, presented a very noble spectacle. I was
-frequently surprised in the scenery of Tierra del Fuego, at the little
-apparent elevation of mountains really lofty. I suspect it is owing to
-a cause which would not at first be imagined, namely, that the whole
-mass, from the summit to the water's edge, is generally in full view. I
-remember having seen a mountain, first from the Beagle Channel, where
-the whole sweep from the summit to the base was full in view, and then
-from Ponsonby Sound across several successive ridges; and it was
-curious to observe in the latter case, as each fresh ridge afforded
-fresh means of judging of the distance, how the mountain rose in height.
-
-Before reaching Port Famine, two men were seen running along the shore
-and hailing the ship. A boat was sent for them. They turned out to be
-two sailors who had run away from a sealing-vessel, and had joined the
-Patagonians. These Indians had treated them with their usual
-disinterested hospitality. They had parted company through accident,
-and were then proceeding to Port Famine in hopes of finding some ship.
-I dare say they were worthless vagabonds, but I never saw more
-miserable-looking ones. They had been living for some days on
-mussel-shells and berries, and their tattered clothes had been burnt by
-sleeping so near their fires. They had been exposed night and day,
-without any shelter, to the late incessant gales, with rain, sleet, and
-snow, and yet they were in good health.
-
-During our stay at Port Famine, the Fuegians twice came and plagued us.
-As there were many instruments, clothes, and men on shore, it was
-thought necessary to frighten them away. The first time a few great
-guns were fired, when they were far distant. It was most ludicrous to
-watch through a glass the Indians, as often as the shot struck the
-water, take up stones, and, as a bold defiance, throw them towards the
-ship, though about a mile and a half distant! A boat was sent with
-orders to fire a few musket-shots wide of them. The Fuegians hid
-themselves behind the trees, and for every discharge of the muskets
-they fired their arrows; all, however, fell short of the boat, and the
-officer as he pointed at them laughed. This made the Fuegians frantic
-with passion, and they shook their mantles in vain rage. At last,
-seeing the balls cut and strike the trees, they ran away, and we were
-left in peace and quietness. During the former voyage the Fuegians
-were here very troublesome, and to frighten them a rocket was fired at
-night over their wigwams; it answered effectually, and one of the
-officers told me that the clamour first raised, and the barking of the
-dogs, was quite ludicrous in contrast with the profound silence which
-in a minute or two afterwards prevailed. The next morning not a single
-Fuegian was in the neighbourhood.
-
-When the Beagle was here in the month of February, I started one
-morning at four o'clock to ascend Mount Tarn, which is 2600 feet high,
-and is the most elevated point in this immediate district. We went in
-a boat to the foot of the mountain (but unluckily not to the best
-part), and then began our ascent. The forest commences at the line of
-high-water mark, and during the first two hours I gave over all hopes
-of reaching the summit. So thick was the wood, that it was necessary
-to have constant recourse to the compass; for every landmark, though in
-a mountainous country, was completely shut out. In the deep ravines,
-the death-like scene of desolation exceeded all description; outside it
-was blowing a gale, but in these hollows, not even a breath of wind
-stirred the leaves of the tallest trees. So gloomy, cold, and wet was
-every part, that not even the fungi, mosses, or ferns could flourish.
-In the valleys it was scarcely possible to crawl along, they were so
-completely barricaded by great mouldering trunks, which had fallen down
-in every direction. When passing over these natural bridges, one's
-course was often arrested by sinking knee deep into the rotten wood; at
-other times, when attempting to lean against a firm tree, one was
-startled by finding a mass of decayed matter ready to fall at the
-slightest touch. We at last found ourselves among the stunted trees,
-and then soon reached the bare ridge, which conducted us to the summit.
-Here was a view characteristic of Tierra del Fuego; irregular chains of
-hills, mottled with patches of snow, deep yellowish-green valleys, and
-arms of the sea intersecting the land in many directions. The strong
-wind was piercingly cold, and the atmosphere rather hazy, so that we
-did not stay long on the top of the mountain. Our descent was not
-quite so laborious as our ascent, for the weight of the body forced a
-passage, and all the slips and falls were in the right direction.
-
-I have already mentioned the sombre and dull character of the evergreen
-forests, [3] in which two or three species of trees grow, to the
-exclusion of all others. Above the forest land, there are many dwarf
-alpine plants, which all spring from the mass of peat, and help to
-compose it: these plants are very remarkable from their close alliance
-with the species growing on the mountains of Europe, though so many
-thousand miles distant. The central part of Tierra del Fuego, where
-the clay-slate formation occurs, is most favourable to the growth of
-trees; on the outer coast the poorer granitic soil, and a situation
-more exposed to the violent winds, do not allow of their attaining any
-great size. Near Port Famine I have seen more large trees than
-anywhere else: I measured a Winter's Bark which was four feet six
-inches in girth, and several of the beech were as much as thirteen
-feet. Captain King also mentions a beech which was seven feet in
-diameter, seventeen feet above the roots.
-
-There is one vegetable production deserving notice from its importance
-as an article of food to the Fuegians. It is a globular, bright-yellow
-fungus, which grows in vast numbers on the beech-trees. When young it
-is elastic and turgid, with
-
-[picture]
-
-a smooth surface; but when mature it shrinks, becomes tougher, and has
-its entire surface deeply pitted or honey-combed, as represented in the
-accompanying woodcut. This fungus belongs to a new and curious genus,
-[4] I found a second species on another species of beech in Chile: and
-Dr. Hooker informs me, that just lately a third species has been
-discovered on a third species of beech in Van Diernan's Land. How
-singular is this relationship between parasitical fungi and the trees
-on which they grow, in distant parts of the world! In Tierra del Fuego
-the fungus in its tough and mature state is collected in large
-quantities by the women and children, and is eaten un-cooked. It has a
-mucilaginous, slightly sweet taste, with a faint smell like that of a
-mushroom. With the exception of a few berries, chiefly of a dwarf
-arbutus, the natives eat no vegetable food besides this fungus. In New
-Zealand, before the introduction of the potato, the roots of the fern
-were largely consumed; at the present time, I believe, Tierra del Fuego
-is the only country in the world where a cryptogamic plant affords a
-staple article of food.
-
-The zoology of Tierra del Fuego, as might have been expected from the
-nature of its climate and vegetation, is very poor. Of mammalia,
-besides whales and seals, there is one bat, a kind of mouse (Reithrodon
-chinchilloides), two true mice, a ctenomys allied to or identical with
-the tucutuco, two foxes (Canis Magellanicus and C. Azarae), a
-sea-otter, the guanaco, and a deer. Most of these animals inhabit only
-the drier eastern parts of the country; and the deer has never been
-seen south of the Strait of Magellan. Observing the general
-correspondence of the cliffs of soft sandstone, mud, and shingle, on
-the opposite sides of the Strait, and on some intervening islands, one
-is strongly tempted to believe that the land was once joined, and thus
-allowed animals so delicate and helpless as the tucutuco and Reithrodon
-to pass over. The correspondence of the cliffs is far from proving any
-junction; because such cliffs generally are formed by the intersection
-of sloping deposits, which, before the elevation of the land, had been
-accumulated near the then existing shores. It is, however, a
-remarkable coincidence, that in the two large islands cut off by the
-Beagle Channel from the rest of Tierra del Fuego, one has cliffs
-composed of matter that may be called stratified alluvium, which front
-similar ones on the opposite side of the channel,--while the other is
-exclusively bordered by old crystalline rocks: in the former, called
-Navarin Island, both foxes and guanacos occur; but in the latter, Hoste
-Island, although similar in every respect, and only separated by a
-channel a little more than half a mile wide, I have the word of Jemmy
-Button for saying that neither of these animals are found.
-
-The gloomy woods are inhabited by few birds: occasionally the plaintive
-note of a white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius albiceps) may be
-heard, concealed near the summit of the most lofty trees; and more
-rarely the loud strange cry of a black wood-pecker, with a fine scarlet
-crest on its head. A little, dusky-coloured wren (Scytalopus
-Magellanicus) hops in a skulking manner among the entangled mass of the
-fallen and decaying trunks. But the creeper (Oxyurus tupinieri) is the
-commonest bird in the country. Throughout the beech forests, high up
-and low down, in the most gloomy, wet, and impenetrable ravines, it may
-be met with. This little bird no doubt appears more numerous than it
-really is, from its habit of following with seeming curiosity any
-person who enters these silent woods: continually uttering a harsh
-twitter, it flutters from tree to tree, within a few feet of the
-intruder's face. It is far from wishing for the modest concealment of
-the true creeper (Certhia familiaris); nor does it, like that bird, run
-up the trunks of trees, but industriously, after the manner of a
-willow-wren, hops about, and searches for insects on every twig and
-branch. In the more open parts, three or four species of finches, a
-thrush, a starling (or Icterus), two Opetiorhynchi, and several hawks
-and owls occur.
-
-The absence of any species whatever in the whole class of Reptiles, is
-a marked feature in the zoology of this country, as well as in that of
-the Falkland Islands. I do not ground this statement merely on my own
-observation, but I heard it from the Spanish inhabitants of the latter
-place, and from Jemmy Button with regard to Tierra del Fuego. On the
-banks of the Santa Cruz, in 50 degs. south, I saw a frog; and it is
-not improbable that these animals, as well as lizards, may be found as
-far south as the Strait of Magellan, where the country retains the
-character of Patagonia; but within the damp and cold limit of Tierra
-del Fuego not one occurs. That the climate would not have suited some
-of the orders, such as lizards, might have been foreseen; but with
-respect to frogs, this was not so obvious.
-
-Beetles occur in very small numbers: it was long before I could believe
-that a country as large as Scotland, covered with vegetable productions
-and with a variety of stations, could be so unproductive. The few
-which I found were alpine species (Harpalidae and Heteromidae) living
-under stones. The vegetable-feeding Chrysomelidae, so eminently
-characteristic of the Tropics, are here almost entirely absent; [5] I
-saw very few flies, butterflies, or bees, and no crickets or
-Orthoptera. In the pools of water I found but a few aquatic beetles,
-and not any fresh-water shells: Succinea at first appears an exception;
-but here it must be called a terrestrial shell, for it lives on the
-damp herbage far from the water. Land-shells could be procured only in
-the same alpine situations with the beetles. I have already contrasted
-the climate as well as the general appearance of Tierra del Fuego with
-that of Patagonia; and the difference is strongly exemplified in the
-entomology. I do not believe they have one species in common;
-certainly the general character of the insects is widely different.
-
-If we turn from the land to the sea, we shall find the latter as
-abundantly stocked with living creatures as the former is poorly so. In
-all parts of the world a rocky and partially protected shore perhaps
-supports, in a given space, a greater number of individual animals than
-any other station. There is one marine production which, from its
-importance, is worthy of a particular history. It is the kelp, or
-Macrocystis pyrifera. This plant grows on every rock from low-water
-mark to a great depth, both on the outer coast and within the channels.
-[6] I believe, during the voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, not one
-rock near the surface was discovered which was not buoyed by this
-floating weed. The good service it thus affords to vessels navigating
-near this stormy land is evident; and it certainly has saved many a one
-from being wrecked. I know few things more surprising than to see this
-plant growing and flourishing amidst those great breakers of the
-western ocean, which no mass of rock, let it be ever so hard, can long
-resist. The stem is round, slimy, and smooth, and seldom has a
-diameter of so much as an inch. A few taken together are sufficiently
-strong to support the weight of the large loose stones, to which in the
-inland channels they grow attached; and yet some of these stones were
-so heavy that when drawn to the surface, they could scarcely be lifted
-into a boat by one person. Captain Cook, in his second voyage, says,
-that this plant at Kerguelen Land rises from a greater depth than
-twenty-four fathoms; "and as it does not grow in a perpendicular
-direction, but makes a very acute angle with the bottom, and much of it
-afterwards spreads many fathoms on the surface of the sea, I am well
-warranted to say that some of it grows to the length of sixty fathoms
-and upwards." I do not suppose the stem of any other plant attains so
-great a length as three hundred and sixty feet, as stated by Captain
-Cook. Captain Fitz Roy, moreover, found it growing [7] up from the
-greater depth of forty-five fathoms. The beds of this sea-weed, even
-when of not great breadth, make excellent natural floating breakwaters.
-It is quite curious to see, in an exposed harbour, how soon the waves
-from the open sea, as they travel through the straggling stems, sink in
-height, and pass into smooth water.
-
-The number of living creatures of all Orders, whose existence
-intimately depends on the kelp, is wonderful. A great volume might be
-written, describing the inhabitants of one of these beds of sea-weed.
-Almost all the leaves, excepting those that float on the surface, are
-so thickly incrusted with corallines as to be of a white colour. We
-find exquisitely delicate structures, some inhabited by simple
-hydra-like polypi, others by more organized kinds, and beautiful
-compound Ascidiae. On the leaves, also, various patelliform shells,
-Trochi, uncovered molluscs, and some bivalves are attached. Innumerable
-crustacea frequent every part of the plant. On shaking the great
-entangled roots, a pile of small fish, shells, cuttle-fish, crabs of
-all orders, sea-eggs, star-fish, beautiful Holuthuriae, Planariae, and
-crawling nereidous animals of a multitude of forms, all fall out
-together. Often as I recurred to a branch of the kelp, I never failed
-to discover animals of new and curious structures. In Chiloe, where
-the kelp does not thrive very well, the numerous shells, corallines,
-and crustacea are absent; but there yet remain a few of the
-Flustraceae, and some compound Ascidiae; the latter, however, are of
-different species from those in Tierra del Fuego: we see here the fucus
-possessing a wider range than the animals which use it as an abode. I
-can only compare these great aquatic forests of the southern hemisphere
-with the terrestrial ones in the intertropical regions. Yet if in any
-country a forest was destroyed, I do not believe nearly so many species
-of animals would perish as would here, from the destruction of the
-kelp. Amidst the leaves of this plant numerous species of fish live,
-which nowhere else could find food or shelter; with their destruction
-the many cormorants and other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and
-porpoises, would soon perish also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage, the
-miserable lord of this miserable land, would redouble his cannibal
-feast, decrease in numbers, and perhaps cease to exist.
-
-June 8th.--We weighed anchor early in the morning and left Port Famine.
-Captain Fitz Roy determined to leave the Strait of Magellan by the
-Magdalen Channel, which had not long been discovered. Our course lay
-due south, down that gloomy passage which I have before alluded to as
-appearing to lead to another and worse world. The wind was fair, but
-the atmosphere was very thick; so that we missed much curious scenery.
-The dark ragged clouds were rapidly driven over the mountains, from
-their summits nearly down to their bases. The glimpses which we caught
-through the dusky mass were highly interesting; jagged points, cones of
-snow, blue glaciers, strong outlines, marked on a lurid sky, were seen
-at different distances and heights. In the midst of such scenery we
-anchored at Cape Turn, close to Mount Sarmiento, which was then hidden
-in the clouds. At the base of the lofty and almost perpendicular sides
-of our little cove there was one deserted wigwam, and it alone reminded
-us that man sometimes wandered into these desolate regions. But it
-would be difficult to imagine a scene where he seemed to have fewer
-claims or less authority. The inanimate works of nature--rock, ice,
-snow, wind, and water--all warring with each other, yet combined
-against man--here reigned in absolute sovereignty.
-
-June 9th.--In the morning we were delighted by seeing the veil of mist
-gradually rise from Sarmiento, and display it to our view. This
-mountain, which is one of the highest in Tierra del Fuego, has an
-altitude of 6800 feet. Its base, for about an eighth of its total
-height, is clothed by dusky woods, and above this a field of snow
-extends to the summit. These vast piles of snow, which never melt, and
-seem destined to last as long as the world holds together, present a
-noble and even sublime spectacle. The outline of the mountain was
-admirably clear and defined. Owing to the abundance of light reflected
-from the white and glittering surface, no shadows were cast on any
-part; and those lines which intersected the sky could alone be
-distinguished: hence the mass stood out in the boldest relief. Several
-glaciers descended in a winding course from the upper great expanse of
-snow to the sea-coast: they may be likened to great frozen Niagaras;
-and perhaps these cataracts of blue ice are full as beautiful as the
-moving ones of water. By night we reached the western part of the
-channel; but the water was so deep that no anchorage could be found. We
-were in consequence obliged to stand off and on in this narrow arm of
-the sea, during a pitch-dark night of fourteen hours long.
-
-June 10th.--In the morning we made the best of our way into the open
-Pacific. The western coast generally consists of low, rounded, quite
-barren hills of granite and greenstone. Sir J. Narborough called one
-part South Desolation, because it is "so desolate a land to behold:"
-and well indeed might he say so. Outside the main islands, there are
-numberless scattered rocks on which the long swell of the open ocean
-incessantly rages. We passed out between the East and West Furies; and
-a little farther northward there are so many breakers that the sea is
-called the Milky Way. One sight of such a coast is enough to make a
-landsman dream for a week about shipwrecks, peril, and death; and with
-this sight we bade farewell for ever to Tierra del Fuego.
-
-The following discussion on the climate of the southern parts of the
-continent with relation to its productions, on the snow-line, on the
-extraordinarily low descent of the glaciers, and on the zone of
-perpetual congelation in the antarctic islands, may be passed over by
-any one not interested in these curious subjects, or the final
-recapitulation alone may be read. I shall, however, here give only an
-abstract, and must refer for details to the Thirteenth Chapter and the
-Appendix of the former edition of this work.
-
-On the Climate and Productions of Tierra del Fuego and of the
-South-west Coast.--The following table gives the mean temperature of
-Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands, and, for comparison, that of
-Dublin:--
-
- Summer Winter Mean of Summer
- Latitude Temp. Temp. and Winter
- ---------------------------------------------------------------
- Tierra del Fuego 53 38' S. 50 33.08 41.54
- Falkland Islands 51 38' S. 51 -- --
- Dublin 53 21' N. 59.54 39.2 49.37
-
-
-Hence we see that the central part of Tierra del Fuego is colder in
-winter, and no less than 9.5 degs. less hot in summer, than Dublin.
-According to von Buch, the mean temperature of July (not the hottest
-month in the year) at Saltenfiord in Norway, is as high as 57.8 degs.,
-and this place is actually 13 degs. nearer the pole than Port Famine!
-[8] Inhospitable as this climate appears to our feelings evergreen
-trees flourish luxuriantly under it. Humming-birds may be seen sucking
-the flowers, and parrots feeding on the seeds of the Winter's Bark, in
-lat. 55 degs. S. I have already remarked to what a degree the sea
-swarms with living creatures; and the shells (such as the Patellae,
-Fissurellae, Chitons, and Barnacles), according to Mr. G. B. Sowerby,
-are of a much larger size and of a more vigorous growth, than the
-analogous species in the northern hemisphere. A large Voluta is
-abundant in southern Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. At
-Bahia Blanca, in lat. 39 degs. S., the most abundant shells were three
-species of Oliva (one of large size), one or two Volutas, and a
-Terebra. Now, these are amongst the best characterized tropical forms.
-It is doubtful whether even one small species of Oliva exists on the
-southern shores of Europe, and there are no species of the two other
-genera. If a geologist were to find in lat 39 degs. on the coast of
-Portugal a bed containing numerous shells belonging to three species of
-Oliva, to a Voluta and Terebra, he would probably assert that the
-climate at the period of their existence must have been tropical; but
-judging from South America, such an inference might be erroneous.
-
-The equable, humid, and windy climate of Tierra del Fuego extends, with
-only a small increase of heat, for many degrees along the west coast of
-the continent. The forests for 600 miles northward of Cape Horn, have
-a very similar aspect. As a proof of the equable climate, even for 300
-or 400 miles still further northward, I may mention that in Chiloe
-(corresponding in latitude with the northern parts of Spain) the peach
-seldom produces fruit, whilst strawberries and apples thrive to
-perfection. Even the crops of barley and wheat [9] are often brought
-into the houses to be dried and ripened. At Valdivia (in the same
-latitude of 40 degs., with Madrid) grapes and figs ripen, but are not
-common; olives seldom ripen even partially, and oranges not at all.
-These fruits, in corresponding latitudes in Europe, are well known to
-succeed to perfection; and even in this continent, at the Rio Negro,
-under nearly the same parallel with Valdivia, sweet potatoes
-(convolvulus) are cultivated; and grapes, figs, olives, oranges, water
-and musk melons, produce abundant fruit. Although the humid and
-equable climate of Chiloe, and of the coast northward and southward of
-it, is so unfavourable to our fruits, yet the native forests, from lat.
-45 to 38 degs., almost rival in luxuriance those of the glowing
-intertropical regions. Stately trees of many kinds, with smooth and
-highly coloured barks, are loaded by parasitical monocotyledonous
-plants; large and elegant ferns are numerous, and arborescent grasses
-entwine the trees into one entangled mass to the height of thirty or
-forty feet above the ground. Palm-trees grow in lat 37 degs.; an
-arborescent grass, very like a bamboo, in 40 degs.; and another closely
-allied kind, of great length, but not erect, flourishes even as far
-south as 45 degs. S.
-
-An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea compared
-with the land, seems to extend over the greater part of the southern
-hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the vegetation partakes of a
-semi-tropical character. Tree-ferns thrive luxuriantly in Van Diemen's
-Land (lat. 45 degs.), and I measured one trunk no less than six feet in
-circumference. An arborescent fern was found by Forster in New Zealand
-in 46 degs., where orchideous plants are parasitical on the trees. In
-the Auckland Islands, ferns, according to Dr. Dieffenbach [10] have
-trunks so thick and high that they may be almost called tree-ferns; and
-in these islands, and even as far south as lat. 55 degs. in the
-Macquarrie Islands, parrots abound.
-
-On the Height of the Snow-line, and on the Descent of the Glaciers in
-South America.--For the detailed authorities for the following table, I
-must refer to the former edition:--
-
- Height in feet
- Latitude of Snow-line Observer
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Equatorial region; mean result 15,748 Humboldt. Bolivia,
- lat. 16 to 18 degs. S. 17,000 Pentland. Central Chile,
- lat. 33 degs. S. 14,500 - 15,000 Gillies, and
- the Author.
- Chiloe, lat. 41 to 43 degs. S. 6,000 Officers of the
- Beagle and the
- Author.
- Tierra del Fuego, 54 degs. S. 3,500 - 4,000 King.
-
-
-As the height of the plane of perpetual snow seems chiefly to be
-determined by the extreme heat of the summer, rather than by the mean
-temperature of the year, we ought not to be surprised at its descent in
-the Strait of Magellan, where the summer is so cool, to only 3500 or
-4000 feet above the level of the sea; although in Norway, we must
-travel to between lat. 67 and 70 degs. N., that is, about 14 degs.
-nearer the pole, to meet with perpetual snow at this low level. The
-difference in height, namely, about 9000 feet, between the snow-line on
-the Cordillera behind Chiloe (with its highest points ranging from only
-5600 to 7500 feet) and in central Chile [11] (a distance of only 9
-degs. of latitude), is truly wonderful. The land from the southward of
-Chiloe to near Concepcion (lat. 37 degs.) is hidden by one dense forest
-dripping with moisture. The sky is cloudy, and we have seen how badly
-the fruits of southern Europe succeed. In central Chile, on the other
-hand, a little northward of Concepcion, the sky is generally clear,
-rain does not fall for the seven summer months, and southern European
-fruits succeed admirably; and even the sugar-cane has been cultivated.
-[12] No doubt the plane of perpetual snow undergoes the above
-remarkable flexure of 9000 feet, unparalleled in other parts of the
-world, not far from the latitude of Concepcion, where the land ceases
-to be covered with forest-trees; for trees in South America indicate a
-rainy climate, and rain a clouded sky and little heat in summer.
-
-The descent of glaciers to the sea must, I conceive, mainly depend
-(subject, of course, to a proper supply of snow in the upper region) on
-the lowness of the line of perpetual snow on steep mountains near the
-coast. As the snow-line is so low in Tierra del Fuego, we might have
-expected that many of the glaciers would have reached the sea.
-Nevertheless, I was astonished when I first saw a range, only from 3000
-to 4000 feet in height, in the latitude of Cumberland, with every
-valley filled with streams of ice descending to the sea-coast. Almost
-every arm of the sea, which penetrates to the interior higher chain,
-not only in Tierra del Fuego, but on the coast for 650 miles
-northwards, is terminated by "tremendous and astonishing glaciers," as
-described by one of the officers on the survey. Great masses of ice
-frequently fall from these icy cliffs, and the crash reverberates like
-the broadside of a man-of-war through the lonely channels. These
-falls, as noticed in the last chapter, produce great waves which break
-on the adjoining coasts. It is known that earthquakes frequently cause
-masses of earth to fall from sea-cliffs: how terrific, then, would be
-the effect of a severe shock (and such occur here [13]) on a body like
-a glacier, already in motion, and traversed by fissures! I can readily
-believe that the water would be fairly beaten back out of the deepest
-channel, and then, returning with an overwhelming force, would whirl
-about huge masses of rock like so much chaff. In Eyre's Sound, in the
-latitude of Paris, there are immense glaciers, and yet the loftiest
-neighbouring mountain is only 6200 feet high. In this Sound, about
-fifty icebergs were seen at one time floating outwards, and one of them
-must have been at least 168 feet in total height. Some of the icebergs
-were loaded with blocks of no inconsiderable size, of granite and other
-rocks, different from the clay-slate of the surrounding mountains. The
-glacier furthest from the pole, surveyed during the voyages of the
-Adventure and Beagle, is in lat. 46 degs. 50', in the Gulf of Penas. It
-is 15 miles long, and in one part 7 broad and descends to the
-sea-coast. But even a few miles northward of this glacier, in Laguna
-de San
-
-[picture]
-
-Rafael, some Spanish missionaries [14] encountered "many icebergs, some
-great, some small, and others middle-sized," in a narrow arm of the
-sea, on the 22nd of the month corresponding with our June, and in a
-latitude corresponding with that of the Lake of Geneva!
-
-In Europe, the most southern glacier which comes down to the sea is met
-with, according to Von Buch, on the coast of Norway, in lat. 67 degs.
-Now, this is more than 20 degs. of latitude, or 1230 miles, nearer the
-pole than the Laguna de San Rafael. The position of the glaciers at
-this place and in the Gulf of Penas may be put even in a more striking
-point of view, for they descend to the sea-coast within 7.5 degs. of
-latitude, or 450 miles, of a harbour, where three species of Oliva, a
-Voluta, and a Terebra, are the commonest shells, within less than 9
-degs. from where palms grow, within 4.5 degs. of a region where the
-jaguar and puma range over the plains, less than 2.5 degs. from
-arborescent grasses, and (looking to the westward in the same
-hemisphere) less than 2 degs. from orchideous parasites, and within a
-single degree of tree-ferns!
-
-These facts are of high geological interest with respect to the climate
-of the northern hemisphere at the period when boulders were
-transported. I will not here detail how simply the theory of icebergs
-being charged with fragments of rock, explain the origin and position
-of the gigantic boulders of eastern Tierra del Fuego, on the high plain
-of Santa Cruz, and on the island of Chiloe. In Tierra del Fuego, the
-greater number of boulders lie on the lines of old sea-channels, now
-converted into dry valleys by the elevation of the land. They are
-associated with a great unstratified formation of mud and sand,
-containing rounded and angular fragments of all sizes, which has
-originated [15] in the repeated ploughing up of the sea-bottom by the
-stranding of icebergs, and by the matter transported on them. Few
-geologists now doubt that those erratic boulders which lie near lofty
-mountains have been pushed forward by the glaciers themselves, and that
-those distant from mountains, and embedded in subaqueous deposits, have
-been conveyed thither either on icebergs or frozen in coast-ice. The
-connection between the transportal of boulders and the presence of ice
-in some form, is strikingly shown by their geographical distribution
-over the earth. In South America they are not found further than 48
-degs. of latitude, measured from the southern pole; in North America it
-appears that the limit of their transportal extends to 53.5 degs. from
-the northern pole; but in Europe to not more than 40 degs. of latitude,
-measured from the same point. On the other hand, in the intertropical
-parts of America, Asia, and Africa, they have never been observed; nor
-at the Cape of Good Hope, nor in Australia. [16]
-
-On the Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands.--Considering
-the rankness of the vegetation in Tierra del Fuego, and on the coast
-northward of it, the condition of the islands south and south-west of
-America is truly surprising. Sandwich Land, in the latitude of the
-north part of Scotland, was found by Cook, during the hottest month of
-the year, "covered many fathoms thick with everlasting snow;" and there
-seems to be scarcely any vegetation. Georgia, an island 96 miles long
-and 10 broad, in the latitude of Yorkshire, "in the very height of
-summer, is in a manner wholly covered with frozen snow." It can boast
-only of moss, some tufts of grass, and wild burnet; it has only one
-land-bird (Anthus correndera), yet Iceland, which is 10 degs. nearer
-the pole, has, according to Mackenzie, fifteen land-birds. The South
-Shetland Islands, in the same latitude as the southern half of Norway,
-possess only some lichens, moss, and a little grass; and Lieut. Kendall
-[17] found the bay, in which he was at anchor, beginning to freeze at a
-period corresponding with our 8th of September. The soil here consists
-of ice and volcanic ashes interstratified; and at a little depth
-beneath the surface it must remain perpetually congealed, for Lieut.
-Kendall found the body of a foreign sailor which had long been buried,
-with the flesh and all the features perfectly preserved. It is a
-singular fact, that on the two great continents in the northern
-hemisphere (but not in the broken land of Europe between them ), we
-have the zone of perpetually frozen under-soil in a low
-latitude--namely, in 56 degs. in North America at the depth of three
-feet, [18] and in 62 degs. in Siberia at the depth of twelve to fifteen
-feet--as the result of a directly opposite condition of things to those
-of the southern hemisphere. On the northern continents, the winter is
-rendered excessively cold by the radiation from a large area of land
-into a clear sky, nor is it moderated by the warmth-bringing currents
-of the sea; the short summer, on the other hand, is hot. In the
-Southern Ocean the winter is not so excessively cold, but the summer is
-far less hot, for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun to warm the
-ocean, itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean temperature
-of the year, which regulates the zone of perpetually congealed
-under-soil, is low. It is evident that a rank vegetation, which does
-not so much require heat as it does protection from intense cold, would
-approach much nearer to this zone of perpetual congelation under the
-equable climate of the southern hemisphere, than under the extreme
-climate of the northern continents.
-
-The case of the sailor's body perfectly preserved in the icy soil of
-the South Shetland Islands (lat. 62 to 63 degs. S.), in a rather lower
-latitude than that (lat. 64 degs. N.) under which Pallas found the
-frozen rhinoceros in Siberia, is very interesting. Although it is a
-fallacy, as I have endeavoured to show in a former chapter, to suppose
-that the larger quadrupeds require a luxuriant vegetation for their
-support, nevertheless it is important to find in the South Shetland
-Islands a frozen under-soil within 360 miles of the forest-clad islands
-near Cape Horn, where, as far as the _bulk_ of vegetation is concerned,
-any number of great quadrupeds might be supported. The perfect
-preservation of the carcasses of the Siberian elephants and
-rhinoceroses is certainly one of the most wonderful facts in geology;
-but independently of the imagined difficulty of supplying them with
-food from the adjoining countries, the whole case is not, I think, so
-perplexing as it has generally been considered. The plains of Siberia,
-like those of the Pampas, appear to have been formed under the sea,
-into which rivers brought down the bodies of many animals; of the
-greater number of these, only the skeletons have been preserved, but of
-others the perfect carcass. Now, it is known that in the shallow sea
-on the Arctic coast of America the bottom freezes, [19] and does not
-thaw in spring so soon as the surface of the land, moreover at greater
-depths, where the bottom of the sea does not freeze the mud a few feet
-beneath the top layer might remain even in summer below 32 degs., as in
-the case on the land with the soil at the depth of a few feet. At
-still greater depths, the temperature of the mud and water would
-probably not be low enough to preserve the flesh; and hence, carcasses
-drifted beyond the shallow parts near an Arctic coast, would have only
-their skeletons preserved: now in the extreme northern parts of Siberia
-bones are infinitely numerous, so that even islets are said to be
-almost composed of them; [20] and those islets lie no less than ten
-degrees of latitude north of the place where Pallas found the frozen
-rhinoceros. On the other hand, a carcass washed by a flood into a
-shallow part of the Arctic Sea, would be preserved for an indefinite
-period, if it were soon afterwards covered with mud sufficiently thick
-to prevent the heat of the summer-water penetrating to it; and if, when
-the sea-bottom was upraised into land, the covering was sufficiently
-thick to prevent the heat of the summer air and sun thawing and
-corrupting it.
-
-Recapitulation.--I will recapitulate the principal facts with regard to
-the climate, ice-action, and organic productions of the southern
-hemisphere, transposing the places in imagination to Europe, with which
-we are so much better acquainted. Then, near Lisbon, the commonest
-sea-shells, namely, three species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra,
-would have a tropical character. In the southern provinces of France,
-magnificent forests, intwined by arborescent grasses and with the trees
-loaded with parasitical plants, would hide the face of the land. The
-puma and the jaguar would haunt the Pyrenees. In the latitude of Mont
-Blanc, but on an island as far westward as Central North America,
-tree-ferns and parasitical Orchideae would thrive amidst the thick
-woods. Even as far north as central Denmark, humming-birds would be
-seen fluttering about delicate flowers, and parrots feeding amidst the
-evergreen woods; and in the sea there, we should have a Voluta, and all
-the shells of large size and vigorous growth. Nevertheless, on some
-islands only 360 miles northward of our new Cape Horn in Denmark, a
-carcass buried in the soil (or if washed into a shallow sea, and
-covered up with mud) would be preserved perpetually frozen. If some
-bold navigator attempted to penetrate northward of these islands, he
-would run a thousand dangers amidst gigantic icebergs, on some of which
-he would see great blocks of rock borne far away from their original
-site. Another island of large size in the latitude of southern
-Scotland, but twice as far to the west, would be "almost wholly covered
-with everlasting snow," and would have each bay terminated by
-ice-cliffs, whence great masses would be yearly detached: this island
-would boast only of a little moss, grass, and burnet, and a titlark
-would be its only land inhabitant. From our new Cape Horn in Denmark,
-a chain of mountains, scarcely half the height of the Alps, would run
-in a straight line due southward; and on its western flank every deep
-creek of the sea, or fiord, would end in "bold and astonishing
-glaciers." These lonely channels would frequently reverberate with the
-falls of ice, and so often would great waves rush along their coasts;
-numerous icebergs, some as tall as cathedrals, and occasionally loaded
-with "no inconsiderable blocks of rock," would be stranded on the
-outlying islets; at intervals violent earthquakes would shoot
-prodigious masses of ice into the waters below. Lastly, some
-missionaries attempting to penetrate a long arm of the sea, would
-behold the not lofty surrounding mountains, sending down their many
-grand icy streams to the sea-coast, and their progress in the boats
-would be checked by the innumerable floating icebergs, some small and
-some great; and this would have occurred on our twenty-second of June,
-and where the Lake of Geneva is now spread out! [21]
-
-[1] The south-westerly breezes are generally very dry. January 29th,
-being at anchor under Cape Gregory: a very hard gale from W. by S.,
-clear sky with few cumuli; temperature 57 degs., dew-point 36
-degs.,--difference 21 degs. On January 15th, at Port St. Julian: in the
-morning, light winds with much rain, followed by a very heavy squall
-with rain,--settled into heavy gale with large cumuli,--cleared up,
-blowing very strong from S.S.W. Temperature 60 degs., dew-point 42
-degs.,--difference 18 degs.
-
-[2] Rengger, Natur. der Saeugethiere von Paraguay. S. 334.
-
-[3] Captain Fitz Roy informs me that in April (our October), the leaves
-of those trees which grow near the base of the mountains change colour,
-but not those on the more elevated parts. I remember having read some
-observations, showing that in England the leaves fall earlier in a warm
-and fine autumn than in a late and cold one, The change in the colour
-being here retarded in the more elevated, and therefore colder
-situations, must be owing to the same general law of vegetation. The
-trees of Tierra del Fuego during no part of the year entirely shed
-their leaves.
-
-[4] Described from my specimens and notes by the Rev. J. M. Berkeley,
-in the Linnean Transactions (vol. xix. p. 37), under the name of
-Cyttaria Darwinii; the Chilean species is the C. Berteroii. This genus
-is allied to Bulgaria.
-
-[5] I believe I must except one alpine Haltica, and a single specimen
-of a Melasoma. Mr. Waterhouse informs me, that of the Harpalidae there
-are eight or nine species--the forms of the greater number being very
-peculiar; of Heteromera, four or five species; of Rhyncophora, six or
-seven; and of the following families one species in each:
-Staphylinidae, Elateridae, Cebrionidae, Melolonthidae. The species in
-the other orders are even fewer. In all the orders, the scarcity of
-the individuals is even more remarkable than that of the species. Most
-of the Coleoptera have been carefully described by Mr. Waterhouse in
-the Annals of Nat. Hist.
-
-[6] Its geographical range is remarkably wide; it is found from the
-extreme southern islets near Cape Horn, as far north on the eastern
-coast (according to information given me by Mr. Stokes) as lat. 43
-degs.,--but on the western coast, as Dr. Hooker tells me, it extends to
-the R. San Francisco in California, and perhaps even to Kamtschatka. We
-thus have an immense range in latitude; and as Cook, who must have been
-well acquainted with the species, found it at Kerguelen Land, no less
-than 140 degs. in longitude.
-
-[7] Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, vol. i. p. 363.--It appears
-that sea-weed grows extremely quick.--Mr. Stephenson found (Wilson's
-Voyage round Scotland, vol. ii. p. 228) that a rock uncovered only at
-spring-tides, which had been chiselled smooth in November, on the
-following May, that is, within six months afterwards, was thickly
-covered with Fucus digitatus two feet, and F. esculentus six feet, in
-length.
-
-[8] With regard to Tierra del Fuego, the results are deduced from the
-observations of Capt. King (Geographical Journal, 1830), and those
-taken on board the Beagle. For the Falkland Islands, I am indebted to
-Capt. Sulivan for the mean of the mean temperature (reduced from
-careful observations at midnight, 8 A.M., noon, and 8 P.M.) of the
-three hottest months, viz., December, January, and February. The
-temperature of Dublin is taken from Barton.
-
-[9] Agueros, Descrip. Hist. de la Prov. de Chiloe, 1791, p. 94.
-
-[10] See the German Translation of this Journal; and for the other
-facts, Mr. Brown's Appendix to Flinders's Voyage.
-
-
-[11] On the Cordillera of central Chile, I believe the snow-line varies
-exceedingly in height in different summers. I was assured that during
-one very dry and long summer, all the snow disappeared from Aconcagua,
-although it attains the prodigious height of 23,000 feet. It is
-probable that much of the snow at these great heights is evaporated
-rather than thawed.
-
-[12] Miers's Chile, vol. i. p. 415. It is said that the sugar-cane grew
-at Ingenio, lat. 32 to 33 degs., but not in sufficient quantity to make
-the manufacture profitable. In the valley of Quillota, south of
-Ingenio, I saw some large date palm trees.
-
-[13] Bulkeley's and Cummin's Faithful Narrative of the Loss of the
-Wager. The earthquake happened August 25, 1741.
-
-[14] Agueros, Desc. Hist. de Chiloe, p. 227.
-
-[15] Geological Transactions, vol. vi. p. 415.
-
-[16] I have given details (the first, I believe, published) on this
-subject in the first edition, and in the Appendix to it. I have there
-shown that the apparent exceptions to the absence of erratic boulders
-in certain countries, are due to erroneous observations; several
-statements there given I have since found confirmed by various authors.
-
-[17] Geographical Journal, 1830, pp. 65, 66.
-
-[18] Richardson's Append. to Back's Exped., and Humboldt's Fragm.
-Asiat., tom. ii. p. 386.
-
-[19] Messrs. Dease and Simpson, in Geograph. Journ., vol. viii. pp. 218
-and 220.
-
-[20] Cuvier (Ossemens Fossiles, tom. i. p. 151), from Billing's Voyage.
-
-[21] In the former edition and Appendix, I have given some facts on the
-transportal of erratic boulders and icebergs in the Atlantic Ocean.
-This subject has lately been treated excellently by Mr. Hayes, in the
-Boston Journal (vol. iv. p. 426). The author does not appear aware of
-a case published by me (Geographical Journal, vol. ix. p. 528) of a
-gigantic boulder embedded in an iceberg in the Antarctic Ocean, almost
-certainly one hundred miles distant from any land, and perhaps much
-more distant. In the Appendix I have discussed at length the
-probability (at that time hardly thought of) of icebergs, when
-stranded, grooving and polishing rocks, like glaciers. This is now a
-very commonly received opinion; and I cannot still avoid the suspicion
-that it is applicable even to such cases as that of the Jura. Dr.
-Richardson has assured me that the icebergs off North America push
-before them pebbles and sand, and leave the submarine rocky flats quite
-bare; it is hardly possible to doubt that such ledges must be polished
-and scored in the direction of the set of the prevailing currents.
-Since writing that Appendix, I have seen in North Wales (London Phil.
-Mag., vol. xxi. p. 180) the adjoining action of glaciers and floating
-icebergs.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-CENTRAL CHILE
-
-Valparaiso--Excursion to the Foot of the Andes--Structure of the
-Land--Ascend the Bell of Quillota--Shattered Masses of
-Greenstone--Immense Valleys--Mines--State of
-Miners--Santiago--Hot-baths of
-Cauquenes--Gold-mines--Grinding-mills--Perforated Stones--Habits of the
-Puma--El Turco and Tapacolo--Humming-birds.
-
-
-JULY 23rd.--The Beagle anchored late at night in the bay of Valparaiso,
-the chief seaport of Chile. When morning came, everything appeared
-delightful. After Tierra del Fuego, the climate felt quite
-delicious--the atmosphere so dry, and the heavens so clear and blue
-with the sun shining brightly, that all nature seemed sparkling with
-life. The view from the anchorage is very pretty. The town is built
-at the very foot of a range of hills, about 1600 feet high, and rather
-steep. From its position, it consists of one long, straggling street,
-which runs parallel to the beach, and wherever a ravine comes down, the
-houses are piled up on each side of it. The rounded hills, being only
-partially protected by a very scanty vegetation, are worn into
-numberless little gullies, which expose a singularly bright red soil.
-From this cause, and from the low whitewashed houses with tile roofs,
-the view reminded me of St. Cruz in Teneriffe. In a north-westerly
-direction there are some fine glimpses of the Andes: but these
-mountains appear much grander when viewed from the neighbouring hills:
-the great distance at which they are situated can then more readily be
-perceived. The volcano of Aconcagua is particularly magnificent. This
-huge and irregularly conical mass has an elevation greater than that of
-Chimborazo; for, from measurements made by the officers in the Beagle,
-its height is no less than 23,000 feet. The Cordillera, however,
-viewed from this point, owe the greater part of their beauty to the
-atmosphere through which they are seen. When the sun was setting in
-the Pacific, it was admirable to watch how clearly their rugged
-outlines could be distinguished, yet how varied and how delicate were
-the shades of their colour.
-
-I had the good fortune to find living here Mr. Richard Corfield, an old
-schoolfellow and friend, to whose hospitality and kindness I was
-greatly indebted, in having afforded me a most pleasant residence
-during the Beagle's stay in Chile. The immediate neighbourhood of
-Valparaiso is not very productive to the naturalist. During the long
-summer the wind blows steadily from the southward, and a little off
-shore, so that rain never falls; during the three winter months,
-however, it is sufficiently abundant. The vegetation in consequence is
-very scanty: except in some deep valleys, there are no trees, and only
-a little grass and a few low bushes are scattered over the less steep
-parts of the hills. When we reflect, that at the distance of 350 miles
-to the south, this side of the Andes is completely hidden by one
-impenetrable forest, the contrast is very remarkable. I took several
-long walks while collecting objects of natural history. The country is
-pleasant for exercise. There are many very beautiful flowers; and, as
-in most other dry climates, the plants and shrubs possess strong and
-peculiar odours--even one's clothes by brushing through them became
-scented. I did not cease from wonder at finding each succeeding day as
-fine as the foregoing. What a difference does climate make in the
-enjoyment of life! How opposite are the sensations when viewing black
-mountains half enveloped in clouds, and seeing another range through
-the light blue haze of a fine day! The one for a time may be very
-sublime; the other is all gaiety and happy life.
-
-August 14th.--I set out on a riding excursion, for the purpose of
-geologizing the basal parts of the Andes, which alone at this time of
-the year are not shut up by the winter snow. Our first day's ride was
-northward along the sea-coast. After dark we reached the Hacienda of
-Quintero, the estate which formerly belonged to Lord Cochrane. My
-object in coming here was to see the great beds of shells, which stand
-some yards above the level of the sea, and are burnt for lime. The
-proofs of the elevation of this whole line of coast are unequivocal: at
-the height of a few hundred feet old-looking shells are numerous, and I
-found some at 1300 feet. These shells either lie loose on the surface,
-or are embedded in a reddish-black vegetable mould. I was much
-surprised to find under the microscope that this vegetable mould is
-really marine mud, full of minute particles of organic bodies.
-
-15th.--We returned towards the valley of Quillota. The country was
-exceedingly pleasant; just such as poets would call pastoral: green
-open lawns, separated by small valleys with rivulets, and the cottages,
-we may suppose of the shepherds scattered on the hill-sides. We were
-obliged to cross the ridge of the Chilicauquen. At its base there were
-many fine evergreen forest-trees, but these flourished only in the
-ravines, where there was running water. Any person who had seen only
-the country near Valparaiso, would never have imagined that there had
-been such picturesque spots in Chile. As soon as we reached the brow of
-the Sierra, the valley of Quillota was immediately under our feet. The
-prospect was one of remarkable artificial luxuriance. The valley is
-very broad and quite flat, and is thus easily irrigated in all parts.
-The little square gardens are crowded with orange and olive trees, and
-every sort of vegetable. On each side huge bare mountains rise, and
-this from the contrast renders the patchwork valley the more pleasing.
-Whoever called "Valparaiso" the "Valley of Paradise," must have been
-thinking of Quillota. We crossed over to the Hacienda de San Isidro,
-situated at the very foot of the Bell Mountain.
-
-Chile, as may be seen in the maps, is a narrow strip of land between
-the Cordillera and the Pacific; and this strip is itself traversed by
-several mountain-lines, which in this part run parallel to the great
-range. Between these outer lines and the main Cordillera, a succession
-of level basins, generally opening into each other by narrow passages,
-extend far to the southward: in these, the principal towns are
-situated, as San Felipe, Santiago, San Fernando. These basins or
-plains, together with the transverse flat valleys (like that of
-Quillota) which connect them with the coast, I have no doubt are the
-bottoms of ancient inlets and deep bays, such as at the present day
-intersect every part of Tierra del Fuego and the western coast. Chile
-must formerly have resembled the latter country in the configuration of
-its land and water. The resemblance was occasionally shown strikingly
-when a level fog-bank covered, as with a mantle, all the lower parts of
-the country: the white vapour curling into the ravines, beautifully
-represented little coves and bays; and here and there a solitary
-hillock peeping up, showed that it had formerly stood there as an
-islet. The contrast of these flat valleys and basins with the
-irregular mountains, gave the scenery a character which to me was new
-and very interesting.
-
-From the natural slope to seaward of these plains, they are very easily
-irrigated, and in consequence singularly fertile. Without this process
-the land would produce scarcely anything, for during the whole summer
-the sky is cloudless. The mountains and hills are dotted over with
-bushes and low trees, and excepting these the vegetation is very
-scanty. Each landowner in the valley possesses a certain portion of
-hill-country, where his half-wild cattle, in considerable numbers,
-manage to find sufficient pasture. Once every year there is a grand
-"rodeo," when all the cattle are driven down, counted, and marked, and
-a certain number separated to be fattened in the irrigated fields.
-Wheat is extensively cultivated, and a good deal of Indian corn: a kind
-of bean is, however, the staple article of food for the common
-labourers. The orchards produce an overflowing abundance of peaches
-figs, and grapes. With all these advantages, the inhabitants of the
-country ought to be much more prosperous than they are.
-
-16th.--The mayor-domo of the Hacienda was good enough to give me a
-guide and fresh horses; and in the morning we set out to ascend the
-Campana, or Bell Mountain, which is 6400 feet high. The paths were
-very bad, but both the geology and scenery amply repaid the trouble. We
-reached by the evening, a spring called the Agua del Guanaco, which is
-situated at a great height. This must be an old name, for it is very
-many years since a guanaco drank its waters. During the ascent I
-noticed that nothing but bushes grew on the northern slope, whilst on
-the southern slope there was a bamboo about fifteen feet high. In a
-few places there were palms, and I was surprised to see one at an
-elevation of at least 4500 feet. These palms are, for their family,
-ugly trees. Their stem is very large, and of a curious form, being
-thicker in the middle than at the base or top. They are excessively
-numerous in some parts of Chile, and valuable on account of a sort of
-treacle made from the sap. On one estate near Petorca they tried to
-count them, but failed, after having numbered several hundred thousand.
-Every year in the early spring, in August, very many are cut down, and
-when the trunk is lying on the ground, the crown of leaves is lopped
-off. The sap then immediately begins to flow from the upper end, and
-continues so doing for some months: it is, however, necessary that a
-thin slice should be shaved off from that end every morning, so as to
-expose a fresh surface. A good tree will give ninety gallons, and all
-this must have been contained in the vessels of the apparently dry
-trunk. It is said that the sap flows much more quickly on those days
-when the sun is powerful; and likewise, that it is absolutely necessary
-to take care, in cutting down the tree, that it should fall with its
-head upwards on the side of the hill; for if it falls down the slope,
-scarcely any sap will flow; although in that case one would have
-thought that the action would have been aided, instead of checked, by
-the force of gravity. The sap is concentrated by boiling, and is then
-called treacle, which it very much resembles in taste.
-
-We unsaddled our horses near the spring, and prepared to pass the
-night. The evening was fine, and the atmosphere so clear, that the
-masts of the vessels at anchor in the bay of Valparaiso, although no
-less than twenty-six geographical miles distant, could be distinguished
-clearly as little black streaks. A ship doubling the point under sail,
-appeared as a bright white speck. Anson expresses much surprise, in
-his voyage, at the distance at which his vessels were discovered from
-the coast; but he did not sufficiently allow for the height of the
-land, and the great transparency of the air.
-
-The setting of the sun was glorious; the valleys being black whilst the
-snowy peaks of the Andes yet retained a ruby tint. When it was dark,
-we made a fire beneath a little arbour of bamboos, fried our charqui
-(or dried slips of beef), took our mate, and were quite comfortable.
-There is an inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air. The
-evening was calm and still;--the shrill noise of the mountain bizcacha,
-and the faint cry of a goatsucker, were occasionally to be heard.
-Besides these, few birds, or even insects, frequent these dry, parched
-mountains.
-
-August 17th.--In the morning we climbed up the rough mass of greenstone
-which crowns the summit. This rock, as frequently happens, was much
-shattered and broken into huge angular fragments. I observed, however,
-one remarkable circumstance, namely, that many of the surfaces
-presented every degree of freshness some appearing as if broken the day
-before, whilst on others lichens had either just become, or had long
-grown, attached. I so fully believed that this was owing to the
-frequent earthquakes, that I felt inclined to hurry from below each
-loose pile. As one might very easily be deceived in a fact of this
-kind, I doubted its accuracy, until ascending Mount Wellington, in Van
-Diemen's Land, where earthquakes do not occur; and there I saw the
-summit of the mountain similarly composed and similarly shattered, but
-all the blocks appeared as if they had been hurled into their present
-position thousands of years ago.
-
-We spent the day on the summit, and I never enjoyed one more
-thoroughly. Chile, bounded by the Andes and the Pacific, was seen as
-in a map. The pleasure from the scenery, in itself beautiful, was
-heightened by the many reflections which arose from the mere view of
-the Campana range with its lesser parallel ones, and of the broad
-valley of Quillota directly intersecting them. Who can avoid wondering
-at the force which has upheaved these mountains, and even more so at
-the countless ages which it must have required to have broken through,
-removed, and levelled whole masses of them? It is well in this case to
-call to mind the vast shingle and sedimentary beds of Patagonia, which,
-if heaped on the Cordillera, would increase its height by so many
-thousand feet. When in that country, I wondered how any mountain-chain
-could have supplied such masses, and not have been utterly obliterated.
-We must not now reverse the wonder, and doubt whether all-powerful time
-can grind down mountains--even the gigantic Cordillera--into-gravel and
-mud.
-
-The appearance of the Andes was different from that which I had
-expected. The lower line of the snow was of course horizontal, and to
-this line the even summits of the range seemed quite parallel. Only at
-long intervals, a group of points or a single cone showed where a
-volcano had existed, or does now exist. Hence the range resembled a
-great solid wall, surmounted here and there by a tower, and making a
-most perfect barrier to the country.
-
-Almost every part of the hill had been drilled by attempts to open
-gold-mines: the rage for mining has left scarcely a spot in Chile
-unexamined. I spent the evening as before, talking round the fire with
-my two companions. The Guasos of Chile, who correspond to the Gauchos
-of the Pampas, are, however, a very different set of beings. Chile is
-the more civilized of the two countries, and the inhabitants, in
-consequence, have lost much individual character. Gradations in rank
-are much more strongly marked: the Guaso does not by any means consider
-every man his equal; and I was quite surprised to find that my
-companions did not like to eat at the same time with myself. This
-feeling of inequality is a necessary consequence of the existence of an
-aristocracy of wealth. It is said that some few of the greater
-landowners possess from five to ten thousand pounds sterling per annum:
-an inequality of riches which I believe is not met with in any of the
-cattle-breeding countries eastward of the Andes. A traveller does not
-here meet that unbounded hospitality which refuses all payment, but yet
-is so kindly offered that no scruples can be raised in accepting it.
-Almost every house in Chile will receive you for the night, but a
-trifle is expected to be given in the morning; even a rich man will
-accept two or three shillings. The Gaucho, although he may be a
-cutthroat, is a gentleman; the Guaso is in few respects better, but at
-the same time a vulgar, ordinary fellow. The two men, although
-employed much in the same manner, are different in their habits and
-attire; and the peculiarities of each are universal in their respective
-countries. The Gaucho seems part of his horse, and scorns to exert
-himself except when on his back: the Guaso may be hired to work as a
-labourer in the fields. The former lives entirely on animal food; the
-latter almost wholly on vegetable. We do not here see the white boots,
-the broad drawers and scarlet chilipa; the picturesque costume of the
-Pampas. Here, common trousers are protected by black and green worsted
-leggings. The poncho, however, is common to both. The chief pride of
-the Guaso lies in his spurs, which are absurdly large. I measured one
-which was six inches in the _diameter_ of the rowel, and the rowel
-itself contained upwards of thirty points. The stirrups are on the
-same scale, each consisting of a square, carved block of wood, hollowed
-out, yet weighing three or four pounds. The Guaso is perhaps more
-expert with the lazo than the Gaucho; but, from the nature of the
-country, he does not know the use of the bolas.
-
-August 18th.--We descended the mountain, and passed some beautiful
-little spots, with rivulets and fine trees. Having slept at the same
-hacienda as before, we rode during the two succeeding days up the
-valley, and passed through Quillota, which is more like a collection of
-nursery-gardens than a town. The orchards were beautiful, presenting
-one mass of peach-blossoms. I saw, also, in one or two places the
-date-palm; it is a most stately tree; and I should think a group of
-them in their native Asiatic or African deserts must be superb. We
-passed likewise San Felipe, a pretty straggling town like Quillota. The
-valley in this part expands into one of those great bays or plains,
-reaching to the foot of the Cordillera, which have been mentioned as
-forming so curious a part of the scenery of Chile. In the evening we
-reached the mines of Jajuel, situated in a ravine at the flank of the
-great chain. I stayed here five days. My host the superintendent of
-the mine, was a shrewd but rather ignorant Cornish miner. He had
-married a Spanish woman, and did not mean to return home; but his
-admiration for the mines of Cornwall remained unbounded. Amongst many
-other questions, he asked me, "Now that George Rex is dead, how many
-more of the family of Rexes are yet alive?" This Rex certainly must be
-a relation of the great author Finis, who wrote all books!
-
-These mines are of copper, and the ore is all shipped to Swansea, to be
-smelted. Hence the mines have an aspect singularly quiet, as compared
-to those in England: here no smoke, furnaces, or great steam-engines,
-disturb the solitude of the surrounding mountains.
-
-The Chilian government, or rather the old Spanish law, encourages by
-every method the searching for mines. The discoverer may work a mine
-on any ground, by paying five shillings; and before paying this he may
-try, even in the garden of another man, for twenty days.
-
-It is now well known that the Chilian method of mining is the cheapest.
-My host says that the two principal improvements introduced by
-foreigners have been, first, reducing by previous roasting the copper
-pyrites--which, being the common ore in Cornwall, the English miners
-were astounded on their arrival to find thrown away as useless:
-secondly, stamping and washing the scoriae from the old furnaces--by
-which process particles of metal are recovered in abundance. I have
-actually seen mules carrying to the coast, for transportation to
-England, a cargo of such cinders. But the first case is much the most
-curious. The Chilian miners were so convinced that copper pyrites
-contained not a particle of copper, that they laughed at the Englishmen
-for their ignorance, who laughed in turn, and bought their richest
-veins for a few dollars. It is very odd that, in a country where
-mining had been extensively carried on for many years, so simple a
-process as gently roasting the ore to expel the sulphur previous to
-smelting it, had never been discovered. A few improvements have
-likewise been introduced in some of the simple machinery; but even to
-the present day, water is removed from some mines by men carrying it up
-the shaft in leathern bags!
-
-The labouring men work very hard. They have little time allowed for
-their meals, and during summer and winter they begin when it is light,
-and leave off at dark. They are paid one pound sterling a month, and
-their food is given them: this for breakfast consists of sixteen figs
-and two small loaves of bread; for dinner, boiled beans; for supper,
-broken roasted wheat grain. They scarcely ever taste meat; as, with
-the twelve pounds per annum, they have to clothe themselves, and
-support their families. The miners who work in the mine itself have
-twenty-five shillings per month, and are allowed a little charqui. But
-these men come down from their bleak habitations only once in every
-fortnight or three weeks.
-
-During my stay here I thoroughly enjoyed scrambling about these huge
-mountains. The geology, as might have been expected, was very
-interesting. The shattered and baked rocks, traversed by innumerable
-dykes of greenstone, showed what commotions had formerly taken place.
-The scenery was much the same as that near the Bell of Quillota--dry
-barren mountains, dotted at intervals by bushes with a scanty foliage.
-The cactuses, or rather opuntias were here very numerous. I measured
-one of a spherical figure, which, including the spines, was six feet
-and four inches in circumference. The height of the common
-cylindrical, branching kind, is from twelve to fifteen feet, and the
-girth (with spines) of the branches between three and four feet.
-
-A heavy fall of snow on the mountains prevented me during the last two
-days, from making some interesting excursions. I attempted to reach a
-lake which the inhabitants, from some unaccountable reason, believe to
-be an arm of the sea. During a very dry season, it was proposed to
-attempt cutting a channel from it for the sake of the water, but the
-padre, after a consultation, declared it was too dangerous, as all
-Chile would be inundated, if, as generally supposed, the lake was
-connected with the Pacific. We ascended to a great height, but
-becoming involved in the snow-drifts failed in reaching this wonderful
-lake, and had some difficulty in returning. I thought we should have
-lost our horses; for there was no means of guessing how deep the drifts
-were, and the animals, when led, could only move by jumping. The black
-sky showed that a fresh snow-storm was gathering, and we therefore were
-not a little glad when we escaped. By the time we reached the base the
-storm commenced, and it was lucky for us that this did not happen three
-hours earlier in the day.
-
-August 26th.--We left Jajuel and again crossed the basin of San Felipe.
-The day was truly Chilian: glaringly bright, and the atmosphere quite
-clear. The thick and uniform covering of newly fallen snow rendered
-the view of the volcano of Aconcagua and the main chain quite glorious.
-We were now on the road to Santiago, the capital of Chile. We crossed
-the Cerro del Talguen, and slept at a little rancho. The host, talking
-about the state of Chile as compared to other countries, was very
-humble: "Some see with two eyes, and some with one, but for my part I
-do not think that Chile sees with any."
-
-August 27th.--After crossing many low hills we descended into the small
-land-locked plain of Guitron. In the basins, such as this one, which
-are elevated from one thousand to two thousand feet above the sea, two
-species of acacia, which are stunted in their forms, and stand wide
-apart from each other, grow in large numbers. These trees are never
-found near the sea-coast; and this gives another characteristic feature
-to the scenery of these basins. We crossed a low ridge which separates
-Guitron from the great plain on which Santiago stands. The view was
-here pre-eminently striking: the dead level surface, covered in parts
-by woods of acacia, and with the city in the distance, abutting
-horizontally against the base of the Andes, whose snowy peaks were
-bright with the evening sun. At the first glance of this view, it was
-quite evident that the plain represented the extent of a former inland
-sea. As soon as we gained the level road we pushed our horses into a
-gallop, and reached the city before it was dark.
-
-I stayed a week in Santiago, and enjoyed myself very much. In the
-morning I rode to various places on the plain, and in the evening dined
-with several of the English merchants, whose hospitality at this place
-is well known. A never-failing source of pleasure was to ascend the
-little hillock of rock (St. Lucia) which projects in the middle of the
-city. The scenery certainly is most striking, and, as I have said,
-very peculiar. I am informed that this same character is common to the
-cities on the great Mexican platform. Of the town I have nothing to
-say in detail: it is not so fine or so large as Buenos Ayres, but is
-built after the same model. I arrived here by a circuit to the north;
-so I resolved to return to Valparaiso by a rather longer excursion to
-the south of the direct road.
-
-September 5th.--By the middle of the day we arrived at one of the
-suspension bridges, made of hide, which cross the Maypu, a large
-turbulent river a few leagues southward of Santiago. These bridges are
-very poor affairs. The road, following the curvature of the suspending
-ropes, is made of bundles of sticks placed close together. It was full
-of holes, and oscillated rather fearfully, even with the weight of a
-man leading his horse. In the evening we reached a comfortable
-farm-house, where there were several very pretty senoritas. They were
-much horrified at my having entered one of their churches out of mere
-curiosity. They asked me, "Why do you not become a Christian--for our
-religion is certain?" I assured them I was a sort of Christian; but
-they would not hear of it--appealing to my own words, "Do not your
-padres, your very bishops, marry?" The absurdity of a bishop having a
-wife particularly struck them: they scarcely knew whether to be most
-amused or horror-struck at such an enormity.
-
-6th.--We proceeded due south, and slept at Rancagua. The road passed
-over the level but narrow plain, bounded on one side by lofty hills,
-and on the other by the Cordillera. The next day we turned up the
-valley of the Rio Cachapual, in which the hot-baths of Cauquenes, long
-celebrated for their medicinal properties, are situated. The
-suspension bridges, in the less frequented parts, are generally taken
-down during the winter when the rivers are low. Such was the case in
-this valley, and we were therefore obliged to cross the stream on
-horseback. This is rather disagreeable, for the foaming water, though
-not deep, rushes so quickly over the bed of large rounded stones, that
-one's head becomes quite confused, and it is difficult even to perceive
-whether the horse is moving onward or standing still. In summer, when
-the snow melts, the torrents are quite impassable; their strength and
-fury are then extremely great, as might be plainly seen by the marks
-which they had left. We reached the baths in the evening, and stayed
-there five days, being confined the two last by heavy rain. The
-buildings consist of a square of miserable little hovels, each with a
-single table and bench. They are situated in a narrow deep valley just
-without the central Cordillera. It is a quiet, solitary spot, with a
-good deal of wild beauty.
-
-The mineral springs of Cauquenes burst forth on a line of dislocation,
-crossing a mass of stratified rock, the whole of which betrays the
-action of heat. A considerable quantity of gas is continually escaping
-from the same orifices with the water. Though the springs are only a
-few yards apart, they have very different temperature; and this appears
-to be the result of an unequal mixture of cold water: for those with
-the lowest temperature have scarcely any mineral taste. After the great
-earthquake of 1822 the springs ceased, and the water did not return for
-nearly a year. They were also much affected by the earthquake of 1835;
-the temperature being suddenly changed from 118 to 92 degs. [1] It
-seems probable that mineral waters rising deep from the bowels of the
-earth, would always be more deranged by subterranean disturbances than
-those nearer the surface. The man who had charge of the baths assured
-me that in summer the water is hotter and more plentiful than in
-winter. The former circumstance I should have expected, from the less
-mixture, during the dry season, of cold water; but the latter statement
-appears very strange and contradictory. The periodical increase during
-the summer, when rain never falls, can, I think, only be accounted for
-by the melting of the snow: yet the mountains which are covered by snow
-during that season, are three or four leagues distant from the springs.
-I have no reason to doubt the accuracy of my informer, who, having
-lived on the spot for several years, ought to be well acquainted with
-the circumstance,--which, if true, certainly is very curious: for we
-must suppose that the snow-water, being conducted through porous strata
-to the regions of heat, is again thrown up to the surface by the line
-of dislocated and injected rocks at Cauquenes; and the regularity of
-the phenomenon would seem to indicate that in this district heated rock
-occurred at a depth not very great.
-
-One day I rode up the valley to the farthest inhabited spot. Shortly
-above that point, the Cachapual divides into two deep tremendous
-ravines, which penetrate directly into the great range. I scrambled up
-a peaked mountain, probably more than six thousand feet high. Here, as
-indeed everywhere else, scenes of the highest interest presented
-themselves. It was by one of these ravines, that Pincheira entered
-Chile and ravaged the neighbouring country. This is the same man whose
-attack on an estancia at the Rio Negro I have described. He was a
-renegade half-caste Spaniard, who collected a great body of Indians
-together and established himself by a stream in the Pampas, which place
-none of the forces sent after him could ever discover. From this point
-he used to sally forth, and crossing the Cordillera by passes hitherto
-unattempted, he ravaged the farm-houses and drove the cattle to his
-secret rendezvous. Pincheira was a capital horseman, and he made all
-around him equally good, for he invariably shot any one who hesitated
-to follow him. It was against this man, and other wandering Indian
-tribes, that Rosas waged the war of extermination.
-
-September 13th.--We left the baths of Cauquenes, and, rejoining the
-main road, slept at the Rio Clara. From this place we rode to the town
-of San Fernando. Before arriving there, the last land-locked basin had
-expanded into a great plain, which extended so far to the south, that
-the snowy summits of the more distant Andes were seen as if above the
-horizon of the sea. San Fernando is forty leagues from Santiago; and
-it was my farthest point southward; for we here turned at right angles
-towards the coast. We slept at the gold-mines of Yaquil, which are
-worked by Mr. Nixon, an American gentleman, to whose kindness I was
-much indebted during the four days I stayed at his house. The next
-morning we rode to the mines, which are situated at the distance of
-some leagues, near the summit of a lofty hill. On the way we had a
-glimpse of the lake Tagua-tagua, celebrated for its floating islands,
-which have been described by M. Gay. [2] They are composed of the
-stalks of various dead plants intertwined together, and on the surface
-of which other living ones take root. Their form is generally
-circular, and their thickness from four to six feet, of which the
-greater part is immersed in the water. As the wind blows, they pass
-from one side of the lake to the other, and often carry cattle and
-horses as passengers.
-
-When we arrived at the mine, I was struck by the pale appearance of
-many of the men, and inquired from Mr. Nixon respecting their
-condition. The mine is 450 feet deep, and each man brings up about 200
-pounds weight of stone. With this load they have to climb up the
-alternate notches cut in the trunks of trees, placed in a zigzag line
-up the shaft. Even beardless young men, eighteen and twenty years old,
-with little muscular development of their bodies (they are quite naked
-excepting drawers) ascend with this great load from nearly the same
-depth. A strong man, who is not accustomed to this labour, perspires
-most profusely, with merely carrying up his own body. With this very
-severe labour, they live entirely on boiled beans and bread. They
-would prefer having bread alone; but their masters, finding that they
-cannot work so hard upon this, treat them like horses, and make them
-eat the beans. Their pay is here rather more than at the mines of
-Jajuel, being from 24 to 28 shillings per month. They leave the mine
-only once in three weeks; when they stay with their families for two
-days. One of the rules of this mine sounds very harsh, but answers
-pretty well for the master. The only method of stealing gold is to
-secrete pieces of the ore, and take them out as occasion may offer.
-Whenever the major-domo finds a lump thus hidden, its full value is
-stopped out of the wages of all the men; who thus, without they all
-combine, are obliged to keep watch over each other.
-
-When the ore is brought to the mill, it is ground into an impalpable
-powder; the process of washing removes all the lighter particles, and
-amalgamation finally secures the gold-dust. The washing, when
-described, sounds a very simple process; but it is beautiful to see how
-the exact adaptation of the current of water to the specific gravity of
-the gold, so easily separates the powdered matrix from the metal. The
-mud which passes from the mills is collected into pools, where it
-subsides, and every now and then is cleared out, and thrown into a
-common heap. A great deal of chemical action then commences, salts of
-various kinds effloresce on the surface, and the mass becomes hard.
-After having been left for a year or two, and then rewashed, it yields
-gold; and this process may be repeated even six or seven times; but the
-gold each time becomes less in quantity, and the intervals required (as
-the inhabitants say, to generate the metal) are longer. There can be
-no doubt that the chemical action, already mentioned, each time
-liberates fresh gold from some combination. The discovery of a method
-to effect this before the first grinding would without doubt raise the
-value of gold-ores many fold.
-
-It is curious to find how the minute particles of gold, being scattered
-about and not corroding, at last accumulate in some quantity. A short
-time since a few miners, being out of work, obtained permission to
-scrape the ground round the house and mills; they washed the earth thus
-got together, and so procured thirty dollars' worth of gold. This is
-an exact counterpart of what takes place in nature. Mountains suffer
-degradation and wear away, and with them the metallic veins which they
-contain. The hardest rock is worn into impalpable mud, the ordinary
-metals oxidate, and both are removed; but gold, platina, and a few
-others are nearly indestructible, and from their weight, sinking to the
-bottom, are left behind. After whole mountains have passed through this
-grinding mill, and have been washed by the hand of nature, the residue
-becomes metalliferous, and man finds it worth his while to complete the
-task of separation.
-
-Bad as the above treatment of the miners appears, it is gladly accepted
-of by them; for the condition of the labouring agriculturists is much
-worse. Their wages are lower, and they live almost exclusively on
-beans. This poverty must be chiefly owing to the feudal-like system on
-which the land is tilled: the landowner gives a small plot of ground to
-the labourer for building on and cultivating, and in return has his
-services (or those of a proxy) for every day of his life, without any
-wages. Until a father has a grown-up son, who can by his labour pay
-the rent, there is no one, except on occasional days, to take care of
-his own patch of ground. Hence extreme poverty is very common among the
-labouring classes in this country.
-
-There are some old Indian ruins in this neighbourhood, and I was shown
-one of the perforated stones, which Molina mentions as being found in
-many places in considerable numbers. They are of a circular flattened
-form, from five to six inches in diameter, with a hole passing quite
-through the centre. It has generally been supposed that they were used
-as heads to clubs, although their form does not appear at all well
-adapted for that purpose. Burchell [3] states that some of the tribes
-in Southern Africa dig up roots by the aid of a stick pointed at one
-end, the force and weight of which are increased by a round stone with
-a hole in it, into which the other end is firmly wedged. It appears
-probable that the Indians of Chile formerly used some such rude
-agricultural instrument.
-
-One day, a German collector in natural history, of the name of Renous,
-called, and nearly at the same time an old Spanish lawyer. I was
-amused at being told the conversation which took place between them.
-Renous speaks Spanish so well, that the old lawyer mistook him for a
-Chilian. Renous alluding to me, asked him what he thought of the King
-of England sending out a collector to their country, to pick up lizards
-and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentleman thought seriously
-for some time, and then said, "It is not well,--_hay un gato encerrado
-aqui_ (there is a cat shut up here). No man is so rich as to send out
-people to pick up such rubbish. I do not like it: if one of us were to
-go and do such things in England, do not you think the King of England
-would very soon send us out of his country?" And this old gentleman,
-from his profession, belongs to the better informed and more
-intelligent classes! Renous himself, two or three years before, left
-in a house at San Fernando some caterpillars, under charge of a girl to
-feed, that they might turn into butterflies. This was rumoured through
-the town, and at last the padres and governor consulted together, and
-agreed it must be some heresy. Accordingly, when Renous returned, he
-was arrested.
-
-September 19th.--We left Yaquil, and followed the flat valley, formed
-like that of Quillota, in which the Rio Tinderidica flows. Even at
-these few miles south of Santiago the climate is much damper; in
-consequence there are fine tracts of pasturage, which are not
-irrigated. (20th.) We followed this valley till it expanded into a
-great plain, which reaches from the sea to the mountains west of
-Rancagua. We shortly lost all trees and even bushes; so that the
-inhabitants are nearly as badly off for firewood as those in the
-Pampas. Never having heard of these plains, I was much surprised at
-meeting with such scenery in Chile. The plains belong to more than one
-series of different elevations, and they are traversed by broad
-flat-bottomed valleys; both of which circumstances, as in Patagonia,
-bespeak the action of the sea on gently rising land. In the steep
-cliffs bordering these valleys, there are some large caves, which no
-doubt were originally formed by the waves: one of these is celebrated
-under the name of Cueva del Obispo; having formerly been consecrated.
-During the day I felt very unwell, and from that time till the end of
-October did not recover.
-
-September 22nd.--We continued to pass over green plains without a tree.
-The next day we arrived at a house near Navedad, on the sea-coast,
-where a rich Haciendero gave us lodgings. I stayed here the two
-ensuing days, and although very unwell, managed to collect from the
-tertiary formation some marine shells.
-
-24th.--Our course was now directed towards Valparaiso, which with great
-difficulty I reached on the 27th, and was there confined to my bed till
-the end of October. During this time I was an inmate in Mr. Corfield's
-house, whose kindness to me I do not know how to express.
-
-
-I will here add a few observations on some of the animals and birds of
-Chile. The Puma, or South American Lion, is not uncommon. This animal
-has a wide geographical range; being found from the equatorial forests,
-throughout the deserts of Patagonia as far south as the damp and cold
-latitudes (53 to 54 degs.) of Tierra del Fuego. I have seen its
-footsteps in the Cordillera of central Chile, at an elevation of at
-least 10,000 feet. In La Plata the puma preys chiefly on deer,
-ostriches, bizcacha, and other small quadrupeds; it there seldom
-attacks cattle or horses, and most rarely man. In Chile, however, it
-destroys many young horses and cattle, owing probably to the scarcity
-of other quadrupeds: I heard, likewise, of two men and a woman who had
-been thus killed. It is asserted that the puma always kills its prey by
-springing on the shoulders, and then drawing back the head with one of
-its paws, until the vertebrae break: I have seen in Patagonia the
-skeletons of guanacos, with their necks thus dislocated.
-
-The puma, after eating its fill, covers the carcass with many large
-bushes, and lies down to watch it. This habit is often the cause of
-its being discovered; for the condors wheeling in the air every now and
-then descend to partake of the feast, and being angrily driven away,
-rise all together on the wing. The Chileno Guaso then knows there is a
-lion watching his prey--the word is given--and men and dogs hurry to
-the chase. Sir F. Head says that a Gaucho in the pampas, upon merely
-seeing some condors wheeling in the air, cried "A lion!" I could never
-myself meet with any one who pretended to such powers of
-discrimination. It is asserted that, if a puma has once been betrayed
-by thus watching the carcass, and has then been hunted, it never
-resumes this habit; but that, having gorged itself, it wanders far
-away. The puma is easily killed. In an open country, it is first
-entangled with the bolas, then lazoed, and dragged along the ground
-till rendered insensible. At Tandeel (south of the plata), I was told
-that within three months one hundred were thus destroyed. In Chile
-they are generally driven up bushes or trees, and are then either shot,
-or baited to death by dogs. The dogs employed in this chase belong to
-a particular breed, called Leoneros: they are weak, slight animals,
-like long-legged terriers, but are born with a particular instinct for
-this sport. The puma is described as being very crafty: when pursued,
-it often returns on its former track, and then suddenly making a spring
-on one side, waits there till the dogs have passed by. It is a very
-silent animal, uttering no cry even when wounded, and only rarely
-during the breeding season.
-
-Of birds, two species of the genus Pteroptochos (megapodius and
-albicollis of Kittlitz) are perhaps the most conspicuous. The former,
-called by the Chilenos "el Turco," is as large as a fieldfare, to which
-bird it has some alliance; but its legs are much longer, tail shorter,
-and beak stronger: its colour is a reddish brown. The Turco is not
-uncommon. It lives on the ground, sheltered among the thickets which
-are scattered over the dry and sterile hills. With its tail erect, and
-stilt-like legs, it may be seen every now and then popping from one
-bush to another with uncommon quickness. It really requires little
-imagination to believe that the bird is ashamed of itself, and is aware
-of its most ridiculous figure. On first seeing it, one is tempted to
-exclaim, "A vilely stuffed specimen has escaped from some museum, and
-has come to life again!" It cannot be made to take flight without the
-greatest trouble, nor does it run, but only hops. The various loud
-cries which it utters when concealed amongst the bushes, are as strange
-as its appearance. It is said to build its nest in a deep hole beneath
-the ground. I dissected several specimens: the gizzard, which was very
-muscular, contained beetles, vegetable fibres, and pebbles. From this
-character, from the length of its legs, scratching feet, membranous
-covering to the nostrils, short and arched wings, this bird seems in a
-certain degree to connect the thrushes with the gallinaceous order.
-
-The second species (or P. albicollis) is allied to the first in its
-general form. It is called Tapacolo, or "cover your posterior;" and
-well does the shameless little bird deserve its name; for it carries
-its tail more than erect, that is, inclined backwards towards its head.
-It is very common, and frequents the bottoms of hedge-rows, and the
-bushes scattered over the barren hills, where scarcely another bird can
-exist. In its general manner of feeding, of quickly hopping out of the
-thickets and back again, in its desire of concealment, unwillingness to
-take flight, and nidification, it bears a close resemblance to the
-Turco; but its appearance is not quite so ridiculous. The Tapacolo is
-very crafty: when frightened by any person, it will remain motionless
-at the bottom of a bush, and will then, after a little while, try with
-much address to crawl away on the opposite side. It is also an active
-bird, and continually making a noise: these noises are various and
-strangely odd; some are like the cooing of doves, others like the
-bubbling of water, and many defy all similes. The country people say
-it changes its cry five times in the year--according to some change of
-season, I suppose. [4]
-
-Two species of humming-birds are common; Trochilus forficatus is found
-over a space of 2500 miles on the west coast, from the hot dry country
-of Lima, to the forests of Tierra del Fuego--where it may be seen
-flitting about in snow-storms. In the wooded island of Chiloe, which
-has an extremely humid climate, this little bird, skipping from side to
-side amidst the dripping foliage, is perhaps more abundant than almost
-any other kind. I opened the stomachs of several specimens, shot in
-different parts of the continent, and in all, remains of insects were
-as numerous as in the stomach of a creeper. When this species migrates
-in the summer southward, it is replaced by the arrival of another
-species coming from the north. This second kind (Trochilus gigas) is a
-very large bird for the delicate family to which it belongs: when on
-the wing its appearance is singular. Like others of the genus, it
-moves from place to place with a rapidity which may be compared to that
-of Syrphus amongst flies, and Sphinx among moths; but whilst hovering
-over a flower, it flaps its wings with a very slow and powerful
-movement, totally different from that vibratory one common to most of
-the species, which produces the humming noise. I never saw any other
-bird where the force of its wings appeared (as in a butterfly) so
-powerful in proportion to the weight of its body. When hovering by a
-flower, its tail is constantly expanded and shut like a fan, the body
-being kept in a nearly vertical position. This action appears to
-steady and support the bird, between the slow movements of its wings.
-Although flying from flower to flower in search of food, its stomach
-generally contained abundant remains of insects, which I suspect are
-much more the object of its search than honey. The note of this
-species, like that of nearly the whole family, is extremely shrill.
-
-[1] Caldeleugh, in Philosoph. Transact. for 1836.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles, March, 1833. M. Gay, a zealous and
-able naturalist, was then occupied in studying every branch of natural
-history throughout the kingdom of Chile.
-
-[3] Burchess's Travels, vol. ii. p. 45.
-
-[4] It is a remarkable fact, that Molina, though describing in detail
-all the birds and animals of Chile, never once mentions this genus, the
-species of which are so common, and so remarkable in their habits. Was
-he at a loss how to classify them, and did he consequently think that
-silence was the more prudent course? It is one more instance of the
-frequency of omissions by authors, on those very subjects where it
-might have been least expected.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
-
-Chiloe--General Aspect--Boat Excursion--Native Indians--Castro--Tame
-Fox--Ascend San Pedro--Chonos Archipelago--Peninsula of Tres
-Montes--Granitic Range--Boat-wrecked Sailors--Low's Harbour--Wild
-Potato--Formation of Peat--Myopotamus, Otter and Mice--Cheucau and
-Barking-bird--Opetiorhynchus--Singular Character of
-Ornithology--Petrels.
-
-
-NOVEMBER 10th.--The Beagle sailed from Valparaiso to the south, for the
-purpose of surveying the southern part of Chile, the island of Chiloe,
-and the broken land called the Chonos Archipelago, as far south as the
-Peninsula of Tres Montes. On the 21st we anchored in the bay of S.
-Carlos, the capital of Chiloe.
-
-This island is about ninety miles long, with a breadth of rather less
-than thirty. The land is hilly, but not mountainous, and is covered by
-one great forest, except where a few green patches have been cleared
-round the thatched cottages. From a distance the view somewhat
-resembles that of Tierra del Fuego; but the woods, when seen nearer,
-are incomparably more beautiful. Many kinds of fine evergreen trees,
-and plants with a tropical character, here take the place of the gloomy
-beech of the southern shores. In winter the climate is detestable, and
-in summer it is only a little better. I should think there are few
-parts of the world, within the temperate regions, where so much rain
-falls. The winds are very boisterous, and the sky almost always
-clouded: to have a week of fine weather is something wonderful. It is
-even difficult to get a single glimpse of the Cordillera: during our
-first visit, once only the volcano of Osorno stood out in bold relief,
-and that was before sunrise; it was curious to watch, as the sun rose,
-the outline gradually fading away in the glare of the eastern sky.
-
-The inhabitants, from their complexion and low stature; appear to have
-three-fourths of Indian blood in their veins. They are an humble,
-quiet, industrious set of men. Although the fertile soil, resulting
-from the decomposition of the volcanic rocks, supports a rank
-vegetation, yet the climate is not favourable to any production which
-requires much sunshine to ripen it. There is very little pasture for
-the larger quadrupeds; and in consequence, the staple articles of food
-are pigs, potatoes, and fish. The people all dress in strong woollen
-garments, which each family makes for itself, and dyes with indigo of a
-dark blue colour. The arts, however, are in the rudest state;--as may
-be seen in their strange fashion of ploughing, their method of
-spinning, grinding corn, and in the construction of their boats. The
-forests are so impenetrable, that the land is nowhere cultivated except
-near the coast and on the adjoining islets. Even where paths exist,
-they are scarcely passable from the soft and swampy state of the soil.
-The inhabitants, like those of Tierra del Fuego, move about chiefly on
-the beach or in boats. Although with plenty to eat, the people are
-very poor: there is no demand for labour, and consequently the lower
-orders cannot scrape together money sufficient to purchase even the
-smallest luxuries. There is also a great deficiency of a circulating
-medium. I have seen a man bringing on his back a bag of charcoal, with
-which to buy some trifle, and another carrying a plank to exchange for
-a bottle of wine. Hence every tradesman must also be a merchant, and
-again sell the goods which he takes in exchange.
-
-November 24th.--The yawl and whale-boat were sent under the command of
-Mr. (now Captain) Sulivan, to survey the eastern or inland coast of
-Chiloe; and with orders to meet the Beagle at the southern extremity of
-the island; to which point she would proceed by the outside, so as thus
-to circumnavigate the whole. I accompanied this expedition, but
-instead of going in the boats the first day, I hired horses to take me
-to Chacao, at the northern extremity of the island. The road followed
-the coast; every now and then crossing promontories covered by fine
-forests. In these shaded paths it is absolutely necessary that the
-whole road should be made of logs of wood, which are squared and placed
-by the side of each other. From the rays of the sun never penetrating
-the evergreen foliage, the ground is so damp and soft, that except by
-this means neither man nor horse would be able to pass along. I
-arrived at the village of Chacao shortly after the tents belonging to
-the boats were pitched for the night.
-
-The land in this neighbourhood has been extensively cleared, and there
-were many quiet and most picturesque nooks in the forest. Chacao was
-formerly the principal port in the island; but many vessels having been
-lost, owing to the dangerous currents and rocks in the straits, the
-Spanish government burnt the church, and thus arbitrarily compelled the
-greater number of inhabitants to migrate to S. Carlos. We had not long
-bivouacked, before the barefooted son of the governor came down to
-reconnoitre us. Seeing the English flag hoisted at the yawl's
-mast-head, he asked with the utmost indifference, whether it was always
-to fly at Chacao. In several places the inhabitants were much
-astonished at the appearance of men-of-war's boats, and hoped and
-believed it was the forerunner of a Spanish fleet, coming to recover
-the island from the patriot government of Chile. All the men in power,
-however, had been informed of our intended visit, and were exceedingly
-civil. While we were eating our supper, the governor paid us a visit.
-He had been a lieutenant-colonel in the Spanish service, but now was
-miserably poor. He gave us two sheep, and accepted in return two
-cotton handkerchiefs, some brass trinkets, and a little tobacco.
-
-25th.--Torrents of rain: we managed, however, to run down the coast as
-far as Huapi-lenou. The whole of this eastern side of Chiloe has one
-aspect; it is a plain, broken by valleys and divided into little
-islands, and the whole thickly covered with one impervious
-blackish-green forest. On the margins there are some cleared spaces,
-surrounding the high-roofed cottages.
-
-26th--The day rose splendidly clear. The volcano of Orsono was
-spouting out volumes of smoke. This most beautiful mountain, formed
-like a perfect cone, and white with snow, stands out in front of the
-Cordillera. Another great volcano, with a saddle-shaped summit, also
-emitted from its immense crater little jets of steam. Subsequently we
-saw the lofty-peaked Corcovado--well deserving the name of "el famoso
-Corcovado." Thus we beheld, from one point of view, three great active
-volcanoes, each about seven thousand feet high. In addition to this,
-far to the south, there were other lofty cones covered with snow,
-which, although not known to be active, must be in their origin
-volcanic. The line of the Andes is not, in this neighbourhood, nearly
-so elevated as in Chile; neither does it appear to form so perfect a
-barrier between the regions of the earth. This great range, although
-running in a straight north and south line, owing to an optical
-deception, always appeared more or less curved; for the lines drawn
-from each peak to the beholder's eye, necessarily converged like the
-radii of a semicircle, and as it was not possible (owing to the
-clearness of the atmosphere and the absence of all intermediate
-objects) to judge how far distant the farthest peaks were off, they
-appeared to stand in a flattish semicircle.
-
-Landing at midday, we saw a family of pure Indian extraction. The
-father was singularly like York Minster; and some of the younger boys,
-with their ruddy complexions, might have been mistaken for Pampas
-Indians. Everything I have seen, convinces me of the close connexion
-of the different American tribes, who nevertheless speak distinct
-languages. This party could muster but little Spanish, and talked to
-each other in their own tongue. It is a pleasant thing to see the
-aborigines advanced to the same degree of civilization, however low
-that may be, which their white conquerors have attained. More to the
-south we saw many pure Indians: indeed, all the inhabitants of some of
-the islets retain their Indian surnames. In the census of 1832, there
-were in Chiloe and its dependencies forty-two thousand souls; the
-greater number of these appear to be of mixed blood. Eleven thousand
-retain their Indian surnames, but it is probable that not nearly all of
-these are of a pure breed. Their manner of life is the same with that
-of the other poor inhabitants, and they are all Christians; but it is
-said that they yet retain some strange superstitious ceremonies, and
-that they pretend to hold communication with the devil in certain
-caves. Formerly, every one convicted of this offence was sent to the
-Inquisition at Lima. Many of the inhabitants who are not included in
-the eleven thousand with Indian surnames, cannot be distinguished by
-their appearance from Indians. Gomez, the governor of Lemuy, is
-descended from noblemen of Spain on both sides; but by constant
-intermarriages with the natives the present man is an Indian. On the
-other hand the governor of Quinchao boasts much of his purely kept
-Spanish blood.
-
-We reached at night a beautiful little cove, north of the island of
-Caucahue. The people here complained of want of land. This is partly
-owing to their own negligence in not clearing the woods, and partly to
-restrictions by the government, which makes it necessary, before buying
-ever so small a piece, to pay two shillings to the surveyor for
-measuring each quadra (150 yards square), together with whatever price
-he fixes for the value of the land. After his valuation the land must
-be put up three times to auction, and if no one bids more, the
-purchaser can have it at that rate. All these exactions must be a
-serious check to clearing the ground, where the inhabitants are so
-extremely poor. In most countries, forests are removed without much
-difficulty by the aid of fire; but in Chiloe, from the damp nature of
-the climate, and the sort of trees, it is necessary first to cut them
-down. This is a heavy drawback to the prosperity of Chiloe. In the
-time of the Spaniards the Indians could not hold land; and a family,
-after having cleared a piece of ground, might be driven away, and the
-property seized by the government. The Chilian authorities are now
-performing an act of justice by making retribution to these poor
-Indians, giving to each man, according to his grade of life, a certain
-portion of land. The value of uncleared ground is very little. The
-government gave Mr. Douglas (the present surveyor, who informed me of
-these circumstances) eight and a half square miles of forest near S.
-Carlos, in lieu of a debt; and this he sold for 350 dollars, or about
-70 pounds sterling.
-
-The two succeeding days were fine, and at night we reached the island
-of Quinchao. This neighbourhood is the most cultivated part of the
-Archipelago; for a broad strip of land on the coast of the main island,
-as well as on many of the smaller adjoining ones, is almost completely
-cleared. Some of the farm-houses seemed very comfortable. I was
-curious to ascertain how rich any of these people might be, but Mr.
-Douglas says that no one can be considered as possessing a regular
-income. One of the richest landowners might possibly accumulate, in a
-long industrious life, as much as 1000 pounds sterling; but should this
-happen, it would all be stowed away in some secret corner, for it is
-the custom of almost every family to have a jar or treasure-chest
-buried in the ground.
-
-November 30th.--Early on Sunday morning we reached Castro, the ancient
-capital of Chiloe, but now a most forlorn and deserted place. The usual
-quadrangular arrangement of Spanish towns could be traced, but the
-streets and plaza were coated with fine green turf, on which sheep were
-browsing. The church, which stands in the middle, is entirely built of
-plank, and has a picturesque and venerable appearance. The poverty of
-the place may be conceived from the fact, that although containing some
-hundreds of inhabitants, one of our party was unable anywhere to
-purchase either a pound of sugar or an ordinary knife. No individual
-possessed either a watch or a clock; and an old man, who was supposed
-to have a good idea of time, was employed to strike the church bell by
-guess. The arrival of our boats was a rare event in this quiet retired
-corner of the world; and nearly all the inhabitants came down to the
-beach to see us pitch our tents. They were very civil, and offered us
-a house; and one man even sent us a cask of cider as a present. In the
-afternoon we paid our respects to the governor--a quiet old man, who,
-in his appearance and manner of life, was scarcely superior to an
-English cottager. At night heavy rain set in, which was hardly
-sufficient to drive away from our tents the large circle of lookers-on.
-An Indian family, who had come to trade in a canoe from Caylen,
-bivouacked near us. They had no shelter during the rain. In the
-morning I asked a young Indian, who was wet to the skin, how he had
-passed the night. He seemed perfectly content, and answered, "Muy
-bien, senor."
-
-December 1st.--We steered for the island of Lemuy. I was anxious to
-examine a reported coal-mine which turned out to be lignite of little
-value, in the sandstone (probably of an ancient tertiary epoch) of
-which these islands are composed. When we reached Lemuy we had much
-difficulty in finding any place to pitch our tents, for it was
-spring-tide, and the land was wooded down to the water's edge. In a
-short time we were surrounded by a large group of the nearly pure
-Indian inhabitants. They were much surprised at our arrival, and said
-one to the other, "This is the reason we have seen so many parrots
-lately; the cheucau (an odd red-breasted little bird, which inhabits
-the thick forest, and utters very peculiar noises) has not cried
-'beware' for nothing." They were soon anxious for barter. Money was
-scarcely worth anything, but their eagerness for tobacco was something
-quite extraordinary. After tobacco, indigo came next in value; then
-capsicum, old clothes, and gunpowder. The latter article was required
-for a very innocent purpose: each parish has a public musket, and the
-gunpowder was wanted for making a noise on their saint or feast days.
-
-The people here live chiefly on shell-fish and potatoes. At certain
-seasons they catch also, in "corrales," or hedges under water, many
-fish which are left on the mud-banks as the tide falls. They
-occasionally possess fowls, sheep, goats, pigs, horses, and cattle; the
-order in which they are here mentioned, expressing their respective
-numbers. I never saw anything more obliging and humble than the
-manners of these people. They generally began with stating that they
-were poor natives of the place, and not Spaniards and that they were in
-sad want of tobacco and other comforts. At Caylen, the most southern
-island, the sailors bought with a stick of tobacco, of the value of
-three-halfpence, two fowls, one of which, the Indian stated, had skin
-between its toes, and turned out to be a fine duck; and with some
-cotton handkerchiefs, worth three shillings, three sheep and a large
-bunch of onions were procured. The yawl at this place was anchored
-some way from the shore, and we had fears for her safety from robbers
-during the night. Our pilot, Mr. Douglas, accordingly told the
-constable of the district that we always placed sentinels with loaded
-arms and not understanding Spanish, if we saw any person in the dark,
-we should assuredly shoot him. The constable, with much humility,
-agreed to the perfect propriety of this arrangement, and promised us
-that no one should stir out of his house during that night.
-
-During the four succeeding days we continued sailing southward. The
-general features of the country remained the same, but it was much less
-thickly inhabited. On the large island of Tanqui there was scarcely
-one cleared spot, the trees on every side extending their branches over
-the sea-beach. I one day noticed, growing on the sandstone cliffs,
-some very fine plants of the panke (Gunnera scabra), which somewhat
-resembles the rhubarb on a gigantic scale. The inhabitants eat the
-stalks, which are subacid, and tan leather with the roots, and prepare
-a black dye from them. The leaf is nearly circular, but deeply indented
-on its margin. I measured one which was nearly eight feet in diameter,
-and therefore no less than twenty-four in circumference! The stalk is
-rather more than a yard high, and each plant sends out four or five of
-these enormous leaves, presenting together a very noble appearance.
-
-December 6th.--We reached Caylen, called "el fin del Cristiandad." In
-the morning we stopped for a few minutes at a house on the northern end
-of Laylec, which was the extreme point of South American Christendom,
-and a miserable hovel it was. The latitude is 43 degs. 10', which is
-two degrees farther south than the Rio Negro on the Atlantic coast.
-These extreme Christians were very poor, and, under the plea of their
-situation, begged for some tobacco. As a proof of the poverty of these
-Indians, I may mention that shortly before this, we had met a man, who
-had travelled three days and a half on foot, and had as many to return,
-for the sake of recovering the value of a small axe and a few fish. How
-very difficult it must be to buy the smallest article, when such
-trouble is taken to recover so small a debt.
-
-In the evening we reached the island of San Pedro, where we found the
-Beagle at anchor. In doubling the point, two of the officers landed to
-take a round of angles with the theodolite. A fox (Canis fulvipes), of
-a kind said to be peculiar to the island, and very rare in it, and
-which is a new species, was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently
-absorbed in watching the work of the officers, that I was able, by
-quietly walking up behind, to knock him on the head with my geological
-hammer. This fox, more curious or more scientific, but less wise, than
-the generality of his brethren, is now mounted in the museum of the
-Zoological Society.
-
-We stayed three days in this harbour, on one of which Captain Fitz
-Roy, with a party, attempted to ascend to the summit of San Pedro. The
-woods here had rather a different appearance from those on the northern
-part of the island. The rock, also, being micaceous slate, there was no
-beach, but the steep sides dipped directly beneath the water. The
-general aspect in consequence was more like that of Tierra del Fuego
-than of Chiloe. In vain we tried to gain the summit: the forest was so
-impenetrable, that no one who has not beheld it can imagine so
-entangled a mass of dying and dead trunks. I am sure that often, for
-more than ten minutes together, our feet never touched the ground, and
-we were frequently ten or fifteen feet above it, so that the seamen as
-a joke called out the soundings. At other times we crept one after
-another on our hands and knees, under the rotten trunks. In the lower
-part of the mountain, noble trees of the Winter's Bark, and a laurel
-like the sassafras with fragrant leaves, and others, the names of which
-I do not know, were matted together by a trailing bamboo or cane. Here
-we were more like fishes struggling in a net than any other animal. On
-the higher parts, brushwood takes the place of larger trees, with here
-and there a red cedar or an alerce pine. I was also pleased to see, at
-an elevation of a little less than 1000 feet, our old friend the
-southern beech. They were, however, poor stunted trees, and I should
-think that this must be nearly their northern limit. We ultimately
-gave up the attempt in despair.
-
-December 10th.--The yawl and whale-boat, with Mr. Sulivan, proceeded on
-their survey, but I remained on board the Beagle, which the next day
-left San Pedro for the southward. On the 13th we ran into an opening in
-the southern part of Guayatecas, or the Chonos Archipelago; and it was
-fortunate we did so, for on the following day a storm, worthy of Tierra
-del Fuego, raged with great fury. White massive clouds were piled up
-against a dark blue sky, and across them black ragged sheets of vapour
-were rapidly driven. The successive mountain ranges appeared like dim
-shadows, and the setting sun cast on the woodland a yellow gleam, much
-like that produced by the flame of spirits of wine. The water was
-white with the flying spray, and the wind lulled and roared again
-through the rigging: it was an ominous, sublime scene. During a few
-minutes there was a bright rainbow, and it was curious to observe the
-effect of the spray, which being carried along the surface of the
-water, changed the ordinary semicircle into a circle--a band of
-prismatic colours being continued, from both feet of the common arch
-across the bay, close to the vessel's side: thus forming a distorted,
-but very nearly entire ring.
-
-We stayed here three days. The weather continued bad: but this did not
-much signify, for the surface of the land in all these islands is all
-but impassable. The coast is so very rugged that to attempt to walk in
-that direction requires continued scrambling up and down over the sharp
-rocks of mica-slate; and as for the woods, our faces, hands, and
-shin-bones all bore witness to the maltreatment we received, in merely
-attempting to penetrate their forbidden recesses.
-
-December 18th.--We stood out to sea. On the 20th we bade farewell to
-the south, and with a fair wind turned the ship's head northward. From
-Cape Tres Montes we sailed pleasantly along the lofty weather-beaten
-coast, which is remarkable for the bold outline of its hills, and the
-thick covering of forest even on the almost precipitous flanks. The
-next day a harbour was discovered, which on this dangerous coast might
-be of great service to a distressed vessel. It can easily be
-recognized by a hill 1600 feet high, which is even more perfectly
-conical than the famous sugar-loaf at Rio de Janeiro. The next day,
-after anchoring, I succeeded in reaching the summit of this hill. It
-was a laborious undertaking, for the sides were so steep that in some
-parts it was necessary to use the trees as ladders. There were also
-several extensive brakes of the Fuchsia, covered with its beautiful
-drooping flowers, but very difficult to crawl through. In these wild
-countries it gives much delight to gain the summit of any mountain.
-There is an indefinite expectation of seeing something very strange,
-which, however often it may be balked, never failed with me to recur on
-each successive attempt. Every one must know the feeling of triumph
-and pride which a grand view from a height communicates to the mind. In
-these little frequented countries there is also joined to it some
-vanity, that you perhaps are the first man who ever stood on this
-pinnacle or admired this view.
-
-A strong desire is always felt to ascertain whether any human being has
-previously visited an unfrequented spot. A bit of wood with a nail in
-it, is picked up and studied as if it were covered with hieroglyphics.
-Possessed with this feeling, I was much interested by finding, on a
-wild part of the coast, a bed made of grass beneath a ledge of rock.
-Close by it there had been a fire, and the man had used an axe. The
-fire, bed, and situation showed the dexterity of an Indian; but he
-could scarcely have been an Indian, for the race is in this part
-extinct, owing to the Catholic desire of making at one blow Christians
-and Slaves. I had at the time some misgivings that the solitary man
-who had made his bed on this wild spot, must have been some poor
-shipwrecked sailor, who, in trying to travel up the coast, had here
-laid himself down for his dreary night.
-
-December 28th.--The weather continued very bad, but it at last
-permitted us to proceed with the survey. The time hung heavy on our
-hands, as it always did when we were delayed from day to day by
-successive gales of wind. In the evening another harbour was
-discovered, where we anchored. Directly afterwards a man was seen
-waving a shirt, and a boat was sent which brought back two seamen. A
-party of six had run away from an American whaling vessel, and had
-landed a little to the southward in a boat, which was shortly
-afterwards knocked to pieces by the surf. They had now been wandering
-up and down the coast for fifteen months, without knowing which way to
-go, or where they were. What a singular piece of good fortune it was
-that this harbour was now discovered! Had it not been for this one
-chance, they might have wandered till they had grown old men, and at
-last have perished on this wild coast. Their sufferings had been very
-great, and one of their party had lost his life by falling from the
-cliffs. They were sometimes obliged to separate in search of food, and
-this explained the bed of the solitary man. Considering what they had
-undergone, I think they had kept a very good reckoning of time, for
-they had lost only four days.
-
-December 30th.--We anchored in a snug little cove at the foot of some
-high hills, near the northern extremity of Tres Montes. After
-breakfast the next morning, a party ascended one of these mountains,
-which was 2400 feet high. The scenery was remarkable The chief part of
-the range was composed of grand, solid, abrupt masses of granite, which
-appeared as if they had been coeval with the beginning of the world.
-The granite was capped with mica-slate, and this in the lapse of ages
-had been worn into strange finger-shaped points. These two formations,
-thus differing in their outlines, agree in being almost destitute of
-vegetation. This barrenness had to our eyes a strange appearance, from
-having been so long accustomed to the sight of an almost universal
-forest of dark-green trees. I took much delight in examining the
-structure of these mountains. The complicated and lofty ranges bore a
-noble aspect of durability--equally profitless, however, to man and to
-all other animals. Granite to the geologist is classic ground: from
-its widespread limits, and its beautiful and compact texture, few rocks
-have been more anciently recognised. Granite has given rise, perhaps,
-to more discussion concerning its origin than any other formation. We
-generally see it constituting the fundamental rock, and, however
-formed, we know it is the deepest layer in the crust of this globe to
-which man has penetrated. The limit of man's knowledge in any subject
-possesses a high interest, which is perhaps increased by its close
-neighbourhood to the realms of imagination.
-
-January 1st 1835.--The new year is ushered in with the ceremonies
-proper to it in these regions. She lays out no false hopes: a heavy
-north-western gale, with steady rain, bespeaks the rising year. Thank
-God, we are not destined here to see the end of it, but hope then to be
-in the Pacific Ocean, where a blue sky tells one there is a heaven,--a
-something beyond the clouds above our heads.
-
-The north-west winds prevailing for the next four days, we only managed
-to cross a great bay, and then anchored in another secure harbour. I
-accompanied the Captain in a boat to the head of a deep creek. On the
-way the number of seals which we saw was quite astonishing: every bit
-of flat rock, and parts of the beach, were covered with them. There
-appeared to be of a loving disposition, and lay huddled together, fast
-asleep, like so many pigs; but even pigs would have been ashamed of
-their dirt, and of the foul smell which came from them. Each herd was
-watched by the patient but inauspicious eyes of the turkey-buzzard.
-This disgusting bird, with its bald scarlet head, formed to wallow in
-putridity, is very common on the west coast, and their attendance on
-the seals shows on what they rely for their food. We found the water
-(probably only that of the surface) nearly fresh: this was caused by
-the number of torrents which, in the form of cascades, came tumbling
-over the bold granite mountains into the sea. The fresh water attracts
-the fish, and these bring many terns, gulls, and two kinds of
-cormorant. We saw also a pair of the beautiful black-necked swans, and
-several small sea-otters, the fur of which is held in such high
-estimation. In returning, we were again amused by the impetuous manner
-in which the heap of seals, old and young, tumbled into the water as
-the boat passed. They did not remain long under water, but rising,
-followed us with outstretched necks, expressing great wonder and
-curiosity.
-
-7th.--Having run up the coast, we anchored near the northern end of the
-Chonos Archipelago, in Low's Harbour, where we remained a week. The
-islands were here, as in Chiloe, composed of a stratified, soft,
-littoral deposit; and the vegetation in consequence was beautifully
-luxuriant. The woods came down to the sea-beach, just in the manner of
-an evergreen shrubbery over a gravel walk. We also enjoyed from the
-anchorage a splendid view of four great snowy cones of the Cordillera,
-including "el famoso Corcovado;" the range itself had in this latitude
-so little height, that few parts of it appeared above the tops of the
-neighbouring islets. We found here a party of five men from Caylen,
-"el fin del Cristiandad," who had most adventurously crossed in their
-miserable boat-canoe, for the purpose of fishing, the open space of sea
-which separates Chonos from Chiloe. These islands will, in all
-probability, in a short time become peopled like those adjoining the
-coast of Chiloe.
-
-
-The wild potato grows on these islands in great abundance, on the
-sandy, shelly soil near the sea-beach. The tallest plant was four feet
-in height. The tubers were generally small, but I found one, of an
-oval shape, two inches in diameter: they resembled in every respect,
-and had the same smell as English potatoes; but when boiled they shrunk
-much, and were watery and insipid, without any bitter taste. They are
-undoubtedly here indigenous: they grow as far south, according to Mr.
-Low, as lat. 50 degs., and are called Aquinas by the wild Indians of
-that part: the Chilotan Indians have a different name for them.
-Professor Henslow, who has examined the dried specimens which I brought
-home, says that they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine
-[1] from Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some
-botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It is
-remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile mountains
-of central Chile, where a drop of rain does not fall for more than six
-months, and within the damp forests of these southern islands.
-
-In the central parts of the Chonos Archipelago (lat. 45 degs.), the
-forest has very much the same character with that along the whole west
-coast, for 600 miles southward to Cape Horn. The arborescent grass of
-Chiloe is not found here; while the beech of Tierra del Fuego grows to
-a good size, and forms a considerable proportion of the wood; not,
-however, in the same exclusive manner as it does farther southward.
-Cryptogamic plants here find a most congenial climate. In the Strait
-of Magellan, as I have before remarked, the country appears too cold
-and wet to allow of their arriving at perfection; but in these islands,
-within the forest, the number of species and great abundance of mosses,
-lichens, and small ferns, is quite extraordinary. [2] In Tierra del
-Fuego trees grow only on the hill-sides; every level piece of land
-being invariably covered by a thick bed of peat; but in Chiloe flat
-land supports the most luxuriant forests. Here, within the Chonos
-Archipelago, the nature of the climate more closely approaches that of
-Tierra del Fuego than that of northern Chiloe; for every patch of level
-ground is covered by two species of plants (Astelia pumila and Donatia
-magellanica), which by their joint decay compose a thick bed of elastic
-peat.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, above the region of woodland, the former of these
-eminently sociable plants is the chief agent in the production of peat.
-Fresh leaves are always succeeding one to the other round the central
-tap-root, the lower ones soon decay, and in tracing a root downwards in
-the peat, the leaves, yet holding their place, can be observed passing
-through every stage of decomposition, till the whole becomes blended in
-one confused mass. The Astelia is assisted by a few other
-plants,--here and there a small creeping Myrtus (M. nummularia), with a
-woody stem like our cranberry and with a sweet berry,--an Empetrum (E.
-rubrum), like our heath,--a rush (Juncus grandiflorus), are nearly the
-only ones that grow on the swampy surface. These plants, though
-possessing a very close general resemblance to the English species of
-the same genera, are different. In the more level parts of the
-country, the surface of the peat is broken up into little pools of
-water, which stand at different heights, and appear as if artificially
-excavated. Small streams of water, flowing underground, complete the
-disorganization of the vegetable matter, and consolidate the whole.
-
-The climate of the southern part of America appears particularly
-favourable to the production of peat. In the Falkland Islands almost
-every kind of plant, even the coarse grass which covers the whole
-surface of the land, becomes converted into this substance: scarcely
-any situation checks its growth; some of the beds are as much as twelve
-feet thick, and the lower part becomes so solid when dry, that it will
-hardly burn. Although every plant lends its aid, yet in most parts the
-Astelia is the most efficient. It is rather a singular circumstance,
-as being so very different from what occurs in Europe, that I nowhere
-saw moss forming by its decay any portion of the peat in South America.
-With respect to the northern limit, at which the climate allows of that
-peculiar kind of slow decomposition which is necessary for its
-production, I believe that in Chiloe (lat. 41 to 42 degs.), although
-there is much swampy ground, no well-characterized peat occurs: but in
-the Chonos Islands, three degrees farther southward, we have seen that
-it is abundant. On the eastern coast in La Plata (lat. 35 degs.) I was
-told by a Spanish resident who had visited Ireland, that he had often
-sought for this substance, but had never been able to find any. He
-showed me, as the nearest approach to it which he had discovered, a
-black peaty soil, so penetrated with roots as to allow of an extremely
-slow and imperfect combustion.
-
-
-The zoology of these broken islets of the Chonos Archipelago is, as
-might have been expected, very poor. Of quadrupeds two aquatic kinds
-are common. The Myopotamus Coypus (like a beaver, but with a round
-tail) is well known from its fine fur, which is an object of trade
-throughout the tributaries of La Plata. It here, however, exclusively
-frequents salt water; which same circumstance has been mentioned as
-sometimes occurring with the great rodent, the Capybara. A small
-sea-otter is very numerous; this animal does not feed exclusively on
-fish, but, like the seals, draws a large supply from a small red crab,
-which swims in shoals near the surface of the water. Mr. Bynoe saw one
-in Tierra del Fuego eating a cuttle-fish; and at Low's Harbour, another
-was killed in the act of carrying to its hole a large volute shell. At
-one place I caught in a trap a singular little mouse (M. brachiotis);
-it appeared common on several of the islets, but the Chilotans at Low's
-Harbour said that it was not found in all. What a succession of
-chances, [3] or what changes of level must have been brought into play,
-thus to spread these small animals throughout this broken archipelago!
-
-In all parts of Chiloe and Chonos, two very strange birds occur, which
-are allied to, and replace, the Turco and Tapacolo of central Chile.
-One is called by the inhabitants "Cheucau" (Pteroptochos rubecula): it
-frequents the most gloomy and retired spots within the damp forests.
-Sometimes, although its cry may be heard close at hand, let a person
-watch ever so attentively he will not see the cheucau; at other times,
-let him stand motionless and the red-breasted little bird will approach
-within a few feet in the most familiar manner. It then busily hops
-about the entangled mass of rotting cones and branches, with its little
-tail cocked upwards. The cheucau is held in superstitious fear by the
-Chilotans, on account of its strange and varied cries. There are three
-very distinct cries: One is called "chiduco," and is an omen of good;
-another, "huitreu," which is extremely unfavourable; and a third, which
-I have forgotten. These words are given in imitation of the noises;
-and the natives are in some things absolutely governed by them. The
-Chilotans assuredly have chosen a most comical little creature for
-their prophet. An allied species, but rather larger, is called by the
-natives "Guid-guid" (Pteroptochos Tarnii), and by the English the
-barking-bird. This latter name is well given; for I defy any one at
-first to feel certain that a small dog is not yelping somewhere in the
-forest. Just as with the cheucau, a person will sometimes hear the
-bark close by, but in vain many endeavour by watching, and with still
-less chance by beating the bushes, to see the bird; yet at other times
-the guid-guid fearlessly comes near. Its manner of feeding and its
-general habits are very similar to those of the cheucau.
-
-On the coast, [4] a small dusky-coloured bird (Opetiorhynchus
-Patagonicus) is very common. It is remarkable from its quiet habits;
-it lives entirely on the sea-beach, like a sandpiper. Besides these
-birds only few others inhabit this broken land. In my rough notes I
-describe the strange noises, which, although frequently heard within
-these gloomy forests, yet scarcely disturb the general silence. The
-yelping of the guid-guid, and the sudden whew-whew of the cheucau,
-sometimes come from afar off, and sometimes from close at hand; the
-little black wren of Tierra del Fuego occasionally adds its cry; the
-creeper (Oxyurus) follows the intruder screaming and twittering; the
-humming-bird may be seen every now and then darting from side to side,
-and emitting, like an insect, its shrill chirp; lastly, from the top of
-some lofty tree the indistinct but plaintive note of the white-tufted
-tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius) may be noticed. From the great
-preponderance in most countries of certain common genera of birds, such
-as the finches, one feels at first surprised at meeting with the
-peculiar forms above enumerated, as the commonest birds in any
-district. In central Chile two of them, namely, the Oxyurus and
-Scytalopus, occur, although most rarely. When finding, as in this
-case, animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great
-scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were created.
-
-But it should always be recollected, that in some other country perhaps
-they are essential members of society, or at some former period may
-have been so. If America south of 37 degs. were sunk beneath the
-waters of the ocean, these two birds might continue to exist in central
-Chile for a long period, but it is very improbable that their numbers
-would increase. We should then see a case which must inevitably have
-happened with very many animals.
-
-These southern seas are frequented by several species of Petrels: the
-largest kind, Procellaria gigantea, or nelly (quebrantahuesos, or
-break-bones, of the Spaniards), is a common bird, both in the inland
-channels and on the open sea. In its habits and manner of flight, there
-is a very close resemblance with the albatross; and as with the
-albatross, a person may watch it for hours together without seeing on
-what it feeds. The "break-bones" is, however, a rapacious bird, for it
-was observed by some of the officers at Port St. Antonio chasing a
-diver, which tried to escape by diving and flying, but was continually
-struck down, and at last killed by a blow on its head. At Port St.
-Julian these great petrels were seen killing and devouring young gulls.
-A second species (Puffinus cinereus), which is common to Europe, Cape
-Horn, and the coast of Peru, is of much smaller size than the P.
-gigantea, but, like it, of a dirty black colour. It generally
-frequents the inland sounds in very large flocks: I do not think I ever
-saw so many birds of any other sort together, as I once saw of these
-behind the island of Chiloe. Hundreds of thousands flew in an irregular
-line for several hours in one direction. When part of the flock
-settled on the water the surface was blackened, and a noise proceeded
-from them as of human beings talking in the distance.
-
-There are several other species of petrels, but I will only mention one
-other kind, the Pelacanoides Berardi which offers an example of those
-extraordinary cases, of a bird evidently belonging to one well-marked
-family, yet both in its habits and structure allied to a very distinct
-tribe. This bird never leaves the quiet inland sounds. When disturbed
-it dives to a distance, and on coming to the surface, with the same
-movement takes flight. After flying by a rapid movement of its short
-wings for a space in a straight line, it drops, as if struck dead, and
-dives again. The form of its beak and nostrils, length of foot, and
-even the colouring of its plumage, show that this bird is a petrel: on
-the other hand, its short wings and consequent little power of flight,
-its form of body and shape of tail, the absence of a hind toe to its
-foot, its habit of diving, and its choice of situation, make it at
-first doubtful whether its relationship is not equally close with the
-auks. It would undoubtedly be mistaken for an auk, when seen from a
-distance, either on the wing, or when diving and quietly swimming about
-the retired channels of Tierra del Fuego.
-
-[1] Horticultural Transact., vol. v. p. 249. Mr. Caldeleugh sent home
-two tubers, which, being well manured, even the first season produced
-numerous potatoes and an abundance of leaves. See Humboldt's
-interesting discussion on this plant, which it appears was unknown in
-Mexico,--in Polit. Essay on New Spain, book iv. chap. ix.
-
-[2] By sweeping with my insect-net, I procured from these situations a
-considerable number of minute insects, of the family of Staphylinidae,
-and others allied to Pselaphus, and minute Hymenoptera. But the most
-characteristic family in number, both of individuals and species,
-throughout the more open parts of Chiloe and Chonos is that of
-Telephoridae.
-
-[3] It is said that some rapacious birds bring their prey alive to
-their nests. If so, in the course of centuries, every now and then,
-one might escape from the young birds. Some such agency is necessary,
-to account for the distribution of the smaller gnawing animals on
-islands not very near each other.
-
-[4] I may mention, as a proof of how great a difference there is
-between the seasons of the wooded and the open parts of this coast,
-that on September 20th, in lat. 34 degs., these birds had young ones in
-the nest, while among the Chonos Islands, three months later in the
-summer, they were only laying, the difference in latitude between these
-two places being about 700 miles.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
-
-San Carlos, Chiloe--Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously with
-Aconcagua and Coseguina--Ride to Cucao--Impenetrable Forests--Valdivia
-Indians--Earthquake--Concepcion--Great Earthquake--Rocks
-fissured--Appearance of the former Towns--The Sea Black and
-Boiling--Direction of the Vibrations--Stones twisted round--Great
-Wave--Permanent Elevation of the Land--Area of Volcanic Phenomena--The
-connection between the Elevatory and Eruptive Forces--Cause of
-Earthquakes--Slow Elevation of Mountain-chains.
-
-
-ON JANUARY the 15th we sailed from Low's Harbour, and three days
-afterwards anchored a second time in the bay of S. Carlos in Chiloe. On
-the night of the 19th the volcano of Osorno was in action. At midnight
-the sentry observed something like a large star, which gradually
-increased in size till about three o'clock, when it presented a very
-magnificent spectacle. By the aid of a glass, dark objects, in
-constant succession, were seen, in the midst of a great glare of red
-light, to be thrown up and to fall down. The light was sufficient to
-cast on the water a long bright reflection. Large masses of molten
-matter seem very commonly to be cast out of the craters in this part of
-the Cordillera. I was assured that when the Corcovado is in eruption,
-great masses are projected upwards and are seen to burst in the air,
-assuming many fantastical forms, such as trees: their size must be
-immense, for they can be distinguished from the high land behind S.
-Carlos, which is no less than ninety-three miles from the Corcovado. In
-the morning the volcano became tranquil.
-
-I was surprised at hearing afterwards that Aconcagua in Chile, 480
-miles northwards, was in action on the same night; and still more
-surprised to hear that the great eruption of Coseguina (2700 miles
-north of Aconcagua), accompanied by an earthquake felt over a 1000
-miles, also occurred within six hours of this same time. This
-coincidence is the more remarkable, as Coseguina had been dormant for
-twenty-six years; and Aconcagua most rarely shows any signs of action.
-It is difficult even to conjecture whether this coincidence was
-accidental, or shows some subterranean connection. If Vesuvius, Etna,
-and Hecla in Iceland (all three relatively nearer each other than the
-corresponding points in South America), suddenly burst forth in
-eruption on the same night, the coincidence would be thought
-remarkable; but it is far more remarkable in this case, where the three
-vents fall on the same great mountain-chain, and where the vast plains
-along the entire eastern coast, and the upraised recent shells along
-more than 2000 miles on the western coast, show in how equable and
-connected a manner the elevatory forces have acted.
-
-Captain Fitz Roy being anxious that some bearings should be taken on
-the outer coast of Chiloe, it was planned that Mr. King and myself
-should ride to Castro, and thence across the island to the Capella de
-Cucao, situated on the west coast. Having hired horses and a guide, we
-set out on the morning of the 22nd. We had not proceeded far, before
-we were joined by a woman and two boys, who were bent on the same
-journey. Every one on this road acts on a "hail fellow well met"
-fashion; and one may here enjoy the privilege, so rare in South
-America, of travelling without fire-arms. At first, the country
-consisted of a succession of hills and valleys: nearer to Castro it
-became very level. The road itself is a curious affair; it consists in
-its whole length, with the exception of very few parts, of great logs
-of wood, which are either broad and laid longitudinally, or narrow and
-placed transversely. In summer the road is not very bad; but in
-winter, when the wood is rendered slippery from rain, travelling is
-exceedingly difficult. At that time of the year, the ground on each
-side becomes a morass, and is often overflowed: hence it is necessary
-that the longitudinal logs should be fastened down by transverse poles,
-which are pegged on each side into the earth. These pegs render a fall
-from a horse dangerous, as the chance of alighting on one of them is
-not small. It is remarkable, however, how active custom has made the
-Chilotan horses. In crossing bad parts, where the logs had been
-displaced, they skipped from one to the other, almost with the
-quickness and certainty of a dog. On both hands the road is bordered
-by the lofty forest-trees, with their bases matted together by canes.
-When occasionally a long reach of this avenue could be beheld, it
-presented a curious scene of uniformity: the white line of logs,
-narrowing in perspective, became hidden by the gloomy forest, or
-terminated in a zigzag which ascended some steep hill.
-
-Although the distance from S. Carlos to Castro is only twelve leagues
-in a straight line, the formation of the road must have been a great
-labour. I was told that several people had formerly lost their lives
-in attempting to cross the forest. The first who succeeded was an
-Indian, who cut his way through the canes in eight days, and reached S.
-Carlos: he was rewarded by the Spanish government with a grant of land.
-During the summer, many of the Indians wander about the forests (but
-chiefly in the higher parts, where the woods are not quite so thick) in
-search of the half-wild cattle which live on the leaves of the cane and
-certain trees. It was one of these huntsmen who by chance discovered,
-a few years since, an English vessel, which had been wrecked on the
-outer coast. The crew were beginning to fail in provisions, and it is
-not probable that, without the aid of this man, they would ever have
-extricated themselves from these scarcely penetrable woods. As it was,
-one seaman died on the march, from fatigue. The Indians in these
-excursions steer by the sun; so that if there is a continuance of
-cloudy weather, they can not travel.
-
-The day was beautiful, and the number of trees which were in full
-flower perfumed the air; yet even this could hardly dissipate the
-effects of the gloomy dampness of the forest. Moreover, the many dead
-trunks that stand like skeletons, never fail to give to these primeval
-woods a character of solemnity, absent in those of countries long
-civilized. Shortly after sunset we bivouacked for the night. Our
-female companion, who was rather good-looking, belonged to one of the
-most respectable families in Castro: she rode, however, astride, and
-without shoes or stockings. I was surprised at the total want of pride
-shown by her and her brother. They brought food with them, but at all
-our meals sat watching Mr. King and myself whilst eating, till we were
-fairly shamed into feeding the whole party. The night was cloudless;
-and while lying in our beds, we enjoyed the sight (and it is a high
-enjoyment) of the multitude of stars which illumined the darkness of
-the forest.
-
-January 23rd.--We rose early in the morning, and reached the pretty
-quiet town of Castro by two o'clock. The old governor had died since
-our last visit, and a Chileno was acting in his place. We had a letter
-of introduction to Don Pedro, whom we found exceedingly hospitable and
-kind, and more disinterested than is usual on this side of the
-continent. The next day Don Pedro procured us fresh horses, and
-offered to accompany us himself. We proceeded to the south--generally
-following the coast, and passing through several hamlets, each with its
-large barn-like chapel built of wood. At Vilipilli, Don Pedro asked
-the commandant to give us a guide to Cucao. The old gentleman offered
-to come himself; but for a long time nothing would persuade him that
-two Englishmen really wished to go to such an out-of-the-way place as
-Cucao. We were thus accompanied by the two greatest aristocrats in the
-country, as was plainly to be seen in the manner of all the poorer
-Indians towards them. At Chonchi we struck across the island,
-following intricate winding paths, sometimes passing through
-magnificent forests, and sometimes through pretty cleared spots,
-abounding with corn and potato crops. This undulating woody country,
-partially cultivated, reminded me of the wilder parts of England, and
-therefore had to my eye a most fascinating aspect. At Vilinco, which
-is situated on the borders of the lake of Cucao, only a few fields were
-cleared; and all the inhabitants appeared to be Indians. This lake is
-twelve miles long, and runs in an east and west direction. From local
-circumstances, the sea-breeze blows very regularly during the day, and
-during the night it falls calm: this has given rise to strange
-exaggerations, for the phenomenon, as described to us at S. Carlos, was
-quite a prodigy.
-
-The road to Cucao was so very bad that we determined to embark in a
-_periagua_. The commandant, in the most authoritative manner, ordered
-six Indians to get ready to pull us over, without deigning to tell them
-whether they would be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but
-the crew were still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got
-into a boat together. They pulled, however, very well and cheerfully.
-The stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered strange cries, much
-after the fashion of a pig-driver driving his pigs. We started with a
-light breeze against us, but yet reached the Capella de Cucao before it
-was late. The country on each side of the lake was one unbroken
-forest. In the same periagua with us, a cow was embarked. To get so
-large an animal into a small boat appears at first a difficulty, but
-the Indians managed it in a minute. They brought the cow alongside the
-boat, which was heeled towards her; then placing two oars under her
-belly, with their ends resting on the gunwale, by the aid of these
-levers they fairly tumbled the poor beast heels over head into the
-bottom of the boat, and then lashed her down with ropes. At Cucao we
-found an uninhabited hovel (which is the residence of the padre when he
-pays this Capella a visit), where, lighting a fire, we cooked our
-supper, and were very comfortable.
-
-The district of Cucao is the only inhabited part on the whole west
-coast of Chiloe. It contains about thirty or forty Indian families,
-who are scattered along four or five miles of the shore. They are very
-much secluded from the rest of Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of
-commerce, except sometimes in a little oil, which they get from
-seal-blubber. They are tolerably dressed in clothes of their own
-manufacture, and they have plenty to eat. They seemed, however,
-discontented, yet humble to a degree which it was quite painful to
-witness. These feelings are, I think, chiefly to be attributed to the
-harsh and authoritative manner in which they are treated by their
-rulers. Our companions, although so very civil to us, behaved to the
-poor Indians as if they had been slaves, rather than free men. They
-ordered provisions and the use of their horses, without ever
-condescending to say how much, or indeed whether the owners should be
-paid at all. In the morning, being left alone with these poor people,
-we soon ingratiated ourselves by presents of cigars and mate. A lump
-of white sugar was divided between all present, and tasted with the
-greatest curiosity. The Indians ended all their complaints by saying,
-"And it is only because we are poor Indians, and know nothing; but it
-was not so when we had a King."
-
-The next day after breakfast, we rode a few miles northward to Punta
-Huantamo. The road lay along a very broad beach, on which, even after
-so many fine days, a terrible surf was breaking. I was assured that
-after a heavy gale, the roar can be heard at night even at Castro, a
-distance of no less than twenty-one sea-miles across a hilly and wooded
-country. We had some difficulty in reaching the point, owing to the
-intolerably bad paths; for everywhere in the shade the ground soon
-becomes a perfect quagmire. The point itself is a bold rocky hill. It
-is covered by a plant allied, I believe, to Bromelia, and called by the
-inhabitants Chepones. In scrambling through the beds, our hands were
-very much scratched. I was amused by observing the precaution our
-Indian guide took, in turning up his trousers, thinking that they were
-more delicate than his own hard skin. This plant bears a fruit, in
-shape like an artichoke, in which a number of seed-vessels are packed:
-these contain a pleasant sweet pulp, here much esteemed. I saw at
-Low's Harbour the Chilotans making chichi, or cider, with this fruit:
-so true is it, as Humboldt remarks, that almost everywhere man finds
-means of preparing some kind of beverage from the vegetable kingdom.
-The savages, however, of Tierra del Fuego, and I believe of Australia,
-have not advanced thus far in the arts.
-
-The coast to the north of Punta Huantamo is exceedingly rugged and
-broken, and is fronted by many breakers, on which the sea is eternally
-roaring. Mr. King and myself were anxious to return, if it had been
-possible, on foot along this coast; but even the Indians said it was
-quite impracticable. We were told that men have crossed by striking
-directly through the woods from Cucao to S. Carlos, but never by the
-coast. On these expeditions, the Indians carry with them only roasted
-corn, and of this they eat sparingly twice a day.
-
-26th.--Re-embarking in the periagua, we returned across the lake, and
-then mounted our horses. The whole of Chiloe took advantage of this
-week of unusually fine weather, to clear the ground by burning. In
-every direction volumes of smoke were curling upwards. Although the
-inhabitants were so assiduous in setting fire to every part of the
-wood, yet I did not see a single fire which they had succeeded in
-making extensive. We dined with our friend the commandant, and did not
-reach Castro till after dark. The next morning we started very early.
-After having ridden for some time, we obtained from the brow of a steep
-hill an extensive view (and it is a rare thing on this road) of the
-great forest. Over the horizon of trees, the volcano of Corcovado, and
-the great flat-topped one to the north, stood out in proud
-pre-eminence: scarcely another peak in the long range showed its snowy
-summit. I hope it will be long before I forget this farewell view of
-the magnificent Cordillera fronting Chiloe. At night we bivouacked
-under a cloudless sky, and the next morning reached S. Carlos. We
-arrived on the right day, for before evening heavy rain commenced.
-
-February 4th.--Sailed from Chiloe. During the last week I made several
-short excursions. One was to examine a great bed of now-existing
-shells, elevated 350 feet above the level of the sea: from among these
-shells, large forest-trees were growing. Another ride was to P.
-Huechucucuy. I had with me a guide who knew the country far too well;
-for he would pertinaciously tell me endless Indian names for every
-little point, rivulet, and creek. In the same manner as in Tierra del
-Fuego, the Indian language appears singularly well adapted for
-attaching names to the most trivial features of the land. I believe
-every one was glad to say farewell to Chiloe; yet if we could forget
-the gloom and ceaseless rain of winter, Chiloe might pass for a
-charming island. There is also something very attractive in the
-simplicity and humble politeness of the poor inhabitants.
-
-We steered northward along shore, but owing to thick weather did not
-reach Valdivia till the night of the 8th. The next morning the boat
-proceeded to the town, which is distant about ten miles. We followed
-the course of the river, occasionally passing a few hovels, and patches
-of ground cleared out of the otherwise unbroken forest; and sometimes
-meeting a canoe with an Indian family. The town is situated on the low
-banks of the stream, and is so completely buried in a wood of
-apple-trees that the streets are merely paths in an orchard. I have
-never seen any country, where apple-trees appeared to thrive so well as
-in this damp part of South America: on the borders of the roads there
-were many young trees evidently self-grown. In Chiloe the inhabitants
-possess a marvellously short method of making an orchard. At the lower
-part of almost every branch, small, conical, brown, wrinkled points
-project: these are always ready to change into roots, as may sometimes
-be seen, where any mud has been accidentally splashed against the tree.
-A branch as thick as a man's thigh is chosen in the early spring, and
-is cut off just beneath a group of these points, all the smaller
-branches are lopped off, and it is then placed about two feet deep in
-the ground. During the ensuing summer the stump throws out long
-shoots, and sometimes even bears fruit: I was shown one which had
-produced as many as twenty-three apples, but this was thought very
-unusual. In the third season the stump is changed (as I have myself
-seen) into a well-wooded tree, loaded with fruit. An old man near
-Valdivia illustrated his motto, "Necesidad es la madre del invencion,"
-by giving an account of the several useful things he manufactured from
-his apples. After making cider, and likewise wine, he extracted from
-the refuse a white and finely flavoured spirit; by another process he
-procured a sweet treacle, or, as he called it, honey. His children and
-pigs seemed almost to live, during this season of the year, in his
-orchard.
-
-February 11th.--I set out with a guide on a short ride, in which,
-however, I managed to see singularly little, either of the geology of
-the country or of its inhabitants. There is not much cleared land near
-Valdivia: after crossing a river at the distance of a few miles, we
-entered the forest, and then passed only one miserable hovel, before
-reaching our sleeping-place for the night. The short difference in
-latitude, of 150 miles, has given a new aspect to the forest compared
-with that of Chiloe. This is owing to a slightly different proportion
-in the kinds of trees. The evergreens do not appear to be quite so
-numerous, and the forest in consequence has a brighter tint. As in
-Chiloe, the lower parts are matted together by canes: here also another
-kind (resembling the bamboo of Brazil and about twenty feet in height)
-grows in clusters, and ornaments the banks of some of the streams in a
-very pretty manner. It is with this plant that the Indians make their
-chuzos, or long tapering spears. Our resting-house was so dirty that I
-preferred sleeping outside: on these journeys the first night is
-generally very uncomfortable, because one is not accustomed to the
-tickling and biting of the fleas. I am sure, in the morning, there was
-not a space on my legs the size of a shilling which had not its little
-red mark where the flea had feasted.
-
-12th.--We continued to ride through the uncleared forest; only
-occasionally meeting an Indian on horseback, or a troop of fine mules
-bringing alerce-planks and corn from the southern plains. In the
-afternoon one of the horses knocked up: we were then on a brow of a
-hill, which commanded a fine view of the Llanos. The view of these
-open plains was very refreshing, after being hemmed in and buried in
-the wilderness of trees. The uniformity of a forest soon becomes very
-wearisome. This west coast makes me remember with pleasure the free,
-unbounded plains of Patagonia; yet, with the true spirit of
-contradiction, I cannot forget how sublime is the silence of the
-forest. The Llanos are the most fertile and thickly peopled parts of
-the country, as they possess the immense advantage of being nearly free
-from trees. Before leaving the forest we crossed some flat little
-lawns, around which single trees stood, as in an English park: I have
-often noticed with surprise, in wooded undulatory districts, that the
-quite level parts have been destitute of trees. On account of the
-tired horse, I determined to stop at the Mission of Cudico, to the
-friar of which I had a letter of introduction. Cudico is an
-intermediate district between the forest and the Llanos. There are a
-good many cottages, with patches of corn and potatoes, nearly all
-belonging to Indians. The tribes dependent on Valdivia are "reducidos y
-cristianos." The Indians farther northward, about Arauco and Imperial,
-are still very wild, and not converted; but they have all much
-intercourse with the Spaniards. The padre said that the Christian
-Indians did not much like coming to mass, but that otherwise they
-showed respect for religion. The greatest difficulty is in making them
-observe the ceremonies of marriage. The wild Indians take as many
-wives as they can support, and a cacique will sometimes have more than
-ten: on entering his house, the number may be told by that of the
-separate fires. Each wife lives a week in turn with the cacique; but
-all are employed in weaving ponchos, etc., for his profit. To be the
-wife of a cacique, is an honour much sought after by the Indian women.
-
-The men of all these tribes wear a coarse woolen poncho: those south of
-Valdivia wear short trousers, and those north of it a petticoat, like
-the chilipa of the Gauchos. All have their long hair bound by a
-scarlet fillet, but with no other covering on their heads. These
-Indians are good-sized men; their cheek-bones are prominent, and in
-general appearance they resemble the great American family to which
-they belong; but their physiognomy seemed to me to be slightly
-different from that of any other tribe which I had before seen. Their
-expression is generally grave, and even austere, and possesses much
-character: this may pass either for honest bluntness or fierce
-determination. The long black hair, the grave and much-lined features,
-and the dark complexion, called to my mind old portraits of James I. On
-the road we met with none of that humble politeness so universal in
-Chiloe. Some gave their "mari-mari" (good morning) with promptness,
-but the greater number did not seem inclined to offer any salute. This
-independence of manners is probably a consequence of their long wars,
-and the repeated victories which they alone, of all the tribes in
-America, have gained over the Spaniards.
-
-I spent the evening very pleasantly, talking with the padre. He was
-exceedingly kind and hospitable; and coming from Santiago, had
-contrived to surround himself with some few comforts. Being a man of
-some little education, he bitterly complained of the total want of
-society. With no particular zeal for religion, no business or pursuit,
-how completely must this man's life be wasted! The next day, on our
-return, we met seven very wild-looking Indians, of whom some were
-caciques that had just received from the Chilian government their
-yearly small stipend for having long remained faithful. They were
-fine-looking men, and they rode one after the other, with most gloomy
-faces. An old cacique, who headed them, had been, I suppose, more
-excessively drunk than the rest, for he seemed extremely grave and very
-crabbed. Shortly before this, two Indians joined us, who were
-travelling from a distant mission to Valdivia concerning some lawsuit.
-One was a good-humoured old man, but from his wrinkled beardless face
-looked more like an old woman than a man. I frequently presented both
-of them with cigars; and though ready to receive them, and I dare say
-grateful, they would hardly condescend to thank me. A Chilotan Indian
-would have taken off his hat, and given his "Dios le page!" The
-travelling was very tedious, both from the badness of the roads, and
-from the number of great fallen trees, which it was necessary either to
-leap over or to avoid by making long circuits. We slept on the road,
-and next morning reached Valdivia, whence I proceeded on board.
-
-A few days afterwards I crossed the bay with a party of officers, and
-landed near the fort called Niebla. The buildings were in a most
-ruinous state, and the gun-carriages quite rotten. Mr. Wickham
-remarked to the commanding officer, that with one discharge they would
-certainly all fall to pieces. The poor man, trying to put a good face
-upon it, gravely replied, "No, I am sure, sir, they would stand two!"
-The Spaniards must have intended to have made this place impregnable.
-There is now lying in the middle of the courtyard a little mountain of
-mortar, which rivals in hardness the rock on which it is placed. It
-was brought from Chile, and cost 7000 dollars. The revolution having
-broken out, prevented its being applied to any purpose, and now it
-remains a monument of the fallen greatness of Spain.
-
-I wanted to go to a house about a mile and a half distant, but my guide
-said it was quite impossible to penetrate the wood in a straight line.
-He offered, however, to lead me, by following obscure cattle-tracks,
-the shortest way: the walk, nevertheless, took no less than three
-hours! This man is employed in hunting strayed cattle; yet, well as he
-must know the woods, he was not long since lost for two whole days, and
-had nothing to eat. These facts convey a good idea of the
-impracticability of the forests of these countries. A question often
-occurred to me--how long does any vestige of a fallen tree remain? This
-man showed me one which a party of fugitive royalists had cut down
-fourteen years ago; and taking this as a criterion, I should think a
-bole a foot and a half in diameter would in thirty years be changed
-into a heap of mould.
-
-February 20th.--This day has been memorable in the annals of Valdivia,
-for the most severe earthquake experienced by the oldest inhabitant. I
-happened to be on shore, and was lying down in the wood to rest myself.
-It came on suddenly, and lasted two minutes, but the time appeared much
-longer. The rocking of the ground was very sensible. The undulations
-appeared to my companion and myself to come from due east, whilst
-others thought they proceeded from south-west: this shows how difficult
-it sometimes is to perceive the directions of the vibrations. There
-was no difficulty in standing upright, but the motion made me almost
-giddy: it was something like the movement of a vessel in a little
-cross-ripple, or still more like that felt by a person skating over
-thin ice, which bends under the weight of his body. A bad earthquake at
-once destroys our oldest associations: the earth, the very emblem of
-solidity, has moved beneath our feet like a thin crust over a
-fluid;--one second of time has created in the mind a strange idea of
-insecurity, which hours of reflection would not have produced. In the
-forest, as a breeze moved the trees, I felt only the earth tremble, but
-saw no other effect. Captain Fitz Roy and some officers were at the
-town during the shock, and there the scene was more striking; for
-although the houses, from being built of wood, did not fall, they were
-violently shaken, and the boards creaked and rattled together. The
-people rushed out of doors in the greatest alarm. It is these
-accompaniments that create that perfect horror of earthquakes,
-experienced by all who have thus seen, as well as felt, their effects.
-Within the forest it was a deeply interesting, but by no means an
-awe-exciting phenomenon. The tides were very curiously affected. The
-great shock took place at the time of low water; and an old woman who
-was on the beach told me that the water flowed very quickly, but not in
-great waves, to high-water mark, and then as quickly returned to its
-proper level; this was also evident by the line of wet sand. The same
-kind of quick but quiet movement in the tide happened a few years since
-at Chiloe, during a slight earthquake, and created much causeless
-alarm. In the course of the evening there were many weaker shocks,
-which seemed to produce in the harbour the most complicated currents,
-and some of great strength.
-
-
-March 4th.--We entered the harbour of Concepcion. While the ship was
-beating up to the anchorage, I landed on the island of Quiriquina. The
-mayor-domo of the estate quickly rode down to tell me the terrible news
-of the great earthquake of the 20th:--"That not a house in Concepcion
-or Talcahuano (the port) was standing; that seventy villages were
-destroyed; and that a great wave had almost washed away the ruins of
-Talcahuano." Of this latter statement I soon saw abundant proofs--the
-whole coast being strewed over with timber and furniture as if a
-thousand ships had been wrecked. Besides chairs, tables, book-shelves,
-etc., in great numbers, there were several roofs of cottages, which had
-been transported almost whole. The storehouses at Talcahuano had been
-burst open, and great bags of cotton, yerba, and other valuable
-merchandise were scattered on the shore. During my walk round the
-island, I observed that numerous fragments of rock, which, from the
-marine productions adhering to them, must recently have been lying in
-deep water, had been cast up high on the beach; one of these was six
-feet long, three broad, and two thick.
-
-The island itself as plainly showed the overwhelming power of the
-earthquake, as the beach did that of the consequent great wave. The
-ground in many parts was fissured in north and south lines, perhaps
-caused by the yielding of the parallel and steep sides of this narrow
-island. Some of the fissures near the cliffs were a yard wide. Many
-enormous masses had already fallen on the beach; and the inhabitants
-thought that when the rains commenced far greater slips would happen.
-The effect of the vibration on the hard primary slate, which composes
-the foundation of the island, was still more curious: the superficial
-parts of some narrow ridges were as completely shivered as if they had
-been blasted by gunpowder. This effect, which was rendered conspicuous
-by the fresh fractures and displaced soil, must be confined to near the
-surface, for otherwise there would not exist a block of solid rock
-throughout Chile; nor is this improbable, as it is known that the
-surface of a vibrating body is affected differently from the central
-part. It is, perhaps, owing to this same reason, that earthquakes do
-not cause quite such terrific havoc within deep mines as would be
-expected. I believe this convulsion has been more effectual in
-lessening the size of the island of Quiriquina, than the ordinary
-wear-and-tear of the sea and weather during the course of a whole
-century.
-
-The next day I landed at Talcahuano, and afterwards rode to Concepcion.
-Both towns presented the most awful yet interesting spectacle I ever
-beheld. To a person who had formerly known them, it possibly might have
-been still more impressive; for the ruins were so mingled together, and
-the whole scene possessed so little the air of a habitable place, that
-it was scarcely possible to imagine its former condition. The
-earthquake commenced at half-past eleven o'clock in the forenoon. If
-it had happened in the middle of the night, the greater number of the
-inhabitants (which in this one province must amount to many thousands)
-must have perished, instead of less than a hundred: as it was, the
-invariable practice of running out of doors at the first trembling of
-the ground, alone saved them. In Concepcion each house, or row of
-houses, stood by itself, a heap or line of ruins; but in Talcahuano,
-owing to the great wave, little more than one layer of bricks, tiles,
-and timber with here and there part of a wall left standing, could be
-distinguished. From this circumstance Concepcion, although not so
-completely desolated, was a more terrible, and if I may so call it,
-picturesque sight. The first shock was very sudden. The mayor-domo at
-Quiriquina told me, that the first notice he received of it, was
-finding both the horse he rode and himself, rolling together on the
-ground. Rising up, he was again thrown down. He also told me that
-some cows which were standing on the steep side of the island were
-rolled into the sea. The great wave caused the destruction of many
-cattle; on one low island near the head of the bay, seventy animals
-were washed off and drowned. It is generally thought that this has
-been the worst earthquake ever recorded in Chile; but as the very
-severe ones occur only after long intervals, this cannot easily be
-known; nor indeed would a much worse shock have made any difference,
-for the ruin was now complete. Innumerable small tremblings followed
-the great earthquake, and within the first twelve days no less than
-three hundred were counted.
-
-After viewing Concepcion, I cannot understand how the greater number of
-inhabitants escaped unhurt. The houses in many parts fell outwards;
-thus forming in the middle of the streets little hillocks of brickwork
-and rubbish. Mr. Rouse, the English consul, told us that he was at
-breakfast when the first movement warned him to run out. He had
-scarcely reached the middle of the courtyard, when one side of his
-house came thundering down. He retained presence of mind to remember,
-that if he once got on the top of that part which had already fallen,
-he would be safe. Not being able from the motion of the ground to
-stand, he crawled up on his hands and knees; and no sooner had he
-ascended this little eminence, than the other side of the house fell
-in, the great beams sweeping close in front of his head. With his eyes
-blinded, and his mouth choked with the cloud of dust which darkened the
-sky, at last he gained the street. As shock succeeded shock, at the
-interval of a few minutes, no one dared approach the shattered ruins,
-and no one knew whether his dearest friends and relations were not
-perishing from the want of help. Those who had saved any property were
-obliged to keep a constant watch, for thieves prowled about, and at
-each little trembling of the ground, with one hand they beat their
-breasts and cried "Misericordia!" and then with the other filched what
-they could from the ruins. The thatched roofs fell over the fires, and
-flames burst forth in all parts. Hundreds knew themselves ruined, and
-few had the means of providing food for the day.
-
-Earthquakes alone are sufficient to destroy the prosperity of any
-country. If beneath England the now inert subterranean forces should
-exert those powers, which most assuredly in former geological ages they
-have exerted, how completely would the entire condition of the country
-be changed! What would become of the lofty houses, thickly packed
-cities, great manufactories, the beautiful public and private edifices?
-If the new period of disturbance were first to commence by some great
-earthquake in the dead of the night, how terrific would be the carnage!
-England would at once be bankrupt; all papers, records, and accounts
-would from that moment be lost. Government being unable to collect the
-taxes, and failing to maintain its authority, the hand of violence and
-rapine would remain uncontrolled. In every large town famine would go
-forth, pestilence and death following in its train.
-
-Shortly after the shock, a great wave was seen from the distance of
-three or four miles, approaching in the middle of the bay with a smooth
-outline; but along the shore it tore up cottages and trees, as it swept
-onwards with irresistible force. At the head of the bay it broke in a
-fearful line of white breakers, which rushed up to a height of 23
-vertical feet above the highest spring-tides. Their force must have
-been prodigious; for at the Fort a cannon with its carriage, estimated
-at four tons in weight, was moved 15 feet inwards. A schooner was left
-in the midst of the ruins, 200 yards from the beach. The first wave
-was followed by two others, which in their retreat carried away a vast
-wreck of floating objects. In one part of the bay, a ship was pitched
-high and dry on shore, was carried off, again driven on shore, and
-again carried off. In another part, two large vessels anchored near
-together were whirled about, and their cables were thrice wound round
-each other; though anchored at a depth of 36 feet, they were for some
-minutes aground. The great wave must have travelled slowly, for the
-inhabitants of Talcahuano had time to run up the hills behind the town;
-and some sailors pulled out seaward, trusting successfully to their
-boat riding securely over the swell, if they could reach it before it
-broke. One old woman with a little boy, four or five years old, ran
-into a boat, but there was nobody to row it out: the boat was
-consequently dashed against an anchor and cut in twain; the old woman
-was drowned, but the child was picked up some hours afterwards clinging
-to the wreck. Pools of salt-water were still standing amidst the ruins
-of the houses, and children, making boats with old tables and chairs,
-appeared as happy as their parents were miserable. It was, however,
-exceedingly interesting to observe, how much more active and cheerful
-all appeared than could have been expected. It was remarked with much
-truth, that from the destruction being universal, no one individual was
-humbled more than another, or could suspect his friends of
-coldness--that most grievous result of the loss of wealth. Mr. Rouse,
-and a large party whom he kindly took under his protection, lived for
-the first week in a garden beneath some apple-trees. At first they were
-as merry as if it had been a picnic; but soon afterwards heavy rain
-caused much discomfort, for they were absolutely without shelter.
-
-In Captain Fitz Roy's excellent account of the earthquake, it is said
-that two explosions, one like a column of smoke and another like the
-blowing of a great whale, were seen in the bay. The water also
-appeared everywhere to be boiling; and it "became black, and exhaled a
-most disagreeable sulphureous smell." These latter circumstances were
-observed in the Bay of Valparaiso during the earthquake of 1822; they
-may, I think, be accounted for, by the disturbance of the mud at the
-bottom of the sea containing organic matter in decay. In the Bay of
-Callao, during a calm day, I noticed, that as the ship dragged her
-cable over the bottom, its course was marked by a line of bubbles. The
-lower orders in Talcahuano thought that the earthquake was caused by
-some old Indian women, who two years ago, being offended, stopped the
-volcano of Antuco. This silly belief is curious, because it shows that
-experience has taught them to observe, that there exists a relation
-between the suppressed action of the volcanos, and the trembling of the
-ground. It was necessary to apply the witchcraft to the point where
-their perception of cause and effect failed; and this was the closing
-of the volcanic vent. This belief is the more singular in this
-particular instance, because, according to Captain Fitz Roy, there is
-reason to believe that Antuco was noways affected.
-
-The town of Concepcion was built in the usual Spanish fashion, with all
-the streets running at right angles to each other; one set ranging S.W.
-by W., and the other set N.W. by N. The walls in the former direction
-certainly stood better than those in the latter; the greater number of
-the masses of brickwork were thrown down towards the N.E. Both these
-circumstances perfectly agree with the general idea, of the undulations
-having come from the S.W., in which quarter subterranean noises were
-also heard; for it is evident that the walls running S.W. and N.E.
-which presented their ends to the point whence the undulations came,
-would be much less likely to fall than those walls which, running N.W.
-and S.E., must in their whole lengths have been at the same instant
-thrown out of the perpendicular; for the undulations, coming from the
-S.W., must have extended in N.W. and S.E. waves, as they passed under
-the foundations. This may be illustrated by placing books edgeways on
-a carpet, and then, after the manner suggested by Michell, imitating
-the undulations of an earthquake: it will be found that they fall with
-more or less readiness, according as their direction more or less
-nearly coincides with the line of the waves. The fissures in the
-ground generally, though not uniformly, extended in a S.E. and N.W.
-direction, and therefore corresponded to the lines of undulation or of
-principal flexure. Bearing in mind all these circumstances, which so
-clearly point to the S.W. as the chief focus of disturbance, it is a
-very interesting fact that the island of S. Maria, situated in that
-quarter, was, during the general uplifting of the land, raised to
-nearly three times the height of any other part of the coast.
-
-The different resistance offered by the walls, according to their
-direction, was well exemplified in the case of the Cathedral. The side
-which fronted the N.E. presented a grand pile of ruins, in the midst of
-which door-cases and masses of timber stood up, as if floating in a
-stream. Some of the angular blocks of brickwork were of great
-dimensions; and they were rolled to a distance on the level plaza, like
-fragments of rock at the base of some high mountain. The side walls
-(running S.W. and N.E.), though exceedingly fractured, yet remained
-standing; but the vast buttresses (at right angles to them, and
-therefore parallel to the walls that fell) were in many cases cut clean
-off, as if by a chisel, and hurled to the ground. Some square
-ornaments on the coping of these same walls, were moved by the
-earthquake into a diagonal position. A similar circumstance was
-observed after an earthquake at Valparaiso, Calabria, and other places,
-including some of the ancient Greek temples. [1] This twisting
-displacement, at first appears to indicate a vorticose movement beneath
-each point thus affected; but this is highly improbable. May it not be
-caused by a tendency in each stone to arrange itself in some particular
-position, with respect to the lines of vibration,--in a manner somewhat
-similar to pins on a sheet of paper when shaken? Generally speaking,
-arched doorways or windows stood much better than any other part of the
-buildings. Nevertheless, a poor lame old man, who had been in the
-habit, during trifling shocks, of crawling to a certain doorway, was
-this time crushed to pieces.
-
-I have not attempted to give any detailed description of the appearance
-of Concepcion, for I feel that it is quite impossible to convey the
-mingled feelings which I experienced. Several of the officers visited
-it before me, but their strongest language failed to give a just idea
-of the scene of desolation. It is a bitter and humiliating thing to
-see works, which have cost man so much time and labour, overthrown in
-one minute; yet compassion for the inhabitants was almost instantly
-banished, by the surprise in seeing a state of things produced in a
-moment of time, which one was accustomed to attribute to a succession
-of ages. In my opinion, we have scarcely beheld, since leaving
-England, any sight so deeply interesting.
-
-In almost every severe earthquake, the neighbouring waters of the sea
-are said to have been greatly agitated. The disturbance seems
-generally, as in the case of Concepcion, to have been of two kinds:
-first, at the instant of the shock, the water swells high up on the
-beach with a gentle motion, and then as quietly retreats; secondly,
-some time afterwards, the whole body of the sea retires from the coast,
-and then returns in waves of overwhelming force. The first movement
-seems to be an immediate consequence of the earthquake affecting
-differently a fluid and a solid, so that their respective levels are
-slightly deranged: but the second case is a far more important
-phenomenon. During most earthquakes, and especially during those on
-the west coast of America, it is certain that the first great movement
-of the waters has been a retirement. Some authors have attempted to
-explain this, by supposing that the water retains its level, whilst the
-land oscillates upwards; but surely the water close to the land, even
-on a rather steep coast, would partake of the motion of the bottom:
-moreover, as urged by Mr. Lyell, similar movements of the sea have
-occurred at islands far distant from the chief line of disturbance, as
-was the case with Juan Fernandez during this earthquake, and with
-Madeira during the famous Lisbon shock. I suspect (but the subject is
-a very obscure one) that a wave, however produced, first draws the
-water from the shore, on which it is advancing to break: I have
-observed that this happens with the little waves from the paddles of a
-steam-boat. It is remarkable that whilst Talcahuano and Callao (near
-Lima), both situated at the head of large shallow bays, have suffered
-during every severe earthquake from great waves, Valparaiso, seated
-close to the edge of profoundly deep water, has never been overwhelmed,
-though so often shaken by the severest shocks. From the great wave not
-immediately following the earthquake, but sometimes after the interval
-of even half an hour, and from distant islands being affected similarly
-with the coasts near the focus of the disturbance, it appears that the
-wave first rises in the offing; and as this is of general occurrence,
-the cause must be general: I suspect we must look to the line, where
-the less disturbed waters of the deep ocean join the water nearer the
-coast, which has partaken of the movements of the land, as the place
-where the great wave is first generated; it would also appear that the
-wave is larger or smaller, according to the extent of shoal water which
-has been agitated together with the bottom on which it rested.
-
-
-The most remarkable effect of this earthquake was the permanent
-elevation of the land, it would probably be far more correct to speak
-of it as the cause. There can be no doubt that the land round the Bay
-of Concepcion was upraised two or three feet; but it deserves notice,
-that owing to the wave having obliterated the old lines of tidal action
-on the sloping sandy shores, I could discover no evidence of this fact,
-except in the united testimony of the inhabitants, that one little
-rocky shoal, now exposed, was formerly covered with water. At the
-island of S. Maria (about thirty miles distant) the elevation was
-greater; on one part, Captain Fitz Roy founds beds of putrid
-mussel-shells _still adhering to the rocks_, ten feet above high-water
-mark: the inhabitants had formerly dived at lower-water spring-tides
-for these shells. The elevation of this province is particularly
-interesting, from its having been the theatre of several other violent
-earthquakes, and from the vast numbers of sea-shells scattered over the
-land, up to a height of certainly 600, and I believe, of 1000 feet. At
-Valparaiso, as I have remarked, similar shells are found at the height
-of 1300 feet: it is hardly possible to doubt that this great elevation
-has been effected by successive small uprisings, such as that which
-accompanied or caused the earthquake of this year, and likewise by an
-insensibly slow rise, which is certainly in progress on some parts of
-this coast.
-
-The island of Juan Fernandez, 360 miles to the N.E., was, at the time
-of the great shock of the 20th, violently shaken, so that the trees
-beat against each other, and a volcano burst forth under water close to
-the shore: these facts are remarkable because this island, during the
-earthquake of 1751, was then also affected more violently than other
-places at an equal distance from Concepcion, and this seems to show
-some subterranean connection between these two points. Chiloe, about
-340 miles southward of Concepcion, appears to have been shaken more
-strongly than the intermediate district of Valdivia, where the volcano
-of Villarica was noways affected, whilst in the Cordillera in front of
-Chiloe, two of the volcanos burst-forth at the same instant in violent
-action. These two volcanos, and some neighbouring ones, continued for
-a long time in eruption, and ten months afterwards were again
-influenced by an earthquake at Concepcion. Some men, cutting wood near
-the base of one of these volcanos, did not perceive the shock of the
-20th, although the whole surrounding Province was then trembling; here
-we have an eruption relieving and taking the place of an earthquake, as
-would have happened at Concepcion, according to the belief of the lower
-orders, if the volcano at Antuco had not been closed by witchcraft. Two
-years and three-quarters afterwards, Valdivia and Chiloe were again
-shaken, more violently than on the 20th, and an island in the Chonos
-Archipelago was permanently elevated more than eight feet. It will give
-a better idea of the scale of these phenomena, if (as in the case of
-the glaciers) we suppose them to have taken place at corresponding
-distances in Europe:--then would the land from the North Sea to the
-Mediterranean have been violently shaken, and at the same instant of
-time a large tract of the eastern coast of England would have been
-permanently elevated, together with some outlying islands,--a train of
-volcanos on the coast of Holland would have burst forth in action, and
-an eruption taken place at the bottom of the sea, near the northern
-extremity of Ireland--and lastly, the ancient vents of Auvergne,
-Cantal, and Mont d'Or would each have sent up to the sky a dark column
-of smoke, and have long remained in fierce action. Two years and
-three-quarters afterwards, France, from its centre to the English
-Channel, would have been again desolated by an earthquake and an island
-permanently upraised in the Mediterranean.
-
-The space, from under which volcanic matter on the 20th was actually
-erupted, is 720 miles in one line, and 400 miles in another line at
-right angles to the first: hence, in all probability, a subterranean
-lake of lava is here stretched out, of nearly double the area of the
-Black Sea. From the intimate and complicated manner in which the
-elevatory and eruptive forces were shown to be connected during this
-train of phenomena, we may confidently come to the conclusion, that the
-forces which slowly and by little starts uplift continents, and those
-which at successive periods pour forth volcanic matter from open
-orifices, are identical. From many reasons, I believe that the
-frequent quakings of the earth on this line of coast are caused by the
-rending of the strata, necessarily consequent on the tension of the
-land when upraised, and their injection by fluidified rock. This
-rending and injection would, if repeated often enough (and we know that
-earthquakes repeatedly affect the same areas in the same manner), form
-a chain of hills;--and the linear island of S. Mary, which was upraised
-thrice the height of the neighbouring country, seems to be undergoing
-this process. I believe that the solid axis of a mountain, differs in
-its manner of formation from a volcanic hill, only in the molten stone
-having been repeatedly injected, instead of having been repeatedly
-ejected. Moreover, I believe that it is impossible to explain the
-structure of great mountain-chains, such as that of the Cordillera,
-were the strata, capping the injected axis of plutonic rock, have been
-thrown on their edges along several parallel and neighbouring lines of
-elevation, except on this view of the rock of the axis having been
-repeatedly injected, after intervals sufficiently long to allow the
-upper parts or wedges to cool and become solid;--for if the strata had
-been thrown into their present highly inclined, vertical, and even
-inverted positions, by a single blow, the very bowels of the earth
-would have gushed out; and instead of beholding abrupt mountain-axes of
-rock solidified under great pressure, deluges of lava would have flowed
-out at innumerable points on every line of elevation. [2]
-
-[1] M. Arago in L'Institut, 1839, p. 337. See also Miers's Chile, vol.
-i. p. 392; also Lyell's Principles of Geology, chap. xv., book ii.
-
-[2] For a full account of the volcanic phenomena which accompanied the
-earthquake of the 20th, and for the conclusions deducible from them, I
-must refer to Volume V. of the Geological Transactions.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
-
-Valparaiso--Portillo Pass--Sagacity of Mules--Mountain-torrents--Mines,
-how discovered--Proofs of the gradual Elevation of the
-Cordillera--Effect of Snow on Rocks--Geological Structure of the two
-main Ranges, their distinct Origin and Upheaval--Great Subsidence--Red
-Snow--Winds--Pinnacles of Snow--Dry and clear
-Atmosphere--Electricity--Pampas--Zoology of the opposite Side of the
-Andes--Locusts--Great Bugs--Mendoza--Uspallata Pass--Silicified Trees
-buried as they grew--Incas Bridge--Badness of the Passes
-exaggerated--Cumbre--Casuchas--Valparaiso.
-
-
-MARCH 7th, 1835.--We stayed three days at Concepcion, and then sailed
-for Valparaiso. The wind being northerly, we only reached the mouth of
-the harbour of Concepcion before it was dark. Being very near the
-land, and a fog coming on, the anchor was dropped. Presently a large
-American whaler appeared alongside of us; and we heard the Yankee
-swearing at his men to keep quiet, whilst he listened for the breakers.
-Captain Fitz Roy hailed him, in a loud clear voice, to anchor where he
-then was. The poor man must have thought the voice came from the
-shore: such a Babel of cries issued at once from the ship--every one
-hallooing out, "Let go the anchor! veer cable! shorten sail!" It was
-the most laughable thing I ever heard. If the ship's crew had been all
-captains, and no men, there could not have been a greater uproar of
-orders. We afterwards found that the mate stuttered: I suppose all
-hands were assisting him in giving his orders.
-
-On the 11th we anchored at Valparaiso, and two days afterwards I set
-out to cross the Cordillera. I proceeded to Santiago, where Mr.
-Caldcleugh most kindly assisted me in every possible way in making the
-little preparations which were necessary. In this part of Chile there
-are two passes across the Andes to Mendoza: the one most commonly used,
-namely, that of Aconcagua or Uspallata--is situated some way to the
-north; the other, called the Portillo, is to the south, and nearer, but
-more lofty and dangerous.
-
-March 18th.--We set out for the Portillo pass. Leaving Santiago we
-crossed the wide burnt-up plain on which that city stands, and in the
-afternoon arrived at the Maypu, one of the principal rivers in Chile.
-The valley, at the point where it enters the first Cordillera, is
-bounded on each side by lofty barren mountains; and although not broad,
-it is very fertile. Numerous cottages were surrounded by vines, and by
-orchards of apple, nectarine, and peach-trees--their boughs breaking
-with the weight of the beautiful ripe fruit. In the evening we passed
-the custom-house, where our luggage was examined. The frontier of
-Chile is better guarded by the Cordillera, than by the waters of the
-sea. There are very few valleys which lead to the central ranges, and
-the mountains are quite impassable in other parts by beasts of burden.
-The custom-house officers were very civil, which was perhaps partly
-owing to the passport which the President of the Republic had given me;
-but I must express my admiration at the natural politeness of almost
-every Chileno. In this instance, the contrast with the same class of
-men in most other countries was strongly marked. I may mention an
-anecdote with which I was at the time much pleased: we met near Mendoza
-a little and very fat negress, riding astride on a mule. She had a
-_goitre_ so enormous that it was scarcely possible to avoid gazing at
-her for a moment; but my two companions almost instantly, by way of
-apology, made the common salute of the country by taking off their
-hats. Where would one of the lower or higher classes in Europe, have
-shown such feeling politeness to a poor and miserable object of a
-degraded race?
-
-At night we slept at a cottage. Our manner of travelling was
-delightfully independent. In the inhabited parts we bought a little
-firewood, hired pasture for the animals, and bivouacked in the corner
-of the same field with them. Carrying an iron pot, we cooked and ate
-our supper under a cloudless sky, and knew no trouble. My companions
-were Mariano Gonzales, who had formerly accompanied me in Chile, and an
-"arriero," with his ten mules and a "madrina." The madrina (or
-godmother) is a most important personage:
-
-She is an old steady mare, with a little bell round her neck; and
-wherever she goes, the mules, like good children, follow her. The
-affection of these animals for their madrinas saves infinite trouble.
-If several large troops are turned into one field to graze, in the
-morning the muleteers have only to lead the madrinas a little apart,
-and tinkle their bells; although there may be two or three hundred
-together, each mule immediately knows the bell of its own madrina, and
-comes to her. It is nearly impossible to lose an old mule; for if
-detained for several hours by force, she will, by the power of smell,
-like a dog, track out her companions, or rather the madrina, for,
-according to the muleteer, she is the chief object of affection. The
-feeling, however, is not of an individual nature; for I believe I am
-right in saying that any animal with a bell will serve as a madrina. In
-a troop each animal carries on a level road, a cargo weighing 416
-pounds (more than 29 stone), but in a mountainous country 100 pounds
-less; yet with what delicate slim limbs, without any proportional bulk
-of muscle, these animals support so great a burden! The mule always
-appears to me a most surprising animal. That a hybrid should possess
-more reason, memory, obstinacy, social affection, powers of muscular
-endurance, and length of life, than either of its parents, seems to
-indicate that art has here outdone nature. Of our ten animals, six
-were intended for riding, and four for carrying cargoes, each taking
-turn about. We carried a good deal of food in case we should be snowed
-up, as the season was rather late for passing the Portillo.
-
-March 19th.--We rode during this day to the last, and therefore most
-elevated, house in the valley. The number of inhabitants became
-scanty; but wherever water could be brought on the land, it was very
-fertile. All the main valleys in the Cordillera are characterized by
-having, on both sides, a fringe or terrace of shingle and sand, rudely
-stratified, and generally of considerable thickness. These fringes
-evidently once extended across the valleys and were united; and the
-bottoms of the valleys in northern Chile, where there are no streams,
-are thus smoothly filled up. On these fringes the roads are generally
-carried, for their surfaces are even, and they rise, with a very gentle
-slope up the valleys: hence, also, they are easily cultivated by
-irrigation. They may be traced up to a height of between 7000 and 9000
-feet, where they become hidden by the irregular piles of debris. At
-the lower end or mouths of the valleys, they are continuously united to
-those land-locked plains (also formed of shingle) at the foot of the
-main Cordillera, which I have described in a former chapter as
-characteristic of the scenery of Chile, and which were undoubtedly
-deposited when the sea penetrated Chile, as it now does the more
-southern coasts. No one fact in the geology of South America,
-interested me more than these terraces of rudely-stratified shingle.
-They precisely resemble in composition the matter which the torrents in
-each valley would deposit, if they were checked in their course by any
-cause, such as entering a lake or arm of the sea; but the torrents,
-instead of depositing matter, are now steadily at work wearing away
-both the solid rock and these alluvial deposits, along the whole line
-of every main valley and side valley. It is impossible here to give
-the reasons, but I am convinced that the shingle terraces were
-accumulated, during the gradual elevation of the Cordillera, by the
-torrents delivering, at successive levels, their detritus on the
-beachheads of long narrow arms of the sea, first high up the valleys,
-then lower and lower down as the land slowly rose. If this be so, and
-I cannot doubt it, the grand and broken chain of the Cordillera,
-instead of having been suddenly thrown up, as was till lately the
-universal, and still is the common opinion of geologists, has been
-slowly upheaved in mass, in the same gradual manner as the coasts of
-the Atlantic and Pacific have risen within the recent period. A
-multitude of facts in the structure of the Cordillera, on this view
-receive a simple explanation.
-
-The rivers which flow in these valleys ought rather to be called
-mountain-torrents. Their inclination is very great, and their water
-the colour of mud. The roar which the Maypu made, as it rushed over
-the great rounded fragments, was like that of the sea. Amidst the din
-of rushing waters, the noise from the stones, as they rattled one over
-another, was most distinctly audible even from a distance. This
-rattling noise, night and day, may be heard along the whole course of
-the torrent. The sound spoke eloquently to the geologist; the
-thousands and thousands of stones, which, striking against each other,
-made the one dull uniform sound, were all hurrying in one direction. It
-was like thinking on time, where the minute that now glides past is
-irrevocable. So was it with these stones; the ocean is their eternity,
-and each note of that wild music told of one more step towards their
-destiny.
-
-It is not possible for the mind to comprehend, except by a slow
-process, any effect which is produced by a cause repeated so often,
-that the multiplier itself conveys an idea, not more definite than the
-savage implies when he points to the hairs of his head. As often as I
-have seen beds of mud, sand, and shingle, accumulated to the thickness
-of many thousand feet, I have felt inclined to exclaim that causes,
-such as the present rivers and the present beaches, could never have
-ground down and produced such masses. But, on the other hand, when
-listening to the rattling noise of these torrents, and calling to mind
-that whole races of animals have passed away from the face of the
-earth, and that during this whole period, night and day, these stones
-have gone rattling onwards in their course, I have thought to myself,
-can any mountains, any continent, withstand such waste?
-
-In this part of the valley, the mountains on each side were from 3000
-to 6000 or 8000 feet high, with rounded outlines and steep bare flanks.
-The general colour of the rock was dullish purple, and the
-stratification very distinct. If the scenery was not beautiful, it was
-remarkable and grand. We met during the day several herds of cattle,
-which men were driving down from the higher valleys in the Cordillera.
-This sign of the approaching winter hurried our steps, more than was
-convenient for geologizing. The house where we slept was situated at
-the foot of a mountain, on the summit of which are the mines of S.
-Pedro de Nolasko. Sir F. Head marvels how mines have been discovered
-in such extraordinary situations, as the bleak summit of the mountain
-of S. Pedro de Nolasko. In the first place, metallic veins in this
-country are generally harder than the surrounding strata: hence, during
-the gradual wear of the hills, they project above the surface of the
-ground. Secondly, almost every labourer, especially in the northern
-parts of Chile, understands something about the appearance of ores. In
-the great mining provinces of Coquimbo and Copiapo, firewood is very
-scarce, and men search for it over every hill and dale; and by this
-means nearly all the richest mines have there been discovered.
-Chanuncillo, from which silver to the value of many hundred thousand
-pounds has been raised in the course of a few years, was discovered by
-a man who threw a stone at his loaded donkey, and thinking that it was
-very heavy, he picked it up, and found it full of pure silver: the vein
-occurred at no great distance, standing up like a wedge of metal. The
-miners, also, taking a crowbar with them, often wander on Sundays over
-the mountains. In this south part of Chile, the men who drive cattle
-into the Cordillera, and who frequent every ravine where there is a
-little pasture, are the usual discoverers.
-
-20th.--As we ascended the valley, the vegetation, with the exception of
-a few pretty alpine flowers, became exceedingly scanty, and of
-quadrupeds, birds, or insects, scarcely one could be seen. The lofty
-mountains, their summits marked with a few patches of snow, stood well
-separated from each other, the valleys being filled up with an immense
-thickness of stratified alluvium. The features in the scenery of the
-Andes which struck me most, as contrasted with the other mountain
-chains with which I am acquainted, were,--the flat fringes sometimes
-expanding into narrow plains on each side of the valleys,--the bright
-colours, chiefly red and purple, of the utterly bare and precipitous
-hills of porphyry, the grand and continuous wall-like dykes,--the
-plainly-divided strata which, where nearly vertical, formed the
-picturesque and wild central pinnacles, but where less inclined,
-composed the great massive mountains on the outskirts of the
-range,--and lastly, the smooth conical piles of fine and brightly
-coloured detritus, which sloped up at a high angle from the base of the
-mountains, sometimes to a height of more than 2000 feet.
-
-I frequently observed, both in Tierra del Fuego and within the Andes,
-that where the rock was covered during the greater part of the year
-with snow, it was shivered in a very extraordinary manner into small
-angular fragments. Scoresby [1] has observed the same fact in
-Spitzbergen. The case appears to me rather obscure: for that part of
-the mountain which is protected by a mantle of snow, must be less
-subject to repeated and great changes of temperature than any other
-part. I have sometimes thought, that the earth and fragments of stone
-on the surface, were perhaps less effectually removed by slowly
-percolating snow-water [2] than by rain, and therefore that the
-appearance of a quicker disintegration of the solid rock under the
-snow, was deceptive. Whatever the cause may be, the quantity of
-crumbling stone on the Cordillera is very great. Occasionally in the
-spring, great masses of this detritus slide down the mountains, and
-cover the snow-drifts in the valleys, thus forming natural ice-houses.
-We rode over one, the height of which was far below the limit of
-perpetual snow.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, we reached a singular basin-like plain,
-called the Valle del Yeso. It was covered by a little dry pasture, and
-we had the pleasant sight of a herd of cattle amidst the surrounding
-rocky deserts. The valley takes its name of Yeso from a great bed, I
-should think at least 2000 feet thick, of white, and in some parts
-quite pure, gypsum. We slept with a party of men, who were employed in
-loading mules with this substance, which is used in the manufacture of
-wine. We set out early in the morning (21st), and continued to follow
-the course of the river, which had become very small, till we arrived
-at the foot of the ridge, that separates the waters flowing into the
-Pacific and Atlantic Oceans. The road, which as yet had been good with
-a steady but very gradual ascent, now changed into a steep zigzag track
-up the great range, dividing the republics of Chile and Mendoza.
-
-I will here give a very brief sketch of the geology of the several
-parallel lines forming the Cordillera. Of these lines, there are two
-considerably higher than the others; namely, on the Chilian side, the
-Peuquenes ridge, which, where the road crosses it, is 13,210 feet above
-the sea; and the Portillo ridge, on the Mendoza side, which is 14,305
-feet. The lower beds of the Peuquenes ridge, and of the several great
-lines to the westward of it, are composed of a vast pile, many thousand
-feet in thickness, of porphyries which have flowed as submarine lavas,
-alternating with angular and rounded fragments of the same rocks,
-thrown out of the submarine craters. These alternating masses are
-covered in the central parts, by a great thickness of red sandstone,
-conglomerate, and calcareous clay-slate, associated with, and passing
-into, prodigious beds of gypsum. In these upper beds shells are
-tolerably frequent; and they belong to about the period of the lower
-chalk of Europe. It is an old story, but not the less wonderful, to
-hear of shells which were once crawling on the bottom of the sea, now
-standing nearly 14,000 feet above its level. The lower beds in this
-great pile of strata, have been dislocated, baked, crystallized and
-almost blended together, through the agency of mountain masses of a
-peculiar white soda-granitic rock.
-
-The other main line, namely, that of the Portillo, is of a totally
-different formation: it consists chiefly of grand bare pinnacles of a
-red potash-granite, which low down on the western flank are covered by
-a sandstone, converted by the former heat into a quartz-rock. On the
-quartz, there rest beds of a conglomerate several thousand feet in
-thickness, which have been upheaved by the red granite, and dip at an
-angle of 45 degs. towards the Peuquenes line. I was astonished to find
-that this conglomerate was partly composed of pebbles, derived from the
-rocks, with their fossil shells, of the Peuquenes range; and partly of
-red potash-granite, like that of the Portillo. Hence we must conclude,
-that both the Peuquenes and Portillo ranges were partially upheaved and
-exposed to wear and tear, when the conglomerate was forming; but as the
-beds of the conglomerate have been thrown off at an angle of 45 degs.
-by the red Portillo granite (with the underlying sandstone baked by
-it), we may feel sure, that the greater part of the injection and
-upheaval of the already partially formed Portillo line, took place
-after the accumulation of the conglomerate, and long after the
-elevation of the Peuquenes ridge. So that the Portillo, the loftiest
-line in this part of the Cordillera, is not so old as the less lofty
-line of the Peuquenes. Evidence derived from an inclined stream of
-lava at the eastern base of the Portillo, might be adduced to show,
-that it owes part of its great height to elevations of a still later
-date. Looking to its earliest origin, the red granite seems to have
-been injected on an ancient pre-existing line of white granite and
-mica-slate. In most parts, perhaps in all parts, of the Cordillera, it
-may be concluded that each line has been formed by repeated upheavals
-and injections; and that the several parallel lines are of different
-ages. Only thus can we gain time, at all sufficient to explain the
-truly astonishing amount of denudation, which these great, though
-comparatively with most other ranges recent, mountains have suffered.
-
-Finally, the shells in the Peuquenes or oldest ridge, prove, as before
-remarked, that it has been upraised 14,000 feet since a Secondary
-period, which in Europe we are accustomed to consider as far from
-ancient; but since these shells lived in a moderately deep sea, it can
-be shown that the area now occupied by the Cordillera, must have
-subsided several thousand feet--in northern Chile as much as 6000
-feet--so as to have allowed that amount of submarine strata to have
-been heaped on the bed on which the shells lived. The proof is the
-same with that by which it was shown, that at a much later period,
-since the tertiary shells of Patagonia lived, there must have been
-there a subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing
-elevation. Daily it is forced home on the mind of the geologist, that
-nothing, not even the wind that blows, is so unstable as the level of
-the crust of this earth.
-
-I will make only one other geological remark: although the Portillo
-chain is here higher than the Peuquenes, the waters draining the
-intermediate valleys, have burst through it. The same fact, on a
-grander scale, has been remarked in the eastern and loftiest line of
-the Bolivian Cordillera, through which the rivers pass: analogous facts
-have also been observed in other quarters of the world. On the
-supposition of the subsequent and gradual elevation of the Portillo
-line, this can be understood; for a chain of islets would at first
-appear, and, as these were lifted up, the tides would be always wearing
-deeper and broader channels between them. At the present day, even in
-the most retired Sounds on the coast of Tierra del Fuego, the currents
-in the transverse breaks which connect the longitudinal channels, are
-very strong, so that in one transverse channel even a small vessel
-under sail was whirled round and round.
-
-
-About noon we began the tedious ascent of the Peuquenes ridge, and then
-for the first time experienced some little difficulty in our
-respiration. The mules would halt every fifty yards, and after resting
-for a few seconds the poor willing animals started of their own accord
-again. The short breathing from the rarefied atmosphere is called by
-the Chilenos "puna;" and they have most ridiculous notions concerning
-its origin. Some say "all the waters here have puna;" others that
-"where there is snow there is puna;"--and this no doubt is true. The
-only sensation I experienced was a slight tightness across the head and
-chest, like that felt on leaving a warm room and running quickly in
-frosty weather. There was some imagination even in this; for upon
-finding fossil shells on the highest ridge, I entirely forgot the puna
-in my delight. Certainly the exertion of walking was extremely great,
-and the respiration became deep and laborious: I am told that in Potosi
-(about 13,000 feet above the sea) strangers do not become thoroughly
-accustomed to the atmosphere for an entire year. The inhabitants all
-recommend onions for the puna; as this vegetable has sometimes been
-given in Europe for pectoral complaints, it may possibly be of real
-service:--for my part I found nothing so good as the fossil shells!
-
-When about half-way up we met a large party with seventy loaded mules.
-It was interesting to hear the wild cries of the muleteers, and to
-watch the long descending string of the animals; they appeared so
-diminutive, there being nothing but the black mountains with which they
-could be compared. When near the summit, the wind, as generally
-happens, was impetuous and extremely cold. On each side of the ridge,
-we had to pass over broad bands of perpetual snow, which were now soon
-to be covered by a fresh layer. When we reached the crest and looked
-backwards, a glorious view was presented. The atmosphere resplendently
-clear; the sky an intense blue; the profound valleys; the wild broken
-forms: the heaps of ruins, piled up during the lapse of ages; the
-bright-coloured rocks, contrasted with the quiet mountains of snow, all
-these together produced a scene no one could have imagined. Neither
-plant nor bird, excepting a few condors wheeling around the higher
-pinnacles, distracted my attention from the inanimate mass. I felt
-glad that I was alone: it was like watching a thunderstorm, or hearing
-in full orchestra a chorus of the Messiah.
-
-On several patches of the snow I found the Protococcus nivalis, or red
-snow, so well known from the accounts of Arctic navigators. My
-attention was called to it, by observing the footsteps of the mules
-stained a pale red, as if their hoofs had been slightly bloody. I at
-first thought that it was owing to dust blown from the surrounding
-mountains of red porphyry; for from the magnifying power of the
-crystals of snow, the groups of these microscopical plants appeared
-like coarse particles. The snow was coloured only where it had thawed
-very rapidly, or had been accidentally crushed. A little rubbed on
-paper gave it a faint rose tinge mingled with a little brick-red. I
-afterwards scraped some off the paper, and found that it consisted of
-groups of little spheres in colourless cases, each of the thousandth
-part of an inch in diameter.
-
-The wind on the crest of the Peuquenes, as just remarked, is generally
-impetuous and very cold: it is said [3] to blow steadily from the
-westward or Pacific side. As the observations have been chiefly made
-in summer, this wind must be an upper and return current. The Peak of
-Teneriffe, with a less elevation, and situated in lat. 28 degs., in
-like manner falls within an upper return stream. At first it appears
-rather surprising, that the trade-wind along the northern parts of
-Chile and on the coast of Peru, should blow in so very southerly a
-direction as it does; but when we reflect that the Cordillera, running
-in a north and south line, intercepts, like a great wall, the entire
-depth of the lower atmospheric current, we can easily see that the
-trade-wind must be drawn northward, following the line of mountains,
-towards the equatorial regions, and thus lose part of that easterly
-movement which it otherwise would have gained from the earth's
-rotation. At Mendoza, on the eastern foot of the Andes, the climate is
-said to be subject to long calms, and to frequent though false
-appearances of gathering rain-storms: we may imagine that the wind,
-which coming from the eastward is thus banked up by the line of
-mountains, would become stagnant and irregular in its movements.
-
-Having crossed the Peuquenes, we descended into a mountainous country,
-intermediate between the two main ranges, and then took up our quarters
-for the night. We were now in the republic of Mendoza. The elevation
-was probably not under 11,000 feet, and the vegetation in consequence
-exceedingly scanty. The root of a small scrubby plant served as fuel,
-but it made a miserable fire, and the wind was piercingly cold. Being
-quite tired with my days work, I made up my bed as quickly as I could,
-and went to sleep. About midnight I observed the sky became suddenly
-clouded: I awakened the arriero to know if there was any danger of bad
-weather; but he said that without thunder and lightning there was no
-risk of a heavy snow-storm. The peril is imminent, and the difficulty
-of subsequent escape great, to any one overtaken by bad weather between
-the two ranges. A certain cave offers the only place of refuge: Mr.
-Caldcleugh, who crossed on this same day of the month, was detained
-there for some time by a heavy fall of snow. Casuchas, or houses of
-refuge, have not been built in this pass as in that of Uspallata, and,
-therefore, during the autumn, the Portillo is little frequented. I may
-here remark that within the main Cordillera rain never falls, for
-during the summer the sky is cloudless, and in winter snow-storms alone
-occur.
-
-At the place where we slept water necessarily boiled, from the
-diminished pressure of the atmosphere, at a lower temperature than it
-does in a less lofty country; the case being the converse of that of a
-Papin's digester. Hence the potatoes, after remaining for some hours
-in the boiling water, were nearly as hard as ever. The pot was left on
-the fire all night, and next morning it was boiled again, but yet the
-potatoes were not cooked. I found out this, by overhearing my two
-companions discussing the cause, they had come to the simple
-conclusion, "that the cursed pot [which was a new one] did not choose
-to boil potatoes."
-
-March 22nd.--After eating our potatoless breakfast, we travelled
-across the intermediate tract to the foot of the Portillo range. In
-the middle of summer cattle are brought up here to graze; but they had
-now all been removed: even the greater number of the Guanacos had
-decamped, knowing well that if overtaken here by a snow-storm, they
-would be caught in a trap. We had a fine view of a mass of mountains
-called Tupungato, the whole clothed with unbroken snow, in the midst of
-which there was a blue patch, no doubt a glacier;--a circumstance of
-rare occurrence in these mountains. Now commenced a heavy and long
-climb, similar to that of the Peuquenes. Bold conical hills of red
-granite rose on each hand; in the valleys there were several broad
-fields of perpetual snow. These frozen masses, during the process of
-thawing, had in some parts been converted into pinnacles or columns,
-[4] which, as they were high and close together, made it difficult for
-the cargo mules to pass. On one of these columns of ice, a frozen horse
-was sticking as on a pedestal, but with its hind legs straight up in
-the air. The animal, I suppose, must have fallen with its head
-downward into a hole, when the snow was continuous, and afterwards the
-surrounding parts must have been removed by the thaw.
-
-When nearly on the crest of the Portillo, we were enveloped in a
-falling cloud of minute frozen spicula. This was very unfortunate, as
-it continued the whole day, and quite intercepted our view. The pass
-takes its name of Portillo, from a narrow cleft or doorway on the
-highest ridge, through which the road passes. From this point, on a
-clear day, those vast plains which uninterruptedly extend to the
-Atlantic Ocean can be seen. We descended to the upper limit of
-vegetation, and found good quarters for the night under the shelter of
-some large fragments of rock. We met here some passengers, who made
-anxious inquiries about the state of the road. Shortly after it was
-dark the clouds suddenly cleared away, and the effect was quite
-magical. The great mountains, bright with the full moon, seemed
-impending over us on all sides, as over a deep crevice: one morning,
-very early, I witnessed the same striking effect. As soon as the
-clouds were dispersed it froze severely; but as there was no wind, we
-slept very comfortably.
-
-The increased brilliancy of the moon and stars at this elevation, owing
-to the perfect transparency of the atmosphere, was very remarkable.
-Travelers having observed the difficulty of judging heights and
-distances amidst lofty mountains, have generally attributed it to the
-absence of objects of comparison. It appears to me, that it is fully
-as much owing to the transparency of the air confounding objects at
-different distances, and likewise partly to the novelty of an unusual
-degree of fatigue arising from a little exertion,--habit being thus
-opposed to the evidence of the senses. I am sure that this extreme
-clearness of the air gives a peculiar character to the landscape, all
-objects appearing to be brought nearly into one plane, as in a drawing
-or panorama. The transparency is, I presume, owing to the equable and
-high state of atmospheric dryness. This dryness was shown by the
-manner in which woodwork shrank (as I soon found by the trouble my
-geological hammer gave me); by articles of food, such as bread and
-sugar, becoming extremely hard; and by the preservation of the skin and
-parts of the flesh of the beasts, which had perished on the road. To
-the same cause we must attribute the singular facility with which
-electricity is excited. My flannel waistcoat, when rubbed in the dark,
-appeared as if it had been washed with phosphorus,--every hair on a
-dog's back crackled;--even the linen sheets, and leathern straps of the
-saddle, when handled, emitted sparks.
-
-March 23rd.--The descent on the eastern side of the Cordillera is much
-shorter or steeper than on the Pacific side; in other words, the
-mountains rise more abruptly from the plains than from the alpine
-country of Chile. A level and brilliantly white sea of clouds was
-stretched out beneath our feet, shutting out the view of the equally
-level Pampas. We soon entered the band of clouds, and did not again
-emerge from it that day. About noon, finding pasture for the animals
-and bushes for firewood at Los Arenales, we stopped for the night. This
-was near the uppermost limit of bushes, and the elevation, I suppose,
-was between seven and eight thousand feet.
-
-I was much struck with the marked difference between the vegetation of
-these eastern valleys and those on the Chilian side: yet the climate,
-as well as the kind of soil, is nearly the same, and the difference of
-longitude very trifling. The same remark holds good with the
-quadrupeds, and in a lesser degree with the birds and insects. I may
-instance the mice, of which I obtained thirteen species on the shores
-of the Atlantic, and five on the Pacific, and not one of them is
-identical. We must except all those species, which habitually or
-occasionally frequent elevated mountains; and certain birds, which
-range as far south as the Strait of Magellan. This fact is in perfect
-accordance with the geological history of the Andes; for these
-mountains have existed as a great barrier since the present races of
-animals have appeared; and therefore, unless we suppose the same
-species to have been created in two different places, we ought not to
-expect any closer similarity between the organic beings on the opposite
-sides of the Andes than on the opposite shores of the ocean. In both
-cases, we must leave out of the question those kinds which have been
-able to cross the barrier, whether of solid rock or salt-water. [5]
-
-A great number of the plants and animals were absolutely the same as,
-or most closely allied to, those of Patagonia. We here have the agouti,
-bizcacha, three species of armadillo, the ostrich, certain kinds of
-partridges and other birds, none of which are ever seen in Chile, but
-are the characteristic animals of the desert plains of Patagonia. We
-have likewise many of the same (to the eyes of a person who is not a
-botanist) thorny stunted bushes, withered grass, and dwarf plants. Even
-the black slowly crawling beetles are closely similar, and some, I
-believe, on rigorous examination, absolutely identical. It had always
-been to me a subject of regret, that we were unavoidably compelled to
-give up the ascent of the S. Cruz river before reaching the mountains:
-I always had a latent hope of meeting with some great change in the
-features of the country; but I now feel sure, that it would only have
-been following the plains of Patagonia up a mountainous ascent.
-
-March 24th.--Early in the morning I climbed up a mountain on one side
-of the valley, and enjoyed a far extended view over the Pampas. This
-was a spectacle to which I had always looked forward with interest, but
-I was disappointed: at the first glance it much resembled a distant
-view of the ocean, but in the northern parts many irregularities were
-soon distinguishable. The most striking feature consisted in the
-rivers, which, facing the rising sun, glittered like silver threads,
-till lost in the immensity of the distance. At midday we descended the
-valley, and reached a hovel, where an officer and three soldiers were
-posted to examine passports. One of these men was a thoroughbred Pampas
-Indian: he was kept much for the same purpose as a bloodhound, to track
-out any person who might pass by secretly, either on foot or horseback.
-Some years ago, a passenger endeavoured to escape detection, by making
-a long circuit over a neighbouring mountain; but this Indian, having by
-chance crossed his track, followed it for the whole day over dry and
-very stony hills, till at last he came on his prey hidden in a gully.
-We here heard that the silvery clouds, which we had admired from the
-bright region above, had poured down torrents of rain. The valley from
-this point gradually opened, and the hills became mere water-worn
-hillocks compared to the giants behind: it then expanded into a gently
-sloping plain of shingle, covered with low trees and bushes. This
-talus, although appearing narrow, must be nearly ten miles wide before
-it blends into the apparently dead level Pampas. We passed the only
-house in this neighbourhood, the Estancia of Chaquaio: and at sunset we
-pulled up in the first snug corner, and there bivouacked.
-
-March 25th.--I was reminded of the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, by seeing
-the disk of the rising sun, intersected by an horizon level as that of
-the ocean. During the night a heavy dew fell, a circumstance which we
-did not experience within the Cordillera. The road proceeded for some
-distance due east across a low swamp; then meeting the dry plain, it
-turned to the north towards Mendoza. The distance is two very long
-days' journey. Our first day's journey was called fourteen leagues to
-Estacado, and the second seventeen to Luxan, near Mendoza. The whole
-distance is over a level desert plain, with not more than two or three
-houses. The sun was exceedingly powerful, and the ride devoid of all
-interest. There is very little water in this "traversia," and in our
-second day's journey we found only one little pool. Little water flows
-from the mountains, and it soon becomes absorbed by the dry and porous
-soil; so that, although we travelled at the distance of only ten or
-fifteen miles from the outer range of the Cordillera, we did not cross
-a single stream. In many parts the ground was incrusted with a saline
-efflorescence; hence we had the same salt-loving plants which are
-common near Bahia Blanca. The landscape has a uniform character from
-the Strait of Magellan, along the whole eastern coast of Patagonia, to
-the Rio Colorado; and it appears that the same kind of country extends
-inland from this river, in a sweeping line as far as San Luis and
-perhaps even further north. To the eastward of this curved line lies
-the basin of the comparatively damp and green plains of Buenos Ayres.
-The sterile plains of Mendoza and Patagonia consist of a bed of
-shingle, worn smooth and accumulated by the waves of the sea while the
-Pampas, covered by thistles, clover, and grass, have been formed by the
-ancient estuary mud of the Plata.
-
-After our two days' tedious journey, it was refreshing to see in the
-distance the rows of poplars and willows growing round the village and
-river of Luxan. Shortly before we arrived at this place, we observed
-to the south a ragged cloud of dark reddish-brown colour. At first we
-thought that it was smoke from some great fire on the plains; but we
-soon found that it was a swarm of locusts. They were flying northward;
-and with the aid of a light breeze, they overtook us at a rate of ten
-or fifteen miles an hour. The main body filled the air from a height
-of twenty feet, to that, as it appeared, of two or three thousand above
-the ground; "and the sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots
-of many horses running to battle:" or rather, I should say, like a
-strong breeze passing through the rigging of a ship. The sky, seen
-through the advanced guard, appeared like a mezzotinto engraving, but
-the main body was impervious to sight; they were not, however, so thick
-together, but that they could escape a stick waved backwards and
-forwards. When they alighted, they were more numerous than the leaves
-in the field, and the surface became reddish instead of being green:
-the swarm having once alighted, the individuals flew from side to side
-in all directions. Locusts are not an uncommon pest in this country:
-already during the season, several smaller swarms had come up from the
-south, where, as apparently in all other parts of the world, they are
-bred in the deserts. The poor cottagers in vain attempted by lighting
-fires, by shouts, and by waving branches to avert the attack. This
-species of locust closely resembles, and perhaps is identical with, the
-famous Gryllus migratorius of the East.
-
-We crossed the Luxan, which is a river of considerable size, though its
-course towards the sea-coast is very imperfectly known: it is even
-doubtful whether, in passing over the plains, it is not evaporated and
-lost. We slept in the village of Luxan, which is a small place
-surrounded by gardens, and forms the most southern cultivated district
-in the Province of Mendoza; it is five leagues south of the capital. At
-night I experienced an attack (for it deserves no less a name) of the
-_Benchuca_, a species of Reduvius, the great black bug of the Pampas.
-It is most disgusting to feel soft wingless insects, about an inch
-long, crawling over one's body. Before sucking they are quite thin,
-but afterwards they become round and bloated with blood, and in this
-state are easily crushed. One which I caught at Iquique, (for they are
-found in Chile and Peru,) was very empty. When placed on a table, and
-though surrounded by people, if a finger was presented, the bold insect
-would immediately protrude its sucker, make a charge, and if allowed,
-draw blood. No pain was caused by the wound. It was curious to watch
-its body during the act of sucking, as in less than ten minutes it
-changed from being as flat as a wafer to a globular form. This one
-feast, for which the benchuca was indebted to one of the officers, kept
-it fat during four whole months; but, after the first fortnight, it was
-quite ready to have another suck.
-
-March 27th.--We rode on to Mendoza. The country was beautifully
-cultivated, and resembled Chile. This neighbourhood is celebrated for
-its fruit; and certainly nothing could appear more flourishing than the
-vineyards and the orchards of figs, peaches, and olives. We bought
-water-melons nearly twice as large as a man's head, most deliciously
-cool and well-flavoured, for a halfpenny apiece; and for the value of
-threepence, half a wheelbarrowful of peaches. The cultivated and
-enclosed part of this province is very small; there is little more than
-that which we passed through between Luxan and the capital. The land,
-as in Chile, owes its fertility entirely to artificial irrigation; and
-it is really wonderful to observe how extraordinarily productive a
-barren traversia is thus rendered.
-
-We stayed the ensuing day in Mendoza. The prosperity of the place has
-much declined of late years. The inhabitants say "it is good to live
-in, but very bad to grow rich in." The lower orders have the lounging,
-reckless manners of the Gauchos of the Pampas; and their dress,
-riding-gear, and habits of life, are nearly the same. To my mind the
-town had a stupid, forlorn aspect. Neither the boasted alameda, nor
-the scenery, is at all comparable with that of Santiago; but to those
-who, coming from Buenos Ayres, have just crossed the unvaried Pampas,
-the gardens and orchards must appear delightful. Sir F. Head, speaking
-of the inhabitants, says, "They eat their dinners, and it is so very
-hot, they go to sleep--and could they do better?" I quite agree with
-Sir F. Head: the happy doom of the Mendozinos is to eat, sleep and be
-idle.
-
-
-March 29th.--We set out on our return to Chile, by the Uspallata pass
-situated north of Mendoza. We had to cross a long and most sterile
-traversia of fifteen leagues. The soil in parts was absolutely bare,
-in others covered by numberless dwarf cacti, armed with formidable
-spines, and called by the inhabitants "little lions." There were, also,
-a few low bushes. Although the plain is nearly three thousand feet
-above the sea, the sun was very powerful; and the heat as well as the
-clouds of impalpable dust, rendered the travelling extremely irksome.
-Our course during the day lay nearly parallel to the Cordillera, but
-gradually approaching them. Before sunset we entered one of the wide
-valleys, or rather bays, which open on the plain: this soon narrowed
-into a ravine, where a little higher up the house of Villa Vicencio is
-situated. As we had ridden all day without a drop of water, both our
-mules and selves were very thirsty, and we looked out anxiously for the
-stream which flows down this valley. It was curious to observe how
-gradually the water made its appearance: on the plain the course was
-quite dry; by degrees it became a little damper; then puddles of water
-appeared; these soon became connected; and at Villa Vicencio there was
-a nice little rivulet.
-
-30th.--The solitary hovel which bears the imposing name of Villa
-Vicencio, has been mentioned by every traveller who has crossed the
-Andes. I stayed here and at some neighbouring mines during the two
-succeeding days. The geology of the surrounding country is very
-curious. The Uspallata range is separated from the main Cordillera by
-a long narrow plain or basin, like those so often mentioned in Chile,
-but higher, being six thousand feet above the sea. This range has
-nearly the same geographical position with respect to the Cordillera,
-which the gigantic Portillo line has, but it is of a totally different
-origin: it consists of various kinds of submarine lava, alternating
-with volcanic sandstones and other remarkable sedimentary deposits; the
-whole having a very close resemblance to some of the tertiary beds on
-the shores of the Pacific. From this resemblance I expected to find
-silicified wood, which is generally characteristic of those formations.
-I was gratified in a very extraordinary manner. In the central part of
-the range, at an elevation of about seven thousand feet, I observed on
-a bare slope some snow-white projecting columns. These were petrified
-trees, eleven being silicified, and from thirty to forty converted into
-coarsely-crystallized white calcareous spar. They were abruptly broken
-off, the upright stumps projecting a few feet above the ground. The
-trunks measured from three to five feet each in circumference. They
-stood a little way apart from each other, but the whole formed one
-group. Mr. Robert Brown has been kind enough to examine the wood: he
-says it belongs to the fir tribe, partaking of the character of the
-Araucarian family, but with some curious points of affinity with the
-yew. The volcanic sandstone in which the trees were embedded, and from
-the lower part of which they must have sprung, had accumulated in
-successive thin layers around their trunks; and the stone yet retained
-the impression of the bark.
-
-It required little geological practice to interpret the marvellous
-story which this scene at once unfolded; though I confess I was at
-first so much astonished that I could scarcely believe the plainest
-evidence. I saw the spot where a cluster of fine trees once waved
-their branches on the shores of the Atlantic, when that ocean (now
-driven back 700 miles) came to the foot of the Andes. I saw that they
-had sprung from a volcanic soil which had been raised above the level
-of the sea, and that subsequently this dry land, with its upright
-trees, had been let down into the depths of the ocean. In these
-depths, the formerly dry land was covered by sedimentary beds, and
-these again by enormous streams of submarine lava--one such mass
-attaining the thickness of a thousand feet; and these deluges of molten
-stone and aqueous deposits five times alternately had been spread out.
-The ocean which received such thick masses, must have been profoundly
-deep; but again the subterranean forces exerted themselves, and I now
-beheld the bed of that ocean, forming a chain of mountains more than
-seven thousand feet in height. Nor had those antagonistic forces been
-dormant, which are always at work wearing down the surface of the land;
-the great piles of strata had been intersected by many wide valleys,
-and the trees now changed into silex, were exposed projecting from the
-volcanic soil, now changed into rock, whence formerly, in a green and
-budding state, they had raised their lofty heads. Now, all is utterly
-irreclaimable and desert; even the lichen cannot adhere to the stony
-casts of former trees. Vast, and scarcely comprehensible as such
-changes must ever appear, yet they have all occurred within a period,
-recent when compared with the history of the Cordillera; and the
-Cordillera itself is absolutely modern as compared with many of the
-fossiliferous strata of Europe and America.
-
-April 1st.--We crossed the Upsallata range, and at night slept at the
-custom-house--the only inhabited spot on the plain. Shortly before
-leaving the mountains, there was a very extraordinary view; red,
-purple, green, and quite white sedimentary rocks, alternating with
-black lavas, were broken up and thrown into all kinds of disorder by
-masses of porphyry of every shade of colour, from dark brown to the
-brightest lilac. It was the first view I ever saw, which really
-resembled those pretty sections which geologists make of the inside of
-the earth.
-
-The next day we crossed the plain, and followed the course of the same
-great mountain stream which flows by Luxan. Here it was a furious
-torrent, quite impassable, and appeared larger than in the low country,
-as was the case with the rivulet of Villa Vicencio. On the evening of
-the succeeding day, we reached the Rio de las Vacas, which is
-considered the worst stream in the Cordillera to cross. As all these
-rivers have a rapid and short course, and are formed by the melting of
-the snow, the hour of the day makes a considerable difference in their
-volume. In the evening the stream is muddy and full, but about
-daybreak it becomes clearer, and much less impetuous. This we found to
-be the case with the Rio Vacas, and in the morning we crossed it with
-little difficulty.
-
-The scenery thus far was very uninteresting, compared with that of the
-Portillo pass. Little can be seen beyond the bare walls of the one
-grand flat-bottomed valley, which the road follows up to the highest
-crest. The valley and the huge rocky mountains are extremely barren:
-during the two previous nights the poor mules had absolutely nothing to
-eat, for excepting a few low resinous bushes, scarcely a plant can be
-seen. In the course of this day we crossed some of the worst passes in
-the Cordillera, but their danger has been much exaggerated. I was told
-that if I attempted to pass on foot, my head would turn giddy, and that
-there was no room to dismount; but I did not see a place where any one
-might not have walked over backwards, or got off his mule on either
-side. One of the bad passes, called _las Animas_ (the souls), I had
-crossed, and did not find out till a day afterwards, that it was one of
-the awful dangers. No doubt there are many parts in which, if the mule
-should stumble, the rider would be hurled down a great precipice; but
-of this there is little chance. I dare say, in the spring, the
-"laderas," or roads, which each year are formed anew across the piles
-of fallen detritus, are very bad; but from what I saw, I suspect the
-real danger is nothing. With cargo-mules the case is rather different,
-for the loads project so far, that the animals, occasionally running
-against each other, or against a point of rock, lose their balance, and
-are thrown down the precipices. In crossing the rivers I can well
-believe that the difficulty may be very great: at this season there was
-little trouble, but in the summer they must be very hazardous. I can
-quite imagine, as Sir F. Head describes, the different expressions of
-those who _have_ passed the gulf, and those who _are_ passing. I never
-heard of any man being drowned, but with loaded mules it frequently
-happens. The arriero tells you to show your mule the best line, and
-then allow her to cross as she likes: the cargo-mule takes a bad line,
-and is often lost.
-
-April 4th.--From the Rio de las Vacas to the Puente del Incas, half a
-day's journey. As there was pasture for the mules, and geology for me,
-we bivouacked here for the night. When one hears of a natural Bridge,
-one pictures to one's self some deep and narrow ravine, across which a
-bold mass of rock has fallen; or a great arch hollowed out like the
-vault of a cavern. Instead of this, the Incas Bridge consists of a
-crust of stratified shingle cemented together by the deposits of the
-neighbouring hot springs. It appears, as if the stream had scooped out
-a channel on one side, leaving an overhanging ledge, which was met by
-earth and stones falling down from the opposite cliff. Certainly an
-oblique junction, as would happen in such a case, was very distinct on
-one side. The Bridge of the Incas is by no means worthy of the great
-monarchs whose name it bears.
-
-5th.--We had a long day's ride across the central ridge, from the Incas
-Bridge to the Ojos del Agua, which are situated near the lowest
-_casucha_ on the Chilian side. These casuchas are round little towers,
-with steps outside to reach the floor, which is raised some feet above
-the ground on account of the snow-drifts. They are eight in number,
-and under the Spanish government were kept during the winter well
-stored with food and charcoal, and each courier had a master-key. Now
-they only answer the purpose of caves, or rather dungeons. Seated on
-some little eminence, they are not, however, ill suited to the
-surrounding scene of desolation. The zigzag ascent of the Cumbre, or
-the partition of the waters, was very steep and tedious; its height,
-according to Mr. Pentland, is 12,454 feet. The road did not pass over
-any perpetual snow, although there were patches of it on both hands.
-The wind on the summit was exceedingly cold, but it was impossible not
-to stop for a few minutes to admire, again and again, the colour of the
-heavens, and the brilliant transparency of the atmosphere. The scenery
-was grand: to the westward there was a fine chaos of mountains, divided
-by profound ravines. Some snow generally falls before this period of
-the season, and it has even happened that the Cordillera have been
-finally closed by this time. But we were most fortunate. The sky, by
-night and by day, was cloudless, excepting a few round little masses of
-vapour, that floated over the highest pinnacles. I have often seen
-these islets in the sky, marking the position of the Cordillera, when
-the far-distant mountains have been hidden beneath the horizon.
-
-April 6th.--In the morning we found some thief had stolen one of our
-mules, and the bell of the madrina. We therefore rode only two or
-three miles down the valley, and stayed there the ensuing day in hopes
-of recovering the mule, which the arriero thought had been hidden in
-some ravine. The scenery in this part had assumed a Chilian character:
-the lower sides of the mountains, dotted over with the pale evergreen
-Quillay tree, and with the great chandelier-like cactus, are certainly
-more to be admired than the bare eastern valleys; but I cannot quite
-agree with the admiration expressed by some travellers. The extreme
-pleasure, I suspect, is chiefly owing to the prospect of a good fire
-and of a good supper, after escaping from the cold regions above: and I
-am sure I most heartily participated in these feelings.
-
-8th.--We left the valley of the Aconcagua, by which we had descended,
-and reached in the evening a cottage near the Villa del St. Rosa. The
-fertility of the plain was delightful: the autumn being advanced, the
-leaves of many of the fruit-trees were falling; and of the
-labourers,--some were busy in drying figs and peaches on the roofs of
-their cottages, while others were gathering the grapes from the
-vineyards. It was a pretty scene; but I missed that pensive stillness
-which makes the autumn in England indeed the evening of the year. On
-the 10th we reached Santiago, where I received a very kind and
-hospitable reception from Mr. Caldcleugh. My excursion only cost me
-twenty-four days, and never did I more deeply enjoy an equal space of
-time. A few days afterwards I returned to Mr. Corfield's house at
-Valparaiso.
-
-[1] Scoresby's Arctic Regions, vol. i. p. 122.
-
-[2] I have heard it remarked in Shropshire that the water, when the
-Severn is flooded from long-continued rain, is much more turbid than
-when it proceeds from the snow melting in the Welsh mountains.
-D'Orbigny (tom. i. p. 184), in explaining the cause of the various
-colours of the rivers in South America, remarks that those with blue or
-clear water have there source in the Cordillera, where the snow melts.
-
-[3] Dr. Gillies in Journ. of Nat. and Geograph. Science, Aug., 1830.
-This author gives the heights of the Passes.
-
-[4] This structure in frozen snow was long since observed by Scoresby
-in the icebergs near Spitzbergen, and, lately, with more care, by
-Colonel Jackson (Journ. of Geograph. Soc., vol. v. p. 12) on the Neva.
-Mr. Lyell (Principles, vol. iv. p. 360) has compared the fissures by
-which the columnar structure seems to be determined, to the joints that
-traverse nearly all rocks, but which are best seen in the
-non-stratified masses. I may observe, that in the case of the frozen
-snow, the columnar structure must be owing to a "metamorphic" action,
-and not to a process during deposition.
-
-[5] This is merely an illustration of the admirable laws, first laid
-down by Mr. Lyell, on the geographical distribution of animals, as
-influenced by geological changes. The whole reasoning, of course, is
-founded on the assumption of the immutability of species; otherwise the
-difference in the species in the two regions might be considered as
-superinduced during a length of time.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
-
-Coast-road to Coquimbo--Great Loads carried by the
-Miners--Coquimbo--Earthquake--Step-formed Terrace--Absence of recent
-Deposits--Contemporaneousness of the Tertiary Formations--Excursion up
-the Valley--Road to Guasco--Deserts--Valley of Copiapo--Rain and
-Earthquakes--Hydrophobia--The Despoblado--Indian Ruins--Probable Change
-of Climate--River-bed arched by an Earthquake--Cold Gales of
-Wind--Noises from a Hill--Iquique--Salt Alluvium--Nitrate of
-Soda--Lima--Unhealthy Country--Ruins of Callao, overthrown by an
-Earthquake--Recent Subsidence--Elevated Shells on San Lorenzo, their
-decomposition--Plain with embedded Shells and fragments of
-Pottery--Antiquity of the Indian Race.
-
-
-APRIL 27th.--I set out on a journey to Coquimbo, and thence through
-Guasco to Copiapo, where Captain Fitz Roy kindly offered to pick me up
-in the Beagle. The distance in a straight line along the shore
-northward is only 420 miles; but my mode of travelling made it a very
-long journey. I bought four horses and two mules, the latter carrying
-the luggage on alternate days. The six animals together only cost the
-value of twenty-five pounds sterling, and at Copiapo I sold them again
-for twenty-three. We travelled in the same independent manner as
-before, cooking our own meals, and sleeping in the open air. As we
-rode towards the Vino del Mar, I took a farewell view of Valparaiso,
-and admired its picturesque appearance. For geological purposes I made
-a detour from the high road to the foot of the Bell of Quillota. We
-passed through an alluvial district rich in gold, to the neighbourhood
-of Limache, where we slept. Washing for gold supports the inhabitants
-of numerous hovels, scattered along the sides of each little rivulet;
-but, like all those whose gains are uncertain, they are unthrifty in
-all their habits, and consequently poor.
-
-28th.--In the afternoon we arrived at a cottage at the foot of the Bell
-mountain. The inhabitants were freeholders, which is not very usual in
-Chile. They supported themselves on the produce of a garden and a
-little field, but were very poor. Capital is here so deficient, that
-the people are obliged to sell their green corn while standing in the
-field, in order to buy necessaries for the ensuing year. Wheat in
-consequence was dearer in the very district of its production than at
-Valparaiso, where the contractors live. The next day we joined the
-main road to Coquimbo. At night there was a very light shower of rain:
-this was the first drop that had fallen since the heavy rain of
-September 11th and 12th, which detained me a prisoner at the Baths of
-Cauquenes. The interval was seven and a half months; but the rain this
-year in Chile was rather later than usual. The distant Andes were now
-covered by a thick mass of snow, and were a glorious sight.
-
-May 2nd.--The road continued to follow the coast, at no great distance
-from the sea. The few trees and bushes which are common in central
-Chile decreased rapidly in numbers, and were replaced by a tall plant,
-something like a yucca in appearance. The surface of the country, on a
-small scale, was singularly broken and irregular; abrupt little peaks
-of rock rising out of small plains or basins. The indented coast and
-the bottom of the neighbouring sea, studded with breakers, would, if
-converted into dry land, present similar forms; and such a conversion
-without doubt has taken place in the part over which we rode.
-
-3rd.--Quilimari to Conchalee. The country became more and more barren.
-In the valleys there was scarcely sufficient water for any irrigation;
-and the intermediate land was quite bare, not supporting even goats. In
-the spring, after the winter showers, a thin pasture rapidly springs
-up, and cattle are then driven down from the Cordillera to graze for a
-short time. It is curious to observe how the seeds of the grass and
-other plants seem to accommodate themselves, as if by an acquired
-habit, to the quantity of rain which falls upon different parts of this
-coast. One shower far northward at Copiapo produces as great an effect
-on the vegetation, as two at Guasco, and three or four in this
-district. At Valparaiso a winter so dry as greatly to injure the
-pasture, would at Guasco produce the most unusual abundance. Proceeding
-northward, the quantity of rain does not appear to decrease in strict
-proportion to the latitude. At Conchalee, which is only 67 miles north
-of Valparaiso, rain is not expected till the end of May; whereas at
-Valparaiso some generally falls early in April: the annual quantity is
-likewise small in proportion to the lateness of the season at which it
-commences.
-
-4th.--Finding the coast-road devoid of interest of any kind, we turned
-inland towards the mining district and valley of Illapel. This valley,
-like every other in Chile, is level, broad, and very fertile: it is
-bordered on each side, either by cliffs of stratified shingle, or by
-bare rocky mountains. Above the straight line of the uppermost
-irrigating ditch, all is brown as on a high road; while all below is of
-as bright a green as verdigris, from the beds of alfalfa, a kind of
-clover. We proceeded to Los Hornos, another mining district, where the
-principal hill was drilled with holes, like a great ants'-nest. The
-Chilian miners are a peculiar race of men in their habits. Living for
-weeks together in the most desolate spots, when they descend to the
-villages on feast-days, there is no excess of extravagance into which
-they do not run. They sometimes gain a considerable sum, and then,
-like sailors with prize-money, they try how soon they can contrive to
-squander it. They drink excessively, buy quantities of clothes, and in
-a few days return penniless to their miserable abodes, there to work
-harder than beasts of burden. This thoughtlessness, as with sailors,
-is evidently the result of a similar manner of life. Their daily food
-is found them, and they acquire no habits of carefulness: moreover,
-temptation and the means of yielding to it are placed in their power at
-the same time. On the other hand, in Cornwall, and some other parts of
-England, where the system of selling part of the vein is followed, the
-miners, from being obliged to act and think for themselves, are a
-singularly intelligent and well-conducted set of men.
-
-The dress of the Chilian miner is peculiar and rather picturesque He
-wears a very long shirt of some dark-coloured baize, with a leathern
-apron; the whole being fastened round his waist by a bright-coloured
-sash. His trousers are very broad, and his small cap of scarlet cloth
-is made to fit the head closely. We met a party of these miners in
-full costume, carrying the body of one of their companions to be
-buried. They marched at a very quick trot, four men supporting the
-corpse. One set having run as hard as they could for about two hundred
-yards, were relieved by four others, who had previously dashed on ahead
-on horseback. Thus they proceeded, encouraging each other by wild
-cries: altogether the scene formed a most strange funeral.
-
-We continued travelling northward, in a zigzag line; sometimes stopping
-a day to geologize. The country was so thinly inhabited, and the track
-so obscure, that we often had difficulty in finding our way. On the
-12th I stayed at some mines. The ore in this case was not considered
-particularly good, but from being abundant it was supposed the mine
-would sell for about thirty or forty thousand dollars (that is, 6000 or
-8000 pounds sterling); yet it had been bought by one of the English
-Associations for an ounce of gold (3l. 8s.). The ore is yellow
-pyrites, which, as I have already remarked, before the arrival of the
-English, was not supposed to contain a particle of copper. On a scale
-of profits nearly as great as in the above instance, piles of cinders,
-abounding with minute globules of metallic copper, were purchased; yet
-with these advantages, the mining associations, as is well known,
-contrived to lose immense sums of money. The folly of the greater
-number of the commissioners and shareholders amounted to
-infatuation;--a thousand pounds per annum given in some cases to
-entertain the Chilian authorities; libraries of well-bound geological
-books; miners brought out for particular metals, as tin, which are not
-found in Chile; contracts to supply the miners with milk, in parts
-where there are no cows; machinery, where it could not possibly be
-used; and a hundred similar arrangements, bore witness to our
-absurdity, and to this day afford amusement to the natives. Yet there
-can be no doubt, that the same capital well employed in these mines
-would have yielded an immense return, a confidential man of business, a
-practical miner and assayer, would have been all that was required.
-
-Captain Head has described the wonderful load which the "Apires," truly
-beasts of burden, carry up from the deepest mines. I confess I thought
-the account exaggerated: so that I was glad to take an opportunity of
-weighing one of the loads, which I picked out by hazard. It required
-considerable exertion on my part, when standing directly over it, to
-lift it from the ground. The load was considered under weight when
-found to be 197 pounds. The apire had carried this up eighty
-perpendicular yards,--part of the way by a steep passage, but the
-greater part up notched poles, placed in a zigzag line up the shaft.
-According to the general regulation, the apire is not allowed to halt
-for breath, except the mine is six hundred feet deep. The average load
-is considered as rather more than 200 pounds, and I have been assured
-that one of 300 pounds (twenty-two stone and a half) by way of a trial
-has been brought up from the deepest mine! At this time the apires were
-bringing up the usual load twelve times in the day; that is 2400 pounds
-from eighty yards deep; and they were employed in the intervals in
-breaking and picking ore.
-
-These men, excepting from accidents, are healthy, and appear cheerful.
-Their bodies are not very muscular. They rarely eat meat once a week,
-and never oftener, and then only the hard dry charqui. Although with a
-knowledge that the labour was voluntary, it was nevertheless quite
-revolting to see the state in which they reached the mouth of the mine;
-their bodies bent forward, leaning with their arms on the steps, their
-legs bowed, their muscles quivering, the perspiration streaming from
-their faces over their breasts, their nostrils distended, the corners
-of their mouth forcibly drawn back, and the expulsion of their breath
-most laborious. Each time they draw their breath, they utter an
-articulate cry of "ay-ay," which ends in a sound rising from deep in
-the chest, but shrill like the note of a fife. After staggering to the
-pile of ore, they emptied the "carpacho;" in two or three seconds
-recovering their breath, they wiped the sweat from their brows, and
-apparently quite fresh descended the mine again at a quick pace. This
-appears to me a wonderful instance of the amount of labour which habit,
-for it can be nothing else, will enable a man to endure.
-
-In the evening, talking with the _mayor-domo_ of these mines about the
-number of foreigners now scattered over the whole country, he told me
-that, though quite a young man, he remembers when he was a boy at
-school at Coquimbo, a holiday being given to see the captain of an
-English ship, who was brought to the city to speak to the governor. He
-believes that nothing would have induced any boy in the school, himself
-included, to have gone close to the Englishman; so deeply had they been
-impressed with an idea of the heresy, contamination, and evil to be
-derived from contact with such a person. To this day they relate the
-atrocious actions of the bucaniers; and especially of one man, who took
-away the figure of the Virgin Mary, and returned the year after for
-that of St. Joseph, saying it was a pity the lady should not have a
-husband. I heard also of an old lady who, at a dinner at Coquimbo,
-remarked how wonderfully strange it was that she should have lived to
-dine in the same room with an Englishman; for she remembered as a girl,
-that twice, at the mere cry of "Los Ingleses," every soul, carrying
-what valuables they could, had taken to the mountains.
-
-14th.--We reached Coquimbo, where we stayed a few days. The town is
-remarkable for nothing but its extreme quietness. It is said to
-contain from 6000 to 8000 inhabitants. On the morning of the 17th it
-rained lightly, the first time this year, for about five hours. The
-farmers, who plant corn near the sea-coast where the atmosphere is most
-humid, taking advantage of this shower, would break up the ground;
-after a second they would put the seed in; and if a third shower should
-fall, they would reap a good harvest in the spring. It was interesting
-to watch the effect of this trifling amount of moisture. Twelve hours
-afterwards the ground appeared as dry as ever; yet after an interval of
-ten days, all the hills were faintly tinged with green patches; the
-grass being sparingly scattered in hair-like fibres a full inch in
-length. Before this shower every part of the surface was bare as on a
-high road.
-
-In the evening, Captain Fitz Roy and myself were dining with Mr.
-Edwards, an English resident well known for his hospitality by all who
-have visited Coquimbo, when a sharp earthquake happened. I heard the
-forecoming rumble, but from the screams of the ladies, the running of
-the servants, and the rush of several of the gentlemen to the doorway,
-I could not distinguish the motion. Some of the women afterwards were
-crying with terror, and one gentleman said he should not be able to
-sleep all night, or if he did, it would only be to dream of falling
-houses. The father of this person had lately lost all his property at
-Talcahuano, and he himself had only just escaped a falling roof at
-Valparaiso, in 1822. He mentioned a curious coincidence which then
-happened: he was playing at cards, when a German, one of the party, got
-up, and said he would never sit in a room in these countries with the
-door shut, as owing to his having done so, he had nearly lost his life
-at Copiapo. Accordingly he opened the door; and no sooner had he done
-this, than he cried out, "Here it comes again!" and the famous shock
-commenced. The whole party escaped. The danger in an earthquake is
-not from the time lost in opening the door, but from the chance of its
-becoming jammed by the movement of the walls.
-
-It is impossible to be much surprised at the fear which natives and old
-residents, though some of them known to be men of great command of
-mind, so generally experience during earthquakes. I think, however,
-this excess of panic may be partly attributed to a want of habit in
-governing their fear, as it is not a feeling they are ashamed of.
-Indeed, the natives do not like to see a person indifferent. I heard
-of two Englishmen who, sleeping in the open air during a smart shock,
-knowing that there was no danger, did not rise. The natives cried out
-indignantly, "Look at those heretics, they do not even get out of their
-beds!"
-
-
-I spent some days in examining the step-formed terraces of shingle,
-first noticed by Captain B. Hall, and believed by Mr. Lyell to have
-been formed by the sea, during the gradual rising of the land. This
-certainly is the true explanation, for I found numerous shells of
-existing species on these terraces. Five narrow, gently sloping,
-fringe-like terraces rise one behind the other, and where best
-developed are formed of shingle: they front the bay, and sweep up both
-sides of the valley. At Guasco, north of Coquimbo, the phenomenon is
-displayed on a much grander scale, so as to strike with surprise even
-some of the inhabitants. The terraces are there much broader, and may
-be called plains, in some parts there are six of them, but generally
-only five; they run up the valley for thirty-seven miles from the
-coast. These step-formed terraces or fringes closely resemble those in
-the valley of S. Cruz, and, except in being on a smaller scale, those
-great ones along the whole coast-line of Patagonia. They have
-undoubtedly been formed by the denuding power of the sea, during long
-periods of rest in the gradual elevation of the continent.
-
-Shells of many existing species not only lie on the surface of the
-terraces at Coquimbo (to a height of 250 feet), but are embedded in a
-friable calcareous rock, which in some places is as much as between
-twenty and thirty feet in thickness, but is of little extent. These
-modern beds rest on an ancient tertiary formation containing shells,
-apparently all extinct. Although I examined so many hundred miles of
-coast on the Pacific, as well as Atlantic side of the continent, I
-found no regular strata containing sea-shells of recent species,
-excepting at this place, and at a few points northward on the road to
-Guasco. This fact appears to me highly remarkable; for the explanation
-generally given by geologists, of the absence in any district of
-stratified fossiliferous deposits of a given period, namely, that the
-surface then existed as dry land, is not here applicable; for we know
-from the shells strewed on the surface and embedded in loose sand or
-mould that the land for thousands of miles along both coasts has lately
-been submerged. The explanation, no doubt, must be sought in the fact,
-that the whole southern part of the continent has been for a long time
-slowly rising; and therefore that all matter deposited along shore in
-shallow water, must have been soon brought up and slowly exposed to the
-wearing action of the sea-beach; and it is only in comparatively
-shallow water that the greater number of marine organic beings can
-flourish, and in such water it is obviously impossible that strata of
-any great thickness can accumulate. To show the vast power of the
-wearing action of sea-beaches, we need only appeal to the great cliffs
-along the present coast of Patagonia, and to the escarpments or ancient
-sea-cliffs at different levels, one above another, on that same line of
-coast.
-
-The old underlying tertiary formation at Coquimbo, appears to be of
-about the same age with several deposits on the coast of Chile (of
-which that of Navedad is the principal one), and with the great
-formation of Patagonia. Both at Navedad and in Patagonia there is
-evidence, that since the shells (a list of which has been seen by
-Professor E. Forbes) there entombed were living, there has been a
-subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing elevation. It
-may naturally be asked, how it comes that, although no extensive
-fossiliferous deposits of the recent period, nor of any period
-intermediate between it and the ancient tertiary epoch, have been
-preserved on either side of the continent, yet that at this ancient
-tertiary epoch, sedimentary matter containing fossil remains, should
-have been deposited and preserved at different points in north and
-south lines, over a space of 1100 miles on the shores of the Pacific,
-and of at least 1350 miles on the shores of the Atlantic, and in an
-east and west line of 700 miles across the widest part of the
-continent? I believe the explanation is not difficult, and that it is
-perhaps applicable to nearly analogous facts observed in other quarters
-of the world. Considering the enormous power of denudation which the
-sea possesses, as shown by numberless facts, it is not probable that a
-sedimentary deposit, when being upraised, could pass through the ordeal
-of the beach, so as to be preserved in sufficient masses to last to a
-distant period, without it were originally of wide extent and of
-considerable thickness: now it is impossible on a moderately shallow
-bottom, which alone is favourable to most living creatures, that a
-thick and widely extended covering of sediment could be spread out,
-without the bottom sank down to receive the successive layers. This
-seems to have actually taken place at about the same period in southern
-Patagonia and Chile, though these places are a thousand miles apart.
-Hence, if prolonged movements of approximately contemporaneous
-subsidence are generally widely extensive, as I am strongly inclined to
-believe from my examination of the Coral Reefs of the great oceans--or
-if, confining our view to South America, the subsiding movements have
-been co-extensive with those of elevation, by which, within the same
-period of existing shells, the shores of Peru, Chile, Tierra del Fuego,
-Patagonia, and La Plata have been upraised--then we can see that at the
-same time, at far distant points, circumstances would have been
-favourable to the formation of fossiliferous deposits of wide extent
-and of considerable thickness; and such deposits, consequently, would
-have a good chance of resisting the wear and tear of successive
-beach-lines, and of lasting to a future epoch.
-
-
-May 21st.--I set out in company with Don Jose Edwards to the
-silver-mine of Arqueros, and thence up the valley of Coquimbo. Passing
-through a mountainous country, we reached by nightfall the mines
-belonging to Mr. Edwards. I enjoyed my night's rest here from a reason
-which will not be fully appreciated in England, namely, the absence of
-fleas! The rooms in Coquimbo swarm with them; but they will not live
-here at the height of only three or four thousand feet: it can scarcely
-be the trifling diminution of temperature, but some other cause which
-destroys these troublesome insects at this place. The mines are now in
-a bad state, though they formerly yielded about 2000 pounds in weight
-of silver a year. It has been said that "a person with a copper-mine
-will gain; with silver he may gain; but with gold he is sure to lose."
-This is not true: all the large Chilian fortunes have been made by
-mines of the more precious metals. A short time since an English
-physician returned to England from Copiapo, taking with him the profits
-of one share of a silver-mine, which amounted to about 24,000 pounds
-sterling. No doubt a copper-mine with care is a sure game, whereas the
-other is gambling, or rather taking a ticket in a lottery. The owners
-lose great quantities of rich ores; for no precautions can prevent
-robberies. I heard of a gentleman laying a bet with another, that one
-of his men should rob him before his face. The ore when brought out of
-the mine is broken into pieces, and the useless stone thrown on one
-side. A couple of the miners who were thus employed, pitched, as if by
-accident, two fragments away at the same moment, and then cried out for
-a joke "Let us see which rolls furthest." The owner, who was standing
-by, bet a cigar with his friend on the race. The miner by this means
-watched the very point amongst the rubbish where the stone lay. In the
-evening he picked it up and carried it to his master, showing him a
-rich mass of silver-ore, and saying, "This was the stone on which you
-won a cigar by its rolling so far."
-
-May 23rd.--We descended into the fertile valley of Coquimbo, and
-followed it till we reached an Hacienda belonging to a relation of Don
-Jose, where we stayed the next day. I then rode one day's journey
-further, to see what were declared to be some petrified shells and
-beans, which latter turned out to be small quartz pebbles. We passed
-through several small villages; and the valley was beautifully
-cultivated, and the whole scenery very grand. We were here near the
-main Cordillera, and the surrounding hills were lofty. In all parts of
-northern Chile, fruit trees produce much more abundantly at a
-considerable height near the Andes than in the lower country. The figs
-and grapes of this district are famous for their excellence, and are
-cultivated to a great extent. This valley is, perhaps, the most
-productive one north of Quillota. I believe it contains, including
-Coquimbo, 25,000 inhabitants. The next day I returned to the Hacienda,
-and thence, together with Don Jose, to Coquimbo.
-
-June 2nd.--We set out for the valley of Guasco, following the
-coast-road, which was considered rather less desert than the other. Our
-first day's ride was to a solitary house, called Yerba Buena, where
-there was pasture for our horses. The shower mentioned as having
-fallen, a fortnight ago, only reached about half-way to Guasco; we had,
-therefore, in the first part of our journey a most faint tinge of
-green, which soon faded quite away. Even where brightest, it was
-scarcely sufficient to remind one of the fresh turf and budding flowers
-of the spring of other countries. While travelling through these
-deserts one feels like a prisoner shut up in a gloomy court, who longs
-to see something green and to smell a moist atmosphere.
-
-June 3rd.--Yerba Buena to Carizal. During the first part of the day we
-crossed a mountainous rocky desert, and afterwards a long deep sandy
-plain, strewed with broken sea-shells. There was very little water, and
-that little saline: the whole country, from the coast to the
-Cordillera, is an uninhabited desert. I saw traces only of one living
-animal in abundance, namely, the shells of a Bulimus, which were
-collected together in extraordinary numbers on the driest spots. In
-the spring one humble little plant sends out a few leaves, and on these
-the snails feed. As they are seen only very early in the morning, when
-the ground is slightly damp with dew, the Guascos believe that they are
-bred from it. I have observed in other places that extremely dry and
-sterile districts, where the soil is calcareous, are extraordinarily
-favourable to land-shells. At Carizal there were a few cottages, some
-brackish water, and a trace of cultivation: but it was with difficulty
-that we purchased a little corn and straw for our horses.
-
-4th.--Carizal to Sauce. We continued to ride over desert plains,
-tenanted by large herds of guanaco. We crossed also the valley of
-Chaneral; which, although the most fertile one between Guasco and
-Coquimbo, is very narrow, and produces so little pasture, that we could
-not purchase any for our horses. At Sauce we found a very civil old
-gentleman, superintendent of a copper-smelting furnace. As an especial
-favour, he allowed me to purchase at a high price an armful of dirty
-straw, which was all the poor horses had for supper after their long
-day's journey. Few smelting-furnaces are now at work in any part of
-Chile; it is found more profitable, on account of the extreme scarcity
-of firewood, and from the Chilian method of reduction being so
-unskilful, to ship the ore for Swansea. The next day we crossed some
-mountains to Freyrina, in the valley of Guasco. During each day's ride
-further northward, the vegetation became more and more scanty; even the
-great chandelier-like cactus was here replaced by a different and much
-smaller species. During the winter months, both in northern Chile and
-in Peru, a uniform bank of clouds hangs, at no great height, over the
-Pacific. From the mountains we had a very striking view of this white
-and brilliant aerial-field, which sent arms up the valleys, leaving
-islands and promontories in the same manner, as the sea does in the
-Chonos archipelago and in Tierra del Fuego.
-
-We stayed two days at Freyrina. In the valley of Guasco there are four
-small towns. At the mouth there is the port, a spot entirely desert,
-and without any water in the immediate neighbourhood. Five leagues
-higher up stands Freyrina, a long straggling village, with decent
-whitewashed houses. Again, ten leagues further up Ballenar is situated,
-and above this Guasco Alto, a horticultural village, famous for its
-dried fruit. On a clear day the view up the valley is very fine; the
-straight opening terminates in the far-distant snowy Cordillera; on
-each side an infinity of crossing-lines are blended together in a
-beautiful haze. The foreground is singular from the number of parallel
-and step-formed terraces; and the included strip of green valley, with
-its willow-bushes, is contrasted on both hands with the naked hills.
-That the surrounding country was most barren will be readily believed,
-when it is known that a shower of rain had not fallen during the last
-thirteen months. The inhabitants heard with the greatest envy of the
-rain at Coquimbo; from the appearance of the sky they had hopes of
-equally good fortune, which, a fortnight afterwards, were realized. I
-was at Copiapo at the time; and there the people, with equal envy,
-talked of the abundant rain at Guasco. After two or three very dry
-years, perhaps with not more than one shower during the whole time, a
-rainy year generally follows; and this does more harm than even the
-drought. The rivers swell, and cover with gravel and sand the narrow
-strips of ground, which alone are fit for cultivation. The floods also
-injure the irrigating ditches. Great devastation had thus been caused
-three years ago.
-
-June 8th.--We rode on to Ballenar, which takes its name from Ballenagh
-in Ireland, the birthplace of the family of O'Higgins, who, under the
-Spanish government, were presidents and generals in Chile. As the rocky
-mountains on each hand were concealed by clouds, the terrace-like
-plains gave to the valley an appearance like that of Santa Cruz in
-Patagonia. After spending one day at Ballenar I set out, on the 10th,
-for the upper part of the valley of Copiapo. We rode all day over an
-uninteresting country. I am tired of repeating the epithets barren and
-sterile. These words, however, as commonly used, are comparative; I
-have always applied them to the plains of Patagonia, which can boast of
-spiny bushes and some tufts of grass; and this is absolute fertility,
-as compared with northern Chile. Here again, there are not many spaces
-of two hundred yards square, where some little bush, cactus or lichen,
-may not be discovered by careful examination; and in the soil seeds lie
-dormant ready to spring up during the first rainy winter. In Peru real
-deserts occur over wide tracts of country. In the evening we arrived at
-a valley, in which the bed of the streamlet was damp: following it up,
-we came to tolerably good water. During the night, the stream, from not
-being evaporated and absorbed so quickly, flows a league lower down
-than during the day. Sticks were plentiful for firewood, so that it
-was a good place to bivouac for us; but for the poor animals there was
-not a mouthful to eat.
-
-June 11th.--We rode without stopping for twelve hours till we reached
-an old smelting-furnace, where there was water and firewood; but our
-horses again had nothing to eat, being shut up in an old courtyard. The
-line of road was hilly, and the distant views interesting, from the
-varied colours of the bare mountains. It was almost a pity to see the
-sun shining constantly over so useless a country; such splendid weather
-ought to have brightened fields and pretty gardens. The next day we
-reached the valley of Copiapo. I was heartily glad of it; for the whole
-journey was a continued source of anxiety; it was most disagreeable to
-hear, whilst eating our own suppers, our horses gnawing the posts to
-which they were tied, and to have no means of relieving their hunger.
-To all appearance, however, the animals were quite fresh; and no one
-could have told that they had eaten nothing for the last fifty-five
-hours.
-
-I had a letter of introduction to Mr. Bingley, who received me very
-kindly at the Hacienda of Potrero Seco. This estate is between twenty
-and thirty miles long, but very narrow, being generally only two fields
-wide, one on each side the river. In some parts the estate is of no
-width, that is to say, the land cannot be irrigated, and therefore is
-valueless, like the surrounding rocky desert. The small quantity of
-cultivated land in the whole line of valley, does not so much depend on
-inequalities of level, and consequent unfitness for irrigation, as on
-the small supply of water. The river this year was remarkably full:
-here, high up the valley, it reached to the horse's belly, and was
-about fifteen yards wide, and rapid; lower down it becomes smaller and
-smaller, and is generally quite lost, as happened during one period of
-thirty years, so that not a drop entered the sea. The inhabitants
-watch a storm over the Cordillera with great interest; as one good fall
-of snow provides them with water for the ensuing year. This is of
-infinitely more consequence than rain in the lower country. Rain, as
-often as it falls, which is about once in every two or three years, is
-a great advantage, because the cattle and mules can for some time
-afterwards find a little pasture in the mountains. But without snow on
-the Andes, desolation extends throughout the valley. It is on record
-that three times nearly all the inhabitants have been obliged to
-emigrate to the south. This year there was plenty of water, and every
-man irrigated his ground as much as he chose; but it has frequently
-been necessary to post soldiers at the sluices, to see that each estate
-took only its proper allowance during so many hours in the week. The
-valley is said to contain 12,000 souls, but its produce is sufficient
-only for three months in the year; the rest of the supply being drawn
-from Valparaiso and the south. Before the discovery of the famous
-silver-mines of Chanuncillo, Copiapo was in a rapid state of decay; but
-now it is in a very thriving condition; and the town, which was
-completely overthrown by an earthquake, has been rebuilt.
-
-The valley of Copiapo, forming a mere ribbon of green in a desert, runs
-in a very southerly direction; so that it is of considerable length to
-its source in the Cordillera. The valleys of Guasco and Copiapo may
-both be considered as long narrow islands, separated from the rest of
-Chile by deserts of rock instead of by salt water. Northward of these,
-there is one other very miserable valley, called Paposo, which contains
-about two hundred souls; and then there extends the real desert of
-Atacama--a barrier far worse than the most turbulent ocean. After
-staying a few days at Potrero Seco, I proceeded up the valley to the
-house of Don Benito Cruz, to whom I had a letter of introduction. I
-found him most hospitable; indeed it is impossible to bear too strong
-testimony to the kindness with which travellers are received in almost
-every part of South America. The next day I hired some mules to take
-me by the ravine of Jolquera into the central Cordillera. On the
-second night the weather seemed to foretell a storm of snow or rain,
-and whilst lying in our beds we felt a trifling shock of an earthquake.
-
-The connection between earthquakes and the weather has been often
-disputed: it appears to me to be a point of great interest, which is
-little understood. Humboldt has remarked in one part of the Personal
-Narrative, [1] that it would be difficult for any person who had long
-resided in New Andalusia, or in Lower Peru, to deny that there exists
-some connection between these phenomena: in another part, however he
-seems to think the connection fanciful. At Guayaquil it is said that a
-heavy shower in the dry season is invariably followed by an earthquake.
-In Northern Chile, from the extreme infrequency of rain, or even of
-weather foreboding rain, the probability of accidental coincidences
-becomes very small; yet the inhabitants are here most firmly convinced
-of some connection between the state of the atmosphere and of the
-trembling of the ground: I was much struck by this when mentioning to
-some people at Copiapo that there had been a sharp shock at Coquimbo:
-they immediately cried out, "How fortunate! there will be plenty of
-pasture there this year." To their minds an earthquake foretold rain as
-surely as rain foretold abundant pasture. Certainly it did so happen
-that on the very day of the earthquake, that shower of rain fell, which
-I have described as in ten days' time producing a thin sprinkling of
-grass. At other times rain has followed earthquakes at a period of the
-year when it is a far greater prodigy than the earthquake itself: this
-happened after the shock of November, 1822, and again in 1829, at
-Valparaiso; also after that of September, 1833, at Tacna. A person must
-be somewhat habituated to the climate of these countries to perceive
-the extreme improbability of rain falling at such seasons, except as a
-consequence of some law quite unconnected with the ordinary course of
-the weather. In the cases of great volcanic eruptions, as that of
-Coseguina, where torrents of rain fell at a time of the year most
-unusual for it, and "almost unprecedented in Central America," it is
-not difficult to understand that the volumes of vapour and clouds of
-ashes might have disturbed the atmospheric equilibrium. Humboldt
-extends this view to the case of earthquakes unaccompanied by
-eruptions; but I can hardly conceive it possible, that the small
-quantity of aeriform fluids which then escape from the fissured ground,
-can produce such remarkable effects. There appears much probability in
-the view first proposed by Mr. P. Scrope, that when the barometer is
-low, and when rain might naturally be expected to fall, the diminished
-pressure of the atmosphere over a wide extent of country, might well
-determine the precise day on which the earth, already stretched to the
-utmost by the subterranean forces, should yield, crack, and
-consequently tremble. It is, however, doubtful how far this idea will
-explain the circumstances of torrents of rain falling in the dry season
-during several days, after an earthquake unaccompanied by an eruption;
-such cases seem to bespeak some more intimate connection between the
-atmospheric and subterranean regions.
-
-Finding little of interest in this part of the ravine, we retraced our
-steps to the house of Don Benito, where I stayed two days collecting
-fossil shells and wood. Great prostrate silicified trunks of trees,
-embedded in a conglomerate, were extraordinarily numerous. I measured
-one, which was fifteen feet in circumference: how surprising it is that
-every atom of the woody matter in this great cylinder should have been
-removed and replaced by silex so perfectly, that each vessel and pore
-is preserved! These trees flourished at about the period of our lower
-chalk; they all belonged to the fir-tribe. It was amusing to hear the
-inhabitants discussing the nature of the fossil shells which I
-collected, almost in the same terms as were used a century ago in
-Europe,--namely, whether or not they had been thus "born by nature." My
-geological examination of the country generally created a good deal of
-surprise amongst the Chilenos: it was long before they could be
-convinced that I was not hunting for mines. This was sometimes
-troublesome: I found the most ready way of explaining my employment,
-was to ask them how it was that they themselves were not curious
-concerning earthquakes and volcanos?--why some springs were hot and
-others cold?--why there were mountains in Chile, and not a hill in La
-Plata? These bare questions at once satisfied and silenced the greater
-number; some, however (like a few in England who are a century
-behindhand), thought that all such inquiries were useless and impious;
-and that it was quite sufficient that God had thus made the mountains.
-
-An order had recently been issued that all stray dogs should be killed,
-and we saw many lying dead on the road. A great number had lately gone
-mad, and several men had been bitten and had died in consequence. On
-several occasions hydrophobia has prevailed in this valley. It is
-remarkable thus to find so strange and dreadful a disease, appearing
-time after time in the same isolated spot. It has been remarked that
-certain villages in England are in like manner much more subject to
-this visitation than others. Dr. Unanue states that hydrophobia was
-first known in South America in 1803: this statement is corroborated by
-Azara and Ulloa having never heard of it in their time. Dr. Unanue
-says that it broke out in Central America, and slowly travelled
-southward. It reached Arequipa in 1807; and it is said that some men
-there, who had not been bitten, were affected, as were some negroes,
-who had eaten a bullock which had died of hydrophobia. At Ica
-forty-two people thus miserably perished. The disease came on between
-twelve and ninety days after the bite; and in those cases where it did
-come on, death ensued invariably within five days. After 1808, a long
-interval ensued without any cases. On inquiry, I did not hear of
-hydrophobia in Van Diemen's Land, or in Australia; and Burchell says,
-that during the five years he was at the Cape of Good Hope, he never
-heard of an instance of it. Webster asserts that at the Azores
-hydrophobia has never occurred; and the same assertion has been made
-with respect to Mauritius and St. Helena. [2] In so strange a disease
-some information might possibly be gained by considering the
-circumstances under which it originates in distant climates; for it is
-improbable that a dog already bitten, should have been brought to these
-distant countries.
-
-At night, a stranger arrived at the house of Don Benito, and asked
-permission to sleep there. He said he had been wandering about the
-mountains for seventeen days, having lost his way. He started from
-Guasco, and being accustomed to travelling in the Cordillera, did not
-expect any difficulty in following the track to Copiapo; but he soon
-became involved in a labyrinth of mountains, whence he could not
-escape. Some of his mules had fallen over precipices, and he had been
-in great distress. His chief difficulty arose from not knowing where
-to find water in the lower country, so that he was obliged to keep
-bordering the central ranges.
-
-We returned down the valley, and on the 22nd reached the town of
-Copiapo. The lower part of the valley is broad, forming a fine plain
-like that of Quillota. The town covers a considerable space of ground,
-each house possessing a garden: but it is an uncomfortable place, and
-the dwellings are poorly furnished. Every one seems bent on the one
-object of making money, and then migrating as quickly as possible. All
-the inhabitants are more or less directly concerned with mines; and
-mines and ores are the sole subjects of conversation. Necessaries of
-all sorts are extremely dear; as the distance from the town to the port
-is eighteen leagues, and the land carriage very expensive. A fowl
-costs five or six shillings; meat is nearly as dear as in England;
-firewood, or rather sticks, are brought on donkeys from a distance of
-two and three days' journey within the Cordillera; and pasturage for
-animals is a shilling a day: all this for South America is wonderfully
-exorbitant.
-
-
-June 26th.--I hired a guide and eight mules to take me into the
-Cordillera by a different line from my last excursion. As the country
-was utterly desert, we took a cargo and a half of barley mixed with
-chopped straw. About two leagues above the town a broad valley called
-the "Despoblado," or uninhabited, branches off from that one by which
-we had arrived. Although a valley of the grandest dimensions, and
-leading to a pass across the Cordillera, yet it is completely dry,
-excepting perhaps for a few days during some very rainy winter. The
-sides of the crumbling mountains were furrowed by scarcely any ravines;
-and the bottom of the main valley, filled with shingle, was smooth and
-nearly level. No considerable torrent could ever have flowed down this
-bed of shingle; for if it had, a great cliff-bounded channel, as in all
-the southern valleys, would assuredly have been formed. I feel little
-doubt that this valley, as well as those mentioned by travellers in
-Peru, were left in the state we now see them by the waves of the sea,
-as the land slowly rose. I observed in one place, where the Despoblado
-was joined by a ravine (which in almost any other chain would have been
-called a grand valley), that its bed, though composed merely of sand
-and gravel, was higher than that of its tributary. A mere rivulet of
-water, in the course of an hour, would have cut a channel for itself;
-but it was evident that ages had passed away, and no such rivulet had
-drained this great tributary. It was curious to behold the machinery,
-if such a term may be used, for the drainage, all, with the last
-trifling exception, perfect, yet without any signs of action. Every
-one must have remarked how mud-banks, left by the retiring tide,
-imitate in miniature a country with hill and dale; and here we have the
-original model in rock, formed as the continent rose during the secular
-retirement of the ocean, instead of during the ebbing and flowing of
-the tides. If a shower of rain falls on the mud-bank, when left dry,
-it deepens the already-formed shallow lines of excavation; and so it is
-with the rain of successive centuries on the bank of rock and soil,
-which we call a continent.
-
-We rode on after it was dark, till we reached a side ravine with a
-small well, called "Agua amarga." The water deserved its name, for
-besides being saline it was most offensively putrid and bitter; so that
-we could not force ourselves to drink either tea or mate. I suppose
-the distance from the river of Copiapo to this spot was at least
-twenty-five or thirty English miles; in the whole space there was not a
-single drop of water, the country deserving the name of desert in the
-strictest sense. Yet about half way we passed some old Indian ruins
-near Punta Gorda: I noticed also in front of some of the valleys, which
-branch off from the Despoblado, two piles of stones placed a little way
-apart, and directed so as to point up the mouths of these small
-valleys. My companions knew nothing about them, and only answered my
-queries by their imperturbable "quien sabe?"
-
-I observed Indian ruins in several parts of the Cordillera: the most
-perfect which I saw, were the Ruinas de Tambillos, in the Uspallata
-Pass. Small square rooms were there huddled together in separate
-groups: some of the doorways were yet standing; they were formed by a
-cross slab of stone only about three feet high. Ulloa has remarked on
-the lowness of the doors in the ancient Peruvian dwellings. These
-houses, when perfect, must have been capable of containing a
-considerable number of persons. Tradition says, that they were used as
-halting-places for the Incas, when they crossed the mountains. Traces
-of Indian habitations have been discovered in many other parts, where
-it does not appear probable that they were used as mere resting-places,
-but yet where the land is as utterly unfit for any kind of cultivation,
-as it is near the Tambillos or at the Incas Bridge, or in the Portillo
-Pass, at all which places I saw ruins. In the ravine of Jajuel, near
-Aconcagua, where there is no pass, I heard of remains of houses
-situated at a great height, where it is extremely cold and sterile. At
-first I imagined that these buildings had been places of refuge, built
-by the Indians on the first arrival of the Spaniards; but I have since
-been inclined to speculate on the probability of a small change of
-climate.
-
-In this northern part of Chile, within the Cordillera, old Indian
-houses are said to be especially numerous: by digging amongst the
-ruins, bits of woollen articles, instruments of precious metals, and
-heads of Indian corn, are not unfrequently discovered: an arrow-head
-made of agate, and of precisely the same form with those now used in
-Tierra del Fuego, was given me. I am aware that the Peruvian Indians
-now frequently inhabit most lofty and bleak situations; but at Copiapo
-I was assured by men who had spent their lives in travelling through
-the Andes, that there were very many (muchisimas) buildings at heights
-so great as almost to border upon the perpetual snow, and in parts
-where there exist no passes, and where the land produces absolutely
-nothing, and what is still more extraordinary, where there is no water.
-Nevertheless it is the opinion of the people of the country (although
-they are much puzzled by the circumstance), that, from the appearance
-of the houses, the Indians must have used them as places of residence.
-In this valley, at Punta Gorda, the remains consisted of seven or eight
-square little rooms, which were of a similar form with those at
-Tambillos, but built chiefly of mud, which the present inhabitants
-cannot, either here or, according to Ulloa, in Peru, imitate in
-durability. They were situated in the most conspicuous and defenceless
-position, at the bottom of the flat broad valley. There was no water
-nearer than three or four leagues, and that only in very small
-quantity, and bad: the soil was absolutely sterile; I looked in vain
-even for a lichen adhering to the rocks. At the present day, with the
-advantage of beasts of burden, a mine, unless it were very rich, could
-scarcely be worked here with profit. Yet the Indians formerly chose it
-as a place of residence! If at the present time two or three showers
-of rain were to fall annually, instead of one, as now is the case
-during as many years, a small rill of water would probably be formed in
-this great valley; and then, by irrigation (which was formerly so well
-understood by the Indians), the soil would easily be rendered
-sufficiently productive to support a few families.
-
-I have convincing proofs that this part of the continent of South
-America has been elevated near the coast at least from 400 to 500, and
-in some parts from 1000 to 1300 feet, since the epoch of existing
-shells; and further inland the rise possibly may have been greater. As
-the peculiarly arid character of the climate is evidently a consequence
-of the height of the Cordillera, we may feel almost sure that before
-the later elevations, the atmosphere could not have been so completely
-drained of its moisture as it now is; and as the rise has been gradual,
-so would have been the change in climate. On this notion of a change
-of climate since the buildings were inhabited, the ruins must be of
-extreme antiquity, but I do not think their preservation under the
-Chilian climate any great difficulty. We must also admit on this
-notion (and this perhaps is a greater difficulty) that man has
-inhabited South America for an immensely long period, inasmuch as any
-change of climate effected by the elevation of the land must have been
-extremely gradual. At Valparaiso, within the last 220 years, the rise
-has been somewhat less than 19 feet: at Lima a sea-beach has certainly
-been upheaved from 80 to 90 feet, within the Indo-human period: but
-such small elevations could have had little power in deflecting the
-moisture-bringing atmospheric currents. Dr. Lund, however, found human
-skeletons in the caves of Brazil, the appearance of which induced him
-to believe that the Indian race has existed during a vast lapse of time
-in South America.
-
-When at Lima, I conversed on these subjects [3] with Mr. Gill, a civil
-engineer, who had seen much of the interior country. He told me that a
-conjecture of a change of climate had sometimes crossed his mind; but
-that he thought that the greater portion of land, now incapable of
-cultivation, but covered with Indian ruins, had been reduced to this
-state by the water-conduits, which the Indians formerly constructed on
-so wonderful a scale, having been injured by neglect and by
-subterranean movements. I may here mention, that the Peruvians
-actually carried their irrigating streams in tunnels through hills of
-solid rock. Mr. Gill told me, he had been employed professionally to
-examine one: he found the passage low, narrow, crooked, and not of
-uniform breadth, but of very considerable length. Is it not most
-wonderful that men should have attempted such operations, without the
-use of iron or gunpowder? Mr. Gill also mentioned to me a most
-interesting, and, as far as I am aware, quite unparalleled case, of a
-subterranean disturbance having changed the drainage of a country.
-Travelling from Casma to Huaraz (not very far distant from Lima), he
-found a plain covered with ruins and marks of ancient cultivation but
-now quite barren. Near it was the dry course of a considerable river,
-whence the water for irrigation had formerly been conducted. There was
-nothing in the appearance of the water-course to indicate that the
-river had not flowed there a few years previously; in some parts, beds
-of sand and gravel were spread out; in others, the solid rock had been
-worn into a broad channel, which in one spot was about 40 yards in
-breadth and 8 feet deep. It is self-evident that a person following up
-the course of a stream, will always ascend at a greater or less
-inclination: Mr. Gill, therefore, was much astonished, when walking up
-the bed of this ancient river, to find himself suddenly going down
-hill. He imagined that the downward slope had a fall of about 40 or 50
-feet perpendicular. We here have unequivocal evidence that a ridge had
-been uplifted right across the old bed of a stream. From the moment
-the river-course was thus arched, the water must necessarily have been
-thrown back, and a new channel formed. From that moment, also, the
-neighbouring plain must have lost its fertilizing stream, and become a
-desert.
-
-June 27th.--We set out early in the morning, and by midday reached the
-ravine of Paypote, where there is a tiny rill of water, with a little
-vegetation, and even a few algarroba trees, a kind of mimosa. From
-having firewood, a smelting-furnace had formerly been built here: we
-found a solitary man in charge of it, whose sole employment was hunting
-guanacos. At night it froze sharply; but having plenty of wood for our
-fire, we kept ourselves warm.
-
-28th.--We continued gradually ascending, and the valley now changed
-into a ravine. During the day we saw several guanacos, and the track
-of the closely-allied species, the Vicuna: this latter animal is
-pre-eminently alpine in its habits; it seldom descends much below the
-limit of perpetual snow, and therefore haunts even a more lofty and
-sterile situation than the guanaco. The only other animal which we saw
-in any number was a small fox: I suppose this animal preys on the mice
-and other small rodents, which, as long as there is the least
-vegetation, subsist in considerable numbers in very desert places. In
-Patagonia, even on the borders of the salinas, where a drop of fresh
-water can never be found, excepting dew, these little animals swarm.
-Next to lizards, mice appear to be able to support existence on the
-smallest and driest portions of the earth--even on islets in the midst
-of great oceans.
-
-The scene on all sides showed desolation, brightened and made palpable
-by a clear, unclouded sky. For a time such scenery is sublime, but
-this feeling cannot last, and then it becomes uninteresting. We
-bivouacked at the foot of the "primera linea," or the first line of the
-partition of waters. The streams, however, on the east side do not flow
-to the Atlantic, but into an elevated district, in the middle of which
-there is a large saline, or salt lake; thus forming a little Caspian
-Sea at the height, perhaps, of ten thousand feet. Where we slept,
-there were some considerable patches of snow, but they do not remain
-throughout the year. The winds in these lofty regions obey very
-regular laws. Every day a fresh breeze blows up the valley, and at
-night, an hour or two after sunset, the air from the cold regions above
-descends as through a funnel. This night it blew a gale of wind, and
-the temperature must have been considerably below the freezing-point,
-for water in a vessel soon became a block of ice. No clothes seemed to
-pose any obstacle to the air; I suffered very much from the cold, so
-that I could not sleep, and in the morning rose with my body quite dull
-and benumbed.
-
-In the Cordillera further southward, people lose their lives from
-snow-storms; here, it sometimes happens from another cause. My guide,
-when a boy of fourteen years old, was passing the Cordillera with a
-party in the month of May; and while in the central parts, a furious
-gale of wind arose, so that the men could hardly cling on their mules,
-and stones were flying along the ground. The day was cloudless, and
-not a speck of snow fell, but the temperature was low. It is probable
-that the thermometer could not have stood very many degrees below the
-freezing-point, but the effect on their bodies, ill protected by
-clothing, must have been in proportion to the rapidity of the current
-of cold air. The gale lasted for more than a day; the men began to
-lose their strength, and the mules would not move onwards. My guide's
-brother tried to return, but he perished, and his body was found two
-years afterwards. Lying by the side of his mule near the road, with the
-bridle still in his hand. Two other men in the party lost their
-fingers and toes; and out of two hundred mules and thirty cows, only
-fourteen mules escaped alive. Many years ago the whole of a large
-party are supposed to have perished from a similar cause, but their
-bodies to this day have never been discovered. The union of a
-cloudless sky, low temperature, and a furious gale of wind, must be, I
-should think, in all parts of the world an unusual occurrence.
-
-June 29th--We gladly travelled down the valley to our former night's
-lodging, and thence to near the Agua amarga. On July 1st we reached the
-valley of Copiapo. The smell of the fresh clover was quite delightful,
-after the scentless air of the dry, sterile Despoblado. Whilst staying
-in the town I heard an account from several of the inhabitants, of a
-hill in the neighbourhood which they called "El Bramador,"--the roarer
-or bellower. I did not at the time pay sufficient attention to the
-account; but, as far as I understood, the hill was covered by sand, and
-the noise was produced only when people, by ascending it, put the sand
-in motion. The same circumstances are described in detail on the
-authority of Seetzen and Ehrenberg, [4] as the cause of the sounds
-which have been heard by many travellers on Mount Sinai near the Red
-Sea. One person with whom I conversed had himself heard the noise: he
-described it as very surprising; and he distinctly stated that,
-although he could not understand how it was caused, yet it was
-necessary to set the sand rolling down the acclivity. A horse walking
-over dry coarse sand, causes a peculiar chirping noise from the
-friction of the particles; a circumstance which I several times noticed
-on the coast of Brazil.
-
-Three days afterwards I heard of the Beagle's arrival at the Port,
-distant eighteen leagues from the town. There is very little land
-cultivated down the valley; its wide expanse supports a wretched wiry
-grass, which even the donkeys can hardly eat. This poorness of the
-vegetation is owing to the quantity of saline matter with which the
-soil is impregnated. The Port consists of an assemblage of miserable
-little hovels, situated at the foot of a sterile plain. At present, as
-the river contains water enough to reach the sea, the inhabitants enjoy
-the advantage of having fresh water within a mile and a half. On the
-beach there were large piles of merchandise, and the little place had
-an air of activity. In the evening I gave my adios, with a hearty
-good-will, to my companion Mariano Gonzales, with whom I had ridden so
-many leagues in Chile. The next morning the Beagle sailed for Iquique.
-
-July 12th.--We anchored in the port of Iquique, in lat. 20 degs. 12',
-on the coast of Peru. The town contains about a thousand inhabitants,
-and stands on a little plain of sand at the foot of a great wall of
-rock, 2000 feet in height, here forming the coast. The whole is
-utterly desert. A light shower of rain falls only once in very many
-years; and the ravines consequently are filled with detritus, and the
-mountain-sides covered by piles of fine white sand, even to a height of
-a thousand feet. During this season of the year a heavy bank of
-clouds, stretched over the ocean, seldom rises above the wall of rocks
-on the coast. The aspect of the place was most gloomy; the little
-port, with its few vessels, and small group of wretched houses, seemed
-overwhelmed and out of all proportion with the rest of the scene.
-
-The inhabitants live like persons on board a ship: every necessary
-comes from a distance: water is brought in boats from Pisagua, about
-forty miles northward, and is sold at the rate of nine reals (4s. 6d.)
-an eighteen-gallon cask: I bought a wine-bottle full for threepence. In
-like manner firewood, and of course every article of food, is imported.
-Very few animals can be maintained in such a place: on the ensuing
-morning I hired with difficulty, at the price of four pounds sterling,
-two mules and a guide to take me to the nitrate of soda works. These
-are at present the support of Iquique. This salt was first exported in
-1830: in one year an amount in value of one hundred thousand pounds
-sterling, was sent to France and England. It is principally used as a
-manure and in the manufacture of nitric acid: owing to its deliquescent
-property it will not serve for gunpowder. Formerly there were two
-exceedingly rich silver-mines in this neighbourhood, but their produce
-is now very small.
-
-Our arrival in the offing caused some little apprehension. Peru was in
-a state of anarchy; and each party having demanded a contribution, the
-poor town of Iquique was in tribulation, thinking the evil hour was
-come. The people had also their domestic troubles; a short time
-before, three French carpenters had broken open, during the same night,
-the two churches, and stolen all the plate: one of the robbers,
-however, subsequently confessed, and the plate was recovered. The
-convicts were sent to Arequipa, which though the capital of this
-province, is two hundred leagues distant, the government there thought
-it a pity to punish such useful workmen, who could make all sorts of
-furniture; and accordingly liberated them. Things being in this state,
-the churches were again broken open, but this time the plate was not
-recovered. The inhabitants became dreadfully enraged, and declaring
-that none but heretics would thus "eat God Almighty," proceeded to
-torture some Englishmen, with the intention of afterwards shooting
-them. At last the authorities interfered, and peace was established.
-
-
-13th.--In the morning I started for the saltpetre-works, a distance of
-fourteen leagues. Having ascended the steep coast-mountains by a
-zigzag sandy track, we soon came in view of the mines of Guantajaya and
-St. Rosa. These two small villages are placed at the very mouths of
-the mines; and being perched up on hills, they had a still more
-unnatural and desolate appearance than the town of Iquique. We did not
-reach the saltpetre-works till after sunset, having ridden all day
-across an undulating country, a complete and utter desert. The road
-was strewed with the bones and dried skins of many beasts of burden
-which had perished on it from fatigue. Excepting the Vultur aura,
-which preys on the carcasses, I saw neither bird, quadruped, reptile,
-nor insect. On the coast-mountains, at the height of about 2000 feet
-where during this season the clouds generally hang, a very few cacti
-were growing in the clefts of rock; and the loose sand was strewed over
-with a lichen, which lies on the surface quite unattached. This plant
-belongs to the genus Cladonia, and somewhat resembles the reindeer
-lichen. In some parts it was in sufficient quantity to tinge the sand,
-as seen from a distance, of a pale yellowish colour. Further inland,
-during the whole ride of fourteen leagues, I saw only one other
-vegetable production, and that was a most minute yellow lichen, growing
-on the bones of the dead mules. This was the first true desert which I
-had seen: the effect on me was not impressive; but I believe this was
-owing to my having become gradually accustomed to such scenes, as I
-rode northward from Valparaiso, through Coquimbo, to Copiapo. The
-appearance of the country was remarkable, from being covered by a thick
-crust of common salt, and of a stratified saliferous alluvium, which
-seems to have been deposited as the land slowly rose above the level of
-the sea. The salt is white, very hard, and compact: it occurs in water
-worn nodules projecting from the agglutinated sand, and is associated
-with much gypsum. The appearance of this superficial mass very closely
-resembled that of a country after snow, before the last dirty patches
-are thawed. The existence of this crust of a soluble substance over
-the whole face of the country, shows how extraordinarily dry the
-climate must have been for a long period.
-
-At night I slept at the house of the owner of one of the saltpetre
-mines. The country is here as unproductive as near the coast; but
-water, having rather a bitter and brackish taste, can be procured by
-digging wells. The well at this house was thirty-six yards deep: as
-scarcely any rain falls, it is evident the water is not thus derived;
-indeed if it were, it could not fail to be as salt as brine, for the
-whole surrounding country is incrusted with various saline substances.
-We must therefore conclude that it percolates under ground from the
-Cordillera, though distant many leagues. In that direction there are a
-few small villages, where the inhabitants, having more water, are
-enabled to irrigate a little land, and raise hay, on which the mules
-and asses, employed in carrying the saltpetre, are fed. The nitrate of
-soda was now selling at the ship's side at fourteen shillings per
-hundred pounds: the chief expense is its transport to the sea-coast.
-The mine consists of a hard stratum, between two and three feet thick,
-of the nitrate mingled with a little of the sulphate of soda and a good
-deal of common salt. It lies close beneath the surface, and follows
-for a length of one hundred and fifty miles the margin of a grand basin
-or plain; this, from its outline, manifestly must once have been a
-lake, or more probably an inland arm of the sea, as may be inferred
-from the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. The surface of
-the plain is 3300 feet above the Pacific.
-
-
-19th.--We anchored in the Bay of Callao, the seaport of Lima, the
-capital of Peru. We stayed here six weeks but from the troubled state
-of public affairs, I saw very little of the country. During our whole
-visit the climate was far from being so delightful, as it is generally
-represented. A dull heavy bank of clouds constantly hung over the
-land, so that during the first sixteen days I had only one view of the
-Cordillera behind Lima. These mountains, seen in stages, one above the
-other, through openings in the clouds, had a very grand appearance. It
-is almost become a proverb, that rain never falls in the lower part of
-Peru. Yet this can hardly be considered correct; for during almost
-every day of our visit there was a thick drizzling mist, which was
-sufficient to make the streets muddy and one's clothes damp: this the
-people are pleased to call Peruvian dew. That much rain does not fall
-is very certain, for the houses are covered only with flat roofs made
-of hardened mud; and on the mole shiploads of wheat were piled up,
-being thus left for weeks together without any shelter.
-
-I cannot say I liked the very little I saw of Peru: in summer, however,
-it is said that the climate is much pleasanter. In all seasons, both
-inhabitants and foreigners suffer from severe attacks of ague. This
-disease is common on the whole coast of Peru, but is unknown in the
-interior. The attacks of illness which arise from miasma never fail to
-appear most mysterious. So difficult is it to judge from the aspect of
-a country, whether or not it is healthy, that if a person had been told
-to choose within the tropics a situation appearing favourable for
-health, very probably he would have named this coast. The plain round
-the outskirts of Callao is sparingly covered with a coarse grass, and
-in some parts there are a few stagnant, though very small, pools of
-water. The miasma, in all probability, arises from these: for the town
-of Arica was similarly circumstanced, and its healthiness was much
-improved by the drainage of some little pools. Miasma is not always
-produced by a luxuriant vegetation with an ardent climate; for many
-parts of Brazil, even where there are marshes and a rank vegetation,
-are much more healthy than this sterile coast of Peru. The densest
-forests in a temperate climate, as in Chiloe, do not seem in the
-slightest degree to affect the healthy condition of the atmosphere.
-
-The island of St. Jago, at the Cape de Verds, offers another strongly
-marked instance of a country, which any one would have expected to find
-most healthy, being very much the contrary. I have described the bare
-and open plains as supporting, during a few weeks after the rainy
-season, a thin vegetation, which directly withers away and dries up: at
-this period the air appears to become quite poisonous; both natives and
-foreigners often being affected with violent fevers. On the other hand,
-the Galapagos Archipelago, in the Pacific, with a similar soil, and
-periodically subject to the same process of vegetation, is perfectly
-healthy. Humboldt has observed, that, "under the torrid zone, the
-smallest marshes are the most dangerous, being surrounded, as at Vera
-Cruz and Carthagena, with an arid and sandy soil, which raises the
-temperature of the ambient air." [5] On the coast of Peru, however, the
-temperature is not hot to any excessive degree; and perhaps in
-consequence, the intermittent fevers are not of the most malignant
-order. In all unhealthy countries the greatest risk is run by sleeping
-on shore. Is this owing to the state of the body during sleep, or to a
-greater abundance of miasma at such times? It appears certain that
-those who stay on board a vessel, though anchored at only a short
-distance from the coast, generally suffer less than those actually on
-shore. On the other hand, I have heard of one remarkable case where a
-fever broke out among the crew of a man-of-war some hundred miles off
-the coast of Africa, and at the same time one of those fearful periods
-[6] of death commenced at Sierra Leone.
-
-No state in South America, since the declaration of independence, has
-suffered more from anarchy than Peru. At the time of our visit, there
-were four chiefs in arms contending for supremacy in the government: if
-one succeeded in becoming for a time very powerful, the others
-coalesced against him; but no sooner were they victorious, than they
-were again hostile to each other. The other day, at the Anniversary of
-the Independence, high mass was performed, the President partaking of
-the sacrament: during the _Te Deum laudamus_, instead of each regiment
-displaying the Peruvian flag, a black one with death's head was
-unfurled. Imagine a government under which such a scene could be
-ordered, on such an occasion, to be typical of their determination of
-fighting to death! This state of affairs happened at a time very
-unfortunately for me, as I was precluded from taking any excursions
-much beyond the limits of the town. The barren island of St. Lorenzo,
-which forms the harbour, was nearly the only place where one could walk
-securely. The upper part, which is upwards of 1000 feet in height,
-during this season of the year (winter), comes within the lower limit
-of the clouds; and in consequence, an abundant cryptogamic vegetation,
-and a few flowers cover the summit. On the hills near Lima, at a
-height but little greater, the ground is carpeted with moss, and beds
-of beautiful yellow lilies, called Amancaes. This indicates a very
-much greater degree of humidity, than at a corresponding height at
-Iquique. Proceeding northward of Lima, the climate becomes damper, till
-on the banks of the Guayaquil, nearly under the equator, we find the
-most luxuriant forests. The change, however, from the sterile coast of
-Peru to that fertile land is described as taking place rather abruptly
-in the latitude of Cape Blanco, two degrees south of Guayaquil.
-
-Callao is a filthy, ill-built, small seaport. The inhabitants, both
-here and at Lima, present every imaginable shade of mixture, between
-European, Negro, and Indian blood. They appear a depraved, drunken set
-of people. The atmosphere is loaded with foul smells, and that
-peculiar one, which may be perceived in almost every town within the
-tropics, was here very strong. The fortress, which withstood Lord
-Cochrane's long siege, has an imposing appearance. But the President,
-during our stay, sold the brass guns, and proceeded to dismantle parts
-of it. The reason assigned was, that he had not an officer to whom he
-could trust so important a charge. He himself had good reason for
-thinking so, as he had obtained the presidentship by rebelling while in
-charge of this same fortress. After we left South America, he paid the
-penalty in the usual manner, by being conquered, taken prisoner, and
-shot.
-
-Lima stands on a plain in a valley, formed during the gradual retreat
-of the sea. It is seven miles from Callao, and is elevated 500 feet
-above it; but from the slope being very gradual, the road appears
-absolutely level; so that when at Lima it is difficult to believe one
-has ascended even one hundred feet: Humboldt has remarked on this
-singularly deceptive case. Steep barren hills rise like islands from
-the plain, which is divided, by straight mud-walls, into large green
-fields. In these scarcely a tree grows excepting a few willows, and an
-occasional clump of bananas and of oranges. The city of Lima is now in
-a wretched state of decay: the streets are nearly unpaved; and heaps of
-filth are piled up in all directions, where the black gallinazos, tame
-as poultry, pick up bits of carrion. The houses have generally an
-upper story, built on account of the earthquakes, of plastered woodwork
-but some of the old ones, which are now used by several families, are
-immensely large, and would rival in suites of apartments the most
-magnificent in any place. Lima, the City of the Kings, must formerly
-have been a splendid town. The extraordinary number of churches gives
-it, even at the present day, a peculiar and striking character,
-especially when viewed from a short distance.
-
-One day I went out with some merchants to hunt in the immediate
-vicinity of the city. Our sport was very poor; but I had an
-opportunity of seeing the ruins of one of the ancient Indian villages,
-with its mound like a natural hill in the centre. The remains of
-houses, enclosures, irrigating streams, and burial mounds, scattered
-over this plain, cannot fail to give one a high idea of the condition
-and number of the ancient population. When their earthenware, woollen
-clothes, utensils of elegant forms cut out of the hardest rocks, tools
-of copper, ornaments of precious stones, palaces, and hydraulic works,
-are considered, it is impossible not to respect the considerable
-advance made by them in the arts of civilization. The burial mounds,
-called Huacas, are really stupendous; although in some places they
-appear to be natural hills incased and modelled.
-
-There is also another and very different class of ruins, which
-possesses some interest, namely, those of old Callao, overwhelmed by
-the great earthquake of 1746, and its accompanying wave. The
-destruction must have been more complete even than at Talcahuano.
-Quantities of shingle almost conceal the foundations of the walls, and
-vast masses of brickwork appear to have been whirled about like pebbles
-by the retiring waves. It has been stated that the land subsided
-during this memorable shock: I could not discover any proof of this;
-yet it seems far from improbable, for the form of the coast must
-certainly have undergone some change since the foundation of the old
-town; as no people in their senses would willingly have chosen for
-their building place, the narrow spit of shingle on which the ruins now
-stand. Since our voyage, M. Tschudi has come to the conclusion, by the
-comparison of old and modern maps, that the coast both north and south
-of Lima has certainly subsided.
-
-On the island of San Lorenzo, there are very satisfactory proofs of
-elevation within the recent period; this of course is not opposed to
-the belief, of a small sinking of the ground having subsequently taken
-place. The side of this island fronting the Bay of Callao, is worn
-into three obscure terraces, the lower one of which is covered by a bed
-a mile in length, almost wholly composed of shells of eighteen species,
-now living in the adjoining sea. The height of this bed is eighty-five
-feet. Many of the shells are deeply corroded, and have a much older
-and more decayed appearance than those at the height of 500 or 600 feet
-on the coast of Chile. These shells are associated with much common
-salt, a little sulphate of lime (both probably left by the evaporation
-of the spray, as the land slowly rose), together with sulphate of soda
-and muriate of lime. They rest on fragments of the underlying
-sandstone, and are covered by a few inches thick of detritus. The
-shells, higher up on this terrace could be traced scaling off in
-flakes, and falling into an impalpable powder; and on an upper terrace,
-at the height of 170 feet, and likewise at some considerably higher
-points, I found a layer of saline powder of exactly similar appearance,
-and lying in the same relative position. I have no doubt that this
-upper layer originally existed as a bed of shells, like that on the
-eighty-five-feet ledge; but it does not now contain even a trace of
-organic structure. The powder has been analyzed for me by Mr. T.
-Reeks; it consists of sulphates and muriates both of lime and soda,
-with very little carbonate of lime. It is known that common salt and
-carbonate of lime left in a mass for some time together, partly
-decompose each other; though this does not happen with small quantities
-in solution. As the half-decomposed shells in the lower parts are
-associated with much common salt, together with some of the saline
-substances composing the upper saline layer, and as these shells are
-corroded and decayed in a remarkable manner, I strongly suspect that
-this double decomposition has here taken place. The resultant salts,
-however, ought to be carbonate of soda and muriate of lime, the latter
-is present, but not the carbonate of soda. Hence I am led to imagine
-that by some unexplained means, the carbonate of soda becomes changed
-into the sulphate. It is obvious that the saline layer could not have
-been preserved in any country in which abundant rain occasionally fell:
-on the other hand, this very circumstance, which at first sight appears
-so highly favourable to the long preservation of exposed shells, has
-probably been the indirect means, through the common salt not having
-been washed away, of their decomposition and early decay.
-
-I was much interested by finding on the terrace, at the height of
-eighty-five feet, _embedded_ amidst the shells and much sea-drifted
-rubbish, some bits of cotton thread, plaited rush, and the head of a
-stalk of Indian corn: I compared these relics with similar ones taken
-out of the Huacas, or old Peruvian tombs, and found them identical in
-appearance. On the mainland in front of San Lorenzo, near Bellavista,
-there is an extensive and level plain about a hundred feet high, of
-which the lower part is formed of alternating layers of sand and impure
-clay, together with some gravel, and the surface, to the depth of from
-three to six feet, of a reddish loam, containing a few scattered
-sea-shells and numerous small fragments of coarse red earthenware, more
-abundant at certain spots than at others. At first I was inclined to
-believe that this superficial bed, from its wide extent and smoothness,
-must have been deposited beneath the sea; but I afterwards found in one
-spot, that it lay on an artificial floor of round stones. It seems,
-therefore, most probable that at a period when the land stood at a
-lower level there was a plain very similar to that now surrounding
-Callao, which being protected by a shingle beach, is raised but very
-little above the level of the sea. On this plain, with its underlying
-red-clay beds, I imagine that the Indians manufactured their earthen
-vessels; and that, during some violent earthquake, the sea broke over
-the beach, and converted the plain into a temporary lake, as happened
-round Callao in 1713 and 1746. The water would then have deposited
-mud, containing fragments of pottery from the kilns, more abundant at
-some spots than at others, and shells from the sea. This bed, with
-fossil earthenware, stands at about the same height with the shells on
-the lower terrace of San Lorenzo, in which the cotton-thread and other
-relics were embedded.
-
-Hence we may safely conclude, that within the Indo-human period there
-has been an elevation, as before alluded to, of more than eighty-five
-feet; for some little elevation must have been lost by the coast having
-subsided since the old maps were engraved. At Valparaiso, although in
-the 220 years before our visit, the elevation cannot have exceeded
-nineteen feet, yet subsequently to 1817, there has been a rise, partly
-insensible and partly by a start during the shock of 1822, of ten or
-eleven feet. The antiquity of the Indo-human race here, judging by the
-eighty-five feet rise of the land since the relics were embedded, is
-the more remarkable, as on the coast of Patagonia, when the land stood
-about the same number of feet lower, the Macrauchenia was a living
-beast; but as the Patagonian coast is some way distant from the
-Cordillera, the rising there may have been slower than here. At Bahia
-Blanca, the elevation has been only a few feet since the numerous
-gigantic quadrupeds were there entombed; and, according to the
-generally received opinion, when these extinct animals were living, man
-did not exist. But the rising of that part of the coast of Patagonia,
-is perhaps no way connected with the Cordillera, but rather with a line
-of old volcanic rocks in Banda Oriental, so that it may have been
-infinitely slower than on the shores of Peru. All these speculations,
-however, must be vague; for who will pretend to say that there may not
-have been several periods of subsidence, intercalated between the
-movements of elevation; for we know that along the whole coast of
-Patagonia, there have certainly been many and long pauses in the upward
-action of the elevatory forces.
-
-[1] Vol. iv. p. 11, and vol. ii. p. 217. For the remarks on Guayaquil,
-see Silliman's Journ., vol. xxiv. p. 384. For those on Tacna by Mr.
-Hamilton, see Trans. of British Association, 1840. For those on
-Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil. Trans., 1835. In the former
-edition I collected several references on the coincidences between
-sudden falls in the barometer and earthquakes; and between earthquakes
-and meteors.
-
-[2] Observa. sobre el Clima de Lima, p. 67.--Azara's Travels, vol. i.
-p. 381.--Ulloa's Voyage, vol. ii. p. 28.--Burchell's Travels, vol. ii.
-p. 524.--Webster's Description of the Azores, p. 124.--Voyage a l'Isle
-de France par un Officer du Roi, tom. i. p. 248.--Description of St.
-Helena, p. 123.
-
-[3] Temple, in his travels through Upper Peru, or Bolivia, in going
-from Potosi to Oruro, says, "I saw many Indian villages or dwellings in
-ruins, up even to the very tops of the mountains, attesting a former
-population where now all is desolate." He makes similar remarks in
-another place; but I cannot tell whether this desolation has been
-caused by a want of population, or by an altered condition of the land.
-
-[4] Edinburgh, Phil. Journ., Jan., 1830, p. 74; and April, 1830, p.
-258--also Daubeny on Volcanoes, p. 438; and Bengal Journ., vol. vii. p.
-324.
-
-[5] Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, vol. iv. p. 199.
-
-[6] A similar interesting case is recorded in the Madras Medical Quart.
-Journ., 1839, p. 340. Dr. Ferguson, in his admirable Paper (see 9th
-vol. of Edinburgh Royal Trans.), shows clearly that the poison is
-generated in the drying process; and hence that dry hot countries are
-often the most unhealthy.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
-
-The whole Group Volcanic--Numbers of Craters--Leafless Bushes Colony at
-Charles Island--James Island--Salt-lake in Crater--Natural History of
-the Group--Ornithology, curious Finches--Reptiles--Great Tortoises,
-habits of--Marine Lizard, feeds on Sea-weed--Terrestrial Lizard,
-burrowing habits, herbivorous--Importance of Reptiles in the
-Archipelago--Fish, Shells, Insects--Botany--American Type of
-Organization--Differences in the Species or Races on different
-Islands--Tameness of the Birds--Fear of Man, an acquired Instinct.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 15th.--This archipelago consists of ten principal islands, of
-which five exceed the others in size. They are situated under the
-Equator, and between five and six hundred miles westward of the coast
-of America. They are all formed of volcanic rocks; a few fragments of
-granite curiously glazed and altered by the heat, can hardly be
-considered as an exception. Some of the craters, surmounting the
-larger islands, are of immense size, and they rise to a height of
-between three and four thousand feet. Their flanks are studded by
-innumerable smaller orifices. I scarcely hesitate to affirm, that
-there must be in the whole archipelago at least two thousand craters.
-These consist either of lava or scoriae, or of finely-stratified,
-sandstone-like tuff. Most of the latter are beautifully symmetrical;
-they owe their origin to eruptions of volcanic mud without any lava: it
-is a remarkable circumstance that every one of the twenty-eight
-tuff-craters which were examined, had their southern sides either much
-lower than the other sides, or quite broken down and removed. As all
-these craters apparently have been formed when standing in the sea, and
-as the waves from the trade wind and the swell from the open Pacific
-here unite their forces on the southern coasts of all the islands, this
-singular uniformity in the broken state of the craters, composed of the
-soft and yielding tuff, is easily explained.
-
-Considering that these islands are placed directly under the equator,
-the climate is far from being excessively hot; this seems chiefly
-caused by the singularly low temperature of the surrounding water,
-brought here by the great southern
-
-
-[map]
-
-
-Polar current. Excepting during one short season, very little rain
-falls, and even then it is irregular; but the clouds generally hang
-low. Hence, whilst the lower parts of the islands are very sterile,
-the upper parts, at a height of a thousand feet and upwards, possess a
-damp climate and a tolerably luxuriant vegetation. This is especially
-the case on the windward sides of the islands, which first receive and
-condense the moisture from the atmosphere.
-
-In the morning (17th) we landed on Chatham Island, which, like the
-others, rises with a tame and rounded outline, broken here and there by
-scattered hillocks, the remains of former craters. Nothing could be
-less inviting than the first appearance. A broken field of black
-basaltic lava, thrown into the most rugged waves, and crossed by great
-fissures, is everywhere covered by stunted, sun-burnt brushwood, which
-shows little signs of life. The dry and parched surface, being heated
-by the noon-day sun, gave to the air a close and sultry feeling, like
-that from a stove: we fancied even that the bushes smelt unpleasantly.
-Although I diligently tried to collect as many plants as possible, I
-succeeded in getting very few; and such wretched-looking little weeds
-would have better become an arctic than an equatorial Flora. The
-brushwood appears, from a short distance, as leafless as our trees
-during winter; and it was some time before I discovered that not only
-almost every plant was now in full leaf, but that the greater number
-were in flower. The commonest bush is one of the Euphorbiaceae: an
-acacia and a great odd-looking cactus are the only trees which afford
-any shade. After the season of heavy rains, the islands are said to
-appear for a short time partially green. The volcanic island of
-Fernando Noronha, placed in many respects under nearly similar
-conditions, is the only other country where I have seen a vegetation at
-all like this of the Galapagos Islands.
-
-The Beagle sailed round Chatham Island, and anchored in several bays.
-One night I slept on shore on a part of the island, where black
-truncated cones were extraordinarily numerous: from one small eminence
-I counted sixty of them, all surmounted by craters more or less
-perfect. The greater number consisted merely of a ring of red scoriae
-or slags, cemented together: and their height above the plain of lava
-was not more than from fifty to a hundred feet; none had been very
-lately active. The entire surface of this part of the island seems to
-have been permeated, like a sieve, by the subterranean vapours: here
-and there the lava, whilst soft, has been blown into great bubbles; and
-in other parts, the tops of caverns similarly formed have fallen in,
-leaving circular pits with steep sides. From the regular form of the
-many craters, they gave to the country an artificial appearance, which
-vividly reminded me of those parts of Staffordshire, where the great
-iron-foundries are most numerous. The day was glowing hot, and the
-scrambling over the rough surface and through the intricate thickets,
-was very fatiguing; but I was well repaid by the strange Cyclopean
-scene. As I was walking along I met two large tortoises, each of which
-must have weighed at least two hundred pounds: one was eating a piece
-of cactus, and as I approached, it stared at me and slowly walked away;
-the other gave a deep hiss, and drew in its head. These huge reptiles,
-surrounded by the black lava, the leafless shrubs, and large cacti,
-seemed to my fancy like some antediluvian animals. The few
-dull-coloured birds cared no more for me than they did for the great
-tortoises.
-
-23rd.--The Beagle proceeded to Charles Island. This archipelago has
-long been frequented, first by the bucaniers, and latterly by whalers,
-but it is only within the last six years, that a small colony has been
-established here. The inhabitants are between two and three hundred in
-number; they are nearly all people of colour, who have been banished
-for political crimes from the Republic of the Equator, of which Quito
-is the capital. The settlement is placed about four and a half miles
-inland, and at a height probably of a thousand feet. In the first part
-of the road we passed through leafless thickets, as in Chatham Island.
-Higher up, the woods gradually became greener; and as soon as we
-crossed the ridge of the island, we were cooled by a fine southerly
-breeze, and our sight refreshed by a green and thriving vegetation. In
-this upper region coarse grasses and ferns abound; but there are no
-tree-ferns: I saw nowhere any member of the palm family, which is the
-more singular, as 360 miles northward, Cocos Island takes its name from
-the number of cocoa-nuts. The houses are irregularly scattered over a
-flat space of ground, which is cultivated with sweet potatoes and
-bananas. It will not easily be imagined how pleasant the sight of
-black mud was to us, after having been so long, accustomed to the
-parched soil of Peru and northern Chile. The inhabitants, although
-complaining of poverty, obtain, without much trouble, the means of
-subsistence. In the woods there are many wild pigs and goats; but the
-staple article of animal food is supplied by the tortoises. Their
-numbers have of course been greatly reduced in this island, but the
-people yet count on two days' hunting giving them food for the rest of
-the week. It is said that formerly single vessels have taken away as
-many as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a frigate some
-years since brought down in one day two hundred tortoises to the beach.
-
-September 29th.--We doubled the south-west extremity of Albemarle
-Island, and the next day were nearly becalmed between it and Narborough
-Island. Both are covered with immense deluges of black naked lava,
-which have flowed either over the rims of the great caldrons, like
-pitch over the rim of a pot in which it has been boiled, or have burst
-forth from smaller orifices on the flanks; in their descent they have
-spread over miles of the sea-coast. On both of these islands,
-eruptions are known to have taken place; and in Albemarle, we saw a
-small jet of smoke curling from the summit of one of the great craters.
-In the evening we anchored in Bank's Cove, in Albemarle Island. The
-next morning I went out walking. To the south of the broken
-tuff-crater, in which the Beagle was anchored, there was another
-beautifully symmetrical one of an elliptic form; its longer axis was a
-little less than a mile, and its depth about 500 feet. At its bottom
-there was a shallow lake, in the middle of which a tiny crater formed
-an islet. The day was overpoweringly hot, and the lake looked clear
-and blue: I hurried down the cindery slope, and, choked with dust,
-eagerly tasted the water--but, to my sorrow, I found it salt as brine.
-
-The rocks on the coast abounded with great black lizards, between three
-and four feet long; and on the hills, an ugly yellowish-brown species
-was equally common. We saw many of this latter kind, some clumsily
-running out of the way, and others shuffling into their burrows. I
-shall presently describe in more detail the habits of both these
-reptiles. The whole of this northern part of Albemarle Island is
-miserably sterile.
-
-October 8th.--We arrived at James Island: this island, as well as
-Charles Island, were long since thus named after our kings of the
-Stuart line. Mr. Bynoe, myself, and our servants were left here for a
-week, with provisions and a tent, whilst the Beagle went for water. We
-found here a party of Spaniards, who had been sent from Charles Island
-to dry fish, and to salt tortoise-meat. About six miles inland, and at
-the height of nearly 2000 feet, a hovel had been built in which two men
-lived, who were employed in catching tortoises, whilst the others were
-fishing on the coast. I paid this party two visits, and slept there
-one night. As in the other islands, the lower region was covered by
-nearly leafless bushes, but the trees were here of a larger growth than
-elsewhere, several being two feet and some even two feet nine inches in
-diameter. The upper region being kept damp by the clouds, supports a
-green and flourishing vegetation. So damp was the ground, that there
-were large beds of a coarse cyperus, in which great numbers of a very
-small water-rail lived and bred. While staying in this upper region,
-we lived entirely upon tortoise-meat: the breast-plate roasted (as the
-Gauchos do _carne con cuero_), with the flesh on it, is very good; and
-the young tortoises make excellent soup; but otherwise the meat to my
-taste is indifferent.
-
-One day we accompanied a party of the Spaniards in their whale-boat to
-a salina, or lake from which salt is procured. After landing, we had a
-very rough walk over a rugged field of recent lava, which has almost
-surrounded a tuff-crater, at the bottom of which the salt-lake lies.
-The water is only three or four inches deep, and rests on a layer of
-beautifully crystallized, white salt. The lake is quite circular, and
-is fringed with a border of bright green succulent plants; the almost
-precipitous walls of the crater are clothed with wood, so that the
-scene was altogether both picturesque and curious. A few years since,
-the sailors belonging to a sealing-vessel murdered their captain in
-this quiet spot; and we saw his skull lying among the bushes.
-
-During the greater part of our stay of a week, the sky was cloudless,
-and if the trade-wind failed for an hour, the heat became very
-oppressive. On two days, the thermometer within the tent stood for
-some hours at 93 degs.; but in the open air, in the wind and sun, at
-only 85 degs. The sand was extremely hot; the thermometer placed in
-some of a brown colour immediately rose to 137 degs., and how much
-above that it would have risen, I do not know, for it was not graduated
-any higher. The black sand felt much hotter, so that even in thick
-boots it was quite disagreeable to walk over it.
-
-
-The natural history of these islands is eminently curious, and well
-deserves attention. Most of the organic productions are aboriginal
-creations, found nowhere else; there is even a difference between the
-inhabitants of the different islands; yet all show a marked
-relationship with those of America, though separated from that
-continent by an open space of ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in
-width. The archipelago is a little world within itself, or rather a
-satellite attached to America, whence it has derived a few stray
-colonists, and has received the general character of its indigenous
-productions. Considering the small size of the islands, we feel the
-more astonished at the number of their aboriginal beings, and at their
-confined range. Seeing every height crowned with its crater, and the
-boundaries of most of the lava-streams still distinct, we are led to
-believe that within a period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was
-here spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be brought
-somewhat near to that great fact--that mystery of mysteries--the first
-appearance of new beings on this earth.
-
-Of terrestrial mammals, there is only one which must be considered as
-indigenous, namely, a mouse (Mus Galapagoensis), and this is confined,
-as far as I could ascertain, to Chatham Island, the most easterly
-island of the group. It belongs, as I am informed by Mr. Waterhouse,
-to a division of the family of mice characteristic of America. At
-James Island, there is a rat sufficiently distinct from the common kind
-to have been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse; but as it belongs
-to the old-world division of the family, and as this island has been
-frequented by ships for the last hundred and fifty years, I can hardly
-doubt that this rat is merely a variety produced by the new and
-peculiar climate, food, and soil, to which it has been subjected.
-Although no one has a right to speculate without distinct facts, yet
-even with respect to the Chatham Island mouse, it should be borne in
-mind, that it may possibly be an American species imported here; for I
-have seen, in a most unfrequented part of the Pampas, a native mouse
-living in the roof of a newly built hovel, and therefore its
-transportation in a vessel is not improbable: analogous facts have been
-observed by Dr. Richardson in North America.
-
-Of land-birds I obtained twenty-six kinds, all peculiar to the group
-and found nowhere else, with the exception of one lark-like finch from
-North America (Dolichonyx oryzivorus), which ranges on that continent
-as far north as 54 degs., and generally frequents marshes. The other
-twenty-five birds consist, firstly, of a hawk, curiously intermediate
-in structure between a buzzard and the American group of
-carrion-feeding Polybori; and with these latter birds it agrees most
-closely in every habit and even tone of voice. Secondly, there are two
-owls, representing the short-eared and white barn-owls of Europe.
-Thirdly, a wren, three tyrant-flycatchers (two of them species of
-Pyrocephalus, one or both of which would be ranked by some
-ornithologists as only varieties), and a dove--all analogous to, but
-distinct from, American species. Fourthly, a swallow, which though
-differing from the Progne purpurea of both Americas, only in being
-rather duller colored, smaller, and slenderer, is considered by Mr.
-Gould as specifically distinct. Fifthly, there are three species of
-mocking thrush--a form highly characteristic of America. The remaining
-land-birds form a most singular group of finches, related to each other
-in the structure of their beaks, short tails, form of body and plumage:
-there are thirteen species, which Mr. Gould has divided into four
-sub-groups. All these species are peculiar to this archipelago; and so
-is the whole group, with the exception of one species of the sub-group
-Cactornis, lately brought from Bow Island, in the Low Archipelago. Of
-Cactornis, the two species may be often seen climbing about the flowers
-of the great cactus-trees; but all the other species of this group of
-finches, mingled together in flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground
-of the lower districts. The males of all, or certainly of the greater
-number, are jet black; and the females (with perhaps one or two
-exceptions) are brown. The most curious fact is the perfect gradation
-in the size of the beaks in the different species of Geospiza, from one
-as large as that of a hawfinch to that of a chaffinch, and (if Mr.
-Gould is right in including his sub-group, Certhidea, in the main
-group) even to that of a warbler. The largest beak in the genus
-Geospiza is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but instead of
-there being only one intermediate species, with a beak of the size
-shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species with insensibly
-graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group Certhidea, is shown in Fig.
-4. The beak of Cactornis is
-
-
-[picture]
-
-1. Geospiza magnirostris. 2. Geospiza fortis. 3. Geospiza parvula.
-4. Certhidea olivasea.
-
-
-somewhat like that of a starling, and that of the fourth sub-group,
-Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped. Seeing this gradation and
-diversity of structure in one small, intimately related group of birds,
-one might really fancy that from an original paucity of birds in this
-archipelago, one species had been taken and modified for different
-ends. In a like manner it might be fancied that a bird originally a
-buzzard, had been induced here to undertake the office of the
-carrion-feeding Polybori of the American continent.
-
-Of waders and water-birds I was able to get only eleven kinds, and of
-these only three (including a rail confined to the damp summits of the
-islands) are new species. Considering the wandering habits of the
-gulls, I was surprised to find that the species inhabiting these
-islands is peculiar, but allied to one from the southern parts of South
-America. The far greater peculiarity of the land-birds, namely,
-twenty-five out of twenty-six, being new species, or at least new
-races, compared with the waders and web-footed birds, is in accordance
-with the greater range which these latter orders have in all parts of
-the world. We shall hereafter see this law of aquatic forms, whether
-marine or fresh-water, being less peculiar at any given point of the
-earth's surface than the terrestrial forms of the same classes,
-strikingly illustrated in the shells, and in a lesser degree in the
-insects of this archipelago.
-
-Two of the waders are rather smaller than the same species brought from
-other places: the swallow is also smaller, though it is doubtful
-whether or not it is distinct from its analogue. The two owls, the two
-tyrant-catchers (Pyrocephalus) and the dove, are also smaller than the
-analogous but distinct species, to which they are most nearly related;
-on the other hand, the gull is rather larger. The two owls, the
-swallow, all three species of mocking-thrush, the dove in its separate
-colours though not in its whole plumage, the Totanus, and the gull, are
-likewise duskier coloured than their analogous species; and in the case
-of the mocking-thrush and Totanus, than any other species of the two
-genera. With the exception of a wren with a fine yellow breast, and of
-a tyrant-flycatcher with a scarlet tuft and breast, none of the birds
-are brilliantly coloured, as might have been expected in an equatorial
-district. Hence it would appear probable, that the same causes which
-here make the immigrants of some peculiar species smaller, make most of
-the peculiar Galapageian species also smaller, as well as very
-generally more dusky coloured. All the plants have a wretched, weedy
-appearance, and I did not see one beautiful flower. The insects,
-again, are small-sized and dull-coloured, and, as Mr. Waterhouse
-informs me, there is nothing in their general appearance which would
-have led him to imagine that they had come from under the equator. [1]
-The birds, plants, and insects have a desert character, and are not
-more brilliantly coloured than those from southern Patagonia; we may,
-therefore, conclude that the usual gaudy colouring of the intertropical
-productions, is not related either to the heat or light of those zones,
-but to some other cause, perhaps to the conditions of existence being
-generally favourable to life.
-
-
-We will now turn to the order of reptiles, which gives the most
-striking character to the zoology of these islands. The species are not
-numerous, but the numbers of individuals of each species are
-extraordinarily great. There is one small lizard belonging to a South
-American genus, and two species (and probably more) of the
-Amblyrhynchus--a genus confined to the Galapagos Islands. There is one
-snake which is numerous; it is identical, as I am informed by M.
-Bibron, with the Psammophis Temminckii from Chile. [2] Of sea-turtle I
-believe there are more than one species, and of tortoises there are, as
-we shall presently show, two or three species or races. Of toads and
-frogs there are none: I was surprised at this, considering how well
-suited for them the temperate and damp upper woods appeared to be. It
-recalled to my mind the remark made by Bory St. Vincent, [3] namely,
-that none of this family are found on any of the volcanic islands in
-the great oceans. As far as I can ascertain from various works, this
-seems to hold good throughout the Pacific, and even in the large
-islands of the Sandwich archipelago. Mauritius offers an apparent
-exception, where I saw the Rana Mascariensis in abundance: this frog is
-said now to inhabit the Seychelles, Madagascar, and Bourbon; but on the
-other hand, Du Bois, in his voyage in 1669, states that there were no
-reptiles in Bourbon except tortoises; and the Officier du Roi asserts
-that before 1768 it had been attempted, without success, to introduce
-frogs into Mauritius--I presume for the purpose of eating: hence it may
-be well doubted whether this frog is an aboriginal of these islands.
-The absence of the frog family in the oceanic islands is the more
-remarkable, when contrasted with the case of lizards, which swarm on
-most of the smallest islands. May this difference not be caused, by
-the greater facility with which the eggs of lizards, protected by
-calcareous shells might be transported through salt-water, than could
-the slimy spawn of frogs?
-
-I will first describe the habits of the tortoise (Testudo nigra,
-formerly called Indica), which has been so frequently alluded to. These
-animals are found, I believe, on all the islands of the archipelago;
-certainly on the greater number. They frequent in preference the high
-damp parts, but they likewise live in the lower and arid districts. I
-have already shown, from the numbers which have been caught in a single
-day, how very numerous they must be. Some grow to an immense size: Mr.
-Lawson, an Englishman, and vice-governor of the colony, told us that he
-had seen several so large, that it required six or eight men to lift
-them from the ground; and that some had afforded as much as two hundred
-pounds of meat. The old males are the largest, the females rarely
-growing to so great a size: the male can readily be distinguished from
-the female by the greater length of its tail. The tortoises which live
-on those islands where there is no water, or in the lower and arid
-parts of the others, feed chiefly on the succulent cactus. Those which
-frequent the higher and damp regions, eat the leaves of various trees,
-a kind of berry (called guayavita) which is acid and austere, and
-likewise a pale green filamentous lichen (Usnera plicata), that hangs
-from the boughs of the trees.
-
-The tortoise is very fond of water, drinking large quantities, and
-wallowing in the mud. The larger islands alone possess springs, and
-these are always situated towards the central parts, and at a
-considerable height. The tortoises, therefore, which frequent the
-lower districts, when thirsty, are obliged to travel from a long
-distance. Hence broad and well-beaten paths branch off in every
-direction from the wells down to the sea-coast; and the Spaniards by
-following them up, first discovered the watering-places. When I landed
-at Chatham Island, I could not imagine what animal travelled so
-methodically along well-chosen tracks. Near the springs it was a
-curious spectacle to behold many of these huge creatures, one set
-eagerly travelling onwards with outstretched necks, and another set
-returning, after having drunk their fill. When the tortoise arrives at
-the spring, quite regardless of any spectator, he buries his head in
-the water above his eyes, and greedily swallows great mouthfuls, at the
-rate of about ten in a minute. The inhabitants say each animal stays
-three or four days in the neighbourhood of the water, and then returns
-to the lower country; but they differed respecting the frequency of
-these visits. The animal probably regulates them according to the
-nature of the food on which it has lived. It is, however, certain,
-that tortoises can subsist even on these islands where there is no
-other water than what falls during a few rainy days in the year.
-
-I believe it is well ascertained, that the bladder of the frog acts as
-a reservoir for the moisture necessary to its existence: such seems to
-be the case with the tortoise. For some time after a visit to the
-springs, their urinary bladders are distended with fluid, which is said
-gradually to decrease in volume, and to become less pure. The
-inhabitants, when walking in the lower district, and overcome with
-thirst, often take advantage of this circumstance, and drink the
-contents of the bladder if full: in one I saw killed, the fluid was
-quite limpid, and had only a very slightly bitter taste. The
-inhabitants, however, always first drink the water in the pericardium,
-which is described as being best.
-
-The tortoises, when purposely moving towards any point, travel by night
-and day, and arrive at their journey's end much sooner than would be
-expected. The inhabitants, from observing marked individuals, consider
-that they travel a distance of about eight miles in two or three days.
-One large tortoise, which I watched, walked at the rate of sixty yards
-in ten minutes, that is 360 yards in the hour, or four miles a
-day,--allowing a little time for it to eat on the road. During the
-breeding season, when the male and female are together, the male utters
-a hoarse roar or bellowing, which, it is said, can be heard at the
-distance of more than a hundred yards. The female never uses her voice,
-and the male only at these times; so that when the people hear this
-noise, they know that the two are together. They were at this time
-(October) laying their eggs. The female, where the soil is sandy,
-deposits them together, and covers them up with sand; but where the
-ground is rocky she drops them indiscriminately in any hole: Mr. Bynoe
-found seven placed in a fissure. The egg is white and spherical; one
-which I measured was seven inches and three-eighths in circumference,
-and therefore larger than a hen's egg. The young tortoises, as soon as
-they are hatched, fall a prey in great numbers to the carrion-feeding
-buzzard. The old ones seem generally to die from accidents, as from
-falling down precipices: at least, several of the inhabitants told me,
-that they never found one dead without some evident cause.
-
-The inhabitants believe that these animals are absolutely deaf;
-certainly they do not overhear a person walking close behind them. I
-was always amused when overtaking one of these great monsters, as it
-was quietly pacing along, to see how suddenly, the instant I passed, it
-would draw in its head and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the
-ground with a heavy sound, as if struck dead. I frequently got on
-their backs, and then giving a few raps on the hinder part of their
-shells, they would rise up and walk away;--but I found it very
-difficult to keep my balance. The flesh of this animal is largely
-employed, both fresh and salted; and a beautifully clear oil is
-prepared from the fat. When a tortoise is caught, the man makes a slit
-in the skin near its tail, so as to see inside its body, whether the
-fat under the dorsal plate is thick. If it is not, the animal is
-liberated and it is said to recover soon from this strange operation.
-In order to secure the tortoise, it is not sufficient to turn them like
-turtle, for they are often able to get on their legs again.
-
-There can be little doubt that this tortoise is an aboriginal
-inhabitant of the Galapagos; for it is found on all, or nearly all, the
-islands, even on some of the smaller ones where there is no water; had
-it been an imported species, this would hardly have been the case in a
-group which has been so little frequented. Moreover, the old Bucaniers
-found this tortoise in greater numbers even than at present: Wood and
-Rogers also, in 1708, say that it is the opinion of the Spaniards, that
-it is found nowhere else in this quarter of the world. It is now
-widely distributed; but it may be questioned whether it is in any other
-place an aboriginal. The bones of a tortoise at Mauritius, associated
-with those of the extinct Dodo, have generally been considered as
-belonging to this tortoise; if this had been so, undoubtedly it must
-have been there indigenous; but M. Bibron informs me that he believes
-that it was distinct, as the species now living there certainly is.
-
-The Amblyrhynchus, a remarkable genus of lizards, is confined to this
-archipelago; there are two species, resembling
-
-[picture]
-
-each other in general form, one being terrestrial and the other
-aquatic. This latter species (A. cristatus) was first characterized by
-Mr. Bell, who well foresaw, from its short, broad head, and strong
-claws of equal length, that its habits of life would turn out very
-peculiar, and different from those of its nearest ally, the Iguana. It
-is extremely common on all the islands throughout the group, and lives
-exclusively on the rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I
-never saw one, even ten yards in-shore. It is a hideous-looking
-creature, of a dirty black colour, stupid, and sluggish in its
-movements. The usual length of a full-grown one is about a yard, but
-there are some even four feet long; a large one weighed twenty pounds:
-on the island of Albemarle they seem to grow to a greater size than
-elsewhere. Their tails are flattened sideways, and all four feet
-partially webbed. They are occasionally seen some hundred yards from
-the shore, swimming about; and Captain Collnett, in his Voyage says,
-"They go to sea in herds a-fishing, and sun themselves on the rocks;
-and may be called alligators in miniature." It must not, however, be
-supposed that they live on fish. When in the water this lizard swims
-with perfect ease and quickness, by a serpentine movement of its body
-and flattened tail--the legs being motionless and closely collapsed on
-its sides. A seaman on board sank one, with a heavy weight attached to
-it, thinking thus to kill it directly; but when, an hour afterwards, he
-drew up the line, it was quite active. Their limbs and strong claws
-are admirably adapted for crawling over the rugged and fissured masses
-of lava, which everywhere form the coast. In such situations, a group
-of six or seven of these hideous reptiles may oftentimes be seen on the
-black rocks, a few feet above the surf, basking in the sun with
-outstretched legs.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them largely distended with
-minced sea-weed (Ulvae), which grows in thin foliaceous expansions of a
-bright green or a dull red colour. I do not recollect having observed
-this sea-weed in any quantity on the tidal rocks; and I have reason to
-believe it grows at the bottom of the sea, at some little distance from
-the coast. If such be the case, the object of these animals
-occasionally going out to sea is explained. The stomach contained
-nothing but the sea-weed. Mr. Baynoe, however, found a piece of crab
-in one; but this might have got in accidentally, in the same manner as
-I have seen a caterpillar, in the midst of some lichen, in the paunch
-of a tortoise. The intestines were large, as in other herbivorous
-animals. The nature of this lizard's food, as well as the structure of
-its tail and feet, and the fact of its having been seen voluntarily
-swimming out at sea, absolutely prove its aquatic habits; yet there is
-in this respect one strange anomaly, namely, that when frightened it
-will not enter the water. Hence it is easy to drive these lizards down
-to any little point overhanging the sea, where they will sooner allow a
-person to catch hold of their tails than jump into the water. They do
-not seem to have any notion of biting; but when much frightened they
-squirt a drop of fluid from each nostril. I threw one several times as
-far as I could, into a deep pool left by the retiring tide; but it
-invariably returned in a direct line to the spot where I stood. It
-swam near the bottom, with a very graceful and rapid movement, and
-occasionally aided itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As
-soon as it arrived near the edge, but still being under water, it tried
-to conceal itself in the tufts of sea-weed, or it entered some crevice.
-As soon as it thought the danger was past, it crawled out on the dry
-rocks, and shuffled away as quickly as it could. I several times
-caught this same lizard, by driving it down to a point, and though
-possessed of such perfect powers of diving and swimming, nothing would
-induce it to enter the water; and as often as I threw it in, it
-returned in the manner above described. Perhaps this singular piece of
-apparent stupidity may be accounted for by the circumstance, that this
-reptile has no enemy whatever on shore, whereas at sea it must often
-fall a prey to the numerous sharks. Hence, probably, urged by a fixed
-and hereditary instinct that the shore is its place of safety, whatever
-the emergency may be, it there takes refuge.
-
-During our visit (in October), I saw extremely few small individuals of
-this species, and none I should think under a year old. From this
-circumstance it seems probable that the breeding season had not then
-commenced. I asked several of the inhabitants if they knew where it
-laid its eggs: they said that they knew nothing of its propagation,
-although well acquainted with the eggs of the land kind--a fact,
-considering how very common this lizard is, not a little extraordinary.
-
-We will now turn to the terrestrial species (A. Demarlii), with a round
-tail, and toes without webs. This lizard, instead of being found like
-the other on all the islands, is confined to the central part of the
-archipelago, namely to Albemarle, James, Barrington, and Indefatigable
-islands. To the southward, in Charles, Hood, and Chatham islands, and
-to the northward, in Towers, Bindloes, and Abingdon, I neither saw nor
-heard of any. It would appear as if it had been created in the centre
-of the archipelago, and thence had been dispersed only to a certain
-distance. Some of these lizards inhabit the high and damp parts of the
-islands, but they are much more numerous in the lower and sterile
-districts near the coast. I cannot give a more forcible proof of their
-numbers, than by stating that when we were left at James Island, we
-could not for some time find a spot free from their burrows on which to
-pitch our single tent. Like their brothers the sea-kind, they are ugly
-animals, of a yellowish orange beneath, and of a brownish red colour
-above: from their low facial angle they have a singularly stupid
-appearance. They are, perhaps, of a rather less size than the marine
-species; but several of them weighed between ten and fifteen pounds. In
-their movements they are lazy and half torpid. When not frightened,
-they slowly crawl along with their tails and bellies dragging on the
-ground. They often stop, and doze for a minute or two, with closed
-eyes and hind legs spread out on the parched soil.
-
-They inhabit burrows, which they sometimes make between fragments of
-lava, but more generally on level patches of the soft sandstone-like
-tuff. The holes do not appear to be very deep, and they enter the
-ground at a small angle; so that when walking over these
-lizard-warrens, the soil is constantly giving way, much to the
-annoyance of the tired walker. This animal, when making its burrow,
-works alternately the opposite sides of its body. One front leg for a
-short time scratches up the soil, and throws it towards the hind foot,
-which is well placed so as to heave it beyond the mouth of the hole.
-That side of the body being tired, the other takes up the task, and so
-on alternately. I watched one for a long time, till half its body was
-buried; I then walked up and pulled it by the tail, at this it was
-greatly astonished, and soon shuffled up to see what was the matter;
-and then stared me in the face, as much as to say, "What made you pull
-my tail?"
-
-They feed by day, and do not wander far from their burrows; if
-frightened, they rush to them with a most awkward gait. Except when
-running down hill, they cannot move very fast, apparently from the
-lateral position of their legs. They are not at all timorous: when
-attentively watching any one, they curl their tails, and, raising
-themselves on their front legs, nod their heads vertically, with a
-quick movement, and try to look very fierce; but in reality they are
-not at all so: if one just stamps on the ground, down go their tails,
-and off they shuffle as quickly as they can. I have frequently
-observed small fly-eating lizards, when watching anything, nod their
-heads in precisely the same manner; but I do not at all know for what
-purpose. If this Amblyrhynchus is held and plagued with a stick, it
-will bite it very severely; but I caught many by the tail, and they
-never tried to bite me. If two are placed on the ground and held
-together, they will fight, and bite each other till blood is drawn.
-
-The individuals, and they are the greater number, which inhabit the
-lower country, can scarcely taste a drop of water throughout the year;
-but they consume much of the succulent cactus, the branches of which
-are occasionally broken off by the wind. I several times threw a piece
-to two or three of them when together; and it was amusing enough to see
-them trying to seize and carry it away in their mouths, like so many
-hungry dogs with a bone. They eat very deliberately, but do not chew
-their food. The little birds are aware how harmless these creatures
-are: I have seen one of the thick-billed finches picking at one end of
-a piece of cactus (which is much relished by all the animals of the
-lower region), whilst a lizard was eating at the other end; and
-afterwards the little bird with the utmost indifference hopped on the
-back of the reptile.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them full of vegetable
-fibres and leaves of different trees, especially of an acacia. In the
-upper region they live chiefly on the acid and astringent berries of
-the guayavita, under which trees I have seen these lizards and the huge
-tortoises feeding together. To obtain the acacia-leaves they crawl up
-the low stunted trees; and it is not uncommon to see a pair quietly
-browsing, whilst seated on a branch several feet above the ground.
-These lizards, when cooked, yield a white meat, which is liked by those
-whose stomachs soar above all prejudices.
-
-Humboldt has remarked that in intertropical South America, all lizards
-which inhabit dry regions are esteemed delicacies for the table. The
-inhabitants state that those which inhabit the upper damp parts drink
-water, but that the others do not, like the tortoises, travel up for it
-from the lower sterile country. At the time of our visit, the females
-had within their bodies numerous, large, elongated eggs, which they lay
-in their burrows: the inhabitants seek them for food.
-
-These two species of Amblyrhynchus agree, as I have already stated, in
-their general structure, and in many of their habits. Neither have
-that rapid movement, so characteristic of the genera Lacerta and
-Iguana. They are both herbivorous, although the kind of vegetation on
-which they feed is so very different. Mr. Bell has given the name to
-the genus from the shortness of the snout: indeed, the form of the
-mouth may almost be compared to that of the tortoise: one is led to
-suppose that this is an adaptation to their herbivorous appetites. It
-is very interesting thus to find a well-characterized genus, having its
-marine and terrestrial species, belonging to so confined a portion of
-the world. The aquatic species is by far the most remarkable, because
-it is the only existing lizard which lives on marine vegetable
-productions. As I at first observed, these islands are not so
-remarkable for the number of the species of reptiles, as for that of
-the individuals, when we remember the well-beaten paths made by the
-thousands of huge tortoises--the many turtles--the great warrens of the
-terrestrial Amblyrhynchus--and the groups of the marine species basking
-on the coast-rocks of every island--we must admit that there is no
-other quarter of the world where this Order replaces the herbivorous
-mammalia in so extraordinary a manner. The geologist on hearing this
-will probably refer back in his mind to the Secondary epochs, when
-lizards, some herbivorous, some carnivorous, and of dimensions
-comparable only with our existing whales, swarmed on the land and in
-the sea. It is, therefore, worthy of his observation, that this
-archipelago, instead of possessing a humid climate and rank vegetation,
-cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and, for an
-equatorial region, remarkably temperate.
-
-To finish with the zoology: the fifteen kinds of sea-fish which I
-procured here are all new species; they belong to twelve genera, all
-widely distributed, with the exception of Prionotus, of which the four
-previously known species live on the eastern side of America. Of
-land-shells I collected sixteen kinds (and two marked varieties), of
-which, with the exception of one Helix found at Tahiti, all are
-peculiar to this archipelago: a single fresh-water shell (Paludina) is
-common to Tahiti and Van Diemen's Land. Mr. Cuming, before our voyage
-procured here ninety species of sea-shells, and this does not include
-several species not yet specifically examined, of Trochus, Turbo,
-Monodonta, and Nassa. He has been kind enough to give me the following
-interesting results: Of the ninety shells, no less than forty-seven are
-unknown elsewhere--a wonderful fact, considering how widely distributed
-sea-shells generally are. Of the forty-three shells found in other
-parts of the world, twenty-five inhabit the western coast of America,
-and of these eight are distinguishable as varieties; the remaining
-eighteen (including one variety) were found by Mr. Cuming in the Low
-Archipelago, and some of them also at the Philippines. This fact of
-shells from islands in the central parts of the Pacific occurring here,
-deserves notice, for not one single sea-shell is known to be common to
-the islands of that ocean and to the west coast of America. The space
-of open sea running north and south off the west coast, separates two
-quite distinct conchological provinces; but at the Galapagos
-Archipelago we have a halting-place, where many new forms have been
-created, and whither these two great conchological provinces have each
-sent up several colonists. The American province has also sent here
-representative species; for there is a Galapageian species of
-Monoceros, a genus only found on the west coast of America; and there
-are Galapageian species of Fissurella and Cancellaria, genera common on
-the west coast, but not found (as I am informed by Mr. Cuming) in the
-central islands of the Pacific. On the other hand, there are
-Galapageian species of Oniscia and Stylifer, genera common to the West
-Indies and to the Chinese and Indian seas, but not found either on the
-west coast of America or in the central Pacific. I may here add, that
-after the comparison by Messrs. Cuming and Hinds of about 2000 shells
-from the eastern and western coasts of America, only one single shell
-was found in common, namely, the Purpura patula, which inhabits the
-West Indies, the coast of Panama, and the Galapagos. We have,
-therefore, in this quarter of the world, three great conchological
-sea-provinces, quite distinct, though surprisingly near each other,
-being separated by long north and south spaces either of land or of
-open sea.
-
-I took great pains in collecting the insects, but excepting Tierra del
-Fuego, I never saw in this respect so poor a country. Even in the upper
-and damp region I procured very few, excepting some minute Diptera and
-Hymenoptera, mostly of common mundane forms. As before remarked, the
-insects, for a tropical region, are of very small size and dull
-colours. Of beetles I collected twenty-five species (excluding a
-Dermestes and Corynetes imported, wherever a ship touches); of these,
-two belong to the Harpalidae, two to the Hydrophilidae, nine to three
-families of the Heteromera, and the remaining twelve to as many
-different families. This circumstance of insects (and I may add
-plants), where few in number, belonging to many different families, is,
-I believe, very general. Mr. Waterhouse, who has published [4] an
-account of the insects of this archipelago, and to whom I am indebted
-for the above details, informs me that there are several new genera:
-and that of the genera not new, one or two are American, and the rest
-of mundane distribution. With the exception of a wood-feeding Apate,
-and of one or probably two water-beetles from the American continent,
-all the species appear to be new.
-
-The botany of this group is fully as interesting as the zoology. Dr.
-J. Hooker will soon publish in the "Linnean Transactions" a full
-account of the Flora, and I am much indebted to him for the following
-details. Of flowering plants there are, as far as at present is known,
-185 species, and 40 cryptogamic species, making altogether 225; of this
-number I was fortunate enough to bring home 193. Of the flowering
-plants, 100 are new species, and are probably confined to this
-archipelago. Dr. Hooker conceives that, of the plants not so confined,
-at least 10 species found near the cultivated ground at Charles Island,
-have been imported. It is, I think, surprising that more American
-species have not been introduced naturally, considering that the
-distance is only between 500 and 600 miles from the continent, and that
-(according to Collnet, p. 58) drift-wood, bamboos, canes, and the nuts
-of a palm, are often washed on the south-eastern shores. The
-proportion of 100 flowering plants out of 183 (or 175 excluding the
-imported weeds) being new, is sufficient, I conceive, to make the
-Galapagos Archipelago a distinct botanical province; but this Flora is
-not nearly so peculiar as that of St. Helena, nor, as I am informed by
-Dr. Hooker, of Juan Fernandez. The peculiarity of the Galapageian
-Flora is best shown in certain families;--thus there are 21 species of
-Compositae, of which 20 are peculiar to this archipelago; these belong
-to twelve genera, and of these genera no less than ten are confined to
-the archipelago! Dr. Hooker informs me that the Flora has an
-undoubtedly Western American character; nor can he detect in it any
-affinity with that of the Pacific. If, therefore, we except the
-eighteen marine, the one fresh-water, and one land-shell, which have
-apparently come here as colonists from the central islands of the
-Pacific, and likewise the one distinct Pacific species of the
-Galapageian group of finches, we see that this archipelago, though
-standing in the Pacific Ocean, is zoologically part of America.
-
-If this character were owing merely to immigrants from America, there
-would be little remarkable in it; but we see that a vast majority of
-all the land animals, and that more than half of the flowering plants,
-are aboriginal productions. It was most striking to be surrounded by new
-birds, new reptiles, new shells, new insects, new plants, and yet by
-innumerable trifling details of structure, and even by the tones of
-voice and plumage of the birds, to have the temperate plains of
-Patagonia, or rather the hot dry deserts of Northern Chile, vividly
-brought before my eyes. Why, on these small points of land, which
-within a late geological period must have been covered by the ocean,
-which are formed by basaltic lava, and therefore differ in geological
-character from the American continent, and which are placed under a
-peculiar climate,--why were their aboriginal inhabitants, associated, I
-may add, in different proportions both in kind and number from those on
-the continent, and therefore acting on each other in a different
-manner--why were they created on American types of organization? It is
-probable that the islands of the Cape de Verd group resemble, in all
-their physical conditions, far more closely the Galapagos Islands, than
-these latter physically resemble the coast of America, yet the
-aboriginal inhabitants of the two groups are totally unlike; those of
-the Cape de Verd Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as the
-inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped with that of
-America.
-
-I have not as yet noticed by far the most remarkable feature in the
-natural history of this archipelago; it is, that the different islands
-to a considerable extent are inhabited by a different set of beings. My
-attention was first called to this fact by the Vice-Governor, Mr.
-Lawson, declaring that the tortoises differed from the different
-islands, and that he could with certainty tell from which island any
-one was brought. I did not for some time pay sufficient attention to
-this statement, and I had already partially mingled together the
-collections from two of the islands. I never dreamed that islands,
-about 50 or 60 miles apart, and most of them in sight of each other,
-formed of precisely the same rocks, placed under a quite similar
-climate, rising to a nearly equal height, would have been differently
-tenanted; but we shall soon see that this is the case. It is the fate
-of most voyagers, no sooner to discover what is most interesting in any
-locality, than they are hurried from it; but I ought, perhaps, to be
-thankful that I obtained sufficient materials to establish this most
-remarkable fact in the distribution of organic beings.
-
-The inhabitants, as I have said, state that they can distinguish the
-tortoises from the different islands; and that they differ not only in
-size, but in other characters. Captain Porter has described [5] those
-from Charles and from the nearest island to it, namely, Hood Island, as
-having their shells in front thick and turned up like a Spanish saddle,
-whilst the tortoises from James Island are rounder, blacker, and have a
-better taste when cooked. M. Bibron, moreover, informs me that he has
-seen what he considers two distinct species of tortoise from the
-Galapagos, but he does not know from which islands. The specimens that
-I brought from three islands were young ones: and probably owing to
-this cause neither Mr. Gray nor myself could find in them any specific
-differences. I have remarked that the marine Amblyrhynchus was larger
-at Albemarle Island than elsewhere; and M. Bibron informs me that he
-has seen two distinct aquatic species of this genus; so that the
-different islands probably have their representative species or races
-of the Amblyrhynchus, as well as of the tortoise. My attention was
-first thoroughly aroused, by comparing together the numerous specimens,
-shot by myself and several other parties on board, of the
-mocking-thrushes, when, to my astonishment, I discovered that all those
-from Charles Island belonged to one species (Mimus trifasciatus) all
-from Albemarle Island to M. parvulus; and all from James and Chatham
-Islands (between which two other islands are situated, as connecting
-links) belonged to M. melanotis. These two latter species are closely
-allied, and would by some ornithologists be considered as only
-well-marked races or varieties; but the Mimus trifasciatus is very
-distinct. Unfortunately most of the specimens of the finch tribe were
-mingled together; but I have strong reasons to suspect that some of the
-species of the sub-group Geospiza are confined to separate islands. If
-the different islands have their representatives of Geospiza, it may
-help to explain the singularly large number of the species of this
-sub-group in this one small archipelago, and as a probable consequence
-of their numbers, the perfectly graduated series in the size of their
-beaks. Two species of the sub-group Cactornis, and two of the
-Camarhynchus, were procured in the archipelago; and of the numerous
-specimens of these two sub-groups shot by four collectors at James
-Island, all were found to belong to one species of each; whereas the
-numerous specimens shot either on Chatham or Charles Island (for the
-two sets were mingled together) all belonged to the two other species:
-hence we may feel almost sure that these islands possess their
-respective species of these two sub-groups. In land-shells this law of
-distribution does not appear to hold good. In my very small collection
-of insects, Mr. Waterhouse remarks, that of those which were ticketed
-with their locality, not one was common to any two of the islands.
-
-If we now turn to the Flora, we shall find the aboriginal plants of the
-different islands wonderfully different. I give all the following
-results on the high authority of my friend Dr. J. Hooker. I may
-premise that I indiscriminately collected everything in flower on the
-different islands, and fortunately kept my collections separate. Too
-much confidence, however, must not be placed in the proportional
-results, as the small collections brought home by some other
-naturalists though in some respects confirming the results, plainly
-show that much remains to be done in the botany of this group: the
-Leguminosae, moreover, has as yet been only approximately worked out:--
-
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- Number of
- Species
- confined
- to the
- Number of Number of Galapagos
- species species Number Archipelago
- Total found in confined confined but found
- Name Number other to the to the on more
- of of parts of Galapagos one than the
- Island Species the world Archipelago island one island
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
- James 71 33 38 30 8
- Albemarle 46 18 26 22 4
- Chatham 32 16 16 12 4
- Charles 68 39 29 21 8
- (or 29, if
- the probably
- imported
- plants be
- subtracted.)
- ----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Hence we have the truly wonderful fact, that in James Island, of the
-thirty-eight Galapageian plants, or those found in no other part of the
-world, thirty are exclusively confined to this one island; and in
-Albemarle Island, of the twenty-six aboriginal Galapageian plants,
-twenty-two are confined to this one island, that is, only four are at
-present known to grow in the other islands of the archipelago; and so
-on, as shown in the above table, with the plants from Chatham and
-Charles Islands. This fact will, perhaps, be rendered even more
-striking, by giving a few illustrations:--thus, Scalesia, a remarkable
-arborescent genus of the Compositae, is confined to the archipelago: it
-has six species: one from Chatham, one from Albemarle, one from Charles
-Island, two from James Island, and the sixth from one of the three
-latter islands, but it is not known from which: not one of these six
-species grows on any two islands. Again, Euphorbia, a mundane or
-widely distributed genus, has here eight species, of which seven are
-confined to the archipelago, and not one found on any two islands:
-Acalypha and Borreria, both mundane genera, have respectively six and
-seven species, none of which have the same species on two islands, with
-the exception of one Borreria, which does occur on two islands. The
-species of the Compositae are particularly local; and Dr. Hooker has
-furnished me with several other most striking illustrations of the
-difference of the species on the different islands. He remarks that
-this law of distribution holds good both with those genera confined to
-the archipelago, and those distributed in other quarters of the world:
-in like manner we have seen that the different islands have their
-proper species of the mundane genus of tortoise, and of the widely
-distributed American genus of the mocking-thrush, as well as of two of
-the Galapageian sub-groups of finches, and almost certainly of the
-Galapageian genus Amblyrhynchus.
-
-The distribution of the tenants of this archipelago would not be nearly
-so wonderful, if, for instance, one island had a mocking-thrush, and a
-second island some other quite distinct genus,--if one island had its
-genus of lizard, and a second island another distinct genus, or none
-whatever;--or if the different islands were inhabited, not by
-representative species of the same genera of plants, but by totally
-different genera, as does to a certain extent hold good: for, to give
-one instance, a large berry-bearing tree at James Island has no
-representative species in Charles Island. But it is the circumstance,
-that several of the islands possess their own species of the tortoise,
-mocking-thrush, finches, and numerous plants, these species having the
-same general habits, occupying analogous situations, and obviously
-filling the same place in the natural economy of this archipelago, that
-strikes me with wonder. It may be suspected that some of these
-representative species, at least in the case of the tortoise and of
-some of the birds, may hereafter prove to be only well-marked races;
-but this would be of equally great interest to the philosophical
-naturalist. I have said that most of the islands are in sight of each
-other: I may specify that Charles Island is fifty miles from the
-nearest part of Chatham Island, and thirty-three miles from the nearest
-part of Albemarle Island. Chatham Island is sixty miles from the
-nearest part of James Island, but there are two intermediate islands
-between them which were not visited by me. James Island is only ten
-miles from the nearest part of Albemarle Island, but the two points
-where the collections were made are thirty-two miles apart. I must
-repeat, that neither the nature of the soil, nor height of the land,
-nor the climate, nor the general character of the associated beings,
-and therefore their action one on another, can differ much in the
-different islands. If there be any sensible difference in their
-climates, it must be between the Windward group (namely, Charles and
-Chatham Islands), and that to leeward; but there seems to be no
-corresponding difference in the productions of these two halves of the
-archipelago.
-
-The only light which I can throw on this remarkable difference in the
-inhabitants of the different islands, is, that very strong currents of
-the sea running in a westerly and W.N.W. direction must separate, as
-far as transportal by the sea is concerned, the southern islands from
-the northern ones; and between these northern islands a strong N.W.
-current was observed, which must effectually separate James and
-Albemarle Islands. As the archipelago is free to a most remarkable
-degree from gales of wind, neither the birds, insects, nor lighter
-seeds, would be blown from island to island. And lastly, the profound
-depth of the ocean between the islands, and their apparently recent (in
-a geological sense) volcanic origin, render it highly unlikely that
-they were ever united; and this, probably, is a far more important
-consideration than any other, with respect to the geographical
-distribution of their inhabitants. Reviewing the facts here given, one
-is astonished at the amount of creative force, if such an expression
-may be used, displayed on these small, barren, and rocky islands; and
-still more so, at its diverse yet analogous action on points so near
-each other. I have said that the Galapagos Archipelago might be called
-a satellite attached to America, but it should rather be called a group
-of satellites, physically similar, organically distinct, yet intimately
-related to each other, and all related in a marked, though much lesser
-degree, to the great American continent.
-
-I will conclude my description of the natural history of these islands,
-by giving an account of the extreme tameness of the birds.
-
-This disposition is common to all the terrestrial species; namely, to
-the mocking-thrushes, the finches, wrens, tyrant-flycatchers, the dove,
-and carrion-buzzard. All of them are often approached sufficiently
-near to be killed with a switch, and sometimes, as I myself tried, with
-a cap or hat. A gun is here almost superfluous; for with the muzzle I
-pushed a hawk off the branch of a tree. One day, whilst lying down, a
-mocking-thrush alighted on the edge of a pitcher, made of the shell of
-a tortoise, which I held in my hand, and began very quietly to sip the
-water; it allowed me to lift it from the ground whilst seated on the
-vessel: I often tried, and very nearly succeeded, in catching these
-birds by their legs. Formerly the birds appear to have been even tamer
-than at present. Cowley (in the year 1684) says that the "Turtledoves
-were so tame, that they would often alight on our hats and arms, so as
-that we could take them alive, they not fearing man, until such time as
-some of our company did fire at them, whereby they were rendered more
-shy." Dampier also, in the same year, says that a man in a morning's
-walk might kill six or seven dozen of these doves. At present,
-although certainly very tame, they do not alight on people's arms, nor
-do they suffer themselves to be killed in such large numbers. It is
-surprising that they have not become wilder; for these islands during
-the last hundred and fifty years have been frequently visited by
-bucaniers and whalers; and the sailors, wandering through the wood in
-search of tortoises, always take cruel delight in knocking down the
-little birds. These birds, although now still more persecuted, do not
-readily become wild. In Charles Island, which had then been colonized
-about six years, I saw a boy sitting by a well with a switch in his
-hand, with which he killed the doves and finches as they came to drink.
-He had already procured a little heap of them for his dinner, and he
-said that he had constantly been in the habit of waiting by this well
-for the same purpose. It would appear that the birds of this
-archipelago, not having as yet learnt that man is a more dangerous
-animal than the tortoise or the Amblyrhynchus, disregard him, in the
-same manner as in England shy birds, such as magpies, disregard the
-cows and horses grazing in our fields.
-
-The Falkland Islands offer a second instance of birds with a similar
-disposition. The extraordinary tameness of the little Opetiorhynchus
-has been remarked by Pernety, Lesson, and other voyagers. It is not,
-however, peculiar to that bird: the Polyborus, snipe, upland and
-lowland goose, thrush, bunting, and even some true hawks, are all more
-or less tame. As the birds are so tame there, where foxes, hawks, and
-owls occur, we may infer that the absence of all rapacious animals at
-the Galapagos, is not the cause of their tameness here. The upland
-geese at the Falklands show, by the precaution they take in building on
-the islets, that they are aware of their danger from the foxes; but
-they are not by this rendered wild towards man. This tameness of the
-birds, especially of the water-fowl, is strongly contrasted with the
-habits of the same species in Tierra del Fuego, where for ages past
-they have been persecuted by the wild inhabitants. In the Falklands,
-the sportsman may sometimes kill more of the upland geese in one day
-than he can carry home; whereas in Tierra del Fuego it is nearly as
-difficult to kill one, as it is in England to shoot the common wild
-goose.
-
-In the time of Pernety (1763), all the birds there appear to have been
-much tamer than at present; he states that the Opetiorhynchus would
-almost perch on his finger; and that with a wand he killed ten in half
-an hour. At that period the birds must have been about as tame as they
-now are at the Galapagos. They appear to have learnt caution more
-slowly at these latter islands than at the Falklands, where they have
-had proportionate means of experience; for besides frequent visits from
-vessels, those islands have been at intervals colonized during the
-entire period. Even formerly, when all the birds were so tame, it was
-impossible by Pernety's account to kill the black-necked swan--a bird
-of passage, which probably brought with it the wisdom learnt in foreign
-countries.
-
-I may add that, according to Du Bois, all the birds at Bourbon in
-1571-72, with the exception of the flamingoes and geese, were so
-extremely tame, that they could be caught by the hand, or killed in any
-number with a stick. Again, at Tristan d'Acunha in the Atlantic,
-Carmichael [6] states that the only two land-birds, a thrush and a
-bunting, were "so tame as to suffer themselves to be caught with a
-hand-net." From these several facts we may, I think, conclude, first,
-that the wildness of birds with regard to man, is a particular instinct
-directed against _him_, and not dependent upon any general degree of
-caution arising from other sources of danger; secondly, that it is not
-acquired by individual birds in a short time, even when much
-persecuted; but that in the course of successive generations it becomes
-hereditary. With domesticated animals we are accustomed to see new
-mental habits or instincts acquired or rendered hereditary; but with
-animals in a state of nature, it must always be most difficult to
-discover instances of acquired hereditary knowledge. In regard to the
-wildness of birds towards man, there is no way of accounting for it,
-except as an inherited habit: comparatively few young birds, in any one
-year, have been injured by man in England, yet almost all, even
-nestlings, are afraid of him; many individuals, on the other hand, both
-at the Galapagos and at the Falklands, have been pursued and injured by
-man, yet have not learned a salutary dread of him. We may infer from
-these facts, what havoc the introduction of any new beast of prey must
-cause in a country, before the instincts of the indigenous inhabitants
-have become adapted to the stranger's craft or power.
-
-[1] The progress of research has shown that some of these birds, which
-were then thought to be confined to the islands, occur on the American
-continent. The eminent ornithologist, Mr. Sclater, informs me that
-this is the case with the Strix punctatissima and Pyrocephalus nanus;
-and probably with the Otus Galapagoensis and Zenaida Galapagoensis: so
-that the number of endemic birds is reduced to twenty-three, or
-probably to twenty-one. Mr. Sclater thinks that one or two of these
-endemic forms should be ranked rather as varieties than species, which
-always seemed to me probable.
-
-[2] This is stated by Dr. Gunther (Zoolog. Soc. Jan 24th, 1859) to be a
-peculiar species, not known to inhabit any other country.
-
-[3] Voyage aux Quatre Iles d'Afrique. With respect to the Sandwich
-Islands, see Tyerman and Bennett's Journal, vol. i. p. 434. For
-Mauritius, see Voyage par un Officier, etc., part i. p. 170. There are
-no frogs in the Canary Islands (Webb et Berthelot, Hist. Nat. des Iles
-Canaries). I saw none at St. Jago in the Cape de Verds. There are
-none at St. Helena.
-
-[4] Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 19.
-
-[5] Voyage in the U. S. ship Essex, vol. i. p. 215.
-
-[6] Linn. Trans., vol. xii. p. 496. The most anomalous fact on this
-subject which I have met with is the wildness of the small birds in the
-Arctic parts of North America (as described by Richardson, Fauna Bor.,
-vol. ii. p. 332), where they are said never to be persecuted. This
-case is the more strange, because it is asserted that some of the same
-species in their winter-quarters in the United States are tame. There
-is much, as Dr. Richardson well remarks, utterly inexplicable connected
-with the different degrees of shyness and care with which birds conceal
-their nests. How strange it is that the English wood-pigeon, generally
-so wild a bird, should very frequently rear its young in shrubberies
-close to houses!
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
-
-Pass through the Low Archipelago--Tahiti--Aspect--Vegetation on the
-Mountains--View of Eimeo--Excursion into the Interior--Profound
-Ravines--Succession of Waterfalls--Number of wild useful
-Plants--Temperance of the Inhabitants--Their moral state--Parliament
-convened--New Zealand--Bay of Islands--Hippahs--Excursion to
-Waimate--Missionary Establishment--English Weeds now run
-wild--Waiomio--Funeral of a New Zealand Woman--Sail for Australia.
-
-
-OCTOBER 20th.--The survey of the Galapagos Archipelago being concluded,
-we steered towards Tahiti and commenced our long passage of 3200 miles.
-In the course of a few days we sailed out of the gloomy and clouded
-ocean-district which extends during the winter far from the coast of
-South America. We then enjoyed bright and clear weather, while running
-pleasantly along at the rate of 150 or 160 miles a day before the
-steady trade-wind. The temperature in this more central part of the
-Pacific is higher than near the American shore. The thermometer in the
-poop cabin, by night and day, ranged between 80 and 83 degs., which
-feels very pleasant; but with one degree or two higher, the heat
-becomes oppressive. We passed through the Low or Dangerous
-Archipelago, and saw several of those most curious rings of coral land,
-just rising above the water's edge, which have been called Lagoon
-Islands. A long and brilliantly white beach is capped by a margin of
-green vegetation; and the strip, looking either way, rapidly narrows
-away in the distance, and sinks beneath the horizon From the mast-head
-a wide expanse of smooth water can be seen within the ring. These low
-hollow coral islands bear no proportion to the vast ocean out of which
-they abruptly rise; and it seems wonderful, that such weak invaders are
-not overwhelmed, by the all-powerful and never-tiring waves of that
-great sea, miscalled the Pacific.
-
-November 15th.--At daylight, Tahiti, an island which must for ever
-remain classical to the voyager in the South Sea, was in view. At a
-distance the appearance was not attractive. The luxuriant vegetation
-of the lower part could not yet be seen, and as the clouds rolled past,
-the wildest and most precipitous peaks showed themselves towards the
-centre of the island. As soon as we anchored in Matavai Bay, we were
-surrounded by canoes. This was our Sunday, but the Monday of Tahiti:
-if the case had been reversed, we should not have received a single
-visit; for the injunction not to launch a canoe on the sabbath is
-rigidly obeyed. After dinner we landed to enjoy all the delights
-produced by the first impressions of a new country, and that country
-the charming Tahiti. A crowd of men, women, and children, was
-collected on the memorable Point Venus, ready to receive us with
-laughing, merry faces. They marshalled us towards the house of Mr.
-Wilson, the missionary of the district, who met us on the road, and
-gave us a very friendly reception. After sitting a very short time in
-his house, we separated to walk about, but returned there in the
-evening.
-
-The land capable of cultivation, is scarcely in any part more than a
-fringe of low alluvial soil, accumulated round the base of the
-mountains, and protected from the waves of the sea by a coral reef,
-which encircles the entire line of coast. Within the reef there is an
-expanse of smooth water, like that of a lake, where the canoes of the
-natives can ply with safety and where ships anchor. The low land which
-comes down to the beach of coral-sand, is covered by the most beautiful
-productions of the intertropical regions. In the midst of bananas,
-orange, cocoa-nut, and bread-fruit trees, spots are cleared where yams,
-sweet potatoes, and sugar-cane, and pine-apples are cultivated. Even
-the brushwood is an imported fruit-tree, namely, the guava, which from
-its abundance has become as noxious as a weed. In Brazil I have often
-admired the varied beauty of the bananas, palms, and orange-trees
-contrasted together; and here we also have the bread-fruit, conspicuous
-from its large, glossy, and deeply digitated leaf. It is admirable to
-behold groves of a tree, sending forth its branches with the vigour of
-an English oak, loaded with large and most nutritious fruit. However
-seldom the usefulness of an object can account for the pleasure of
-beholding it, in the case of these beautiful woods, the knowledge of
-their high productiveness no doubt enters largely into the feeling of
-admiration. The little winding paths, cool from the surrounding shade,
-led to the scattered houses; the owners of which everywhere gave us a
-cheerful and most hospitable reception.
-
-I was pleased with nothing so much as with the inhabitants. There is a
-mildness in the expression of their countenances which at once banishes
-the idea of a savage; and intelligence which shows that they are
-advancing in civilization. The common people, when working, keep the
-upper part of their bodies quite naked; and it is then that the
-Tahitians are seen to advantage. They are very tall, broad-shouldered,
-athletic, and well-proportioned. It has been remarked, that it
-requires little habit to make a dark skin more pleasing and natural to
-the eye of an European than his own colour. A white man bathing by the
-side of a Tahitian, was like a plant bleached by the gardener's art
-compared with a fine dark green one growing vigorously in the open
-fields. Most of the men are tattooed, and the ornaments follow the
-curvature of the body so gracefully, that they have a very elegant
-effect. One common pattern, varying in its details, is somewhat like
-the crown of a palm-tree. It springs from the central line of the back,
-and gracefully curls round both sides. The simile may be a fanciful
-one, but I thought the body of a man thus ornamented was like the trunk
-of a noble tree embraced by a delicate creeper.
-
-Many of the elder people had their feet covered with small figures, so
-placed as to resemble a sock. This fashion, however, is partly gone
-by, and has been succeeded by others. Here, although fashion is far
-from immutable, every one must abide by that prevailing in his youth.
-An old man has thus his age for ever stamped on his body, and he cannot
-assume the airs of a young dandy. The women are tattooed in the same
-manner as the men, and very commonly on their fingers. One unbecoming
-fashion is now almost universal: namely, shaving the hair from the
-upper part of the head, in a circular form, so as to leave only an
-outer ring. The missionaries have tried to persuade the people to
-change this habit; but it is the fashion, and that is a sufficient
-answer at Tahiti, as well as at Paris. I was much disappointed in the
-personal appearance of the women: they are far inferior in every
-respect to the men. The custom of wearing a white or scarlet flower in
-the back of the head, or through a small hole in each ear, is pretty. A
-crown of woven cocoa-nut leaves is also worn as a shade for the eyes.
-The women appear to be in greater want of some becoming costume even
-than the men.
-
-Nearly all the natives understand a little English--that is, they know
-the names of common things; and by the aid of this, together with
-signs, a lame sort of conversation could be carried on. In returning
-in the evening to the boat, we stopped to witness a very pretty scene.
-Numbers of children were playing on the beach, and had lighted bonfires
-which illumined the placid sea and surrounding trees; others, in
-circles, were singing Tahitian verses. We seated ourselves on the
-sand, and joined their party. The songs were impromptu, and I believe
-related to our arrival: one little girl sang a line, which the rest
-took up in parts, forming a very pretty chorus. The whole scene made
-us unequivocally aware that we were seated on the shores of an island
-in the far-famed South Sea.
-
-17th.--This day is reckoned in the log-book as Tuesday the 17th,
-instead of Monday the 16th, owing to our, so far, successful chase of
-the sun. Before breakfast the ship was hemmed in by a flotilla of
-canoes; and when the natives were allowed to come on board, I suppose
-there could not have been less than two hundred. It was the opinion of
-every one that it would have been difficult to have picked out an equal
-number from any other nation, who would have given so little trouble.
-Everybody brought something for sale: shells were the main articles of
-trade. The Tahitians now fully understand the value of money, and
-prefer it to old clothes or other articles. The various coins,
-however, of English and Spanish denomination puzzle them, and they
-never seemed to think the small silver quite secure until changed into
-dollars. Some of the chiefs have accumulated considerable sums of
-money. One chief, not long since, offered 800 dollars (about 160
-pounds sterling) for a small vessel; and frequently they purchase
-whale-boats and horses at the rate of from 50 to 100 dollars.
-
-After breakfast I went on shore, and ascended the nearest slope to a
-height of between two and three thousand feet. The outer mountains are
-smooth and conical, but steep; and the old volcanic rocks, of which
-they are formed, have been cut through by many profound ravines,
-diverging from the central broken parts of the island to the coast.
-Having crossed the narrow low girt of inhabited and fertile land, I
-followed a smooth steep ridge between two of the deep ravines. The
-vegetation was singular, consisting almost exclusively of small dwarf
-ferns, mingled higher up, with coarse grass; it was not very dissimilar
-from that on some of the Welsh hills, and this so close above the
-orchard of tropical plants on the coast was very surprising. At the
-highest point, which I reached, trees again appeared. Of the three
-zones of comparative luxuriance, the lower one owes its moisture, and
-therefore fertility, to its flatness; for, being scarcely raised above
-the level of the sea, the water from the higher land drains away
-slowly. The intermediate zone does not, like the upper one, reach into
-a damp and cloudy atmosphere, and therefore remains sterile. The woods
-in the upper zone are very pretty, tree-ferns replacing the cocoa-nuts
-on the coast. It must not, however, be supposed that these woods at
-all equal in splendour the forests of Brazil. The vast numbers of
-productions, which characterize a continent, cannot be expected to
-occur in an island.
-
-From the highest point which I attained, there was a good view of the
-distant island of Eimeo, dependent on the same sovereign with Tahiti.
-On the lofty and broken pinnacles, white massive clouds were piled up,
-which formed an island in the blue sky, as Eimeo itself did in the blue
-ocean. The island, with the exception of one small gateway, is
-completely encircled by a reef. At this distance, a narrow but
-well-defined brilliantly white line was alone visible, where the waves
-first encountered the wall of coral. The mountains rose abruptly out
-of the glassy expanse of the lagoon, included within this narrow white
-line, outside which the heaving waters of the ocean were dark-coloured.
-The view was striking: it may aptly be compared to a framed engraving,
-where the frame represents the breakers, the marginal paper the smooth
-lagoon, and the drawing the island itself. When in the evening I
-descended from the mountain, a man, whom I had pleased with a trifling
-gift, met me, bringing with him hot roasted bananas, a pine-apple, and
-cocoa-nuts. After walking under a burning sun, I do not know anything
-more delicious than the milk of a young cocoa-nut. Pine-apples are
-here so abundant that the people eat them in the same wasteful manner
-as we might turnips. They are of an excellent flavor--perhaps even
-better than those cultivated in England; and this I believe is the
-highest compliment which can be paid to any fruit. Before going on
-board, Mr. Wilson interpreted for me to the Tahitian who had paid me so
-adroit an attention, that I wanted him and another man to accompany me
-on a short excursion into the mountains.
-
-18th.--In the morning I came on shore early, bringing with me some
-provisions in a bag, and two blankets for myself and servant. These
-were lashed to each end of a long pole, which was alternately carried
-by my Tahitian companions on their shoulders. These men are accustomed
-thus to carry, for a whole day, as much as fifty pounds at each end of
-their poles. I told my guides to provide themselves with food and
-clothing; but they said that there was plenty of food in the mountains,
-and for clothing, that their skins were sufficient. Our line of march
-was the valley of Tiaauru, down which a river flows into the sea by
-Point Venus. This is one of the principal streams in the island, and
-its source lies at the base of the loftiest central pinnacles, which
-rise to a height of about 7000 feet. The whole island is so
-mountainous that the only way to penetrate into the interior is to
-follow up the valleys. Our road, at first, lay through woods which
-bordered each side of the river; and the glimpses of the lofty central
-peaks, seen as through an avenue, with here and there a waving
-cocoa-nut tree on one side, were extremely picturesque. The valley
-soon began to narrow, and the sides to grow lofty and more precipitous.
-After having walked between three and four hours, we found the width of
-the ravine scarcely exceeded that of the bed of the stream. On each
-hand the walls were nearly vertical, yet from the soft nature of the
-volcanic strata, trees and a rank vegetation sprung from every
-projecting ledge. These precipices must have been some thousand feet
-high; and the whole formed a mountain gorge far more magnificent than
-anything which I had ever before beheld. Until the midday sun stood
-vertically over the ravine, the air felt cool and damp, but now it
-became very sultry. Shaded by a ledge of rock, beneath a facade of
-columnar lava, we ate our dinner. My guides had already procured a
-dish of small fish and fresh-water prawns. They carried with them a
-small net stretched on a hoop; and where the water was deep and in
-eddies, they dived, and like otters, with their eyes open followed the
-fish into holes and corners, and thus caught them.
-
-The Tahitians have the dexterity of amphibious animals in the water. An
-anecdote mentioned by Ellis shows how much they feel at home in this
-element. When a horse was landing for Pomarre in 1817, the slings
-broke, and it fell into the water; immediately the natives jumped
-overboard, and by their cries and vain efforts at assistance almost
-drowned it. As soon, however, as it reached the shore, the whole
-population took to flight, and tried to hide themselves from the
-man-carrying pig, as they christened the horse.
-
-A little higher up, the river divided itself into three little streams.
-The two northern ones were impracticable, owing to a succession of
-waterfalls which descended from the jagged summit of the highest
-mountain; the other to all appearance was equally inaccessible, but we
-managed to ascend it by a most extraordinary road. The sides of the
-valley were here nearly precipitous, but, as frequently happens with
-stratified rocks, small ledges projected, which were thickly covered by
-wild bananas, lilaceous plants, and other luxuriant productions of the
-tropics. The Tahitians, by climbing amongst these ledges, searching
-for fruit, had discovered a track by which the whole precipice could be
-scaled. The first ascent from the valley was very dangerous; for it was
-necessary to pass a steeply inclined face of naked rock, by the aid of
-ropes which we brought with us. How any person discovered that this
-formidable spot was the only point where the side of the mountain was
-practicable, I cannot imagine. We then cautiously walked along one of
-the ledges till we came to one of the three streams. This ledge formed
-a flat spot, above which a beautiful cascade, some hundred feet in
-height, poured down its waters, and beneath, another high cascade fell
-into the main stream in the valley below. From this cool and shady
-recess we made a circuit to avoid the overhanging waterfall. As
-before, we followed little projecting ledges, the danger being partly
-concealed by the thickness of the vegetation. In passing from one of
-the ledges to another, there was a vertical wall of rock. One of the
-Tahitians, a fine active man, placed the trunk of a tree against this,
-climbed up it, and then by the aid of crevices reached the summit. He
-fixed the ropes to a projecting point, and lowered them for our dog and
-luggage, and then we clambered up ourselves. Beneath the ledge on
-which the dead tree was placed, the precipice must have been five or
-six hundred feet deep; and if the abyss had not been partly concealed
-by the overhanging ferns and lilies my head would have turned giddy,
-and nothing should have induced me to have attempted it. We continued
-to ascend, sometimes along ledges, and sometimes along knife-edged
-ridges, having on each hand profound ravines. In the Cordillera I have
-seen mountains on a far grander scale, but for abruptness, nothing at
-all comparable with this. In the evening we reached a flat little spot
-on the banks of the same stream, which we had continued to follow, and
-which descends in a chain of waterfalls: here we bivouacked for the
-night. On each side of the ravine there were great beds of the
-mountain-banana, covered with ripe fruit. Many of these plants were
-from twenty to twenty-five feet high, and from three to four in
-circumference. By the aid of strips of bark for rope, the stems of
-bamboos for rafters, and the large leaf of the banana for a thatch, the
-Tahitians in a few minutes built us an excellent house; and with
-withered leaves made a soft bed.
-
-They then proceeded to make a fire, and cook our evening meal. A light
-was procured, by rubbing a blunt pointed stick in a groove made in
-another, as if with intention of deepening it, until by the friction
-the dust became ignited. A peculiarly white and very light wood (the
-Hibiscus tiliareus) is alone used for this purpose: it is the same
-which serves for poles to carry any burden, and for the floating
-out-riggers to their canoes. The fire was produced in a few seconds:
-but to a person who does not understand the art, it requires, as I
-found, the greatest exertion; but at last, to my great pride, I
-succeeded in igniting the dust. The Gaucho in the Pampas uses a
-different method: taking an elastic stick about eighteen inches long,
-he presses one end on his breast, and the other pointed end into a hole
-in a piece of wood, and then rapidly turns the curved part, like a
-carpenter's centre-bit. The Tahitians having made a small fire of
-sticks, placed a score of stones, of about the size of cricket-balls,
-on the burning wood. In about ten minutes the sticks were consumed,
-and the stones hot. They had previously folded up in small parcels of
-leaves, pieces of beef, fish, ripe and unripe bananas, and the tops of
-the wild arum. These green parcels were laid in a layer between two
-layers of the hot stones, and the whole then covered up with earth, so
-that no smoke or steam could escape. In about a quarter of an hour,
-the whole was most deliciously cooked. The choice green parcels were
-now laid on a cloth of banana leaves, and with a cocoa-nut shell we
-drank the cool water of the running stream; and thus we enjoyed our
-rustic meal.
-
-I could not look on the surrounding plants without admiration. On every
-side were forests of banana; the fruit of which, though serving for
-food in various ways, lay in heaps decaying on the ground. In front of
-us there was an extensive brake of wild sugar-cane; and the stream was
-shaded by the dark green knotted stem of the Ava,--so famous in former
-days for its powerful intoxicating effects. I chewed a piece, and
-found that it had an acrid and unpleasant taste, which would have
-induced any one at once to have pronounced it poisonous. Thanks to the
-missionaries, this plant now thrives only in these deep ravines,
-innocuous to every one. Close by I saw the wild arum, the roots of
-which, when well baked, are good to eat, and the young leaves better
-than spinach. There was the wild yam, and a liliaceous plant called
-Ti, which grows in abundance, and has a soft brown root, in shape and
-size like a huge log of wood: this served us for dessert, for it is as
-sweet as treacle, and with a pleasant taste. There were, moreover,
-several other wild fruits, and useful vegetables. The little stream,
-besides its cool water, produced eels, and cray-fish. I did indeed
-admire this scene, when I compared it with an uncultivated one in the
-temperate zones. I felt the force of the remark, that man, at least
-savage man, with his reasoning powers only partly developed, is the
-child of the tropics.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, I strolled beneath the gloomy shade of
-the bananas up the course of the stream. My walk was soon brought to a
-close, by coming to a waterfall between two and three hundred feet
-high; and again above this there was another. I mention all these
-waterfalls in this one brook, to give a general idea of the inclination
-of the land. In the little recess where the water fell, it did not
-appear that a breath of wind had ever blown. The thin edges of the
-great leaves of the banana, damp with spray, were unbroken, instead of
-being, as is so generally the case, split into a thousand shreds. From
-our position, almost suspended on the mountain side, there were
-glimpses into the depths of the neighbouring valleys; and the lofty
-points of the central mountains, towering up within sixty degrees of
-the zenith, hid half the evening sky. Thus seated, it was a sublime
-spectacle to watch the shades of night gradually obscuring the last and
-highest pinnacles.
-
-Before we laid ourselves down to sleep, the elder Tahitian fell on his
-knees, and with closed eyes repeated a long prayer in his native
-tongue. He prayed as a Christian should do, with fitting reverence,
-and without the fear of ridicule or any ostentation of piety. At our
-meals neither of the men would taste food, without saying beforehand a
-short grace. Those travellers who think that a Tahitian prays only when
-the eyes of the missionary are fixed on him, should have slept with us
-that night on the mountain-side. Before morning it rained very
-heavily; but the good thatch of banana-leaves kept us dry.
-
-November 19th.--At daylight my friends, after their morning prayer,
-prepared an excellent breakfast in the same manner as in the evening.
-They themselves certainly partook of it largely; indeed I never saw any
-men eat near so much. I suppose such enormously capacious stomachs
-must be the effect of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit
-and vegetables, which contain, in a given bulk, a comparatively small
-portion of nutriment. Unwittingly, I was the means of my companions
-breaking, as I afterwards learned, one of their own laws, and
-resolutions: I took with me a flask of spirits, which they could not
-refuse to partake of; but as often as they drank a little, they put
-their fingers before their mouths, and uttered the word "Missionary."
-About two years ago, although the use of the ava was prevented,
-drunkenness from the introduction of spirits became very prevalent. The
-missionaries prevailed on a few good men, who saw that their country
-was rapidly going to ruin, to join with them in a Temperance Society.
-From good sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen were at last
-persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed, that no spirits
-should be allowed to be introduced into the island, and that he who
-sold and he who bought the forbidden article should be punished by a
-fine. With remarkable justice, a certain period was allowed for stock
-in hand to be sold, before the law came into effect. But when it did,
-a general search was made, in which even the houses of the missionaries
-were not exempted, and all the ava (as the natives call all ardent
-spirits) was poured on the ground. When one reflects on the effect of
-intemperance on the aborigines of the two Americas, I think it will be
-acknowledged that every well-wisher of Tahiti owes no common debt of
-gratitude to the missionaries. As long as the little island of St.
-Helena remained under the government of the East India Company,
-spirits, owing to the great injury they had produced, were not allowed
-to be imported; but wine was supplied from the Cape of Good Hope. It
-is rather a striking and not very gratifying fact, that in the same
-year that spirits were allowed to be sold in Helena, their use was
-banished from Tahiti by the free will of the people.
-
-After breakfast we proceeded on our Journey. As my object was merely
-to see a little of the interior scenery, we returned by another track,
-which descended into the main valley lower down. For some distance we
-wound, by a most intricate path, along the side of the mountain which
-formed the valley. In the less precipitous parts we passed through
-extensive groves of the wild banana. The Tahitians, with their naked,
-tattooed bodies, their heads ornamented with flowers, and seen in the
-dark shade of these groves, would have formed a fine picture of man
-inhabiting some primeval land. In our descent we followed the line of
-ridges; these were exceedingly narrow, and for considerable lengths
-steep as a ladder; but all clothed with vegetation. The extreme care
-necessary in poising each step rendered the walk fatiguing. I did not
-cease to wonder at these ravines and precipices: when viewing the
-country from one of the knife-edged ridges, the point of support was so
-small, that the effect was nearly the same as it must be from a
-balloon. In this descent we had occasion to use the ropes only once,
-at the point where we entered the main valley. We slept under the same
-ledge of rock where we had dined the day before: the night was fine,
-but from the depth and narrowness of the gorge, profoundly dark.
-
-Before actually seeing this country, I found it difficult to understand
-two facts mentioned by Ellis; namely, that after the murderous battles
-of former times, the survivors on the conquered side retired into the
-mountains, where a handful of men could resist a multitude. Certainly
-half a dozen men, at the spot where the Tahitian reared the old tree,
-could easily have repulsed thousands. Secondly, that after the
-introduction of Christianity, there were wild men who lived in the
-mountains, and whose retreats were unknown to the more civilized
-inhabitants.
-
-November 20th.--In the morning we started early, and reached Matavai at
-noon. On the road we met a large party of noble athletic men, going
-for wild bananas. I found that the ship, on account of the difficulty
-in watering, had moved to the harbour of Papawa, to which place I
-immediately walked. This is a very pretty spot. The cove is
-surrounded by reefs, and the water as smooth as in a lake. The
-cultivated ground, with its beautiful productions, interspersed with
-cottages, comes close down to the water's edge. From the varying
-accounts which I had read before reaching these islands, I was very
-anxious to form, from my own observation, a judgment of their moral
-state,--although such judgment would necessarily be very imperfect.
-First impressions at all times very much depend on one's previously
-acquired ideas. My notions were drawn from Ellis's "Polynesian
-Researches"--an admirable and most interesting work, but naturally
-looking at everything under a favourable point of view, from Beechey's
-Voyage; and from that of Kotzebue, which is strongly adverse to the
-whole missionary system. He who compares these three accounts will, I
-think, form a tolerably accurate conception of the present state of
-Tahiti. One of my impressions which I took from the two last
-authorities, was decidedly incorrect; viz., that the Tahitians had
-become a gloomy race, and lived in fear of the missionaries. Of the
-latter feeling I saw no trace, unless, indeed, fear and respect be
-confounded under one name. Instead of discontent being a common
-feeling, it would be difficult in Europe to pick out of a crowd half so
-many merry and happy faces. The prohibition of the flute and dancing
-is inveighed against as wrong and foolish;--the more than presbyterian
-manner of keeping the sabbath is looked at in a similar light. On
-these points I will not pretend to offer any opinion to men who have
-resided as many years as I was days on the island.
-
-On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and religion of the
-inhabitants are highly creditable. There are many who attack, even
-more acrimoniously than Kotzebue, both the missionaries, their system,
-and the effects produced by it. Such reasoners never compare the
-present state with that of the island only twenty years ago; nor even
-with that of Europe at this day; but they compare it with the high
-standard of Gospel perfection. They expect the missionaries to effect
-that which the Apostles themselves failed to do. Inasmuch as the
-condition of the people falls short of this high standard, blame is
-attached to the missionary, instead of credit for that which he has
-effected. They forget, or will not remember, that human sacrifices,
-and the power of an idolatrous priesthood--a system of profligacy
-unparalleled in any other part of the world--infanticide a consequence
-of that system--bloody wars, where the conquerors spared neither women
-nor children--that all these have been abolished; and that dishonesty,
-intemperance, and licentiousness have been greatly reduced by the
-introduction of Christianity. In a voyager to forget these things is
-base ingratitude; for should he chance to be at the point of shipwreck
-on some unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that the lesson of
-the missionary may have extended thus far.
-
-In point of morality, the virtue of the women, it has been often said,
-is most open to exception. But before they are blamed too severely, it
-will be well distinctly to call to mind the scenes described by Captain
-Cook and Mr. Banks, in which the grandmothers and mothers of the
-present race played a part. Those who are most severe, should consider
-how much of the morality of the women in Europe is owing to the system
-early impressed by mothers on their daughters, and how much in each
-individual case to the precepts of religion. But it is useless to
-argue against such reasoners;--I believe that, disappointed in not
-finding the field of licentiousness quite so open as formerly, they
-will not give credit to a morality which they do not wish to practise,
-or to a religion which they undervalue, if not despise.
-
-Sunday, 22nd.--The harbour of Papiete, where the queen resides, may be
-considered as the capital of the island: it is also the seat of
-government, and the chief resort of shipping. Captain Fitz Roy took a
-party there this day to hear divine service, first in the Tahitian
-language, and afterwards in our own. Mr. Pritchard, the leading
-missionary in the island, performed the service. The chapel consisted
-of a large airy framework of wood; and it was filled to excess by tidy,
-clean people, of all ages and both sexes. I was rather disappointed in
-the apparent degree of attention; but I believe my expectations were
-raised too high. At all events the appearance was quite equal to that
-in a country church in England. The singing of the hymns was decidedly
-very pleasing, but the language from the pulpit, although fluently
-delivered, did not sound well: a constant repetition of words, like
-"tata ta, mata mai," rendered it monotonous. After English service, a
-party returned on foot to Matavai. It was a pleasant walk, sometimes
-along the sea-beach and sometimes under the shade of the many beautiful
-trees.
-
-About two years ago, a small vessel under English colours was plundered
-by some of the inhabitants of the Low Islands, which were then under
-the dominion of the Queen of Tahiti. It was believed that the
-perpetrators were instigated to this act by some indiscreet laws issued
-by her majesty. The British government demanded compensation; which
-was acceded to, and the sum of nearly three thousand dollars was agreed
-to be paid on the first of last September. The Commodore at Lima
-ordered Captain Fitz Roy to inquire concerning this debt, and to demand
-satisfaction if it were not paid. Captain Fitz Roy accordingly
-requested an interview with the Queen Pomarre, since famous from the
-ill-treatment she had received from the French; and a parliament was
-held to consider the question, at which all the principal chiefs of the
-island and the queen were assembled. I will not attempt to describe
-what took place, after the interesting account given by Captain Fitz
-Roy. The money, it appeared, had not been paid; perhaps the alleged
-reasons were rather equivocal; but otherwise I cannot sufficiently
-express our general surprise at the extreme good sense, the reasoning
-powers, moderation, candour, and prompt resolution, which were
-displayed on all sides. I believe we all left the meeting with a very
-different opinion of the Tahitians, from what we entertained when we
-entered. The chiefs and people resolved to subscribe and complete the
-sum which was wanting; Captain Fitz Roy urged that it was hard that
-their private property should be sacrificed for the crimes of distant
-islanders. They replied, that they were grateful for his
-consideration, but that Pomarre was their Queen, and that they were
-determined to help her in this her difficulty. This resolution and its
-prompt execution, for a book was opened early the next morning, made a
-perfect conclusion to this very remarkable scene of loyalty and good
-feeling.
-
-After the main discussion was ended, several of the chiefs took the
-opportunity of asking Captain Fitz Roy many intelligent questions on
-international customs and laws, relating to the treatment of ships and
-foreigners. On some points, as soon as the decision was made, the law
-was issued verbally on the spot. This Tahitian parliament lasted for
-several hours; and when it was over Captain Fitz Roy invited Queen
-Pomarre to pay the Beagle a visit.
-
-November 25th.--In the evening four boats were sent for her majesty;
-the ship was dressed with flags, and the yards manned on her coming on
-board. She was accompanied by most of the chiefs. The behaviour of
-all was very proper: they begged for nothing, and seemed much pleased
-with Captain Fitz Roy's presents. The queen is a large awkward woman,
-without any beauty, grace or dignity. She has only one royal
-attribute: a perfect immovability of expression under all
-circumstances, and that rather a sullen one. The rockets were most
-admired, and a deep "Oh!" could be heard from the shore, all round the
-dark bay, after each explosion. The sailors' songs were also much
-admired; and the queen said she thought that one of the most boisterous
-ones certainly could not be a hymn! The royal party did not return on
-shore till past midnight.
-
-26th.--In the evening, with a gentle land-breeze, a course was steered
-for New Zealand; and as the sun set, we had a farewell view of the
-mountains of Tahiti--the island to which every voyager has offered up
-his tribute of admiration.
-
-December 19th.--In the evening we saw in the distance New Zealand. We
-may now consider that we have nearly crossed the Pacific. It is
-necessary to sail over this great ocean to comprehend its immensity.
-Moving quickly onwards for weeks together, we meet with nothing but the
-same blue, profoundly deep, ocean. Even within the archipelagoes, the
-islands are mere specks, and far distant one from the other. Accustomed
-to look at maps drawn on a small scale, where dots, shading, and names
-are crowded together, we do not rightly judge how infinitely small the
-proportion of dry land is to water of this vast expanse. The meridian
-of the Antipodes has likewise been passed; and now every league, it
-made us happy to think, was one league nearer to England. These
-Antipodes call to one's mind old recollections of childish doubt and
-wonder. Only the other day I looked forward to this airy barrier as a
-definite point in our voyage homewards; but now I find it, and all such
-resting-places for the imagination, are like shadows, which a man
-moving onwards cannot catch. A gale of wind lasting for some days, has
-lately given us full leisure to measure the future stages in our
-homeward voyage, and to wish most earnestly for its termination.
-
-December 21st.--Early in the morning we entered the Bay of Islands, and
-being becalmed for some hours near the mouth, we did not reach the
-anchorage till the middle of the day. The country is hilly, with a
-smooth outline, and is deeply intersected by numerous arms of the sea
-extending from the bay. The surface appears from a distance as if
-clothed with coarse pasture, but this in truth is nothing but fern. On
-the more distant hills, as well as in parts of the valleys, there is a
-good deal of woodland. The general tint of the landscape is not a
-bright green; and it resembles the country a short distance to the
-south of Concepcion in Chile. In several parts of the bay, little
-villages of square tidy looking houses are scattered close down to the
-water's edge. Three whaling-ships were lying at anchor, and a canoe
-every now and then crossed from shore to shore; with these exceptions,
-an air of extreme quietness reigned over the whole district. Only a
-single canoe came alongside. This, and the aspect of the whole scene,
-afforded a remarkable, and not very pleasing contrast, with our joyful
-and boisterous welcome at Tahiti.
-
-In the afternoon we went on shore to one of the larger groups of
-houses, which yet hardly deserves the title of a village. Its name is
-Pahia: it is the residence of the missionaries; and there are no native
-residents except servants and labourers. In the vicinity of the Bay of
-Islands, the number of Englishmen, including their families, amounts to
-between two and three hundred. All the cottages, many of which are
-whitewashed and look very neat, are the property of the English. The
-hovels of the natives are so diminutive and paltry, that they can
-scarcely be perceived from a distance. At Pahia, it was quite pleasing
-to behold the English flowers in the gardens before the houses; there
-were roses of several kinds, honeysuckle, jasmine, stocks, and whole
-hedges of sweetbrier.
-
-December 22nd.--In the morning I went out walking; but I soon found
-that the country was very impracticable. All the hills are thickly
-covered with tall fern, together with a low bush which grows like a
-cypress; and very little ground has been cleared or cultivated. I then
-tried the sea-beach; but proceeding towards either hand, my walk was
-soon stopped by salt-water creeks and deep brooks. The communication
-between the inhabitants of the different parts of the bay, is (as in
-Chiloe) almost entirely kept up by boats. I was surprised to find that
-almost every hill which I ascended, had been at some former time more
-or less fortified. The summits were cut into steps or successive
-terraces, and frequently they had been protected by deep trenches. I
-afterwards observed that the principal hills inland in like manner
-showed an artificial outline. These are the Pas, so frequently
-mentioned by Captain Cook under the name of "hippah;" the difference of
-sound being owing to the prefixed article.
-
-That the Pas had formerly been much used, was evident from the piles of
-shells, and the pits in which, as I was informed, sweet potatoes used
-to be kept as a reserve. As there was no water on these hills, the
-defenders could never have anticipated a long siege, but only a hurried
-attack for plunder, against which the successive terraces would have
-afforded good protection. The general introduction of fire-arms has
-changed the whole system of warfare; and an exposed situation on the
-top of a hill is now worse than useless. The Pas in consequence are, at
-the present day, always built on a level piece of ground. They consist
-of a double stockade of thick and tall posts, placed in a zigzag line,
-so that every part can be flanked. Within the stockade a mound of
-earth is thrown up, behind which the defenders can rest in safety, or
-use their fire-arms over it. On the level of the ground little
-archways sometimes pass through this breastwork, by which means the
-defenders can crawl out to the stockade and reconnoitre their enemies.
-The Rev. W. Williams, who gave me this account, added, that in one Pas
-he had noticed spurs or buttresses projecting on the inner and
-protected side of the mound of earth. On asking the chief the use of
-them, he replied, that if two or three of his men were shot, their
-neighbours would not see the bodies, and so be discouraged.
-
-These Pas are considered by the New Zealanders as very perfect means of
-defence: for the attacking force is never so well disciplined as to
-rush in a body to the stockade, cut it down, and effect their entry.
-When a tribe goes to war, the chief cannot order one party to go here
-and another there; but every man fights in the manner which best
-pleases himself; and to each separate individual to approach a stockade
-defended by fire-arms must appear certain death. I should think a more
-warlike race of inhabitants could not be found in any part of the world
-than the New Zealanders. Their conduct on first seeing a ship, as
-described by Captain Cook, strongly illustrates this: the act of
-throwing volleys of stones at so great and novel an object, and their
-defiance of "Come on shore and we will kill and eat you all," shows
-uncommon boldness. This warlike spirit is evident in many of their
-customs, and even in their smallest actions. If a New Zealander is
-struck, although but in joke, the blow must be returned and of this I
-saw an instance with one of our officers.
-
-At the present day, from the progress of civilization, there is much
-less warfare, except among some of the southern tribes. I heard a
-characteristic anecdote of what took place some time ago in the south.
-A missionary found a chief and his tribe in preparation for war;--their
-muskets clean and bright, and their ammunition ready. He reasoned long
-on the inutility of the war, and the little provocation which had been
-given for it. The chief was much shaken in his resolution, and seemed
-in doubt: but at length it occurred to him that a barrel of his
-gunpowder was in a bad state, and that it would not keep much longer.
-This was brought forward as an unanswerable argument for the necessity
-of immediately declaring war: the idea of allowing so much good
-gunpowder to spoil was not to be thought of; and this settled the
-point. I was told by the missionaries that in the life of Shongi, the
-chief who visited England, the love of war was the one and lasting
-spring of every action. The tribe in which he was a principal chief
-had at one time been oppressed by another tribe from the Thames River.
-A solemn oath was taken by the men that when their boys should grow up,
-and they should be powerful enough, they would never forget or forgive
-these injuries. To fulfil this oath appears to have been Shongi's
-chief motive for going to England; and when there it was his sole
-object. Presents were valued only as they could be converted into
-arms; of the arts, those alone interested him which were connected with
-the manufacture of arms. When at Sydney, Shongi, by a strange
-coincidence, met the hostile chief of the Thames River at the house of
-Mr. Marsden: their conduct was civil to each other; but Shongi told him
-that when again in New Zealand he would never cease to carry war into
-his country. The challenge was accepted; and Shongi on his return
-fulfilled the threat to the utmost letter. The tribe on the Thames
-River was utterly overthrown, and the chief to whom the challenge had
-been given was himself killed. Shongi, although harbouring such deep
-feelings of hatred and revenge, is described as having been a
-good-natured person.
-
-In the evening I went with Captain Fitz Roy and Mr. Baker, one of the
-missionaries, to pay a visit to Kororadika: we wandered about the
-village, and saw and conversed with many of the people, both men,
-women, and children. Looking at the New Zealander, one naturally
-compares him with the Tahitian; both belonging to the same family of
-mankind. The comparison, however, tells heavily against the New
-Zealander. He may, perhaps be superior in energy, but in every other
-respect his character is of a much lower order. One glance at their
-respective expressions, brings conviction to the mind that one is a
-savage, the other a civilized man. It would be vain to seek in the
-whole of New Zealand a person with the face and mien of the old
-Tahitian chief Utamme. No doubt the extraordinary manner in which
-tattooing is here practised, gives a disagreeable expression to their
-countenances. The complicated but symmetrical figures covering the
-whole face, puzzle and mislead an unaccustomed eye: it is moreover
-probable, that the deep incisions, by destroying the play of the
-superficial muscles, give an air of rigid inflexibility. But, besides
-this, there is a twinkling in the eye, which cannot indicate anything
-but cunning and ferocity. Their figures are tall and bulky; but not
-comparable in elegance with those of the working-classes in Tahiti.
-
-But their persons and houses are filthily dirty and offensive: the idea
-of washing either their bodies or their clothes never seems to enter
-their heads. I saw a chief, who was wearing a shirt black and matted
-with filth, and when asked how it came to be so dirty, he replied, with
-surprise, "Do not you see it is an old one?" Some of the men have
-shirts; but the common dress is one or two large blankets, generally
-black with dirt, which are thrown over their shoulders in a very
-inconvenient and awkward fashion. A few of the principal chiefs have
-decent suits of English clothes; but these are only worn on great
-occasions.
-
-December 23rd.--At a place called Waimate, about fifteen miles from the
-Bay of Islands, and midway between the eastern and western coasts, the
-missionaries have purchased some land for agricultural purposes. I had
-been introduced to the Rev. W. Williams, who, upon my expressing a
-wish, invited me to pay him a visit there. Mr. Bushby, the British
-resident, offered to take me in his boat by a creek, where I should see
-a pretty waterfall, and by which means my walk would be shortened. He
-likewise procured for me a guide.
-
-Upon asking a neighbouring chief to recommend a man, the chief himself
-offered to go; but his ignorance of the value of money was so complete,
-that at first he asked how many pounds I would give him, but afterwards
-was well contented with two dollars. When I showed the chief a very
-small bundle, which I wanted carried, it became absolutely necessary
-for him to take a slave. These feelings of pride are beginning to wear
-away; but formerly a leading man would sooner have died, than undergone
-the indignity of carrying the smallest burden. My companion was a
-light active man, dressed in a dirty blanket, and with his face
-completely tattooed. He had formerly been a great warrior. He
-appeared to be on very cordial terms with Mr. Bushby; but at various
-times they had quarrelled violently. Mr. Bushby remarked that a little
-quiet irony would frequently silence any one of these natives in their
-most blustering moments. This chief has come and harangued Mr. Bushby
-in a hectoring manner, saying, "great chief, a great man, a friend of
-mine, has come to pay me a visit--you must give him something good to
-eat, some fine presents, etc." Mr. Bushby has allowed him to finish his
-discourse, and then has quietly replied by some answer such as, "What
-else shall your slave do for you?" The man would then instantly, with a
-very comical expression, cease his braggadocio.
-
-Some time ago, Mr. Bushby suffered a far more serious attack. A chief
-and a party of men tried to break into his house in the middle of the
-night, and not finding this so easy, commenced a brisk firing with
-their muskets. Mr. Bushby was slightly wounded, but the party was at
-length driven away. Shortly afterwards it was discovered who was the
-aggressor; and a general meeting of the chiefs was convened to consider
-the case. It was considered by the New Zealanders as very atrocious,
-inasmuch as it was a night attack, and that Mrs. Bushby was lying ill
-in the house: this latter circumstance, much to their honour, being
-considered in all cases as a protection. The chiefs agreed to
-confiscate the land of the aggressor to the King of England. The whole
-proceeding, however, in thus trying and punishing a chief was entirely
-without precedent. The aggressor, moreover, lost caste in the
-estimation of his equals and this was considered by the British as of
-more consequence than the confiscation of his land.
-
-As the boat was shoving off, a second chief stepped into her, who only
-wanted the amusement of the passage up and down the creek. I never saw
-a more horrid and ferocious expression than this man had. It
-immediately struck me I had somewhere seen his likeness: it will be
-found in Retzch's outlines to Schiller's ballad of Fridolin, where two
-men are pushing Robert into the burning iron furnace. It is the man
-who has his arm on Robert's breast. Physiognomy here spoke the truth;
-this chief had been a notorious murderer, and was an arrant coward to
-boot. At the point where the boat landed, Mr. Bushby accompanied me a
-few hundred yards on the road: I could not help admiring the cool
-impudence of the hoary old villain, whom we left lying in the boat,
-when he shouted to Mr. Bushby, "Do not you stay long, I shall be tired
-of waiting here."
-
-We now commenced our walk. The road lay along a well beaten path,
-bordered on each side by the tall fern, which covers the whole country.
-After travelling some miles, we came to a little country village, where
-a few hovels were collected together, and some patches of ground
-cultivated with potatoes. The introduction of the potato has been the
-most essential benefit to the island; it is now much more used than any
-native vegetable. New Zealand is favoured by one great natural
-advantage; namely, that the inhabitants can never perish from famine.
-The whole country abounds with fern: and the roots of this plant, if
-not very palatable, yet contain much nutriment. A native can always
-subsist on these, and on the shell-fish, which are abundant on all
-parts of the sea-coast. The villages are chiefly conspicuous by the
-platforms which are raised on four posts ten or twelve feet above the
-ground, and on which the produce of the fields is kept secure from all
-accidents.
-
-On coming near one of the huts I was much amused by seeing in due form
-the ceremony of rubbing, or, as it ought to be called, pressing noses.
-The women, on our first approach, began uttering something in a most
-dolorous voice; they then squatted themselves down and held up their
-faces; my companion standing over them, one after another, placed the
-bridge of his nose at right angles to theirs, and commenced pressing.
-This lasted rather longer than a cordial shake of the hand with us, and
-as we vary the force of the grasp of the hand in shaking, so do they in
-pressing. During the process they uttered comfortable little grunts,
-very much in the same manner as two pigs do, when rubbing against each
-other. I noticed that the slave would press noses with any one he met,
-indifferently either before or after his master the chief. Although
-among the savages, the chief has absolute power of life and death over
-his slave, yet there is an entire absence of ceremony between them. Mr.
-Burchell has remarked the same thing in Southern Africa, with the rude
-Bachapins. Where civilization has arrived at a certain point, complex
-formalities soon arise between the different grades of society: thus at
-Tahiti all were formerly obliged to uncover themselves as low as the
-waist in presence of the king.
-
-The ceremony of pressing noses having been duly completed with all
-present, we seated ourselves in a circle in the front of one of the
-hovels, and rested there half-an-hour. All the hovels have nearly the
-same form and dimensions, and all agree in being filthily dirty. They
-resemble a cow-shed with one end open, but having a partition a little
-way within, with a square hole in it, making a small gloomy chamber. In
-this the inhabitants keep all their property, and when the weather is
-cold they sleep there. They eat, however, and pass their time in the
-open part in front. My guides having finished their pipes, we
-continued our walk. The path led through the same undulating country,
-the whole uniformly clothed as before with fern. On our right hand we
-had a serpentine river, the banks of which were fringed with trees, and
-here and there on the hill sides there was a clump of wood. The whole
-scene, in spite of its green colour, had rather a desolate aspect. The
-sight of so much fern impresses the mind with an idea of sterility:
-this, however, is not correct; for wherever the fern grows thick and
-breast-high, the land by tillage becomes productive. Some of the
-residents think that all this extensive open country originally was
-covered with forests, and that it has been cleared by fire. It is said,
-that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the kind of resin which
-flows from the kauri pine are frequently found. The natives had an
-evident motive in clearing the country; for the fern, formerly a staple
-article of food, flourishes only in the open cleared tracks. The
-almost entire absence of associated grasses, which forms so remarkable
-a feature in the vegetation of this island, may perhaps be accounted
-for by the land having been aboriginally covered with forest-trees.
-
-The soil is volcanic; in several parts we passed over shaggy lavas, and
-craters could clearly be distinguished on several of the neighbouring
-hills. Although the scenery is nowhere beautiful, and only
-occasionally pretty, I enjoyed my walk. I should have enjoyed it more,
-if my companion, the chief, had not possessed extraordinary
-conversational powers. I knew only three words: "good," "bad," and
-"yes:" and with these I answered all his remarks, without of course
-having understood one word he said. This, however, was quite
-sufficient: I was a good listener, an agreeable person, and he never
-ceased talking to me.
-
-At length we reached Waimate. After having passed over so many miles
-of an uninhabited useless country, the sudden appearance of an English
-farm-house, and its well-dressed fields, placed there as if by an
-enchanter's wand, was exceedingly pleasant. Mr. Williams not being at
-home, I received in Mr. Davies's house a cordial welcome. After
-drinking tea with his family party, we took a stroll about the farm. At
-Waimate there are three large houses, where the missionary gentlemen,
-Messrs. Williams, Davies, and Clarke, reside; and near them are the
-huts of the native labourers. On an adjoining slope, fine crops of
-barley and wheat were standing in full ear; and in another part, fields
-of potatoes and clover. But I cannot attempt to describe all I saw;
-there were large gardens, with every fruit and vegetable which England
-produces; and many belonging to a warmer clime. I may instance
-asparagus, kidney beans, cucumbers, rhubarb, apples, pears, figs,
-peaches, apricots, grapes, olives, gooseberries, currants, hops, gorse
-for fences, and English oaks; also many kinds of flowers. Around the
-farm-yard there were stables, a thrashing-barn with its winnowing
-machine, a blacksmith's forge, and on the ground ploughshares and other
-tools: in the middle was that happy mixture of pigs and poultry, lying
-comfortably together, as in every English farm-yard. At the distance
-of a few hundred yards, where the water of a little rill had been
-dammed up into a pool, there was a large and substantial water-mill.
-
-All this is very surprising, when it is considered that five years ago
-nothing but the fern flourished here. Moreover, native workmanship,
-taught by the missionaries, has effected this change;--the lesson of
-the missionary is the enchanter's wand. The house had been built, the
-windows framed, the fields ploughed, and even the trees grafted, by a
-New Zealander. At the mill, a New Zealander was seen powdered white
-with flower, like his brother miller in England. When I looked at this
-whole scene, I thought it admirable. It was not merely that England
-was brought vividly before my mind; yet, as the evening drew to a
-close, the domestic sounds, the fields of corn, the distant undulating
-country with its trees might well have been mistaken for our
-fatherland: nor was it the triumphant feeling at seeing what Englishmen
-could effect; but rather the high hopes thus inspired for the future
-progress of this fine island.
-
-
-Several young men, redeemed by the missionaries from slavery, were
-employed on the farm. They were dressed in a shirt, jacket, and
-trousers, and had a respectable appearance. Judging from one trifling
-anecdote, I should think they must be honest. When walking in the
-fields, a young labourer came up to Mr. Davies, and gave him a knife
-and gimlet, saying that he had found them on the road, and did not know
-to whom they belonged! These young men and boys appeared very merry
-and good-humoured. In the evening I saw a party of them at cricket:
-when I thought of the austerity of which the missionaries have been
-accused, I was amused by observing one of their own sons taking an
-active part in the game. A more decided and pleasing change was
-manifested in the young women, who acted as servants within the houses.
-Their clean, tidy, and healthy appearance, like that of the dairy-maids
-in England, formed a wonderful contrast with the women of the filthy
-hovels in Kororadika. The wives of the missionaries tried to persuade
-them not to be tattooed; but a famous operator having arrived from the
-south, they said, "We really must just have a few lines on our lips;
-else when we grow old, our lips will shrivel, and we shall be so very
-ugly." There is not nearly so much tattooing as formerly; but as it is
-a badge of distinction between the chief and the slave, it will
-probably long be practised. So soon does any train of ideas become
-habitual, that the missionaries told me that even in their eyes a plain
-face looked mean, and not like that of a New Zealand gentleman.
-
-Late in the evening I went to Mr. Williams's house, where I passed the
-night. I found there a large party of children, collected together for
-Christmas Day, and all sitting round a table at tea. I never saw a
-nicer or more merry group; and to think that this was in the centre of
-the land of cannibalism, murder, and all atrocious crimes! The
-cordiality and happiness so plainly pictured in the faces of the little
-circle, appeared equally felt by the older persons of the mission.
-
-December 24th.--In the morning, prayers were read in the native tongue
-to the whole family. After breakfast I rambled about the gardens and
-farm. This was a market-day, when the natives of the surrounding
-hamlets bring their potatoes, Indian corn, or pigs, to exchange for
-blankets, tobacco, and sometimes, through the persuasions of the
-missionaries, for soap. Mr. Davies's eldest son, who manages a farm of
-his own, is the man of business in the market. The children of the
-missionaries, who came while young to the island, understand the
-language better than their parents, and can get anything more readily
-done by the natives.
-
-A little before noon Messrs. Williams and Davies walked with me to a
-part of a neighbouring forest, to show me the famous kauri pine. I
-measured one of the noble trees, and found it thirty-one feet in
-circumference above the roots. There was another close by, which I did
-not see, thirty-three feet; and I heard of one no less than forty feet.
-These trees are remarkable for their smooth cylindrical boles, which
-run up to a height of sixty, and even ninety feet, with a nearly equal
-diameter, and without a single branch. The crown of branches at the
-summit is out of all proportion small to the trunk; and the leaves are
-likewise small compared with the branches. The forest was here almost
-composed of the kauri; and the largest trees, from the parallelism of
-their sides, stood up like gigantic columns of wood. The timber of the
-kauri is the most valuable production of the island; moreover, a
-quantity of resin oozes from the bark, which is sold at a penny a pound
-to the Americans, but its use was then unknown. Some of the New
-Zealand forest must be impenetrable to an extraordinary degree. Mr.
-Matthews informed me that one forest only thirty-four miles in width,
-and separating two inhabited districts, had only lately, for the first
-time, been crossed. He and another missionary, each with a party of
-about fifty men, undertook to open a road, but it cost more than a
-fortnight's labour! In the woods I saw very few birds. With regard to
-animals, it is a most remarkable fact, that so large an island,
-extending over more than 700 miles in latitude, and in many parts
-ninety broad, with varied stations, a fine climate, and land of all
-heights, from 14,000 feet downwards, with the exception of a small rat,
-did not possess one indigenous animal. The several species of that
-gigantic genus of birds, the Deinornis seem here to have replaced
-mammiferous quadrupeds, in the same manner as the reptiles still do at
-the Galapagos archipelago. It is said that the common Norway rat, in
-the short space of two years, annihilated in this northern end of the
-island, the New Zealand species. In many places I noticed several
-sorts of weeds, which, like the rats, I was forced to own as
-countrymen. A leek has overrun whole districts, and will prove very
-troublesome, but it was imported as a favour by a French vessel. The
-common dock is also widely disseminated, and will, I fear, for ever
-remain a proof of the rascality of an Englishman, who sold the seeds
-for those of the tobacco plant.
-
-On returning from our pleasant walk to the house, I dined with Mr.
-Williams; and then, a horse being lent me, I returned to the Bay of
-Islands. I took leave of the missionaries with thankfulness for their
-kind welcome, and with feelings of high respect for their
-gentlemanlike, useful, and upright characters. I think it would be
-difficult to find a body of men better adapted for the high office
-which they fulfil.
-
-Christmas Day.--In a few more days the fourth year of our absence from
-England will be completed. Our first Christmas Day was spent at
-Plymouth, the second at St. Martin's Cove, near Cape Horn; the third at
-Port Desire, in Patagonia; the fourth at anchor in a wild harbour in
-the peninsula of Tres Montes, this fifth here, and the next, I trust in
-Providence, will be in England. We attended divine service in the
-chapel of Pahia; part of the service being read in English, and part in
-the native language. Whilst at New Zealand we did not hear of any
-recent acts of cannibalism; but Mr. Stokes found burnt human bones
-strewed round a fire-place on a small island near the anchorage; but
-these remains of a comfortable banquet might have been lying there for
-several years. It is probable that the moral state of the people will
-rapidly improve. Mr. Bushby mentioned one pleasing anecdote as a proof
-of the sincerity of some, at least, of those who profess Christianity.
-One of his young men left him, who had been accustomed to read prayers
-to the rest of the servants. Some weeks afterwards, happening to pass
-late in the evening by an outhouse, he saw and heard one of his men
-reading the Bible with difficulty by the light of the fire, to the
-others. After this the party knelt and prayed: in their prayers they
-mentioned Mr. Bushby and his family, and the missionaries, each
-separately in his respective district.
-
-December 26th.--Mr. Bushby offered to take Mr. Sulivan and myself in
-his boat some miles up the river to Cawa-Cawa, and proposed afterwards
-to walk on to the village of Waiomio, where there are some curious
-rocks. Following one of the arms of the bay, we enjoyed a pleasant
-row, and passed through pretty scenery, until we came to a village,
-beyond which the boat could not pass. From this place a chief and a
-party of men volunteered to walk with us to Waiomio, a distance of four
-miles. The chief was at this time rather notorious from having lately
-hung one of his wives and a slave for adultery. When one of the
-missionaries remonstrated with him he seemed surprised, and said he
-thought he was exactly following the English method. Old Shongi, who
-happened to be in England during the Queen's trial, expressed great
-disapprobation at the whole proceeding: he said he had five wives, and
-he would rather cut off all their heads than be so much troubled about
-one. Leaving this village, we crossed over to another, seated on a
-hill-side at a little distance. The daughter of a chief, who was still
-a heathen, had died there five days before. The hovel in which she had
-expired had been burnt to the ground: her body being enclosed between
-two small canoes, was placed upright on the ground, and protected by an
-enclosure bearing wooden images of their gods, and the whole was
-painted bright red, so as to be conspicuous from afar. Her gown was
-fastened to the coffin, and her hair being cut off was cast at its
-foot. The relatives of the family had torn the flesh of their arms,
-bodies, and faces, so that they were covered with clotted blood; and
-the old women looked most filthy, disgusting objects. On the following
-day some of the officers visited this place, and found the women still
-howling and cutting themselves.
-
-We continued our walk, and soon reached Waiomio. Here there are some
-singular masses of limestone, resembling ruined castles. These rocks
-have long served for burial places, and in consequence are held too
-sacred to be approached. One of the young men, however, cried out, "Let
-us all be brave," and ran on ahead; but when within a hundred yards,
-the whole party thought better of it, and stopped short. With perfect
-indifference, however, they allowed us to examine the whole place. At
-this village we rested some hours, during which time there was a long
-discussion with Mr. Bushby, concerning the right of sale of certain
-lands. One old man, who appeared a perfect genealogist, illustrated the
-successive possessors by bits of stick driven into the ground. Before
-leaving the houses a little basketful of roasted sweet potatoes was
-given to each of our party; and we all, according to the custom,
-carried them away to eat on the road. I noticed that among the women
-employed in cooking, there was a man-slave: it must be a humiliating
-thing for a man in this warlike country to be employed in doing that
-which is considered as the lowest woman's work. Slaves are not allowed
-to go to war; but this perhaps can hardly be considered as a hardship.
-I heard of one poor wretch who, during hostilities, ran away to the
-opposite party; being met by two men, he was immediately seized; but as
-they could not agree to whom he should belong, each stood over him with
-a stone hatchet, and seemed determined that the other at least should
-not take him away alive. The poor man, almost dead with fright, was
-only saved by the address of a chief's wife. We afterwards enjoyed a
-pleasant walk back to the boat, but did not reach the ship till late in
-the evening.
-
-December 30th.--In the afternoon we stood out of the Bay of Islands, on
-our course to Sydney. I believe we were all glad to leave New Zealand.
-It is not a pleasant place. Amongst the natives there is absent that
-charming simplicity which is found in Tahiti; and the greater part of
-the English are the very refuse of society. Neither is the country
-itself attractive. I look back but to one bright spot, and that is
-Waimate, with its Christian inhabitants.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-AUSTRALIA
-
-Sydney--Excursion to Bathurst--Aspect of the Woods--Party of
-Natives--Gradual Extinction of the Aborigines--Infection generated by
-associated Men in health--Blue Mountains--View of the grand gulf-like
-Valleys--Their origin and formation--Bathurst, general civility of the
-Lower Orders--State of Society--Van Diemen's Land--Hobart
-Town--Aborigines all banished--Mount Wellington--King George's
-Sound--Cheerless Aspect of the Country--Bald Head, calcareous casts of
-branches of Trees--Party of Natives--Leave Australia.
-
-
-JANUARY 12th, 1836.--Early in the morning a light air carried us
-towards the entrance of Port Jackson. Instead of beholding a verdant
-country, interspersed with fine houses, a straight line of yellowish
-cliff brought to our minds the coast of Patagonia. A solitary
-lighthouse, built of white stone, alone told us that we were near a
-great and populous city. Having entered the harbour, it appears fine
-and spacious, with cliff-formed shores of horizontally stratified
-sandstone. The nearly level country is covered with thin scrubby
-trees, bespeaking the curse of sterility. Proceeding further inland,
-the country improves: beautiful villas and nice cottages are here and
-there scattered along the beach. In the distance stone houses, two and
-three stories high, and windmills standing on the edge of a bank,
-pointed out to us the neighbourhood of the capital of Australia.
-
-At last we anchored within Sydney Cove. We found the little basin
-occupied by many large ships, and surrounded by warehouses. In the
-evening I walked through the town, and returned full of admiration at
-the whole scene. It is a most magnificent testimony to the power of
-the British nation. Here, in a less promising country, scores of years
-have done many more times more than an equal number of centuries have
-effected in South America. My first feeling was to congratulate myself
-that I was born an Englishman. Upon seeing more of the town
-afterwards, perhaps my admiration fell a little; but yet it is a fine
-town. The streets are regular, broad, clean, and kept in excellent
-order; the houses are of a good size, and the shops well furnished. It
-may be faithfully compared to the large suburbs which stretch out from
-London and a few other great towns in England; but not even near London
-or Birmingham is there an appearance of such rapid growth. The number
-of large houses and other buildings just finished was truly surprising;
-nevertheless, every one complained of the high rents and difficulty in
-procuring a house. Coming from South America, where in the towns every
-man of property is known, no one thing surprised me more than not being
-able to ascertain at once to whom this or that carriage belonged.
-
-I hired a man and two horses to take me to Bathurst, a village about
-one hundred and twenty miles in the interior, and the centre of a great
-pastoral district. By this means I hoped to gain a general idea of the
-appearance of the country. On the morning of the 16th (January) I set
-out on my excursion. The first stage took us to Paramatta, a small
-country town, next to Sydney in importance. The roads were excellent,
-and made upon the MacAdam principle, whinstone having been brought for
-the purpose from the distance of several miles. In all respects there
-was a close resemblance to England: perhaps the alehouses here were
-more numerous. The iron gangs, or parties of convicts who have
-committed here some offense, appeared the least like England: they were
-working in chains, under the charge of sentries with loaded arms.
-
-The power which the government possesses, by means of forced labour, of
-at once opening good roads throughout the country, has been, I believe,
-one main cause of the early prosperity of this colony. I slept at
-night at a very comfortable inn at Emu ferry, thirty-five miles from
-Sydney, and near the ascent of the Blue Mountains. This line of road
-is the most frequented, and has been the longest inhabited of any in
-the colony. The whole land is enclosed with high railings, for the
-farmers have not succeeded in rearing hedges. There are many
-substantial houses and good cottages scattered about; but although
-considerable pieces of land are under cultivation, the greater part yet
-remains as when first discovered.
-
-The extreme uniformity of the vegetation is the most remarkable feature
-in the landscape of the greater part of New South Wales. Everywhere we
-have an open woodland, the ground being partially covered with a very
-thin pasture, with little appearance of verdure. The trees nearly all
-belong to one family, and mostly have their leaves placed in a
-vertical, instead of as in Europe, in a nearly horizontal position: the
-foliage is scanty, and of a peculiar pale green tint, without any
-gloss. Hence the woods appear light and shadowless: this, although a
-loss of comfort to the traveller under the scorching rays of summer, is
-of importance to the farmer, as it allows grass to grow where it
-otherwise would not. The leaves are not shed periodically: this
-character appears common to the entire southern hemisphere, namely,
-South America, Australia, and the Cape of Good Hope. The inhabitants
-of this hemisphere, and of the intertropical regions, thus lose perhaps
-one of the most glorious, though to our eyes common, spectacles in the
-world--the first bursting into full foliage of the leafless tree. They
-may, however, say that we pay dearly for this by having the land
-covered with mere naked skeletons for so many months. This is too true
-but our senses thus acquire a keen relish for the exquisite green of
-the spring, which the eyes of those living within the tropics, sated
-during the long year with the gorgeous productions of those glowing
-climates, can never experience. The greater number of the trees, with
-the exception of some of the Blue-gums, do not attain a large size; but
-they grow tall and tolerably straight, and stand well apart. The bark
-of some of the Eucalypti falls annually, or hangs dead in long shreds
-which swing about with the wind, and give to the woods a desolate and
-untidy appearance. I cannot imagine a more complete contrast, in every
-respect, than between the forests of Valdivia or Chiloe, and the woods
-of Australia.
-
-At sunset, a party of a score of the black aborigines passed by, each
-carrying, in their accustomed manner, a bundle of spears and other
-weapons. By giving a leading young man a shilling, they were easily
-detained, and threw their spears for my amusement. They were all
-partly clothed, and several could speak a little English: their
-countenances were good-humoured and pleasant, and they appeared far
-from being such utterly degraded beings as they have usually been
-represented. In their own arts they are admirable. A cap being fixed
-at thirty yards distance, they transfixed it with a spear, delivered by
-the throwing-stick with the rapidity of an arrow from the bow of a
-practised archer. In tracking animals or men they show most wonderful
-sagacity; and I heard of several of their remarks which manifested
-considerable acuteness. They will not, however, cultivate the ground,
-or build houses and remain stationary, or even take the trouble of
-tending a flock of sheep when given to them. On the whole they appear
-to me to stand some few degrees higher in the scale of civilization
-than the Fuegians.
-
-It is very curious thus to see in the midst of a civilized people, a
-set of harmless savages wandering about without knowing where they
-shall sleep at night, and gaining their livelihood by hunting in the
-woods. As the white man has travelled onwards, he has spread over the
-country belonging to several tribes. These, although thus enclosed by
-one common people, keep up their ancient distinctions, and sometimes go
-to war with each other. In an engagement which took place lately, the
-two parties most singularly chose the centre of the village of Bathurst
-for the field of battle. This was of service to the defeated side, for
-the runaway warriors took refuge in the barracks.
-
-The number of aborigines is rapidly decreasing. In my whole ride, with
-the exception of some boys brought up by Englishmen, I saw only one
-other party. This decrease, no doubt, must be partly owing to the
-introduction of spirits, to European diseases (even the milder ones of
-which, such as the measles, [1] prove very destructive), and to the
-gradual extinction of the wild animals. It is said that numbers of
-their children invariably perish in very early infancy from the effects
-of their wandering life; and as the difficulty of procuring food
-increases, so must their wandering habits increase; and hence the
-population, without any apparent deaths from famine, is repressed in a
-manner extremely sudden compared to what happens in civilized
-countries, where the father, though in adding to his labour he may
-injure himself, does not destroy his offspring.
-
-Besides the several evident causes of destruction, there appears to be
-some more mysterious agency generally at work. Wherever the European
-has trod, death seems to pursue the aboriginal. We may look to the
-wide extent of the Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and
-Australia, and we find the same result. Nor is it the white man alone
-that thus acts the destroyer; the Polynesian of Malay extraction has in
-parts of the East Indian archipelago, thus driven before him the
-dark-coloured native. The varieties of man seem to act on each other
-in the same way as different species of animals--the stronger always
-extirpating the weaker. It was melancholy at New Zealand to hear the
-fine energetic natives saying that they knew the land was doomed to
-pass from their children. Every one has heard of the inexplicable
-reduction of the population in the beautiful and healthy island of
-Tahiti since the date of Captain Cook's voyages: although in that case
-we might have expected that it would have been increased; for
-infanticide, which formerly prevailed to so extraordinary a degree, has
-ceased; profligacy has greatly diminished, and the murderous wars
-become less frequent.
-
-The Rev. J. Williams, in his interesting work, [2] says, that the first
-intercourse between natives and Europeans, "is invariably attended with
-the introduction of fever, dysentery, or some other disease, which
-carries off numbers of the people." Again he affirms, "It is certainly
-a fact, which cannot be controverted, that most of the diseases which
-have raged in the islands during my residence there, have been
-introduced by ships; [3] and what renders this fact remarkable is, that
-there might be no appearance of disease among the crew of the ship
-which conveyed this destructive importation." This statement is not
-quite so extraordinary as it at first appears; for several cases are on
-record of the most malignant fevers having broken out, although the
-parties themselves, who were the cause, were not affected. In the
-early part of the reign of George III., a prisoner who had been
-confined in a dungeon, was taken in a coach with four constables before
-a magistrate; and although the man himself was not ill, the four
-constables died from a short putrid fever; but the contagion extended
-to no others. From these facts it would almost appear as if the
-effluvium of one set of men shut up for some time together was
-poisonous when inhaled by others; and possibly more so, if the men be
-of different races. Mysterious as this circumstance appears to be, it
-is not more surprising than that the body of one's fellow-creature,
-directly after death, and before putrefaction has commenced, should
-often be of so deleterious a quality, that the mere puncture from an
-instrument used in its dissection, should prove fatal.
-
-17th.--Early in the morning we passed the Nepean in a ferry-boat. The
-river, although at this spot both broad and deep, had a very small body
-of running water. Having crossed a low piece of land on the opposite
-side, we reached the slope of the Blue Mountains. The ascent is not
-steep, the road having been cut with much care on the side of a
-sandstone cliff. On the summit an almost level plain extends, which,
-rising imperceptibly to the westward, at last attains a height of more
-than 3000 feet. From so grand a title as Blue Mountains, and from
-their absolute altitude, I expected to have seen a bold chain of
-mountains crossing the country; but instead of this, a sloping plain
-presents merely an inconsiderable front to the low land near the coast.
-From this first slope, the view of the extensive woodland to the east
-was striking, and the surrounding trees grew bold and lofty. But when
-once on the sandstone platform, the scenery becomes exceedingly
-monotonous; each side of the road is bordered by scrubby trees of the
-never-failing Eucalyptus family; and with the exception of two or three
-small inns, there are no houses or cultivated land: the road, moreover,
-is solitary; the most frequent object being a bullock-waggon, piled up
-with bales of wool.
-
-In the middle of the day we baited our horses at a little inn, called
-the Weatherboard. The country here is elevated 2800 feet above the
-sea. About a mile and a half from this place there is a view
-exceedingly well worth visiting. Following down a little valley and
-its tiny rill of water, an immense gulf unexpectedly opens through the
-trees which border the pathway, at the depth of perhaps 1500 feet.
-Walking on a few yards, one stands on the brink of a vast precipice,
-and below one sees a grand bay or gulf, for I know not what other name
-to give it, thickly covered with forest. The point of view is situated
-as if at the head of a bay, the line of cliff diverging on each side,
-and showing headland behind headland, as on a bold sea-coast. These
-cliffs are composed of horizontal strata of whitish sandstone; and are
-so absolutely vertical, that in many places a person standing on the
-edge and throwing down a stone, can see it strike the trees in the
-abyss below. So unbroken is the line of cliff, that in order to reach
-the foot of the waterfall, formed by this little stream, it is said to
-be necessary to go sixteen miles round. About five miles distant in
-front, another line of cliff extends, which thus appears completely to
-encircle the valley; and hence the name of bay is justified, as applied
-to this grand amphitheatrical depression. If we imagine a winding
-harbour, with its deep water surrounded by bold cliff-like shores, to
-be laid dry, and a forest to spring up on its sandy bottom, we should
-then have the appearance and structure here exhibited. This kind of
-view was to me quite novel, and extremely magnificent.
-
-In the evening we reached the Blackheath. The sandstone plateau has
-here attained the height of 3400 feet; and is covered, as before, with
-the same scrubby woods. From the road, there were occasional glimpses
-into a profound valley, of the same character as the one described; but
-from the steepness and depth of its sides, the bottom was scarcely ever
-to be seen. The Blackheath is a very comfortable inn, kept by an old
-soldier; and it reminded me of the small inns in North Wales.
-
-18th.--Very early in the morning, I walked about three miles to see
-Govett's Leap; a view of a similar character with that near the
-Weatherboard, but perhaps even more stupendous. So early in the day
-the gulf was filled with a thin blue haze, which, although destroying
-the general effect of the view added to the apparent depth at which the
-forest was stretched out beneath our feet. These valleys, which so
-long presented an insuperable barrier to the attempts of the most
-enterprising of the colonists to reach the interior, are most
-remarkable. Great arm-like bays, expanding at their upper ends, often
-branch from the main valleys and penetrate the sandstone platform; on
-the other hand, the platform often sends promontories into the valleys,
-and even leaves in them great, almost insulated, masses. To descend
-into some of these valleys, it is necessary to go round twenty miles;
-and into others, the surveyors have only lately penetrated, and the
-colonists have not yet been able to drive in their cattle. But the
-most remarkable feature in their structure is, that although several
-miles wide at their heads, they generally contract towards their mouths
-to such a degree as to become impassable. The Surveyor-General, Sir T.
-Mitchell, [4] endeavoured in vain, first walking and then by crawling
-between the great fallen fragments of sandstone, to ascend through the
-gorge by which the river Grose joins the Nepean, yet the valley of the
-Grose in its upper part, as I saw, forms a magnificent level basin some
-miles in width, and is on all sides surrounded by cliffs, the summits
-of which are believed to be nowhere less than 3000 feet above the level
-of the sea. When cattle are driven into the valley of the Wolgan by a
-path (which I descended), partly natural and partly made by the owner
-of the land, they cannot escape; for this valley is in every other part
-surrounded by perpendicular cliffs, and eight miles lower down, it
-contracts from an average width of half a mile, to a mere chasm,
-impassable to man or beast. Sir T. Mitchell states that the great
-valley of the Cox river with all its branches, contracts, where it
-unites with the Nepean, into a gorge 2200 yards in width, and about
-1000 feet in depth. Other similar cases might have been added.
-
-The first impression, on seeing the correspondence of the horizontal
-strata on each side of these valleys and great amphitheatrical
-depressions, is that they have been hollowed out, like other valleys,
-by the action of water; but when one reflects on the enormous amount of
-stone, which on this view must have been removed through mere gorges or
-chasms, one is led to ask whether these spaces may not have subsided.
-But considering the form of the irregularly branching valleys, and of
-the narrow promontories projecting into them from the platforms, we are
-compelled to abandon this notion. To attribute these hollows to the
-present alluvial action would be preposterous; nor does the drainage
-from the summit-level always fall, as I remarked near the Weatherboard,
-into the head of these valleys, but into one side of their bay-like
-recesses. Some of the inhabitants remarked to me that they never
-viewed one of those bay-like recesses, with the headlands receding on
-both hands, without being struck with their resemblance to a bold
-sea-coast. This is certainly the case; moreover, on the present coast
-of New South Wales, the numerous, fine, widely-branching harbours,
-which are generally connected with the sea by a narrow mouth worn
-through the sandstone coast-cliffs, varying from one mile in width to a
-quarter of a mile, present a likeness, though on a miniature scale, to
-the great valleys of the interior. But then immediately occurs the
-startling difficulty, why has the sea worn out these great, though
-circumscribed depressions on a wide platform, and left mere gorges at
-the openings, through which the whole vast amount of triturated matter
-must have been carried away? The only light I can throw upon this
-enigma, is by remarking that banks of the most irregular forms appear
-to be now forming in some seas, as in parts of the West Indies and in
-the Red Sea, and that their sides are exceedingly steep. Such banks, I
-have been led to suppose, have been formed by sediment heaped by strong
-currents on an irregular bottom. That in some cases the sea, instead
-of spreading out sediment in a uniform sheet, heaps it round submarine
-rocks and islands, it is hardly possible to doubt, after examining the
-charts of the West Indies; and that the waves have power to form high
-and precipitous cliffs, even in land-locked harbours, I have noticed in
-many parts of South America. To apply these ideas to the sandstone
-platforms of New South Wales, I imagine that the strata were heaped by
-the action of strong currents, and of the undulations of an open sea,
-on an irregular bottom; and that the valley-like spaces thus left
-unfilled had their steeply sloping flanks worn into cliffs, during a
-slow elevation of the land; the worn-down sandstone being removed,
-either at the time when the narrow gorges were cut by the retreating
-sea, or subsequently by alluvial action.
-
-
-Soon after leaving the Blackheath, we descended from the sandstone
-platform by the pass of Mount Victoria. To effect this pass, an
-enormous quantity of stone has been cut through; the design, and its
-manner of execution, being worthy of any line of road in England. We
-now entered upon a country less elevated by nearly a thousand feet, and
-consisting of granite. With the change of rock, the vegetation
-improved, the trees were both finer and stood farther apart; and the
-pasture between them was a little greener and more plentiful. At
-Hassan's Walls, I left the high road, and made a short detour to a farm
-called Walerawang; to the superintendent of which I had a letter of
-introduction from the owner in Sydney. Mr. Browne had the kindness to
-ask me to stay the ensuing day, which I had much pleasure in doing.
-This place offers an example of one of the large farming, or rather
-sheep-grazing establishments of the colony. Cattle and horses are,
-however, in this case rather more numerous than usual, owing to some of
-the valleys being swampy and producing a coarser pasture. Two or three
-flat pieces of ground near the house were cleared and cultivated with
-corn, which the harvest-men were now reaping: but no more wheat is sown
-than sufficient for the annual support of the labourers employed on the
-establishment. The usual number of assigned convict-servants here is
-about forty, but at the present time there were rather more. Although
-the farm was well stocked with every necessary, there was an apparent
-absence of comfort; and not one single woman resided here. The sunset
-of a fine day will generally cast an air of happy contentment on any
-scene; but here, at this retired farm-house, the brightest tints on the
-surrounding woods could not make me forget that forty hardened,
-profligate men were ceasing from their daily labours, like the slaves
-from Africa, yet without their holy claim for compassion.
-
-Early on the next morning, Mr. Archer, the joint superintendent, had
-the kindness to take me out kangaroo-hunting. We continued riding the
-greater part of the day, but had very bad sport, not seeing a kangaroo,
-or even a wild dog. The greyhounds pursued a kangaroo rat into a hollow
-tree, out of which we dragged it: it is an animal as large as a rabbit,
-but with the figure of a kangaroo. A few years since this country
-abounded with wild animals; but now the emu is banished to a long
-distance, and the kangaroo is become scarce; to both the English
-greyhound has been highly destructive. It may be long before these
-animals are altogether exterminated, but their doom is fixed. The
-aborigines are always anxious to borrow the dogs from the farm-houses:
-the use of them, the offal when an animal is killed, and some milk from
-the cows, are the peace-offerings of the settlers, who push farther and
-farther towards the interior. The thoughtless aboriginal, blinded by
-these trifling advantages, is delighted at the approach of the white
-man, who seems predestined to inherit the country of his children.
-
-Although having poor sport, we enjoyed a pleasant ride. The woodland is
-generally so open that a person on horseback can gallop through it. It
-is traversed by a few flat-bottomed valleys, which are green and free
-from trees: in such spots the scenery was pretty like that of a park.
-In the whole country I scarcely saw a place without the marks of a
-fire; whether these had been more or less recent--whether the stumps
-were more or less black, was the greatest change which varied the
-uniformity, so wearisome to the traveller's eye. In these woods there
-are not many birds; I saw, however, some large flocks of the white
-cockatoo feeding in a corn-field, and a few most beautiful parrots;
-crows, like our jackdaws were not uncommon, and another bird something
-like the magpie. In the dusk of the evening I took a stroll along a
-chain of ponds, which in this dry country represented the course of a
-river, and had the good fortune to see several of the famous
-Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. They were diving and playing about the
-surface of the water, but showed so little of their bodies, that they
-might easily have been mistaken for water-rats. Mr. Browne shot one:
-certainly it is a most extraordinary animal; a stuffed specimen does
-not at all give a good idea of the appearance of the head and beak when
-fresh; the latter becoming hard and contracted. [5]
-
-20th.--A long day's ride to Bathurst. Before joining the highroad we
-followed a mere path through the forest; and the country, with the
-exception of a few squatters' huts, was very solitary. We experienced
-this day the sirocco-like wind of Australia, which comes from the
-parched deserts of the interior. Clouds of dust were travelling in
-every direction; and the wind felt as if it had passed over a fire. I
-afterwards heard that the thermometer out of doors had stood at 119
-degs., and in a closed room at 96 degs. In the afternoon we came in
-view of the downs of Bathurst. These undulating but nearly smooth
-plains are very remarkable in this country, from being absolutely
-destitute of trees. They support only a thin brown pasture. We rode
-some miles over this country, and then reached the township of
-Bathurst, seated in the middle of what may be called either a very
-broad valley, or narrow plain. I was told at Sydney not to form too
-bad an opinion of Australia by judging of the country from the
-roadside, nor too good a one from Bathurst; in this latter respect, I
-did not feel myself in the least danger of being prejudiced. The
-season, it must be owned, had been one of great drought, and the
-country did not wear a favourable aspect; although I understand it was
-incomparably worse two or three months before. The secret of the
-rapidly growing prosperity of Bathurst is, that the brown pasture which
-appears to the stranger's eye so wretched, is excellent for
-sheep-grazing. The town stands, at the height of 2200 feet above the
-sea, on the banks of the Macquarie. This is one of the rivers flowing
-into the vast and scarcely known interior. The line of water-shed,
-which divides the inland streams from those on the coast, has a height
-of about 3000 feet, and runs in a north and south direction at the
-distance of from eighty to a hundred miles from the sea-side. The
-Macquarie figures in the map as a respectable river, and it is the
-largest of those draining this part of the water-shed; yet to my
-surprise I found it a mere chain of ponds, separated from each other by
-spaces almost dry. Generally a small stream is running; and sometimes
-there are high and impetuous floods. Scanty as the supply of the water
-is throughout this district, it becomes still scantier further inland.
-
-22nd.--I commenced my return, and followed a new road called Lockyer's
-Line, along which the country is rather more hilly and picturesque.
-This was a long day's ride; and the house where I wished to sleep was
-some way off the road, and not easily found. I met on this occasion,
-and indeed on all others, a very general and ready civility among the
-lower orders, which, when one considers what they are, and what they
-have been, would scarcely have been expected. The farm where I passed
-the night, was owned by two young men who had only lately come out, and
-were beginning a settler's life. The total want of almost every
-comfort was not attractive; but future and certain prosperity was
-before their eyes, and that not far distant.
-
-The next day we passed through large tracts of country in flames,
-volumes of smoke sweeping across the road. Before noon we joined our
-former road, and ascended Mount Victoria. I slept at the Weatherboard,
-and before dark took another walk to the amphitheatre. On the road to
-Sydney I spent a very pleasant evening with Captain King at Dunheved;
-and thus ended my little excursion in the colony of New South Wales.
-
-Before arriving here the three things which interested me most
-were--the state of society amongst the higher classes, the condition of
-the convicts, and the degree of attraction sufficient to induce persons
-to emigrate. Of course, after so very short a visit, one's opinion is
-worth scarcely anything; but it is as difficult not to form some
-opinion, as it is to form a correct judgment. On the whole, from what
-I heard, more than from what I saw, I was disappointed in the state of
-society. The whole community is rancorously divided into parties on
-almost every subject. Among those who, from their station in life,
-ought to be the best, many live in such open profligacy that
-respectable people cannot associate with them. There is much jealousy
-between the children of the rich emancipist and the free settlers, the
-former being pleased to consider honest men as interlopers. The whole
-population, poor and rich, are bent on acquiring wealth: amongst the
-higher orders, wool and sheep-grazing form the constant subject of
-conversation. There are many serious drawbacks to the comforts of a
-family, the chief of which, perhaps, is being surrounded by convict
-servants. How thoroughly odious to every feeling, to be waited on by a
-man who the day before, perhaps, was flogged, from your representation,
-for some trifling misdemeanor. The female servants are of course, much
-worse: hence children learn the vilest expressions, and it is
-fortunate, if not equally vile ideas.
-
-On the other hand, the capital of a person, without any trouble on his
-part, produces him treble interest to what it will in England; and with
-care he is sure to grow rich. The luxuries of life are in abundance,
-and very little dearer than in England, and most articles of food are
-cheaper. The climate is splendid, and perfectly healthy; but to my
-mind its charms are lost by the uninviting aspect of the country.
-Settlers possess a great advantage in finding their sons of service
-when very young. At the age of from sixteen to twenty, they frequently
-take charge of distant farming stations. This, however, must happen at
-the expense of their boys associating entirely with convict servants. I
-am not aware that the tone of society has assumed any peculiar
-character; but with such habits, and without intellectual pursuits, it
-can hardly fail to deteriorate. My opinion is such, that nothing but
-rather sharp necessity should compel me to emigrate.
-
-The rapid prosperity and future prospects of this colony are to me, not
-understanding these subjects, very puzzling. The two main exports are
-wool and whale-oil, and to both of these productions there is a limit.
-The country is totally unfit for canals, therefore there is a not very
-distant point, beyond which the land-carriage of wool will not repay
-the expense of shearing and tending sheep. Pasture everywhere is so
-thin that settlers have already pushed far into the interior: moreover,
-the country further inland becomes extremely poor. Agriculture, on
-account of the droughts, can never succeed on an extended scale:
-therefore, so far as I can see, Australia must ultimately depend upon
-being the centre of commerce for the southern hemisphere, and perhaps
-on her future manufactories. Possessing coal, she always has the
-moving power at hand. From the habitable country extending along the
-coast, and from her English extraction, she is sure to be a maritime
-nation. I formerly imagined that Australia would rise to be as grand
-and powerful a country as North America, but now it appears to me that
-such future grandeur is rather problematical.
-
-With respect to the state of the convicts, I had still fewer
-opportunities of judging than on other points. The first question is,
-whether their condition is at all one of punishment: no one will
-maintain that it is a very severe one. This, however, I suppose, is of
-little consequence as long as it continues to be an object of dread to
-criminals at home. The corporeal wants of the convicts are tolerably
-well supplied: their prospect of future liberty and comfort is not
-distant, and, after good conduct, certain. A "ticket of leave," which,
-as long as a man keeps clear of suspicion as well as of crime, makes
-him free within a certain district, is given upon good conduct, after
-years proportional to the length of the sentence; yet with all this,
-and overlooking the previous imprisonment and wretched passage out, I
-believe the years of assignment are passed away with discontent and
-unhappiness. As an intelligent man remarked to me, the convicts know
-no pleasure beyond sensuality, and in this they are not gratified. The
-enormous bribe which Government possesses in offering free pardons,
-together with the deep horror of the secluded penal settlements,
-destroys confidence between the convicts, and so prevents crime. As to
-a sense of shame, such a feeling does not appear to be known, and of
-this I witnessed some very singular proofs. Though it is a curious
-fact, I was universally told that the character of the convict
-population is one of arrant cowardice: not unfrequently some become
-desperate, and quite indifferent as to life, yet a plan requiring cool
-or continued courage is seldom put into execution. The worst feature
-in the whole case is, that although there exists what may be called a
-legal reform, and comparatively little is committed which the law can
-touch, yet that any moral reform should take place appears to be quite
-out of the question. I was assured by well-informed people, that a man
-who should try to improve, could not while living with other assigned
-servants;--his life would be one of intolerable misery and persecution.
-Nor must the contamination of the convict-ships and prisons, both here
-and in England, be forgotten. On the whole, as a place of punishment,
-the object is scarcely gained; as a real system of reform it has
-failed, as perhaps would every other plan; but as a means of making men
-outwardly honest,--of converting vagabonds, most useless in one
-hemisphere, into active citizens of another, and thus giving birth to a
-new and splendid country--a grand centre of civilization--it has
-succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history.
-
-
-30th.--The Beagle sailed for Hobart Town in Van Diemen's Land. On the
-5th of February, after a six days' passage, of which the first part was
-fine, and the latter very cold and squally, we entered the mouth of
-Storm Bay: the weather justified this awful name. The bay should
-rather be called an estuary, for it receives at its head the waters of
-the Derwent. Near the mouth, there are some extensive basaltic
-platforms; but higher up the land becomes mountainous, and is covered
-by a light wood. The lower parts of the hills which skirt the bay are
-cleared; and the bright yellow fields of corn, and dark green ones of
-potatoes, appear very luxuriant. Late in the evening we anchored in the
-snug cove, on the shores of which stands the capital of Tasmania. The
-first aspect of the place was very inferior to that of Sydney; the
-latter might be called a city, this is only a town. It stands at the
-base of Mount Wellington, a mountain 3100 feet high, but of little
-picturesque beauty; from this source, however, it receives a good
-supply of water. Round the cove there are some fine warehouses and on
-one side a small fort. Coming from the Spanish settlements, where such
-magnificent care has generally been paid to the fortifications, the
-means of defence in these colonies appeared very contemptible.
-Comparing the town with Sydney, I was chiefly struck with the
-comparative fewness of the large houses, either built or building.
-Hobart Town, from the census of 1835, contained 13,826 inhabitants, and
-the whole of Tasmania 36,505.
-
-All the aborigines have been removed to an island in Bass's Straits, so
-that Van Diemen's Land enjoys the great advantage of being free from a
-native population. This most cruel step seems to have been quite
-unavoidable, as the only means of stopping a fearful succession of
-robberies, burnings, and murders, committed by the blacks; and which
-sooner or later would have ended in their utter destruction. I fear
-there is no doubt, that this train of evil and its consequences,
-originated in the infamous conduct of some of our countrymen. Thirty
-years is a short period, in which to have banished the last aboriginal
-from his native island,--and that island nearly as large as Ireland.
-The correspondence on this subject, which took place between the
-government at home and that of Van Diemen's Land, is very interesting.
-Although numbers of natives were shot and taken prisoners in the
-skirmishing, which was going on at intervals for several years; nothing
-seems fully to have impressed them with the idea of our overwhelming
-power, until the whole island, in 1830, was put under martial law, and
-by proclamation the whole population commanded to assist in one great
-attempt to secure the entire race. The plan adopted was nearly similar
-to that of the great hunting-matches in India: a line was formed
-reaching across the island, with the intention of driving the natives
-into a _cul-de-sac_ on Tasman's peninsula. The attempt failed; the
-natives, having tied up their dogs, stole during one night through the
-lines. This is far from surprising, when their practised senses, and
-usual manner of crawling after wild animals is considered. I have been
-assured that they can conceal themselves on almost bare ground, in a
-manner which until witnessed is scarcely credible; their dusky bodies
-being easily mistaken for the blackened stumps which are scattered all
-over the country. I was told of a trial between a party of Englishmen
-and a native, who was to stand in full view on the side of a bare hill;
-if the Englishmen closed their eyes for less than a minute, he would
-squat down, and then they were never able to distinguish him from the
-surrounding stumps. But to return to the hunting-match; the natives
-understanding this kind of warfare, were terribly alarmed, for they at
-once perceived the power and numbers of the whites. Shortly afterwards
-a party of thirteen belonging to two tribes came in; and, conscious of
-their unprotected condition, delivered themselves up in despair.
-Subsequently by the intrepid exertions of Mr. Robinson, an active and
-benevolent man, who fearlessly visited by himself the most hostile of
-the natives, the whole were induced to act in a similar manner. They
-were then removed to an island, where food and clothes were provided
-them. Count Strzelecki states, [6] that "at the epoch of their
-deportation in 1835, the number of natives amounted to 210. In 1842,
-that is, after the interval of seven years, they mustered only
-fifty-four individuals; and, while each family of the interior of New
-South Wales, uncontaminated by contact with the whites, swarms with
-children, those of Flinders' Island had during eight years an accession
-of only fourteen in number!"
-
-The Beagle stayed here ten days, and in this time I made several
-pleasant little excursions, chiefly with the object of examining the
-geological structure of the immediate neighbourhood. The main points
-of interest consist, first in some highly fossiliferous strata,
-belonging to the Devonian or Carboniferous period; secondly, in proofs
-of a late small rise of the land; and lastly, in a solitary and
-superficial patch of yellowish limestone or travertin, which contains
-numerous impressions of leaves of trees, together with land-shells, not
-now existing. It is not improbable that this one small quarry includes
-the only remaining record of the vegetation of Van Diemen's Land during
-one former epoch.
-
-The climate here is damper than in New South Wales, and hence the land
-is more fertile. Agriculture flourishes; the cultivated fields look
-well, and the gardens abound with thriving vegetables and fruit-trees.
-Some of the farm-houses, situated in retired spots, had a very
-attractive appearance. The general aspect of the vegetation is similar
-to that of Australia; perhaps it is a little more green and cheerful;
-and the pasture between the trees rather more abundant. One day I took
-a long walk on the side of the bay opposite to the town: I crossed in a
-steam-boat, two of which are constantly plying backwards and forwards.
-The machinery of one of these vessels was entirely manufactured in this
-colony, which, from its very foundation, then numbered only three and
-thirty years! Another day I ascended Mount Wellington; I took with me
-a guide, for I failed in a first attempt, from the thickness of the
-wood. Our guide, however, was a stupid fellow, and conducted us to the
-southern and damp side of the mountain, where the vegetation was very
-luxuriant; and where the labour of the ascent, from the number of
-rotten trunks, was almost as great as on a mountain in Tierra del Fuego
-or in Chiloe. It cost us five and a half hours of hard climbing before
-we reached the summit. In many parts the Eucalypti grew to a great
-size, and composed a noble forest. In some of the dampest ravines,
-tree-ferns flourished in an extraordinary manner; I saw one which must
-have been at least twenty feet high to the base of the fronds, and was
-in girth exactly six feet. The fronds forming the most elegant
-parasols, produced a gloomy shade, like that of the first hour of the
-night. The summit of the mountain is broad and flat, and is composed
-of huge angular masses of naked greenstone. Its elevation is 3100 feet
-above the level of the sea. The day was splendidly clear, and we
-enjoyed a most extensive view; to the north, the country appeared a
-mass of wooded mountains, of about the same height with that on which
-we were standing, and with an equally tame outline: to the south the
-broken land and water, forming many intricate bays, was mapped with
-clearness before us. After staying some hours on the summit, we found
-a better way to descend, but did not reach the Beagle till eight
-o'clock, after a severe day's work.
-
-February 7th.--The Beagle sailed from Tasmania, and, on the 6th of the
-ensuing month, reached King George's Sound, situated close to the S. W.
-corner of Australia. We stayed there eight days; and we did not during
-our voyage pass a more dull and uninteresting time. The country,
-viewed from an eminence, appears a woody plain, with here and there
-rounded and partly bare hills of granite protruding. One day I went out
-with a party, in hopes of seeing a kangaroo hunt, and walked over a
-good many miles of country. Everywhere we found the soil sandy, and
-very poor; it supported either a coarse vegetation of thin, low
-brushwood and wiry grass, or a forest of stunted trees. The scenery
-resembled that of the high sandstone platform of the Blue Mountains;
-the Casuarina (a tree somewhat resembling a Scotch fir) is, however,
-here in greater number, and the Eucalyptus in rather less. In the open
-parts there were many grass-trees,--a plant which, in appearance, has
-some affinity with the palm; but, instead of being surmounted by a
-crown of noble fronds, it can boast merely of a tuft of very coarse
-grass-like leaves. The general bright green colour of the brushwood
-and other plants, viewed from a distance, seemed to promise fertility.
-A single walk, however, was enough to dispel such an illusion; and he
-who thinks with me will never wish to walk again in so uninviting a
-country.
-
-One day I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to Bald Head; the place
-mentioned by so many navigators, where some imagined that they saw
-corals, and others that they saw petrified trees, standing in the
-position in which they had grown. According to our view, the beds have
-been formed by the wind having heaped up fine sand, composed of minute
-rounded particles of shells and corals, during which process branches
-and roots of trees, together with many land-shells, became enclosed.
-The whole then became consolidated by the percolation of calcareous
-matter; and the cylindrical cavities left by the decaying of the wood,
-were thus also filled up with a hard pseudo-stalactical stone. The
-weather is now wearing away the softer parts, and in consequence the
-hard casts of the roots and branches of the trees project above the
-surface, and, in a singularly deceptive manner, resemble the stumps of
-a dead thicket.
-
-A large tribe of natives, called the White Cockatoo men happened to pay
-the settlement a visit while we were there. These men, as well as those
-of the tribe belonging to King George's Sound, being tempted by the
-offer of some tubs of rice and sugar, were persuaded to hold a
-"corrobery," or great dancing-party. As soon as it grew dark, small
-fires were lighted, and the men commenced their toilet, which consisted
-in painting themselves white in spots and lines. As soon as all was
-ready, large fires were kept blazing, round which the women and
-children were collected as spectators; the Cockatoo and King George's
-men formed two distinct parties, and generally danced in answer to each
-other. The dancing consisted in their running either sideways or in
-Indian file into an open space, and stamping the ground with great
-force as they marched together. Their heavy footsteps were accompanied
-by a kind of grunt, by beating their clubs and spears together, and by
-various other gesticulations, such as extending their arms and
-wriggling their bodies. It was a most rude, barbarous scene, and, to
-our ideas, without any sort of meaning; but we observed that the black
-women and children watched it with the greatest pleasure. Perhaps
-these dances originally represented actions, such as wars and
-victories; there was one called the Emu dance, in which each man
-extended his arm in a bent manner, like the neck of that bird. In
-another dance, one man imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in
-the woods, whilst a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him. When
-both tribes mingled in the dance, the ground trembled with the
-heaviness of their steps, and the air resounded with their wild cries.
-Every one appeared in high spirits, and the group of nearly naked
-figures, viewed by the light of the blazing fires, all moving in
-hideous harmony, formed a perfect display of a festival amongst the
-lowest barbarians. In Tierra del Fuego, we have beheld many curious
-scenes in savage life, but never, I think, one where the natives were
-in such high spirits, and so perfectly at their ease. After the
-dancing was over, the whole party formed a great circle on the ground,
-and the boiled rice and sugar was distributed, to the delight of all.
-
-After several tedious delays from clouded weather, on the 14th of
-March, we gladly stood out of King George's Sound on our course to
-Keeling Island. Farewell, Australia! you are a rising child, and
-doubtless some day will reign a great princess in the South: but you
-are too great and ambitious for affection, yet not great enough for
-respect. I leave your shores without sorrow or regret.
-
-[1] It is remarkable how the same disease is modified in different
-climates. At the little island of St. Helena the introduction of
-scarlet fever is dreaded as a plague. In some countries, foreigners
-and natives are as differently affected by certain contagious disorders
-as if they had been different animals; of which fact some instances
-have occurred in Chile; and, according to Humboldt, in Mexico (Polit.
-Essay, New Spain, vol. iv.).
-
-[2] Narrative of Missionary Enterprise, p. 282.
-
-[3] Captain Beechey (chap. iv., vol. i.) states that the inhabitants of
-Pitcairn Island are firmly convinced that after the arrival of every
-ship they suffer cutaneous and other disorders. Captain Beechey
-attributes this to the change of diet during the time of the visit. Dr.
-Macculloch (Western Isles, vol. ii. p. 32) says: "It is asserted, that
-on the arrival of a stranger (at St. Kilda) all the inhabitants, in the
-common phraseology, catch a cold." Dr. Macculloch considers the whole
-case, although often previously affirmed, as ludicrous. He adds,
-however, that "the question was put by us to the inhabitants who
-unanimously agreed in the story." In Vancouver's Voyage, there is a
-somewhat similar statement with respect to Otaheite. Dr. Dieffenbach,
-in a note to his translation of the Journal, states that the same fact
-is universally believed by the inhabitants of the Chatham Islands, and
-in parts of New Zealand. It is impossible that such a belief should
-have become universal in the northern hemisphere, at the Antipodes, and
-in the Pacific, without some good foundation. Humboldt (Polit. Essay
-on King of New Spain, vol. iv.) says, that the great epidemics of
-Panama and Callao are "marked" by the arrival of ships from Chile,
-because the people from that temperate region, first experience the
-fatal effects of the torrid zones. I may add, that I have heard it
-stated in Shropshire, that sheep, which have been imported from
-vessels, although themselves in a healthy condition, if placed in the
-same fold with others, frequently produce sickness in the flock.
-
-[4] Travels in Australia, vol. i. p. 154. I must express my obligation
-to Sir T. Mitchell, for several interesting personal communications on
-the subject of these great valleys of New South Wales.
-
-[5] I was interested by finding here the hollow conical pitfall of the
-lion-ant, or some other insect; first a fly fell down the treacherous
-slope and immediately disappeared; then came a large but unwary ant;
-its struggles to escape being very violent, those curious little jets
-of sand, described by Kirby and Spence (Entomol., vol. i. p. 425) as
-being flirted by the insect's tail, were promptly directed against the
-expected victim. But the ant enjoyed a better fate than the fly, and
-escaped the fatal jaws which lay concealed at the base of the conical
-hollow. This Australian pitfall was only about half the size of that
-made by the European lion-ant.
-
-[6] Physical Description of New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land, p.
-354.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-KEELING ISLAND:--CORAL FORMATIONS
-
-Keeling Island--Singular appearance--Scanty Flora--Transport of
-Seeds--Birds and Insects--Ebbing and flowing Springs--Fields of dead
-Coral--Stones transported in the roots of Trees--Great Crab--Stinging
-Corals--Coral eating Fish--Coral Formations--Lagoon Islands, or
-Atolls--Depth at which reef-building Corals can live--Vast Areas
-interspersed with low Coral Islands--Subsidence of their
-foundations--Barrier Reefs--Fringing Reefs--Conversion of Fringing
-Reefs into Barrier Reefs, and into Atolls--Evidence of changes in
-Level--Breaches in Barrier Reefs--Maldiva Atolls, their peculiar
-structure--Dead and submerged Reefs--Areas of subsidence and
-elevation--Distribution of Volcanoes--Subsidence slow, and vast in
-amount.
-
-
-APRIL 1st.--We arrived in view of the Keeling or Cocos Islands,
-situated in the Indian Ocean, and about six hundred miles distant from
-the coast of Sumatra. This is one of the lagoon-islands (or atolls) of
-coral formation, similar to those in the Low Archipelago which we
-passed near. When the ship was in the channel at the entrance, Mr.
-Liesk, an English resident, came off in his boat. The history of the
-inhabitants of this place, in as few words as possible, is as follows.
-About nine years ago, Mr. Hare, a worthless character, brought from the
-East Indian archipelago a number of Malay slaves, which now including
-children, amount to more than a hundred. Shortly afterwards, Captain
-Ross, who had before visited these islands in his merchant-ship,
-arrived from England, bringing with him his family and goods for
-settlement: along with him came Mr. Liesk, who had been a mate in his
-vessel. The Malay slaves soon ran away from the islet on which Mr. Hare
-was settled, and joined Captain Ross's party. Mr. Hare upon this was
-ultimately obliged to leave the place.
-
-The Malays are now nominally in a state of freedom, and certainly are
-so, as far as regards their personal treatment; but in most other
-points they are considered as slaves. From their discontented state,
-from the repeated removals from islet to islet, and perhaps also from a
-little mismanagement, things are not very prosperous. The island has
-no domestic quadruped, excepting the pig, and the main vegetable
-production is the cocoa-nut. The whole prosperity of the place depends
-on this tree: the only exports being oil from the nut, and the nuts
-themselves, which are taken to Singapore and Mauritius, where they are
-chiefly used, when grated, in making curries. On the cocoa-nut, also,
-the pigs, which are loaded with fat, almost entirely subsist, as do the
-ducks and poultry. Even a huge land-crab is furnished by nature with
-the means to open and feed on this most useful production.
-
-The ring-formed reef of the lagoon-island is surmounted in the greater
-part of its length by linear islets. On the northern or leeward side,
-there is an opening through which vessels can pass to the anchorage
-within. On entering, the scene was very curious and rather pretty; its
-beauty, however, entirely depended on the brilliancy of the surrounding
-colours. The shallow, clear, and still water of the lagoon, resting in
-its greater part on white sand, is, when illumined by a vertical sun,
-of the most vivid green. This brilliant expanse, several miles in
-width, is on all sides divided, either by a line of snow-white breakers
-from the dark heaving waters of the ocean, or from the blue vault of
-heaven by the strips of land, crowned by the level tops of the
-cocoa-nut trees. As a white cloud here and there affords a pleasing
-contrast with the azure sky, so in the lagoon, bands of living coral
-darken the emerald green water.
-
-The next morning after anchoring, I went on shore on Direction Island.
-The strip of dry land is only a few hundred yards in width; on the
-lagoon side there is a white calcareous beach, the radiation from which
-under this sultry climate was very oppressive; and on the outer coast,
-a solid broad flat of coral-rock served to break the violence of the
-open sea. Excepting near the lagoon, where there is some sand, the
-land is entirely composed of rounded fragments of coral. In such a
-loose, dry, stony soil, the climate of the intertropical regions alone
-could produce a vigorous vegetation. On some of the smaller islets,
-nothing could be more elegant than the manner in which the young and
-full-grown cocoa-nut trees, without destroying each other's symmetry,
-were mingled into one wood. A beach of glittering white sand formed a
-border to these fairy spots.
-
-I will now give a sketch of the natural history of these islands,
-which, from its very paucity, possesses a peculiar interest. The
-cocoa-nut tree, at first glance, seems to compose the whole wood; there
-are however, five or six other trees. One of these grows to a very
-large size, but from the extremes of softness of its wood, is useless;
-another sort affords excellent timber for ship-building. Besides the
-trees, the number of plants is exceedingly limited, and consists of
-insignificant weeds. In my collection, which includes, I believe,
-nearly the perfect Flora, there are twenty species, without reckoning a
-moss, lichen, and fungus. To this number two trees must be added; one
-of which was not in flower, and the other I only heard of. The latter
-is a solitary tree of its kind, and grows near the beach, where,
-without doubt, the one seed was thrown up by the waves. A Guilandina
-also grows on only one of the islets. I do not include in the above
-list the sugar-cane, banana, some other vegetables, fruit-trees, and
-imported grasses. As the islands consist entirely of coral, and at one
-time must have existed as mere water-washed reefs, all their
-terrestrial productions must have been transported here by the waves of
-the sea. In accordance with this, the Florula has quite the character
-of a refuge for the destitute: Professor Henslow informs me that of the
-twenty species nineteen belong to different genera, and these again to
-no less than sixteen families! [1]
-
-In Holman's [2] Travels an account is given, on the authority of Mr. A.
-S. Keating, who resided twelve months on these islands, of the various
-seeds and other bodies which have been known to have been washed on
-shore. "Seeds and plants from Sumatra and Java have been driven up by
-the surf on the windward side of the islands. Among them have been
-found the Kimiri, native of Sumatra and the peninsula of Malacca; the
-cocoa-nut of Balci, known by its shape and size; the Dadass, which is
-planted by the Malays with the pepper-vine, the latter intwining round
-its trunk, and supporting itself by the prickles on its stem; the
-soap-tree; the castor-oil plant; trunks of the sago palm; and various
-kinds of seeds unknown to the Malays settled on the islands. These are
-all supposed to have been driven by the N. W. monsoon to the coast of
-New Holland, and thence to these islands by the S. E. trade-wind. Large
-masses of Java teak and Yellow wood have also been found, besides
-immense trees of red and white cedar, and the blue gumwood of New
-Holland, in a perfectly sound condition. All the hardy seeds, such as
-creepers, retain their germinating power, but the softer kinds, among
-which is the mangostin, are destroyed in the passage. Fishing-canoes,
-apparently from Java, have at times been washed on shore." It is
-interesting thus to discover how numerous the seeds are, which, coming
-from several countries, are drifted over the wide ocean. Professor
-Henslow tells me, he believes that nearly all the plants which I
-brought from these islands, are common littoral species in the East
-Indian archipelago. From the direction, however, of the winds and
-currents, it seems scarcely possible that they could have come here in
-a direct line. If, as suggested with much probability by Mr. Keating,
-they were first carried towards the coast of New Holland, and thence
-drifted back together with the productions of that country, the seeds,
-before germinating, must have travelled between 1800 and 2400 miles.
-
-Chamisso, [3] when describing the Radack Archipelago, situated in the
-western part of the Pacific, states that "the sea brings to these
-islands the seeds and fruits of many trees, most of which have yet not
-grown here. The greater part of these seeds appear to have not yet
-lost the capability of growing."
-
-It is also said that palms and bamboos from somewhere in the torrid
-zone, and trunks of northern firs, are washed on shore: these firs must
-have come from an immense distance. These facts are highly
-interesting. It cannot be doubted that if there were land-birds to
-pick up the seeds when first cast on shore, and a soil better adapted
-for their growth than the loose blocks of coral, that the most isolated
-of the lagoon-islands would in time possess a far more abundant Flora
-than they now have.
-
-The list of land animals is even poorer than that of the plants. Some
-of the islets are inhabited by rats, which were brought in a ship from
-the Mauritius, wrecked here. These rats are considered by Mr.
-Waterhouse as identical with the English kind, but they are smaller,
-and more brightly coloured. There are no true land-birds, for a snipe
-and a rail (Rallus Phillippensis), though living entirely in the dry
-herbage, belong to the order of Waders. Birds of this order are said
-to occur on several of the small low islands in the Pacific. At
-Ascension, where there is no land-bird, a rail (Porphyrio simplex) was
-shot near the summit of the mountain, and it was evidently a solitary
-straggler. At Tristan d'Acunha, where, according to Carmichael, there
-are only two land-birds, there is a coot. From these facts I believe
-that the waders, after the innumerable web-footed species, are
-generally the first colonists of small isolated islands. I may add,
-that whenever I noticed birds, not of oceanic species, very far out at
-sea, they always belonged to this order; and hence they would naturally
-become the earliest colonists of any remote point of land.
-
-Of reptiles I saw only one small lizard. Of insects I took pains to
-collect every kind. Exclusive of spiders, which were numerous, there
-were thirteen species. [4] Of these, one only was a beetle. A small
-ant swarmed by thousands under the loose dry blocks of coral, and was
-the only true insect which was abundant. Although the productions of
-the land are thus scanty, if we look to the waters of the surrounding
-sea, the number of organic beings is indeed infinite. Chamisso has
-described [5] the natural history of a lagoon-island in the Radack
-Archipelago; and it is remarkable how closely its inhabitants, in
-number and kind, resemble those of Keeling Island. There is one lizard
-and two waders, namely, a snipe and curlew. Of plants there are
-nineteen species, including a fern; and some of these are the same with
-those growing here, though on a spot so immensely remote, and in a
-different ocean.
-
-The long strips of land, forming the linear islets, have been raised
-only to that height to which the surf can throw fragments of coral, and
-the wind heap up calcareous sand. The solid flat of coral rock on the
-outside, by its breadth, breaks the first violence of the waves, which
-otherwise, in a day, would sweep away these islets and all their
-productions. The ocean and the land seem here struggling for mastery:
-although terra firma has obtained a footing, the denizens of the water
-think their claim at least equally good. In every part one meets
-hermit crabs of more than one species, [6] carrying on their backs the
-shells which they have stolen from the neighbouring beach. Overhead,
-numerous gannets, frigate-birds, and terns, rest on the trees; and the
-wood, from the many nests and from the smell of the atmosphere, might
-be called a sea-rookery. The gannets, sitting on their rude nests,
-gaze at one with a stupid yet angry air. The noddies, as their name
-expresses, are silly little creatures. But there is one charming bird:
-it is a small, snow-white tern, which smoothly hovers at the distance
-of a few feet above one's head, its large black eye scanning, with
-quiet curiosity, your expression. Little imagination is required to
-fancy that so light and delicate a body must be tenanted by some
-wandering fairy spirit.
-
-Sunday, April 3rd.--After service I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to the
-settlement, situated at the distance of some miles, on the point of an
-islet thickly covered with tall cocoa-nut trees. Captain Ross and Mr.
-Liesk live in a large barn-like house open at both ends, and lined with
-mats made of woven bark. The houses of the Malays are arranged along
-the shore of the lagoon. The whole place had rather a desolate aspect,
-for there were no gardens to show the signs of care and cultivation.
-The natives belong to different islands in the East Indian archipelago,
-but all speak the same language: we saw the inhabitants of Borneo,
-Celebes, Java, and Sumatra. In colour they resemble the Tahitians,
-from whom they do not widely differ in features. Some of the women,
-however, show a good deal of the Chinese character. I liked both their
-general expressions and the sound of their voices. They appeared poor,
-and their houses were destitute of furniture; but it was evident, from
-the plumpness of the little children, that cocoa-nuts and turtle afford
-no bad sustenance.
-
-On this island the wells are situated, from which ships obtain water.
-At first sight it appears not a little remarkable that the fresh water
-should regularly ebb and flow with the tides; and it has even been
-imagined, that sand has the power of filtering the salt from the
-sea-water. These ebbing wells are common on some of the low islands in
-the West Indies. The compressed sand, or porous coral rock, is
-permeated like a sponge with the salt water, but the rain which falls
-on the surface must sink to the level of the surrounding sea, and must
-accumulate there, displacing an equal bulk of the salt water. As the
-water in the lower part of the great sponge-like coral mass rises and
-falls with the tides, so will the water near the surface; and this will
-keep fresh, if the mass be sufficiently compact to prevent much
-mechanical admixture; but where the land consists of great loose blocks
-of coral with open interstices, if a well be dug, the water, as I have
-seen, is brackish.
-
-After dinner we stayed to see a curious half superstitious scene acted
-by the Malay women. A large wooden spoon dressed in garments, and
-which had been carried to the grave of a dead man, they pretend becomes
-inspired at the full of the moon, and will dance and jump about. After
-the proper preparations, the spoon, held by two women, became
-convulsed, and danced in good time to the song of the surrounding
-children and women. It was a most foolish spectacle; but Mr. Liesk
-maintained that many of the Malays believed in its spiritual movements.
-The dance did not commence till the moon had risen, and it was well
-worth remaining to behold her bright orb so quietly shining through the
-long arms of the cocoa-nut trees as they waved in the evening breeze.
-These scenes of the tropics are in themselves so delicious, that they
-almost equal those dearer ones at home, to which we are bound by each
-best feeling of the mind.
-
-The next day I employed myself in examining the very interesting, yet
-simple structure and origin of these islands. The water being unusually
-smooth, I waded over the outer flat of dead rock as far as the living
-mounds of coral, on which the swell of the open sea breaks. In some of
-the gullies and hollows there were beautiful green and other coloured
-fishes, and the form and tints of many of the zoophytes were admirable.
-It is excusable to grow enthusiastic over the infinite numbers of
-organic beings with which the sea of the tropics, so prodigal of life,
-teems; yet I must confess I think those naturalists who have described,
-in well-known words, the submarine grottoes decked with a thousand
-beauties, have indulged in rather exuberant language.
-
-April 6th.--I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to an island at the head of
-the lagoon: the channel was exceedingly intricate, winding through
-fields of delicately branched corals. We saw several turtle and two
-boats were then employed in catching them. The water was so clear and
-shallow, that although at first a turtle quickly dives out of sight,
-yet in a canoe or boat under sail, the pursuers after no very long
-chase come up to it. A man standing ready in the bow, at this moment
-dashes through the water upon the turtle's back; then clinging with
-both hands by the shell of its neck, he is carried away till the animal
-becomes exhausted and is secured. It was quite an interesting chase to
-see the two boats thus doubling about, and the men dashing head
-foremost into the water trying to seize their prey. Captain Moresby
-informs me that in the Chagos archipelago in this same ocean, the
-natives, by a horrible process, take the shell from the back of the
-living turtle. "It is covered with burning charcoal, which causes the
-outer shell to curl upwards, it is then forced off with a knife, and
-before it becomes cold flattened between boards. After this barbarous
-process the animal is suffered to regain its native element, where,
-after a certain time, a new shell is formed; it is, however, too thin
-to be of any service, and the animal always appears languishing and
-sickly."
-
-When we arrived at the head of the lagoon, we crossed a narrow islet,
-and found a great surf breaking on the windward coast. I can hardly
-explain the reason, but there is to my mind much grandeur in the view
-of the outer shores of these lagoon-islands. There is a simplicity in
-the barrier-like beach, the margin of green bushes and tall cocoa-nuts,
-the solid flat of dead coral-rock, strewed here and there with great
-loose fragments, and the line of furious breakers, all rounding away
-towards either hand. The ocean throwing its waters over the broad reef
-appears an invincible, all-powerful enemy; yet we see it resisted, and
-even conquered, by means which at first seem most weak and inefficient.
-It is not that the ocean spares the rock of coral; the great fragments
-scattered over the reef, and heaped on the beach, whence the tall
-cocoa-nut springs, plainly bespeak the unrelenting power of the waves.
-Nor are any periods of repose granted. The long swell caused by the
-gentle but steady action of the trade-wind, always blowing in one
-direction over a wide area, causes breakers, almost equalling in force
-those during a gale of wind in the temperate regions, and which never
-cease to rage. It is impossible to behold these waves without feeling
-a conviction that an island, though built of the hardest rock, let it
-be porphyry, granite, or quartz, would ultimately yield and be
-demolished by such an irresistible power. Yet these low, insignificant
-coral-islets stand and are victorious: for here another power, as an
-antagonist, takes part in the contest. The organic forces separate the
-atoms of carbonate of lime, one by one, from the foaming breakers, and
-unite them into a symmetrical structure. Let the hurricane tear up its
-thousand huge fragments; yet what will that tell against the
-accumulated labour of myriads of architects at work night and day,
-month after month? Thus do we see the soft and gelatinous body of a
-polypus, through the agency of the vital laws, conquering the great
-mechanical power of the waves of an ocean which neither the art of man
-nor the inanimate works of nature could successfully resist.
-
-We did not return on board till late in the evening, for we stayed a
-long time in the lagoon, examining the fields of coral and the gigantic
-shells of the chama, into which, if a man were to put his hand, he
-would not, as long as the animal lived, be able to withdraw it. Near
-the head of the lagoon I was much surprised to find a wide area,
-considerably more than a mile square, covered with a forest of
-delicately branching corals, which, though standing upright, were all
-dead and rotten. At first I was quite at a loss to understand the
-cause afterwards it occurred to me that it was owing to the following
-rather curious combination of circumstances. It should, however, first
-be stated, that corals are not able to survive even a short exposure in
-the air to the sun's rays, so that their upward limit of growth is
-determined by that of lowest water at spring tides. It appears, from
-some old charts, that the long island to windward was formerly
-separated by wide channels into several islets; this fact is likewise
-indicated by the trees being younger on these portions. Under the
-former condition of the reef, a strong breeze, by throwing more water
-over the barrier, would tend to raise the level of the lagoon. Now it
-acts in a directly contrary manner; for the water within the lagoon not
-only is not increased by currents from the outside, but is itself blown
-outwards by the force of the wind. Hence it is observed, that the tide
-near the head of the lagoon does not rise so high during a strong
-breeze as it does when it is calm. This difference of level, although
-no doubt very small, has, I believe, caused the death of those
-coral-groves, which under the former and more open condition of the
-outer reef has attained the utmost possible limit of upward growth.
-
-A few miles north of Keeling there is another small atoll, the lagoon
-of which is nearly filled up with coral-mud. Captain Ross found
-embedded in the conglomerate on the outer coast, a well-rounded
-fragment of greenstone, rather larger than a man's head: he and the men
-with him were so much surprised at this, that they brought it away and
-preserved it as a curiosity. The occurrence of this one stone, where
-every other particle of matter is calcareous, certainly is very
-puzzling. The island has scarcely ever been visited, nor is it
-probable that a ship had been wrecked there. From the absence of any
-better explanation, I came to the conclusion that it must have come
-entangled in the roots of some large tree: when, however, I considered
-the great distance from the nearest land, the combination of chances
-against a stone thus being entangled, the tree washed into the sea,
-floated so far, then landed safely, and the stone finally so embedded
-as to allow of its discovery, I was almost afraid of imagining a means
-of transport apparently so improbable. It was therefore with great
-interest that I found Chamisso, the justly distinguished naturalist who
-accompanied Kotzebue, stating that the inhabitants of the Radack
-archipelago, a group of lagoon-islands in the midst of the Pacific,
-obtained stones for sharpening their instruments by searching the roots
-of trees which are cast upon the beach. It will be evident that this
-must have happened several times, since laws have been established that
-such stones belong to the chief, and a punishment is inflicted on any
-one who attempts to steal them. When the isolated position of these
-small islands in the midst of a vast ocean--their great distance from
-any land excepting that of coral formation, attested by the value which
-the inhabitants, who are such bold navigators, attach to a stone of any
-kind, [7]--and the slowness of the currents of the open sea, are all
-considered, the occurrence of pebbles thus transported does appear
-wonderful. Stones may often be thus carried; and if the island on
-which they are stranded is constructed of any other substance besides
-coral, they would scarcely attract attention, and their origin at least
-would never be guessed. Moreover, this agency may long escape
-discovery from the probability of trees, especially those loaded with
-stones, floating beneath the surface. In the channels of Tierra del
-Fuego large quantities of drift timber are cast upon the beach, yet it
-is extremely rare to meet a tree swimming on the water. These facts
-may possibly throw light on single stones, whether angular or rounded,
-occasionally found embedded in fine sedimentary masses.
-
-During another day I visited West Islet, on which the vegetation was
-perhaps more luxuriant than on any other. The cocoa-nut trees generally
-grow separate, but here the young ones flourished beneath their tall
-parents, and formed with their long and curved fronds the most shady
-arbours. Those alone who have tried it, know how delicious it is to be
-seated in such shade, and drink the cool pleasant fluid of the
-cocoa-nut. In this island there is a large bay-like space, composed of
-the finest white sand: it is quite level and is only covered by the
-tide at high water; from this large bay smaller creeks penetrate the
-surrounding woods. To see a field of glittering white sand,
-representing water, with the cocoa-nut trees extending their tall and
-waving trunks around the margin, formed a singular and very pretty view.
-
-I have before alluded to a crab which lives on the cocoa-nuts; it is
-very common on all parts of the dry land, and grows to a monstrous
-size: it is closely allied or identical with the Birgos latro. The
-front pair of legs terminate in very strong and heavy pincers, and the
-last pair are fitted with others weaker and much narrower. It would at
-first be thought quite impossible for a crab to open a strong cocoa-nut
-covered with the husk; but Mr. Liesk assures me that he has repeatedly
-seen this effected. The crab begins by tearing the husk, fibre by
-fibre, and always from that end under which the three eye-holes are
-situated; when this is completed, the crab commences hammering with its
-heavy claws on one of the eye-holes till an opening is made. Then
-turning round its body, by the aid of its posterior and narrow pair of
-pincers, it extracts the white albuminous substance. I think this is as
-curious a case of instinct as ever I heard of, and likewise of
-adaptation in structure between two objects apparently so remote from
-each other in the scheme of nature, as a crab and a cocoa-nut tree. The
-Birgos is diurnal in its habits; but every night it is said to pay a
-visit to the sea, no doubt for the purpose of moistening its branchiae.
-The young are likewise hatched, and live for some time, on the coast.
-These crabs inhabit deep burrows, which they hollow out beneath the
-roots of trees; and where they accumulate surprising quantities of the
-picked fibres of the cocoa-nut husk, on which they rest as on a bed.
-The Malays sometimes take advantage of this, and collect the fibrous
-mass to use as junk. These crabs are very good to eat; moreover, under
-the tail of the larger ones there is a mass of fat, which, when melted,
-sometimes yields as much as a quart bottle full of limpid oil. It has
-been stated by some authors that the Birgos crawls up the cocoa-nut
-trees for the purpose of stealing the nuts: I very much doubt the
-possibility of this; but with the Pandanus [8] the task would be very
-much easier. I was told by Mr. Liesk that on these islands the Birgos
-lives only on the nuts which have fallen to the ground.
-
-Captain Moresby informs me that this crab inhabits the Chagos and
-Seychelle groups, but not the neighbouring Maldiva archipelago. It
-formerly abounded at Mauritius, but only a few small ones are now found
-there. In the Pacific, this species, or one with closely allied
-habits, is said [9] to inhabit a single coral island, north of the
-Society group. To show the wonderful strength of the front pair of
-pincers, I may mention, that Captain Moresby confined one in a strong
-tin-box, which had held biscuits, the lid being secured with wire; but
-the crab turned down the edges and escaped. In turning down the edges,
-it actually punched many small holes quite through the tin!
-
-I was a good deal surprised by finding two species of coral of the
-genus Millepora (M. complanata and alcicornis), possessed of the power
-of stinging. The stony branches or plates, when taken fresh from the
-water, have a harsh feel and are not slimy, although possessing a
-strong and disagreeable smell. The stinging property seems to vary in
-different specimens: when a piece was pressed or rubbed on the tender
-skin of the face or arm, a pricking sensation was usually caused, which
-came on after the interval of a second, and lasted only for a few
-minutes. One day, however, by merely touching my face with one of the
-branches, pain was instantaneously caused; it increased as usual after
-a few seconds, and remaining sharp for some minutes, was perceptible
-for half an hour afterwards. The sensation was as bad as that from a
-nettle, but more like that caused by the Physalia or Portuguese
-man-of-war. Little red spots were produced on the tender skin of the
-arm, which appeared as if they would have formed watery pustules, but
-did not. M. Quoy mentions this case of the Millepora; and I have heard
-of stinging corals in the West Indies. Many marine animals seem to
-have this power of stinging: besides the Portuguese man-of-war, many
-jelly-fish, and the Aplysia or sea-slug of the Cape de Verd Islands, it
-is stated in the voyage of the Astrolabe, that an Actinia or
-sea-anemone, as well as a flexible coralline allied to Sertularia, both
-possess this means of offence or defence. In the East Indian sea, a
-stinging sea-weed is said to be found.
-
-Two species of fish, of the genus Scarus, which are common here,
-exclusively feed on coral: both are coloured of a splendid
-bluish-green, one living invariably in the lagoon, and the other
-amongst the outer breakers. Mr. Liesk assured us, that he had
-repeatedly seen whole shoals grazing with their strong bony jaws on the
-tops of the coral branches: I opened the intestines of several, and
-found them distended with yellowish calcareous sandy mud. The slimy
-disgusting Holuthuriae (allied to our star-fish), which the Chinese
-gourmands are so fond of, also feed largely, as I am informed by Dr.
-Allan, on corals; and the bony apparatus within their bodies seems well
-adapted for this end. These Holuthuriae, the fish, the numerous
-burrowing shells, and nereidous worms, which perforate every block of
-dead coral, must be very efficient agents in producing the fine white
-mud which lies at the bottom and on the shores of the lagoon. A
-portion, however, of this mud, which when wet resembled pounded chalk,
-was found by Professor Ehrenberg to be partly composed of
-siliceous-shielded infusoria.
-
-April 12th.--In the morning we stood out of the lagoon on our passage
-to the Isle of France. I am glad we have visited these islands: such
-formations surely rank high amongst the wonderful objects of this
-world. Captain Fitz Roy found no bottom with a line 7200 feet in
-length, at the distance of only 2200 yards from the shore; hence this
-island forms a lofty submarine mountain, with sides steeper even than
-those of the most abrupt volcanic cone. The saucer-shaped summit is
-nearly ten miles across; and every single atom, [10] from the least
-particle to the largest fragment of rock, in this great pile, which
-however is small compared with very many other lagoon-islands, bears
-the stamp of having been subjected to organic arrangement. We feel
-surprise when travellers tell us of the vast dimensions of the Pyramids
-and other great ruins, but how utterly insignificant are the greatest
-of these, when compared to these mountains of stone accumulated by the
-agency of various minute and tender animals! This is a wonder which
-does not at first strike the eye of the body, but, after reflection,
-the eye of reason.
-
-I will now give a very brief account of the three great classes of
-coral-reefs; namely, Atolls, Barrier, and Fringing-reefs, and will
-explain my views [11] on their formation. Almost every voyager who has
-crossed the Pacific has expressed his unbounded astonishment at the
-lagoon-islands, or as I shall for the future call them by their Indian
-name of atolls, and has attempted some explanation. Even as long ago
-as the year 1605, Pyrard de Laval well exclaimed, "C'est
-
-[picture]
-
-une merveille de voir chacun de ces atollons, environne d'un grand banc
-de pierre tout autour, n'y ayant point d'artifice humain." The
-accompanying sketch of Whitsunday Island in the Pacific, copied from,
-Capt. Beechey's admirable Voyage, gives but a faint idea of the
-singular aspect of an atoll: it is one of the smallest size, and has
-its narrow islets united together in a ring. The immensity of the
-ocean, the fury of the breakers, contrasted with the lowness of the
-land and the smoothness of the bright green water within the lagoon,
-can hardly be imagined without having been seen.
-
-The earlier voyagers fancied that the coral-building animals
-instinctively built up their great circles to afford themselves
-protection in the inner parts; but so far is this from the truth, that
-those massive kinds, to whose growth on the exposed outer shores the
-very existence of the reef depends, cannot live within the lagoon,
-where other delicately-branching kinds flourish. Moreover, on this
-view, many species of distinct genera and families are supposed to
-combine for one end; and of such a combination, not a single instance
-can be found in the whole of nature. The theory that has been most
-generally received is, that atolls are based on submarine craters; but
-when we consider the form and size of some, the number, proximity, and
-relative positions of others, this idea loses its plausible character:
-thus Suadiva atoll is 44 geographical miles in diameter in one line, by
-34 miles in another line; Rimsky is 54 by 20 miles across, and it has a
-strangely sinuous margin; Bow atoll is 30 miles long, and on an average
-only 6 in width; Menchicoff atoll consists of three atolls united or
-tied together. This theory, moreover, is totally inapplicable to the
-northern Maldiva atolls in the Indian Ocean (one of which is 88 miles
-in length, and between 10 and 20 in breadth), for they are not bounded
-like ordinary atolls by narrow reefs, but by a vast number of separate
-little atolls; other little atolls rising out of the great central
-lagoon-like spaces. A third and better theory was advanced by
-Chamisso, who thought that from the corals growing more vigorously
-where exposed to the open sea, as undoubtedly is the case, the outer
-edges would grow up from the general foundation before any other part,
-and that this would account for the ring or cup-shaped structure. But
-we shall immediately see, that in this, as well as in the
-crater-theory, a most important consideration has been overlooked,
-namely, on what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at a
-great depth, based their massive structures?
-
-Numerous soundings were carefully taken by Captain Fitz Roy on the
-steep outside of Keeling atoll, and it was found that within ten
-fathoms, the prepared tallow at the bottom of the lead, invariably came
-up marked with the impression of living corals, but as perfectly clean
-as if it had been dropped on a carpet of turf; as the depth increased,
-the impressions became less numerous, but the adhering particles of
-sand more and more numerous, until at last it was evident that the
-bottom consisted of a smooth sandy layer: to carry on the analogy of
-the turf, the blades of grass grew thinner and thinner, till at last
-the soil was so sterile, that nothing sprang from it. From these
-observations, confirmed by many others, it may be safely inferred that
-the utmost depth at which corals can construct reefs is between 20 and
-30 fathoms. Now there are enormous areas in the Pacific and Indian
-Ocean, in which every single island is of coral formation, and is
-raised only to that height to which the waves can throw up fragments,
-and the winds pile up sand. Thus Radack group of atolls is an
-irregular square, 520 miles long and 240 broad; the Low Archipelago is
-elliptic-formed, 840 miles in its longer, and 420 in its shorter axis:
-there are other small groups and single low islands between these two
-archipelagoes, making a linear space of ocean actually more than 4000
-miles in length, in which not one single island rises above the
-specified height. Again, in the Indian Ocean there is a space of ocean
-1500 miles in length, including three archipelagoes, in which every
-island is low and of coral formation. From the fact of the
-reef-building corals not living at great depths, it is absolutely
-certain that throughout these vast areas, wherever there is now an
-atoll, a foundation must have originally existed within a depth of from
-20 to 30 fathoms from the surface. It is improbable in the highest
-degree that broad, lofty, isolated, steep-sided banks of sediment,
-arranged in groups and lines hundreds of leagues in length, could have
-been deposited in the central and profoundest parts of the Pacific and
-Indian Oceans, at an immense distance from any continent, and where the
-water is perfectly limpid. It is equally improbable that the elevatory
-forces should have uplifted throughout the above vast areas,
-innumerable great rocky banks within 20 to 30 fathoms, or 120 to 180
-feet, of the surface of the sea, and not one single point above that
-level; for where on the whole surface of the globe can we find a single
-chain of mountains, even a few hundred miles in length, with their many
-summits rising within a few feet of a given level, and not one pinnacle
-above it? If then the foundations, whence the atoll-building corals
-sprang, were not formed of sediment, and if they were not lifted up to
-the required level, they must of necessity have subsided into it; and
-this at once solves the difficulty. For as mountain after mountain,
-and island after island, slowly sank beneath the water, fresh bases
-would be successively afforded for the growth of the corals. It is
-impossible here to enter into all the necessary details, but I venture
-to defy [12] any one to explain in any other manner how it is possible
-that numerous islands should be distributed throughout vast areas--all
-the islands being low--all being built of corals, absolutely requiring
-a foundation within a limited depth from the surface.
-
-Before explaining how atoll-formed reefs acquire their peculiar
-structure, we must turn to the second great class, namely,
-Barrier-reefs. These either extend in straight lines in front of the
-shores of a continent or of a large island, or they encircle smaller
-islands; in both cases, being separated from the land by a broad and
-rather deep channel of water, analogous to the lagoon within an atoll.
-It is remarkable how little attention has been paid to encircling
-barrier-reefs; yet they are truly wonderful structures. The following
-sketch represents part of the barrier encircling the island of Bolabola
-in the Pacific, as seen from one of the central peaks. In this instance
-the whole line of reef has been converted into land; but usually a
-snow-white line of great breakers, with only here and there a single
-low islet crowned with cocoa-nut trees, divides the dark heaving waters
-of the ocean from the light-green expanse of the lagoon-channel. And
-the quiet waters of this channel generally bathe a fringe of low
-alluvial soil, loaded with the most beautiful productions of the
-tropics, and lying at the foot of the wild, abrupt, central mountains.
-
-Encircling barrier-reefs are of all sizes, from three miles to no less
-than forty-four miles in diameter; and that which fronts one side, and
-encircles both ends, of New Caledonia, is 400 miles long. Each reef
-includes one, two, or several rocky islands of various heights; and in
-one instance, even as many as twelve separate islands. The reef runs
-at a greater or less distance from the included land; in the Society
-archipelago generally from one to three or four miles; but at Hogoleu
-the reef is 20 miles on the southern side, and 14 miles on the opposite
-or northern side, from the included islands. The depth within the
-lagoon-channel also varies much; from 10 to 30 fathoms may be taken as
-an average; but at Vanikoro there are spaces no less than 56 fathoms or
-363 feet deep. Internally the reef either slopes gently into the
-lagoon-channel, or ends in a perpendicular wall sometimes between two
-and three hundred feet under water in height: externally the reef
-rises, like an atoll, with extreme abruptness out of the profound
-depths of the ocean.
-
-What can be more singular than these structures? We see
-
-[picture]
-
-an island, which may be compared to a castle situated on the summit of
-a lofty submarine mountain, protected by a great wall of coral-rock,
-always steep externally and sometimes internally, with a broad level
-summit, here and there breached by a narrow gateway, through which the
-largest ships can enter the wide and deep encircling moat.
-
-As far as the actual reef of coral is concerned, there is not the
-smallest difference, in general size, outline, grouping, and even in
-quite trifling details of structure, between a barrier and an atoll.
-The geographer Balbi has well remarked, that an encircled island is an
-atoll with high land rising out of its lagoon; remove the land from
-within, and a perfect atoll is left.
-
-But what has caused these reefs to spring up at such great distances
-from the shores of the included islands? It cannot be that the corals
-will not grow close to the land; for the shores within the
-lagoon-channel, when not surrounded by alluvial soil, are often fringed
-by living reefs; and we shall presently see that there is a whole
-class, which I have called Fringing Reefs from their close attachment
-to the shores both of continents and of islands. Again, on what have
-the reef-building corals, which cannot live at great depths, based
-their encircling structures? This is a great apparent difficulty,
-analogous to that in the case of atolls, which has generally been
-overlooked. It will be perceived more clearly by inspecting the
-following sections which are real ones, taken in north and south lines,
-through the islands with their barrier-reefs, of Vanikoro, Gambier, and
-Maurua; and they are laid down, both vertically and horizontally, on
-the same scale of a quarter of an inch to a mile.
-
-It should be observed that the sections might have been taken in any
-direction through these islands, or through
-
-[picture]
-
-many other encircled islands, and the general features would have been
-the same. Now, bearing in mind that reef-building coral cannot live at
-a greater depth than from 20 to 30 fathoms, and that the scale is so
-small that the plummets on the right hand show a depth of 200 fathoms,
-on what are these barrier-reefs based? Are we to suppose that each
-island is surrounded by a collar-like submarine ledge of rock, or by a
-great bank of sediment, ending abruptly where the reef ends?
-
-If the sea had formerly eaten deeply into the islands, before they were
-protected by the reefs, thus having left a shallow ledge round them
-under water, the present shores would have been invariably bounded by
-great precipices, but this is most rarely the case. Moreover, on this
-notion, it is not possible to explain why the corals should have sprung
-up, like a wall, from the extreme outer margin of the ledge, often
-leaving a broad space of water within, too deep for the growth of
-corals. The accumulation of a wide bank of sediment all round these
-islands, and generally widest where the included islands are smallest,
-is highly improbable, considering their exposed positions in the
-central and deepest parts of the ocean. In the case of the
-barrier-reef of New Caledonia, which extends for 150 miles beyond the
-northern point of the islands, in the same straight line with which it
-fronts the west coast, it is hardly possible to believe that a bank of
-sediment could thus have been straightly deposited in front of a lofty
-island, and so far beyond its termination in the open sea. Finally, if
-we look to other oceanic islands of about the same height and of
-similar geological constitution, but not encircled by coral-reefs, we
-may in vain search for so trifling a circumambient depth as 30 fathoms,
-except quite near to their shores; for usually land that rises abruptly
-out of water, as do most of the encircled and non-encircled oceanic
-islands, plunges abruptly under it. On what then, I repeat, are these
-barrier reefs based? Why, with their wide and deep moat-like channels,
-do they stand so far from the included land? We shall soon see how
-easily these difficulties disappear.
-
-We come now to our third class of Fringing-reefs, which will require a
-very short notice. Where the land slopes abruptly under water, these
-reefs are only a few yards in width, forming a mere ribbon or fringe
-round the shores: where the land slopes gently under the water the reef
-extends further, sometimes even as much as a mile from the land; but in
-such cases the soundings outside the reef always show that the
-submarine prolongation of the land is gently inclined. In fact, the
-reefs extend only to that distance from the shore, at which a
-foundation within the requisite depth from 20 to 30 fathoms is found.
-As far as the actual reef is concerned, there is no essential
-difference between it and that forming a barrier or an atoll: it is,
-however, generally of less width, and consequently few islets have been
-formed on it. From the corals growing more vigorously on the outside,
-and from the noxious effect of the sediment washed inwards, the outer
-edge of the reef is the highest part, and between it and the land there
-is generally a shallow sandy channel a few feet in depth. Where banks
-or sediments have accumulated near to the surface, as in parts of the
-West Indies, they sometimes become fringed with corals, and hence in
-some degree resemble lagoon-islands or atolls, in the same manner as
-fringing-reefs, surrounding gently sloping islands, in some degree
-resemble barrier-reefs.
-
-
-No theory on the formation of coral-reefs can be considered
-satisfactory which does not include the three great
-
-[picture]
-
-classes. We have seen that we are driven to believe in the subsidence
-of those vast areas, interspersed with low islands, of which not one
-rises above the height to which the wind and waves can throw up matter,
-and yet are constructed by animals requiring a foundation, and that
-foundation to lie at no great depth. Let us then take an island
-surrounded by fringing-reefs, which offer no difficulty in their
-structure; and let this island with its reefs, represented by the
-unbroken lines in the woodcut, slowly subside. Now, as the island
-sinks down, either a few feet at a time or quite insensibly, we may
-safely infer, from what is known of the conditions favourable to the
-growth of coral, that the living masses, bathed by the surf on the
-margin of the reef, will soon regain the surface. The water, however,
-will encroach little by little on the shore, the island becoming lower
-and smaller, and the space between the inner edge of the reef and the
-beach proportionately broader. A section of the reef and island in
-this state, after a subsidence of several hundred feet, is given by the
-dotted lines. Coral islets are supposed to have been formed on the
-reef; and a ship is anchored in the lagoon-channel. This channel will
-be more or less deep, according to the rate of subsidence, to the
-amount of sediment accumulated in it, and to the growth of the
-delicately branched corals which can live there. The section in this
-state resembles in every respect one drawn through an encircled island:
-in fact, it is a real section (on the scale of .517 of an inch to a
-mile) through Bolabola in the Pacific. We can now at once see why
-encircling barrier-reefs stand so far from the shores which they front.
-We can also perceive, that a line drawn perpendicularly down from the
-outer edge of the new reef, to the foundation of solid rock beneath the
-old fringing-reef, will exceed by as many feet as there have been feet
-of subsidence, that small limit of depth at which the effective corals
-can live:--the little architects having built up their great wall-like
-mass, as the whole sank down, upon a basis formed of other corals and
-their consolidated fragments. Thus the difficulty on this head, which
-appeared so great, disappears.
-
-If, instead of an island, we had taken the shore of a continent fringed
-with reefs, and had imagined it to have subsided, a great straight
-barrier, like that of Australia or New Caledonia, separated from the
-land by a wide and deep channel, would evidently have been the result.
-
-Let us take our new encircling barrier-reef, of which the section is
-now represented by unbroken lines, and which, as I have said, is a real
-section through Bolabola, and let it go on subsiding. As the
-barrier-reef slowly sinks down, the corals will go on vigorously
-growing upwards; but as the island sinks, the water will gain inch by
-inch on the shore--the separate mountains first forming separate
-islands within
-
-[picture]
-
-one great reef--and finally, the last and highest pinnacle
-disappearing. The instant this takes place, a perfect atoll is formed:
-I have said, remove the high land from within an encircling
-barrier-reef, and an atoll is left, and the land has been removed. We
-can now perceive how it comes that atolls, having sprung from
-encircling barrier-reefs, resemble them in general size, form, in the
-manner in which they are grouped together, and in their arrangement in
-single or double lines; for they may be called rude outline charts of
-the sunken islands over which they stand. We can further see how it
-arises that the atolls in the Pacific and Indian Oceans extend in lines
-parallel to the generally prevailing strike of the high islands and
-great coast-lines of those oceans. I venture, therefore, to affirm,
-that on the theory of the upward growth of the corals during the
-sinking of the land, [13] all the leading features in those wonderful
-structures, the lagoon-islands or atolls, which have so long excited
-the attention of voyagers, as well as in the no less wonderful
-barrier-reefs, whether encircling small islands or stretching for
-hundreds of miles along the shores of a continent, are simply explained.
-
-It may be asked, whether I can offer any direct evidence of the
-subsidence of barrier-reefs or atolls; but it must be borne in mind how
-difficult it must ever be to detect a movement, the tendency of which
-is to hide under water the part affected. Nevertheless, at Keeling
-atoll I observed on all sides of the lagoon old cocoa-nut trees
-undermined and falling; and in one place the foundation-posts of a
-shed, which the inhabitants asserted had stood seven years before just
-above high-water mark, but now was daily washed by every tide: on
-inquiry I found that three earthquakes, one of them severe, had been
-felt here during the last ten years. At Vanikoro, the lagoon-channel
-is remarkably deep, scarcely any alluvial soil has accumulated at the
-foot of the lofty included mountains, and remarkably few islets have
-been formed by the heaping of fragments and sand on the wall-like
-barrier reef; these facts, and some analogous ones, led me to believe
-that this island must lately have subsided and the reef grown upwards:
-here again earthquakes are frequent and very severe. In the Society
-archipelago, on the other hand, where the lagoon-channels are almost
-choked up, where much low alluvial land has accumulated, and where in
-some cases long islets have been formed on the barrier-reefs--facts
-all showing that the islands have not very lately subsided--only feeble
-shocks are most rarely felt. In these coral formations, where the land
-and water seem struggling for mastery, it must be ever difficult to
-decide between the effects of a change in the set of the tides and of a
-slight subsidence: that many of these reefs and atolls are subject to
-changes of some kind is certain; on some atolls the islets appear to
-have increased greatly within a late period; on others they have been
-partially or wholly washed away. The inhabitants of parts of the
-Maldiva archipelago know the date of the first formation of some
-islets; in other parts, the corals are now flourishing on water-washed
-reefs, where holes made for graves attest the former existence of
-inhabited land. It is difficult to believe in frequent changes in the
-tidal currents of an open ocean; whereas, we have in the earthquakes
-recorded by the natives on some atolls, and in the great fissures
-observed on other atolls, plain evidence of changes and disturbances in
-progress in the subterranean regions.
-
-It is evident, on our theory, that coasts merely fringed by reefs
-cannot have subsided to any perceptible amount; and therefore they
-must, since the growth of their corals, either have remained stationary
-or have been upheaved. Now, it is remarkable how generally it can be
-shown, by the presence of upraised organic remains, that the fringed
-islands have been elevated: and so far, this is indirect evidence in
-favour of our theory. I was particularly struck with this fact, when I
-found, to my surprise, that the descriptions given by MM. Quoy and
-Gaimard were applicable, not to reefs in general as implied by them,
-but only to those of the fringing class; my surprise, however, ceased
-when I afterwards found that, by a strange chance, all the several
-islands visited by these eminent naturalists, could be shown by their
-own statements to have been elevated within a recent geological era.
-
-Not only the grand features in the structure of barrier-reefs and of
-atolls, and to their likeness to each other in form, size, and other
-characters, are explained on the theory of subsidence--which theory we
-are independently forced to admit in the very areas in question, from
-the necessity of finding bases for the corals within the requisite
-depth--but many details in structure and exceptional cases can thus
-also be simply explained. I will give only a few instances. In
-barrier-reefs it has long been remarked with surprise, that the
-passages through the reef exactly face valleys in the included land,
-even in cases where the reef is separated from the land by a
-lagoon-channel so wide and so much deeper than the actual passage
-itself, that it seems hardly possible that the very small quantity of
-water or sediment brought down could injure the corals on the reef.
-Now, every reef of the fringing class is breached by a narrow gateway
-in front of the smallest rivulet, even if dry during the greater part
-of the year, for the mud, sand, or gravel, occasionally washed down
-kills the corals on which it is deposited. Consequently, when an
-island thus fringed subsides, though most of the narrow gateways will
-probably become closed by the outward and upward growth of the corals,
-yet any that are not closed (and some must always be kept open by the
-sediment and impure water flowing out of the lagoon-channel) will still
-continue to front exactly the upper parts of those valleys, at the
-mouths of which the original basal fringing-reef was breached.
-
-We can easily see how an island fronted only on one side, or on one
-side with one end or both ends encircled by barrier-reefs, might after
-long-continued subsidence be converted either into a single wall-like
-reef, or into an atoll with a great straight spur projecting from it,
-or into two or three atolls tied together by straight reefs--all of
-which exceptional cases actually occur. As the reef-building corals
-require food, are preyed upon by other animals, are killed by sediment,
-cannot adhere to a loose bottom, and may be easily carried down to a
-depth whence they cannot spring up again, we need feel no surprise at
-the reefs both of atolls and barriers becoming in parts imperfect. The
-great barrier of New Caledonia is thus imperfect and broken in many
-parts; hence, after long subsidence, this great reef would not produce
-one great atoll 400 miles in length, but a chain or archipelago of
-atolls, of very nearly the same dimension with those in the Maldiva
-archipelago. Moreover, in an atoll once breached on opposite sides,
-from the likelihood of the oceanic and tidal currents passing straight
-through the breaches, it is extremely improbable that the corals,
-especially during continued subsidence, would ever be able again to
-unite the rim; if they did not, as the whole sank downwards, one atoll
-would be divided into two or more. In the Maldiva archipelago there
-are distinct atolls so related to each other in position, and separated
-by channels either unfathomable or very deep (the channel between Ross
-and Ari atolls is 150 fathoms, and that between the north and south
-Nillandoo atolls is 200 fathoms in depth), that it is impossible to
-look at a map of them without believing that they were once more
-intimately related. And in this same archipelago, Mahlos-Mahdoo atoll
-is divided by a bifurcating channel from 100 to 132 fathoms in depth,
-in such a manner, that it is scarcely possible to say whether it ought
-strictly to be called three separate atolls, or one great atoll not yet
-finally divided.
-
-I will not enter on many more details; but I must remark that the
-curious structure of the northern Maldiva atolls receives (taking into
-consideration the free entrance of the sea through their broken
-margins) a simple explanation in the upward and outward growth of the
-corals, originally based both on small detached reefs in their lagoons,
-such as occur in common atolls, and on broken portions of the linear
-marginal reef, such as bounds every atoll of the ordinary form. I
-cannot refrain from once again remarking on the singularity of these
-complex structures--a great sandy and generally concave disk rises
-abruptly from the unfathomable ocean, with its central expanse studded,
-and its edge symmetrically bordered with oval basins of coral-rock just
-lipping the surface of the sea, sometimes clothed with vegetation, and
-each containing a lake of clear water!
-
-One more point in detail: as in the two neighbouring archipelagoes
-corals flourish in one and not in the other, and as so many conditions
-before enumerated must affect their existence, it would be an
-inexplicable fact if, during the changes to which earth, air, and water
-are subjected, the reef-building corals were to keep alive for
-perpetuity on any one spot or area. And as by our theory the areas
-including atolls and barrier-reefs are subsiding, we ought occasionally
-to find reefs both dead and submerged. In all reefs, owing to the
-sediment being washed out of the lagoon-channel to leeward, that side
-is least favourable to the long-continued vigorous growth of the
-corals; hence dead portions of reef not unfrequently occur on the
-leeward side; and these, though still retaining their proper wall-like
-form, are now in several instances sunk several fathoms beneath the
-surface. The Chagos group appears from some cause, possibly from the
-subsidence having been too rapid, at present to be much less favourably
-circumstanced for the growth of reefs than formerly: one atoll has a
-portion of its marginal reef, nine miles in length, dead and submerged;
-a second has only a few quite small living points which rise to the
-surface, a third and fourth are entirely dead and submerged; a fifth is
-a mere wreck, with its structure almost obliterated. It is remarkable
-that in all these cases, the dead reefs and portions of reef lie at
-nearly the same depth, namely, from six to eight fathoms beneath the
-surface, as if they had been carried down by one uniform movement. One
-of these "half-drowned atolls," so called by Capt. Moresby (to whom I
-am indebted for much invaluable information), is of vast size, namely,
-ninety nautical miles across in one direction, and seventy miles in
-another line; and is in many respects eminently curious. As by our
-theory it follows that new atolls will generally be formed in each new
-area of subsidence, two weighty objections might have been raised,
-namely, that atolls must be increasing indefinitely in number; and
-secondly, that in old areas of subsidence each separate atoll must be
-increasing indefinitely in thickness, if proofs of their occasional
-destruction could not have been adduced. Thus have we traced the
-history of these great rings of coral-rock, from their first origin
-through their normal changes, and through the occasional accidents of
-their existence, to their death and final obliteration.
-
-
-In my volume on "Coral Formations" I have published a map, in which I
-have coloured all the atolls dark-blue, the barrier-reefs pale-blue,
-and the fringing reefs red. These latter reefs have been formed whilst
-the land has been stationary, or, as appears from the frequent presence
-of upraised organic remains, whilst it has been slowly rising: atolls
-and barrier-reefs, on the other hand, have grown up during the directly
-opposite movement of subsidence, which movement must have been very
-gradual, and in the case of atolls so vast in amount as to have buried
-every mountain-summit over wide ocean-spaces. Now in this map we see
-that the reefs tinted pale and dark-blue, which have been produced by
-the same order of movement, as a general rule manifestly stand near
-each other. Again we see, that the areas with the two blue tints are
-of wide extent; and that they lie separate from extensive lines of
-coast coloured red, both of which circumstances might naturally have
-been inferred, on the theory of the nature of the reefs having been
-governed by the nature of the earth's movement. It deserves notice
-that in more than one instance where single red and blue circles
-approach near each other, I can show that there have been oscillations
-of level; for in such cases the red or fringed circles consist of
-atolls, originally by our theory formed during subsidence, but
-subsequently upheaved; and on the other hand, some of the pale-blue or
-encircled islands are composed of coral-rock, which must have been
-uplifted to its present height before that subsidence took place,
-during which the existing barrier-reefs grew upwards.
-
-Authors have noticed with surprise, that although atolls are the
-commonest coral-structures throughout some enormous oceanic tracts,
-they are entirely absent in other seas, as in the West Indies: we can
-now at once perceive the cause, for where there has not been
-subsidence, atolls cannot have been formed; and in the case of the West
-Indies and parts of the East Indies, these tracts are known to have
-been rising within the recent period. The larger areas, coloured red
-and blue, are all elongated; and between the two colours there is a
-degree of rude alternation, as if the rising of one had balanced the
-sinking of the other. Taking into consideration the proofs of recent
-elevation both on the fringed coasts and on some others (for instance,
-in South America) where there are no reefs, we are led to conclude that
-the great continents are for the most part rising areas: and from the
-nature of the coral-reefs, that the central parts of the great oceans
-are sinking areas. The East Indian archipelago, the most broken land
-in the world, is in most parts an area of elevation, but surrounded and
-penetrated, probably in more lines than one, by narrow areas of
-subsidence.
-
-I have marked with vermilion spots all the many known active volcanos
-within the limits of this same map. Their entire absence from every
-one of the great subsiding areas, coloured either pale or dark blue, is
-most striking and not less so is the coincidence of the chief volcanic
-chains with the parts coloured red, which we are led to conclude have
-either long remained stationary, or more generally have been recently
-upraised. Although a few of the vermilion spots occur within no great
-distance of single circles tinted blue, yet not one single active
-volcano is situated within several hundred miles of an archipelago, or
-even small group of atolls. It is, therefore, a striking fact that in
-the Friendly archipelago, which consists of a group of atolls upheaved
-and since partially worn down, two volcanos, and perhaps more, are
-historically known to have been in action. On the other hand, although
-most of the islands in the Pacific which are encircled by
-barrier-reefs, are of volcanic origin, often with the remnants of
-craters still distinguishable, not one of them is known to have ever
-been in eruption. Hence in these cases it would appear, that volcanos
-burst forth into action and become extinguished on the same spots,
-accordingly as elevatory or subsiding movements prevail there.
-Numberless facts could be adduced to prove that upraised organic
-remains are common wherever there are active volcanos; but until it
-could be shown that in areas of subsidence, volcanos were either absent
-or inactive, the inference, however probable in itself, that their
-distribution depended on the rising or falling of the earth's surface,
-would have been hazardous. But now, I think, we may freely admit this
-important deduction.
-
-Taking a final view of the map, and bearing in mind the statements made
-with respect to the upraised organic remains, we must feel astonished
-at the vastness of the areas, which have suffered changes in level
-either downwards or upwards, within a period not geologically remote.
-It would appear also, that the elevatory and subsiding movements follow
-nearly the same laws. Throughout the spaces interspersed with atolls,
-where not a single peak of high land has been left above the level of
-the sea, the sinking must have been immense in amount. The sinking,
-moreover, whether continuous, or recurrent with intervals sufficiently
-long for the corals again to bring up their living edifices to the
-surface, must necessarily have been extremely slow. This conclusion is
-probably the most important one which can be deduced from the study of
-coral formations;--and it is one which it is difficult to imagine how
-otherwise could ever have been arrived at. Nor can I quite pass over
-the probability of the former existence of large archipelagoes of lofty
-islands, where now only rings of coral-rock scarcely break the open
-expanse of the sea, throwing some light on the distribution of the
-inhabitants of the other high islands, now left standing so immensely
-remote from each other in the midst of the great oceans. The
-reef-constructing corals have indeed reared and preserved wonderful
-memorials of the subterranean oscillations of level; we see in each
-barrier-reef a proof that the land has there subsided, and in each
-atoll a monument over an island now lost. We may thus, like unto a
-geologist who had lived his ten thousand years and kept a record of the
-passing changes, gain some insight into the great system by which the
-surface of this globe has been broken up, and land and water
-interchanged.
-
-[1] These Plants are described in the Annals of Nat. Hist., vol. i.,
-1838, p. 337.
-
-[2] Holman's Travels, vol. iv. p. 378.
-
-[3] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 155.
-
-[4] The thirteen species belong to the following orders:--In the
-Coleoptera, a minute Elater; Orthoptera, a Gryllus and a Blatta;
-Hemiptera, one species; Homoptera, two; Neuroptera a Chrysopa;
-Hymenoptera, two ants; Lepidoptera nocturna, a Diopaea, and a
-Pterophorus (?); Diptera, two species.
-
-[5] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 222.
-
-[6] The large claws or pincers of some of these crabs are most
-beautifully adapted, when drawn back, to form an operculum to the
-shell, nearly as perfect as the proper one originally belonging to the
-molluscous animal. I was assured, and as far as my observations went I
-found it so, that certain species of the hermit-crab always use certain
-species of shells.
-
-[7] Some natives carried by Kotzebue to Kamtschatka collected stones to
-take back to their country.
-
-[8] See Proceedings of Zoological Society, 1832, p. 17.
-
-[9] Tyerman and Bennett. Voyage, etc. vol. ii. p. 33.
-
-[10] I exclude, of course, some soil which has been imported here in
-vessels from Malacca and Java, and likewise, some small fragments of
-pumice, drifted here by the waves. The one block of greenstone,
-moreover, on the northern island must be excepted.
-
-[11] These were first read before the Geological Society in May, 1837,
-and have since been developed in a separate volume on the "Structure
-and Distribution of Coral Reefs."
-
-[12] It is remarkable that Mr. Lyell, even in the first edition of his
-"Principles of Geology," inferred that the amount of subsidence in the
-Pacific must have exceeded that of elevation, from the area of land
-being very small relatively to the agents there tending to form it,
-namely, the growth of coral and volcanic action.
-
-[13] It has been highly satisfactory to me to find the following
-passage in a pamphlet by Mr. Couthouy, one of the naturalists in the
-great Antarctic Expedition of the United States:--"Having personally
-examined a large number of coral-islands and resided eight months among
-the volcanic class having shore and partially encircling reefs. I may
-be permitted to state that my own observations have impressed a
-conviction of the correctness of the theory of Mr. Darwin."--The
-naturalists, however, of this expedition differ with me on some points
-respecting coral formations.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
-
-Mauritius, beautiful appearance of--Great crateriform ring of
-Mountains--Hindoos--St. Helena--History of the changes in the
-Vegetation--Cause of the extinction of
-Land-shells--Ascension--Variation in the imported Rats--Volcanic
-Bombs--Beds of Infusoria--Bahia--Brazil--Splendour of Tropical
-Scenery--Pernambuco--Singular Reef--Slavery--Return to
-England--Retrospect on our Voyage.
-
-
-APRIL 29th.--In the morning we passed round the northern end of
-Mauritius, or the Isle of France. From this point of view the aspect of
-the island equalled the expectations raised by the many well-known
-descriptions of its beautiful scenery. The sloping plain of the
-Pamplemousses, interspersed with houses, and coloured by the large
-fields of sugar-cane of a bright green, composed the foreground. The
-brilliancy of the green was the more remarkable because it is a colour
-which generally is conspicuous only from a very short distance. Towards
-the centre of the island groups of wooded mountains rose out of this
-highly cultivated plain; their summits, as so commonly happens with
-ancient volcanic rocks, being jagged into the sharpest points. Masses
-of white clouds were collected around these pinnacles, as if for the
-sake of pleasing the stranger's eye. The whole island, with its
-sloping border and central mountains, was adorned with an air of
-perfect elegance: the scenery, if I may use such an expression,
-appeared to the sight harmonious.
-
-I spent the greater part of the next day in walking about the town and
-visiting different people. The town is of considerable size, and is
-said to contain 20,000 inhabitants; the streets are very clean and
-regular. Although the island has been so many years under the English
-Government, the general character of the place is quite French:
-Englishmen speak to their servants in French, and the shops are all
-French; indeed, I should think that Calais or Boulogne was much more
-Anglified. There is a very pretty little theatre, in which operas are
-excellently performed. We were also surprised at seeing large
-booksellers' shops, with well-stored shelves;--music and reading
-bespeak our approach to the old world of civilization; for in truth
-both Australia and America are new worlds.
-
-The various races of men walking in the streets afford the most
-interesting spectacle in Port Louis. Convicts from India are banished
-here for life; at present there are about 800, and they are employed in
-various public works. Before seeing these people, I had no idea that
-the inhabitants of India were such noble-looking figures. Their skin
-is extremely dark, and many of the older men had large mustaches and
-beards of a snow-white colour; this, together with the fire of their
-expression, gave them quite an imposing aspect. The greater number had
-been banished for murder and the worst crimes; others for causes which
-can scarcely be considered as moral faults, such as for not obeying,
-from superstitious motives, the English laws. These men are generally
-quiet and well-conducted; from their outward conduct, their
-cleanliness, and faithful observance of their strange religious rites,
-it was impossible to look at them with the same eyes as on our wretched
-convicts in New South Wales.
-
-May 1st.--Sunday. I took a quiet walk along the sea-coast to the north
-of the town. The plain in this part is quite uncultivated; it consists
-of a field of black lava, smoothed over with coarse grass and bushes,
-the latter being chiefly Mimosas. The scenery may be described as
-intermediate in character between that of the Galapagos and of Tahiti;
-but this will convey a definite idea to very few persons. It is a very
-pleasant country, but it has not the charms of Tahiti, or the grandeur
-of Brazil. The next day I ascended La Pouce, a mountain so called from
-a thumb-like projection, which rises close behind the town to a height
-of 2,600 feet. The centre of the island consists of a great platform,
-surrounded by old broken basaltic mountains, with their strata dipping
-seawards. The central platform, formed of comparatively recent streams
-of lava, is of an oval shape, thirteen geographical miles across, in
-the line of its shorter axis. The exterior bounding mountains come
-into that class of structures called Craters of Elevation, which are
-supposed to have been formed not like ordinary craters, but by a great
-and sudden upheaval. There appears to me to be insuperable objections
-to this view: on the other hand, I can hardly believe, in this and in
-some other cases, that these marginal crateriform mountains are merely
-the basal remnants of immense volcanos, of which the summits either
-have been blown off, or swallowed up in subterranean abysses.
-
-From our elevated position we enjoyed an excellent view over the
-island. The country on this side appears pretty well cultivated, being
-divided into fields and studded with farm-houses. I was, however,
-assured that of the whole land, not more than half is yet in a
-productive state; if such be the case, considering the present large
-export of sugar, this island, at some future period when thickly
-peopled, will be of great value. Since England has taken possession of
-it, a period of only twenty-five years, the export of sugar is said to
-have increased seventy-five fold. One great cause of its prosperity is
-the excellent state of the roads. In the neighbouring Isle of Bourbon,
-which remains under the French government, the roads are still in the
-same miserable state as they were here only a few years ago. Although
-the French residents must have largely profited by the increased
-prosperity of their island, yet the English government is far from
-popular.
-
-3rd.--In the evening Captain Lloyd, the Surveyor-general, so well known
-from his examination of the Isthmus of Panama, invited Mr. Stokes and
-myself to his country-house, which is situated on the edge of Wilheim
-Plains, and about six miles from the Port. We stayed at this
-delightful place two days; standing nearly 800 feet above the sea, the
-air was cool and fresh, and on every side there were delightful walks.
-Close by, a grand ravine has been worn to a depth of about 500 feet
-through the slightly inclined streams of lava, which have flowed from
-the central platform.
-
-5th.--Captain Lloyd took us to the Riviere Noire, which is several
-miles to the southward, that I might examine some rocks of elevated
-coral. We passed through pleasant gardens, and fine fields of
-sugar-cane growing amidst huge blocks of lava. The roads were bordered
-by hedges of Mimosa, and near many of the houses there were avenues of
-the mango. Some of the views, where the peaked hills and the
-cultivated farms were seen together, were exceedingly picturesque; and
-we were constantly tempted to exclaim, "How pleasant it would be to
-pass one's life in such quiet abodes!" Captain Lloyd possessed an
-elephant, and he sent it half way with us, that we might enjoy a ride
-in true Indian fashion. The circumstance which surprised me most was
-its quite noiseless step. This elephant is the only one at present on
-the island; but it is said others will be sent for.
-
-
-May 9th.--We sailed from Port Louis, and, calling at the Cape of Good
-Hope, on the 8th of July, we arrived off St. Helena. This island, the
-forbidding aspect of which has been so often described, rises abruptly
-like a huge black castle from the ocean. Near the town, as if to
-complete nature's defence, small forts and guns fill up every gap in
-the rugged rocks. The town runs up a flat and narrow valley; the
-houses look respectable, and are interspersed with a very few green
-trees. When approaching the anchorage there was one striking view: an
-irregular castle perched on the summit of a lofty hill, and surrounded
-by a few scattered fir-trees, boldly projected against the sky.
-
-The next day I obtained lodgings within a stone's throw of Napoleon's
-tomb; [1] it was a capital central situation, whence I could make
-excursions in every direction. During the four days I stayed here, I
-wandered over the island from morning to night, and examined its
-geological history. My lodgings were situated at a height of about
-2000 feet; here the weather was cold and boisterous, with constant
-showers of rain; and every now and then the whole scene was veiled in
-thick clouds.
-
-Near the coast the rough lava is quite bare: in the central and higher
-parts, feldspathic rocks by their decomposition have produced a clayey
-soil, which, where not covered by vegetation, is stained in broad bands
-of many bright colours. At this season, the land moistened by constant
-showers, produces a singularly bright green pasture, which lower and
-lower down, gradually fades away and at last disappears. In latitude
-16 degs., and at the trifling elevation of 1500 feet, it is surprising
-to behold a vegetation possessing a character decidedly British. The
-hills are crowned with irregular plantations of Scotch firs; and the
-sloping banks are thickly scattered over with thickets of gorse,
-covered with its bright yellow flowers. Weeping-willows are common on
-the banks of the rivulets, and the hedges are made of the blackberry,
-producing its well-known fruit. When we consider that the number of
-plants now found on the island is 746, and that out of these fifty-two
-alone are indigenous species, the rest having been imported, and most
-of them from England, we see the reason of the British character of the
-vegetation. Many of these English plants appear to flourish better than
-in their native country; some also from the opposite quarter of
-Australia succeed remarkably well. The many imported species must have
-destroyed some of the native kinds; and it is only on the highest and
-steepest ridges that the indigenous Flora is now predominant.
-
-The English, or rather Welsh character of the scenery, is kept up by
-the numerous cottages and small white houses; some buried at the bottom
-of the deepest valleys, and others mounted on the crests of the lofty
-hills. Some of the views are striking, for instance that from near Sir
-W. Doveton's house, where the bold peak called Lot is seen over a dark
-wood of firs, the whole being backed by the red water-worn mountains of
-the southern coast. On viewing the island from an eminence, the first
-circumstance which strikes one, is the number of the roads and forts:
-the labour bestowed on the public works, if one forgets its character
-as a prison, seems out of all proportion to its extent or value. There
-is so little level or useful land, that it seems surprising how so many
-people, about 5000, can subsist here. The lower orders, or the
-emancipated slaves, are I believe extremely poor: they complain of the
-want of work. From the reduction in the number of public servants
-owing to the island having been given up by the East Indian Company,
-and the consequent emigration of many of the richer people, the poverty
-probably will increase. The chief food of the working class is rice
-with a little salt meat; as neither of these articles are the products
-of the island, but must be purchased with money, the low wages tell
-heavily on the poor people. Now that the people are blessed with
-freedom, a right which I believe they value fully, it seems probable
-that their numbers will quickly increase: if so, what is to become of
-the little state of St. Helena?
-
-My guide was an elderly man, who had been a goatherd when a boy, and
-knew every step amongst the rocks. He was of a race many times
-crossed, and although with a dusky skin, he had not the disagreeable
-expression of a mulatto. He was a very civil, quiet old man, and such
-appears the character of the greater number of the lower classes. It
-was strange to my ears to hear a man, nearly white and respectably
-dressed, talking with indifference of the times when he was a slave.
-With my companion, who carried our dinners and a horn of water, which
-is quite necessary, as all the water in the lower valleys is saline, I
-every day took long walks.
-
-Beneath the upper and central green circle, the wild valleys are quite
-desolate and untenanted. Here, to the geologist, there were scenes of
-high interest, showing successive changes and complicated disturbances.
-According to my views, St. Helena has existed as an island from a very
-remote epoch: some obscure proofs, however, of the elevation of the
-land are still extant. I believe that the central and highest peaks
-form parts of the rim of a great crater, the southern half of which has
-been entirely removed by the waves of the sea: there is, moreover, an
-external wall of black basaltic rocks, like the coast-mountains of
-Mauritius, which are older than the central volcanic streams. On the
-higher parts of the island, considerable numbers of a shell, long
-thought to be a marine species occur imbedded in the soil.
-
-It proved to be a Cochlogena, or land-shell of a very peculiar form;
-[2] with it I found six other kinds; and in another spot an eighth
-species. It is remarkable that none of them are now found living.
-Their extinction has probably been caused by the entire destruction of
-the woods, and the consequent loss of food and shelter, which occurred
-during the early part of the last century.
-
-The history of the changes, which the elevated plains of Longwood and
-Deadwood have undergone, as given in General Beatson's account of the
-island, is extremely curious. Both plains, it is said in former times
-were covered with wood, and were therefore called the Great Wood. So
-late as the year 1716 there were many trees, but in 1724 the old trees
-had mostly fallen; and as goats and hogs had been suffered to range
-about, all the young trees had been killed. It appears also from the
-official records, that the trees were unexpectedly, some years
-afterwards, succeeded by a wire grass which spread over the whole
-surface. [3] General Beatson adds that now this plain "is covered with
-fine sward, and is become the finest piece of pasture on the island."
-The extent of surface, probably covered by wood at a former period, is
-estimated at no less than two thousand acres; at the present day
-scarcely a single tree can be found there. It is also said that in
-1709 there were quantities of dead trees in Sandy Bay; this place is
-now so utterly desert, that nothing but so well attested an account
-could have made me believe that they could ever have grown there. The
-fact, that the goats and hogs destroyed all the young trees as they
-sprang up, and that in the course of time the old ones, which were safe
-from their attacks, perished from age, seems clearly made out. Goats
-were introduced in the year 1502; eighty-six years afterwards, in the
-time of Cavendish, it is known that they were exceedingly numerous.
-More than a century afterwards, in 1731, when the evil was complete and
-irretrievable, an order was issued that all stray animals should be
-destroyed. It is very interesting thus to find, that the arrival of
-animals at St. Helena in 1501, did not change the whole aspect of the
-island, until a period of two hundred and twenty years had elapsed: for
-the goats were introduced in 1502, and in 1724 it is said "the old
-trees had mostly fallen." There can be little doubt that this great
-change in the vegetation affected not only the land-shells, causing
-eight species to become extinct, but likewise a multitude of insects.
-
-St. Helena, situated so remote from any continent, in the midst of a
-great ocean, and possessing a unique Flora, excites our curiosity. The
-eight land-shells, though now extinct, and one living Succinea, are
-peculiar species found nowhere else. Mr. Cuming, however, informs me
-that an English Helix is common here, its eggs no doubt having been
-imported in some of the many introduced plants. Mr. Cuming collected
-on the coast sixteen species of sea-shells, of which seven, as far as
-he knows, are confined to this island. Birds and insects, [4] as might
-have been expected, are very few in number; indeed I believe all the
-birds have been introduced within late years. Partridges and pheasants
-are tolerably abundant; the island is much too English not to be
-subject to strict game-laws. I was told of a more unjust sacrifice to
-such ordinances than I ever heard of even in England. The poor people
-formerly used to burn a plant, which grows on the coast-rocks, and
-export the soda from its ashes; but a peremptory order came out
-prohibiting this practice, and giving as a reason that the partridges
-would have nowhere to build.
-
-In my walks I passed more than once over the grassy plain bounded by
-deep valleys, on which Longwood stands. Viewed from a short distance,
-it appears like a respectable gentleman's country-seat. In front there
-are a few cultivated fields, and beyond them the smooth hill of
-coloured rocks called the Flagstaff, and the rugged square black mass
-of the Barn. On the whole the view was rather bleak and uninteresting.
-The only inconvenience I suffered during my walks was from the
-impetuous winds. One day I noticed a curious circumstance; standing on
-the edge of a plain, terminated by a great cliff of about a thousand
-feet in depth, I saw at the distance of a few yards right to windward,
-some tern, struggling against a very strong breeze, whilst, where I
-stood, the air was quite calm. Approaching close to the brink, where
-the current seemed to be deflected upwards from the face of the cliff,
-I stretched out my arm, and immediately felt the full force of the
-wind: an invisible barrier, two yards in width, separated perfectly
-calm air from a strong blast.
-
-I so much enjoyed my rambles among the rocks and mountains of St.
-Helena, that I felt almost sorry on the morning of the 14th to descend
-to the town. Before noon I was on board, and the Beagle made sail.
-
-On the 19th of July we reached Ascension. Those who have beheld a
-volcanic island, situated under an arid climate, will at once be able
-to picture to themselves the appearance of Ascension. They will
-imagine smooth conical hills of a bright red colour, with their summits
-generally truncated, rising separately out of a level surface of black
-rugged lava. A principal mound in the centre of the island, seems the
-father of the lesser cones. It is called Green Hill: its name being
-taken from the faintest tinge of that colour, which at this time of the
-year is barely perceptible from the anchorage. To complete the
-desolate scene, the black rocks on the coast are lashed by a wild and
-turbulent sea.
-
-The settlement is near the beach; it consists of several houses and
-barracks placed irregularly, but well built of white freestone. The
-only inhabitants are marines, and some negroes liberated from
-slave-ships, who are paid and victualled by government. There is not a
-private person on the island. Many of the marines appeared well
-contented with their situation; they think it better to serve their
-one-and-twenty years on shore, let it be what it may, than in a ship;
-in this choice, if I were a marine, I should most heartily agree.
-
-The next morning I ascended Green Hill, 2840 feet high, and thence
-walked across the island to the windward point. A good cart-road leads
-from the coast-settlement to the houses, gardens, and fields, placed
-near the summit of the central mountain. On the roadside there are
-milestones, and likewise cisterns, where each thirsty passer-by can
-drink some good water. Similar care is displayed in each part of the
-establishment, and especially in the management of the springs, so that
-a single drop of water may not be lost: indeed the whole island may be
-compared to a huge ship kept in first-rate order. I could not help,
-when admiring the active industry, which had created such effects out
-of such means, at the same time regretting that it had been wasted on
-so poor and trifling an end. M. Lesson has remarked with justice, that
-the English nation would have thought of making the island of Ascension
-a productive spot, any other people would have held it as a mere
-fortress in the ocean.
-
-Near this coast nothing grows; further inland, an occasional green
-castor-oil plant, and a few grasshoppers, true friends of the desert,
-may be met with. Some grass is scattered over the surface of the
-central elevated region, and the whole much resembles the worse parts
-of the Welsh mountains. But scanty as the pasture appears, about six
-hundred sheep, many goats, a few cows and horses, all thrive well on
-it. Of native animals, land-crabs and rats swarm in numbers. Whether
-the rat is really indigenous, may well be doubted; there are two
-varieties as described by Mr. Waterhouse; one is of a black colour,
-with fine glossy fur, and lives on the grassy summit, the other is
-brown-coloured and less glossy, with longer hairs, and lives near the
-settlement on the coast. Both these varieties are one-third smaller
-than the common black rat (M. rattus); and they differ from it both in
-the colour and character of their fur, but in no other essential
-respect. I can hardly doubt that these rats (like the common mouse,
-which has also run wild) have been imported, and, as at the Galapagos,
-have varied from the effect of the new conditions to which they have
-been exposed: hence the variety on the summit of the island differs
-from that on the coast. Of native birds there are none; but the
-guinea-fowl, imported from the Cape de Verd Islands, is abundant, and
-the common fowl has likewise run wild. Some cats, which were
-originally turned out to destroy the rats and mice, have increased, so
-as to become a great plague. The island is entirely without trees, in
-which, and in every other respect, it is very far inferior to St.
-Helena.
-
-One of my excursions took me towards the S. W. extremity of the island.
-The day was clear and hot, and I saw the island, not smiling with
-beauty, but staring with naked hideousness. The lava streams are
-covered with hummocks, and are rugged to a degree which, geologically
-speaking, is not of easy explanation. The intervening spaces are
-concealed with layers of pumice, ashes and volcanic tuff. Whilst
-passing this end of the island at sea, I could not imagine what the
-white patches were with which the whole plain was mottled; I now found
-that they were seafowl, sleeping in such full confidence, that even in
-midday a man could walk up and seize hold of them. These birds were
-the only living creatures I saw during the whole day. On the beach a
-great surf, although the breeze was light, came tumbling over the
-broken lava rocks.
-
-The geology of this island is in many respects interesting. In several
-places I noticed volcanic bombs, that is, masses of lava which have
-been shot through the air whilst fluid, and have consequently assumed a
-spherical or pear-shape. Not only their external form, but, in several
-cases, their internal structure shows in a very curious manner that
-they have revolved in their aerial course. The internal structure of
-one of these bombs, when broken, is represented very accurately in the
-woodcut. The central part is coarsely cellular, the cells decreasing
-in size towards the exterior; where there is a shell-like case about
-the third of an inch in thickness, of compact stone, which again is
-overlaid by the outside crust of finely cellular lava. I think there
-can be little doubt, first that the external crust cooled rapidly in
-the state in which we now see it; secondly, that the still fluid lava
-within, was packed by the centrifugal force, generated by
-
-[picture]
-
-the revolving of the bomb, against the external cooled crust, and so
-produced the solid shell of stone; and lastly, that the centrifugal
-force, by relieving the pressure in the more central parts of the bomb,
-allowed the heated vapours to expand their cells, thus forming the
-coarse cellular mass of the centre.
-
-A hill, formed of the older series of volcanic rocks, and which has
-been incorrectly considered as the crater of a volcano, is remarkable
-from its broad, slightly hollowed, and circular summit having been
-filled up with many successive layers of ashes and fine scoriae. These
-saucer-shaped layers crop out on the margin, forming perfect rings of
-many different colours, giving to the summit a most fantastic
-appearance; one of these rings is white and broad, and resembles a
-course round which horses have been exercised; hence the hill has been
-called the Devil's Riding School. I brought away specimens of one of
-the tufaceous layers of a pinkish colour and it is a most extraordinary
-fact, that Professor Ehrenberg [5] finds it almost wholly composed of
-matter which has been organized: he detects in it some
-siliceous-shielded fresh-water infusoria, and no less than twenty-five
-different kinds of the siliceous tissue of plants, chiefly of grasses.
-From the absence of all carbonaceous matter, Professor Ehrenberg
-believes that these organic bodies have passed through the volcanic
-fire, and have been erupted in the state in which we now see them. The
-appearance of the layers induced me to believe that they had been
-deposited under water, though from the extreme dryness of the climate I
-was forced to imagine, that torrents of rain had probably fallen during
-some great eruption, and that thus a temporary lake had been formed
-into which the ashes fell. But it may now be suspected that the lake
-was not a temporary one. Anyhow, we may feel sure, that at some former
-epoch the climate and productions of Ascension were very different from
-what they now are. Where on the face of the earth can we find a spot,
-on which close investigation will not discover signs of that endless
-cycle of change, to which this earth has been, is, and will be
-subjected?
-
-On leaving Ascension, we sailed for Bahia, on the coast of Brazil, in
-order to complete the chronometrical measurement of the world. We
-arrived there on August 1st, and stayed four days, during which I took
-several long walks. I was glad to find my enjoyment in tropical scenery
-had not decreased from the want of novelty, even in the slightest
-degree. The elements of the scenery are so simple, that they are worth
-mentioning, as a proof on what trifling circumstances exquisite natural
-beauty depends.
-
-The country may be described as a level plain of about three hundred
-feet in elevation, which in all parts has been worn into flat-bottomed
-valleys. This structure is remarkable in a granitic land, but is
-nearly universal in all those softer formations of which plains are
-usually composed. The whole surface is covered by various kinds of
-stately trees, interspersed with patches of cultivated ground, out of
-which houses, convents, and chapels arise. It must be remembered that
-within the tropics, the wild luxuriance of nature is not lost even in
-the vicinity of large cities: for the natural vegetation of the hedges
-and hill-sides overpowers in picturesque effect the artificial labour
-of man. Hence, there are only a few spots where the bright red soil
-affords a strong contrast with the universal clothing of green. From
-the edges of the plain there are distant views either of the ocean, or
-of the great Bay with its low-wooded shores, and on which numerous
-boats and canoes show their white sails. Excepting from these points,
-the scene is extremely limited; following the level pathways, on each
-hand, only glimpses into the wooded valleys below can be obtained. The
-houses I may add, and especially the sacred edifices, are built in a
-peculiar and rather fantastic style of architecture. They are all
-whitewashed; so that when illumined by the brilliant sun of midday, and
-as seen against the pale blue sky of the horizon, they stand out more
-like shadows than real buildings.
-
-Such are the elements of the scenery, but it is a hopeless attempt to
-paint the general effect. Learned naturalists describe these scenes of
-the tropics by naming a multitude of objects, and mentioning some
-characteristic feature of each. To a learned traveller this possibly
-may communicate some definite ideas: but who else from seeing a plant
-in an herbarium can imagine its appearance when growing in its native
-soil? Who from seeing choice plants in a hothouse, can magnify some
-into the dimensions of forest trees, and crowd others into an entangled
-jungle? Who when examining in the cabinet of the entomologist the gay
-exotic butterflies, and singular cicadas, will associate with these
-lifeless objects, the ceaseless harsh music of the latter, and the lazy
-flight of the former,--the sure accompaniments of the still, glowing
-noon-day of the tropics? It is when the sun has attained its greatest
-height, that such scenes should be viewed: then the dense splendid
-foliage of the mango hides the ground with its darkest shade, whilst
-the upper branches are rendered from the profusion of light of the most
-brilliant green. In the temperate zones the case is different--the
-vegetation there is not so dark or so rich, and hence the rays of the
-declining sun, tinged of a red, purple, or bright yellow color, add
-most to the beauties of those climes.
-
-When quietly walking along the shady pathways, and admiring each
-successive view, I wished to find language to express my ideas. Epithet
-after epithet was found too weak to convey to those who have not
-visited the intertropical regions, the sensation of delight which the
-mind experiences. I have said that the plants in a hothouse fail to
-communicate a just idea of the vegetation, yet I must recur to it. The
-land is one great wild, untidy, luxuriant hothouse, made by Nature for
-herself, but taken possession of by man, who has studded it with gay
-houses and formal gardens. How great would be the desire in every
-admirer of nature to behold, if such were possible, the scenery of
-another planet! yet to every person in Europe, it may be truly said,
-that at the distance of only a few degrees from his native soil, the
-glories of another world are opened to him. In my last walk I stopped
-again and again to gaze on these beauties, and endeavoured to fix in my
-mind for ever, an impression which at the time I knew sooner or later
-must fail. The form of the orange-tree, the cocoa-nut, the palm, the
-mango, the tree-fern, the banana, will remain clear and separate; but
-the thousand beauties which unite these into one perfect scene must
-fade away: yet they will leave, like a tale heard in childhood, a
-picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful figures.
-
-August 6th.--In the afternoon we stood out to sea, with the intention
-of making a direct course to the Cape de Verd Islands. Unfavourable
-winds, however, delayed us, and on the 12th we ran into Pernambuco,--a
-large city on the coast of Brazil, in latitude 8 degs. south. We
-anchored outside the reef; but in a short time a pilot came on board
-and took us into the inner harbour, where we lay close to the town.
-
-Pernambuco is built on some narrow and low sand-banks, which are
-separated from each other by shoal channels of salt water. The three
-parts of the town are connected together by two long bridges built on
-wooden piles. The town is in all parts disgusting, the streets being
-narrow, ill-paved, and filthy; the houses, tall and gloomy. The season
-of heavy rains had hardly come to an end, and hence the surrounding
-country, which is scarcely raised above the level of the sea, was
-flooded with water; and I failed in all my attempts to take walks.
-
-The flat swampy land on which Pernambuco stands is surrounded, at the
-distance of a few miles, by a semicircle of low hills, or rather by the
-edge of a country elevated perhaps two hundred feet above the sea. The
-old city of Olinda stands on one extremity of this range. One day I
-took a canoe, and proceeded up one of the channels to visit it; I found
-the old town from its situation both sweeter and cleaner than that of
-Pernambuco. I must here commemorate what happened for the first time
-during our nearly five years' wandering, namely, having met with a want
-of politeness. I was refused in a sullen manner at two different
-houses, and obtained with difficulty from a third, permission to pass
-through their gardens to an uncultivated hill, for the purpose of
-viewing the country. I feel glad that this happened in the land of the
-Brazilians, for I bear them no good will--a land also of slavery, and
-therefore of moral debasement. A Spaniard would have felt ashamed at
-the very thought of refusing such a request, or of behaving to a
-stranger with rudeness. The channel by which we went to and returned
-from Olinda, was bordered on each side by mangroves, which sprang like
-a miniature forest out of the greasy mud-banks. The bright green
-colour of these bushes always reminded me of the rank grass in a
-church-yard: both are nourished by putrid exhalations; the one speaks
-of death past, and the other too often of death to come.
-
-The most curious object which I saw in this neighbourhood, was the reef
-that forms the harbour. I doubt whether in the whole world any other
-natural structure has so artificial an appearance. [6] It runs for a
-length of several miles in an absolutely straight line, parallel to,
-and not far distant from, the shore. It varies in width from thirty to
-sixty yards, and its surface is level and smooth; it is composed of
-obscurely stratified hard sandstone. At high water the waves break
-over it; at low water its summit is left dry, and it might then be
-mistaken for a breakwater erected by Cyclopean workmen. On this coast
-the currents of the sea tend to throw up in front of the land, long
-spits and bars of loose sand, and on one of these, part of the town of
-Pernambuco stands. In former times a long spit of this nature seems to
-have become consolidated by the percolation of calcareous matter, and
-afterwards to have been gradually upheaved; the outer and loose parts
-during this process having been worn away by the action of the sea, and
-the solid nucleus left as we now see it. Although night and day the
-waves of the open Atlantic, turbid with sediment, are driven against
-the steep outside edges of this wall of stone, yet the oldest pilots
-know of no tradition of any change in its appearance. This durability
-is much the most curious fact in its history: it is due to a tough
-layer, a few inches thick, of calcareous matter, wholly formed by the
-successive growth and death of the small shells of Serpulae, together
-with some few barnacles and nulliporae. These nulliporae, which are
-hard, very simply-organized sea-plants, play an analogous and important
-part in protecting the upper surfaces of coral-reefs, behind and within
-the breakers, where the true corals, during the outward growth of the
-mass, become killed by exposure to the sun and air. These
-insignificant organic beings, especially the Serpulae, have done good
-service to the people of Pernambuco; for without their protective aid
-the bar of sandstone would inevitably have been long ago worn away and
-without the bar, there would have been no harbour.
-
-On the 19th of August we finally left the shores of Brazil. I thank
-God, I shall never again visit a slave-country. To this day, if I hear
-a distant scream, it recalls with painful vividness my feelings, when
-passing a house near Pernambuco, I heard the most pitiable moans, and
-could not but suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew
-that I was as powerless as a child even to remonstrate. I suspected
-that these moans were from a tortured slave, for I was told that this
-was the case in another instance. Near Rio de Janeiro I lived opposite
-to an old lady, who kept screws to crush the fingers of her female
-slaves. I have stayed in a house where a young household mulatto,
-daily and hourly, was reviled, beaten, and persecuted enough to break
-the spirit of the lowest animal. I have seen a little boy, six or
-seven years old, struck thrice with a horse-whip (before I could
-interfere) on his naked head, for having handed me a glass of water not
-quite clean; I saw his father tremble at a mere glance from his
-master's eye. These latter cruelties were witnessed by me in a Spanish
-colony, in which it has always been said, that slaves are better
-treated than by the Portuguese, English, or other European nations. I
-have seen at Rio de Janeiro a powerful negro afraid to ward off a blow
-directed, as he thought, at his face. I was present when a
-kind-hearted man was on the point of separating forever the men, women,
-and little children of a large number of families who had long lived
-together. I will not even allude to the many heart-sickening
-atrocities which I authentically heard of;--nor would I have mentioned
-the above revolting details, had I not met with several people, so
-blinded by the constitutional gaiety of the negro as to speak of
-slavery as a tolerable evil. Such people have generally visited at the
-houses of the upper classes, where the domestic slaves are usually well
-treated, and they have not, like myself, lived amongst the lower
-classes. Such inquirers will ask slaves about their condition; they
-forget that the slave must indeed be dull, who does not calculate on
-the chance of his answer reaching his master's ears.
-
-It is argued that self-interest will prevent excessive cruelty; as if
-self-interest protected our domestic animals, which are far less likely
-than degraded slaves, to stir up the rage of their savage masters. It
-is an argument long since protested against with noble feeling, and
-strikingly exemplified, by the ever-illustrious Humboldt. It is often
-attempted to palliate slavery by comparing the state of slaves with our
-poorer countrymen: if the misery of our poor be caused not by the laws
-of nature, but by our institutions, great is our sin; but how this
-bears on slavery, I cannot see; as well might the use of the
-thumb-screw be defended in one land, by showing that men in another
-land suffered from some dreadful disease. Those who look tenderly at
-the slave owner, and with a cold heart at the slave, never seem to put
-themselves into the position of the latter; what a cheerless prospect,
-with not even a hope of change! picture to yourself the chance, ever
-hanging over you, of your wife and your little children--those objects
-which nature urges even the slave to call his own--being torn from you
-and sold like beasts to the first bidder! And these deeds are done and
-palliated by men, who profess to love their neighbours as themselves,
-who believe in God, and pray that his Will be done on earth! It makes
-one's blood boil, yet heart tremble, to think that we Englishmen and
-our American descendants, with their boastful cry of liberty, have been
-and are so guilty: but it is a consolation to reflect, that we at least
-have made a greater sacrifice, than ever made by any nation, to expiate
-our sin.
-
-
-On the last day of August we anchored for the second time at Porto
-Praya in the Cape de Verd archipelago; thence we proceeded to the
-Azores, where we stayed six days. On the 2nd of October we made the
-shore, of England; and at Falmouth I left the Beagle, having lived on
-board the good little vessel nearly five years.
-
-
-Our Voyage having come to an end, I will take a short retrospect of the
-advantages and disadvantages, the pains and pleasures, of our
-circumnavigation of the world. If a person asked my advice, before
-undertaking a long voyage, my answer would depend upon his possessing a
-decided taste for some branch of knowledge, which could by this means
-be advanced. No doubt it is a high satisfaction to behold various
-countries and the many races of mankind, but the pleasures gained at
-the time do not counterbalance the evils. It is necessary to look
-forward to a harvest, however distant that may be, when some fruit will
-be reaped, some good effected.
-
-Many of the losses which must be experienced are obvious; such as that
-of the society of every old friend, and of the sight of those places
-with which every dearest remembrance is so intimately connected. These
-losses, however, are at the time partly relieved by the exhaustless
-delight of anticipating the long wished-for day of return. If, as
-poets say, life is a dream, I am sure in a voyage these are the visions
-which best serve to pass away the long night. Other losses, although
-not at first felt, tell heavily after a period: these are the want of
-room, of seclusion, of rest; the jading feeling of constant hurry; the
-privation of small luxuries, the loss of domestic society and even of
-music and the other pleasures of imagination. When such trifles are
-mentioned, it is evident that the real grievances, excepting from
-accidents, of a sea-life are at an end. The short space of sixty years
-has made an astonishing difference in the facility of distant
-navigation. Even in the time of Cook, a man who left his fireside for
-such expeditions underwent severe privations. A yacht now, with every
-luxury of life, can circumnavigate the globe. Besides the vast
-improvements in ships and naval resources, the whole western shores of
-America are thrown open, and Australia has become the capital of a
-rising continent. How different are the circumstances to a man
-shipwrecked at the present day in the Pacific, to what they were in the
-time of Cook! Since his voyage a hemisphere has been added to the
-civilized world.
-
-If a person suffer much from sea-sickness, let him weigh it heavily in
-the balance. I speak from experience: it is no trifling evil, cured in
-a week. If, on the other hand, he take pleasure in naval tactics, he
-will assuredly have full scope for his taste. But it must be borne in
-mind, how large a proportion of the time, during a long voyage, is
-spent on the water, as compared with the days in harbour. And what are
-the boasted glories of the illimitable ocean. A tedious waste, a
-desert of water, as the Arabian calls it. No doubt there are some
-delightful scenes. A moonlight night, with the clear heavens and the
-dark glittering sea, and the white sails filled by the soft air of a
-gently blowing trade-wind, a dead calm, with the heaving surface
-polished like a mirror, and all still except the occasional flapping of
-the canvas. It is well once to behold a squall with its rising arch and
-coming fury, or the heavy gale of wind and mountainous waves. I
-confess, however, my imagination had painted something more grand, more
-terrific in the full-grown storm. It is an incomparably finer spectacle
-when beheld on shore, where the waving trees, the wild flight of the
-birds, the dark shadows and bright lights, the rushing of the torrents
-all proclaim the strife of the unloosed elements. At sea the albatross
-and little petrel fly as if the storm were their proper sphere, the
-water rises and sinks as if fulfilling its usual task, the ship alone
-and its inhabitants seem the objects of wrath. On a forlorn and
-weather-beaten coast, the scene is indeed different, but the feelings
-partake more of horror than of wild delight.
-
-Let us now look at the brighter side of the past time. The pleasure
-derived from beholding the scenery and the general aspect of the
-various countries we have visited, has decidedly been the most constant
-and highest source of enjoyment. It is probable that the picturesque
-beauty of many parts of Europe exceeds anything which we beheld. But
-there is a growing pleasure in comparing the character of the scenery
-in different countries, which to a certain degree is distinct from
-merely admiring its beauty. It depends chiefly on an acquaintance with
-the individual parts of each view. I am strongly induced to believe
-that as in music, the person who understands every note will, if he
-also possesses a proper taste, more thoroughly enjoy the whole, so he
-who examines each part of a fine view, may also thoroughly comprehend
-the full and combined effect. Hence, a traveller should be a botanist,
-for in all views plants form the chief embellishment. Group masses of
-naked rock, even in the wildest forms, and they may for a time afford a
-sublime spectacle, but they will soon grow monotonous. Paint them with
-bright and varied colours, as in Northern Chile, they will become
-fantastic; clothe them with vegetation, they must form a decent, if not
-a beautiful picture.
-
-When I say that the scenery of parts of Europe is probably superior to
-anything which we beheld, I except, as a class by itself, that of the
-intertropical zones. The two classes cannot be compared together; but
-I have already often enlarged on the grandeur of those regions. As the
-force of impressions generally depends on preconceived ideas, I may
-add, that mine were taken from the vivid descriptions in the Personal
-Narrative of Humboldt, which far exceed in merit anything else which I
-have read. Yet with these high-wrought ideas, my feelings were far
-from partaking of a tinge of disappointment on my first and final
-landing on the shores of Brazil.
-
-Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind, none exceed in
-sublimity the primeval forests undefaced by the hand of man; whether
-those of Brazil, where the powers of Life are predominant, or those of
-Tierra del Fuego, where Death and decay prevail. Both are temples
-filled with the varied productions of the God of Nature:--no one can
-stand in these solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is more in
-man than the mere breath of his body. In calling up images of the
-past, I find that the plains of Patagonia frequently cross before my
-eyes; yet these plains are pronounced by all wretched and useless. They
-can be described only by negative characters; without habitations,
-without water, without trees, without mountains, they support merely a
-few dwarf plants. Why, then, and the case is not peculiar to myself,
-have these arid wastes taken so firm a hold on my memory? Why have not
-the still more level, the greener and more fertile Pampas, which are
-serviceable to mankind, produced an equal impression? I can scarcely
-analyze these feelings: but it must be partly owing to the free scope
-given to the imagination. The plains of Patagonia are boundless, for
-they are scarcely passable, and hence unknown: they bear the stamp of
-having lasted, as they are now, for ages, and there appears no limit to
-their duration through future time. If, as the ancients supposed, the
-flat earth was surrounded by an impassable breadth of water, or by
-deserts heated to an intolerable excess, who would not look at these
-last boundaries to man's knowledge with deep but ill-defined sensations?
-
-Lastly, of natural scenery, the views from lofty mountains, through
-certainly in one sense not beautiful, are very memorable. When looking
-down from the highest crest of the Cordillera, the mind, undisturbed by
-minute details, was filled with the stupendous dimensions of the
-surrounding masses.
-
-Of individual objects, perhaps nothing is more certain to create
-astonishment than the first sight in his native haunt of a
-barbarian--of man in his lowest and most savage state. One's mind
-hurries back over past centuries, and then asks, could our progenitors
-have been men like these?--men, whose very signs and expressions are
-less intelligible to us than those of the domesticated animals; men,
-who do not possess the instinct of those animals, nor yet appear to
-boast of human reason, or at least of arts consequent on that reason. I
-do not believe it is possible to describe or paint the difference
-between savage and civilized man. It is the difference between a wild
-and tame animal: and part of the interest in beholding a savage, is the
-same which would lead every one to desire to see the lion in his
-desert, the tiger tearing his prey in the jungle, or the rhinoceros
-wandering over the wild plains of Africa.
-
-Among the other most remarkable spectacles which we have beheld, may be
-ranked, the Southern Cross, the cloud of Magellan, and the other
-constellations of the southern hemisphere--the water-spout--the glacier
-leading its blue stream of ice, overhanging the sea in a bold
-precipice--a lagoon-island raised by the reef-building corals--an
-active volcano--and the overwhelming effects of a violent earthquake.
-These latter phenomena, perhaps, possess for me a peculiar interest,
-from their intimate connection with the geological structure of the
-world. The earthquake, however, must be to every one a most impressive
-event: the earth, considered from our earliest childhood as the type of
-solidity, has oscillated like a thin crust beneath our feet; and in
-seeing the laboured works of man in a moment overthrown, we feel the
-insignificance of his boasted power.
-
-It has been said, that the love of the chase is an inherent delight in
-man--a relic of an instinctive passion. If so, I am sure the pleasure
-of living in the open air, with the sky for a roof and the ground for a
-table, is part of the same feeling, it is the savage returning to his
-wild and native habits. I always look back to our boat cruises, and my
-land journeys, when through unfrequented countries, with an extreme
-delight, which no scenes of civilization could have created. I do not
-doubt that every traveller must remember the glowing sense of happiness
-which he experienced, when he first breathed in a foreign clime, where
-the civilized man had seldom or never trod.
-
-There are several other sources of enjoyment in a long voyage, which
-are of a more reasonable nature. The map of the world ceases to be a
-blank; it becomes a picture full of the most varied and animated
-figures. Each part assumes its proper dimensions: continents are not
-looked at in the light of islands, or islands considered as mere
-specks, which are, in truth, larger than many kingdoms of Europe.
-Africa, or North and South America, are well-sounding names, and easily
-pronounced; but it is not until having sailed for weeks along small
-portions of their shores, that one is thoroughly convinced what vast
-spaces on our immense world these names imply.
-
-From seeing the present state, it is impossible not to look forward
-with high expectations to the future progress of nearly an entire
-hemisphere. The march of improvement, consequent on the introduction
-of Christianity throughout the South Sea, probably stands by itself in
-the records of history. It is the more striking when we remember that
-only sixty years since, Cook, whose excellent judgment none will
-dispute, could foresee no prospect of a change. Yet these changes have
-now been effected by the philanthropic spirit of the British nation.
-
-In the same quarter of the globe Australia is rising, or indeed may be
-said to have risen, into a grand centre of civilization, which, at some
-not very remote period, will rule as empress over the southern
-hemisphere. It is impossible for an Englishman to behold these distant
-colonies, without a high pride and satisfaction. To hoist the British
-flag, seems to draw with it as a certain consequence, wealth,
-prosperity, and civilization.
-
-In conclusion, it appears to me that nothing can be more improving to a
-young naturalist, than a journey in distant countries. It both
-sharpens, and partly allays that want and craving, which, as Sir J.
-Herschel remarks, a man experiences although every corporeal sense be
-fully satisfied. The excitement from the novelty of objects, and the
-chance of success, stimulate him to increased activity. Moreover, as a
-number of isolated facts soon become uninteresting, the habit of
-comparison leads to generalization. On the other hand, as the
-traveller stays but a short time in each place, his descriptions must
-generally consist of mere sketches, instead of detailed observations.
-Hence arises, as I have found to my cost, a constant tendency to fill
-up the wide gaps of knowledge, by inaccurate and superficial hypotheses.
-
-But I have too deeply enjoyed the voyage, not to recommend any
-naturalist, although he must not expect to be so fortunate in his
-companions as I have been, to take all chances, and to start, on
-travels by land if possible, if otherwise, on a long voyage. He may
-feel assured, he will meet with no difficulties or dangers, excepting
-in rare cases, nearly so bad as he beforehand anticipates. In a moral
-point of view, the effect ought to be, to teach him good-humoured
-patience, freedom from selfishness, the habit of acting for himself,
-and of making the best of every occurrence. In short, he ought to
-partake of the characteristic qualities of most sailors. Travelling
-ought also to teach him distrust; but at the same time he will
-discover, how many truly kind-hearted people there are, with whom he
-never before had, or ever again will have any further communication,
-who yet are ready to offer him the most disinterested assistance.
-
-[1] After the volumes of eloquence which have poured forth on this
-subject, it is dangerous even to mention the tomb. A modern traveller,
-in twelve lines, burdens the poor little island with the following
-titles,--it is a grave, tomb, pyramid, cemetery, sepulchre, catacomb,
-sarcophagus, minaret, and mausoleum!
-
-[2] It deserves notice, that all the many specimens of this shell found
-by me in one spot, differ as a marked variety, from another set of
-specimens procured from a different spot.
-
-[3] Beatson's St. Helena. Introductory chapter, p. 4.
-
-[4] Among these few insects, I was surprised to find a small Aphodius
-(nov. spec.) and an Oryctes, both extremely numerous under dung. When
-the island was discovered it certainly possessed no quadruped,
-excepting perhaps a mouse: it becomes, therefore, a difficult point to
-ascertain, whether these stercovorous insects have since been imported
-by accident, or if aborigines, on what food they formerly subsisted. On
-the banks of the Plata, where, from the vast number of cattle and
-horses, the fine plains of turf are richly manured, it is vain to seek
-the many kinds of dung-feeding beetles, which occur so abundantly in
-Europe. I observed only an Oryctes (the insects of this genus in
-Europe generally feed on decayed vegetable matter) and two species of
-Phanaeus, common in such situations. On the opposite side of the
-Cordillera in Chiloe, another species of Phanaeus is exceedingly
-abundant, and it buries the dung of the cattle in large earthen balls
-beneath the ground. There is reason to believe that the genus
-Phanaeus, before the introduction of cattle, acted as scavengers to
-man. In Europe, beetles, which find support in the matter which has
-already contributed towards the life of other and larger animals, are
-so numerous that there must be considerably more than one hundred
-different species. Considering this, and observing what a quantity of
-food of this kind is lost on the plains of La Plata, I imagined I saw
-an instance where man had disturbed that chain, by which so many
-animals are linked together in their native country. In Van Diemen's
-Land, however, I found four species of Onthophagus, two of Aphodius,
-and one of a third genus, very abundantly under the dung of cows; yet
-these latter animals had been then introduced only thirty-three years.
-Previous to that time the kangaroo and some other small animals were
-the only quadrupeds; and their dung is of a very different quality from
-that of their successors introduced by man. In England the greater
-number of stercovorous beetles are confined in their appetites; that
-is, they do not depend indifferently on any quadruped for the means of
-subsistence. The change, therefore, in habits which must have taken
-place in Van Diemen's Land is highly remarkable. I am indebted to the
-Rev. F. W. Hope, who, I hope, will permit me to call him my master in
-Entomology, for giving me the names of the foregoing insects.
-
-[5] Monats. der Konig. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin. Vom April, 1845.
-
-[6] I have described this Bar in detail, in the Lond. and Edin. Phil.
-Mag., vol. xix. (1841), p. 257.
-
-
-
-
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-<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The Voyage of the Beagle, by Charles Darwin</div>
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-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The Voyage of the Beagle</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Charles Darwin</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 15, 1997 [eBook #944]<br />
-[Most recently updated: March 27, 2021]</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
-<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
-<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: John Hamm and David Widger</div>
-<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE ***</div>
-
-<h1>THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE</h1>
-
- <h2>
- By Charles Darwin
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0001" id="linkimage-0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0007.jpg" alt="0007 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0007.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <b>CONTENTS</b>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_PREF"> PREFACE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_4_0002"> <b>THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE</b> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0001"> CHAPTER I &mdash; ST. JAGO&mdash;CAPE DE VERD
- ISLANDS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0002"> CHAPTER II &mdash; RIO DE JANEIRO </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0003"> CHAPTER III &mdash; MALDONADO </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0004"> CHAPTER IV &mdash; RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0005"> CHAPTER V &mdash; BAHIA BLANCA </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0006"> CHAPTER VI &mdash; BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0007"> CHAPTER VII &mdash; BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0008"> CHAPTER VIII &mdash; BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0009"> CHAPTER IX &mdash; SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE
- FALKLAND ISLANDS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0010"> CHAPTER X &mdash; TIERRA DEL FUEGO </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0011"> CHAPTER XI &mdash; STRAIT OF MAGELLAN.&mdash;CLIMATE
- OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0012"> CHAPTER XII &mdash; CENTRAL CHILE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0013"> CHAPTER XIII &mdash; CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
- </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0014"> CHAPTER XIV &mdash; CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT
- EARTHQUAKE </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0015"> CHAPTER XV &mdash; PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0016"> CHAPTER XVI &mdash; NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0017"> CHAPTER XVII &mdash; GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0018"> CHAPTER XVIII &mdash; TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0019"> CHAPTER XIX &mdash; AUSTRALIA </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0020"> CHAPTER XX &mdash; KEELING ISLAND: CORAL
- FORMATIONS </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2HCH0021"> CHAPTER XXI &mdash; MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND </a>
- </p>
- <p class="toc">
- <a href="#link2H_FOOT"> FOOTNOTES: </a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_PREF" id="link2H_PREF"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- PREFACE
- </h2>
- <p>
- I have stated in the preface to the first Edition of this work, and in the
- Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, that it was in consequence of a wish
- expressed by Captain Fitz Roy, of having some scientific person on board,
- accompanied by an offer from him of giving up part of his own
- accommodations, that I volunteered my services, which received, through
- the kindness of the hydrographer, Captain Beaufort, the sanction of the
- Lords of the Admiralty. As I feel that the opportunities which I enjoyed
- of studying the Natural History of the different countries we visited,
- have been wholly due to Captain Fitz Roy, I hope I may here be permitted
- to repeat my expression of gratitude to him; and to add that, during the
- five years we were together, I received from him the most cordial
- friendship and steady assistance. Both to Captain Fitz Roy and to all the
- Officers of the Beagle <a href="#linknote-10" name="linknoteref-10"
- id="linknoteref-10"><small>10</small></a> I shall ever feel most thankful
- for the undeviating kindness with which I was treated during our long
- voyage.
- </p>
- <p>
- This volume contains, in the form of a Journal, a history of our voyage,
- and a sketch of those observations in Natural History and Geology, which I
- think will possess some interest for the general reader. I have in this
- edition largely condensed and corrected some parts, and have added a
- little to others, in order to render the volume more fitted for popular
- reading; but I trust that naturalists will remember, that they must refer
- for details to the larger publications which comprise the scientific
- results of the Expedition. The Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle
- includes an account of the Fossil Mammalia, by Professor Owen; of the
- Living Mammalia, by Mr. Waterhouse; of the Birds, by Mr. Gould; of the
- Fish, by the Rev. L. Jenyns; and of the Reptiles, by Mr. Bell. I have
- appended to the descriptions of each species an account of its habits and
- range. These works, which I owe to the high talents and disinterested zeal
- of the above distinguished authors, could not have been undertaken, had it
- not been for the liberality of the Lords Commissioners of Her Majesty's
- Treasury, who, through the representation of the Right Honourable the
- Chancellor of the Exchequer, have been pleased to grant a sum of one
- thousand pounds towards defraying part of the expenses of publication.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have myself published separate volumes on the 'Structure and
- Distribution of Coral Reefs;' on the 'Volcanic Islands visited during the
- Voyage of the Beagle;' and on the 'Geology of South America.' The sixth
- volume of the 'Geological Transactions' contains two papers of mine on the
- Erratic Boulders and Volcanic Phenomena of South America. Messrs.
- Waterhouse, Walker, Newman, and White, have published several able papers
- on the Insects which were collected, and I trust that many others will
- hereafter follow. The plants from the southern parts of America will be
- given by Dr. J. Hooker, in his great work on the Botany of the Southern
- Hemisphere. The Flora of the Galapagos Archipelago is the subject of a
- separate memoir by him, in the 'Linnean Transactions.' The Reverend
- Professor Henslow has published a list of the plants collected by me at
- the Keeling Islands; and the Reverend J. M. Berkeley has described my
- cryptogamic plants.
- </p>
- <p>
- I shall have the pleasure of acknowledging the great assistance which I
- have received from several other naturalists, in the course of this and my
- other works; but I must be here allowed to return my most sincere thanks
- to the Reverend Professor Henslow, who, when I was an undergraduate at
- Cambridge, was one chief means of giving me a taste for Natural History,&mdash;who,
- during my absence, took charge of the collections I sent home, and by his
- correspondence directed my endeavours,&mdash;and who, since my return, has
- constantly rendered me every assistance which the kindest friend could
- offer.
- </p>
- <p>
- DOWN, BROMLEY, KENT, June 9, 1845
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_4_0002" id="link2H_4_0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
- </h2>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0001" id="link2HCH0001"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER I &mdash; ST. JAGO&mdash;CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Porto Praya&mdash;Ribeira Grande&mdash;Atmospheric Dust with Infusoria&mdash;Habits
- of a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish&mdash;St. Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic&mdash;Singular
- Incrustations&mdash;Insects the first Colonists of Islands&mdash;Fernando
- Noronha&mdash;Bahia&mdash;Burnished Rocks&mdash;Habits of a Diodon&mdash;Pelagic
- Confervae and Infusoria&mdash;Causes of discoloured Sea.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>FTER having been
- twice driven back by heavy southwestern gales, Her Majesty's ship Beagle,
- a ten-gun brig, under the command of Captain Fitz Roy, R. N., sailed from
- Devonport on the 27th of December, 1831. The object of the expedition was
- to complete the survey of Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under
- Captain King in 1826 to 1830,&mdash;to survey the shores of Chile, Peru,
- and of some islands in the Pacific&mdash;and to carry a chain of
- chronometrical measurements round the World. On the 6th of January we
- reached Teneriffe, but were prevented landing, by fears of our bringing
- the cholera: the next morning we saw the sun rise behind the rugged
- outline of the Grand Canary island, and suddenly illuminate the Peak of
- Teneriffe, whilst the lower parts were veiled in fleecy clouds. This was
- the first of many delightful days never to be forgotten. On the 16th of
- January, 1832, we anchored at Porto Praya, in St. Jago, the chief island
- of the Cape de Verd archipelago.
- </p>
- <p>
- The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea, wears a desolate
- aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age, and the scorching heat of a
- tropical sun, have in most places rendered the soil unfit for vegetation.
- The country rises in successive steps of table-land, interspersed with
- some truncate conical hills, and the horizon is bounded by an irregular
- chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as beheld through the hazy
- atmosphere of this climate, is one of great interest; if, indeed, a
- person, fresh from sea, and who has just walked, for the first time, in a
- grove of cocoa-nut trees, can be a judge of anything but his own
- happiness. The island would generally be considered as very uninteresting,
- but to anyone accustomed only to an English landscape, the novel aspect of
- an utterly sterile land possesses a grandeur which more vegetation might
- spoil. A single green leaf can scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of
- the lava plains; yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive
- to exist. It rains very seldom, but during a short portion of the year
- heavy torrents fall, and immediately afterwards a light vegetation springs
- out of every crevice. This soon withers; and upon such naturally formed
- hay the animals live. It had not now rained for an entire year. When the
- island was discovered, the immediate neighbourhood of Porto Praya was
- clothed with trees, <a href="#linknote-11" name="linknoteref-11"
- id="linknoteref-11"><small>11</small></a> the reckless destruction of
- which has caused here, as at St. Helena, and at some of the Canary
- islands, almost entire sterility. The broad, flat-bottomed valleys, many
- of which serve during a few days only in the season as water-courses, are
- clothed with thickets of leafless bushes. Few living creatures inhabit
- these valleys. The commonest bird is a kingfisher (Dacelo Iagoensis),
- which tamely sits on the branches of the castor-oil plant, and thence
- darts on grasshoppers and lizards. It is brightly coloured, but not so
- beautiful as the European species: in its flight, manners, and place of
- habitation, which is generally in the driest valley, there is also a wide
- difference.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, two of the officers and myself rode to Ribeira Grande, a village
- a few miles eastward of Porto Praya. Until we reached the valley of St.
- Martin, the country presented its usual dull brown appearance; but here, a
- very small rill of water produces a most refreshing margin of luxuriant
- vegetation. In the course of an hour we arrived at Ribeira Grande, and
- were surprised at the sight of a large ruined fort and cathedral. This
- little town, before its harbour was filled up, was the principal place in
- the island: it now presents a melancholy, but very picturesque appearance.
- Having procured a black Padre for a guide, and a Spaniard who had served
- in the Peninsular war as an interpreter, we visited a collection of
- buildings, of which an ancient church formed the principal part. It is
- here the governors and captain-generals of the islands have been buried.
- Some of the tombstones recorded dates of the sixteenth century. <a
- href="#linknote-12" name="linknoteref-12" id="linknoteref-12"><small>12</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- The heraldic ornaments were the only things in this retired place that
- reminded us of Europe. The church or chapel formed one side of a
- quadrangle, in the middle of which a large clump of bananas were growing.
- On another side was a hospital, containing about a dozen miserable-looking
- inmates.
- </p>
- <p>
- We returned to the Venda to eat our dinners. A considerable number of men,
- women, and children, all as black as jet, collected to watch us. Our
- companions were extremely merry; and everything we said or did was
- followed by their hearty laughter. Before leaving the town we visited the
- cathedral. It does not appear so rich as the smaller church, but boasts of
- a little organ, which sent forth singularly inharmonious cries. We
- presented the black priest with a few shillings, and the Spaniard, patting
- him on the head, said, with much candour, he thought his colour made no
- great difference. We then returned, as fast as the ponies would go, to
- Porto Praya.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another day we rode to the village of St. Domingo, situated near the
- centre of the island. On a small plain which we crossed, a few stunted
- acacias were growing; their tops had been bent by the steady trade-wind,
- in a singular manner&mdash;some of them even at right angles to their
- trunks. The direction of the branches was exactly N. E. by N., and S. W.
- by S., and these natural vanes must indicate the prevailing direction of
- the force of the trade-wind. The travelling had made so little impression
- on the barren soil, that we here missed our track, and took that to
- Fuentes. This we did not find out till we arrived there; and we were
- afterwards glad of our mistake. Fuentes is a pretty village, with a small
- stream; and everything appeared to prosper well, excepting, indeed, that
- which ought to do so most&mdash;its inhabitants. The black children,
- completely naked, and looking very wretched, were carrying bundles of
- firewood half as big as their own bodies.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near Fuentes we saw a large flock of guinea-fowl&mdash;probably fifty or
- sixty in number. They were extremely wary, and could not be approached.
- They avoided us, like partridges on a rainy day in September, running with
- their heads cocked up; and if pursued, they readily took to the wing.
- </p>
- <p>
- The scenery of St. Domingo possesses a beauty totally unexpected, from the
- prevalent gloomy character of the rest of the island. The village is
- situated at the bottom of a valley, bounded by lofty and jagged walls of
- stratified lava. The black rocks afford a most striking contrast with the
- bright green vegetation, which follows the banks of a little stream of
- clear water. It happened to be a grand feast-day, and the village was full
- of people. On our return we overtook a party of about twenty young black
- girls, dressed in excellent taste; their black skins and snow-white linen
- being set off by coloured turbans and large shawls. As soon as we
- approached near, they suddenly all turned round, and covering the path
- with their shawls, sung with great energy a wild song, beating time with
- their hands upon their legs. We threw them some vintems, which were
- received with screams of laughter, and we left them redoubling the noise
- of their song.
- </p>
- <p>
- One morning the view was singularly clear; the distant mountains being
- projected with the sharpest outline on a heavy bank of dark blue clouds.
- Judging from the appearance, and from similar cases in England, I supposed
- that the air was saturated with moisture. The fact, however, turned out
- quite the contrary. The hygrometer gave a difference of 29.6 degs.,
- between the temperature of the air, and the point at which dew was
- precipitated. This difference was nearly double that which I had observed
- on the previous mornings. This unusual degree of atmospheric dryness was
- accompanied by continual flashes of lightning. Is it not an uncommon case,
- thus to find a remarkable degree of aerial transparency with such a state
- of weather?
- </p>
- <p>
- Generally the atmosphere is hazy; and this is caused by the falling of
- impalpably fine dust, which was found to have slightly injured the
- astronomical instruments. The morning before we anchored at Porto Praya, I
- collected a little packet of this brown-coloured fine dust, which appeared
- to have been filtered from the wind by the gauze of the vane at the
- mast-head. Mr. Lyell has also given me four packets of dust which fell on
- a vessel a few hundred miles northward of these islands. Professor
- Ehrenberg <a href="#linknote-13" name="linknoteref-13" id="linknoteref-13"><small>13</small></a>
- finds that this dust consists in great part of infusoria with siliceous
- shields, and of the siliceous tissue of plants. In five little packets
- which I sent him, he has ascertained no less than sixty-seven different
- organic forms! The infusoria, with the exception of two marine species,
- are all inhabitants of fresh-water. I have found no less than fifteen
- different accounts of dust having fallen on vessels when far out in the
- Atlantic. From the direction of the wind whenever it has fallen, and from
- its having always fallen during those months when the harmattan is known
- to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere, we may feel sure that it
- all comes from Africa. It is, however, a very singular fact, that,
- although Professor Ehrenberg knows many species of infusoria peculiar to
- Africa, he finds none of these in the dust which I sent him. On the other
- hand, he finds in it two species which hitherto he knows as living only in
- South America. The dust falls in such quantities as to dirty everything on
- board, and to hurt people's eyes; vessels even have run on shore owing to
- the obscurity of the atmosphere. It has often fallen on ships when several
- hundred, and even more than a thousand miles from the coast of Africa, and
- at points sixteen hundred miles distant in a north and south direction. In
- some dust which was collected on a vessel three hundred miles from the
- land, I was much surprised to find particles of stone above the thousandth
- of an inch square, mixed with finer matter. After this fact one need not
- be surprised at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules of
- cryptogamic plants.
- </p>
- <p>
- The geology of this island is the most interesting part of its natural
- history. On entering the harbour, a perfectly horizontal white band, in
- the face of the sea cliff, may be seen running for some miles along the
- coast, and at the height of about forty-five feet above the water. Upon
- examination this white stratum is found to consist of calcareous matter
- with numerous shells embedded, most or all of which now exist on the
- neighbouring coast. It rests on ancient volcanic rocks, and has been
- covered by a stream of basalt, which must have entered the sea when the
- white shelly bed was lying at the bottom. It is interesting to trace the
- changes produced by the heat of the overlying lava, on the friable mass,
- which in parts has been converted into a crystalline limestone, and in
- other parts into a compact spotted stone Where the lime has been caught up
- by the scoriaceous fragments of the lower surface of the stream, it is
- converted into groups of beautifully radiated fibres resembling
- arragonite. The beds of lava rise in successive gently-sloping plains,
- towards the interior, whence the deluges of melted stone have originally
- proceeded. Within historical times, no signs of volcanic activity have, I
- believe, been manifested in any part of St. Jago. Even the form of a
- crater can but rarely be discovered on the summits of the many red cindery
- hills; yet the more recent streams can be distinguished on the coast,
- forming lines of cliffs of less height, but stretching out in advance of
- those belonging to an older series: the height of the cliffs thus
- affording a rude measure of the age of the streams.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our stay, I observed the habits of some marine animals. A large
- Aplysia is very common. This sea-slug is about five inches long; and is of
- a dirty yellowish colour veined with purple. On each side of the lower
- surface, or foot, there is a broad membrane, which appears sometimes to
- act as a ventilator, in causing a current of water to flow over the dorsal
- branchiae or lungs. It feeds on the delicate sea-weeds which grow among
- the stones in muddy and shallow water; and I found in its stomach several
- small pebbles, as in the gizzard of a bird. This slug, when disturbed,
- emits a very fine purplish-red fluid, which stains the water for the space
- of a foot around. Besides this means of defence, an acrid secretion, which
- is spread over its body, causes a sharp, stinging sensation, similar to
- that produced by the Physalia, or Portuguese man-of-war.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was much interested, on several occasions, by watching the habits of an
- Octopus, or cuttle-fish. Although common in the pools of water left by the
- retiring tide, these animals were not easily caught. By means of their
- long arms and suckers, they could drag their bodies into very narrow
- crevices; and when thus fixed, it required great force to remove them. At
- other times they darted tail first, with the rapidity of an arrow, from
- one side of the pool to the other, at the same instant discolouring the
- water with a dark chestnut-brown ink. These animals also escape detection
- by a very extraordinary, chameleon-like power of changing their colour.
- They appear to vary their tints according to the nature of the ground over
- which they pass: when in deep water, their general shade was brownish
- purple, but when placed on the land, or in shallow water, this dark tint
- changed into one of a yellowish green. The colour, examined more
- carefully, was a French grey, with numerous minute spots of bright yellow:
- the former of these varied in intensity; the latter entirely disappeared
- and appeared again by turns. These changes were effected in such a manner,
- that clouds, varying in tint between a hyacinth red and a chestnut-brown,
- <a href="#linknote-14" name="linknoteref-14" id="linknoteref-14"><small>14</small></a>
- were continually passing over the body. Any part, being subjected to a
- slight shock of galvanism, became almost black: a similar effect, but in a
- less degree, was produced by scratching the skin with a needle. These
- clouds, or blushes as they may be called, are said to be produced by the
- alternate expansion and contraction of minute vesicles containing
- variously coloured fluids. <a href="#linknote-15" name="linknoteref-15"
- id="linknoteref-15"><small>15</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- This cuttle-fish displayed its chameleon-like power both during the act of
- swimming and whilst remaining stationary at the bottom. I was much amused
- by the various arts to escape detection used by one individual, which
- seemed fully aware that I was watching it. Remaining for a time
- motionless, it would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a cat
- after a mouse; sometimes changing its colour: it thus proceeded, till
- having gained a deeper part, it darted away, leaving a dusky train of ink
- to hide the hole into which it had crawled.
- </p>
- <p>
- While looking for marine animals, with my head about two feet above the
- rocky shore, I was more than once saluted by a jet of water, accompanied
- by a slight grating noise. At first I could not think what it was, but
- afterwards I found out that it was this cuttle-fish, which, though
- concealed in a hole, thus often led me to its discovery. That it possesses
- the power of ejecting water there is no doubt, and it appeared to me that
- it could certainly take good aim by directing the tube or siphon on the
- under side of its body. From the difficulty which these animals have in
- carrying their heads, they cannot crawl with ease when placed on the
- ground. I observed that one which I kept in the cabin was slightly
- phosphorescent in the dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- ST. PAUL'S ROCKS.&mdash;In crossing the Atlantic we hove-to during the
- morning of February 16th, close to the island of St. Paul's. This cluster
- of rocks is situated in 0 degs. 58' north latitude, and 29 degs. 15' west
- longitude. It is 540 miles distant from the coast of America, and 350 from
- the island of Fernando Noronha. The highest point is only fifty feet above
- the level of the sea, and the entire circumference is under three-quarters
- of a mile. This small point rises abruptly out of the depths of the ocean.
- Its mineralogical constitution is not simple; in some parts the rock is of
- a cherty, in others of a felspathic nature, including thin veins of
- serpentine. It is a remarkable fact, that all the many small islands,
- lying far from any continent, in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic Oceans,
- with the exception of the Seychelles and this little point of rock, are, I
- believe, composed either of coral or of erupted matter. The volcanic
- nature of these oceanic islands is evidently an extension of that law, and
- the effect of those same causes, whether chemical or mechanical, from
- which it results that a vast majority of the volcanoes now in action stand
- either near sea-coasts or as islands in the midst of the sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0002" id="linkimage-0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0027.jpg" alt="0027 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0027.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly white
- colour. This is partly owing to the dung of a vast multitude of seafowl,
- and partly to a coating of a hard glossy substance with a pearly lustre,
- which is intimately united to the surface of the rocks. This, when
- examined with a lens, is found to consist of numerous exceedingly thin
- layers, its total thickness being about the tenth of an inch. It contains
- much animal matter, and its origin, no doubt, is due to the action of the
- rain or spray on the birds' dung. Below some small masses of guano at
- Ascension, and on the Abrolhos Islets, I found certain stalactitic
- branching bodies, formed apparently in the same manner as the thin white
- coating on these rocks. The branching bodies so closely resembled in
- general appearance certain nulliporae (a family of hard calcareous
- sea-plants), that in lately looking hastily over my collection I did not
- perceive the difference. The globular extremities of the branches are of a
- pearly texture, like the enamel of teeth, but so hard as just to scratch
- plate-glass. I may here mention, that on a part of the coast of Ascension,
- where there is a vast accumulation of shelly sand, an incrustation is
- deposited on the tidal rocks by the water of the sea, resembling, as
- represented in the woodcut, certain cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often
- seen on damp walls. The surface of the fronds is beautifully glossy; and
- those parts formed where fully exposed to the light are of a jet black
- colour, but those shaded under ledges are only grey. I have shown
- specimens of this incrustation to several geologists, and they all thought
- that they were of volcanic or igneous origin! In its hardness and
- translucency&mdash;in its polish, equal to that of the finest oliva-shell&mdash;in
- the bad smell given out, and loss of colour under the blowpipe&mdash;it
- shows a close similarity with living sea-shells. Moreover, in sea-shells,
- it is known that the parts habitually covered and shaded by the mantle of
- the animal, are of a paler colour than those fully exposed to the light,
- just as is the case with this incrustation. When we remember that lime,
- either as a phosphate or carbonate, enters into the composition of the
- hard parts, such as bones and shells, of all living animals, it is an
- interesting physiological fact <a href="#linknote-16" name="linknoteref-16"
- id="linknoteref-16"><small>16</small></a> to find substances harder than
- the enamel of teeth, and coloured surfaces as well polished as those of a
- fresh shell, reformed through inorganic means from dead organic matter&mdash;mocking,
- also, in shape, some of the lower vegetable productions.
- </p>
- <p>
- We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds&mdash;the booby and the
- noddy. The former is a species of gannet, and the latter a tern. Both are
- of a tame and stupid disposition, and are so unaccustomed to visitors,
- that I could have killed any number of them with my geological hammer. The
- booby lays her eggs on the bare rock; but the tern makes a very simple
- nest with sea-weed. By the side of many of these nests a small flying-fish
- was placed; which I suppose, had been brought by the male bird for its
- partner. It was amusing to watch how quickly a large and active crab
- (Graspus), which inhabits the crevices of the rock, stole the fish from
- the side of the nest, as soon as we had disturbed the parent birds. Sir W.
- Symonds, one of the few persons who have landed here, informs me that he
- saw the crabs dragging even the young birds out of their nests, and
- devouring them. Not a single plant, not even a lichen, grows on this
- islet; yet it is inhabited by several insects and spiders. The following
- list completes, I believe, the terrestrial fauna: a fly (Olfersia) living
- on the booby, and a tick which must have come here as a parasite on the
- birds; a small brown moth, belonging to a genus that feeds on feathers; a
- beetle (Quedius) and a woodlouse from beneath the dung; and lastly,
- numerous spiders, which I suppose prey on these small attendants and
- scavengers of the water-fowl. The often repeated description of the
- stately palm and other noble tropical plants, then birds, and lastly man,
- taking possession of the coral islets as soon as formed, in the Pacific,
- is probably not correct; I fear it destroys the poetry of this story, that
- feather and dirt-feeding and parasitic insects and spiders should be the
- first inhabitants of newly formed oceanic land.
- </p>
- <p>
- The smallest rock in the tropical seas, by giving a foundation for the
- growth of innumerable kinds of sea-weed and compound animals, supports
- likewise a large number of fish. The sharks and the seamen in the boats
- maintained a constant struggle which should secure the greater share of
- the prey caught by the fishing-lines. I have heard that a rock near the
- Bermudas, lying many miles out at sea, and at a considerable depth, was
- first discovered by the circumstance of fish having been observed in the
- neighbourhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- FERNANDO NORONHA, Feb. 20th.&mdash;As far as I was enabled to observe,
- during the few hours we stayed at this place, the constitution of the
- island is volcanic, but probably not of a recent date. The most remarkable
- feature is a conical hill, about one thousand feet high, the upper part of
- which is exceedingly steep, and on one side overhangs its base. The rock
- is phonolite, and is divided into irregular columns. On viewing one of
- these isolated masses, at first one is inclined to believe that it has
- been suddenly pushed up in a semi-fluid state. At St. Helena, however, I
- ascertained that some pinnacles, of a nearly similar figure and
- constitution, had been formed by the injection of melted rock into
- yielding strata, which thus had formed the moulds for these gigantic
- obelisks. The whole island is covered with wood; but from the dryness of
- the climate there is no appearance of luxuriance. Half-way up the
- mountain, some great masses of the columnar rock, shaded by laurel-like
- trees, and ornamented by others covered with fine pink flowers but without
- a single leaf, gave a pleasing effect to the nearer parts of the scenery.
- </p>
- <p>
- BAHIA, OR SAN SALVADOR. BRAZIL, Feb. 29th.&mdash;The day has passed
- delightfully. Delight itself, however, is a weak term to express the
- feelings of a naturalist who, for the first time, has wandered by himself
- in a Brazilian forest. The elegance of the grasses, the novelty of the
- parasitical plants, the beauty of the flowers, the glossy green of the
- foliage, but above all the general luxuriance of the vegetation, filled me
- with admiration. A most paradoxical mixture of sound and silence pervades
- the shady parts of the wood. The noise from the insects is so loud, that
- it may be heard even in a vessel anchored several hundred yards from the
- shore; yet within the recesses of the forest a universal silence appears
- to reign. To a person fond of natural history, such a day as this brings
- with it a deeper pleasure than he can ever hope to experience again. After
- wandering about for some hours, I returned to the landing-place; but,
- before reaching it, I was overtaken by a tropical storm. I tried to find
- shelter under a tree, which was so thick that it would never have been
- penetrated by common English rain; but here, in a couple of minutes, a
- little torrent flowed down the trunk. It is to this violence of the rain
- that we must attribute the verdure at the bottom of the thickest woods: if
- the showers were like those of a colder climate, the greater part would be
- absorbed or evaporated before it reached the ground. I will not at present
- attempt to describe the gaudy scenery of this noble bay, because, in our
- homeward voyage, we called here a second time, and I shall then have
- occasion to remark on it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Along the whole coast of Brazil, for a length of at least 2000 miles, and
- certainly for a considerable space inland, wherever solid rock occurs, it
- belongs to a granitic formation. The circumstance of this enormous area
- being constituted of materials which most geologists believe to have been
- crystallized when heated under pressure, gives rise to many curious
- reflections. Was this effect produced beneath the depths of a profound
- ocean? or did a covering of strata formerly extend over it, which has
- since been removed? Can we believe that any power, acting for a time short
- of infinity, could have denuded the granite over so many thousand square
- leagues?
- </p>
- <p>
- On a point not far from the city, where a rivulet entered the sea, I
- observed a fact connected with a subject discussed by Humboldt. <a
- href="#linknote-17" name="linknoteref-17" id="linknoteref-17"><small>17</small></a>
- At the cataracts of the great rivers Orinoco, Nile, and Congo, the
- syenitic rocks are coated by a black substance, appearing as if they had
- been polished with plumbago. The layer is of extreme thinness; and on
- analysis by Berzelius it was found to consist of the oxides of manganese
- and iron. In the Orinoco it occurs on the rocks periodically washed by the
- floods, and in those parts alone where the stream is rapid; or, as the
- Indians say, "the rocks are black where the waters are white." Here the
- coating is of a rich brown instead of a black colour, and seems to be
- composed of ferruginous matter alone. Hand specimens fail to give a just
- idea of these brown burnished stones which glitter in the sun's rays. They
- occur only within the limits of the tidal waves; and as the rivulet slowly
- trickles down, the surf must supply the polishing power of the cataracts
- in the great rivers. In like manner, the rise and fall of the tide
- probably answer to the periodical inundations; and thus the same effects
- are produced under apparently different but really similar circumstances.
- The origin, however, of these coatings of metallic oxides, which seem as
- if cemented to the rocks, is not understood; and no reason, I believe, can
- be assigned for their thickness remaining the same.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day I was amused by watching the habits of the Diodon antennatus,
- which was caught swimming near the shore. This fish, with its flabby skin,
- is well known to possess the singular power of distending itself into a
- nearly spherical form. After having been taken out of water for a short
- time, and then again immersed in it, a considerable quantity both of water
- and air is absorbed by the mouth, and perhaps likewise by the branchial
- orifices. This process is effected by two methods: the air is swallowed,
- and is then forced into the cavity of the body, its return being prevented
- by a muscular contraction which is externally visible: but the water
- enters in a gentle stream through the mouth, which is kept wide open and
- motionless; this latter action must, therefore, depend on suction. The
- skin about the abdomen is much looser than that on the back; hence, during
- the inflation, the lower surface becomes far more distended than the
- upper; and the fish, in consequence, floats with its back downwards.
- Cuvier doubts whether the Diodon in this position is able to swim; but not
- only can it thus move forward in a straight line, but it can turn round to
- either side. This latter movement is effected solely by the aid of the
- pectoral fins; the tail being collapsed, and not used. From the body being
- buoyed up with so much air, the branchial openings are out of water, but a
- stream drawn in by the mouth constantly flows through them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The fish, having remained in this distended state for a short time,
- generally expelled the air and water with considerable force from the
- branchial apertures and mouth. It could emit, at will, a certain portion
- of the water, and it appears, therefore, probable that this fluid is taken
- in partly for the sake of regulating its specific gravity. This Diodon
- possessed several means of defence. It could give a severe bite, and could
- eject water from its mouth to some distance, at the same time making a
- curious noise by the movement of its jaws. By the inflation of its body,
- the papillae, with which the skin is covered, become erect and pointed.
- But the most curious circumstance is, that it secretes from the skin of
- its belly, when handled, a most beautiful carmine-red fibrous matter,
- which stains ivory and paper in so permanent a manner that the tint is
- retained with all its brightness to the present day: I am quite ignorant
- of the nature and use of this secretion. I have heard from Dr. Allan of
- Forres, that he has frequently found a Diodon, floating alive and
- distended, in the stomach of the shark, and that on several occasions he
- has known it eat its way, not only through the coats of the stomach, but
- through the sides of the monster, which has thus been killed. Who would
- ever have imagined that a little soft fish could have destroyed the great
- and savage shark?
- </p>
- <p>
- March 18th.&mdash;We sailed from Bahia. A few days afterwards, when not
- far distant from the Abrolhos Islets, my attention was called to a
- reddish-brown appearance in the sea. The whole surface of the water, as it
- appeared under a weak lens, seemed as if covered by chopped bits of hay,
- with their ends jagged. These are minute cylindrical confervae, in bundles
- or rafts of from twenty to sixty in each. Mr. Berkeley informs me that
- they are the same species (Trichodesmium erythraeum) with that found over
- large spaces in the Red Sea, and whence its name of Red Sea is derived. <a
- href="#linknote-18" name="linknoteref-18" id="linknoteref-18"><small>18</small></a>
- Their numbers must be infinite: the ship passed through several bands of
- them, one of which was about ten yards wide, and, judging from the
- mud-like colour of the water, at least two and a half miles long. In
- almost every long voyage some account is given of these confervae. They
- appear especially common in the sea near Australia; and off Cape Leeuwin I
- found an allied but smaller and apparently different species. Captain
- Cook, in his third voyage, remarks, that the sailors gave to this
- appearance the name of sea-sawdust.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near Keeling Atoll, in the Indian Ocean, I observed many little masses of
- confervae a few inches square, consisting of long cylindrical threads of
- excessive thinness, so as to be barely visible to the naked eye, mingled
- with other rather larger bodies, finely conical at both ends. Two of these
- are shown in the woodcut united together. They vary in length from .04 to
- .06, and even to .08 of an inch in length; and in diameter from .006 to
- .008 of an inch. Near one extremity of the cylindrical part, a green
- septum, formed of granular matter, and thickest in the middle, may
- generally be seen. This, I believe, is the bottom of a most delicate,
- colourless sac, composed of a pulpy substance, which lines the exterior
- case, but does not extend within the extreme conical points. In some
- specimens, small but perfect spheres of brownish granular matter supplied
- the places of the septa; and I observed the curious process by which they
- were produced. The pulpy matter of the internal coating suddenly grouped
- itself into lines, some of which assumed a form radiating from a common
- centre; it then continued, with an irregular and rapid movement, to
- contract itself, so that in the course of a second the whole was united
- into a perfect little sphere, which occupied the position of the septum at
- one end of the now quite hollow case. The formation of the granular sphere
- was hastened by any accidental injury. I may add, that frequently a pair
- of these bodies were attached to each other, as represented above, cone
- beside cone, at that end where the septum occurs.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will add here a few other observations connected with the discoloration
- of the sea from organic causes. On the coast of Chile, a few leagues north
- of Concepcion, the Beagle one day passed through great bands of muddy
- water, exactly like that of a swollen river; and again, a degree south of
- Valparaiso, when fifty miles from the land, the same appearance was still
- more extensive. Some of the water placed in a glass was of a pale reddish
- tint; and, examined under a microscope, was seen to swarm with minute
- animalcula darting about, and often exploding. Their shape is oval, and
- contracted in the middle by a ring of vibrating curved ciliae. It was,
- however, very difficult to examine them with care, for almost the instant
- motion ceased, even while crossing the field of vision, their bodies
- burst. Sometimes both ends burst at once, sometimes only one, and a
- quantity of coarse, brownish, granular matter was ejected. The animal an
- instant before bursting expanded to half again its natural size; and the
- explosion took place about fifteen seconds after the rapid progressive
- motion had ceased: in a few cases it was preceded for a short interval by
- a rotatory movement on the longer axis. About two minutes after any number
- were isolated in a drop of water, they thus perished. The animals move
- with the narrow apex forwards, by the aid of their vibratory ciliae, and
- generally by rapid starts. They are exceedingly minute, and quite
- invisible to the naked eye, only covering a space equal to the square of
- the thousandth of an inch. Their numbers were infinite; for the smallest
- drop of water which I could remove contained very many. In one day we
- passed through two spaces of water thus stained, one of which alone must
- have extended over several square miles. What incalculable numbers of
- these microscopical animals! The colour of the water, as seen at some
- distance, was like that of a river which has flowed through a red clay
- district, but under the shade of the vessel's side it was quite as dark as
- chocolate. The line where the red and blue water joined was distinctly
- defined. The weather for some days previously had been calm, and the ocean
- abounded, to an unusual degree, with living creatures. <a
- href="#linknote-19" name="linknoteref-19" id="linknoteref-19"><small>19</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- In the sea around Tierra del Fuego, and at no great distance from the
- land, I have seen narrow lines of water of a bright red colour, from the
- number of crustacea, which somewhat resemble in form large prawns. The
- sealers call them whale-food. Whether whales feed on them I do not know;
- but terns, cormorants, and immense herds of great unwieldy seals derive,
- on some parts of the coast, their chief sustenance from these swimming
- crabs. Seamen invariably attribute the discoloration of the water to
- spawn; but I found this to be the case only on one occasion. At the
- distance of several leagues from the Archipelago of the Galapagos, the
- ship sailed through three strips of a dark yellowish, or mud-like water;
- these strips were some miles long, but only a few yards wide, and they
- were separated from the surrounding water by a sinuous yet distinct
- margin. The colour was caused by little gelatinous balls, about the fifth
- of an inch in diameter, in which numerous minute spherical ovules were
- imbedded: they were of two distinct kinds, one being of a reddish colour
- and of a different shape from the other. I cannot form a conjecture as to
- what two kinds of animals these belonged. Captain Colnett remarks, that
- this appearance is very common among the Galapagos Islands, and that the
- directions of the bands indicate that of the currents; in the described
- case, however, the line was caused by the wind. The only other appearance
- which I have to notice, is a thin oily coat on the water which displays
- iridescent colours. I saw a considerable tract of the ocean thus covered
- on the coast of Brazil; the seamen attributed it to the putrefying carcase
- of some whale, which probably was floating at no great distance. I do not
- here mention the minute gelatinous particles, hereafter to be referred to,
- which are frequently dispersed throughout the water, for they are not
- sufficiently abundant to create any change of colour.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are two circumstances in the above accounts which appear remarkable:
- first, how do the various bodies which form the bands with defined edges
- keep together? In the case of the prawn-like crabs, their movements were
- as co-instantaneous as in a regiment of soldiers; but this cannot happen
- from anything like voluntary action with the ovules, or the confervae, nor
- is it probable among the infusoria. Secondly, what causes the length and
- narrowness of the bands? The appearance so much resembles that which may
- be seen in every torrent, where the stream uncoils into long streaks the
- froth collected in the eddies, that I must attribute the effect to a
- similar action either of the currents of the air or sea. Under this
- supposition we must believe that the various organized bodies are produced
- in certain favourable places, and are thence removed by the set of either
- wind or water. I confess, however, there is a very great difficulty in
- imagining any one spot to be the birthplace of the millions of millions of
- animalcula and confervae: for whence come the germs at such points?&mdash;the
- parent bodies having been distributed by the winds and waves over the
- immense ocean. But on no other hypothesis can I understand their linear
- grouping. I may add that Scoresby remarks that green water abounding with
- pelagic animals is invariably found in a certain part of the Arctic Sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0002" id="link2HCH0002"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER II &mdash; RIO DE JANEIRO
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Rio de Janeiro&mdash;Excursion north of Cape Frio&mdash;Great
- Evaporation&mdash;Slavery&mdash;Botofogo Bay&mdash;Terrestrial Planariae&mdash;Clouds
- on the Corcovado&mdash;Heavy Rain&mdash;Musical Frogs&mdash;Phosphorescent
- Insects&mdash;Elater, springing powers of&mdash;Blue Haze&mdash;Noise made
- by a Butterfly&mdash;Entomology&mdash;Ants&mdash;Wasp killing a Spider&mdash;Parasitical
- Spider&mdash;Artifices of an Epeira&mdash;Gregarious Spider&mdash;Spider
- with an unsymmetrical Web.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>PRIL 4th to July
- 5th, 1832.&mdash;A few days after our arrival I became acquainted with an
- Englishman who was going to visit his estate, situated rather more than a
- hundred miles from the capital, to the northward of Cape Frio. I gladly
- accepted his kind offer of allowing me to accompany him.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 8th.&mdash;Our party amounted to seven. The first stage was very
- interesting. The day was powerfully hot, and as we passed through the
- woods, everything was motionless, excepting the large and brilliant
- butterflies, which lazily fluttered about. The view seen when crossing the
- hills behind Praia Grande was most beautiful; the colours were intense,
- and the prevailing tint a dark blue; the sky and the calm waters of the
- bay vied with each other in splendour. After passing through some
- cultivated country, we entered a forest, which in the grandeur of all its
- parts could not be exceeded. We arrived by midday at Ithacaia; this small
- village is situated on a plain, and round the central house are the huts
- of the negroes. These, from their regular form and position, reminded me
- of the drawings of the Hottentot habitations in Southern Africa. As the
- moon rose early, we determined to start the same evening for our
- sleeping-place at the Lagoa Marica. As it was growing dark we passed under
- one of the massive, bare, and steep hills of granite which are so common
- in this country. This spot is notorious from having been, for a long time,
- the residence of some runaway slaves, who, by cultivating a little ground
- near the top, contrived to eke out a subsistence. At length they were
- discovered, and a party of soldiers being sent, the whole were seized with
- the exception of one old woman, who, sooner than again be led into
- slavery, dashed herself to pieces from the summit of the mountain. In a
- Roman matron this would have been called the noble love of freedom: in a
- poor negress it is mere brutal obstinacy. We continued riding for some
- hours. For the few last miles the road was intricate, and it passed
- through a desert waste of marshes and lagoons. The scene by the dimmed
- light of the moon was most desolate. A few fireflies flitted by us; and
- the solitary snipe, as it rose, uttered its plaintive cry. The distant and
- sullen roar of the sea scarcely broke the stillness of the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 9th.&mdash;We left our miserable sleeping-place before sunrise. The
- road passed through a narrow sandy plain, lying between the sea and the
- interior salt lagoons. The number of beautiful fishing birds, such as
- egrets and cranes, and the succulent plants assuming most fantastical
- forms, gave to the scene an interest which it would not otherwise have
- possessed. The few stunted trees were loaded with parasitical plants,
- among which the beauty and delicious fragrance of some of the orchideae
- were most to be admired. As the sun rose, the day became extremely hot,
- and the reflection of the light and heat from the white sand was very
- distressing. We dined at Mandetiba; the thermometer in the shade being 84
- degs. The beautiful view of the distant wooded hills, reflected in the
- perfectly calm water of an extensive lagoon, quite refreshed us. As the
- venda <a href="#linknote-21" name="linknoteref-21" id="linknoteref-21"><small>21</small></a>
- here was a very good one, and I have the pleasant, but rare remembrance,
- of an excellent dinner, I will be grateful and presently describe it, as
- the type of its class. These houses are often large, and are built of
- thick upright posts, with boughs interwoven, and afterwards plastered.
- They seldom have floors, and never glazed windows; but are generally
- pretty well roofed. Universally the front part is open, forming a kind of
- verandah, in which tables and benches are placed. The bed-rooms join on
- each side, and here the passenger may sleep as comfortably as he can, on a
- wooden platform, covered by a thin straw mat. The venda stands in a
- courtyard, where the horses are fed. On first arriving it was our custom
- to unsaddle the horses and give them their Indian corn; then, with a low
- bow, to ask the senhor to do us the favour to give up something to eat.
- "Anything you choose, sir," was his usual answer. For the few first times,
- vainly I thanked providence for having guided us to so good a man. The
- conversation proceeding, the case universally became deplorable. "Any fish
- can you do us the favour of giving ?"&mdash;"Oh! no, sir."&mdash;"Any
- soup?"&mdash;"No, sir."&mdash;"Any bread?"&mdash;"Oh! no, sir."&mdash;"Any
- dried meat?"&mdash;"Oh! no, sir." If we were lucky, by waiting a couple of
- hours, we obtained fowls, rice, and farinha. It not unfrequently happened,
- that we were obliged to kill, with stones, the poultry for our own supper.
- When, thoroughly exhausted by fatigue and hunger, we timorously hinted
- that we should be glad of our meal, the pompous, and (though true) most
- unsatisfactory answer was, "It will be ready when it is ready." If we had
- dared to remonstrate any further, we should have been told to proceed on
- our journey, as being too impertinent. The hosts are most ungracious and
- disagreeable in their manners; their houses and their persons are often
- filthily dirty; the want of the accommodation of forks, knives, and spoons
- is common; and I am sure no cottage or hovel in England could be found in
- a state so utterly destitute of every comfort. At Campos Novos, however,
- we fared sumptuously; having rice and fowls, biscuit, wine, and spirits,
- for dinner; coffee in the evening, and fish with coffee for breakfast. All
- this, with good food for the horses, only cost 2s. 6d. per head. Yet the
- host of this venda, being asked if he knew anything of a whip which one of
- the party had lost, gruffly answered, "How should I know? why did you not
- take care of it?&mdash;I suppose the dogs have eaten it."
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving Mandetiba, we continued to pass through an intricate wilderness of
- lakes; in some of which were fresh, in others salt water shells. Of the
- former kinds, I found a Limnaea in great numbers in a lake, into which,
- the inhabitants assured me that the sea enters once a year, and sometimes
- oftener, and makes the water quite salt. I have no doubt many interesting
- facts, in relation to marine and fresh water animals, might be observed in
- this chain of lagoons, which skirt the coast of Brazil. M. Gay <a
- href="#linknote-22" name="linknoteref-22" id="linknoteref-22"><small>22</small></a>
- has stated that he found in the neighbourhood of Rio, shells of the marine
- genera solen and mytilus, and fresh water ampullariae, living together in
- brackish water. I also frequently observed in the lagoon near the Botanic
- Garden, where the water is only a little less salt than in the sea, a
- species of hydrophilus, very similar to a water-beetle common in the
- ditches of England: in the same lake the only shell belonged to a genus
- generally found in estuaries.
- </p>
- <p>
- Leaving the coast for a time, we again entered the forest. The trees were
- very lofty, and remarkable, compared with those of Europe, from the
- whiteness of their trunks. I see by my note-book, "wonderful and
- beautiful, flowering parasites," invariably struck me as the most novel
- object in these grand scenes. Travelling onwards we passed through tracts
- of pasturage, much injured by the enormous conical ants' nests, which were
- nearly twelve feet high. They gave to the plain exactly the appearance of
- the mud volcanos at Jorullo, as figured by Humboldt. We arrived at
- Engenhodo after it was dark, having been ten hours on horseback. I never
- ceased, during the whole journey, to be surprised at the amount of labour
- which the horses were capable of enduring; they appeared also to recover
- from any injury much sooner than those of our English breed. The Vampire
- bat is often the cause of much trouble, by biting the horses on their
- withers. The injury is generally not so much owing to the loss of blood,
- as to the inflammation which the pressure of the saddle afterwards
- produces. The whole circumstance has lately been doubted in England; I was
- therefore fortunate in being present when one (Desmodus d'orbignyi, Wat.)
- was actually caught on a horse's back. We were bivouacking late one
- evening near Coquimbo, in Chile, when my servant, noticing that one of the
- horses was very restive, went to see what was the matter, and fancying he
- could distinguish something, suddenly put his hand on the beast's withers,
- and secured the vampire. In the morning the spot where the bite had been
- inflicted was easily distinguished from being slightly swollen and bloody.
- The third day afterwards we rode the horse, without any ill effects.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 13th.&mdash;After three days' travelling we arrived at Socego, the
- estate of Senhor Manuel Figuireda, a relation of one of our party. The
- house was simple, and, though like a barn in form, was well suited to the
- climate. In the sitting-room gilded chairs and sofas were oddly contrasted
- with the whitewashed walls, thatched roof, and windows without glass. The
- house, together with the granaries, the stables, and workshops for the
- blacks, who had been taught various trades, formed a rude kind of
- quadrangle; in the centre of which a large pile of coffee was drying.
- These buildings stand on a little hill, overlooking the cultivated ground,
- and surrounded on every side by a wall of dark green luxuriant forest. The
- chief produce of this part of the country is coffee. Each tree is supposed
- to yield annually, on an average, two pounds; but some give as much as
- eight. Mandioca or cassada is likewise cultivated in great quantity. Every
- part of this plant is useful; the leaves and stalks are eaten by the
- horses, and the roots are ground into a pulp, which, when pressed dry and
- baked, forms the farinha, the principal article of sustenance in the
- Brazils. It is a curious, though well-known fact, that the juice of this
- most nutritious plant is highly poisonous. A few years ago a cow died at
- this Fazenda, in consequence of having drunk some of it. Senhor Figuireda
- told me that he had planted, the year before, one bag of feijao or beans,
- and three of rice; the former of which produced eighty, and the latter
- three hundred and twenty fold. The pasturage supports a fine stock of
- cattle, and the woods are so full of game that a deer had been killed on
- each of the three previous days. This profusion of food showed itself at
- dinner, where, if the tables did not groan, the guests surely did; for
- each person is expected to eat of every dish. One day, having, as I
- thought, nicely calculated so that nothing should go away untasted, to my
- utter dismay a roast turkey and a pig appeared in all their substantial
- reality. During the meals, it was the employment of a man to drive out of
- the room sundry old hounds, and dozens of little black children, which
- crawled in together, at every opportunity. As long as the idea of slavery
- could be banished, there was something exceedingly fascinating in this
- simple and patriarchal style of living: it was such a perfect retirement
- and independence from the rest of the world.
- </p>
- <p>
- As soon as any stranger is seen arriving, a large bell is set tolling, and
- generally some small cannon are fired. The event is thus announced to the
- rocks and woods, but to nothing else. One morning I walked out an hour
- before daylight to admire the solemn stillness of the scene; at last, the
- silence was broken by the morning hymn, raised on high by the whole body
- of the blacks; and in this manner their daily work is generally begun. On
- such fazendas as these, I have no doubt the slaves pass happy and
- contented lives. On Saturday and Sunday they work for themselves, and in
- this fertile climate the labour of two days is sufficient to support a man
- and his family for the whole week.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 14th.&mdash;Leaving Socego, we rode to another estate on the Rio
- Macae, which was the last patch of cultivated ground in that direction.
- The estate was two and a half miles long, and the owner had forgotten how
- many broad. Only a very small piece had been cleared, yet almost every
- acre was capable of yielding all the various rich productions of a
- tropical land. Considering the enormous area of Brazil, the proportion of
- cultivated ground can scarcely be considered as anything, compared to that
- which is left in the state of nature: at some future age, how vast a
- population it will support! During the second day's journey we found the
- road so shut up, that it was necessary that a man should go ahead with a
- sword to cut away the creepers. The forest abounded with beautiful
- objects; among which the tree ferns, though not large, were, from their
- bright green foliage, and the elegant curvature of their fronds, most
- worthy of admiration. In the evening it rained very heavily, and although
- the thermometer stood at 65 degs., I felt very cold. As soon as the rain
- ceased, it was curious to observe the extraordinary evaporation which
- commenced over the whole extent of the forest. At the height of a hundred
- feet the hills were buried in a dense white vapour, which rose like
- columns of smoke from the most thickly wooded parts, and especially from
- the valleys. I observed this phenomenon on several occasions. I suppose it
- is owing to the large surface of foliage, previously heated by the sun's
- rays.
- </p>
- <p>
- While staying at this estate, I was very nearly being an eye-witness to
- one of those atrocious acts which can only take place in a slave country.
- Owing to a quarrel and a lawsuit, the owner was on the point of taking all
- the women and children from the male slaves, and selling them separately
- at the public auction at Rio. Interest, and not any feeling of compassion,
- prevented this act. Indeed, I do not believe the inhumanity of separating
- thirty families, who had lived together for many years, even occurred to
- the owner. Yet I will pledge myself, that in humanity and good feeling he
- was superior to the common run of men. It may be said there exists no
- limit to the blindness of interest and selfish habit. I may mention one
- very trifling anecdote, which at the time struck me more forcibly than any
- story of cruelty. I was crossing a ferry with a negro, who was uncommonly
- stupid. In endeavouring to make him understand, I talked loud, and made
- signs, in doing which I passed my hand near his face. He, I suppose,
- thought I was in a passion, and was going to strike him; for instantly,
- with a frightened look and half-shut eyes, he dropped his hands. I shall
- never forget my feelings of surprise, disgust, and shame, at seeing a
- great powerful man afraid even to ward off a blow, directed, as he
- thought, at his face. This man had been trained to a degradation lower
- than the slavery of the most helpless animal.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 18th.&mdash;In returning we spent two days at Socego, and I employed
- them in collecting insects in the forest. The greater number of trees,
- although so lofty, are not more than three or four feet in circumference.
- There are, of course, a few of much greater dimensions. Senhor Manuel was
- then making a canoe 70 feet in length from a solid trunk, which had
- originally been 110 feet long, and of great thickness. The contrast of
- palm trees, growing amidst the common branching kinds, never fails to give
- the scene an intertropical character. Here the woods were ornamented by
- the Cabbage Palm&mdash;one of the most beautiful of its family. With a
- stem so narrow that it might be clasped with the two hands, it waves its
- elegant head at the height of forty or fifty feet above the ground. The
- woody creepers, themselves covered by other creepers, were of great
- thickness: some which I measured were two feet in circumference. Many of
- the older trees presented a very curious appearance from the tresses of a
- liana hanging from their boughs, and resembling bundles of hay. If the eye
- was turned from the world of foliage above, to the ground beneath, it was
- attracted by the extreme elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae.
- The latter, in some parts, covered the surface with a brushwood only a few
- inches high. In walking across these thick beds of mimosae, a broad track
- was marked by the change of shade, produced by the drooping of their
- sensitive petioles. It is easy to specify the individual objects of
- admiration in these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an
- adequate idea of the higher feelings of wonder, astonishment, and
- devotion, which fill and elevate the mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 19th.&mdash;Leaving Socego, during the two first days, we retraced
- our steps. It was very wearisome work, as the road generally ran across a
- glaring hot sandy plain, not far from the coast. I noticed that each time
- the horse put its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle chirping noise
- was produced. On the third day we took a different line, and passed
- through the gay little village of Madre de Deos. This is one of the
- principal lines of road in Brazil; yet it was in so bad a state that no
- wheeled vehicle, excepting the clumsy bullock-wagon, could pass along. In
- our whole journey we did not cross a single bridge built of stone; and
- those made of logs of wood were frequently so much out of repair, that it
- was necessary to go on one side to avoid them. All distances are
- inaccurately known. The road is often marked by crosses, in the place of
- milestones, to signify where human blood has been spilled. On the evening
- of the 23rd we arrived at Rio, having finished our pleasant little
- excursion.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the remainder of my stay at Rio, I resided in a cottage at Botofogo
- Bay. It was impossible to wish for anything more delightful than thus to
- spend some weeks in so magnificent a country. In England any person fond
- of natural history enjoys in his walks a great advantage, by always having
- something to attract his attention; but in these fertile climates, teeming
- with life, the attractions are so numerous, that he is scarcely able to
- walk at all.
- </p>
- <p>
- The few observations which I was enabled to make were almost exclusively
- confined to the invertebrate animals. The existence of a division of the
- genus Planaria, which inhabits the dry land, interested me much. These
- animals are of so simple a structure, that Cuvier has arranged them with
- the intestinal worms, though never found within the bodies of other
- animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh water; but those to
- which I allude were found, even in the drier parts of the forest, beneath
- logs of rotten wood, on which I believe they feed. In general form they
- resemble little slugs, but are very much narrower in proportion, and
- several of the species are beautifully coloured with longitudinal stripes.
- Their structure is very simple: near the middle of the under or crawling
- surface there are two small transverse slits, from the anterior one of
- which a funnel-shaped and highly irritable mouth can be protruded. For
- some time after the rest of the animal was completely dead from the
- effects of salt water or any other cause, this organ still retained its
- vitality.
- </p>
- <p>
- I found no less than twelve different species of terrestrial Planariae in
- different parts of the southern hemisphere. <a href="#linknote-23"
- name="linknoteref-23" id="linknoteref-23"><small>23</small></a> Some
- specimens which I obtained at Van Dieman's Land, I kept alive for nearly
- two months, feeding them on rotten wood. Having cut one of them
- transversely into two nearly equal parts, in the course of a fortnight
- both had the shape of perfect animals. I had, however, so divided the
- body, that one of the halves contained both the inferior orifices, and the
- other, in consequence, none. In the course of twenty-five days from the
- operation, the more perfect half could not have been distinguished from
- any other specimen. The other had increased much in size; and towards its
- posterior end, a clear space was formed in the parenchymatous mass, in
- which a rudimentary cup-shaped mouth could clearly be distinguished; on
- the under surface, however, no corresponding slit was yet open. If the
- increased heat of the weather, as we approached the equator, had not
- destroyed all the individuals, there can be no doubt that this last step
- would have completed its structure. Although so well-known an experiment,
- it was interesting to watch the gradual production of every essential
- organ, out of the simple extremity of another animal. It is extremely
- difficult to preserve these Planariae; as soon as the cessation of life
- allows the ordinary laws of change to act, their entire bodies become soft
- and fluid, with a rapidity which I have never seen equalled.
- </p>
- <p>
- I first visited the forest in which these Planariae were found, in company
- with an old Portuguese priest who took me out to hunt with him. The sport
- consisted in turning into the cover a few dogs, and then patiently waiting
- to fire at any animal which might appear. We were accompanied by the son
- of a neighbouring farmer&mdash;a good specimen of a wild Brazilian youth.
- He was dressed in a tattered old shirt and trousers, and had his head
- uncovered: he carried an old-fashioned gun and a large knife. The habit of
- carrying the knife is universal; and in traversing a thick wood it is
- almost necessary, on account of the creeping plants. The frequent
- occurrence of murder may be partly attributed to this habit. The
- Brazilians are so dexterous with the knife, that they can throw it to some
- distance with precision, and with sufficient force to cause a fatal wound.
- I have seen a number of little boys practising this art as a game of play
- and from their skill in hitting an upright stick, they promised well for
- more earnest attempts. My companion, the day before, had shot two large
- bearded monkeys. These animals have prehensile tails, the extremity of
- which, even after death, can support the whole weight of the body. One of
- them thus remained fast to a branch, and it was necessary to cut down a
- large tree to procure it. This was soon effected, and down came tree and
- monkey with an awful crash. Our day's sport, besides the monkey, was
- confined to sundry small green parrots and a few toucans. I profited,
- however, by my acquaintance with the Portuguese padre, for on another
- occasion he gave me a fine specimen of the Yagouaroundi cat.
- </p>
- <p>
- Every one has heard of the beauty of the scenery near Botofogo. The house
- in which I lived was seated close beneath the well-known mountain of the
- Corcovado. It has been remarked, with much truth, that abruptly conical
- hills are characteristic of the formation which Humboldt designates as
- gneiss-granite. Nothing can be more striking than the effect of these huge
- rounded masses of naked rock rising out of the most luxuriant vegetation.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was often interested by watching the clouds, which, rolling in from
- seaward, formed a bank just beneath the highest point of the Corcovado.
- This mountain, like most others, when thus partly veiled, appeared to rise
- to a far prouder elevation than its real height of 2300 feet. Mr. Daniell
- has observed, in his meteorological essays, that a cloud sometimes appears
- fixed on a mountain summit, while the wind continues to blow over it. The
- same phenomenon here presented a slightly different appearance. In this
- case the cloud was clearly seen to curl over, and rapidly pass by the
- summit, and yet was neither diminished nor increased in size. The sun was
- setting, and a gentle southerly breeze, striking against the southern side
- of the rock, mingled its current with the colder air above; and the vapour
- was thus condensed; but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over the
- ridge, and came within the influence of the warmer atmosphere of the
- northern sloping bank, they were immediately re-dissolved.
- </p>
- <p>
- The climate, during the months of May and June, or the beginning of
- winter, was delightful. The mean temperature, from observations taken at
- nine o'clock, both morning and evening, was only 72 degs. It often rained
- heavily, but the drying southerly winds soon again rendered the walks
- pleasant. One morning, in the course of six hours, 1.6 inches of rain
- fell. As this storm passed over the forests which surround the Corcovado,
- the sound produced by the drops pattering on the countless multitude of
- leaves was very remarkable, it could be heard at the distance of a quarter
- of a mile, and was like the rushing of a great body of water. After the
- hotter days, it was delicious to sit quietly in the garden and watch the
- evening pass into night. Nature, in these climes, chooses her vocalists
- from more humble performers than in Europe. A small frog, of the genus
- Hyla, sits on a blade of grass about an inch above the surface of the
- water, and sends forth a pleasing chirp: when several are together they
- sing in harmony on different notes. I had some difficulty in catching a
- specimen of this frog. The genus Hyla has its toes terminated by small
- suckers; and I found this animal could crawl up a pane of glass, when
- placed absolutely perpendicular. Various cicidae and crickets, at the same
- time, keep up a ceaseless shrill cry, but which, softened by the distance,
- is not unpleasant. Every evening after dark this great concert commenced;
- and often have I sat listening to it, until my attention has been drawn
- away by some curious passing insect.
- </p>
- <p>
- At these times the fireflies are seen flitting about from hedge to hedge.
- On a dark night the light can be seen at about two hundred paces distant.
- It is remarkable that in all the different kinds of glowworms, shining
- elaters, and various marine animals (such as the crustacea, medusae,
- nereidae, a coralline of the genus Clytia, and Pyrosma), which I have
- observed, the light has been of a well-marked green colour. All the
- fireflies, which I caught here, belonged to the Lampyridae (in which
- family the English glowworm is included), and the greater number of
- specimens were of Lampyris occidentalis. <a href="#linknote-24"
- name="linknoteref-24" id="linknoteref-24"><small>24</small></a> I found
- that this insect emitted the most brilliant flashes when irritated: in the
- intervals, the abdominal rings were obscured. The flash was almost
- co-instantaneous in the two rings, but it was just perceptible first in
- the anterior one. The shining matter was fluid and very adhesive: little
- spots, where the skin had been torn, continued bright with a slight
- scintillation, whilst the uninjured parts were obscured. When the insect
- was decapitated the rings remained uninterruptedly bright, but not so
- brilliant as before: local irritation with a needle always increased the
- vividness of the light. The rings in one instance retained their luminous
- property nearly twenty-four hours after the death of the insect. From
- these facts it would appear probable, that the animal has only the power
- of concealing or extinguishing the light for short intervals, and that at
- other times the display is involuntary. On the muddy and wet gravel-walks
- I found the larvae of this lampyris in great numbers: they resembled in
- general form the female of the English glowworm. These larvae possessed
- but feeble luminous powers; very differently from their parents, on the
- slightest touch they feigned death and ceased to shine; nor did irritation
- excite any fresh display. I kept several of them alive for some time:
- their tails are very singular organs, for they act, by a well-fitted
- contrivance, as suckers or organs of attachment, and likewise as
- reservoirs for saliva, or some such fluid. I repeatedly fed them on raw
- meat; and I invariably observed, that every now and then the extremity of
- the tail was applied to the mouth, and a drop of fluid exuded on the meat,
- which was then in the act of being consumed. The tail, notwithstanding so
- much practice, does not seem to be able to find its way to the mouth; at
- least the neck was always touched first, and apparently as a guide.
- </p>
- <p>
- When we were at Bahia, an elater or beetle (Pyrophorus luminosus, Illig.)
- seemed the most common luminous insect. The light in this case was also
- rendered more brilliant by irritation. I amused myself one day by
- observing the springing powers of this insect, which have not, as it
- appears to me, been properly described. <a href="#linknote-25"
- name="linknoteref-25" id="linknoteref-25"><small>25</small></a> The
- elater, when placed on its back and preparing to spring, moved its head
- and thorax backwards, so that the pectoral spine was drawn out, and rested
- on the edge of its sheath. The same backward movement being continued, the
- spine, by the full action of the muscles, was bent like a spring; and the
- insect at this moment rested on the extremity of its head and wing-cases.
- The effort being suddenly relaxed, the head and thorax flew up, and in
- consequence, the base of the wing-cases struck the supporting surface with
- such force, that the insect by the reaction was jerked upwards to the
- height of one or two inches. The projecting points of the thorax, and the
- sheath of the spine, served to steady the whole body during the spring. In
- the descriptions which I have read, sufficient stress does not appear to
- have been laid on the elasticity of the spine: so sudden a spring could
- not be the result of simple muscular contraction, without the aid of some
- mechanical contrivance.
- </p>
- <p>
- On several occasions I enjoyed some short but most pleasant excursions in
- the neighbouring country. One day I went to the Botanic Garden, where many
- plants, well known for their great utility, might be seen growing. The
- leaves of the camphor, pepper, cinnamon, and clove trees were delightfully
- aromatic; and the bread-fruit, the jaca, and the mango, vied with each
- other in the magnificence of their foliage. The landscape in the
- neighbourhood of Bahia almost takes its character from the two latter
- trees. Before seeing them, I had no idea that any trees could cast so
- black a shade on the ground. Both of them bear to the evergreen vegetation
- of these climates the same kind of relation which laurels and hollies in
- England do to the lighter green of the deciduous trees. It may be
- observed, that the houses within the tropics are surrounded by the most
- beautiful forms of vegetation, because many of them are at the same time
- most useful to man. Who can doubt that these qualities are united in the
- banana, the cocoa-nut, the many kinds of palm, the orange, and the
- bread-fruit tree?
- </p>
- <p>
- During this day I was particularly struck with a remark of Humboldt's, who
- often alludes to "the thin vapour which, without changing the transparency
- of the air, renders its tints more harmonious, and softens its effects."
- This is an appearance which I have never observed in the temperate zones.
- The atmosphere, seen through a short space of half or three-quarters of a
- mile, was perfectly lucid, but at a greater distance all colours were
- blended into a most beautiful haze, of a pale French grey, mingled with a
- little blue. The condition of the atmosphere between the morning and about
- noon, when the effect was most evident, had undergone little change,
- excepting in its dryness. In the interval, the difference between the dew
- point and temperature had increased from 7.5 to 17 degs.
- </p>
- <p>
- On another occasion I started early and walked to the Gavia, or topsail
- mountain. The air was delightfully cool and fragrant; and the drops of dew
- still glittered on the leaves of the large liliaceous plants, which shaded
- the streamlets of clear water. Sitting down on a block of granite, it was
- delightful to watch the various insects and birds as they flew past. The
- humming-bird seems particularly fond of such shady retired spots. Whenever
- I saw these little creatures buzzing round a flower, with their wings
- vibrating so rapidly as to be scarcely visible, I was reminded of the
- sphinx moths: their movements and habits are indeed in many respects very
- similar.
- </p>
- <p>
- Following a pathway, I entered a noble forest, and from a height of five
- or six hundred feet, one of those splendid views was presented, which are
- so common on every side of Rio. At this elevation the landscape attains
- its most brilliant tint; and every form, every shade, so completely
- surpasses in magnificence all that the European has ever beheld in his own
- country, that he knows not how to express his feelings. The general effect
- frequently recalled to my mind the gayest scenery of the Opera-house or
- the great theatres. I never returned from these excursions empty-handed.
- This day I found a specimen of a curious fungus, called Hymenophallus.
- Most people know the English Phallus, which in autumn taints the air with
- its odious smell: this, however, as the entomologist is aware, is, to some
- of our beetles a delightful fragrance. So was it here; for a Strongylus,
- attracted by the odour, alighted on the fungus as I carried it in my hand.
- We here see in two distant countries a similar relation between plants and
- insects of the same families, though the species of both are different.
- When man is the agent in introducing into a country a new species, this
- relation is often broken: as one instance of this I may mention, that the
- leaves of the cabbages and lettuces, which in England afford food to such
- a multitude of slugs and caterpillars, in the gardens near Rio are
- untouched.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our stay at Brazil I made a large collection of insects. A few
- general observations on the comparative importance of the different orders
- may be interesting to the English entomologist. The large and brilliantly
- coloured Lepidoptera bespeak the zone they inhabit, far more plainly than
- any other race of animals. I allude only to the butterflies; for the
- moths, contrary to what might have been expected from the rankness of the
- vegetation, certainly appeared in much fewer numbers than in our own
- temperate regions. I was much surprised at the habits of Papilio feronia.
- This butterfly is not uncommon, and generally frequents the orange-groves.
- Although a high flier, yet it very frequently alights on the trunks of
- trees. On these occasions its head is invariably placed downwards; and its
- wings are expanded in a horizontal plane, instead of being folded
- vertically, as is commonly the case. This is the only butterfly which I
- have ever seen, that uses its legs for running. Not being aware of this
- fact, the insect, more than once, as I cautiously approached with my
- forceps, shuffled on one side just as the instrument was on the point of
- closing, and thus escaped. But a far more singular fact is the power which
- this species possesses of making a noise. <a href="#linknote-26"
- name="linknoteref-26" id="linknoteref-26"><small>26</small></a> Several
- times when a pair, probably male and female, were chasing each other in an
- irregular course, they passed within a few yards of me; and I distinctly
- heard a clicking noise, similar to that produced by a toothed wheel
- passing under a spring catch. The noise was continued at short intervals,
- and could be distinguished at about twenty yards' distance: I am certain
- there is no error in the observation.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was disappointed in the general aspect of the Coleoptera. The number of
- minute and obscurely coloured beetles is exceedingly great. <a
- href="#linknote-27" name="linknoteref-27" id="linknoteref-27"><small>27</small></a>
- The cabinets of Europe can, as yet, boast only of the larger species from
- tropical climates. It is sufficient to disturb the composure of an
- entomologist's mind, to look forward to the future dimensions of a
- complete catalogue. The carnivorous beetles, or Carabidae, appear in
- extremely few numbers within the tropics: this is the more remarkable when
- compared to the case of the carnivorous quadrupeds, which are so abundant
- in hot countries. I was struck with this observation both on entering
- Brazil, and when I saw the many elegant and active forms of the Harpalidae
- re-appearing on the temperate plains of La Plata. Do the very numerous
- spiders and rapacious Hymenoptera supply the place of the carnivorous
- beetles? The carrion-feeders and Brachelytra are very uncommon; on the
- other hand, the Rhyncophora and Chrysomelidae, all of which depend on the
- vegetable world for subsistence, are present in astonishing numbers. I do
- not here refer to the number of different species, but to that of the
- individual insects; for on this it is that the most striking character in
- the entomology of different countries depends. The orders Orthoptera and
- Hemiptera are particularly numerous; as likewise is the stinging division
- of the Hymenoptera the bees, perhaps, being excepted. A person, on first
- entering a tropical forest, is astonished at the labours of the ants:
- well-beaten paths branch off in every direction, on which an army of
- never-failing foragers may be seen, some going forth, and others
- returning, burdened with pieces of green leaf, often larger than their own
- bodies.
- </p>
- <p>
- A small dark-coloured ant sometimes migrates in countless numbers. One
- day, at Bahia, my attention was drawn by observing many spiders,
- cockroaches, and other insects, and some lizards, rushing in the greatest
- agitation across a bare piece of ground. A little way behind, every stalk
- and leaf was blackened by a small ant. The swarm having crossed the bare
- space, divided itself, and descended an old wall. By this means many
- insects were fairly enclosed; and the efforts which the poor little
- creatures made to extricate themselves from such a death were wonderful.
- When the ants came to the road they changed their course, and in narrow
- files reascended the wall. Having placed a small stone so as to intercept
- one of the lines, the whole body attacked it, and then immediately
- retired. Shortly afterwards another body came to the charge, and again
- having failed to make any impression, this line of march was entirely
- given up. By going an inch round, the file might have avoided the stone,
- and this doubtless would have happened, if it had been originally there:
- but having been attacked, the lion-hearted little warriors scorned the
- idea of yielding.
- </p>
- <p>
- Certain wasp-like insects, which construct in the corners of the verandahs
- clay cells for their larvae, are very numerous in the neighbourhood of
- Rio. These cells they stuff full of half-dead spiders and caterpillars,
- which they seem wonderfully to know how to sting to that degree as to
- leave them paralysed but alive, until their eggs are hatched; and the
- larvae feed on the horrid mass of powerless, half-killed victims&mdash;a
- sight which has been described by an enthusiastic naturalist <a
- href="#linknote-28" name="linknoteref-28" id="linknoteref-28"><small>28</small></a>
- as curious and pleasing! I was much interested one day by watching a
- deadly contest between a Pepsis and a large spider of the genus Lycosa.
- The wasp made a sudden dash at its prey, and then flew away: the spider
- was evidently wounded, for, trying to escape, it rolled down a little
- slope, but had still strength sufficient to crawl into a thick tuft of
- grass. The wasp soon returned, and seemed surprised at not immediately
- finding its victim. It then commenced as regular a hunt as ever hound did
- after fox; making short semicircular casts, and all the time rapidly
- vibrating its wings and antennae. The spider, though well concealed, was
- soon discovered, and the wasp, evidently still afraid of its adversary's
- jaws, after much manoeuvring, inflicted two stings on the under side of
- its thorax. At last, carefully examining with its antennae the now
- motionless spider, it proceeded to drag away the body. But I stopped both
- tyrant and prey. <a href="#linknote-29" name="linknoteref-29"
- id="linknoteref-29"><small>29</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- The number of spiders, in proportion to other insects, is here compared
- with England very much larger; perhaps more so than with any other
- division of the articulate animals. The variety of species among the
- jumping spiders appears almost infinite. The genus, or rather family, of
- Epeira, is here characterized by many singular forms; some species have
- pointed coriaceous shells, others enlarged and spiny tibiae. Every path in
- the forest is barricaded with the strong yellow web of a species,
- belonging to the same division with the Epeira clavipes of Fabricius,
- which was formerly said by Sloane to make, in the West Indies, webs so
- strong as to catch birds. A small and pretty kind of spider, with very
- long fore-legs, and which appears to belong to an undescribed genus, lives
- as a parasite on almost every one of these webs. I suppose it is too
- insignificant to be noticed by the great Epeira, and is therefore allowed
- to prey on the minute insects, which, adhering to the lines, would
- otherwise be wasted. When frightened, this little spider either feigns
- death by extending its front legs, or suddenly drops from the web. A large
- Epeira of the same division with Epeira tuberculata and conica is
- extremely common, especially in dry situations. Its web, which is
- generally placed among the great leaves of the common agave, is sometimes
- strengthened near the centre by a pair or even four zigzag ribbons, which
- connect two adjoining rays. When any large insect, as a grasshopper or
- wasp, is caught, the spider, by a dexterous movement, makes it revolve
- very rapidly, and at the same time emitting a band of threads from its
- spinners, soon envelops its prey in a case like the cocoon of a silkworm.
- The spider now examines the powerless victim, and gives the fatal bite on
- the hinder part of its thorax; then retreating, patiently waits till the
- poison has taken effect. The virulence of this poison may be judged of
- from the fact that in half a minute I opened the mesh, and found a large
- wasp quite lifeless. This Epeira always stands with its head downwards
- near the centre of the web. When disturbed, it acts differently according
- to circumstances: if there is a thicket below, it suddenly falls down; and
- I have distinctly seen the thread from the spinners lengthened by the
- animal while yet stationary, as preparatory to its fall. If the ground is
- clear beneath, the Epeira seldom falls, but moves quickly through a
- central passage from one to the other side. When still further disturbed,
- it practises a most curious manoeuvre: standing in the middle, it
- violently jerks the web, which it attached to elastic twigs, till at last
- the whole acquires such a rapid vibratory movement, that even the outline
- of the spider's body becomes indistinct.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is well known that most of the British spiders, when a large insect is
- caught in their webs, endeavour to cut the lines and liberate their prey,
- to save their nets from being entirely spoiled. I once, however, saw in a
- hothouse in Shropshire a large female wasp caught in the irregular web of
- a quite small spider; and this spider, instead of cutting the web, most
- perseveringly continued to entangle the body, and especially the wings, of
- its prey. The wasp at first aimed in vain repeated thrusts with its sting
- at its little antagonist. Pitying the wasp, after allowing it to struggle
- for more than an hour, I killed it and put it back into the web. The
- spider soon returned; and an hour afterwards I was much surprised to find
- it with its jaws buried in the orifice, through which the sting is
- protruded by the living wasp. I drove the spider away two or three times,
- but for the next twenty-four hours I always found it again sucking at the
- same place. The spider became much distended by the juices of its prey,
- which was many times larger than itself.
- </p>
- <p>
- I may here just mention, that I found, near St. Fe Bajada, many large
- black spiders, with ruby-coloured marks on their backs, having gregarious
- habits. The webs were placed vertically, as is invariably the case with
- the genus Epeira: they were separated from each other by a space of about
- two feet, but were all attached to certain common lines, which were of
- great length, and extended to all parts of the community. In this manner
- the tops of some large bushes were encompassed by the united nets. Azara
- <a href="#linknote-210" name="linknoteref-210" id="linknoteref-210"><small>210</small></a>
- has described a gregarious spider in Paraguay, which Walckanaer thinks
- must be a Theridion, but probably it is an Epeira, and perhaps even the
- same species with mine. I cannot, however, recollect seeing a central nest
- as large as a hat, in which, during autumn, when the spiders die, Azara
- says the eggs are deposited. As all the spiders which I saw were of the
- same size, they must have been nearly of the same age. This gregarious
- habit, in so typical a genus as Epeira, among insects, which are so
- bloodthirsty and solitary that even the two sexes attack each other, is a
- very singular fact.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found another spider
- with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines radiated in a vertical plane
- from a common centre, where the insect had its station; but only two of
- the rays were connected by a symmetrical mesh-work; so that the net,
- instead of being, as is generally the case, circular, consisted of a
- wedge-shaped segment. All the webs were similarly constructed.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0003" id="link2HCH0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER III &mdash; MALDONADO
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Monte Video&mdash;Excursion to R. Polanco&mdash;Lazo and Bolas&mdash;Partridges&mdash;
- Absence of Trees&mdash;Deer&mdash;Capybara, or River Hog&mdash;Tucutuco&mdash;Molothrus,
- cuckoo-like habits&mdash;Tyrant-flycatcher&mdash;Mocking-bird&mdash;Carrion
- Hawks&mdash; Tubes formed by Lightning&mdash;House struck.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ULY 5th, 1832&mdash;In
- the morning we got under way, and stood out of the splendid harbour of Rio
- de Janeiro. In our passage to the Plata, we saw nothing particular,
- excepting on one day a great shoal of porpoises, many hundreds in number.
- The whole sea was in places furrowed by them; and a most extraordinary
- spectacle was presented, as hundreds, proceeding together by jumps, in
- which their whole bodies were exposed, thus cut the water. When the ship
- was running nine knots an hour, these animals could cross and recross the
- bows with the greatest of ease, and then dash away right ahead. As soon as
- we entered the estuary of the Plata, the weather was very unsettled. One
- dark night we were surrounded by numerous seals and penguins, which made
- such strange noises, that the officer on watch reported he could hear the
- cattle bellowing on shore. On a second night we witnessed a splendid scene
- of natural fireworks; the mast-head and yard-arm-ends shone with St.
- Elmo's light; and the form of the vane could almost be traced, as if it
- had been rubbed with phosphorus. The sea was so highly luminous, that the
- tracks of the penguins were marked by a fiery wake, and the darkness of
- the sky was momentarily illuminated by the most vivid lightning.
- </p>
- <p>
- When within the mouth of the river, I was interested by observing how
- slowly the waters of the sea and river mixed. The latter, muddy and
- discoloured, from its less specific gravity, floated on the surface of the
- salt water. This was curiously exhibited in the wake of the vessel, where
- a line of blue water was seen mingling in little eddies, with the
- adjoining fluid.
- </p>
- <p>
- July 26th.&mdash;We anchored at Monte Video. The Beagle was employed in
- surveying the extreme southern and eastern coasts of America, south of the
- Plata, during the two succeeding years. To prevent useless repetitions, I
- will extract those parts of my journal which refer to the same districts
- without always attending to the order in which we visited them.
- </p>
- <p>
- MALDONADO is situated on the northern bank of the Plata, and not very far
- from the mouth of the estuary. It is a most quiet, forlorn, little town;
- built, as is universally the case in these countries, with the streets
- running at right angles to each other, and having in the middle a large
- plaza or square, which, from its size, renders the scantiness of the
- population more evident. It possesses scarcely any trade; the exports
- being confined to a few hides and living cattle. The inhabitants are
- chiefly landowners, together with a few shopkeepers and the necessary
- tradesmen, such as blacksmiths and carpenters, who do nearly all the
- business for a circuit of fifty miles round. The town is separated from
- the river by a band of sand-hillocks, about a mile broad: it is
- surrounded, on all other sides, by an open slightly-undulating country,
- covered by one uniform layer of fine green turf, on which countless herds
- of cattle, sheep, and horses graze. There is very little land cultivated
- even close to the town. A few hedges, made of cacti and agave, mark out
- where some wheat or Indian corn has been planted. The features of the
- country are very similar along the whole northern bank of the Plata. The
- only difference is, that here the granitic hills are a little bolder. The
- scenery is very uninteresting; there is scarcely a house, an enclosed
- piece of ground, or even a tree, to give it an air of cheerfulness Yet,
- after being imprisoned for some time in a ship, there is a charm in the
- unconfined feeling of walking over boundless plains of turf. Moreover, if
- your view is limited to a small space, many objects possess beauty. Some
- of the smaller birds are brilliantly coloured; and the bright green sward,
- browsed short by the cattle, is ornamented by dwarf flowers, among which a
- plant, looking like the daisy, claimed the place of an old friend. What
- would a florist say to whole tracts, so thickly covered by the Verbena
- melindres, as, even at a distance, to appear of the most gaudy scarlet?
- </p>
- <p>
- I stayed ten weeks at Maldonado, in which time a nearly perfect collection
- of the animals, birds, and reptiles, was procured. Before making any
- observations respecting them, I will give an account of a little excursion
- I made as far as the river Polanco, which is about seventy miles distant,
- in a northerly direction. I may mention, as a proof how cheap everything
- is in this country, that I paid only two dollars a day, or eight
- shillings, for two men, together with a troop of about a dozen
- riding-horses. My companions were well armed with pistols and sabres; a
- precaution which I thought rather unnecessary but the first piece of news
- we heard was, that, the day before, a traveller from Monte Video had been
- found dead on the road, with his throat cut. This happened close to a
- cross, the record of a former murder.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the first night we slept at a retired little country-house; and there I
- soon found out that I possessed two or three articles, especially a pocket
- compass, which created unbounded astonishment. In every house I was asked
- to show the compass, and by its aid, together with a map, to point out the
- direction of various places. It excited the liveliest admiration that I, a
- perfect stranger, should know the road (for direction and road are
- synonymous in this open country) to places where I had never been. At one
- house a young woman, who was ill in bed, sent to entreat me to come and
- show her the compass. If their surprise was great, mine was greater, to
- find such ignorance among people who possessed their thousands of cattle,
- and "estancias" of great extent. It can only be accounted for by the
- circumstance that this retired part of the country is seldom visited by
- foreigners. I was asked whether the earth or sun moved; whether it was
- hotter or colder to the north; where Spain was, and many other such
- questions. The greater number of the inhabitants had an indistinct idea
- that England, London, and North America, were different names for the same
- place; but the better informed well knew that London and North America
- were separate countries close together, and that England was a large town
- in London! I carried with me some promethean matches, which I ignited by
- biting; it was thought so wonderful that a man should strike fire with his
- teeth, that it was usual to collect the whole family to see it: I was once
- offered a dollar for a single one. Washing my face in the morning caused
- much speculation at the village of Las Minas; a superior tradesman closely
- cross-questioned me about so singular a practice; and likewise why on
- board we wore our beards; for he had heard from my guide that we did so.
- He eyed me with much suspicion; perhaps he had heard of ablutions in the
- Mahomedan religion, and knowing me to be a heretick, probably he came to
- the conclusion that all hereticks were Turks. It is the general custom in
- this country to ask for a night's lodging at the first convenient house.
- The astonishment at the compass, and my other feats of jugglery, was to a
- certain degree advantageous, as with that, and the long stories my guides
- told of my breaking stones, knowing venomous from harmless snakes,
- collecting insects, etc., I repaid them for their hospitality. I am
- writing as if I had been among the inhabitants of central Africa: Banda
- Oriental would not be flattered by the comparison; but such were my
- feelings at the time.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day we rode to the village of Las Minas. The country was rather
- more hilly, but otherwise continued the same; an inhabitant of the Pampas
- no doubt would have considered it as truly Alpine. The country is so
- thinly inhabited, that during the whole day we scarcely met a single
- person. Las Minas is much smaller even than Maldonado. It is seated on a
- little plain, and is surrounded by low rocky mountains. It is of the usual
- symmetrical form, and with its whitewashed church standing in the centre,
- had rather a pretty appearance. The outskirting houses rose out of the
- plain like isolated beings, without the accompaniment of gardens or
- courtyards. This is generally the case in the country, and all the houses
- have, in consequence an uncomfortable aspect. At night we stopped at a
- pulperia, or drinking-shop. During the evening a great number of Gauchos
- came in to drink spirits and smoke cigars: their appearance is very
- striking; they are generally tall and handsome, but with a proud and
- dissolute expression of countenance. They frequently wear their moustaches
- and long black hair curling down their backs. With their brightly coloured
- garments, great spurs clanking about their heels, and knives stuck as
- daggers (and often so used) at their waists, they look a very different
- race of men from what might be expected from their name of Gauchos, or
- simple countrymen. Their politeness is excessive; they never drink their
- spirits without expecting you to taste it; but whilst making their
- exceedingly graceful bow, they seem quite as ready, if occasion offered,
- to cut your throat.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the third day we pursued rather an irregular course, as I was employed
- in examining some beds of marble. On the fine plains of turf we saw many
- ostriches (Struthio rhea). Some of the flocks contained as many as twenty
- or thirty birds. These, when standing on any little eminence, and seen
- against the clear sky, presented a very noble appearance. I never met with
- such tame ostriches in any other part of the country: it was easy to
- gallop up within a short distance of them; but then, expanding their
- wings, they made all sail right before the wind, and soon left the horse
- astern.
- </p>
- <p>
- At night we came to the house of Don Juan Fuentes, a rich landed
- proprietor, but not personally known to either of my companions. On
- approaching the house of a stranger, it is usual to follow several little
- points of etiquette: riding up slowly to the door, the salutation of Ave
- Maria is given, and until somebody comes out and asks you to alight, it is
- not customary even to get off your horse: the formal answer of the owner
- is, "sin pecado concebida"&mdash;that is, conceived without sin. Having
- entered the house, some general conversation is kept up for a few minutes,
- till permission is asked to pass the night there. This is granted as a
- matter of course. The stranger then takes his meals with the family, and a
- room is assigned him, where with the horsecloths belonging to his recado
- (or saddle of the Pampas) he makes his bed. It is curious how similar
- circumstances produce such similar results in manners. At the Cape of Good
- Hope the same hospitality, and very nearly the same points of etiquette,
- are universally observed. The difference, however, between the character
- of the Spaniard and that of the Dutch boer is shown, by the former never
- asking his guest a single question beyond the strictest rule of
- politeness, whilst the honest Dutchman demands where he has been, where he
- is going, what is his business, and even how many brothers sisters, or
- children he may happen to have.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after our arrival at Don Juan's, one of the largest herds of
- cattle was driven in towards the house, and three beasts were picked out
- to be slaughtered for the supply of the establishment. These half-wild
- cattle are very active; and knowing full well the fatal lazo, they led the
- horses a long and laborious chase. After witnessing the rude wealth
- displayed in the number of cattle, men, and horses, Don Juan's miserable
- house was quite curious. The floor consisted of hardened mud, and the
- windows were without glass; the sitting-room boasted only of a few of the
- roughest chairs and stools, with a couple of tables. The supper, although
- several strangers were present, consisted of two huge piles, one of roast
- beef, the other of boiled, with some pieces of pumpkin: besides this
- latter there was no other vegetable, and not even a morsel of bread. For
- drinking, a large earthenware jug of water served the whole party. Yet
- this man was the owner of several square miles of land, of which nearly
- every acre would produce corn, and, with a little trouble, all the common
- vegetables. The evening was spent in smoking, with a little impromptu
- singing, accompanied by the guitar. The signoritas all sat together in one
- corner of the room, and did not sup with the men.
- </p>
- <p>
- So many works have been written about these countries, that it is almost
- superfluous to describe either the lazo or the bolas. The lazo consists of
- a very strong, but thin, well-plaited rope, made of raw hide. One end is
- attached to the broad surcingle, which fastens together the complicated
- gear of the recado, or saddle used in the Pampas; the other is terminated
- by a small ring of iron or brass, by which a noose can be formed. The
- Gaucho, when he is going to use the lazo, keeps a small coil in his
- bridle-hand, and in the other holds the running noose which is made very
- large, generally having a diameter of about eight feet. This he whirls
- round his head, and by the dexterous movement of his wrist keeps the noose
- open; then, throwing it, he causes it to fall on any particular spot he
- chooses. The lazo, when not used, is tied up in a small coil to the after
- part of the recado. The bolas, or balls, are of two kinds: the simplest,
- which is chiefly used for catching ostriches, consists of two round
- stones, covered with leather, and united by a thin plaited thong, about
- eight feet long. The other kind differs only in having three balls united
- by the thongs to a common centre. The Gaucho holds the smallest of the
- three in his hand, and whirls the other two round and round his head;
- then, taking aim, sends them like chain shot revolving through the air.
- The balls no sooner strike any object, than, winding round it, they cross
- each other, and become firmly hitched. The size and weight of the balls
- vary, according to the purpose for which they are made: when of stone,
- although not larger than an apple, they are sent with such force as
- sometimes to break the leg even of a horse. I have seen the balls made of
- wood, and as large as a turnip, for the sake of catching these animals
- without injuring them. The balls are sometimes made of iron, and these can
- be hurled to the greatest distance. The main difficulty in using either
- lazo or bolas is to ride so well as to be able at full speed, and while
- suddenly turning about, to whirl them so steadily round the head, as to
- take aim: on foot any person would soon learn the art. One day, as I was
- amusing myself by galloping and whirling the balls round my head, by
- accident the free one struck a bush, and its revolving motion being thus
- destroyed, it immediately fell to the ground, and, like magic, caught one
- hind leg of my horse; the other ball was then jerked out of my hand, and
- the horse fairly secured. Luckily he was an old practised animal, and knew
- what it meant; otherwise he would probably have kicked till he had thrown
- himself down. The Gauchos roared with laughter; they cried out that they
- had seen every sort of animal caught, but had never before seen a man
- caught by himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the two succeeding days, I reached the furthest point which I was
- anxious to examine. The country wore the same aspect, till at last the
- fine green turf became more wearisome than a dusty turnpike road. We
- everywhere saw great numbers of partridges (Nothura major). These birds do
- not go in coveys, nor do they conceal themselves like the English kind. It
- appears a very silly bird. A man on horseback by riding round and round in
- a circle, or rather in a spire, so as to approach closer each time, may
- knock on the head as many as he pleases. The more common method is to
- catch them with a running noose, or little lazo, made of the stem of an
- ostrich's feather, fastened to the end of a long stick. A boy on a quiet
- old horse will frequently thus catch thirty or forty in a day. In Arctic
- North America <a href="#linknote-31" name="linknoteref-31"
- id="linknoteref-31"><small>31</small></a> the Indians catch the Varying
- Hare by walking spirally round and round it, when on its form: the middle
- of the day is reckoned the best time, when the sun is high, and the shadow
- of the hunter not very long.
- </p>
- <p>
- On our return to Maldonado, we followed rather a different line of road.
- Near Pan de Azucar, a landmark well known to all those who have sailed up
- the Plata, I stayed a day at the house of a most hospitable old Spaniard.
- Early in the morning we ascended the Sierra de las Animas. By the aid of
- the rising sun the scenery was almost picturesque. To the westward the
- view extended over an immense level plain as far as the Mount, at Monte
- Video, and to the eastward, over the mammillated country of Maldonado. On
- the summit of the mountain there were several small heaps of stones, which
- evidently had lain there for many years. My companion assured me that they
- were the work of the Indians in the old time. The heaps were similar, but
- on a much smaller scale, to those so commonly found on the mountains of
- Wales. The desire to signalize any event, on the highest point of the
- neighbouring land, seems an universal passion with mankind. At the present
- day, not a single Indian, either civilized or wild, exists in this part of
- the province; nor am I aware that the former inhabitants have left behind
- them any more permanent records than these insignificant piles on the
- summit of the Sierra de las Animas.
- </p>
- <p>
- The general, and almost entire absence of trees in Banda Oriental is
- remarkable. Some of the rocky hills are partly covered by thickets, and on
- the banks of the larger streams, especially to the north of Las Minas,
- willow-trees are not uncommon. Near the Arroyo Tapes I heard of a wood of
- palms; and one of these trees, of considerable size, I saw near the Pan de
- Azucar, in lat. 35 degs. These, and the trees planted by the Spaniards,
- offer the only exceptions to the general scarcity of wood. Among the
- introduced kinds may be enumerated poplars, olives, peach, and other fruit
- trees: the peaches succeed so well, that they afford the main supply of
- firewood to the city of Buenos Ayres. Extremely level countries, such as
- the Pampas, seldom appear favourable to the growth of trees. This may
- possibly be attributed either to the force of the winds, or the kind of
- drainage. In the nature of the land, however, around Maldonado, no such
- reason is apparent; the rocky mountains afford protected situations;
- enjoying various kinds of soil; streamlets of water are common at the
- bottoms of nearly every valley; and the clayey nature of the earth seems
- adapted to retain moisture. It has been inferred with much probability,
- that the presence of woodland is generally determined <a
- href="#linknote-32" name="linknoteref-32" id="linknoteref-32"><small>32</small></a>
- by the annual amount of moisture; yet in this province abundant and heavy
- rain falls during the winter; and the summer, though dry, is not so in any
- excessive degree. <a href="#linknote-33" name="linknoteref-33"
- id="linknoteref-33"><small>33</small></a> We see nearly the whole of
- Australia covered by lofty trees, yet that country possesses a far more
- arid climate. Hence we must look to some other and unknown cause.
- </p>
- <p>
- Confining our view to South America, we should certainly be tempted to
- believe that trees flourished only under a very humid climate; for the
- limit of the forest-land follows, in a most remarkable manner, that of the
- damp winds. In the southern part of the continent, where the western
- gales, charged with moisture from the Pacific, prevail, every island on
- the broken west coast, from lat. 38 degs. to the extreme point of Tierra
- del Fuego, is densely covered by impenetrable forests. On the eastern side
- of the Cordillera, over the same extent of latitude, where a blue sky and
- a fine climate prove that the atmosphere has been deprived of its moisture
- by passing over the mountains, the arid plains of Patagonia support a most
- scanty vegetation. In the more northern parts of the continent, within the
- limits of the constant south-eastern trade-wind, the eastern side is
- ornamented by magnificent forests; whilst the western coast, from lat. 4
- degs. S. to lat. 32 degs. S., may be described as a desert; on this
- western coast, northward of lat. 4 degs. S., where the trade-wind loses
- its regularity, and heavy torrents of rain fall periodically, the shores
- of the Pacific, so utterly desert in Peru, assume near Cape Blanco the
- character of luxuriance so celebrated at Guyaquil and Panama. Hence in the
- southern and northern parts of the continent, the forest and desert lands
- occupy reversed positions with respect to the Cordillera, and these
- positions are apparently determined by the direction of the prevalent
- winds. In the middle of the continent there is a broad intermediate band,
- including central Chile and the provinces of La Plata, where the
- rain-bringing winds have not to pass over lofty mountains, and where the
- land is neither a desert nor covered by forests. But even the rule, if
- confined to South America, of trees flourishing only in a climate rendered
- humid by rain-bearing winds, has a strongly marked exception in the case
- of the Falkland Islands. These islands, situated in the same latitude with
- Tierra del Fuego and only between two and three hundred miles distant from
- it, having a nearly similar climate, with a geological formation almost
- identical, with favourable situations and the same kind of peaty soil, yet
- can boast of few plants deserving even the title of bushes; whilst in
- Tierra del Fuego it is impossible to find an acre of land not covered by
- the densest forest. In this case, both the direction of the heavy gales of
- wind and of the currents of the sea are favourable to the transport of
- seeds from Tierra del Fuego, as is shown by the canoes and trunks of trees
- drifted from that country, and frequently thrown on the shores of the
- Western Falkland. Hence perhaps it is, that there are many plants in
- common to the two countries but with respect to the trees of Tierra del
- Fuego, even attempts made to transplant them have failed.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our stay at Maldonado I collected several quadrupeds, eighty kinds
- of birds, and many reptiles, including nine species of snakes. Of the
- indigenous mammalia, the only one now left of any size, which is common,
- is the Cervus campestris. This deer is exceedingly abundant, often in
- small herds, throughout the countries bordering the Plata and in Northern
- Patagonia. If a person crawling close along the ground, slowly advances
- towards a herd, the deer frequently, out of curiosity, approach to
- reconnoitre him. I have by this means, killed from one spot, three out of
- the same herd. Although so tame and inquisitive, yet when approached on
- horseback, they are exceedingly wary. In this country nobody goes on foot,
- and the deer knows man as its enemy only when he is mounted and armed with
- the bolas. At Bahia Blanca, a recent establishment in Northern Patagonia,
- I was surprised to find how little the deer cared for the noise of a gun:
- one day I fired ten times from within eighty yards at one animal; and it
- was much more startled at the ball cutting up the ground than at the
- report of the rifle. My powder being exhausted, I was obliged to get up
- (to my shame as a sportsman be it spoken, though well able to kill birds
- on the wing) and halloo till the deer ran away.
- </p>
- <p>
- The most curious fact with respect to this animal, is the overpoweringly
- strong and offensive odour which proceeds from the buck. It is quite
- indescribable: several times whilst skinning the specimen which is now
- mounted at the Zoological Museum, I was almost overcome by nausea. I tied
- up the skin in a silk pocket-handkerchief, and so carried it home: this
- handkerchief, after being well washed, I continually used, and it was of
- course as repeatedly washed; yet every time, for a space of one year and
- seven months, when first unfolded, I distinctly perceived the odour. This
- appears an astonishing instance of the permanence of some matter, which
- nevertheless in its nature must be most subtile and volatile. Frequently,
- when passing at the distance of half a mile to leeward of a herd, I have
- perceived the whole air tainted with the effluvium. I believe the smell
- from the buck is most powerful at the period when its horns are perfect,
- or free from the hairy skin. When in this state the meat is, of course,
- quite uneatable; but the Gauchos assert, that if buried for some time in
- fresh earth, the taint is removed. I have somewhere read that the
- islanders in the north of Scotland treat the rank carcasses of the
- fish-eating birds in the same manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- The order Rodentia is here very numerous in species: of mice alone I
- obtained no less than eight kinds. <a href="#linknote-34"
- name="linknoteref-34" id="linknoteref-34"><small>34</small></a> The
- largest gnawing animal in the world, the Hydrochaerus capybara (the
- water-hog), is here also common. One which I shot at Monte Video weighed
- ninety-eight pounds: its length from the end of the snout to the
- stump-like tail, was three feet two inches; and its girth three feet
- eight. These great Rodents occasionally frequent the islands in the mouth
- of the Plata, where the water is quite salt, but are far more abundant on
- the borders of fresh-water lakes and rivers. Near Maldonado three or four
- generally live together. In the daytime they either lie among the aquatic
- plants, or openly feed on the turf plain. <a href="#linknote-35"
- name="linknoteref-35" id="linknoteref-35"><small>35</small></a> When
- viewed at a distance, from their manner of walking and colour they
- resemble pigs: but when seated on their haunches, and attentively watching
- any object with one eye, they reassume the appearance of their congeners,
- cavies and rabbits. Both the front and side view of their head has quite a
- ludicrous aspect, from the great depth of their jaw. These animals, at
- Maldonado, were very tame; by cautiously walking, I approached within
- three yards of four old ones. This tameness may probably be accounted for,
- by the Jaguar having been banished for some years, and by the Gaucho not
- thinking it worth his while to hunt them. As I approached nearer and
- nearer they frequently made their peculiar noise, which is a low abrupt
- grunt, not having much actual sound, but rather arising from the sudden
- expulsion of air: the only noise I know at all like it, is the first
- hoarse bark of a large dog. Having watched the four from almost within
- arm's length (and they me) for several minutes, they rushed into the water
- at full gallop with the greatest impetuosity, and emitted at the same time
- their bark. After diving a short distance they came again to the surface,
- but only just showed the upper part of their heads. When the female is
- swimming in the water, and has young ones, they are said to sit on her
- back. These animals are easily killed in numbers; but their skins are of
- trifling value, and the meat is very indifferent. On the islands in the
- Rio Parana they are exceedingly abundant, and afford the ordinary prey to
- the Jaguar.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Tucutuco (Ctenomys Brasiliensis) is a curious small animal, which may
- be briefly described as a Gnawer, with the habits of a mole. It is
- extremely numerous in some parts of the country, but it is difficult to be
- procured, and never, I believe, comes out of the ground. It throws up at
- the mouth of its burrows hillocks of earth like those of the mole, but
- smaller. Considerable tracts of country are so completely undermined by
- these animals, that horses in passing over, sink above their fetlocks. The
- tucutucos appear, to a certain degree, to be gregarious: the man who
- procured the specimens for me had caught six together, and he said this
- was a common occurrence. They are nocturnal in their habits; and their
- principal food is the roots of plants, which are the object of their
- extensive and superficial burrows. This animal is universally known by a
- very peculiar noise which it makes when beneath the ground. A person, the
- first time he hears it, is much surprised; for it is not easy to tell
- whence it comes, nor is it possible to guess what kind of creature utters
- it. The noise consists in a short, but not rough, nasal grunt, which is
- monotonously repeated about four times in quick succession: <a
- href="#linknote-36" name="linknoteref-36" id="linknoteref-36"><small>36</small></a>
- the name Tucutuco is given in imitation of the sound. Where this animal is
- abundant, it may be heard at all times of the day, and sometimes directly
- beneath one's feet. When kept in a room, the tucutucos move both slowly
- and clumsily, which appears owing to the outward action of their hind
- legs; and they are quite incapable, from the socket of the thigh-bone not
- having a certain ligament, of jumping even the smallest vertical height.
- They are very stupid in making any attempt to escape; when angry or
- frightened they utter the tucutuco. Of those I kept alive several, even
- the first day, became quite tame, not attempting to bite or to run away;
- others were a little wilder.
- </p>
- <p>
- The man who caught them asserted that very many are invariably found
- blind. A specimen which I preserved in spirits was in this state; Mr. Reid
- considers it to be the effect of inflammation in the nictitating membrane.
- When the animal was alive I placed my finger within half an inch of its
- head, and not the slightest notice was taken: it made its way, however,
- about the room nearly as well as the others. Considering the strictly
- subterranean habits of the tucutuco, the blindness, though so common,
- cannot be a very serious evil; yet it appears strange that any animal
- should possess an organ frequently subject to be injured. Lamarck would
- have been delighted with this fact, had he known it, when speculating <a
- href="#linknote-37" name="linknoteref-37" id="linknoteref-37"><small>37</small></a>
- (probably with more truth than usual with him) on the gradually <i>acquired</i>
- blindness of the Asphalax, a Gnawer living under ground, and of the
- Proteus, a reptile living in dark caverns filled with water; in both of
- which animals the eye is in an almost rudimentary state, and is covered by
- a tendinous membrane and skin. In the common mole the eye is
- extraordinarily small but perfect, though many anatomists doubt whether it
- is connected with the true optic nerve; its vision must certainly be
- imperfect, though probably useful to the animal when it leaves its burrow.
- In the tucutuco, which I believe never comes to the surface of the ground,
- the eye is rather larger, but often rendered blind and useless, though
- without apparently causing any inconvenience to the animal; no doubt
- Lamarck would have said that the tucutuco is now passing into the state of
- the Asphalax and Proteus.
- </p>
- <p>
- Birds of many kinds are extremely abundant on the undulating, grassy
- plains around Maldonado. There are several species of a family allied in
- structure and manners to our Starling: one of these (Molothrus niger) is
- remarkable from its habits. Several may often be seen standing together on
- the back of a cow or horse; and while perched on a hedge, pluming
- themselves in the sun, they sometimes attempt to sing, or rather to hiss;
- the noise being very peculiar, resembling that of bubbles of air passing
- rapidly from a small orifice under water, so as to produce an acute sound.
- According to Azara, this bird, like the cuckoo, deposits its eggs in other
- birds' nests. I was several times told by the country people that there
- certainly is some bird having this habit; and my assistant in collecting,
- who is a very accurate person, found a nest of the sparrow of this country
- (Zonotrichia matutina), with one egg in it larger than the others, and of
- a different colour and shape. In North America there is another species of
- Molothrus (M. pecoris), which has a similar cuckoo-like habit, and which
- is most closely allied in every respect to the species from the Plata,
- even in such trifling peculiarities as standing on the backs of cattle; it
- differs only in being a little smaller, and in its plumage and eggs being
- of a slightly different shade of colour. This close agreement in structure
- and habits, in representative species coming from opposite quarters of a
- great continent, always strikes one as interesting, though of common
- occurrence.
- </p>
- <p>
- Mr. Swainson has well remarked, <a href="#linknote-38"
- name="linknoteref-38" id="linknoteref-38"><small>38</small></a> that with
- the exception of the Molothrus pecoris, to which must be added the M.
- niger, the cuckoos are the only birds which can be called truly
- parasitical; namely, such as "fasten themselves, as it were, on another
- living animal, whose animal heat brings their young into life, whose food
- they live upon, and whose death would cause theirs during the period of
- infancy." It is remarkable that some of the species, but not all, both of
- the Cuckoo and Molothrus, should agree in this one strange habit of their
- parasitical propagation, whilst opposed to each other in almost every
- other habit: the molothrus, like our starling, is eminently sociable, and
- lives on the open plains without art or disguise: the cuckoo, as every one
- knows, is a singularly shy bird; it frequents the most retired thickets,
- and feeds on fruit and caterpillars. In structure also these two genera
- are widely removed from each other. Many theories, even phrenological
- theories, have been advanced to explain the origin of the cuckoo laying
- its eggs in other birds' nests. M. Prevost alone, I think, has thrown
- light by his observations <a href="#linknote-39" name="linknoteref-39"
- id="linknoteref-39"><small>39</small></a> on this puzzle: he finds that
- the female cuckoo, which, according to most observers, lays at least from
- four to six eggs, must pair with the male each time after laying only one
- or two eggs. Now, if the cuckoo was obliged to sit on her own eggs, she
- would either have to sit on all together, and therefore leave those first
- laid so long, that they probably would become addled; or she would have to
- hatch separately each egg, or two eggs, as soon as laid: but as the cuckoo
- stays a shorter time in this country than any other migratory bird, she
- certainly would not have time enough for the successive hatchings. Hence
- we can perceive in the fact of the cuckoo pairing several times, and
- laying her eggs at intervals, the cause of her depositing her eggs in
- other birds' nests, and leaving them to the care of foster-parents. I am
- strongly inclined to believe that this view is correct, from having been
- independently led (as we shall hereafter see) to an analogous conclusion
- with regard to the South American ostrich, the females of which are
- parasitical, if I may so express it, on each other; each female laying
- several eggs in the nests of several other females, and the male ostrich
- undertaking all the cares of incubation, like the strange foster-parents
- with the cuckoo.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will mention only two other birds, which are very common, and render
- themselves prominent from their habits. The Saurophagus sulphuratus is
- typical of the great American tribe of tyrant-flycatchers. In its
- structure it closely approaches the true shrikes, but in its habits may be
- compared to many birds. I have frequently observed it, hunting a field,
- hovering over one spot like a hawk, and then proceeding on to another.
- When seen thus suspended in the air, it might very readily at a short
- distance be mistaken for one of the Rapacious order; its stoop, however,
- is very inferior in force and rapidity to that of a hawk. At other times
- the Saurophagus haunts the neighbourhood of water, and there, like a
- kingfisher, remaining stationary, it catches any small fish which may come
- near the margin. These birds are not unfrequently kept either in cages or
- in courtyards, with their wings cut. They soon become tame, and are very
- amusing from their cunning odd manners, which were described to me as
- being similar to those of the common magpie. Their flight is undulatory,
- for the weight of the head and bill appears too great for the body. In the
- evening the Saurophagus takes its stand on a bush, often by the roadside,
- and continually repeats without a change a shrill and rather agreeable
- cry, which somewhat resembles articulate words: the Spaniards say it is
- like the words "Bien te veo" (I see you well), and accordingly have given
- it this name.
- </p>
- <p>
- A mocking-bird (Mimus orpheus), called by the inhabitants Calandria, is
- remarkable, from possessing a song far superior to that of any other bird
- in the country: indeed, it is nearly the only bird in South America which
- I have observed to take its stand for the purpose of singing. The song may
- be compared to that of the Sedge warbler, but is more powerful; some harsh
- notes and some very high ones, being mingled with a pleasant warbling. It
- is heard only during the spring. At other times its cry is harsh and far
- from harmonious. Near Maldonado these birds were tame and bold; they
- constantly attended the country houses in numbers, to pick the meat which
- was hung up on the posts or walls: if any other small bird joined the
- feast, the Calandria soon chased it away. On the wide uninhabited plains
- of Patagonia another closely allied species, O. Patagonica of d'Orbigny,
- which frequents the valleys clothed with spiny bushes, is a wilder bird,
- and has a slightly different tone of voice. It appears to me a curious
- circumstance, as showing the fine shades of difference in habits, that
- judging from this latter respect alone, when I first saw this second
- species, I thought it was different from the Maldonado kind. Having
- afterwards procured a specimen, and comparing the two without particular
- care, they appeared so very similar, that I changed my opinion; but now
- Mr. Gould says that they are certainly distinct; a conclusion in
- conformity with the trifling difference of habit, of which, of course, he
- was not aware.
- </p>
- <p>
- The number, tameness, and disgusting habits of the carrion-feeding hawks
- of South America make them pre-eminently striking to any one accustomed
- only to the birds of Northern Europe. In this list may be included four
- species of the Caracara or Polyborus, the Turkey buzzard, the Gallinazo,
- and the Condor. The Caracaras are, from their structure, placed among the
- eagles: we shall soon see how ill they become so high a rank. In their
- habits they well supply the place of our carrion-crows, magpies, and
- ravens; a tribe of birds widely distributed over the rest of the world,
- but entirely absent in South America. To begin with the Polyborus
- Brasiliensis: this is a common bird, and has a wide geographical range; it
- is most numerous on the grassy savannahs of La Plata (where it goes by the
- name of Carrancha), and is far from unfrequent throughout the sterile
- plains of Patagonia. In the desert between the rivers Negro and Colorado,
- numbers constantly attend the line of road to devour the carcasses of the
- exhausted animals which chance to perish from fatigue and thirst. Although
- thus common in these dry and open countries, and likewise on the arid
- shores of the Pacific, it is nevertheless found inhabiting the damp
- impervious forests of West Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego. The Carranchas,
- together with the Chimango, constantly attend in numbers the estancias and
- slaughtering-houses. If an animal dies on the plain the Gallinazo
- commences the feast, and then the two species of Polyborus pick the bones
- clean. These birds, although thus commonly feeding together, are far from
- being friends. When the Carrancha is quietly seated on the branch of a
- tree or on the ground, the Chimango often continues for a long time flying
- backwards and forwards, up and down, in a semicircle, trying each time at
- the bottom of the curve to strike its larger relative. The Carrancha takes
- little notice, except by bobbing its head. Although the Carranchas
- frequently assemble in numbers, they are not gregarious; for in desert
- places they may be seen solitary, or more commonly by pairs.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Carranchas are said to be very crafty, and to steal great numbers of
- eggs. They attempt, also, together with the Chimango, to pick off the
- scabs from the sore backs of horses and mules. The poor animal, on the one
- hand, with its ears down and its back arched; and, on the other, the
- hovering bird, eyeing at the distance of a yard the disgusting morsel,
- form a picture, which has been described by Captain Head with his own
- peculiar spirit and accuracy. These false eagles most rarely kill any
- living bird or animal; and their vulture-like, necrophagous habits are
- very evident to any one who has fallen asleep on the desolate plains of
- Patagonia, for when he wakes, he will see, on each surrounding hillock,
- one of these birds patiently watching him with an evil eye: it is a
- feature in the landscape of these countries, which will be recognised by
- every one who has wandered over them. If a party of men go out hunting
- with dogs and horses, they will be accompanied, during the day, by several
- of these attendants. After feeding, the uncovered craw protrudes; at such
- times, and indeed generally, the Carrancha is an inactive, tame, and
- cowardly bird. Its flight is heavy and slow, like that of an English rook.
- It seldom soars; but I have twice seen one at a great height gliding
- through the air with much ease. It runs (in contradistinction to hopping),
- but not quite so quickly as some of its congeners. At times the Carrancha
- is noisy, but is not generally so: its cry is loud, very harsh and
- peculiar, and may be likened to the sound of the Spanish guttural g,
- followed by a rough double r r; when uttering this cry it elevates its
- head higher and higher, till at last, with its beak wide open, the crown
- almost touches the lower part of the back. This fact, which has been
- doubted, is quite true; I have seen them several times with their heads
- backwards in a completely inverted position. To these observations I may
- add, on the high authority of Azara, that the Carrancha feeds on worms,
- shells, slugs, grasshoppers, and frogs; that it destroys young lambs by
- tearing the umbilical cord; and that it pursues the Gallinazo, till that
- bird is compelled to vomit up the carrion it may have recently gorged.
- Lastly, Azara states that several Carranchas, five or six together, will
- unite in chase of large birds, even such as herons. All these facts show
- that it is a bird of very versatile habits and considerable ingenuity.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Polyborus Chimango is considerably smaller than the last species. It
- is truly omnivorous, and will eat even bread; and I was assured that it
- materially injures the potato crops in Chiloe, by stocking up the roots
- when first planted. Of all the carrion-feeders it is generally the last
- which leaves the skeleton of a dead animal, and may often be seen within
- the ribs of a cow or horse, like a bird in a cage. Another species is the
- Polyborus Novae Zelandiae, which is exceedingly common in the Falkland
- Islands. These birds in many respects resemble in their habits the
- Carranchas. They live on the flesh of dead animals and on marine
- productions; and on the Ramirez rocks their whole sustenance must depend
- on the sea. They are extraordinarily tame and fearless, and haunt the
- neighborhood of houses for offal. If a hunting party kills an animal, a
- number soon collect and patiently await, standing on the ground on all
- sides. After eating, their uncovered craws are largely protruded, giving
- them a disgusting appearance. They readily attack wounded birds: a
- cormorant in this state having taken to the shore, was immediately seized
- on by several, and its death hastened by their blows. The Beagle was at
- the Falklands only during the summer, but the officers of the Adventure,
- who were there in the winter, mention many extraordinary instances of the
- boldness and rapacity of these birds. They actually pounced on a dog that
- was lying fast asleep close by one of the party; and the sportsmen had
- difficulty in preventing the wounded geese from being seized before their
- eyes. It is said that several together (in this respect resembling the
- Carranchas) wait at the mouth of a rabbit-hole, and together seize on the
- animal when it comes out. They were constantly flying on board the vessel
- when in the harbour; and it was necessary to keep a good look out to
- prevent the leather being torn from the rigging, and the meat or game from
- the stern. These birds are very mischievous and inquisitive; they will
- pick up almost anything from the ground; a large black glazed hat was
- carried nearly a mile, as was a pair of the heavy balls used in catching
- cattle. Mr. Usborne experienced during the survey a more severe loss, in
- their stealing a small Kater's compass in a red morocco leather case,
- which was never recovered. These birds are, moreover, quarrelsome and very
- passionate; tearing up the grass with their bills from rage. They are not
- truly gregarious; they do not soar, and their flight is heavy and clumsy;
- on the ground they run extremely fast, very much like pheasants. They are
- noisy, uttering several harsh cries, one of which is like that of the
- English rook, hence the sealers always call them rooks. It is a curious
- circumstance that, when crying out, they throw their heads upwards and
- backwards, after the same manner as the Carrancha. They build in the rocky
- cliffs of the sea-coast, but only on the small adjoining islets, and not
- on the two main islands: this is a singular precaution in so tame and
- fearless a bird. The sealers say that the flesh of these birds, when
- cooked, is quite white, and very good eating; but bold must the man be who
- attempts such a meal.
- </p>
- <p>
- We have now only to mention the turkey-buzzard (Vultur aura), and the
- Gallinazo. The former is found wherever the country is moderately damp,
- from Cape Horn to North America. Differently from the Polyborus
- Brasiliensis and Chimango, it has found its way to the Falkland Islands.
- The turkey-buzzard is a solitary bird, or at most goes in pairs. It may at
- once be recognised from a long distance, by its lofty, soaring, and most
- elegant flight. It is well known to be a true carrion-feeder. On the west
- coast of Patagonia, among the thickly-wooded islets and broken land, it
- lives exclusively on what the sea throws up, and on the carcasses of dead
- seals. Wherever these animals are congregated on the rocks, there the
- vultures may be seen. The Gallinazo (Cathartes atratus) has a different
- range from the last species, as it never occurs southward of lat. 41 degs.
- Azara states that there exists a tradition that these birds, at the time
- of the conquest, were not found near Monte Video, but that they
- subsequently followed the inhabitants from more northern districts. At the
- present day they are numerous in the valley of the Colorado, which is
- three hundred miles due south of Monte Video. It seems probable that this
- additional migration has happened since the time of Azara. The Gallinazo
- generally prefers a humid climate, or rather the neighbourhood of fresh
- water; hence it is extremely abundant in Brazil and La Plata, while it is
- never found on the desert and arid plains of Northern Patagonia, excepting
- near some stream. These birds frequent the whole Pampas to the foot of the
- Cordillera, but I never saw or heard of one in Chile; in Peru they are
- preserved as scavengers. These vultures certainly may be called
- gregarious, for they seem to have pleasure in society, and are not solely
- brought together by the attraction of a common prey. On a fine day a flock
- may often be observed at a great height, each bird wheeling round and
- round without closing its wings, in the most graceful evolutions. This is
- clearly performed for the mere pleasure of the exercise, or perhaps is
- connected with their matrimonial alliances.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have now mentioned all the carrion-feeders, excepting the condor, an
- account of which will be more appropriately introduced when we visit a
- country more congenial to its habits than the plains of La Plata.
- </p>
- <p>
- In a broad band of sand-hillocks which separate the Laguna del Potrero
- from the shores of the Plata, at the distance of a few miles from
- Maldonado, I found a group of those vitrified, siliceous tubes, which are
- formed by lightning entering loose sand. These tubes resemble in every
- particular those from Drigg in Cumberland, described in the Geological
- Transactions. <a href="#linknote-310" name="linknoteref-310"
- id="linknoteref-310"><small>310</small></a> The sand-hillocks of Maldonado
- not being protected by vegetation, are constantly changing their position.
- From this cause the tubes projected above the surface, and numerous
- fragments lying near, showed that they had formerly been buried to a
- greater depth. Four sets entered the sand perpendicularly: by working with
- my hands I traced one of them two feet deep; and some fragments which
- evidently had belonged to the same tube, when added to the other part,
- measured five feet three inches. The diameter of the whole tube was nearly
- equal, and therefore we must suppose that originally it extended to a much
- greater depth. These dimensions are however small, compared to those of
- the tubes from Drigg, one of which was traced to a depth of not less than
- thirty feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- The internal surface is completely vitrified, glossy, and smooth. A small
- fragment examined under the microscope appeared, from the number of minute
- entangled air or perhaps steam bubbles, like an assay fused before the
- blowpipe. The sand is entirely, or in greater part, siliceous; but some
- points are of a black colour, and from their glossy surface possess a
- metallic lustre. The thickness of the wall of the tube varies from a
- thirtieth to a twentieth of an inch, and occasionally even equals a tenth.
- On the outside the grains of sand are rounded, and have a slightly glazed
- appearance: I could not distinguish any signs of crystallization. In a
- similar manner to that described in the Geological Transactions, the tubes
- are generally compressed, and have deep longitudinal furrows, so as
- closely to resemble a shrivelled vegetable stalk, or the bark of the elm
- or cork tree. Their circumference is about two inches, but in some
- fragments, which are cylindrical and without any furrows, it is as much as
- four inches. The compression from the surrounding loose sand, acting while
- the tube was still softened from the effects of the intense heat, has
- evidently caused the creases or furrows. Judging from the uncompressed
- fragments, the measure or bore of the lightning (if such a term may be
- used) must have been about one inch and a quarter. At Paris, M. Hachette
- and M. Beudant <a href="#linknote-311" name="linknoteref-311"
- id="linknoteref-311"><small>311</small></a> succeeded in making tubes, in
- most respects similar to these fulgurites, by passing very strong shocks
- of galvanism through finely-powdered glass: when salt was added, so as to
- increase its fusibility, the tubes were larger in every dimension. They
- failed both with powdered felspar and quartz. One tube, formed with
- pounded glass, was very nearly an inch long, namely .982, and had an
- internal diameter of .019 of an inch. When we hear that the strongest
- battery in Paris was used, and that its power on a substance of such easy
- fusibility as glass was to form tubes so diminutive, we must feel greatly
- astonished at the force of a shock of lightning, which, striking the sand
- in several places, has formed cylinders, in one instance of at least
- thirty feet long, and having an internal bore, where not compressed, of
- full an inch and a half; and this in a material so extraordinarily
- refractory as quartz!
- </p>
- <p>
- The tubes, as I have already remarked, enter the sand nearly in a vertical
- direction. One, however, which was less regular than the others, deviated
- from a right line, at the most considerable bend, to the amount of
- thirty-three degrees. From this same tube, two small branches, about a
- foot apart, were sent off; one pointed downwards, and the other upwards.
- This latter case is remarkable, as the electric fluid must have turned
- back at the acute angle of 26 degs., to the line of its main course.
- Besides the four tubes which I found vertical, and traced beneath the
- surface, there were several other groups of fragments, the original sites
- of which without doubt were near. All occurred in a level area of shifting
- sand, sixty yards by twenty, situated among some high sand-hillocks, and
- at the distance of about half a mile from a chain of hills four or five
- hundred feet in height. The most remarkable circumstance, as it appears to
- me, in this case as well as in that of Drigg, and in one described by M.
- Ribbentrop in Germany, is the number of tubes found within such limited
- spaces. At Drigg, within an area of fifteen yards, three were observed,
- and the same number occurred in Germany. In the case which I have
- described, certainly more than four existed within the space of the sixty
- by twenty yards. As it does not appear probable that the tubes are
- produced by successive distinct shocks, we must believe that the
- lightning, shortly before entering the ground, divides itself into
- separate branches.
- </p>
- <p>
- The neighbourhood of the Rio Plata seems peculiarly subject to electric
- phenomena. In the year 1793, <a href="#linknote-312" name="linknoteref-312"
- id="linknoteref-312"><small>312</small></a> one of the most destructive
- thunderstorms perhaps on record happened at Buenos Ayres: thirty-seven
- places within the city were struck by lightning, and nineteen people
- killed. From facts stated in several books of travels, I am inclined to
- suspect that thunderstorms are very common near the mouths of great
- rivers. Is it not possible that the mixture of large bodies of fresh and
- salt water may disturb the electrical equilibrium? Even during our
- occasional visits to this part of South America, we heard of a ship, two
- churches, and a house having been struck. Both the church and the house I
- saw shortly afterwards: the house belonged to Mr. Hood, the consul-general
- at Monte Video. Some of the effects were curious: the paper, for nearly a
- foot on each side of the line where the bell-wires had run, was blackened.
- The metal had been fused, and although the room was about fifteen feet
- high, the globules, dropping on the chairs and furniture, had drilled in
- them a chain of minute holes. A part of the wall was shattered, as if by
- gunpowder, and the fragments had been blown off with force sufficient to
- dent the wall on the opposite side of the room. The frame of a
- looking-glass was blackened, and the gilding must have been volatilized,
- for a smelling-bottle, which stood on the chimney-piece, was coated with
- bright metallic particles, which adhered as firmly as if they had been
- enamelled.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0004" id="link2HCH0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IV &mdash; RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Rio Negro&mdash;Estancias attacked by the Indians&mdash;Salt-Lakes&mdash;Flamingoes&mdash;
- R. Negro to R. Colorado&mdash;Sacred Tree&mdash;Patagonian Hare&mdash;Indian
- Families&mdash; General Rosas&mdash;Proceed to Bahia Blanca&mdash;Sand Dunes&mdash;Negro
- Lieutenant&mdash; Bahia Blanca&mdash;Saline Incrustations&mdash;Punta Alta&mdash;Zorillo.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ULY 24th, 1833.&mdash;The
- Beagle sailed from Maldonado, and on August the 3rd she arrived off the
- mouth of the Rio Negro. This is the principal river on the whole line of
- coast between the Strait of Magellan and the Plata. It enters the sea
- about three hundred miles south of the estuary of the Plata. About fifty
- years ago, under the old Spanish government, a small colony was
- established here; and it is still the most southern position (lat. 41
- degs.) on this eastern coast of America inhabited by civilized man.
- </p>
- <p>
- The country near the mouth of the river is wretched in the extreme: on the
- south side a long line of perpendicular cliffs commences, which exposes a
- section of the geological nature of the country. The strata are of
- sandstone, and one layer was remarkable from being composed of a
- firmly-cemented conglomerate of pumice pebbles, which must have travelled
- more than four hundred miles, from the Andes. The surface is everywhere
- covered up by a thick bed of gravel, which extends far and wide over the
- open plain. Water is extremely scarce, and, where found, is almost
- invariably brackish. The vegetation is scanty; and although there are
- bushes of many kinds, all are armed with formidable thorns, which seem to
- warn the stranger not to enter on these inhospitable regions.
- </p>
- <p>
- The settlement is situated eighteen miles up the river. The road follows
- the foot of the sloping cliff, which forms the northern boundary of the
- great valley, in which the Rio Negro flows. On the way we passed the ruins
- of some fine "estancias," which a few years since had been destroyed by
- the Indians. They withstood several attacks. A man present at one gave me
- a very lively description of what took place. The inhabitants had
- sufficient notice to drive all the cattle and horses into the "corral" <a
- href="#linknote-41" name="linknoteref-41" id="linknoteref-41"><small>41</small></a>
- which surrounded the house, and likewise to mount some small cannon. The
- Indians were Araucanians from the south of Chile; several hundreds in
- number, and highly disciplined. They first appeared in two bodies on a
- neighbouring hill; having there dismounted, and taken off their fur
- mantles, they advanced naked to the charge. The only weapon of an Indian
- is a very long bamboo or chuzo, ornamented with ostrich feathers, and
- pointed by a sharp spearhead. My informer seemed to remember with the
- greatest horror the quivering of these chuzos as they approached near.
- When close, the cacique Pincheira hailed the besieged to give up their
- arms, or he would cut all their throats. As this would probably have been
- the result of their entrance under any circumstances, the answer was given
- by a volley of musketry. The Indians, with great steadiness, came to the
- very fence of the corral: but to their surprise they found the posts
- fastened together by iron nails instead of leather thongs, and, of course,
- in vain attempted to cut them with their knives. This saved the lives of
- the Christians: many of the wounded Indians were carried away by their
- companions, and at last, one of the under caciques being wounded, the
- bugle sounded a retreat. They retired to their horses, and seemed to hold
- a council of war. This was an awful pause for the Spaniards, as all their
- ammunition, with the exception of a few cartridges, was expended. In an
- instant the Indians mounted their horses, and galloped out of sight.
- Another attack was still more quickly repulsed. A cool Frenchman managed
- the gun; he stopped till the Indians approached close, and then raked
- their line with grape-shot: he thus laid thirty-nine of them on the
- ground; and, of course, such a blow immediately routed the whole party.
- </p>
- <p>
- The town is indifferently called El Carmen or Patagones. It is built on
- the face of a cliff which fronts the river, and many of the houses are
- excavated even in the sandstone. The river is about two or three hundred
- yards wide, and is deep and rapid. The many islands, with their
- willow-trees, and the flat headlands, seen one behind the other on the
- northern boundary of the broad green valley, form, by the aid of a bright
- sun, a view almost picturesque. The number of inhabitants does not exceed
- a few hundreds. These Spanish colonies do not, like our British ones,
- carry within themselves the elements of growth. Many Indians of pure blood
- reside here: the tribe of the Cacique Lucanee constantly have their Toldos
- <a href="#linknote-42" name="linknoteref-42" id="linknoteref-42"><small>42</small></a>
- on the outskirts of the town. The local government partly supplies them
- with provisions, by giving them all the old worn-out horses, and they earn
- a little by making horse-rugs and other articles of riding-gear. These
- Indians are considered civilized; but what their character may have gained
- by a lesser degree of ferocity, is almost counterbalanced by their entire
- immorality. Some of the younger men are, however, improving; they are
- willing to labour, and a short time since a party went on a
- sealing-voyage, and behaved very well. They were now enjoying the fruits
- of their labour, by being dressed in very gay, clean clothes, and by being
- very idle. The taste they showed in their dress was admirable; if you
- could have turned one of these young Indians into a statue of bronze, his
- drapery would have been perfectly graceful.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day I rode to a large salt-lake, or Salina, which is distant fifteen
- miles from the town. During the winter it consists of a shallow lake of
- brine, which in summer is converted into a field of snow-white salt. The
- layer near the margin is from four to five inches thick, but towards the
- centre its thickness increases. This lake was two and a half miles long,
- and one broad. Others occur in the neighbourhood many times larger, and
- with a floor of salt, two and three feet in thickness, even when under
- water during the winter. One of these brilliantly white and level expanses
- in the midst of the brown and desolate plain, offers an extraordinary
- spectacle. A large quantity of salt is annually drawn from the salina: and
- great piles, some hundred tons in weight, were lying ready for
- exportation. The season for working the salinas forms the harvest of
- Patagones; for on it the prosperity of the place depends. Nearly the whole
- population encamps on the bank of the river, and the people are employed
- in drawing out the salt in bullock-waggons, This salt is crystallized in
- great cubes, and is remarkably pure: Mr. Trenham Reeks has kindly analyzed
- some for me, and he finds in it only 0.26 of gypsum and 0.22 of earthy
- matter. It is a singular fact, that it does not serve so well for
- preserving meat as sea-salt from the Cape de Verd islands; and a merchant
- at Buenos Ayres told me that he considered it as fifty per cent. less
- valuable. Hence the Cape de Verd salt is constantly imported, and is mixed
- with that from these salinas. The purity of the Patagonian salt, or
- absence from it of those other saline bodies found in all sea-water, is
- the only assignable cause for this inferiority: a conclusion which no one,
- I think, would have suspected, but which is supported by the fact lately
- ascertained, <a href="#linknote-43" name="linknoteref-43"
- id="linknoteref-43"><small>43</small></a> that those salts answer best for
- preserving cheese which contain most of the deliquescent chlorides.
- </p>
- <p>
- The border of this lake is formed of mud: and in this numerous large
- crystals of gypsum, some of which are three inches long, lie embedded;
- whilst on the surface others of sulphate of soda lie scattered about. The
- Gauchos call the former the "Padre del sal," and the latter the "Madre;"
- they state that these progenitive salts always occur on the borders of the
- salinas, when the water begins to evaporate. The mud is black, and has a
- fetid odour. I could not at first imagine the cause of this, but I
- afterwards perceived that the froth which the wind drifted on shore was
- coloured green, as if by confervae; I attempted to carry home some of this
- green matter, but from an accident failed. Parts of the lake seen from a
- short distance appeared of a reddish colour, and this perhaps was owing to
- some infusorial animalcula. The mud in many places was thrown up by
- numbers of some kind of worm, or annelidous animal. How surprising it is
- that any creatures should be able to exist in brine, and that they should
- be crawling among crystals of sulphate of soda and lime! And what becomes
- of these worms when, during the long summer, the surface is hardened into
- a solid layer of salt? Flamingoes in considerable numbers inhabit this
- lake, and breed here, throughout Patagonia, in Northern Chile, and at the
- Galapagos Islands, I met with these birds wherever there were lakes of
- brine. I saw them here wading about in search of food&mdash;probably for
- the worms which burrow in the mud; and these latter probably feed on
- infusoria or confervae. Thus we have a little living world within itself
- adapted to these inland lakes of brine. A minute crustaceous animal
- (Cancer salinus) is said <a href="#linknote-44" name="linknoteref-44"
- id="linknoteref-44"><small>44</small></a> to live in countless numbers in
- the brine-pans at Lymington: but only in those in which the fluid has
- attained, from evaporation, considerable strength&mdash;namely, about a
- quarter of a pound of salt to a pint of water. Well may we affirm that
- every part of the world is habitable! Whether lakes of brine, or those
- subterranean ones hidden beneath volcanic mountains&mdash;warm mineral
- springs&mdash;the wide expanse and depths of the ocean&mdash;the upper
- regions of the atmosphere, and even the surface of perpetual snow&mdash;all
- support organic beings.
- </p>
- <p>
- To the northward of the Rio Negro, between it and the inhabited country
- near Buenos Ayres, the Spaniards have only one small settlement, recently
- established at Bahia Blanca. The distance in a straight line to Buenos
- Ayres is very nearly five hundred British miles. The wandering tribes of
- horse Indians, which have always occupied the greater part of this
- country, having of late much harassed the outlying estancias, the
- government at Buenos Ayres equipped some time since an army under the
- command of General Rosas for the purpose of exterminating them. The troops
- were now encamped on the banks of the Colorado; a river lying about eighty
- miles northward of the Rio Negro. When General Rosas left Buenos Ayres he
- struck in a direct line across the unexplored plains: and as the country
- was thus pretty well cleared of Indians, he left behind him, at wide
- intervals, a small party of soldiers with a troop of horses (a posta), so
- as to be enabled to keep up a communication with the capital. As the
- Beagle intended to call at Bahia Blanca, I determined to proceed there by
- land; and ultimately I extended my plan to travel the whole way by the
- postas to Buenos Ayres.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 11th.&mdash;Mr. Harris, an Englishman residing at Patagones, a
- guide, and five Gauchos who were proceeding to the army on business, were
- my companions on the journey. The Colorado, as I have already said, is
- nearly eighty miles distant: and as we travelled slowly, we were two days
- and a half on the road. The whole line of country deserves scarcely a
- better name than that of a desert. Water is found only in two small wells;
- it is called fresh; but even at this time of the year, during the rainy
- season, it was quite brackish. In the summer this must be a distressing
- passage; for now it was sufficiently desolate. The valley of the Rio
- Negro, broad as it is, has merely been excavated out of the sandstone
- plain; for immediately above the bank on which the town stands, a level
- country commences, which is interrupted only by a few trifling valleys and
- depressions. Everywhere the landscape wears the same sterile aspect; a dry
- gravelly soil supports tufts of brown withered grass, and low scattered
- bushes, armed with thorns.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after passing the first spring we came in sight of a famous tree,
- which the Indians reverence as the altar of Walleechu. It is situated on a
- high part of the plain; and hence is a landmark visible at a great
- distance. As soon as a tribe of Indians come in sight of it, they offer
- their adorations by loud shouts. The tree itself is low, much branched,
- and thorny: just above the root it has a diameter of about three feet. It
- stands by itself without any neighbour, and was indeed the first tree we
- saw; afterwards we met with a few others of the same kind, but they were
- far from common. Being winter the tree had no leaves, but in their place
- numberless threads, by which the various offerings, such as cigars, bread,
- meat, pieces of cloth, etc., had been suspended. Poor Indians, not having
- anything better, only pull a thread out of their ponchos, and fasten it to
- the tree. Richer Indians are accustomed to pour spirits and mate into a
- certain hole, and likewise to smoke upwards, thinking thus to afford all
- possible gratification to Walleechu. To complete the scene, the tree was
- surrounded by the bleached bones of horses which had been slaughtered as
- sacrifices. All Indians of every age and sex make their offerings; they
- then think that their horses will not tire, and that they themselves shall
- be prosperous. The Gaucho who told me this, said that in the time of peace
- he had witnessed this scene, and that he and others used to wait till the
- Indians had passed by, for the sake of stealing from Walleechu the
- offerings.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Gauchos think that the Indians consider the tree as the god itself,
- but it seems far more probable that they regard it as the altar. The only
- cause which I can imagine for this choice, is its being a landmark in a
- dangerous passage. The Sierra de la Ventana is visible at an immense
- distance; and a Gaucho told me that he was once riding with an Indian a
- few miles to the north of the Rio Colorado when the Indian commenced
- making the same loud noise which is usual at the first sight of the
- distant tree, putting his hand to his head, and then pointing in the
- direction of the Sierra. Upon being asked the reason of this, the Indian
- said in broken Spanish, "First see the Sierra." About two leagues beyond
- this curious tree we halted for the night: at this instant an unfortunate
- cow was spied by the lynx-eyed Gauchos, who set off in full chase, and in
- a few minutes dragged her in with their lazos, and slaughtered her. We
- here had the four necessaries of life "en el campo,"&mdash;pasture for the
- horses, water (only a muddy puddle), meat and firewood. The Gauchos were
- in high spirits at finding all these luxuries; and we soon set to work at
- the poor cow. This was the first night which I passed under the open sky,
- with the gear of the recado for my bed. There is high enjoyment in the
- independence of the Gaucho life&mdash;to be able at any moment to pull up
- your horse, and say, "Here we will pass the night." The death-like
- stillness of the plain, the dogs keeping watch, the gipsy-group of Gauchos
- making their beds round the fire, have left in my mind a strongly-marked
- picture of this first night, which will never be forgotten.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day the country continued similar to that above described. It is
- inhabited by few birds or animals of any kind. Occasionally a deer, or a
- Guanaco (wild Llama) may be seen; but the Agouti (Cavia Patagonica) is the
- commonest quadruped. This animal here represents our hares. It differs,
- however, from that genus in many essential respects; for instance, it has
- only three toes behind. It is also nearly twice the size, weighing from
- twenty to twenty-five pounds. The Agouti is a true friend of the desert;
- it is a common feature of the landscape to see two or three hopping
- quickly one after the other in a straight line across these wild plains.
- They are found as far north as the Sierra Tapalguen (lat. 37 degs. 30'),
- where the plain rather suddenly becomes greener and more humid; and their
- southern limit is between Port Desire and St. Julian, where there is no
- change in the nature of the country. It is a singular fact, that although
- the Agouti is not now found as far south as Port St. Julian, yet that
- Captain Wood, in his voyage in 1670, talks of them as being numerous
- there. What cause can have altered, in a wide, uninhabited, and
- rarely-visited country, the range of an animal like this? It appears also,
- from the number shot by Captain Wood in one day at Port Desire, that they
- must have been considerably more abundant there formerly than at present.
- Where the Bizcacha lives and makes its burrows, the Agouti uses them; but
- where, as at Bahia Blanca, the Bizcacha is not found, the Agouti burrows
- for itself. The same thing occurs with the little owl of the Pampas
- (Athene cunicularia), which has so often been described as standing like a
- sentinel at the mouth of the burrows; for in Banda Oriental, owing to the
- absence of the Bizcacha, it is obliged to hollow out its own habitation.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning, as we approached the Rio Colorado, the appearance of the
- country changed; we soon came on a plain covered with turf, which, from
- its flowers, tall clover, and little owls, resembled the Pampas. We passed
- also a muddy swamp of considerable extent, which in summer dries, and
- becomes incrusted with various salts; and hence is called a salitral. It
- was covered by low succulent plants, of the same kind with those growing
- on the sea-shore. The Colorado, at the pass where we crossed it, is only
- about sixty yards wide; generally it must be nearly double that width. Its
- course is very tortuous, being marked by willow-trees and beds of reeds:
- in a direct line the distance to the mouth of the river is said to be nine
- leagues, but by water twenty-five. We were delayed crossing in the canoe
- by some immense troops of mares, which were swimming the river in order to
- follow a division of troops into the interior. A more ludicrous spectacle
- I never beheld than the hundreds and hundreds of heads, all directed one
- way, with pointed ears and distended snorting nostrils, appearing just
- above the water like a great shoal of some amphibious animal. Mare's flesh
- is the only food which the soldiers have when on an expedition. This gives
- them a great facility of movement; for the distance to which horses can be
- driven over these plains is quite surprising: I have been assured that an
- unloaded horse can travel a hundred miles a day for many days
- successively.
- </p>
- <p>
- The encampment of General Rosas was close to the river. It consisted of a
- square formed by waggons, artillery, straw huts, etc. The soldiers were
- nearly all cavalry; and I should think such a villainous, banditti-like
- army was never before collected together. The greater number of men were
- of a mixed breed, between Negro, Indian, and Spaniard. I know not the
- reason, but men of such origin seldom have a good expression of
- countenance. I called on the Secretary to show my passport. He began to
- cross-question me in the most dignified and mysterious manner. By good
- luck I had a letter of recommendation from the government of Buenos Ayres
- <a href="#linknote-45" name="linknoteref-45" id="linknoteref-45"><small>45</small></a>
- to the commandant of Patagones. This was taken to General Rosas, who sent
- me a very obliging message; and the Secretary returned all smiles and
- graciousness. We took up our residence in the <i>rancho</i>, or hovel, of
- a curious old Spaniard, who had served with Napoleon in the expedition
- against Russia.
- </p>
- <p>
- We stayed two days at the Colorado; I had little to do, for the
- surrounding country was a swamp, which in summer (December), when the snow
- melts on the Cordillera, is over-flowed by the river. My chief amusement
- was watching the Indian families as they came to buy little articles at
- the rancho where we stayed. It was supposed that General Rosas had about
- six hundred Indian allies. The men were a tall, fine race, yet it was
- afterwards easy to see in the Fuegian savage the same countenance rendered
- hideous by cold, want of food, and less civilization. Some authors, in
- defining the primary races of mankind, have separated these Indians into
- two classes; but this is certainly incorrect. Among the young women or
- chinas, some deserve to be called even beautiful. Their hair was coarse,
- but bright and black; and they wore it in two plaits hanging down to the
- waist. They had a high colour, and eyes that glistened with brilliancy;
- their legs, feet, and arms were small and elegantly formed; their ankles,
- and sometimes their wrists, were ornamented by broad bracelets of blue
- beads. Nothing could be more interesting than some of the family groups. A
- mother with one or two daughters would often come to our rancho, mounted
- on the same horse. They ride like men, but with their knees tucked up much
- higher. This habit, perhaps, arises from their being accustomed, when
- travelling, to ride the loaded horses. The duty of the women is to load
- and unload the horses; to make the tents for the night; in short to be,
- like the wives of all savages, useful slaves. The men fight, hunt, take
- care of the horses, and make the riding gear. One of their chief indoor
- occupations is to knock two stones together till they become round, in
- order to make the bolas. With this important weapon the Indian catches his
- game, and also his horse, which roams free over the plain. In fighting,
- his first attempt is to throw down the horse of his adversary with the
- bolas, and when entangled by the fall to kill him with the chuzo. If the
- balls only catch the neck or body of an animal, they are often carried
- away and lost. As the making the stones round is the labour of two days,
- the manufacture of the balls is a very common employment. Several of the
- men and women had their faces painted red, but I never saw the horizontal
- bands which are so common among the Fuegians. Their chief pride consists
- in having everything made of silver; I have seen a cacique with his spurs,
- stirrups, handle of his knife, and bridle made of this metal: the
- head-stall and reins being of wire, were not thicker than whipcord; and to
- see a fiery steed wheeling about under the command of so light a chain,
- gave to the horsemanship a remarkable character of elegance.
- </p>
- <p>
- General Rosas intimated a wish to see me; a circumstance which I was
- afterwards very glad of. He is a man of an extraordinary character, and
- has a most predominant influence in the country, which it seems he will
- use to its prosperity and advancement. <a href="#linknote-46"
- name="linknoteref-46" id="linknoteref-46"><small>46</small></a> He is said
- to be the owner of seventy-four square leagues of land, and to have about
- three hundred thousand head of cattle. His estates are admirably managed,
- and are far more productive of corn than those of others. He first gained
- his celebrity by his laws for his own estancias, and by disciplining
- several hundred men, so as to resist with success the attacks of the
- Indians. There are many stories current about the rigid manner in which
- his laws were enforced. One of these was, that no man, on penalty of being
- put into the stocks, should carry his knife on a Sunday: this being the
- principal day for gambling and drinking, many quarrels arose, which from
- the general manner of fighting with the knife often proved fatal. One
- Sunday the Governor came in great form to pay the estancia a visit, and
- General Rosas, in his hurry, walked out to receive him with his knife, as
- usual, stuck in his belt. The steward touched his arm, and reminded him of
- the law; upon which turning to the Governor, he said he was extremely
- sorry, but that he must go into the stocks, and that till let out, he
- possessed no power even in his own house. After a little time the steward
- was persuaded to open the stocks, and to let him out, but no sooner was
- this done, than he turned to the steward and said, "You now have broken
- the laws, so you must take my place in the stocks." Such actions as these
- delighted the Gauchos, who all possess high notions of their own equality
- and dignity.
- </p>
- <p>
- General Rosas is also a perfect horseman&mdash;an accomplishment of no
- small consequence In a country where an assembled army elected its general
- by the following trial: A troop of unbroken horses being driven into a
- corral, were let out through a gateway, above which was a cross-bar: it
- was agreed whoever should drop from the bar on one of these wild animals,
- as it rushed out, and should be able, without saddle or bridle, not only
- to ride it, but also to bring it back to the door of the corral, should be
- their general. The person who succeeded was accordingly elected; and
- doubtless made a fit general for such an army. This extraordinary feat has
- also been performed by Rosas.
- </p>
- <p>
- By these means, and by conforming to the dress and habits of the Gauchos,
- he has obtained an unbounded popularity in the country, and in consequence
- a despotic power. I was assured by an English merchant, that a man who had
- murdered another, when arrested and questioned concerning his motive,
- answered, "He spoke disrespectfully of General Rosas, so I killed him." At
- the end of a week the murderer was at liberty. This doubtless was the act
- of the general's party, and not of the general himself.
- </p>
- <p>
- In conversation he is enthusiastic, sensible, and very grave. His gravity
- is carried to a high pitch: I heard one of his mad buffoons (for he keeps
- two, like the barons of old) relate the following anecdote. "I wanted very
- much to hear a certain piece of music, so I went to the general two or
- three times to ask him; he said to me, 'Go about your business, for I am
- engaged.' I went a second time; he said, 'If you come again I will punish
- you.' A third time I asked, and he laughed. I rushed out of the tent, but
- it was too late&mdash;he ordered two soldiers to catch and stake me. I
- begged by all the saints in heaven he would let me off; but it would not
- do,&mdash;when the general laughs he spares neither mad man nor sound."
- The poor flighty gentleman looked quite dolorous, at the very recollection
- of the staking. This is a very severe punishment; four posts are driven
- into the ground, and the man is extended by his arms and legs
- horizontally, and there left to stretch for several hours. The idea is
- evidently taken from the usual method of drying hides. My interview passed
- away, without a smile, and I obtained a passport and order for the
- government post-horses, and this he gave me in the most obliging and ready
- manner.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning we started for Bahia Blanca, which we reached in two days.
- Leaving the regular encampment, we passed by the toldos of the Indians.
- These are round like ovens, and covered with hides; by the mouth of each,
- a tapering chuzo was stuck in the ground. The toldos were divided into
- separate groups, which belong to the different caciques' tribes, and the
- groups were again divided into smaller ones, according to the relationship
- of the owners. For several miles we travelled along the valley of the
- Colorado. The alluvial plains on the side appeared fertile, and it is
- supposed that they are well adapted to the growth of corn. Turning
- northward from the river, we soon entered on a country, differing from the
- plains south of the river. The land still continued dry and sterile: but
- it supported many different kinds of plants, and the grass, though brown
- and withered, was more abundant, as the thorny bushes were less so. These
- latter in a short space entirely disappeared, and the plains were left
- without a thicket to cover their nakedness. This change in the vegetation
- marks the commencement of the grand calcareo argillaceous deposit, which
- forms the wide extent of the Pampas, and covers the granitic rocks of
- Banda Oriental. From the Strait of Magellan to the Colorado, a distance of
- about eight hundred miles, the face of the country is everywhere composed
- of shingle: the pebbles are chiefly of porphyry, and probably owe their
- origin to the rocks of the Cordillera. North of the Colorado this bed
- thins out, and the pebbles become exceedingly small, and here the
- characteristic vegetation of Patagonia ceases.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having ridden about twenty-five miles, we came to a broad belt of
- sand-dunes, which stretches, as far as the eye can reach, to the east and
- west. The sand-hillocks resting on the clay, allow small pools of water to
- collect, and thus afford in this dry country an invaluable supply of fresh
- water. The great advantage arising from depressions and elevations of the
- soil, is not often brought home to the mind. The two miserable springs in
- the long passage between the Rio Negro and Colorado were caused by
- trifling inequalities in the plain, without them not a drop of water would
- have been found. The belt of sand-dunes is about eight miles wide; at some
- former period, it probably formed the margin of a grand estuary, where the
- Colorado now flows. In this district, where absolute proofs of the recent
- elevation of the land occur, such speculations can hardly be neglected by
- any one, although merely considering the physical geography of the
- country. Having crossed the sandy tract, we arrived in the evening at one
- of the post-houses; and, as the fresh horses were grazing at a distance we
- determined to pass the night there.
- </p>
- <p>
- The house was situated at the base of a ridge between one and two hundred
- feet high&mdash;a most remarkable feature in this country. This posta was
- commanded by a negro lieutenant, born in Africa: to his credit be it said,
- there was not a ranche between the Colorado and Buenos Ayres in nearly
- such neat order as his. He had a little room for strangers, and a small
- corral for the horses, all made of sticks and reeds; he had also dug a
- ditch round his house as a defence in case of being attacked. This would,
- however, have been of little avail, if the Indians had come; but his chief
- comfort seemed to rest in the thought of selling his life dearly. A short
- time before, a body of Indians had travelled past in the night; if they
- had been aware of the posta, our black friend and his four soldiers would
- assuredly have been slaughtered. I did not anywhere meet a more civil and
- obliging man than this negro; it was therefore the more painful to see
- that he would not sit down and eat with us.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning we sent for the horses very early, and started for another
- exhilarating gallop. We passed the Cabeza del Buey, an old name given to
- the head of a large marsh, which extends from Bahia Blanca. Here we
- changed horses, and passed through some leagues of swamps and saline
- marshes. Changing horses for the last time, we again began wading through
- the mud. My animal fell and I was well soused in black mire&mdash;a very
- disagreeable accident when one does not possess a change of clothes. Some
- miles from the fort we met a man, who told us that a great gun had been
- fired, which is a signal that Indians are near. We immediately left the
- road, and followed the edge of a marsh, which when chased offers the best
- mode of escape. We were glad to arrive within the walls, when we found all
- the alarm was about nothing, for the Indians turned out to be friendly
- ones, who wished to join General Rosas.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bahia Blanca scarcely deserves the name of a village. A few houses and the
- barracks for the troops are enclosed by a deep ditch and fortified wall.
- The settlement is only of recent standing (since 1828); and its growth has
- been one of trouble. The government of Buenos Ayres unjustly occupied it
- by force, instead of following the wise example of the Spanish Viceroys,
- who purchased the land near the older settlement of the Rio Negro, from
- the Indians. Hence the need of the fortifications; hence the few houses
- and little cultivated land without the limits of the walls; even the
- cattle are not safe from the attacks of the Indians beyond the boundaries
- of the plain, on which the fortress stands.
- </p>
- <p>
- The part of the harbour where the Beagle intended to anchor being distant
- twenty-five miles, I obtained from the Commandant a guide and horses, to
- take me to see whether she had arrived. Leaving the plain of green turf,
- which extended along the course of a little brook, we soon entered on a
- wide level waste consisting either of sand, saline marshes, or bare mud.
- Some parts were clothed by low thickets, and others with those succulent
- plants, which luxuriate only where salt abounds. Bad as the country was,
- ostriches, deer, agoutis, and armadilloes, were abundant. My guide told
- me, that two months before he had a most narrow escape of his life: he was
- out hunting with two other men, at no great distance from this part of the
- country, when they were suddenly met by a party of Indians, who giving
- chase, soon overtook and killed his two friends. His own horse's legs were
- also caught by the bolas, but he jumped off, and with his knife cut them
- free: while doing this he was obliged to dodge round his horse, and
- received two severe wounds from their chuzos. Springing on the saddle, he
- managed, by a most wonderful exertion, just to keep ahead of the long
- spears of his pursuers, who followed him to within sight of the fort. From
- that time there was an order that no one should stray far from the
- settlement. I did not know of this when I started, and was surprised to
- observe how earnestly my guide watched a deer, which appeared to have been
- frightened from a distant quarter.
- </p>
- <p>
- We found the Beagle had not arrived, and consequently set out on our
- return, but the horses soon tiring, we were obliged to bivouac on the
- plain. In the morning we had caught an armadillo, which although a most
- excellent dish when roasted in its shell, did not make a very substantial
- breakfast and dinner for two hungry men. The ground at the place where we
- stopped for the night, was incrusted with a layer of sulphate of soda, and
- hence, of course, was without water. Yet many of the smaller rodents
- managed to exist even here, and the tucutuco was making its odd little
- grunt beneath my head, during half the night. Our horses were very poor
- ones, and in the morning they were soon exhausted from not having had
- anything to drink, so that we were obliged to walk. About noon the dogs
- killed a kid, which we roasted. I ate some of it, but it made me
- intolerably thirsty. This was the more distressing as the road, from some
- recent rain, was full of little puddles of clear water, yet not a drop was
- drinkable. I had scarcely been twenty hours without water, and only part
- of the time under a hot sun, yet the thirst rendered me very weak. How
- people survive two or three days under such circumstances, I cannot
- imagine: at the same time, I must confess that my guide did not suffer at
- all, and was astonished that one day's deprivation should be so
- troublesome to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have several times alluded to the surface of the ground being incrusted
- with salt. This phenomenon is quite different from that of the salinas,
- and more extraordinary. In many parts of South America, wherever the
- climate is moderately dry, these incrustations occur; but I have nowhere
- seen them so abundant as near Bahia Blanca. The salt here, and in other
- parts of Patagonia, consists chiefly of sulphate of soda with some common
- salt. As long as the ground remains moist in the salitrales (as the
- Spaniards improperly call them, mistaking this substance for saltpeter),
- nothing is to be seen but an extensive plain composed of a black, muddy
- soil, supporting scattered tufts of succulent plants. On returning through
- one of these tracts, after a week's hot weather, one is surprised to see
- square miles of the plain white, as if from a slight fall of snow, here
- and there heaped up by the wind into little drifts. This latter appearance
- is chiefly caused by the salts being drawn up, during the slow evaporation
- of the moisture, round blades of dead grass, stumps of wood, and pieces of
- broken earth, instead of being crystallized at the bottoms of the puddles
- of water. The salitrales occur either on level tracts elevated only a few
- feet above the level of the sea, or on alluvial land bordering rivers. M.
- Parchappe <a href="#linknote-47" name="linknoteref-47" id="linknoteref-47"><small>47</small></a>
- found that the saline incrustation on the plain, at the distance of some
- miles from the sea, consisted chiefly of sulphate of soda, with only seven
- per cent. of common salt; whilst nearer to the coast, the common salt
- increased to 37 parts in a hundred. This circumstance would tempt one to
- believe that the sulphate of soda is generated in the soil, from the
- muriate, left on the surface during the slow and recent elevation of this
- dry country. The whole phenomenon is well worthy the attention of
- naturalists. Have the succulent, salt-loving plants, which are well known
- to contain much soda, the power of decomposing the muriate? Does the black
- fetid mud, abounding with organic matter, yield the sulphur and ultimately
- the sulphuric acid?
- </p>
- <p>
- Two days afterwards I again rode to the harbour: when not far from our
- destination, my companion, the same man as before, spied three people
- hunting on horseback. He immediately dismounted, and watching them
- intently, said, "They don't ride like Christians, and nobody can leave the
- fort." The three hunters joined company, and likewise dismounted from
- their horses. At last one mounted again and rode over the hill out of
- sight. My companion said, "We must now get on our horses: load your
- pistol;" and he looked to his own sword. I asked, "Are they Indians?"&mdash;"Quien
- sabe? (who knows?) if there are no more than three, it does not signify."
- It then struck me, that the one man had gone over the hill to fetch the
- rest of his tribe. I suggested this; but all the answer I could extort
- was, "Quien sabe?" His head and eye never for a minute ceased scanning
- slowly the distant horizon. I thought his uncommon coolness too good a
- joke, and asked him why he did not return home. I was startled when he
- answered, "We are returning, but in a line so as to pass near a swamp,
- into which we can gallop the horses as far as they can go, and then trust
- to our own legs; so that there is no danger." I did not feel quite so
- confident of this, and wanted to increase our pace. He said, "No, not
- until they do." When any little inequality concealed us, we galloped; but
- when in sight, continued walking. At last we reached a valley, and turning
- to the left, galloped quickly to the foot of a hill; he gave me his horse
- to hold, made the dogs lie down, and then crawled on his hands and knees
- to reconnoitre. He remained in this position for some time, and at last,
- bursting out in laughter, exclaimed, "Mugeres!" (women!). He knew them to
- be the wife and sister-in-law of the major's son, hunting for ostrich's
- eggs. I have described this man's conduct, because he acted under the full
- impression that they were Indians. As soon, however, as the absurd mistake
- was found out, he gave me a hundred reasons why they could not have been
- Indians; but all these were forgotten at the time. We then rode on in
- peace and quietness to a low point called Punta Alta, whence we could see
- nearly the whole of the great harbour of Bahia Blanca.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wide expanse of water is choked up by numerous great mud-banks, which
- the inhabitants call Cangrejales, or <i>crabberies</i>, from the number of
- small crabs. The mud is so soft that it is impossible to walk over them,
- even for the shortest distance. Many of the banks have their surfaces
- covered with long rushes, the tops of which alone are visible at high
- water. On one occasion, when in a boat, we were so entangled by these
- shallows that we could hardly find our way. Nothing was visible but the
- flat beds of mud; the day was not very clear, and there was much
- refraction, or as the sailors expressed it, "things loomed high." The only
- object within our view which was not level was the horizon; rushes looked
- like bushes unsupported in the air, and water like mud-banks, and
- mud-banks like water.
- </p>
- <p>
- We passed the night in Punta Alta, and I employed myself in searching for
- fossil bones; this point being a perfect catacomb for monsters of extinct
- races. The evening was perfectly calm and clear; the extreme monotony of
- the view gave it an interest even in the midst of mud-banks and gulls
- sand-hillocks and solitary vultures. In riding back in the morning we came
- across a very fresh track of a Puma, but did not succeed in finding it. We
- saw also a couple of Zorillos, or skunks,&mdash;odious animals, which are
- far from uncommon. In general appearance, the Zorillo resembles a polecat,
- but it is rather larger, and much thicker in proportion. Conscious of its
- power, it roams by day about the open plain, and fears neither dog nor
- man. If a dog is urged to the attack, its courage is instantly checked by
- a few drops of the fetid oil, which brings on violent sickness and running
- at the nose. Whatever is once polluted by it, is for ever useless. Azara
- says the smell can be perceived at a league distant; more than once, when
- entering the harbour of Monte Video, the wind being off shore, we have
- perceived the odour on board the Beagle. Certain it is, that every animal
- most willingly makes room for the Zorillo.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0005" id="link2HCH0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER V &mdash; BAHIA BLANCA
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Bahia Blanca&mdash;Geology&mdash;Numerous gigantic Quadrupeds&mdash;Recent
- Extinction&mdash;Longevity of species&mdash;Large Animals do not require a
- luxuriant vegetation&mdash;Southern Africa&mdash;Siberian Fossils&mdash;Two
- Species of Ostrich&mdash;Habits of Oven-bird&mdash;Armadilloes&mdash;Venomous
- Snake, Toad, Lizard&mdash;Hybernation of Animal&mdash;Habits of Sea-Pen&mdash;Indian
- Wars and Massacres&mdash;Arrow-head, antiquarian Relic.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">T</span>HE Beagle arrived
- here on the 24th of August, and a week afterwards sailed for the Plata.
- With Captain Fitz Roy's consent I was left behind, to travel by land to
- Buenos Ayres. I will here add some observations, which were made during
- this visit and on a previous occasion, when the Beagle was employed in
- surveying the harbour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The plain, at the distance of a few miles from the coast, belongs to the
- great Pampean formation, which consists in part of a reddish clay, and in
- part of a highly calcareous marly rock. Nearer the coast there are some
- plains formed from the wreck of the upper plain, and from mud, gravel, and
- sand thrown up by the sea during the slow elevation of the land, of which
- elevation we have evidence in upraised beds of recent shells, and in
- rounded pebbles of pumice scattered over the country. At Punta Alta we
- have a section of one of these later-formed little plains, which is highly
- interesting from the number and extraordinary character of the remains of
- gigantic land-animals embedded in it. These have been fully described by
- Professor Owen, in the Zoology of the voyage of the Beagle, and are
- deposited in the College of Surgeons. I will here give only a brief
- outline of their nature.
- </p>
- <p>
- First, parts of three heads and other bones of the Megatherium, the huge
- dimensions of which are expressed by its name. Secondly, the Megalonyx, a
- great allied animal. Thirdly, the Scelidotherium, also an allied animal,
- of which I obtained a nearly perfect skeleton. It must have been as large
- as a rhinoceros: in the structure of its head it comes according to Mr.
- Owen, nearest to the Cape Anteater, but in some other respects it
- approaches to the armadilloes. Fourthly, the Mylodon Darwinii, a closely
- related genus of little inferior size. Fifthly, another gigantic edental
- quadruped. Sixthly, a large animal, with an osseous coat in compartments,
- very like that of an armadillo. Seventhly, an extinct kind of horse, to
- which I shall have again to refer. Eighthly, a tooth of a Pachydermatous
- animal, probably the same with the Macrauchenia, a huge beast with a long
- neck like a camel, which I shall also refer to again. Lastly, the Toxodon,
- perhaps one of the strangest animals ever discovered: in size it equalled
- an elephant or megatherium, but the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen
- states, proves indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers,
- the order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest
- quadrupeds: in many details it is allied to the Pachydermata: judging from
- the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils, it was probably aquatic,
- like the Dugong and Manatee, to which it is also allied. How wonderfully
- are the different Orders, at the present time so well separated, blended
- together in different points of the structure of the Toxodon!
- </p>
- <p>
- The remains of these nine great quadrupeds, and many detached bones, were
- found embedded on the beach, within the space of about 200 yards square.
- It is a remarkable circumstance that so many different species should be
- found together; and it proves how numerous in kind the ancient inhabitants
- of this country must have been. At the distance of about thirty miles from
- Punta Alta, in a cliff of red earth, I found several fragments of bones,
- some of large size. Among them were the teeth of a gnawer, equalling in
- size and closely resembling those of the Capybara, whose habits have been
- described; and therefore, probably, an aquatic animal. There was also part
- of the head of a Ctenomys; the species being different from the Tucutuco,
- but with a close general resemblance. The red earth, like that of the
- Pampas, in which these remains were embedded, contains, according to
- Professor Ehrenberg, eight fresh-water and one salt-water infusorial
- animalcule; therefore, probably, it was an estuary deposit.
- </p>
- <p>
- The remains at Punta Alta were embedded in stratified gravel and reddish
- mud, just such as the sea might now wash up on a shallow bank. They were
- associated with twenty-three species of shells, of which thirteen are
- recent and four others very closely related to recent forms. <a
- href="#linknote-51" name="linknoteref-51" id="linknoteref-51"><small>51</small></a>
- From the bones of the Scelidotherium, including even the knee-cap, being
- intombed in their proper relative positions, and from the osseous armour
- of the great armadillo-like animal being so well preserved, together with
- the bones of one of its legs, we may feel assured that these remains were
- fresh and united by their ligaments, when deposited in the gravel together
- with the shells. <a href="#linknote-52" name="linknoteref-52"
- id="linknoteref-52"><small>52</small></a> Hence we have good evidence that
- the above enumerated gigantic quadrupeds, more different from those of the
- present day than the oldest of the tertiary quadrupeds of Europe, lived
- whilst the sea was peopled with most of its present inhabitants; and we
- have confirmed that remarkable law so often insisted on by Mr. Lyell,
- namely, that the "longevity of the species in the mammalia is upon the
- whole inferior to that of the testacea." <a href="#linknote-53"
- name="linknoteref-53" id="linknoteref-53"><small>53</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- The great size of the bones of the Megatheroid animals, including the
- Megatherium, Megalonyx, Scelidotherium, and Mylodon, is truly wonderful.
- The habits of life of these animals were a complete puzzle to naturalists,
- until Professor Owen <a href="#linknote-54" name="linknoteref-54"
- id="linknoteref-54"><small>54</small></a> solved the problem with
- remarkable ingenuity. The teeth indicate, by their simple structure, that
- these Megatheroid animals lived on vegetable food, and probably on the
- leaves and small twigs of trees; their ponderous forms and great strong
- curved claws seem so little adapted for locomotion, that some eminent
- naturalists have actually believed, that, like the sloths, to which they
- are intimately related, they subsisted by climbing back downwards on
- trees, and feeding on the leaves. It was a bold, not to say preposterous,
- idea to conceive even antediluvian trees, with branches strong enough to
- bear animals as large as elephants. Professor Owen, with far more
- probability, believes that, instead of climbing on the trees, they pulled
- the branches down to them, and tore up the smaller ones by the roots, and
- so fed on the leaves. The colossal breadth and weight of their hinder
- quarters, which can hardly be imagined without having been seen, become on
- this view, of obvious service, instead of being an incumbrance: their
- apparent clumsiness disappears. With their great tails and their huge
- heels firmly fixed like a tripod on the ground, they could freely exert
- the full force of their most powerful arms and great claws. Strongly
- rooted, indeed, must that tree have been, which could have resisted such
- force! The Mylodon, moreover, was furnished with a long extensile tongue
- like that of the giraffe, which, by one of those beautiful provisions of
- nature, thus reaches with the aid of its long neck its leafy food. I may
- remark, that in Abyssinia the elephant, according to Bruce, when it cannot
- reach with its proboscis the branches, deeply scores with its tusks the
- trunk of the tree, up and down and all round, till it is sufficiently
- weakened to be broken down.
- </p>
- <p>
- The beds including the above fossil remains, stand only from fifteen to
- twenty feet above the level of high-water; and hence the elevation of the
- land has been small (without there has been an intercalated period of
- subsidence, of which we have no evidence) since the great quadrupeds
- wandered over the surrounding plains; and the external features of the
- country must then have been very nearly the same as now. What, it may
- naturally be asked, was the character of the vegetation at that period;
- was the country as wretchedly sterile as it now is? As so many of the
- co-embedded shells are the same with those now living in the bay, I was at
- first inclined to think that the former vegetation was probably similar to
- the existing one; but this would have been an erroneous inference for some
- of these same shells live on the luxuriant coast of Brazil; and generally,
- the character of the inhabitants of the sea are useless as guides to judge
- of those on the land. Nevertheless, from the following considerations, I
- do not believe that the simple fact of many gigantic quadrupeds having
- lived on the plains round Bahia Blanca, is any sure guide that they
- formerly were clothed with a luxuriant vegetation: I have no doubt that
- the sterile country a little southward, near the Rio Negro, with its
- scattered thorny trees, would support many and large quadrupeds.
- </p>
- <p>
- That large animals require a luxuriant vegetation, has been a general
- assumption which has passed from one work to another; but I do not
- hesitate to say that it is completely false, and that it has vitiated the
- reasoning of geologists on some points of great interest in the ancient
- history of the world. The prejudice has probably been derived from India,
- and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants, noble forests, and
- impenetrable jungles, are associated together in every one's mind. If,
- however, we refer to any work of travels through the southern parts of
- Africa, we shall find allusions in almost every page either to the desert
- character of the country, or to the numbers of large animals inhabiting
- it. The same thing is rendered evident by the many engravings which have
- been published of various parts of the interior. When the Beagle was at
- Cape Town, I made an excursion of some days' length into the country,
- which at least was sufficient to render that which I had read more fully
- intelligible.
- </p>
- <p>
- Dr. Andrew Smith, who, at the head of his adventurous party, has lately
- succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn, informs me that, taking into
- consideration the whole of the southern part of Africa, there can be no
- doubt of its being a sterile country. On the southern and south-eastern
- coasts there are some fine forests, but with these exceptions, the
- traveller may pass for days together through open plains, covered by a
- poor and scanty vegetation. It is difficult to convey any accurate idea of
- degrees of comparative fertility; but it may be safely said that the
- amount of vegetation supported at any one time <a href="#linknote-55"
- name="linknoteref-55" id="linknoteref-55"><small>55</small></a> by Great
- Britain, exceeds, perhaps even tenfold, the quantity on an equal area, in
- the interior parts of Southern Africa. The fact that bullock-waggons can
- travel in any direction, excepting near the coast, without more than
- occasionally half an hour's delay in cutting down bushes, gives, perhaps,
- a more definite notion of the scantiness of the vegetation. Now, if we
- look to the animals inhabiting these wide plains, we shall find their
- numbers extraordinarily great, and their bulk immense. We must enumerate
- the elephant, three species of rhinoceros, and probably, according to Dr.
- Smith, two others, the hippopotamus, the giraffe, the bos caffer&mdash;as
- large as a full-grown bull, and the elan&mdash;but little less, two
- zebras, and the quaccha, two gnus, and several antelopes even larger than
- these latter animals. It may be supposed that although the species are
- numerous, the individuals of each kind are few. By the kindness of Dr.
- Smith, I am enabled to show that the case is very different. He informs
- me, that in lat. 24 degs., in one day's march with the bullock-waggons, he
- saw, without wandering to any great distance on either side, between one
- hundred and one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses, which belonged to three
- species: the same day he saw several herds of giraffes, amounting together
- to nearly a hundred; and that although no elephant was observed, yet they
- are found in this district. At the distance of a little more than one
- hour's march from their place of encampment on the previous night, his
- party actually killed at one spot eight hippopotamuses, and saw many more.
- In this same river there were likewise crocodiles. Of course it was a case
- quite extraordinary, to see so many great animals crowded together, but it
- evidently proves that they must exist in great numbers. Dr. Smith
- describes the country passed through that day, as "being thinly covered
- with grass, and bushes about four feet high, and still more thinly with
- mimosa-trees." The waggons were not prevented travelling in a nearly
- straight line.
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides these large animals, every one the least acquainted with the
- natural history of the Cape, has read of the herds of antelopes, which can
- be compared only with the flocks of migratory birds. The numbers indeed of
- the lion, panther, and hyaena, and the multitude of birds of prey, plainly
- speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds: one evening seven lions
- were counted at the same time prowling round Dr. Smith's encampment. As
- this able naturalist remarked to me, the carnage each day in Southern
- Africa must indeed be terrific! I confess it is truly surprising how such
- a number of animals can find support in a country producing so little
- food. The larger quadrupeds no doubt roam over wide tracts in search of
- it; and their food chiefly consists of underwood, which probably contains
- much nutriment in a small bulk. Dr. Smith also informs me that the
- vegetation has a rapid growth; no sooner is a part consumed, than its
- place is supplied by a fresh stock. There can be no doubt, however, that
- our ideas respecting the apparent amount of food necessary for the support
- of large quadrupeds are much exaggerated: it should have been remembered
- that the camel, an animal of no mean bulk, has always been considered as
- the emblem of the desert.
- </p>
- <p>
- The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation must
- necessarily be luxuriant, is the more remarkable, because the converse is
- far from true. Mr. Burchell observed to me that when entering Brazil,
- nothing struck him more forcibly than the splendour of the South American
- vegetation contrasted with that of South Africa, together with the absence
- of all large quadrupeds. In his Travels, <a href="#linknote-56"
- name="linknoteref-56" id="linknoteref-56"><small>56</small></a> he has
- suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if there were
- sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest herbivorous quadrupeds
- of each country would be extremely curious. If we take on the one side,
- the elephant, <a href="#linknote-57" name="linknoteref-57"
- id="linknoteref-57"><small>57</small></a> hippopotamus, giraffe, bos
- caffer, elan, certainly three, and probably five species of rhinoceros;
- and on the American side, two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the vicuna,
- peccari, capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys to complete
- the number), and then place these two groups alongside each other, it is
- not easy to conceive ranks more disproportionate in size. After the above
- facts, we are compelled to conclude, against anterior probability, <a
- href="#linknote-58" name="linknoteref-58" id="linknoteref-58"><small>58</small></a>
- that among the mammalia there exists no close relation between the bulk of
- the species, and the <i>quantity</i> of the vegetation, in the countries
- which they inhabit.
- </p>
- <p>
- With regard to the number of large quadrupeds, there certainly exists no
- quarter of the globe which will bear comparison with Southern Africa.
- After the different statements which have been given, the extremely desert
- character of that region will not be disputed. In the European division of
- the world, we must look back to the tertiary epochs, to find a condition
- of things among the mammalia, resembling that now existing at the Cape of
- Good Hope. Those tertiary epochs, which we are apt to consider as
- abounding to an astonishing degree with large animals, because we find the
- remains of many ages accumulated at certain spots, could hardly boast of
- more large quadrupeds than Southern Africa does at present. If we
- speculate on the condition of the vegetation during these epochs we are at
- least bound so far to consider existing analogies, as not to urge as
- absolutely necessary a luxuriant vegetation, when we see a state of things
- so totally different at the Cape of Good Hope.
- </p>
- <p>
- We know <a href="#linknote-59" name="linknoteref-59" id="linknoteref-59"><small>59</small></a>
- that the extreme regions of North America, many degrees beyond the limit
- where the ground at the depth of a few feet remains perpetually congealed,
- are covered by forests of large and tall trees. In a like manner, in
- Siberia, we have woods of birch, fir, aspen, and larch, growing in a
- latitude <a href="#linknote-510" name="linknoteref-510"
- id="linknoteref-510"><small>510</small></a> (64 degs.) where the mean
- temperature of the air falls below the freezing point, and where the earth
- is so completely frozen, that the carcass of an animal embedded in it is
- perfectly preserved. With these facts we must grant, as far as <i>quantity
- alone</i> of vegetation is concerned, that the great quadrupeds of the
- later tertiary epochs might, in most parts of Northern Europe and Asia,
- have lived on the spots where their remains are now found. I do not here
- speak of the kind of vegetation necessary for their support; because, as
- there is evidence of physical changes, and as the animals have become
- extinct, so may we suppose that the species of plants have likewise been
- changed.
- </p>
- <p>
- These remarks, I may be permitted to add, directly bear on the case of the
- Siberian animals preserved in ice. The firm conviction of the necessity of
- a vegetation possessing a character of tropical luxuriance, to support
- such large animals, and the impossibility of reconciling this with the
- proximity of perpetual congelation, was one chief cause of the several
- theories of sudden revolutions of climate, and of overwhelming
- catastrophes, which were invented to account for their entombment. I am
- far from supposing that the climate has not changed since the period when
- those animals lived, which now lie buried in the ice. At present I only
- wish to show, that as far as <i>quantity</i> of food <i>alone</i> is
- concerned, the ancient rhinoceroses might have roamed over the <i>steppes</i>
- of central Siberia (the northern parts probably being under water) even in
- their present condition, as well as the living rhinoceroses and elephants
- over the <i>Karros</i> of Southern Africa.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will now give an account of the habits of some of the more interesting
- birds which are common on the wild plains of Northern Patagonia: and first
- for the largest, or South American ostrich. The ordinary habits of the
- ostrich are familiar to every one. They live on vegetable matter, such as
- roots and grass; but at Bahia Blanca I have repeatedly seen three or four
- come down at low water to the extensive mud-banks which are then dry, for
- the sake, as the Gauchos say, of feeding on small fish. Although the
- ostrich in its habits is so shy, wary, and solitary, and although so fleet
- in its pace, it is caught without much difficulty by the Indian or Gaucho
- armed with the bolas. When several horsemen appear in a semicircle, it
- becomes confounded, and does not know which way to escape. They generally
- prefer running against the wind; yet at the first start they expand their
- wings, and like a vessel make all sail. On one fine hot day I saw several
- ostriches enter a bed of tall rushes, where they squatted concealed, till
- quite closely approached. It is not generally known that ostriches readily
- take to the water. Mr. King informs me that at the Bay of San Blas, and at
- Port Valdes in Patagonia, he saw these birds swimming several times from
- island to island. They ran into the water both when driven down to a
- point, and likewise of their own accord when not frightened: the distance
- crossed was about two hundred yards. When swimming, very little of their
- bodies appear above water; their necks are extended a little forward, and
- their progress is slow. On two occasions I saw some ostriches swimming
- across the Santa Cruz river, where its course was about four hundred yards
- wide, and the stream rapid. Captain Sturt, <a href="#linknote-511"
- name="linknoteref-511" id="linknoteref-511"><small>511</small></a> when
- descending the Murrumbidgee, in Australia, saw two emus in the act of
- swimming.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhabitants of the country readily distinguish, even at a distance,
- the cock bird from the hen. The former is larger and darker-coloured, <a
- href="#linknote-512" name="linknoteref-512" id="linknoteref-512"><small>512</small></a>
- and has a bigger head. The ostrich, I believe the cock, emits a singular,
- deep-toned, hissing note: when first I heard it, standing in the midst of
- some sand-hillocks, I thought it was made by some wild beast, for it is a
- sound that one cannot tell whence it comes, or from how far distant. When
- we were at Bahia Blanca in the months of September and October, the eggs,
- in extraordinary numbers, were found all over the country. They lie either
- scattered and single, in which case they are never hatched, and are called
- by the Spaniards huachos; or they are collected together into a shallow
- excavation, which forms the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three
- contained twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven. In one day's
- hunting on horseback sixty-four eggs were found; forty-four of these were
- in two nests, and the remaining twenty, scattered huachos. The Gauchos
- unanimously affirm, and there is no reason to doubt their statement, that
- the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for some time afterwards
- accompanies the young. The cock when on the nest lies very close; I have
- myself almost ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times they are
- occasionally fierce, and even dangerous, and that they have been known to
- attack a man on horseback, trying to kick and leap on him. My informer
- pointed out to me an old man, whom he had seen much terrified by one
- chasing him. I observe in Burchell's travels in South Africa, that he
- remarks, "Having killed a male ostrich, and the feathers being dirty, it
- was said by the Hottentots to be a nest bird." I understand that the male
- emu in the Zoological Gardens takes charge of the nest: this habit,
- therefore, is common to the family.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females lay in one nest. I
- have been positively told that four or five hen birds have been watched to
- go in the middle of the day, one after the other, to the same nest. I may
- add, also, that it is believed in Africa, that two or more females lay in
- one nest. <a href="#linknote-513" name="linknoteref-513"
- id="linknoteref-513"><small>513</small></a> Although this habit at first
- appears very strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple
- manner. The number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty to forty, and
- even to fifty; and according to Azara, some times to seventy or eighty.
- Now, although it is most probable, from the number of eggs found in one
- district being so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent birds,
- and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that she may in the
- course of the season lay a large number, yet the time required must be
- very long. Azara states, <a href="#linknote-514" name="linknoteref-514"
- id="linknoteref-514"><small>514</small></a> that a female in a state of
- domestication laid seventeen eggs, each at the interval of three days one
- from another. If the hen was obliged to hatch her own eggs, before the
- last was laid the first probably would be addled; but if each laid a few
- eggs at successive periods, in different nests, and several hens, as is
- stated to be the case, combined together, then the eggs in one collection
- would be nearly of the same age. If the number of eggs in one of these
- nests is, as I believe, not greater on an average than the number laid by
- one female in the season, then there must be as many nests as females, and
- each cock bird will have its fair share of the labour of incubation; and
- that during a period when the females probably could not sit, from not
- having finished laying. <a href="#linknote-515" name="linknoteref-515"
- id="linknoteref-515"><small>515</small></a> I have before mentioned the
- great numbers of huachos, or deserted eggs; so that in one day's hunting
- twenty were found in this state. It appears odd that so many should be
- wasted. Does it not arise from the difficulty of several females
- associating together, and finding a male ready to undertake the office of
- incubation? It is evident that there must at first be some degree of
- association between at least two females; otherwise the eggs would remain
- scattered over the wide plain, at distances far too great to allow of the
- male collecting them into one nest: some authors have believed that the
- scattered eggs were deposited for the young birds to feed on. This can
- hardly be the case in America, because the huachos, although often found
- addled and putrid, are generally whole.
- </p>
- <p>
- When at the Rio Negro in Northern Patagonia, I repeatedly heard the
- Gauchos talking of a very rare bird which they called Avestruz Petise.
- They described it as being less than the common ostrich (which is there
- abundant), but with a very close general resemblance. They said its colour
- was dark and mottled, and that its legs were shorter, and feathered lower
- down than those of the common ostrich. It is more easily caught by the
- bolas than the other species. The few inhabitants who had seen both kinds,
- affirmed they could distinguish them apart from a long distance. The eggs
- of the small species appeared, however, more generally known; and it was
- remarked, with surprise, that they were very little less than those of the
- Rhea, but of a slightly different form, and with a tinge of pale blue.
- This species occurs most rarely on the plains bordering the Rio Negro; but
- about a degree and a half further south they are tolerably abundant. When
- at Port Desire, in Patagonia (lat. 48 degs.), Mr. Martens shot an ostrich;
- and I looked at it, forgetting at the moment, in the most unaccountable
- manner, the whole subject of the Petises, and thought it was a not
- full-grown bird of the common sort. It was cooked and eaten before my
- memory returned. Fortunately the head, neck, legs, wings, many of the
- larger feathers, and a large part of the skin, had been preserved; and
- from these a very nearly perfect specimen has been put together, and is
- now exhibited in the museum of the Zoological Society. Mr. Gould, in
- describing this new species, has done me the honour of calling it after my
- name.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the Patagonian Indians in the Strait of Magellan, we found a half
- Indian, who had lived some years with the tribe, but had been born in the
- northern provinces. I asked him if he had ever heard of the Avestruz
- Petise? He answered by saying, "Why, there are none others in these
- southern countries." He informed me that the number of eggs in the nest of
- the petise is considerably less than in that of the other kind, namely,
- not more than fifteen on an average, but he asserted that more than one
- female deposited them. At Santa Cruz we saw several of these birds. They
- were excessively wary: I think they could see a person approaching when
- too far off to be distinguished themselves. In ascending the river few
- were seen; but in our quiet and rapid descent, many, in pairs and by fours
- or fives, were observed. It was remarked that this bird did not expand its
- wings, when first starting at full speed, after the manner of the northern
- kind. In conclusion I may observe, that the Struthio rhea inhabits the
- country of La Plata as far as a little south of the Rio Negro in lat. 41
- degs., and that the Struthio Darwinii takes its place in Southern
- Patagonia; the part about the Rio Negro being neutral territory. M. A.
- d'Orbigny, <a href="#linknote-516" name="linknoteref-516"
- id="linknoteref-516"><small>516</small></a> when at the Rio Negro, made
- great exertions to procure this bird, but never had the good fortune to
- succeed. Dobrizhoffer <a href="#linknote-517" name="linknoteref-517"
- id="linknoteref-517"><small>517</small></a> long ago was aware of there
- being two kinds of ostriches, he says, "You must know, moreover, that Emus
- differ in size and habits in different tracts of land; for those that
- inhabit the plains of Buenos Ayres and Tucuman are larger, and have black,
- white and grey feathers; those near to the Strait of Magellan are smaller
- and more beautiful, for their white feathers are tipped with black at the
- extremity, and their black ones in like manner terminate in white."
- </p>
- <p>
- A very singular little bird, Tinochorus rumicivorus, is here common: in
- its habits and general appearance, it nearly equally partakes of the
- characters, different as they are, of the quail and snipe. The Tinochorus
- is found in the whole of southern South America, wherever there are
- sterile plains, or open dry pasture land. It frequents in pairs or small
- flocks the most desolate places, where scarcely another living creature
- can exist. Upon being approached they squat close, and then are very
- difficult to be distinguished from the ground. When feeding they walk
- rather slowly, with their legs wide apart. They dust themselves in roads
- and sandy places, and frequent particular spots, where they may be found
- day after day: like partridges, they take wing in a flock. In all these
- respects, in the muscular gizzard adapted for vegetable food, in the
- arched beak and fleshy nostrils, short legs and form of foot, the
- Tinochorus has a close affinity with quails. But as soon as the bird is
- seen flying, its whole appearance changes; the long pointed wings, so
- different from those in the gallinaceous order, the irregular manner of
- flight, and plaintive cry uttered at the moment of rising, recall the idea
- of a snipe. The sportsmen of the Beagle unanimously called it the
- short-billed snipe. To this genus, or rather to the family of the Waders,
- its skeleton shows that it is really related.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Tinochorus is closely related to some other South American birds. Two
- species of the genus Attagis are in almost every respect ptarmigans in
- their habits; one lives in Tierra del Fuego, above the limits of the
- forest land; and the other just beneath the snow-line on the Cordillera of
- Central Chile. A bird of another closely allied genus, Chionis alba, is an
- inhabitant of the antarctic regions; it feeds on sea-weed and shells on
- the tidal rocks. Although not web footed, from some unaccountable habit,
- it is frequently met with far out at sea. This small family of birds is
- one of those which, from its varied relations to other families, although
- at present offering only difficulties to the systematic naturalist,
- ultimately may assist in revealing the grand scheme, common to the present
- and past ages, on which organized beings have been created.
- </p>
- <p>
- The genus Furnarius contains several species, all small birds, living on
- the ground, and inhabiting open dry countries. In structure they cannot be
- compared to any European form. Ornithologists have generally included them
- among the creepers, although opposed to that family in every habit. The
- best known species is the common oven-bird of La Plata, the Casara or
- housemaker of the Spaniards. The nest, whence it takes its name, is placed
- in the most exposed situations, as on the top of a post, a bare rock, or
- on a cactus. It is composed of mud and bits of straw, and has strong thick
- walls: in shape it precisely resembles an oven, or depressed beehive. The
- opening is large and arched, and directly in front, within the nest, there
- is a partition, which reaches nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage
- or antechamber to the true nest.
- </p>
- <p>
- Another and smaller species of Furnarius (F. cunicularius), resembles the
- oven-bird in the general reddish tint of its plumage, in a peculiar shrill
- reiterated cry, and in an odd manner of running by starts. From its
- affinity, the Spaniards call it Casarita (or little housebuilder),
- although its nidification is quite different. The Casarita builds its nest
- at the bottom of a narrow cylindrical hole, which is said to extend
- horizontally to nearly six feet under ground. Several of the country
- people told me, that when boys, they had attempted to dig out the nest,
- but had scarcely ever succeeded in getting to the end of the passage. The
- bird chooses any low bank of firm sandy soil by the side of a road or
- stream. Here (at Bahia Blanca) the walls round the houses are built of
- hardened mud, and I noticed that one, which enclosed a courtyard where I
- lodged, was bored through by round holes in a score of places. On asking
- the owner the cause of this he bitterly complained of the little casarita,
- several of which I afterwards observed at work. It is rather curious to
- find how incapable these birds must be of acquiring any notion of
- thickness, for although they were constantly flitting over the low wall,
- they continued vainly to bore through it, thinking it an excellent bank
- for their nests. I do not doubt that each bird, as often as it came to
- daylight on the opposite side, was greatly surprised at the marvellous
- fact.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have already mentioned nearly all the mammalia common in this country.
- Of armadilloes three species occur namely, the Dasypus minutus or <i>pichy</i>,
- the D. villosus or <i>peludo</i>, and the <i>apar</i>. The first extends
- ten degrees further south than any other kind; a fourth species, the <i>Mulita</i>,
- does not come as far south as Bahia Blanca. The four species have nearly
- similar habits; the <i>peludo</i>, however, is nocturnal, while the others
- wander by day over the open plains, feeding on beetles, larvae, roots, and
- even small snakes. The <i>apar</i>, commonly called <i>mataco</i>, is
- remarkable by having only three moveable bands; the rest of its tesselated
- covering being nearly inflexible. It has the power of rolling itself into
- a perfect sphere, like one kind of English woodlouse. In this state it is
- safe from the attack of dogs; for the dog not being able to take the whole
- in its mouth, tries to bite one side, and the ball slips away. The smooth
- hard covering of the <i>mataco</i> offers a better defence than the sharp
- spines of the hedgehog. The <i>pichy</i> prefers a very dry soil; and the
- sand-dunes near the coast, where for many months it can never taste water,
- is its favourite resort: it often tries to escape notice, by squatting
- close to the ground. In the course of a day's ride, near Bahia Blanca,
- several were generally met with. The instant one was perceived, it was
- necessary, in order to catch it, almost to tumble off one's horse; for in
- soft soil the animal burrowed so quickly, that its hinder quarters would
- almost disappear before one could alight. It seems almost a pity to kill
- such nice little animals, for as a Gaucho said, while sharpening his knife
- on the back of one, "Son tan mansos" (they are so quiet).
- </p>
- <p>
- Of reptiles there are many kinds: one snake (a Trigonocephalus, or Cophias
- <a href="#linknote-518" name="linknoteref-518" id="linknoteref-518"><small>518</small></a>),
- from the size of the poison channel in its fangs, must be very deadly.
- Cuvier, in opposition to some other naturalists, makes this a sub-genus of
- the rattlesnake, and intermediate between it and the viper. In
- confirmation of this opinion, I observed a fact, which appears to me very
- curious and instructive, as showing how every character, even though it
- may be in some degree independent of structure, has a tendency to vary by
- slow degrees. The extremity of the tail of this snake is terminated by a
- point, which is very slightly enlarged; and as the animal glides along, it
- constantly vibrates the last inch; and this part striking against the dry
- grass and brushwood, produces a rattling noise, which can be distinctly
- heard at the distance of six feet. As often as the animal was irritated or
- surprised, its tail was shaken; and the vibrations were extremely rapid.
- Even as long as the body retained its irritability, a tendency to this
- habitual movement was evident. This Trigonocephalus has, therefore, in
- some respects the structure of a viper, with the habits of a rattlesnake:
- the noise, however, being produced by a simpler device. The expression of
- this snake's face was hideous and fierce; the pupil consisted of a
- vertical slit in a mottled and coppery iris; the jaws were broad at the
- base, and the nose terminated in a triangular projection. I do not think I
- ever saw anything more ugly, excepting, perhaps, some of the vampire bats.
- I imagine this repulsive aspect originates from the features being placed
- in positions, with respect to each other, somewhat proportional to those
- of the human face; and thus we obtain a scale of hideousness.
- </p>
- <p>
- Amongst the Batrachian reptiles, I found only one little toad (Phryniscus
- nigricans), which was most singular from its colour. If we imagine, first,
- that it had been steeped in the blackest ink, and then, when dry, allowed
- to crawl over a board, freshly painted with the brightest vermilion, so as
- to colour the soles of its feet and parts of its stomach, a good idea of
- its appearance will be gained. If it had been an unnamed species, surely
- it ought to have been called <i>Diabolicus</i>, for it is a fit toad to
- preach in the ear of Eve. Instead of being nocturnal in its habits, as
- other toads are, and living in damp obscure recesses, it crawls during the
- heat of the day about the dry sand-hillocks and arid plains, where not a
- single drop of water can be found. It must necessarily depend on the dew
- for its moisture; and this probably is absorbed by the skin, for it is
- known, that these reptiles possess great powers of cutaneous absorption.
- At Maldonado, I found one in a situation nearly as dry as at Bahia Blanca,
- and thinking to give it a great treat, carried it to a pool of water; not
- only was the little animal unable to swim, but I think without help it
- would soon have been drowned. Of lizards there were many kinds, but only
- one (Proctotretus multimaculatus) remarkable from its habits. It lives on
- the bare sand near the sea coast, and from its mottled colour, the
- brownish scales being speckled with white, yellowish red, and dirty blue,
- can hardly be distinguished from the surrounding surface. When frightened,
- it attempts to avoid discovery by feigning death, with outstretched legs,
- depressed body, and closed eyes: if further molested, it buries itself
- with great quickness in the loose sand. This lizard, from its flattened
- body and short legs, cannot run quickly.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will here add a few remarks on the hybernation of animals in this part
- of South America. When we first arrived at Bahia Blanca, September 7th,
- 1832, we thought nature had granted scarcely a living creature to this
- sandy and dry country. By digging, however, in the ground, several
- insects, large spiders, and lizards were found in a half-torpid state. On
- the 15th, a few animals began to appear, and by the 18th (three days from
- the equinox), everything announced the commencement of spring. The plains
- were ornamented by the flowers of a pink wood-sorrel, wild peas,
- cenotherae, and geraniums; and the birds began to lay their eggs. Numerous
- Lamellicorn and Heteromerous insects, the latter remarkable for their
- deeply sculptured bodies, were slowly crawling about; while the lizard
- tribe, the constant inhabitants of a sandy soil, darted about in every
- direction. During the first eleven days, whilst nature was dormant, the
- mean temperature taken from observations made every two hours on board the
- Beagle, was 51 degs.; and in the middle of the day the thermometer seldom
- ranged above 55 degs. On the eleven succeeding days, in which all living
- things became so animated, the mean was 58 degs., and the range in the
- middle of the day between 60 and 70 degs. Here, then, an increase of seven
- degrees in mean temperature, but a greater one of extreme heat, was
- sufficient to awake the functions of life. At Monte Video, from which we
- had just before sailed, in the twenty-three days included between the 26th
- of July and the 19th of August, the mean temperature from 276 observations
- was 58.4 degs.; the mean hottest day being 65.5 degs., and the coldest 46
- degs. The lowest point to which the thermometer fell was 41.5 degs., and
- occasionally in the middle of the day it rose to 69 or 70 degs. Yet with
- this high temperature, almost every beetle, several genera of spiders,
- snails, and land-shells, toads and lizards were all lying torpid beneath
- stones. But we have seen that at Bahia Blanca, which is four degrees
- southward and therefore with a climate only a very little colder, this
- same temperature with a rather less extreme heat, was sufficient to awake
- all orders of animated beings. This shows how nicely the stimulus required
- to arouse hybernating animals is governed by the usual climate of the
- district, and not by the absolute heat. It is well known that within the
- tropics, the hybernation, or more properly aestivation, of animals is
- determined not by the temperature, but by the times of drought. Near Rio
- de Janeiro, I was at first surprised to observe, that, a few days after
- some little depressions had been filled with water, they were peopled by
- numerous full-grown shells and beetles, which must have been lying
- dormant. Humboldt has related the strange accident of a hovel having been
- erected over a spot where a young crocodile lay buried in the hardened
- mud. He adds, "The Indians often find enormous boas, which they call Uji
- or water serpents, in the same lethargic state. To reanimate them, they
- must be irritated or wetted with water."
- </p>
- <p>
- I will only mention one other animal, a zoophyte (I believe Virgularia
- Patagonica), a kind of sea-pen. It consists of a thin, straight, fleshy
- stem, with alternate rows of polypi on each side, and surrounding an
- elastic stony axis, varying in length from eight inches to two feet. The
- stem at one extremity is truncate, but at the other is terminated by a
- vermiform fleshy appendage. The stony axis which gives strength to the
- stem may be traced at this extremity into a mere vessel filled with
- granular matter. At low water hundreds of these zoophytes might be seen,
- projecting like stubble, with the truncate end upwards, a few inches above
- the surface of the muddy sand. When touched or pulled they suddenly drew
- themselves in with force, so as nearly or quite to disappear. By this
- action, the highly elastic axis must be bent at the lower extremity, where
- it is naturally slightly curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity
- alone that the zoophyte is enabled to rise again through the mud. Each
- polypus, though closely united to its brethren, has a distinct mouth,
- body, and tentacula. Of these polypi, in a large specimen, there must be
- many thousands; yet we see that they act by one movement: they have also
- one central axis connected with a system of obscure circulation, and the
- ova are produced in an organ distinct from the separate individuals. <a
- href="#linknote-519" name="linknoteref-519" id="linknoteref-519"><small>519</small></a>
- Well may one be allowed to ask, what is an individual? It is always
- interesting to discover the foundation of the strange tales of the old
- voyagers; and I have no doubt but that the habits of this Virgularia
- explain one such case. Captain Lancaster, in his voyage <a
- href="#linknote-520" name="linknoteref-520" id="linknoteref-520"><small>520</small></a>
- in 1601, narrates that on the sea-sands of the Island of Sombrero, in the
- East Indies, he "found a small twig growing up like a young tree, and on
- offering to pluck it up it shrinks down to the ground, and sinks, unless
- held very hard. On being plucked up, a great worm is found to be its root,
- and as the tree groweth in greatness, so doth the worm diminish, and as
- soon as the worm is entirely turned into a tree it rooteth in the earth,
- and so becomes great. This transformation is one of the strangest wonders
- that I saw in all my travels: for if this tree is plucked up, while young,
- and the leaves and bark stripped off, it becomes a hard stone when dry,
- much like white coral: thus is this worm twice transformed into different
- natures. Of these we gathered and brought home many."
- </p>
- <p>
- During my stay at Bahia Blanca, while waiting for the Beagle, the place
- was in a constant state of excitement, from rumours of wars and victories,
- between the troops of Rosas and the wild Indians. One day an account came
- that a small party forming one of the postas on the line to Buenos Ayres,
- had been found all murdered. The next day three hundred men arrived from
- the Colorado, under the command of Commandant Miranda. A large portion of
- these men were Indians (mansos, or tame), belonging to the tribe of the
- Cacique Bernantio. They passed the night here; and it was impossible to
- conceive anything more wild and savage than the scene of their bivouac.
- Some drank till they were intoxicated; others swallowed the steaming blood
- of the cattle slaughtered for their suppers, and then, being sick from
- drunkenness, they cast it up again, and were besmeared with filth and
- gore.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nam simul expletus dapibus, vinoque sepultus Cervicem inflexam posuit,
- jacuitque per antrum Immensus, saniem eructans, ac frusta cruenta Per
- somnum commixta mero.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning they started for the scene of the murder, with orders to
- follow the "rastro," or track, even if it led them to Chile. We
- subsequently heard that the wild Indians had escaped into the great
- Pampas, and from some cause the track had been missed. One glance at the
- rastro tells these people a whole history. Supposing they examine the
- track of a thousand horses, they will soon guess the number of mounted
- ones by seeing how many have cantered; by the depth of the other
- impressions, whether any horses were loaded with cargoes; by the
- irregularity of the footsteps, how far tired; by the manner in which the
- food has been cooked, whether the pursued travelled in haste; by the
- general appearance, how long it has been since they passed. They consider
- a rastro of ten days or a fortnight, quite recent enough to be hunted out.
- We also heard that Miranda struck from the west end of the Sierra Ventana,
- in a direct line to the island of Cholechel, situated seventy leagues up
- the Rio Negro. This is a distance of between two and three hundred miles,
- through a country completely unknown. What other troops in the world are
- so independent? With the sun for their guide, mare's flesh for food, their
- saddle-cloths for beds,&mdash;as long as there is a little water, these
- men would penetrate to the end of the world.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few days afterwards I saw another troop of these banditti-like soldiers
- start on an expedition against a tribe of Indians at the small Salinas,
- who had been betrayed by a prisoner cacique. The Spaniard who brought the
- orders for this expedition was a very intelligent man. He gave me an
- account of the last engagement at which he was present. Some Indians, who
- had been taken prisoners, gave information of a tribe living north of the
- Colorado. Two hundred soldiers were sent; and they first discovered the
- Indians by a cloud of dust from their horses' feet, as they chanced to be
- travelling. The country was mountainous and wild, and it must have been
- far in the interior, for the Cordillera were in sight. The Indians, men,
- women, and children, were about one hundred and ten in number, and they
- were nearly all taken or killed, for the soldiers sabre every man. The
- Indians are now so terrified that they offer no resistance in a body, but
- each flies, neglecting even his wife and children; but when overtaken,
- like wild animals, they fight against any number to the last moment. One
- dying Indian seized with his teeth the thumb of his adversary, and allowed
- his own eye to be forced out sooner than relinquish his hold. Another, who
- was wounded, feigned death, keeping a knife ready to strike one more fatal
- blow. My informer said, when he was pursuing an Indian, the man cried out
- for mercy, at the same time that he was covertly loosing the bolas from
- his waist, meaning to whirl it round his head and so strike his pursuer.
- "I however struck him with my sabre to the ground, and then got off my
- horse, and cut his throat with my knife." This is a dark picture; but how
- much more shocking is the unquestionable fact, that all the women who
- appear above twenty years old are massacred in cold blood! When I
- exclaimed that this appeared rather inhuman, he answered, "Why, what can
- be done? they breed so!"
- </p>
- <p>
- Every one here is fully convinced that this is the most just war, because
- it is against barbarians. Who would believe in this age that such
- atrocities could be committed in a Christian civilized country? The
- children of the Indians are saved, to be sold or given away as servants,
- or rather slaves for as long a time as the owners can make them believe
- themselves slaves; but I believe in their treatment there is little to
- complain of.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the battle four men ran away together. They were pursued, one was
- killed, and the other three were taken alive. They turned out to be
- messengers or ambassadors from a large body of Indians, united in the
- common cause of defence, near the Cordillera. The tribe to which they had
- been sent was on the point of holding a grand council, the feast of mare's
- flesh was ready, and the dance prepared: in the morning the ambassadors
- were to have returned to the Cordillera. They were remarkably fine men,
- very fair, above six feet high, and all under thirty years of age. The
- three survivors of course possessed very valuable information and to
- extort this they were placed in a line. The two first being questioned,
- answered, "No se" (I do not know), and were one after the other shot. The
- third also said "No se;" adding, "Fire, I am a man, and can die!" Not one
- syllable would they breathe to injure the united cause of their country!
- The conduct of the above-mentioned cacique was very different; he saved
- his life by betraying the intended plan of warfare, and the point of union
- in the Andes. It was believed that there were already six or seven hundred
- Indians together, and that in summer their numbers would be doubled.
- Ambassadors were to have been sent to the Indians at the small Salinas,
- near Bahia Blanca, whom I have mentioned that this same cacique had
- betrayed. The communication, therefore, between the Indians, extends from
- the Cordillera to the coast of the Atlantic.
- </p>
- <p>
- General Rosas's plan is to kill all stragglers, and having driven the
- remainder to a common point, to attack them in a body, in the summer, with
- the assistance of the Chilenos. This operation is to be repeated for three
- successive years. I imagine the summer is chosen as the time for the main
- attack, because the plains are then without water, and the Indians can
- only travel in particular directions. The escape of the Indians to the
- south of the Rio Negro, where in such a vast unknown country they would be
- safe, is prevented by a treaty with the Tehuelches to this effect;&mdash;that
- Rosas pays them so much to slaughter every Indian who passes to the south
- of the river, but if they fail in so doing, they themselves are to be
- exterminated. The war is waged chiefly against the Indians near the
- Cordillera; for many of the tribes on this eastern side are fighting with
- Rosas. The general, however, like Lord Chesterfield, thinking that his
- friends may in a future day become his enemies, always places them in the
- front ranks, so that their numbers may be thinned. Since leaving South
- America we have heard that this war of extermination completely failed.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the captive girls taken in the same engagement, there were two very
- pretty Spanish ones, who had been carried away by the Indians when young,
- and could now only speak the Indian tongue. From their account they must
- have come from Salta, a distance in a straight line of nearly one thousand
- miles. This gives one a grand idea of the immense territory over which the
- Indians roam: yet, great as it is, I think there will not, in another
- half-century, be a wild Indian northward of the Rio Negro. The warfare is
- too bloody to last; the Christians killing every Indian, and the Indians
- doing the same by the Christians. It is melancholy to trace how the
- Indians have given way before the Spanish invaders. Schirdel <a
- href="#linknote-521" name="linknoteref-521" id="linknoteref-521"><small>521</small></a>
- says that in 1535, when Buenos Ayres was founded, there were villages
- containing two and three thousand inhabitants. Even in Falconer's time
- (1750) the Indians made inroads as far as Luxan, Areco, and Arrecife, but
- now they are driven beyond the Salado. Not only have whole tribes been
- exterminated, but the remaining Indians have become more barbarous:
- instead of living in large villages, and being employed in the arts of
- fishing, as well as of the chase, they now wander about the open plains,
- without home or fixed occupation.
- </p>
- <p>
- I heard also some account of an engagement which took place, a few weeks
- previously to the one mentioned, at Cholechel. This is a very important
- station on account of being a pass for horses; and it was, in consequence,
- for some time the head-quarters of a division of the army. When the troops
- first arrived there they found a tribe of Indians, of whom they killed
- twenty or thirty. The cacique escaped in a manner which astonished every
- one. The chief Indians always have one or two picked horses, which they
- keep ready for any urgent occasion. On one of these, an old white horse,
- the cacique sprung, taking with him his little son. The horse had neither
- saddle nor bridle. To avoid the shots, the Indian rode in the peculiar
- method of his nation namely, with an arm round the horse's neck, and one
- leg only on its back. Thus hanging on one side, he was seen patting the
- horse's head, and talking to him. The pursuers urged every effort in the
- chase; the Commandant three times changed his horse, but all in vain. The
- old Indian father and his son escaped, and were free. What a fine picture
- one can form in one's mind,&mdash;the naked, bronze-like figure of the old
- man with his little boy, riding like a Mazeppa on the white horse, thus
- leaving far behind him the host of his pursuers!
- </p>
- <p>
- I saw one day a soldier striking fire with a piece of flint, which I
- immediately recognised as having been a part of the head of an arrow. He
- told me it was found near the island of Cholechel, and that they are
- frequently picked up there. It was between two and three inches long, and
- therefore twice as large as those now used in Tierra del Fuego: it was
- made of opaque cream-coloured flint, but the point and barbs had been
- intentionally broken off. It is well known that no Pampas Indians now use
- bows and arrows. I believe a small tribe in Banda Oriental must be
- excepted; but they are widely separated from the Pampas Indians, and
- border close on those tribes that inhabit the forest, and live on foot. It
- appears, therefore, that these arrow-heads are antiquarian <a
- href="#linknote-522" name="linknoteref-522" id="linknoteref-522"><small>522</small></a>
- relics of the Indians, before the great change in habits consequent on the
- introduction of the horse into South America.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0006" id="link2HCH0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VI &mdash; BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Set out for Buenos Ayres&mdash;Rio Sauce&mdash;Sierra Ventana&mdash;Third
- Posta&mdash;Driving Horses&mdash;Bolas&mdash;Partridges and Foxes&mdash;Features
- of the Country&mdash;Long-legged Plover&mdash;Teru-tero&mdash;Hail-storm&mdash;Natural
- Enclosures in the Sierra Tapalguen&mdash;Flesh of Puma&mdash;Meat Diet&mdash;Guardia
- del Monte&mdash;Effects of Cattle on the Vegetation&mdash;Cardoon&mdash;Buenos
- Ayres&mdash;Corral where Cattle are Slaughtered.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>EPTEMBER 18th.&mdash;I
- hired a Gaucho to accompany me on my ride to Buenos Ayres, though with
- some difficulty, as the father of one man was afraid to let him go, and
- another, who seemed willing, was described to me as so fearful, that I was
- afraid to take him, for I was told that even if he saw an ostrich at a
- distance, he would mistake it for an Indian, and would fly like the wind
- away. The distance to Buenos Ayres is about four hundred miles, and nearly
- the whole way through an uninhabited country. We started early in the
- morning; ascending a few hundred feet from the basin of green turf on
- which Bahia Blanca stands, we entered on a wide desolate plain. It
- consists of a crumbling argillaceo-calcareous rock, which, from the dry
- nature of the climate, supports only scattered tufts of withered grass,
- without a single bush or tree to break the monotonous uniformity. The
- weather was fine, but the atmosphere remarkably hazy; I thought the
- appearance foreboded a gale, but the Gauchos said it was owing to the
- plain, at some great distance in the interior, being on fire. After a long
- gallop, having changed horses twice, we reached the Rio Sauce: it is a
- deep, rapid, little stream, not above twenty-five feet wide. The second
- posta on the road to Buenos Ayres stands on its banks, a little above
- there is a ford for horses, where the water does not reach to the horses'
- belly; but from that point, in its course to the sea, it is quite
- impassable, and hence makes a most useful barrier against the Indians.
- </p>
- <p>
- Insignificant as this stream is, the Jesuit Falconer, whose information is
- generally so very correct, figures it as a considerable river, rising at
- the foot of the Cordillera. With respect to its source, I do not doubt
- that this is the case for the Gauchos assured me, that in the middle of
- the dry summer, this stream, at the same time with the Colorado has
- periodical floods; which can only originate in the snow melting on the
- Andes. It is extremely improbable that a stream so small as the Sauce then
- was, should traverse the entire width of the continent; and indeed, if it
- were the residue of a large river, its waters, as in other ascertained
- cases, would be saline. During the winter we must look to the springs
- round the Sierra Ventana as the source of its pure and limpid stream. I
- suspect the plains of Patagonia like those of Australia, are traversed by
- many water-courses which only perform their proper parts at certain
- periods. Probably this is the case with the water which flows into the
- head of Port Desire, and likewise with the Rio Chupat, on the banks of
- which masses of highly cellular scoriae were found by the officers
- employed in the survey.
- </p>
- <p>
- As it was early in the afternoon when we arrived, we took fresh horses,
- and a soldier for a guide, and started for the Sierra de la Ventana. This
- mountain is visible from the anchorage at Bahia Blanca; and Capt. Fitz Roy
- calculates its height to be 3340 feet&mdash;an altitude very remarkable on
- this eastern side of the continent. I am not aware that any foreigner,
- previous to my visit, had ascended this mountain; and indeed very few of
- the soldiers at Bahia Blanca knew anything about it. Hence we heard of
- beds of coal, of gold and silver, of caves, and of forests, all of which
- inflamed my curiosity, only to disappoint it. The distance from the posta
- was about six leagues over a level plain of the same character as before.
- The ride was, however, interesting, as the mountain began to show its true
- form. When we reached the foot of the main ridge, we had much difficulty
- in finding any water, and we thought we should have been obliged to have
- passed the night without any. At last we discovered some by looking close
- to the mountain, for at the distance even of a few hundred yards the
- streamlets were buried and entirely lost in the friable calcareous stone
- and loose detritus. I do not think Nature ever made a more solitary,
- desolate pile of rock;&mdash;it well deserves its name of <i>Hurtado</i>,
- or separated. The mountain is steep, extremely rugged, and broken, and so
- entirely destitute of trees, and even bushes, that we actually could not
- make a skewer to stretch out our meat over the fire of thistle-stalks. <a
- href="#linknote-61" name="linknoteref-61" id="linknoteref-61"><small>61</small></a>
- The strange aspect of this mountain is contrasted by the sea-like plain,
- which not only abuts against its steep sides, but likewise separates the
- parallel ranges. The uniformity of the colouring gives an extreme
- quietness to the view,&mdash;the whitish grey of the quartz rock, and the
- light brown of the withered grass of the plain, being unrelieved by any
- brighter tint. From custom, one expects to see in the neighbourhood of a
- lofty and bold mountain, a broken country strewed over with huge
- fragments. Here nature shows that the last movement before the bed of the
- sea is changed into dry land may sometimes be one of tranquillity. Under
- these circumstances I was curious to observe how far from the parent rock
- any pebbles could be found. On the shores of Bahia Blanca, and near the
- settlement, there were some of quartz, which certainly must have come from
- this source: the distance is forty-five miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dew, which in the early part of the night wetted the saddle-cloths
- under which we slept, was in the morning frozen. The plain, though
- appearing horizontal, had insensibly sloped up to a height of between 800
- and 900 feet above the sea. In the morning (9th of September) the guide
- told me to ascend the nearest ridge, which he thought would lead me to the
- four peaks that crown the summit. The climbing up such rough rocks was
- very fatiguing; the sides were so indented, that what was gained in one
- five minutes was often lost in the next. At last, when I reached the
- ridge, my disappointment was extreme in finding a precipitous valley as
- deep as the plain, which cut the chain transversely in two, and separated
- me from the four points. This valley is very narrow, but flat-bottomed,
- and it forms a fine horse-pass for the Indians, as it connects the plains
- on the northern and southern sides of the range. Having descended, and
- while crossing it, I saw two horses grazing: I immediately hid myself in
- the long grass, and began to reconnoitre; but as I could see no signs of
- Indians I proceeded cautiously on my second ascent. It was late in the
- day, and this part of the mountain, like the other, was steep and rugged.
- I was on the top of the second peak by two o'clock, but got there with
- extreme difficulty; every twenty yards I had the cramp in the upper part
- of both thighs, so that I was afraid I should not have been able to have
- got down again. It was also necessary to return by another road, as it was
- out of the question to pass over the saddle-back. I was therefore obliged
- to give up the two higher peaks. Their altitude was but little greater,
- and every purpose of geology had been answered; so that the attempt was
- not worth the hazard of any further exertion. I presume the cause of the
- cramp was the great change in the kind of muscular action, from that of
- hard riding to that of still harder climbing. It is a lesson worth
- remembering, as in some cases it might cause much difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have already said the mountain is composed of white quartz rock, and
- with it a little glossy clay-slate is associated. At the height of a few
- hundred feet above the plain patches of conglomerate adhered in several
- places to the solid rock. They resembled in hardness, and in the nature of
- the cement, the masses which may be seen daily forming on some coasts. I
- do not doubt these pebbles were in a similar manner aggregated, at a
- period when the great calcareous formation was depositing beneath the
- surrounding sea. We may believe that the jagged and battered forms of the
- hard quartz yet show the effects of the waves of an open ocean.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was, on the whole, disappointed with this ascent. Even the view was
- insignificant;&mdash;a plain like the sea, but without its beautiful
- colour and defined outline. The scene, however, was novel, and a little
- danger, like salt to meat, gave it a relish. That the danger was very
- little was certain, for my two companions made a good fire&mdash;a thing
- which is never done when it is suspected that Indians are near. I reached
- the place of our bivouac by sunset, and drinking much mate, and smoking
- several cigaritos, soon made up my bed for the night. The wind was very
- strong and cold, but I never slept more comfortably.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 10th.&mdash;In the morning, having fairly scudded before the
- gale, we arrived by the middle of the day at the Sauce posta. In the road
- we saw great numbers of deer, and near the mountain a guanaco. The plain,
- which abuts against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gullies, of
- which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty deep; we were
- obliged in consequence to make a considerable circuit before we could find
- a pass. We stayed the night at the posta, the conversation, as was
- generally the case, being about the Indians. The Sierra Ventana was
- formerly a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there was
- much fighting there. My guide had been present when many Indians were
- killed: the women escaped to the top of the ridge, and fought most
- desperately with great stones; many thus saving themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 11th.&mdash;Proceeded to the third posta in company with the
- lieutenant who commanded it. The distance is called fifteen leagues; but
- it is only guess-work, and is generally overstated. The road was
- uninteresting, over a dry grassy plain; and on our left hand at a greater
- or less distance there were some low hills; a continuation of which we
- crossed close to the posta. Before our arrival we met a large herd of
- cattle and horses, guarded by fifteen soldiers; but we were told many had
- been lost. It is very difficult to drive animals across the plains; for if
- in the night a puma, or even a fox, approaches, nothing can prevent the
- horses dispersing in every direction; and a storm will have the same
- effect. A short time since, an officer left Buenos Ayres with five hundred
- horses, and when he arrived at the army he had under twenty.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon afterwards we perceived by the cloud of dust, that a party of
- horsemen were coming towards us; when far distant my companions knew them
- to be Indians, by their long hair streaming behind their backs. The
- Indians generally have a fillet round their heads, but never any covering;
- and their black hair blowing across their swarthy faces, heightens to an
- uncommon degree the wildness of their appearance. They turned out to be a
- party of Bernantio's friendly tribe, going to a salina for salt. The
- Indians eat much salt, their children sucking it like sugar. This habit is
- very different from that of the Spanish Gauchos, who, leading the same
- kind of life, eat scarcely any; according to Mungo Park, <a
- href="#linknote-62" name="linknoteref-62" id="linknoteref-62"><small>62</small></a>
- it is people who live on vegetable food who have an unconquerable desire
- for salt. The Indians gave us good-humoured nods as they passed at full
- gallop, driving before them a troop of horses, and followed by a train of
- lanky dogs.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 12th and 13th.&mdash;I stayed at this posta two days, waiting
- for a troop of soldiers, which General Rosas had the kindness to send to
- inform me, would shortly travel to Buenos Ayres; and he advised me to take
- the opportunity of the escort. In the morning we rode to some neighbouring
- hills to view the country, and to examine the geology. After dinner the
- soldiers divided themselves into two parties for a trial of skill with the
- bolas. Two spears were stuck in the ground twenty-five yards apart, but
- they were struck and entangled only once in four or five times. The balls
- can be thrown fifty or sixty yards, but with little certainty. This,
- however, does not apply to a man on horseback; for when the speed of the
- horse is added to the force of the arm, it is said, that they can be
- whirled with effect to the distance of eighty yards. As a proof of their
- force, I may mention, that at the Falkland Islands, when the Spaniards
- murdered some of their own countrymen and all the Englishmen, a young
- friendly Spaniard was running away, when a great tall man, by name
- Luciano, came at full gallop after him, shouting to him to stop, and
- saying that he only wanted to speak to him. Just as the Spaniard was on
- the point of reaching the boat, Luciano threw the balls: they struck him
- on the legs with such a jerk, as to throw him down and to render him for
- some time insensible. The man, after Luciano had had his talk, was allowed
- to escape. He told us that his legs were marked by great weals, where the
- thong had wound round, as if he had been flogged with a whip. In the
- middle of the day two men arrived, who brought a parcel from the next
- posta to be forwarded to the general: so that besides these two, our party
- consisted this evening of my guide and self, the lieutenant, and his four
- soldiers. The latter were strange beings; the first a fine young negro;
- the second half Indian and negro; and the two others non-descripts;
- namely, an old Chilian miner, the colour of mahogany, and another partly a
- mulatto; but two such mongrels with such detestable expressions, I never
- saw before. At night, when they were sitting round the fire, and playing
- at cards, I retired to view such a Salvator Rosa scene. They were seated
- under a low cliff, so that I could look down upon them; around the party
- were lying dogs, arms, remnants of deer and ostriches; and their long
- spears were stuck in the turf. Further in the dark background, their
- horses were tied up, ready for any sudden danger. If the stillness of the
- desolate plain was broken by one of the dogs barking, a soldier, leaving
- the fire, would place his head close to the ground, and thus slowly scan
- the horizon. Even if the noisy teru-tero uttered its scream, there would
- be a pause in the conversation, and every head, for a moment, a little
- inclined.
- </p>
- <p>
- What a life of misery these men appear to us to lead! They were at least
- ten leagues from the Sauce posta, and since the murder committed by the
- Indians, twenty from another. The Indians are supposed to have made their
- attack in the middle of the night; for very early in the morning after the
- murder, they were luckily seen approaching this posta. The whole party
- here, however, escaped, together with the troop of horses; each one taking
- a line for himself, and driving with him as many animals as he was able to
- manage.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little hovel, built of thistle-stalks, in which they slept, neither
- kept out the wind nor rain; indeed in the latter case the only effect the
- roof had, was to condense it into larger drops. They had nothing to eat
- excepting what they could catch, such as ostriches, deer, armadilloes,
- etc., and their only fuel was the dry stalks of a small plant, somewhat
- resembling an aloe. The sole luxury which these men enjoyed was smoking
- the little paper cigars, and sucking mate. I used to think that the
- carrion vultures, man's constant attendants on these dreary plains, while
- seated on the little neighbouring cliffs seemed by their very patience to
- say, "Ah! when the Indians come we shall have a feast."
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning we all sallied forth to hunt, and although we had not much
- success, there were some animated chases. Soon after starting the party
- separated, and so arranged their plans, that at a certain time of the day
- (in guessing which they show much skill) they should all meet from
- different points of the compass on a plain piece of ground, and thus drive
- together the wild animals. One day I went out hunting at Bahia Blanca, but
- the men there merely rode in a crescent, each being about a quarter of a
- mile apart from the other. A fine male ostrich being turned by the
- headmost riders, tried to escape on one side. The Gauchos pursued at a
- reckless pace, twisting their horses about with the most admirable
- command, and each man whirling the balls round his head. At length the
- foremost threw them, revolving through the air: in an instant the ostrich
- rolled over and over, its legs fairly lashed together by the thong. The
- plains abound with three kinds of partridge, <a href="#linknote-63"
- name="linknoteref-63" id="linknoteref-63"><small>63</small></a> two of
- which are as large as hen pheasants. Their destroyer, a small and pretty
- fox, was also singularly numerous; in the course of the day we could not
- have seen less than forty or fifty. They were generally near their earths,
- but the dogs killed one. When we returned to the posta, we found two of
- the party returned who had been hunting by themselves. They had killed a
- puma, and had found an ostrich's nest with twenty-seven eggs in it. Each
- of these is said to equal in weight eleven hen's eggs; so that we obtained
- from this one nest as much food as 297 hen's eggs would have given.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 14th.&mdash;As the soldiers belonging to the next posta meant to
- return, and we should together make a party of five, and all armed, I
- determined not to wait for the expected troops. My host, the lieutenant,
- pressed me much to stop. As he had been very obliging&mdash;not only
- providing me with food, but lending me his private horses&mdash;I wanted
- to make him some remuneration. I asked my guide whether I might do so, but
- he told me certainly not; that the only answer I should receive, probably
- would be, "We have meat for the dogs in our country, and therefore do not
- grudge it to a Christian." It must not be supposed that the rank of
- lieutenant in such an army would at all prevent the acceptance of payment:
- it was only the high sense of hospitality, which every traveller is bound
- to acknowledge as nearly universal throughout these provinces. After
- galloping some leagues, we came to a low swampy country, which extends for
- nearly eighty miles northward, as far as the Sierra Tapalguen. In some
- parts there were fine damp plains, covered with grass, while others had a
- soft, black, and peaty soil. There were also many extensive but shallow
- lakes, and large beds of reeds. The country on the whole resembled the
- better parts of the Cambridgeshire fens. At night we had some difficulty
- in finding amidst the swamps, a dry place for our bivouac.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 15th.&mdash;Rose very early in the morning and shortly after
- passed the posta where the Indians had murdered the five soldiers. The
- officer had eighteen chuzo wounds in his body. By the middle of the day,
- after a hard gallop, we reached the fifth posta: on account of some
- difficulty in procuring horses we stayed there the night. As this point
- was the most exposed on the whole line, twenty-one soldiers were stationed
- here; at sunset they returned from hunting, bringing with them seven deer,
- three ostriches, and many armadilloes and partridges. When riding through
- the country, it is a common practice to set fire to the plain; and hence
- at night, as on this occasion, the horizon was illuminated in several
- places by brilliant conflagrations. This is done partly for the sake of
- puzzling any stray Indians, but chiefly for improving the pasture. In
- grassy plains unoccupied by the larger ruminating quadrupeds, it seems
- necessary to remove the superfluous vegetation by fire, so as to render
- the new year's growth serviceable.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rancho at this place did not boast even of a roof, but merely
- consisted of a ring of thistle-stalks, to break the force of the wind. It
- was situated on the borders of an extensive but shallow lake, swarming
- with wild fowl, among which the black-necked swan was conspicuous.
- </p>
- <p>
- The kind of plover, which appears as if mounted on stilts (Himantopus
- nigricollis), is here common in flocks of considerable size. It has been
- wrongfully accused of inelegance; when wading about in shallow water,
- which is its favourite resort, its gait is far from awkward. These birds
- in a flock utter a noise, that singularly resembles the cry of a pack of
- small dogs in full chase: waking in the night, I have more than once been
- for a moment startled at the distant sound. The teru-tero (Vanellus
- cayanus) is another bird, which often disturbs the stillness of the night.
- In appearance and habits it resembles in many respects our peewits; its
- wings, however, are armed with sharp spurs, like those on the legs of the
- common cock. As our peewit takes its name from the sound of its voice, so
- does the teru-tero. While riding over the grassy plains, one is constantly
- pursued by these birds, which appear to hate mankind, and I am sure
- deserve to be hated for their never-ceasing, unvaried, harsh screams. To
- the sportsman they are most annoying, by telling every other bird and
- animal of his approach: to the traveller in the country, they may
- possibly, as Molina says, do good, by warning him of the midnight robber.
- During the breeding season, they attempt, like our peewits, by feigning to
- be wounded, to draw away from their nests dogs and other enemies. The eggs
- of this bird are esteemed a great delicacy.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 16th.&mdash;To the seventh posta at the foot of the Sierra
- Tapalguen. The country was quite level, with a coarse herbage and a soft
- peaty soil. The hovel was here remarkably neat, the posts and rafters
- being made of about a dozen dry thistle-stalks bound together with thongs
- of hide; and by the support of these Ionic-like columns, the roof and
- sides were thatched with reeds. We were here told a fact, which I would
- not have credited, if I had not had partly ocular proof of it; namely,
- that, during the previous night hail as large as small apples, and
- extremely hard, had fallen with such violence, as to kill the greater
- number of the wild animals. One of the men had already found thirteen deer
- (Cervus campestris) lying dead, and I saw their <i>fresh</i> hides;
- another of the party, a few minutes after my arrival brought in seven
- more. Now I well know, that one man without dogs could hardly have killed
- seven deer in a week. The men believed they had seen about fifteen
- ostriches (part of one of which we had for dinner); and they said that
- several were running about evidently blind in one eye. Numbers of smaller
- birds, as ducks, hawks, and partridges, were killed. I saw one of the
- latter with a black mark on its back, as if it had been struck with a
- paving-stone. A fence of thistle-stalks round the hovel was nearly broken
- down, and my informer, putting his head out to see what was the matter,
- received a severe cut, and now wore a bandage. The storm was said to have
- been of limited extent: we certainly saw from our last night's bivouac a
- dense cloud and lightning in this direction. It is marvellous how such
- strong animals as deer could thus have been killed; but I have no doubt,
- from the evidence I have given, that the story is not in the least
- exaggerated. I am glad, however, to have its credibility supported by the
- Jesuit Dobrizhoffen, <a href="#linknote-64" name="linknoteref-64"
- id="linknoteref-64"><small>64</small></a> who, speaking of a country much
- to the northward, says, hail fell of an enormous size and killed vast
- numbers of cattle: the Indians hence called the place <i>Lalegraicavalca</i>,
- meaning "the little white things." Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me that
- he witnessed in 1831 in India, a hail-storm, which killed numbers of large
- birds and much injured the cattle. These hailstones were flat, and one was
- ten inches in circumference, and another weighed two ounces. They ploughed
- up a gravel-walk like musket-balls, and passed through glass-windows,
- making round holes, but not cracking them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having finished our dinner, of hail-stricken meat, we crossed the Sierra
- Tapalguen; a low range of hills, a few hundred feet in height, which
- commences at Cape Corrientes. The rock in this part is pure quartz;
- further eastward I understand it is granitic. The hills are of a
- remarkable form; they consist of flat patches of table-land, surrounded by
- low perpendicular cliffs, like the outliers of a sedimentary deposit. The
- hill which I ascended was very small, not above a couple of hundred yards
- in diameter; but I saw others larger. One which goes by the name of the
- "Corral," is said to be two or three miles in diameter, and encompassed by
- perpendicular cliffs, between thirty and forty feet high, excepting at one
- spot, where the entrance lies. Falconer <a href="#linknote-65"
- name="linknoteref-65" id="linknoteref-65"><small>65</small></a> gives a
- curious account of the Indians driving troops of wild horses into it, and
- then by guarding the entrance, keeping them secure. I have never heard of
- any other instance of table-land in a formation of quartz, and which, in
- the hill I examined, had neither cleavage nor stratification. I was told
- that the rock of the "Corral" was white, and would strike fire.
- </p>
- <p>
- We did not reach the posta on the Rio Tapalguen till after it was dark. At
- supper, from something which was said, I was suddenly struck with horror
- at thinking that I was eating one of the favourite dishes of the country
- namely, a half-formed calf, long before its proper time of birth. It
- turned out to be Puma; the meat is very white and remarkably like veal in
- taste. Dr. Shaw was laughed at for stating that "the flesh of the lion is
- in great esteem having no small affinity with veal, both in colour, taste,
- and flavour." Such certainly is the case with the Puma. The Gauchos differ
- in their opinion, whether the Jaguar is good eating, but are unanimous in
- saying that cat is excellent.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 17th.&mdash;We followed the course of the Rio Tapalguen, through
- a very fertile country, to the ninth posta. Tapalguen, itself, or the town
- of Tapalguen, if it may be so called, consists of a perfectly level plain,
- studded over, as far as the eye can reach, with the toldos or oven-shaped
- huts of the Indians. The families of the friendly Indians, who were
- fighting on the side of Rosas, resided here. We met and passed many young
- Indian women, riding by two or three together on the same horse: they, as
- well as many of the young men, were strikingly handsome,&mdash;their fine
- ruddy complexions being the picture of health. Besides the toldos, there
- were three ranchos; one inhabited by the Commandant, and the two others by
- Spaniards with small shops.
- </p>
- <p>
- We were here able to buy some biscuit. I had now been several days without
- tasting anything besides meat: I did not at all dislike this new regimen;
- but I felt as if it would only have agreed with me with hard exercise. I
- have heard that patients in England, when desired to confine themselves
- exclusively to an animal diet, even with the hope of life before their
- eyes, have hardly been able to endure it. Yet the Gaucho in the Pampas,
- for months together, touches nothing but beef. But they eat, I observe, a
- very large proportion of fat, which is of a less animalized nature; and
- they particularly dislike dry meat, such as that of the Agouti. Dr.
- Richardson <a href="#linknote-66" name="linknoteref-66" id="linknoteref-66"><small>66</small></a>
- also, has remarked, "that when people have fed for a long time solely upon
- lean animal food, the desire for fat becomes so insatiable, that they can
- consume a large quantity of unmixed and even oily fat without nausea:"
- this appears to me a curious physiological fact. It is, perhaps, from
- their meat regimen that the Gauchos, like other carnivorous animals, can
- abstain long from food. I was told that at Tandeel, some troops
- voluntarily pursued a party of Indians for three days, without eating or
- drinking.
- </p>
- <p>
- We saw in the shops many articles, such as horsecloths, belts, and
- garters, woven by the Indian women. The patterns were very pretty, and the
- colours brilliant; the workmanship of the garters was so good that an
- English merchant at Buenos Ayres maintained they must have been
- manufactured in England, till he found the tassels had been fastened by
- split sinew.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 18th.&mdash;We had a very long ride this day. At the twelfth
- posta, which is seven leagues south of the Rio Salado, we came to the
- first estancia with cattle and white women. Afterwards we had to ride for
- many miles through a country flooded with water above our horses' knees.
- By crossing the stirrups, and riding Arab-like with our legs bent up, we
- contrived to keep tolerably dry. It was nearly dark when we arrived at the
- Salado; the stream was deep, and about forty yards wide; in summer,
- however, its bed becomes almost dry, and the little remaining water nearly
- as salt as that of the sea. We slept at one of the great estancias of
- General Rosas. It was fortified, and of such an extent, that arriving in
- the dark I thought it was a town and fortress. In the morning we saw
- immense herds of cattle, the general here having seventy-four square
- leagues of land. Formerly nearly three hundred men were employed about
- this estate, and they defied all the attacks of the Indians.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 19th.&mdash;Passed the Guardia del Monte. This is a nice
- scattered little town, with many gardens, full of peach and quince trees.
- The plain here looked like that around Buenos Ayres; the turf being short
- and bright green, with beds of clover and thistles, and with bizcacha
- holes. I was very much struck with the marked change in the aspect of the
- country after having crossed the Salado. From a coarse herbage we passed
- on to a carpet of fine green verdure. I at first attributed this to some
- change in the nature of the soil, but the inhabitants assured me that
- here, as well as in Banda Oriental, where there is as great a difference
- between the country round Monte Video and the thinly-inhabited savannahs
- of Colonia, the whole was to be attributed to the manuring and grazing of
- the cattle. Exactly the same fact has been observed in the prairies <a
- href="#linknote-67" name="linknoteref-67" id="linknoteref-67"><small>67</small></a>
- of North America, where coarse grass, between five and six feet high, when
- grazed by cattle, changes into common pasture land. I am not botanist
- enough to say whether the change here is owing to the introduction of new
- species, to the altered growth of the same, or to a difference in their
- proportional numbers. Azara has also observed with astonishment this
- change: he is likewise much perplexed by the immediate appearance of
- plants not occurring in the neighbourhood, on the borders of any track
- that leads to a newly-constructed hovel. In another part he says, <a
- href="#linknote-68" name="linknoteref-68" id="linknoteref-68"><small>68</small></a>
- "ces chevaux (sauvages) ont la manie de preferer les chemins, et le bord
- des routes pour deposer leurs excremens, dont on trouve des monceaux dans
- ces endroits." Does this not partly explain the circumstance? We thus have
- lines of richly manured land serving as channels of communication across
- wide districts.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near the Guardia we find the southern limit of two European plants, now
- become extraordinarily common. The fennel in great profusion covers the
- ditch-banks in the neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, and other
- towns. But the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus) has a far wider range: <a
- href="#linknote-69" name="linknoteref-69" id="linknoteref-69"><small>69</small></a>
- it occurs in these latitudes on both sides of the, Cordillera, across the
- continent. I saw it in unfrequented spots in Chile, Entre Rios, and Banda
- Oriental. In the latter country alone, very many (probably several
- hundred) square miles are covered by one mass of these prickly plants, and
- are impenetrable by man or beast. Over the undulating plains, where these
- great beds occur, nothing else can now live. Before their introduction,
- however, the surface must have supported, as in other parts, a rank
- herbage. I doubt whether any case is on record of an invasion on so grand
- a scale of one plant over the aborigines. As I have already said, I
- nowhere saw the cardoon south of the Salado; but it is probable that in
- proportion as that country becomes inhabited, the cardoon will extend its
- limits. The case is different with the giant thistle (with variegated
- leaves) of the Pampas, for I met with it in the valley of the Sauce.
- According to the principles so well laid down by Mr. Lyell, few countries
- have undergone more remarkable changes, since the year 1535, when the
- first colonist of La Plata landed with seventy-two horses. The countless
- herds of horses, cattle, and sheep, not only have altered the whole aspect
- of the vegetation, but they have almost banished the guanaco, deer and
- ostrich. Numberless other changes must likewise have taken place; the wild
- pig in some parts probably replaces the peccari; packs of wild dogs may be
- heard howling on the wooded banks of the less-frequented streams; and the
- common cat, altered into a large and fierce animal, inhabits rocky hills.
- As M. d'Orbigny has remarked, the increase in numbers of the
- carrion-vulture, since the introduction of the domestic animals, must have
- been infinitely great; and we have given reasons for believing that they
- have extended their southern range. No doubt many plants, besides the
- cardoon and fennel, are naturalized; thus the islands near the mouth of
- the Parana, are thickly clothed with peach and orange trees, springing
- from seeds carried there by the waters of the river.
- </p>
- <p>
- While changing horses at the Guardia several people questioned us much
- about the army,&mdash;I never saw anything like the enthusiasm for Rosas,
- and for the success of the "most just of all wars, because against
- barbarians." This expression, it must be confessed, is very natural, for
- till lately, neither man, woman nor horse, was safe from the attacks of
- the Indians. We had a long day's ride over the same rich green plain,
- abounding with various flocks, and with here and there a solitary
- estancia, and its one <i>ombu</i> tree. In the evening it rained heavily:
- on arriving at a posthouse we were told by the owner, that if we had not a
- regular passport we must pass on, for there were so many robbers he would
- trust no one. When he read, however, my passport, which began with "El
- Naturalista Don Carlos," his respect and civility were as unbounded as his
- suspicions had been before. What a naturalist might be, neither he nor his
- countrymen, I suspect, had any idea; but probably my title lost nothing of
- its value from that cause.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 20th.&mdash;We arrived by the middle of the day at Buenos Ayres.
- The outskirts of the city looked quite pretty, with the agave hedges, and
- groves of olive, peach and willow trees, all just throwing out their fresh
- green leaves. I rode to the house of Mr. Lumb, an English merchant, to
- whose kindness and hospitality, during my stay in the country, I was
- greatly indebted.
- </p>
- <p>
- The city of Buenos Ayres is large; <a href="#linknote-610"
- name="linknoteref-610" id="linknoteref-610"><small>610</small></a> and I
- should think one of the most regular in the world. Every street is at
- right angles to the one it crosses, and the parallel ones being
- equidistant, the houses are collected into solid squares of equal
- dimensions, which are called quadras. On the other hand, the houses
- themselves are hollow squares; all the rooms opening into a neat little
- courtyard. They are generally only one story high, with flat roofs, which
- are fitted with seats and are much frequented by the inhabitants in
- summer. In the centre of the town is the Plaza, where the public offices,
- fortress, cathedral, etc., stand. Here also, the old viceroys, before the
- revolution, had their palaces. The general assemblage of buildings
- possesses considerable architectural beauty, although none individually
- can boast of any.
- </p>
- <p>
- The great <i>corral</i>, where the animals are kept for slaughter to
- supply food to this beef-eating population, is one of the spectacles best
- worth seeing. The strength of the horse as compared to that of the bullock
- is quite astonishing: a man on horseback having thrown his lazo round the
- horns of a beast, can drag it anywhere he chooses. The animal ploughing up
- the ground with outstretched legs, in vain efforts to resist the force,
- generally dashes at full speed to one side; but the horse immediately
- turning to receive the shock, stands so firmly that the bullock is almost
- thrown down, and it is surprising that their necks are not broken. The
- struggle is not, however, one of fair strength; the horse's girth being
- matched against the bullock's extended neck. In a similar manner a man can
- hold the wildest horse, if caught with the lazo, just behind the ears.
- When the bullock has been dragged to the spot where it is to be
- slaughtered, the matador with great caution cuts the hamstrings. Then is
- given the death bellow; a noise more expressive of fierce agony than any I
- know. I have often distinguished it from a long distance, and have always
- known that the struggle was then drawing to a close. The whole sight is
- horrible and revolting: the ground is almost made of bones; and the horses
- and riders are drenched with gore.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0007" id="link2HCH0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VII &mdash; BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Excursion to St. Fe&mdash;Thistle Beds&mdash;Habits of the Bizcacha&mdash;Little
- Owl&mdash;Saline Streams&mdash;Level Plain&mdash;Mastodon&mdash;St. Fe&mdash;Change
- in Landscape&mdash;Geology&mdash;Tooth of extinct Horse&mdash;Relation of
- the Fossil and recent Quadrupeds of North and South America&mdash;Effects
- of a great Drought&mdash;Parana&mdash;Habits of the Jaguar&mdash;Scissor-beak&mdash;Kingfisher,
- Parrot, and Scissor-tail&mdash;Revolution&mdash;Buenos Ayres State of
- Government.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>EPTEMBER 27th.&mdash;In
- the evening I set out on an excursion to St. Fe, which is situated nearly
- three hundred English miles from Buenos Ayres, on the banks of the Parana.
- The roads in the neighbourhood of the city after the rainy weather, were
- extraordinarily bad. I should never have thought it possible for a bullock
- waggon to have crawled along: as it was, they scarcely went at the rate of
- a mile an hour, and a man was kept ahead, to survey the best line for
- making the attempt. The bullocks were terribly jaded: it is a great
- mistake to suppose that with improved roads, and an accelerated rate of
- travelling, the sufferings of the animals increase in the same proportion.
- We passed a train of waggons and a troop of beasts on their road to
- Mendoza. The distance is about 580 geographical miles, and the journey is
- generally performed in fifty days. These waggons are very long, narrow,
- and thatched with reeds; they have only two wheels, the diameter of which
- in some cases is as much as ten feet. Each is drawn by six bullocks, which
- are urged on by a goad at least twenty feet long: this is suspended from
- within the roof; for the wheel bullocks a smaller one is kept; and for the
- intermediate pair, a point projects at right angles from the middle of the
- long one.
- </p>
- <p>
- The whole apparatus looked like some implement of war.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 28th.&mdash;We passed the small town of Luxan where there is a
- wooden bridge over the river&mdash;a most unusual convenience in this
- country. We passed also Areco. The plains appeared level, but were not so
- in fact; for in various places the horizon was distant. The estancias are
- here wide apart; for there is little good pasture, owing to the land being
- covered by beds either of an acrid clover, or of the great thistle. The
- latter, well known from the animated description given by Sir F. Head,
- were at this time of the year two-thirds grown; in some parts they were as
- high as the horse's back, but in others they had not yet sprung up, and
- the ground was bare and dusty as on a turnpike-road. The clumps were of
- the most brilliant green, and they made a pleasing miniature-likeness of
- broken forest land. When the thistles are full grown, the great beds are
- impenetrable, except by a few tracts, as intricate as those in a
- labyrinth. These are only known to the robbers, who at this season inhabit
- them, and sally forth at night to rob and cut throats with impunity. Upon
- asking at a house whether robbers were numerous, I was answered, "The
- thistles are not up yet;"&mdash;the meaning of which reply was not at
- first very obvious. There is little interest in passing over these tracts,
- for they are inhabited by few animals or birds, excepting the bizcacha and
- its friend the little owl.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bizcacha <a href="#linknote-71" name="linknoteref-71"
- id="linknoteref-71"><small>71</small></a> is well known to form a
- prominent feature in the zoology of the Pampas. It is found as far south
- as the Rio Negro, in lat. 41 degs., but not beyond. It cannot, like the
- agouti, subsist on the gravelly and desert plains of Patagonia, but
- prefers a clayey or sandy soil, which produces a different and more
- abundant vegetation. Near Mendoza, at the foot of the Cordillera, it
- occurs in close neighbourhood with the allied alpine species. It is a very
- curious circumstance in its geographical distribution, that it has never
- been seen, fortunately for the inhabitants of Banda Oriental, to the
- eastward of the river Uruguay: yet in this province there are plains which
- appear admirably adapted to its habits. The Uruguay has formed an
- insuperable obstacle to its migration: although the broader barrier of the
- Parana has been passed, and the bizcacha is common in Entre Rios, the
- province between these two great rivers. Near Buenos Ayres these animals
- are exceedingly common. Their most favourite resort appears to be those
- parts of the plain which during one-half of the year are covered with
- giant thistles, to the exclusion of other plants. The Gauchos affirm that
- it lives on roots; which, from the great strength of its gnawing teeth,
- and the kind of places frequented by it, seems probable. In the evening
- the bizcachas come out in numbers, and quietly sit at the mouths of their
- burrows on their haunches. At such times they are very tame, and a man on
- horseback passing by seems only to present an object for their grave
- contemplation. They run very awkwardly, and when running out of danger,
- from their elevated tails and short front legs much resemble great rats.
- Their flesh, when cooked, is very white and good, but it is seldom used.
- </p>
- <p>
- The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging every hard
- object to the mouth of its burrow: around each group of holes many bones
- of cattle, stones, thistle-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung, etc.,
- are collected into an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to as much
- as a wheelbarrow would contain. I was credibly informed that a gentleman,
- when riding on a dark night, dropped his watch; he returned in the
- morning, and by searching the neighbourhood of every bizcacha hole on the
- line of road, as he expected, he soon found it. This habit of picking up
- whatever may be lying on the ground anywhere near its habitation, must
- cost much trouble. For what purpose it is done, I am quite unable to form
- even the most remote conjecture: it cannot be for defence, because the
- rubbish is chiefly placed above the mouth of the burrow, which enters the
- ground at a very small inclination. No doubt there must exist some good
- reason; but the inhabitants of the country are quite ignorant of it. The
- only fact which I know analogous to it, is the habit of that extraordinary
- Australian bird, the Calodera maculata, which makes an elegant vaulted
- passage of twigs for playing in, and which collects near the spot, land
- and sea-shells, bones and the feathers of birds, especially brightly
- coloured ones. Mr. Gould, who has described these facts, informs me, that
- the natives, when they lose any hard object, search the playing passages,
- and he has known a tobacco-pipe thus recovered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The little owl (Athene cunicularia), which has been so often mentioned, on
- the plains of Buenos Ayres exclusively inhabits the holes of the bizcacha;
- but in Banda Oriental it is its own workman. During the open day, but more
- especially in the evening, these birds may be seen in every direction
- standing frequently by pairs on the hillock near their burrows. If
- disturbed they either enter the hole, or, uttering a shrill harsh cry,
- move with a remarkably undulatory flight to a short distance, and then
- turning round, steadily gaze at their pursuer. Occasionally in the evening
- they may be heard hooting. I found in the stomachs of two which I opened
- the remains of mice, and I one day saw a small snake killed and carried
- away. It is said that snakes are their common prey during the daytime. I
- may here mention, as showing on what various kinds of food owls subsist,
- that a species killed among the islets of the Chonos Archipelago, had its
- stomach full of good-sized crabs. In India <a href="#linknote-72"
- name="linknoteref-72" id="linknoteref-72"><small>72</small></a> there is a
- fishing genus of owls, which likewise catches crabs.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we crossed the Rio Arrecife on a simple raft made of
- barrels lashed together, and slept at the post-house on the other side. I
- this day paid horse-hire for thirty-one leagues; and although the sun was
- glaring hot I was but little fatigued. When Captain Head talks of riding
- fifty leagues a day, I do not imagine the distance is equal to 150 English
- miles. At all events, the thirty-one leagues was only 76 miles in a
- straight line, and in an open country I should think four additional miles
- for turnings would be a sufficient allowance.
- </p>
- <p>
- 29th and 30th.&mdash;We continued to ride over plains of the same
- character. At San Nicolas I first saw the noble river of the Parana. At
- the foot of the cliff on which the town stands, some large vessels were at
- anchor. Before arriving at Rozario, we crossed the Saladillo, a stream of
- fine clear running water, but too saline to drink. Rozario is a large town
- built on a dead level plain, which forms a cliff about sixty feet high
- over the Parana. The river here is very broad, with many islands, which
- are low and wooded, as is also the opposite shore. The view would resemble
- that of a great lake, if it were not for the linear-shaped islets, which
- alone give the idea of running water. The cliffs are the most picturesque
- part; sometimes they are absolutely perpendicular, and of a red colour; at
- other times in large broken masses, covered with cacti and mimosa-trees.
- The real grandeur, however, of an immense river like this, is derived from
- reflecting how important a means of communication and commerce it forms
- between one nation and another; to what a distance it travels, and from
- how vast a territory it drains the great body of fresh water which flows
- past your feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- For many leagues north and south of San Nicolas and Rozario, the country
- is really level. Scarcely anything which travellers have written about its
- extreme flatness, can be considered as exaggeration. Yet I could never
- find a spot where, by slowly turning round, objects were not seen at
- greater distances in some directions than in others; and this manifestly
- proves inequality in the plain. At sea, a person's eye being six feet
- above the surface of the water, his horizon is two miles and four-fifths
- distant. In like manner, the more level the plain, the more nearly does
- the horizon approach within these narrow limits; and this, in my opinion,
- entirely destroys that grandeur which one would have imagined that a vast
- level plain would have possessed.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 1st.&mdash;We started by moonlight and arrived at the Rio Tercero
- by sunrise. The river is also called the Saladillo, and it deserves the
- name, for the water is brackish. I stayed here the greater part of the
- day, searching for fossil bones. Besides a perfect tooth of the Toxodon,
- and many scattered bones, I found two immense skeletons near each other,
- projecting in bold relief from the perpendicular cliff of the Parana. They
- were, however, so completely decayed, that I could only bring away small
- fragments of one of the great molar teeth; but these are sufficient to
- show that the remains belonged to a Mastodon, probably to the same species
- with that, which formerly must have inhabited the Cordillera in Upper Peru
- in such great numbers. The men who took me in the canoe, said they had
- long known of these skeletons, and had often wondered how they had got
- there: the necessity of a theory being felt, they came to the conclusion
- that, like the bizcacha, the mastodon was formerly a burrowing animal! In
- the evening we rode another stage, and crossed the Monge, another brackish
- stream, bearing the dregs of the washings of the Pampas.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 2nd.&mdash;We passed through Corunda, which, from the luxuriance
- of its gardens, was one of the prettiest villages I saw. From this point
- to St. Fe the road is not very safe. The western side of the Parana
- northward, ceases to be inhabited; and hence the Indians sometimes come
- down thus far, and waylay travellers. The nature of the country also
- favours this, for instead of a grassy plain, there is an open woodland,
- composed of low prickly mimosas. We passed some houses that had been
- ransacked and since deserted; we saw also a spectacle, which my guides
- viewed with high satisfaction; it was the skeleton of an Indian with the
- dried skin hanging on the bones, suspended to the branch of a tree.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning we arrived at St. Fe. I was surprised to observe how great
- a change of climate a difference of only three degrees of latitude between
- this place and Buenos Ayres had caused. This was evident from the dress
- and complexion of the men&mdash;from the increased size of the ombu-trees&mdash;the
- number of new cacti and other plants&mdash;and especially from the birds.
- In the course of an hour I remarked half-a-dozen birds, which I had never
- seen at Buenos Ayres. Considering that there is no natural boundary
- between the two places, and that the character of the country is nearly
- similar, the difference was much greater than I should have expected.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 3rd and 4th.&mdash;I was confined for these two days to my bed by
- a headache. A good-natured old woman, who attended me, wished me to try
- many odd remedies. A common practice is, to bind an orange-leaf or a bit
- of black plaster to each temple: and a still more general plan is, to
- split a bean into halves, moisten them, and place one on each temple,
- where they will easily adhere. It is not thought proper ever to remove the
- beans or plaster, but to allow them to drop off, and sometimes, if a man,
- with patches on his head, is asked, what is the matter? he will answer, "I
- had a headache the day before yesterday." Many of the remedies used by the
- people of the country are ludicrously strange, but too disgusting to be
- mentioned. One of the least nasty is to kill and cut open two puppies and
- bind them on each side of a broken limb. Little hairless dogs are in great
- request to sleep at the feet of invalids.
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Fe is a quiet little town, and is kept clean and in good order. The
- governor, Lopez, was a common soldier at the time of the revolution; but
- has now been seventeen years in power. This stability of government is
- owing to his tyrannical habits; for tyranny seems as yet better adapted to
- these countries than republicanism. The governor's favourite occupation is
- hunting Indians: a short time since he slaughtered forty-eight, and sold
- the children at the rate of three or four pounds apiece.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 5th.&mdash;We crossed the Parana to St. Fe Bajada, a town on the
- opposite shore. The passage took some hours, as the river here consisted
- of a labyrinth of small streams, separated by low wooded islands. I had a
- letter of introduction to an old Catalonian Spaniard, who treated me with
- the most uncommon hospitality. The Bajada is the capital of Entre Rios. In
- 1825 the town contained 6000 inhabitants, and the province 30,000; yet,
- few as the inhabitants are, no province has suffered more from bloody and
- desperate revolutions. They boast here of representatives, ministers, a
- standing army, and governors: so it is no wonder that they have their
- revolutions. At some future day this must be one of the richest countries
- of La Plata. The soil is varied and productive; and its almost insular
- form gives it two grand lines of communication by the rivers Parana and
- Uruguay.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was delayed here five days, and employed myself in examining the geology
- of the surrounding country, which was very interesting. We here see at the
- bottom of the cliffs, beds containing sharks' teeth and sea-shells of
- extinct species, passing above into an indurated marl, and from that into
- the red clayey earth of the Pampas, with its calcareous concretions and
- the bones of terrestrial quadrupeds. This vertical section clearly tells
- us of a large bay of pure salt-water, gradually encroached on, and at last
- converted into the bed of a muddy estuary, into which floating carcasses
- were swept. At Punta Gorda, in Banda Oriental, I found an alternation of
- the Pampaean estuary deposit, with a limestone containing some of the same
- extinct sea-shells; and this shows either a change in the former currents,
- or more probably an oscillation of level in the bottom of the ancient
- estuary. Until lately, my reasons for considering the Pampaean formation
- to be an estuary deposit were, its general appearance, its position at the
- mouth of the existing great river the Plata, and the presence of so many
- bones of terrestrial quadrupeds: but now Professor Ehrenberg has had the
- kindness to examine for me a little of the red earth, taken from low down
- in the deposit, close to the skeletons of the mastodon, and he finds in it
- many infusoria, partly salt-water and partly fresh-water forms, with the
- latter rather preponderating; and therefore, as he remarks, the water must
- have been brackish. M. A. d'Orbigny found on the banks of the Parana, at
- the height of a hundred feet, great beds of an estuary shell, now living a
- hundred miles lower down nearer the sea; and I found similar shells at a
- less height on the banks of the Uruguay; this shows that just before the
- Pampas was slowly elevated into dry land, the water covering it was
- brackish. Below Buenos Ayres there are upraised beds of sea-shells of
- existing species, which also proves that the period of elevation of the
- Pampas was within the recent period.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Pampaean deposit at the Bajada I found the osseous armour of a
- gigantic armadillo-like animal, the inside of which, when the earth was
- removed, was like a great cauldron; I found also teeth of the Toxodon and
- Mastodon, and one tooth of a Horse, in the same stained and decayed state.
- This latter tooth greatly interested me, <a href="#linknote-73"
- name="linknoteref-73" id="linknoteref-73"><small>73</small></a> and I took
- scrupulous care in ascertaining that it had been embedded
- contemporaneously with the other remains; for I was not then aware that
- amongst the fossils from Bahia Blanca there was a horse's tooth hidden in
- the matrix: nor was it then known with certainty that the remains of
- horses are common in North America. Mr. Lyell has lately brought from the
- United States a tooth of a horse; and it is an interesting fact, that
- Professor Owen could find in no species, either fossil or recent, a slight
- but peculiar curvature characterizing it, until he thought of comparing it
- with my specimen found here: he has named this American horse Equus
- curvidens. Certainly it is a marvellous fact in the history of the
- Mammalia, that in South America a native horse should have lived and
- disappeared, to be succeeded in after-ages by the countless herds
- descended from the few introduced with the Spanish colonists!
- </p>
- <p>
- The existence in South America of a fossil horse, of the mastodon,
- possibly of an elephant, <a href="#linknote-74" name="linknoteref-74"
- id="linknoteref-74"><small>74</small></a> and of a hollow-horned ruminant,
- discovered by MM. Lund and Clausen in the caves of Brazil, are highly
- interesting facts with respect to the geographical distribution of
- animals. At the present time, if we divide America, not by the Isthmus of
- Panama, but by the southern part of Mexico <a href="#linknote-75"
- name="linknoteref-75" id="linknoteref-75"><small>75</small></a> in lat. 20
- degs., where the great table-land presents an obstacle to the migration of
- species, by affecting the climate, and by forming, with the exception of
- some valleys and of a fringe of low land on the coast, a broad barrier; we
- shall then have the two zoological provinces of North and South America
- strongly contrasted with each other. Some few species alone have passed
- the barrier, and may be considered as wanderers from the south, such as
- the puma, opossum, kinkajou, and peccari. South America is characterized
- by possessing many peculiar gnawers, a family of monkeys, the llama,
- peccari, tapir, opossums, and, especially, several genera of Edentata, the
- order which includes the sloths, ant-eaters, and armadilloes. North
- America, on the other hand, is characterized (putting on one side a few
- wandering species) by numerous peculiar gnawers, and by four genera (the
- ox, sheep, goat, and antelope) of hollow-horned ruminants, of which great
- division South America is not known to possess a single species. Formerly,
- but within the period when most of the now existing shells were living,
- North America possessed, besides hollow-horned ruminants, the elephant,
- mastodon, horse, and three genera of Edentata, namely, the Megatherium,
- Megalonyx, and Mylodon. Within nearly this same period (as proved by the
- shells at Bahia Blanca) South America possessed, as we have just seen, a
- mastodon, horse, hollow-horned ruminant, and the same three genera (as
- well as several others) of the Edentata. Hence it is evident that North
- and South America, in having within a late geological period these several
- genera in common, were much more closely related in the character of their
- terrestrial inhabitants than they now are. The more I reflect on this
- case, the more interesting it appears: I know of no other instance where
- we can almost mark the period and manner of the splitting up of one great
- region into two well-characterized zoological provinces. The geologist,
- who is fully impressed with the vast oscillations of level which have
- affected the earth's crust within late periods, will not fear to speculate
- on the recent elevation of the Mexican platform, or, more probably, on the
- recent submergence of land in the West Indian Archipelago, as the cause of
- the present zoological separation of North and South America. The South
- American character of the West Indian mammals <a href="#linknote-76"
- name="linknoteref-76" id="linknoteref-76"><small>76</small></a> seems to
- indicate that this archipelago was formerly united to the southern
- continent, and that it has subsequently been an area of subsidence.
- </p>
- <p>
- When America, and especially North America, possessed its elephants,
- mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants, it was much more closely
- related in its zoological characters to the temperate parts of Europe and
- Asia than it now is. As the remains of these genera are found on both
- sides of Behring's Straits <a href="#linknote-77" name="linknoteref-77"
- id="linknoteref-77"><small>77</small></a> and on the plains of Siberia, we
- are led to look to the north-western side of North America as the former
- point of communication between the Old and so-called New World. And as so
- many species, both living and extinct, of these same genera inhabit and
- have inhabited the Old World, it seems most probable that the North
- American elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants
- migrated, on land since submerged near Behring's Straits, from Siberia
- into North America, and thence, on land since submerged in the West
- Indies, into South America, where for a time they mingled with the forms
- characteristic of that southern continent, and have since become extinct.
- </p>
- <p>
- While travelling through the country, I received several vivid
- descriptions of the effects of a late great drought; and the account of
- this may throw some light on the cases where vast numbers of animals of
- all kinds have been embedded together. The period included between the
- years 1827 and 1830 is called the "gran seco," or the great drought.
- During this time so little rain fell, that the vegetation, even to the
- thistles, failed; the brooks were dried up, and the whole country assumed
- the appearance of a dusty high road. This was especially the case in the
- northern part of the province of Buenos Ayres and the southern part of St.
- Fe. Very great numbers of birds, wild animals, cattle, and horses perished
- from the want of food and water. A man told me that the deer <a
- href="#linknote-78" name="linknoteref-78" id="linknoteref-78"><small>78</small></a>
- used to come into his courtyard to the well, which he had been obliged to
- dig to supply his own family with water; and that the partridges had
- hardly strength to fly away when pursued. The lowest estimation of the
- loss of cattle in the province of Buenos Ayres alone, was taken at one
- million head. A proprietor at San Pedro had previously to these years
- 20,000 cattle; at the end not one remained. San Pedro is situated in the
- middle of the finest country; and even now abounds again with animals; yet
- during the latter part of the "gran seco," live cattle were brought in
- vessels for the consumption of the inhabitants. The animals roamed from
- their estancias, and, wandering far southward, were mingled together in
- such multitudes, that a government commission was sent from Buenos Ayres
- to settle the disputes of the owners. Sir Woodbine Parish informed me of
- another and very curious source of dispute; the ground being so long dry,
- such quantities of dust were blown about, that in this open country the
- landmarks became obliterated, and people could not tell the limits of
- their estates.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was informed by an eye-witness that the cattle in herds of thousands
- rushed into the Parana, and being exhausted by hunger they were unable to
- crawl up the muddy banks, and thus were drowned. The arm of the river
- which runs by San Pedro was so full of putrid carcasses, that the master
- of a vessel told me that the smell rendered it quite impassable. Without
- doubt several hundred thousand animals thus perished in the river: their
- bodies when putrid were seen floating down the stream; and many in all
- probability were deposited in the estuary of the Plata. All the small
- rivers became highly saline, and this caused the death of vast numbers in
- particular spots; for when an animal drinks of such water it does not
- recover. Azara describes <a href="#linknote-79" name="linknoteref-79"
- id="linknoteref-79"><small>79</small></a> the fury of the wild horses on a
- similar occasion, rushing into the marshes, those which arrived first
- being overwhelmed and crushed by those which followed. He adds that more
- than once he has seen the carcasses of upwards of a thousand wild horses
- thus destroyed. I noticed that the smaller streams in the Pampas were
- paved with a breccia of bones but this probably is the effect of a gradual
- increase, rather than of the destruction at any one period. Subsequently
- to the drought of 1827 to 1832, a very rainy season followed which caused
- great floods. Hence it is almost certain that some thousands of the
- skeletons were buried by the deposits of the very next year. What would be
- the opinion of a geologist, viewing such an enormous collection of bones,
- of all kinds of animals and of all ages, thus embedded in one thick earthy
- mass? Would he not attribute it to a flood having swept over the surface
- of the land, rather than to the common order of things? <a
- href="#linknote-710" name="linknoteref-710" id="linknoteref-710"><small>710</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- October 12th.&mdash;I had intended to push my excursion further, but not
- being quite well, I was compelled to return by a balandra, or one-masted
- vessel of about a hundred tons' burden, which was bound to Buenos Ayres.
- As the weather was not fair, we moored early in the day to a branch of a
- tree on one of the islands. The Parana is full of islands, which undergo a
- constant round of decay and renovation. In the memory of the master
- several large ones had disappeared, and others again had been formed and
- protected by vegetation. They are composed of muddy sand, without even the
- smallest pebble, and were then about four feet above the level of the
- river; but during the periodical floods they are inundated. They all
- present one character; numerous willows and a few other trees are bound
- together by a great variety of creeping plants, thus forming a thick
- jungle. These thickets afford a retreat for capybaras and jaguars. The
- fear of the latter animal quite destroyed all pleasure in scrambling
- through the woods. This evening I had not proceeded a hundred yards,
- before finding indubitable signs of the recent presence of the tiger, I
- was obliged to come back. On every island there were tracks; and as on the
- former excursion "el rastro de los Indios" had been the subject of
- conversation, so in this was "el rastro del tigre." The wooded banks of
- the great rivers appear to be the favourite haunts of the jaguar; but
- south of the Plata, I was told that they frequented the reeds bordering
- lakes: wherever they are, they seem to require water. Their common prey is
- the capybara, so that it is generally said, where capybaras are numerous
- there is little danger from the jaguar. Falconer states that near the
- southern side of the mouth of the Plata there are many jaguars, and that
- they chiefly live on fish; this account I have heard repeated. On the
- Parana they have killed many wood-cutters, and have even entered vessels
- at night. There is a man now living in the Bajada, who, coming up from
- below when it was dark, was seized on the deck; he escaped, however, with
- the loss of the use of one arm. When the floods drive these animals from
- the islands, they are most dangerous. I was told that a few years since a
- very large one found its way into a church at St. Fe: two padres entering
- one after the other were killed, and a third, who came to see what was the
- matter, escaped with difficulty. The beast was destroyed by being shot
- from a corner of the building which was unroofed. They commit also at
- these times great ravages among cattle and horses. It is said that they
- kill their prey by breaking their necks. If driven from the carcass, they
- seldom return to it. The Gauchos say that the jaguar, when wandering about
- at night, is much tormented by the foxes yelping as they follow him. This
- is a curious coincidence with the fact which is generally affirmed of the
- jackals accompanying, in a similarly officious manner, the East Indian
- tiger. The jaguar is a noisy animal, roaring much by night, and especially
- before bad weather.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, when hunting on the banks of the Uruguay, I was shown certain
- trees, to which these animals constantly recur for the purpose, as it is
- said, of sharpening their claws. I saw three well-known trees; in front,
- the bark was worn smooth, as if by the breast of the animal, and on each
- side there were deep scratches, or rather grooves, extending in an oblique
- line, nearly a yard in length. The scars were of different ages. A common
- method of ascertaining whether a jaguar is in the neighbourhood is to
- examine these trees. I imagine this habit of the jaguar is exactly similar
- to one which may any day be seen in the common cat, as with outstretched
- legs and exserted claws it scrapes the leg of a chair; and I have heard of
- young fruit-trees in an orchard in England having been thus much injured.
- Some such habit must also be common to the puma, for on the bare hard soil
- of Patagonia I have frequently seen scores so deep that no other animal
- could have made them. The object of this practice is, I believe, to tear
- off the ragged points of their claws, and not, as the Gauchos think, to
- sharpen them. The jaguar is killed, without much difficulty, by the aid of
- dogs baying and driving him up a tree, where he is despatched with
- bullets.
- </p>
- <p>
- Owing to bad weather we remained two days at our moorings. Our only
- amusement was catching fish for our dinner: there were several kinds, and
- all good eating. A fish called the "armado" (a Silurus) is remarkable from
- a harsh grating noise which it makes when caught by hook and line, and
- which can be distinctly heard when the fish is beneath the water. This
- same fish has the power of firmly catching hold of any object, such as the
- blade of an oar or the fishing-line, with the strong spine both of its
- pectoral and dorsal fin. In the evening the weather was quite tropical,
- the thermometer standing at 79 degs. Numbers of fireflies were hovering
- about, and the musquitoes were very troublesome. I exposed my hand for
- five minutes, and it was soon black with them; I do not suppose there
- could have been less than fifty, all busy sucking.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 15th.&mdash;We got under way and passed Punta Gorda, where there
- is a colony of tame Indians from the province of Missiones. We sailed
- rapidly down the current, but before sunset, from a silly fear of bad
- weather, we brought-to in a narrow arm of the river. I took the boat and
- rowed some distance up this creek. It was very narrow, winding, and deep;
- on each side a wall thirty or forty feet high, formed by trees intwined
- with creepers, gave to the canal a singularly gloomy appearance. I here
- saw a very extraordinary bird, called the Scissor- beak (Rhynchops nigra).
- It has short legs, web feet, extremely long- pointed wings, and is of
- about the size of a tern. The beak is flattened laterally, that is, in a
- plane at right angles to that of a spoonbill or duck. It is as flat and
- elastic as an ivory paper-cutter, and the lower mandible, differing from
- every other bird, is an inch and a half longer than the upper. In a lake
- near Maldonado, from which the water had been nearly drained, and which,
- in consequence, swarmed with small fry, I saw several of these birds,
- generally in small flocks, flying rapidly backwards and forwards close to
- the surface of the lake. They kept their bills wide open, and the lower
- mandible half buried in the water. Thus skimming the surface, they
- ploughed it in their course: the water was quite smooth, and it formed a
- most curious spectacle to behold a flock, each bird leaving its narrow
- wake on the mirror-like surface. In their flight they frequently twist
- about with extreme quickness, and dexterously manage with their projecting
- lower mandible to plough up small fish, which are secured by the upper and
- shorter half of their scissor-like bills. This fact I repeatedly saw, as,
- like swallows, they continued to fly backwards and forwards close before
- me. Occasionally when leaving the surface of the water their flight was
- wild, irregular, and rapid; they then uttered loud harsh cries. When these
- birds are fishing, the advantage of the long primary feathers of their
- wings, in keeping them dry, is very evident. When thus employed, their
- forms resemble the symbol by which many artists represent marine birds.
- Their tails are much used in steering their irregular course.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0003" id="linkimage-0003"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0159.jpg" alt="0159 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0159.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- These birds are common far inland along the course of the Rio Parana; it
- is said that they remain here during the whole year, and breed in the
- marshes. During the day they rest in flocks on the grassy plains at some
- distance from the water. Being at anchor, as I have said, in one of the
- deep creeks between the islands of the Parana, as the evening drew to a
- close, one of these scissor-beaks suddenly appeared. The water was quite
- still, and many little fish were rising. The bird continued for a long
- time to skim the surface, flying in its wild and irregular manner up and
- down the narrow canal, now dark with the growing night and the shadows of
- the overhanging trees. At Monte Video, I observed that some large flocks
- during the day remained on the mud-banks at the head of the harbour, in
- the same manner as on the grassy plains near the Parana; and every evening
- they took flight seaward. From these facts I suspect that the Rhynchops
- generally fishes by night, at which time many of the lower animals come
- most abundantly to the surface. M. Lesson states that he has seen these
- birds opening the shells of the mactrae buried in the sand-banks on the
- coast of Chile: from their weak bills, with the lower mandible so much
- projecting, their short legs and long wings, it is very improbable that
- this can be a general habit.
- </p>
- <p>
- In our course down the Parana, I observed only three other birds, whose
- habits are worth mentioning. One is a small kingfisher (Ceryle Americana);
- it has a longer tail than the European species, and hence does not sit in
- so stiff and upright a position. Its flight also, instead of being direct
- and rapid, like the course of an arrow, is weak and undulatory, as among
- the soft-billed birds. It utters a low note, like the clicking together of
- two small stones. A small green parrot (Conurus murinus), with a grey
- breast, appears to prefer the tall trees on the islands to any other
- situation for its building-place. A number of nests are placed so close
- together as to form one great mass of sticks. These parrots always live in
- flocks, and commit great ravages on the corn-fields. I was told, that near
- Colonia 2500 were killed in the course of one year. A bird with a forked
- tail, terminated by two long feathers (Tyrannus savana), and named by the
- Spaniards scissor-tail, is very common near Buenos Ayres: it commonly sits
- on a branch of the <i>ombu</i> tree, near a house, and thence takes a
- short flight in pursuit of insects, and returns to the same spot. When on
- the wing it presents in its manner of flight and general appearance a
- caricature-likeness of the common swallow. It has the power of turning
- very shortly in the air, and in so doing opens and shuts its tail,
- sometimes in a horizontal or lateral and sometimes in a vertical
- direction, just like a pair of scissors.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 16th.&mdash;Some leagues below Rozario, the western shore of the
- Parana is bounded by perpendicular cliffs, which extend in a long line to
- below San Nicolas; hence it more resembles a sea-coast than that of a
- fresh-water river. It is a great drawback to the scenery of the Parana,
- that, from the soft nature of its banks, the water is very muddy. The
- Uruguay, flowing through a granitic country, is much clearer; and where
- the two channels unite at the head of the Plata, the waters may for a long
- distance be distinguished by their black and red colours. In the evening,
- the wind being not quite fair, as usual we immediately moored, and the
- next day, as it blew rather freshly, though with a favouring current, the
- master was much too indolent to think of starting. At Bajada, he was
- described to me as "hombre muy aflicto"&mdash;a man always miserable to
- get on; but certainly he bore all delays with admirable resignation. He
- was an old Spaniard, and had been many years in this country. He professed
- a great liking to the English, but stoutly maintained that the battle of
- Trafalgar was merely won by the Spanish captains having been all bought
- over; and that the only really gallant action on either side was performed
- by the Spanish admiral. It struck me as rather characteristic, that this
- man should prefer his countrymen being thought the worst of traitors,
- rather than unskilful or cowardly.
- </p>
- <p>
- 18th and 19th.&mdash;We continued slowly to sail down the noble stream:
- the current helped us but little. We met, during our descent, very few
- vessels. One of the best gifts of nature, in so grand a channel of
- communication, seems here wilfully thrown away&mdash;a river in which
- ships might navigate from a temperate country, as surprisingly abundant in
- certain productions as destitute of others, to another possessing a
- tropical climate, and a soil which, according to the best of judges, M.
- Bonpland, is perhaps unequalled in fertility in any part of the world. How
- different would have been the aspect of this river if English colonists
- had by good fortune first sailed up the Plata! What noble towns would now
- have occupied its shores! Till the death of Francia, the Dictator of
- Paraguay, these two countries must remain distinct, as if placed on
- opposite sides of the globe. And when the old bloody-minded tyrant is gone
- to his long account, Paraguay will be torn by revolutions, violent in
- proportion to the previous unnatural calm. That country will have to
- learn, like every other South American state, that a republic cannot
- succeed till it contains a certain body of men imbued with the principles
- of justice and honour.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 20th.&mdash;Being arrived at the mouth of the Parana, and as I was
- very anxious to reach Buenos Ayres, I went on shore at Las Conchas, with
- the intention of riding there. Upon landing, I found to my great surprise
- that I was to a certain degree a prisoner. A violent revolution having
- broken out, all the ports were laid under an embargo. I could not return
- to my vessel, and as for going by land to the city, it was out of the
- question. After a long conversation with the commandant, I obtained
- permission to go the next day to General Rolor, who commanded a division
- of the rebels on this side the capital. In the morning I rode to the
- encampment. The general, officers, and soldiers, all appeared, and I
- believe really were, great villains. The general, the very evening before
- he left the city, voluntarily went to the Governor, and with his hand to
- his heart, pledged his word of honour that he at least would remain
- faithful to the last. The general told me that the city was in a state of
- close blockade, and that all he could do was to give me a passport to the
- commander-in-chief of the rebels at Quilmes. We had therefore to take a
- great sweep round the city, and it was with much difficulty that we
- procured horses. My reception at the encampment was quite civil, but I was
- told it was impossible that I could be allowed to enter the city. I was
- very anxious about this, as I anticipated the Beagle's departure from the
- Rio Plata earlier than it took place. Having mentioned, however, General
- Rosas's obliging kindness to me when at the Colorado, magic itself could
- not have altered circumstances quicker than did this conversation. I was
- instantly told that though they could not give me a passport, if I chose
- to leave my guide and horses, I might pass their sentinels. I was too glad
- to accept of this, and an officer was sent with me to give directions that
- I should not be stopped at the bridge. The road for the space of a league
- was quite deserted. I met one party of soldiers, who were satisfied by
- gravely looking at an old passport: and at length I was not a little
- pleased to find myself within the city.
- </p>
- <p>
- This revolution was supported by scarcely any pretext of grievances: but
- in a state which, in the course of nine months (from February to October,
- 1820), underwent fifteen changes in its government&mdash;each governor,
- according to the constitution, being elected for three years&mdash;it
- would be very unreasonable to ask for pretexts. In this case, a party of
- men&mdash;who, being attached to Rosas, were disgusted with the governor
- Balcarce&mdash;to the number of seventy left the city, and with the cry of
- Rosas the whole country took arms. The city was then blockaded, no
- provisions, cattle or horses, were allowed to enter; besides this, there
- was only a little skirmishing, and a few men daily killed. The outside
- party well knew that by stopping the supply of meat they would certainly
- be victorious. General Rosas could not have known of this rising; but it
- appears to be quite consonant with the plans of his party. A year ago he
- was elected governor, but he refused it, unless the Sala would also confer
- on him extraordinary powers. This was refused, and since then his party
- have shown that no other governor can keep his place. The warfare on both
- sides was avowedly protracted till it was possible to hear from Rosas. A
- note arrived a few days after I left Buenos Ayres, which stated that the
- General disapproved of peace having been broken, but that he thought the
- outside party had justice on their side. On the bare reception of this,
- the Governor, ministers, and part of the military, to the number of some
- hundreds, fled from the city. The rebels entered, elected a new governor,
- and were paid for their services to the number of 5500 men. From these
- proceedings, it was clear that Rosas ultimately would become the dictator:
- to the term king, the people in this, as in other republics, have a
- particular dislike. Since leaving South America, we have heard that Rosas
- has been elected, with powers and for a time altogether opposed to the
- constitutional principles of the republic.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0008" id="link2HCH0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER VIII &mdash; BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento&mdash;Value of an Estancia&mdash;Cattle,
- how counted&mdash;Singular Breed of Oxen&mdash;Perforated Pebbles&mdash;Shepherd
- Dogs&mdash;Horses broken-in, Gauchos riding&mdash;Character of Inhabitants&mdash;Rio
- Plata&mdash;Flocks of Butterflies&mdash;Aeronaut Spiders&mdash;Phosphorescence
- of the Sea&mdash;Port Desire&mdash;Guanaco&mdash;Port St. Julian&mdash;Geology
- of Patagonia&mdash;Fossil gigantic Animal&mdash;Types of Organization
- constant&mdash;Change in the Zoology of America&mdash;Causes of
- Extinction.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">H</span>AVING been delayed
- for nearly a fortnight in the city, I was glad to escape on board a packet
- bound for Monte Video. A town in a state of blockade must always be a
- disagreeable place of residence; in this case moreover there were constant
- apprehensions from robbers within. The sentinels were the worst of all;
- for, from their office and from having arms in their hands, they robbed
- with a degree of authority which other men could not imitate.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our passage was a very long and tedious one. The Plata looks like a noble
- estuary on the map; but is in truth a poor affair. A wide expanse of muddy
- water has neither grandeur nor beauty. At one time of the day, the two
- shores, both of which are extremely low, could just be distinguished from
- the deck. On arriving at Monte Video I found that the Beagle would not
- sail for some time, so I prepared for a short excursion in this part of
- Banda Oriental. Everything which I have said about the country near
- Maldonado is applicable to Monte Video; but the land, with the one
- exception of the Green Mount 450 feet high, from which it takes its name,
- is far more level. Very little of the undulating grassy plain is enclosed;
- but near the town there are a few hedge-banks, covered with agaves, cacti,
- and fennel.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 14th.&mdash;We left Monte Video in the afternoon. I intended to
- proceed to Colonia del Sacramiento, situated on the northern bank of the
- Plata and opposite to Buenos Ayres, and thence, following up the Uruguay,
- to the village of Mercedes on the Rio Negro (one of the many rivers of
- this name in South America), and from this point to return direct to Monte
- Video. We slept at the house of my guide at Canelones. In the morning we
- rose early, in the hopes of being able to ride a good distance; but it was
- a vain attempt, for all the rivers were flooded. We passed in boats the
- streams of Canelones, St. Lucia, and San Jose, and thus lost much time. On
- a former excursion I crossed the Lucia near its mouth, and I was surprised
- to observe how easily our horses, although not used to swim, passed over a
- width of at least six hundred yards. On mentioning this at Monte Video, I
- was told that a vessel containing some mountebanks and their horses, being
- wrecked in the Plata, one horse swam seven miles to the shore. In the
- course of the day I was amused by the dexterity with which a Gaucho forced
- a restive horse to swim a river. He stripped off his clothes, and jumping
- on its back, rode into the water till it was out of its depth; then
- slipping off over the crupper, he caught hold of the tail, and as often as
- the horse turned round the man frightened it back by splashing water in
- its face. As soon as the horse touched the bottom on the other side, the
- man pulled himself on, and was firmly seated, bridle in hand, before the
- horse gained the bank. A naked man on a naked horse is a fine spectacle; I
- had no idea how well the two animals suited each other. The tail of a
- horse is a very useful appendage; I have passed a river in a boat with
- four people in it, which was ferried across in the same way as the Gaucho.
- If a man and horse have to cross a broad river, the best plan is for the
- man to catch hold of the pommel or mane, and help himself with the other
- arm.
- </p>
- <p>
- We slept and stayed the following day at the post of Cufre. In the evening
- the postman or letter-carrier arrived. He was a day after his time, owing
- to the Rio Rozario being flooded. It would not, however, be of much
- consequence; for, although he had passed through some of the principal
- towns in Banda Oriental, his luggage consisted of two letters! The view
- from the house was pleasing; an undulating green surface, with distant
- glimpses of the Plata. I find that I look at this province with very
- different eyes from what I did upon my first arrival. I recollect I then
- thought it singularly level; but now, after galloping over the Pampas, my
- only surprise is, what could have induced me ever to call it level. The
- country is a series of undulations, in themselves perhaps not absolutely
- great, but, as compared to the plains of St. Fe, real mountains. From
- these inequalities there is an abundance of small rivulets, and the turf
- is green and luxuriant.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 17th.&mdash;We crossed the Rozario, which was deep and rapid, and
- passing the village of Colla, arrived at midday at Colonia del
- Sacramiento. The distance is twenty leagues, through a country covered
- with fine grass, but poorly stocked with cattle or inhabitants. I was
- invited to sleep at Colonia, and to accompany on the following day a
- gentleman to his estancia, where there were some limestone rocks. The town
- is built on a stony promontory something in the same manner as at Monte
- Video. It is strongly fortified, but both fortifications and town suffered
- much in the Brazilian war. It is very ancient; and the irregularity of the
- streets, and the surrounding groves of old orange and peach trees, gave it
- a pretty appearance. The church is a curious ruin; it was used as a
- powder-magazine, and was struck by lightning in one of the ten thousand
- thunderstorms of the Rio Plata. Two-thirds of the building were blown away
- to the very foundation; and the rest stands a shattered and curious
- monument of the united powers of lightning and gunpowder. In the evening I
- wandered about the half-demolished walls of the town. It was the chief
- seat of the Brazilian war;&mdash;a war most injurious to this country, not
- so much in its immediate effects, as in being the origin of a multitude of
- generals and all other grades of officers. More generals are numbered (but
- not paid) in the United Provinces of La Plata than in the United Kingdom
- of Great Britain. These gentlemen have learned to like power, and do not
- object to a little skirmishing. Hence there are many always on the watch
- to create disturbance and to overturn a government which as yet has never
- rested on any staple foundation. I noticed, however, both here and in
- other places, a very general interest in the ensuing election for the
- President; and this appears a good sign for the prosperity of this little
- country. The inhabitants do not require much education in their
- representatives; I heard some men discussing the merits of those for
- Colonia; and it was said that, "although they were not men of business,
- they could all sign their names:" with this they seemed to think every
- reasonable man ought to be satisfied.
- </p>
- <p>
- 18th.&mdash;Rode with my host to his estancia, at the Arroyo de San Juan.
- In the evening we took a ride round the estate: it contained two square
- leagues and a half, and was situated in what is called a rincon; that is,
- one side was fronted by the Plata, and the two others guarded by
- impassable brooks. There was an excellent port for little vessels, and an
- abundance of small wood, which is valuable as supplying fuel to Buenos
- Ayres. I was curious to know the value of so complete an estancia. Of
- cattle there were 3000, and it would well support three or four times that
- number; of mares 800, together with 150 broken-in horses, and 600 sheep.
- There was plenty of water and limestone, a rough house, excellent corrals,
- and a peach orchard. For all this he had been offered 2000 Pounds, and he
- only wanted 500 Pounds additional, and probably would sell it for less.
- The chief trouble with an estancia is driving the cattle twice a week to a
- central spot, in order to make them tame, and to count them. This latter
- operation would be thought difficult, where there are ten or fifteen
- thousand head together. It is managed on the principle that the cattle
- invariably divide themselves into little troops of from forty to one
- hundred. Each troop is recognized by a few peculiarly marked animals, and
- its number is known: so that, one being lost out of ten thousand, it is
- perceived by its absence from one of the tropillas. During a stormy night
- the cattle all mingle together; but the next morning the tropillas
- separate as before; so that each animal must know its fellow out of ten
- thousand others.
- </p>
- <p>
- On two occasions I met with in this province some oxen of a very curious
- breed, called nata or niata. They appear externally to hold nearly the
- same relation to other cattle, which bull or pug dogs do to other dogs.
- Their forehead is very short and broad, with the nasal end turned up, and
- the upper lip much drawn back; their lower jaws project beyond the upper,
- and have a corresponding upward curve; hence their teeth are always
- exposed. Their nostrils are seated high up and are very open; their eyes
- project outwards. When walking they carry their heads low, on a short
- neck; and their hinder legs are rather longer compared with the front legs
- than is usual. Their bare teeth, their short heads, and upturned nostrils
- give them the most ludicrous self-confident air of defiance imaginable.
- </p>
- <p>
- Since my return, I have procured a skeleton head, through the kindness of
- my friend Captain Sulivan, R. N., which is now deposited in the College of
- Surgeons. <a href="#linknote-81" name="linknoteref-81" id="linknoteref-81"><small>81</small></a>
- Don F. Muniz, of Luxan, has kindly collected for me all the information
- which he could respecting this breed. From his account it seems that about
- eighty or ninety years ago, they were rare and kept as curiosities at
- Buenos Ayres. The breed is universally believed to have originated amongst
- the Indians southward of the Plata; and that it was with them the
- commonest kind. Even to this day, those reared in the provinces near the
- Plata show their less civilized origin, in being fiercer than common
- cattle, and in the cow easily deserting her first calf, if visited too
- often or molested. It is a singular fact that an almost similar structure
- to the abnormal <a href="#linknote-82" name="linknoteref-82"
- id="linknoteref-82"><small>82</small></a> one of the niata breed,
- characterizes, as I am informed by Dr. Falconer, that great extinct
- ruminant of India, the Sivatherium. The breed is very <i>true</i>; and a
- niata bull and cow invariably produce niata calves. A niata bull with a
- common cow, or the reverse cross, produces offspring having an
- intermediate character, but with the niata characters strongly displayed:
- according to Senor Muniz, there is the clearest evidence, contrary to the
- common belief of agriculturists in analogous cases, that the niata cow
- when crossed with a common bull transmits her peculiarities more strongly
- than the niata bull when crossed with a common cow. When the pasture is
- tolerably long, the niata cattle feed with the tongue and palate as well
- as common cattle; but during the great droughts, when so many animals
- perish, the niata breed is under a great disadvantage, and would be
- exterminated if not attended to; for the common cattle, like horses, are
- able just to keep alive, by browsing with their lips on twigs of trees and
- reeds; this the niatas cannot so well do, as their lips do not join, and
- hence they are found to perish before the common cattle. This strikes me
- as a good illustration of how little we are able to judge from the
- ordinary habits of life, on what circumstances, occurring only at long
- intervals, the rarity or extinction of a species may be determined.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 19th.&mdash;Passing the valley of Las Vacas, we slept at a house
- of a North American, who worked a lime-kiln on the Arroyo de las Vivoras.
- In the morning we rode to a protecting headland on the banks of the river,
- called Punta Gorda. On the way we tried to find a jaguar. There were
- plenty of fresh tracks, and we visited the trees, on which they are said
- to sharpen their claws; but we did not succeed in disturbing one. From
- this point the Rio Uruguay presented to our view a noble volume of water.
- From the clearness and rapidity of the stream, its appearance was far
- superior to that of its neighbour the Parana. On the opposite coast,
- several branches from the latter river entered the Uruguay. As the sun was
- shining, the two colours of the waters could be seen quite distinct.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we proceeded on our road towards Mercedes on the Rio Negro.
- At night we asked permission to sleep at an estancia at which we happened
- to arrive. It was a very large estate, being ten leagues square, and the
- owner is one of the greatest landowners in the country. His nephew had
- charge of it, and with him there was a captain in the army, who the other
- day ran away from Buenos Ayres. Considering their station, their
- conversation was rather amusing. They expressed, as was usual, unbounded
- astonishment at the globe being round, and could scarcely credit that a
- hole would, if deep enough, come out on the other side. They had, however,
- heard of a country where there were six months of light and six of
- darkness, and where the inhabitants were very tall and thin! They were
- curious about the price and condition of horses and cattle in England.
- Upon finding out we did not catch our animals with the lazo, they cried
- out, "Ah, then, you use nothing but the bolas:" the idea of an enclosed
- country was quite new to them. The captain at last said, he had one
- question to ask me, which he should be very much obliged if I would answer
- with all truth. I trembled to think how deeply scientific it would be: it
- was, "Whether the ladies of Buenos Ayres were not the handsomest in the
- world." I replied, like a renegade, "Charmingly so." He added, "I have one
- other question: Do ladies in any other part of the world wear such large
- combs?" I solemnly assured him that they did not. They were absolutely
- delighted. The captain exclaimed, "Look there! a man who has seen half the
- world says it is the case; we always thought so, but now we know it." My
- excellent judgment in combs and beauty procured me a most hospitable
- reception; the captain forced me to take his bed, and he would sleep on
- his recado.
- </p>
- <p>
- 21st.&mdash;Started at sunrise, and rode slowly during the whole day. The
- geological nature of this part of the province was different from the
- rest, and closely resembled that of the Pampas. In consequence, there were
- immense beds of the thistle, as well as of the cardoon: the whole country,
- indeed, may be called one great bed of these plants. The two sorts grow
- separate, each plant in company with its own kind. The cardoon is as high
- as a horse's back, but the Pampas thistle is often higher than the crown
- of the rider's head. To leave the road for a yard is out of the question;
- and the road itself is partly, and in some cases entirely closed. Pasture,
- of course there is none; if cattle or horses once enter the bed, they are
- for the time completely lost. Hence it is very hazardous to attempt to
- drive cattle at this season of the year; for when jaded enough to face the
- thistles, they rush among them, and are seen no more. In these districts
- there are very few estancias, and these few are situated in the
- neighbourhood of damp valleys, where fortunately neither of these
- overwhelming plants can exist. As night came on before we arrived at our
- journey's end, we slept at a miserable little hovel inhabited by the
- poorest people. The extreme though rather formal courtesy of our host and
- hostess, considering their grade of life, was quite delightful.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 22nd.&mdash;Arrived at an estancia on the Berquelo belonging to a
- very hospitable Englishman, to whom I had a letter of introduction from my
- friend Mr. Lumb. I stayed here three days. One morning I rode with my host
- to the Sierra del Pedro Flaco, about twenty miles up the Rio Negro. Nearly
- the whole country was covered with good though coarse grass, which was as
- high as a horse's belly; yet there were square leagues without a single
- head of cattle. The province of Banda Oriental, if well stocked, would
- support an astonishing number of animals, at present the annual export of
- hides from Monte Video amounts to three hundred thousand; and the home
- consumption, from waste, is very considerable. An "estanciero" told me
- that he often had to send large herds of cattle a long journey to a
- salting establishment, and that the tired beasts were frequently obliged
- to be killed and skinned; but that he could never persuade the Gauchos to
- eat of them, and every evening a fresh beast was slaughtered for their
- suppers! The view of the Rio Negro from the Sierra was more picturesque
- than any other which I saw in this province. The river, broad, deep, and
- rapid, wound at the foot of a rocky precipitous cliff: a belt of wood
- followed its course, and the horizon terminated in the distant undulations
- of the turf-plain.
- </p>
- <p>
- When in this neighbourhood, I several times heard of the Sierra de las
- Cuentas: a hill distant many miles to the northward. The name signifies
- hill of beads. I was assured that vast numbers of little round stones, of
- various colours, each with a small cylindrical hole, are found there.
- Formerly the Indians used to collect them, for the purpose of making
- necklaces and bracelets&mdash;a taste, I may observe, which is common to
- all savage nations, as well as to the most polished. I did not know what
- to understand from this story, but upon mentioning it at the Cape of Good
- Hope to Dr. Andrew Smith, he told me that he recollected finding on the
- south-eastern coast of Africa, about one hundred miles to the eastward of
- St. John's river, some quartz crystals with their edges blunted from
- attrition, and mixed with gravel on the sea-beach. Each crystal was about
- five lines in diameter, and from an inch to an inch and a half in length.
- Many of them had a small canal extending from one extremity to the other,
- perfectly cylindrical, and of a size that readily admitted a coarse thread
- or a piece of fine catgut. Their colour was red or dull white. The natives
- were acquainted with this structure in crystals. I have mentioned these
- circumstances because, although no crystallized body is at present known
- to assume this form, it may lead some future traveller to investigate the
- real nature of such stones.
- </p>
- <p>
- While staying at this estancia, I was amused with what I saw and heard of
- the shepherd-dogs of the country. <a href="#linknote-83"
- name="linknoteref-83" id="linknoteref-83"><small>83</small></a> When
- riding, it is a common thing to meet a large flock of sheep guarded by one
- or two dogs, at the distance of some miles from any house or man. I often
- wondered how so firm a friendship had been established. The method of
- education consists in separating the puppy, while very young, from the
- bitch, and in accustoming it to its future companions. An ewe is held
- three or four times a day for the little thing to suck, and a nest of wool
- is made for it in the sheep-pen; at no time is it allowed to associate
- with other dogs, or with the children of the family. The puppy is,
- moreover, generally castrated; so that, when grown up, it can scarcely
- have any feelings in common with the rest of its kind. From this education
- it has no wish to leave the flock, and just as another dog will defend its
- master, man, so will these the sheep. It is amusing to observe, when
- approaching a flock, how the dog immediately advances barking, and the
- sheep all close in his rear, as if round the oldest ram. These dogs are
- also easily taught to bring home the flock, at a certain hour in the
- evening. Their most troublesome fault, when young, is their desire of
- playing with the sheep; for in their sport they sometimes gallop their
- poor subjects most unmercifully.
- </p>
- <p>
- The shepherd-dog comes to the house every day for some meat, and as soon
- as it is given him, he skulks away as if ashamed of himself. On these
- occasions the house-dogs are very tyrannical, and the least of them will
- attack and pursue the stranger. The minute, however, the latter has
- reached the flock, he turns round and begins to bark, and then all the
- house-dogs take very quickly to their heels. In a similar manner a whole
- pack of the hungry wild dogs will scarcely ever (and I was told by some
- never) venture to attack a flock guarded by even one of these faithful
- shepherds. The whole account appears to me a curious instance of the
- pliability of the affections in the dog; and yet, whether wild or however
- educated, he has a feeling of respect or fear for those that are
- fulfilling their instinct of association. For we can understand on no
- principle the wild dogs being driven away by the single one with its
- flock, except that they consider, from some confused notion, that the one
- thus associated gains power, as if in company with its own kind. F. Cuvier
- has observed that all animals that readily enter into domestication,
- consider man as a member of their own society, and thus fulfil their
- instinct of association. In the above case the shepherd-dog ranks the
- sheep as its fellow-brethren, and thus gains confidence; and the wild
- dogs, though knowing that the individual sheep are not dogs, but are good
- to eat, yet partly consent to this view when seeing them in a flock with a
- shepherd-dog at their head.
- </p>
- <p>
- One evening a "domidor" (a subduer of horses) came for the purpose of
- breaking-in some colts. I will describe the preparatory steps, for I
- believe they have not been mentioned by other travellers. A troop of wild
- young horses is driven into the corral, or large enclosure of stakes, and
- the door is shut. We will suppose that one man alone has to catch and
- mount a horse, which as yet had never felt bridle or saddle. I conceive,
- except by a Gaucho, such a feat would be utterly impracticable. The Gaucho
- picks out a full-grown colt; and as the beast rushes round the circus he
- throws his lazo so as to catch both the front legs. Instantly the horse
- rolls over with a heavy shock, and whilst struggling on the ground, the
- Gaucho, holding the lazo tight, makes a circle, so as to catch one of the
- hind legs just beneath the fetlock, and draws it close to the two front
- legs: he then hitches the lazo, so that the three are bound together. Then
- sitting on the horse's neck, he fixes a strong bridle, without a bit, to
- the lower jaw: this he does by passing a narrow thong through the
- eye-holes at the end of the reins, and several times round both jaw and
- tongue. The two front legs are now tied closely together with a strong
- leathern thong, fastened by a slip-knot. The lazo, which bound the three
- together, being then loosed, the horse rises with difficulty. The Gaucho
- now holding fast the bridle fixed to the lower jaw, leads the horse
- outside the corral. If a second man is present (otherwise the trouble is
- much greater) he holds the animal's head, whilst the first puts on the
- horsecloths and saddle, and girths the whole together. During this
- operation, the horse, from dread and astonishment at thus being bound
- round the waist, throws himself over and over again on the ground, and,
- till beaten, is unwilling to rise. At last, when the saddling is finished,
- the poor animal can hardly breathe from fear, and is white with foam and
- sweat. The man now prepares to mount by pressing heavily on the stirrup,
- so that the horse may not lose its balance; and at the moment that he
- throws his leg over the animal's back, he pulls the slip-knot binding the
- front legs, and the beast is free. Some "domidors" pull the knot while the
- animal is lying on the ground, and, standing over the saddle, allow him to
- rise beneath them. The horse, wild with dread, gives a few most violent
- bounds, and then starts off at full gallop: when quite exhausted, the man,
- by patience, brings him back to the corral, where, reeking hot and
- scarcely alive, the poor beast is let free. Those animals which will not
- gallop away, but obstinately throw themselves on the ground, are by far
- the most troublesome. This process is tremendously severe, but in two or
- three trials the horse is tamed. It is not, however, for some weeks that
- the animal is ridden with the iron bit and solid ring, for it must learn
- to associate the will of its rider with the feel of the rein, before the
- most powerful bridle can be of any service.
- </p>
- <p>
- Animals are so abundant in these countries, that humanity and
- self-interest are not closely united; therefore I fear it is that the
- former is here scarcely known. One day, riding in the Pampas with a very
- respectable "estanciero," my horse, being tired, lagged behind. The man
- often shouted to me to spur him. When I remonstrated that it was a pity,
- for the horse was quite exhausted, he cried out, "Why not?&mdash;never
- mind&mdash;spur him&mdash;it is my horse." I had then some difficulty in
- making him comprehend that it was for the horse's sake, and not on his
- account, that I did not choose to use my spurs. He exclaimed, with a look
- of great surprise, "Ah, Don Carlos, que cosa!" It was clear that such an
- idea had never before entered his head.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Gauchos are well known to be perfect riders. The idea of being thrown,
- let the horse do what it likes; never enters their head. Their criterion
- of a good rider is, a man who can manage an untamed colt, or who, if his
- horse falls, alights on his own feet, or can perform other such exploits.
- I have heard of a man betting that he would throw his horse down twenty
- times, and that nineteen times he would not fall himself. I recollect
- seeing a Gaucho riding a very stubborn horse, which three times
- successively reared so high as to fall backwards with great violence. The
- man judged with uncommon coolness the proper moment for slipping off, not
- an instant before or after the right time; and as soon as the horse got
- up, the man jumped on his back, and at last they started at a gallop. The
- Gaucho never appears to exert any muscular force. I was one day watching a
- good rider, as we were galloping along at a rapid pace, and thought to
- myself, "Surely if the horse starts, you appear so careless on your seat,
- you must fall." At this moment, a male ostrich sprang from its nest right
- beneath the horse's nose: the young colt bounded on one side like a stag;
- but as for the man, all that could be said was, that he started and took
- fright with his horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Chile and Peru more pains are taken with the mouth of the horse than in
- La Plata, and this is evidently a consequence of the more intricate nature
- of the country. In Chile a horse is not considered perfectly broken, till
- he can be brought up standing, in the midst of his full speed, on any
- particular spot,&mdash;for instance, on a cloak thrown on the ground: or,
- again, he will charge a wall, and rearing, scrape the surface with his
- hoofs. I have seen an animal bounding with spirit, yet merely reined by a
- fore-finger and thumb, taken at full gallop across a courtyard, and then
- made to wheel round the post of a veranda with great speed, but at so
- equal a distance, that the rider, with outstretched arm, all the while
- kept one finger rubbing the post. Then making a demi-volte in the air,
- with the other arm outstretched in a like manner, he wheeled round, with
- astonishing force, in an opposite direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such a horse is well broken; and although this at first may appear
- useless, it is far otherwise. It is only carrying that which is daily
- necessary into perfection. When a bullock is checked and caught by the
- lazo, it will sometimes gallop round and round in a circle, and the horse
- being alarmed at the great strain, if not well broken, will not readily
- turn like the pivot of a wheel. In consequence many men have been killed;
- for if the lazo once takes a twist round a man's body, it will instantly,
- from the power of the two opposed animals, almost cut him in twain. On the
- same principle the races are managed; the course is only two or three
- hundred yards long, the wish being to have horses that can make a rapid
- dash. The race-horses are trained not only to stand with their hoofs
- touching a line, but to draw all four feet together, so as at the first
- spring to bring into play the full action of the hind-quarters. In Chile I
- was told an anecdote, which I believe was true; and it offers a good
- illustration of the use of a well-broken animal. A respectable man riding
- one day met two others, one of whom was mounted on a horse, which he knew
- to have been stolen from himself. He challenged them; they answered him by
- drawing their sabres and giving chase. The man, on his good and fleet
- beast, kept just ahead: as he passed a thick bush he wheeled round it, and
- brought up his horse to a dead check. The pursuers were obliged to shoot
- on one side and ahead. Then instantly dashing on, right behind them, he
- buried his knife in the back of one, wounded the other, recovered his
- horse from the dying robber, and rode home. For these feats of
- horsemanship two things are necessary: a most severe bit, like the
- Mameluke, the power of which, though seldom used, the horse knows full
- well; and large blunt spurs, that can be applied either as a mere touch,
- or as an instrument of extreme pain. I conceive that with English spurs,
- the slightest touch of which pricks the skin, it would be impossible to
- break in a horse after the South American fashion.
- </p>
- <p>
- At an estancia near Las Vacas large numbers of mares are weekly
- slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although worth only five paper
- dollars, or about half a crown apiece. It seems at first strange that it
- can answer to kill mares for such a trifle; but as it is thought
- ridiculous in this country ever to break in or ride a mare, they are of no
- value except for breeding. The only thing for which I ever saw mares used,
- was to tread out wheat from the ear, for which purpose they were driven
- round a circular enclosure, where the wheat-sheaves were strewed. The man
- employed for slaughtering the mares happened to be celebrated for his
- dexterity with the lazo. Standing at the distance of twelve yards from the
- mouth of the corral, he has laid a wager that he would catch by the legs
- every animal, without missing one, as it rushed past him. There was
- another man who said he would enter the corral on foot, catch a mare,
- fasten her front legs together, drive her out, throw her down, kill, skin,
- and stake the hide for drying (which latter is a tedious job); and he
- engaged that he would perform this whole operation on twenty-two animals
- in one day. Or he would kill and take the skin off fifty in the same time.
- This would have been a prodigious task, for it is considered a good day's
- work to skin and stake the hides of fifteen or sixteen animals.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 26th.&mdash;I set out on my return in a direct line for Monte
- Video. Having heard of some giant's bones at a neighbouring farm-house on
- the Sarandis, a small stream entering the Rio Negro, I rode there
- accompanied by my host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence the
- head of the Toxodon. <a href="#linknote-84" name="linknoteref-84"
- id="linknoteref-84"><small>84</small></a> When found it was quite perfect;
- but the boys knocked out some of the teeth with stones, and then set up
- the head as a mark to throw at. By a most fortunate chance I found a
- perfect tooth, which exactly fitted one of the sockets in this skull,
- embedded by itself on the banks of the Rio Tercero, at the distance of
- about 180 miles from this place. I found remains of this extraordinary
- animal at two other places, so that it must formerly have been common. I
- found here, also, some large portions of the armour of a gigantic
- armadillo-like animal, and part of the great head of a Mylodon. The bones
- of this head are so fresh, that they contain, according to the analysis by
- Mr. T. Reeks, seven per cent of animal matter; and when placed in a
- spirit-lamp, they burn with a small flame. The number of the remains
- embedded in the grand estuary deposit which forms the Pampas and covers
- the granitic rocks of Banda Oriental, must be extraordinarily great. I
- believe a straight line drawn in any direction through the Pampas would
- cut through some skeleton or bones. Besides those which I found during my
- short excursions, I heard of many others, and the origin of such names as
- "the stream of the animal," "the hill of the giant," is obvious. At other
- times I heard of the marvellous property of certain rivers, which had the
- power of changing small bones into large; or, as some maintained, the
- bones themselves grew. As far as I am aware, not one of these animals
- perished, as was formerly supposed, in the marshes or muddy river-beds of
- the present land, but their bones have been exposed by the streams
- intersecting the subaqueous deposit in which they were originally
- embedded. We may conclude that the whole area of the Pampas is one wide
- sepulchre of these extinct gigantic quadrupeds.
- </p>
- <p>
- By the middle of the day, on the 28th, we arrived at Monte Video, having
- been two days and a half on the road. The country for the whole way was of
- a very uniform character, some parts being rather more rocky and hilly
- than near the Plata. Not far from Monte Video we passed through the
- village of Las Pietras, so named from some large rounded masses of
- syenite. Its appearance was rather pretty. In this country a few fig-trees
- round a group of houses, and a site elevated a hundred feet above the
- general level, ought always to be called picturesque.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the last six months I have had an opportunity of seeing a little of
- the character of the inhabitants of these provinces. The Gauchos, or
- countryrmen, are very superior to those who reside in the towns. The
- Gaucho is invariably most obliging, polite, and hospitable: I did not meet
- with even one instance of rudeness or inhospitality. He is modest, both
- respecting himself and country, but at the same time a spirited, bold
- fellow. On the other hand, many robberies are committed, and there is much
- bloodshed: the habit of constantly wearing the knife is the chief cause of
- the latter. It is lamentable to hear how many lives are lost in trifling
- quarrels. In fighting, each party tries to mark the face of his adversary
- by slashing his nose or eyes; as is often attested by deep and
- horrid-looking scars. Robberies are a natural consequence of universal
- gambling, much drinking, and extreme indolence. At Mercedes I asked two
- men why they did not work. One gravely said the days were too long; the
- other that he was too poor. The number of horses and the profusion of food
- are the destruction of all industry. Moreover, there are so many
- feast-days; and again, nothing can succeed without it be begun when the
- moon is on the increase; so that half the month is lost from these two
- causes.
- </p>
- <p>
- Police and justice are quite inefficient. If a man who is poor commits
- murder and is taken, he will be imprisoned, and perhaps even shot; but if
- he is rich and has friends, he may rely on it no very severe consequence
- will ensue. It is curious that the most respectable inhabitants of the
- country invariably assist a murderer to escape: they seem to think that
- the individual sins against the government, and not against the people. A
- traveller has no protection besides his fire-arms; and the constant habit
- of carrying them is the main check to more frequent robberies. The
- character of the higher and more educated classes who reside in the towns,
- partakes, but perhaps in a lesser degree, of the good parts of the Gaucho,
- but is, I fear, stained by many vices of which he is free. Sensuality,
- mockery of all religion, and the grossest corruption, are far from
- uncommon. Nearly every public officer can be bribed. The head man in the
- post-office sold forged government franks. The governor and prime minister
- openly combined to plunder the state. Justice, where gold came into play,
- was hardly expected by any one. I knew an Englishman, who went to the
- Chief Justice (he told me, that not then understanding the ways of the
- place, he trembled as he entered the room), and said, "Sir, I have come to
- offer you two hundred (paper) dollars (value about five pounds sterling)
- if you will arrest before a certain time a man who has cheated me. I know
- it is against the law, but my lawyer (naming him) recommended me to take
- this step." The Chief Justice smiled acquiescence, thanked him, and the
- man before night was safe in prison. With this entire want of principle in
- many of the leading men, with the country full of ill-paid turbulent
- officers, the people yet hope that a democratic form of government can
- succeed!
- </p>
- <p>
- On first entering society in these countries, two or three features strike
- one as particularly remarkable. The polite and dignified manners pervading
- every rank of life, the excellent taste displayed by the women in their
- dresses, and the equality amongst all ranks. At the Rio Colorado some men
- who kept the humblest shops used to dine with General Rosas. A son of a
- major at Bahia Blanca gained his livelihood by making paper cigars, and he
- wished to accompany me, as guide or servant, to Buenos Ayres, but his
- father objected on the score of the danger alone. Many officers in the
- army can neither read nor write, yet all meet in society as equals. In
- Entre Rios, the Sala consisted of only six representatives. One of them
- kept a common shop, and evidently was not degraded by the office. All this
- is what would be expected in a new country; nevertheless the absence of
- gentlemen by profession appears to an Englishman something strange.
- </p>
- <p>
- When speaking of these countries, the manner in which they have been
- brought up by their unnatural parent, Spain, should always be borne in
- mind. On the whole, perhaps, more credit is due for what has been done,
- than blame for that which may be deficient. It is impossible to doubt but
- that the extreme liberalism of these countries must ultimately lead to
- good results. The very general toleration of foreign religions, the regard
- paid to the means of education, the freedom of the press, the facilities
- offered to all foreigners, and especially, as I am bound to add, to every
- one professing the humblest pretensions to science, should be recollected
- with gratitude by those who have visited Spanish South America.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 6th.&mdash;The Beagle sailed from the Rio Plata, never again to
- enter its muddy stream. Our course was directed to Port Desire, on the
- coast of Patagonia. Before proceeding any further, I will here put
- together a few observations made at sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several times when the ship has been some miles off the mouth of the
- Plata, and at other times when off the shores of Northern Patagonia, we
- have been surrounded by insects. One evening, when we were about ten miles
- from the Bay of San Blas, vast numbers of butterflies, in bands or flocks
- of countless myriads, extended as far as the eye could range. Even by the
- aid of a telescope it was not possible to see a space free from
- butterflies. The seamen cried out "it was snowing butterflies," and such
- in fact was the appearance. More species than one were present, but the
- main part belonged to a kind very similar to, but not identical with, the
- common English Colias edusa. Some moths and hymenoptera accompanied the
- butterflies; and a fine beetle (Calosoma) flew on board. Other instances
- are known of this beetle having been caught far out at sea; and this is
- the more remarkable, as the greater number of the Carabidae seldom or
- never take wing. The day had been fine and calm, and the one previous to
- it equally so, with light and variable airs. Hence we cannot suppose that
- the insects were blown off the land, but we must conclude that they
- voluntarily took flight. The great bands of the Colias seem at first to
- afford an instance like those on record of the migrations of another
- butterfly, Vanessa cardui; <a href="#linknote-85" name="linknoteref-85"
- id="linknoteref-85"><small>85</small></a> but the presence of other
- insects makes the case distinct, and even less intelligible. Before sunset
- a strong breeze sprung up from the north, and this must have caused tens
- of thousands of the butterflies and other insects to have perished.
- </p>
- <p>
- On another occasion, when seventeen miles off Cape Corrientes, I had a net
- overboard to catch pelagic animals. Upon drawing it up, to my surprise, I
- found a considerable number of beetles in it, and although in the open
- sea, they did not appear much injured by the salt water. I lost some of
- the specimens, but those which I preserved belonged to the genera
- Colymbetes, Hydroporus, Hydrobius (two species), Notaphus, Cynucus,
- Adimonia, and Scarabaeus. At first I thought that these insects had been
- blown from the shore; but upon reflecting that out of the eight species
- four were aquatic, and two others partly so in their habits, it appeared
- to me most probable that they were floated into the sea by a small stream
- which drains a lake near Cape Corrientes. On any supposition it is an
- interesting circumstance to find live insects swimming in the open ocean
- seventeen miles from the nearest point of land. There are several accounts
- of insects having been blown off the Patagonian shore. Captain Cook
- observed it, as did more lately Captain King of the Adventure. The cause
- probably is due to the want of shelter, both of trees and hills, so that
- an insect on the wing with an off-shore breeze, would be very apt to be
- blown out to sea. The most remarkable instance I have known of an insect
- being caught far from the land, was that of a large grasshopper
- (Acrydium), which flew on board, when the Beagle was to windward of the
- Cape de Verd Islands, and when the nearest point of land, not directly
- opposed to the trade-wind, was Cape Blanco on the coast of Africa, 370
- miles distant. <a href="#linknote-86" name="linknoteref-86"
- id="linknoteref-86"><small>86</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- On several occasions, when the Beagle has been within the mouth of the
- Plata, the rigging has been coated with the web of the Gossamer Spider.
- One day (November 1st, 1832) I paid particular attention to this subject.
- The weather had been fine and clear, and in the morning the air was full
- of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in England. The
- ship was sixty miles distant from the land, in the direction of a steady
- though light breeze. Vast numbers of a small spider, about one-tenth of an
- inch in length, and of a dusky red colour, were attached to the webs.
- There must have been, I should suppose, some thousands on the ship. The
- little spider, when first coming in contact with the rigging, was always
- seated on a single thread, and not on the flocculent mass. This latter
- seems merely to be produced by the entanglement of the single threads. The
- spiders were all of one species, but of both sexes, together with young
- ones. These latter were distinguished by their smaller size and more dusky
- colour. I will not give the description of this spider, but merely state
- that it does not appear to me to be included in any of Latreille's genera.
- The little aeronaut as soon as it arrived on board was very active,
- running about, sometimes letting itself fall, and then reascending the
- same thread; sometimes employing itself in making a small and very
- irregular mesh in the corners between the ropes. It could run with
- facility on the surface of the water. When disturbed it lifted up its
- front legs, in the attitude of attention. On its first arrival it appeared
- very thirsty, and with exserted maxillae drank eagerly of drops of water,
- this same circumstance has been observed by Strack: may it not be in
- consequence of the little insect having passed through a dry and rarefied
- atmosphere? Its stock of web seemed inexhaustible. While watching some
- that were suspended by a single thread, I several times observed that the
- slightest breath of air bore them away out of sight, in a horizontal line.
- </p>
- <p>
- On another occasion (25th) under similar circumstances, I repeatedly
- observed the same kind of small spider, either when placed or having
- crawled on some little eminence, elevate its abdomen, send forth a thread,
- and then sail away horizontally, but with a rapidity which was quite
- unaccountable. I thought I could perceive that the spider, before
- performing the above preparatory steps, connected its legs together with
- the most delicate threads, but I am not sure whether this observation was
- correct.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, at St. Fe, I had a better opportunity of observing some similar
- facts. A spider which was about three-tenths of an inch in length, and
- which in its general appearance resembled a Citigrade (therefore quite
- different from the gossamer), while standing on the summit of a post,
- darted forth four or five threads from its spinners. These, glittering in
- the sunshine, might be compared to diverging rays of light; they were not,
- however, straight, but in undulations like films of silk blown by the
- wind. They were more than a yard in length, and diverged in an ascending
- direction from the orifices. The spider then suddenly let go its hold of
- the post, and was quickly borne out of sight. The day was hot and
- apparently calm; yet under such circumstances, the atmosphere can never be
- so tranquil as not to affect a vane so delicate as the thread of a
- spider's web. If during a warm day we look either at the shadow of any
- object cast on a bank, or over a level plain at a distant landmark, the
- effect of an ascending current of heated air is almost always evident:
- such upward currents, it has been remarked, are also shown by the ascent
- of soap-bubbles, which will not rise in an in-doors room. Hence I think
- there is not much difficulty in understanding the ascent of the fine lines
- projected from a spider's spinners, and afterwards of the spider itself;
- the divergence of the lines has been attempted to be explained, I believe
- by Mr. Murray, by their similar electrical condition. The circumstance of
- spiders of the same species, but of different sexes and ages, being found
- on several occasions at the distance of many leagues from the land,
- attached in vast numbers to the lines, renders it probable that the habit
- of sailing through the air is as characteristic of this tribe, as that of
- diving is of the Argyroneta. We may then reject Latreille's supposition,
- that the gossamer owes its origin indifferently to the young of several
- genera of spiders: although, as we have seen, the young of other spiders
- do possess the power of performing aerial voyages. <a href="#linknote-87"
- name="linknoteref-87" id="linknoteref-87"><small>87</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- During our different passages south of the Plata, I often towed astern a
- net made of bunting, and thus caught many curious animals. Of Crustacea
- there were many strange and undescribed genera. One, which in some
- respects is allied to the Notopods (or those crabs which have their
- posterior legs placed almost on their backs, for the purpose of adhering
- to the under side of rocks), is very remarkable from the structure of its
- hind pair of legs. The penultimate joint, instead of terminating in a
- simple claw, ends in three bristle-like appendages of dissimilar lengths&mdash;the
- longest equalling that of the entire leg. These claws are very thin, and
- are serrated with the finest teeth, directed backwards: their curved
- extremities are flattened, and on this part five most minute cups are
- placed which seem to act in the same manner as the suckers on the arms of
- the cuttle-fish. As the animal lives in the open sea, and probably wants a
- place of rest, I suppose this beautiful and most anomalous structure is
- adapted to take hold of floating marine animals.
- </p>
- <p>
- In deep water, far from the land, the number of living creatures is
- extremely small: south of the latitude 35 degs., I never succeeded in
- catching anything besides some beroe, and a few species of minute
- entomostracous crustacea. In shoaler water, at the distance of a few miles
- from the coast, very many kinds of crustacea and some other animals are
- numerous, but only during the night. Between latitudes 56 and 57 degs.
- south of Cape Horn, the net was put astern several times; it never,
- however, brought up anything besides a few of two extremely minute species
- of Entomostraca. Yet whales and seals, petrels and albatross, are
- exceedingly abundant throughout this part of the ocean. It has always been
- a mystery to me on what the albatross, which lives far from the shore, can
- subsist; I presume that, like the condor, it is able to fast long; and
- that one good feast on the carcass of a putrid whale lasts for a long
- time. The central and intertropical parts of the Atlantic swarm with
- Pteropoda, Crustacea, and Radiata, and with their devourers the
- flying-fish, and again with their devourers the bonitos and albicores; I
- presume that the numerous lower pelagic animals feed on the Infusoria,
- which are now known, from the researches of Ehrenberg, to abound in the
- open ocean: but on what, in the clear blue water, do these Infusoria
- subsist?
- </p>
- <p>
- While sailing a little south of the Plata on one very dark night, the sea
- presented a wonderful and most beautiful spectacle. There was a fresh
- breeze, and every part of the surface, which during the day is seen as
- foam, now glowed with a pale light. The vessel drove before her bows two
- billows of liquid phosphorus, and in her wake she was followed by a milky
- train. As far as the eye reached, the crest of every wave was bright, and
- the sky above the horizon, from the reflected glare of these livid flames,
- was not so utterly obscure as over the vault of the heavens.
- </p>
- <p>
- As we proceed further southward the sea is seldom phosphorescent; and off
- Cape Horn I do not recollect more than once having seen it so, and then it
- was far from being brilliant. This circumstance probably has a close
- connection with the scarcity of organic beings in that part of the ocean.
- After the elaborate paper, <a href="#linknote-88" name="linknoteref-88"
- id="linknoteref-88"><small>88</small></a> by Ehrenberg, on the
- phosphorescence of the sea, it is almost superfluous on my part to make
- any observations on the subject. I may however add, that the same torn and
- irregular particles of gelatinous matter, described by Ehrenberg, seem in
- the southern as well as in the northern hemisphere, to be the common cause
- of this phenomenon. The particles were so minute as easily to pass through
- fine gauze; yet many were distinctly visible by the naked eye. The water
- when placed in a tumbler and agitated, gave out sparks, but a small
- portion in a watch-glass scarcely ever was luminous. Ehrenberg states that
- these particles all retain a certain degree of irritability. My
- observations, some of which were made directly after taking up the water,
- gave a different result. I may also mention, that having used the net
- during one night, I allowed it to become partially dry, and having
- occasion twelve hours afterwards to employ it again, I found the whole
- surface sparkled as brightly as when first taken out of the water. It does
- not appear probable in this case, that the particles could have remained
- so long alive. On one occasion having kept a jelly-fish of the genus
- Dianaea till it was dead, the water in which it was placed became
- luminous. When the waves scintillate with bright green sparks, I believe
- it is generally owing to minute crustacea. But there can be no doubt that
- very many other pelagic animals, when alive, are phosphorescent.
- </p>
- <p>
- On two occasions I have observed the sea luminous at considerable depths
- beneath the surface. Near the mouth of the Plata some circular and oval
- patches, from two to four yards in diameter, and with defined outlines,
- shone with a steady but pale light; while the surrounding water only gave
- out a few sparks. The appearance resembled the reflection of the moon, or
- some luminous body; for the edges were sinuous from the undulations of the
- surface. The ship, which drew thirteen feet of water, passed over, without
- disturbing these patches. Therefore we must suppose that some animals were
- congregated together at a greater depth than the bottom of the vessel.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near Fernando Noronha the sea gave out light in flashes. The appearance
- was very similar to that which might be expected from a large fish moving
- rapidly through a luminous fluid. To this cause the sailors attributed it;
- at the time, however, I entertained some doubts, on account of the
- frequency and rapidity of the flashes. I have already remarked that the
- phenomenon is very much more common in warm than in cold countries; and I
- have sometimes imagined that a disturbed electrical condition of the
- atmosphere was most favourable to its production. Certainly I think the
- sea is most luminous after a few days of more calm weather than ordinary,
- during which time it has swarmed with various animals. Observing that the
- water charged with gelatinous particles is in an impure state, and that
- the luminous appearance in all common cases is produced by the agitation
- of the fluid in contact with the atmosphere, I am inclined to consider
- that the phosphorescence is the result of the decomposition of the organic
- particles, by which process (one is tempted almost to call it a kind of
- respiration) the ocean becomes purified.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 23rd.&mdash;We arrived at Port Desire, situated in lat. 47 degs.,
- on the coast of Patagonia. The creek runs for about twenty miles inland,
- with an irregular width. The Beagle anchored a few miles within the
- entrance, in front of the ruins of an old Spanish settlement.
- </p>
- <p>
- The same evening I went on shore. The first landing in any new country is
- very interesting, and especially when, as in this case, the whole aspect
- bears the stamp of a marked and individual character. At the height of
- between two and three hundred feet above some masses of porphyry a wide
- plain extends, which is truly characteristic of Patagonia. The surface is
- quite level, and is composed of well-rounded shingle mixed with a whitish
- earth. Here and there scattered tufts of brown wiry grass are supported,
- and still more rarely, some low thorny bushes. The weather is dry and
- pleasant, and the fine blue sky is but seldom obscured. When standing in
- the middle of one of these desert plains and looking towards the interior,
- the view is generally bounded by the escarpment of another plain, rather
- higher, but equally level and desolate; and in every other direction the
- horizon is indistinct from the trembling mirage which seems to rise from
- the heated surface.
- </p>
- <p>
- In such a country the fate of the Spanish settlement was soon decided; the
- dryness of the climate during the greater part of the year, and the
- occasional hostile attacks of the wandering Indians, compelled the
- colonists to desert their half-finished buildings. The style, however, in
- which they were commenced shows the strong and liberal hand of Spain in
- the old time. The result of all the attempts to colonize this side of
- America south of 41 degs., has been miserable. Port Famine expresses by
- its name the lingering and extreme sufferings of several hundred wretched
- people, of whom one alone survived to relate their misfortunes. At St.
- Joseph's Bay, on the coast of Patagonia, a small settlement was made; but
- during one Sunday the Indians made an attack and massacred the whole
- party, excepting two men, who remained captives during many years. At the
- Rio Negro I conversed with one of these men, now in extreme old age.
- </p>
- <p>
- The zoology of Patagonia is as limited as its flora. <a href="#linknote-89"
- name="linknoteref-89" id="linknoteref-89"><small>89</small></a> On the
- arid plains a few black beetles (Heteromera) might be seen slowly crawling
- about, and occasionally a lizard darted from side to side. Of birds we
- have three carrion hawks and in the valleys a few finches and
- insect-feeders. An ibis (Theristicus melanops&mdash;a species said to be
- found in central Africa) is not uncommon on the most desert parts: in
- their stomachs I found grasshoppers, cicadae, small lizards, and even
- scorpions. <a href="#linknote-810" name="linknoteref-810"
- id="linknoteref-810"><small>810</small></a> At one time of the year these
- birds go in flocks, at another in pairs, their cry is very loud and
- singular, like the neighing of the guanaco.
- </p>
- <p>
- The guanaco, or wild llama, is the characteristic quadruped of the plains
- of Patagonia; it is the South American representative of the camel of the
- East. It is an elegant animal in a state of nature, with a long slender
- neck and fine legs. It is very common over the whole of the temperate
- parts of the continent, as far south as the islands near Cape Horn. It
- generally lives in small herds of from half a dozen to thirty in each; but
- on the banks of the St. Cruz we saw one herd which must have contained at
- least five hundred.
- </p>
- <p>
- They are generally wild and extremely wary. Mr. Stokes told me, that he
- one day saw through a glass a herd of these animals which evidently had
- been frightened, and were running away at full speed, although their
- distance was so great that he could not distinguish them with his naked
- eye. The sportsman frequently receives the first notice of their presence,
- by hearing from a long distance their peculiar shrill neighing note of
- alarm. If he then looks attentively, he will probably see the herd
- standing in a line on the side of some distant hill. On approaching
- nearer, a few more squeals are given, and off they set at an apparently
- slow, but really quick canter, along some narrow beaten track to a
- neighbouring hill. If, however, by chance he abruptly meets a single
- animal, or several together, they will generally stand motionless and
- intently gaze at him; then perhaps move on a few yards, turn round, and
- look again. What is the cause of this difference in their shyness? Do they
- mistake a man in the distance for their chief enemy the puma? Or does
- curiosity overcome their timidity? That they are curious is certain; for
- if a person lies on the ground, and plays strange antics, such as throwing
- up his feet in the air, they will almost always approach by degrees to
- reconnoitre him. It was an artifice that was repeatedly practised by our
- sportsmen with success, and it had moreover the advantage of allowing
- several shots to be fired, which were all taken as parts of the
- performance. On the mountains of Tierra del Fuego, I have more than once
- seen a guanaco, on being approached, not only neigh and squeal, but prance
- and leap about in the most ridiculous manner, apparently in defiance as a
- challenge. These animals are very easily domesticated, and I have seen
- some thus kept in northern Patagonia near a house, though not under any
- restraint. They are in this state very bold, and readily attack a man by
- striking him from behind with both knees. It is asserted that the motive
- for these attacks is jealousy on account of their females. The wild
- guanacos, however, have no idea of defence; even a single dog will secure
- one of these large animals, till the huntsman can come up. In many of
- their habits they are like sheep in a flock. Thus when they see men
- approaching in several directions on horseback, they soon become
- bewildered, and know not which way to run. This greatly facilitates the
- Indian method of hunting, for they are thus easily driven to a central
- point, and are encompassed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The guanacos readily take to the water: several times at Port Valdes they
- were seen swimming from island to island. Byron, in his voyage says he saw
- them drinking salt water. Some of our officers likewise saw a herd
- apparently drinking the briny fluid from a salina near Cape Blanco. I
- imagine in several parts of the country, if they do not drink salt water,
- they drink none at all. In the middle of the day they frequently roll in
- the dust, in saucer-shaped hollows. The males fight together; two one day
- passed quite close to me, squealing and trying to bite each other; and
- several were shot with their hides deeply scored. Herds sometimes appear
- to set out on exploring parties: at Bahia Blanca, where, within thirty
- miles of the coast, these animals are extremely unfrequent, I one day saw
- the tracks of thirty or forty, which had come in a direct line to a muddy
- salt-water creek. They then must have perceived that they were approaching
- the sea, for they had wheeled with the regularity of cavalry, and had
- returned back in as straight a line as they had advanced. The guanacos
- have one singular habit, which is to me quite inexplicable; namely, that
- on successive days they drop their dung in the same defined heap. I saw
- one of these heaps which was eight feet in diameter, and was composed of a
- large quantity. This habit, according to M. A. d'Orbigny, is common to all
- the species of the genus; it is very useful to the Peruvian Indians, who
- use the dung for fuel, and are thus saved the trouble of collecting it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The guanacos appear to have favourite spots for lying down to die. On the
- banks of the St. Cruz, in certain circumscribed spaces, which were
- generally bushy and all near the river, the ground was actually white with
- bones. On one such spot I counted between ten and twenty heads. I
- particularly examined the bones; they did not appear, as some scattered
- ones which I had seen, gnawed or broken, as if dragged together by beasts
- of prey. The animals in most cases must have crawled, before dying,
- beneath and amongst the bushes. Mr. Bynoe informs me that during a former
- voyage he observed the same circumstance on the banks of the Rio Gallegos.
- I do not at all understand the reason of this, but I may observe, that the
- wounded guanacos at the St. Cruz invariably walked towards the river. At
- St. Jago in the Cape de Verd Islands, I remember having seen in a ravine a
- retired corner covered with bones of the goat; we at the time exclaimed
- that it was the burial ground of all the goats in the island. I mention
- these trifling circumstances, because in certain cases they might explain
- the occurrence of a number of uninjured bones in a cave, or buried under
- alluvial accumulations; and likewise the cause why certain animals are
- more commonly embedded than others in sedimentary deposits.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day the yawl was sent under the command of Mr. Chaffers with three
- days' provisions to survey the upper part of the harbour. In the morning
- we searched for some watering-places mentioned in an old Spanish chart. We
- found one creek, at the head of which there was a trickling rill (the
- first we had seen) of brackish water. Here the tide compelled us to wait
- several hours; and in the interval I walked some miles into the interior.
- The plain as usual consisted of gravel, mingled with soil resembling chalk
- in appearance, but very different from it in nature. From the softness of
- these materials it was worn into many gulleys. There was not a tree, and,
- excepting the guanaco, which stood on the hill-top a watchful sentinel
- over its herd, scarcely an animal or a bird. All was stillness and
- desolation. Yet in passing over these scenes, without one bright object
- near, an ill-defined but strong sense of pleasure is vividly excited. One
- asked how many ages the plain had thus lasted, and how many more it was
- doomed thus to continue.
- </p>
- <p>
- "None can reply&mdash;all seems eternal now. The wilderness has a
- mysterious tongue, Which teaches awful doubt." <a href="#linknote-811"
- name="linknoteref-811" id="linknoteref-811"><small>811</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we sailed a few miles further up, and then pitched the
- tents for the night. By the middle of the next day the yawl was aground,
- and from the shoalness of the water could not proceed any higher. The
- water being found partly fresh, Mr. Chaffers took the dingey and went up
- two or three miles further, where she also grounded, but in a fresh-water
- river. The water was muddy, and though the stream was most insignificant
- in size, it would be difficult to account for its origin, except from the
- melting snow on the Cordillera. At the spot where we bivouacked, we were
- surrounded by bold cliffs and steep pinnacles of porphyry. I do not think
- I ever saw a spot which appeared more secluded from the rest of the world,
- than this rocky crevice in the wide plain.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second day after our return to the anchorage, a party of officers and
- myself went to ransack an old Indian grave, which I had found on the
- summit of a neighbouring hill. Two immense stones, each probably weighing
- at least a couple of tons, had been placed in front of a ledge of rock
- about six feet high. At the bottom of the grave on the hard rock there was
- a layer of earth about a foot deep, which must have been brought up from
- the plain below. Above it a pavement of flat stones was placed, on which
- others were piled, so as to fill up the space between the ledge and the
- two great blocks. To complete the grave, the Indians had contrived to
- detach from the ledge a huge fragment, and to throw it over the pile so as
- to rest on the two blocks. We undermined the grave on both sides, but
- could not find any relics, or even bones. The latter probably had decayed
- long since (in which case the grave must have been of extreme antiquity),
- for I found in another place some smaller heaps beneath which a very few
- crumbling fragments could yet be distinguished as having belonged to a
- man. Falconer states, that where an Indian dies he is buried, but that
- subsequently his bones are carefully taken up and carried, let the
- distance be ever so great, to be deposited near the sea-coast. This
- custom, I think, may be accounted for by recollecting, that before the
- introduction of horses, these Indians must have led nearly the same life
- as the Fuegians now do, and therefore generally have resided in the
- neighbourhood of the sea. The common prejudice of lying where one's
- ancestors have lain, would make the now roaming Indians bring the less
- perishable part of their dead to their ancient burial-ground on the coast.
- </p>
- <p>
- January 9th, 1834.&mdash;Before it was dark the Beagle anchored in the
- fine spacious harbour of Port St. Julian, situated about one hundred and
- ten miles to the south of Port Desire. We remained here eight days. The
- country is nearly similar to that of Port Desire, but perhaps rather more
- sterile. One day a party accompanied Captain Fitz Roy on a long walk round
- the head of the harbour. We were eleven hours without tasting any water,
- and some of the party were quite exhausted. From the summit of a hill
- (since well named Thirsty Hill) a fine lake was spied, and two of the
- party proceeded with concerted signals to show whether it was fresh water.
- What was our disappointment to find a snow-white expanse of salt,
- crystallized in great cubes! We attributed our extreme thirst to the
- dryness of the atmosphere; but whatever the cause might be, we were
- exceedingly glad late in the evening to get back to the boats. Although we
- could nowhere find, during our whole visit, a single drop of fresh water,
- yet some must exist; for by an odd chance I found on the surface of the
- salt water, near the head of the bay, a Colymbetes not quite dead, which
- must have lived in some not far distant pool. Three other insects (a
- Cincindela, like hybrida, a Cymindis, and a Harpalus, which all live on
- muddy flats occasionally overflowed by the sea), and one other found dead
- on the plain, complete the list of the beetles. A good-sized fly (Tabanus)
- was extremely numerous, and tormented us by its painful bite. The common
- horsefly, which is so troublesome in the shady lanes of England, belongs
- to this same genus. We here have the puzzle that so frequently occurs in
- the case of musquitoes&mdash;on the blood of what animals do these insects
- commonly feed? The guanaco is nearly the only warm-blooded quadruped, and
- it is found in quite inconsiderable numbers compared with the multitude of
- flies.
- </p>
- <p>
- The geology of Patagonia is interesting. Differently from Europe, where
- the tertiary formations appear to have accumulated in bays, here along
- hundreds of miles of coast we have one great deposit, including many
- tertiary shells, all apparently extinct. The most common shell is a
- massive gigantic oyster, sometimes even a foot in diameter. These beds are
- covered by others of a peculiar soft white stone, including much gypsum,
- and resembling chalk, but really of a pumiceous nature. It is highly
- remarkable, from being composed, to at least one-tenth of its bulk, of
- Infusoria. Professor Ehrenberg has already ascertained in it thirty
- oceanic forms. This bed extends for 500 miles along the coast, and
- probably for a considerably greater distance. At Port St. Julian its
- thickness is more than 800 feet! These white beds are everywhere capped by
- a mass of gravel, forming probably one of the largest beds of shingle in
- the world: it certainly extends from near the Rio Colorado to between 600
- and 700 nautical miles southward, at Santa Cruz (a river a little south of
- St. Julian), it reaches to the foot of the Cordillera; half way up the
- river, its thickness is more than 200 feet; it probably everywhere extends
- to this great chain, whence the well-rounded pebbles of porphyry have been
- derived: we may consider its average breadth as 200 miles, and its average
- thickness as about 50 feet. If this great bed of pebbles, without
- including the mud necessarily derived from their attrition, was piled into
- a mound, it would form a great mountain chain! When we consider that all
- these pebbles, countless as the grains of sand in the desert, have been
- derived from the slow falling of masses of rock on the old coast-lines and
- banks of rivers, and that these fragments have been dashed into smaller
- pieces, and that each of them has since been slowly rolled, rounded, and
- far transported the mind is stupefied in thinking over the long,
- absolutely necessary, lapse of years. Yet all this gravel has been
- transported, and probably rounded, subsequently to the deposition of the
- white beds, and long subsequently to the underlying beds with the tertiary
- shells.
- </p>
- <p>
- Everything in this southern continent has been effected on a grand scale:
- the land, from the Rio Plata to Tierra del Fuego, a distance of 1200
- miles, has been raised in mass (and in Patagonia to a height of between
- 300 and 400 feet), within the period of the now existing sea-shells. The
- old and weathered shells left on the surface of the upraised plain still
- partially retain their colours. The uprising movement has been interrupted
- by at least eight long periods of rest, during which the sea ate, deeply
- back into the land, forming at successive levels the long lines of cliffs,
- or escarpments, which separate the different plains as they rise like
- steps one behind the other. The elevatory movement, and the eating-back
- power of the sea during the periods of rest, have been equable over long
- lines of coast; for I was astonished to find that the step-like plains
- stand at nearly corresponding heights at far distant points. The lowest
- plain is 90 feet high; and the highest, which I ascended near the coast,
- is 950 feet; and of this, only relics are left in the form of flat
- gravel-capped hills. The upper plain of Santa Cruz slopes up to a height
- of 3000 feet at the foot of the Cordillera. I have said that within the
- period of existing sea-shells, Patagonia has been upraised 300 to 400
- feet: I may add, that within the period when icebergs transported boulders
- over the upper plain of Santa Cruz, the elevation has been at least 1500
- feet. Nor has Patagonia been affected only by upward movements: the
- extinct tertiary shells from Port St. Julian and Santa Cruz cannot have
- lived, according to Professor E. Forbes, in a greater depth of water than
- from 40 to 250 feet; but they are now covered with sea-deposited strata
- from 800 to 1000 feet in thickness: hence the bed of the sea, on which
- these shells once lived, must have sunk downwards several hundred feet, to
- allow of the accumulation of the superincumbent strata. What a history of
- geological changes does the simply-constructed coast of Patagonia reveal!
- </p>
- <p>
- At Port St. Julian, <a href="#linknote-812" name="linknoteref-812"
- id="linknoteref-812"><small>812</small></a> in some red mud capping the
- gravel on the 90-feet plain, I found half the skeleton of the Macrauchenia
- Patachonica, a remarkable quadruped, full as large as a camel. It belongs
- to the same division of the Pachydermata with the rhinoceros, tapir, and
- palaeotherium; but in the structure of the bones of its long neck it shows
- a clear relation to the camel, or rather to the guanaco and llama. From
- recent sea-shells being found on two of the higher step-formed plains,
- which must have been modelled and upraised before the mud was deposited in
- which the Macrauchenia was entombed, it is certain that this curious
- quadruped lived long after the sea was inhabited by its present shells. I
- was at first much surprised how a large quadruped could so lately have
- subsisted, in lat. 49 degs. 15', on these wretched gravel plains, with
- their stunted vegetation; but the relationship of the Macrauchenia to the
- Guanaco, now an inhabitant of the most sterile parts, partly explains this
- difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- The relationship, though distant, between the Macrauchenia and the
- Guanaco, between the Toxodon and the Capybara,&mdash;the closer
- relationship between the many extinct Edentata and the living sloths,
- ant-eaters, and armadillos, now so eminently characteristic of South
- American zoology,&mdash;and the still closer relationship between the
- fossil and living species of Ctenomys and Hydrochaerus, are most
- interesting facts. This relationship is shown wonderfully&mdash;as
- wonderfully as between the fossil and extinct Marsupial animals of
- Australia&mdash;by the great collection lately brought to Europe from the
- caves of Brazil by MM. Lund and Clausen. In this collection there are
- extinct species of all the thirty-two genera, excepting four, of the
- terrestrial quadrupeds now inhabiting the provinces in which the caves
- occur; and the extinct species are much more numerous than those now
- living: there are fossil ant-eaters, armadillos, tapirs, peccaries,
- guanacos, opossums, and numerous South American gnawers and monkeys, and
- other animals. This wonderful relationship in the same continent between
- the dead and the living, will, I do not doubt, hereafter throw more light
- on the appearance of organic beings on our earth, and their disappearance
- from it, than any other class of facts.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is impossible to reflect on the changed state of the American continent
- without the deepest astonishment. Formerly it must have swarmed with great
- monsters: now we find mere pigmies, compared with the antecedent, allied
- races. If Buffon had known of the gigantic sloth and armadillo-like
- animals, and of the lost Pachydermata, he might have said with a greater
- semblance of truth that the creative force in America had lost its power,
- rather than that it had never possessed great vigour. The greater number,
- if not all, of these extinct quadrupeds lived at a late period, and were
- the contemporaries of most of the existing sea-shells. Since they lived,
- no very great change in the form of the land can have taken place. What,
- then, has exterminated so many species and whole genera? The mind at first
- is irresistibly hurried into the belief of some great catastrophe; but
- thus to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patagonia, in
- Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America up to Behring's
- Straits, we must shake the entire framework of the globe. An examination,
- moreover, of the geology of La Plata and Patagonia, leads to the belief
- that all the features of the land result from slow and gradual changes. It
- appears from the character of the fossils in Europe, Asia, Australia, and
- in North and South America, that those conditions which favour the life of
- the <i>larger</i> quadrupeds were lately co-extensive with the world: what
- those conditions were, no one has yet even conjectured. It could hardly
- have been a change of temperature, which at about the same time destroyed
- the inhabitants of tropical, temperate, and arctic latitudes on both sides
- of the globe. In North America we positively know from Mr. Lyell, that the
- large quadrupeds lived subsequently to that period, when boulders were
- brought into latitudes at which icebergs now never arrive: from conclusive
- but indirect reasons we may feel sure, that in the southern hemisphere the
- Macrauchenia, also, lived long subsequently to the ice-transporting
- boulder-period. Did man, after his first inroad into South America,
- destroy, as has been suggested, the unwieldy Megatherium and the other
- Edentata? We must at least look to some other cause for the destruction of
- the little tucutuco at Bahia Blanca, and of the many fossil mice and other
- small quadrupeds in Brazil. No one will imagine that a drought, even far
- severer than those which cause such losses in the provinces of La Plata,
- could destroy every individual of every species from Southern Patagonia to
- Behring's Straits. What shall we say of the extinction of the horse? Did
- those plains fail of pasture, which have since been overrun by thousands
- and hundreds of thousands of the descendants of the stock introduced by
- the Spaniards? Have the subsequently introduced species consumed the food
- of the great antecedent races? Can we believe that the Capybara has taken
- the food of the Toxodon, the Guanaco of the Macrauchenia, the existing
- small Edentata of their numerous gigantic prototypes? Certainly, no fact
- in the long history of the world is so startling as the wide and repeated
- exterminations of its inhabitants.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nevertheless, if we consider the subject under another point of view, it
- will appear less perplexing. We do not steadily bear in mind, how
- profoundly ignorant we are of the conditions of existence of every animal;
- nor do we always remember, that some check is constantly preventing the
- too rapid increase of every organized being left in a state of nature. The
- supply of food, on an average, remains constant, yet the tendency in every
- animal to increase by propagation is geometrical; and its surprising
- effects have nowhere been more astonishingly shown, than in the case of
- the European animals run wild during the last few centuries in America.
- Every animal in a state of nature regularly breeds; yet in a species long
- established, any <i>great</i> increase in numbers is obviously impossible,
- and must be checked by some means. We are, nevertheless, seldom able with
- certainty to tell in any given species, at what period of life, or at what
- period of the year, or whether only at long intervals, the check falls;
- or, again, what is the precise nature of the check. Hence probably it is,
- that we feel so little surprise at one, of two species closely allied in
- habits, being rare and the other abundant in the same district; or, again,
- that one should be abundant in one district, and another, filling the same
- place in the economy of nature, should be abundant in a neighbouring
- district, differing very little in its conditions. If asked how this is,
- one immediately replies that it is determined by some slight difference,
- in climate, food, or the number of enemies: yet how rarely, if ever, we
- can point out the precise cause and manner of action of the check! We are
- therefore, driven to the conclusion, that causes generally quite
- inappreciable by us, determine whether a given species shall be abundant
- or scanty in numbers.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the cases where we can trace the extinction of a species through man,
- either wholly or in one limited district, we know that it becomes rarer
- and rarer, and is then lost: it would be difficult to point out any just
- distinction <a href="#linknote-813" name="linknoteref-813"
- id="linknoteref-813"><small>813</small></a> between a species destroyed by
- man or by the increase of its natural enemies. The evidence of rarity
- preceding extinction, is more striking in the successive tertiary strata,
- as remarked by several able observers; it has often been found that a
- shell very common in a tertiary stratum is now most rare, and has even
- long been thought extinct. If then, as appears probable, species first
- become rare and then extinct&mdash;if the too rapid increase of every
- species, even the most favoured, is steadily checked, as we must admit,
- though how and when it is hard to say&mdash;and if we see, without the
- smallest surprise, though unable to assign the precise reason, one species
- abundant and another closely allied species rare in the same district&mdash;why
- should we feel such great astonishment at the rarity being carried one
- step further to extinction? An action going on, on every side of us, and
- yet barely appreciable, might surely be carried a little further, without
- exciting our observation. Who would feel any great surprise at hearing
- that the Magalonyx was formerly rare compared with the Megatherium, or
- that one of the fossil monkeys was few in number compared with one of the
- now living monkeys? and yet in this comparative rarity, we should have the
- plainest evidence of less favourable conditions for their existence. To
- admit that species generally become rare before they become extinct&mdash;to
- feel no surprise at the comparative rarity of one species with another,
- and yet to call in some extraordinary agent and to marvel greatly when a
- species ceases to exist, appears to me much the same as to admit that
- sickness in the individual is the prelude to death&mdash;to feel no
- surprise at sickness&mdash;but when the sick man dies to wonder, and to
- believe that he died through violence.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0009" id="link2HCH0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER IX &mdash; SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Santa Cruz&mdash;Expedition up the River&mdash;Indians&mdash;Immense
- Streams of Basaltic Lava&mdash;Fragments not transported by the River&mdash;Excavations
- of the Valley&mdash;Condor, Habits of&mdash;Cordillera&mdash;Erratic
- Boulders of great size&mdash;Indian Relics&mdash;Return to the Ship&mdash;Falkland
- Islands&mdash;Wild Horses, Cattle, Rabbits&mdash;Wolf-like Fox&mdash;Fire
- made of Bones&mdash;Manner of Hunting Wild Cattle&mdash;Geology&mdash;Streams
- of Stones&mdash;Scenes of Violence&mdash;Penguins&mdash;Geese&mdash;Eggs
- of Doris&mdash;Compound Animals.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>PRIL 13, 1834.&mdash;The
- Beagle anchored within the mouth of the Santa Cruz. This river is situated
- about sixty miles south of Port St. Julian. During the last voyage Captain
- Stokes proceeded thirty miles up it, but then, from the want of
- provisions, was obliged to return. Excepting what was discovered at that
- time, scarcely anything was known about this large river. Captain Fitz Roy
- now determined to follow its course as far as time would allow. On the
- 18th three whale-boats started, carrying three weeks' provisions; and the
- party consisted of twenty-five souls&mdash;a force which would have been
- sufficient to have defied a host of Indians. With a strong flood-tide and
- a fine day we made a good run, soon drank some of the fresh water, and
- were at night nearly above the tidal influence.
- </p>
- <p>
- The river here assumed a size and appearance which, even at the highest
- point we ultimately reached, was scarcely diminished. It was generally
- from three to four hundred yards broad, and in the middle about seventeen
- feet deep. The rapidity of the current, which in its whole course runs at
- the rate of from four to six knots an hour, is perhaps its most remarkable
- feature. The water is of a fine blue colour, but with a slight milky
- tinge, and not so transparent as at first sight would have been expected.
- It flows over a bed of pebbles, like those which compose the beach and the
- surrounding plains. It runs in a winding course through a valley, which
- extends in a direct line westward. This valley varies from five to ten
- miles in breadth; it is bounded by step-formed terraces, which rise in
- most parts, one above the other, to the height of five hundred feet, and
- have on the opposite sides a remarkable correspondence.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 19th.&mdash;Against so strong a current it was, of course, quite
- impossible to row or sail: consequently the three boats were fastened
- together head and stern, two hands left in each, and the rest came on
- shore to track. As the general arrangements made by Captain Fitz Roy were
- very good for facilitating the work of all, and as all had a share in it,
- I will describe the system. The party including every one, was divided
- into two spells, each of which hauled at the tracking line alternately for
- an hour and a half. The officers of each boat lived with, ate the same
- food, and slept in the same tent with their crew, so that each boat was
- quite independent of the others. After sunset the first level spot where
- any bushes were growing, was chosen for our night's lodging. Each of the
- crew took it in turns to be cook. Immediately the boat was hauled up, the
- cook made his fire; two others pitched the tent; the coxswain handed the
- things out of the boat; the rest carried them up to the tents and
- collected firewood. By this order, in half an hour everything was ready
- for the night. A watch of two men and an officer was always kept, whose
- duty it was to look after the boats, keep up the fire, and guard against
- Indians. Each in the party had his one hour every night.
- </p>
- <p>
- During this day we tracked but a short distance, for there were many
- islets, covered by thorny bushes, and the channels between them were
- shallow.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 20th.&mdash;We passed the islands and set to work. Our regular day's
- march, although it was hard enough, carried us on an average only ten
- miles in a straight line, and perhaps fifteen or twenty altogether. Beyond
- the place where we slept last night, the country is completely <i>terra
- incognita</i>, for it was there that Captain Stokes turned back. We saw in
- the distance a great smoke, and found the skeleton of a horse, so we knew
- that Indians were in the neighbourhood. On the next morning (21st) tracks
- of a party of horse and marks left by the trailing of the chuzos, or long
- spears, were observed on the ground. It was generally thought that the
- Indians had reconnoitred us during the night. Shortly afterwards we came
- to a spot where, from the fresh footsteps of men, children, and horses, it
- was evident that the party had crossed the river.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 22nd.&mdash;The country remained the same, and was extremely
- uninteresting. The complete similarity of the productions throughout
- Patagonia is one of its most striking characters. The level plains of arid
- shingle support the same stunted and dwarf plants; and in the valleys the
- same thorn-bearing bushes grow. Everywhere we see the same birds and
- insects. Even the very banks of the river and of the clear streamlets
- which entered it, were scarcely enlivened by a brighter tint of green. The
- curse of sterility is on the land, and the water flowing over a bed of
- pebbles partakes of the same curse. Hence the number of water-fowls is
- very scanty; for there is nothing to support life in the stream of this
- barren river.
- </p>
- <p>
- Patagonia, poor as she is in some respects, can however boast of a greater
- stock of small rodents <a href="#linknote-91" name="linknoteref-91"
- id="linknoteref-91"><small>91</small></a> than perhaps any other country
- in the world. Several species of mice are externally characterized by
- large thin ears and a very fine fur. These little animals swarm amongst
- the thickets in the valleys, where they cannot for months together taste a
- drop of water excepting the dew. They all seem to be cannibals for no
- sooner was a mouse caught in one of my traps that it was devoured by
- others. A small and delicately shaped fox, which is likewise very
- abundant, probably derives its entire support from these small animals.
- The guanaco is also in his proper district, herds of fifty or a hundred
- were common; and, as I have stated, we saw one which must have contained
- at least five hundred. The puma, with the condor and other carrion-hawks
- in its train, follows and preys upon these animals. The footsteps of the
- puma were to be seen almost everywhere on the banks of the river; and the
- remains of several guanacos, with their necks dislocated and bones broken,
- showed how they had met their death.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 24th.&mdash;Like the navigators of old when approaching an unknown
- land, we examined and watched for the most trivial sign of a change. The
- drifted trunk of a tree, or a boulder of primitive rock, was hailed with
- joy, as if we had seen a forest growing on the flanks of the Cordillera.
- The top, however, of a heavy bank of clouds, which remained almost
- constantly in one position, was the most promising sign, and eventually
- turned out a true harbinger. At first the clouds were mistaken for the
- mountains themselves, instead of the masses of vapour condensed by their
- icy summits.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 26th.&mdash;We this day met with a marked change in the geological
- structure of the plains. From the first starting I had carefully examined
- the gravel in the river, and for the two last days had noticed the
- presence of a few small pebbles of a very cellular basalt. These gradually
- increased in number and in size, but none were as large as a man's head.
- This morning, however, pebbles of the same rock, but more compact,
- suddenly became abundant, and in the course of half an hour we saw, at the
- distance of five of six miles, the angular edge of a great basaltic
- platform. When we arrived at its base we found the stream bubbling among
- the fallen blocks. For the next twenty-eight miles the river-course was
- encumbered with these basaltic masses. Above that limit immense fragments
- of primitive rocks, derived from its surrounding boulder-formation, were
- equally numerous. None of the fragments of any considerable size had been
- washed more than three or four miles down the river below their
- parent-source: considering the singular rapidity of the great body of
- water in the Santa Cruz, and that no still reaches occur in any part, this
- example is a most striking one, of the inefficiency of rivers in
- transporting even moderately-sized fragments.
- </p>
- <p>
- The basalt is only lava, which has flowed beneath the sea; but the
- eruptions must have been on the grandest scale. At the point where we
- first met this formation it was 120 feet in thickness; following up the
- river course, the surface imperceptibly rose and the mass became thicker,
- so that at forty miles above the first station it was 320 feet thick. What
- the thickness may be close to the Cordillera, I have no means of knowing,
- but the platform there attains a height of about three thousand feet above
- the level of the sea; we must therefore look to the mountains of that
- great chain for its source; and worthy of such a source are streams that
- have flowed over the gently inclined bed of the sea to a distance of one
- hundred miles. At the first glance of the basaltic cliffs on the opposite
- sides of the valley, it was evident that the strata once were united. What
- power, then, has removed along a whole line of country, a solid mass of
- very hard rock, which had an average thickness of nearly three hundred
- feet, and a breadth varying from rather less than two miles to four miles?
- The river, though it has so little power in transporting even
- inconsiderable fragments, yet in the lapse of ages might produce by its
- gradual erosion an effect of which it is difficult to judge the amount.
- But in this case, independently of the insignificance of such an agency,
- good reasons can be assigned for believing that this valley was formerly
- occupied by an arm of the sea. It is needless in this work to detail the
- arguments leading to this conclusion, derived from the form and the nature
- of the step-formed terraces on both sides of the valley, from the manner
- in which the bottom of the valley near the Andes expands into a great
- estuary-like plain with sand-hillocks on it, and from the occurrence of a
- few sea-shells lying in the bed of the river. If I had space I could prove
- that South America was formerly here cut off by a strait, joining the
- Atlantic and Pacific oceans, like that of Magellan. But it may yet be
- asked, how has the solid basalt been moved? Geologists formerly would have
- brought into play the violent action of some overwhelming debacle; but in
- this case such a supposition would have been quite inadmissible, because,
- the same step-like plains with existing sea-shells lying on their surface,
- which front the long line of the Patagonian coast, sweep up on each side
- of the valley of Santa Cruz. No possible action of any flood could thus
- have modelled the land, either within the valley or along the open coast;
- and by the formation of such step-like plains or terraces the valley
- itself had been hollowed out. Although we know that there are tides, which
- run within the Narrows of the Strait of Magellan at the rate of eight
- knots an hour, yet we must confess that it makes the head almost giddy to
- reflect on the number of years, century after century, which the tides,
- unaided by a heavy surf, must have required to have corroded so vast an
- area and thickness of solid basaltic lava. Nevertheless, we must believe
- that the strata undermined by the waters of this ancient strait, were
- broken up into huge fragments, and these lying scattered on the beach were
- reduced first to smaller blocks, then to pebbles and lastly to the most
- impalpable mud, which the tides drifted far into the Eastern or Western
- Ocean.
- </p>
- <p>
- With the change in the geological structure of the plains the character of
- the landscape likewise altered. While rambling up some of the narrow and
- rocky defiles, I could almost have fancied myself transported back again
- to the barren valleys of the island of St. Jago. Among the basaltic cliffs
- I found some plants which I had seen nowhere else, but others I recognised
- as being wanderers from Tierra del Fuego. These porous rocks serve as a
- reservoir for the scanty rain-water; and consequently on the line where
- the igneous and sedimentary formations unite, some small springs (most
- rare occurrences in Patagonia) burst forth; and they could be
- distinguished at a distance by the circumscribed patches of bright green
- herbage.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 27th.&mdash;The bed of the river became rather narrower and hence
- the stream more rapid. It here ran at the rate of six knots an hour. From
- this cause, and from the many great angular fragments, tracking the boats
- became both dangerous and laborious.
- </p>
- <p>
- This day I shot a condor. It measured from tip to tip of the wings, eight
- and a half feet, and from beak to tail, four feet. This bird is known to
- have a wide geographical range, being found on the west coast of South
- America, from the Strait of Magellan along the Cordillera as far as eight
- degrees north of the equator. The steep cliff near the mouth of the Rio
- Negro is its northern limit on the Patagonian coast; and they have there
- wandered about four hundred miles from the great central line of their
- habitations in the Andes. Further south, among the bold precipices at the
- head of Port Desire, the condor is not uncommon; yet only a few stragglers
- occasionally visit the sea-coast. A line of cliff near the mouth of the
- Santa Cruz is frequented by these birds, and about eighty miles up the
- river, where the sides of the valley are formed by steep basaltic
- precipices, the condor reappears. From these facts it seems that the
- condors require perpendicular cliffs. In Chile, they haunt, during the
- greater part of the year, the lower country near the shores of the
- Pacific, and at night several roost together in one tree; but in the early
- part of summer, they retire to the most inaccessible parts of the inner
- Cordillera, there to breed in peace.
- </p>
- <p>
- With respect to their propagation, I was told by the country people in
- Chile, that the condor makes no sort of nest, but in the months of
- November and December lays two large white eggs on a shelf of bare rock.
- It is said that the young condors cannot fly for an entire year; and long
- after they are able, they continue to roost by night, and hunt by day with
- their parents. The old birds generally live in pairs; but among the inland
- basaltic cliffs of the Santa Cruz, I found a spot, where scores must
- usually haunt. On coming suddenly to the brow of the precipice, it was a
- grand spectacle to see between twenty and thirty of these great birds
- start heavily from their resting-place, and wheel away in majestic
- circles. From the quantity of dung on the rocks they must long have
- frequented this cliff for roosting and breeding. Having gorged themselves
- with carrion on the plains below, they retire to these favourite ledges to
- digest their food. From these facts, the condor, like the gallinazo, must
- to a certain degree be considered as a gregarious bird. In this part of
- the country they live altogether on the guanacos which have died a natural
- death, or as more commonly happens, have been killed by the pumas. I
- believe, from what I saw in Patagonia, that they do not on ordinary
- occasions extend their daily excursions to any great distance from their
- regular sleeping-places.
- </p>
- <p>
- The condors may oftentimes be seen at a great height, soaring over a
- certain spot in the most graceful circles. On some occasions I am sure
- that they do this only for pleasure, but on others, the Chileno countryman
- tells you that they are watching a dying animal, or the puma devouring its
- prey. If the condors glide down, and then suddenly all rise together, the
- Chileno knows that it is the puma which, watching the carcass, has sprung
- out to drive away the robbers. Besides feeding on carrion, the condors
- frequently attack young goats and lambs; and the shepherd-dogs are
- trained, whenever they pass over, to run out, and looking upwards to bark
- violently. The Chilenos destroy and catch numbers. Two methods are used;
- one is to place a carcass on a level piece of ground within an enclosure
- of sticks with an opening, and when the condors are gorged to gallop up on
- horseback to the entrance, and thus enclose them: for when this bird has
- not space to run, it cannot give its body sufficient momentum to rise from
- the ground. The second method is to mark the trees in which, frequently to
- the number of five or six together, they roost, and they at night to climb
- up and noose them. They are such heavy sleepers, as I have myself
- witnessed, that this is not a difficult task. At Valparaiso, I have seen a
- living condor sold for sixpence, but the common price is eight or ten
- shillings. One which I saw brought in, had been tied with rope, and was
- much injured; yet, the moment the line was cut by which its bill was
- secured, although surrounded by people, it began ravenously to tear a
- piece of carrion. In a garden at the same place, between twenty and thirty
- were kept alive. They were fed only once a week, but they appeared in
- pretty good health. <a href="#linknote-92" name="linknoteref-92"
- id="linknoteref-92"><small>92</small></a> The Chileno countrymen assert
- that the condor will live, and retain its vigour, between five and six
- weeks without eating: I cannot answer for the truth of this, but it is a
- cruel experiment, which very likely has been tried.
- </p>
- <p>
- When an animal is killed in the country, it is well known that the
- condors, like other carrion-vultures, soon gain intelligence of it, and
- congregate in an inexplicable manner. In most cases it must not be
- overlooked, that the birds have discovered their prey, and have picked the
- skeleton clean, before the flesh is in the least degree tainted.
- Remembering the experiments of M. Audubon, on the little smelling powers
- of carrion-hawks, I tried in the above mentioned garden the following
- experiment: the condors were tied, each by a rope, in a long row at the
- bottom of a wall; and having folded up a piece of meat in white paper, I
- walked backwards and forwards, carrying it in my hand at the distance of
- about three yards from them, but no notice whatever was taken. I then
- threw it on the ground, within one yard of an old male bird; he looked at
- it for a moment with attention, but then regarded it no more. With a stick
- I pushed it closer and closer, until at last he touched it with his beak;
- the paper was then instantly torn off with fury, and at the same moment,
- every bird in the long row began struggling and flapping its wings. Under
- the same circumstances, it would have been quite impossible to have
- deceived a dog. The evidence in favour of and against the acute smelling
- powers of carrion-vultures is singularly balanced. Professor Owen has
- demonstrated that the olfactory nerves of the turkey-buzzard (Cathartes
- aura) are highly developed, and on the evening when Mr. Owen's paper was
- read at the Zoological Society, it was mentioned by a gentleman that he
- had seen the carrion-hawks in the West Indies on two occasions collect on
- the roof of a house, when a corpse had become offensive from not having
- been buried, in this case, the intelligence could hardly have been
- acquired by sight. On the other hand, besides the experiments of Audubon
- and that one by myself, Mr. Bachman has tried in the United States many
- varied plans, showing that neither the turkey-buzzard (the species
- dissected by Professor Owen) nor the gallinazo find their food by smell.
- He covered portions of highly-offensive offal with a thin canvas cloth,
- and strewed pieces of meat on it: these the carrion-vultures ate up, and
- then remained quietly standing, with their beaks within the eighth of an
- inch of the putrid mass, without discovering it. A small rent was made in
- the canvas, and the offal was immediately discovered; the canvas was
- replaced by a fresh piece, and meat again put on it, and was again
- devoured by the vultures without their discovering the hidden mass on
- which they were trampling. These facts are attested by the signatures of
- six gentlemen, besides that of Mr. Bachman. <a href="#linknote-93"
- name="linknoteref-93" id="linknoteref-93"><small>93</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- Often when lying down to rest on the open plains, on looking upwards, I
- have seen carrion-hawks sailing through the air at a great height. Where
- the country is level I do not believe a space of the heavens, of more than
- fifteen degrees above the horizon, is commonly viewed with any attention
- by a person either walking or on horseback. If such be the case, and the
- vulture is on the wing at a height of between three and four thousand
- feet, before it could come within the range of vision, its distance in a
- straight line from the beholder's eye, would be rather more than two
- British miles. Might it not thus readily be overlooked? When an animal is
- killed by the sportsman in a lonely valley, may he not all the while be
- watched from above by the sharp-sighted bird? And will not the manner of
- its descend proclaim throughout the district to the whole family of
- carrion-feeders, that their prey is at hand?
- </p>
- <p>
- When the condors are wheeling in a flock round and round any spot, their
- flight is beautiful. Except when rising from the ground, I do not
- recollect ever having seen one of these birds flap its wings. Near Lima, I
- watched several for nearly half an hour, without once taking off my eyes,
- they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles, descending and ascending
- without giving a single flap. As they glided close over my head, I
- intently watched from an oblique position, the outlines of the separate
- and great terminal feathers of each wing; and these separate feathers, if
- there had been the least vibratory movement, would have appeared as if
- blended together; but they were seen distinct against the blue sky. The
- head and neck were moved frequently, and apparently with force; and the
- extended wings seemed to form the fulcrum on which the movements of the
- neck, body, and tail acted. If the bird wished to descend, the wings were
- for a moment collapsed; and when again expanded with an altered
- inclination, the momentum gained by the rapid descent seemed to urge the
- bird upwards with the even and steady movement of a paper kite. In the
- case of any bird soaring, its motion must be sufficiently rapid so that
- the action of the inclined surface of its body on the atmosphere may
- counterbalance its gravity. The force to keep up the momentum of a body
- moving in a horizontal plane in the air (in which there is so little
- friction) cannot be great, and this force is all that is wanted. The
- movements of the neck and body of the condor, we must suppose, is
- sufficient for this. However this may be, it is truly wonderful and
- beautiful to see so great a bird, hour after hour, without any apparent
- exertion, wheeling and gliding over mountain and river.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 29th.&mdash;From some high land we hailed with joy the white summits
- of the Cordillera, as they were seen occasionally peeping through their
- dusky envelope of clouds. During the few succeeding days we continued to
- get on slowly, for we found the river-course very tortuous, and strewed
- with immense fragments of various ancient slate rocks, and of granite. The
- plain bordering the valley has here attained an elevation of about 1100
- feet above the river, and its character was much altered. The well-rounded
- pebbles of porphyry were mingled with many immense angular fragments of
- basalt and of primary rocks. The first of these erratic boulders which I
- noticed, was sixty-seven miles distant from the nearest mountain; another
- which I measured was five yards square, and projected five feet above the
- gravel. Its edges were so angular, and its size so great, that I at first
- mistook it for a rock <i>in situ</i>, and took out my compass to observe
- the direction of its cleavage. The plain here was not quite so level as
- that nearer the coast, but yet in betrayed no signs of any great violence.
- Under these circumstances it is, I believe, quite impossible to explain
- the transportal of these gigantic masses of rock so many miles from their
- parent-source, on any theory except by that of floating icebergs.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the two last days we met with signs of horses, and with several
- small articles which had belonged to the Indians&mdash;such as parts of a
- mantle and a bunch of ostrich feathers&mdash;, but they appeared to have
- been lying long on the ground. Between the place where the Indians had so
- lately crossed the river and this neighbourhood, though so many miles
- apart, the country appears to be quite unfrequented. At first, considering
- the abundance of the guanacos, I was surprised at this; but it is
- explained by the stony nature of the plains, which would soon disable an
- unshod horse from taking part in the chase. Nevertheless, in two places in
- this very central region, I found small heaps of stones, which I do not
- think could have been accidentally thrown together. They were placed on
- points, projecting over the edge of the highest lava cliff, and they
- resembled, but on a small scale, those near Port Desire.
- </p>
- <p>
- May 4th.&mdash;Captain Fitz Roy determined to take the boats no higher.
- The river had a winding course, and was very rapid; and the appearance of
- the country offered no temptation to proceed any further. Everywhere we
- met with the same productions, and the same dreary landscape. We were now
- one hundred and forty miles distant from the Atlantic and about sixty from
- the nearest arm of the Pacific. The valley in this upper part expanded
- into a wide basin, bounded on the north and south by the basaltic
- platforms, and fronted by the long range of the snow-clad Cordillera. But
- we viewed these grand mountains with regret, for we were obliged to
- imagine their nature and productions, instead of standing, as we had
- hoped, on their summits. Besides the useless loss of time which an attempt
- to ascend the river and higher would have cost us, we had already been for
- some days on half allowance of bread. This, although really enough for
- reasonable men, was, after a hard day's march, rather scanty food: a light
- stomach and an easy digestion are good things to talk about, but very
- unpleasant in practice.
- </p>
- <p>
- 5th.&mdash;Before sunrise we commenced our descent. We shot down the
- stream with great rapidity, generally at the rate of ten knots an hour. In
- this one day we effected what had cost us five-and-a-half hard days'
- labour in ascending. On the 8th, we reached the Beagle after our
- twenty-one days' expedition. Every one, excepting myself, had cause to be
- dissatisfied; but to me the ascent afforded a most interesting section of
- the great tertiary formation of Patagonia.
- </p>
- <p>
- On March 1st, 1833, and again on March 16th, 1834, the Beagle anchored in
- Berkeley Sound, in East Falkland Island. This archipelago is situated in
- nearly the same latitude with the mouth of the Strait of Magellan; it
- covers a space of one hundred and twenty by sixty geographical miles, and
- is little more than half the size of Ireland. After the possession of
- these miserable islands had been contested by France, Spain, and England,
- they were left uninhabited. The government of Buenos Ayres then sold them
- to a private individual, but likewise used them, as old Spain had done
- before, for a penal settlement. England claimed her right and seized them.
- The Englishman who was left in charge of the flag was consequently
- murdered. A British officer was next sent, unsupported by any power: and
- when we arrived, we found him in charge of a population, of which rather
- more than half were runaway rebels and murderers.
- </p>
- <p>
- The theatre is worthy of the scenes acted on it. An undulating land, with
- a desolate and wretched aspect, is everywhere covered by a peaty soil and
- wiry grass, of one monotonous brown colour. Here and there a peak or ridge
- of grey quartz rock breaks through the smooth surface Every one has heard
- of the climate of these regions; it may be compared to that which is
- experienced at the height of between one and two thousand feet, on the
- mountains of North Wales; having however less sunshine and less frost but
- more wind and rain. <a href="#linknote-94" name="linknoteref-94"
- id="linknoteref-94"><small>94</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- 16th.&mdash;I will now describe a short excursion which made round a part
- of this island. In the morning I started with six horses and two Gauchos:
- the latter were capital men for the purpose, and well accustomed to living
- on their own resources. The weather was very boisterous and cold with
- heavy hail-storms. We got on, however, pretty well but, except the
- geology, nothing could be less interesting than our day's ride. The
- country is uniformly the same undulating moorland; the surface being
- covered by light brown withered grass and a few very small shrubs, all
- springing out of an elastic peaty soil. In the valleys here and there
- might be seen a small flock of wild geese, and everywhere the ground was
- so soft that the snipe were able to feed. Besides these two birds there
- were few others. There is one main range of hills, nearly two thousand
- feet in height, and composed of quartz rock, the rugged and barren crests
- of which gave us some trouble to cross. On the south side we came to the
- best country for wild cattle; we met, however, no great number, for they
- had been lately much harassed.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we came across a small herd. One of my companions, St. Jago
- by name, soon separated a fat cow: he threw the bolas, and it struck her
- legs, but failed in becoming entangled. Then dropping his hat to mark the
- spot where the balls were left, while at full gallop, he uncoiled his
- lazo, and after a most severe chase, again came up to the cow, and caught
- her round the horns. The other Gaucho had gone on ahead with the spare
- horses, so that St. Jago had some difficulty in killing the furious beast.
- He managed to get her on a level piece of ground, by taking advantage of
- her as often as she rushed at him; and when she would not move, my horse,
- from having been trained, would canter up, and with his chest give her a
- violent push. But when on level ground it does not appear an easy job for
- one man to kill a beast mad with terror. Nor would it be so, if the horse,
- when left to itself without its rider, did not soon learn, for its own
- safety, to keep the lazo tight, so that, if the cow or ox moves forward,
- the horse moves just as quickly forward; otherwise, it stands motionless
- leaning on one side. This horse, however, was a young one, and would not
- stand still, but gave in to the cow as she struggled. It was admirable to
- see with what dexterity St. Jago dodged behind the beast, till at last he
- contrived to give the fatal touch to the main tendon of the hind leg after
- which, without much difficulty, he drove his knife into the head of the
- spinal marrow, and the cow dropped as if struck by lightning. He cut off
- pieces of flesh with the skin to it, but without any bones, sufficient for
- our expedition. We then rode on to our sleeping-place, and had for supper
- "carne con cuero," or meat roasted with the skin on it. This is as
- superior to common beef as venison is to mutton. A large circular piece
- taken from the back is roasted on the embers with the hide downwards and
- is the form of a saucer, so that none of the gravy is lost. If any worthy
- alderman had supped with us that evening, "carne con cuero," without
- doubt, would soon have been celebrated in London.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the night it rained, and the next day (17th) was very stormy, with
- much hail and snow. We rode across the island to the neck of land which
- joins the Rincon del Toro (the great peninsula at the S. W. extremity) to
- the rest of the island. From the great number of cows which have been
- killed, there is a large proportion of bulls. These wander about single,
- or two and three together, and are very savage. I never saw such
- magnificent beasts; they equalled in the size of their huge heads and
- necks the Grecian marble sculptures. Capt. Sulivan informs me that the
- hide of an average-sized bull weighs forty-seven pounds, whereas a hide of
- this weight, less thoroughly dried, is considered as a very heavy one at
- Monte Video. The young bulls generally run away, for a short distance; but
- the old ones do not stir a step, except to rush at man and horse; and many
- horses have been thus killed. An old bull crossed a boggy stream, and took
- his stand on the opposite side to us; we in vain tried to drive him away,
- and failing, were obliged to make a large circuit. The Gauchos in revenge
- determined to emasculate him and render him for the future harmless. It
- was very interesting to see how art completely mastered force. One lazo
- was thrown over his horns as he rushed at the horse, and another round his
- hind legs: in a minute the monster was stretched powerless on the ground.
- After the lazo has once been drawn tightly round the horns of a furious
- animal, it does not at first appear an easy thing to disengage it again
- without killing the beast: nor, I apprehend, would it be so if the man was
- by himself. By the aid, however, of a second person throwing his lazo so
- as to catch both hind legs, it is quickly managed: for the animal, as long
- as its hind legs are kept outstretched, is quite helpless, and the first
- man can with his hands loosen his lazo from the horns, and then quietly
- mount his horse; but the moment the second man, by backing ever so little,
- relaxes the strain, the lazo slips off the legs of the struggling beast,
- which then rises free, shakes himself, and vainly rushes at his
- antagonist.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our whole ride we saw only one troop of wild horses. These animals,
- as well as the cattle, were introduced by the French in 1764, since which
- time both have greatly increased. It is a curious fact, that the horses
- have never left the eastern end of the island, although there is no
- natural boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that part of the island
- is not more tempting than the rest. The Gauchos whom I asked, though
- asserting this to be the case, were unable to account for it, except from
- the strong attachment which horses have to any locality to which they are
- accustomed. Considering that the island does not appear fully stocked, and
- that there are no beasts of prey, I was particularly curious to know what
- has checked their originally rapid increase. That in a limited island some
- check would sooner or later supervene, is inevitable; but why had the
- increase of the horse been checked sooner than that of the cattle? Capt.
- Sulivan has taken much pains for me in this inquiry. The Gauchos employed
- here attribute it chiefly to the stallions constantly roaming from place
- to place, and compelling the mares to accompany them, whether or not the
- young foals are able to follow. One Gaucho told Capt. Sulivan that he had
- watched a stallion for a whole hour, violently kicking and biting a mare
- till he forced her to leave her foal to its fate. Capt. Sulivan can so far
- corroborate this curious account, that he has several times found young
- foals dead, whereas he has never found a dead calf. Moreover, the dead
- bodies of full-grown horses are more frequently found, as if more subject
- to disease or accidents, than those of the cattle. From the softness of
- the ground their hoofs often grow irregularly to a great length, and this
- causes lameness. The predominant colours are roan and iron-grey. All the
- horses bred here, both tame and wild, are rather small-sized, though
- generally in good condition; and they have lost so much strength, that
- they are unfit to be used in taking wild cattle with the lazo: in
- consequence, it is necessary to go to the great expense of importing fresh
- horses from the Plata. At some future period the southern hemisphere
- probably will have its breed of Falkland ponies, as the northern has its
- Shetland breed.
- </p>
- <p>
- The cattle, instead of having degenerated like the horses seem, as before
- remarked, to have increased in size; and they are much more numerous than
- the horses. Capt. Sulivan informs me that they vary much less in the
- general form of their bodies and in the shape of their horns than English
- cattle. In colour they differ much; and it is a remarkable circumstance,
- that in different parts of this one small island, different colours
- predominate. Round Mount Usborne, at a height of from 1000 to 1500 feet
- above the sea, about half of some of the herds are mouse or lead-coloured,
- a tint which is not common in other parts of the island. Near Port
- Pleasant dark brown prevails, whereas south of Choiseul Sound (which
- almost divides the island into two parts), white beasts with black heads
- and feet are the most common: in all parts black, and some spotted animals
- may be observed. Capt. Sulivan remarks, that the difference in the
- prevailing colours was so obvious, that in looking for the herds near Port
- Pleasant, they appeared from a long distance like black spots, whilst
- south of Choiseul Sound they appeared like white spots on the hill-sides.
- Capt. Sulivan thinks that the herds do not mingle; and it is a singular
- fact, that the mouse-coloured cattle, though living on the high land,
- calve about a month earlier in the season than the other coloured beasts
- on the lower land. It is interesting thus to find the once domesticated
- cattle breaking into three colours, of which some one colour would in all
- probability ultimately prevail over the others, if the herds were left
- undisturbed for the next several centuries.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rabbit is another animal which has been introduced; and has succeeded
- very well; so that they abound over large parts of the island. Yet, like
- the horses, they are confined within certain limits; for they have not
- crossed the central chain of hills, nor would they have extended even so
- far as its base, if, as the Gauchos informed me, small colonies has not
- been carried there. I should not have supposed that these animals, natives
- of northern Africa, could have existed in a climate so humid as this, and
- which enjoys so little sunshine that even wheat ripens only occasionally.
- It is asserted that in Sweden, which any one would have thought a more
- favourable climate, the rabbit cannot live out of doors. The first few
- pairs, moreover, had here to content against pre-existing enemies, in the
- fox and some large hawks. The French naturalists have considered the black
- variety a distinct species, and called it Lepus Magellanicus. <a
- href="#linknote-95" name="linknoteref-95" id="linknoteref-95"><small>95</small></a>
- They imagined that Magellan, when talking of an animal under the name of
- "conejos" in the Strait of Magellan, referred to this species; but he was
- alluding to a small cavy, which to this day is thus called by the
- Spaniards. The Gauchos laughed at the idea of the black kind being
- different from the grey, and they said that at all events it had not
- extended its range any further than the grey kind; that the two were never
- found separate; and that they readily bred together, and produced piebald
- offspring. Of the latter I now possess a specimen, and it is marked about
- the head differently from the French specific description. This
- circumstance shows how cautious naturalists should be in making species;
- for even Cuvier, on looking at the skull of one of these rabbits, thought
- it was probably distinct!
- </p>
- <p>
- The only quadruped native to the island <a href="#linknote-96"
- name="linknoteref-96" id="linknoteref-96"><small>96</small></a>; is a
- large wolf-like fox (Canis antarcticus), which is common to both East and
- West Falkland. I have no doubt it is a peculiar species, and confined to
- this archipelago; because many sealers, Gauchos, and Indians, who have
- visited these islands, all maintain that no such animal is found in any
- part of South America.
- </p>
- <p>
- Molina, from a similarity in habits, thought that this was the same with
- his "culpeu;" <a href="#linknote-97" name="linknoteref-97"
- id="linknoteref-97"><small>97</small></a> but I have seen both, and they
- are quite distinct. These wolves are well known from Byron's account of
- their tameness and curiosity, which the sailors, who ran into the water to
- avoid them, mistook for fierceness. To this day their manners remain the
- same. They have been observed to enter a tent, and actually pull some meat
- from beneath the head of a sleeping seaman. The Gauchos also have
- frequently in the evening killed them, by holding out a piece of meat in
- one hand, and in the other a knife ready to stick them. As far as I am
- aware, there is no other instance in any part of the world, of so small a
- mass of broken land, distant from a continent, possessing so large an
- aboriginal quadruped peculiar to itself. Their numbers have rapidly
- decreased; they are already banished from that half of the island which
- lies to the eastward of the neck of land between St. Salvador Bay and
- Berkeley Sound. Within a very few years after these islands shall have
- become regularly settled, in all probability this for will be classed with
- the dodo, as an animal which has perished from the face of the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- At night (17th) we slept on the neck of land at the head of Choiseul
- Sound, which forms the south-west peninsula. The valley was pretty well
- sheltered from the cold wind, but there was very little brushwood for
- fuel. The Gauchos, however, soon found what, to my great surprise, made
- nearly as hot a fire as coals; this was the skeleton of a bullock lately
- killed, from which the flesh had been picked by the carrion-hawks. They
- told me that in winter they often killed a beast, cleaned the flesh from
- the bones with their knives, and then with these same bones roasted the
- meat for their suppers.
- </p>
- <p>
- 18th.&mdash;It rained during nearly the whole day. At night we managed,
- however, with our saddle-cloths to keep ourselves pretty well dry and
- warm; but the ground on which we slept was on each occasion nearly in the
- state of a bog, and there was not a dry spot to sit down on after our
- day's ride. I have in another part stated how singular it is that there
- should be absolutely no trees on these islands, although Tierra del Fuego
- is covered by one large forest. The largest bush in the island (belonging
- to the family of Compositae) is scarcely so tall as our gorse. The best
- fuel is afforded by a green little bush about the size of common heath,
- which has the useful property of burning while fresh and green. It was
- very surprising to see the Gauchos, in the midst of rain and everything
- soaking wet, with nothing more than a tinder-box and a piece of rag,
- immediately make a fire. They sought beneath the tufts of grass and bushel
- for a few dry twigs, and these they rubbed into fibres; then surrounding
- them with coarser twigs, something like a bird's nest, they put the rag
- with its spark of fire in the middle and covered it up. The nest being
- then held up to the wind, by degrees it smoked more and more, and at last
- burst out in flames. I do not think any other method would have had a
- chance of succeeding with such damp materials.
- </p>
- <p>
- 19th.&mdash;Each morning, from not having ridden for some time previously,
- I was very stiff. I was surprised to hear the Gauchos, who have from
- infancy almost lived on horseback, say that, under similar circumstances,
- they always suffer. St. Jago told me, that having been confined for three
- months by illness, he went out hunting wild cattle, and in consequence,
- for the next two days, his thighs were so stiff that he was obliged to lie
- in bed. This shows that the Gauchos, although they do not appear to do so,
- yet really must exert much muscular effort in riding. The hunting wild
- cattle, in a country so difficult to pass as this is on account of the
- swampy ground, must be very hard work. The Gauchos say they often pass at
- full speed over ground which would be impassable at a slower pace; in the
- same manner as a man is able to skate over thin ice. When hunting, the
- party endeavours to get as close as possible to the herd without being
- discovered. Each man carries four or five pair of the bolas; these he
- throws one after the other at as many cattle, which, when once entangled,
- are left for some days till they become a little exhausted by hunger and
- struggling. They are then let free and driven towards a small herd of tame
- animals, which have been brought to the spot on purpose. From their
- previous treatment, being too much terrified to leave the herd, they are
- easily driven, if their strength last out, to the settlement.
- </p>
- <p>
- The weather continued so very bad that we determine to make a push, and
- try to reach the vessel before night. From the quantity of rain which had
- fallen, the surface of the whole country was swampy. I suppose my horse
- fell at least a dozen times, and sometimes the whole six horses were
- floundering in the mud together. All the little streams are bordered by
- soft peat, which makes it very difficult for the horses to leap them
- without falling. To complete our discomforts we were obliged to cross the
- head of a creek of the sea, in which the water was as high as our horses'
- backs; and the little waves, owing to the violence of the wind, broke over
- us, and made us very wet and cold. Even the iron-framed Gauchos professed
- themselves glad when they reached the settlement, after our little
- excursion.
- </p>
- <p>
- The geological structure of these islands is in most respects simple. The
- lower country consists of clay-slate and sandstone, containing fossils,
- very closely related to, but not identical with, those found in the
- Silurian formations of Europe; the hills are formed of white granular
- quartz rock. The strata of the latter are frequently arched with perfect
- symmetry, and the appearance of some of the masses is in consequence most
- singular. Pernety <a href="#linknote-98" name="linknoteref-98"
- id="linknoteref-98"><small>98</small></a> has devoted several pages to the
- description of a Hill of Ruins, the successive strata of which he has
- justly compared to the seats of an amphitheatre. The quartz rock must have
- been quite pasty when it underwent such remarkable flexures without being
- shattered into fragments. As the quartz insensibly passes into the
- sandstone, it seems probable that the former owes its origin to the
- sandstone having been heated to such a degree that it became viscid, and
- upon cooling crystallized. While in the soft state it must have been
- pushed up through the overlying beds.
- </p>
- <p>
- In many parts of the island the bottoms of the valleys are covered in an
- extraordinary manner by myriads of great loose angular fragments of the
- quartz rock, forming "streams of stones." These have been mentioned with
- surprise by every voyager since the time of Pernety. The blocks are not
- water-worn, their angles being only a little blunted; they vary in size
- from one or two feet in diameter to ten, or even more than twenty times as
- much. They are not thrown together into irregular piles, but are spread
- out into level sheets or great streams. It is not possible to ascertain
- their thickness, but the water of small streamlets can be heard trickling
- through the stones many feet below the surface. The actual depth is
- probably great, because the crevices between the lower fragments must long
- ago have been filled up with sand. The width of these sheets of stones
- varied from a few hundred feet to a mile; but the peaty soil daily
- encroaches on the borders, and even forms islets wherever a few fragments
- happen to lie close together. In a valley south of Berkeley Sound, which
- some of our party called the "great valley of fragments," it was necessary
- to cross an uninterrupted band half a mile wide, by jumping from one
- pointed stone to another. So large were the fragments, that being
- overtaken by a shower of rain, I readily found shelter beneath one of
- them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Their little inclination is the most remarkable circumstance in these
- "streams of stones." On the hill-sides I have seen them sloping at an
- angle of ten degrees with the horizon; but in some of the level,
- broad-bottomed valleys, the inclination is only just sufficient to be
- clearly perceived. On so rugged a surface there was no means of measuring
- the angle, but to give a common illustration, I may say that the slope
- would not have checked the speed of an English mail-coach. In some places,
- a continuous stream of these fragments followed up the course of a valley,
- and even extended to the very crest of the hill. On these crests huge
- masses, exceeding in dimensions any small building, seemed to stand
- arrested in their headlong course: there, also, the curved strata of the
- archways lay piled on each other, like the ruins of some vast and ancient
- cathedral. In endeavouring to describe these scenes of violence one is
- tempted to pass from one simile to another. We may imagine that streams of
- white lava had flowed from many parts of the mountains into the lower
- country, and that when solidified they had been rent by some enormous
- convulsion into myriads of fragments. The expression "streams of stones,"
- which immediately occurred to every one, conveys the same idea. These
- scenes are on the spot rendered more striking by the contrast of the low
- rounded forms of the neighbouring hills.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was interested by finding on the highest peak of one range (about 700
- feet above the sea) a great arched fragment, lying on its convex side, or
- back downwards. Must we believe that it was fairly pitched up in the air,
- and thus turned? Or, with more probability, that there existed formerly a
- part of the same range more elevated than the point on which this monument
- of a great convulsion of nature now lies. As the fragments in the valleys
- are neither rounded nor the crevices filled up with sand, we must infer
- that the period of violence was subsequent to the land having been raised
- above the waters of the sea. In a transverse section within these valleys,
- the bottom is nearly level, or rises but very little towards either side.
- Hence the fragments appear to have travelled from the head of the valley;
- but in reality it seems more probable that they have been hurled down from
- the nearest slopes; and that since, by a vibratory movement of
- overwhelming force, <a href="#linknote-99" name="linknoteref-99"
- id="linknoteref-99"><small>99</small></a> the fragments have been levelled
- into one continuous sheet. If during the earthquake <a href="#linknote-910"
- name="linknoteref-910" id="linknoteref-910"><small>910</small></a> which
- in 1835 overthrew Concepcion, in Chile, it was thought wonderful that
- small bodies should have been pitched a few inches from the ground, what
- must we say to a movement which has caused fragments many tons in weight,
- to move onwards like so much sand on a vibrating board, and find their
- level? I have seen, in the Cordillera of the Andes, the evident marks
- where stupendous mountains have been broken into pieces like so much thin
- crust, and the strata thrown of their vertical edges; but never did any
- scene, like these "streams of stones," so forcibly convey to my mind the
- idea of a convulsion, of which in historical records we might in vain seek
- for any counterpart: yet the progress of knowledge will probably some day
- give a simple explanation of this phenomenon, as it already has of the so
- long-thought inexplicable transportal of the erratic boulders, which are
- strewed over the plains of Europe.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have little to remark on the zoology of these islands. have before
- described the carrion-vulture of Polyborus. There are some other hawks,
- owls, and a few small land-birds. The water-fowl are particularly
- numerous, and they must formerly, from the accounts of the old navigators,
- have been much more so. One day I observed a cormorant playing with a fish
- which it had caught. Eight times successively the bird let its prey go,
- then dived after it, and although in deep water, brought it each time to
- the surface. In the Zoological Gardens I have seen the otter treat a fish
- in the same manner, much as a cat does a mouse: I do not know of any other
- instance where dame Nature appears so wilfully cruel. Another day, having
- placed myself between a penguin (Aptenodytes demersa) and the water, I was
- much amused by watching its habits. It was a brave bird; and till reaching
- the sea, it regularly fought and drove me backwards. Nothing less than
- heavy blows would have stopped him; every inch he gained he firmly kept,
- standing close before me erect and determined. When thus opposed he
- continually rolled his head from side to side, in a very odd manner, as if
- the power of distinct vision lay only in the anterior and basal part of
- each eye. This bird is commonly called the jackass penguin, from its
- habit, while on shore, of throwing its head backwards, and making a loud
- strange noise, very like the braying of an ass; but while at sea, and
- undisturbed, its note is very deep and solemn, and is often heard in the
- night-time. In diving, its little wings are used as fins; but on the land,
- as front legs. When crawling, it may be said on four legs, through the
- tussocks or on the side of a grassy cliff, it moves so very quickly that
- it might easily be mistaken for a quadruped. When at sea and fishing, it
- comes to the surface for the purpose of breathing with such a spring, and
- dives again so instantaneously, that I defy any one at first sight to be
- sure that it was not a fish leaping for sport.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two kinds of geese frequent the Falklands. The upland species (Anas
- Magellanica) is common, in pairs and in small flocks, throughout the
- island. They do not migrate, but build on the small outlying islets. This
- is supposed to be from fear of the foxes: and it is perhaps from the same
- cause that these birds, though very tame by day, are shy and wild in the
- dusk of the evening. They live entirely on vegetable matter.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rock-goose, so called from living exclusively on the sea-beach (Anas
- antarctica), is common both here and on the west coast of America, as far
- north as Chile. In the deep and retired channels of Tierra del Fuego, the
- snow-white gander, invariably accompanied by his darker consort, and
- standing close by each other on some distant rocky point, is a common
- feature in the landscape.
- </p>
- <p>
- In these islands a great loggerheaded duck or goose (Anas brachyptera),
- which sometimes weighs twenty-two pounds, is very abundant. These birds
- were in former days called, from their extraordinary manner of paddling
- and splashing upon the water, race-horses; but now they are named, much
- more appropriately, steamers. Their wings are too small and weak to allow
- of flight, but by their aid, partly swimming and partly flapping the
- surface of the water, they move very quickly. The manner is something like
- that by which the common house-duck escapes when pursued by a dog; but I
- am nearly sure that the steamer moves its wings alternately, instead of
- both together, as in other birds. These clumsy, loggerheaded ducks make
- such a noise and splashing, that the effect is exceedingly curious.
- </p>
- <p>
- Thus we find in South America three birds which use their wings for other
- purposes besides flight; the penguins as fins, the steamer as paddles, and
- the ostrich as sails: and the Apteryz of New Zealand, as well as its
- gigantic extinct prototype the Deinornis, possess only rudimentary
- representatives of wings. The steamer is able to dive only to a very short
- distance. It feeds entirely on shell-fish from the kelp and tidal rocks:
- hence the beak and head, for the purpose of breaking them, are
- surprisingly heavy and strong: the head is so strong that I have scarcely
- been able to fracture it with my geological hammer; and all our sportsmen
- soon discovered how tenacious these birds were of life. When in the
- evening pluming themselves in a flock, they make the same odd mixture of
- sounds which bull-frogs do within the tropics.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the Falkland Islands, made many
- observations on the lower marine animals, <a href="#linknote-911"
- name="linknoteref-911" id="linknoteref-911"><small>911</small></a> but
- they are of little general interest. I will mention only one class of
- facts, relating to certain zoophytes in the more highly organized division
- of that class. Several genera (Flustra, Eschara, Cellaria, Crisia, and
- others) agree in having singular moveable organs (like those of Flustra
- avicularia, found in the European seas) attached to their cells. The
- organ, in the greater number of cases, very closely resembles the head of
- a vulture; but the lower mandible can be opened much wider than in a real
- bird's beak. The head itself possessed considerable powers of movement, by
- means of a short neck. In one zoophyte the head itself was fixed, but the
- lower jaw free: in another it was replaced by a triangular hood, with
- beautifully-fitted trap-door, which evidently answered to the lower
- mandible. In the greater number of species, each cell was provided with
- one head, but in others each cell had two.
- </p>
- <p>
- The young cells at the end of the branches of these corallines contain
- quite immature polypi, yet the vulture-head attached to them, though
- small, are in every respect perfect When the polypus was removed by a
- needle from any of the cells, these organs did not appear in the least
- affected. When one of the vulture-like heads was cut off from the cell,
- the lower mandible retained its power of opening and closing. Perhaps the
- most singular part of their structure is, that when there were more than
- two rows of cells on a branch, the central cells were furnished with these
- appendages, of only one-fourth the size of the outside ones. Their
- movements varied according to the species; but in some I never saw the
- least motion; while others, with the lower mandible generally wide open,
- oscillated backwards and forwards at the rate of about five seconds each
- turn, others moved rapidly and by starts. When touched with a needle, the
- beak generally seized the point so firmly, that the whole branch might be
- shaken.
- </p>
- <p>
- These bodies have no relation whatever with the production of the eggs or
- gemmules, as they are formed before the young polypi appear in the cells
- at the end of the growing branches; as they move independently of the
- polypi, and do not appear to be in any way connected with them; and as
- they differ in size on the outer and inner rows of cells, I have little
- doubt, that in their functions, they are related rather to the horny axis
- of the branches than to the polypi in the cells. The fleshy appendage at
- the lower extremity of the sea-pen (described at Bahia Blanca) also forms
- part of the zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner as the roots of a
- tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the individual leaf or
- flower-buds.
- </p>
- <p>
- In another elegant little coralline (Crisia?), each cell was furnished
- with a long-toothed bristle, which had the power of moving quickly. Each
- of these bristles and each of the vulture-like heads generally moved quite
- independently of the others, but sometimes all on both sides of a branch,
- sometimes only those on one side, moved together coinstantaneously,
- sometimes each moved in regular order one after another. In these actions
- we apparently behold as perfect a transmission of will in the zoophyte,
- though composed of thousands of distinct polypi, as in any single animal.
- The case, indeed, is not different from that of the sea-pens, which, when
- touched, drew themselves into the sand on the coast of Bahia Blanca. I
- will state one other instance of uniform action, though of a very
- different nature, in a zoophyte closely allied to Clytia, and therefore
- very simply organized. Having kept a large tuft of it in a basin of
- salt-water, when it was dark I found that as often as I rubbed any part of
- a branch, the whole became strongly phosphorescent with a green light: I
- do not think I ever saw any object more beautifully so. But the remarkable
- circumstance was, that the flashes of light always proceeded up the
- branches, from the base towards the extremities.
- </p>
- <p>
- The examination of these compound animals was always very interesting to
- me. What can be more remarkable that to see a plant-like body producing an
- egg, capable of swimming about and of choosing a proper place to adhere
- to, which then sprouts into branches, each crowded with innumerable
- distinct animals, often of complicated organizations. The branches,
- moreover, as we have just seen, sometimes possess organs capable of
- movement and independent of the polypi. Surprising as this union of
- separate individuals in common stock must always appear, every tree
- displays the same fact, for buds must be considered as individual plants.
- It is, however, natural to consider a polypus, furnished with a mouth,
- intestines, and other organs, as a distinct individual, whereas the
- individuality of a leaf-bud is not easily realised, so that the union of
- separate individuals in a common body is more striking in a coralline than
- in a tree. Our conception of a compound animal, where in some respects the
- individuality of each is not completed, may be aided, by reflecting on the
- production of two distinct creatures by bisecting a single one with a
- knife, or where Nature herself performs the task of bisection. We may
- consider the polypi in a zoophyte, or the buds in a tree, as cases where
- the division of the individual has not been completely effected. Certainly
- in the case of trees, and judging from analogy in that of corallines, the
- individuals propagated by buds seem more intimately related to each other,
- than eggs or seeds are to their parents. It seems now pretty well
- established that plants propagated by buds all partake of a common
- duration of life; and it is familiar to every one, what singular and
- numerous peculiarities are transmitted with certainty, by buds, layers,
- and grafts, which by seminal propagation never or only casually reappear.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0010" id="link2HCH0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER X &mdash; TIERRA DEL FUEGO
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Tierra del Fuego, first arrival&mdash;Good Success Bay&mdash;An Account
- of the Fuegians on board&mdash;Interview With the Savages&mdash;Scenery of
- the Forests&mdash;Cape Horn&mdash;Wigwam Cove&mdash;Miserable Condition of
- the Savages&mdash;Famines&mdash;Cannibals&mdash;Matricide&mdash;Religious
- Feelings&mdash;Great Gale&mdash;Beagle Channel&mdash;Ponsonby Sound&mdash;Build
- Wigwams and settle the Fuegians&mdash;Bifurcation of the Beagle Channel&mdash;Glaciers&mdash;Return
- to the Ship&mdash;Second Visit in the Ship to the Settlement&mdash;Equality
- of Condition amongst the Natives.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">D</span>ECEMBER 17th,
- 1832.&mdash;Having now finished with Patagonia and the Falkland Islands, I
- will describe our first arrival in Tierra del Fuego. A little after noon
- we doubled Cape St. Diego, and entered the famous strait of Le Maire. We
- kept close to the Fuegian shore, but the outline of the rugged,
- inhospitable Statenland was visible amidst the clouds. In the afternoon we
- anchored in the Bay of Good Success. While entering we were saluted in a
- manner becoming the inhabitants of this savage land. A group of Fuegians
- partly concealed by the entangled forest, were perched on a wild point
- overhanging the sea; and as we passed by, they sprang up and waving their
- tattered cloaks sent forth a loud and sonorous shout. The savages followed
- the ship, and just before dark we saw their fire, and again heard their
- wild cry. The harbour consists of a fine piece of water half surrounded by
- low rounded mountains of clay-slate, which are covered to the water's edge
- by one dense gloomy forest. A single glance at the landscape was
- sufficient to show me how widely different it was from anything I had ever
- beheld. At night it blew a gale of wind, and heavy squalls from the
- mountains swept past us. It would have been a bad time out at sea, and we,
- as well as others, may call this Good Success Bay.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the morning the Captain sent a party to communicate with the Fuegians.
- When we came within hail, one of the four natives who were present
- advanced to receive us, and began to shout most vehemently, wishing to
- direct us where to land. When we were on shore the party looked rather
- alarmed, but continued talking and making gestures with great rapidity. It
- was without exception the most curious and interesting spectacle I ever
- beheld: I could not have believed how wide was the difference between
- savage and civilized man: it is greater than between a wild and
- domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a greater power of
- improvement. The chief spokesman was old, and appeared to be the head of
- the family; the three others were powerful young men, about six feet high.
- The women and children had been sent away. These Fuegians are a very
- different race from the stunted, miserable wretches farther westward; and
- they seem closely allied to the famous Patagonians of the Strait of
- Magellan. Their only garment consists of a mantle made of guanaco skin,
- with the wool outside: this they wear just thrown over their shoulders,
- leaving their persons as often exposed as covered. Their skin is of a
- dirty coppery-red colour.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old man had a fillet of white feathers tied round his head, which
- partly confined his black, coarse, and entangled hair. His face was
- crossed by two broad transverse bars; one, painted bright red, reached
- from ear to ear and included the upper lip; the other, white like chalk,
- extended above and parallel to the first, so that even his eyelids were
- thus coloured. The other two men were ornamented by streaks of black
- powder, made of charcoal. The party altogether closely resembled the
- devils which come on the stage in plays like Der Freischutz.
- </p>
- <p>
- Their very attitudes were abject, and the expression of their countenances
- distrustful, surprised, and startled. After we had presented them with
- some scarlet cloth, which they immediately tied round their necks, they
- became good friends. This was shown by the old man patting our breasts,
- and making a chuckling kind of noise, as people do when feeding chickens.
- I walked with the old man, and this demonstration of friendship was
- repeated several times; it was concluded by three hard slaps, which were
- given me on the breast and back at the same time. He then bared his bosom
- for me to return the compliment, which being done, he seemed highly
- pleased. The language of these people, according to our notions, scarcely
- deserves to be called articulate. Captain Cook has compared it to a man
- clearing his throat, but certainly no European ever cleared his throat
- with so many hoarse, guttural, and clicking sounds.
- </p>
- <p>
- They are excellent mimics: as often as we coughed or yawned, or made any
- odd motion, they immediately imitated us. Some of our party began to
- squint and look awry; but one of the young Fuegians (whose whole face was
- painted black, excepting a white band across his eyes) succeeded in making
- far more hideous grimaces. They could repeat with perfect correctness each
- word in any sentence we addressed them, and they remembered such words for
- some time. Yet we Europeans all know how difficult it is to distinguish
- apart the sounds in a foreign language. Which of us, for instance, could
- follow an American Indian through a sentence of more than three words? All
- savages appear to possess, to an uncommon degree, this power of mimicry. I
- was told, almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among the
- Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious for being
- able to imitate and describe the gait of any man, so that he may be
- recognized. How can this faculty be explained? is it a consequence of the
- more practised habits of perception and keener senses, common to all men
- in a savage state, as compared with those long civilized?
- </p>
- <p>
- When a song was struck up by our party, I thought the Fuegians would have
- fallen down with astonishment. With equal surprise they viewed our
- dancing; but one of the young men, when asked, had no objection to a
- little waltzing. Little accustomed to Europeans as they appeared to be,
- yet they knew and dreaded our fire-arms; nothing would tempt them to take
- a gun in their hands. They begged for knives, calling them by the Spanish
- word "cuchilla." They explained also what they wanted, by acting as if
- they had a piece of blubber in their mouth, and then pretending to cut
- instead of tear it.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have not as yet noticed the Fuegians whom we had on board. During the
- former voyage of the Adventure and Beagle in 1826 to 1830, Captain Fitz
- Roy seized on a party of natives, as hostages for the loss of a boat,
- which had been stolen, to the great jeopardy of a party employed on the
- survey; and some of these natives, as well as a child whom he bought for a
- pearl-button, he took with him to England, determining to educate them and
- instruct them in religion at his own expense. To settle these natives in
- their own country, was one chief inducement to Captain Fitz Roy to
- undertake our present voyage; and before the Admiralty had resolved to
- send out this expedition, Captain Fitz Roy had generously chartered a
- vessel, and would himself have taken them back. The natives were
- accompanied by a missionary, R. Matthews; of whom and of the natives,
- Captain Fitz Roy has published a full and excellent account. Two men, one
- of whom died in England of the small-pox, a boy and a little girl, were
- originally taken; and we had now on board, York Minster, Jemmy Button
- (whose name expresses his purchase-money), and Fuegia Basket. York Minster
- was a full-grown, short, thick, powerful man: his disposition was
- reserved, taciturn, morose, and when excited violently passionate; his
- affections were very strong towards a few friends on board; his intellect
- good. Jemmy Button was a universal favourite, but likewise passionate; the
- expression of his face at once showed his nice disposition. He was merry
- and often laughed, and was remarkably sympathetic with any one in pain:
- when the water was rough, I was often a little sea-sick, and he used to
- come to me and say in a plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!" but the
- notion, after his aquatic life, of a man being sea-sick, was too
- ludicrous, and he was generally obliged to turn on one side to hide a
- smile or laugh, and then he would repeat his "Poor, poor fellow!" He was
- of a patriotic disposition; and he liked to praise his own tribe and
- country, in which he truly said there were "plenty of trees," and he
- abused all the other tribes: he stoutly declared that there was no Devil
- in his land. Jemmy was short, thick, and fat, but vain of his personal
- appearance; he used always to wear gloves, his hair was neatly cut, and he
- was distressed if his well-polished shoes were dirtied. He was fond of
- admiring himself in a looking glass; and a merry-faced little Indian boy
- from the Rio Negro, whom we had for some months on board, soon perceived
- this, and used to mock him: Jemmy, who was always rather jealous of the
- attention paid to this little boy, did not at all like this, and used to
- say, with rather a contemptuous twist of his head, "Too much skylark." It
- seems yet wonderful to me, when I think over all his many good qualities
- that he should have been of the same race, and doubtless partaken of the
- same character, with the miserable, degraded savages whom we first met
- here. Lastly, Fuegia Basket was a nice, modest, reserved young girl, with
- a rather pleasing but sometimes sullen expression, and very quick in
- learning anything, especially languages. This she showed in picking up
- some Portuguese and Spanish, when left on shore for only a short time at
- Rio de Janeiro and Monte Video, and in her knowledge of English. York
- Minster was very jealous of any attention paid to her; for it was clear he
- determined to marry her as soon as they were settled on shore.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although all three could both speak and understand a good deal of English,
- it was singularly difficult to obtain much information from them,
- concerning the habits of their countrymen; this was partly owing to their
- apparent difficulty in understanding the simplest alternative. Every one
- accustomed to very young children, knows how seldom one can get an answer
- even to so simple a question as whether a thing is black or white; the
- idea of black or white seems alternately to fill their minds. So it was
- with these Fuegians, and hence it was generally impossible to find out, by
- cross questioning, whether one had rightly understood anything which they
- had asserted. Their sight was remarkably acute; it is well known that
- sailors, from long practice, can make out a distant object much better
- than a landsman; but both York and Jemmy were much superior to any sailor
- on board: several times they have declared what some distant object has
- been, and though doubted by every one, they have proved right, when it has
- been examined through a telescope. They were quite conscious of this
- power; and Jemmy, when he had any little quarrel with the officer on
- watch, would say, "Me see ship, me no tell."
- </p>
- <p>
- It was interesting to watch the conduct of the savages, when we landed,
- towards Jemmy Button: they immediately perceived the difference between
- him and ourselves, and held much conversation one with another on the
- subject. The old man addressed a long harangue to Jemmy, which it seems
- was to invite him to stay with them. But Jemmy understood very little of
- their language, and was, moreover, thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen.
- When York Minster afterwards came on shore, they noticed him in the same
- way, and told him he ought to shave; yet he had not twenty dwarf hairs on
- his face, whilst we all wore our untrimmed beards. They examined the
- colour of his skin, and compared it with ours. One of our arms being
- bared, they expressed the liveliest surprise and admiration at its
- whiteness, just in the same way in which I have seen the ourangoutang do
- at the Zoological Gardens. We thought that they mistook two or three of
- the officers, who were rather shorter and fairer, though adorned with
- large beards, for the ladies of our party. The tallest amongst the
- Fuegians was evidently much pleased at his height being noticed. When
- placed back to back with the tallest of the boat's crew, he tried his best
- to edge on higher ground, and to stand on tiptoe. He opened his mouth to
- show his teeth, and turned his face for a side view; and all this was done
- with such alacrity, that I dare say he thought himself the handsomest man
- in Tierra del Fuego. After our first feeling of grave astonishment was
- over, nothing could be more ludicrous than the odd mixture of surprise and
- imitation which these savages every moment exhibited.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day I attempted to penetrate some way into the country. Tierra
- del Fuego may be described as a mountainous land, partly submerged in the
- sea, so that deep inlets and bays occupy the place where valleys should
- exist. The mountain sides, except on the exposed western coast, are
- covered from the water's edge upwards by one great forest. The trees reach
- to an elevation of between 1000 and 1500 feet, and are succeeded by a band
- of peat, with minute alpine plants; and this again is succeeded by the
- line of perpetual snow, which, according to Captain King, in the Strait of
- Magellan descends to between 3000 and 4000 feet. To find an acre of level
- land in any part of the country is most rare. I recollect only one little
- flat piece near Port Famine, and another of rather larger extent near
- Goeree Road. In both places, and everywhere else, the surface is covered
- by a thick bed of swampy peat. Even within the forest, the ground is
- concealed by a mass of slowly putrefying vegetable matter, which, from
- being soaked with water, yields to the foot.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finding it nearly hopeless to push my way through the wood, I followed the
- course of a mountain torrent. At first, from the waterfalls and number of
- dead trees, I could hardly crawl along; but the bed of the stream soon
- became a little more open, from the floods having swept the sides. I
- continued slowly to advance for an hour along the broken and rocky banks,
- and was amply repaid by the grandeur of the scene. The gloomy depth of the
- ravine well accorded with the universal signs of violence. On every side
- were lying irregular masses of rock and torn-up trees; other trees, though
- still erect, were decayed to the heart and ready to fall. The entangled
- mass of the thriving and the fallen reminded me of the forests within the
- tropics&mdash;yet there was a difference: for in these still solitudes,
- Death, instead of Life, seemed the predominant spirit. I followed the
- water-course till I came to a spot where a great slip had cleared a
- straight space down the mountain side. By this road I ascended to a
- considerable elevation, and obtained a good view of the surrounding woods.
- The trees all belong to one kind, the Fagus betuloides; for the number of
- the other species of Fagus and of the Winter's Bark, is quite
- inconsiderable. This beech keeps its leaves throughout the year; but its
- foliage is of a peculiar brownish-green colour, with a tinge of yellow. As
- the whole landscape is thus coloured, it has a sombre, dull appearance;
- nor is it often enlivened by the rays of the sun.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 20th.&mdash;One side of the harbour is formed by a hill about
- 1500 feet high, which Captain Fitz Roy has called after Sir J. Banks, in
- commemoration of his disastrous excursion, which proved fatal to two men
- of his party, and nearly so to Dr. Solander. The snow-storm, which was the
- cause of their misfortune, happened in the middle of January,
- corresponding to our July, and in the latitude of Durham! I was anxious to
- reach the summit of this mountain to collect alpine plants; for flowers of
- any kind in the lower parts are few in number. We followed the same
- water-course as on the previous day, till it dwindled away, and we were
- then compelled to crawl blindly among the trees. These, from the effects
- of the elevation and of the impetuous winds, were low, thick and crooked.
- At length we reached that which from a distance appeared like a carpet of
- fine green turf, but which, to our vexation, turned out to be a compact
- mass of little beech-trees about four or five feet high. They were as
- thick together as box in the border of a garden, and we were obliged to
- struggle over the flat but treacherous surface. After a little more
- trouble we gained the peat, and then the bare slate rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- A ridge connected this hill with another, distant some miles, and more
- lofty, so that patches of snow were lying on it. As the day was not far
- advanced, I determined to walk there and collect plants along the road. It
- would have been very hard work, had it not been for a well-beaten and
- straight path made by the guanacos; for these animals, like sheep, always
- follow the same line. When we reached the hill we found it the highest in
- the immediate neighbourhood, and the waters flowed to the sea in opposite
- directions. We obtained a wide view over the surrounding country: to the
- north a swampy moorland extended, but to the south we had a scene of
- savage magnificence, well becoming Tierra del Fuego. There was a degree of
- mysterious grandeur in mountain behind mountain, with the deep intervening
- valleys, all covered by one thick, dusky mass of forest. The atmosphere,
- likewise, in this climate, where gale succeeds gale, with rain, hail, and
- sleet, seems blacker than anywhere else. In the Strait of Magellan looking
- due southward from Port Famine, the distant channels between the mountains
- appeared from their gloominess to lead beyond the confines of this world.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 21st.&mdash;The Beagle got under way: and on the succeeding day,
- favoured to an uncommon degree by a fine easterly breeze, we closed in
- with the Barnevelts, and running past Cape Deceit with its stony peaks,
- about three o'clock doubled the weather-beaten Cape Horn. The evening was
- calm and bright, and we enjoyed a fine view of the surrounding isles. Cape
- Horn, however, demanded his tribute, and before night sent us a gale of
- wind directly in our teeth. We stood out to sea, and on the second day
- again made the land, when we saw on our weather-bow this notorious
- promontory in its proper form&mdash;veiled in a mist, and its dim outline
- surrounded by a storm of wind and water. Great black clouds were rolling
- across the heavens, and squalls of rain, with hail, swept by us with such
- extreme violence, that the Captain determined to run into Wigwam Cove.
- This is a snug little harbour, not far from Cape Horn; and here, at
- Christmas-eve, we anchored in smooth water. The only thing which reminded
- us of the gale outside, was every now and then a puff from the mountains,
- which made the ship surge at her anchors.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 25th.&mdash;Close by the Cove, a pointed hill, called Kater's
- Peak, rises to the height of 1700 feet. The surrounding islands all
- consist of conical masses of greenstone, associated sometimes with less
- regular hills of baked and altered clay-slate. This part of Tierra del
- Fuego may be considered as the extremity of the submerged chain of
- mountains already alluded to. The cove takes its name of "Wigwam" from
- some of the Fuegian habitations; but every bay in the neighbourhood might
- be so called with equal propriety. The inhabitants, living chiefly upon
- shell-fish, are obliged constantly to change their place of residence; but
- they return at intervals to the same spots, as is evident from the piles
- of old shells, which must often amount to many tons in freight. These
- heaps can be distinguished at a long distance by the bright green colour
- of certain plants, which invariably grow on them. Among these may be
- enumerated the wild celery and scurvy grass, two very serviceable plants,
- the use of which has not been discovered by the natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Fuegian wigwam resembles, in size and dimensions, a haycock. It merely
- consists of a few broken branches stuck in the ground, and very
- imperfectly thatched on one side with a few tufts of grass and rushes. The
- whole cannot be the work of an hour, and it is only used for a few days.
- At Goeree Roads I saw a place where one of these naked men had slept,
- which absolutely offered no more cover than the form of a hare. The man
- was evidently living by himself, and York Minster said he was "very bad
- man," and that probably he had stolen something. On the west coast,
- however, the wigwams are rather better, for they are covered with
- seal-skins. We were detained here several days by the bad weather. The
- climate is certainly wretched: the summer solstice was now passed, yet
- every day snow fell on the hills, and in the valleys there was rain,
- accompanied by sleet. The thermometer generally stood about 45 degs., but
- in the night fell to 38 or 40 degs. From the damp and boisterous state of
- the atmosphere, not cheered by a gleam of sunshine, one fancied the
- climate even worse than it really was.
- </p>
- <p>
- While going one day on shore near Wollaston Island, we pulled alongside a
- canoe with six Fuegians. These were the most abject and miserable
- creatures I anywhere beheld. On the east coast the natives, as we have
- seen, have guanaco cloaks, and on the west they possess seal-skins.
- Amongst these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or some
- small scrap about as large as a pocket-handkerchief, which is barely
- sufficient to cover their backs as low down as their loins. It is laced
- across the breast by strings, and according as the wind blows, it is
- shifted from side to side. But these Fuegians in the canoe were quite
- naked, and even one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was raining
- heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled down her
- body. In another harbour not far distant, a woman, who was suckling a
- recently-born child, came one day alongside the vessel, and remained there
- out of mere curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed on her naked
- bosom, and on the skin of her naked baby! These poor wretches were stunted
- in their growth, their hideous faces bedaubed with white paint, their
- skins filthy and greasy, their hair entangled, their voices discordant,
- and their gestures violent. Viewing such men, one can hardly make one's
- self believe that they are fellow-creatures, and inhabitants of the same
- world. It is a common subject of conjecture what pleasure in life some of
- the lower animals can enjoy: how much more reasonably the same question
- may be asked with respect to these barbarians! At night, five or six human
- beings, naked and scarcely protected from the wind and rain of this
- tempestuous climate, sleep on the wet ground coiled up like animals.
- Whenever it is low water, winter or summer, night or day, they must rise
- to pick shell-fish from the rocks; and the women either dive to collect
- sea-eggs, or sit patiently in their canoes, and with a baited hair-line
- without any hook, jerk out little fish. If a seal is killed, or the
- floating carcass of a putrid whale is discovered, it is a feast; and such
- miserable food is assisted by a few tasteless berries and fungi.
- </p>
- <p>
- They often suffer from famine: I heard Mr. Low, a sealing-master
- intimately acquainted with the natives of this country, give a curious
- account of the state of a party of one hundred and fifty natives on the
- west coast, who were very thin and in great distress. A succession of
- gales prevented the women from getting shell-fish on the rocks, and they
- could not go out in their canoes to catch seal. A small party of these men
- one morning set out, and the other Indians explained to him, that they
- were going a four days' journey for food: on their return, Low went to
- meet them, and he found them excessively tired, each man carrying a great
- square piece of putrid whale's-blubber with a hole in the middle, through
- which they put their heads, like the Gauchos do through their ponchos or
- cloaks. As soon as the blubber was brought into a wigwam, an old man cut
- off thin slices, and muttering over them, broiled them for a minute, and
- distributed them to the famished party, who during this time preserved a
- profound silence. Mr. Low believes that whenever a whale is cast on shore,
- the natives bury large pieces of it in the sand, as a resource in time of
- famine; and a native boy, whom he had on board, once found a stock thus
- buried. The different tribes when at war are cannibals. From the
- concurrent, but quite independent evidence of the boy taken by Mr. Low,
- and of Jemmy Button, it is certainly true, that when pressed in winter by
- hunger, they kill and devour their old women before they kill their dogs:
- the boy, being asked by Mr. Low why they did this, answered, "Doggies
- catch otters, old women no." This boy described the manner in which they
- are killed by being held over smoke and thus choked; he imitated their
- screams as a joke, and described the parts of their bodies which are
- considered best to eat. Horrid as such a death by the hands of their
- friends and relatives must be, the fears of the old women, when hunger
- begins to press, are more painful to think of; we are told that they then
- often run away into the mountains, but that they are pursued by the men
- and brought back to the slaughter-house at their own firesides!
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Fitz Roy could never ascertain that the Fuegians have any distinct
- belief in a future life. They sometimes bury their dead in caves, and
- sometimes in the mountain forests; we do not know what ceremonies they
- perform. Jemmy Button would not eat land-birds, because "eat dead men":
- they are unwilling even to mention their dead friends. We have no reason
- to believe that they perform any sort of religious worship; though perhaps
- the muttering of the old man before he distributed the putrid blubber to
- his famished party, may be of this nature. Each family or tribe has a
- wizard or conjuring doctor, whose office we could never clearly ascertain.
- Jemmy believed in dreams, though not, as I have said, in the devil: I do
- not think that our Fuegians were much more superstitious than some of the
- sailors; for an old quartermaster firmly believed that the successive
- heavy gales, which we encountered off Cape Horn, were caused by our having
- the Fuegians on board. The nearest approach to a religious feeling which I
- heard of, was shown by York Minster, who, when Mr. Bynoe shot some very
- young ducklings as specimens, declared in the most solemn manner, "Oh, Mr.
- Bynoe, much rain, snow, blow much." This was evidently a retributive
- punishment for wasting human food. In a wild and excited manner he also
- related, that his brother, one day whilst returning to pick up some dead
- birds which he had left on the coast, observed some feathers blown by the
- wind. His brother said (York imitating his manner), "What that?" and
- crawling onwards, he peeped over the cliff, and saw "wild man" picking his
- birds; he crawled a little nearer, and then hurled down a great stone and
- killed him. York declared for a long time afterwards storms raged, and
- much rain and snow fell. As far as we could make out, he seemed to
- consider the elements themselves as the avenging agents: it is evident in
- this case, how naturally, in a race a little more advanced in culture, the
- elements would become personified. What the "bad wild men" were, has
- always appeared to me most mysterious: from what York said, when we found
- the place like the form of a hare, where a single man had slept the night
- before, I should have thought that they were thieves who had been driven
- from their tribes; but other obscure speeches made me doubt this; I have
- sometimes imagined that the most probable explanation was that they were
- insane.
- </p>
- <p>
- The different tribes have no government or chief; yet each is surrounded
- by other hostile tribes, speaking different dialects, and separated from
- each other only by a deserted border or neutral territory: the cause of
- their warfare appears to be the means of subsistence. Their country is a
- broken mass of wild rocks, lofty hills, and useless forests: and these are
- viewed through mists and endless storms. The habitable land is reduced to
- the stones on the beach; in search of food they are compelled unceasingly
- to wander from spot to spot, and so steep is the coast, that they can only
- move about in their wretched canoes. They cannot know the feeling of
- having a home, and still less that of domestic affection; for the husband
- is to the wife a brutal master to a laborious slave. Was a more horrid
- deed ever perpetrated, than that witnessed on the west coast by Byron, who
- saw a wretched mother pick up her bleeding dying infant-boy, whom her
- husband had mercilessly dashed on the stones for dropping a basket of
- sea-eggs! How little can the higher powers of the mind be brought into
- play: what is there for imagination to picture, for reason to compare, or
- judgment to decide upon? to knock a limpet from the rock does not require
- even cunning, that lowest power of the mind. Their skill in some respects
- may be compared to the instinct of animals; for it is not improved by
- experience: the canoe, their most ingenious work, poor as it is, has
- remained the same, as we know from Drake, for the last two hundred and
- fifty years.
- </p>
- <p>
- Whilst beholding these savages, one asks, whence have they come? What
- could have tempted, or what change compelled a tribe of men, to leave the
- fine regions of the north, to travel down the Cordillera or backbone of
- America, to invent and build canoes, which are not used by the tribes of
- Chile, Peru, and Brazil, and then to enter on one of the most inhospitable
- countries within the limits of the globe? Although such reflections must
- at first seize on the mind, yet we may feel sure that they are partly
- erroneous. There is no reason to believe that the Fuegians decrease in
- number; therefore we must suppose that they enjoy a sufficient share of
- happiness, of whatever kind it may be, to render life worth having. Nature
- by making habit omnipotent, and its effects hereditary, has fitted the
- Fuegian to the climate and the productions of his miserable country.
- </p>
- <p>
- After having been detained six days in Wigwam Cove by very bad weather, we
- put to sea on the 30th of December. Captain Fitz Roy wished to get
- westward to land York and Fuegia in their own country. When at sea we had
- a constant succession of gales, and the current was against us: we drifted
- to 57 degs. 23' south. On the 11th of January, 1833, by carrying a press
- of sail, we fetched within a few miles of the great rugged mountain of
- York Minster (so called by Captain Cook, and the origin of the name of the
- elder Fuegian), when a violent squall compelled us to shorten sail and
- stand out to sea. The surf was breaking fearfully on the coast, and the
- spray was carried over a cliff estimated to 200 feet in height. On the
- 12th the gale was very heavy, and we did not know exactly where we were:
- it was a most unpleasant sound to hear constantly repeated, "keep a good
- look-out to leeward." On the 13th the storm raged with its full fury: our
- horizon was narrowly limited by the sheets of spray borne by the wind. The
- sea looked ominous, like a dreary waving plain with patches of drifted
- snow: whilst the ship laboured heavily, the albatross glided with its
- expanded wings right up the wind. At noon a great sea broke over us, and
- filled one of the whale boats, which was obliged to be instantly cut away.
- The poor Beagle trembled at the shock, and for a few minutes would not
- obey her helm; but soon, like a good ship that she was, she righted and
- came up to the wind again. Had another sea followed the first, our fate
- would have been decided soon, and for ever. We had now been twenty-four
- days trying in vain to get westward; the men were worn out with fatigue,
- and they had not had for many nights or days a dry thing to put on.
- Captain Fitz Roy gave up the attempt to get westward by the outside coast.
- In the evening we ran in behind False Cape Horn, and dropped our anchor in
- forty-seven fathoms, fire flashing from the windlass as the chain rushed
- round it. How delightful was that still night, after having been so long
- involved in the din of the warring elements!
- </p>
- <p>
- January 15th, 1833.&mdash;The Beagle anchored in Goeree Roads. Captain
- Fitz Roy having resolved to settle the Fuegians, according to their
- wishes, in Ponsonby Sound, four boats were equipped to carry them there
- through the Beagle Channel. This channel, which was discovered by Captain
- Fitz Roy during the last voyage, is a most remarkable feature in the
- geography of this, or indeed of any other country: it may be compared to
- the valley of Lochness in Scotland, with its chain of lakes and friths. It
- is about one hundred and twenty miles long, with an average breadth, not
- subject to any very great variation, of about two miles; and is throughout
- the greater part so perfectly straight, that the view, bounded on each
- side by a line of mountains, gradually becomes indistinct in the long
- distance. It crosses the southern part of Tierra del Fuego in an east and
- west line, and in the middle is joined at right angles on the south side
- by an irregular channel, which has been called Ponsonby Sound. This is the
- residence of Jemmy Button's tribe and family.
- </p>
- <p>
- 19th.&mdash;Three whale-boats and the yawl, with a party of twenty-eight,
- started under the command of Captain Fitz Roy. In the afternoon we entered
- the eastern mouth of the channel, and shortly afterwards found a snug
- little cove concealed by some surrounding islets. Here we pitched our
- tents and lighted our fires. Nothing could look more comfortable than this
- scene. The glassy water of the little harbour, with the branches of the
- trees hanging over the rocky beach, the boats at anchor, the tents
- supported by the crossed oars, and the smoke curling up the wooded valley,
- formed a picture of quiet retirement. The next day (20th) we smoothly
- glided onwards in our little fleet, and came to a more inhabited district.
- Few if any of these natives could ever have seen a white man; certainly
- nothing could exceed their astonishment at the apparition of the four
- boats. Fires were lighted on every point (hence the name of Tierra del
- Fuego, or the land of fire), both to attract our attention and to spread
- far and wide the news. Some of the men ran for miles along the shore. I
- shall never forget how wild and savage one group appeared: suddenly four
- or five men came to the edge of an overhanging cliff; they were absolutely
- naked, and their long hair streamed about their faces; they held rugged
- staffs in their hands, and, springing from the ground, they waved their
- arms round their heads, and sent forth the most hideous yells.
- </p>
- <p>
- At dinner-time we landed among a party of Fuegians. At first they were not
- inclined to be friendly; for until the Captain pulled in ahead of the
- other boats, they kept their slings in their hands. We soon, however,
- delighted them by trifling presents, such as tying red tape round their
- heads. They liked our biscuit: but one of the savages touched with his
- finger some of the meat preserved in tin cases which I was eating, and
- feeling it soft and cold, showed as much disgust at it, as I should have
- done at putrid blubber. Jemmy was thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen,
- and declared his own tribe were quite different, in which he was wofully
- mistaken. It was as easy to please as it was difficult to satisfy these
- savages. Young and old, men and children, never ceased repeating the word
- "yammerschooner," which means "give me." After pointing to almost every
- object, one after the other, even to the buttons on our coats, and saying
- their favourite word in as many intonations as possible, they would then
- use it in a neuter sense, and vacantly repeat "yammerschooner." After
- yammerschoonering for any article very eagerly, they would by a simple
- artifice point to their young women or little children, as much as to say,
- "If you will not give it me, surely you will to such as these."
- </p>
- <p>
- At night we endeavoured in vain to find an uninhabited cove; and at last
- were obliged to bivouac not far from a party of natives. They were very
- inoffensive as long as they were few in numbers, but in the morning (21st)
- being joined by others they showed symptoms of hostility, and we thought
- that we should have come to a skirmish. An European labours under great
- disadvantages when treating with savages like these, who have not the
- least idea of the power of fire-arms. In the very act of levelling his
- musket he appears to the savage far inferior to a man armed with a bow and
- arrow, a spear, or even a sling. Nor is it easy to teach them our
- superiority except by striking a fatal blow. Like wild beasts, they do not
- appear to compare numbers; for each individual, if attacked, instead of
- retiring, will endeavour to dash your brains out with a stone, as
- certainly as a tiger under similar circumstances would tear you. Captain
- Fitz Roy on one occasion being very anxious, from good reasons, to
- frighten away a small party, first flourished a cutlass near them, at
- which they only laughed; he then twice fired his pistol close to a native.
- The man both times looked astounded, and carefully but quickly rubbed his
- head; he then stared awhile, and gabbled to his companions, but he never
- seemed to think of running away. We can hardly put ourselves in the
- position of these savages, and understand their actions. In the case of
- this Fuegian, the possibility of such a sound as the report of a gun close
- to his ear could never have entered his mind. He perhaps literally did not
- for a second know whether it was a sound or a blow, and therefore very
- naturally rubbed his head. In a similar manner, when a savage sees a mark
- struck by a bullet, it may be some time before he is able at all to
- understand how it is effected; for the fact of a body being invisible from
- its velocity would perhaps be to him an idea totally inconceivable.
- Moreover, the extreme force of a bullet, that penetrates a hard substance
- without tearing it, may convince the savage that it has no force at all.
- Certainly I believe that many savages of the lowest grade, such as these
- of Tierra del Fuego, have seen objects struck, and even small animals
- killed by the musket, without being in the least aware how deadly an
- instrument it is.
- </p>
- <p>
- 22nd.&mdash;After having passed an unmolested night, in what would appear
- to be neutral territory between Jemmy's tribe and the people whom we saw
- yesterday, we sailed pleasantly along. I do not know anything which shows
- more clearly the hostile state of the different tribes, than these wide
- border or neutral tracts. Although Jemmy Button well knew the force of our
- party, he was, at first, unwilling to land amidst the hostile tribe
- nearest to his own. He often told us how the savage Oens men "when the
- leaf red," crossed the mountains from the eastern coast of Tierra del
- Fuego, and made inroads on the natives of this part of the country. It was
- most curious to watch him when thus talking, and see his eyes gleaming and
- his whole face assume a new and wild expression. As we proceeded along the
- Beagle Channel, the scenery assumed a peculiar and very magnificent
- character; but the effect was much lessened from the lowness of the point
- of view in a boat, and from looking along the valley, and thus losing all
- the beauty of a succession of ridges. The mountains were here about three
- thousand feet high, and terminated in sharp and jagged points. They rose
- in one unbroken sweep from the water's edge, and were covered to the
- height of fourteen or fifteen hundred feet by the dusky-coloured forest.
- It was most curious to observe, as far as the eye could range, how level
- and truly horizontal the line on the mountain side was, at which trees
- ceased to grow: it precisely resembled the high-water mark of drift-weed
- on a sea-beach.
- </p>
- <p>
- At night we slept close to the junction of Ponsonby Sound with the Beagle
- Channel. A small family of Fuegians, who were living in the cove, were
- quiet and inoffensive, and soon joined our party round a blazing fire. We
- were well clothed, and though sitting close to the fire were far from too
- warm; yet these naked savages, though further off, were observed, to our
- great surprise, to be streaming with perspiration at undergoing such a
- roasting. They seemed, however, very well pleased, and all joined in the
- chorus of the seamen's songs: but the manner in which they were invariably
- a little behindhand was quite ludicrous.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the night the news had spread, and early in the morning (23rd) a
- fresh party arrived, belonging to the Tekenika, or Jemmy's tribe. Several
- of them had run so fast that their noses were bleeding, and their mouths
- frothed from the rapidity with which they talked; and with their naked
- bodies all bedaubed with black, white, <a href="#linknote-101"
- name="linknoteref-101" id="linknoteref-101"><small>101</small></a> and
- red, they looked like so many demoniacs who had been fighting. We then
- proceeded (accompanied by twelve canoes, each holding four or five people)
- down Ponsonby Sound to the spot where poor Jemmy expected to find his
- mother and relatives. He had already heard that his father was dead; but
- as he had had a "dream in his head" to that effect, he did not seem to
- care much about it, and repeatedly comforted himself with the very natural
- reflection&mdash;"Me no help it." He was not able to learn any particulars
- regarding his father's death, as his relations would not speak about it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jemmy was now in a district well known to him, and guided the boats to a
- quiet pretty cove named Woollya, surrounded by islets, every one of which
- and every point had its proper native name. We found here a family of
- Jemmy's tribe, but not his relations: we made friends with them; and in
- the evening they sent a canoe to inform Jemmy's mother and brothers. The
- cove was bordered by some acres of good sloping land, not covered (as
- elsewhere) either by peat or by forest-trees. Captain Fitz Roy originally
- intended, as before stated, to have taken York Minster and Fuegia to their
- own tribe on the west coast; but as they expressed a wish to remain here,
- and as the spot was singularly favourable, Captain Fitz Roy determined to
- settle here the whole party, including Matthews, the missionary. Five days
- were spent in building for them three large wigwams, in landing their
- goods, in digging two gardens, and sowing seeds.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning after our arrival (the 24th) the Fuegians began to pour
- in, and Jemmy's mother and brothers arrived. Jemmy recognised the
- stentorian voice of one of his brothers at a prodigious distance. The
- meeting was less interesting than that between a horse, turned out into a
- field, when he joins an old companion. There was no demonstration of
- affection; they simply stared for a short time at each other; and the
- mother immediately went to look after her canoe. We heard, however,
- through York that the mother has been inconsolable for the loss of Jemmy
- and had searched everywhere for him, thinking that he might have been left
- after having been taken in the boat. The women took much notice of and
- were very kind to Fuegia. We had already perceived that Jemmy had almost
- forgotten his own language. I should think there was scarcely another
- human being with so small a stock of language, for his English was very
- imperfect. It was laughable, but almost pitiable, to hear him speak to his
- wild brother in English, and then ask him in Spanish ("no sabe?") whether
- he did not understand him.
- </p>
- <p>
- Everything went on peaceably during the three next days whilst the gardens
- were digging and wigwams building. We estimated the number of natives at
- about one hundred and twenty. The women worked hard, whilst the men
- lounged about all day long, watching us. They asked for everything they
- saw, and stole what they could. They were delighted at our dancing and
- singing, and were particularly interested at seeing us wash in a
- neighbouring brook; they did not pay much attention to anything else, not
- even to our boats. Of all the things which York saw, during his absence
- from his country, nothing seems more to have astonished him than an
- ostrich, near Maldonado: breathless with astonishment he came running to
- Mr. Bynoe, with whom he was out walking&mdash;"Oh, Mr. Bynoe, oh, bird all
- same horse!" Much as our white skins surprised the natives, by Mr. Low's
- account a negro-cook to a sealing vessel, did so more effectually, and the
- poor fellow was so mobbed and shouted at that he would never go on shore
- again. Everything went on so quietly that some of the officers and myself
- took long walks in the surrounding hills and woods. Suddenly, however, on
- the 27th, every woman and child disappeared. We were all uneasy at this,
- as neither York nor Jemmy could make out the cause. It was thought by some
- that they had been frightened by our cleaning and firing off our muskets
- on the previous evening; by others, that it was owing to offence taken by
- an old savage, who, when told to keep further off, had coolly spit in the
- sentry's face, and had then, by gestures acted over a sleeping Fuegian,
- plainly showed, as it was said, that he should like to cut up and eat our
- man. Captain Fitz Roy, to avoid the chance of an encounter, which would
- have been fatal to so many of the Fuegians, thought it advisable for us to
- sleep at a cove a few miles distant. Matthews, with his usual quiet
- fortitude (remarkable in a man apparently possessing little energy of
- character), determined to stay with the Fuegians, who evinced no alarm for
- themselves; and so we left them to pass their first awful night.
- </p>
- <p>
- On our return in the morning (28th) we were delighted to find all quiet,
- and the men employed in their canoes spearing fish. Captain Fitz Roy
- determined to send the yawl and one whale-boat back to the ship; and to
- proceed with the two other boats, one under his own command (in which he
- most kindly allowed me to accompany him), and one under Mr. Hammond, to
- survey the western parts of the Beagle Channel, and afterwards to return
- and visit the settlement. The day to our astonishment was overpoweringly
- hot, so that our skins were scorched: with this beautiful weather, the
- view in the middle of the Beagle Channel was very remarkable. Looking
- towards either hand, no object intercepted the vanishing points of this
- long canal between the mountains. The circumstance of its being an arm of
- the sea was rendered very evident by several huge whales <a
- href="#linknote-102" name="linknoteref-102" id="linknoteref-102"><small>102</small></a>
- spouting in different directions. On one occasion I saw two of these
- monsters, probably male and female, slowly swimming one after the other,
- within less than a stone's throw of the shore, over which the beech-tree
- extended its branches. We sailed on till it was dark, and then pitched our
- tents in a quiet creek. The greatest luxury was to find for our beds a
- beach of pebbles, for they were dry and yielded to the body. Peaty soil is
- damp; rock is uneven and hard; sand gets into one's meat, when cooked and
- eaten boat-fashion; but when lying in our blanket-bags, on a good bed of
- smooth pebbles, we passed most comfortable nights.
- </p>
- <p>
- It was my watch till one o'clock. There is something very solemn in these
- scenes. At no time does the consciousness in what a remote corner of the
- world you are then standing, come so strongly before the mind. Everything
- tends to this effect; the stillness of the night is interrupted only by
- the heavy breathing of the seamen beneath the tents, and sometimes by the
- cry of a night-bird. The occasional barking of a dog, heard in the
- distance, reminds one that it is the land of the savage.
- </p>
- <p>
- January 20th.&mdash;Early in the morning we arrived at the point where the
- Beagle Channel divides into two arms; and we entered the northern one. The
- scenery here becomes even grander than before. The lofty mountains on the
- north side compose the granitic axis, or backbone of the country and
- boldly rise to a height of between three and four thousand feet, with one
- peak above six thousand feet. They are covered by a wide mantle of
- perpetual snow, and numerous cascades pour their waters, through the
- woods, into the narrow channel below. In many parts, magnificent glaciers
- extend from the mountain side to the water's edge. It is scarcely possible
- to imagine anything more beautiful than the beryl-like blue of these
- glaciers, and especially as contrasted with the dead white of the upper
- expanse of snow. The fragments which had fallen from the glacier into the
- water were floating away, and the channel with its icebergs presented, for
- the space of a mile, a miniature likeness of the Polar Sea. The boats
- being hauled on shore at our dinner-hour, we were admiring from the
- distance of half a mile a perpendicular cliff of ice, and were wishing
- that some more fragments would fall. At last, down came a mass with a
- roaring noise, and immediately we saw the smooth outline of a wave
- travelling towards us. The men ran down as quickly as they could to the
- boats; for the chance of their being dashed to pieces was evident. One of
- the seamen just caught hold of the bows, as the curling breaker reached
- it: he was knocked over and over, but not hurt, and the boats though
- thrice lifted on high and let fall again, received no damage. This was
- most fortunate for us, for we were a hundred miles distant from the ship,
- and we should have been left without provisions or fire-arms. I had
- previously observed that some large fragments of rock on the beach had
- been lately displaced; but until seeing this wave, I did not understand
- the cause. One side of the creek was formed by a spur of mica-slate; the
- head by a cliff of ice about forty feet high; and the other side by a
- promontory fifty feet high, built up of huge rounded fragments of granite
- and mica-slate, out of which old trees were growing. This promontory was
- evidently a moraine, heaped up at a period when the glacier had greater
- dimensions.
- </p>
- <p>
- When we reached the western mouth of this northern branch of the Beagle
- Channel, we sailed amongst many unknown desolate islands, and the weather
- was wretchedly bad. We met with no natives. The coast was almost
- everywhere so steep, that we had several times to pull many miles before
- we could find space enough to pitch our two tents: one night we slept on
- large round boulders, with putrefying sea-weed between them; and when the
- tide rose, we had to get up and move our blanket-bags. The farthest point
- westward which we reached was Stewart Island, a distance of about one
- hundred and fifty miles from our ship. We returned into the Beagle Channel
- by the southern arm, and thence proceeded, with no adventure, back to
- Ponsonby Sound.
- </p>
- <p>
- February 6th.&mdash;We arrived at Woollya. Matthews gave so bad an account
- of the conduct of the Fuegians, that Captain Fitz Roy determined to take
- him back to the Beagle; and ultimately he was left at New Zealand, where
- his brother was a missionary. From the time of our leaving, a regular
- system of plunder commenced; fresh parties of the natives kept arriving:
- York and Jemmy lost many things, and Matthews almost everything which had
- not been concealed underground. Every article seemed to have been torn up
- and divided by the natives. Matthews described the watch he was obliged
- always to keep as most harassing; night and day he was surrounded by the
- natives, who tried to tire him out by making an incessant noise close to
- his head. One day an old man, whom Matthews asked to leave his wigwam,
- immediately returned with a large stone in his hand: another day a whole
- party came armed with stones and stakes, and some of the younger men and
- Jemmy's brother were crying: Matthews met them with presents. Another
- party showed by signs that they wished to strip him naked and pluck all
- the hairs out of his face and body. I think we arrived just in time to
- save his life. Jemmy's relatives had been so vain and foolish, that they
- had showed to strangers their plunder, and their manner of obtaining it.
- It was quite melancholy leaving the three Fuegians with their savage
- countrymen; but it was a great comfort that they had no personal fears.
- York, being a powerful resolute man, was pretty sure to get on well,
- together with his wife Fuegia. Poor Jemmy looked rather disconsolate, and
- would then, I have little doubt, have been glad to have returned with us.
- His own brother had stolen many things from him; and as he remarked, "What
- fashion call that:" he abused his countrymen, "all bad men, no sabe (know)
- nothing" and, though I never heard him swear before, "damned fools." Our
- three Fuegians, though they had been only three years with civilized men,
- would, I am sure, have been glad to have retained their new habits; but
- this was obviously impossible. I fear it is more than doubtful, whether
- their visit will have been of any use to them.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening, with Matthews on board, we made sail back to the ship, not
- by the Beagle Channel, but by the southern coast. The boats were heavily
- laden and the sea rough, and we had a dangerous passage. By the evening of
- the 7th we were on board the Beagle after an absence of twenty days,
- during which time we had gone three hundred miles in the open boats. On
- the 11th, Captain Fitz Roy paid a visit by himself to the Fuegians and
- found them going on well; and that they had lost very few more things.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the last day of February in the succeeding year (1834) the Beagle
- anchored in a beautiful little cove at the eastern entrance of the Beagle
- Channel. Captain Fitz Roy determined on the bold, and as it proved
- successful, attempt to beat against the westerly winds by the same route,
- which we had followed in the boats to the settlement at Woollya. We did
- not see many natives until we were near Ponsonby Sound, where we were
- followed by ten or twelve canoes. The natives did not at all understand
- the reason of our tacking, and, instead of meeting us at each tack, vainly
- strove to follow us in our zigzag course. I was amused at finding what a
- difference the circumstance of being quite superior in force made, in the
- interest of beholding these savages. While in the boats I got to hate the
- very sound of their voices, so much trouble did they give us. The first
- and last word was "yammerschooner." When, entering some quiet little cove,
- we have looked round and thought to pass a quiet night, the odious word
- "yammerschooner" has shrilly sounded from some gloomy nook, and then the
- little signal-smoke has curled up to spread the news far and wide. On
- leaving some place we have said to each other, "Thank heaven, we have at
- last fairly left these wretches!" when one more faint hallo from an
- all-powerful voice, heard at a prodigious distance, would reach our ears,
- and clearly could we distinguish&mdash;"yammerschooner." But now, the more
- Fuegians the merrier; and very merry work it was. Both parties laughing,
- wondering, gaping at each other; we pitying them, for giving us good fish
- and crabs for rags, etc.; they grasping at the chance of finding people so
- foolish as to exchange such splendid ornaments for a good supper. It was
- most amusing to see the undisguised smile of satisfaction with which one
- young woman with her face painted black, tied several bits of scarlet
- cloth round her head with rushes. Her husband, who enjoyed the very
- universal privilege in this country of possessing two wives, evidently
- became jealous of all the attention paid to his young wife; and, after a
- consultation with his naked beauties, was paddled away by them.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some of the Fuegians plainly showed that they had a fair notion of barter.
- I gave one man a large nail (a most valuable present) without making any
- signs for a return; but he immediately picked out two fish, and handed
- them up on the point of his spear. If any present was designed for one
- canoe, and it fell near another, it was invariably given to the right
- owner. The Fuegian boy, whom Mr. Low had on board showed, by going into
- the most violent passion, that he quite understood the reproach of being
- called a liar, which in truth he was. We were this time, as on all former
- occasions, much surprised at the little notice, or rather none whatever,
- which was taken of many things, the use of which must have been evident to
- the natives. Simple circumstances&mdash;such as the beauty of scarlet
- cloth or blue beads, the absence of women, our care in washing ourselves,&mdash;excited
- their admiration far more than any grand or complicated object, such as
- our ship. Bougainville has well remarked concerning these people, that
- they treat the "chefs d'oeuvre de l'industrie humaine, comme ils traitent
- les loix de la nature et ses phenomenes."
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 5th of March, we anchored in a cove at Woollya, but we saw not a
- soul there. We were alarmed at this, for the natives in Ponsonby Sound
- showed by gestures, that there had been fighting; and we afterwards heard
- that the dreaded Oens men had made a descent. Soon a canoe, with a little
- flag flying, was seen approaching, with one of the men in it washing the
- paint off his face. This man was poor Jemmy,&mdash;now a thin, haggard
- savage, with long disordered hair, and naked, except a bit of blanket
- round his waist. We did not recognize him till he was close to us, for he
- was ashamed of himself, and turned his back to the ship. We had left him
- plump, fat, clean, and well-dressed;&mdash;I never saw so complete and
- grievous a change. As soon, however, as he was clothed, and the first
- flurry was over, things wore a good appearance. He dined with Captain Fitz
- Roy, and ate his dinner as tidily as formerly. He told us that he had "too
- much" (meaning enough) to eat, that he was not cold, that his relations
- were very good people, and that he did not wish to go back to England: in
- the evening we found out the cause of this great change in Jemmy's
- feelings, in the arrival of his young and nice-looking wife. With his
- usual good feeling he brought two beautiful otter-skins for two of his
- best friends, and some spear-heads and arrows made with his own hands for
- the Captain. He said he had built a canoe for himself, and he boasted that
- he could talk a little of his own language! But it is a most singular
- fact, that he appears to have taught all his tribe some English: an old
- man spontaneously announced "Jemmy Button's wife." Jemmy had lost all his
- property. He told us that York Minster had built a large canoe, and with
- his wife Fuegia, <a href="#linknote-103" name="linknoteref-103"
- id="linknoteref-103"><small>103</small></a> had several months since gone
- to his own country, and had taken farewell by an act of consummate
- villainy; he persuaded Jemmy and his mother to come with him, and then on
- the way deserted them by night, stealing every article of their property.
- </p>
- <p>
- Jemmy went to sleep on shore, and in the morning returned, and remained on
- board till the ship got under way, which frightened his wife, who
- continued crying violently till he got into his canoe. He returned loaded
- with valuable property. Every soul on board was heartily sorry to shake
- hands with him for the last time. I do not now doubt that he will be as
- happy as, perhaps happier than, if he had never left his own country.
- Every one must sincerely hope that Captain Fitz Roy's noble hope may be
- fulfilled, of being rewarded for the many generous sacrifices which he
- made for these Fuegians, by some shipwrecked sailor being protected by the
- descendants of Jemmy Button and his tribe! When Jemmy reached the shore,
- he lighted a signal fire, and the smoke curled up, bidding us a last and
- long farewell, as the ship stood on her course into the open sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- The perfect equality among the individuals composing the Fuegian tribes
- must for a long time retard their civilization. As we see those animals,
- whose instinct compels them to live in society and obey a chief, are most
- capable of improvement, so is it with the races of mankind. Whether we
- look at it as a cause or a consequence, the more civilized always have the
- most artificial governments. For instance, the inhabitants of Otaheite,
- who, when first discovered, were governed by hereditary kings, had arrived
- at a far higher grade than another branch of the same people, the New
- Zealanders,&mdash;who, although benefited by being compelled to turn their
- attention to agriculture, were republicans in the most absolute sense. In
- Tierra del Fuego, until some chief shall arise with power sufficient to
- secure any acquired advantage, such as the domesticated animals, it seems
- scarcely possible that the political state of the country can be improved.
- At present, even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds and
- distributed; and no one individual becomes richer than another. On the
- other hand, it is difficult to understand how a chief can arise till there
- is property of some sort by which he might manifest his superiority and
- increase his power.
- </p>
- <p>
- I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man exists in a lower
- state of improvement than in any other part of the world. The South Sea
- Islanders, of the two races inhabiting the Pacific, are comparatively
- civilized. The Esquimau in his subterranean hut, enjoys some of the
- comforts of life, and in his canoe, when fully equipped, manifests much
- skill. Some of the tribes of Southern Africa prowling about in search of
- roots, and living concealed on the wild and arid plains, are sufficiently
- wretched. The Australian, in the simplicity of the arts of life, comes
- nearest the Fuegian: he can, however, boast of his boomerang, his spear
- and throwing-stick, his method of climbing trees, of tracking animals, and
- of hunting. Although the Australian may be superior in acquirements, it by
- no means follows that he is likewise superior in mental capacity: indeed,
- from what I saw of the Fuegians when on board and from what I have read of
- the Australians, I should think the case was exactly the reverse.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0011" id="link2HCH0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XI &mdash; STRAIT OF MAGELLAN.&mdash;CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN
- COASTS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Strait of Magellan&mdash;Port Famine&mdash;Ascent of Mount Tarn&mdash;Forests&mdash;Edible
- Fungus&mdash;Zoology&mdash;Great Sea-weed&mdash;Leave Tierra del Fuego&mdash;Climate&mdash;Fruit-trees
- and Productions of the Southern Coasts&mdash;Height of Snow-line on the
- Cordillera&mdash;Descent of Glaciers to the Sea&mdash;Icebergs formed&mdash;Transportal
- of Boulders&mdash;Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands&mdash;Preservation
- of Frozen Carcasses&mdash;Recapitulation.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">I</span>N THE end of May,
- 1834, we entered for a second time the eastern mouth of the Strait of
- Magellan. The country on both sides of this part of the Strait consists of
- nearly level plains, like those of Patagonia. Cape Negro, a little within
- the second Narrows, may be considered as the point where the land begins
- to assume the marked features of Tierra del Fuego. On the east coast,
- south of the Strait, broken park-like scenery in a like manner connects
- these two countries, which are opposed to each other in almost every
- feature. It is truly surprising to find in a space of twenty miles such a
- change in the landscape. If we take a rather greater distance, as between
- Port Famine and Gregory Bay, that is about sixty miles, the difference is
- still more wonderful. At the former place, we have rounded mountains
- concealed by impervious forests, which are drenched with the rain, brought
- by an endless succession of gales; while at Cape Gregory, there is a clear
- and bright blue sky over the dry and sterile plains. The atmospheric
- currents, <a href="#linknote-111" name="linknoteref-111"
- id="linknoteref-111"><small>111</small></a> although rapid, turbulent, and
- unconfined by any apparent limits, yet seem to follow, like a river in its
- bed, a regularly determined course.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our previous visit (in January), we had an interview at Cape
- Gregory with the famous so-called gigantic Patagonians, who gave us a
- cordial reception. Their height appears greater than it really is, from
- their large guanaco mantles, their long flowing hair, and general figure:
- on an average, their height is about six feet, with some men taller and
- only a few shorter; and the women are also tall; altogether they are
- certainly the tallest race which we anywhere saw. In features they
- strikingly resemble the more northern Indians whom I saw with Rosas, but
- they have a wilder and more formidable appearance: their faces were much
- painted with red and black, and one man was ringed and dotted with white
- like a Fuegian. Captain Fitz Roy offered to take any three of them on
- board, and all seemed determined to be of the three. It was long before we
- could clear the boat; at last we got on board with our three giants, who
- dined with the Captain, and behaved quite like gentlemen, helping
- themselves with knives, forks, and spoons: nothing was so much relished as
- sugar. This tribe has had so much communication with sealers and whalers
- that most of the men can speak a little English and Spanish; and they are
- half civilized, and proportionally demoralized.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning a large party went on shore, to barter for skins and
- ostrich-feathers; fire-arms being refused, tobacco was in greatest
- request, far more so than axes or tools. The whole population of the
- toldos, men, women, and children, were arranged on a bank. It was an
- amusing scene, and it was impossible not to like the so-called giants,
- they were so thoroughly good-humoured and unsuspecting: they asked us to
- come again. They seem to like to have Europeans to live with them; and old
- Maria, an important woman in the tribe, once begged Mr. Low to leave any
- one of his sailors with them. They spend the greater part of the year
- here; but in summer they hunt along the foot of the Cordillera: sometimes
- they travel as far as the Rio Negro 750 miles to the north. They are well
- stocked with horses, each man having, according to Mr. Low, six or seven,
- and all the women, and even children, their one own horse. In the time of
- Sarmiento (1580), these Indians had bows and arrows, now long since
- disused; they then also possessed some horses. This is a very curious
- fact, showing the extraordinarily rapid multiplication of horses in South
- America. The horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and the
- colony being then for a time deserted, the horse ran wild; <a
- href="#linknote-112" name="linknoteref-112" id="linknoteref-112"><small>112</small></a>
- in 1580, only forty-three years afterwards, we hear of them at the Strait
- of Magellan! Mr. Low informs me, that a neighbouring tribe of foot-Indians
- is now changing into horse-Indians: the tribe at Gregory Bay giving them
- their worn-out horses, and sending in winter a few of their best skilled
- men to hunt for them.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 1st.&mdash;We anchored in the fine bay of Port Famine. It was now the
- beginning of winter, and I never saw a more cheerless prospect; the dusky
- woods, piebald with snow, could be only seen indistinctly, through a
- drizzling hazy atmosphere. We were, however, lucky in getting two fine
- days. On one of these, Mount Sarmiento, a distant mountain 6800 feet high,
- presented a very noble spectacle. I was frequently surprised in the
- scenery of Tierra del Fuego, at the little apparent elevation of mountains
- really lofty. I suspect it is owing to a cause which would not at first be
- imagined, namely, that the whole mass, from the summit to the water's
- edge, is generally in full view. I remember having seen a mountain, first
- from the Beagle Channel, where the whole sweep from the summit to the base
- was full in view, and then from Ponsonby Sound across several successive
- ridges; and it was curious to observe in the latter case, as each fresh
- ridge afforded fresh means of judging of the distance, how the mountain
- rose in height.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before reaching Port Famine, two men were seen running along the shore and
- hailing the ship. A boat was sent for them. They turned out to be two
- sailors who had run away from a sealing-vessel, and had joined the
- Patagonians. These Indians had treated them with their usual disinterested
- hospitality. They had parted company through accident, and were then
- proceeding to Port Famine in hopes of finding some ship. I dare say they
- were worthless vagabonds, but I never saw more miserable-looking ones.
- They had been living for some days on mussel-shells and berries, and their
- tattered clothes had been burnt by sleeping so near their fires. They had
- been exposed night and day, without any shelter, to the late incessant
- gales, with rain, sleet, and snow, and yet they were in good health.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our stay at Port Famine, the Fuegians twice came and plagued us. As
- there were many instruments, clothes, and men on shore, it was thought
- necessary to frighten them away. The first time a few great guns were
- fired, when they were far distant. It was most ludicrous to watch through
- a glass the Indians, as often as the shot struck the water, take up
- stones, and, as a bold defiance, throw them towards the ship, though about
- a mile and a half distant! A boat was sent with orders to fire a few
- musket-shots wide of them. The Fuegians hid themselves behind the trees,
- and for every discharge of the muskets they fired their arrows; all,
- however, fell short of the boat, and the officer as he pointed at them
- laughed. This made the Fuegians frantic with passion, and they shook their
- mantles in vain rage. At last, seeing the balls cut and strike the trees,
- they ran away, and we were left in peace and quietness. During the former
- voyage the Fuegians were here very troublesome, and to frighten them a
- rocket was fired at night over their wigwams; it answered effectually, and
- one of the officers told me that the clamour first raised, and the barking
- of the dogs, was quite ludicrous in contrast with the profound silence
- which in a minute or two afterwards prevailed. The next morning not a
- single Fuegian was in the neighbourhood.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the Beagle was here in the month of February, I started one morning
- at four o'clock to ascend Mount Tarn, which is 2600 feet high, and is the
- most elevated point in this immediate district. We went in a boat to the
- foot of the mountain (but unluckily not to the best part), and then began
- our ascent. The forest commences at the line of high-water mark, and
- during the first two hours I gave over all hopes of reaching the summit.
- So thick was the wood, that it was necessary to have constant recourse to
- the compass; for every landmark, though in a mountainous country, was
- completely shut out. In the deep ravines, the death-like scene of
- desolation exceeded all description; outside it was blowing a gale, but in
- these hollows, not even a breath of wind stirred the leaves of the tallest
- trees. So gloomy, cold, and wet was every part, that not even the fungi,
- mosses, or ferns could flourish. In the valleys it was scarcely possible
- to crawl along, they were so completely barricaded by great mouldering
- trunks, which had fallen down in every direction. When passing over these
- natural bridges, one's course was often arrested by sinking knee deep into
- the rotten wood; at other times, when attempting to lean against a firm
- tree, one was startled by finding a mass of decayed matter ready to fall
- at the slightest touch. We at last found ourselves among the stunted
- trees, and then soon reached the bare ridge, which conducted us to the
- summit. Here was a view characteristic of Tierra del Fuego; irregular
- chains of hills, mottled with patches of snow, deep yellowish-green
- valleys, and arms of the sea intersecting the land in many directions. The
- strong wind was piercingly cold, and the atmosphere rather hazy, so that
- we did not stay long on the top of the mountain. Our descent was not quite
- so laborious as our ascent, for the weight of the body forced a passage,
- and all the slips and falls were in the right direction.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have already mentioned the sombre and dull character of the evergreen
- forests, <a href="#linknote-113" name="linknoteref-113"
- id="linknoteref-113"><small>113</small></a> in which two or three species
- of trees grow, to the exclusion of all others. Above the forest land,
- there are many dwarf alpine plants, which all spring from the mass of
- peat, and help to compose it: these plants are very remarkable from their
- close alliance with the species growing on the mountains of Europe, though
- so many thousand miles distant. The central part of Tierra del Fuego,
- where the clay-slate formation occurs, is most favourable to the growth of
- trees; on the outer coast the poorer granitic soil, and a situation more
- exposed to the violent winds, do not allow of their attaining any great
- size. Near Port Famine I have seen more large trees than anywhere else: I
- measured a Winter's Bark which was four feet six inches in girth, and
- several of the beech were as much as thirteen feet. Captain King also
- mentions a beech which was seven feet in diameter, seventeen feet above
- the roots.
- </p>
- <p>
- There is one vegetable production deserving notice from its importance as
- an article of food to the Fuegians. It is a globular, bright-yellow
- fungus, which grows in vast numbers on the beech-trees. When young it is
- elastic and turgid, with
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0004" id="linkimage-0004"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="figleft" style="width:20%;">
- <img src="images/9261.jpg" alt="9261 " width="100%" /><br /><a
- href="images/9261.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </div>
- <p>
- a smooth surface; but when mature it shrinks, becomes tougher, and has its
- entire surface deeply pitted or honey-combed, as represented in the
- accompanying woodcut. This fungus belongs to a new and curious genus, <a
- href="#linknote-114" name="linknoteref-114" id="linknoteref-114"><small>114</small></a>
- I found a second species on another species of beech in Chile: and Dr.
- Hooker informs me, that just lately a third species has been discovered on
- a third species of beech in Van Diernan's Land. How singular is this
- relationship between parasitical fungi and the trees on which they grow,
- in distant parts of the world! In Tierra del Fuego the fungus in its tough
- and mature state is collected in large quantities by the women and
- children, and is eaten un-cooked. It has a mucilaginous, slightly sweet
- taste, with a faint smell like that of a mushroom. With the exception of a
- few berries, chiefly of a dwarf arbutus, the natives eat no vegetable food
- besides this fungus. In New Zealand, before the introduction of the
- potato, the roots of the fern were largely consumed; at the present time,
- I believe, Tierra del Fuego is the only country in the world where a
- cryptogamic plant affords a staple article of food.
- </p>
- <p>
- The zoology of Tierra del Fuego, as might have been expected from the
- nature of its climate and vegetation, is very poor. Of mammalia, besides
- whales and seals, there is one bat, a kind of mouse (Reithrodon
- chinchilloides), two true mice, a ctenomys allied to or identical with the
- tucutuco, two foxes (Canis Magellanicus and C. Azarae), a sea-otter, the
- guanaco, and a deer. Most of these animals inhabit only the drier eastern
- parts of the country; and the deer has never been seen south of the Strait
- of Magellan. Observing the general correspondence of the cliffs of soft
- sandstone, mud, and shingle, on the opposite sides of the Strait, and on
- some intervening islands, one is strongly tempted to believe that the land
- was once joined, and thus allowed animals so delicate and helpless as the
- tucutuco and Reithrodon to pass over. The correspondence of the cliffs is
- far from proving any junction; because such cliffs generally are formed by
- the intersection of sloping deposits, which, before the elevation of the
- land, had been accumulated near the then existing shores. It is, however,
- a remarkable coincidence, that in the two large islands cut off by the
- Beagle Channel from the rest of Tierra del Fuego, one has cliffs composed
- of matter that may be called stratified alluvium, which front similar ones
- on the opposite side of the channel,&mdash;while the other is exclusively
- bordered by old crystalline rocks: in the former, called Navarin Island,
- both foxes and guanacos occur; but in the latter, Hoste Island, although
- similar in every respect, and only separated by a channel a little more
- than half a mile wide, I have the word of Jemmy Button for saying that
- neither of these animals are found.
- </p>
- <p>
- The gloomy woods are inhabited by few birds: occasionally the plaintive
- note of a white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius albiceps) may be heard,
- concealed near the summit of the most lofty trees; and more rarely the
- loud strange cry of a black wood-pecker, with a fine scarlet crest on its
- head. A little, dusky-coloured wren (Scytalopus Magellanicus) hops in a
- skulking manner among the entangled mass of the fallen and decaying
- trunks. But the creeper (Oxyurus tupinieri) is the commonest bird in the
- country. Throughout the beech forests, high up and low down, in the most
- gloomy, wet, and impenetrable ravines, it may be met with. This little
- bird no doubt appears more numerous than it really is, from its habit of
- following with seeming curiosity any person who enters these silent woods:
- continually uttering a harsh twitter, it flutters from tree to tree,
- within a few feet of the intruder's face. It is far from wishing for the
- modest concealment of the true creeper (Certhia familiaris); nor does it,
- like that bird, run up the trunks of trees, but industriously, after the
- manner of a willow-wren, hops about, and searches for insects on every
- twig and branch. In the more open parts, three or four species of finches,
- a thrush, a starling (or Icterus), two Opetiorhynchi, and several hawks
- and owls occur.
- </p>
- <p>
- The absence of any species whatever in the whole class of Reptiles, is a
- marked feature in the zoology of this country, as well as in that of the
- Falkland Islands. I do not ground this statement merely on my own
- observation, but I heard it from the Spanish inhabitants of the latter
- place, and from Jemmy Button with regard to Tierra del Fuego. On the banks
- of the Santa Cruz, in 50 degs. south, I saw a frog; and it is not
- improbable that these animals, as well as lizards, may be found as far
- south as the Strait of Magellan, where the country retains the character
- of Patagonia; but within the damp and cold limit of Tierra del Fuego not
- one occurs. That the climate would not have suited some of the orders,
- such as lizards, might have been foreseen; but with respect to frogs, this
- was not so obvious.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beetles occur in very small numbers: it was long before I could believe
- that a country as large as Scotland, covered with vegetable productions
- and with a variety of stations, could be so unproductive. The few which I
- found were alpine species (Harpalidae and Heteromidae) living under
- stones. The vegetable-feeding Chrysomelidae, so eminently characteristic
- of the Tropics, are here almost entirely absent; <a href="#linknote-115"
- name="linknoteref-115" id="linknoteref-115"><small>115</small></a> I saw
- very few flies, butterflies, or bees, and no crickets or Orthoptera. In
- the pools of water I found but a few aquatic beetles, and not any
- fresh-water shells: Succinea at first appears an exception; but here it
- must be called a terrestrial shell, for it lives on the damp herbage far
- from the water. Land-shells could be procured only in the same alpine
- situations with the beetles. I have already contrasted the climate as well
- as the general appearance of Tierra del Fuego with that of Patagonia; and
- the difference is strongly exemplified in the entomology. I do not believe
- they have one species in common; certainly the general character of the
- insects is widely different.
- </p>
- <p>
- If we turn from the land to the sea, we shall find the latter as
- abundantly stocked with living creatures as the former is poorly so. In
- all parts of the world a rocky and partially protected shore perhaps
- supports, in a given space, a greater number of individual animals than
- any other station. There is one marine production which, from its
- importance, is worthy of a particular history. It is the kelp, or
- Macrocystis pyrifera. This plant grows on every rock from low-water mark
- to a great depth, both on the outer coast and within the channels. <a
- href="#linknote-116" name="linknoteref-116" id="linknoteref-116"><small>116</small></a>
- I believe, during the voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, not one rock
- near the surface was discovered which was not buoyed by this floating
- weed. The good service it thus affords to vessels navigating near this
- stormy land is evident; and it certainly has saved many a one from being
- wrecked. I know few things more surprising than to see this plant growing
- and flourishing amidst those great breakers of the western ocean, which no
- mass of rock, let it be ever so hard, can long resist. The stem is round,
- slimy, and smooth, and seldom has a diameter of so much as an inch. A few
- taken together are sufficiently strong to support the weight of the large
- loose stones, to which in the inland channels they grow attached; and yet
- some of these stones were so heavy that when drawn to the surface, they
- could scarcely be lifted into a boat by one person. Captain Cook, in his
- second voyage, says, that this plant at Kerguelen Land rises from a
- greater depth than twenty-four fathoms; "and as it does not grow in a
- perpendicular direction, but makes a very acute angle with the bottom, and
- much of it afterwards spreads many fathoms on the surface of the sea, I am
- well warranted to say that some of it grows to the length of sixty fathoms
- and upwards." I do not suppose the stem of any other plant attains so
- great a length as three hundred and sixty feet, as stated by Captain Cook.
- Captain Fitz Roy, moreover, found it growing <a href="#linknote-117"
- name="linknoteref-117" id="linknoteref-117"><small>117</small></a> up from
- the greater depth of forty-five fathoms. The beds of this sea-weed, even
- when of not great breadth, make excellent natural floating breakwaters. It
- is quite curious to see, in an exposed harbour, how soon the waves from
- the open sea, as they travel through the straggling stems, sink in height,
- and pass into smooth water.
- </p>
- <p>
- The number of living creatures of all Orders, whose existence intimately
- depends on the kelp, is wonderful. A great volume might be written,
- describing the inhabitants of one of these beds of sea-weed. Almost all
- the leaves, excepting those that float on the surface, are so thickly
- incrusted with corallines as to be of a white colour. We find exquisitely
- delicate structures, some inhabited by simple hydra-like polypi, others by
- more organized kinds, and beautiful compound Ascidiae. On the leaves,
- also, various patelliform shells, Trochi, uncovered molluscs, and some
- bivalves are attached. Innumerable crustacea frequent every part of the
- plant. On shaking the great entangled roots, a pile of small fish, shells,
- cuttle-fish, crabs of all orders, sea-eggs, star-fish, beautiful
- Holuthuriae, Planariae, and crawling nereidous animals of a multitude of
- forms, all fall out together. Often as I recurred to a branch of the kelp,
- I never failed to discover animals of new and curious structures. In
- Chiloe, where the kelp does not thrive very well, the numerous shells,
- corallines, and crustacea are absent; but there yet remain a few of the
- Flustraceae, and some compound Ascidiae; the latter, however, are of
- different species from those in Tierra del Fuego: we see here the fucus
- possessing a wider range than the animals which use it as an abode. I can
- only compare these great aquatic forests of the southern hemisphere with
- the terrestrial ones in the intertropical regions. Yet if in any country a
- forest was destroyed, I do not believe nearly so many species of animals
- would perish as would here, from the destruction of the kelp. Amidst the
- leaves of this plant numerous species of fish live, which nowhere else
- could find food or shelter; with their destruction the many cormorants and
- other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and porpoises, would soon perish
- also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage, the miserable lord of this miserable
- land, would redouble his cannibal feast, decrease in numbers, and perhaps
- cease to exist.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 8th.&mdash;We weighed anchor early in the morning and left Port
- Famine. Captain Fitz Roy determined to leave the Strait of Magellan by the
- Magdalen Channel, which had not long been discovered. Our course lay due
- south, down that gloomy passage which I have before alluded to as
- appearing to lead to another and worse world. The wind was fair, but the
- atmosphere was very thick; so that we missed much curious scenery. The
- dark ragged clouds were rapidly driven over the mountains, from their
- summits nearly down to their bases. The glimpses which we caught through
- the dusky mass were highly interesting; jagged points, cones of snow, blue
- glaciers, strong outlines, marked on a lurid sky, were seen at different
- distances and heights. In the midst of such scenery we anchored at Cape
- Turn, close to Mount Sarmiento, which was then hidden in the clouds. At
- the base of the lofty and almost perpendicular sides of our little cove
- there was one deserted wigwam, and it alone reminded us that man sometimes
- wandered into these desolate regions. But it would be difficult to imagine
- a scene where he seemed to have fewer claims or less authority. The
- inanimate works of nature&mdash;rock, ice, snow, wind, and water&mdash;all
- warring with each other, yet combined against man&mdash;here reigned in
- absolute sovereignty.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 9th.&mdash;In the morning we were delighted by seeing the veil of
- mist gradually rise from Sarmiento, and display it to our view. This
- mountain, which is one of the highest in Tierra del Fuego, has an altitude
- of 6800 feet. Its base, for about an eighth of its total height, is
- clothed by dusky woods, and above this a field of snow extends to the
- summit. These vast piles of snow, which never melt, and seem destined to
- last as long as the world holds together, present a noble and even sublime
- spectacle. The outline of the mountain was admirably clear and defined.
- Owing to the abundance of light reflected from the white and glittering
- surface, no shadows were cast on any part; and those lines which
- intersected the sky could alone be distinguished: hence the mass stood out
- in the boldest relief. Several glaciers descended in a winding course from
- the upper great expanse of snow to the sea-coast: they may be likened to
- great frozen Niagaras; and perhaps these cataracts of blue ice are full as
- beautiful as the moving ones of water. By night we reached the western
- part of the channel; but the water was so deep that no anchorage could be
- found. We were in consequence obliged to stand off and on in this narrow
- arm of the sea, during a pitch-dark night of fourteen hours long.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 10th.&mdash;In the morning we made the best of our way into the open
- Pacific. The western coast generally consists of low, rounded, quite
- barren hills of granite and greenstone. Sir J. Narborough called one part
- South Desolation, because it is "so desolate a land to behold:" and well
- indeed might he say so. Outside the main islands, there are numberless
- scattered rocks on which the long swell of the open ocean incessantly
- rages. We passed out between the East and West Furies; and a little
- farther northward there are so many breakers that the sea is called the
- Milky Way. One sight of such a coast is enough to make a landsman dream
- for a week about shipwrecks, peril, and death; and with this sight we bade
- farewell for ever to Tierra del Fuego.
- </p>
- <p>
- The following discussion on the climate of the southern parts of the
- continent with relation to its productions, on the snow-line, on the
- extraordinarily low descent of the glaciers, and on the zone of perpetual
- congelation in the antarctic islands, may be passed over by any one not
- interested in these curious subjects, or the final recapitulation alone
- may be read. I shall, however, here give only an abstract, and must refer
- for details to the Thirteenth Chapter and the Appendix of the former
- edition of this work.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the Climate and Productions of Tierra del Fuego and of the South-west
- Coast.&mdash;The following table gives the mean temperature of Tierra del
- Fuego, the Falkland Islands, and, for comparison, that of Dublin:&mdash;
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- Summer Winter Mean of Summer
- Latitude Temp. Temp. and Winter
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;-
- Tierra del Fuego 53 38' S. 50 33.08 41.54
- Falkland Islands 51 38' S. 51 &mdash; &mdash;
- Dublin 53 21' N. 59.54 39.2 49.37
-</pre>
- <p>
- Hence we see that the central part of Tierra del Fuego is colder in
- winter, and no less than 9.5 degs. less hot in summer, than Dublin.
- According to von Buch, the mean temperature of July (not the hottest month
- in the year) at Saltenfiord in Norway, is as high as 57.8 degs., and this
- place is actually 13 degs. nearer the pole than Port Famine! <a
- href="#linknote-118" name="linknoteref-118" id="linknoteref-118"><small>118</small></a>
- Inhospitable as this climate appears to our feelings evergreen trees
- flourish luxuriantly under it. Humming-birds may be seen sucking the
- flowers, and parrots feeding on the seeds of the Winter's Bark, in lat. 55
- degs. S. I have already remarked to what a degree the sea swarms with
- living creatures; and the shells (such as the Patellae, Fissurellae,
- Chitons, and Barnacles), according to Mr. G. B. Sowerby, are of a much
- larger size and of a more vigorous growth, than the analogous species in
- the northern hemisphere. A large Voluta is abundant in southern Tierra del
- Fuego and the Falkland Islands. At Bahia Blanca, in lat. 39 degs. S., the
- most abundant shells were three species of Oliva (one of large size), one
- or two Volutas, and a Terebra. Now, these are amongst the best
- characterized tropical forms. It is doubtful whether even one small
- species of Oliva exists on the southern shores of Europe, and there are no
- species of the two other genera. If a geologist were to find in lat 39
- degs. on the coast of Portugal a bed containing numerous shells belonging
- to three species of Oliva, to a Voluta and Terebra, he would probably
- assert that the climate at the period of their existence must have been
- tropical; but judging from South America, such an inference might be
- erroneous.
- </p>
- <p>
- The equable, humid, and windy climate of Tierra del Fuego extends, with
- only a small increase of heat, for many degrees along the west coast of
- the continent. The forests for 600 miles northward of Cape Horn, have a
- very similar aspect. As a proof of the equable climate, even for 300 or
- 400 miles still further northward, I may mention that in Chiloe
- (corresponding in latitude with the northern parts of Spain) the peach
- seldom produces fruit, whilst strawberries and apples thrive to
- perfection. Even the crops of barley and wheat <a href="#linknote-119"
- name="linknoteref-119" id="linknoteref-119"><small>119</small></a> are
- often brought into the houses to be dried and ripened. At Valdivia (in the
- same latitude of 40 degs., with Madrid) grapes and figs ripen, but are not
- common; olives seldom ripen even partially, and oranges not at all. These
- fruits, in corresponding latitudes in Europe, are well known to succeed to
- perfection; and even in this continent, at the Rio Negro, under nearly the
- same parallel with Valdivia, sweet potatoes (convolvulus) are cultivated;
- and grapes, figs, olives, oranges, water and musk melons, produce abundant
- fruit. Although the humid and equable climate of Chiloe, and of the coast
- northward and southward of it, is so unfavourable to our fruits, yet the
- native forests, from lat. 45 to 38 degs., almost rival in luxuriance those
- of the glowing intertropical regions. Stately trees of many kinds, with
- smooth and highly coloured barks, are loaded by parasitical
- monocotyledonous plants; large and elegant ferns are numerous, and
- arborescent grasses entwine the trees into one entangled mass to the
- height of thirty or forty feet above the ground. Palm-trees grow in lat 37
- degs.; an arborescent grass, very like a bamboo, in 40 degs.; and another
- closely allied kind, of great length, but not erect, flourishes even as
- far south as 45 degs. S.
- </p>
- <p>
- An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea compared with
- the land, seems to extend over the greater part of the southern
- hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the vegetation partakes of a
- semi-tropical character. Tree-ferns thrive luxuriantly in Van Diemen's
- Land (lat. 45 degs.), and I measured one trunk no less than six feet in
- circumference. An arborescent fern was found by Forster in New Zealand in
- 46 degs., where orchideous plants are parasitical on the trees. In the
- Auckland Islands, ferns, according to Dr. Dieffenbach <a
- href="#linknote-1110" name="linknoteref-1110" id="linknoteref-1110"><small>1110</small></a>
- have trunks so thick and high that they may be almost called tree-ferns;
- and in these islands, and even as far south as lat. 55 degs. in the
- Macquarrie Islands, parrots abound.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the Height of the Snow-line, and on the Descent of the Glaciers in
- South America.&mdash;For the detailed authorities for the following table,
- I must refer to the former edition:&mdash;
- </p>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- Height in feet
- Latitude of Snow-line Observer
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- Equatorial region; mean result 15,748 Humboldt. Bolivia,
- lat. 16 to 18 degs. S. 17,000 Pentland. Central Chile,
- lat. 33 degs. S. 14,500 - 15,000 Gillies, and
- the Author.
- Chiloe, lat. 41 to 43 degs. S. 6,000 Officers of the
- Beagle and the
- Author.
- Tierra del Fuego, 54 degs. S. 3,500 - 4,000 King.
-</pre>
- <p>
- As the height of the plane of perpetual snow seems chiefly to be
- determined by the extreme heat of the summer, rather than by the mean
- temperature of the year, we ought not to be surprised at its descent in
- the Strait of Magellan, where the summer is so cool, to only 3500 or 4000
- feet above the level of the sea; although in Norway, we must travel to
- between lat. 67 and 70 degs. N., that is, about 14 degs. nearer the pole,
- to meet with perpetual snow at this low level. The difference in height,
- namely, about 9000 feet, between the snow-line on the Cordillera behind
- Chiloe (with its highest points ranging from only 5600 to 7500 feet) and
- in central Chile <a href="#linknote-1111" name="linknoteref-1111"
- id="linknoteref-1111"><small>1111</small></a> (a distance of only 9 degs.
- of latitude), is truly wonderful. The land from the southward of Chiloe to
- near Concepcion (lat. 37 degs.) is hidden by one dense forest dripping
- with moisture. The sky is cloudy, and we have seen how badly the fruits of
- southern Europe succeed. In central Chile, on the other hand, a little
- northward of Concepcion, the sky is generally clear, rain does not fall
- for the seven summer months, and southern European fruits succeed
- admirably; and even the sugar-cane has been cultivated. <a
- href="#linknote-1112" name="linknoteref-1112" id="linknoteref-1112"><small>1112</small></a>
- No doubt the plane of perpetual snow undergoes the above remarkable
- flexure of 9000 feet, unparalleled in other parts of the world, not far
- from the latitude of Concepcion, where the land ceases to be covered with
- forest-trees; for trees in South America indicate a rainy climate, and
- rain a clouded sky and little heat in summer.
- </p>
- <p>
- The descent of glaciers to the sea must, I conceive, mainly depend
- (subject, of course, to a proper supply of snow in the upper region) on
- the lowness of the line of perpetual snow on steep mountains near the
- coast. As the snow-line is so low in Tierra del Fuego, we might have
- expected that many of the glaciers would have reached the sea.
- Nevertheless, I was astonished when I first saw a range, only from 3000 to
- 4000 feet in height, in the latitude of Cumberland, with every valley
- filled with streams of ice descending to the sea-coast. Almost every arm
- of the sea, which penetrates to the interior higher chain, not only in
- Tierra del Fuego, but on the coast for 650 miles northwards, is terminated
- by "tremendous and astonishing glaciers," as described by one of the
- officers on the survey. Great masses of ice frequently fall from these icy
- cliffs, and the crash reverberates like the broadside of a man-of-war
- through the lonely channels. These falls, as noticed in the last chapter,
- produce great waves which break on the adjoining coasts. It is known that
- earthquakes frequently cause masses of earth to fall from sea-cliffs: how
- terrific, then, would be the effect of a severe shock (and such occur here
- <a href="#linknote-1113" name="linknoteref-1113" id="linknoteref-1113"><small>1113</small></a>)
- on a body like a glacier, already in motion, and traversed by fissures! I
- can readily believe that the water would be fairly beaten back out of the
- deepest channel, and then, returning with an overwhelming force, would
- whirl about huge masses of rock like so much chaff. In Eyre's Sound, in
- the latitude of Paris, there are immense glaciers, and yet the loftiest
- neighbouring mountain is only 6200 feet high. In this Sound, about fifty
- icebergs were seen at one time floating outwards, and one of them must
- have been at least 168 feet in total height. Some of the icebergs were
- loaded with blocks of no inconsiderable size, of granite and other rocks,
- different from the clay-slate of the surrounding mountains. The glacier
- furthest from the pole, surveyed during the voyages of the Adventure and
- Beagle, is in lat. 46 degs. 50', in the Gulf of Penas. It is 15 miles
- long, and in one part 7 broad and descends to the sea-coast. But even a
- few miles northward of this glacier, in Laguna de San Rafael, some Spanish
- missionaries <a href="#linknote-1114" name="linknoteref-1114"
- id="linknoteref-1114"><small>1114</small></a> encountered "many icebergs,
- some great, some small, and others middle-sized," in a narrow arm of the
- sea, on the 22nd of the month corresponding with our June, and in a
- latitude corresponding with that of the Lake of Geneva!
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0005" id="linkimage-0005"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0272.jpg" alt="0272 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0272.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- In Europe, the most southern glacier which comes down to the sea is met
- with, according to Von Buch, on the coast of Norway, in lat. 67 degs. Now,
- this is more than 20 degs. of latitude, or 1230 miles, nearer the pole
- than the Laguna de San Rafael. The position of the glaciers at this place
- and in the Gulf of Penas may be put even in a more striking point of view,
- for they descend to the sea-coast within 7.5 degs. of latitude, or 450
- miles, of a harbour, where three species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a
- Terebra, are the commonest shells, within less than 9 degs. from where
- palms grow, within 4.5 degs. of a region where the jaguar and puma range
- over the plains, less than 2.5 degs. from arborescent grasses, and
- (looking to the westward in the same hemisphere) less than 2 degs. from
- orchideous parasites, and within a single degree of tree-ferns!
- </p>
- <p>
- These facts are of high geological interest with respect to the climate of
- the northern hemisphere at the period when boulders were transported. I
- will not here detail how simply the theory of icebergs being charged with
- fragments of rock, explain the origin and position of the gigantic
- boulders of eastern Tierra del Fuego, on the high plain of Santa Cruz, and
- on the island of Chiloe. In Tierra del Fuego, the greater number of
- boulders lie on the lines of old sea-channels, now converted into dry
- valleys by the elevation of the land. They are associated with a great
- unstratified formation of mud and sand, containing rounded and angular
- fragments of all sizes, which has originated <a href="#linknote-1115"
- name="linknoteref-1115" id="linknoteref-1115"><small>1115</small></a> in
- the repeated ploughing up of the sea-bottom by the stranding of icebergs,
- and by the matter transported on them. Few geologists now doubt that those
- erratic boulders which lie near lofty mountains have been pushed forward
- by the glaciers themselves, and that those distant from mountains, and
- embedded in subaqueous deposits, have been conveyed thither either on
- icebergs or frozen in coast-ice. The connection between the transportal of
- boulders and the presence of ice in some form, is strikingly shown by
- their geographical distribution over the earth. In South America they are
- not found further than 48 degs. of latitude, measured from the southern
- pole; in North America it appears that the limit of their transportal
- extends to 53.5 degs. from the northern pole; but in Europe to not more
- than 40 degs. of latitude, measured from the same point. On the other
- hand, in the intertropical parts of America, Asia, and Africa, they have
- never been observed; nor at the Cape of Good Hope, nor in Australia. <a
- href="#linknote-1116" name="linknoteref-1116" id="linknoteref-1116"><small>1116</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- On the Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands.&mdash;Considering
- the rankness of the vegetation in Tierra del Fuego, and on the coast
- northward of it, the condition of the islands south and south-west of
- America is truly surprising. Sandwich Land, in the latitude of the north
- part of Scotland, was found by Cook, during the hottest month of the year,
- "covered many fathoms thick with everlasting snow;" and there seems to be
- scarcely any vegetation. Georgia, an island 96 miles long and 10 broad, in
- the latitude of Yorkshire, "in the very height of summer, is in a manner
- wholly covered with frozen snow." It can boast only of moss, some tufts of
- grass, and wild burnet; it has only one land-bird (Anthus correndera), yet
- Iceland, which is 10 degs. nearer the pole, has, according to Mackenzie,
- fifteen land-birds. The South Shetland Islands, in the same latitude as
- the southern half of Norway, possess only some lichens, moss, and a little
- grass; and Lieut. Kendall <a href="#linknote-1117" name="linknoteref-1117"
- id="linknoteref-1117"><small>1117</small></a> found the bay, in which he
- was at anchor, beginning to freeze at a period corresponding with our 8th
- of September. The soil here consists of ice and volcanic ashes
- interstratified; and at a little depth beneath the surface it must remain
- perpetually congealed, for Lieut. Kendall found the body of a foreign
- sailor which had long been buried, with the flesh and all the features
- perfectly preserved. It is a singular fact, that on the two great
- continents in the northern hemisphere (but not in the broken land of
- Europe between them ), we have the zone of perpetually frozen under-soil
- in a low latitude&mdash;namely, in 56 degs. in North America at the depth
- of three feet, <a href="#linknote-1118" name="linknoteref-1118"
- id="linknoteref-1118"><small>1118</small></a> and in 62 degs. in Siberia
- at the depth of twelve to fifteen feet&mdash;as the result of a directly
- opposite condition of things to those of the southern hemisphere. On the
- northern continents, the winter is rendered excessively cold by the
- radiation from a large area of land into a clear sky, nor is it moderated
- by the warmth-bringing currents of the sea; the short summer, on the other
- hand, is hot. In the Southern Ocean the winter is not so excessively cold,
- but the summer is far less hot, for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun
- to warm the ocean, itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean
- temperature of the year, which regulates the zone of perpetually congealed
- under-soil, is low. It is evident that a rank vegetation, which does not
- so much require heat as it does protection from intense cold, would
- approach much nearer to this zone of perpetual congelation under the
- equable climate of the southern hemisphere, than under the extreme climate
- of the northern continents.
- </p>
- <p>
- The case of the sailor's body perfectly preserved in the icy soil of the
- South Shetland Islands (lat. 62 to 63 degs. S.), in a rather lower
- latitude than that (lat. 64 degs. N.) under which Pallas found the frozen
- rhinoceros in Siberia, is very interesting. Although it is a fallacy, as I
- have endeavoured to show in a former chapter, to suppose that the larger
- quadrupeds require a luxuriant vegetation for their support, nevertheless
- it is important to find in the South Shetland Islands a frozen under-soil
- within 360 miles of the forest-clad islands near Cape Horn, where, as far
- as the <i>bulk</i> of vegetation is concerned, any number of great
- quadrupeds might be supported. The perfect preservation of the carcasses
- of the Siberian elephants and rhinoceroses is certainly one of the most
- wonderful facts in geology; but independently of the imagined difficulty
- of supplying them with food from the adjoining countries, the whole case
- is not, I think, so perplexing as it has generally been considered. The
- plains of Siberia, like those of the Pampas, appear to have been formed
- under the sea, into which rivers brought down the bodies of many animals;
- of the greater number of these, only the skeletons have been preserved,
- but of others the perfect carcass. Now, it is known that in the shallow
- sea on the Arctic coast of America the bottom freezes, <a
- href="#linknote-1119" name="linknoteref-1119" id="linknoteref-1119"><small>1119</small></a>
- and does not thaw in spring so soon as the surface of the land, moreover
- at greater depths, where the bottom of the sea does not freeze the mud a
- few feet beneath the top layer might remain even in summer below 32 degs.,
- as in the case on the land with the soil at the depth of a few feet. At
- still greater depths, the temperature of the mud and water would probably
- not be low enough to preserve the flesh; and hence, carcasses drifted
- beyond the shallow parts near an Arctic coast, would have only their
- skeletons preserved: now in the extreme northern parts of Siberia bones
- are infinitely numerous, so that even islets are said to be almost
- composed of them; <a href="#linknote-1120" name="linknoteref-1120"
- id="linknoteref-1120"><small>1120</small></a> and those islets lie no less
- than ten degrees of latitude north of the place where Pallas found the
- frozen rhinoceros. On the other hand, a carcass washed by a flood into a
- shallow part of the Arctic Sea, would be preserved for an indefinite
- period, if it were soon afterwards covered with mud sufficiently thick to
- prevent the heat of the summer-water penetrating to it; and if, when the
- sea-bottom was upraised into land, the covering was sufficiently thick to
- prevent the heat of the summer air and sun thawing and corrupting it.
- </p>
- <p>
- Recapitulation.&mdash;I will recapitulate the principal facts with regard
- to the climate, ice-action, and organic productions of the southern
- hemisphere, transposing the places in imagination to Europe, with which we
- are so much better acquainted. Then, near Lisbon, the commonest
- sea-shells, namely, three species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra, would
- have a tropical character. In the southern provinces of France,
- magnificent forests, intwined by arborescent grasses and with the trees
- loaded with parasitical plants, would hide the face of the land. The puma
- and the jaguar would haunt the Pyrenees. In the latitude of Mont Blanc,
- but on an island as far westward as Central North America, tree-ferns and
- parasitical Orchideae would thrive amidst the thick woods. Even as far
- north as central Denmark, humming-birds would be seen fluttering about
- delicate flowers, and parrots feeding amidst the evergreen woods; and in
- the sea there, we should have a Voluta, and all the shells of large size
- and vigorous growth. Nevertheless, on some islands only 360 miles
- northward of our new Cape Horn in Denmark, a carcass buried in the soil
- (or if washed into a shallow sea, and covered up with mud) would be
- preserved perpetually frozen. If some bold navigator attempted to
- penetrate northward of these islands, he would run a thousand dangers
- amidst gigantic icebergs, on some of which he would see great blocks of
- rock borne far away from their original site. Another island of large size
- in the latitude of southern Scotland, but twice as far to the west, would
- be "almost wholly covered with everlasting snow," and would have each bay
- terminated by ice-cliffs, whence great masses would be yearly detached:
- this island would boast only of a little moss, grass, and burnet, and a
- titlark would be its only land inhabitant. From our new Cape Horn in
- Denmark, a chain of mountains, scarcely half the height of the Alps, would
- run in a straight line due southward; and on its western flank every deep
- creek of the sea, or fiord, would end in "bold and astonishing glaciers."
- These lonely channels would frequently reverberate with the falls of ice,
- and so often would great waves rush along their coasts; numerous icebergs,
- some as tall as cathedrals, and occasionally loaded with "no
- inconsiderable blocks of rock," would be stranded on the outlying islets;
- at intervals violent earthquakes would shoot prodigious masses of ice into
- the waters below. Lastly, some missionaries attempting to penetrate a long
- arm of the sea, would behold the not lofty surrounding mountains, sending
- down their many grand icy streams to the sea-coast, and their progress in
- the boats would be checked by the innumerable floating icebergs, some
- small and some great; and this would have occurred on our twenty-second of
- June, and where the Lake of Geneva is now spread out! <a
- href="#linknote-1121" name="linknoteref-1121" id="linknoteref-1121"><small>1121</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0012" id="link2HCH0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XII &mdash; CENTRAL CHILE
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Valparaiso&mdash;Excursion to the Foot of the Andes&mdash;Structure of
- the Land&mdash;Ascend the Bell of Quillota&mdash;Shattered Masses of
- Greenstone&mdash;Immense Valleys&mdash;Mines&mdash;State of Miners&mdash;Santiago&mdash;Hot-baths
- of Cauquenes&mdash;Gold-mines&mdash;Grinding-mills&mdash;Perforated Stones&mdash;Habits
- of the Puma&mdash;El Turco and Tapacolo&mdash;Humming-birds.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ULY 23rd.&mdash;The
- Beagle anchored late at night in the bay of Valparaiso, the chief seaport
- of Chile. When morning came, everything appeared delightful. After Tierra
- del Fuego, the climate felt quite delicious&mdash;the atmosphere so dry,
- and the heavens so clear and blue with the sun shining brightly, that all
- nature seemed sparkling with life. The view from the anchorage is very
- pretty. The town is built at the very foot of a range of hills, about 1600
- feet high, and rather steep. From its position, it consists of one long,
- straggling street, which runs parallel to the beach, and wherever a ravine
- comes down, the houses are piled up on each side of it. The rounded hills,
- being only partially protected by a very scanty vegetation, are worn into
- numberless little gullies, which expose a singularly bright red soil. From
- this cause, and from the low whitewashed houses with tile roofs, the view
- reminded me of St. Cruz in Teneriffe. In a north-westerly direction there
- are some fine glimpses of the Andes: but these mountains appear much
- grander when viewed from the neighbouring hills: the great distance at
- which they are situated can then more readily be perceived. The volcano of
- Aconcagua is particularly magnificent. This huge and irregularly conical
- mass has an elevation greater than that of Chimborazo; for, from
- measurements made by the officers in the Beagle, its height is no less
- than 23,000 feet. The Cordillera, however, viewed from this point, owe the
- greater part of their beauty to the atmosphere through which they are
- seen. When the sun was setting in the Pacific, it was admirable to watch
- how clearly their rugged outlines could be distinguished, yet how varied
- and how delicate were the shades of their colour.
- </p>
- <p>
- I had the good fortune to find living here Mr. Richard Corfield, an old
- schoolfellow and friend, to whose hospitality and kindness I was greatly
- indebted, in having afforded me a most pleasant residence during the
- Beagle's stay in Chile. The immediate neighbourhood of Valparaiso is not
- very productive to the naturalist. During the long summer the wind blows
- steadily from the southward, and a little off shore, so that rain never
- falls; during the three winter months, however, it is sufficiently
- abundant. The vegetation in consequence is very scanty: except in some
- deep valleys, there are no trees, and only a little grass and a few low
- bushes are scattered over the less steep parts of the hills. When we
- reflect, that at the distance of 350 miles to the south, this side of the
- Andes is completely hidden by one impenetrable forest, the contrast is
- very remarkable. I took several long walks while collecting objects of
- natural history. The country is pleasant for exercise. There are many very
- beautiful flowers; and, as in most other dry climates, the plants and
- shrubs possess strong and peculiar odours&mdash;even one's clothes by
- brushing through them became scented. I did not cease from wonder at
- finding each succeeding day as fine as the foregoing. What a difference
- does climate make in the enjoyment of life! How opposite are the
- sensations when viewing black mountains half enveloped in clouds, and
- seeing another range through the light blue haze of a fine day! The one
- for a time may be very sublime; the other is all gaiety and happy life.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 14th.&mdash;I set out on a riding excursion, for the purpose of
- geologizing the basal parts of the Andes, which alone at this time of the
- year are not shut up by the winter snow. Our first day's ride was
- northward along the sea-coast. After dark we reached the Hacienda of
- Quintero, the estate which formerly belonged to Lord Cochrane. My object
- in coming here was to see the great beds of shells, which stand some yards
- above the level of the sea, and are burnt for lime. The proofs of the
- elevation of this whole line of coast are unequivocal: at the height of a
- few hundred feet old-looking shells are numerous, and I found some at 1300
- feet. These shells either lie loose on the surface, or are embedded in a
- reddish-black vegetable mould. I was much surprised to find under the
- microscope that this vegetable mould is really marine mud, full of minute
- particles of organic bodies.
- </p>
- <p>
- 15th.&mdash;We returned towards the valley of Quillota. The country was
- exceedingly pleasant; just such as poets would call pastoral: green open
- lawns, separated by small valleys with rivulets, and the cottages, we may
- suppose of the shepherds scattered on the hill-sides. We were obliged to
- cross the ridge of the Chilicauquen. At its base there were many fine
- evergreen forest-trees, but these flourished only in the ravines, where
- there was running water. Any person who had seen only the country near
- Valparaiso, would never have imagined that there had been such picturesque
- spots in Chile. As soon as we reached the brow of the Sierra, the valley
- of Quillota was immediately under our feet. The prospect was one of
- remarkable artificial luxuriance. The valley is very broad and quite flat,
- and is thus easily irrigated in all parts. The little square gardens are
- crowded with orange and olive trees, and every sort of vegetable. On each
- side huge bare mountains rise, and this from the contrast renders the
- patchwork valley the more pleasing. Whoever called "Valparaiso" the
- "Valley of Paradise," must have been thinking of Quillota. We crossed over
- to the Hacienda de San Isidro, situated at the very foot of the Bell
- Mountain.
- </p>
- <p>
- Chile, as may be seen in the maps, is a narrow strip of land between the
- Cordillera and the Pacific; and this strip is itself traversed by several
- mountain-lines, which in this part run parallel to the great range.
- Between these outer lines and the main Cordillera, a succession of level
- basins, generally opening into each other by narrow passages, extend far
- to the southward: in these, the principal towns are situated, as San
- Felipe, Santiago, San Fernando. These basins or plains, together with the
- transverse flat valleys (like that of Quillota) which connect them with
- the coast, I have no doubt are the bottoms of ancient inlets and deep
- bays, such as at the present day intersect every part of Tierra del Fuego
- and the western coast. Chile must formerly have resembled the latter
- country in the configuration of its land and water. The resemblance was
- occasionally shown strikingly when a level fog-bank covered, as with a
- mantle, all the lower parts of the country: the white vapour curling into
- the ravines, beautifully represented little coves and bays; and here and
- there a solitary hillock peeping up, showed that it had formerly stood
- there as an islet. The contrast of these flat valleys and basins with the
- irregular mountains, gave the scenery a character which to me was new and
- very interesting.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the natural slope to seaward of these plains, they are very easily
- irrigated, and in consequence singularly fertile. Without this process the
- land would produce scarcely anything, for during the whole summer the sky
- is cloudless. The mountains and hills are dotted over with bushes and low
- trees, and excepting these the vegetation is very scanty. Each landowner
- in the valley possesses a certain portion of hill-country, where his
- half-wild cattle, in considerable numbers, manage to find sufficient
- pasture. Once every year there is a grand "rodeo," when all the cattle are
- driven down, counted, and marked, and a certain number separated to be
- fattened in the irrigated fields. Wheat is extensively cultivated, and a
- good deal of Indian corn: a kind of bean is, however, the staple article
- of food for the common labourers. The orchards produce an overflowing
- abundance of peaches figs, and grapes. With all these advantages, the
- inhabitants of the country ought to be much more prosperous than they are.
- </p>
- <p>
- 16th.&mdash;The mayor-domo of the Hacienda was good enough to give me a
- guide and fresh horses; and in the morning we set out to ascend the
- Campana, or Bell Mountain, which is 6400 feet high. The paths were very
- bad, but both the geology and scenery amply repaid the trouble. We reached
- by the evening, a spring called the Agua del Guanaco, which is situated at
- a great height. This must be an old name, for it is very many years since
- a guanaco drank its waters. During the ascent I noticed that nothing but
- bushes grew on the northern slope, whilst on the southern slope there was
- a bamboo about fifteen feet high. In a few places there were palms, and I
- was surprised to see one at an elevation of at least 4500 feet. These
- palms are, for their family, ugly trees. Their stem is very large, and of
- a curious form, being thicker in the middle than at the base or top. They
- are excessively numerous in some parts of Chile, and valuable on account
- of a sort of treacle made from the sap. On one estate near Petorca they
- tried to count them, but failed, after having numbered several hundred
- thousand. Every year in the early spring, in August, very many are cut
- down, and when the trunk is lying on the ground, the crown of leaves is
- lopped off. The sap then immediately begins to flow from the upper end,
- and continues so doing for some months: it is, however, necessary that a
- thin slice should be shaved off from that end every morning, so as to
- expose a fresh surface. A good tree will give ninety gallons, and all this
- must have been contained in the vessels of the apparently dry trunk. It is
- said that the sap flows much more quickly on those days when the sun is
- powerful; and likewise, that it is absolutely necessary to take care, in
- cutting down the tree, that it should fall with its head upwards on the
- side of the hill; for if it falls down the slope, scarcely any sap will
- flow; although in that case one would have thought that the action would
- have been aided, instead of checked, by the force of gravity. The sap is
- concentrated by boiling, and is then called treacle, which it very much
- resembles in taste.
- </p>
- <p>
- We unsaddled our horses near the spring, and prepared to pass the night.
- The evening was fine, and the atmosphere so clear, that the masts of the
- vessels at anchor in the bay of Valparaiso, although no less than
- twenty-six geographical miles distant, could be distinguished clearly as
- little black streaks. A ship doubling the point under sail, appeared as a
- bright white speck. Anson expresses much surprise, in his voyage, at the
- distance at which his vessels were discovered from the coast; but he did
- not sufficiently allow for the height of the land, and the great
- transparency of the air.
- </p>
- <p>
- The setting of the sun was glorious; the valleys being black whilst the
- snowy peaks of the Andes yet retained a ruby tint. When it was dark, we
- made a fire beneath a little arbour of bamboos, fried our charqui (or
- dried slips of beef), took our mate, and were quite comfortable. There is
- an inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air. The evening was
- calm and still;&mdash;the shrill noise of the mountain bizcacha, and the
- faint cry of a goatsucker, were occasionally to be heard. Besides these,
- few birds, or even insects, frequent these dry, parched mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 17th.&mdash;In the morning we climbed up the rough mass of
- greenstone which crowns the summit. This rock, as frequently happens, was
- much shattered and broken into huge angular fragments. I observed,
- however, one remarkable circumstance, namely, that many of the surfaces
- presented every degree of freshness some appearing as if broken the day
- before, whilst on others lichens had either just become, or had long
- grown, attached. I so fully believed that this was owing to the frequent
- earthquakes, that I felt inclined to hurry from below each loose pile. As
- one might very easily be deceived in a fact of this kind, I doubted its
- accuracy, until ascending Mount Wellington, in Van Diemen's Land, where
- earthquakes do not occur; and there I saw the summit of the mountain
- similarly composed and similarly shattered, but all the blocks appeared as
- if they had been hurled into their present position thousands of years
- ago.
- </p>
- <p>
- We spent the day on the summit, and I never enjoyed one more thoroughly.
- Chile, bounded by the Andes and the Pacific, was seen as in a map. The
- pleasure from the scenery, in itself beautiful, was heightened by the many
- reflections which arose from the mere view of the Campana range with its
- lesser parallel ones, and of the broad valley of Quillota directly
- intersecting them. Who can avoid wondering at the force which has upheaved
- these mountains, and even more so at the countless ages which it must have
- required to have broken through, removed, and levelled whole masses of
- them? It is well in this case to call to mind the vast shingle and
- sedimentary beds of Patagonia, which, if heaped on the Cordillera, would
- increase its height by so many thousand feet. When in that country, I
- wondered how any mountain-chain could have supplied such masses, and not
- have been utterly obliterated. We must not now reverse the wonder, and
- doubt whether all-powerful time can grind down mountains&mdash;even the
- gigantic Cordillera&mdash;into-gravel and mud.
- </p>
- <p>
- The appearance of the Andes was different from that which I had expected.
- The lower line of the snow was of course horizontal, and to this line the
- even summits of the range seemed quite parallel. Only at long intervals, a
- group of points or a single cone showed where a volcano had existed, or
- does now exist. Hence the range resembled a great solid wall, surmounted
- here and there by a tower, and making a most perfect barrier to the
- country.
- </p>
- <p>
- Almost every part of the hill had been drilled by attempts to open
- gold-mines: the rage for mining has left scarcely a spot in Chile
- unexamined. I spent the evening as before, talking round the fire with my
- two companions. The Guasos of Chile, who correspond to the Gauchos of the
- Pampas, are, however, a very different set of beings. Chile is the more
- civilized of the two countries, and the inhabitants, in consequence, have
- lost much individual character. Gradations in rank are much more strongly
- marked: the Guaso does not by any means consider every man his equal; and
- I was quite surprised to find that my companions did not like to eat at
- the same time with myself. This feeling of inequality is a necessary
- consequence of the existence of an aristocracy of wealth. It is said that
- some few of the greater landowners possess from five to ten thousand
- pounds sterling per annum: an inequality of riches which I believe is not
- met with in any of the cattle-breeding countries eastward of the Andes. A
- traveller does not here meet that unbounded hospitality which refuses all
- payment, but yet is so kindly offered that no scruples can be raised in
- accepting it. Almost every house in Chile will receive you for the night,
- but a trifle is expected to be given in the morning; even a rich man will
- accept two or three shillings. The Gaucho, although he may be a cutthroat,
- is a gentleman; the Guaso is in few respects better, but at the same time
- a vulgar, ordinary fellow. The two men, although employed much in the same
- manner, are different in their habits and attire; and the peculiarities of
- each are universal in their respective countries. The Gaucho seems part of
- his horse, and scorns to exert himself except when on his back: the Guaso
- may be hired to work as a labourer in the fields. The former lives
- entirely on animal food; the latter almost wholly on vegetable. We do not
- here see the white boots, the broad drawers and scarlet chilipa; the
- picturesque costume of the Pampas. Here, common trousers are protected by
- black and green worsted leggings. The poncho, however, is common to both.
- The chief pride of the Guaso lies in his spurs, which are absurdly large.
- I measured one which was six inches in the <i>diameter</i> of the rowel,
- and the rowel itself contained upwards of thirty points. The stirrups are
- on the same scale, each consisting of a square, carved block of wood,
- hollowed out, yet weighing three or four pounds. The Guaso is perhaps more
- expert with the lazo than the Gaucho; but, from the nature of the country,
- he does not know the use of the bolas.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 18th.&mdash;We descended the mountain, and passed some beautiful
- little spots, with rivulets and fine trees. Having slept at the same
- hacienda as before, we rode during the two succeeding days up the valley,
- and passed through Quillota, which is more like a collection of
- nursery-gardens than a town. The orchards were beautiful, presenting one
- mass of peach-blossoms. I saw, also, in one or two places the date-palm;
- it is a most stately tree; and I should think a group of them in their
- native Asiatic or African deserts must be superb. We passed likewise San
- Felipe, a pretty straggling town like Quillota. The valley in this part
- expands into one of those great bays or plains, reaching to the foot of
- the Cordillera, which have been mentioned as forming so curious a part of
- the scenery of Chile. In the evening we reached the mines of Jajuel,
- situated in a ravine at the flank of the great chain. I stayed here five
- days. My host the superintendent of the mine, was a shrewd but rather
- ignorant Cornish miner. He had married a Spanish woman, and did not mean
- to return home; but his admiration for the mines of Cornwall remained
- unbounded. Amongst many other questions, he asked me, "Now that George Rex
- is dead, how many more of the family of Rexes are yet alive?" This Rex
- certainly must be a relation of the great author Finis, who wrote all
- books!
- </p>
- <p>
- These mines are of copper, and the ore is all shipped to Swansea, to be
- smelted. Hence the mines have an aspect singularly quiet, as compared to
- those in England: here no smoke, furnaces, or great steam-engines, disturb
- the solitude of the surrounding mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Chilian government, or rather the old Spanish law, encourages by every
- method the searching for mines. The discoverer may work a mine on any
- ground, by paying five shillings; and before paying this he may try, even
- in the garden of another man, for twenty days.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is now well known that the Chilian method of mining is the cheapest. My
- host says that the two principal improvements introduced by foreigners
- have been, first, reducing by previous roasting the copper pyrites&mdash;which,
- being the common ore in Cornwall, the English miners were astounded on
- their arrival to find thrown away as useless: secondly, stamping and
- washing the scoriae from the old furnaces&mdash;by which process particles
- of metal are recovered in abundance. I have actually seen mules carrying
- to the coast, for transportation to England, a cargo of such cinders. But
- the first case is much the most curious. The Chilian miners were so
- convinced that copper pyrites contained not a particle of copper, that
- they laughed at the Englishmen for their ignorance, who laughed in turn,
- and bought their richest veins for a few dollars. It is very odd that, in
- a country where mining had been extensively carried on for many years, so
- simple a process as gently roasting the ore to expel the sulphur previous
- to smelting it, had never been discovered. A few improvements have
- likewise been introduced in some of the simple machinery; but even to the
- present day, water is removed from some mines by men carrying it up the
- shaft in leathern bags!
- </p>
- <p>
- The labouring men work very hard. They have little time allowed for their
- meals, and during summer and winter they begin when it is light, and leave
- off at dark. They are paid one pound sterling a month, and their food is
- given them: this for breakfast consists of sixteen figs and two small
- loaves of bread; for dinner, boiled beans; for supper, broken roasted
- wheat grain. They scarcely ever taste meat; as, with the twelve pounds per
- annum, they have to clothe themselves, and support their families. The
- miners who work in the mine itself have twenty-five shillings per month,
- and are allowed a little charqui. But these men come down from their bleak
- habitations only once in every fortnight or three weeks.
- </p>
- <p>
- During my stay here I thoroughly enjoyed scrambling about these huge
- mountains. The geology, as might have been expected, was very interesting.
- The shattered and baked rocks, traversed by innumerable dykes of
- greenstone, showed what commotions had formerly taken place. The scenery
- was much the same as that near the Bell of Quillota&mdash;dry barren
- mountains, dotted at intervals by bushes with a scanty foliage. The
- cactuses, or rather opuntias were here very numerous. I measured one of a
- spherical figure, which, including the spines, was six feet and four
- inches in circumference. The height of the common cylindrical, branching
- kind, is from twelve to fifteen feet, and the girth (with spines) of the
- branches between three and four feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- A heavy fall of snow on the mountains prevented me during the last two
- days, from making some interesting excursions. I attempted to reach a lake
- which the inhabitants, from some unaccountable reason, believe to be an
- arm of the sea. During a very dry season, it was proposed to attempt
- cutting a channel from it for the sake of the water, but the padre, after
- a consultation, declared it was too dangerous, as all Chile would be
- inundated, if, as generally supposed, the lake was connected with the
- Pacific. We ascended to a great height, but becoming involved in the
- snow-drifts failed in reaching this wonderful lake, and had some
- difficulty in returning. I thought we should have lost our horses; for
- there was no means of guessing how deep the drifts were, and the animals,
- when led, could only move by jumping. The black sky showed that a fresh
- snow-storm was gathering, and we therefore were not a little glad when we
- escaped. By the time we reached the base the storm commenced, and it was
- lucky for us that this did not happen three hours earlier in the day.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 26th.&mdash;We left Jajuel and again crossed the basin of San
- Felipe. The day was truly Chilian: glaringly bright, and the atmosphere
- quite clear. The thick and uniform covering of newly fallen snow rendered
- the view of the volcano of Aconcagua and the main chain quite glorious. We
- were now on the road to Santiago, the capital of Chile. We crossed the
- Cerro del Talguen, and slept at a little rancho. The host, talking about
- the state of Chile as compared to other countries, was very humble: "Some
- see with two eyes, and some with one, but for my part I do not think that
- Chile sees with any."
- </p>
- <p>
- August 27th.&mdash;After crossing many low hills we descended into the
- small land-locked plain of Guitron. In the basins, such as this one, which
- are elevated from one thousand to two thousand feet above the sea, two
- species of acacia, which are stunted in their forms, and stand wide apart
- from each other, grow in large numbers. These trees are never found near
- the sea-coast; and this gives another characteristic feature to the
- scenery of these basins. We crossed a low ridge which separates Guitron
- from the great plain on which Santiago stands. The view was here
- pre-eminently striking: the dead level surface, covered in parts by woods
- of acacia, and with the city in the distance, abutting horizontally
- against the base of the Andes, whose snowy peaks were bright with the
- evening sun. At the first glance of this view, it was quite evident that
- the plain represented the extent of a former inland sea. As soon as we
- gained the level road we pushed our horses into a gallop, and reached the
- city before it was dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- I stayed a week in Santiago, and enjoyed myself very much. In the morning
- I rode to various places on the plain, and in the evening dined with
- several of the English merchants, whose hospitality at this place is well
- known. A never-failing source of pleasure was to ascend the little hillock
- of rock (St. Lucia) which projects in the middle of the city. The scenery
- certainly is most striking, and, as I have said, very peculiar. I am
- informed that this same character is common to the cities on the great
- Mexican platform. Of the town I have nothing to say in detail: it is not
- so fine or so large as Buenos Ayres, but is built after the same model. I
- arrived here by a circuit to the north; so I resolved to return to
- Valparaiso by a rather longer excursion to the south of the direct road.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 5th.&mdash;By the middle of the day we arrived at one of the
- suspension bridges, made of hide, which cross the Maypu, a large turbulent
- river a few leagues southward of Santiago. These bridges are very poor
- affairs. The road, following the curvature of the suspending ropes, is
- made of bundles of sticks placed close together. It was full of holes, and
- oscillated rather fearfully, even with the weight of a man leading his
- horse. In the evening we reached a comfortable farm-house, where there
- were several very pretty senoritas. They were much horrified at my having
- entered one of their churches out of mere curiosity. They asked me, "Why
- do you not become a Christian&mdash;for our religion is certain?" I
- assured them I was a sort of Christian; but they would not hear of it&mdash;appealing
- to my own words, "Do not your padres, your very bishops, marry?" The
- absurdity of a bishop having a wife particularly struck them: they
- scarcely knew whether to be most amused or horror-struck at such an
- enormity.
- </p>
- <p>
- 6th.&mdash;We proceeded due south, and slept at Rancagua. The road passed
- over the level but narrow plain, bounded on one side by lofty hills, and
- on the other by the Cordillera. The next day we turned up the valley of
- the Rio Cachapual, in which the hot-baths of Cauquenes, long celebrated
- for their medicinal properties, are situated. The suspension bridges, in
- the less frequented parts, are generally taken down during the winter when
- the rivers are low. Such was the case in this valley, and we were
- therefore obliged to cross the stream on horseback. This is rather
- disagreeable, for the foaming water, though not deep, rushes so quickly
- over the bed of large rounded stones, that one's head becomes quite
- confused, and it is difficult even to perceive whether the horse is moving
- onward or standing still. In summer, when the snow melts, the torrents are
- quite impassable; their strength and fury are then extremely great, as
- might be plainly seen by the marks which they had left. We reached the
- baths in the evening, and stayed there five days, being confined the two
- last by heavy rain. The buildings consist of a square of miserable little
- hovels, each with a single table and bench. They are situated in a narrow
- deep valley just without the central Cordillera. It is a quiet, solitary
- spot, with a good deal of wild beauty.
- </p>
- <p>
- The mineral springs of Cauquenes burst forth on a line of dislocation,
- crossing a mass of stratified rock, the whole of which betrays the action
- of heat. A considerable quantity of gas is continually escaping from the
- same orifices with the water. Though the springs are only a few yards
- apart, they have very different temperature; and this appears to be the
- result of an unequal mixture of cold water: for those with the lowest
- temperature have scarcely any mineral taste. After the great earthquake of
- 1822 the springs ceased, and the water did not return for nearly a year.
- They were also much affected by the earthquake of 1835; the temperature
- being suddenly changed from 118 to 92 degs. <a href="#linknote-121"
- name="linknoteref-121" id="linknoteref-121"><small>121</small></a> It
- seems probable that mineral waters rising deep from the bowels of the
- earth, would always be more deranged by subterranean disturbances than
- those nearer the surface. The man who had charge of the baths assured me
- that in summer the water is hotter and more plentiful than in winter. The
- former circumstance I should have expected, from the less mixture, during
- the dry season, of cold water; but the latter statement appears very
- strange and contradictory. The periodical increase during the summer, when
- rain never falls, can, I think, only be accounted for by the melting of
- the snow: yet the mountains which are covered by snow during that season,
- are three or four leagues distant from the springs. I have no reason to
- doubt the accuracy of my informer, who, having lived on the spot for
- several years, ought to be well acquainted with the circumstance,&mdash;which,
- if true, certainly is very curious: for we must suppose that the
- snow-water, being conducted through porous strata to the regions of heat,
- is again thrown up to the surface by the line of dislocated and injected
- rocks at Cauquenes; and the regularity of the phenomenon would seem to
- indicate that in this district heated rock occurred at a depth not very
- great.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day I rode up the valley to the farthest inhabited spot. Shortly above
- that point, the Cachapual divides into two deep tremendous ravines, which
- penetrate directly into the great range. I scrambled up a peaked mountain,
- probably more than six thousand feet high. Here, as indeed everywhere
- else, scenes of the highest interest presented themselves. It was by one
- of these ravines, that Pincheira entered Chile and ravaged the
- neighbouring country. This is the same man whose attack on an estancia at
- the Rio Negro I have described. He was a renegade half-caste Spaniard, who
- collected a great body of Indians together and established himself by a
- stream in the Pampas, which place none of the forces sent after him could
- ever discover. From this point he used to sally forth, and crossing the
- Cordillera by passes hitherto unattempted, he ravaged the farm-houses and
- drove the cattle to his secret rendezvous. Pincheira was a capital
- horseman, and he made all around him equally good, for he invariably shot
- any one who hesitated to follow him. It was against this man, and other
- wandering Indian tribes, that Rosas waged the war of extermination.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 13th.&mdash;We left the baths of Cauquenes, and, rejoining the
- main road, slept at the Rio Clara. From this place we rode to the town of
- San Fernando. Before arriving there, the last land-locked basin had
- expanded into a great plain, which extended so far to the south, that the
- snowy summits of the more distant Andes were seen as if above the horizon
- of the sea. San Fernando is forty leagues from Santiago; and it was my
- farthest point southward; for we here turned at right angles towards the
- coast. We slept at the gold-mines of Yaquil, which are worked by Mr.
- Nixon, an American gentleman, to whose kindness I was much indebted during
- the four days I stayed at his house. The next morning we rode to the
- mines, which are situated at the distance of some leagues, near the summit
- of a lofty hill. On the way we had a glimpse of the lake Tagua-tagua,
- celebrated for its floating islands, which have been described by M. Gay.
- <a href="#linknote-122" name="linknoteref-122" id="linknoteref-122"><small>122</small></a>
- They are composed of the stalks of various dead plants intertwined
- together, and on the surface of which other living ones take root. Their
- form is generally circular, and their thickness from four to six feet, of
- which the greater part is immersed in the water. As the wind blows, they
- pass from one side of the lake to the other, and often carry cattle and
- horses as passengers.
- </p>
- <p>
- When we arrived at the mine, I was struck by the pale appearance of many
- of the men, and inquired from Mr. Nixon respecting their condition. The
- mine is 450 feet deep, and each man brings up about 200 pounds weight of
- stone. With this load they have to climb up the alternate notches cut in
- the trunks of trees, placed in a zigzag line up the shaft. Even beardless
- young men, eighteen and twenty years old, with little muscular development
- of their bodies (they are quite naked excepting drawers) ascend with this
- great load from nearly the same depth. A strong man, who is not accustomed
- to this labour, perspires most profusely, with merely carrying up his own
- body. With this very severe labour, they live entirely on boiled beans and
- bread. They would prefer having bread alone; but their masters, finding
- that they cannot work so hard upon this, treat them like horses, and make
- them eat the beans. Their pay is here rather more than at the mines of
- Jajuel, being from 24 to 28 shillings per month. They leave the mine only
- once in three weeks; when they stay with their families for two days. One
- of the rules of this mine sounds very harsh, but answers pretty well for
- the master. The only method of stealing gold is to secrete pieces of the
- ore, and take them out as occasion may offer. Whenever the major-domo
- finds a lump thus hidden, its full value is stopped out of the wages of
- all the men; who thus, without they all combine, are obliged to keep watch
- over each other.
- </p>
- <p>
- When the ore is brought to the mill, it is ground into an impalpable
- powder; the process of washing removes all the lighter particles, and
- amalgamation finally secures the gold-dust. The washing, when described,
- sounds a very simple process; but it is beautiful to see how the exact
- adaptation of the current of water to the specific gravity of the gold, so
- easily separates the powdered matrix from the metal. The mud which passes
- from the mills is collected into pools, where it subsides, and every now
- and then is cleared out, and thrown into a common heap. A great deal of
- chemical action then commences, salts of various kinds effloresce on the
- surface, and the mass becomes hard. After having been left for a year or
- two, and then rewashed, it yields gold; and this process may be repeated
- even six or seven times; but the gold each time becomes less in quantity,
- and the intervals required (as the inhabitants say, to generate the metal)
- are longer. There can be no doubt that the chemical action, already
- mentioned, each time liberates fresh gold from some combination. The
- discovery of a method to effect this before the first grinding would
- without doubt raise the value of gold-ores many fold.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is curious to find how the minute particles of gold, being scattered
- about and not corroding, at last accumulate in some quantity. A short time
- since a few miners, being out of work, obtained permission to scrape the
- ground round the house and mills; they washed the earth thus got together,
- and so procured thirty dollars' worth of gold. This is an exact
- counterpart of what takes place in nature. Mountains suffer degradation
- and wear away, and with them the metallic veins which they contain. The
- hardest rock is worn into impalpable mud, the ordinary metals oxidate, and
- both are removed; but gold, platina, and a few others are nearly
- indestructible, and from their weight, sinking to the bottom, are left
- behind. After whole mountains have passed through this grinding mill, and
- have been washed by the hand of nature, the residue becomes metalliferous,
- and man finds it worth his while to complete the task of separation.
- </p>
- <p>
- Bad as the above treatment of the miners appears, it is gladly accepted of
- by them; for the condition of the labouring agriculturists is much worse.
- Their wages are lower, and they live almost exclusively on beans. This
- poverty must be chiefly owing to the feudal-like system on which the land
- is tilled: the landowner gives a small plot of ground to the labourer for
- building on and cultivating, and in return has his services (or those of a
- proxy) for every day of his life, without any wages. Until a father has a
- grown-up son, who can by his labour pay the rent, there is no one, except
- on occasional days, to take care of his own patch of ground. Hence extreme
- poverty is very common among the labouring classes in this country.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are some old Indian ruins in this neighbourhood, and I was shown one
- of the perforated stones, which Molina mentions as being found in many
- places in considerable numbers. They are of a circular flattened form,
- from five to six inches in diameter, with a hole passing quite through the
- centre. It has generally been supposed that they were used as heads to
- clubs, although their form does not appear at all well adapted for that
- purpose. Burchell <a href="#linknote-123" name="linknoteref-123"
- id="linknoteref-123"><small>123</small></a> states that some of the tribes
- in Southern Africa dig up roots by the aid of a stick pointed at one end,
- the force and weight of which are increased by a round stone with a hole
- in it, into which the other end is firmly wedged. It appears probable that
- the Indians of Chile formerly used some such rude agricultural instrument.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day, a German collector in natural history, of the name of Renous,
- called, and nearly at the same time an old Spanish lawyer. I was amused at
- being told the conversation which took place between them. Renous speaks
- Spanish so well, that the old lawyer mistook him for a Chilian. Renous
- alluding to me, asked him what he thought of the King of England sending
- out a collector to their country, to pick up lizards and beetles, and to
- break stones? The old gentleman thought seriously for some time, and then
- said, "It is not well,&mdash;<i>hay un gato encerrado aqui</i> (there is a
- cat shut up here). No man is so rich as to send out people to pick up such
- rubbish. I do not like it: if one of us were to go and do such things in
- England, do not you think the King of England would very soon send us out
- of his country?" And this old gentleman, from his profession, belongs to
- the better informed and more intelligent classes! Renous himself, two or
- three years before, left in a house at San Fernando some caterpillars,
- under charge of a girl to feed, that they might turn into butterflies.
- This was rumoured through the town, and at last the padres and governor
- consulted together, and agreed it must be some heresy. Accordingly, when
- Renous returned, he was arrested.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 19th.&mdash;We left Yaquil, and followed the flat valley, formed
- like that of Quillota, in which the Rio Tinderidica flows. Even at these
- few miles south of Santiago the climate is much damper; in consequence
- there are fine tracts of pasturage, which are not irrigated. (20th.) We
- followed this valley till it expanded into a great plain, which reaches
- from the sea to the mountains west of Rancagua. We shortly lost all trees
- and even bushes; so that the inhabitants are nearly as badly off for
- firewood as those in the Pampas. Never having heard of these plains, I was
- much surprised at meeting with such scenery in Chile. The plains belong to
- more than one series of different elevations, and they are traversed by
- broad flat-bottomed valleys; both of which circumstances, as in Patagonia,
- bespeak the action of the sea on gently rising land. In the steep cliffs
- bordering these valleys, there are some large caves, which no doubt were
- originally formed by the waves: one of these is celebrated under the name
- of Cueva del Obispo; having formerly been consecrated. During the day I
- felt very unwell, and from that time till the end of October did not
- recover.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 22nd.&mdash;We continued to pass over green plains without a
- tree. The next day we arrived at a house near Navedad, on the sea-coast,
- where a rich Haciendero gave us lodgings. I stayed here the two ensuing
- days, and although very unwell, managed to collect from the tertiary
- formation some marine shells.
- </p>
- <p>
- 24th.&mdash;Our course was now directed towards Valparaiso, which with
- great difficulty I reached on the 27th, and was there confined to my bed
- till the end of October. During this time I was an inmate in Mr.
- Corfield's house, whose kindness to me I do not know how to express.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will here add a few observations on some of the animals and birds of
- Chile. The Puma, or South American Lion, is not uncommon. This animal has
- a wide geographical range; being found from the equatorial forests,
- throughout the deserts of Patagonia as far south as the damp and cold
- latitudes (53 to 54 degs.) of Tierra del Fuego. I have seen its footsteps
- in the Cordillera of central Chile, at an elevation of at least 10,000
- feet. In La Plata the puma preys chiefly on deer, ostriches, bizcacha, and
- other small quadrupeds; it there seldom attacks cattle or horses, and most
- rarely man. In Chile, however, it destroys many young horses and cattle,
- owing probably to the scarcity of other quadrupeds: I heard, likewise, of
- two men and a woman who had been thus killed. It is asserted that the puma
- always kills its prey by springing on the shoulders, and then drawing back
- the head with one of its paws, until the vertebrae break: I have seen in
- Patagonia the skeletons of guanacos, with their necks thus dislocated.
- </p>
- <p>
- The puma, after eating its fill, covers the carcass with many large
- bushes, and lies down to watch it. This habit is often the cause of its
- being discovered; for the condors wheeling in the air every now and then
- descend to partake of the feast, and being angrily driven away, rise all
- together on the wing. The Chileno Guaso then knows there is a lion
- watching his prey&mdash;the word is given&mdash;and men and dogs hurry to
- the chase. Sir F. Head says that a Gaucho in the pampas, upon merely
- seeing some condors wheeling in the air, cried "A lion!" I could never
- myself meet with any one who pretended to such powers of discrimination.
- It is asserted that, if a puma has once been betrayed by thus watching the
- carcass, and has then been hunted, it never resumes this habit; but that,
- having gorged itself, it wanders far away. The puma is easily killed. In
- an open country, it is first entangled with the bolas, then lazoed, and
- dragged along the ground till rendered insensible. At Tandeel (south of
- the plata), I was told that within three months one hundred were thus
- destroyed. In Chile they are generally driven up bushes or trees, and are
- then either shot, or baited to death by dogs. The dogs employed in this
- chase belong to a particular breed, called Leoneros: they are weak, slight
- animals, like long-legged terriers, but are born with a particular
- instinct for this sport. The puma is described as being very crafty: when
- pursued, it often returns on its former track, and then suddenly making a
- spring on one side, waits there till the dogs have passed by. It is a very
- silent animal, uttering no cry even when wounded, and only rarely during
- the breeding season.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of birds, two species of the genus Pteroptochos (megapodius and albicollis
- of Kittlitz) are perhaps the most conspicuous. The former, called by the
- Chilenos "el Turco," is as large as a fieldfare, to which bird it has some
- alliance; but its legs are much longer, tail shorter, and beak stronger:
- its colour is a reddish brown. The Turco is not uncommon. It lives on the
- ground, sheltered among the thickets which are scattered over the dry and
- sterile hills. With its tail erect, and stilt-like legs, it may be seen
- every now and then popping from one bush to another with uncommon
- quickness. It really requires little imagination to believe that the bird
- is ashamed of itself, and is aware of its most ridiculous figure. On first
- seeing it, one is tempted to exclaim, "A vilely stuffed specimen has
- escaped from some museum, and has come to life again!" It cannot be made
- to take flight without the greatest trouble, nor does it run, but only
- hops. The various loud cries which it utters when concealed amongst the
- bushes, are as strange as its appearance. It is said to build its nest in
- a deep hole beneath the ground. I dissected several specimens: the
- gizzard, which was very muscular, contained beetles, vegetable fibres, and
- pebbles. From this character, from the length of its legs, scratching
- feet, membranous covering to the nostrils, short and arched wings, this
- bird seems in a certain degree to connect the thrushes with the
- gallinaceous order.
- </p>
- <p>
- The second species (or P. albicollis) is allied to the first in its
- general form. It is called Tapacolo, or "cover your posterior;" and well
- does the shameless little bird deserve its name; for it carries its tail
- more than erect, that is, inclined backwards towards its head. It is very
- common, and frequents the bottoms of hedge-rows, and the bushes scattered
- over the barren hills, where scarcely another bird can exist. In its
- general manner of feeding, of quickly hopping out of the thickets and back
- again, in its desire of concealment, unwillingness to take flight, and
- nidification, it bears a close resemblance to the Turco; but its
- appearance is not quite so ridiculous. The Tapacolo is very crafty: when
- frightened by any person, it will remain motionless at the bottom of a
- bush, and will then, after a little while, try with much address to crawl
- away on the opposite side. It is also an active bird, and continually
- making a noise: these noises are various and strangely odd; some are like
- the cooing of doves, others like the bubbling of water, and many defy all
- similes. The country people say it changes its cry five times in the year&mdash;according
- to some change of season, I suppose. <a href="#linknote-124"
- name="linknoteref-124" id="linknoteref-124"><small>124</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- Two species of humming-birds are common; Trochilus forficatus is found
- over a space of 2500 miles on the west coast, from the hot dry country of
- Lima, to the forests of Tierra del Fuego&mdash;where it may be seen
- flitting about in snow-storms. In the wooded island of Chiloe, which has
- an extremely humid climate, this little bird, skipping from side to side
- amidst the dripping foliage, is perhaps more abundant than almost any
- other kind. I opened the stomachs of several specimens, shot in different
- parts of the continent, and in all, remains of insects were as numerous as
- in the stomach of a creeper. When this species migrates in the summer
- southward, it is replaced by the arrival of another species coming from
- the north. This second kind (Trochilus gigas) is a very large bird for the
- delicate family to which it belongs: when on the wing its appearance is
- singular. Like others of the genus, it moves from place to place with a
- rapidity which may be compared to that of Syrphus amongst flies, and
- Sphinx among moths; but whilst hovering over a flower, it flaps its wings
- with a very slow and powerful movement, totally different from that
- vibratory one common to most of the species, which produces the humming
- noise. I never saw any other bird where the force of its wings appeared
- (as in a butterfly) so powerful in proportion to the weight of its body.
- When hovering by a flower, its tail is constantly expanded and shut like a
- fan, the body being kept in a nearly vertical position. This action
- appears to steady and support the bird, between the slow movements of its
- wings. Although flying from flower to flower in search of food, its
- stomach generally contained abundant remains of insects, which I suspect
- are much more the object of its search than honey. The note of this
- species, like that of nearly the whole family, is extremely shrill.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0013" id="link2HCH0013"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIII &mdash; CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Chiloe&mdash;General Aspect&mdash;Boat Excursion&mdash;Native Indians&mdash;Castro&mdash;Tame
- Fox&mdash;Ascend San Pedro&mdash;Chonos Archipelago&mdash;Peninsula of
- Tres Montes&mdash;Granitic Range&mdash;Boat-wrecked Sailors&mdash;Low's
- Harbour&mdash;Wild Potato&mdash;Formation of Peat&mdash;Myopotamus, Otter
- and Mice&mdash;Cheucau and Barking-bird&mdash;Opetiorhynchus&mdash;Singular
- Character of Ornithology&mdash;Petrels.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">N</span>OVEMBER 10th.&mdash;The
- Beagle sailed from Valparaiso to the south, for the purpose of surveying
- the southern part of Chile, the island of Chiloe, and the broken land
- called the Chonos Archipelago, as far south as the Peninsula of Tres
- Montes. On the 21st we anchored in the bay of S. Carlos, the capital of
- Chiloe.
- </p>
- <p>
- This island is about ninety miles long, with a breadth of rather less than
- thirty. The land is hilly, but not mountainous, and is covered by one
- great forest, except where a few green patches have been cleared round the
- thatched cottages. From a distance the view somewhat resembles that of
- Tierra del Fuego; but the woods, when seen nearer, are incomparably more
- beautiful. Many kinds of fine evergreen trees, and plants with a tropical
- character, here take the place of the gloomy beech of the southern shores.
- In winter the climate is detestable, and in summer it is only a little
- better. I should think there are few parts of the world, within the
- temperate regions, where so much rain falls. The winds are very
- boisterous, and the sky almost always clouded: to have a week of fine
- weather is something wonderful. It is even difficult to get a single
- glimpse of the Cordillera: during our first visit, once only the volcano
- of Osorno stood out in bold relief, and that was before sunrise; it was
- curious to watch, as the sun rose, the outline gradually fading away in
- the glare of the eastern sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhabitants, from their complexion and low stature; appear to have
- three-fourths of Indian blood in their veins. They are an humble, quiet,
- industrious set of men. Although the fertile soil, resulting from the
- decomposition of the volcanic rocks, supports a rank vegetation, yet the
- climate is not favourable to any production which requires much sunshine
- to ripen it. There is very little pasture for the larger quadrupeds; and
- in consequence, the staple articles of food are pigs, potatoes, and fish.
- The people all dress in strong woollen garments, which each family makes
- for itself, and dyes with indigo of a dark blue colour. The arts, however,
- are in the rudest state;&mdash;as may be seen in their strange fashion of
- ploughing, their method of spinning, grinding corn, and in the
- construction of their boats. The forests are so impenetrable, that the
- land is nowhere cultivated except near the coast and on the adjoining
- islets. Even where paths exist, they are scarcely passable from the soft
- and swampy state of the soil. The inhabitants, like those of Tierra del
- Fuego, move about chiefly on the beach or in boats. Although with plenty
- to eat, the people are very poor: there is no demand for labour, and
- consequently the lower orders cannot scrape together money sufficient to
- purchase even the smallest luxuries. There is also a great deficiency of a
- circulating medium. I have seen a man bringing on his back a bag of
- charcoal, with which to buy some trifle, and another carrying a plank to
- exchange for a bottle of wine. Hence every tradesman must also be a
- merchant, and again sell the goods which he takes in exchange.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 24th.&mdash;The yawl and whale-boat were sent under the command
- of Mr. (now Captain) Sulivan, to survey the eastern or inland coast of
- Chiloe; and with orders to meet the Beagle at the southern extremity of
- the island; to which point she would proceed by the outside, so as thus to
- circumnavigate the whole. I accompanied this expedition, but instead of
- going in the boats the first day, I hired horses to take me to Chacao, at
- the northern extremity of the island. The road followed the coast; every
- now and then crossing promontories covered by fine forests. In these
- shaded paths it is absolutely necessary that the whole road should be made
- of logs of wood, which are squared and placed by the side of each other.
- From the rays of the sun never penetrating the evergreen foliage, the
- ground is so damp and soft, that except by this means neither man nor
- horse would be able to pass along. I arrived at the village of Chacao
- shortly after the tents belonging to the boats were pitched for the night.
- </p>
- <p>
- The land in this neighbourhood has been extensively cleared, and there
- were many quiet and most picturesque nooks in the forest. Chacao was
- formerly the principal port in the island; but many vessels having been
- lost, owing to the dangerous currents and rocks in the straits, the
- Spanish government burnt the church, and thus arbitrarily compelled the
- greater number of inhabitants to migrate to S. Carlos. We had not long
- bivouacked, before the barefooted son of the governor came down to
- reconnoitre us. Seeing the English flag hoisted at the yawl's mast-head,
- he asked with the utmost indifference, whether it was always to fly at
- Chacao. In several places the inhabitants were much astonished at the
- appearance of men-of-war's boats, and hoped and believed it was the
- forerunner of a Spanish fleet, coming to recover the island from the
- patriot government of Chile. All the men in power, however, had been
- informed of our intended visit, and were exceedingly civil. While we were
- eating our supper, the governor paid us a visit. He had been a
- lieutenant-colonel in the Spanish service, but now was miserably poor. He
- gave us two sheep, and accepted in return two cotton handkerchiefs, some
- brass trinkets, and a little tobacco.
- </p>
- <p>
- 25th.&mdash;Torrents of rain: we managed, however, to run down the coast
- as far as Huapi-lenou. The whole of this eastern side of Chiloe has one
- aspect; it is a plain, broken by valleys and divided into little islands,
- and the whole thickly covered with one impervious blackish-green forest.
- On the margins there are some cleared spaces, surrounding the high-roofed
- cottages.
- </p>
- <p>
- 26th&mdash;The day rose splendidly clear. The volcano of Orsono was
- spouting out volumes of smoke. This most beautiful mountain, formed like a
- perfect cone, and white with snow, stands out in front of the Cordillera.
- Another great volcano, with a saddle-shaped summit, also emitted from its
- immense crater little jets of steam. Subsequently we saw the lofty-peaked
- Corcovado&mdash;well deserving the name of "el famoso Corcovado." Thus we
- beheld, from one point of view, three great active volcanoes, each about
- seven thousand feet high. In addition to this, far to the south, there
- were other lofty cones covered with snow, which, although not known to be
- active, must be in their origin volcanic. The line of the Andes is not, in
- this neighbourhood, nearly so elevated as in Chile; neither does it appear
- to form so perfect a barrier between the regions of the earth. This great
- range, although running in a straight north and south line, owing to an
- optical deception, always appeared more or less curved; for the lines
- drawn from each peak to the beholder's eye, necessarily converged like the
- radii of a semicircle, and as it was not possible (owing to the clearness
- of the atmosphere and the absence of all intermediate objects) to judge
- how far distant the farthest peaks were off, they appeared to stand in a
- flattish semicircle.
- </p>
- <p>
- Landing at midday, we saw a family of pure Indian extraction. The father
- was singularly like York Minster; and some of the younger boys, with their
- ruddy complexions, might have been mistaken for Pampas Indians. Everything
- I have seen, convinces me of the close connexion of the different American
- tribes, who nevertheless speak distinct languages. This party could muster
- but little Spanish, and talked to each other in their own tongue. It is a
- pleasant thing to see the aborigines advanced to the same degree of
- civilization, however low that may be, which their white conquerors have
- attained. More to the south we saw many pure Indians: indeed, all the
- inhabitants of some of the islets retain their Indian surnames. In the
- census of 1832, there were in Chiloe and its dependencies forty-two
- thousand souls; the greater number of these appear to be of mixed blood.
- Eleven thousand retain their Indian surnames, but it is probable that not
- nearly all of these are of a pure breed. Their manner of life is the same
- with that of the other poor inhabitants, and they are all Christians; but
- it is said that they yet retain some strange superstitious ceremonies, and
- that they pretend to hold communication with the devil in certain caves.
- Formerly, every one convicted of this offence was sent to the Inquisition
- at Lima. Many of the inhabitants who are not included in the eleven
- thousand with Indian surnames, cannot be distinguished by their appearance
- from Indians. Gomez, the governor of Lemuy, is descended from noblemen of
- Spain on both sides; but by constant intermarriages with the natives the
- present man is an Indian. On the other hand the governor of Quinchao
- boasts much of his purely kept Spanish blood.
- </p>
- <p>
- We reached at night a beautiful little cove, north of the island of
- Caucahue. The people here complained of want of land. This is partly owing
- to their own negligence in not clearing the woods, and partly to
- restrictions by the government, which makes it necessary, before buying
- ever so small a piece, to pay two shillings to the surveyor for measuring
- each quadra (150 yards square), together with whatever price he fixes for
- the value of the land. After his valuation the land must be put up three
- times to auction, and if no one bids more, the purchaser can have it at
- that rate. All these exactions must be a serious check to clearing the
- ground, where the inhabitants are so extremely poor. In most countries,
- forests are removed without much difficulty by the aid of fire; but in
- Chiloe, from the damp nature of the climate, and the sort of trees, it is
- necessary first to cut them down. This is a heavy drawback to the
- prosperity of Chiloe. In the time of the Spaniards the Indians could not
- hold land; and a family, after having cleared a piece of ground, might be
- driven away, and the property seized by the government. The Chilian
- authorities are now performing an act of justice by making retribution to
- these poor Indians, giving to each man, according to his grade of life, a
- certain portion of land. The value of uncleared ground is very little. The
- government gave Mr. Douglas (the present surveyor, who informed me of
- these circumstances) eight and a half square miles of forest near S.
- Carlos, in lieu of a debt; and this he sold for 350 dollars, or about 70
- pounds sterling.
- </p>
- <p>
- The two succeeding days were fine, and at night we reached the island of
- Quinchao. This neighbourhood is the most cultivated part of the
- Archipelago; for a broad strip of land on the coast of the main island, as
- well as on many of the smaller adjoining ones, is almost completely
- cleared. Some of the farm-houses seemed very comfortable. I was curious to
- ascertain how rich any of these people might be, but Mr. Douglas says that
- no one can be considered as possessing a regular income. One of the
- richest landowners might possibly accumulate, in a long industrious life,
- as much as 1000 pounds sterling; but should this happen, it would all be
- stowed away in some secret corner, for it is the custom of almost every
- family to have a jar or treasure-chest buried in the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 30th.&mdash;Early on Sunday morning we reached Castro, the
- ancient capital of Chiloe, but now a most forlorn and deserted place. The
- usual quadrangular arrangement of Spanish towns could be traced, but the
- streets and plaza were coated with fine green turf, on which sheep were
- browsing. The church, which stands in the middle, is entirely built of
- plank, and has a picturesque and venerable appearance. The poverty of the
- place may be conceived from the fact, that although containing some
- hundreds of inhabitants, one of our party was unable anywhere to purchase
- either a pound of sugar or an ordinary knife. No individual possessed
- either a watch or a clock; and an old man, who was supposed to have a good
- idea of time, was employed to strike the church bell by guess. The arrival
- of our boats was a rare event in this quiet retired corner of the world;
- and nearly all the inhabitants came down to the beach to see us pitch our
- tents. They were very civil, and offered us a house; and one man even sent
- us a cask of cider as a present. In the afternoon we paid our respects to
- the governor&mdash;a quiet old man, who, in his appearance and manner of
- life, was scarcely superior to an English cottager. At night heavy rain
- set in, which was hardly sufficient to drive away from our tents the large
- circle of lookers-on. An Indian family, who had come to trade in a canoe
- from Caylen, bivouacked near us. They had no shelter during the rain. In
- the morning I asked a young Indian, who was wet to the skin, how he had
- passed the night. He seemed perfectly content, and answered, "Muy bien,
- senor."
- </p>
- <p>
- December 1st.&mdash;We steered for the island of Lemuy. I was anxious to
- examine a reported coal-mine which turned out to be lignite of little
- value, in the sandstone (probably of an ancient tertiary epoch) of which
- these islands are composed. When we reached Lemuy we had much difficulty
- in finding any place to pitch our tents, for it was spring-tide, and the
- land was wooded down to the water's edge. In a short time we were
- surrounded by a large group of the nearly pure Indian inhabitants. They
- were much surprised at our arrival, and said one to the other, "This is
- the reason we have seen so many parrots lately; the cheucau (an odd
- red-breasted little bird, which inhabits the thick forest, and utters very
- peculiar noises) has not cried 'beware' for nothing." They were soon
- anxious for barter. Money was scarcely worth anything, but their eagerness
- for tobacco was something quite extraordinary. After tobacco, indigo came
- next in value; then capsicum, old clothes, and gunpowder. The latter
- article was required for a very innocent purpose: each parish has a public
- musket, and the gunpowder was wanted for making a noise on their saint or
- feast days.
- </p>
- <p>
- The people here live chiefly on shell-fish and potatoes. At certain
- seasons they catch also, in "corrales," or hedges under water, many fish
- which are left on the mud-banks as the tide falls. They occasionally
- possess fowls, sheep, goats, pigs, horses, and cattle; the order in which
- they are here mentioned, expressing their respective numbers. I never saw
- anything more obliging and humble than the manners of these people. They
- generally began with stating that they were poor natives of the place, and
- not Spaniards and that they were in sad want of tobacco and other
- comforts. At Caylen, the most southern island, the sailors bought with a
- stick of tobacco, of the value of three-halfpence, two fowls, one of
- which, the Indian stated, had skin between its toes, and turned out to be
- a fine duck; and with some cotton handkerchiefs, worth three shillings,
- three sheep and a large bunch of onions were procured. The yawl at this
- place was anchored some way from the shore, and we had fears for her
- safety from robbers during the night. Our pilot, Mr. Douglas, accordingly
- told the constable of the district that we always placed sentinels with
- loaded arms and not understanding Spanish, if we saw any person in the
- dark, we should assuredly shoot him. The constable, with much humility,
- agreed to the perfect propriety of this arrangement, and promised us that
- no one should stir out of his house during that night.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the four succeeding days we continued sailing southward. The
- general features of the country remained the same, but it was much less
- thickly inhabited. On the large island of Tanqui there was scarcely one
- cleared spot, the trees on every side extending their branches over the
- sea-beach. I one day noticed, growing on the sandstone cliffs, some very
- fine plants of the panke (Gunnera scabra), which somewhat resembles the
- rhubarb on a gigantic scale. The inhabitants eat the stalks, which are
- subacid, and tan leather with the roots, and prepare a black dye from
- them. The leaf is nearly circular, but deeply indented on its margin. I
- measured one which was nearly eight feet in diameter, and therefore no
- less than twenty-four in circumference! The stalk is rather more than a
- yard high, and each plant sends out four or five of these enormous leaves,
- presenting together a very noble appearance.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 6th.&mdash;We reached Caylen, called "el fin del Cristiandad." In
- the morning we stopped for a few minutes at a house on the northern end of
- Laylec, which was the extreme point of South American Christendom, and a
- miserable hovel it was. The latitude is 43 degs. 10', which is two degrees
- farther south than the Rio Negro on the Atlantic coast. These extreme
- Christians were very poor, and, under the plea of their situation, begged
- for some tobacco. As a proof of the poverty of these Indians, I may
- mention that shortly before this, we had met a man, who had travelled
- three days and a half on foot, and had as many to return, for the sake of
- recovering the value of a small axe and a few fish. How very difficult it
- must be to buy the smallest article, when such trouble is taken to recover
- so small a debt.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we reached the island of San Pedro, where we found the
- Beagle at anchor. In doubling the point, two of the officers landed to
- take a round of angles with the theodolite. A fox (Canis fulvipes), of a
- kind said to be peculiar to the island, and very rare in it, and which is
- a new species, was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently absorbed in
- watching the work of the officers, that I was able, by quietly walking up
- behind, to knock him on the head with my geological hammer. This fox, more
- curious or more scientific, but less wise, than the generality of his
- brethren, is now mounted in the museum of the Zoological Society.
- </p>
- <p>
- We stayed three days in this harbour, on one of which Captain Fitz Roy,
- with a party, attempted to ascend to the summit of San Pedro. The woods
- here had rather a different appearance from those on the northern part of
- the island. The rock, also, being micaceous slate, there was no beach, but
- the steep sides dipped directly beneath the water. The general aspect in
- consequence was more like that of Tierra del Fuego than of Chiloe. In vain
- we tried to gain the summit: the forest was so impenetrable, that no one
- who has not beheld it can imagine so entangled a mass of dying and dead
- trunks. I am sure that often, for more than ten minutes together, our feet
- never touched the ground, and we were frequently ten or fifteen feet above
- it, so that the seamen as a joke called out the soundings. At other times
- we crept one after another on our hands and knees, under the rotten
- trunks. In the lower part of the mountain, noble trees of the Winter's
- Bark, and a laurel like the sassafras with fragrant leaves, and others,
- the names of which I do not know, were matted together by a trailing
- bamboo or cane. Here we were more like fishes struggling in a net than any
- other animal. On the higher parts, brushwood takes the place of larger
- trees, with here and there a red cedar or an alerce pine. I was also
- pleased to see, at an elevation of a little less than 1000 feet, our old
- friend the southern beech. They were, however, poor stunted trees, and I
- should think that this must be nearly their northern limit. We ultimately
- gave up the attempt in despair.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 10th.&mdash;The yawl and whale-boat, with Mr. Sulivan, proceeded
- on their survey, but I remained on board the Beagle, which the next day
- left San Pedro for the southward. On the 13th we ran into an opening in
- the southern part of Guayatecas, or the Chonos Archipelago; and it was
- fortunate we did so, for on the following day a storm, worthy of Tierra
- del Fuego, raged with great fury. White massive clouds were piled up
- against a dark blue sky, and across them black ragged sheets of vapour
- were rapidly driven. The successive mountain ranges appeared like dim
- shadows, and the setting sun cast on the woodland a yellow gleam, much
- like that produced by the flame of spirits of wine. The water was white
- with the flying spray, and the wind lulled and roared again through the
- rigging: it was an ominous, sublime scene. During a few minutes there was
- a bright rainbow, and it was curious to observe the effect of the spray,
- which being carried along the surface of the water, changed the ordinary
- semicircle into a circle&mdash;a band of prismatic colours being
- continued, from both feet of the common arch across the bay, close to the
- vessel's side: thus forming a distorted, but very nearly entire ring.
- </p>
- <p>
- We stayed here three days. The weather continued bad: but this did not
- much signify, for the surface of the land in all these islands is all but
- impassable. The coast is so very rugged that to attempt to walk in that
- direction requires continued scrambling up and down over the sharp rocks
- of mica-slate; and as for the woods, our faces, hands, and shin-bones all
- bore witness to the maltreatment we received, in merely attempting to
- penetrate their forbidden recesses.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 18th.&mdash;We stood out to sea. On the 20th we bade farewell to
- the south, and with a fair wind turned the ship's head northward. From
- Cape Tres Montes we sailed pleasantly along the lofty weather-beaten
- coast, which is remarkable for the bold outline of its hills, and the
- thick covering of forest even on the almost precipitous flanks. The next
- day a harbour was discovered, which on this dangerous coast might be of
- great service to a distressed vessel. It can easily be recognized by a
- hill 1600 feet high, which is even more perfectly conical than the famous
- sugar-loaf at Rio de Janeiro. The next day, after anchoring, I succeeded
- in reaching the summit of this hill. It was a laborious undertaking, for
- the sides were so steep that in some parts it was necessary to use the
- trees as ladders. There were also several extensive brakes of the Fuchsia,
- covered with its beautiful drooping flowers, but very difficult to crawl
- through. In these wild countries it gives much delight to gain the summit
- of any mountain. There is an indefinite expectation of seeing something
- very strange, which, however often it may be balked, never failed with me
- to recur on each successive attempt. Every one must know the feeling of
- triumph and pride which a grand view from a height communicates to the
- mind. In these little frequented countries there is also joined to it some
- vanity, that you perhaps are the first man who ever stood on this pinnacle
- or admired this view.
- </p>
- <p>
- A strong desire is always felt to ascertain whether any human being has
- previously visited an unfrequented spot. A bit of wood with a nail in it,
- is picked up and studied as if it were covered with hieroglyphics.
- Possessed with this feeling, I was much interested by finding, on a wild
- part of the coast, a bed made of grass beneath a ledge of rock. Close by
- it there had been a fire, and the man had used an axe. The fire, bed, and
- situation showed the dexterity of an Indian; but he could scarcely have
- been an Indian, for the race is in this part extinct, owing to the
- Catholic desire of making at one blow Christians and Slaves. I had at the
- time some misgivings that the solitary man who had made his bed on this
- wild spot, must have been some poor shipwrecked sailor, who, in trying to
- travel up the coast, had here laid himself down for his dreary night.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 28th.&mdash;The weather continued very bad, but it at last
- permitted us to proceed with the survey. The time hung heavy on our hands,
- as it always did when we were delayed from day to day by successive gales
- of wind. In the evening another harbour was discovered, where we anchored.
- Directly afterwards a man was seen waving a shirt, and a boat was sent
- which brought back two seamen. A party of six had run away from an
- American whaling vessel, and had landed a little to the southward in a
- boat, which was shortly afterwards knocked to pieces by the surf. They had
- now been wandering up and down the coast for fifteen months, without
- knowing which way to go, or where they were. What a singular piece of good
- fortune it was that this harbour was now discovered! Had it not been for
- this one chance, they might have wandered till they had grown old men, and
- at last have perished on this wild coast. Their sufferings had been very
- great, and one of their party had lost his life by falling from the
- cliffs. They were sometimes obliged to separate in search of food, and
- this explained the bed of the solitary man. Considering what they had
- undergone, I think they had kept a very good reckoning of time, for they
- had lost only four days.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 30th.&mdash;We anchored in a snug little cove at the foot of some
- high hills, near the northern extremity of Tres Montes. After breakfast
- the next morning, a party ascended one of these mountains, which was 2400
- feet high. The scenery was remarkable The chief part of the range was
- composed of grand, solid, abrupt masses of granite, which appeared as if
- they had been coeval with the beginning of the world. The granite was
- capped with mica-slate, and this in the lapse of ages had been worn into
- strange finger-shaped points. These two formations, thus differing in
- their outlines, agree in being almost destitute of vegetation. This
- barrenness had to our eyes a strange appearance, from having been so long
- accustomed to the sight of an almost universal forest of dark-green trees.
- I took much delight in examining the structure of these mountains. The
- complicated and lofty ranges bore a noble aspect of durability&mdash;equally
- profitless, however, to man and to all other animals. Granite to the
- geologist is classic ground: from its widespread limits, and its beautiful
- and compact texture, few rocks have been more anciently recognised.
- Granite has given rise, perhaps, to more discussion concerning its origin
- than any other formation. We generally see it constituting the fundamental
- rock, and, however formed, we know it is the deepest layer in the crust of
- this globe to which man has penetrated. The limit of man's knowledge in
- any subject possesses a high interest, which is perhaps increased by its
- close neighbourhood to the realms of imagination.
- </p>
- <p>
- January 1st 1835.&mdash;The new year is ushered in with the ceremonies
- proper to it in these regions. She lays out no false hopes: a heavy
- north-western gale, with steady rain, bespeaks the rising year. Thank God,
- we are not destined here to see the end of it, but hope then to be in the
- Pacific Ocean, where a blue sky tells one there is a heaven,&mdash;a
- something beyond the clouds above our heads.
- </p>
- <p>
- The north-west winds prevailing for the next four days, we only managed to
- cross a great bay, and then anchored in another secure harbour. I
- accompanied the Captain in a boat to the head of a deep creek. On the way
- the number of seals which we saw was quite astonishing: every bit of flat
- rock, and parts of the beach, were covered with them. There appeared to be
- of a loving disposition, and lay huddled together, fast asleep, like so
- many pigs; but even pigs would have been ashamed of their dirt, and of the
- foul smell which came from them. Each herd was watched by the patient but
- inauspicious eyes of the turkey-buzzard. This disgusting bird, with its
- bald scarlet head, formed to wallow in putridity, is very common on the
- west coast, and their attendance on the seals shows on what they rely for
- their food. We found the water (probably only that of the surface) nearly
- fresh: this was caused by the number of torrents which, in the form of
- cascades, came tumbling over the bold granite mountains into the sea. The
- fresh water attracts the fish, and these bring many terns, gulls, and two
- kinds of cormorant. We saw also a pair of the beautiful black-necked
- swans, and several small sea-otters, the fur of which is held in such high
- estimation. In returning, we were again amused by the impetuous manner in
- which the heap of seals, old and young, tumbled into the water as the boat
- passed. They did not remain long under water, but rising, followed us with
- outstretched necks, expressing great wonder and curiosity.
- </p>
- <p>
- 7th.&mdash;Having run up the coast, we anchored near the northern end of
- the Chonos Archipelago, in Low's Harbour, where we remained a week. The
- islands were here, as in Chiloe, composed of a stratified, soft, littoral
- deposit; and the vegetation in consequence was beautifully luxuriant. The
- woods came down to the sea-beach, just in the manner of an evergreen
- shrubbery over a gravel walk. We also enjoyed from the anchorage a
- splendid view of four great snowy cones of the Cordillera, including "el
- famoso Corcovado;" the range itself had in this latitude so little height,
- that few parts of it appeared above the tops of the neighbouring islets.
- We found here a party of five men from Caylen, "el fin del Cristiandad,"
- who had most adventurously crossed in their miserable boat-canoe, for the
- purpose of fishing, the open space of sea which separates Chonos from
- Chiloe. These islands will, in all probability, in a short time become
- peopled like those adjoining the coast of Chiloe.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wild potato grows on these islands in great abundance, on the sandy,
- shelly soil near the sea-beach. The tallest plant was four feet in height.
- The tubers were generally small, but I found one, of an oval shape, two
- inches in diameter: they resembled in every respect, and had the same
- smell as English potatoes; but when boiled they shrunk much, and were
- watery and insipid, without any bitter taste. They are undoubtedly here
- indigenous: they grow as far south, according to Mr. Low, as lat. 50
- degs., and are called Aquinas by the wild Indians of that part: the
- Chilotan Indians have a different name for them. Professor Henslow, who
- has examined the dried specimens which I brought home, says that they are
- the same with those described by Mr. Sabine <a href="#linknote-131"
- name="linknoteref-131" id="linknoteref-131"><small>131</small></a> from
- Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some botanists has been
- considered as specifically distinct. It is remarkable that the same plant
- should be found on the sterile mountains of central Chile, where a drop of
- rain does not fall for more than six months, and within the damp forests
- of these southern islands.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the central parts of the Chonos Archipelago (lat. 45 degs.), the forest
- has very much the same character with that along the whole west coast, for
- 600 miles southward to Cape Horn. The arborescent grass of Chiloe is not
- found here; while the beech of Tierra del Fuego grows to a good size, and
- forms a considerable proportion of the wood; not, however, in the same
- exclusive manner as it does farther southward. Cryptogamic plants here
- find a most congenial climate. In the Strait of Magellan, as I have before
- remarked, the country appears too cold and wet to allow of their arriving
- at perfection; but in these islands, within the forest, the number of
- species and great abundance of mosses, lichens, and small ferns, is quite
- extraordinary. <a href="#linknote-132" name="linknoteref-132"
- id="linknoteref-132"><small>132</small></a> In Tierra del Fuego trees grow
- only on the hill-sides; every level piece of land being invariably covered
- by a thick bed of peat; but in Chiloe flat land supports the most
- luxuriant forests. Here, within the Chonos Archipelago, the nature of the
- climate more closely approaches that of Tierra del Fuego than that of
- northern Chiloe; for every patch of level ground is covered by two species
- of plants (Astelia pumila and Donatia magellanica), which by their joint
- decay compose a thick bed of elastic peat.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Tierra del Fuego, above the region of woodland, the former of these
- eminently sociable plants is the chief agent in the production of peat.
- Fresh leaves are always succeeding one to the other round the central
- tap-root, the lower ones soon decay, and in tracing a root downwards in
- the peat, the leaves, yet holding their place, can be observed passing
- through every stage of decomposition, till the whole becomes blended in
- one confused mass. The Astelia is assisted by a few other plants,&mdash;here
- and there a small creeping Myrtus (M. nummularia), with a woody stem like
- our cranberry and with a sweet berry,&mdash;an Empetrum (E. rubrum), like
- our heath,&mdash;a rush (Juncus grandiflorus), are nearly the only ones
- that grow on the swampy surface. These plants, though possessing a very
- close general resemblance to the English species of the same genera, are
- different. In the more level parts of the country, the surface of the peat
- is broken up into little pools of water, which stand at different heights,
- and appear as if artificially excavated. Small streams of water, flowing
- underground, complete the disorganization of the vegetable matter, and
- consolidate the whole.
- </p>
- <p>
- The climate of the southern part of America appears particularly
- favourable to the production of peat. In the Falkland Islands almost every
- kind of plant, even the coarse grass which covers the whole surface of the
- land, becomes converted into this substance: scarcely any situation checks
- its growth; some of the beds are as much as twelve feet thick, and the
- lower part becomes so solid when dry, that it will hardly burn. Although
- every plant lends its aid, yet in most parts the Astelia is the most
- efficient. It is rather a singular circumstance, as being so very
- different from what occurs in Europe, that I nowhere saw moss forming by
- its decay any portion of the peat in South America. With respect to the
- northern limit, at which the climate allows of that peculiar kind of slow
- decomposition which is necessary for its production, I believe that in
- Chiloe (lat. 41 to 42 degs.), although there is much swampy ground, no
- well-characterized peat occurs: but in the Chonos Islands, three degrees
- farther southward, we have seen that it is abundant. On the eastern coast
- in La Plata (lat. 35 degs.) I was told by a Spanish resident who had
- visited Ireland, that he had often sought for this substance, but had
- never been able to find any. He showed me, as the nearest approach to it
- which he had discovered, a black peaty soil, so penetrated with roots as
- to allow of an extremely slow and imperfect combustion.
- </p>
- <p>
- The zoology of these broken islets of the Chonos Archipelago is, as might
- have been expected, very poor. Of quadrupeds two aquatic kinds are common.
- The Myopotamus Coypus (like a beaver, but with a round tail) is well known
- from its fine fur, which is an object of trade throughout the tributaries
- of La Plata. It here, however, exclusively frequents salt water; which
- same circumstance has been mentioned as sometimes occurring with the great
- rodent, the Capybara. A small sea-otter is very numerous; this animal does
- not feed exclusively on fish, but, like the seals, draws a large supply
- from a small red crab, which swims in shoals near the surface of the
- water. Mr. Bynoe saw one in Tierra del Fuego eating a cuttle-fish; and at
- Low's Harbour, another was killed in the act of carrying to its hole a
- large volute shell. At one place I caught in a trap a singular little
- mouse (M. brachiotis); it appeared common on several of the islets, but
- the Chilotans at Low's Harbour said that it was not found in all. What a
- succession of chances, <a href="#linknote-133" name="linknoteref-133"
- id="linknoteref-133"><small>133</small></a> or what changes of level must
- have been brought into play, thus to spread these small animals throughout
- this broken archipelago!
- </p>
- <p>
- In all parts of Chiloe and Chonos, two very strange birds occur, which are
- allied to, and replace, the Turco and Tapacolo of central Chile. One is
- called by the inhabitants "Cheucau" (Pteroptochos rubecula): it frequents
- the most gloomy and retired spots within the damp forests. Sometimes,
- although its cry may be heard close at hand, let a person watch ever so
- attentively he will not see the cheucau; at other times, let him stand
- motionless and the red-breasted little bird will approach within a few
- feet in the most familiar manner. It then busily hops about the entangled
- mass of rotting cones and branches, with its little tail cocked upwards.
- The cheucau is held in superstitious fear by the Chilotans, on account of
- its strange and varied cries. There are three very distinct cries: One is
- called "chiduco," and is an omen of good; another, "huitreu," which is
- extremely unfavourable; and a third, which I have forgotten. These words
- are given in imitation of the noises; and the natives are in some things
- absolutely governed by them. The Chilotans assuredly have chosen a most
- comical little creature for their prophet. An allied species, but rather
- larger, is called by the natives "Guid-guid" (Pteroptochos Tarnii), and by
- the English the barking-bird. This latter name is well given; for I defy
- any one at first to feel certain that a small dog is not yelping somewhere
- in the forest. Just as with the cheucau, a person will sometimes hear the
- bark close by, but in vain many endeavour by watching, and with still less
- chance by beating the bushes, to see the bird; yet at other times the
- guid-guid fearlessly comes near. Its manner of feeding and its general
- habits are very similar to those of the cheucau.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the coast, <a href="#linknote-134" name="linknoteref-134"
- id="linknoteref-134"><small>134</small></a> a small dusky-coloured bird
- (Opetiorhynchus Patagonicus) is very common. It is remarkable from its
- quiet habits; it lives entirely on the sea-beach, like a sandpiper.
- Besides these birds only few others inhabit this broken land. In my rough
- notes I describe the strange noises, which, although frequently heard
- within these gloomy forests, yet scarcely disturb the general silence. The
- yelping of the guid-guid, and the sudden whew-whew of the cheucau,
- sometimes come from afar off, and sometimes from close at hand; the little
- black wren of Tierra del Fuego occasionally adds its cry; the creeper
- (Oxyurus) follows the intruder screaming and twittering; the humming-bird
- may be seen every now and then darting from side to side, and emitting,
- like an insect, its shrill chirp; lastly, from the top of some lofty tree
- the indistinct but plaintive note of the white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher
- (Myiobius) may be noticed. From the great preponderance in most countries
- of certain common genera of birds, such as the finches, one feels at first
- surprised at meeting with the peculiar forms above enumerated, as the
- commonest birds in any district. In central Chile two of them, namely, the
- Oxyurus and Scytalopus, occur, although most rarely. When finding, as in
- this case, animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great
- scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were created.
- </p>
- <p>
- But it should always be recollected, that in some other country perhaps
- they are essential members of society, or at some former period may have
- been so. If America south of 37 degs. were sunk beneath the waters of the
- ocean, these two birds might continue to exist in central Chile for a long
- period, but it is very improbable that their numbers would increase. We
- should then see a case which must inevitably have happened with very many
- animals.
- </p>
- <p>
- These southern seas are frequented by several species of Petrels: the
- largest kind, Procellaria gigantea, or nelly (quebrantahuesos, or
- break-bones, of the Spaniards), is a common bird, both in the inland
- channels and on the open sea. In its habits and manner of flight, there is
- a very close resemblance with the albatross; and as with the albatross, a
- person may watch it for hours together without seeing on what it feeds.
- The "break-bones" is, however, a rapacious bird, for it was observed by
- some of the officers at Port St. Antonio chasing a diver, which tried to
- escape by diving and flying, but was continually struck down, and at last
- killed by a blow on its head. At Port St. Julian these great petrels were
- seen killing and devouring young gulls. A second species (Puffinus
- cinereus), which is common to Europe, Cape Horn, and the coast of Peru, is
- of much smaller size than the P. gigantea, but, like it, of a dirty black
- colour. It generally frequents the inland sounds in very large flocks: I
- do not think I ever saw so many birds of any other sort together, as I
- once saw of these behind the island of Chiloe. Hundreds of thousands flew
- in an irregular line for several hours in one direction. When part of the
- flock settled on the water the surface was blackened, and a noise
- proceeded from them as of human beings talking in the distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are several other species of petrels, but I will only mention one
- other kind, the Pelacanoides Berardi which offers an example of those
- extraordinary cases, of a bird evidently belonging to one well-marked
- family, yet both in its habits and structure allied to a very distinct
- tribe. This bird never leaves the quiet inland sounds. When disturbed it
- dives to a distance, and on coming to the surface, with the same movement
- takes flight. After flying by a rapid movement of its short wings for a
- space in a straight line, it drops, as if struck dead, and dives again.
- The form of its beak and nostrils, length of foot, and even the colouring
- of its plumage, show that this bird is a petrel: on the other hand, its
- short wings and consequent little power of flight, its form of body and
- shape of tail, the absence of a hind toe to its foot, its habit of diving,
- and its choice of situation, make it at first doubtful whether its
- relationship is not equally close with the auks. It would undoubtedly be
- mistaken for an auk, when seen from a distance, either on the wing, or
- when diving and quietly swimming about the retired channels of Tierra del
- Fuego.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0014" id="link2HCH0014"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIV &mdash; CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>San Carlos, Chiloe&mdash;Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously with
- Aconcagua and Coseguina&mdash;Ride to Cucao&mdash;Impenetrable Forests&mdash;Valdivia
- Indians&mdash;Earthquake&mdash;Concepcion&mdash;Great Earthquake&mdash;Rocks
- fissured&mdash;Appearance of the former Towns&mdash;The Sea Black and
- Boiling&mdash;Direction of the Vibrations&mdash;Stones twisted round&mdash;Great
- Wave&mdash;Permanent Elevation of the Land&mdash;Area of Volcanic
- Phenomena&mdash;The connection between the Elevatory and Eruptive Forces&mdash;Cause
- of Earthquakes&mdash;Slow Elevation of Mountain-chains.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>N JANUARY the 15th
- we sailed from Low's Harbour, and three days afterwards anchored a second
- time in the bay of S. Carlos in Chiloe. On the night of the 19th the
- volcano of Osorno was in action. At midnight the sentry observed something
- like a large star, which gradually increased in size till about three
- o'clock, when it presented a very magnificent spectacle. By the aid of a
- glass, dark objects, in constant succession, were seen, in the midst of a
- great glare of red light, to be thrown up and to fall down. The light was
- sufficient to cast on the water a long bright reflection. Large masses of
- molten matter seem very commonly to be cast out of the craters in this
- part of the Cordillera. I was assured that when the Corcovado is in
- eruption, great masses are projected upwards and are seen to burst in the
- air, assuming many fantastical forms, such as trees: their size must be
- immense, for they can be distinguished from the high land behind S.
- Carlos, which is no less than ninety-three miles from the Corcovado. In
- the morning the volcano became tranquil.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was surprised at hearing afterwards that Aconcagua in Chile, 480 miles
- northwards, was in action on the same night; and still more surprised to
- hear that the great eruption of Coseguina (2700 miles north of Aconcagua),
- accompanied by an earthquake felt over a 1000 miles, also occurred within
- six hours of this same time. This coincidence is the more remarkable, as
- Coseguina had been dormant for twenty-six years; and Aconcagua most rarely
- shows any signs of action. It is difficult even to conjecture whether this
- coincidence was accidental, or shows some subterranean connection. If
- Vesuvius, Etna, and Hecla in Iceland (all three relatively nearer each
- other than the corresponding points in South America), suddenly burst
- forth in eruption on the same night, the coincidence would be thought
- remarkable; but it is far more remarkable in this case, where the three
- vents fall on the same great mountain-chain, and where the vast plains
- along the entire eastern coast, and the upraised recent shells along more
- than 2000 miles on the western coast, show in how equable and connected a
- manner the elevatory forces have acted.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Fitz Roy being anxious that some bearings should be taken on the
- outer coast of Chiloe, it was planned that Mr. King and myself should ride
- to Castro, and thence across the island to the Capella de Cucao, situated
- on the west coast. Having hired horses and a guide, we set out on the
- morning of the 22nd. We had not proceeded far, before we were joined by a
- woman and two boys, who were bent on the same journey. Every one on this
- road acts on a "hail fellow well met" fashion; and one may here enjoy the
- privilege, so rare in South America, of travelling without fire-arms. At
- first, the country consisted of a succession of hills and valleys: nearer
- to Castro it became very level. The road itself is a curious affair; it
- consists in its whole length, with the exception of very few parts, of
- great logs of wood, which are either broad and laid longitudinally, or
- narrow and placed transversely. In summer the road is not very bad; but in
- winter, when the wood is rendered slippery from rain, travelling is
- exceedingly difficult. At that time of the year, the ground on each side
- becomes a morass, and is often overflowed: hence it is necessary that the
- longitudinal logs should be fastened down by transverse poles, which are
- pegged on each side into the earth. These pegs render a fall from a horse
- dangerous, as the chance of alighting on one of them is not small. It is
- remarkable, however, how active custom has made the Chilotan horses. In
- crossing bad parts, where the logs had been displaced, they skipped from
- one to the other, almost with the quickness and certainty of a dog. On
- both hands the road is bordered by the lofty forest-trees, with their
- bases matted together by canes. When occasionally a long reach of this
- avenue could be beheld, it presented a curious scene of uniformity: the
- white line of logs, narrowing in perspective, became hidden by the gloomy
- forest, or terminated in a zigzag which ascended some steep hill.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although the distance from S. Carlos to Castro is only twelve leagues in a
- straight line, the formation of the road must have been a great labour. I
- was told that several people had formerly lost their lives in attempting
- to cross the forest. The first who succeeded was an Indian, who cut his
- way through the canes in eight days, and reached S. Carlos: he was
- rewarded by the Spanish government with a grant of land. During the
- summer, many of the Indians wander about the forests (but chiefly in the
- higher parts, where the woods are not quite so thick) in search of the
- half-wild cattle which live on the leaves of the cane and certain trees.
- It was one of these huntsmen who by chance discovered, a few years since,
- an English vessel, which had been wrecked on the outer coast. The crew
- were beginning to fail in provisions, and it is not probable that, without
- the aid of this man, they would ever have extricated themselves from these
- scarcely penetrable woods. As it was, one seaman died on the march, from
- fatigue. The Indians in these excursions steer by the sun; so that if
- there is a continuance of cloudy weather, they can not travel.
- </p>
- <p>
- The day was beautiful, and the number of trees which were in full flower
- perfumed the air; yet even this could hardly dissipate the effects of the
- gloomy dampness of the forest. Moreover, the many dead trunks that stand
- like skeletons, never fail to give to these primeval woods a character of
- solemnity, absent in those of countries long civilized. Shortly after
- sunset we bivouacked for the night. Our female companion, who was rather
- good-looking, belonged to one of the most respectable families in Castro:
- she rode, however, astride, and without shoes or stockings. I was
- surprised at the total want of pride shown by her and her brother. They
- brought food with them, but at all our meals sat watching Mr. King and
- myself whilst eating, till we were fairly shamed into feeding the whole
- party. The night was cloudless; and while lying in our beds, we enjoyed
- the sight (and it is a high enjoyment) of the multitude of stars which
- illumined the darkness of the forest.
- </p>
- <p>
- January 23rd.&mdash;We rose early in the morning, and reached the pretty
- quiet town of Castro by two o'clock. The old governor had died since our
- last visit, and a Chileno was acting in his place. We had a letter of
- introduction to Don Pedro, whom we found exceedingly hospitable and kind,
- and more disinterested than is usual on this side of the continent. The
- next day Don Pedro procured us fresh horses, and offered to accompany us
- himself. We proceeded to the south&mdash;generally following the coast,
- and passing through several hamlets, each with its large barn-like chapel
- built of wood. At Vilipilli, Don Pedro asked the commandant to give us a
- guide to Cucao. The old gentleman offered to come himself; but for a long
- time nothing would persuade him that two Englishmen really wished to go to
- such an out-of-the-way place as Cucao. We were thus accompanied by the two
- greatest aristocrats in the country, as was plainly to be seen in the
- manner of all the poorer Indians towards them. At Chonchi we struck across
- the island, following intricate winding paths, sometimes passing through
- magnificent forests, and sometimes through pretty cleared spots, abounding
- with corn and potato crops. This undulating woody country, partially
- cultivated, reminded me of the wilder parts of England, and therefore had
- to my eye a most fascinating aspect. At Vilinco, which is situated on the
- borders of the lake of Cucao, only a few fields were cleared; and all the
- inhabitants appeared to be Indians. This lake is twelve miles long, and
- runs in an east and west direction. From local circumstances, the
- sea-breeze blows very regularly during the day, and during the night it
- falls calm: this has given rise to strange exaggerations, for the
- phenomenon, as described to us at S. Carlos, was quite a prodigy.
- </p>
- <p>
- The road to Cucao was so very bad that we determined to embark in a <i>periagua</i>.
- The commandant, in the most authoritative manner, ordered six Indians to
- get ready to pull us over, without deigning to tell them whether they
- would be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but the crew were
- still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got into a boat
- together. They pulled, however, very well and cheerfully. The
- stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered strange cries, much after the
- fashion of a pig-driver driving his pigs. We started with a light breeze
- against us, but yet reached the Capella de Cucao before it was late. The
- country on each side of the lake was one unbroken forest. In the same
- periagua with us, a cow was embarked. To get so large an animal into a
- small boat appears at first a difficulty, but the Indians managed it in a
- minute. They brought the cow alongside the boat, which was heeled towards
- her; then placing two oars under her belly, with their ends resting on the
- gunwale, by the aid of these levers they fairly tumbled the poor beast
- heels over head into the bottom of the boat, and then lashed her down with
- ropes. At Cucao we found an uninhabited hovel (which is the residence of
- the padre when he pays this Capella a visit), where, lighting a fire, we
- cooked our supper, and were very comfortable.
- </p>
- <p>
- The district of Cucao is the only inhabited part on the whole west coast
- of Chiloe. It contains about thirty or forty Indian families, who are
- scattered along four or five miles of the shore. They are very much
- secluded from the rest of Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of commerce,
- except sometimes in a little oil, which they get from seal-blubber. They
- are tolerably dressed in clothes of their own manufacture, and they have
- plenty to eat. They seemed, however, discontented, yet humble to a degree
- which it was quite painful to witness. These feelings are, I think,
- chiefly to be attributed to the harsh and authoritative manner in which
- they are treated by their rulers. Our companions, although so very civil
- to us, behaved to the poor Indians as if they had been slaves, rather than
- free men. They ordered provisions and the use of their horses, without
- ever condescending to say how much, or indeed whether the owners should be
- paid at all. In the morning, being left alone with these poor people, we
- soon ingratiated ourselves by presents of cigars and mate. A lump of white
- sugar was divided between all present, and tasted with the greatest
- curiosity. The Indians ended all their complaints by saying, "And it is
- only because we are poor Indians, and know nothing; but it was not so when
- we had a King."
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day after breakfast, we rode a few miles northward to Punta
- Huantamo. The road lay along a very broad beach, on which, even after so
- many fine days, a terrible surf was breaking. I was assured that after a
- heavy gale, the roar can be heard at night even at Castro, a distance of
- no less than twenty-one sea-miles across a hilly and wooded country. We
- had some difficulty in reaching the point, owing to the intolerably bad
- paths; for everywhere in the shade the ground soon becomes a perfect
- quagmire. The point itself is a bold rocky hill. It is covered by a plant
- allied, I believe, to Bromelia, and called by the inhabitants Chepones. In
- scrambling through the beds, our hands were very much scratched. I was
- amused by observing the precaution our Indian guide took, in turning up
- his trousers, thinking that they were more delicate than his own hard
- skin. This plant bears a fruit, in shape like an artichoke, in which a
- number of seed-vessels are packed: these contain a pleasant sweet pulp,
- here much esteemed. I saw at Low's Harbour the Chilotans making chichi, or
- cider, with this fruit: so true is it, as Humboldt remarks, that almost
- everywhere man finds means of preparing some kind of beverage from the
- vegetable kingdom. The savages, however, of Tierra del Fuego, and I
- believe of Australia, have not advanced thus far in the arts.
- </p>
- <p>
- The coast to the north of Punta Huantamo is exceedingly rugged and broken,
- and is fronted by many breakers, on which the sea is eternally roaring.
- Mr. King and myself were anxious to return, if it had been possible, on
- foot along this coast; but even the Indians said it was quite
- impracticable. We were told that men have crossed by striking directly
- through the woods from Cucao to S. Carlos, but never by the coast. On
- these expeditions, the Indians carry with them only roasted corn, and of
- this they eat sparingly twice a day.
- </p>
- <p>
- 26th.&mdash;Re-embarking in the periagua, we returned across the lake, and
- then mounted our horses. The whole of Chiloe took advantage of this week
- of unusually fine weather, to clear the ground by burning. In every
- direction volumes of smoke were curling upwards. Although the inhabitants
- were so assiduous in setting fire to every part of the wood, yet I did not
- see a single fire which they had succeeded in making extensive. We dined
- with our friend the commandant, and did not reach Castro till after dark.
- The next morning we started very early. After having ridden for some time,
- we obtained from the brow of a steep hill an extensive view (and it is a
- rare thing on this road) of the great forest. Over the horizon of trees,
- the volcano of Corcovado, and the great flat-topped one to the north,
- stood out in proud pre-eminence: scarcely another peak in the long range
- showed its snowy summit. I hope it will be long before I forget this
- farewell view of the magnificent Cordillera fronting Chiloe. At night we
- bivouacked under a cloudless sky, and the next morning reached S. Carlos.
- We arrived on the right day, for before evening heavy rain commenced.
- </p>
- <p>
- February 4th.&mdash;Sailed from Chiloe. During the last week I made
- several short excursions. One was to examine a great bed of now-existing
- shells, elevated 350 feet above the level of the sea: from among these
- shells, large forest-trees were growing. Another ride was to P.
- Huechucucuy. I had with me a guide who knew the country far too well; for
- he would pertinaciously tell me endless Indian names for every little
- point, rivulet, and creek. In the same manner as in Tierra del Fuego, the
- Indian language appears singularly well adapted for attaching names to the
- most trivial features of the land. I believe every one was glad to say
- farewell to Chiloe; yet if we could forget the gloom and ceaseless rain of
- winter, Chiloe might pass for a charming island. There is also something
- very attractive in the simplicity and humble politeness of the poor
- inhabitants.
- </p>
- <p>
- We steered northward along shore, but owing to thick weather did not reach
- Valdivia till the night of the 8th. The next morning the boat proceeded to
- the town, which is distant about ten miles. We followed the course of the
- river, occasionally passing a few hovels, and patches of ground cleared
- out of the otherwise unbroken forest; and sometimes meeting a canoe with
- an Indian family. The town is situated on the low banks of the stream, and
- is so completely buried in a wood of apple-trees that the streets are
- merely paths in an orchard. I have never seen any country, where
- apple-trees appeared to thrive so well as in this damp part of South
- America: on the borders of the roads there were many young trees evidently
- self-grown. In Chiloe the inhabitants possess a marvellously short method
- of making an orchard. At the lower part of almost every branch, small,
- conical, brown, wrinkled points project: these are always ready to change
- into roots, as may sometimes be seen, where any mud has been accidentally
- splashed against the tree. A branch as thick as a man's thigh is chosen in
- the early spring, and is cut off just beneath a group of these points, all
- the smaller branches are lopped off, and it is then placed about two feet
- deep in the ground. During the ensuing summer the stump throws out long
- shoots, and sometimes even bears fruit: I was shown one which had produced
- as many as twenty-three apples, but this was thought very unusual. In the
- third season the stump is changed (as I have myself seen) into a
- well-wooded tree, loaded with fruit. An old man near Valdivia illustrated
- his motto, "Necesidad es la madre del invencion," by giving an account of
- the several useful things he manufactured from his apples. After making
- cider, and likewise wine, he extracted from the refuse a white and finely
- flavoured spirit; by another process he procured a sweet treacle, or, as
- he called it, honey. His children and pigs seemed almost to live, during
- this season of the year, in his orchard.
- </p>
- <p>
- February 11th.&mdash;I set out with a guide on a short ride, in which,
- however, I managed to see singularly little, either of the geology of the
- country or of its inhabitants. There is not much cleared land near
- Valdivia: after crossing a river at the distance of a few miles, we
- entered the forest, and then passed only one miserable hovel, before
- reaching our sleeping-place for the night. The short difference in
- latitude, of 150 miles, has given a new aspect to the forest compared with
- that of Chiloe. This is owing to a slightly different proportion in the
- kinds of trees. The evergreens do not appear to be quite so numerous, and
- the forest in consequence has a brighter tint. As in Chiloe, the lower
- parts are matted together by canes: here also another kind (resembling the
- bamboo of Brazil and about twenty feet in height) grows in clusters, and
- ornaments the banks of some of the streams in a very pretty manner. It is
- with this plant that the Indians make their chuzos, or long tapering
- spears. Our resting-house was so dirty that I preferred sleeping outside:
- on these journeys the first night is generally very uncomfortable, because
- one is not accustomed to the tickling and biting of the fleas. I am sure,
- in the morning, there was not a space on my legs the size of a shilling
- which had not its little red mark where the flea had feasted.
- </p>
- <p>
- 12th.&mdash;We continued to ride through the uncleared forest; only
- occasionally meeting an Indian on horseback, or a troop of fine mules
- bringing alerce-planks and corn from the southern plains. In the afternoon
- one of the horses knocked up: we were then on a brow of a hill, which
- commanded a fine view of the Llanos. The view of these open plains was
- very refreshing, after being hemmed in and buried in the wilderness of
- trees. The uniformity of a forest soon becomes very wearisome. This west
- coast makes me remember with pleasure the free, unbounded plains of
- Patagonia; yet, with the true spirit of contradiction, I cannot forget how
- sublime is the silence of the forest. The Llanos are the most fertile and
- thickly peopled parts of the country, as they possess the immense
- advantage of being nearly free from trees. Before leaving the forest we
- crossed some flat little lawns, around which single trees stood, as in an
- English park: I have often noticed with surprise, in wooded undulatory
- districts, that the quite level parts have been destitute of trees. On
- account of the tired horse, I determined to stop at the Mission of Cudico,
- to the friar of which I had a letter of introduction. Cudico is an
- intermediate district between the forest and the Llanos. There are a good
- many cottages, with patches of corn and potatoes, nearly all belonging to
- Indians. The tribes dependent on Valdivia are "reducidos y cristianos."
- The Indians farther northward, about Arauco and Imperial, are still very
- wild, and not converted; but they have all much intercourse with the
- Spaniards. The padre said that the Christian Indians did not much like
- coming to mass, but that otherwise they showed respect for religion. The
- greatest difficulty is in making them observe the ceremonies of marriage.
- The wild Indians take as many wives as they can support, and a cacique
- will sometimes have more than ten: on entering his house, the number may
- be told by that of the separate fires. Each wife lives a week in turn with
- the cacique; but all are employed in weaving ponchos, etc., for his
- profit. To be the wife of a cacique, is an honour much sought after by the
- Indian women.
- </p>
- <p>
- The men of all these tribes wear a coarse woolen poncho: those south of
- Valdivia wear short trousers, and those north of it a petticoat, like the
- chilipa of the Gauchos. All have their long hair bound by a scarlet
- fillet, but with no other covering on their heads. These Indians are
- good-sized men; their cheek-bones are prominent, and in general appearance
- they resemble the great American family to which they belong; but their
- physiognomy seemed to me to be slightly different from that of any other
- tribe which I had before seen. Their expression is generally grave, and
- even austere, and possesses much character: this may pass either for
- honest bluntness or fierce determination. The long black hair, the grave
- and much-lined features, and the dark complexion, called to my mind old
- portraits of James I. On the road we met with none of that humble
- politeness so universal in Chiloe. Some gave their "mari-mari" (good
- morning) with promptness, but the greater number did not seem inclined to
- offer any salute. This independence of manners is probably a consequence
- of their long wars, and the repeated victories which they alone, of all
- the tribes in America, have gained over the Spaniards.
- </p>
- <p>
- I spent the evening very pleasantly, talking with the padre. He was
- exceedingly kind and hospitable; and coming from Santiago, had contrived
- to surround himself with some few comforts. Being a man of some little
- education, he bitterly complained of the total want of society. With no
- particular zeal for religion, no business or pursuit, how completely must
- this man's life be wasted! The next day, on our return, we met seven very
- wild-looking Indians, of whom some were caciques that had just received
- from the Chilian government their yearly small stipend for having long
- remained faithful. They were fine-looking men, and they rode one after the
- other, with most gloomy faces. An old cacique, who headed them, had been,
- I suppose, more excessively drunk than the rest, for he seemed extremely
- grave and very crabbed. Shortly before this, two Indians joined us, who
- were travelling from a distant mission to Valdivia concerning some
- lawsuit. One was a good-humoured old man, but from his wrinkled beardless
- face looked more like an old woman than a man. I frequently presented both
- of them with cigars; and though ready to receive them, and I dare say
- grateful, they would hardly condescend to thank me. A Chilotan Indian
- would have taken off his hat, and given his "Dios le page!" The travelling
- was very tedious, both from the badness of the roads, and from the number
- of great fallen trees, which it was necessary either to leap over or to
- avoid by making long circuits. We slept on the road, and next morning
- reached Valdivia, whence I proceeded on board.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few days afterwards I crossed the bay with a party of officers, and
- landed near the fort called Niebla. The buildings were in a most ruinous
- state, and the gun-carriages quite rotten. Mr. Wickham remarked to the
- commanding officer, that with one discharge they would certainly all fall
- to pieces. The poor man, trying to put a good face upon it, gravely
- replied, "No, I am sure, sir, they would stand two!" The Spaniards must
- have intended to have made this place impregnable. There is now lying in
- the middle of the courtyard a little mountain of mortar, which rivals in
- hardness the rock on which it is placed. It was brought from Chile, and
- cost 7000 dollars. The revolution having broken out, prevented its being
- applied to any purpose, and now it remains a monument of the fallen
- greatness of Spain.
- </p>
- <p>
- I wanted to go to a house about a mile and a half distant, but my guide
- said it was quite impossible to penetrate the wood in a straight line. He
- offered, however, to lead me, by following obscure cattle-tracks, the
- shortest way: the walk, nevertheless, took no less than three hours! This
- man is employed in hunting strayed cattle; yet, well as he must know the
- woods, he was not long since lost for two whole days, and had nothing to
- eat. These facts convey a good idea of the impracticability of the forests
- of these countries. A question often occurred to me&mdash;how long does
- any vestige of a fallen tree remain? This man showed me one which a party
- of fugitive royalists had cut down fourteen years ago; and taking this as
- a criterion, I should think a bole a foot and a half in diameter would in
- thirty years be changed into a heap of mould.
- </p>
- <p>
- February 20th.&mdash;This day has been memorable in the annals of
- Valdivia, for the most severe earthquake experienced by the oldest
- inhabitant. I happened to be on shore, and was lying down in the wood to
- rest myself. It came on suddenly, and lasted two minutes, but the time
- appeared much longer. The rocking of the ground was very sensible. The
- undulations appeared to my companion and myself to come from due east,
- whilst others thought they proceeded from south-west: this shows how
- difficult it sometimes is to perceive the directions of the vibrations.
- There was no difficulty in standing upright, but the motion made me almost
- giddy: it was something like the movement of a vessel in a little
- cross-ripple, or still more like that felt by a person skating over thin
- ice, which bends under the weight of his body. A bad earthquake at once
- destroys our oldest associations: the earth, the very emblem of solidity,
- has moved beneath our feet like a thin crust over a fluid;&mdash;one
- second of time has created in the mind a strange idea of insecurity, which
- hours of reflection would not have produced. In the forest, as a breeze
- moved the trees, I felt only the earth tremble, but saw no other effect.
- Captain Fitz Roy and some officers were at the town during the shock, and
- there the scene was more striking; for although the houses, from being
- built of wood, did not fall, they were violently shaken, and the boards
- creaked and rattled together. The people rushed out of doors in the
- greatest alarm. It is these accompaniments that create that perfect horror
- of earthquakes, experienced by all who have thus seen, as well as felt,
- their effects. Within the forest it was a deeply interesting, but by no
- means an awe-exciting phenomenon. The tides were very curiously affected.
- The great shock took place at the time of low water; and an old woman who
- was on the beach told me that the water flowed very quickly, but not in
- great waves, to high-water mark, and then as quickly returned to its
- proper level; this was also evident by the line of wet sand. The same kind
- of quick but quiet movement in the tide happened a few years since at
- Chiloe, during a slight earthquake, and created much causeless alarm. In
- the course of the evening there were many weaker shocks, which seemed to
- produce in the harbour the most complicated currents, and some of great
- strength.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 4th.&mdash;We entered the harbour of Concepcion. While the ship was
- beating up to the anchorage, I landed on the island of Quiriquina. The
- mayor-domo of the estate quickly rode down to tell me the terrible news of
- the great earthquake of the 20th:&mdash;"That not a house in Concepcion or
- Talcahuano (the port) was standing; that seventy villages were destroyed;
- and that a great wave had almost washed away the ruins of Talcahuano." Of
- this latter statement I soon saw abundant proofs&mdash;the whole coast
- being strewed over with timber and furniture as if a thousand ships had
- been wrecked. Besides chairs, tables, book-shelves, etc., in great
- numbers, there were several roofs of cottages, which had been transported
- almost whole. The storehouses at Talcahuano had been burst open, and great
- bags of cotton, yerba, and other valuable merchandise were scattered on
- the shore. During my walk round the island, I observed that numerous
- fragments of rock, which, from the marine productions adhering to them,
- must recently have been lying in deep water, had been cast up high on the
- beach; one of these was six feet long, three broad, and two thick.
- </p>
- <p>
- The island itself as plainly showed the overwhelming power of the
- earthquake, as the beach did that of the consequent great wave. The ground
- in many parts was fissured in north and south lines, perhaps caused by the
- yielding of the parallel and steep sides of this narrow island. Some of
- the fissures near the cliffs were a yard wide. Many enormous masses had
- already fallen on the beach; and the inhabitants thought that when the
- rains commenced far greater slips would happen. The effect of the
- vibration on the hard primary slate, which composes the foundation of the
- island, was still more curious: the superficial parts of some narrow
- ridges were as completely shivered as if they had been blasted by
- gunpowder. This effect, which was rendered conspicuous by the fresh
- fractures and displaced soil, must be confined to near the surface, for
- otherwise there would not exist a block of solid rock throughout Chile;
- nor is this improbable, as it is known that the surface of a vibrating
- body is affected differently from the central part. It is, perhaps, owing
- to this same reason, that earthquakes do not cause quite such terrific
- havoc within deep mines as would be expected. I believe this convulsion
- has been more effectual in lessening the size of the island of Quiriquina,
- than the ordinary wear-and-tear of the sea and weather during the course
- of a whole century.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day I landed at Talcahuano, and afterwards rode to Concepcion.
- Both towns presented the most awful yet interesting spectacle I ever
- beheld. To a person who had formerly known them, it possibly might have
- been still more impressive; for the ruins were so mingled together, and
- the whole scene possessed so little the air of a habitable place, that it
- was scarcely possible to imagine its former condition. The earthquake
- commenced at half-past eleven o'clock in the forenoon. If it had happened
- in the middle of the night, the greater number of the inhabitants (which
- in this one province must amount to many thousands) must have perished,
- instead of less than a hundred: as it was, the invariable practice of
- running out of doors at the first trembling of the ground, alone saved
- them. In Concepcion each house, or row of houses, stood by itself, a heap
- or line of ruins; but in Talcahuano, owing to the great wave, little more
- than one layer of bricks, tiles, and timber with here and there part of a
- wall left standing, could be distinguished. From this circumstance
- Concepcion, although not so completely desolated, was a more terrible, and
- if I may so call it, picturesque sight. The first shock was very sudden.
- The mayor-domo at Quiriquina told me, that the first notice he received of
- it, was finding both the horse he rode and himself, rolling together on
- the ground. Rising up, he was again thrown down. He also told me that some
- cows which were standing on the steep side of the island were rolled into
- the sea. The great wave caused the destruction of many cattle; on one low
- island near the head of the bay, seventy animals were washed off and
- drowned. It is generally thought that this has been the worst earthquake
- ever recorded in Chile; but as the very severe ones occur only after long
- intervals, this cannot easily be known; nor indeed would a much worse
- shock have made any difference, for the ruin was now complete. Innumerable
- small tremblings followed the great earthquake, and within the first
- twelve days no less than three hundred were counted.
- </p>
- <p>
- After viewing Concepcion, I cannot understand how the greater number of
- inhabitants escaped unhurt. The houses in many parts fell outwards; thus
- forming in the middle of the streets little hillocks of brickwork and
- rubbish. Mr. Rouse, the English consul, told us that he was at breakfast
- when the first movement warned him to run out. He had scarcely reached the
- middle of the courtyard, when one side of his house came thundering down.
- He retained presence of mind to remember, that if he once got on the top
- of that part which had already fallen, he would be safe. Not being able
- from the motion of the ground to stand, he crawled up on his hands and
- knees; and no sooner had he ascended this little eminence, than the other
- side of the house fell in, the great beams sweeping close in front of his
- head. With his eyes blinded, and his mouth choked with the cloud of dust
- which darkened the sky, at last he gained the street. As shock succeeded
- shock, at the interval of a few minutes, no one dared approach the
- shattered ruins, and no one knew whether his dearest friends and relations
- were not perishing from the want of help. Those who had saved any property
- were obliged to keep a constant watch, for thieves prowled about, and at
- each little trembling of the ground, with one hand they beat their breasts
- and cried "Misericordia!" and then with the other filched what they could
- from the ruins. The thatched roofs fell over the fires, and flames burst
- forth in all parts. Hundreds knew themselves ruined, and few had the means
- of providing food for the day.
- </p>
- <p>
- Earthquakes alone are sufficient to destroy the prosperity of any country.
- If beneath England the now inert subterranean forces should exert those
- powers, which most assuredly in former geological ages they have exerted,
- how completely would the entire condition of the country be changed! What
- would become of the lofty houses, thickly packed cities, great
- manufactories, the beautiful public and private edifices? If the new
- period of disturbance were first to commence by some great earthquake in
- the dead of the night, how terrific would be the carnage! England would at
- once be bankrupt; all papers, records, and accounts would from that moment
- be lost. Government being unable to collect the taxes, and failing to
- maintain its authority, the hand of violence and rapine would remain
- uncontrolled. In every large town famine would go forth, pestilence and
- death following in its train.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shortly after the shock, a great wave was seen from the distance of three
- or four miles, approaching in the middle of the bay with a smooth outline;
- but along the shore it tore up cottages and trees, as it swept onwards
- with irresistible force. At the head of the bay it broke in a fearful line
- of white breakers, which rushed up to a height of 23 vertical feet above
- the highest spring-tides. Their force must have been prodigious; for at
- the Fort a cannon with its carriage, estimated at four tons in weight, was
- moved 15 feet inwards. A schooner was left in the midst of the ruins, 200
- yards from the beach. The first wave was followed by two others, which in
- their retreat carried away a vast wreck of floating objects. In one part
- of the bay, a ship was pitched high and dry on shore, was carried off,
- again driven on shore, and again carried off. In another part, two large
- vessels anchored near together were whirled about, and their cables were
- thrice wound round each other; though anchored at a depth of 36 feet, they
- were for some minutes aground. The great wave must have travelled slowly,
- for the inhabitants of Talcahuano had time to run up the hills behind the
- town; and some sailors pulled out seaward, trusting successfully to their
- boat riding securely over the swell, if they could reach it before it
- broke. One old woman with a little boy, four or five years old, ran into a
- boat, but there was nobody to row it out: the boat was consequently dashed
- against an anchor and cut in twain; the old woman was drowned, but the
- child was picked up some hours afterwards clinging to the wreck. Pools of
- salt-water were still standing amidst the ruins of the houses, and
- children, making boats with old tables and chairs, appeared as happy as
- their parents were miserable. It was, however, exceedingly interesting to
- observe, how much more active and cheerful all appeared than could have
- been expected. It was remarked with much truth, that from the destruction
- being universal, no one individual was humbled more than another, or could
- suspect his friends of coldness&mdash;that most grievous result of the
- loss of wealth. Mr. Rouse, and a large party whom he kindly took under his
- protection, lived for the first week in a garden beneath some apple-trees.
- At first they were as merry as if it had been a picnic; but soon
- afterwards heavy rain caused much discomfort, for they were absolutely
- without shelter.
- </p>
- <p>
- In Captain Fitz Roy's excellent account of the earthquake, it is said that
- two explosions, one like a column of smoke and another like the blowing of
- a great whale, were seen in the bay. The water also appeared everywhere to
- be boiling; and it "became black, and exhaled a most disagreeable
- sulphureous smell." These latter circumstances were observed in the Bay of
- Valparaiso during the earthquake of 1822; they may, I think, be accounted
- for, by the disturbance of the mud at the bottom of the sea containing
- organic matter in decay. In the Bay of Callao, during a calm day, I
- noticed, that as the ship dragged her cable over the bottom, its course
- was marked by a line of bubbles. The lower orders in Talcahuano thought
- that the earthquake was caused by some old Indian women, who two years
- ago, being offended, stopped the volcano of Antuco. This silly belief is
- curious, because it shows that experience has taught them to observe, that
- there exists a relation between the suppressed action of the volcanos, and
- the trembling of the ground. It was necessary to apply the witchcraft to
- the point where their perception of cause and effect failed; and this was
- the closing of the volcanic vent. This belief is the more singular in this
- particular instance, because, according to Captain Fitz Roy, there is
- reason to believe that Antuco was noways affected.
- </p>
- <p>
- The town of Concepcion was built in the usual Spanish fashion, with all
- the streets running at right angles to each other; one set ranging S.W. by
- W., and the other set N.W. by N. The walls in the former direction
- certainly stood better than those in the latter; the greater number of the
- masses of brickwork were thrown down towards the N.E. Both these
- circumstances perfectly agree with the general idea, of the undulations
- having come from the S.W., in which quarter subterranean noises were also
- heard; for it is evident that the walls running S.W. and N.E. which
- presented their ends to the point whence the undulations came, would be
- much less likely to fall than those walls which, running N.W. and S.E.,
- must in their whole lengths have been at the same instant thrown out of
- the perpendicular; for the undulations, coming from the S.W., must have
- extended in N.W. and S.E. waves, as they passed under the foundations.
- This may be illustrated by placing books edgeways on a carpet, and then,
- after the manner suggested by Michell, imitating the undulations of an
- earthquake: it will be found that they fall with more or less readiness,
- according as their direction more or less nearly coincides with the line
- of the waves. The fissures in the ground generally, though not uniformly,
- extended in a S.E. and N.W. direction, and therefore corresponded to the
- lines of undulation or of principal flexure. Bearing in mind all these
- circumstances, which so clearly point to the S.W. as the chief focus of
- disturbance, it is a very interesting fact that the island of S. Maria,
- situated in that quarter, was, during the general uplifting of the land,
- raised to nearly three times the height of any other part of the coast.
- </p>
- <p>
- The different resistance offered by the walls, according to their
- direction, was well exemplified in the case of the Cathedral. The side
- which fronted the N.E. presented a grand pile of ruins, in the midst of
- which door-cases and masses of timber stood up, as if floating in a
- stream. Some of the angular blocks of brickwork were of great dimensions;
- and they were rolled to a distance on the level plaza, like fragments of
- rock at the base of some high mountain. The side walls (running S.W. and
- N.E.), though exceedingly fractured, yet remained standing; but the vast
- buttresses (at right angles to them, and therefore parallel to the walls
- that fell) were in many cases cut clean off, as if by a chisel, and hurled
- to the ground. Some square ornaments on the coping of these same walls,
- were moved by the earthquake into a diagonal position. A similar
- circumstance was observed after an earthquake at Valparaiso, Calabria, and
- other places, including some of the ancient Greek temples. <a
- href="#linknote-141" name="linknoteref-141" id="linknoteref-141"><small>141</small></a>
- This twisting displacement, at first appears to indicate a vorticose
- movement beneath each point thus affected; but this is highly improbable.
- May it not be caused by a tendency in each stone to arrange itself in some
- particular position, with respect to the lines of vibration,&mdash;in a
- manner somewhat similar to pins on a sheet of paper when shaken? Generally
- speaking, arched doorways or windows stood much better than any other part
- of the buildings. Nevertheless, a poor lame old man, who had been in the
- habit, during trifling shocks, of crawling to a certain doorway, was this
- time crushed to pieces.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have not attempted to give any detailed description of the appearance of
- Concepcion, for I feel that it is quite impossible to convey the mingled
- feelings which I experienced. Several of the officers visited it before
- me, but their strongest language failed to give a just idea of the scene
- of desolation. It is a bitter and humiliating thing to see works, which
- have cost man so much time and labour, overthrown in one minute; yet
- compassion for the inhabitants was almost instantly banished, by the
- surprise in seeing a state of things produced in a moment of time, which
- one was accustomed to attribute to a succession of ages. In my opinion, we
- have scarcely beheld, since leaving England, any sight so deeply
- interesting.
- </p>
- <p>
- In almost every severe earthquake, the neighbouring waters of the sea are
- said to have been greatly agitated. The disturbance seems generally, as in
- the case of Concepcion, to have been of two kinds: first, at the instant
- of the shock, the water swells high up on the beach with a gentle motion,
- and then as quietly retreats; secondly, some time afterwards, the whole
- body of the sea retires from the coast, and then returns in waves of
- overwhelming force. The first movement seems to be an immediate
- consequence of the earthquake affecting differently a fluid and a solid,
- so that their respective levels are slightly deranged: but the second case
- is a far more important phenomenon. During most earthquakes, and
- especially during those on the west coast of America, it is certain that
- the first great movement of the waters has been a retirement. Some authors
- have attempted to explain this, by supposing that the water retains its
- level, whilst the land oscillates upwards; but surely the water close to
- the land, even on a rather steep coast, would partake of the motion of the
- bottom: moreover, as urged by Mr. Lyell, similar movements of the sea have
- occurred at islands far distant from the chief line of disturbance, as was
- the case with Juan Fernandez during this earthquake, and with Madeira
- during the famous Lisbon shock. I suspect (but the subject is a very
- obscure one) that a wave, however produced, first draws the water from the
- shore, on which it is advancing to break: I have observed that this
- happens with the little waves from the paddles of a steam-boat. It is
- remarkable that whilst Talcahuano and Callao (near Lima), both situated at
- the head of large shallow bays, have suffered during every severe
- earthquake from great waves, Valparaiso, seated close to the edge of
- profoundly deep water, has never been overwhelmed, though so often shaken
- by the severest shocks. From the great wave not immediately following the
- earthquake, but sometimes after the interval of even half an hour, and
- from distant islands being affected similarly with the coasts near the
- focus of the disturbance, it appears that the wave first rises in the
- offing; and as this is of general occurrence, the cause must be general: I
- suspect we must look to the line, where the less disturbed waters of the
- deep ocean join the water nearer the coast, which has partaken of the
- movements of the land, as the place where the great wave is first
- generated; it would also appear that the wave is larger or smaller,
- according to the extent of shoal water which has been agitated together
- with the bottom on which it rested.
- </p>
- <p>
- The most remarkable effect of this earthquake was the permanent elevation
- of the land, it would probably be far more correct to speak of it as the
- cause. There can be no doubt that the land round the Bay of Concepcion was
- upraised two or three feet; but it deserves notice, that owing to the wave
- having obliterated the old lines of tidal action on the sloping sandy
- shores, I could discover no evidence of this fact, except in the united
- testimony of the inhabitants, that one little rocky shoal, now exposed,
- was formerly covered with water. At the island of S. Maria (about thirty
- miles distant) the elevation was greater; on one part, Captain Fitz Roy
- founds beds of putrid mussel-shells <i>still adhering to the rocks</i>,
- ten feet above high-water mark: the inhabitants had formerly dived at
- lower-water spring-tides for these shells. The elevation of this province
- is particularly interesting, from its having been the theatre of several
- other violent earthquakes, and from the vast numbers of sea-shells
- scattered over the land, up to a height of certainly 600, and I believe,
- of 1000 feet. At Valparaiso, as I have remarked, similar shells are found
- at the height of 1300 feet: it is hardly possible to doubt that this great
- elevation has been effected by successive small uprisings, such as that
- which accompanied or caused the earthquake of this year, and likewise by
- an insensibly slow rise, which is certainly in progress on some parts of
- this coast.
- </p>
- <p>
- The island of Juan Fernandez, 360 miles to the N.E., was, at the time of
- the great shock of the 20th, violently shaken, so that the trees beat
- against each other, and a volcano burst forth under water close to the
- shore: these facts are remarkable because this island, during the
- earthquake of 1751, was then also affected more violently than other
- places at an equal distance from Concepcion, and this seems to show some
- subterranean connection between these two points. Chiloe, about 340 miles
- southward of Concepcion, appears to have been shaken more strongly than
- the intermediate district of Valdivia, where the volcano of Villarica was
- noways affected, whilst in the Cordillera in front of Chiloe, two of the
- volcanos burst-forth at the same instant in violent action. These two
- volcanos, and some neighbouring ones, continued for a long time in
- eruption, and ten months afterwards were again influenced by an earthquake
- at Concepcion. Some men, cutting wood near the base of one of these
- volcanos, did not perceive the shock of the 20th, although the whole
- surrounding Province was then trembling; here we have an eruption
- relieving and taking the place of an earthquake, as would have happened at
- Concepcion, according to the belief of the lower orders, if the volcano at
- Antuco had not been closed by witchcraft. Two years and three-quarters
- afterwards, Valdivia and Chiloe were again shaken, more violently than on
- the 20th, and an island in the Chonos Archipelago was permanently elevated
- more than eight feet. It will give a better idea of the scale of these
- phenomena, if (as in the case of the glaciers) we suppose them to have
- taken place at corresponding distances in Europe:&mdash;then would the
- land from the North Sea to the Mediterranean have been violently shaken,
- and at the same instant of time a large tract of the eastern coast of
- England would have been permanently elevated, together with some outlying
- islands,&mdash;a train of volcanos on the coast of Holland would have
- burst forth in action, and an eruption taken place at the bottom of the
- sea, near the northern extremity of Ireland&mdash;and lastly, the ancient
- vents of Auvergne, Cantal, and Mont d'Or would each have sent up to the
- sky a dark column of smoke, and have long remained in fierce action. Two
- years and three-quarters afterwards, France, from its centre to the
- English Channel, would have been again desolated by an earthquake and an
- island permanently upraised in the Mediterranean.
- </p>
- <p>
- The space, from under which volcanic matter on the 20th was actually
- erupted, is 720 miles in one line, and 400 miles in another line at right
- angles to the first: hence, in all probability, a subterranean lake of
- lava is here stretched out, of nearly double the area of the Black Sea.
- From the intimate and complicated manner in which the elevatory and
- eruptive forces were shown to be connected during this train of phenomena,
- we may confidently come to the conclusion, that the forces which slowly
- and by little starts uplift continents, and those which at successive
- periods pour forth volcanic matter from open orifices, are identical. From
- many reasons, I believe that the frequent quakings of the earth on this
- line of coast are caused by the rending of the strata, necessarily
- consequent on the tension of the land when upraised, and their injection
- by fluidified rock. This rending and injection would, if repeated often
- enough (and we know that earthquakes repeatedly affect the same areas in
- the same manner), form a chain of hills;&mdash;and the linear island of S.
- Mary, which was upraised thrice the height of the neighbouring country,
- seems to be undergoing this process. I believe that the solid axis of a
- mountain, differs in its manner of formation from a volcanic hill, only in
- the molten stone having been repeatedly injected, instead of having been
- repeatedly ejected. Moreover, I believe that it is impossible to explain
- the structure of great mountain-chains, such as that of the Cordillera,
- were the strata, capping the injected axis of plutonic rock, have been
- thrown on their edges along several parallel and neighbouring lines of
- elevation, except on this view of the rock of the axis having been
- repeatedly injected, after intervals sufficiently long to allow the upper
- parts or wedges to cool and become solid;&mdash;for if the strata had been
- thrown into their present highly inclined, vertical, and even inverted
- positions, by a single blow, the very bowels of the earth would have
- gushed out; and instead of beholding abrupt mountain-axes of rock
- solidified under great pressure, deluges of lava would have flowed out at
- innumerable points on every line of elevation. <a href="#linknote-142"
- name="linknoteref-142" id="linknoteref-142"><small>142</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0015" id="link2HCH0015"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XV &mdash; PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Valparaiso&mdash;Portillo Pass&mdash;Sagacity of Mules&mdash;Mountain-torrents&mdash;Mines,
- how discovered&mdash;Proofs of the gradual Elevation of the Cordillera&mdash;Effect
- of Snow on Rocks&mdash;Geological Structure of the two main Ranges, their
- distinct Origin and Upheaval&mdash;Great Subsidence&mdash;Red Snow&mdash;Winds&mdash;Pinnacles
- of Snow&mdash;Dry and clear Atmosphere&mdash;Electricity&mdash;Pampas&mdash;Zoology
- of the opposite Side of the Andes&mdash;Locusts&mdash;Great Bugs&mdash;Mendoza&mdash;Uspallata
- Pass&mdash;Silicified Trees buried as they grew&mdash;Incas Bridge&mdash;Badness
- of the Passes exaggerated&mdash;Cumbre&mdash;Casuchas&mdash;Valparaiso.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">M</span>ARCH 7th, 1835.&mdash;We
- stayed three days at Concepcion, and then sailed for Valparaiso. The wind
- being northerly, we only reached the mouth of the harbour of Concepcion
- before it was dark. Being very near the land, and a fog coming on, the
- anchor was dropped. Presently a large American whaler appeared alongside
- of us; and we heard the Yankee swearing at his men to keep quiet, whilst
- he listened for the breakers. Captain Fitz Roy hailed him, in a loud clear
- voice, to anchor where he then was. The poor man must have thought the
- voice came from the shore: such a Babel of cries issued at once from the
- ship&mdash;every one hallooing out, "Let go the anchor! veer cable!
- shorten sail!" It was the most laughable thing I ever heard. If the ship's
- crew had been all captains, and no men, there could not have been a
- greater uproar of orders. We afterwards found that the mate stuttered: I
- suppose all hands were assisting him in giving his orders.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 11th we anchored at Valparaiso, and two days afterwards I set out
- to cross the Cordillera. I proceeded to Santiago, where Mr. Caldcleugh
- most kindly assisted me in every possible way in making the little
- preparations which were necessary. In this part of Chile there are two
- passes across the Andes to Mendoza: the one most commonly used, namely,
- that of Aconcagua or Uspallata&mdash;is situated some way to the north;
- the other, called the Portillo, is to the south, and nearer, but more
- lofty and dangerous.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 18th.&mdash;We set out for the Portillo pass. Leaving Santiago we
- crossed the wide burnt-up plain on which that city stands, and in the
- afternoon arrived at the Maypu, one of the principal rivers in Chile. The
- valley, at the point where it enters the first Cordillera, is bounded on
- each side by lofty barren mountains; and although not broad, it is very
- fertile. Numerous cottages were surrounded by vines, and by orchards of
- apple, nectarine, and peach-trees&mdash;their boughs breaking with the
- weight of the beautiful ripe fruit. In the evening we passed the
- custom-house, where our luggage was examined. The frontier of Chile is
- better guarded by the Cordillera, than by the waters of the sea. There are
- very few valleys which lead to the central ranges, and the mountains are
- quite impassable in other parts by beasts of burden. The custom-house
- officers were very civil, which was perhaps partly owing to the passport
- which the President of the Republic had given me; but I must express my
- admiration at the natural politeness of almost every Chileno. In this
- instance, the contrast with the same class of men in most other countries
- was strongly marked. I may mention an anecdote with which I was at the
- time much pleased: we met near Mendoza a little and very fat negress,
- riding astride on a mule. She had a <i>goitre</i> so enormous that it was
- scarcely possible to avoid gazing at her for a moment; but my two
- companions almost instantly, by way of apology, made the common salute of
- the country by taking off their hats. Where would one of the lower or
- higher classes in Europe, have shown such feeling politeness to a poor and
- miserable object of a degraded race?
- </p>
- <p>
- At night we slept at a cottage. Our manner of travelling was delightfully
- independent. In the inhabited parts we bought a little firewood, hired
- pasture for the animals, and bivouacked in the corner of the same field
- with them. Carrying an iron pot, we cooked and ate our supper under a
- cloudless sky, and knew no trouble. My companions were Mariano Gonzales,
- who had formerly accompanied me in Chile, and an "arriero," with his ten
- mules and a "madrina." The madrina (or godmother) is a most important
- personage:
- </p>
- <p>
- She is an old steady mare, with a little bell round her neck; and wherever
- she goes, the mules, like good children, follow her. The affection of
- these animals for their madrinas saves infinite trouble. If several large
- troops are turned into one field to graze, in the morning the muleteers
- have only to lead the madrinas a little apart, and tinkle their bells;
- although there may be two or three hundred together, each mule immediately
- knows the bell of its own madrina, and comes to her. It is nearly
- impossible to lose an old mule; for if detained for several hours by
- force, she will, by the power of smell, like a dog, track out her
- companions, or rather the madrina, for, according to the muleteer, she is
- the chief object of affection. The feeling, however, is not of an
- individual nature; for I believe I am right in saying that any animal with
- a bell will serve as a madrina. In a troop each animal carries on a level
- road, a cargo weighing 416 pounds (more than 29 stone), but in a
- mountainous country 100 pounds less; yet with what delicate slim limbs,
- without any proportional bulk of muscle, these animals support so great a
- burden! The mule always appears to me a most surprising animal. That a
- hybrid should possess more reason, memory, obstinacy, social affection,
- powers of muscular endurance, and length of life, than either of its
- parents, seems to indicate that art has here outdone nature. Of our ten
- animals, six were intended for riding, and four for carrying cargoes, each
- taking turn about. We carried a good deal of food in case we should be
- snowed up, as the season was rather late for passing the Portillo.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 19th.&mdash;We rode during this day to the last, and therefore most
- elevated, house in the valley. The number of inhabitants became scanty;
- but wherever water could be brought on the land, it was very fertile. All
- the main valleys in the Cordillera are characterized by having, on both
- sides, a fringe or terrace of shingle and sand, rudely stratified, and
- generally of considerable thickness. These fringes evidently once extended
- across the valleys and were united; and the bottoms of the valleys in
- northern Chile, where there are no streams, are thus smoothly filled up.
- On these fringes the roads are generally carried, for their surfaces are
- even, and they rise, with a very gentle slope up the valleys: hence, also,
- they are easily cultivated by irrigation. They may be traced up to a
- height of between 7000 and 9000 feet, where they become hidden by the
- irregular piles of debris. At the lower end or mouths of the valleys, they
- are continuously united to those land-locked plains (also formed of
- shingle) at the foot of the main Cordillera, which I have described in a
- former chapter as characteristic of the scenery of Chile, and which were
- undoubtedly deposited when the sea penetrated Chile, as it now does the
- more southern coasts. No one fact in the geology of South America,
- interested me more than these terraces of rudely-stratified shingle. They
- precisely resemble in composition the matter which the torrents in each
- valley would deposit, if they were checked in their course by any cause,
- such as entering a lake or arm of the sea; but the torrents, instead of
- depositing matter, are now steadily at work wearing away both the solid
- rock and these alluvial deposits, along the whole line of every main
- valley and side valley. It is impossible here to give the reasons, but I
- am convinced that the shingle terraces were accumulated, during the
- gradual elevation of the Cordillera, by the torrents delivering, at
- successive levels, their detritus on the beachheads of long narrow arms of
- the sea, first high up the valleys, then lower and lower down as the land
- slowly rose. If this be so, and I cannot doubt it, the grand and broken
- chain of the Cordillera, instead of having been suddenly thrown up, as was
- till lately the universal, and still is the common opinion of geologists,
- has been slowly upheaved in mass, in the same gradual manner as the coasts
- of the Atlantic and Pacific have risen within the recent period. A
- multitude of facts in the structure of the Cordillera, on this view
- receive a simple explanation.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rivers which flow in these valleys ought rather to be called
- mountain-torrents. Their inclination is very great, and their water the
- colour of mud. The roar which the Maypu made, as it rushed over the great
- rounded fragments, was like that of the sea. Amidst the din of rushing
- waters, the noise from the stones, as they rattled one over another, was
- most distinctly audible even from a distance. This rattling noise, night
- and day, may be heard along the whole course of the torrent. The sound
- spoke eloquently to the geologist; the thousands and thousands of stones,
- which, striking against each other, made the one dull uniform sound, were
- all hurrying in one direction. It was like thinking on time, where the
- minute that now glides past is irrevocable. So was it with these stones;
- the ocean is their eternity, and each note of that wild music told of one
- more step towards their destiny.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is not possible for the mind to comprehend, except by a slow process,
- any effect which is produced by a cause repeated so often, that the
- multiplier itself conveys an idea, not more definite than the savage
- implies when he points to the hairs of his head. As often as I have seen
- beds of mud, sand, and shingle, accumulated to the thickness of many
- thousand feet, I have felt inclined to exclaim that causes, such as the
- present rivers and the present beaches, could never have ground down and
- produced such masses. But, on the other hand, when listening to the
- rattling noise of these torrents, and calling to mind that whole races of
- animals have passed away from the face of the earth, and that during this
- whole period, night and day, these stones have gone rattling onwards in
- their course, I have thought to myself, can any mountains, any continent,
- withstand such waste?
- </p>
- <p>
- In this part of the valley, the mountains on each side were from 3000 to
- 6000 or 8000 feet high, with rounded outlines and steep bare flanks. The
- general colour of the rock was dullish purple, and the stratification very
- distinct. If the scenery was not beautiful, it was remarkable and grand.
- We met during the day several herds of cattle, which men were driving down
- from the higher valleys in the Cordillera. This sign of the approaching
- winter hurried our steps, more than was convenient for geologizing. The
- house where we slept was situated at the foot of a mountain, on the summit
- of which are the mines of S. Pedro de Nolasko. Sir F. Head marvels how
- mines have been discovered in such extraordinary situations, as the bleak
- summit of the mountain of S. Pedro de Nolasko. In the first place,
- metallic veins in this country are generally harder than the surrounding
- strata: hence, during the gradual wear of the hills, they project above
- the surface of the ground. Secondly, almost every labourer, especially in
- the northern parts of Chile, understands something about the appearance of
- ores. In the great mining provinces of Coquimbo and Copiapo, firewood is
- very scarce, and men search for it over every hill and dale; and by this
- means nearly all the richest mines have there been discovered.
- Chanuncillo, from which silver to the value of many hundred thousand
- pounds has been raised in the course of a few years, was discovered by a
- man who threw a stone at his loaded donkey, and thinking that it was very
- heavy, he picked it up, and found it full of pure silver: the vein
- occurred at no great distance, standing up like a wedge of metal. The
- miners, also, taking a crowbar with them, often wander on Sundays over the
- mountains. In this south part of Chile, the men who drive cattle into the
- Cordillera, and who frequent every ravine where there is a little pasture,
- are the usual discoverers.
- </p>
- <p>
- 20th.&mdash;As we ascended the valley, the vegetation, with the exception
- of a few pretty alpine flowers, became exceedingly scanty, and of
- quadrupeds, birds, or insects, scarcely one could be seen. The lofty
- mountains, their summits marked with a few patches of snow, stood well
- separated from each other, the valleys being filled up with an immense
- thickness of stratified alluvium. The features in the scenery of the Andes
- which struck me most, as contrasted with the other mountain chains with
- which I am acquainted, were,&mdash;the flat fringes sometimes expanding
- into narrow plains on each side of the valleys,&mdash;the bright colours,
- chiefly red and purple, of the utterly bare and precipitous hills of
- porphyry, the grand and continuous wall-like dykes,&mdash;the
- plainly-divided strata which, where nearly vertical, formed the
- picturesque and wild central pinnacles, but where less inclined, composed
- the great massive mountains on the outskirts of the range,&mdash;and
- lastly, the smooth conical piles of fine and brightly coloured detritus,
- which sloped up at a high angle from the base of the mountains, sometimes
- to a height of more than 2000 feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- I frequently observed, both in Tierra del Fuego and within the Andes, that
- where the rock was covered during the greater part of the year with snow,
- it was shivered in a very extraordinary manner into small angular
- fragments. Scoresby <a href="#linknote-151" name="linknoteref-151"
- id="linknoteref-151"><small>151</small></a> has observed the same fact in
- Spitzbergen. The case appears to me rather obscure: for that part of the
- mountain which is protected by a mantle of snow, must be less subject to
- repeated and great changes of temperature than any other part. I have
- sometimes thought, that the earth and fragments of stone on the surface,
- were perhaps less effectually removed by slowly percolating snow-water <a
- href="#linknote-152" name="linknoteref-152" id="linknoteref-152"><small>152</small></a>
- than by rain, and therefore that the appearance of a quicker
- disintegration of the solid rock under the snow, was deceptive. Whatever
- the cause may be, the quantity of crumbling stone on the Cordillera is
- very great. Occasionally in the spring, great masses of this detritus
- slide down the mountains, and cover the snow-drifts in the valleys, thus
- forming natural ice-houses. We rode over one, the height of which was far
- below the limit of perpetual snow.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the evening drew to a close, we reached a singular basin-like plain,
- called the Valle del Yeso. It was covered by a little dry pasture, and we
- had the pleasant sight of a herd of cattle amidst the surrounding rocky
- deserts. The valley takes its name of Yeso from a great bed, I should
- think at least 2000 feet thick, of white, and in some parts quite pure,
- gypsum. We slept with a party of men, who were employed in loading mules
- with this substance, which is used in the manufacture of wine. We set out
- early in the morning (21st), and continued to follow the course of the
- river, which had become very small, till we arrived at the foot of the
- ridge, that separates the waters flowing into the Pacific and Atlantic
- Oceans. The road, which as yet had been good with a steady but very
- gradual ascent, now changed into a steep zigzag track up the great range,
- dividing the republics of Chile and Mendoza.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will here give a very brief sketch of the geology of the several
- parallel lines forming the Cordillera. Of these lines, there are two
- considerably higher than the others; namely, on the Chilian side, the
- Peuquenes ridge, which, where the road crosses it, is 13,210 feet above
- the sea; and the Portillo ridge, on the Mendoza side, which is 14,305
- feet. The lower beds of the Peuquenes ridge, and of the several great
- lines to the westward of it, are composed of a vast pile, many thousand
- feet in thickness, of porphyries which have flowed as submarine lavas,
- alternating with angular and rounded fragments of the same rocks, thrown
- out of the submarine craters. These alternating masses are covered in the
- central parts, by a great thickness of red sandstone, conglomerate, and
- calcareous clay-slate, associated with, and passing into, prodigious beds
- of gypsum. In these upper beds shells are tolerably frequent; and they
- belong to about the period of the lower chalk of Europe. It is an old
- story, but not the less wonderful, to hear of shells which were once
- crawling on the bottom of the sea, now standing nearly 14,000 feet above
- its level. The lower beds in this great pile of strata, have been
- dislocated, baked, crystallized and almost blended together, through the
- agency of mountain masses of a peculiar white soda-granitic rock.
- </p>
- <p>
- The other main line, namely, that of the Portillo, is of a totally
- different formation: it consists chiefly of grand bare pinnacles of a red
- potash-granite, which low down on the western flank are covered by a
- sandstone, converted by the former heat into a quartz-rock. On the quartz,
- there rest beds of a conglomerate several thousand feet in thickness,
- which have been upheaved by the red granite, and dip at an angle of 45
- degs. towards the Peuquenes line. I was astonished to find that this
- conglomerate was partly composed of pebbles, derived from the rocks, with
- their fossil shells, of the Peuquenes range; and partly of red
- potash-granite, like that of the Portillo. Hence we must conclude, that
- both the Peuquenes and Portillo ranges were partially upheaved and exposed
- to wear and tear, when the conglomerate was forming; but as the beds of
- the conglomerate have been thrown off at an angle of 45 degs. by the red
- Portillo granite (with the underlying sandstone baked by it), we may feel
- sure, that the greater part of the injection and upheaval of the already
- partially formed Portillo line, took place after the accumulation of the
- conglomerate, and long after the elevation of the Peuquenes ridge. So that
- the Portillo, the loftiest line in this part of the Cordillera, is not so
- old as the less lofty line of the Peuquenes. Evidence derived from an
- inclined stream of lava at the eastern base of the Portillo, might be
- adduced to show, that it owes part of its great height to elevations of a
- still later date. Looking to its earliest origin, the red granite seems to
- have been injected on an ancient pre-existing line of white granite and
- mica-slate. In most parts, perhaps in all parts, of the Cordillera, it may
- be concluded that each line has been formed by repeated upheavals and
- injections; and that the several parallel lines are of different ages.
- Only thus can we gain time, at all sufficient to explain the truly
- astonishing amount of denudation, which these great, though comparatively
- with most other ranges recent, mountains have suffered.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finally, the shells in the Peuquenes or oldest ridge, prove, as before
- remarked, that it has been upraised 14,000 feet since a Secondary period,
- which in Europe we are accustomed to consider as far from ancient; but
- since these shells lived in a moderately deep sea, it can be shown that
- the area now occupied by the Cordillera, must have subsided several
- thousand feet&mdash;in northern Chile as much as 6000 feet&mdash;so as to
- have allowed that amount of submarine strata to have been heaped on the
- bed on which the shells lived. The proof is the same with that by which it
- was shown, that at a much later period, since the tertiary shells of
- Patagonia lived, there must have been there a subsidence of several
- hundred feet, as well as an ensuing elevation. Daily it is forced home on
- the mind of the geologist, that nothing, not even the wind that blows, is
- so unstable as the level of the crust of this earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will make only one other geological remark: although the Portillo chain
- is here higher than the Peuquenes, the waters draining the intermediate
- valleys, have burst through it. The same fact, on a grander scale, has
- been remarked in the eastern and loftiest line of the Bolivian Cordillera,
- through which the rivers pass: analogous facts have also been observed in
- other quarters of the world. On the supposition of the subsequent and
- gradual elevation of the Portillo line, this can be understood; for a
- chain of islets would at first appear, and, as these were lifted up, the
- tides would be always wearing deeper and broader channels between them. At
- the present day, even in the most retired Sounds on the coast of Tierra
- del Fuego, the currents in the transverse breaks which connect the
- longitudinal channels, are very strong, so that in one transverse channel
- even a small vessel under sail was whirled round and round.
- </p>
- <p>
- About noon we began the tedious ascent of the Peuquenes ridge, and then
- for the first time experienced some little difficulty in our respiration.
- The mules would halt every fifty yards, and after resting for a few
- seconds the poor willing animals started of their own accord again. The
- short breathing from the rarefied atmosphere is called by the Chilenos
- "puna;" and they have most ridiculous notions concerning its origin. Some
- say "all the waters here have puna;" others that "where there is snow
- there is puna;"&mdash;and this no doubt is true. The only sensation I
- experienced was a slight tightness across the head and chest, like that
- felt on leaving a warm room and running quickly in frosty weather. There
- was some imagination even in this; for upon finding fossil shells on the
- highest ridge, I entirely forgot the puna in my delight. Certainly the
- exertion of walking was extremely great, and the respiration became deep
- and laborious: I am told that in Potosi (about 13,000 feet above the sea)
- strangers do not become thoroughly accustomed to the atmosphere for an
- entire year. The inhabitants all recommend onions for the puna; as this
- vegetable has sometimes been given in Europe for pectoral complaints, it
- may possibly be of real service:&mdash;for my part I found nothing so good
- as the fossil shells!
- </p>
- <p>
- When about half-way up we met a large party with seventy loaded mules. It
- was interesting to hear the wild cries of the muleteers, and to watch the
- long descending string of the animals; they appeared so diminutive, there
- being nothing but the black mountains with which they could be compared.
- When near the summit, the wind, as generally happens, was impetuous and
- extremely cold. On each side of the ridge, we had to pass over broad bands
- of perpetual snow, which were now soon to be covered by a fresh layer.
- When we reached the crest and looked backwards, a glorious view was
- presented. The atmosphere resplendently clear; the sky an intense blue;
- the profound valleys; the wild broken forms: the heaps of ruins, piled up
- during the lapse of ages; the bright-coloured rocks, contrasted with the
- quiet mountains of snow, all these together produced a scene no one could
- have imagined. Neither plant nor bird, excepting a few condors wheeling
- around the higher pinnacles, distracted my attention from the inanimate
- mass. I felt glad that I was alone: it was like watching a thunderstorm,
- or hearing in full orchestra a chorus of the Messiah.
- </p>
- <p>
- On several patches of the snow I found the Protococcus nivalis, or red
- snow, so well known from the accounts of Arctic navigators. My attention
- was called to it, by observing the footsteps of the mules stained a pale
- red, as if their hoofs had been slightly bloody. I at first thought that
- it was owing to dust blown from the surrounding mountains of red porphyry;
- for from the magnifying power of the crystals of snow, the groups of these
- microscopical plants appeared like coarse particles. The snow was coloured
- only where it had thawed very rapidly, or had been accidentally crushed. A
- little rubbed on paper gave it a faint rose tinge mingled with a little
- brick-red. I afterwards scraped some off the paper, and found that it
- consisted of groups of little spheres in colourless cases, each of the
- thousandth part of an inch in diameter.
- </p>
- <p>
- The wind on the crest of the Peuquenes, as just remarked, is generally
- impetuous and very cold: it is said <a href="#linknote-153"
- name="linknoteref-153" id="linknoteref-153"><small>153</small></a> to blow
- steadily from the westward or Pacific side. As the observations have been
- chiefly made in summer, this wind must be an upper and return current. The
- Peak of Teneriffe, with a less elevation, and situated in lat. 28 degs.,
- in like manner falls within an upper return stream. At first it appears
- rather surprising, that the trade-wind along the northern parts of Chile
- and on the coast of Peru, should blow in so very southerly a direction as
- it does; but when we reflect that the Cordillera, running in a north and
- south line, intercepts, like a great wall, the entire depth of the lower
- atmospheric current, we can easily see that the trade-wind must be drawn
- northward, following the line of mountains, towards the equatorial
- regions, and thus lose part of that easterly movement which it otherwise
- would have gained from the earth's rotation. At Mendoza, on the eastern
- foot of the Andes, the climate is said to be subject to long calms, and to
- frequent though false appearances of gathering rain-storms: we may imagine
- that the wind, which coming from the eastward is thus banked up by the
- line of mountains, would become stagnant and irregular in its movements.
- </p>
- <p>
- Having crossed the Peuquenes, we descended into a mountainous country,
- intermediate between the two main ranges, and then took up our quarters
- for the night. We were now in the republic of Mendoza. The elevation was
- probably not under 11,000 feet, and the vegetation in consequence
- exceedingly scanty. The root of a small scrubby plant served as fuel, but
- it made a miserable fire, and the wind was piercingly cold. Being quite
- tired with my days work, I made up my bed as quickly as I could, and went
- to sleep. About midnight I observed the sky became suddenly clouded: I
- awakened the arriero to know if there was any danger of bad weather; but
- he said that without thunder and lightning there was no risk of a heavy
- snow-storm. The peril is imminent, and the difficulty of subsequent escape
- great, to any one overtaken by bad weather between the two ranges. A
- certain cave offers the only place of refuge: Mr. Caldcleugh, who crossed
- on this same day of the month, was detained there for some time by a heavy
- fall of snow. Casuchas, or houses of refuge, have not been built in this
- pass as in that of Uspallata, and, therefore, during the autumn, the
- Portillo is little frequented. I may here remark that within the main
- Cordillera rain never falls, for during the summer the sky is cloudless,
- and in winter snow-storms alone occur.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the place where we slept water necessarily boiled, from the diminished
- pressure of the atmosphere, at a lower temperature than it does in a less
- lofty country; the case being the converse of that of a Papin's digester.
- Hence the potatoes, after remaining for some hours in the boiling water,
- were nearly as hard as ever. The pot was left on the fire all night, and
- next morning it was boiled again, but yet the potatoes were not cooked. I
- found out this, by overhearing my two companions discussing the cause,
- they had come to the simple conclusion, "that the cursed pot [15which was
- a new one] did not choose to boil potatoes."
- </p>
- <p>
- March 22nd.&mdash;After eating our potatoless breakfast, we travelled
- across the intermediate tract to the foot of the Portillo range. In the
- middle of summer cattle are brought up here to graze; but they had now all
- been removed: even the greater number of the Guanacos had decamped,
- knowing well that if overtaken here by a snow-storm, they would be caught
- in a trap. We had a fine view of a mass of mountains called Tupungato, the
- whole clothed with unbroken snow, in the midst of which there was a blue
- patch, no doubt a glacier;&mdash;a circumstance of rare occurrence in
- these mountains. Now commenced a heavy and long climb, similar to that of
- the Peuquenes. Bold conical hills of red granite rose on each hand; in the
- valleys there were several broad fields of perpetual snow. These frozen
- masses, during the process of thawing, had in some parts been converted
- into pinnacles or columns, <a href="#linknote-154" name="linknoteref-154"
- id="linknoteref-154"><small>154</small></a> which, as they were high and
- close together, made it difficult for the cargo mules to pass. On one of
- these columns of ice, a frozen horse was sticking as on a pedestal, but
- with its hind legs straight up in the air. The animal, I suppose, must
- have fallen with its head downward into a hole, when the snow was
- continuous, and afterwards the surrounding parts must have been removed by
- the thaw.
- </p>
- <p>
- When nearly on the crest of the Portillo, we were enveloped in a falling
- cloud of minute frozen spicula. This was very unfortunate, as it continued
- the whole day, and quite intercepted our view. The pass takes its name of
- Portillo, from a narrow cleft or doorway on the highest ridge, through
- which the road passes. From this point, on a clear day, those vast plains
- which uninterruptedly extend to the Atlantic Ocean can be seen. We
- descended to the upper limit of vegetation, and found good quarters for
- the night under the shelter of some large fragments of rock. We met here
- some passengers, who made anxious inquiries about the state of the road.
- Shortly after it was dark the clouds suddenly cleared away, and the effect
- was quite magical. The great mountains, bright with the full moon, seemed
- impending over us on all sides, as over a deep crevice: one morning, very
- early, I witnessed the same striking effect. As soon as the clouds were
- dispersed it froze severely; but as there was no wind, we slept very
- comfortably.
- </p>
- <p>
- The increased brilliancy of the moon and stars at this elevation, owing to
- the perfect transparency of the atmosphere, was very remarkable. Travelers
- having observed the difficulty of judging heights and distances amidst
- lofty mountains, have generally attributed it to the absence of objects of
- comparison. It appears to me, that it is fully as much owing to the
- transparency of the air confounding objects at different distances, and
- likewise partly to the novelty of an unusual degree of fatigue arising
- from a little exertion,&mdash;habit being thus opposed to the evidence of
- the senses. I am sure that this extreme clearness of the air gives a
- peculiar character to the landscape, all objects appearing to be brought
- nearly into one plane, as in a drawing or panorama. The transparency is, I
- presume, owing to the equable and high state of atmospheric dryness. This
- dryness was shown by the manner in which woodwork shrank (as I soon found
- by the trouble my geological hammer gave me); by articles of food, such as
- bread and sugar, becoming extremely hard; and by the preservation of the
- skin and parts of the flesh of the beasts, which had perished on the road.
- To the same cause we must attribute the singular facility with which
- electricity is excited. My flannel waistcoat, when rubbed in the dark,
- appeared as if it had been washed with phosphorus,&mdash;every hair on a
- dog's back crackled;&mdash;even the linen sheets, and leathern straps of
- the saddle, when handled, emitted sparks.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 23rd.&mdash;The descent on the eastern side of the Cordillera is
- much shorter or steeper than on the Pacific side; in other words, the
- mountains rise more abruptly from the plains than from the alpine country
- of Chile. A level and brilliantly white sea of clouds was stretched out
- beneath our feet, shutting out the view of the equally level Pampas. We
- soon entered the band of clouds, and did not again emerge from it that
- day. About noon, finding pasture for the animals and bushes for firewood
- at Los Arenales, we stopped for the night. This was near the uppermost
- limit of bushes, and the elevation, I suppose, was between seven and eight
- thousand feet.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was much struck with the marked difference between the vegetation of
- these eastern valleys and those on the Chilian side: yet the climate, as
- well as the kind of soil, is nearly the same, and the difference of
- longitude very trifling. The same remark holds good with the quadrupeds,
- and in a lesser degree with the birds and insects. I may instance the
- mice, of which I obtained thirteen species on the shores of the Atlantic,
- and five on the Pacific, and not one of them is identical. We must except
- all those species, which habitually or occasionally frequent elevated
- mountains; and certain birds, which range as far south as the Strait of
- Magellan. This fact is in perfect accordance with the geological history
- of the Andes; for these mountains have existed as a great barrier since
- the present races of animals have appeared; and therefore, unless we
- suppose the same species to have been created in two different places, we
- ought not to expect any closer similarity between the organic beings on
- the opposite sides of the Andes than on the opposite shores of the ocean.
- In both cases, we must leave out of the question those kinds which have
- been able to cross the barrier, whether of solid rock or salt-water. <a
- href="#linknote-155" name="linknoteref-155" id="linknoteref-155"><small>155</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- A great number of the plants and animals were absolutely the same as, or
- most closely allied to, those of Patagonia. We here have the agouti,
- bizcacha, three species of armadillo, the ostrich, certain kinds of
- partridges and other birds, none of which are ever seen in Chile, but are
- the characteristic animals of the desert plains of Patagonia. We have
- likewise many of the same (to the eyes of a person who is not a botanist)
- thorny stunted bushes, withered grass, and dwarf plants. Even the black
- slowly crawling beetles are closely similar, and some, I believe, on
- rigorous examination, absolutely identical. It had always been to me a
- subject of regret, that we were unavoidably compelled to give up the
- ascent of the S. Cruz river before reaching the mountains: I always had a
- latent hope of meeting with some great change in the features of the
- country; but I now feel sure, that it would only have been following the
- plains of Patagonia up a mountainous ascent.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 24th.&mdash;Early in the morning I climbed up a mountain on one side
- of the valley, and enjoyed a far extended view over the Pampas. This was a
- spectacle to which I had always looked forward with interest, but I was
- disappointed: at the first glance it much resembled a distant view of the
- ocean, but in the northern parts many irregularities were soon
- distinguishable. The most striking feature consisted in the rivers, which,
- facing the rising sun, glittered like silver threads, till lost in the
- immensity of the distance. At midday we descended the valley, and reached
- a hovel, where an officer and three soldiers were posted to examine
- passports. One of these men was a thoroughbred Pampas Indian: he was kept
- much for the same purpose as a bloodhound, to track out any person who
- might pass by secretly, either on foot or horseback. Some years ago, a
- passenger endeavoured to escape detection, by making a long circuit over a
- neighbouring mountain; but this Indian, having by chance crossed his
- track, followed it for the whole day over dry and very stony hills, till
- at last he came on his prey hidden in a gully. We here heard that the
- silvery clouds, which we had admired from the bright region above, had
- poured down torrents of rain. The valley from this point gradually opened,
- and the hills became mere water-worn hillocks compared to the giants
- behind: it then expanded into a gently sloping plain of shingle, covered
- with low trees and bushes. This talus, although appearing narrow, must be
- nearly ten miles wide before it blends into the apparently dead level
- Pampas. We passed the only house in this neighbourhood, the Estancia of
- Chaquaio: and at sunset we pulled up in the first snug corner, and there
- bivouacked.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 25th.&mdash;I was reminded of the Pampas of Buenos Ayres, by seeing
- the disk of the rising sun, intersected by an horizon level as that of the
- ocean. During the night a heavy dew fell, a circumstance which we did not
- experience within the Cordillera. The road proceeded for some distance due
- east across a low swamp; then meeting the dry plain, it turned to the
- north towards Mendoza. The distance is two very long days' journey. Our
- first day's journey was called fourteen leagues to Estacado, and the
- second seventeen to Luxan, near Mendoza. The whole distance is over a
- level desert plain, with not more than two or three houses. The sun was
- exceedingly powerful, and the ride devoid of all interest. There is very
- little water in this "traversia," and in our second day's journey we found
- only one little pool. Little water flows from the mountains, and it soon
- becomes absorbed by the dry and porous soil; so that, although we
- travelled at the distance of only ten or fifteen miles from the outer
- range of the Cordillera, we did not cross a single stream. In many parts
- the ground was incrusted with a saline efflorescence; hence we had the
- same salt-loving plants which are common near Bahia Blanca. The landscape
- has a uniform character from the Strait of Magellan, along the whole
- eastern coast of Patagonia, to the Rio Colorado; and it appears that the
- same kind of country extends inland from this river, in a sweeping line as
- far as San Luis and perhaps even further north. To the eastward of this
- curved line lies the basin of the comparatively damp and green plains of
- Buenos Ayres. The sterile plains of Mendoza and Patagonia consist of a bed
- of shingle, worn smooth and accumulated by the waves of the sea while the
- Pampas, covered by thistles, clover, and grass, have been formed by the
- ancient estuary mud of the Plata.
- </p>
- <p>
- After our two days' tedious journey, it was refreshing to see in the
- distance the rows of poplars and willows growing round the village and
- river of Luxan. Shortly before we arrived at this place, we observed to
- the south a ragged cloud of dark reddish-brown colour. At first we thought
- that it was smoke from some great fire on the plains; but we soon found
- that it was a swarm of locusts. They were flying northward; and with the
- aid of a light breeze, they overtook us at a rate of ten or fifteen miles
- an hour. The main body filled the air from a height of twenty feet, to
- that, as it appeared, of two or three thousand above the ground; "and the
- sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many horses running
- to battle:" or rather, I should say, like a strong breeze passing through
- the rigging of a ship. The sky, seen through the advanced guard, appeared
- like a mezzotinto engraving, but the main body was impervious to sight;
- they were not, however, so thick together, but that they could escape a
- stick waved backwards and forwards. When they alighted, they were more
- numerous than the leaves in the field, and the surface became reddish
- instead of being green: the swarm having once alighted, the individuals
- flew from side to side in all directions. Locusts are not an uncommon pest
- in this country: already during the season, several smaller swarms had
- come up from the south, where, as apparently in all other parts of the
- world, they are bred in the deserts. The poor cottagers in vain attempted
- by lighting fires, by shouts, and by waving branches to avert the attack.
- This species of locust closely resembles, and perhaps is identical with,
- the famous Gryllus migratorius of the East.
- </p>
- <p>
- We crossed the Luxan, which is a river of considerable size, though its
- course towards the sea-coast is very imperfectly known: it is even
- doubtful whether, in passing over the plains, it is not evaporated and
- lost. We slept in the village of Luxan, which is a small place surrounded
- by gardens, and forms the most southern cultivated district in the
- Province of Mendoza; it is five leagues south of the capital. At night I
- experienced an attack (for it deserves no less a name) of the <i>Benchuca</i>,
- a species of Reduvius, the great black bug of the Pampas. It is most
- disgusting to feel soft wingless insects, about an inch long, crawling
- over one's body. Before sucking they are quite thin, but afterwards they
- become round and bloated with blood, and in this state are easily crushed.
- One which I caught at Iquique, (for they are found in Chile and Peru,) was
- very empty. When placed on a table, and though surrounded by people, if a
- finger was presented, the bold insect would immediately protrude its
- sucker, make a charge, and if allowed, draw blood. No pain was caused by
- the wound. It was curious to watch its body during the act of sucking, as
- in less than ten minutes it changed from being as flat as a wafer to a
- globular form. This one feast, for which the benchuca was indebted to one
- of the officers, kept it fat during four whole months; but, after the
- first fortnight, it was quite ready to have another suck.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 27th.&mdash;We rode on to Mendoza. The country was beautifully
- cultivated, and resembled Chile. This neighbourhood is celebrated for its
- fruit; and certainly nothing could appear more flourishing than the
- vineyards and the orchards of figs, peaches, and olives. We bought
- water-melons nearly twice as large as a man's head, most deliciously cool
- and well-flavoured, for a halfpenny apiece; and for the value of
- threepence, half a wheelbarrowful of peaches. The cultivated and enclosed
- part of this province is very small; there is little more than that which
- we passed through between Luxan and the capital. The land, as in Chile,
- owes its fertility entirely to artificial irrigation; and it is really
- wonderful to observe how extraordinarily productive a barren traversia is
- thus rendered.
- </p>
- <p>
- We stayed the ensuing day in Mendoza. The prosperity of the place has much
- declined of late years. The inhabitants say "it is good to live in, but
- very bad to grow rich in." The lower orders have the lounging, reckless
- manners of the Gauchos of the Pampas; and their dress, riding-gear, and
- habits of life, are nearly the same. To my mind the town had a stupid,
- forlorn aspect. Neither the boasted alameda, nor the scenery, is at all
- comparable with that of Santiago; but to those who, coming from Buenos
- Ayres, have just crossed the unvaried Pampas, the gardens and orchards
- must appear delightful. Sir F. Head, speaking of the inhabitants, says,
- "They eat their dinners, and it is so very hot, they go to sleep&mdash;and
- could they do better?" I quite agree with Sir F. Head: the happy doom of
- the Mendozinos is to eat, sleep and be idle.
- </p>
- <p>
- March 29th.&mdash;We set out on our return to Chile, by the Uspallata pass
- situated north of Mendoza. We had to cross a long and most sterile
- traversia of fifteen leagues. The soil in parts was absolutely bare, in
- others covered by numberless dwarf cacti, armed with formidable spines,
- and called by the inhabitants "little lions." There were, also, a few low
- bushes. Although the plain is nearly three thousand feet above the sea,
- the sun was very powerful; and the heat as well as the clouds of
- impalpable dust, rendered the travelling extremely irksome. Our course
- during the day lay nearly parallel to the Cordillera, but gradually
- approaching them. Before sunset we entered one of the wide valleys, or
- rather bays, which open on the plain: this soon narrowed into a ravine,
- where a little higher up the house of Villa Vicencio is situated. As we
- had ridden all day without a drop of water, both our mules and selves were
- very thirsty, and we looked out anxiously for the stream which flows down
- this valley. It was curious to observe how gradually the water made its
- appearance: on the plain the course was quite dry; by degrees it became a
- little damper; then puddles of water appeared; these soon became
- connected; and at Villa Vicencio there was a nice little rivulet.
- </p>
- <p>
- 30th.&mdash;The solitary hovel which bears the imposing name of Villa
- Vicencio, has been mentioned by every traveller who has crossed the Andes.
- I stayed here and at some neighbouring mines during the two succeeding
- days. The geology of the surrounding country is very curious. The
- Uspallata range is separated from the main Cordillera by a long narrow
- plain or basin, like those so often mentioned in Chile, but higher, being
- six thousand feet above the sea. This range has nearly the same
- geographical position with respect to the Cordillera, which the gigantic
- Portillo line has, but it is of a totally different origin: it consists of
- various kinds of submarine lava, alternating with volcanic sandstones and
- other remarkable sedimentary deposits; the whole having a very close
- resemblance to some of the tertiary beds on the shores of the Pacific.
- From this resemblance I expected to find silicified wood, which is
- generally characteristic of those formations. I was gratified in a very
- extraordinary manner. In the central part of the range, at an elevation of
- about seven thousand feet, I observed on a bare slope some snow-white
- projecting columns. These were petrified trees, eleven being silicified,
- and from thirty to forty converted into coarsely-crystallized white
- calcareous spar. They were abruptly broken off, the upright stumps
- projecting a few feet above the ground. The trunks measured from three to
- five feet each in circumference. They stood a little way apart from each
- other, but the whole formed one group. Mr. Robert Brown has been kind
- enough to examine the wood: he says it belongs to the fir tribe, partaking
- of the character of the Araucarian family, but with some curious points of
- affinity with the yew. The volcanic sandstone in which the trees were
- embedded, and from the lower part of which they must have sprung, had
- accumulated in successive thin layers around their trunks; and the stone
- yet retained the impression of the bark.
- </p>
- <p>
- It required little geological practice to interpret the marvellous story
- which this scene at once unfolded; though I confess I was at first so much
- astonished that I could scarcely believe the plainest evidence. I saw the
- spot where a cluster of fine trees once waved their branches on the shores
- of the Atlantic, when that ocean (now driven back 700 miles) came to the
- foot of the Andes. I saw that they had sprung from a volcanic soil which
- had been raised above the level of the sea, and that subsequently this dry
- land, with its upright trees, had been let down into the depths of the
- ocean. In these depths, the formerly dry land was covered by sedimentary
- beds, and these again by enormous streams of submarine lava&mdash;one such
- mass attaining the thickness of a thousand feet; and these deluges of
- molten stone and aqueous deposits five times alternately had been spread
- out. The ocean which received such thick masses, must have been profoundly
- deep; but again the subterranean forces exerted themselves, and I now
- beheld the bed of that ocean, forming a chain of mountains more than seven
- thousand feet in height. Nor had those antagonistic forces been dormant,
- which are always at work wearing down the surface of the land; the great
- piles of strata had been intersected by many wide valleys, and the trees
- now changed into silex, were exposed projecting from the volcanic soil,
- now changed into rock, whence formerly, in a green and budding state, they
- had raised their lofty heads. Now, all is utterly irreclaimable and
- desert; even the lichen cannot adhere to the stony casts of former trees.
- Vast, and scarcely comprehensible as such changes must ever appear, yet
- they have all occurred within a period, recent when compared with the
- history of the Cordillera; and the Cordillera itself is absolutely modern
- as compared with many of the fossiliferous strata of Europe and America.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 1st.&mdash;We crossed the Upsallata range, and at night slept at the
- custom-house&mdash;the only inhabited spot on the plain. Shortly before
- leaving the mountains, there was a very extraordinary view; red, purple,
- green, and quite white sedimentary rocks, alternating with black lavas,
- were broken up and thrown into all kinds of disorder by masses of porphyry
- of every shade of colour, from dark brown to the brightest lilac. It was
- the first view I ever saw, which really resembled those pretty sections
- which geologists make of the inside of the earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day we crossed the plain, and followed the course of the same
- great mountain stream which flows by Luxan. Here it was a furious torrent,
- quite impassable, and appeared larger than in the low country, as was the
- case with the rivulet of Villa Vicencio. On the evening of the succeeding
- day, we reached the Rio de las Vacas, which is considered the worst stream
- in the Cordillera to cross. As all these rivers have a rapid and short
- course, and are formed by the melting of the snow, the hour of the day
- makes a considerable difference in their volume. In the evening the stream
- is muddy and full, but about daybreak it becomes clearer, and much less
- impetuous. This we found to be the case with the Rio Vacas, and in the
- morning we crossed it with little difficulty.
- </p>
- <p>
- The scenery thus far was very uninteresting, compared with that of the
- Portillo pass. Little can be seen beyond the bare walls of the one grand
- flat-bottomed valley, which the road follows up to the highest crest. The
- valley and the huge rocky mountains are extremely barren: during the two
- previous nights the poor mules had absolutely nothing to eat, for
- excepting a few low resinous bushes, scarcely a plant can be seen. In the
- course of this day we crossed some of the worst passes in the Cordillera,
- but their danger has been much exaggerated. I was told that if I attempted
- to pass on foot, my head would turn giddy, and that there was no room to
- dismount; but I did not see a place where any one might not have walked
- over backwards, or got off his mule on either side. One of the bad passes,
- called <i>las Animas</i> (the souls), I had crossed, and did not find out
- till a day afterwards, that it was one of the awful dangers. No doubt
- there are many parts in which, if the mule should stumble, the rider would
- be hurled down a great precipice; but of this there is little chance. I
- dare say, in the spring, the "laderas," or roads, which each year are
- formed anew across the piles of fallen detritus, are very bad; but from
- what I saw, I suspect the real danger is nothing. With cargo-mules the
- case is rather different, for the loads project so far, that the animals,
- occasionally running against each other, or against a point of rock, lose
- their balance, and are thrown down the precipices. In crossing the rivers
- I can well believe that the difficulty may be very great: at this season
- there was little trouble, but in the summer they must be very hazardous. I
- can quite imagine, as Sir F. Head describes, the different expressions of
- those who <i>have</i> passed the gulf, and those who <i>are</i> passing. I
- never heard of any man being drowned, but with loaded mules it frequently
- happens. The arriero tells you to show your mule the best line, and then
- allow her to cross as she likes: the cargo-mule takes a bad line, and is
- often lost.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 4th.&mdash;From the Rio de las Vacas to the Puente del Incas, half a
- day's journey. As there was pasture for the mules, and geology for me, we
- bivouacked here for the night. When one hears of a natural Bridge, one
- pictures to one's self some deep and narrow ravine, across which a bold
- mass of rock has fallen; or a great arch hollowed out like the vault of a
- cavern. Instead of this, the Incas Bridge consists of a crust of
- stratified shingle cemented together by the deposits of the neighbouring
- hot springs. It appears, as if the stream had scooped out a channel on one
- side, leaving an overhanging ledge, which was met by earth and stones
- falling down from the opposite cliff. Certainly an oblique junction, as
- would happen in such a case, was very distinct on one side. The Bridge of
- the Incas is by no means worthy of the great monarchs whose name it bears.
- </p>
- <p>
- 5th.&mdash;We had a long day's ride across the central ridge, from the
- Incas Bridge to the Ojos del Agua, which are situated near the lowest <i>casucha</i>
- on the Chilian side. These casuchas are round little towers, with steps
- outside to reach the floor, which is raised some feet above the ground on
- account of the snow-drifts. They are eight in number, and under the
- Spanish government were kept during the winter well stored with food and
- charcoal, and each courier had a master-key. Now they only answer the
- purpose of caves, or rather dungeons. Seated on some little eminence, they
- are not, however, ill suited to the surrounding scene of desolation. The
- zigzag ascent of the Cumbre, or the partition of the waters, was very
- steep and tedious; its height, according to Mr. Pentland, is 12,454 feet.
- The road did not pass over any perpetual snow, although there were patches
- of it on both hands. The wind on the summit was exceedingly cold, but it
- was impossible not to stop for a few minutes to admire, again and again,
- the colour of the heavens, and the brilliant transparency of the
- atmosphere. The scenery was grand: to the westward there was a fine chaos
- of mountains, divided by profound ravines. Some snow generally falls
- before this period of the season, and it has even happened that the
- Cordillera have been finally closed by this time. But we were most
- fortunate. The sky, by night and by day, was cloudless, excepting a few
- round little masses of vapour, that floated over the highest pinnacles. I
- have often seen these islets in the sky, marking the position of the
- Cordillera, when the far-distant mountains have been hidden beneath the
- horizon.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 6th.&mdash;In the morning we found some thief had stolen one of our
- mules, and the bell of the madrina. We therefore rode only two or three
- miles down the valley, and stayed there the ensuing day in hopes of
- recovering the mule, which the arriero thought had been hidden in some
- ravine. The scenery in this part had assumed a Chilian character: the
- lower sides of the mountains, dotted over with the pale evergreen Quillay
- tree, and with the great chandelier-like cactus, are certainly more to be
- admired than the bare eastern valleys; but I cannot quite agree with the
- admiration expressed by some travellers. The extreme pleasure, I suspect,
- is chiefly owing to the prospect of a good fire and of a good supper,
- after escaping from the cold regions above: and I am sure I most heartily
- participated in these feelings.
- </p>
- <p>
- 8th.&mdash;We left the valley of the Aconcagua, by which we had descended,
- and reached in the evening a cottage near the Villa del St. Rosa. The
- fertility of the plain was delightful: the autumn being advanced, the
- leaves of many of the fruit-trees were falling; and of the labourers,&mdash;some
- were busy in drying figs and peaches on the roofs of their cottages, while
- others were gathering the grapes from the vineyards. It was a pretty
- scene; but I missed that pensive stillness which makes the autumn in
- England indeed the evening of the year. On the 10th we reached Santiago,
- where I received a very kind and hospitable reception from Mr. Caldcleugh.
- My excursion only cost me twenty-four days, and never did I more deeply
- enjoy an equal space of time. A few days afterwards I returned to Mr.
- Corfield's house at Valparaiso.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0016" id="link2HCH0016"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVI &mdash; NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Coast-road to Coquimbo&mdash;Great Loads carried by the Miners&mdash;Coquimbo&mdash;Earthquake&mdash;Step-formed
- Terrace&mdash;Absence of recent Deposits&mdash;Contemporaneousness of the
- Tertiary Formations&mdash;Excursion up the Valley&mdash;Road to Guasco&mdash;Deserts&mdash;Valley
- of Copiapo&mdash;Rain and Earthquakes&mdash;Hydrophobia&mdash;The
- Despoblado&mdash;Indian Ruins&mdash;Probable Change of Climate&mdash;River-bed
- arched by an Earthquake&mdash;Cold Gales of Wind&mdash;Noises from a Hill&mdash;Iquique&mdash;Salt
- Alluvium&mdash;Nitrate of Soda&mdash;Lima&mdash;Unhealthy Country&mdash;Ruins
- of Callao, overthrown by an Earthquake&mdash;Recent Subsidence&mdash;Elevated
- Shells on San Lorenzo, their decomposition&mdash;Plain with embedded
- Shells and fragments of Pottery&mdash;Antiquity of the Indian Race.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>PRIL 27th.&mdash;I
- set out on a journey to Coquimbo, and thence through Guasco to Copiapo,
- where Captain Fitz Roy kindly offered to pick me up in the Beagle. The
- distance in a straight line along the shore northward is only 420 miles;
- but my mode of travelling made it a very long journey. I bought four
- horses and two mules, the latter carrying the luggage on alternate days.
- The six animals together only cost the value of twenty-five pounds
- sterling, and at Copiapo I sold them again for twenty-three. We travelled
- in the same independent manner as before, cooking our own meals, and
- sleeping in the open air. As we rode towards the Vino del Mar, I took a
- farewell view of Valparaiso, and admired its picturesque appearance. For
- geological purposes I made a detour from the high road to the foot of the
- Bell of Quillota. We passed through an alluvial district rich in gold, to
- the neighbourhood of Limache, where we slept. Washing for gold supports
- the inhabitants of numerous hovels, scattered along the sides of each
- little rivulet; but, like all those whose gains are uncertain, they are
- unthrifty in all their habits, and consequently poor.
- </p>
- <p>
- 28th.&mdash;In the afternoon we arrived at a cottage at the foot of the
- Bell mountain. The inhabitants were freeholders, which is not very usual
- in Chile. They supported themselves on the produce of a garden and a
- little field, but were very poor. Capital is here so deficient, that the
- people are obliged to sell their green corn while standing in the field,
- in order to buy necessaries for the ensuing year. Wheat in consequence was
- dearer in the very district of its production than at Valparaiso, where
- the contractors live. The next day we joined the main road to Coquimbo. At
- night there was a very light shower of rain: this was the first drop that
- had fallen since the heavy rain of September 11th and 12th, which detained
- me a prisoner at the Baths of Cauquenes. The interval was seven and a half
- months; but the rain this year in Chile was rather later than usual. The
- distant Andes were now covered by a thick mass of snow, and were a
- glorious sight.
- </p>
- <p>
- May 2nd.&mdash;The road continued to follow the coast, at no great
- distance from the sea. The few trees and bushes which are common in
- central Chile decreased rapidly in numbers, and were replaced by a tall
- plant, something like a yucca in appearance. The surface of the country,
- on a small scale, was singularly broken and irregular; abrupt little peaks
- of rock rising out of small plains or basins. The indented coast and the
- bottom of the neighbouring sea, studded with breakers, would, if converted
- into dry land, present similar forms; and such a conversion without doubt
- has taken place in the part over which we rode.
- </p>
- <p>
- 3rd.&mdash;Quilimari to Conchalee. The country became more and more
- barren. In the valleys there was scarcely sufficient water for any
- irrigation; and the intermediate land was quite bare, not supporting even
- goats. In the spring, after the winter showers, a thin pasture rapidly
- springs up, and cattle are then driven down from the Cordillera to graze
- for a short time. It is curious to observe how the seeds of the grass and
- other plants seem to accommodate themselves, as if by an acquired habit,
- to the quantity of rain which falls upon different parts of this coast.
- One shower far northward at Copiapo produces as great an effect on the
- vegetation, as two at Guasco, and three or four in this district. At
- Valparaiso a winter so dry as greatly to injure the pasture, would at
- Guasco produce the most unusual abundance. Proceeding northward, the
- quantity of rain does not appear to decrease in strict proportion to the
- latitude. At Conchalee, which is only 67 miles north of Valparaiso, rain
- is not expected till the end of May; whereas at Valparaiso some generally
- falls early in April: the annual quantity is likewise small in proportion
- to the lateness of the season at which it commences.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4th.&mdash;Finding the coast-road devoid of interest of any kind, we
- turned inland towards the mining district and valley of Illapel. This
- valley, like every other in Chile, is level, broad, and very fertile: it
- is bordered on each side, either by cliffs of stratified shingle, or by
- bare rocky mountains. Above the straight line of the uppermost irrigating
- ditch, all is brown as on a high road; while all below is of as bright a
- green as verdigris, from the beds of alfalfa, a kind of clover. We
- proceeded to Los Hornos, another mining district, where the principal hill
- was drilled with holes, like a great ants'-nest. The Chilian miners are a
- peculiar race of men in their habits. Living for weeks together in the
- most desolate spots, when they descend to the villages on feast-days,
- there is no excess of extravagance into which they do not run. They
- sometimes gain a considerable sum, and then, like sailors with
- prize-money, they try how soon they can contrive to squander it. They
- drink excessively, buy quantities of clothes, and in a few days return
- penniless to their miserable abodes, there to work harder than beasts of
- burden. This thoughtlessness, as with sailors, is evidently the result of
- a similar manner of life. Their daily food is found them, and they acquire
- no habits of carefulness: moreover, temptation and the means of yielding
- to it are placed in their power at the same time. On the other hand, in
- Cornwall, and some other parts of England, where the system of selling
- part of the vein is followed, the miners, from being obliged to act and
- think for themselves, are a singularly intelligent and well-conducted set
- of men.
- </p>
- <p>
- The dress of the Chilian miner is peculiar and rather picturesque He wears
- a very long shirt of some dark-coloured baize, with a leathern apron; the
- whole being fastened round his waist by a bright-coloured sash. His
- trousers are very broad, and his small cap of scarlet cloth is made to fit
- the head closely. We met a party of these miners in full costume, carrying
- the body of one of their companions to be buried. They marched at a very
- quick trot, four men supporting the corpse. One set having run as hard as
- they could for about two hundred yards, were relieved by four others, who
- had previously dashed on ahead on horseback. Thus they proceeded,
- encouraging each other by wild cries: altogether the scene formed a most
- strange funeral.
- </p>
- <p>
- We continued travelling northward, in a zigzag line; sometimes stopping a
- day to geologize. The country was so thinly inhabited, and the track so
- obscure, that we often had difficulty in finding our way. On the 12th I
- stayed at some mines. The ore in this case was not considered particularly
- good, but from being abundant it was supposed the mine would sell for
- about thirty or forty thousand dollars (that is, 6000 or 8000 pounds
- sterling); yet it had been bought by one of the English Associations for
- an ounce of gold (3l. 8s.). The ore is yellow pyrites, which, as I have
- already remarked, before the arrival of the English, was not supposed to
- contain a particle of copper. On a scale of profits nearly as great as in
- the above instance, piles of cinders, abounding with minute globules of
- metallic copper, were purchased; yet with these advantages, the mining
- associations, as is well known, contrived to lose immense sums of money.
- The folly of the greater number of the commissioners and shareholders
- amounted to infatuation;&mdash;a thousand pounds per annum given in some
- cases to entertain the Chilian authorities; libraries of well-bound
- geological books; miners brought out for particular metals, as tin, which
- are not found in Chile; contracts to supply the miners with milk, in parts
- where there are no cows; machinery, where it could not possibly be used;
- and a hundred similar arrangements, bore witness to our absurdity, and to
- this day afford amusement to the natives. Yet there can be no doubt, that
- the same capital well employed in these mines would have yielded an
- immense return, a confidential man of business, a practical miner and
- assayer, would have been all that was required.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Head has described the wonderful load which the "Apires," truly
- beasts of burden, carry up from the deepest mines. I confess I thought the
- account exaggerated: so that I was glad to take an opportunity of weighing
- one of the loads, which I picked out by hazard. It required considerable
- exertion on my part, when standing directly over it, to lift it from the
- ground. The load was considered under weight when found to be 197 pounds.
- The apire had carried this up eighty perpendicular yards,&mdash;part of
- the way by a steep passage, but the greater part up notched poles, placed
- in a zigzag line up the shaft. According to the general regulation, the
- apire is not allowed to halt for breath, except the mine is six hundred
- feet deep. The average load is considered as rather more than 200 pounds,
- and I have been assured that one of 300 pounds (twenty-two stone and a
- half) by way of a trial has been brought up from the deepest mine! At this
- time the apires were bringing up the usual load twelve times in the day;
- that is 2400 pounds from eighty yards deep; and they were employed in the
- intervals in breaking and picking ore.
- </p>
- <p>
- These men, excepting from accidents, are healthy, and appear cheerful.
- Their bodies are not very muscular. They rarely eat meat once a week, and
- never oftener, and then only the hard dry charqui. Although with a
- knowledge that the labour was voluntary, it was nevertheless quite
- revolting to see the state in which they reached the mouth of the mine;
- their bodies bent forward, leaning with their arms on the steps, their
- legs bowed, their muscles quivering, the perspiration streaming from their
- faces over their breasts, their nostrils distended, the corners of their
- mouth forcibly drawn back, and the expulsion of their breath most
- laborious. Each time they draw their breath, they utter an articulate cry
- of "ay-ay," which ends in a sound rising from deep in the chest, but
- shrill like the note of a fife. After staggering to the pile of ore, they
- emptied the "carpacho;" in two or three seconds recovering their breath,
- they wiped the sweat from their brows, and apparently quite fresh
- descended the mine again at a quick pace. This appears to me a wonderful
- instance of the amount of labour which habit, for it can be nothing else,
- will enable a man to endure.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening, talking with the <i>mayor-domo</i> of these mines about
- the number of foreigners now scattered over the whole country, he told me
- that, though quite a young man, he remembers when he was a boy at school
- at Coquimbo, a holiday being given to see the captain of an English ship,
- who was brought to the city to speak to the governor. He believes that
- nothing would have induced any boy in the school, himself included, to
- have gone close to the Englishman; so deeply had they been impressed with
- an idea of the heresy, contamination, and evil to be derived from contact
- with such a person. To this day they relate the atrocious actions of the
- bucaniers; and especially of one man, who took away the figure of the
- Virgin Mary, and returned the year after for that of St. Joseph, saying it
- was a pity the lady should not have a husband. I heard also of an old lady
- who, at a dinner at Coquimbo, remarked how wonderfully strange it was that
- she should have lived to dine in the same room with an Englishman; for she
- remembered as a girl, that twice, at the mere cry of "Los Ingleses," every
- soul, carrying what valuables they could, had taken to the mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- 14th.&mdash;We reached Coquimbo, where we stayed a few days. The town is
- remarkable for nothing but its extreme quietness. It is said to contain
- from 6000 to 8000 inhabitants. On the morning of the 17th it rained
- lightly, the first time this year, for about five hours. The farmers, who
- plant corn near the sea-coast where the atmosphere is most humid, taking
- advantage of this shower, would break up the ground; after a second they
- would put the seed in; and if a third shower should fall, they would reap
- a good harvest in the spring. It was interesting to watch the effect of
- this trifling amount of moisture. Twelve hours afterwards the ground
- appeared as dry as ever; yet after an interval of ten days, all the hills
- were faintly tinged with green patches; the grass being sparingly
- scattered in hair-like fibres a full inch in length. Before this shower
- every part of the surface was bare as on a high road.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening, Captain Fitz Roy and myself were dining with Mr. Edwards,
- an English resident well known for his hospitality by all who have visited
- Coquimbo, when a sharp earthquake happened. I heard the forecoming rumble,
- but from the screams of the ladies, the running of the servants, and the
- rush of several of the gentlemen to the doorway, I could not distinguish
- the motion. Some of the women afterwards were crying with terror, and one
- gentleman said he should not be able to sleep all night, or if he did, it
- would only be to dream of falling houses. The father of this person had
- lately lost all his property at Talcahuano, and he himself had only just
- escaped a falling roof at Valparaiso, in 1822. He mentioned a curious
- coincidence which then happened: he was playing at cards, when a German,
- one of the party, got up, and said he would never sit in a room in these
- countries with the door shut, as owing to his having done so, he had
- nearly lost his life at Copiapo. Accordingly he opened the door; and no
- sooner had he done this, than he cried out, "Here it comes again!" and the
- famous shock commenced. The whole party escaped. The danger in an
- earthquake is not from the time lost in opening the door, but from the
- chance of its becoming jammed by the movement of the walls.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is impossible to be much surprised at the fear which natives and old
- residents, though some of them known to be men of great command of mind,
- so generally experience during earthquakes. I think, however, this excess
- of panic may be partly attributed to a want of habit in governing their
- fear, as it is not a feeling they are ashamed of. Indeed, the natives do
- not like to see a person indifferent. I heard of two Englishmen who,
- sleeping in the open air during a smart shock, knowing that there was no
- danger, did not rise. The natives cried out indignantly, "Look at those
- heretics, they do not even get out of their beds!"
- </p>
- <p>
- I spent some days in examining the step-formed terraces of shingle, first
- noticed by Captain B. Hall, and believed by Mr. Lyell to have been formed
- by the sea, during the gradual rising of the land. This certainly is the
- true explanation, for I found numerous shells of existing species on these
- terraces. Five narrow, gently sloping, fringe-like terraces rise one
- behind the other, and where best developed are formed of shingle: they
- front the bay, and sweep up both sides of the valley. At Guasco, north of
- Coquimbo, the phenomenon is displayed on a much grander scale, so as to
- strike with surprise even some of the inhabitants. The terraces are there
- much broader, and may be called plains, in some parts there are six of
- them, but generally only five; they run up the valley for thirty-seven
- miles from the coast. These step-formed terraces or fringes closely
- resemble those in the valley of S. Cruz, and, except in being on a smaller
- scale, those great ones along the whole coast-line of Patagonia. They have
- undoubtedly been formed by the denuding power of the sea, during long
- periods of rest in the gradual elevation of the continent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Shells of many existing species not only lie on the surface of the
- terraces at Coquimbo (to a height of 250 feet), but are embedded in a
- friable calcareous rock, which in some places is as much as between twenty
- and thirty feet in thickness, but is of little extent. These modern beds
- rest on an ancient tertiary formation containing shells, apparently all
- extinct. Although I examined so many hundred miles of coast on the
- Pacific, as well as Atlantic side of the continent, I found no regular
- strata containing sea-shells of recent species, excepting at this place,
- and at a few points northward on the road to Guasco. This fact appears to
- me highly remarkable; for the explanation generally given by geologists,
- of the absence in any district of stratified fossiliferous deposits of a
- given period, namely, that the surface then existed as dry land, is not
- here applicable; for we know from the shells strewed on the surface and
- embedded in loose sand or mould that the land for thousands of miles along
- both coasts has lately been submerged. The explanation, no doubt, must be
- sought in the fact, that the whole southern part of the continent has been
- for a long time slowly rising; and therefore that all matter deposited
- along shore in shallow water, must have been soon brought up and slowly
- exposed to the wearing action of the sea-beach; and it is only in
- comparatively shallow water that the greater number of marine organic
- beings can flourish, and in such water it is obviously impossible that
- strata of any great thickness can accumulate. To show the vast power of
- the wearing action of sea-beaches, we need only appeal to the great cliffs
- along the present coast of Patagonia, and to the escarpments or ancient
- sea-cliffs at different levels, one above another, on that same line of
- coast.
- </p>
- <p>
- The old underlying tertiary formation at Coquimbo, appears to be of about
- the same age with several deposits on the coast of Chile (of which that of
- Navedad is the principal one), and with the great formation of Patagonia.
- Both at Navedad and in Patagonia there is evidence, that since the shells
- (a list of which has been seen by Professor E. Forbes) there entombed were
- living, there has been a subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an
- ensuing elevation. It may naturally be asked, how it comes that, although
- no extensive fossiliferous deposits of the recent period, nor of any
- period intermediate between it and the ancient tertiary epoch, have been
- preserved on either side of the continent, yet that at this ancient
- tertiary epoch, sedimentary matter containing fossil remains, should have
- been deposited and preserved at different points in north and south lines,
- over a space of 1100 miles on the shores of the Pacific, and of at least
- 1350 miles on the shores of the Atlantic, and in an east and west line of
- 700 miles across the widest part of the continent? I believe the
- explanation is not difficult, and that it is perhaps applicable to nearly
- analogous facts observed in other quarters of the world. Considering the
- enormous power of denudation which the sea possesses, as shown by
- numberless facts, it is not probable that a sedimentary deposit, when
- being upraised, could pass through the ordeal of the beach, so as to be
- preserved in sufficient masses to last to a distant period, without it
- were originally of wide extent and of considerable thickness: now it is
- impossible on a moderately shallow bottom, which alone is favourable to
- most living creatures, that a thick and widely extended covering of
- sediment could be spread out, without the bottom sank down to receive the
- successive layers. This seems to have actually taken place at about the
- same period in southern Patagonia and Chile, though these places are a
- thousand miles apart. Hence, if prolonged movements of approximately
- contemporaneous subsidence are generally widely extensive, as I am
- strongly inclined to believe from my examination of the Coral Reefs of the
- great oceans&mdash;or if, confining our view to South America, the
- subsiding movements have been co-extensive with those of elevation, by
- which, within the same period of existing shells, the shores of Peru,
- Chile, Tierra del Fuego, Patagonia, and La Plata have been upraised&mdash;then
- we can see that at the same time, at far distant points, circumstances
- would have been favourable to the formation of fossiliferous deposits of
- wide extent and of considerable thickness; and such deposits,
- consequently, would have a good chance of resisting the wear and tear of
- successive beach-lines, and of lasting to a future epoch.
- </p>
- <p>
- May 21st.&mdash;I set out in company with Don Jose Edwards to the
- silver-mine of Arqueros, and thence up the valley of Coquimbo. Passing
- through a mountainous country, we reached by nightfall the mines belonging
- to Mr. Edwards. I enjoyed my night's rest here from a reason which will
- not be fully appreciated in England, namely, the absence of fleas! The
- rooms in Coquimbo swarm with them; but they will not live here at the
- height of only three or four thousand feet: it can scarcely be the
- trifling diminution of temperature, but some other cause which destroys
- these troublesome insects at this place. The mines are now in a bad state,
- though they formerly yielded about 2000 pounds in weight of silver a year.
- It has been said that "a person with a copper-mine will gain; with silver
- he may gain; but with gold he is sure to lose." This is not true: all the
- large Chilian fortunes have been made by mines of the more precious
- metals. A short time since an English physician returned to England from
- Copiapo, taking with him the profits of one share of a silver-mine, which
- amounted to about 24,000 pounds sterling. No doubt a copper-mine with care
- is a sure game, whereas the other is gambling, or rather taking a ticket
- in a lottery. The owners lose great quantities of rich ores; for no
- precautions can prevent robberies. I heard of a gentleman laying a bet
- with another, that one of his men should rob him before his face. The ore
- when brought out of the mine is broken into pieces, and the useless stone
- thrown on one side. A couple of the miners who were thus employed,
- pitched, as if by accident, two fragments away at the same moment, and
- then cried out for a joke "Let us see which rolls furthest." The owner,
- who was standing by, bet a cigar with his friend on the race. The miner by
- this means watched the very point amongst the rubbish where the stone lay.
- In the evening he picked it up and carried it to his master, showing him a
- rich mass of silver-ore, and saying, "This was the stone on which you won
- a cigar by its rolling so far."
- </p>
- <p>
- May 23rd.&mdash;We descended into the fertile valley of Coquimbo, and
- followed it till we reached an Hacienda belonging to a relation of Don
- Jose, where we stayed the next day. I then rode one day's journey further,
- to see what were declared to be some petrified shells and beans, which
- latter turned out to be small quartz pebbles. We passed through several
- small villages; and the valley was beautifully cultivated, and the whole
- scenery very grand. We were here near the main Cordillera, and the
- surrounding hills were lofty. In all parts of northern Chile, fruit trees
- produce much more abundantly at a considerable height near the Andes than
- in the lower country. The figs and grapes of this district are famous for
- their excellence, and are cultivated to a great extent. This valley is,
- perhaps, the most productive one north of Quillota. I believe it contains,
- including Coquimbo, 25,000 inhabitants. The next day I returned to the
- Hacienda, and thence, together with Don Jose, to Coquimbo.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 2nd.&mdash;We set out for the valley of Guasco, following the
- coast-road, which was considered rather less desert than the other. Our
- first day's ride was to a solitary house, called Yerba Buena, where there
- was pasture for our horses. The shower mentioned as having fallen, a
- fortnight ago, only reached about half-way to Guasco; we had, therefore,
- in the first part of our journey a most faint tinge of green, which soon
- faded quite away. Even where brightest, it was scarcely sufficient to
- remind one of the fresh turf and budding flowers of the spring of other
- countries. While travelling through these deserts one feels like a
- prisoner shut up in a gloomy court, who longs to see something green and
- to smell a moist atmosphere.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 3rd.&mdash;Yerba Buena to Carizal. During the first part of the day
- we crossed a mountainous rocky desert, and afterwards a long deep sandy
- plain, strewed with broken sea-shells. There was very little water, and
- that little saline: the whole country, from the coast to the Cordillera,
- is an uninhabited desert. I saw traces only of one living animal in
- abundance, namely, the shells of a Bulimus, which were collected together
- in extraordinary numbers on the driest spots. In the spring one humble
- little plant sends out a few leaves, and on these the snails feed. As they
- are seen only very early in the morning, when the ground is slightly damp
- with dew, the Guascos believe that they are bred from it. I have observed
- in other places that extremely dry and sterile districts, where the soil
- is calcareous, are extraordinarily favourable to land-shells. At Carizal
- there were a few cottages, some brackish water, and a trace of
- cultivation: but it was with difficulty that we purchased a little corn
- and straw for our horses.
- </p>
- <p>
- 4th.&mdash;Carizal to Sauce. We continued to ride over desert plains,
- tenanted by large herds of guanaco. We crossed also the valley of
- Chaneral; which, although the most fertile one between Guasco and
- Coquimbo, is very narrow, and produces so little pasture, that we could
- not purchase any for our horses. At Sauce we found a very civil old
- gentleman, superintendent of a copper-smelting furnace. As an especial
- favour, he allowed me to purchase at a high price an armful of dirty
- straw, which was all the poor horses had for supper after their long day's
- journey. Few smelting-furnaces are now at work in any part of Chile; it is
- found more profitable, on account of the extreme scarcity of firewood, and
- from the Chilian method of reduction being so unskilful, to ship the ore
- for Swansea. The next day we crossed some mountains to Freyrina, in the
- valley of Guasco. During each day's ride further northward, the vegetation
- became more and more scanty; even the great chandelier-like cactus was
- here replaced by a different and much smaller species. During the winter
- months, both in northern Chile and in Peru, a uniform bank of clouds
- hangs, at no great height, over the Pacific. From the mountains we had a
- very striking view of this white and brilliant aerial-field, which sent
- arms up the valleys, leaving islands and promontories in the same manner,
- as the sea does in the Chonos archipelago and in Tierra del Fuego.
- </p>
- <p>
- We stayed two days at Freyrina. In the valley of Guasco there are four
- small towns. At the mouth there is the port, a spot entirely desert, and
- without any water in the immediate neighbourhood. Five leagues higher up
- stands Freyrina, a long straggling village, with decent whitewashed
- houses. Again, ten leagues further up Ballenar is situated, and above this
- Guasco Alto, a horticultural village, famous for its dried fruit. On a
- clear day the view up the valley is very fine; the straight opening
- terminates in the far-distant snowy Cordillera; on each side an infinity
- of crossing-lines are blended together in a beautiful haze. The foreground
- is singular from the number of parallel and step-formed terraces; and the
- included strip of green valley, with its willow-bushes, is contrasted on
- both hands with the naked hills. That the surrounding country was most
- barren will be readily believed, when it is known that a shower of rain
- had not fallen during the last thirteen months. The inhabitants heard with
- the greatest envy of the rain at Coquimbo; from the appearance of the sky
- they had hopes of equally good fortune, which, a fortnight afterwards,
- were realized. I was at Copiapo at the time; and there the people, with
- equal envy, talked of the abundant rain at Guasco. After two or three very
- dry years, perhaps with not more than one shower during the whole time, a
- rainy year generally follows; and this does more harm than even the
- drought. The rivers swell, and cover with gravel and sand the narrow
- strips of ground, which alone are fit for cultivation. The floods also
- injure the irrigating ditches. Great devastation had thus been caused
- three years ago.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 8th.&mdash;We rode on to Ballenar, which takes its name from
- Ballenagh in Ireland, the birthplace of the family of O'Higgins, who,
- under the Spanish government, were presidents and generals in Chile. As
- the rocky mountains on each hand were concealed by clouds, the
- terrace-like plains gave to the valley an appearance like that of Santa
- Cruz in Patagonia. After spending one day at Ballenar I set out, on the
- 10th, for the upper part of the valley of Copiapo. We rode all day over an
- uninteresting country. I am tired of repeating the epithets barren and
- sterile. These words, however, as commonly used, are comparative; I have
- always applied them to the plains of Patagonia, which can boast of spiny
- bushes and some tufts of grass; and this is absolute fertility, as
- compared with northern Chile. Here again, there are not many spaces of two
- hundred yards square, where some little bush, cactus or lichen, may not be
- discovered by careful examination; and in the soil seeds lie dormant ready
- to spring up during the first rainy winter. In Peru real deserts occur
- over wide tracts of country. In the evening we arrived at a valley, in
- which the bed of the streamlet was damp: following it up, we came to
- tolerably good water. During the night, the stream, from not being
- evaporated and absorbed so quickly, flows a league lower down than during
- the day. Sticks were plentiful for firewood, so that it was a good place
- to bivouac for us; but for the poor animals there was not a mouthful to
- eat.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 11th.&mdash;We rode without stopping for twelve hours till we reached
- an old smelting-furnace, where there was water and firewood; but our
- horses again had nothing to eat, being shut up in an old courtyard. The
- line of road was hilly, and the distant views interesting, from the varied
- colours of the bare mountains. It was almost a pity to see the sun shining
- constantly over so useless a country; such splendid weather ought to have
- brightened fields and pretty gardens. The next day we reached the valley
- of Copiapo. I was heartily glad of it; for the whole journey was a
- continued source of anxiety; it was most disagreeable to hear, whilst
- eating our own suppers, our horses gnawing the posts to which they were
- tied, and to have no means of relieving their hunger. To all appearance,
- however, the animals were quite fresh; and no one could have told that
- they had eaten nothing for the last fifty-five hours.
- </p>
- <p>
- I had a letter of introduction to Mr. Bingley, who received me very kindly
- at the Hacienda of Potrero Seco. This estate is between twenty and thirty
- miles long, but very narrow, being generally only two fields wide, one on
- each side the river. In some parts the estate is of no width, that is to
- say, the land cannot be irrigated, and therefore is valueless, like the
- surrounding rocky desert. The small quantity of cultivated land in the
- whole line of valley, does not so much depend on inequalities of level,
- and consequent unfitness for irrigation, as on the small supply of water.
- The river this year was remarkably full: here, high up the valley, it
- reached to the horse's belly, and was about fifteen yards wide, and rapid;
- lower down it becomes smaller and smaller, and is generally quite lost, as
- happened during one period of thirty years, so that not a drop entered the
- sea. The inhabitants watch a storm over the Cordillera with great
- interest; as one good fall of snow provides them with water for the
- ensuing year. This is of infinitely more consequence than rain in the
- lower country. Rain, as often as it falls, which is about once in every
- two or three years, is a great advantage, because the cattle and mules can
- for some time afterwards find a little pasture in the mountains. But
- without snow on the Andes, desolation extends throughout the valley. It is
- on record that three times nearly all the inhabitants have been obliged to
- emigrate to the south. This year there was plenty of water, and every man
- irrigated his ground as much as he chose; but it has frequently been
- necessary to post soldiers at the sluices, to see that each estate took
- only its proper allowance during so many hours in the week. The valley is
- said to contain 12,000 souls, but its produce is sufficient only for three
- months in the year; the rest of the supply being drawn from Valparaiso and
- the south. Before the discovery of the famous silver-mines of Chanuncillo,
- Copiapo was in a rapid state of decay; but now it is in a very thriving
- condition; and the town, which was completely overthrown by an earthquake,
- has been rebuilt.
- </p>
- <p>
- The valley of Copiapo, forming a mere ribbon of green in a desert, runs in
- a very southerly direction; so that it is of considerable length to its
- source in the Cordillera. The valleys of Guasco and Copiapo may both be
- considered as long narrow islands, separated from the rest of Chile by
- deserts of rock instead of by salt water. Northward of these, there is one
- other very miserable valley, called Paposo, which contains about two
- hundred souls; and then there extends the real desert of Atacama&mdash;a
- barrier far worse than the most turbulent ocean. After staying a few days
- at Potrero Seco, I proceeded up the valley to the house of Don Benito
- Cruz, to whom I had a letter of introduction. I found him most hospitable;
- indeed it is impossible to bear too strong testimony to the kindness with
- which travellers are received in almost every part of South America. The
- next day I hired some mules to take me by the ravine of Jolquera into the
- central Cordillera. On the second night the weather seemed to foretell a
- storm of snow or rain, and whilst lying in our beds we felt a trifling
- shock of an earthquake.
- </p>
- <p>
- The connection between earthquakes and the weather has been often
- disputed: it appears to me to be a point of great interest, which is
- little understood. Humboldt has remarked in one part of the Personal
- Narrative, <a href="#linknote-161" name="linknoteref-161"
- id="linknoteref-161"><small>161</small></a> that it would be difficult for
- any person who had long resided in New Andalusia, or in Lower Peru, to
- deny that there exists some connection between these phenomena: in another
- part, however he seems to think the connection fanciful. At Guayaquil it
- is said that a heavy shower in the dry season is invariably followed by an
- earthquake. In Northern Chile, from the extreme infrequency of rain, or
- even of weather foreboding rain, the probability of accidental
- coincidences becomes very small; yet the inhabitants are here most firmly
- convinced of some connection between the state of the atmosphere and of
- the trembling of the ground: I was much struck by this when mentioning to
- some people at Copiapo that there had been a sharp shock at Coquimbo: they
- immediately cried out, "How fortunate! there will be plenty of pasture
- there this year." To their minds an earthquake foretold rain as surely as
- rain foretold abundant pasture. Certainly it did so happen that on the
- very day of the earthquake, that shower of rain fell, which I have
- described as in ten days' time producing a thin sprinkling of grass. At
- other times rain has followed earthquakes at a period of the year when it
- is a far greater prodigy than the earthquake itself: this happened after
- the shock of November, 1822, and again in 1829, at Valparaiso; also after
- that of September, 1833, at Tacna. A person must be somewhat habituated to
- the climate of these countries to perceive the extreme improbability of
- rain falling at such seasons, except as a consequence of some law quite
- unconnected with the ordinary course of the weather. In the cases of great
- volcanic eruptions, as that of Coseguina, where torrents of rain fell at a
- time of the year most unusual for it, and "almost unprecedented in Central
- America," it is not difficult to understand that the volumes of vapour and
- clouds of ashes might have disturbed the atmospheric equilibrium. Humboldt
- extends this view to the case of earthquakes unaccompanied by eruptions;
- but I can hardly conceive it possible, that the small quantity of aeriform
- fluids which then escape from the fissured ground, can produce such
- remarkable effects. There appears much probability in the view first
- proposed by Mr. P. Scrope, that when the barometer is low, and when rain
- might naturally be expected to fall, the diminished pressure of the
- atmosphere over a wide extent of country, might well determine the precise
- day on which the earth, already stretched to the utmost by the
- subterranean forces, should yield, crack, and consequently tremble. It is,
- however, doubtful how far this idea will explain the circumstances of
- torrents of rain falling in the dry season during several days, after an
- earthquake unaccompanied by an eruption; such cases seem to bespeak some
- more intimate connection between the atmospheric and subterranean regions.
- </p>
- <p>
- Finding little of interest in this part of the ravine, we retraced our
- steps to the house of Don Benito, where I stayed two days collecting
- fossil shells and wood. Great prostrate silicified trunks of trees,
- embedded in a conglomerate, were extraordinarily numerous. I measured one,
- which was fifteen feet in circumference: how surprising it is that every
- atom of the woody matter in this great cylinder should have been removed
- and replaced by silex so perfectly, that each vessel and pore is
- preserved! These trees flourished at about the period of our lower chalk;
- they all belonged to the fir-tribe. It was amusing to hear the inhabitants
- discussing the nature of the fossil shells which I collected, almost in
- the same terms as were used a century ago in Europe,&mdash;namely, whether
- or not they had been thus "born by nature." My geological examination of
- the country generally created a good deal of surprise amongst the
- Chilenos: it was long before they could be convinced that I was not
- hunting for mines. This was sometimes troublesome: I found the most ready
- way of explaining my employment, was to ask them how it was that they
- themselves were not curious concerning earthquakes and volcanos?&mdash;why
- some springs were hot and others cold?&mdash;why there were mountains in
- Chile, and not a hill in La Plata? These bare questions at once satisfied
- and silenced the greater number; some, however (like a few in England who
- are a century behindhand), thought that all such inquiries were useless
- and impious; and that it was quite sufficient that God had thus made the
- mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- An order had recently been issued that all stray dogs should be killed,
- and we saw many lying dead on the road. A great number had lately gone
- mad, and several men had been bitten and had died in consequence. On
- several occasions hydrophobia has prevailed in this valley. It is
- remarkable thus to find so strange and dreadful a disease, appearing time
- after time in the same isolated spot. It has been remarked that certain
- villages in England are in like manner much more subject to this
- visitation than others. Dr. Unanue states that hydrophobia was first known
- in South America in 1803: this statement is corroborated by Azara and
- Ulloa having never heard of it in their time. Dr. Unanue says that it
- broke out in Central America, and slowly travelled southward. It reached
- Arequipa in 1807; and it is said that some men there, who had not been
- bitten, were affected, as were some negroes, who had eaten a bullock which
- had died of hydrophobia. At Ica forty-two people thus miserably perished.
- The disease came on between twelve and ninety days after the bite; and in
- those cases where it did come on, death ensued invariably within five
- days. After 1808, a long interval ensued without any cases. On inquiry, I
- did not hear of hydrophobia in Van Diemen's Land, or in Australia; and
- Burchell says, that during the five years he was at the Cape of Good Hope,
- he never heard of an instance of it. Webster asserts that at the Azores
- hydrophobia has never occurred; and the same assertion has been made with
- respect to Mauritius and St. Helena. <a href="#linknote-162"
- name="linknoteref-162" id="linknoteref-162"><small>162</small></a> In so
- strange a disease some information might possibly be gained by considering
- the circumstances under which it originates in distant climates; for it is
- improbable that a dog already bitten, should have been brought to these
- distant countries.
- </p>
- <p>
- At night, a stranger arrived at the house of Don Benito, and asked
- permission to sleep there. He said he had been wandering about the
- mountains for seventeen days, having lost his way. He started from Guasco,
- and being accustomed to travelling in the Cordillera, did not expect any
- difficulty in following the track to Copiapo; but he soon became involved
- in a labyrinth of mountains, whence he could not escape. Some of his mules
- had fallen over precipices, and he had been in great distress. His chief
- difficulty arose from not knowing where to find water in the lower
- country, so that he was obliged to keep bordering the central ranges.
- </p>
- <p>
- We returned down the valley, and on the 22nd reached the town of Copiapo.
- The lower part of the valley is broad, forming a fine plain like that of
- Quillota. The town covers a considerable space of ground, each house
- possessing a garden: but it is an uncomfortable place, and the dwellings
- are poorly furnished. Every one seems bent on the one object of making
- money, and then migrating as quickly as possible. All the inhabitants are
- more or less directly concerned with mines; and mines and ores are the
- sole subjects of conversation. Necessaries of all sorts are extremely
- dear; as the distance from the town to the port is eighteen leagues, and
- the land carriage very expensive. A fowl costs five or six shillings; meat
- is nearly as dear as in England; firewood, or rather sticks, are brought
- on donkeys from a distance of two and three days' journey within the
- Cordillera; and pasturage for animals is a shilling a day: all this for
- South America is wonderfully exorbitant.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 26th.&mdash;I hired a guide and eight mules to take me into the
- Cordillera by a different line from my last excursion. As the country was
- utterly desert, we took a cargo and a half of barley mixed with chopped
- straw. About two leagues above the town a broad valley called the
- "Despoblado," or uninhabited, branches off from that one by which we had
- arrived. Although a valley of the grandest dimensions, and leading to a
- pass across the Cordillera, yet it is completely dry, excepting perhaps
- for a few days during some very rainy winter. The sides of the crumbling
- mountains were furrowed by scarcely any ravines; and the bottom of the
- main valley, filled with shingle, was smooth and nearly level. No
- considerable torrent could ever have flowed down this bed of shingle; for
- if it had, a great cliff-bounded channel, as in all the southern valleys,
- would assuredly have been formed. I feel little doubt that this valley, as
- well as those mentioned by travellers in Peru, were left in the state we
- now see them by the waves of the sea, as the land slowly rose. I observed
- in one place, where the Despoblado was joined by a ravine (which in almost
- any other chain would have been called a grand valley), that its bed,
- though composed merely of sand and gravel, was higher than that of its
- tributary. A mere rivulet of water, in the course of an hour, would have
- cut a channel for itself; but it was evident that ages had passed away,
- and no such rivulet had drained this great tributary. It was curious to
- behold the machinery, if such a term may be used, for the drainage, all,
- with the last trifling exception, perfect, yet without any signs of
- action. Every one must have remarked how mud-banks, left by the retiring
- tide, imitate in miniature a country with hill and dale; and here we have
- the original model in rock, formed as the continent rose during the
- secular retirement of the ocean, instead of during the ebbing and flowing
- of the tides. If a shower of rain falls on the mud-bank, when left dry, it
- deepens the already-formed shallow lines of excavation; and so it is with
- the rain of successive centuries on the bank of rock and soil, which we
- call a continent.
- </p>
- <p>
- We rode on after it was dark, till we reached a side ravine with a small
- well, called "Agua amarga." The water deserved its name, for besides being
- saline it was most offensively putrid and bitter; so that we could not
- force ourselves to drink either tea or mate. I suppose the distance from
- the river of Copiapo to this spot was at least twenty-five or thirty
- English miles; in the whole space there was not a single drop of water,
- the country deserving the name of desert in the strictest sense. Yet about
- half way we passed some old Indian ruins near Punta Gorda: I noticed also
- in front of some of the valleys, which branch off from the Despoblado, two
- piles of stones placed a little way apart, and directed so as to point up
- the mouths of these small valleys. My companions knew nothing about them,
- and only answered my queries by their imperturbable "quien sabe?"
- </p>
- <p>
- I observed Indian ruins in several parts of the Cordillera: the most
- perfect which I saw, were the Ruinas de Tambillos, in the Uspallata Pass.
- Small square rooms were there huddled together in separate groups: some of
- the doorways were yet standing; they were formed by a cross slab of stone
- only about three feet high. Ulloa has remarked on the lowness of the doors
- in the ancient Peruvian dwellings. These houses, when perfect, must have
- been capable of containing a considerable number of persons. Tradition
- says, that they were used as halting-places for the Incas, when they
- crossed the mountains. Traces of Indian habitations have been discovered
- in many other parts, where it does not appear probable that they were used
- as mere resting-places, but yet where the land is as utterly unfit for any
- kind of cultivation, as it is near the Tambillos or at the Incas Bridge,
- or in the Portillo Pass, at all which places I saw ruins. In the ravine of
- Jajuel, near Aconcagua, where there is no pass, I heard of remains of
- houses situated at a great height, where it is extremely cold and sterile.
- At first I imagined that these buildings had been places of refuge, built
- by the Indians on the first arrival of the Spaniards; but I have since
- been inclined to speculate on the probability of a small change of
- climate.
- </p>
- <p>
- In this northern part of Chile, within the Cordillera, old Indian houses
- are said to be especially numerous: by digging amongst the ruins, bits of
- woollen articles, instruments of precious metals, and heads of Indian
- corn, are not unfrequently discovered: an arrow-head made of agate, and of
- precisely the same form with those now used in Tierra del Fuego, was given
- me. I am aware that the Peruvian Indians now frequently inhabit most lofty
- and bleak situations; but at Copiapo I was assured by men who had spent
- their lives in travelling through the Andes, that there were very many
- (muchisimas) buildings at heights so great as almost to border upon the
- perpetual snow, and in parts where there exist no passes, and where the
- land produces absolutely nothing, and what is still more extraordinary,
- where there is no water. Nevertheless it is the opinion of the people of
- the country (although they are much puzzled by the circumstance), that,
- from the appearance of the houses, the Indians must have used them as
- places of residence. In this valley, at Punta Gorda, the remains consisted
- of seven or eight square little rooms, which were of a similar form with
- those at Tambillos, but built chiefly of mud, which the present
- inhabitants cannot, either here or, according to Ulloa, in Peru, imitate
- in durability. They were situated in the most conspicuous and defenceless
- position, at the bottom of the flat broad valley. There was no water
- nearer than three or four leagues, and that only in very small quantity,
- and bad: the soil was absolutely sterile; I looked in vain even for a
- lichen adhering to the rocks. At the present day, with the advantage of
- beasts of burden, a mine, unless it were very rich, could scarcely be
- worked here with profit. Yet the Indians formerly chose it as a place of
- residence! If at the present time two or three showers of rain were to
- fall annually, instead of one, as now is the case during as many years, a
- small rill of water would probably be formed in this great valley; and
- then, by irrigation (which was formerly so well understood by the
- Indians), the soil would easily be rendered sufficiently productive to
- support a few families.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have convincing proofs that this part of the continent of South America
- has been elevated near the coast at least from 400 to 500, and in some
- parts from 1000 to 1300 feet, since the epoch of existing shells; and
- further inland the rise possibly may have been greater. As the peculiarly
- arid character of the climate is evidently a consequence of the height of
- the Cordillera, we may feel almost sure that before the later elevations,
- the atmosphere could not have been so completely drained of its moisture
- as it now is; and as the rise has been gradual, so would have been the
- change in climate. On this notion of a change of climate since the
- buildings were inhabited, the ruins must be of extreme antiquity, but I do
- not think their preservation under the Chilian climate any great
- difficulty. We must also admit on this notion (and this perhaps is a
- greater difficulty) that man has inhabited South America for an immensely
- long period, inasmuch as any change of climate effected by the elevation
- of the land must have been extremely gradual. At Valparaiso, within the
- last 220 years, the rise has been somewhat less than 19 feet: at Lima a
- sea-beach has certainly been upheaved from 80 to 90 feet, within the
- Indo-human period: but such small elevations could have had little power
- in deflecting the moisture-bringing atmospheric currents. Dr. Lund,
- however, found human skeletons in the caves of Brazil, the appearance of
- which induced him to believe that the Indian race has existed during a
- vast lapse of time in South America.
- </p>
- <p>
- When at Lima, I conversed on these subjects <a href="#linknote-163"
- name="linknoteref-163" id="linknoteref-163"><small>163</small></a> with
- Mr. Gill, a civil engineer, who had seen much of the interior country. He
- told me that a conjecture of a change of climate had sometimes crossed his
- mind; but that he thought that the greater portion of land, now incapable
- of cultivation, but covered with Indian ruins, had been reduced to this
- state by the water-conduits, which the Indians formerly constructed on so
- wonderful a scale, having been injured by neglect and by subterranean
- movements. I may here mention, that the Peruvians actually carried their
- irrigating streams in tunnels through hills of solid rock. Mr. Gill told
- me, he had been employed professionally to examine one: he found the
- passage low, narrow, crooked, and not of uniform breadth, but of very
- considerable length. Is it not most wonderful that men should have
- attempted such operations, without the use of iron or gunpowder? Mr. Gill
- also mentioned to me a most interesting, and, as far as I am aware, quite
- unparalleled case, of a subterranean disturbance having changed the
- drainage of a country. Travelling from Casma to Huaraz (not very far
- distant from Lima), he found a plain covered with ruins and marks of
- ancient cultivation but now quite barren. Near it was the dry course of a
- considerable river, whence the water for irrigation had formerly been
- conducted. There was nothing in the appearance of the water-course to
- indicate that the river had not flowed there a few years previously; in
- some parts, beds of sand and gravel were spread out; in others, the solid
- rock had been worn into a broad channel, which in one spot was about 40
- yards in breadth and 8 feet deep. It is self-evident that a person
- following up the course of a stream, will always ascend at a greater or
- less inclination: Mr. Gill, therefore, was much astonished, when walking
- up the bed of this ancient river, to find himself suddenly going down
- hill. He imagined that the downward slope had a fall of about 40 or 50
- feet perpendicular. We here have unequivocal evidence that a ridge had
- been uplifted right across the old bed of a stream. From the moment the
- river-course was thus arched, the water must necessarily have been thrown
- back, and a new channel formed. From that moment, also, the neighbouring
- plain must have lost its fertilizing stream, and become a desert.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 27th.&mdash;We set out early in the morning, and by midday reached
- the ravine of Paypote, where there is a tiny rill of water, with a little
- vegetation, and even a few algarroba trees, a kind of mimosa. From having
- firewood, a smelting-furnace had formerly been built here: we found a
- solitary man in charge of it, whose sole employment was hunting guanacos.
- At night it froze sharply; but having plenty of wood for our fire, we kept
- ourselves warm.
- </p>
- <p>
- 28th.&mdash;We continued gradually ascending, and the valley now changed
- into a ravine. During the day we saw several guanacos, and the track of
- the closely-allied species, the Vicuna: this latter animal is
- pre-eminently alpine in its habits; it seldom descends much below the
- limit of perpetual snow, and therefore haunts even a more lofty and
- sterile situation than the guanaco. The only other animal which we saw in
- any number was a small fox: I suppose this animal preys on the mice and
- other small rodents, which, as long as there is the least vegetation,
- subsist in considerable numbers in very desert places. In Patagonia, even
- on the borders of the salinas, where a drop of fresh water can never be
- found, excepting dew, these little animals swarm. Next to lizards, mice
- appear to be able to support existence on the smallest and driest portions
- of the earth&mdash;even on islets in the midst of great oceans.
- </p>
- <p>
- The scene on all sides showed desolation, brightened and made palpable by
- a clear, unclouded sky. For a time such scenery is sublime, but this
- feeling cannot last, and then it becomes uninteresting. We bivouacked at
- the foot of the "primera linea," or the first line of the partition of
- waters. The streams, however, on the east side do not flow to the
- Atlantic, but into an elevated district, in the middle of which there is a
- large saline, or salt lake; thus forming a little Caspian Sea at the
- height, perhaps, of ten thousand feet. Where we slept, there were some
- considerable patches of snow, but they do not remain throughout the year.
- The winds in these lofty regions obey very regular laws. Every day a fresh
- breeze blows up the valley, and at night, an hour or two after sunset, the
- air from the cold regions above descends as through a funnel. This night
- it blew a gale of wind, and the temperature must have been considerably
- below the freezing-point, for water in a vessel soon became a block of
- ice. No clothes seemed to pose any obstacle to the air; I suffered very
- much from the cold, so that I could not sleep, and in the morning rose
- with my body quite dull and benumbed.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the Cordillera further southward, people lose their lives from
- snow-storms; here, it sometimes happens from another cause. My guide, when
- a boy of fourteen years old, was passing the Cordillera with a party in
- the month of May; and while in the central parts, a furious gale of wind
- arose, so that the men could hardly cling on their mules, and stones were
- flying along the ground. The day was cloudless, and not a speck of snow
- fell, but the temperature was low. It is probable that the thermometer
- could not have stood very many degrees below the freezing-point, but the
- effect on their bodies, ill protected by clothing, must have been in
- proportion to the rapidity of the current of cold air. The gale lasted for
- more than a day; the men began to lose their strength, and the mules would
- not move onwards. My guide's brother tried to return, but he perished, and
- his body was found two years afterwards. Lying by the side of his mule
- near the road, with the bridle still in his hand. Two other men in the
- party lost their fingers and toes; and out of two hundred mules and thirty
- cows, only fourteen mules escaped alive. Many years ago the whole of a
- large party are supposed to have perished from a similar cause, but their
- bodies to this day have never been discovered. The union of a cloudless
- sky, low temperature, and a furious gale of wind, must be, I should think,
- in all parts of the world an unusual occurrence.
- </p>
- <p>
- June 29th&mdash;We gladly travelled down the valley to our former night's
- lodging, and thence to near the Agua amarga. On July 1st we reached the
- valley of Copiapo. The smell of the fresh clover was quite delightful,
- after the scentless air of the dry, sterile Despoblado. Whilst staying in
- the town I heard an account from several of the inhabitants, of a hill in
- the neighbourhood which they called "El Bramador,"&mdash;the roarer or
- bellower. I did not at the time pay sufficient attention to the account;
- but, as far as I understood, the hill was covered by sand, and the noise
- was produced only when people, by ascending it, put the sand in motion.
- The same circumstances are described in detail on the authority of Seetzen
- and Ehrenberg, <a href="#linknote-164" name="linknoteref-164"
- id="linknoteref-164"><small>164</small></a> as the cause of the sounds
- which have been heard by many travellers on Mount Sinai near the Red Sea.
- One person with whom I conversed had himself heard the noise: he described
- it as very surprising; and he distinctly stated that, although he could
- not understand how it was caused, yet it was necessary to set the sand
- rolling down the acclivity. A horse walking over dry coarse sand, causes a
- peculiar chirping noise from the friction of the particles; a circumstance
- which I several times noticed on the coast of Brazil.
- </p>
- <p>
- Three days afterwards I heard of the Beagle's arrival at the Port, distant
- eighteen leagues from the town. There is very little land cultivated down
- the valley; its wide expanse supports a wretched wiry grass, which even
- the donkeys can hardly eat. This poorness of the vegetation is owing to
- the quantity of saline matter with which the soil is impregnated. The Port
- consists of an assemblage of miserable little hovels, situated at the foot
- of a sterile plain. At present, as the river contains water enough to
- reach the sea, the inhabitants enjoy the advantage of having fresh water
- within a mile and a half. On the beach there were large piles of
- merchandise, and the little place had an air of activity. In the evening I
- gave my adios, with a hearty good-will, to my companion Mariano Gonzales,
- with whom I had ridden so many leagues in Chile. The next morning the
- Beagle sailed for Iquique.
- </p>
- <p>
- July 12th.&mdash;We anchored in the port of Iquique, in lat. 20 degs. 12',
- on the coast of Peru. The town contains about a thousand inhabitants, and
- stands on a little plain of sand at the foot of a great wall of rock, 2000
- feet in height, here forming the coast. The whole is utterly desert. A
- light shower of rain falls only once in very many years; and the ravines
- consequently are filled with detritus, and the mountain-sides covered by
- piles of fine white sand, even to a height of a thousand feet. During this
- season of the year a heavy bank of clouds, stretched over the ocean,
- seldom rises above the wall of rocks on the coast. The aspect of the place
- was most gloomy; the little port, with its few vessels, and small group of
- wretched houses, seemed overwhelmed and out of all proportion with the
- rest of the scene.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhabitants live like persons on board a ship: every necessary comes
- from a distance: water is brought in boats from Pisagua, about forty miles
- northward, and is sold at the rate of nine reals (4s. 6d.) an
- eighteen-gallon cask: I bought a wine-bottle full for threepence. In like
- manner firewood, and of course every article of food, is imported. Very
- few animals can be maintained in such a place: on the ensuing morning I
- hired with difficulty, at the price of four pounds sterling, two mules and
- a guide to take me to the nitrate of soda works. These are at present the
- support of Iquique. This salt was first exported in 1830: in one year an
- amount in value of one hundred thousand pounds sterling, was sent to
- France and England. It is principally used as a manure and in the
- manufacture of nitric acid: owing to its deliquescent property it will not
- serve for gunpowder. Formerly there were two exceedingly rich silver-mines
- in this neighbourhood, but their produce is now very small.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our arrival in the offing caused some little apprehension. Peru was in a
- state of anarchy; and each party having demanded a contribution, the poor
- town of Iquique was in tribulation, thinking the evil hour was come. The
- people had also their domestic troubles; a short time before, three French
- carpenters had broken open, during the same night, the two churches, and
- stolen all the plate: one of the robbers, however, subsequently confessed,
- and the plate was recovered. The convicts were sent to Arequipa, which
- though the capital of this province, is two hundred leagues distant, the
- government there thought it a pity to punish such useful workmen, who
- could make all sorts of furniture; and accordingly liberated them. Things
- being in this state, the churches were again broken open, but this time
- the plate was not recovered. The inhabitants became dreadfully enraged,
- and declaring that none but heretics would thus "eat God Almighty,"
- proceeded to torture some Englishmen, with the intention of afterwards
- shooting them. At last the authorities interfered, and peace was
- established.
- </p>
- <p>
- 13th.&mdash;In the morning I started for the saltpetre-works, a distance
- of fourteen leagues. Having ascended the steep coast-mountains by a zigzag
- sandy track, we soon came in view of the mines of Guantajaya and St. Rosa.
- These two small villages are placed at the very mouths of the mines; and
- being perched up on hills, they had a still more unnatural and desolate
- appearance than the town of Iquique. We did not reach the saltpetre-works
- till after sunset, having ridden all day across an undulating country, a
- complete and utter desert. The road was strewed with the bones and dried
- skins of many beasts of burden which had perished on it from fatigue.
- Excepting the Vultur aura, which preys on the carcasses, I saw neither
- bird, quadruped, reptile, nor insect. On the coast-mountains, at the
- height of about 2000 feet where during this season the clouds generally
- hang, a very few cacti were growing in the clefts of rock; and the loose
- sand was strewed over with a lichen, which lies on the surface quite
- unattached. This plant belongs to the genus Cladonia, and somewhat
- resembles the reindeer lichen. In some parts it was in sufficient quantity
- to tinge the sand, as seen from a distance, of a pale yellowish colour.
- Further inland, during the whole ride of fourteen leagues, I saw only one
- other vegetable production, and that was a most minute yellow lichen,
- growing on the bones of the dead mules. This was the first true desert
- which I had seen: the effect on me was not impressive; but I believe this
- was owing to my having become gradually accustomed to such scenes, as I
- rode northward from Valparaiso, through Coquimbo, to Copiapo. The
- appearance of the country was remarkable, from being covered by a thick
- crust of common salt, and of a stratified saliferous alluvium, which seems
- to have been deposited as the land slowly rose above the level of the sea.
- The salt is white, very hard, and compact: it occurs in water worn nodules
- projecting from the agglutinated sand, and is associated with much gypsum.
- The appearance of this superficial mass very closely resembled that of a
- country after snow, before the last dirty patches are thawed. The
- existence of this crust of a soluble substance over the whole face of the
- country, shows how extraordinarily dry the climate must have been for a
- long period.
- </p>
- <p>
- At night I slept at the house of the owner of one of the saltpetre mines.
- The country is here as unproductive as near the coast; but water, having
- rather a bitter and brackish taste, can be procured by digging wells. The
- well at this house was thirty-six yards deep: as scarcely any rain falls,
- it is evident the water is not thus derived; indeed if it were, it could
- not fail to be as salt as brine, for the whole surrounding country is
- incrusted with various saline substances. We must therefore conclude that
- it percolates under ground from the Cordillera, though distant many
- leagues. In that direction there are a few small villages, where the
- inhabitants, having more water, are enabled to irrigate a little land, and
- raise hay, on which the mules and asses, employed in carrying the
- saltpetre, are fed. The nitrate of soda was now selling at the ship's side
- at fourteen shillings per hundred pounds: the chief expense is its
- transport to the sea-coast. The mine consists of a hard stratum, between
- two and three feet thick, of the nitrate mingled with a little of the
- sulphate of soda and a good deal of common salt. It lies close beneath the
- surface, and follows for a length of one hundred and fifty miles the
- margin of a grand basin or plain; this, from its outline, manifestly must
- once have been a lake, or more probably an inland arm of the sea, as may
- be inferred from the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. The
- surface of the plain is 3300 feet above the Pacific.
- </p>
- <p>
- 19th.&mdash;We anchored in the Bay of Callao, the seaport of Lima, the
- capital of Peru. We stayed here six weeks but from the troubled state of
- public affairs, I saw very little of the country. During our whole visit
- the climate was far from being so delightful, as it is generally
- represented. A dull heavy bank of clouds constantly hung over the land, so
- that during the first sixteen days I had only one view of the Cordillera
- behind Lima. These mountains, seen in stages, one above the other, through
- openings in the clouds, had a very grand appearance. It is almost become a
- proverb, that rain never falls in the lower part of Peru. Yet this can
- hardly be considered correct; for during almost every day of our visit
- there was a thick drizzling mist, which was sufficient to make the streets
- muddy and one's clothes damp: this the people are pleased to call Peruvian
- dew. That much rain does not fall is very certain, for the houses are
- covered only with flat roofs made of hardened mud; and on the mole
- shiploads of wheat were piled up, being thus left for weeks together
- without any shelter.
- </p>
- <p>
- I cannot say I liked the very little I saw of Peru: in summer, however, it
- is said that the climate is much pleasanter. In all seasons, both
- inhabitants and foreigners suffer from severe attacks of ague. This
- disease is common on the whole coast of Peru, but is unknown in the
- interior. The attacks of illness which arise from miasma never fail to
- appear most mysterious. So difficult is it to judge from the aspect of a
- country, whether or not it is healthy, that if a person had been told to
- choose within the tropics a situation appearing favourable for health,
- very probably he would have named this coast. The plain round the
- outskirts of Callao is sparingly covered with a coarse grass, and in some
- parts there are a few stagnant, though very small, pools of water. The
- miasma, in all probability, arises from these: for the town of Arica was
- similarly circumstanced, and its healthiness was much improved by the
- drainage of some little pools. Miasma is not always produced by a
- luxuriant vegetation with an ardent climate; for many parts of Brazil,
- even where there are marshes and a rank vegetation, are much more healthy
- than this sterile coast of Peru. The densest forests in a temperate
- climate, as in Chiloe, do not seem in the slightest degree to affect the
- healthy condition of the atmosphere.
- </p>
- <p>
- The island of St. Jago, at the Cape de Verds, offers another strongly
- marked instance of a country, which any one would have expected to find
- most healthy, being very much the contrary. I have described the bare and
- open plains as supporting, during a few weeks after the rainy season, a
- thin vegetation, which directly withers away and dries up: at this period
- the air appears to become quite poisonous; both natives and foreigners
- often being affected with violent fevers. On the other hand, the Galapagos
- Archipelago, in the Pacific, with a similar soil, and periodically subject
- to the same process of vegetation, is perfectly healthy. Humboldt has
- observed, that, "under the torrid zone, the smallest marshes are the most
- dangerous, being surrounded, as at Vera Cruz and Carthagena, with an arid
- and sandy soil, which raises the temperature of the ambient air." <a
- href="#linknote-165" name="linknoteref-165" id="linknoteref-165"><small>165</small></a>
- On the coast of Peru, however, the temperature is not hot to any excessive
- degree; and perhaps in consequence, the intermittent fevers are not of the
- most malignant order. In all unhealthy countries the greatest risk is run
- by sleeping on shore. Is this owing to the state of the body during sleep,
- or to a greater abundance of miasma at such times? It appears certain that
- those who stay on board a vessel, though anchored at only a short distance
- from the coast, generally suffer less than those actually on shore. On the
- other hand, I have heard of one remarkable case where a fever broke out
- among the crew of a man-of-war some hundred miles off the coast of Africa,
- and at the same time one of those fearful periods <a href="#linknote-166"
- name="linknoteref-166" id="linknoteref-166"><small>166</small></a> of
- death commenced at Sierra Leone.
- </p>
- <p>
- No state in South America, since the declaration of independence, has
- suffered more from anarchy than Peru. At the time of our visit, there were
- four chiefs in arms contending for supremacy in the government: if one
- succeeded in becoming for a time very powerful, the others coalesced
- against him; but no sooner were they victorious, than they were again
- hostile to each other. The other day, at the Anniversary of the
- Independence, high mass was performed, the President partaking of the
- sacrament: during the <i>Te Deum laudamus</i>, instead of each regiment
- displaying the Peruvian flag, a black one with death's head was unfurled.
- Imagine a government under which such a scene could be ordered, on such an
- occasion, to be typical of their determination of fighting to death! This
- state of affairs happened at a time very unfortunately for me, as I was
- precluded from taking any excursions much beyond the limits of the town.
- The barren island of St. Lorenzo, which forms the harbour, was nearly the
- only place where one could walk securely. The upper part, which is upwards
- of 1000 feet in height, during this season of the year (winter), comes
- within the lower limit of the clouds; and in consequence, an abundant
- cryptogamic vegetation, and a few flowers cover the summit. On the hills
- near Lima, at a height but little greater, the ground is carpeted with
- moss, and beds of beautiful yellow lilies, called Amancaes. This indicates
- a very much greater degree of humidity, than at a corresponding height at
- Iquique. Proceeding northward of Lima, the climate becomes damper, till on
- the banks of the Guayaquil, nearly under the equator, we find the most
- luxuriant forests. The change, however, from the sterile coast of Peru to
- that fertile land is described as taking place rather abruptly in the
- latitude of Cape Blanco, two degrees south of Guayaquil.
- </p>
- <p>
- Callao is a filthy, ill-built, small seaport. The inhabitants, both here
- and at Lima, present every imaginable shade of mixture, between European,
- Negro, and Indian blood. They appear a depraved, drunken set of people.
- The atmosphere is loaded with foul smells, and that peculiar one, which
- may be perceived in almost every town within the tropics, was here very
- strong. The fortress, which withstood Lord Cochrane's long siege, has an
- imposing appearance. But the President, during our stay, sold the brass
- guns, and proceeded to dismantle parts of it. The reason assigned was,
- that he had not an officer to whom he could trust so important a charge.
- He himself had good reason for thinking so, as he had obtained the
- presidentship by rebelling while in charge of this same fortress. After we
- left South America, he paid the penalty in the usual manner, by being
- conquered, taken prisoner, and shot.
- </p>
- <p>
- Lima stands on a plain in a valley, formed during the gradual retreat of
- the sea. It is seven miles from Callao, and is elevated 500 feet above it;
- but from the slope being very gradual, the road appears absolutely level;
- so that when at Lima it is difficult to believe one has ascended even one
- hundred feet: Humboldt has remarked on this singularly deceptive case.
- Steep barren hills rise like islands from the plain, which is divided, by
- straight mud-walls, into large green fields. In these scarcely a tree
- grows excepting a few willows, and an occasional clump of bananas and of
- oranges. The city of Lima is now in a wretched state of decay: the streets
- are nearly unpaved; and heaps of filth are piled up in all directions,
- where the black gallinazos, tame as poultry, pick up bits of carrion. The
- houses have generally an upper story, built on account of the earthquakes,
- of plastered woodwork but some of the old ones, which are now used by
- several families, are immensely large, and would rival in suites of
- apartments the most magnificent in any place. Lima, the City of the Kings,
- must formerly have been a splendid town. The extraordinary number of
- churches gives it, even at the present day, a peculiar and striking
- character, especially when viewed from a short distance.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day I went out with some merchants to hunt in the immediate vicinity
- of the city. Our sport was very poor; but I had an opportunity of seeing
- the ruins of one of the ancient Indian villages, with its mound like a
- natural hill in the centre. The remains of houses, enclosures, irrigating
- streams, and burial mounds, scattered over this plain, cannot fail to give
- one a high idea of the condition and number of the ancient population.
- When their earthenware, woollen clothes, utensils of elegant forms cut out
- of the hardest rocks, tools of copper, ornaments of precious stones,
- palaces, and hydraulic works, are considered, it is impossible not to
- respect the considerable advance made by them in the arts of civilization.
- The burial mounds, called Huacas, are really stupendous; although in some
- places they appear to be natural hills incased and modelled.
- </p>
- <p>
- There is also another and very different class of ruins, which possesses
- some interest, namely, those of old Callao, overwhelmed by the great
- earthquake of 1746, and its accompanying wave. The destruction must have
- been more complete even than at Talcahuano. Quantities of shingle almost
- conceal the foundations of the walls, and vast masses of brickwork appear
- to have been whirled about like pebbles by the retiring waves. It has been
- stated that the land subsided during this memorable shock: I could not
- discover any proof of this; yet it seems far from improbable, for the form
- of the coast must certainly have undergone some change since the
- foundation of the old town; as no people in their senses would willingly
- have chosen for their building place, the narrow spit of shingle on which
- the ruins now stand. Since our voyage, M. Tschudi has come to the
- conclusion, by the comparison of old and modern maps, that the coast both
- north and south of Lima has certainly subsided.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the island of San Lorenzo, there are very satisfactory proofs of
- elevation within the recent period; this of course is not opposed to the
- belief, of a small sinking of the ground having subsequently taken place.
- The side of this island fronting the Bay of Callao, is worn into three
- obscure terraces, the lower one of which is covered by a bed a mile in
- length, almost wholly composed of shells of eighteen species, now living
- in the adjoining sea. The height of this bed is eighty-five feet. Many of
- the shells are deeply corroded, and have a much older and more decayed
- appearance than those at the height of 500 or 600 feet on the coast of
- Chile. These shells are associated with much common salt, a little
- sulphate of lime (both probably left by the evaporation of the spray, as
- the land slowly rose), together with sulphate of soda and muriate of lime.
- They rest on fragments of the underlying sandstone, and are covered by a
- few inches thick of detritus. The shells, higher up on this terrace could
- be traced scaling off in flakes, and falling into an impalpable powder;
- and on an upper terrace, at the height of 170 feet, and likewise at some
- considerably higher points, I found a layer of saline powder of exactly
- similar appearance, and lying in the same relative position. I have no
- doubt that this upper layer originally existed as a bed of shells, like
- that on the eighty-five-feet ledge; but it does not now contain even a
- trace of organic structure. The powder has been analyzed for me by Mr. T.
- Reeks; it consists of sulphates and muriates both of lime and soda, with
- very little carbonate of lime. It is known that common salt and carbonate
- of lime left in a mass for some time together, partly decompose each
- other; though this does not happen with small quantities in solution. As
- the half-decomposed shells in the lower parts are associated with much
- common salt, together with some of the saline substances composing the
- upper saline layer, and as these shells are corroded and decayed in a
- remarkable manner, I strongly suspect that this double decomposition has
- here taken place. The resultant salts, however, ought to be carbonate of
- soda and muriate of lime, the latter is present, but not the carbonate of
- soda. Hence I am led to imagine that by some unexplained means, the
- carbonate of soda becomes changed into the sulphate. It is obvious that
- the saline layer could not have been preserved in any country in which
- abundant rain occasionally fell: on the other hand, this very
- circumstance, which at first sight appears so highly favourable to the
- long preservation of exposed shells, has probably been the indirect means,
- through the common salt not having been washed away, of their
- decomposition and early decay.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was much interested by finding on the terrace, at the height of
- eighty-five feet, <i>embedded</i> amidst the shells and much sea-drifted
- rubbish, some bits of cotton thread, plaited rush, and the head of a stalk
- of Indian corn: I compared these relics with similar ones taken out of the
- Huacas, or old Peruvian tombs, and found them identical in appearance. On
- the mainland in front of San Lorenzo, near Bellavista, there is an
- extensive and level plain about a hundred feet high, of which the lower
- part is formed of alternating layers of sand and impure clay, together
- with some gravel, and the surface, to the depth of from three to six feet,
- of a reddish loam, containing a few scattered sea-shells and numerous
- small fragments of coarse red earthenware, more abundant at certain spots
- than at others. At first I was inclined to believe that this superficial
- bed, from its wide extent and smoothness, must have been deposited beneath
- the sea; but I afterwards found in one spot, that it lay on an artificial
- floor of round stones. It seems, therefore, most probable that at a period
- when the land stood at a lower level there was a plain very similar to
- that now surrounding Callao, which being protected by a shingle beach, is
- raised but very little above the level of the sea. On this plain, with its
- underlying red-clay beds, I imagine that the Indians manufactured their
- earthen vessels; and that, during some violent earthquake, the sea broke
- over the beach, and converted the plain into a temporary lake, as happened
- round Callao in 1713 and 1746. The water would then have deposited mud,
- containing fragments of pottery from the kilns, more abundant at some
- spots than at others, and shells from the sea. This bed, with fossil
- earthenware, stands at about the same height with the shells on the lower
- terrace of San Lorenzo, in which the cotton-thread and other relics were
- embedded.
- </p>
- <p>
- Hence we may safely conclude, that within the Indo-human period there has
- been an elevation, as before alluded to, of more than eighty-five feet;
- for some little elevation must have been lost by the coast having subsided
- since the old maps were engraved. At Valparaiso, although in the 220 years
- before our visit, the elevation cannot have exceeded nineteen feet, yet
- subsequently to 1817, there has been a rise, partly insensible and partly
- by a start during the shock of 1822, of ten or eleven feet. The antiquity
- of the Indo-human race here, judging by the eighty-five feet rise of the
- land since the relics were embedded, is the more remarkable, as on the
- coast of Patagonia, when the land stood about the same number of feet
- lower, the Macrauchenia was a living beast; but as the Patagonian coast is
- some way distant from the Cordillera, the rising there may have been
- slower than here. At Bahia Blanca, the elevation has been only a few feet
- since the numerous gigantic quadrupeds were there entombed; and, according
- to the generally received opinion, when these extinct animals were living,
- man did not exist. But the rising of that part of the coast of Patagonia,
- is perhaps no way connected with the Cordillera, but rather with a line of
- old volcanic rocks in Banda Oriental, so that it may have been infinitely
- slower than on the shores of Peru. All these speculations, however, must
- be vague; for who will pretend to say that there may not have been several
- periods of subsidence, intercalated between the movements of elevation;
- for we know that along the whole coast of Patagonia, there have certainly
- been many and long pauses in the upward action of the elevatory forces.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0017" id="link2HCH0017"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVII &mdash; GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>The whole Group Volcanic&mdash;Numbers of Craters&mdash;Leafless Bushes
- Colony at Charles Island&mdash;James Island&mdash;Salt-lake in Crater&mdash;Natural
- History of the Group&mdash;Ornithology, curious Finches&mdash;Reptiles&mdash;Great
- Tortoises, habits of&mdash;Marine Lizard, feeds on Sea-weed&mdash;Terrestrial
- Lizard, burrowing habits, herbivorous&mdash;Importance of Reptiles in the
- Archipelago&mdash;Fish, Shells, Insects&mdash;Botany&mdash;American Type
- of Organization&mdash;Differences in the Species or Races on different
- Islands&mdash;Tameness of the Birds&mdash;Fear of Man, an acquired
- Instinct.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">S</span>EPTEMBER 15th.&mdash;This
- archipelago consists of ten principal islands, of which five exceed the
- others in size. They are situated under the Equator, and between five and
- six hundred miles westward of the coast of America. They are all formed of
- volcanic rocks; a few fragments of granite curiously glazed and altered by
- the heat, can hardly be considered as an exception. Some of the craters,
- surmounting the larger islands, are of immense size, and they rise to a
- height of between three and four thousand feet. Their flanks are studded
- by innumerable smaller orifices. I scarcely hesitate to affirm, that there
- must be in the whole archipelago at least two thousand craters. These
- consist either of lava or scoriae, or of finely-stratified, sandstone-like
- tuff. Most of the latter are beautifully symmetrical; they owe their
- origin to eruptions of volcanic mud without any lava: it is a remarkable
- circumstance that every one of the twenty-eight tuff-craters which were
- examined, had their southern sides either much lower than the other sides,
- or quite broken down and removed. As all these craters apparently have
- been formed when standing in the sea, and as the waves from the trade wind
- and the swell from the open Pacific here unite their forces on the
- southern coasts of all the islands, this singular uniformity in the broken
- state of the craters, composed of the soft and yielding tuff, is easily
- explained.
- </p>
- <p>
- Considering that these islands are placed directly under the equator, the
- climate is far from being excessively hot; this seems chiefly caused by
- the singularly low temperature of the surrounding water, brought here by
- the great southern Polar current. Excepting during one short season, very
- little rain falls, and even then it is irregular; but the clouds generally
- hang low. Hence, whilst the lower parts of the islands are very sterile,
- the upper parts, at a height of a thousand feet and upwards, possess a
- damp climate and a tolerably luxuriant vegetation. This is especially the
- case on the windward sides of the islands, which first receive and
- condense the moisture from the atmosphere.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0006" id="linkimage-0006"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0404.jpg" alt="0404 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0404.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- In the morning (17th) we landed on Chatham Island, which, like the others,
- rises with a tame and rounded outline, broken here and there by scattered
- hillocks, the remains of former craters. Nothing could be less inviting
- than the first appearance. A broken field of black basaltic lava, thrown
- into the most rugged waves, and crossed by great fissures, is everywhere
- covered by stunted, sun-burnt brushwood, which shows little signs of life.
- The dry and parched surface, being heated by the noon-day sun, gave to the
- air a close and sultry feeling, like that from a stove: we fancied even
- that the bushes smelt unpleasantly. Although I diligently tried to collect
- as many plants as possible, I succeeded in getting very few; and such
- wretched-looking little weeds would have better become an arctic than an
- equatorial Flora. The brushwood appears, from a short distance, as
- leafless as our trees during winter; and it was some time before I
- discovered that not only almost every plant was now in full leaf, but that
- the greater number were in flower. The commonest bush is one of the
- Euphorbiaceae: an acacia and a great odd-looking cactus are the only trees
- which afford any shade. After the season of heavy rains, the islands are
- said to appear for a short time partially green. The volcanic island of
- Fernando Noronha, placed in many respects under nearly similar conditions,
- is the only other country where I have seen a vegetation at all like this
- of the Galapagos Islands.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Beagle sailed round Chatham Island, and anchored in several bays. One
- night I slept on shore on a part of the island, where black truncated
- cones were extraordinarily numerous: from one small eminence I counted
- sixty of them, all surmounted by craters more or less perfect. The greater
- number consisted merely of a ring of red scoriae or slags, cemented
- together: and their height above the plain of lava was not more than from
- fifty to a hundred feet; none had been very lately active. The entire
- surface of this part of the island seems to have been permeated, like a
- sieve, by the subterranean vapours: here and there the lava, whilst soft,
- has been blown into great bubbles; and in other parts, the tops of caverns
- similarly formed have fallen in, leaving circular pits with steep sides.
- From the regular form of the many craters, they gave to the country an
- artificial appearance, which vividly reminded me of those parts of
- Staffordshire, where the great iron-foundries are most numerous. The day
- was glowing hot, and the scrambling over the rough surface and through the
- intricate thickets, was very fatiguing; but I was well repaid by the
- strange Cyclopean scene. As I was walking along I met two large tortoises,
- each of which must have weighed at least two hundred pounds: one was
- eating a piece of cactus, and as I approached, it stared at me and slowly
- walked away; the other gave a deep hiss, and drew in its head. These huge
- reptiles, surrounded by the black lava, the leafless shrubs, and large
- cacti, seemed to my fancy like some antediluvian animals. The few
- dull-coloured birds cared no more for me than they did for the great
- tortoises.
- </p>
- <p>
- 23rd.&mdash;The Beagle proceeded to Charles Island. This archipelago has
- long been frequented, first by the bucaniers, and latterly by whalers, but
- it is only within the last six years, that a small colony has been
- established here. The inhabitants are between two and three hundred in
- number; they are nearly all people of colour, who have been banished for
- political crimes from the Republic of the Equator, of which Quito is the
- capital. The settlement is placed about four and a half miles inland, and
- at a height probably of a thousand feet. In the first part of the road we
- passed through leafless thickets, as in Chatham Island. Higher up, the
- woods gradually became greener; and as soon as we crossed the ridge of the
- island, we were cooled by a fine southerly breeze, and our sight refreshed
- by a green and thriving vegetation. In this upper region coarse grasses
- and ferns abound; but there are no tree-ferns: I saw nowhere any member of
- the palm family, which is the more singular, as 360 miles northward, Cocos
- Island takes its name from the number of cocoa-nuts. The houses are
- irregularly scattered over a flat space of ground, which is cultivated
- with sweet potatoes and bananas. It will not easily be imagined how
- pleasant the sight of black mud was to us, after having been so long,
- accustomed to the parched soil of Peru and northern Chile. The
- inhabitants, although complaining of poverty, obtain, without much
- trouble, the means of subsistence. In the woods there are many wild pigs
- and goats; but the staple article of animal food is supplied by the
- tortoises. Their numbers have of course been greatly reduced in this
- island, but the people yet count on two days' hunting giving them food for
- the rest of the week. It is said that formerly single vessels have taken
- away as many as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a frigate
- some years since brought down in one day two hundred tortoises to the
- beach.
- </p>
- <p>
- September 29th.&mdash;We doubled the south-west extremity of Albemarle
- Island, and the next day were nearly becalmed between it and Narborough
- Island. Both are covered with immense deluges of black naked lava, which
- have flowed either over the rims of the great caldrons, like pitch over
- the rim of a pot in which it has been boiled, or have burst forth from
- smaller orifices on the flanks; in their descent they have spread over
- miles of the sea-coast. On both of these islands, eruptions are known to
- have taken place; and in Albemarle, we saw a small jet of smoke curling
- from the summit of one of the great craters. In the evening we anchored in
- Bank's Cove, in Albemarle Island. The next morning I went out walking. To
- the south of the broken tuff-crater, in which the Beagle was anchored,
- there was another beautifully symmetrical one of an elliptic form; its
- longer axis was a little less than a mile, and its depth about 500 feet.
- At its bottom there was a shallow lake, in the middle of which a tiny
- crater formed an islet. The day was overpoweringly hot, and the lake
- looked clear and blue: I hurried down the cindery slope, and, choked with
- dust, eagerly tasted the water&mdash;but, to my sorrow, I found it salt as
- brine.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rocks on the coast abounded with great black lizards, between three
- and four feet long; and on the hills, an ugly yellowish-brown species was
- equally common. We saw many of this latter kind, some clumsily running out
- of the way, and others shuffling into their burrows. I shall presently
- describe in more detail the habits of both these reptiles. The whole of
- this northern part of Albemarle Island is miserably sterile.
- </p>
- <p>
- October 8th.&mdash;We arrived at James Island: this island, as well as
- Charles Island, were long since thus named after our kings of the Stuart
- line. Mr. Bynoe, myself, and our servants were left here for a week, with
- provisions and a tent, whilst the Beagle went for water. We found here a
- party of Spaniards, who had been sent from Charles Island to dry fish, and
- to salt tortoise-meat. About six miles inland, and at the height of nearly
- 2000 feet, a hovel had been built in which two men lived, who were
- employed in catching tortoises, whilst the others were fishing on the
- coast. I paid this party two visits, and slept there one night. As in the
- other islands, the lower region was covered by nearly leafless bushes, but
- the trees were here of a larger growth than elsewhere, several being two
- feet and some even two feet nine inches in diameter. The upper region
- being kept damp by the clouds, supports a green and flourishing
- vegetation. So damp was the ground, that there were large beds of a coarse
- cyperus, in which great numbers of a very small water-rail lived and bred.
- While staying in this upper region, we lived entirely upon tortoise-meat:
- the breast-plate roasted (as the Gauchos do <i>carne con cuero</i>), with
- the flesh on it, is very good; and the young tortoises make excellent
- soup; but otherwise the meat to my taste is indifferent.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day we accompanied a party of the Spaniards in their whale-boat to a
- salina, or lake from which salt is procured. After landing, we had a very
- rough walk over a rugged field of recent lava, which has almost surrounded
- a tuff-crater, at the bottom of which the salt-lake lies. The water is
- only three or four inches deep, and rests on a layer of beautifully
- crystallized, white salt. The lake is quite circular, and is fringed with
- a border of bright green succulent plants; the almost precipitous walls of
- the crater are clothed with wood, so that the scene was altogether both
- picturesque and curious. A few years since, the sailors belonging to a
- sealing-vessel murdered their captain in this quiet spot; and we saw his
- skull lying among the bushes.
- </p>
- <p>
- During the greater part of our stay of a week, the sky was cloudless, and
- if the trade-wind failed for an hour, the heat became very oppressive. On
- two days, the thermometer within the tent stood for some hours at 93
- degs.; but in the open air, in the wind and sun, at only 85 degs. The sand
- was extremely hot; the thermometer placed in some of a brown colour
- immediately rose to 137 degs., and how much above that it would have
- risen, I do not know, for it was not graduated any higher. The black sand
- felt much hotter, so that even in thick boots it was quite disagreeable to
- walk over it.
- </p>
- <p>
- The natural history of these islands is eminently curious, and well
- deserves attention. Most of the organic productions are aboriginal
- creations, found nowhere else; there is even a difference between the
- inhabitants of the different islands; yet all show a marked relationship
- with those of America, though separated from that continent by an open
- space of ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in width. The archipelago is a
- little world within itself, or rather a satellite attached to America,
- whence it has derived a few stray colonists, and has received the general
- character of its indigenous productions. Considering the small size of the
- islands, we feel the more astonished at the number of their aboriginal
- beings, and at their confined range. Seeing every height crowned with its
- crater, and the boundaries of most of the lava-streams still distinct, we
- are led to believe that within a period geologically recent the unbroken
- ocean was here spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be
- brought somewhat near to that great fact&mdash;that mystery of mysteries&mdash;the
- first appearance of new beings on this earth.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of terrestrial mammals, there is only one which must be considered as
- indigenous, namely, a mouse (Mus Galapagoensis), and this is confined, as
- far as I could ascertain, to Chatham Island, the most easterly island of
- the group. It belongs, as I am informed by Mr. Waterhouse, to a division
- of the family of mice characteristic of America. At James Island, there is
- a rat sufficiently distinct from the common kind to have been named and
- described by Mr. Waterhouse; but as it belongs to the old-world division
- of the family, and as this island has been frequented by ships for the
- last hundred and fifty years, I can hardly doubt that this rat is merely a
- variety produced by the new and peculiar climate, food, and soil, to which
- it has been subjected. Although no one has a right to speculate without
- distinct facts, yet even with respect to the Chatham Island mouse, it
- should be borne in mind, that it may possibly be an American species
- imported here; for I have seen, in a most unfrequented part of the Pampas,
- a native mouse living in the roof of a newly built hovel, and therefore
- its transportation in a vessel is not improbable: analogous facts have
- been observed by Dr. Richardson in North America.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of land-birds I obtained twenty-six kinds, all peculiar to the group and
- found nowhere else, with the exception of one lark-like finch from North
- America (Dolichonyx oryzivorus), which ranges on that continent as far
- north as 54 degs., and generally frequents marshes. The other twenty-five
- birds consist, firstly, of a hawk, curiously intermediate in structure
- between a buzzard and the American group of carrion-feeding Polybori; and
- with these latter birds it agrees most closely in every habit and even
- tone of voice. Secondly, there are two owls, representing the short-eared
- and white barn-owls of Europe. Thirdly, a wren, three tyrant-flycatchers
- (two of them species of Pyrocephalus, one or both of which would be ranked
- by some ornithologists as only varieties), and a dove&mdash;all analogous
- to, but distinct from, American species. Fourthly, a swallow, which though
- differing from the Progne purpurea of both Americas, only in being rather
- duller colored, smaller, and slenderer, is considered by Mr. Gould as
- specifically distinct. Fifthly, there are three species of mocking thrush&mdash;a
- form highly characteristic of America. The remaining land-birds form a
- most singular group of finches, related to each other in the structure of
- their beaks, short tails, form of body and plumage: there are thirteen
- species, which Mr. Gould has divided into four sub-groups. All these
- species are peculiar to this archipelago; and so is the whole group, with
- the exception of one species of the sub-group Cactornis, lately brought
- from Bow Island, in the Low Archipelago. Of Cactornis, the two species may
- be often seen climbing about the flowers of the great cactus-trees; but
- all the other species of this group of finches, mingled together in
- flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground of the lower districts. The
- males of all, or certainly of the greater number, are jet black; and the
- females (with perhaps one or two exceptions) are brown. The most curious
- fact is the perfect gradation in the size of the beaks in the different
- species of Geospiza, from one as large as that of a hawfinch to that of a
- chaffinch, and (if Mr. Gould is right in including his sub-group,
- Certhidea, in the main group) even to that of a warbler. The largest beak
- in the genus Geospiza is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but
- instead of there being only one intermediate species, with a beak of the
- size shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species with insensibly
- graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group Certhidea, is shown in Fig. 4.
- The beak of Cactornis is somewhat like that of a starling, and that of the
- fourth sub-group, Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0007" id="linkimage-0007"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0411.jpg" alt="0411 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0411.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- Seeing this gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately
- related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an original
- paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had been taken and
- modified for different ends. In a like manner it might be fancied that a
- bird originally a buzzard, had been induced here to undertake the office
- of the carrion-feeding Polybori of the American continent.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of waders and water-birds I was able to get only eleven kinds, and of
- these only three (including a rail confined to the damp summits of the
- islands) are new species. Considering the wandering habits of the gulls, I
- was surprised to find that the species inhabiting these islands is
- peculiar, but allied to one from the southern parts of South America. The
- far greater peculiarity of the land-birds, namely, twenty-five out of
- twenty-six, being new species, or at least new races, compared with the
- waders and web-footed birds, is in accordance with the greater range which
- these latter orders have in all parts of the world. We shall hereafter see
- this law of aquatic forms, whether marine or fresh-water, being less
- peculiar at any given point of the earth's surface than the terrestrial
- forms of the same classes, strikingly illustrated in the shells, and in a
- lesser degree in the insects of this archipelago.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two of the waders are rather smaller than the same species brought from
- other places: the swallow is also smaller, though it is doubtful whether
- or not it is distinct from its analogue. The two owls, the two
- tyrant-catchers (Pyrocephalus) and the dove, are also smaller than the
- analogous but distinct species, to which they are most nearly related; on
- the other hand, the gull is rather larger. The two owls, the swallow, all
- three species of mocking-thrush, the dove in its separate colours though
- not in its whole plumage, the Totanus, and the gull, are likewise duskier
- coloured than their analogous species; and in the case of the
- mocking-thrush and Totanus, than any other species of the two genera. With
- the exception of a wren with a fine yellow breast, and of a
- tyrant-flycatcher with a scarlet tuft and breast, none of the birds are
- brilliantly coloured, as might have been expected in an equatorial
- district. Hence it would appear probable, that the same causes which here
- make the immigrants of some peculiar species smaller, make most of the
- peculiar Galapageian species also smaller, as well as very generally more
- dusky coloured. All the plants have a wretched, weedy appearance, and I
- did not see one beautiful flower. The insects, again, are small-sized and
- dull-coloured, and, as Mr. Waterhouse informs me, there is nothing in
- their general appearance which would have led him to imagine that they had
- come from under the equator. <a href="#linknote-171" name="linknoteref-171"
- id="linknoteref-171"><small>171</small></a> The birds, plants, and insects
- have a desert character, and are not more brilliantly coloured than those
- from southern Patagonia; we may, therefore, conclude that the usual gaudy
- colouring of the intertropical productions, is not related either to the
- heat or light of those zones, but to some other cause, perhaps to the
- conditions of existence being generally favourable to life.
- </p>
- <p>
- We will now turn to the order of reptiles, which gives the most striking
- character to the zoology of these islands. The species are not numerous,
- but the numbers of individuals of each species are extraordinarily great.
- There is one small lizard belonging to a South American genus, and two
- species (and probably more) of the Amblyrhynchus&mdash;a genus confined to
- the Galapagos Islands. There is one snake which is numerous; it is
- identical, as I am informed by M. Bibron, with the Psammophis Temminckii
- from Chile. <a href="#linknote-172" name="linknoteref-172"
- id="linknoteref-172"><small>172</small></a> Of sea-turtle I believe there
- are more than one species, and of tortoises there are, as we shall
- presently show, two or three species or races. Of toads and frogs there
- are none: I was surprised at this, considering how well suited for them
- the temperate and damp upper woods appeared to be. It recalled to my mind
- the remark made by Bory St. Vincent, <a href="#linknote-173"
- name="linknoteref-173" id="linknoteref-173"><small>173</small></a> namely,
- that none of this family are found on any of the volcanic islands in the
- great oceans. As far as I can ascertain from various works, this seems to
- hold good throughout the Pacific, and even in the large islands of the
- Sandwich archipelago. Mauritius offers an apparent exception, where I saw
- the Rana Mascariensis in abundance: this frog is said now to inhabit the
- Seychelles, Madagascar, and Bourbon; but on the other hand, Du Bois, in
- his voyage in 1669, states that there were no reptiles in Bourbon except
- tortoises; and the Officier du Roi asserts that before 1768 it had been
- attempted, without success, to introduce frogs into Mauritius&mdash;I
- presume for the purpose of eating: hence it may be well doubted whether
- this frog is an aboriginal of these islands. The absence of the frog
- family in the oceanic islands is the more remarkable, when contrasted with
- the case of lizards, which swarm on most of the smallest islands. May this
- difference not be caused, by the greater facility with which the eggs of
- lizards, protected by calcareous shells might be transported through
- salt-water, than could the slimy spawn of frogs?
- </p>
- <p>
- I will first describe the habits of the tortoise (Testudo nigra, formerly
- called Indica), which has been so frequently alluded to. These animals are
- found, I believe, on all the islands of the archipelago; certainly on the
- greater number. They frequent in preference the high damp parts, but they
- likewise live in the lower and arid districts. I have already shown, from
- the numbers which have been caught in a single day, how very numerous they
- must be. Some grow to an immense size: Mr. Lawson, an Englishman, and
- vice-governor of the colony, told us that he had seen several so large,
- that it required six or eight men to lift them from the ground; and that
- some had afforded as much as two hundred pounds of meat. The old males are
- the largest, the females rarely growing to so great a size: the male can
- readily be distinguished from the female by the greater length of its
- tail. The tortoises which live on those islands where there is no water,
- or in the lower and arid parts of the others, feed chiefly on the
- succulent cactus. Those which frequent the higher and damp regions, eat
- the leaves of various trees, a kind of berry (called guayavita) which is
- acid and austere, and likewise a pale green filamentous lichen (Usnera
- plicata), that hangs from the boughs of the trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tortoise is very fond of water, drinking large quantities, and
- wallowing in the mud. The larger islands alone possess springs, and these
- are always situated towards the central parts, and at a considerable
- height. The tortoises, therefore, which frequent the lower districts, when
- thirsty, are obliged to travel from a long distance. Hence broad and
- well-beaten paths branch off in every direction from the wells down to the
- sea-coast; and the Spaniards by following them up, first discovered the
- watering-places. When I landed at Chatham Island, I could not imagine what
- animal travelled so methodically along well-chosen tracks. Near the
- springs it was a curious spectacle to behold many of these huge creatures,
- one set eagerly travelling onwards with outstretched necks, and another
- set returning, after having drunk their fill. When the tortoise arrives at
- the spring, quite regardless of any spectator, he buries his head in the
- water above his eyes, and greedily swallows great mouthfuls, at the rate
- of about ten in a minute. The inhabitants say each animal stays three or
- four days in the neighbourhood of the water, and then returns to the lower
- country; but they differed respecting the frequency of these visits. The
- animal probably regulates them according to the nature of the food on
- which it has lived. It is, however, certain, that tortoises can subsist
- even on these islands where there is no other water than what falls during
- a few rainy days in the year.
- </p>
- <p>
- I believe it is well ascertained, that the bladder of the frog acts as a
- reservoir for the moisture necessary to its existence: such seems to be
- the case with the tortoise. For some time after a visit to the springs,
- their urinary bladders are distended with fluid, which is said gradually
- to decrease in volume, and to become less pure. The inhabitants, when
- walking in the lower district, and overcome with thirst, often take
- advantage of this circumstance, and drink the contents of the bladder if
- full: in one I saw killed, the fluid was quite limpid, and had only a very
- slightly bitter taste. The inhabitants, however, always first drink the
- water in the pericardium, which is described as being best.
- </p>
- <p>
- The tortoises, when purposely moving towards any point, travel by night
- and day, and arrive at their journey's end much sooner than would be
- expected. The inhabitants, from observing marked individuals, consider
- that they travel a distance of about eight miles in two or three days. One
- large tortoise, which I watched, walked at the rate of sixty yards in ten
- minutes, that is 360 yards in the hour, or four miles a day,&mdash;allowing
- a little time for it to eat on the road. During the breeding season, when
- the male and female are together, the male utters a hoarse roar or
- bellowing, which, it is said, can be heard at the distance of more than a
- hundred yards. The female never uses her voice, and the male only at these
- times; so that when the people hear this noise, they know that the two are
- together. They were at this time (October) laying their eggs. The female,
- where the soil is sandy, deposits them together, and covers them up with
- sand; but where the ground is rocky she drops them indiscriminately in any
- hole: Mr. Bynoe found seven placed in a fissure. The egg is white and
- spherical; one which I measured was seven inches and three-eighths in
- circumference, and therefore larger than a hen's egg. The young tortoises,
- as soon as they are hatched, fall a prey in great numbers to the
- carrion-feeding buzzard. The old ones seem generally to die from
- accidents, as from falling down precipices: at least, several of the
- inhabitants told me, that they never found one dead without some evident
- cause.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhabitants believe that these animals are absolutely deaf; certainly
- they do not overhear a person walking close behind them. I was always
- amused when overtaking one of these great monsters, as it was quietly
- pacing along, to see how suddenly, the instant I passed, it would draw in
- its head and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the ground with a
- heavy sound, as if struck dead. I frequently got on their backs, and then
- giving a few raps on the hinder part of their shells, they would rise up
- and walk away;&mdash;but I found it very difficult to keep my balance. The
- flesh of this animal is largely employed, both fresh and salted; and a
- beautifully clear oil is prepared from the fat. When a tortoise is caught,
- the man makes a slit in the skin near its tail, so as to see inside its
- body, whether the fat under the dorsal plate is thick. If it is not, the
- animal is liberated and it is said to recover soon from this strange
- operation. In order to secure the tortoise, it is not sufficient to turn
- them like turtle, for they are often able to get on their legs again.
- </p>
- <p>
- There can be little doubt that this tortoise is an aboriginal inhabitant
- of the Galapagos; for it is found on all, or nearly all, the islands, even
- on some of the smaller ones where there is no water; had it been an
- imported species, this would hardly have been the case in a group which
- has been so little frequented. Moreover, the old Bucaniers found this
- tortoise in greater numbers even than at present: Wood and Rogers also, in
- 1708, say that it is the opinion of the Spaniards, that it is found
- nowhere else in this quarter of the world. It is now widely distributed;
- but it may be questioned whether it is in any other place an aboriginal.
- The bones of a tortoise at Mauritius, associated with those of the extinct
- Dodo, have generally been considered as belonging to this tortoise; if
- this had been so, undoubtedly it must have been there indigenous; but M.
- Bibron informs me that he believes that it was distinct, as the species
- now living there certainly is.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Amblyrhynchus, a remarkable genus of lizards, is confined to this
- archipelago; there are two species, resembling each other in general form,
- one being terrestrial and the other aquatic.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0008" id="linkimage-0008"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0417.jpg" alt="0417 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0417.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- This latter species (A. cristatus) was first characterized by Mr. Bell,
- who well foresaw, from its short, broad head, and strong claws of equal
- length, that its habits of life would turn out very peculiar, and
- different from those of its nearest ally, the Iguana. It is extremely
- common on all the islands throughout the group, and lives exclusively on
- the rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I never saw one, even
- ten yards in-shore. It is a hideous-looking creature, of a dirty black
- colour, stupid, and sluggish in its movements. The usual length of a
- full-grown one is about a yard, but there are some even four feet long; a
- large one weighed twenty pounds: on the island of Albemarle they seem to
- grow to a greater size than elsewhere. Their tails are flattened sideways,
- and all four feet partially webbed. They are occasionally seen some
- hundred yards from the shore, swimming about; and Captain Collnett, in his
- Voyage says, "They go to sea in herds a-fishing, and sun themselves on the
- rocks; and may be called alligators in miniature." It must not, however,
- be supposed that they live on fish. When in the water this lizard swims
- with perfect ease and quickness, by a serpentine movement of its body and
- flattened tail&mdash;the legs being motionless and closely collapsed on
- its sides. A seaman on board sank one, with a heavy weight attached to it,
- thinking thus to kill it directly; but when, an hour afterwards, he drew
- up the line, it was quite active. Their limbs and strong claws are
- admirably adapted for crawling over the rugged and fissured masses of
- lava, which everywhere form the coast. In such situations, a group of six
- or seven of these hideous reptiles may oftentimes be seen on the black
- rocks, a few feet above the surf, basking in the sun with outstretched
- legs.
- </p>
- <p>
- I opened the stomachs of several, and found them largely distended with
- minced sea-weed (Ulvae), which grows in thin foliaceous expansions of a
- bright green or a dull red colour. I do not recollect having observed this
- sea-weed in any quantity on the tidal rocks; and I have reason to believe
- it grows at the bottom of the sea, at some little distance from the coast.
- If such be the case, the object of these animals occasionally going out to
- sea is explained. The stomach contained nothing but the sea-weed. Mr.
- Baynoe, however, found a piece of crab in one; but this might have got in
- accidentally, in the same manner as I have seen a caterpillar, in the
- midst of some lichen, in the paunch of a tortoise. The intestines were
- large, as in other herbivorous animals. The nature of this lizard's food,
- as well as the structure of its tail and feet, and the fact of its having
- been seen voluntarily swimming out at sea, absolutely prove its aquatic
- habits; yet there is in this respect one strange anomaly, namely, that
- when frightened it will not enter the water. Hence it is easy to drive
- these lizards down to any little point overhanging the sea, where they
- will sooner allow a person to catch hold of their tails than jump into the
- water. They do not seem to have any notion of biting; but when much
- frightened they squirt a drop of fluid from each nostril. I threw one
- several times as far as I could, into a deep pool left by the retiring
- tide; but it invariably returned in a direct line to the spot where I
- stood. It swam near the bottom, with a very graceful and rapid movement,
- and occasionally aided itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As
- soon as it arrived near the edge, but still being under water, it tried to
- conceal itself in the tufts of sea-weed, or it entered some crevice. As
- soon as it thought the danger was past, it crawled out on the dry rocks,
- and shuffled away as quickly as it could. I several times caught this same
- lizard, by driving it down to a point, and though possessed of such
- perfect powers of diving and swimming, nothing would induce it to enter
- the water; and as often as I threw it in, it returned in the manner above
- described. Perhaps this singular piece of apparent stupidity may be
- accounted for by the circumstance, that this reptile has no enemy whatever
- on shore, whereas at sea it must often fall a prey to the numerous sharks.
- Hence, probably, urged by a fixed and hereditary instinct that the shore
- is its place of safety, whatever the emergency may be, it there takes
- refuge.
- </p>
- <p>
- During our visit (in October), I saw extremely few small individuals of
- this species, and none I should think under a year old. From this
- circumstance it seems probable that the breeding season had not then
- commenced. I asked several of the inhabitants if they knew where it laid
- its eggs: they said that they knew nothing of its propagation, although
- well acquainted with the eggs of the land kind&mdash;a fact, considering
- how very common this lizard is, not a little extraordinary.
- </p>
- <p>
- We will now turn to the terrestrial species (A. Demarlii), with a round
- tail, and toes without webs. This lizard, instead of being found like the
- other on all the islands, is confined to the central part of the
- archipelago, namely to Albemarle, James, Barrington, and Indefatigable
- islands. To the southward, in Charles, Hood, and Chatham islands, and to
- the northward, in Towers, Bindloes, and Abingdon, I neither saw nor heard
- of any. It would appear as if it had been created in the centre of the
- archipelago, and thence had been dispersed only to a certain distance.
- Some of these lizards inhabit the high and damp parts of the islands, but
- they are much more numerous in the lower and sterile districts near the
- coast. I cannot give a more forcible proof of their numbers, than by
- stating that when we were left at James Island, we could not for some time
- find a spot free from their burrows on which to pitch our single tent.
- Like their brothers the sea-kind, they are ugly animals, of a yellowish
- orange beneath, and of a brownish red colour above: from their low facial
- angle they have a singularly stupid appearance. They are, perhaps, of a
- rather less size than the marine species; but several of them weighed
- between ten and fifteen pounds. In their movements they are lazy and half
- torpid. When not frightened, they slowly crawl along with their tails and
- bellies dragging on the ground. They often stop, and doze for a minute or
- two, with closed eyes and hind legs spread out on the parched soil.
- </p>
- <p>
- They inhabit burrows, which they sometimes make between fragments of lava,
- but more generally on level patches of the soft sandstone-like tuff. The
- holes do not appear to be very deep, and they enter the ground at a small
- angle; so that when walking over these lizard-warrens, the soil is
- constantly giving way, much to the annoyance of the tired walker. This
- animal, when making its burrow, works alternately the opposite sides of
- its body. One front leg for a short time scratches up the soil, and throws
- it towards the hind foot, which is well placed so as to heave it beyond
- the mouth of the hole. That side of the body being tired, the other takes
- up the task, and so on alternately. I watched one for a long time, till
- half its body was buried; I then walked up and pulled it by the tail, at
- this it was greatly astonished, and soon shuffled up to see what was the
- matter; and then stared me in the face, as much as to say, "What made you
- pull my tail?"
- </p>
- <p>
- They feed by day, and do not wander far from their burrows; if frightened,
- they rush to them with a most awkward gait. Except when running down hill,
- they cannot move very fast, apparently from the lateral position of their
- legs. They are not at all timorous: when attentively watching any one,
- they curl their tails, and, raising themselves on their front legs, nod
- their heads vertically, with a quick movement, and try to look very
- fierce; but in reality they are not at all so: if one just stamps on the
- ground, down go their tails, and off they shuffle as quickly as they can.
- I have frequently observed small fly-eating lizards, when watching
- anything, nod their heads in precisely the same manner; but I do not at
- all know for what purpose. If this Amblyrhynchus is held and plagued with
- a stick, it will bite it very severely; but I caught many by the tail, and
- they never tried to bite me. If two are placed on the ground and held
- together, they will fight, and bite each other till blood is drawn.
- </p>
- <p>
- The individuals, and they are the greater number, which inhabit the lower
- country, can scarcely taste a drop of water throughout the year; but they
- consume much of the succulent cactus, the branches of which are
- occasionally broken off by the wind. I several times threw a piece to two
- or three of them when together; and it was amusing enough to see them
- trying to seize and carry it away in their mouths, like so many hungry
- dogs with a bone. They eat very deliberately, but do not chew their food.
- The little birds are aware how harmless these creatures are: I have seen
- one of the thick-billed finches picking at one end of a piece of cactus
- (which is much relished by all the animals of the lower region), whilst a
- lizard was eating at the other end; and afterwards the little bird with
- the utmost indifference hopped on the back of the reptile.
- </p>
- <p>
- I opened the stomachs of several, and found them full of vegetable fibres
- and leaves of different trees, especially of an acacia. In the upper
- region they live chiefly on the acid and astringent berries of the
- guayavita, under which trees I have seen these lizards and the huge
- tortoises feeding together. To obtain the acacia-leaves they crawl up the
- low stunted trees; and it is not uncommon to see a pair quietly browsing,
- whilst seated on a branch several feet above the ground. These lizards,
- when cooked, yield a white meat, which is liked by those whose stomachs
- soar above all prejudices.
- </p>
- <p>
- Humboldt has remarked that in intertropical South America, all lizards
- which inhabit dry regions are esteemed delicacies for the table. The
- inhabitants state that those which inhabit the upper damp parts drink
- water, but that the others do not, like the tortoises, travel up for it
- from the lower sterile country. At the time of our visit, the females had
- within their bodies numerous, large, elongated eggs, which they lay in
- their burrows: the inhabitants seek them for food.
- </p>
- <p>
- These two species of Amblyrhynchus agree, as I have already stated, in
- their general structure, and in many of their habits. Neither have that
- rapid movement, so characteristic of the genera Lacerta and Iguana. They
- are both herbivorous, although the kind of vegetation on which they feed
- is so very different. Mr. Bell has given the name to the genus from the
- shortness of the snout: indeed, the form of the mouth may almost be
- compared to that of the tortoise: one is led to suppose that this is an
- adaptation to their herbivorous appetites. It is very interesting thus to
- find a well-characterized genus, having its marine and terrestrial
- species, belonging to so confined a portion of the world. The aquatic
- species is by far the most remarkable, because it is the only existing
- lizard which lives on marine vegetable productions. As I at first
- observed, these islands are not so remarkable for the number of the
- species of reptiles, as for that of the individuals, when we remember the
- well-beaten paths made by the thousands of huge tortoises&mdash;the many
- turtles&mdash;the great warrens of the terrestrial Amblyrhynchus&mdash;and
- the groups of the marine species basking on the coast-rocks of every
- island&mdash;we must admit that there is no other quarter of the world
- where this Order replaces the herbivorous mammalia in so extraordinary a
- manner. The geologist on hearing this will probably refer back in his mind
- to the Secondary epochs, when lizards, some herbivorous, some carnivorous,
- and of dimensions comparable only with our existing whales, swarmed on the
- land and in the sea. It is, therefore, worthy of his observation, that
- this archipelago, instead of possessing a humid climate and rank
- vegetation, cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and, for
- an equatorial region, remarkably temperate.
- </p>
- <p>
- To finish with the zoology: the fifteen kinds of sea-fish which I procured
- here are all new species; they belong to twelve genera, all widely
- distributed, with the exception of Prionotus, of which the four previously
- known species live on the eastern side of America. Of land-shells I
- collected sixteen kinds (and two marked varieties), of which, with the
- exception of one Helix found at Tahiti, all are peculiar to this
- archipelago: a single fresh-water shell (Paludina) is common to Tahiti and
- Van Diemen's Land. Mr. Cuming, before our voyage procured here ninety
- species of sea-shells, and this does not include several species not yet
- specifically examined, of Trochus, Turbo, Monodonta, and Nassa. He has
- been kind enough to give me the following interesting results: Of the
- ninety shells, no less than forty-seven are unknown elsewhere&mdash;a
- wonderful fact, considering how widely distributed sea-shells generally
- are. Of the forty-three shells found in other parts of the world,
- twenty-five inhabit the western coast of America, and of these eight are
- distinguishable as varieties; the remaining eighteen (including one
- variety) were found by Mr. Cuming in the Low Archipelago, and some of them
- also at the Philippines. This fact of shells from islands in the central
- parts of the Pacific occurring here, deserves notice, for not one single
- sea-shell is known to be common to the islands of that ocean and to the
- west coast of America. The space of open sea running north and south off
- the west coast, separates two quite distinct conchological provinces; but
- at the Galapagos Archipelago we have a halting-place, where many new forms
- have been created, and whither these two great conchological provinces
- have each sent up several colonists. The American province has also sent
- here representative species; for there is a Galapageian species of
- Monoceros, a genus only found on the west coast of America; and there are
- Galapageian species of Fissurella and Cancellaria, genera common on the
- west coast, but not found (as I am informed by Mr. Cuming) in the central
- islands of the Pacific. On the other hand, there are Galapageian species
- of Oniscia and Stylifer, genera common to the West Indies and to the
- Chinese and Indian seas, but not found either on the west coast of America
- or in the central Pacific. I may here add, that after the comparison by
- Messrs. Cuming and Hinds of about 2000 shells from the eastern and western
- coasts of America, only one single shell was found in common, namely, the
- Purpura patula, which inhabits the West Indies, the coast of Panama, and
- the Galapagos. We have, therefore, in this quarter of the world, three
- great conchological sea-provinces, quite distinct, though surprisingly
- near each other, being separated by long north and south spaces either of
- land or of open sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- I took great pains in collecting the insects, but excepting Tierra del
- Fuego, I never saw in this respect so poor a country. Even in the upper
- and damp region I procured very few, excepting some minute Diptera and
- Hymenoptera, mostly of common mundane forms. As before remarked, the
- insects, for a tropical region, are of very small size and dull colours.
- Of beetles I collected twenty-five species (excluding a Dermestes and
- Corynetes imported, wherever a ship touches); of these, two belong to the
- Harpalidae, two to the Hydrophilidae, nine to three families of the
- Heteromera, and the remaining twelve to as many different families. This
- circumstance of insects (and I may add plants), where few in number,
- belonging to many different families, is, I believe, very general. Mr.
- Waterhouse, who has published <a href="#linknote-174"
- name="linknoteref-174" id="linknoteref-174"><small>174</small></a> an
- account of the insects of this archipelago, and to whom I am indebted for
- the above details, informs me that there are several new genera: and that
- of the genera not new, one or two are American, and the rest of mundane
- distribution. With the exception of a wood-feeding Apate, and of one or
- probably two water-beetles from the American continent, all the species
- appear to be new.
- </p>
- <p>
- The botany of this group is fully as interesting as the zoology. Dr. J.
- Hooker will soon publish in the "Linnean Transactions" a full account of
- the Flora, and I am much indebted to him for the following details. Of
- flowering plants there are, as far as at present is known, 185 species,
- and 40 cryptogamic species, making altogether 225; of this number I was
- fortunate enough to bring home 193. Of the flowering plants, 100 are new
- species, and are probably confined to this archipelago. Dr. Hooker
- conceives that, of the plants not so confined, at least 10 species found
- near the cultivated ground at Charles Island, have been imported. It is, I
- think, surprising that more American species have not been introduced
- naturally, considering that the distance is only between 500 and 600 miles
- from the continent, and that (according to Collnet, p. 58) drift-wood,
- bamboos, canes, and the nuts of a palm, are often washed on the
- south-eastern shores. The proportion of 100 flowering plants out of 183
- (or 175 excluding the imported weeds) being new, is sufficient, I
- conceive, to make the Galapagos Archipelago a distinct botanical province;
- but this Flora is not nearly so peculiar as that of St. Helena, nor, as I
- am informed by Dr. Hooker, of Juan Fernandez. The peculiarity of the
- Galapageian Flora is best shown in certain families;&mdash;thus there are
- 21 species of Compositae, of which 20 are peculiar to this archipelago;
- these belong to twelve genera, and of these genera no less than ten are
- confined to the archipelago! Dr. Hooker informs me that the Flora has an
- undoubtedly Western American character; nor can he detect in it any
- affinity with that of the Pacific. If, therefore, we except the eighteen
- marine, the one fresh-water, and one land-shell, which have apparently
- come here as colonists from the central islands of the Pacific, and
- likewise the one distinct Pacific species of the Galapageian group of
- finches, we see that this archipelago, though standing in the Pacific
- Ocean, is zoologically part of America.
- </p>
- <p>
- If this character were owing merely to immigrants from America, there
- would be little remarkable in it; but we see that a vast majority of all
- the land animals, and that more than half of the flowering plants, are
- aboriginal productions. It was most striking to be surrounded by new
- birds, new reptiles, new shells, new insects, new plants, and yet by
- innumerable trifling details of structure, and even by the tones of voice
- and plumage of the birds, to have the temperate plains of Patagonia, or
- rather the hot dry deserts of Northern Chile, vividly brought before my
- eyes. Why, on these small points of land, which within a late geological
- period must have been covered by the ocean, which are formed by basaltic
- lava, and therefore differ in geological character from the American
- continent, and which are placed under a peculiar climate,&mdash;why were
- their aboriginal inhabitants, associated, I may add, in different
- proportions both in kind and number from those on the continent, and
- therefore acting on each other in a different manner&mdash;why were they
- created on American types of organization? It is probable that the islands
- of the Cape de Verd group resemble, in all their physical conditions, far
- more closely the Galapagos Islands, than these latter physically resemble
- the coast of America, yet the aboriginal inhabitants of the two groups are
- totally unlike; those of the Cape de Verd Islands bearing the impress of
- Africa, as the inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped with
- that of America.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have not as yet noticed by far the most remarkable feature in the
- natural history of this archipelago; it is, that the different islands to
- a considerable extent are inhabited by a different set of beings. My
- attention was first called to this fact by the Vice-Governor, Mr. Lawson,
- declaring that the tortoises differed from the different islands, and that
- he could with certainty tell from which island any one was brought. I did
- not for some time pay sufficient attention to this statement, and I had
- already partially mingled together the collections from two of the
- islands. I never dreamed that islands, about 50 or 60 miles apart, and
- most of them in sight of each other, formed of precisely the same rocks,
- placed under a quite similar climate, rising to a nearly equal height,
- would have been differently tenanted; but we shall soon see that this is
- the case. It is the fate of most voyagers, no sooner to discover what is
- most interesting in any locality, than they are hurried from it; but I
- ought, perhaps, to be thankful that I obtained sufficient materials to
- establish this most remarkable fact in the distribution of organic beings.
- </p>
- <p>
- The inhabitants, as I have said, state that they can distinguish the
- tortoises from the different islands; and that they differ not only in
- size, but in other characters. Captain Porter has described <a
- href="#linknote-175" name="linknoteref-175" id="linknoteref-175"><small>175</small></a>
- those from Charles and from the nearest island to it, namely, Hood Island,
- as having their shells in front thick and turned up like a Spanish saddle,
- whilst the tortoises from James Island are rounder, blacker, and have a
- better taste when cooked. M. Bibron, moreover, informs me that he has seen
- what he considers two distinct species of tortoise from the Galapagos, but
- he does not know from which islands. The specimens that I brought from
- three islands were young ones: and probably owing to this cause neither
- Mr. Gray nor myself could find in them any specific differences. I have
- remarked that the marine Amblyrhynchus was larger at Albemarle Island than
- elsewhere; and M. Bibron informs me that he has seen two distinct aquatic
- species of this genus; so that the different islands probably have their
- representative species or races of the Amblyrhynchus, as well as of the
- tortoise. My attention was first thoroughly aroused, by comparing together
- the numerous specimens, shot by myself and several other parties on board,
- of the mocking-thrushes, when, to my astonishment, I discovered that all
- those from Charles Island belonged to one species (Mimus trifasciatus) all
- from Albemarle Island to M. parvulus; and all from James and Chatham
- Islands (between which two other islands are situated, as connecting
- links) belonged to M. melanotis. These two latter species are closely
- allied, and would by some ornithologists be considered as only well-marked
- races or varieties; but the Mimus trifasciatus is very distinct.
- Unfortunately most of the specimens of the finch tribe were mingled
- together; but I have strong reasons to suspect that some of the species of
- the sub-group Geospiza are confined to separate islands. If the different
- islands have their representatives of Geospiza, it may help to explain the
- singularly large number of the species of this sub-group in this one small
- archipelago, and as a probable consequence of their numbers, the perfectly
- graduated series in the size of their beaks. Two species of the sub-group
- Cactornis, and two of the Camarhynchus, were procured in the archipelago;
- and of the numerous specimens of these two sub-groups shot by four
- collectors at James Island, all were found to belong to one species of
- each; whereas the numerous specimens shot either on Chatham or Charles
- Island (for the two sets were mingled together) all belonged to the two
- other species: hence we may feel almost sure that these islands possess
- their respective species of these two sub-groups. In land-shells this law
- of distribution does not appear to hold good. In my very small collection
- of insects, Mr. Waterhouse remarks, that of those which were ticketed with
- their locality, not one was common to any two of the islands.
- </p>
- <p>
- If we now turn to the Flora, we shall find the aboriginal plants of the
- different islands wonderfully different. I give all the following results
- on the high authority of my friend Dr. J. Hooker. I may premise that I
- indiscriminately collected everything in flower on the different islands,
- and fortunately kept my collections separate. Too much confidence,
- however, must not be placed in the proportional results, as the small
- collections brought home by some other naturalists though in some respects
- confirming the results, plainly show that much remains to be done in the
- botany of this group: the Leguminosae, moreover, has as yet been only
- approximately worked out:&mdash;
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0009" id="linkimage-0009"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0428.jpg" alt="0428 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0428.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
-<pre xml:space="preserve">
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- Number of
- Species
- confined
- to the
- Number of Number of Galapagos
- species species Number Archipelago
- Total found in confined confined but found
- Name Number other to the to the on more
- of of parts of Galapagos one than the
- Island Species the world Archipelago island one island
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
- James 71 33 38 30 8
- Albemarle 46 18 26 22 4
- Chatham 32 16 16 12 4
- Charles 68 39 29 21 8
- (or 29, if
- the probably
- imported
- plants be
- subtracted.)
- &mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;&mdash;
-</pre>
- <p>
- Hence we have the truly wonderful fact, that in James Island, of the
- thirty-eight Galapageian plants, or those found in no other part of the
- world, thirty are exclusively confined to this one island; and in
- Albemarle Island, of the twenty-six aboriginal Galapageian plants,
- twenty-two are confined to this one island, that is, only four are at
- present known to grow in the other islands of the archipelago; and so on,
- as shown in the above table, with the plants from Chatham and Charles
- Islands. This fact will, perhaps, be rendered even more striking, by
- giving a few illustrations:&mdash;thus, Scalesia, a remarkable arborescent
- genus of the Compositae, is confined to the archipelago: it has six
- species: one from Chatham, one from Albemarle, one from Charles Island,
- two from James Island, and the sixth from one of the three latter islands,
- but it is not known from which: not one of these six species grows on any
- two islands. Again, Euphorbia, a mundane or widely distributed genus, has
- here eight species, of which seven are confined to the archipelago, and
- not one found on any two islands: Acalypha and Borreria, both mundane
- genera, have respectively six and seven species, none of which have the
- same species on two islands, with the exception of one Borreria, which
- does occur on two islands. The species of the Compositae are particularly
- local; and Dr. Hooker has furnished me with several other most striking
- illustrations of the difference of the species on the different islands.
- He remarks that this law of distribution holds good both with those genera
- confined to the archipelago, and those distributed in other quarters of
- the world: in like manner we have seen that the different islands have
- their proper species of the mundane genus of tortoise, and of the widely
- distributed American genus of the mocking-thrush, as well as of two of the
- Galapageian sub-groups of finches, and almost certainly of the Galapageian
- genus Amblyrhynchus.
- </p>
- <p>
- The distribution of the tenants of this archipelago would not be nearly so
- wonderful, if, for instance, one island had a mocking-thrush, and a second
- island some other quite distinct genus,&mdash;if one island had its genus
- of lizard, and a second island another distinct genus, or none whatever;&mdash;or
- if the different islands were inhabited, not by representative species of
- the same genera of plants, but by totally different genera, as does to a
- certain extent hold good: for, to give one instance, a large berry-bearing
- tree at James Island has no representative species in Charles Island. But
- it is the circumstance, that several of the islands possess their own
- species of the tortoise, mocking-thrush, finches, and numerous plants,
- these species having the same general habits, occupying analogous
- situations, and obviously filling the same place in the natural economy of
- this archipelago, that strikes me with wonder. It may be suspected that
- some of these representative species, at least in the case of the tortoise
- and of some of the birds, may hereafter prove to be only well-marked
- races; but this would be of equally great interest to the philosophical
- naturalist. I have said that most of the islands are in sight of each
- other: I may specify that Charles Island is fifty miles from the nearest
- part of Chatham Island, and thirty-three miles from the nearest part of
- Albemarle Island. Chatham Island is sixty miles from the nearest part of
- James Island, but there are two intermediate islands between them which
- were not visited by me. James Island is only ten miles from the nearest
- part of Albemarle Island, but the two points where the collections were
- made are thirty-two miles apart. I must repeat, that neither the nature of
- the soil, nor height of the land, nor the climate, nor the general
- character of the associated beings, and therefore their action one on
- another, can differ much in the different islands. If there be any
- sensible difference in their climates, it must be between the Windward
- group (namely, Charles and Chatham Islands), and that to leeward; but
- there seems to be no corresponding difference in the productions of these
- two halves of the archipelago.
- </p>
- <p>
- The only light which I can throw on this remarkable difference in the
- inhabitants of the different islands, is, that very strong currents of the
- sea running in a westerly and W.N.W. direction must separate, as far as
- transportal by the sea is concerned, the southern islands from the
- northern ones; and between these northern islands a strong N.W. current
- was observed, which must effectually separate James and Albemarle Islands.
- As the archipelago is free to a most remarkable degree from gales of wind,
- neither the birds, insects, nor lighter seeds, would be blown from island
- to island. And lastly, the profound depth of the ocean between the
- islands, and their apparently recent (in a geological sense) volcanic
- origin, render it highly unlikely that they were ever united; and this,
- probably, is a far more important consideration than any other, with
- respect to the geographical distribution of their inhabitants. Reviewing
- the facts here given, one is astonished at the amount of creative force,
- if such an expression may be used, displayed on these small, barren, and
- rocky islands; and still more so, at its diverse yet analogous action on
- points so near each other. I have said that the Galapagos Archipelago
- might be called a satellite attached to America, but it should rather be
- called a group of satellites, physically similar, organically distinct,
- yet intimately related to each other, and all related in a marked, though
- much lesser degree, to the great American continent.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will conclude my description of the natural history of these islands, by
- giving an account of the extreme tameness of the birds.
- </p>
- <p>
- This disposition is common to all the terrestrial species; namely, to the
- mocking-thrushes, the finches, wrens, tyrant-flycatchers, the dove, and
- carrion-buzzard. All of them are often approached sufficiently near to be
- killed with a switch, and sometimes, as I myself tried, with a cap or hat.
- A gun is here almost superfluous; for with the muzzle I pushed a hawk off
- the branch of a tree. One day, whilst lying down, a mocking-thrush
- alighted on the edge of a pitcher, made of the shell of a tortoise, which
- I held in my hand, and began very quietly to sip the water; it allowed me
- to lift it from the ground whilst seated on the vessel: I often tried, and
- very nearly succeeded, in catching these birds by their legs. Formerly the
- birds appear to have been even tamer than at present. Cowley (in the year
- 1684) says that the "Turtledoves were so tame, that they would often
- alight on our hats and arms, so as that we could take them alive, they not
- fearing man, until such time as some of our company did fire at them,
- whereby they were rendered more shy." Dampier also, in the same year, says
- that a man in a morning's walk might kill six or seven dozen of these
- doves. At present, although certainly very tame, they do not alight on
- people's arms, nor do they suffer themselves to be killed in such large
- numbers. It is surprising that they have not become wilder; for these
- islands during the last hundred and fifty years have been frequently
- visited by bucaniers and whalers; and the sailors, wandering through the
- wood in search of tortoises, always take cruel delight in knocking down
- the little birds. These birds, although now still more persecuted, do not
- readily become wild. In Charles Island, which had then been colonized
- about six years, I saw a boy sitting by a well with a switch in his hand,
- with which he killed the doves and finches as they came to drink. He had
- already procured a little heap of them for his dinner, and he said that he
- had constantly been in the habit of waiting by this well for the same
- purpose. It would appear that the birds of this archipelago, not having as
- yet learnt that man is a more dangerous animal than the tortoise or the
- Amblyrhynchus, disregard him, in the same manner as in England shy birds,
- such as magpies, disregard the cows and horses grazing in our fields.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Falkland Islands offer a second instance of birds with a similar
- disposition. The extraordinary tameness of the little Opetiorhynchus has
- been remarked by Pernety, Lesson, and other voyagers. It is not, however,
- peculiar to that bird: the Polyborus, snipe, upland and lowland goose,
- thrush, bunting, and even some true hawks, are all more or less tame. As
- the birds are so tame there, where foxes, hawks, and owls occur, we may
- infer that the absence of all rapacious animals at the Galapagos, is not
- the cause of their tameness here. The upland geese at the Falklands show,
- by the precaution they take in building on the islets, that they are aware
- of their danger from the foxes; but they are not by this rendered wild
- towards man. This tameness of the birds, especially of the water-fowl, is
- strongly contrasted with the habits of the same species in Tierra del
- Fuego, where for ages past they have been persecuted by the wild
- inhabitants. In the Falklands, the sportsman may sometimes kill more of
- the upland geese in one day than he can carry home; whereas in Tierra del
- Fuego it is nearly as difficult to kill one, as it is in England to shoot
- the common wild goose.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the time of Pernety (1763), all the birds there appear to have been
- much tamer than at present; he states that the Opetiorhynchus would almost
- perch on his finger; and that with a wand he killed ten in half an hour.
- At that period the birds must have been about as tame as they now are at
- the Galapagos. They appear to have learnt caution more slowly at these
- latter islands than at the Falklands, where they have had proportionate
- means of experience; for besides frequent visits from vessels, those
- islands have been at intervals colonized during the entire period. Even
- formerly, when all the birds were so tame, it was impossible by Pernety's
- account to kill the black-necked swan&mdash;a bird of passage, which
- probably brought with it the wisdom learnt in foreign countries.
- </p>
- <p>
- I may add that, according to Du Bois, all the birds at Bourbon in 1571-72,
- with the exception of the flamingoes and geese, were so extremely tame,
- that they could be caught by the hand, or killed in any number with a
- stick. Again, at Tristan d'Acunha in the Atlantic, Carmichael <a
- href="#linknote-176" name="linknoteref-176" id="linknoteref-176"><small>176</small></a>
- states that the only two land-birds, a thrush and a bunting, were "so tame
- as to suffer themselves to be caught with a hand-net." From these several
- facts we may, I think, conclude, first, that the wildness of birds with
- regard to man, is a particular instinct directed against <i>him</i>, and
- not dependent upon any general degree of caution arising from other
- sources of danger; secondly, that it is not acquired by individual birds
- in a short time, even when much persecuted; but that in the course of
- successive generations it becomes hereditary. With domesticated animals we
- are accustomed to see new mental habits or instincts acquired or rendered
- hereditary; but with animals in a state of nature, it must always be most
- difficult to discover instances of acquired hereditary knowledge. In
- regard to the wildness of birds towards man, there is no way of accounting
- for it, except as an inherited habit: comparatively few young birds, in
- any one year, have been injured by man in England, yet almost all, even
- nestlings, are afraid of him; many individuals, on the other hand, both at
- the Galapagos and at the Falklands, have been pursued and injured by man,
- yet have not learned a salutary dread of him. We may infer from these
- facts, what havoc the introduction of any new beast of prey must cause in
- a country, before the instincts of the indigenous inhabitants have become
- adapted to the stranger's craft or power.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0018" id="link2HCH0018"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XVIII &mdash; TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Pass through the Low Archipelago&mdash;Tahiti&mdash;Aspect&mdash;Vegetation
- on the Mountains&mdash;View of Eimeo&mdash;Excursion into the Interior&mdash;Profound
- Ravines&mdash;Succession of Waterfalls&mdash;Number of wild useful Plants&mdash;Temperance
- of the Inhabitants&mdash;Their moral state&mdash;Parliament convened&mdash;New
- Zealand&mdash;Bay of Islands&mdash;Hippahs&mdash;Excursion to Waimate&mdash;Missionary
- Establishment&mdash;English Weeds now run wild&mdash;Waiomio&mdash;Funeral
- of a New Zealand Woman&mdash;Sail for Australia.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">O</span>CTOBER 20th.&mdash;The
- survey of the Galapagos Archipelago being concluded, we steered towards
- Tahiti and commenced our long passage of 3200 miles. In the course of a
- few days we sailed out of the gloomy and clouded ocean-district which
- extends during the winter far from the coast of South America. We then
- enjoyed bright and clear weather, while running pleasantly along at the
- rate of 150 or 160 miles a day before the steady trade-wind. The
- temperature in this more central part of the Pacific is higher than near
- the American shore. The thermometer in the poop cabin, by night and day,
- ranged between 80 and 83 degs., which feels very pleasant; but with one
- degree or two higher, the heat becomes oppressive. We passed through the
- Low or Dangerous Archipelago, and saw several of those most curious rings
- of coral land, just rising above the water's edge, which have been called
- Lagoon Islands. A long and brilliantly white beach is capped by a margin
- of green vegetation; and the strip, looking either way, rapidly narrows
- away in the distance, and sinks beneath the horizon From the mast-head a
- wide expanse of smooth water can be seen within the ring. These low hollow
- coral islands bear no proportion to the vast ocean out of which they
- abruptly rise; and it seems wonderful, that such weak invaders are not
- overwhelmed, by the all-powerful and never-tiring waves of that great sea,
- miscalled the Pacific.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 15th.&mdash;At daylight, Tahiti, an island which must for ever
- remain classical to the voyager in the South Sea, was in view. At a
- distance the appearance was not attractive. The luxuriant vegetation of
- the lower part could not yet be seen, and as the clouds rolled past, the
- wildest and most precipitous peaks showed themselves towards the centre of
- the island. As soon as we anchored in Matavai Bay, we were surrounded by
- canoes. This was our Sunday, but the Monday of Tahiti: if the case had
- been reversed, we should not have received a single visit; for the
- injunction not to launch a canoe on the sabbath is rigidly obeyed. After
- dinner we landed to enjoy all the delights produced by the first
- impressions of a new country, and that country the charming Tahiti. A
- crowd of men, women, and children, was collected on the memorable Point
- Venus, ready to receive us with laughing, merry faces. They marshalled us
- towards the house of Mr. Wilson, the missionary of the district, who met
- us on the road, and gave us a very friendly reception. After sitting a
- very short time in his house, we separated to walk about, but returned
- there in the evening.
- </p>
- <p>
- The land capable of cultivation, is scarcely in any part more than a
- fringe of low alluvial soil, accumulated round the base of the mountains,
- and protected from the waves of the sea by a coral reef, which encircles
- the entire line of coast. Within the reef there is an expanse of smooth
- water, like that of a lake, where the canoes of the natives can ply with
- safety and where ships anchor. The low land which comes down to the beach
- of coral-sand, is covered by the most beautiful productions of the
- intertropical regions. In the midst of bananas, orange, cocoa-nut, and
- bread-fruit trees, spots are cleared where yams, sweet potatoes, and
- sugar-cane, and pine-apples are cultivated. Even the brushwood is an
- imported fruit-tree, namely, the guava, which from its abundance has
- become as noxious as a weed. In Brazil I have often admired the varied
- beauty of the bananas, palms, and orange-trees contrasted together; and
- here we also have the bread-fruit, conspicuous from its large, glossy, and
- deeply digitated leaf. It is admirable to behold groves of a tree, sending
- forth its branches with the vigour of an English oak, loaded with large
- and most nutritious fruit. However seldom the usefulness of an object can
- account for the pleasure of beholding it, in the case of these beautiful
- woods, the knowledge of their high productiveness no doubt enters largely
- into the feeling of admiration. The little winding paths, cool from the
- surrounding shade, led to the scattered houses; the owners of which
- everywhere gave us a cheerful and most hospitable reception.
- </p>
- <p>
- I was pleased with nothing so much as with the inhabitants. There is a
- mildness in the expression of their countenances which at once banishes
- the idea of a savage; and intelligence which shows that they are advancing
- in civilization. The common people, when working, keep the upper part of
- their bodies quite naked; and it is then that the Tahitians are seen to advantage.
- They are very tall, broad-shouldered, athletic, and well-proportioned. It
- has been remarked, that it requires little habit to make a dark skin more
- pleasing and natural to the eye of an European than his own colour. A
- white man bathing by the side of a Tahitian, was like a plant bleached by
- the gardener's art compared with a fine dark green one growing vigorously
- in the open fields. Most of the men are tattooed, and the ornaments follow
- the curvature of the body so gracefully, that they have a very elegant
- effect. One common pattern, varying in its details, is somewhat like the
- crown of a palm-tree. It springs from the central line of the back, and
- gracefully curls round both sides. The simile may be a fanciful one, but I
- thought the body of a man thus ornamented was like the trunk of a noble
- tree embraced by a delicate creeper.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many of the elder people had their feet covered with small figures, so
- placed as to resemble a sock. This fashion, however, is partly gone by,
- and has been succeeded by others. Here, although fashion is far from
- immutable, every one must abide by that prevailing in his youth. An old
- man has thus his age for ever stamped on his body, and he cannot assume
- the airs of a young dandy. The women are tattooed in the same manner as
- the men, and very commonly on their fingers. One unbecoming fashion is now
- almost universal: namely, shaving the hair from the upper part of the
- head, in a circular form, so as to leave only an outer ring. The
- missionaries have tried to persuade the people to change this habit; but
- it is the fashion, and that is a sufficient answer at Tahiti, as well as
- at Paris. I was much disappointed in the personal appearance of the women:
- they are far inferior in every respect to the men. The custom of wearing a
- white or scarlet flower in the back of the head, or through a small hole
- in each ear, is pretty. A crown of woven cocoa-nut leaves is also worn as
- a shade for the eyes. The women appear to be in greater want of some
- becoming costume even than the men.
- </p>
- <p>
- Nearly all the natives understand a little English&mdash;that is, they
- know the names of common things; and by the aid of this, together with
- signs, a lame sort of conversation could be carried on. In returning in
- the evening to the boat, we stopped to witness a very pretty scene.
- Numbers of children were playing on the beach, and had lighted bonfires
- which illumined the placid sea and surrounding trees; others, in circles,
- were singing Tahitian verses. We seated ourselves on the sand, and joined
- their party. The songs were impromptu, and I believe related to our
- arrival: one little girl sang a line, which the rest took up in parts,
- forming a very pretty chorus. The whole scene made us unequivocally aware
- that we were seated on the shores of an island in the far-famed South Sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- 17th.&mdash;This day is reckoned in the log-book as Tuesday the 17th,
- instead of Monday the 16th, owing to our, so far, successful chase of the
- sun. Before breakfast the ship was hemmed in by a flotilla of canoes; and
- when the natives were allowed to come on board, I suppose there could not
- have been less than two hundred. It was the opinion of every one that it
- would have been difficult to have picked out an equal number from any
- other nation, who would have given so little trouble. Everybody brought
- something for sale: shells were the main articles of trade. The Tahitians
- now fully understand the value of money, and prefer it to old clothes or
- other articles. The various coins, however, of English and Spanish
- denomination puzzle them, and they never seemed to think the small silver
- quite secure until changed into dollars. Some of the chiefs have
- accumulated considerable sums of money. One chief, not long since, offered
- 800 dollars (about 160 pounds sterling) for a small vessel; and frequently
- they purchase whale-boats and horses at the rate of from 50 to 100
- dollars.
- </p>
- <p>
- After breakfast I went on shore, and ascended the nearest slope to a
- height of between two and three thousand feet. The outer mountains are
- smooth and conical, but steep; and the old volcanic rocks, of which they
- are formed, have been cut through by many profound ravines, diverging from
- the central broken parts of the island to the coast. Having crossed the
- narrow low girt of inhabited and fertile land, I followed a smooth steep
- ridge between two of the deep ravines. The vegetation was singular,
- consisting almost exclusively of small dwarf ferns, mingled higher up,
- with coarse grass; it was not very dissimilar from that on some of the
- Welsh hills, and this so close above the orchard of tropical plants on the
- coast was very surprising. At the highest point, which I reached, trees
- again appeared. Of the three zones of comparative luxuriance, the lower
- one owes its moisture, and therefore fertility, to its flatness; for,
- being scarcely raised above the level of the sea, the water from the
- higher land drains away slowly. The intermediate zone does not, like the
- upper one, reach into a damp and cloudy atmosphere, and therefore remains
- sterile. The woods in the upper zone are very pretty, tree-ferns replacing
- the cocoa-nuts on the coast. It must not, however, be supposed that these
- woods at all equal in splendour the forests of Brazil. The vast numbers of
- productions, which characterize a continent, cannot be expected to occur
- in an island.
- </p>
- <p>
- From the highest point which I attained, there was a good view of the
- distant island of Eimeo, dependent on the same sovereign with Tahiti. On
- the lofty and broken pinnacles, white massive clouds were piled up, which
- formed an island in the blue sky, as Eimeo itself did in the blue ocean.
- The island, with the exception of one small gateway, is completely
- encircled by a reef. At this distance, a narrow but well-defined
- brilliantly white line was alone visible, where the waves first
- encountered the wall of coral. The mountains rose abruptly out of the
- glassy expanse of the lagoon, included within this narrow white line,
- outside which the heaving waters of the ocean were dark-coloured. The view
- was striking: it may aptly be compared to a framed engraving, where the
- frame represents the breakers, the marginal paper the smooth lagoon, and
- the drawing the island itself. When in the evening I descended from the
- mountain, a man, whom I had pleased with a trifling gift, met me, bringing
- with him hot roasted bananas, a pine-apple, and cocoa-nuts. After walking
- under a burning sun, I do not know anything more delicious than the milk
- of a young cocoa-nut. Pine-apples are here so abundant that the people eat
- them in the same wasteful manner as we might turnips. They are of an
- excellent flavor&mdash;perhaps even better than those cultivated in
- England; and this I believe is the highest compliment which can be paid to
- any fruit. Before going on board, Mr. Wilson interpreted for me to the
- Tahitian who had paid me so adroit an attention, that I wanted him and
- another man to accompany me on a short excursion into the mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- 18th.&mdash;In the morning I came on shore early, bringing with me some
- provisions in a bag, and two blankets for myself and servant. These were
- lashed to each end of a long pole, which was alternately carried by my
- Tahitian companions on their shoulders. These men are accustomed thus to
- carry, for a whole day, as much as fifty pounds at each end of their
- poles. I told my guides to provide themselves with food and clothing; but
- they said that there was plenty of food in the mountains, and for
- clothing, that their skins were sufficient. Our line of march was the
- valley of Tiaauru, down which a river flows into the sea by Point Venus.
- This is one of the principal streams in the island, and its source lies at
- the base of the loftiest central pinnacles, which rise to a height of
- about 7000 feet. The whole island is so mountainous that the only way to
- penetrate into the interior is to follow up the valleys. Our road, at
- first, lay through woods which bordered each side of the river; and the
- glimpses of the lofty central peaks, seen as through an avenue, with here
- and there a waving cocoa-nut tree on one side, were extremely picturesque.
- The valley soon began to narrow, and the sides to grow lofty and more
- precipitous. After having walked between three and four hours, we found
- the width of the ravine scarcely exceeded that of the bed of the stream.
- On each hand the walls were nearly vertical, yet from the soft nature of
- the volcanic strata, trees and a rank vegetation sprung from every
- projecting ledge. These precipices must have been some thousand feet high;
- and the whole formed a mountain gorge far more magnificent than anything
- which I had ever before beheld. Until the midday sun stood vertically over
- the ravine, the air felt cool and damp, but now it became very sultry.
- Shaded by a ledge of rock, beneath a facade of columnar lava, we ate our
- dinner. My guides had already procured a dish of small fish and
- fresh-water prawns. They carried with them a small net stretched on a
- hoop; and where the water was deep and in eddies, they dived, and like
- otters, with their eyes open followed the fish into holes and corners, and
- thus caught them.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Tahitians have the dexterity of amphibious animals in the water. An
- anecdote mentioned by Ellis shows how much they feel at home in this
- element. When a horse was landing for Pomarre in 1817, the slings broke,
- and it fell into the water; immediately the natives jumped overboard, and
- by their cries and vain efforts at assistance almost drowned it. As soon,
- however, as it reached the shore, the whole population took to flight, and
- tried to hide themselves from the man-carrying pig, as they christened the
- horse.
- </p>
- <p>
- A little higher up, the river divided itself into three little streams.
- The two northern ones were impracticable, owing to a succession of
- waterfalls which descended from the jagged summit of the highest mountain;
- the other to all appearance was equally inaccessible, but we managed to
- ascend it by a most extraordinary road. The sides of the valley were here
- nearly precipitous, but, as frequently happens with stratified rocks,
- small ledges projected, which were thickly covered by wild bananas,
- lilaceous plants, and other luxuriant productions of the tropics. The
- Tahitians, by climbing amongst these ledges, searching for fruit, had
- discovered a track by which the whole precipice could be scaled. The first
- ascent from the valley was very dangerous; for it was necessary to pass a
- steeply inclined face of naked rock, by the aid of ropes which we brought
- with us. How any person discovered that this formidable spot was the only
- point where the side of the mountain was practicable, I cannot imagine. We
- then cautiously walked along one of the ledges till we came to one of the
- three streams. This ledge formed a flat spot, above which a beautiful
- cascade, some hundred feet in height, poured down its waters, and beneath,
- another high cascade fell into the main stream in the valley below. From
- this cool and shady recess we made a circuit to avoid the overhanging
- waterfall. As before, we followed little projecting ledges, the danger
- being partly concealed by the thickness of the vegetation. In passing from
- one of the ledges to another, there was a vertical wall of rock. One of
- the Tahitians, a fine active man, placed the trunk of a tree against this,
- climbed up it, and then by the aid of crevices reached the summit. He
- fixed the ropes to a projecting point, and lowered them for our dog and
- luggage, and then we clambered up ourselves. Beneath the ledge on which
- the dead tree was placed, the precipice must have been five or six hundred
- feet deep; and if the abyss had not been partly concealed by the
- overhanging ferns and lilies my head would have turned giddy, and nothing
- should have induced me to have attempted it. We continued to ascend,
- sometimes along ledges, and sometimes along knife-edged ridges, having on
- each hand profound ravines. In the Cordillera I have seen mountains on a
- far grander scale, but for abruptness, nothing at all comparable with
- this. In the evening we reached a flat little spot on the banks of the
- same stream, which we had continued to follow, and which descends in a
- chain of waterfalls: here we bivouacked for the night. On each side of the
- ravine there were great beds of the mountain-banana, covered with ripe
- fruit. Many of these plants were from twenty to twenty-five feet high, and
- from three to four in circumference. By the aid of strips of bark for
- rope, the stems of bamboos for rafters, and the large leaf of the banana
- for a thatch, the Tahitians in a few minutes built us an excellent house;
- and with withered leaves made a soft bed.
- </p>
- <p>
- They then proceeded to make a fire, and cook our evening meal. A light was
- procured, by rubbing a blunt pointed stick in a groove made in another, as
- if with intention of deepening it, until by the friction the dust became
- ignited. A peculiarly white and very light wood (the Hibiscus tiliareus)
- is alone used for this purpose: it is the same which serves for poles to
- carry any burden, and for the floating out-riggers to their canoes. The
- fire was produced in a few seconds: but to a person who does not
- understand the art, it requires, as I found, the greatest exertion; but at
- last, to my great pride, I succeeded in igniting the dust. The Gaucho in
- the Pampas uses a different method: taking an elastic stick about eighteen
- inches long, he presses one end on his breast, and the other pointed end
- into a hole in a piece of wood, and then rapidly turns the curved part,
- like a carpenter's centre-bit. The Tahitians having made a small fire of
- sticks, placed a score of stones, of about the size of cricket-balls, on
- the burning wood. In about ten minutes the sticks were consumed, and the
- stones hot. They had previously folded up in small parcels of leaves,
- pieces of beef, fish, ripe and unripe bananas, and the tops of the wild
- arum. These green parcels were laid in a layer between two layers of the
- hot stones, and the whole then covered up with earth, so that no smoke or
- steam could escape. In about a quarter of an hour, the whole was most
- deliciously cooked. The choice green parcels were now laid on a cloth of
- banana leaves, and with a cocoa-nut shell we drank the cool water of the
- running stream; and thus we enjoyed our rustic meal.
- </p>
- <p>
- I could not look on the surrounding plants without admiration. On every
- side were forests of banana; the fruit of which, though serving for food
- in various ways, lay in heaps decaying on the ground. In front of us there
- was an extensive brake of wild sugar-cane; and the stream was shaded by
- the dark green knotted stem of the Ava,&mdash;so famous in former days for
- its powerful intoxicating effects. I chewed a piece, and found that it had
- an acrid and unpleasant taste, which would have induced any one at once to
- have pronounced it poisonous. Thanks to the missionaries, this plant now
- thrives only in these deep ravines, innocuous to every one. Close by I saw
- the wild arum, the roots of which, when well baked, are good to eat, and
- the young leaves better than spinach. There was the wild yam, and a
- liliaceous plant called Ti, which grows in abundance, and has a soft brown
- root, in shape and size like a huge log of wood: this served us for
- dessert, for it is as sweet as treacle, and with a pleasant taste. There
- were, moreover, several other wild fruits, and useful vegetables. The
- little stream, besides its cool water, produced eels, and cray-fish. I did
- indeed admire this scene, when I compared it with an uncultivated one in
- the temperate zones. I felt the force of the remark, that man, at least
- savage man, with his reasoning powers only partly developed, is the child
- of the tropics.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the evening drew to a close, I strolled beneath the gloomy shade of the
- bananas up the course of the stream. My walk was soon brought to a close,
- by coming to a waterfall between two and three hundred feet high; and
- again above this there was another. I mention all these waterfalls in this
- one brook, to give a general idea of the inclination of the land. In the
- little recess where the water fell, it did not appear that a breath of
- wind had ever blown. The thin edges of the great leaves of the banana,
- damp with spray, were unbroken, instead of being, as is so generally the
- case, split into a thousand shreds. From our position, almost suspended on
- the mountain side, there were glimpses into the depths of the neighbouring
- valleys; and the lofty points of the central mountains, towering up within
- sixty degrees of the zenith, hid half the evening sky. Thus seated, it was
- a sublime spectacle to watch the shades of night gradually obscuring the
- last and highest pinnacles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before we laid ourselves down to sleep, the elder Tahitian fell on his
- knees, and with closed eyes repeated a long prayer in his native tongue.
- He prayed as a Christian should do, with fitting reverence, and without
- the fear of ridicule or any ostentation of piety. At our meals neither of
- the men would taste food, without saying beforehand a short grace. Those
- travellers who think that a Tahitian prays only when the eyes of the
- missionary are fixed on him, should have slept with us that night on the
- mountain-side. Before morning it rained very heavily; but the good thatch
- of banana-leaves kept us dry.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 19th.&mdash;At daylight my friends, after their morning prayer,
- prepared an excellent breakfast in the same manner as in the evening. They
- themselves certainly partook of it largely; indeed I never saw any men eat
- near so much. I suppose such enormously capacious stomachs must be the
- effect of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit and vegetables,
- which contain, in a given bulk, a comparatively small portion of
- nutriment. Unwittingly, I was the means of my companions breaking, as I
- afterwards learned, one of their own laws, and resolutions: I took with me
- a flask of spirits, which they could not refuse to partake of; but as
- often as they drank a little, they put their fingers before their mouths,
- and uttered the word "Missionary." About two years ago, although the use
- of the ava was prevented, drunkenness from the introduction of spirits
- became very prevalent. The missionaries prevailed on a few good men, who
- saw that their country was rapidly going to ruin, to join with them in a
- Temperance Society. From good sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen
- were at last persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed, that no
- spirits should be allowed to be introduced into the island, and that he
- who sold and he who bought the forbidden article should be punished by a
- fine. With remarkable justice, a certain period was allowed for stock in
- hand to be sold, before the law came into effect. But when it did, a
- general search was made, in which even the houses of the missionaries were
- not exempted, and all the ava (as the natives call all ardent spirits) was
- poured on the ground. When one reflects on the effect of intemperance on
- the aborigines of the two Americas, I think it will be acknowledged that
- every well-wisher of Tahiti owes no common debt of gratitude to the
- missionaries. As long as the little island of St. Helena remained under
- the government of the East India Company, spirits, owing to the great
- injury they had produced, were not allowed to be imported; but wine was
- supplied from the Cape of Good Hope. It is rather a striking and not very
- gratifying fact, that in the same year that spirits were allowed to be
- sold in Helena, their use was banished from Tahiti by the free will of the
- people.
- </p>
- <p>
- After breakfast we proceeded on our Journey. As my object was merely to
- see a little of the interior scenery, we returned by another track, which
- descended into the main valley lower down. For some distance we wound, by
- a most intricate path, along the side of the mountain which formed the
- valley. In the less precipitous parts we passed through extensive groves
- of the wild banana. The Tahitians, with their naked, tattooed bodies,
- their heads ornamented with flowers, and seen in the dark shade of these
- groves, would have formed a fine picture of man inhabiting some primeval
- land. In our descent we followed the line of ridges; these were
- exceedingly narrow, and for considerable lengths steep as a ladder; but
- all clothed with vegetation. The extreme care necessary in poising each
- step rendered the walk fatiguing. I did not cease to wonder at these
- ravines and precipices: when viewing the country from one of the
- knife-edged ridges, the point of support was so small, that the effect was
- nearly the same as it must be from a balloon. In this descent we had
- occasion to use the ropes only once, at the point where we entered the
- main valley. We slept under the same ledge of rock where we had dined the
- day before: the night was fine, but from the depth and narrowness of the
- gorge, profoundly dark.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before actually seeing this country, I found it difficult to understand
- two facts mentioned by Ellis; namely, that after the murderous battles of
- former times, the survivors on the conquered side retired into the
- mountains, where a handful of men could resist a multitude. Certainly half
- a dozen men, at the spot where the Tahitian reared the old tree, could
- easily have repulsed thousands. Secondly, that after the introduction of
- Christianity, there were wild men who lived in the mountains, and whose
- retreats were unknown to the more civilized inhabitants.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 20th.&mdash;In the morning we started early, and reached Matavai
- at noon. On the road we met a large party of noble athletic men, going for
- wild bananas. I found that the ship, on account of the difficulty in
- watering, had moved to the harbour of Papawa, to which place I immediately
- walked. This is a very pretty spot. The cove is surrounded by reefs, and
- the water as smooth as in a lake. The cultivated ground, with its
- beautiful productions, interspersed with cottages, comes close down to the
- water's edge. From the varying accounts which I had read before reaching
- these islands, I was very anxious to form, from my own observation, a
- judgment of their moral state,&mdash;although such judgment would
- necessarily be very imperfect. First impressions at all times very much
- depend on one's previously acquired ideas. My notions were drawn from
- Ellis's "Polynesian Researches"&mdash;an admirable and most interesting
- work, but naturally looking at everything under a favourable point of
- view, from Beechey's Voyage; and from that of Kotzebue, which is strongly
- adverse to the whole missionary system. He who compares these three
- accounts will, I think, form a tolerably accurate conception of the
- present state of Tahiti. One of my impressions which I took from the two
- last authorities, was decidedly incorrect; viz., that the Tahitians had
- become a gloomy race, and lived in fear of the missionaries. Of the latter
- feeling I saw no trace, unless, indeed, fear and respect be confounded
- under one name. Instead of discontent being a common feeling, it would be
- difficult in Europe to pick out of a crowd half so many merry and happy
- faces. The prohibition of the flute and dancing is inveighed against as
- wrong and foolish;&mdash;the more than presbyterian manner of keeping the
- sabbath is looked at in a similar light. On these points I will not
- pretend to offer any opinion to men who have resided as many years as I
- was days on the island.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and religion of the
- inhabitants are highly creditable. There are many who attack, even more
- acrimoniously than Kotzebue, both the missionaries, their system, and the
- effects produced by it. Such reasoners never compare the present state
- with that of the island only twenty years ago; nor even with that of
- Europe at this day; but they compare it with the high standard of Gospel
- perfection. They expect the missionaries to effect that which the Apostles
- themselves failed to do. Inasmuch as the condition of the people falls
- short of this high standard, blame is attached to the missionary, instead
- of credit for that which he has effected. They forget, or will not
- remember, that human sacrifices, and the power of an idolatrous priesthood&mdash;a
- system of profligacy unparalleled in any other part of the world&mdash;infanticide
- a consequence of that system&mdash;bloody wars, where the conquerors
- spared neither women nor children&mdash;that all these have been
- abolished; and that dishonesty, intemperance, and licentiousness have been
- greatly reduced by the introduction of Christianity. In a voyager to
- forget these things is base ingratitude; for should he chance to be at the
- point of shipwreck on some unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that
- the lesson of the missionary may have extended thus far.
- </p>
- <p>
- In point of morality, the virtue of the women, it has been often said, is
- most open to exception. But before they are blamed too severely, it will
- be well distinctly to call to mind the scenes described by Captain Cook
- and Mr. Banks, in which the grandmothers and mothers of the present race
- played a part. Those who are most severe, should consider how much of the
- morality of the women in Europe is owing to the system early impressed by
- mothers on their daughters, and how much in each individual case to the
- precepts of religion. But it is useless to argue against such reasoners;&mdash;I
- believe that, disappointed in not finding the field of licentiousness
- quite so open as formerly, they will not give credit to a morality which
- they do not wish to practise, or to a religion which they undervalue, if
- not despise.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sunday, 22nd.&mdash;The harbour of Papiete, where the queen resides, may
- be considered as the capital of the island: it is also the seat of
- government, and the chief resort of shipping. Captain Fitz Roy took a
- party there this day to hear divine service, first in the Tahitian
- language, and afterwards in our own. Mr. Pritchard, the leading missionary
- in the island, performed the service. The chapel consisted of a large airy
- framework of wood; and it was filled to excess by tidy, clean people, of
- all ages and both sexes. I was rather disappointed in the apparent degree
- of attention; but I believe my expectations were raised too high. At all
- events the appearance was quite equal to that in a country church in
- England. The singing of the hymns was decidedly very pleasing, but the
- language from the pulpit, although fluently delivered, did not sound well:
- a constant repetition of words, like "tata ta, mata mai," rendered it
- monotonous. After English service, a party returned on foot to Matavai. It
- was a pleasant walk, sometimes along the sea-beach and sometimes under the
- shade of the many beautiful trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- About two years ago, a small vessel under English colours was plundered by
- some of the inhabitants of the Low Islands, which were then under the
- dominion of the Queen of Tahiti. It was believed that the perpetrators
- were instigated to this act by some indiscreet laws issued by her majesty.
- The British government demanded compensation; which was acceded to, and
- the sum of nearly three thousand dollars was agreed to be paid on the
- first of last September. The Commodore at Lima ordered Captain Fitz Roy to
- inquire concerning this debt, and to demand satisfaction if it were not
- paid. Captain Fitz Roy accordingly requested an interview with the Queen
- Pomarre, since famous from the ill-treatment she had received from the
- French; and a parliament was held to consider the question, at which all
- the principal chiefs of the island and the queen were assembled. I will
- not attempt to describe what took place, after the interesting account
- given by Captain Fitz Roy. The money, it appeared, had not been paid;
- perhaps the alleged reasons were rather equivocal; but otherwise I cannot
- sufficiently express our general surprise at the extreme good sense, the
- reasoning powers, moderation, candour, and prompt resolution, which were
- displayed on all sides. I believe we all left the meeting with a very
- different opinion of the Tahitians, from what we entertained when we
- entered. The chiefs and people resolved to subscribe and complete the sum
- which was wanting; Captain Fitz Roy urged that it was hard that their
- private property should be sacrificed for the crimes of distant islanders.
- They replied, that they were grateful for his consideration, but that
- Pomarre was their Queen, and that they were determined to help her in this
- her difficulty. This resolution and its prompt execution, for a book was
- opened early the next morning, made a perfect conclusion to this very
- remarkable scene of loyalty and good feeling.
- </p>
- <p>
- After the main discussion was ended, several of the chiefs took the
- opportunity of asking Captain Fitz Roy many intelligent questions on
- international customs and laws, relating to the treatment of ships and
- foreigners. On some points, as soon as the decision was made, the law was
- issued verbally on the spot. This Tahitian parliament lasted for several
- hours; and when it was over Captain Fitz Roy invited Queen Pomarre to pay
- the Beagle a visit.
- </p>
- <p>
- November 25th.&mdash;In the evening four boats were sent for her majesty;
- the ship was dressed with flags, and the yards manned on her coming on
- board. She was accompanied by most of the chiefs. The behaviour of all was
- very proper: they begged for nothing, and seemed much pleased with Captain
- Fitz Roy's presents. The queen is a large awkward woman, without any
- beauty, grace or dignity. She has only one royal attribute: a perfect
- immovability of expression under all circumstances, and that rather a
- sullen one. The rockets were most admired, and a deep "Oh!" could be heard
- from the shore, all round the dark bay, after each explosion. The sailors'
- songs were also much admired; and the queen said she thought that one of
- the most boisterous ones certainly could not be a hymn! The royal party
- did not return on shore till past midnight.
- </p>
- <p>
- 26th.&mdash;In the evening, with a gentle land-breeze, a course was
- steered for New Zealand; and as the sun set, we had a farewell view of the
- mountains of Tahiti&mdash;the island to which every voyager has offered up
- his tribute of admiration.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 19th.&mdash;In the evening we saw in the distance New Zealand. We
- may now consider that we have nearly crossed the Pacific. It is necessary
- to sail over this great ocean to comprehend its immensity. Moving quickly
- onwards for weeks together, we meet with nothing but the same blue,
- profoundly deep, ocean. Even within the archipelagoes, the islands are
- mere specks, and far distant one from the other. Accustomed to look at
- maps drawn on a small scale, where dots, shading, and names are crowded
- together, we do not rightly judge how infinitely small the proportion of
- dry land is to water of this vast expanse. The meridian of the Antipodes
- has likewise been passed; and now every league, it made us happy to think,
- was one league nearer to England. These Antipodes call to one's mind old
- recollections of childish doubt and wonder. Only the other day I looked
- forward to this airy barrier as a definite point in our voyage homewards;
- but now I find it, and all such resting-places for the imagination, are
- like shadows, which a man moving onwards cannot catch. A gale of wind
- lasting for some days, has lately given us full leisure to measure the
- future stages in our homeward voyage, and to wish most earnestly for its
- termination.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 21st.&mdash;Early in the morning we entered the Bay of Islands,
- and being becalmed for some hours near the mouth, we did not reach the
- anchorage till the middle of the day. The country is hilly, with a smooth
- outline, and is deeply intersected by numerous arms of the sea extending
- from the bay. The surface appears from a distance as if clothed with
- coarse pasture, but this in truth is nothing but fern. On the more distant
- hills, as well as in parts of the valleys, there is a good deal of
- woodland. The general tint of the landscape is not a bright green; and it
- resembles the country a short distance to the south of Concepcion in
- Chile. In several parts of the bay, little villages of square tidy looking
- houses are scattered close down to the water's edge. Three whaling-ships
- were lying at anchor, and a canoe every now and then crossed from shore to
- shore; with these exceptions, an air of extreme quietness reigned over the
- whole district. Only a single canoe came alongside. This, and the aspect
- of the whole scene, afforded a remarkable, and not very pleasing contrast,
- with our joyful and boisterous welcome at Tahiti.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the afternoon we went on shore to one of the larger groups of houses,
- which yet hardly deserves the title of a village. Its name is Pahia: it is
- the residence of the missionaries; and there are no native residents
- except servants and labourers. In the vicinity of the Bay of Islands, the
- number of Englishmen, including their families, amounts to between two and
- three hundred. All the cottages, many of which are whitewashed and look
- very neat, are the property of the English. The hovels of the natives are
- so diminutive and paltry, that they can scarcely be perceived from a
- distance. At Pahia, it was quite pleasing to behold the English flowers in
- the gardens before the houses; there were roses of several kinds,
- honeysuckle, jasmine, stocks, and whole hedges of sweetbrier.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 22nd.&mdash;In the morning I went out walking; but I soon found
- that the country was very impracticable. All the hills are thickly covered
- with tall fern, together with a low bush which grows like a cypress; and
- very little ground has been cleared or cultivated. I then tried the
- sea-beach; but proceeding towards either hand, my walk was soon stopped by
- salt-water creeks and deep brooks. The communication between the
- inhabitants of the different parts of the bay, is (as in Chiloe) almost
- entirely kept up by boats. I was surprised to find that almost every hill
- which I ascended, had been at some former time more or less fortified. The
- summits were cut into steps or successive terraces, and frequently they
- had been protected by deep trenches. I afterwards observed that the
- principal hills inland in like manner showed an artificial outline. These
- are the Pas, so frequently mentioned by Captain Cook under the name of
- "hippah;" the difference of sound being owing to the prefixed article.
- </p>
- <p>
- That the Pas had formerly been much used, was evident from the piles of
- shells, and the pits in which, as I was informed, sweet potatoes used to
- be kept as a reserve. As there was no water on these hills, the defenders
- could never have anticipated a long siege, but only a hurried attack for
- plunder, against which the successive terraces would have afforded good
- protection. The general introduction of fire-arms has changed the whole
- system of warfare; and an exposed situation on the top of a hill is now
- worse than useless. The Pas in consequence are, at the present day, always
- built on a level piece of ground. They consist of a double stockade of
- thick and tall posts, placed in a zigzag line, so that every part can be
- flanked. Within the stockade a mound of earth is thrown up, behind which
- the defenders can rest in safety, or use their fire-arms over it. On the
- level of the ground little archways sometimes pass through this
- breastwork, by which means the defenders can crawl out to the stockade and
- reconnoitre their enemies. The Rev. W. Williams, who gave me this account,
- added, that in one Pas he had noticed spurs or buttresses projecting on
- the inner and protected side of the mound of earth. On asking the chief
- the use of them, he replied, that if two or three of his men were shot,
- their neighbours would not see the bodies, and so be discouraged.
- </p>
- <p>
- These Pas are considered by the New Zealanders as very perfect means of
- defence: for the attacking force is never so well disciplined as to rush
- in a body to the stockade, cut it down, and effect their entry. When a
- tribe goes to war, the chief cannot order one party to go here and another
- there; but every man fights in the manner which best pleases himself; and
- to each separate individual to approach a stockade defended by fire-arms
- must appear certain death. I should think a more warlike race of
- inhabitants could not be found in any part of the world than the New
- Zealanders. Their conduct on first seeing a ship, as described by Captain
- Cook, strongly illustrates this: the act of throwing volleys of stones at
- so great and novel an object, and their defiance of "Come on shore and we
- will kill and eat you all," shows uncommon boldness. This warlike spirit
- is evident in many of their customs, and even in their smallest actions.
- If a New Zealander is struck, although but in joke, the blow must be
- returned and of this I saw an instance with one of our officers.
- </p>
- <p>
- At the present day, from the progress of civilization, there is much less
- warfare, except among some of the southern tribes. I heard a
- characteristic anecdote of what took place some time ago in the south. A
- missionary found a chief and his tribe in preparation for war;&mdash;their
- muskets clean and bright, and their ammunition ready. He reasoned long on
- the inutility of the war, and the little provocation which had been given
- for it. The chief was much shaken in his resolution, and seemed in doubt:
- but at length it occurred to him that a barrel of his gunpowder was in a
- bad state, and that it would not keep much longer. This was brought
- forward as an unanswerable argument for the necessity of immediately
- declaring war: the idea of allowing so much good gunpowder to spoil was
- not to be thought of; and this settled the point. I was told by the
- missionaries that in the life of Shongi, the chief who visited England,
- the love of war was the one and lasting spring of every action. The tribe
- in which he was a principal chief had at one time been oppressed by
- another tribe from the Thames River. A solemn oath was taken by the men
- that when their boys should grow up, and they should be powerful enough,
- they would never forget or forgive these injuries. To fulfil this oath
- appears to have been Shongi's chief motive for going to England; and when
- there it was his sole object. Presents were valued only as they could be
- converted into arms; of the arts, those alone interested him which were
- connected with the manufacture of arms. When at Sydney, Shongi, by a
- strange coincidence, met the hostile chief of the Thames River at the
- house of Mr. Marsden: their conduct was civil to each other; but Shongi
- told him that when again in New Zealand he would never cease to carry war
- into his country. The challenge was accepted; and Shongi on his return
- fulfilled the threat to the utmost letter. The tribe on the Thames River
- was utterly overthrown, and the chief to whom the challenge had been given
- was himself killed. Shongi, although harbouring such deep feelings of
- hatred and revenge, is described as having been a good-natured person.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening I went with Captain Fitz Roy and Mr. Baker, one of the
- missionaries, to pay a visit to Kororadika: we wandered about the village,
- and saw and conversed with many of the people, both men, women, and
- children. Looking at the New Zealander, one naturally compares him with
- the Tahitian; both belonging to the same family of mankind. The
- comparison, however, tells heavily against the New Zealander. He may,
- perhaps be superior in energy, but in every other respect his character is
- of a much lower order. One glance at their respective expressions, brings
- conviction to the mind that one is a savage, the other a civilized man. It
- would be vain to seek in the whole of New Zealand a person with the face
- and mien of the old Tahitian chief Utamme. No doubt the extraordinary
- manner in which tattooing is here practised, gives a disagreeable
- expression to their countenances. The complicated but symmetrical figures
- covering the whole face, puzzle and mislead an unaccustomed eye: it is
- moreover probable, that the deep incisions, by destroying the play of the
- superficial muscles, give an air of rigid inflexibility. But, besides
- this, there is a twinkling in the eye, which cannot indicate anything but
- cunning and ferocity. Their figures are tall and bulky; but not comparable
- in elegance with those of the working-classes in Tahiti.
- </p>
- <p>
- But their persons and houses are filthily dirty and offensive: the idea of
- washing either their bodies or their clothes never seems to enter their
- heads. I saw a chief, who was wearing a shirt black and matted with filth,
- and when asked how it came to be so dirty, he replied, with surprise, "Do
- not you see it is an old one?" Some of the men have shirts; but the common
- dress is one or two large blankets, generally black with dirt, which are
- thrown over their shoulders in a very inconvenient and awkward fashion. A
- few of the principal chiefs have decent suits of English clothes; but
- these are only worn on great occasions.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 23rd.&mdash;At a place called Waimate, about fifteen miles from
- the Bay of Islands, and midway between the eastern and western coasts, the
- missionaries have purchased some land for agricultural purposes. I had
- been introduced to the Rev. W. Williams, who, upon my expressing a wish,
- invited me to pay him a visit there. Mr. Bushby, the British resident,
- offered to take me in his boat by a creek, where I should see a pretty
- waterfall, and by which means my walk would be shortened. He likewise
- procured for me a guide.
- </p>
- <p>
- Upon asking a neighbouring chief to recommend a man, the chief himself
- offered to go; but his ignorance of the value of money was so complete,
- that at first he asked how many pounds I would give him, but afterwards
- was well contented with two dollars. When I showed the chief a very small
- bundle, which I wanted carried, it became absolutely necessary for him to
- take a slave. These feelings of pride are beginning to wear away; but
- formerly a leading man would sooner have died, than undergone the
- indignity of carrying the smallest burden. My companion was a light active
- man, dressed in a dirty blanket, and with his face completely tattooed. He
- had formerly been a great warrior. He appeared to be on very cordial terms
- with Mr. Bushby; but at various times they had quarrelled violently. Mr.
- Bushby remarked that a little quiet irony would frequently silence any one
- of these natives in their most blustering moments. This chief has come and
- harangued Mr. Bushby in a hectoring manner, saying, "great chief, a great
- man, a friend of mine, has come to pay me a visit&mdash;you must give him
- something good to eat, some fine presents, etc." Mr. Bushby has allowed
- him to finish his discourse, and then has quietly replied by some answer
- such as, "What else shall your slave do for you?" The man would then
- instantly, with a very comical expression, cease his braggadocio.
- </p>
- <p>
- Some time ago, Mr. Bushby suffered a far more serious attack. A chief and
- a party of men tried to break into his house in the middle of the night,
- and not finding this so easy, commenced a brisk firing with their muskets.
- Mr. Bushby was slightly wounded, but the party was at length driven away.
- Shortly afterwards it was discovered who was the aggressor; and a general
- meeting of the chiefs was convened to consider the case. It was considered
- by the New Zealanders as very atrocious, inasmuch as it was a night
- attack, and that Mrs. Bushby was lying ill in the house: this latter
- circumstance, much to their honour, being considered in all cases as a
- protection. The chiefs agreed to confiscate the land of the aggressor to
- the King of England. The whole proceeding, however, in thus trying and
- punishing a chief was entirely without precedent. The aggressor, moreover,
- lost caste in the estimation of his equals and this was considered by the
- British as of more consequence than the confiscation of his land.
- </p>
- <p>
- As the boat was shoving off, a second chief stepped into her, who only
- wanted the amusement of the passage up and down the creek. I never saw a
- more horrid and ferocious expression than this man had. It immediately
- struck me I had somewhere seen his likeness: it will be found in Retzch's
- outlines to Schiller's ballad of Fridolin, where two men are pushing
- Robert into the burning iron furnace. It is the man who has his arm on
- Robert's breast. Physiognomy here spoke the truth; this chief had been a
- notorious murderer, and was an arrant coward to boot. At the point where
- the boat landed, Mr. Bushby accompanied me a few hundred yards on the
- road: I could not help admiring the cool impudence of the hoary old
- villain, whom we left lying in the boat, when he shouted to Mr. Bushby,
- "Do not you stay long, I shall be tired of waiting here."
- </p>
- <p>
- We now commenced our walk. The road lay along a well beaten path, bordered
- on each side by the tall fern, which covers the whole country. After
- travelling some miles, we came to a little country village, where a few
- hovels were collected together, and some patches of ground cultivated with
- potatoes. The introduction of the potato has been the most essential
- benefit to the island; it is now much more used than any native vegetable.
- New Zealand is favoured by one great natural advantage; namely, that the
- inhabitants can never perish from famine. The whole country abounds with
- fern: and the roots of this plant, if not very palatable, yet contain much
- nutriment. A native can always subsist on these, and on the shell-fish,
- which are abundant on all parts of the sea-coast. The villages are chiefly
- conspicuous by the platforms which are raised on four posts ten or twelve
- feet above the ground, and on which the produce of the fields is kept
- secure from all accidents.
- </p>
- <p>
- On coming near one of the huts I was much amused by seeing in due form the
- ceremony of rubbing, or, as it ought to be called, pressing noses. The
- women, on our first approach, began uttering something in a most dolorous
- voice; they then squatted themselves down and held up their faces; my
- companion standing over them, one after another, placed the bridge of his
- nose at right angles to theirs, and commenced pressing. This lasted rather
- longer than a cordial shake of the hand with us, and as we vary the force
- of the grasp of the hand in shaking, so do they in pressing. During the
- process they uttered comfortable little grunts, very much in the same
- manner as two pigs do, when rubbing against each other. I noticed that the
- slave would press noses with any one he met, indifferently either before
- or after his master the chief. Although among the savages, the chief has
- absolute power of life and death over his slave, yet there is an entire
- absence of ceremony between them. Mr. Burchell has remarked the same thing
- in Southern Africa, with the rude Bachapins. Where civilization has
- arrived at a certain point, complex formalities soon arise between the
- different grades of society: thus at Tahiti all were formerly obliged to
- uncover themselves as low as the waist in presence of the king.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ceremony of pressing noses having been duly completed with all
- present, we seated ourselves in a circle in the front of one of the
- hovels, and rested there half-an-hour. All the hovels have nearly the same
- form and dimensions, and all agree in being filthily dirty. They resemble
- a cow-shed with one end open, but having a partition a little way within,
- with a square hole in it, making a small gloomy chamber. In this the
- inhabitants keep all their property, and when the weather is cold they
- sleep there. They eat, however, and pass their time in the open part in
- front. My guides having finished their pipes, we continued our walk. The
- path led through the same undulating country, the whole uniformly clothed
- as before with fern. On our right hand we had a serpentine river, the
- banks of which were fringed with trees, and here and there on the hill
- sides there was a clump of wood. The whole scene, in spite of its green
- colour, had rather a desolate aspect. The sight of so much fern impresses
- the mind with an idea of sterility: this, however, is not correct; for
- wherever the fern grows thick and breast-high, the land by tillage becomes
- productive. Some of the residents think that all this extensive open
- country originally was covered with forests, and that it has been cleared
- by fire. It is said, that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the
- kind of resin which flows from the kauri pine are frequently found. The
- natives had an evident motive in clearing the country; for the fern,
- formerly a staple article of food, flourishes only in the open cleared
- tracks. The almost entire absence of associated grasses, which forms so
- remarkable a feature in the vegetation of this island, may perhaps be
- accounted for by the land having been aboriginally covered with
- forest-trees.
- </p>
- <p>
- The soil is volcanic; in several parts we passed over shaggy lavas, and
- craters could clearly be distinguished on several of the neighbouring
- hills. Although the scenery is nowhere beautiful, and only occasionally
- pretty, I enjoyed my walk. I should have enjoyed it more, if my companion,
- the chief, had not possessed extraordinary conversational powers. I knew
- only three words: "good," "bad," and "yes:" and with these I answered all
- his remarks, without of course having understood one word he said. This,
- however, was quite sufficient: I was a good listener, an agreeable person,
- and he never ceased talking to me.
- </p>
- <p>
- At length we reached Waimate. After having passed over so many miles of an
- uninhabited useless country, the sudden appearance of an English
- farm-house, and its well-dressed fields, placed there as if by an
- enchanter's wand, was exceedingly pleasant. Mr. Williams not being at
- home, I received in Mr. Davies's house a cordial welcome. After drinking
- tea with his family party, we took a stroll about the farm. At Waimate
- there are three large houses, where the missionary gentlemen, Messrs.
- Williams, Davies, and Clarke, reside; and near them are the huts of the
- native labourers. On an adjoining slope, fine crops of barley and wheat
- were standing in full ear; and in another part, fields of potatoes and
- clover. But I cannot attempt to describe all I saw; there were large
- gardens, with every fruit and vegetable which England produces; and many
- belonging to a warmer clime. I may instance asparagus, kidney beans,
- cucumbers, rhubarb, apples, pears, figs, peaches, apricots, grapes,
- olives, gooseberries, currants, hops, gorse for fences, and English oaks;
- also many kinds of flowers. Around the farm-yard there were stables, a
- thrashing-barn with its winnowing machine, a blacksmith's forge, and on
- the ground ploughshares and other tools: in the middle was that happy
- mixture of pigs and poultry, lying comfortably together, as in every
- English farm-yard. At the distance of a few hundred yards, where the water
- of a little rill had been dammed up into a pool, there was a large and
- substantial water-mill.
- </p>
- <p>
- All this is very surprising, when it is considered that five years ago
- nothing but the fern flourished here. Moreover, native workmanship, taught
- by the missionaries, has effected this change;&mdash;the lesson of the
- missionary is the enchanter's wand. The house had been built, the windows
- framed, the fields ploughed, and even the trees grafted, by a New
- Zealander. At the mill, a New Zealander was seen powdered white with
- flower, like his brother miller in England. When I looked at this whole
- scene, I thought it admirable. It was not merely that England was brought
- vividly before my mind; yet, as the evening drew to a close, the domestic
- sounds, the fields of corn, the distant undulating country with its trees
- might well have been mistaken for our fatherland: nor was it the
- triumphant feeling at seeing what Englishmen could effect; but rather the
- high hopes thus inspired for the future progress of this fine island.
- </p>
- <p>
- Several young men, redeemed by the missionaries from slavery, were
- employed on the farm. They were dressed in a shirt, jacket, and trousers,
- and had a respectable appearance. Judging from one trifling anecdote, I
- should think they must be honest. When walking in the fields, a young
- labourer came up to Mr. Davies, and gave him a knife and gimlet, saying
- that he had found them on the road, and did not know to whom they
- belonged! These young men and boys appeared very merry and good-humoured.
- In the evening I saw a party of them at cricket: when I thought of the
- austerity of which the missionaries have been accused, I was amused by
- observing one of their own sons taking an active part in the game. A more
- decided and pleasing change was manifested in the young women, who acted
- as servants within the houses. Their clean, tidy, and healthy appearance,
- like that of the dairy-maids in England, formed a wonderful contrast with
- the women of the filthy hovels in Kororadika. The wives of the
- missionaries tried to persuade them not to be tattooed; but a famous
- operator having arrived from the south, they said, "We really must just
- have a few lines on our lips; else when we grow old, our lips will
- shrivel, and we shall be so very ugly." There is not nearly so much
- tattooing as formerly; but as it is a badge of distinction between the
- chief and the slave, it will probably long be practised. So soon does any
- train of ideas become habitual, that the missionaries told me that even in
- their eyes a plain face looked mean, and not like that of a New Zealand
- gentleman.
- </p>
- <p>
- Late in the evening I went to Mr. Williams's house, where I passed the
- night. I found there a large party of children, collected together for
- Christmas Day, and all sitting round a table at tea. I never saw a nicer
- or more merry group; and to think that this was in the centre of the land
- of cannibalism, murder, and all atrocious crimes! The cordiality and
- happiness so plainly pictured in the faces of the little circle, appeared
- equally felt by the older persons of the mission.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 24th.&mdash;In the morning, prayers were read in the native
- tongue to the whole family. After breakfast I rambled about the gardens
- and farm. This was a market-day, when the natives of the surrounding
- hamlets bring their potatoes, Indian corn, or pigs, to exchange for
- blankets, tobacco, and sometimes, through the persuasions of the
- missionaries, for soap. Mr. Davies's eldest son, who manages a farm of his
- own, is the man of business in the market. The children of the
- missionaries, who came while young to the island, understand the language
- better than their parents, and can get anything more readily done by the
- natives.
- </p>
- <p>
- A little before noon Messrs. Williams and Davies walked with me to a part
- of a neighbouring forest, to show me the famous kauri pine. I measured one
- of the noble trees, and found it thirty-one feet in circumference above
- the roots. There was another close by, which I did not see, thirty-three
- feet; and I heard of one no less than forty feet. These trees are
- remarkable for their smooth cylindrical boles, which run up to a height of
- sixty, and even ninety feet, with a nearly equal diameter, and without a
- single branch. The crown of branches at the summit is out of all
- proportion small to the trunk; and the leaves are likewise small compared
- with the branches. The forest was here almost composed of the kauri; and
- the largest trees, from the parallelism of their sides, stood up like
- gigantic columns of wood. The timber of the kauri is the most valuable
- production of the island; moreover, a quantity of resin oozes from the
- bark, which is sold at a penny a pound to the Americans, but its use was
- then unknown. Some of the New Zealand forest must be impenetrable to an
- extraordinary degree. Mr. Matthews informed me that one forest only
- thirty-four miles in width, and separating two inhabited districts, had
- only lately, for the first time, been crossed. He and another missionary,
- each with a party of about fifty men, undertook to open a road, but it
- cost more than a fortnight's labour! In the woods I saw very few birds.
- With regard to animals, it is a most remarkable fact, that so large an
- island, extending over more than 700 miles in latitude, and in many parts
- ninety broad, with varied stations, a fine climate, and land of all
- heights, from 14,000 feet downwards, with the exception of a small rat,
- did not possess one indigenous animal. The several species of that
- gigantic genus of birds, the Deinornis seem here to have replaced
- mammiferous quadrupeds, in the same manner as the reptiles still do at the
- Galapagos archipelago. It is said that the common Norway rat, in the short
- space of two years, annihilated in this northern end of the island, the
- New Zealand species. In many places I noticed several sorts of weeds,
- which, like the rats, I was forced to own as countrymen. A leek has
- overrun whole districts, and will prove very troublesome, but it was
- imported as a favour by a French vessel. The common dock is also widely
- disseminated, and will, I fear, for ever remain a proof of the rascality
- of an Englishman, who sold the seeds for those of the tobacco plant.
- </p>
- <p>
- On returning from our pleasant walk to the house, I dined with Mr.
- Williams; and then, a horse being lent me, I returned to the Bay of
- Islands. I took leave of the missionaries with thankfulness for their kind
- welcome, and with feelings of high respect for their gentlemanlike,
- useful, and upright characters. I think it would be difficult to find a
- body of men better adapted for the high office which they fulfil.
- </p>
- <p>
- Christmas Day.&mdash;In a few more days the fourth year of our absence
- from England will be completed. Our first Christmas Day was spent at
- Plymouth, the second at St. Martin's Cove, near Cape Horn; the third at
- Port Desire, in Patagonia; the fourth at anchor in a wild harbour in the
- peninsula of Tres Montes, this fifth here, and the next, I trust in
- Providence, will be in England. We attended divine service in the chapel
- of Pahia; part of the service being read in English, and part in the
- native language. Whilst at New Zealand we did not hear of any recent acts
- of cannibalism; but Mr. Stokes found burnt human bones strewed round a
- fire-place on a small island near the anchorage; but these remains of a
- comfortable banquet might have been lying there for several years. It is
- probable that the moral state of the people will rapidly improve. Mr.
- Bushby mentioned one pleasing anecdote as a proof of the sincerity of
- some, at least, of those who profess Christianity. One of his young men
- left him, who had been accustomed to read prayers to the rest of the
- servants. Some weeks afterwards, happening to pass late in the evening by
- an outhouse, he saw and heard one of his men reading the Bible with
- difficulty by the light of the fire, to the others. After this the party
- knelt and prayed: in their prayers they mentioned Mr. Bushby and his
- family, and the missionaries, each separately in his respective district.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 26th.&mdash;Mr. Bushby offered to take Mr. Sulivan and myself in
- his boat some miles up the river to Cawa-Cawa, and proposed afterwards to
- walk on to the village of Waiomio, where there are some curious rocks.
- Following one of the arms of the bay, we enjoyed a pleasant row, and
- passed through pretty scenery, until we came to a village, beyond which
- the boat could not pass. From this place a chief and a party of men
- volunteered to walk with us to Waiomio, a distance of four miles. The
- chief was at this time rather notorious from having lately hung one of his
- wives and a slave for adultery. When one of the missionaries remonstrated
- with him he seemed surprised, and said he thought he was exactly following
- the English method. Old Shongi, who happened to be in England during the
- Queen's trial, expressed great disapprobation at the whole proceeding: he
- said he had five wives, and he would rather cut off all their heads than
- be so much troubled about one. Leaving this village, we crossed over to
- another, seated on a hill-side at a little distance. The daughter of a
- chief, who was still a heathen, had died there five days before. The hovel
- in which she had expired had been burnt to the ground: her body being
- enclosed between two small canoes, was placed upright on the ground, and
- protected by an enclosure bearing wooden images of their gods, and the
- whole was painted bright red, so as to be conspicuous from afar. Her gown
- was fastened to the coffin, and her hair being cut off was cast at its
- foot. The relatives of the family had torn the flesh of their arms,
- bodies, and faces, so that they were covered with clotted blood; and the
- old women looked most filthy, disgusting objects. On the following day
- some of the officers visited this place, and found the women still howling
- and cutting themselves.
- </p>
- <p>
- We continued our walk, and soon reached Waiomio. Here there are some
- singular masses of limestone, resembling ruined castles. These rocks have
- long served for burial places, and in consequence are held too sacred to
- be approached. One of the young men, however, cried out, "Let us all be
- brave," and ran on ahead; but when within a hundred yards, the whole party
- thought better of it, and stopped short. With perfect indifference,
- however, they allowed us to examine the whole place. At this village we
- rested some hours, during which time there was a long discussion with Mr.
- Bushby, concerning the right of sale of certain lands. One old man, who
- appeared a perfect genealogist, illustrated the successive possessors by
- bits of stick driven into the ground. Before leaving the houses a little
- basketful of roasted sweet potatoes was given to each of our party; and we
- all, according to the custom, carried them away to eat on the road. I
- noticed that among the women employed in cooking, there was a man-slave:
- it must be a humiliating thing for a man in this warlike country to be
- employed in doing that which is considered as the lowest woman's work.
- Slaves are not allowed to go to war; but this perhaps can hardly be
- considered as a hardship. I heard of one poor wretch who, during
- hostilities, ran away to the opposite party; being met by two men, he was
- immediately seized; but as they could not agree to whom he should belong,
- each stood over him with a stone hatchet, and seemed determined that the
- other at least should not take him away alive. The poor man, almost dead
- with fright, was only saved by the address of a chief's wife. We
- afterwards enjoyed a pleasant walk back to the boat, but did not reach the
- ship till late in the evening.
- </p>
- <p>
- December 30th.&mdash;In the afternoon we stood out of the Bay of Islands,
- on our course to Sydney. I believe we were all glad to leave New Zealand.
- It is not a pleasant place. Amongst the natives there is absent that
- charming simplicity which is found in Tahiti; and the greater part of the
- English are the very refuse of society. Neither is the country itself
- attractive. I look back but to one bright spot, and that is Waimate, with
- its Christian inhabitants.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0019" id="link2HCH0019"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XIX &mdash; AUSTRALIA
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Sydney&mdash;Excursion to Bathurst&mdash;Aspect of the Woods&mdash;Party
- of Natives&mdash;Gradual Extinction of the Aborigines&mdash;Infection
- generated by associated Men in health&mdash;Blue Mountains&mdash;View of
- the grand gulf-like Valleys&mdash;Their origin and formation&mdash;Bathurst,
- general civility of the Lower Orders&mdash;State of Society&mdash;Van
- Diemen's Land&mdash;Hobart Town&mdash;Aborigines all banished&mdash;Mount
- Wellington&mdash;King George's Sound&mdash;Cheerless Aspect of the Country&mdash;Bald
- Head, calcareous casts of branches of Trees&mdash;Party of Natives&mdash;Leave
- Australia.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">J</span>ANUARY 12th, 1836.&mdash;Early
- in the morning a light air carried us towards the entrance of Port
- Jackson. Instead of beholding a verdant country, interspersed with fine
- houses, a straight line of yellowish cliff brought to our minds the coast
- of Patagonia. A solitary lighthouse, built of white stone, alone told us
- that we were near a great and populous city. Having entered the harbour,
- it appears fine and spacious, with cliff-formed shores of horizontally
- stratified sandstone. The nearly level country is covered with thin
- scrubby trees, bespeaking the curse of sterility. Proceeding further
- inland, the country improves: beautiful villas and nice cottages are here
- and there scattered along the beach. In the distance stone houses, two and
- three stories high, and windmills standing on the edge of a bank, pointed
- out to us the neighbourhood of the capital of Australia.
- </p>
- <p>
- At last we anchored within Sydney Cove. We found the little basin occupied
- by many large ships, and surrounded by warehouses. In the evening I walked
- through the town, and returned full of admiration at the whole scene. It
- is a most magnificent testimony to the power of the British nation. Here,
- in a less promising country, scores of years have done many more times
- more than an equal number of centuries have effected in South America. My
- first feeling was to congratulate myself that I was born an Englishman.
- Upon seeing more of the town afterwards, perhaps my admiration fell a
- little; but yet it is a fine town. The streets are regular, broad, clean,
- and kept in excellent order; the houses are of a good size, and the shops
- well furnished. It may be faithfully compared to the large suburbs which
- stretch out from London and a few other great towns in England; but not
- even near London or Birmingham is there an appearance of such rapid
- growth. The number of large houses and other buildings just finished was
- truly surprising; nevertheless, every one complained of the high rents and
- difficulty in procuring a house. Coming from South America, where in the
- towns every man of property is known, no one thing surprised me more than
- not being able to ascertain at once to whom this or that carriage
- belonged.
- </p>
- <p>
- I hired a man and two horses to take me to Bathurst, a village about one
- hundred and twenty miles in the interior, and the centre of a great
- pastoral district. By this means I hoped to gain a general idea of the
- appearance of the country. On the morning of the 16th (January) I set out
- on my excursion. The first stage took us to Paramatta, a small country
- town, next to Sydney in importance. The roads were excellent, and made
- upon the MacAdam principle, whinstone having been brought for the purpose
- from the distance of several miles. In all respects there was a close
- resemblance to England: perhaps the alehouses here were more numerous. The
- iron gangs, or parties of convicts who have committed here some offense,
- appeared the least like England: they were working in chains, under the
- charge of sentries with loaded arms.
- </p>
- <p>
- The power which the government possesses, by means of forced labour, of at
- once opening good roads throughout the country, has been, I believe, one
- main cause of the early prosperity of this colony. I slept at night at a
- very comfortable inn at Emu ferry, thirty-five miles from Sydney, and near
- the ascent of the Blue Mountains. This line of road is the most
- frequented, and has been the longest inhabited of any in the colony. The
- whole land is enclosed with high railings, for the farmers have not
- succeeded in rearing hedges. There are many substantial houses and good
- cottages scattered about; but although considerable pieces of land are
- under cultivation, the greater part yet remains as when first discovered.
- </p>
- <p>
- The extreme uniformity of the vegetation is the most remarkable feature in
- the landscape of the greater part of New South Wales. Everywhere we have
- an open woodland, the ground being partially covered with a very thin
- pasture, with little appearance of verdure. The trees nearly all belong to
- one family, and mostly have their leaves placed in a vertical, instead of
- as in Europe, in a nearly horizontal position: the foliage is scanty, and
- of a peculiar pale green tint, without any gloss. Hence the woods appear
- light and shadowless: this, although a loss of comfort to the traveller
- under the scorching rays of summer, is of importance to the farmer, as it
- allows grass to grow where it otherwise would not. The leaves are not shed
- periodically: this character appears common to the entire southern
- hemisphere, namely, South America, Australia, and the Cape of Good Hope.
- The inhabitants of this hemisphere, and of the intertropical regions, thus
- lose perhaps one of the most glorious, though to our eyes common,
- spectacles in the world&mdash;the first bursting into full foliage of the
- leafless tree. They may, however, say that we pay dearly for this by
- having the land covered with mere naked skeletons for so many months. This
- is too true but our senses thus acquire a keen relish for the exquisite
- green of the spring, which the eyes of those living within the tropics,
- sated during the long year with the gorgeous productions of those glowing
- climates, can never experience. The greater number of the trees, with the
- exception of some of the Blue-gums, do not attain a large size; but they
- grow tall and tolerably straight, and stand well apart. The bark of some
- of the Eucalypti falls annually, or hangs dead in long shreds which swing
- about with the wind, and give to the woods a desolate and untidy
- appearance. I cannot imagine a more complete contrast, in every respect,
- than between the forests of Valdivia or Chiloe, and the woods of
- Australia.
- </p>
- <p>
- At sunset, a party of a score of the black aborigines passed by, each
- carrying, in their accustomed manner, a bundle of spears and other
- weapons. By giving a leading young man a shilling, they were easily
- detained, and threw their spears for my amusement. They were all partly
- clothed, and several could speak a little English: their countenances were
- good-humoured and pleasant, and they appeared far from being such utterly
- degraded beings as they have usually been represented. In their own arts
- they are admirable. A cap being fixed at thirty yards distance, they
- transfixed it with a spear, delivered by the throwing-stick with the
- rapidity of an arrow from the bow of a practised archer. In tracking
- animals or men they show most wonderful sagacity; and I heard of several
- of their remarks which manifested considerable acuteness. They will not,
- however, cultivate the ground, or build houses and remain stationary, or
- even take the trouble of tending a flock of sheep when given to them. On
- the whole they appear to me to stand some few degrees higher in the scale
- of civilization than the Fuegians.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is very curious thus to see in the midst of a civilized people, a set
- of harmless savages wandering about without knowing where they shall sleep
- at night, and gaining their livelihood by hunting in the woods. As the
- white man has travelled onwards, he has spread over the country belonging
- to several tribes. These, although thus enclosed by one common people,
- keep up their ancient distinctions, and sometimes go to war with each
- other. In an engagement which took place lately, the two parties most
- singularly chose the centre of the village of Bathurst for the field of
- battle. This was of service to the defeated side, for the runaway warriors
- took refuge in the barracks.
- </p>
- <p>
- The number of aborigines is rapidly decreasing. In my whole ride, with the
- exception of some boys brought up by Englishmen, I saw only one other
- party. This decrease, no doubt, must be partly owing to the introduction
- of spirits, to European diseases (even the milder ones of which, such as
- the measles, <a href="#linknote-191" name="linknoteref-191"
- id="linknoteref-191"><small>191</small></a> prove very destructive), and
- to the gradual extinction of the wild animals. It is said that numbers of
- their children invariably perish in very early infancy from the effects of
- their wandering life; and as the difficulty of procuring food increases,
- so must their wandering habits increase; and hence the population, without
- any apparent deaths from famine, is repressed in a manner extremely sudden
- compared to what happens in civilized countries, where the father, though
- in adding to his labour he may injure himself, does not destroy his
- offspring.
- </p>
- <p>
- Besides the several evident causes of destruction, there appears to be
- some more mysterious agency generally at work. Wherever the European has
- trod, death seems to pursue the aboriginal. We may look to the wide extent
- of the Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and Australia, and we
- find the same result. Nor is it the white man alone that thus acts the
- destroyer; the Polynesian of Malay extraction has in parts of the East
- Indian archipelago, thus driven before him the dark-coloured native. The
- varieties of man seem to act on each other in the same way as different
- species of animals&mdash;the stronger always extirpating the weaker. It
- was melancholy at New Zealand to hear the fine energetic natives saying
- that they knew the land was doomed to pass from their children. Every one
- has heard of the inexplicable reduction of the population in the beautiful
- and healthy island of Tahiti since the date of Captain Cook's voyages:
- although in that case we might have expected that it would have been
- increased; for infanticide, which formerly prevailed to so extraordinary a
- degree, has ceased; profligacy has greatly diminished, and the murderous
- wars become less frequent.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Rev. J. Williams, in his interesting work, <a href="#linknote-192"
- name="linknoteref-192" id="linknoteref-192"><small>192</small></a> says,
- that the first intercourse between natives and Europeans, "is invariably
- attended with the introduction of fever, dysentery, or some other disease,
- which carries off numbers of the people." Again he affirms, "It is
- certainly a fact, which cannot be controverted, that most of the diseases
- which have raged in the islands during my residence there, have been
- introduced by ships; <a href="#linknote-193" name="linknoteref-193"
- id="linknoteref-193"><small>193</small></a> and what renders this fact
- remarkable is, that there might be no appearance of disease among the crew
- of the ship which conveyed this destructive importation." This statement
- is not quite so extraordinary as it at first appears; for several cases
- are on record of the most malignant fevers having broken out, although the
- parties themselves, who were the cause, were not affected. In the early
- part of the reign of George III., a prisoner who had been confined in a
- dungeon, was taken in a coach with four constables before a magistrate;
- and although the man himself was not ill, the four constables died from a
- short putrid fever; but the contagion extended to no others. From these
- facts it would almost appear as if the effluvium of one set of men shut up
- for some time together was poisonous when inhaled by others; and possibly
- more so, if the men be of different races. Mysterious as this circumstance
- appears to be, it is not more surprising than that the body of one's
- fellow-creature, directly after death, and before putrefaction has
- commenced, should often be of so deleterious a quality, that the mere
- puncture from an instrument used in its dissection, should prove fatal.
- </p>
- <p>
- 17th.&mdash;Early in the morning we passed the Nepean in a ferry-boat. The
- river, although at this spot both broad and deep, had a very small body of
- running water. Having crossed a low piece of land on the opposite side, we
- reached the slope of the Blue Mountains. The ascent is not steep, the road
- having been cut with much care on the side of a sandstone cliff. On the
- summit an almost level plain extends, which, rising imperceptibly to the
- westward, at last attains a height of more than 3000 feet. From so grand a
- title as Blue Mountains, and from their absolute altitude, I expected to
- have seen a bold chain of mountains crossing the country; but instead of
- this, a sloping plain presents merely an inconsiderable front to the low
- land near the coast. From this first slope, the view of the extensive
- woodland to the east was striking, and the surrounding trees grew bold and
- lofty. But when once on the sandstone platform, the scenery becomes
- exceedingly monotonous; each side of the road is bordered by scrubby trees
- of the never-failing Eucalyptus family; and with the exception of two or
- three small inns, there are no houses or cultivated land: the road,
- moreover, is solitary; the most frequent object being a bullock-waggon,
- piled up with bales of wool.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the middle of the day we baited our horses at a little inn, called the
- Weatherboard. The country here is elevated 2800 feet above the sea. About
- a mile and a half from this place there is a view exceedingly well worth
- visiting. Following down a little valley and its tiny rill of water, an
- immense gulf unexpectedly opens through the trees which border the
- pathway, at the depth of perhaps 1500 feet. Walking on a few yards, one
- stands on the brink of a vast precipice, and below one sees a grand bay or
- gulf, for I know not what other name to give it, thickly covered with
- forest. The point of view is situated as if at the head of a bay, the line
- of cliff diverging on each side, and showing headland behind headland, as
- on a bold sea-coast. These cliffs are composed of horizontal strata of
- whitish sandstone; and are so absolutely vertical, that in many places a
- person standing on the edge and throwing down a stone, can see it strike
- the trees in the abyss below. So unbroken is the line of cliff, that in
- order to reach the foot of the waterfall, formed by this little stream, it
- is said to be necessary to go sixteen miles round. About five miles
- distant in front, another line of cliff extends, which thus appears
- completely to encircle the valley; and hence the name of bay is justified,
- as applied to this grand amphitheatrical depression. If we imagine a
- winding harbour, with its deep water surrounded by bold cliff-like shores,
- to be laid dry, and a forest to spring up on its sandy bottom, we should
- then have the appearance and structure here exhibited. This kind of view
- was to me quite novel, and extremely magnificent.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the evening we reached the Blackheath. The sandstone plateau has here
- attained the height of 3400 feet; and is covered, as before, with the same
- scrubby woods. From the road, there were occasional glimpses into a
- profound valley, of the same character as the one described; but from the
- steepness and depth of its sides, the bottom was scarcely ever to be seen.
- The Blackheath is a very comfortable inn, kept by an old soldier; and it
- reminded me of the small inns in North Wales.
- </p>
- <p>
- 18th.&mdash;Very early in the morning, I walked about three miles to see
- Govett's Leap; a view of a similar character with that near the
- Weatherboard, but perhaps even more stupendous. So early in the day the
- gulf was filled with a thin blue haze, which, although destroying the
- general effect of the view added to the apparent depth at which the forest
- was stretched out beneath our feet. These valleys, which so long presented
- an insuperable barrier to the attempts of the most enterprising of the
- colonists to reach the interior, are most remarkable. Great arm-like bays,
- expanding at their upper ends, often branch from the main valleys and
- penetrate the sandstone platform; on the other hand, the platform often
- sends promontories into the valleys, and even leaves in them great, almost
- insulated, masses. To descend into some of these valleys, it is necessary
- to go round twenty miles; and into others, the surveyors have only lately
- penetrated, and the colonists have not yet been able to drive in their
- cattle. But the most remarkable feature in their structure is, that
- although several miles wide at their heads, they generally contract
- towards their mouths to such a degree as to become impassable. The
- Surveyor-General, Sir T. Mitchell, <a href="#linknote-194"
- name="linknoteref-194" id="linknoteref-194"><small>194</small></a>
- endeavoured in vain, first walking and then by crawling between the great
- fallen fragments of sandstone, to ascend through the gorge by which the
- river Grose joins the Nepean, yet the valley of the Grose in its upper
- part, as I saw, forms a magnificent level basin some miles in width, and
- is on all sides surrounded by cliffs, the summits of which are believed to
- be nowhere less than 3000 feet above the level of the sea. When cattle are
- driven into the valley of the Wolgan by a path (which I descended), partly
- natural and partly made by the owner of the land, they cannot escape; for
- this valley is in every other part surrounded by perpendicular cliffs, and
- eight miles lower down, it contracts from an average width of half a mile,
- to a mere chasm, impassable to man or beast. Sir T. Mitchell states that
- the great valley of the Cox river with all its branches, contracts, where
- it unites with the Nepean, into a gorge 2200 yards in width, and about
- 1000 feet in depth. Other similar cases might have been added.
- </p>
- <p>
- The first impression, on seeing the correspondence of the horizontal
- strata on each side of these valleys and great amphitheatrical
- depressions, is that they have been hollowed out, like other valleys, by
- the action of water; but when one reflects on the enormous amount of
- stone, which on this view must have been removed through mere gorges or
- chasms, one is led to ask whether these spaces may not have subsided. But
- considering the form of the irregularly branching valleys, and of the
- narrow promontories projecting into them from the platforms, we are
- compelled to abandon this notion. To attribute these hollows to the
- present alluvial action would be preposterous; nor does the drainage from
- the summit-level always fall, as I remarked near the Weatherboard, into
- the head of these valleys, but into one side of their bay-like recesses.
- Some of the inhabitants remarked to me that they never viewed one of those
- bay-like recesses, with the headlands receding on both hands, without
- being struck with their resemblance to a bold sea-coast. This is certainly
- the case; moreover, on the present coast of New South Wales, the numerous,
- fine, widely-branching harbours, which are generally connected with the
- sea by a narrow mouth worn through the sandstone coast-cliffs, varying
- from one mile in width to a quarter of a mile, present a likeness, though
- on a miniature scale, to the great valleys of the interior. But then
- immediately occurs the startling difficulty, why has the sea worn out
- these great, though circumscribed depressions on a wide platform, and left
- mere gorges at the openings, through which the whole vast amount of
- triturated matter must have been carried away? The only light I can throw
- upon this enigma, is by remarking that banks of the most irregular forms
- appear to be now forming in some seas, as in parts of the West Indies and
- in the Red Sea, and that their sides are exceedingly steep. Such banks, I
- have been led to suppose, have been formed by sediment heaped by strong
- currents on an irregular bottom. That in some cases the sea, instead of
- spreading out sediment in a uniform sheet, heaps it round submarine rocks
- and islands, it is hardly possible to doubt, after examining the charts of
- the West Indies; and that the waves have power to form high and
- precipitous cliffs, even in land-locked harbours, I have noticed in many
- parts of South America. To apply these ideas to the sandstone platforms of
- New South Wales, I imagine that the strata were heaped by the action of
- strong currents, and of the undulations of an open sea, on an irregular
- bottom; and that the valley-like spaces thus left unfilled had their
- steeply sloping flanks worn into cliffs, during a slow elevation of the
- land; the worn-down sandstone being removed, either at the time when the
- narrow gorges were cut by the retreating sea, or subsequently by alluvial
- action.
- </p>
- <p>
- Soon after leaving the Blackheath, we descended from the sandstone
- platform by the pass of Mount Victoria. To effect this pass, an enormous
- quantity of stone has been cut through; the design, and its manner of
- execution, being worthy of any line of road in England. We now entered
- upon a country less elevated by nearly a thousand feet, and consisting of
- granite. With the change of rock, the vegetation improved, the trees were
- both finer and stood farther apart; and the pasture between them was a
- little greener and more plentiful. At Hassan's Walls, I left the high
- road, and made a short detour to a farm called Walerawang; to the
- superintendent of which I had a letter of introduction from the owner in
- Sydney. Mr. Browne had the kindness to ask me to stay the ensuing day,
- which I had much pleasure in doing. This place offers an example of one of
- the large farming, or rather sheep-grazing establishments of the colony.
- Cattle and horses are, however, in this case rather more numerous than
- usual, owing to some of the valleys being swampy and producing a coarser
- pasture. Two or three flat pieces of ground near the house were cleared
- and cultivated with corn, which the harvest-men were now reaping: but no
- more wheat is sown than sufficient for the annual support of the labourers
- employed on the establishment. The usual number of assigned
- convict-servants here is about forty, but at the present time there were
- rather more. Although the farm was well stocked with every necessary,
- there was an apparent absence of comfort; and not one single woman resided
- here. The sunset of a fine day will generally cast an air of happy
- contentment on any scene; but here, at this retired farm-house, the
- brightest tints on the surrounding woods could not make me forget that
- forty hardened, profligate men were ceasing from their daily labours, like
- the slaves from Africa, yet without their holy claim for compassion.
- </p>
- <p>
- Early on the next morning, Mr. Archer, the joint superintendent, had the
- kindness to take me out kangaroo-hunting. We continued riding the greater
- part of the day, but had very bad sport, not seeing a kangaroo, or even a
- wild dog. The greyhounds pursued a kangaroo rat into a hollow tree, out of
- which we dragged it: it is an animal as large as a rabbit, but with the
- figure of a kangaroo. A few years since this country abounded with wild
- animals; but now the emu is banished to a long distance, and the kangaroo
- is become scarce; to both the English greyhound has been highly
- destructive. It may be long before these animals are altogether
- exterminated, but their doom is fixed. The aborigines are always anxious
- to borrow the dogs from the farm-houses: the use of them, the offal when
- an animal is killed, and some milk from the cows, are the peace-offerings
- of the settlers, who push farther and farther towards the interior. The
- thoughtless aboriginal, blinded by these trifling advantages, is delighted
- at the approach of the white man, who seems predestined to inherit the
- country of his children.
- </p>
- <p>
- Although having poor sport, we enjoyed a pleasant ride. The woodland is
- generally so open that a person on horseback can gallop through it. It is
- traversed by a few flat-bottomed valleys, which are green and free from
- trees: in such spots the scenery was pretty like that of a park. In the
- whole country I scarcely saw a place without the marks of a fire; whether
- these had been more or less recent&mdash;whether the stumps were more or
- less black, was the greatest change which varied the uniformity, so
- wearisome to the traveller's eye. In these woods there are not many birds;
- I saw, however, some large flocks of the white cockatoo feeding in a
- corn-field, and a few most beautiful parrots; crows, like our jackdaws
- were not uncommon, and another bird something like the magpie. In the dusk
- of the evening I took a stroll along a chain of ponds, which in this dry
- country represented the course of a river, and had the good fortune to see
- several of the famous Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. They were diving and
- playing about the surface of the water, but showed so little of their
- bodies, that they might easily have been mistaken for water-rats. Mr.
- Browne shot one: certainly it is a most extraordinary animal; a stuffed
- specimen does not at all give a good idea of the appearance of the head
- and beak when fresh; the latter becoming hard and contracted. <a
- href="#linknote-195" name="linknoteref-195" id="linknoteref-195"><small>195</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- 20th.&mdash;A long day's ride to Bathurst. Before joining the highroad we
- followed a mere path through the forest; and the country, with the
- exception of a few squatters' huts, was very solitary. We experienced this
- day the sirocco-like wind of Australia, which comes from the parched
- deserts of the interior. Clouds of dust were travelling in every
- direction; and the wind felt as if it had passed over a fire. I afterwards
- heard that the thermometer out of doors had stood at 119 degs., and in a
- closed room at 96 degs. In the afternoon we came in view of the downs of
- Bathurst. These undulating but nearly smooth plains are very remarkable in
- this country, from being absolutely destitute of trees. They support only
- a thin brown pasture. We rode some miles over this country, and then
- reached the township of Bathurst, seated in the middle of what may be
- called either a very broad valley, or narrow plain. I was told at Sydney
- not to form too bad an opinion of Australia by judging of the country from
- the roadside, nor too good a one from Bathurst; in this latter respect, I
- did not feel myself in the least danger of being prejudiced. The season,
- it must be owned, had been one of great drought, and the country did not
- wear a favourable aspect; although I understand it was incomparably worse
- two or three months before. The secret of the rapidly growing prosperity
- of Bathurst is, that the brown pasture which appears to the stranger's eye
- so wretched, is excellent for sheep-grazing. The town stands, at the
- height of 2200 feet above the sea, on the banks of the Macquarie. This is
- one of the rivers flowing into the vast and scarcely known interior. The
- line of water-shed, which divides the inland streams from those on the
- coast, has a height of about 3000 feet, and runs in a north and south
- direction at the distance of from eighty to a hundred miles from the
- sea-side. The Macquarie figures in the map as a respectable river, and it
- is the largest of those draining this part of the water-shed; yet to my
- surprise I found it a mere chain of ponds, separated from each other by
- spaces almost dry. Generally a small stream is running; and sometimes
- there are high and impetuous floods. Scanty as the supply of the water is
- throughout this district, it becomes still scantier further inland.
- </p>
- <p>
- 22nd.&mdash;I commenced my return, and followed a new road called
- Lockyer's Line, along which the country is rather more hilly and
- picturesque. This was a long day's ride; and the house where I wished to
- sleep was some way off the road, and not easily found. I met on this
- occasion, and indeed on all others, a very general and ready civility
- among the lower orders, which, when one considers what they are, and what
- they have been, would scarcely have been expected. The farm where I passed
- the night, was owned by two young men who had only lately come out, and
- were beginning a settler's life. The total want of almost every comfort
- was not attractive; but future and certain prosperity was before their
- eyes, and that not far distant.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day we passed through large tracts of country in flames, volumes
- of smoke sweeping across the road. Before noon we joined our former road,
- and ascended Mount Victoria. I slept at the Weatherboard, and before dark
- took another walk to the amphitheatre. On the road to Sydney I spent a
- very pleasant evening with Captain King at Dunheved; and thus ended my
- little excursion in the colony of New South Wales.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before arriving here the three things which interested me most were&mdash;the
- state of society amongst the higher classes, the condition of the
- convicts, and the degree of attraction sufficient to induce persons to
- emigrate. Of course, after so very short a visit, one's opinion is worth
- scarcely anything; but it is as difficult not to form some opinion, as it
- is to form a correct judgment. On the whole, from what I heard, more than
- from what I saw, I was disappointed in the state of society. The whole
- community is rancorously divided into parties on almost every subject.
- Among those who, from their station in life, ought to be the best, many
- live in such open profligacy that respectable people cannot associate with
- them. There is much jealousy between the children of the rich emancipist
- and the free settlers, the former being pleased to consider honest men as
- interlopers. The whole population, poor and rich, are bent on acquiring
- wealth: amongst the higher orders, wool and sheep-grazing form the
- constant subject of conversation. There are many serious drawbacks to the
- comforts of a family, the chief of which, perhaps, is being surrounded by
- convict servants. How thoroughly odious to every feeling, to be waited on
- by a man who the day before, perhaps, was flogged, from your
- representation, for some trifling misdemeanor. The female servants are of
- course, much worse: hence children learn the vilest expressions, and it is
- fortunate, if not equally vile ideas.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the other hand, the capital of a person, without any trouble on his
- part, produces him treble interest to what it will in England; and with
- care he is sure to grow rich. The luxuries of life are in abundance, and
- very little dearer than in England, and most articles of food are cheaper.
- The climate is splendid, and perfectly healthy; but to my mind its charms
- are lost by the uninviting aspect of the country. Settlers possess a great
- advantage in finding their sons of service when very young. At the age of
- from sixteen to twenty, they frequently take charge of distant farming
- stations. This, however, must happen at the expense of their boys
- associating entirely with convict servants. I am not aware that the tone
- of society has assumed any peculiar character; but with such habits, and
- without intellectual pursuits, it can hardly fail to deteriorate. My
- opinion is such, that nothing but rather sharp necessity should compel me
- to emigrate.
- </p>
- <p>
- The rapid prosperity and future prospects of this colony are to me, not
- understanding these subjects, very puzzling. The two main exports are wool
- and whale-oil, and to both of these productions there is a limit. The
- country is totally unfit for canals, therefore there is a not very distant
- point, beyond which the land-carriage of wool will not repay the expense
- of shearing and tending sheep. Pasture everywhere is so thin that settlers
- have already pushed far into the interior: moreover, the country further
- inland becomes extremely poor. Agriculture, on account of the droughts,
- can never succeed on an extended scale: therefore, so far as I can see,
- Australia must ultimately depend upon being the centre of commerce for the
- southern hemisphere, and perhaps on her future manufactories. Possessing
- coal, she always has the moving power at hand. From the habitable country
- extending along the coast, and from her English extraction, she is sure to
- be a maritime nation. I formerly imagined that Australia would rise to be
- as grand and powerful a country as North America, but now it appears to me
- that such future grandeur is rather problematical.
- </p>
- <p>
- With respect to the state of the convicts, I had still fewer opportunities
- of judging than on other points. The first question is, whether their
- condition is at all one of punishment: no one will maintain that it is a
- very severe one. This, however, I suppose, is of little consequence as
- long as it continues to be an object of dread to criminals at home. The
- corporeal wants of the convicts are tolerably well supplied: their
- prospect of future liberty and comfort is not distant, and, after good
- conduct, certain. A "ticket of leave," which, as long as a man keeps clear
- of suspicion as well as of crime, makes him free within a certain
- district, is given upon good conduct, after years proportional to the
- length of the sentence; yet with all this, and overlooking the previous
- imprisonment and wretched passage out, I believe the years of assignment
- are passed away with discontent and unhappiness. As an intelligent man
- remarked to me, the convicts know no pleasure beyond sensuality, and in
- this they are not gratified. The enormous bribe which Government possesses
- in offering free pardons, together with the deep horror of the secluded
- penal settlements, destroys confidence between the convicts, and so
- prevents crime. As to a sense of shame, such a feeling does not appear to
- be known, and of this I witnessed some very singular proofs. Though it is
- a curious fact, I was universally told that the character of the convict
- population is one of arrant cowardice: not unfrequently some become
- desperate, and quite indifferent as to life, yet a plan requiring cool or
- continued courage is seldom put into execution. The worst feature in the
- whole case is, that although there exists what may be called a legal
- reform, and comparatively little is committed which the law can touch, yet
- that any moral reform should take place appears to be quite out of the
- question. I was assured by well-informed people, that a man who should try
- to improve, could not while living with other assigned servants;&mdash;his
- life would be one of intolerable misery and persecution. Nor must the
- contamination of the convict-ships and prisons, both here and in England,
- be forgotten. On the whole, as a place of punishment, the object is
- scarcely gained; as a real system of reform it has failed, as perhaps
- would every other plan; but as a means of making men outwardly honest,&mdash;of
- converting vagabonds, most useless in one hemisphere, into active citizens
- of another, and thus giving birth to a new and splendid country&mdash;a
- grand centre of civilization&mdash;it has succeeded to a degree perhaps
- unparalleled in history.
- </p>
- <p>
- 30th.&mdash;The Beagle sailed for Hobart Town in Van Diemen's Land. On the
- 5th of February, after a six days' passage, of which the first part was
- fine, and the latter very cold and squally, we entered the mouth of Storm
- Bay: the weather justified this awful name. The bay should rather be
- called an estuary, for it receives at its head the waters of the Derwent.
- Near the mouth, there are some extensive basaltic platforms; but higher up
- the land becomes mountainous, and is covered by a light wood. The lower
- parts of the hills which skirt the bay are cleared; and the bright yellow
- fields of corn, and dark green ones of potatoes, appear very luxuriant.
- Late in the evening we anchored in the snug cove, on the shores of which
- stands the capital of Tasmania. The first aspect of the place was very
- inferior to that of Sydney; the latter might be called a city, this is
- only a town. It stands at the base of Mount Wellington, a mountain 3100
- feet high, but of little picturesque beauty; from this source, however, it
- receives a good supply of water. Round the cove there are some fine
- warehouses and on one side a small fort. Coming from the Spanish
- settlements, where such magnificent care has generally been paid to the
- fortifications, the means of defence in these colonies appeared very
- contemptible. Comparing the town with Sydney, I was chiefly struck with
- the comparative fewness of the large houses, either built or building.
- Hobart Town, from the census of 1835, contained 13,826 inhabitants, and
- the whole of Tasmania 36,505.
- </p>
- <p>
- All the aborigines have been removed to an island in Bass's Straits, so
- that Van Diemen's Land enjoys the great advantage of being free from a
- native population. This most cruel step seems to have been quite
- unavoidable, as the only means of stopping a fearful succession of
- robberies, burnings, and murders, committed by the blacks; and which
- sooner or later would have ended in their utter destruction. I fear there
- is no doubt, that this train of evil and its consequences, originated in
- the infamous conduct of some of our countrymen. Thirty years is a short
- period, in which to have banished the last aboriginal from his native
- island,&mdash;and that island nearly as large as Ireland. The
- correspondence on this subject, which took place between the government at
- home and that of Van Diemen's Land, is very interesting. Although numbers
- of natives were shot and taken prisoners in the skirmishing, which was
- going on at intervals for several years; nothing seems fully to have
- impressed them with the idea of our overwhelming power, until the whole
- island, in 1830, was put under martial law, and by proclamation the whole
- population commanded to assist in one great attempt to secure the entire
- race. The plan adopted was nearly similar to that of the great
- hunting-matches in India: a line was formed reaching across the island,
- with the intention of driving the natives into a <i>cul-de-sac</i> on
- Tasman's peninsula. The attempt failed; the natives, having tied up their
- dogs, stole during one night through the lines. This is far from
- surprising, when their practised senses, and usual manner of crawling
- after wild animals is considered. I have been assured that they can
- conceal themselves on almost bare ground, in a manner which until
- witnessed is scarcely credible; their dusky bodies being easily mistaken
- for the blackened stumps which are scattered all over the country. I was
- told of a trial between a party of Englishmen and a native, who was to
- stand in full view on the side of a bare hill; if the Englishmen closed
- their eyes for less than a minute, he would squat down, and then they were
- never able to distinguish him from the surrounding stumps. But to return
- to the hunting-match; the natives understanding this kind of warfare, were
- terribly alarmed, for they at once perceived the power and numbers of the
- whites. Shortly afterwards a party of thirteen belonging to two tribes
- came in; and, conscious of their unprotected condition, delivered
- themselves up in despair. Subsequently by the intrepid exertions of Mr.
- Robinson, an active and benevolent man, who fearlessly visited by himself
- the most hostile of the natives, the whole were induced to act in a
- similar manner. They were then removed to an island, where food and
- clothes were provided them. Count Strzelecki states, <a
- href="#linknote-196" name="linknoteref-196" id="linknoteref-196"><small>196</small></a>
- that "at the epoch of their deportation in 1835, the number of natives
- amounted to 210. In 1842, that is, after the interval of seven years, they
- mustered only fifty-four individuals; and, while each family of the
- interior of New South Wales, uncontaminated by contact with the whites,
- swarms with children, those of Flinders' Island had during eight years an
- accession of only fourteen in number!"
- </p>
- <p>
- The Beagle stayed here ten days, and in this time I made several pleasant
- little excursions, chiefly with the object of examining the geological
- structure of the immediate neighbourhood. The main points of interest
- consist, first in some highly fossiliferous strata, belonging to the
- Devonian or Carboniferous period; secondly, in proofs of a late small rise
- of the land; and lastly, in a solitary and superficial patch of yellowish
- limestone or travertin, which contains numerous impressions of leaves of
- trees, together with land-shells, not now existing. It is not improbable
- that this one small quarry includes the only remaining record of the
- vegetation of Van Diemen's Land during one former epoch.
- </p>
- <p>
- The climate here is damper than in New South Wales, and hence the land is
- more fertile. Agriculture flourishes; the cultivated fields look well, and
- the gardens abound with thriving vegetables and fruit-trees. Some of the
- farm-houses, situated in retired spots, had a very attractive appearance.
- The general aspect of the vegetation is similar to that of Australia;
- perhaps it is a little more green and cheerful; and the pasture between
- the trees rather more abundant. One day I took a long walk on the side of
- the bay opposite to the town: I crossed in a steam-boat, two of which are
- constantly plying backwards and forwards. The machinery of one of these
- vessels was entirely manufactured in this colony, which, from its very
- foundation, then numbered only three and thirty years! Another day I
- ascended Mount Wellington; I took with me a guide, for I failed in a first
- attempt, from the thickness of the wood. Our guide, however, was a stupid
- fellow, and conducted us to the southern and damp side of the mountain,
- where the vegetation was very luxuriant; and where the labour of the
- ascent, from the number of rotten trunks, was almost as great as on a
- mountain in Tierra del Fuego or in Chiloe. It cost us five and a half
- hours of hard climbing before we reached the summit. In many parts the
- Eucalypti grew to a great size, and composed a noble forest. In some of
- the dampest ravines, tree-ferns flourished in an extraordinary manner; I
- saw one which must have been at least twenty feet high to the base of the
- fronds, and was in girth exactly six feet. The fronds forming the most
- elegant parasols, produced a gloomy shade, like that of the first hour of
- the night. The summit of the mountain is broad and flat, and is composed
- of huge angular masses of naked greenstone. Its elevation is 3100 feet
- above the level of the sea. The day was splendidly clear, and we enjoyed a
- most extensive view; to the north, the country appeared a mass of wooded
- mountains, of about the same height with that on which we were standing,
- and with an equally tame outline: to the south the broken land and water,
- forming many intricate bays, was mapped with clearness before us. After
- staying some hours on the summit, we found a better way to descend, but
- did not reach the Beagle till eight o'clock, after a severe day's work.
- </p>
- <p>
- February 7th.&mdash;The Beagle sailed from Tasmania, and, on the 6th of
- the ensuing month, reached King George's Sound, situated close to the S.
- W. corner of Australia. We stayed there eight days; and we did not during
- our voyage pass a more dull and uninteresting time. The country, viewed
- from an eminence, appears a woody plain, with here and there rounded and
- partly bare hills of granite protruding. One day I went out with a party,
- in hopes of seeing a kangaroo hunt, and walked over a good many miles of
- country. Everywhere we found the soil sandy, and very poor; it supported
- either a coarse vegetation of thin, low brushwood and wiry grass, or a
- forest of stunted trees. The scenery resembled that of the high sandstone
- platform of the Blue Mountains; the Casuarina (a tree somewhat resembling
- a Scotch fir) is, however, here in greater number, and the Eucalyptus in
- rather less. In the open parts there were many grass-trees,&mdash;a plant
- which, in appearance, has some affinity with the palm; but, instead of
- being surmounted by a crown of noble fronds, it can boast merely of a tuft
- of very coarse grass-like leaves. The general bright green colour of the
- brushwood and other plants, viewed from a distance, seemed to promise
- fertility. A single walk, however, was enough to dispel such an illusion;
- and he who thinks with me will never wish to walk again in so uninviting a
- country.
- </p>
- <p>
- One day I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to Bald Head; the place mentioned
- by so many navigators, where some imagined that they saw corals, and
- others that they saw petrified trees, standing in the position in which
- they had grown. According to our view, the beds have been formed by the
- wind having heaped up fine sand, composed of minute rounded particles of
- shells and corals, during which process branches and roots of trees,
- together with many land-shells, became enclosed. The whole then became
- consolidated by the percolation of calcareous matter; and the cylindrical
- cavities left by the decaying of the wood, were thus also filled up with a
- hard pseudo-stalactical stone. The weather is now wearing away the softer
- parts, and in consequence the hard casts of the roots and branches of the
- trees project above the surface, and, in a singularly deceptive manner,
- resemble the stumps of a dead thicket.
- </p>
- <p>
- A large tribe of natives, called the White Cockatoo men happened to pay
- the settlement a visit while we were there. These men, as well as those of
- the tribe belonging to King George's Sound, being tempted by the offer of
- some tubs of rice and sugar, were persuaded to hold a "corrobery," or
- great dancing-party. As soon as it grew dark, small fires were lighted,
- and the men commenced their toilet, which consisted in painting themselves
- white in spots and lines. As soon as all was ready, large fires were kept
- blazing, round which the women and children were collected as spectators;
- the Cockatoo and King George's men formed two distinct parties, and
- generally danced in answer to each other. The dancing consisted in their
- running either sideways or in Indian file into an open space, and stamping
- the ground with great force as they marched together. Their heavy
- footsteps were accompanied by a kind of grunt, by beating their clubs and
- spears together, and by various other gesticulations, such as extending
- their arms and wriggling their bodies. It was a most rude, barbarous
- scene, and, to our ideas, without any sort of meaning; but we observed
- that the black women and children watched it with the greatest pleasure.
- Perhaps these dances originally represented actions, such as wars and
- victories; there was one called the Emu dance, in which each man extended
- his arm in a bent manner, like the neck of that bird. In another dance,
- one man imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in the woods, whilst
- a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him. When both tribes mingled
- in the dance, the ground trembled with the heaviness of their steps, and
- the air resounded with their wild cries. Every one appeared in high
- spirits, and the group of nearly naked figures, viewed by the light of the
- blazing fires, all moving in hideous harmony, formed a perfect display of
- a festival amongst the lowest barbarians. In Tierra del Fuego, we have
- beheld many curious scenes in savage life, but never, I think, one where
- the natives were in such high spirits, and so perfectly at their ease.
- After the dancing was over, the whole party formed a great circle on the
- ground, and the boiled rice and sugar was distributed, to the delight of
- all.
- </p>
- <p>
- After several tedious delays from clouded weather, on the 14th of March,
- we gladly stood out of King George's Sound on our course to Keeling
- Island. Farewell, Australia! you are a rising child, and doubtless some
- day will reign a great princess in the South: but you are too great and
- ambitious for affection, yet not great enough for respect. I leave your
- shores without sorrow or regret.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0020" id="link2HCH0020"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XX &mdash; KEELING ISLAND: CORAL FORMATIONS
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Keeling Island&mdash;Singular appearance&mdash;Scanty Flora&mdash;Transport
- of Seeds&mdash;Birds and Insects&mdash;Ebbing and flowing Springs&mdash;Fields
- of dead Coral&mdash;Stones transported in the roots of Trees&mdash;Great
- Crab&mdash;Stinging Corals&mdash;Coral eating Fish&mdash;Coral Formations&mdash;Lagoon
- Islands, or Atolls&mdash;Depth at which reef-building Corals can live&mdash;Vast
- Areas interspersed with low Coral Islands&mdash;Subsidence of their
- foundations&mdash;Barrier Reefs&mdash;Fringing Reefs&mdash;Conversion of
- Fringing Reefs into Barrier Reefs, and into Atolls&mdash;Evidence of
- changes in Level&mdash;Breaches in Barrier Reefs&mdash;Maldiva Atolls,
- their peculiar structure&mdash;Dead and submerged Reefs&mdash;Areas of
- subsidence and elevation&mdash;Distribution of Volcanoes&mdash;Subsidence
- slow, and vast in amount.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>PRIL 1st.&mdash;We
- arrived in view of the Keeling or Cocos Islands, situated in the Indian
- Ocean, and about six hundred miles distant from the coast of Sumatra. This
- is one of the lagoon-islands (or atolls) of coral formation, similar to
- those in the Low Archipelago which we passed near. When the ship was in
- the channel at the entrance, Mr. Liesk, an English resident, came off in
- his boat. The history of the inhabitants of this place, in as few words as
- possible, is as follows. About nine years ago, Mr. Hare, a worthless
- character, brought from the East Indian archipelago a number of Malay
- slaves, which now including children, amount to more than a hundred.
- Shortly afterwards, Captain Ross, who had before visited these islands in
- his merchant-ship, arrived from England, bringing with him his family and
- goods for settlement: along with him came Mr. Liesk, who had been a mate
- in his vessel. The Malay slaves soon ran away from the islet on which Mr.
- Hare was settled, and joined Captain Ross's party. Mr. Hare upon this was
- ultimately obliged to leave the place.
- </p>
- <p>
- The Malays are now nominally in a state of freedom, and certainly are so,
- as far as regards their personal treatment; but in most other points they
- are considered as slaves. From their discontented state, from the repeated
- removals from islet to islet, and perhaps also from a little
- mismanagement, things are not very prosperous. The island has no domestic
- quadruped, excepting the pig, and the main vegetable production is the
- cocoa-nut. The whole prosperity of the place depends on this tree: the
- only exports being oil from the nut, and the nuts themselves, which are
- taken to Singapore and Mauritius, where they are chiefly used, when
- grated, in making curries. On the cocoa-nut, also, the pigs, which are
- loaded with fat, almost entirely subsist, as do the ducks and poultry.
- Even a huge land-crab is furnished by nature with the means to open and
- feed on this most useful production.
- </p>
- <p>
- The ring-formed reef of the lagoon-island is surmounted in the greater
- part of its length by linear islets. On the northern or leeward side,
- there is an opening through which vessels can pass to the anchorage
- within. On entering, the scene was very curious and rather pretty; its
- beauty, however, entirely depended on the brilliancy of the surrounding
- colours. The shallow, clear, and still water of the lagoon, resting in its
- greater part on white sand, is, when illumined by a vertical sun, of the
- most vivid green. This brilliant expanse, several miles in width, is on
- all sides divided, either by a line of snow-white breakers from the dark
- heaving waters of the ocean, or from the blue vault of heaven by the
- strips of land, crowned by the level tops of the cocoa-nut trees. As a
- white cloud here and there affords a pleasing contrast with the azure sky,
- so in the lagoon, bands of living coral darken the emerald green water.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning after anchoring, I went on shore on Direction Island. The
- strip of dry land is only a few hundred yards in width; on the lagoon side
- there is a white calcareous beach, the radiation from which under this
- sultry climate was very oppressive; and on the outer coast, a solid broad
- flat of coral-rock served to break the violence of the open sea. Excepting
- near the lagoon, where there is some sand, the land is entirely composed
- of rounded fragments of coral. In such a loose, dry, stony soil, the
- climate of the intertropical regions alone could produce a vigorous
- vegetation. On some of the smaller islets, nothing could be more elegant
- than the manner in which the young and full-grown cocoa-nut trees, without
- destroying each other's symmetry, were mingled into one wood. A beach of
- glittering white sand formed a border to these fairy spots.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will now give a sketch of the natural history of these islands, which,
- from its very paucity, possesses a peculiar interest. The cocoa-nut tree,
- at first glance, seems to compose the whole wood; there are however, five
- or six other trees. One of these grows to a very large size, but from the
- extremes of softness of its wood, is useless; another sort affords
- excellent timber for ship-building. Besides the trees, the number of
- plants is exceedingly limited, and consists of insignificant weeds. In my
- collection, which includes, I believe, nearly the perfect Flora, there are
- twenty species, without reckoning a moss, lichen, and fungus. To this
- number two trees must be added; one of which was not in flower, and the
- other I only heard of. The latter is a solitary tree of its kind, and
- grows near the beach, where, without doubt, the one seed was thrown up by
- the waves. A Guilandina also grows on only one of the islets. I do not
- include in the above list the sugar-cane, banana, some other vegetables,
- fruit-trees, and imported grasses. As the islands consist entirely of
- coral, and at one time must have existed as mere water-washed reefs, all
- their terrestrial productions must have been transported here by the waves
- of the sea. In accordance with this, the Florula has quite the character
- of a refuge for the destitute: Professor Henslow informs me that of the
- twenty species nineteen belong to different genera, and these again to no
- less than sixteen families! <a href="#linknote-201" name="linknoteref-201"
- id="linknoteref-201"><small>201</small></a>
- </p>
- <p>
- In Holman's <a href="#linknote-202" name="linknoteref-202"
- id="linknoteref-202"><small>202</small></a> Travels an account is given,
- on the authority of Mr. A. S. Keating, who resided twelve months on these
- islands, of the various seeds and other bodies which have been known to
- have been washed on shore. "Seeds and plants from Sumatra and Java have
- been driven up by the surf on the windward side of the islands. Among them
- have been found the Kimiri, native of Sumatra and the peninsula of
- Malacca; the cocoa-nut of Balci, known by its shape and size; the Dadass,
- which is planted by the Malays with the pepper-vine, the latter intwining
- round its trunk, and supporting itself by the prickles on its stem; the
- soap-tree; the castor-oil plant; trunks of the sago palm; and various
- kinds of seeds unknown to the Malays settled on the islands. These are all
- supposed to have been driven by the N. W. monsoon to the coast of New
- Holland, and thence to these islands by the S. E. trade-wind. Large masses
- of Java teak and Yellow wood have also been found, besides immense trees
- of red and white cedar, and the blue gumwood of New Holland, in a
- perfectly sound condition. All the hardy seeds, such as creepers, retain
- their germinating power, but the softer kinds, among which is the
- mangostin, are destroyed in the passage. Fishing-canoes, apparently from
- Java, have at times been washed on shore." It is interesting thus to
- discover how numerous the seeds are, which, coming from several countries,
- are drifted over the wide ocean. Professor Henslow tells me, he believes
- that nearly all the plants which I brought from these islands, are common
- littoral species in the East Indian archipelago. From the direction,
- however, of the winds and currents, it seems scarcely possible that they
- could have come here in a direct line. If, as suggested with much
- probability by Mr. Keating, they were first carried towards the coast of
- New Holland, and thence drifted back together with the productions of that
- country, the seeds, before germinating, must have travelled between 1800
- and 2400 miles.
- </p>
- <p>
- Chamisso, <a href="#linknote-203" name="linknoteref-203"
- id="linknoteref-203"><small>203</small></a> when describing the Radack
- Archipelago, situated in the western part of the Pacific, states that "the
- sea brings to these islands the seeds and fruits of many trees, most of
- which have yet not grown here. The greater part of these seeds appear to
- have not yet lost the capability of growing."
- </p>
- <p>
- It is also said that palms and bamboos from somewhere in the torrid zone,
- and trunks of northern firs, are washed on shore: these firs must have
- come from an immense distance. These facts are highly interesting. It
- cannot be doubted that if there were land-birds to pick up the seeds when
- first cast on shore, and a soil better adapted for their growth than the
- loose blocks of coral, that the most isolated of the lagoon-islands would
- in time possess a far more abundant Flora than they now have.
- </p>
- <p>
- The list of land animals is even poorer than that of the plants. Some of
- the islets are inhabited by rats, which were brought in a ship from the
- Mauritius, wrecked here. These rats are considered by Mr. Waterhouse as
- identical with the English kind, but they are smaller, and more brightly
- coloured. There are no true land-birds, for a snipe and a rail (Rallus
- Phillippensis), though living entirely in the dry herbage, belong to the
- order of Waders. Birds of this order are said to occur on several of the
- small low islands in the Pacific. At Ascension, where there is no
- land-bird, a rail (Porphyrio simplex) was shot near the summit of the
- mountain, and it was evidently a solitary straggler. At Tristan d'Acunha,
- where, according to Carmichael, there are only two land-birds, there is a
- coot. From these facts I believe that the waders, after the innumerable
- web-footed species, are generally the first colonists of small isolated
- islands. I may add, that whenever I noticed birds, not of oceanic species,
- very far out at sea, they always belonged to this order; and hence they
- would naturally become the earliest colonists of any remote point of land.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of reptiles I saw only one small lizard. Of insects I took pains to
- collect every kind. Exclusive of spiders, which were numerous, there were
- thirteen species. <a href="#linknote-204" name="linknoteref-204"
- id="linknoteref-204"><small>204</small></a> Of these, one only was a
- beetle. A small ant swarmed by thousands under the loose dry blocks of
- coral, and was the only true insect which was abundant. Although the
- productions of the land are thus scanty, if we look to the waters of the
- surrounding sea, the number of organic beings is indeed infinite. Chamisso
- has described <a href="#linknote-205" name="linknoteref-205"
- id="linknoteref-205"><small>205</small></a> the natural history of a
- lagoon-island in the Radack Archipelago; and it is remarkable how closely
- its inhabitants, in number and kind, resemble those of Keeling Island.
- There is one lizard and two waders, namely, a snipe and curlew. Of plants
- there are nineteen species, including a fern; and some of these are the
- same with those growing here, though on a spot so immensely remote, and in
- a different ocean.
- </p>
- <p>
- The long strips of land, forming the linear islets, have been raised only
- to that height to which the surf can throw fragments of coral, and the
- wind heap up calcareous sand. The solid flat of coral rock on the outside,
- by its breadth, breaks the first violence of the waves, which otherwise,
- in a day, would sweep away these islets and all their productions. The
- ocean and the land seem here struggling for mastery: although terra firma
- has obtained a footing, the denizens of the water think their claim at
- least equally good. In every part one meets hermit crabs of more than one
- species, <a href="#linknote-206" name="linknoteref-206"
- id="linknoteref-206"><small>206</small></a> carrying on their backs the
- shells which they have stolen from the neighbouring beach. Overhead,
- numerous gannets, frigate-birds, and terns, rest on the trees; and the
- wood, from the many nests and from the smell of the atmosphere, might be
- called a sea-rookery. The gannets, sitting on their rude nests, gaze at
- one with a stupid yet angry air. The noddies, as their name expresses, are
- silly little creatures. But there is one charming bird: it is a small,
- snow-white tern, which smoothly hovers at the distance of a few feet above
- one's head, its large black eye scanning, with quiet curiosity, your
- expression. Little imagination is required to fancy that so light and
- delicate a body must be tenanted by some wandering fairy spirit.
- </p>
- <p>
- Sunday, April 3rd.&mdash;After service I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to
- the settlement, situated at the distance of some miles, on the point of an
- islet thickly covered with tall cocoa-nut trees. Captain Ross and Mr.
- Liesk live in a large barn-like house open at both ends, and lined with
- mats made of woven bark. The houses of the Malays are arranged along the
- shore of the lagoon. The whole place had rather a desolate aspect, for
- there were no gardens to show the signs of care and cultivation. The
- natives belong to different islands in the East Indian archipelago, but
- all speak the same language: we saw the inhabitants of Borneo, Celebes,
- Java, and Sumatra. In colour they resemble the Tahitians, from whom they
- do not widely differ in features. Some of the women, however, show a good
- deal of the Chinese character. I liked both their general expressions and
- the sound of their voices. They appeared poor, and their houses were
- destitute of furniture; but it was evident, from the plumpness of the
- little children, that cocoa-nuts and turtle afford no bad sustenance.
- </p>
- <p>
- On this island the wells are situated, from which ships obtain water. At
- first sight it appears not a little remarkable that the fresh water should
- regularly ebb and flow with the tides; and it has even been imagined, that
- sand has the power of filtering the salt from the sea-water. These ebbing
- wells are common on some of the low islands in the West Indies. The
- compressed sand, or porous coral rock, is permeated like a sponge with the
- salt water, but the rain which falls on the surface must sink to the level
- of the surrounding sea, and must accumulate there, displacing an equal
- bulk of the salt water. As the water in the lower part of the great
- sponge-like coral mass rises and falls with the tides, so will the water
- near the surface; and this will keep fresh, if the mass be sufficiently
- compact to prevent much mechanical admixture; but where the land consists
- of great loose blocks of coral with open interstices, if a well be dug,
- the water, as I have seen, is brackish.
- </p>
- <p>
- After dinner we stayed to see a curious half superstitious scene acted by
- the Malay women. A large wooden spoon dressed in garments, and which had
- been carried to the grave of a dead man, they pretend becomes inspired at
- the full of the moon, and will dance and jump about. After the proper
- preparations, the spoon, held by two women, became convulsed, and danced
- in good time to the song of the surrounding children and women. It was a
- most foolish spectacle; but Mr. Liesk maintained that many of the Malays
- believed in its spiritual movements. The dance did not commence till the
- moon had risen, and it was well worth remaining to behold her bright orb
- so quietly shining through the long arms of the cocoa-nut trees as they
- waved in the evening breeze. These scenes of the tropics are in themselves
- so delicious, that they almost equal those dearer ones at home, to which
- we are bound by each best feeling of the mind.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day I employed myself in examining the very interesting, yet
- simple structure and origin of these islands. The water being unusually
- smooth, I waded over the outer flat of dead rock as far as the living
- mounds of coral, on which the swell of the open sea breaks. In some of the
- gullies and hollows there were beautiful green and other coloured fishes,
- and the form and tints of many of the zoophytes were admirable. It is
- excusable to grow enthusiastic over the infinite numbers of organic beings
- with which the sea of the tropics, so prodigal of life, teems; yet I must
- confess I think those naturalists who have described, in well-known words,
- the submarine grottoes decked with a thousand beauties, have indulged in
- rather exuberant language.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 6th.&mdash;I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to an island at the head
- of the lagoon: the channel was exceedingly intricate, winding through
- fields of delicately branched corals. We saw several turtle and two boats
- were then employed in catching them. The water was so clear and shallow,
- that although at first a turtle quickly dives out of sight, yet in a canoe
- or boat under sail, the pursuers after no very long chase come up to it. A
- man standing ready in the bow, at this moment dashes through the water
- upon the turtle's back; then clinging with both hands by the shell of its
- neck, he is carried away till the animal becomes exhausted and is secured.
- It was quite an interesting chase to see the two boats thus doubling
- about, and the men dashing head foremost into the water trying to seize
- their prey. Captain Moresby informs me that in the Chagos archipelago in
- this same ocean, the natives, by a horrible process, take the shell from
- the back of the living turtle. "It is covered with burning charcoal, which
- causes the outer shell to curl upwards, it is then forced off with a
- knife, and before it becomes cold flattened between boards. After this
- barbarous process the animal is suffered to regain its native element,
- where, after a certain time, a new shell is formed; it is, however, too
- thin to be of any service, and the animal always appears languishing and
- sickly."
- </p>
- <p>
- When we arrived at the head of the lagoon, we crossed a narrow islet, and
- found a great surf breaking on the windward coast. I can hardly explain
- the reason, but there is to my mind much grandeur in the view of the outer
- shores of these lagoon-islands. There is a simplicity in the barrier-like
- beach, the margin of green bushes and tall cocoa-nuts, the solid flat of
- dead coral-rock, strewed here and there with great loose fragments, and
- the line of furious breakers, all rounding away towards either hand. The
- ocean throwing its waters over the broad reef appears an invincible,
- all-powerful enemy; yet we see it resisted, and even conquered, by means
- which at first seem most weak and inefficient. It is not that the ocean
- spares the rock of coral; the great fragments scattered over the reef, and
- heaped on the beach, whence the tall cocoa-nut springs, plainly bespeak
- the unrelenting power of the waves. Nor are any periods of repose granted.
- The long swell caused by the gentle but steady action of the trade-wind,
- always blowing in one direction over a wide area, causes breakers, almost
- equalling in force those during a gale of wind in the temperate regions,
- and which never cease to rage. It is impossible to behold these waves
- without feeling a conviction that an island, though built of the hardest
- rock, let it be porphyry, granite, or quartz, would ultimately yield and
- be demolished by such an irresistible power. Yet these low, insignificant
- coral-islets stand and are victorious: for here another power, as an
- antagonist, takes part in the contest. The organic forces separate the
- atoms of carbonate of lime, one by one, from the foaming breakers, and
- unite them into a symmetrical structure. Let the hurricane tear up its
- thousand huge fragments; yet what will that tell against the accumulated
- labour of myriads of architects at work night and day, month after month?
- Thus do we see the soft and gelatinous body of a polypus, through the
- agency of the vital laws, conquering the great mechanical power of the
- waves of an ocean which neither the art of man nor the inanimate works of
- nature could successfully resist.
- </p>
- <p>
- We did not return on board till late in the evening, for we stayed a long
- time in the lagoon, examining the fields of coral and the gigantic shells
- of the chama, into which, if a man were to put his hand, he would not, as
- long as the animal lived, be able to withdraw it. Near the head of the
- lagoon I was much surprised to find a wide area, considerably more than a
- mile square, covered with a forest of delicately branching corals, which,
- though standing upright, were all dead and rotten. At first I was quite at
- a loss to understand the cause afterwards it occurred to me that it was
- owing to the following rather curious combination of circumstances. It
- should, however, first be stated, that corals are not able to survive even
- a short exposure in the air to the sun's rays, so that their upward limit
- of growth is determined by that of lowest water at spring tides. It
- appears, from some old charts, that the long island to windward was
- formerly separated by wide channels into several islets; this fact is
- likewise indicated by the trees being younger on these portions. Under the
- former condition of the reef, a strong breeze, by throwing more water over
- the barrier, would tend to raise the level of the lagoon. Now it acts in a
- directly contrary manner; for the water within the lagoon not only is not
- increased by currents from the outside, but is itself blown outwards by
- the force of the wind. Hence it is observed, that the tide near the head
- of the lagoon does not rise so high during a strong breeze as it does when
- it is calm. This difference of level, although no doubt very small, has, I
- believe, caused the death of those coral-groves, which under the former
- and more open condition of the outer reef has attained the utmost possible
- limit of upward growth.
- </p>
- <p>
- A few miles north of Keeling there is another small atoll, the lagoon of
- which is nearly filled up with coral-mud. Captain Ross found embedded in
- the conglomerate on the outer coast, a well-rounded fragment of
- greenstone, rather larger than a man's head: he and the men with him were
- so much surprised at this, that they brought it away and preserved it as a
- curiosity. The occurrence of this one stone, where every other particle of
- matter is calcareous, certainly is very puzzling. The island has scarcely
- ever been visited, nor is it probable that a ship had been wrecked there.
- From the absence of any better explanation, I came to the conclusion that
- it must have come entangled in the roots of some large tree: when,
- however, I considered the great distance from the nearest land, the
- combination of chances against a stone thus being entangled, the tree
- washed into the sea, floated so far, then landed safely, and the stone
- finally so embedded as to allow of its discovery, I was almost afraid of
- imagining a means of transport apparently so improbable. It was therefore
- with great interest that I found Chamisso, the justly distinguished
- naturalist who accompanied Kotzebue, stating that the inhabitants of the
- Radack archipelago, a group of lagoon-islands in the midst of the Pacific,
- obtained stones for sharpening their instruments by searching the roots of
- trees which are cast upon the beach. It will be evident that this must
- have happened several times, since laws have been established that such
- stones belong to the chief, and a punishment is inflicted on any one who
- attempts to steal them. When the isolated position of these small islands
- in the midst of a vast ocean&mdash;their great distance from any land
- excepting that of coral formation, attested by the value which the
- inhabitants, who are such bold navigators, attach to a stone of any kind,
- <a href="#linknote-207" name="linknoteref-207" id="linknoteref-207"><small>207</small></a>&mdash;and
- the slowness of the currents of the open sea, are all considered, the
- occurrence of pebbles thus transported does appear wonderful. Stones may
- often be thus carried; and if the island on which they are stranded is
- constructed of any other substance besides coral, they would scarcely
- attract attention, and their origin at least would never be guessed.
- Moreover, this agency may long escape discovery from the probability of
- trees, especially those loaded with stones, floating beneath the surface.
- In the channels of Tierra del Fuego large quantities of drift timber are
- cast upon the beach, yet it is extremely rare to meet a tree swimming on
- the water. These facts may possibly throw light on single stones, whether
- angular or rounded, occasionally found embedded in fine sedimentary
- masses.
- </p>
- <p>
- During another day I visited West Islet, on which the vegetation was
- perhaps more luxuriant than on any other. The cocoa-nut trees generally
- grow separate, but here the young ones flourished beneath their tall
- parents, and formed with their long and curved fronds the most shady
- arbours. Those alone who have tried it, know how delicious it is to be
- seated in such shade, and drink the cool pleasant fluid of the cocoa-nut.
- In this island there is a large bay-like space, composed of the finest
- white sand: it is quite level and is only covered by the tide at high
- water; from this large bay smaller creeks penetrate the surrounding woods.
- To see a field of glittering white sand, representing water, with the
- cocoa-nut trees extending their tall and waving trunks around the margin,
- formed a singular and very pretty view.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have before alluded to a crab which lives on the cocoa-nuts; it is very
- common on all parts of the dry land, and grows to a monstrous size: it is
- closely allied or identical with the Birgos latro. The front pair of legs
- terminate in very strong and heavy pincers, and the last pair are fitted
- with others weaker and much narrower. It would at first be thought quite
- impossible for a crab to open a strong cocoa-nut covered with the husk;
- but Mr. Liesk assures me that he has repeatedly seen this effected. The
- crab begins by tearing the husk, fibre by fibre, and always from that end
- under which the three eye-holes are situated; when this is completed, the
- crab commences hammering with its heavy claws on one of the eye-holes till
- an opening is made. Then turning round its body, by the aid of its
- posterior and narrow pair of pincers, it extracts the white albuminous
- substance. I think this is as curious a case of instinct as ever I heard
- of, and likewise of adaptation in structure between two objects apparently
- so remote from each other in the scheme of nature, as a crab and a
- cocoa-nut tree. The Birgos is diurnal in its habits; but every night it is
- said to pay a visit to the sea, no doubt for the purpose of moistening its
- branchiae. The young are likewise hatched, and live for some time, on the
- coast. These crabs inhabit deep burrows, which they hollow out beneath the
- roots of trees; and where they accumulate surprising quantities of the
- picked fibres of the cocoa-nut husk, on which they rest as on a bed. The
- Malays sometimes take advantage of this, and collect the fibrous mass to
- use as junk. These crabs are very good to eat; moreover, under the tail of
- the larger ones there is a mass of fat, which, when melted, sometimes
- yields as much as a quart bottle full of limpid oil. It has been stated by
- some authors that the Birgos crawls up the cocoa-nut trees for the purpose
- of stealing the nuts: I very much doubt the possibility of this; but with
- the Pandanus <a href="#linknote-208" name="linknoteref-208"
- id="linknoteref-208"><small>208</small></a> the task would be very much
- easier. I was told by Mr. Liesk that on these islands the Birgos lives
- only on the nuts which have fallen to the ground.
- </p>
- <p>
- Captain Moresby informs me that this crab inhabits the Chagos and
- Seychelle groups, but not the neighbouring Maldiva archipelago. It
- formerly abounded at Mauritius, but only a few small ones are now found
- there. In the Pacific, this species, or one with closely allied habits, is
- said <a href="#linknote-209" name="linknoteref-209" id="linknoteref-209"><small>209</small></a>
- to inhabit a single coral island, north of the Society group. To show the
- wonderful strength of the front pair of pincers, I may mention, that
- Captain Moresby confined one in a strong tin-box, which had held biscuits,
- the lid being secured with wire; but the crab turned down the edges and
- escaped. In turning down the edges, it actually punched many small holes
- quite through the tin!
- </p>
- <p>
- I was a good deal surprised by finding two species of coral of the genus
- Millepora (M. complanata and alcicornis), possessed of the power of
- stinging. The stony branches or plates, when taken fresh from the water,
- have a harsh feel and are not slimy, although possessing a strong and
- disagreeable smell. The stinging property seems to vary in different
- specimens: when a piece was pressed or rubbed on the tender skin of the
- face or arm, a pricking sensation was usually caused, which came on after
- the interval of a second, and lasted only for a few minutes. One day,
- however, by merely touching my face with one of the branches, pain was
- instantaneously caused; it increased as usual after a few seconds, and
- remaining sharp for some minutes, was perceptible for half an hour
- afterwards. The sensation was as bad as that from a nettle, but more like
- that caused by the Physalia or Portuguese man-of-war. Little red spots
- were produced on the tender skin of the arm, which appeared as if they
- would have formed watery pustules, but did not. M. Quoy mentions this case
- of the Millepora; and I have heard of stinging corals in the West Indies.
- Many marine animals seem to have this power of stinging: besides the
- Portuguese man-of-war, many jelly-fish, and the Aplysia or sea-slug of the
- Cape de Verd Islands, it is stated in the voyage of the Astrolabe, that an
- Actinia or sea-anemone, as well as a flexible coralline allied to
- Sertularia, both possess this means of offence or defence. In the East
- Indian sea, a stinging sea-weed is said to be found.
- </p>
- <p>
- Two species of fish, of the genus Scarus, which are common here,
- exclusively feed on coral: both are coloured of a splendid bluish-green,
- one living invariably in the lagoon, and the other amongst the outer
- breakers. Mr. Liesk assured us, that he had repeatedly seen whole shoals
- grazing with their strong bony jaws on the tops of the coral branches: I
- opened the intestines of several, and found them distended with yellowish
- calcareous sandy mud. The slimy disgusting Holuthuriae (allied to our
- star-fish), which the Chinese gourmands are so fond of, also feed largely,
- as I am informed by Dr. Allan, on corals; and the bony apparatus within
- their bodies seems well adapted for this end. These Holuthuriae, the fish,
- the numerous burrowing shells, and nereidous worms, which perforate every
- block of dead coral, must be very efficient agents in producing the fine
- white mud which lies at the bottom and on the shores of the lagoon. A
- portion, however, of this mud, which when wet resembled pounded chalk, was
- found by Professor Ehrenberg to be partly composed of siliceous-shielded
- infusoria.
- </p>
- <p>
- April 12th.&mdash;In the morning we stood out of the lagoon on our passage
- to the Isle of France. I am glad we have visited these islands: such
- formations surely rank high amongst the wonderful objects of this world.
- Captain Fitz Roy found no bottom with a line 7200 feet in length, at the
- distance of only 2200 yards from the shore; hence this island forms a
- lofty submarine mountain, with sides steeper even than those of the most
- abrupt volcanic cone. The saucer-shaped summit is nearly ten miles across;
- and every single atom, <a href="#linknote-2010" name="linknoteref-2010"
- id="linknoteref-2010"><small>2010</small></a> from the least particle to
- the largest fragment of rock, in this great pile, which however is small
- compared with very many other lagoon-islands, bears the stamp of having
- been subjected to organic arrangement. We feel surprise when travellers
- tell us of the vast dimensions of the Pyramids and other great ruins, but
- how utterly insignificant are the greatest of these, when compared to
- these mountains of stone accumulated by the agency of various minute and
- tender animals! This is a wonder which does not at first strike the eye of
- the body, but, after reflection, the eye of reason.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will now give a very brief account of the three great classes of
- coral-reefs; namely, Atolls, Barrier, and Fringing-reefs, and will explain
- my views <a href="#linknote-2011" name="linknoteref-2011"
- id="linknoteref-2011"><small>2011</small></a> on their formation. Almost
- every voyager who has crossed the Pacific has expressed his unbounded
- astonishment at the lagoon-islands, or as I shall for the future call them
- by their Indian name of atolls, and has attempted some explanation. Even
- as long ago as the year 1605, Pyrard de Laval well exclaimed, "C'est
- </p>
- <p>
- [20picture]
- </p>
- <p>
- une merveille de voir chacun de ces atollons, environne d'un grand banc de
- pierre tout autour, n'y ayant point d'artifice humain." The accompanying
- sketch of Whitsunday Island in the Pacific, copied from, Capt. Beechey's
- admirable Voyage, gives but a faint idea of the singular aspect of an
- atoll: it is one of the smallest size, and has its narrow islets united
- together in a ring. The immensity of the ocean, the fury of the breakers,
- contrasted with the lowness of the land and the smoothness of the bright
- green water within the lagoon, can hardly be imagined without having been
- seen.
- </p>
- <p>
- The earlier voyagers fancied that the coral-building animals instinctively
- built up their great circles to afford themselves protection in the inner
- parts; but so far is this from the truth, that those massive kinds, to
- whose growth on the exposed outer shores the very existence of the reef
- depends, cannot live within the lagoon, where other delicately-branching
- kinds flourish. Moreover, on this view, many species of distinct genera
- and families are supposed to combine for one end; and of such a
- combination, not a single instance can be found in the whole of nature.
- The theory that has been most generally received is, that atolls are based
- on submarine craters; but when we consider the form and size of some, the
- number, proximity, and relative positions of others, this idea loses its
- plausible character: thus Suadiva atoll is 44 geographical miles in
- diameter in one line, by 34 miles in another line; Rimsky is 54 by 20
- miles across, and it has a strangely sinuous margin; Bow atoll is 30 miles
- long, and on an average only 6 in width; Menchicoff atoll consists of
- three atolls united or tied together. This theory, moreover, is totally
- inapplicable to the northern Maldiva atolls in the Indian Ocean (one of
- which is 88 miles in length, and between 10 and 20 in breadth), for they
- are not bounded like ordinary atolls by narrow reefs, but by a vast number
- of separate little atolls; other little atolls rising out of the great
- central lagoon-like spaces. A third and better theory was advanced by
- Chamisso, who thought that from the corals growing more vigorously where
- exposed to the open sea, as undoubtedly is the case, the outer edges would
- grow up from the general foundation before any other part, and that this
- would account for the ring or cup-shaped structure. But we shall
- immediately see, that in this, as well as in the crater-theory, a most
- important consideration has been overlooked, namely, on what have the
- reef-building corals, which cannot live at a great depth, based their
- massive structures?
- </p>
- <p>
- Numerous soundings were carefully taken by Captain Fitz Roy on the steep
- outside of Keeling atoll, and it was found that within ten fathoms, the
- prepared tallow at the bottom of the lead, invariably came up marked with
- the impression of living corals, but as perfectly clean as if it had been
- dropped on a carpet of turf; as the depth increased, the impressions
- became less numerous, but the adhering particles of sand more and more
- numerous, until at last it was evident that the bottom consisted of a
- smooth sandy layer: to carry on the analogy of the turf, the blades of
- grass grew thinner and thinner, till at last the soil was so sterile, that
- nothing sprang from it. From these observations, confirmed by many others,
- it may be safely inferred that the utmost depth at which corals can
- construct reefs is between 20 and 30 fathoms. Now there are enormous areas
- in the Pacific and Indian Ocean, in which every single island is of coral
- formation, and is raised only to that height to which the waves can throw
- up fragments, and the winds pile up sand. Thus Radack group of atolls is
- an irregular square, 520 miles long and 240 broad; the Low Archipelago is
- elliptic-formed, 840 miles in its longer, and 420 in its shorter axis:
- there are other small groups and single low islands between these two
- archipelagoes, making a linear space of ocean actually more than 4000
- miles in length, in which not one single island rises above the specified
- height. Again, in the Indian Ocean there is a space of ocean 1500 miles in
- length, including three archipelagoes, in which every island is low and of
- coral formation. From the fact of the reef-building corals not living at
- great depths, it is absolutely certain that throughout these vast areas,
- wherever there is now an atoll, a foundation must have originally existed
- within a depth of from 20 to 30 fathoms from the surface. It is improbable
- in the highest degree that broad, lofty, isolated, steep-sided banks of
- sediment, arranged in groups and lines hundreds of leagues in length,
- could have been deposited in the central and profoundest parts of the
- Pacific and Indian Oceans, at an immense distance from any continent, and
- where the water is perfectly limpid. It is equally improbable that the
- elevatory forces should have uplifted throughout the above vast areas,
- innumerable great rocky banks within 20 to 30 fathoms, or 120 to 180 feet,
- of the surface of the sea, and not one single point above that level; for
- where on the whole surface of the globe can we find a single chain of
- mountains, even a few hundred miles in length, with their many summits
- rising within a few feet of a given level, and not one pinnacle above it?
- If then the foundations, whence the atoll-building corals sprang, were not
- formed of sediment, and if they were not lifted up to the required level,
- they must of necessity have subsided into it; and this at once solves the
- difficulty. For as mountain after mountain, and island after island,
- slowly sank beneath the water, fresh bases would be successively afforded
- for the growth of the corals. It is impossible here to enter into all the
- necessary details, but I venture to defy <a href="#linknote-2012"
- name="linknoteref-2012" id="linknoteref-2012"><small>2012</small></a> any
- one to explain in any other manner how it is possible that numerous
- islands should be distributed throughout vast areas&mdash;all the islands
- being low&mdash;all being built of corals, absolutely requiring a
- foundation within a limited depth from the surface.
- </p>
- <p>
- Before explaining how atoll-formed reefs acquire their peculiar structure,
- we must turn to the second great class, namely, Barrier-reefs. These
- either extend in straight lines in front of the shores of a continent or
- of a large island, or they encircle smaller islands; in both cases, being
- separated from the land by a broad and rather deep channel of water,
- analogous to the lagoon within an atoll. It is remarkable how little
- attention has been paid to encircling barrier-reefs; yet they are truly
- wonderful structures. The following sketch represents part of the barrier
- encircling the island of Bolabola in the Pacific, as seen from one of the
- central peaks. In this instance the whole line of reef has been converted
- into land; but usually a snow-white line of great breakers, with only here
- and there a single low islet crowned with cocoa-nut trees, divides the
- dark heaving waters of the ocean from the light-green expanse of the
- lagoon-channel. And the quiet waters of this channel generally bathe a
- fringe of low alluvial soil, loaded with the most beautiful productions of
- the tropics, and lying at the foot of the wild, abrupt, central mountains.
- </p>
- <p>
- Encircling barrier-reefs are of all sizes, from three miles to no less
- than forty-four miles in diameter; and that which fronts one side, and
- encircles both ends, of New Caledonia, is 400 miles long. Each reef
- includes one, two, or several rocky islands of various heights; and in one
- instance, even as many as twelve separate islands. The reef runs at a
- greater or less distance from the included land; in the Society
- archipelago generally from one to three or four miles; but at Hogoleu the
- reef is 20 miles on the southern side, and 14 miles on the opposite or
- northern side, from the included islands. The depth within the
- lagoon-channel also varies much; from 10 to 30 fathoms may be taken as an
- average; but at Vanikoro there are spaces no less than 56 fathoms or 363
- feet deep. Internally the reef either slopes gently into the
- lagoon-channel, or ends in a perpendicular wall sometimes between two and
- three hundred feet under water in height: externally the reef rises, like
- an atoll, with extreme abruptness out of the profound depths of the ocean.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0010" id="linkimage-0010"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0504.jpg" alt="0504 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0504.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- What can be more singular than these structures? We see an island, which
- may be compared to a castle situated on the summit of a lofty submarine
- mountain, protected by a great wall of coral-rock, always steep externally
- and sometimes internally, with a broad level summit, here and there
- breached by a narrow gateway, through which the largest ships can enter
- the wide and deep encircling moat.
- </p>
- <p>
- As far as the actual reef of coral is concerned, there is not the smallest
- difference, in general size, outline, grouping, and even in quite trifling
- details of structure, between a barrier and an atoll. The geographer Balbi
- has well remarked, that an encircled island is an atoll with high land
- rising out of its lagoon; remove the land from within, and a perfect atoll
- is left.
- </p>
- <p>
- But what has caused these reefs to spring up at such great distances from
- the shores of the included islands? It cannot be that the corals will not
- grow close to the land; for the shores within the lagoon-channel, when not
- surrounded by alluvial soil, are often fringed by living reefs; and we
- shall presently see that there is a whole class, which I have called
- Fringing Reefs from their close attachment to the shores both of
- continents and of islands. Again, on what have the reef-building corals,
- which cannot live at great depths, based their encircling structures? This
- is a great apparent difficulty, analogous to that in the case of atolls,
- which has generally been overlooked. It will be perceived more clearly by
- inspecting the following sections which are real ones, taken in north and
- south lines, through the islands with their barrier-reefs, of Vanikoro,
- Gambier, and Maurua; and they are laid down, both vertically and
- horizontally, on the same scale of a quarter of an inch to a mile.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0011" id="linkimage-0011"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0505.jpg" alt="0505 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0505.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- It should be observed that the sections might have been taken in any
- direction through these islands, or through many other encircled islands,
- and the general features would have been the same. Now, bearing in mind
- that reef-building coral cannot live at a greater depth than from 20 to 30
- fathoms, and that the scale is so small that the plummets on the right
- hand show a depth of 200 fathoms, on what are these barrier-reefs based?
- Are we to suppose that each island is surrounded by a collar-like
- submarine ledge of rock, or by a great bank of sediment, ending abruptly
- where the reef ends?
- </p>
- <p>
- If the sea had formerly eaten deeply into the islands, before they were
- protected by the reefs, thus having left a shallow ledge round them under
- water, the present shores would have been invariably bounded by great
- precipices, but this is most rarely the case. Moreover, on this notion, it
- is not possible to explain why the corals should have sprung up, like a
- wall, from the extreme outer margin of the ledge, often leaving a broad
- space of water within, too deep for the growth of corals. The accumulation
- of a wide bank of sediment all round these islands, and generally widest
- where the included islands are smallest, is highly improbable, considering
- their exposed positions in the central and deepest parts of the ocean. In
- the case of the barrier-reef of New Caledonia, which extends for 150 miles
- beyond the northern point of the islands, in the same straight line with
- which it fronts the west coast, it is hardly possible to believe that a
- bank of sediment could thus have been straightly deposited in front of a
- lofty island, and so far beyond its termination in the open sea. Finally,
- if we look to other oceanic islands of about the same height and of
- similar geological constitution, but not encircled by coral-reefs, we may
- in vain search for so trifling a circumambient depth as 30 fathoms, except
- quite near to their shores; for usually land that rises abruptly out of
- water, as do most of the encircled and non-encircled oceanic islands,
- plunges abruptly under it. On what then, I repeat, are these barrier reefs
- based? Why, with their wide and deep moat-like channels, do they stand so
- far from the included land? We shall soon see how easily these
- difficulties disappear.
- </p>
- <p>
- We come now to our third class of Fringing-reefs, which will require a
- very short notice. Where the land slopes abruptly under water, these reefs
- are only a few yards in width, forming a mere ribbon or fringe round the
- shores: where the land slopes gently under the water the reef extends
- further, sometimes even as much as a mile from the land; but in such cases
- the soundings outside the reef always show that the submarine prolongation
- of the land is gently inclined. In fact, the reefs extend only to that
- distance from the shore, at which a foundation within the requisite depth
- from 20 to 30 fathoms is found. As far as the actual reef is concerned,
- there is no essential difference between it and that forming a barrier or
- an atoll: it is, however, generally of less width, and consequently few
- islets have been formed on it. From the corals growing more vigorously on
- the outside, and from the noxious effect of the sediment washed inwards,
- the outer edge of the reef is the highest part, and between it and the
- land there is generally a shallow sandy channel a few feet in depth. Where
- banks or sediments have accumulated near to the surface, as in parts of
- the West Indies, they sometimes become fringed with corals, and hence in
- some degree resemble lagoon-islands or atolls, in the same manner as
- fringing-reefs, surrounding gently sloping islands, in some degree
- resemble barrier-reefs.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0012" id="linkimage-0012"> </a>
- </p>
- <div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0507.jpg" alt="0507 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0507.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
- <p>
- No theory on the formation of coral-reefs can be considered satisfactory
- which does not include the three great classes. We have seen that we are
- driven to believe in the subsidence of those vast areas, interspersed with
- low islands, of which not one rises above the height to which the wind and
- waves can throw up matter, and yet are constructed by animals requiring a
- foundation, and that foundation to lie at no great depth. Let us then take
- an island surrounded by fringing-reefs, which offer no difficulty in their
- structure; and let this island with its reefs, represented by the unbroken
- lines in the woodcut, slowly subside. Now, as the island sinks down,
- either a few feet at a time or quite insensibly, we may safely infer, from
- what is known of the conditions favourable to the growth of coral, that
- the living masses, bathed by the surf on the margin of the reef, will soon
- regain the surface. The water, however, will encroach little by little on
- the shore, the island becoming lower and smaller, and the space between
- the inner edge of the reef and the beach proportionately broader. A
- section of the reef and island in this state, after a subsidence of
- several hundred feet, is given by the dotted lines. Coral islets are
- supposed to have been formed on the reef; and a ship is anchored in the
- lagoon-channel. This channel will be more or less deep, according to the
- rate of subsidence, to the amount of sediment accumulated in it, and to
- the growth of the delicately branched corals which can live there. The
- section in this state resembles in every respect one drawn through an
- encircled island: in fact, it is a real section (on the scale of .517 of
- an inch to a mile) through Bolabola in the Pacific. We can now at once see
- why encircling barrier-reefs stand so far from the shores which they
- front. We can also perceive, that a line drawn perpendicularly down from
- the outer edge of the new reef, to the foundation of solid rock beneath
- the old fringing-reef, will exceed by as many feet as there have been feet
- of subsidence, that small limit of depth at which the effective corals can
- live:&mdash;the little architects having built up their great wall-like
- mass, as the whole sank down, upon a basis formed of other corals and
- their consolidated fragments. Thus the difficulty on this head, which
- appeared so great, disappears.
- </p>
- <p>
- If, instead of an island, we had taken the shore of a continent fringed
- with reefs, and had imagined it to have subsided, a great straight
- barrier, like that of Australia or New Caledonia, separated from the land
- by a wide and deep channel, would evidently have been the result.
- </p>
- <p>
- Let us take our new encircling barrier-reef, of which the section is now
- represented by unbroken lines, and which, as I have said, is a real
- section through Bolabola, and let it go on subsiding. As the barrier-reef
- slowly sinks down, the corals will go on vigorously growing upwards; but
- as the island sinks, the water will gain inch by inch on the shore&mdash;the
- separate mountains first forming separate islands within
- </p>
- <p>
- [20picture]
- </p>
- <p>
- one great reef&mdash;and finally, the last and highest pinnacle
- disappearing. The instant this takes place, a perfect atoll is formed: I
- have said, remove the high land from within an encircling barrier-reef,
- and an atoll is left, and the land has been removed. We can now perceive
- how it comes that atolls, having sprung from encircling barrier-reefs,
- resemble them in general size, form, in the manner in which they are
- grouped together, and in their arrangement in single or double lines; for
- they may be called rude outline charts of the sunken islands over which
- they stand. We can further see how it arises that the atolls in the
- Pacific and Indian Oceans extend in lines parallel to the generally
- prevailing strike of the high islands and great coast-lines of those
- oceans. I venture, therefore, to affirm, that on the theory of the upward
- growth of the corals during the sinking of the land, <a
- href="#linknote-2013" name="linknoteref-2013" id="linknoteref-2013"><small>2013</small></a>
- all the leading features in those wonderful structures, the lagoon-islands
- or atolls, which have so long excited the attention of voyagers, as well
- as in the no less wonderful barrier-reefs, whether encircling small
- islands or stretching for hundreds of miles along the shores of a
- continent, are simply explained.
- </p>
- <p>
- It may be asked, whether I can offer any direct evidence of the subsidence
- of barrier-reefs or atolls; but it must be borne in mind how difficult it
- must ever be to detect a movement, the tendency of which is to hide under
- water the part affected. Nevertheless, at Keeling atoll I observed on all
- sides of the lagoon old cocoa-nut trees undermined and falling; and in one
- place the foundation-posts of a shed, which the inhabitants asserted had
- stood seven years before just above high-water mark, but now was daily
- washed by every tide: on inquiry I found that three earthquakes, one of
- them severe, had been felt here during the last ten years. At Vanikoro,
- the lagoon-channel is remarkably deep, scarcely any alluvial soil has
- accumulated at the foot of the lofty included mountains, and remarkably
- few islets have been formed by the heaping of fragments and sand on the
- wall-like barrier reef; these facts, and some analogous ones, led me to
- believe that this island must lately have subsided and the reef grown
- upwards: here again earthquakes are frequent and very severe. In the
- Society archipelago, on the other hand, where the lagoon-channels are
- almost choked up, where much low alluvial land has accumulated, and where
- in some cases long islets have been formed on the barrier-reefs&mdash;facts
- all showing that the islands have not very lately subsided&mdash;only
- feeble shocks are most rarely felt. In these coral formations, where the
- land and water seem struggling for mastery, it must be ever difficult to
- decide between the effects of a change in the set of the tides and of a
- slight subsidence: that many of these reefs and atolls are subject to
- changes of some kind is certain; on some atolls the islets appear to have
- increased greatly within a late period; on others they have been partially
- or wholly washed away. The inhabitants of parts of the Maldiva archipelago
- know the date of the first formation of some islets; in other parts, the
- corals are now flourishing on water-washed reefs, where holes made for
- graves attest the former existence of inhabited land. It is difficult to
- believe in frequent changes in the tidal currents of an open ocean;
- whereas, we have in the earthquakes recorded by the natives on some
- atolls, and in the great fissures observed on other atolls, plain evidence
- of changes and disturbances in progress in the subterranean regions.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is evident, on our theory, that coasts merely fringed by reefs cannot
- have subsided to any perceptible amount; and therefore they must, since
- the growth of their corals, either have remained stationary or have been
- upheaved. Now, it is remarkable how generally it can be shown, by the
- presence of upraised organic remains, that the fringed islands have been
- elevated: and so far, this is indirect evidence in favour of our theory. I
- was particularly struck with this fact, when I found, to my surprise, that
- the descriptions given by MM. Quoy and Gaimard were applicable, not to
- reefs in general as implied by them, but only to those of the fringing
- class; my surprise, however, ceased when I afterwards found that, by a
- strange chance, all the several islands visited by these eminent
- naturalists, could be shown by their own statements to have been elevated
- within a recent geological era.
- </p>
- <p>
- Not only the grand features in the structure of barrier-reefs and of
- atolls, and to their likeness to each other in form, size, and other
- characters, are explained on the theory of subsidence&mdash;which theory
- we are independently forced to admit in the very areas in question, from
- the necessity of finding bases for the corals within the requisite depth&mdash;but
- many details in structure and exceptional cases can thus also be simply
- explained. I will give only a few instances. In barrier-reefs it has long
- been remarked with surprise, that the passages through the reef exactly
- face valleys in the included land, even in cases where the reef is
- separated from the land by a lagoon-channel so wide and so much deeper
- than the actual passage itself, that it seems hardly possible that the
- very small quantity of water or sediment brought down could injure the
- corals on the reef. Now, every reef of the fringing class is breached by a
- narrow gateway in front of the smallest rivulet, even if dry during the
- greater part of the year, for the mud, sand, or gravel, occasionally
- washed down kills the corals on which it is deposited. Consequently, when
- an island thus fringed subsides, though most of the narrow gateways will
- probably become closed by the outward and upward growth of the corals, yet
- any that are not closed (and some must always be kept open by the sediment
- and impure water flowing out of the lagoon-channel) will still continue to
- front exactly the upper parts of those valleys, at the mouths of which the
- original basal fringing-reef was breached.
- </p>
- <p>
- We can easily see how an island fronted only on one side, or on one side
- with one end or both ends encircled by barrier-reefs, might after
- long-continued subsidence be converted either into a single wall-like
- reef, or into an atoll with a great straight spur projecting from it, or
- into two or three atolls tied together by straight reefs&mdash;all of
- which exceptional cases actually occur. As the reef-building corals
- require food, are preyed upon by other animals, are killed by sediment,
- cannot adhere to a loose bottom, and may be easily carried down to a depth
- whence they cannot spring up again, we need feel no surprise at the reefs
- both of atolls and barriers becoming in parts imperfect. The great barrier
- of New Caledonia is thus imperfect and broken in many parts; hence, after
- long subsidence, this great reef would not produce one great atoll 400
- miles in length, but a chain or archipelago of atolls, of very nearly the
- same dimension with those in the Maldiva archipelago. Moreover, in an
- atoll once breached on opposite sides, from the likelihood of the oceanic
- and tidal currents passing straight through the breaches, it is extremely
- improbable that the corals, especially during continued subsidence, would
- ever be able again to unite the rim; if they did not, as the whole sank
- downwards, one atoll would be divided into two or more. In the Maldiva
- archipelago there are distinct atolls so related to each other in
- position, and separated by channels either unfathomable or very deep (the
- channel between Ross and Ari atolls is 150 fathoms, and that between the
- north and south Nillandoo atolls is 200 fathoms in depth), that it is
- impossible to look at a map of them without believing that they were once
- more intimately related. And in this same archipelago, Mahlos-Mahdoo atoll
- is divided by a bifurcating channel from 100 to 132 fathoms in depth, in
- such a manner, that it is scarcely possible to say whether it ought
- strictly to be called three separate atolls, or one great atoll not yet
- finally divided.
- </p>
- <p>
- I will not enter on many more details; but I must remark that the curious
- structure of the northern Maldiva atolls receives (taking into
- consideration the free entrance of the sea through their broken margins) a
- simple explanation in the upward and outward growth of the corals,
- originally based both on small detached reefs in their lagoons, such as
- occur in common atolls, and on broken portions of the linear marginal
- reef, such as bounds every atoll of the ordinary form. I cannot refrain
- from once again remarking on the singularity of these complex structures&mdash;a
- great sandy and generally concave disk rises abruptly from the
- unfathomable ocean, with its central expanse studded, and its edge
- symmetrically bordered with oval basins of coral-rock just lipping the
- surface of the sea, sometimes clothed with vegetation, and each containing
- a lake of clear water!
- </p>
- <p>
- One more point in detail: as in the two neighbouring archipelagoes corals
- flourish in one and not in the other, and as so many conditions before
- enumerated must affect their existence, it would be an inexplicable fact
- if, during the changes to which earth, air, and water are subjected, the
- reef-building corals were to keep alive for perpetuity on any one spot or
- area. And as by our theory the areas including atolls and barrier-reefs
- are subsiding, we ought occasionally to find reefs both dead and
- submerged. In all reefs, owing to the sediment being washed out of the
- lagoon-channel to leeward, that side is least favourable to the
- long-continued vigorous growth of the corals; hence dead portions of reef
- not unfrequently occur on the leeward side; and these, though still
- retaining their proper wall-like form, are now in several instances sunk
- several fathoms beneath the surface. The Chagos group appears from some
- cause, possibly from the subsidence having been too rapid, at present to
- be much less favourably circumstanced for the growth of reefs than
- formerly: one atoll has a portion of its marginal reef, nine miles in
- length, dead and submerged; a second has only a few quite small living
- points which rise to the surface, a third and fourth are entirely dead and
- submerged; a fifth is a mere wreck, with its structure almost obliterated.
- It is remarkable that in all these cases, the dead reefs and portions of
- reef lie at nearly the same depth, namely, from six to eight fathoms
- beneath the surface, as if they had been carried down by one uniform
- movement. One of these "half-drowned atolls," so called by Capt. Moresby
- (to whom I am indebted for much invaluable information), is of vast size,
- namely, ninety nautical miles across in one direction, and seventy miles
- in another line; and is in many respects eminently curious. As by our
- theory it follows that new atolls will generally be formed in each new
- area of subsidence, two weighty objections might have been raised, namely,
- that atolls must be increasing indefinitely in number; and secondly, that
- in old areas of subsidence each separate atoll must be increasing
- indefinitely in thickness, if proofs of their occasional destruction could
- not have been adduced. Thus have we traced the history of these great
- rings of coral-rock, from their first origin through their normal changes,
- and through the occasional accidents of their existence, to their death
- and final obliteration.
- </p>
- <p>
- In my volume on "Coral Formations" I have published a map, in which I have
- coloured all the atolls dark-blue, the barrier-reefs pale-blue, and the
- fringing reefs red. These latter reefs have been formed whilst the land
- has been stationary, or, as appears from the frequent presence of upraised
- organic remains, whilst it has been slowly rising: atolls and
- barrier-reefs, on the other hand, have grown up during the directly
- opposite movement of subsidence, which movement must have been very
- gradual, and in the case of atolls so vast in amount as to have buried
- every mountain-summit over wide ocean-spaces. Now in this map we see that
- the reefs tinted pale and dark-blue, which have been produced by the same
- order of movement, as a general rule manifestly stand near each other.
- Again we see, that the areas with the two blue tints are of wide extent;
- and that they lie separate from extensive lines of coast coloured red,
- both of which circumstances might naturally have been inferred, on the
- theory of the nature of the reefs having been governed by the nature of
- the earth's movement. It deserves notice that in more than one instance
- where single red and blue circles approach near each other, I can show
- that there have been oscillations of level; for in such cases the red or
- fringed circles consist of atolls, originally by our theory formed during
- subsidence, but subsequently upheaved; and on the other hand, some of the
- pale-blue or encircled islands are composed of coral-rock, which must have
- been uplifted to its present height before that subsidence took place,
- during which the existing barrier-reefs grew upwards.
- </p>
- <p>
- Authors have noticed with surprise, that although atolls are the commonest
- coral-structures throughout some enormous oceanic tracts, they are
- entirely absent in other seas, as in the West Indies: we can now at once
- perceive the cause, for where there has not been subsidence, atolls cannot
- have been formed; and in the case of the West Indies and parts of the East
- Indies, these tracts are known to have been rising within the recent
- period. The larger areas, coloured red and blue, are all elongated; and
- between the two colours there is a degree of rude alternation, as if the
- rising of one had balanced the sinking of the other. Taking into
- consideration the proofs of recent elevation both on the fringed coasts
- and on some others (for instance, in South America) where there are no
- reefs, we are led to conclude that the great continents are for the most
- part rising areas: and from the nature of the coral-reefs, that the
- central parts of the great oceans are sinking areas. The East Indian
- archipelago, the most broken land in the world, is in most parts an area
- of elevation, but surrounded and penetrated, probably in more lines than
- one, by narrow areas of subsidence.
- </p>
- <p>
- I have marked with vermilion spots all the many known active volcanos
- within the limits of this same map. Their entire absence from every one of
- the great subsiding areas, coloured either pale or dark blue, is most
- striking and not less so is the coincidence of the chief volcanic chains
- with the parts coloured red, which we are led to conclude have either long
- remained stationary, or more generally have been recently upraised.
- Although a few of the vermilion spots occur within no great distance of
- single circles tinted blue, yet not one single active volcano is situated
- within several hundred miles of an archipelago, or even small group of
- atolls. It is, therefore, a striking fact that in the Friendly
- archipelago, which consists of a group of atolls upheaved and since
- partially worn down, two volcanos, and perhaps more, are historically
- known to have been in action. On the other hand, although most of the
- islands in the Pacific which are encircled by barrier-reefs, are of
- volcanic origin, often with the remnants of craters still distinguishable,
- not one of them is known to have ever been in eruption. Hence in these
- cases it would appear, that volcanos burst forth into action and become
- extinguished on the same spots, accordingly as elevatory or subsiding
- movements prevail there. Numberless facts could be adduced to prove that
- upraised organic remains are common wherever there are active volcanos;
- but until it could be shown that in areas of subsidence, volcanos were
- either absent or inactive, the inference, however probable in itself, that
- their distribution depended on the rising or falling of the earth's
- surface, would have been hazardous. But now, I think, we may freely admit
- this important deduction.
- </p>
- <p>
- Taking a final view of the map, and bearing in mind the statements made
- with respect to the upraised organic remains, we must feel astonished at
- the vastness of the areas, which have suffered changes in level either
- downwards or upwards, within a period not geologically remote. It would
- appear also, that the elevatory and subsiding movements follow nearly the
- same laws. Throughout the spaces interspersed with atolls, where not a
- single peak of high land has been left above the level of the sea, the
- sinking must have been immense in amount. The sinking, moreover, whether
- continuous, or recurrent with intervals sufficiently long for the corals
- again to bring up their living edifices to the surface, must necessarily
- have been extremely slow. This conclusion is probably the most important
- one which can be deduced from the study of coral formations;&mdash;and it
- is one which it is difficult to imagine how otherwise could ever have been
- arrived at. Nor can I quite pass over the probability of the former
- existence of large archipelagoes of lofty islands, where now only rings of
- coral-rock scarcely break the open expanse of the sea, throwing some light
- on the distribution of the inhabitants of the other high islands, now left
- standing so immensely remote from each other in the midst of the great
- oceans. The reef-constructing corals have indeed reared and preserved
- wonderful memorials of the subterranean oscillations of level; we see in
- each barrier-reef a proof that the land has there subsided, and in each
- atoll a monument over an island now lost. We may thus, like unto a
- geologist who had lived his ten thousand years and kept a record of the
- passing changes, gain some insight into the great system by which the
- surface of this globe has been broken up, and land and water interchanged.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2HCH0021" id="link2HCH0021"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- CHAPTER XXI &mdash; MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
- </h2>
- <p>
- <i>Mauritius, beautiful appearance of&mdash;Great crateriform ring of
- Mountains&mdash;Hindoos&mdash;St. Helena&mdash;History of the changes in
- the Vegetation&mdash;Cause of the extinction of Land-shells&mdash;Ascension&mdash;Variation
- in the imported Rats&mdash;Volcanic Bombs&mdash;Beds of Infusoria&mdash;Bahia&mdash;Brazil&mdash;Splendour
- of Tropical Scenery&mdash;Pernambuco&mdash;Singular Reef&mdash;Slavery&mdash;Return
- to England&mdash;Retrospect on our Voyage.</i>
- </p>
- <p class="pfirst">
- <span class="dropcap" style="font-size: 4.00em">A</span>PRIL 29th.&mdash;In
- the morning we passed round the northern end of Mauritius, or the Isle of
- France. From this point of view the aspect of the island equalled the
- expectations raised by the many well-known descriptions of its beautiful
- scenery. The sloping plain of the Pamplemousses, interspersed with houses,
- and coloured by the large fields of sugar-cane of a bright green, composed
- the foreground. The brilliancy of the green was the more remarkable
- because it is a colour which generally is conspicuous only from a very
- short distance. Towards the centre of the island groups of wooded
- mountains rose out of this highly cultivated plain; their summits, as so
- commonly happens with ancient volcanic rocks, being jagged into the
- sharpest points. Masses of white clouds were collected around these
- pinnacles, as if for the sake of pleasing the stranger's eye. The whole
- island, with its sloping border and central mountains, was adorned with an
- air of perfect elegance: the scenery, if I may use such an expression,
- appeared to the sight harmonious.
- </p>
- <p>
- I spent the greater part of the next day in walking about the town and
- visiting different people. The town is of considerable size, and is said
- to contain 20,000 inhabitants; the streets are very clean and regular.
- Although the island has been so many years under the English Government,
- the general character of the place is quite French: Englishmen speak to
- their servants in French, and the shops are all French; indeed, I should
- think that Calais or Boulogne was much more Anglified. There is a very
- pretty little theatre, in which operas are excellently performed. We were
- also surprised at seeing large booksellers' shops, with well-stored
- shelves;&mdash;music and reading bespeak our approach to the old world of
- civilization; for in truth both Australia and America are new worlds.
- </p>
- <p>
- The various races of men walking in the streets afford the most
- interesting spectacle in Port Louis. Convicts from India are banished here
- for life; at present there are about 800, and they are employed in various
- public works. Before seeing these people, I had no idea that the
- inhabitants of India were such noble-looking figures. Their skin is
- extremely dark, and many of the older men had large mustaches and beards
- of a snow-white colour; this, together with the fire of their expression,
- gave them quite an imposing aspect. The greater number had been banished
- for murder and the worst crimes; others for causes which can scarcely be
- considered as moral faults, such as for not obeying, from superstitious
- motives, the English laws. These men are generally quiet and
- well-conducted; from their outward conduct, their cleanliness, and
- faithful observance of their strange religious rites, it was impossible to
- look at them with the same eyes as on our wretched convicts in New South
- Wales.
- </p>
- <p>
- May 1st.&mdash;Sunday. I took a quiet walk along the sea-coast to the
- north of the town. The plain in this part is quite uncultivated; it
- consists of a field of black lava, smoothed over with coarse grass and
- bushes, the latter being chiefly Mimosas. The scenery may be described as
- intermediate in character between that of the Galapagos and of Tahiti; but
- this will convey a definite idea to very few persons. It is a very
- pleasant country, but it has not the charms of Tahiti, or the grandeur of
- Brazil. The next day I ascended La Pouce, a mountain so called from a
- thumb-like projection, which rises close behind the town to a height of
- 2,600 feet. The centre of the island consists of a great platform,
- surrounded by old broken basaltic mountains, with their strata dipping
- seawards. The central platform, formed of comparatively recent streams of
- lava, is of an oval shape, thirteen geographical miles across, in the line
- of its shorter axis. The exterior bounding mountains come into that class
- of structures called Craters of Elevation, which are supposed to have been
- formed not like ordinary craters, but by a great and sudden upheaval.
- There appears to me to be insuperable objections to this view: on the
- other hand, I can hardly believe, in this and in some other cases, that
- these marginal crateriform mountains are merely the basal remnants of
- immense volcanos, of which the summits either have been blown off, or
- swallowed up in subterranean abysses.
- </p>
- <p>
- From our elevated position we enjoyed an excellent view over the island.
- The country on this side appears pretty well cultivated, being divided
- into fields and studded with farm-houses. I was, however, assured that of
- the whole land, not more than half is yet in a productive state; if such
- be the case, considering the present large export of sugar, this island,
- at some future period when thickly peopled, will be of great value. Since
- England has taken possession of it, a period of only twenty-five years,
- the export of sugar is said to have increased seventy-five fold. One great
- cause of its prosperity is the excellent state of the roads. In the
- neighbouring Isle of Bourbon, which remains under the French government,
- the roads are still in the same miserable state as they were here only a
- few years ago. Although the French residents must have largely profited by
- the increased prosperity of their island, yet the English government is
- far from popular.
- </p>
- <p>
- 3rd.&mdash;In the evening Captain Lloyd, the Surveyor-general, so well
- known from his examination of the Isthmus of Panama, invited Mr. Stokes
- and myself to his country-house, which is situated on the edge of Wilheim
- Plains, and about six miles from the Port. We stayed at this delightful
- place two days; standing nearly 800 feet above the sea, the air was cool
- and fresh, and on every side there were delightful walks. Close by, a
- grand ravine has been worn to a depth of about 500 feet through the
- slightly inclined streams of lava, which have flowed from the central
- platform.
- </p>
- <p>
- 5th.&mdash;Captain Lloyd took us to the Riviere Noire, which is several
- miles to the southward, that I might examine some rocks of elevated coral.
- We passed through pleasant gardens, and fine fields of sugar-cane growing
- amidst huge blocks of lava. The roads were bordered by hedges of Mimosa,
- and near many of the houses there were avenues of the mango. Some of the
- views, where the peaked hills and the cultivated farms were seen together,
- were exceedingly picturesque; and we were constantly tempted to exclaim,
- "How pleasant it would be to pass one's life in such quiet abodes!"
- Captain Lloyd possessed an elephant, and he sent it half way with us, that
- we might enjoy a ride in true Indian fashion. The circumstance which
- surprised me most was its quite noiseless step. This elephant is the only
- one at present on the island; but it is said others will be sent for.
- </p>
- <p>
- May 9th.&mdash;We sailed from Port Louis, and, calling at the Cape of Good
- Hope, on the 8th of July, we arrived off St. Helena. This island, the
- forbidding aspect of which has been so often described, rises abruptly
- like a huge black castle from the ocean. Near the town, as if to complete
- nature's defence, small forts and guns fill up every gap in the rugged
- rocks. The town runs up a flat and narrow valley; the houses look
- respectable, and are interspersed with a very few green trees. When
- approaching the anchorage there was one striking view: an irregular castle
- perched on the summit of a lofty hill, and surrounded by a few scattered
- fir-trees, boldly projected against the sky.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next day I obtained lodgings within a stone's throw of Napoleon's
- tomb; <a href="#linknote-211" name="linknoteref-211" id="linknoteref-211"><small>211</small></a>
- it was a capital central situation, whence I could make excursions in
- every direction. During the four days I stayed here, I wandered over the
- island from morning to night, and examined its geological history. My
- lodgings were situated at a height of about 2000 feet; here the weather
- was cold and boisterous, with constant showers of rain; and every now and
- then the whole scene was veiled in thick clouds.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near the coast the rough lava is quite bare: in the central and higher
- parts, feldspathic rocks by their decomposition have produced a clayey
- soil, which, where not covered by vegetation, is stained in broad bands of
- many bright colours. At this season, the land moistened by constant
- showers, produces a singularly bright green pasture, which lower and lower
- down, gradually fades away and at last disappears. In latitude 16 degs.,
- and at the trifling elevation of 1500 feet, it is surprising to behold a
- vegetation possessing a character decidedly British. The hills are crowned
- with irregular plantations of Scotch firs; and the sloping banks are
- thickly scattered over with thickets of gorse, covered with its bright
- yellow flowers. Weeping-willows are common on the banks of the rivulets,
- and the hedges are made of the blackberry, producing its well-known fruit.
- When we consider that the number of plants now found on the island is 746,
- and that out of these fifty-two alone are indigenous species, the rest
- having been imported, and most of them from England, we see the reason of
- the British character of the vegetation. Many of these English plants
- appear to flourish better than in their native country; some also from the
- opposite quarter of Australia succeed remarkably well. The many imported
- species must have destroyed some of the native kinds; and it is only on
- the highest and steepest ridges that the indigenous Flora is now
- predominant.
- </p>
- <p>
- The English, or rather Welsh character of the scenery, is kept up by the
- numerous cottages and small white houses; some buried at the bottom of the
- deepest valleys, and others mounted on the crests of the lofty hills. Some
- of the views are striking, for instance that from near Sir W. Doveton's
- house, where the bold peak called Lot is seen over a dark wood of firs,
- the whole being backed by the red water-worn mountains of the southern
- coast. On viewing the island from an eminence, the first circumstance
- which strikes one, is the number of the roads and forts: the labour
- bestowed on the public works, if one forgets its character as a prison,
- seems out of all proportion to its extent or value. There is so little
- level or useful land, that it seems surprising how so many people, about
- 5000, can subsist here. The lower orders, or the emancipated slaves, are I
- believe extremely poor: they complain of the want of work. From the
- reduction in the number of public servants owing to the island having been
- given up by the East Indian Company, and the consequent emigration of many
- of the richer people, the poverty probably will increase. The chief food
- of the working class is rice with a little salt meat; as neither of these
- articles are the products of the island, but must be purchased with money,
- the low wages tell heavily on the poor people. Now that the people are
- blessed with freedom, a right which I believe they value fully, it seems
- probable that their numbers will quickly increase: if so, what is to
- become of the little state of St. Helena?
- </p>
- <p>
- My guide was an elderly man, who had been a goatherd when a boy, and knew
- every step amongst the rocks. He was of a race many times crossed, and
- although with a dusky skin, he had not the disagreeable expression of a
- mulatto. He was a very civil, quiet old man, and such appears the
- character of the greater number of the lower classes. It was strange to my
- ears to hear a man, nearly white and respectably dressed, talking with
- indifference of the times when he was a slave. With my companion, who
- carried our dinners and a horn of water, which is quite necessary, as all
- the water in the lower valleys is saline, I every day took long walks.
- </p>
- <p>
- Beneath the upper and central green circle, the wild valleys are quite
- desolate and untenanted. Here, to the geologist, there were scenes of high
- interest, showing successive changes and complicated disturbances.
- According to my views, St. Helena has existed as an island from a very
- remote epoch: some obscure proofs, however, of the elevation of the land
- are still extant. I believe that the central and highest peaks form parts
- of the rim of a great crater, the southern half of which has been entirely
- removed by the waves of the sea: there is, moreover, an external wall of
- black basaltic rocks, like the coast-mountains of Mauritius, which are
- older than the central volcanic streams. On the higher parts of the
- island, considerable numbers of a shell, long thought to be a marine
- species occur imbedded in the soil.
- </p>
- <p>
- It proved to be a Cochlogena, or land-shell of a very peculiar form; <a
- href="#linknote-212" name="linknoteref-212" id="linknoteref-212"><small>212</small></a>
- with it I found six other kinds; and in another spot an eighth species. It
- is remarkable that none of them are now found living. Their extinction has
- probably been caused by the entire destruction of the woods, and the
- consequent loss of food and shelter, which occurred during the early part
- of the last century.
- </p>
- <p>
- The history of the changes, which the elevated plains of Longwood and
- Deadwood have undergone, as given in General Beatson's account of the
- island, is extremely curious. Both plains, it is said in former times were
- covered with wood, and were therefore called the Great Wood. So late as
- the year 1716 there were many trees, but in 1724 the old trees had mostly
- fallen; and as goats and hogs had been suffered to range about, all the
- young trees had been killed. It appears also from the official records,
- that the trees were unexpectedly, some years afterwards, succeeded by a
- wire grass which spread over the whole surface. <a href="#linknote-213"
- name="linknoteref-213" id="linknoteref-213"><small>213</small></a> General
- Beatson adds that now this plain "is covered with fine sward, and is
- become the finest piece of pasture on the island." The extent of surface,
- probably covered by wood at a former period, is estimated at no less than
- two thousand acres; at the present day scarcely a single tree can be found
- there. It is also said that in 1709 there were quantities of dead trees in
- Sandy Bay; this place is now so utterly desert, that nothing but so well
- attested an account could have made me believe that they could ever have
- grown there. The fact, that the goats and hogs destroyed all the young
- trees as they sprang up, and that in the course of time the old ones,
- which were safe from their attacks, perished from age, seems clearly made
- out. Goats were introduced in the year 1502; eighty-six years afterwards,
- in the time of Cavendish, it is known that they were exceedingly numerous.
- More than a century afterwards, in 1731, when the evil was complete and
- irretrievable, an order was issued that all stray animals should be
- destroyed. It is very interesting thus to find, that the arrival of
- animals at St. Helena in 1501, did not change the whole aspect of the
- island, until a period of two hundred and twenty years had elapsed: for
- the goats were introduced in 1502, and in 1724 it is said "the old trees
- had mostly fallen." There can be little doubt that this great change in
- the vegetation affected not only the land-shells, causing eight species to
- become extinct, but likewise a multitude of insects.
- </p>
- <p>
- St. Helena, situated so remote from any continent, in the midst of a great
- ocean, and possessing a unique Flora, excites our curiosity. The eight
- land-shells, though now extinct, and one living Succinea, are peculiar
- species found nowhere else. Mr. Cuming, however, informs me that an
- English Helix is common here, its eggs no doubt having been imported in
- some of the many introduced plants. Mr. Cuming collected on the coast
- sixteen species of sea-shells, of which seven, as far as he knows, are
- confined to this island. Birds and insects, <a href="#linknote-214"
- name="linknoteref-214" id="linknoteref-214"><small>214</small></a> as
- might have been expected, are very few in number; indeed I believe all the
- birds have been introduced within late years. Partridges and pheasants are
- tolerably abundant; the island is much too English not to be subject to
- strict game-laws. I was told of a more unjust sacrifice to such ordinances
- than I ever heard of even in England. The poor people formerly used to
- burn a plant, which grows on the coast-rocks, and export the soda from its
- ashes; but a peremptory order came out prohibiting this practice, and
- giving as a reason that the partridges would have nowhere to build.
- </p>
- <p>
- In my walks I passed more than once over the grassy plain bounded by deep
- valleys, on which Longwood stands. Viewed from a short distance, it
- appears like a respectable gentleman's country-seat. In front there are a
- few cultivated fields, and beyond them the smooth hill of coloured rocks
- called the Flagstaff, and the rugged square black mass of the Barn. On the
- whole the view was rather bleak and uninteresting. The only inconvenience
- I suffered during my walks was from the impetuous winds. One day I noticed
- a curious circumstance; standing on the edge of a plain, terminated by a
- great cliff of about a thousand feet in depth, I saw at the distance of a
- few yards right to windward, some tern, struggling against a very strong
- breeze, whilst, where I stood, the air was quite calm. Approaching close
- to the brink, where the current seemed to be deflected upwards from the
- face of the cliff, I stretched out my arm, and immediately felt the full
- force of the wind: an invisible barrier, two yards in width, separated
- perfectly calm air from a strong blast.
- </p>
- <p>
- I so much enjoyed my rambles among the rocks and mountains of St. Helena,
- that I felt almost sorry on the morning of the 14th to descend to the
- town. Before noon I was on board, and the Beagle made sail.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 19th of July we reached Ascension. Those who have beheld a volcanic
- island, situated under an arid climate, will at once be able to picture to
- themselves the appearance of Ascension. They will imagine smooth conical
- hills of a bright red colour, with their summits generally truncated,
- rising separately out of a level surface of black rugged lava. A principal
- mound in the centre of the island, seems the father of the lesser cones.
- It is called Green Hill: its name being taken from the faintest tinge of
- that colour, which at this time of the year is barely perceptible from the
- anchorage. To complete the desolate scene, the black rocks on the coast
- are lashed by a wild and turbulent sea.
- </p>
- <p>
- The settlement is near the beach; it consists of several houses and
- barracks placed irregularly, but well built of white freestone. The only
- inhabitants are marines, and some negroes liberated from slave-ships, who
- are paid and victualled by government. There is not a private person on
- the island. Many of the marines appeared well contented with their
- situation; they think it better to serve their one-and-twenty years on
- shore, let it be what it may, than in a ship; in this choice, if I were a
- marine, I should most heartily agree.
- </p>
- <p>
- The next morning I ascended Green Hill, 2840 feet high, and thence walked
- across the island to the windward point. A good cart-road leads from the
- coast-settlement to the houses, gardens, and fields, placed near the
- summit of the central mountain. On the roadside there are milestones, and
- likewise cisterns, where each thirsty passer-by can drink some good water.
- Similar care is displayed in each part of the establishment, and
- especially in the management of the springs, so that a single drop of
- water may not be lost: indeed the whole island may be compared to a huge
- ship kept in first-rate order. I could not help, when admiring the active
- industry, which had created such effects out of such means, at the same
- time regretting that it had been wasted on so poor and trifling an end. M.
- Lesson has remarked with justice, that the English nation would have
- thought of making the island of Ascension a productive spot, any other
- people would have held it as a mere fortress in the ocean.
- </p>
- <p>
- Near this coast nothing grows; further inland, an occasional green
- castor-oil plant, and a few grasshoppers, true friends of the desert, may
- be met with. Some grass is scattered over the surface of the central
- elevated region, and the whole much resembles the worse parts of the Welsh
- mountains. But scanty as the pasture appears, about six hundred sheep,
- many goats, a few cows and horses, all thrive well on it. Of native
- animals, land-crabs and rats swarm in numbers. Whether the rat is really
- indigenous, may well be doubted; there are two varieties as described by
- Mr. Waterhouse; one is of a black colour, with fine glossy fur, and lives
- on the grassy summit, the other is brown-coloured and less glossy, with
- longer hairs, and lives near the settlement on the coast. Both these
- varieties are one-third smaller than the common black rat (M. rattus); and
- they differ from it both in the colour and character of their fur, but in
- no other essential respect. I can hardly doubt that these rats (like the
- common mouse, which has also run wild) have been imported, and, as at the
- Galapagos, have varied from the effect of the new conditions to which they
- have been exposed: hence the variety on the summit of the island differs
- from that on the coast. Of native birds there are none; but the
- guinea-fowl, imported from the Cape de Verd Islands, is abundant, and the
- common fowl has likewise run wild. Some cats, which were originally turned
- out to destroy the rats and mice, have increased, so as to become a great
- plague. The island is entirely without trees, in which, and in every other
- respect, it is very far inferior to St. Helena.
- </p>
- <p>
- One of my excursions took me towards the S. W. extremity of the island.
- The day was clear and hot, and I saw the island, not smiling with beauty,
- but staring with naked hideousness. The lava streams are covered with
- hummocks, and are rugged to a degree which, geologically speaking, is not
- of easy explanation. The intervening spaces are concealed with layers of
- pumice, ashes and volcanic tuff. Whilst passing this end of the island at
- sea, I could not imagine what the white patches were with which the whole
- plain was mottled; I now found that they were seafowl, sleeping in such
- full confidence, that even in midday a man could walk up and seize hold of
- them. These birds were the only living creatures I saw during the whole
- day. On the beach a great surf, although the breeze was light, came
- tumbling over the broken lava rocks.
- </p>
- <p>
- The geology of this island is in many respects interesting. In several
- places I noticed volcanic bombs, that is, masses of lava which have been
- shot through the air whilst fluid, and have consequently assumed a
- spherical or pear-shape. Not only their external form, but, in several
- cases, their internal structure shows in a very curious manner that they
- have revolved in their aerial course. The internal structure of one of
- these bombs, when broken, is represented very accurately in the woodcut.
- The central part is coarsely cellular, the cells decreasing in size
- towards the exterior; where there is a shell-like case about the third of
- an inch in thickness, of compact stone, which again is overlaid by the
- outside crust of finely cellular lava. I think there can be little doubt,
- first that the external crust cooled rapidly in the state in which we now
- see it; secondly, that the still fluid lava within, was packed by the
- centrifugal force, generated by the revolving of the bomb, against the
- external cooled crust, and so produced the solid shell of stone; and
- lastly, that the centrifugal force, by relieving the pressure in the more
- central parts of the bomb, allowed the heated vapours to expand their
- cells, thus forming the coarse cellular mass of the centre.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br /><a name="linkimage-0013" id="linkimage-0013"> </a>
- </p>
-<div class="fig" style="width:50%;">
- <img src="images/0529.jpg" alt="0529 " width="100%" /><br />
- </div>
- <h5>
- <a href="images/0529.jpg"><img src="images/enlarge.jpg" alt="" /> </a>
- </h5>
-
-<p>
-A hill, formed of the older series of volcanic rocks, and which has
-been incorrectly considered as the crater of a volcano, is remarkable
-from its broad, slightly hollowed, and circular summit having been
-filled up with many successive layers of ashes and fine scoriae. These
-saucer-shaped layers crop out on the margin, forming perfect rings of
-many different colours, giving to the summit a most fantastic
-appearance; one of these rings is white and broad, and resembles a
-course round which horses have been exercised; hence the hill has been
-called the Devil's Riding School. I brought away specimens of one of
-the tufaceous layers of a pinkish colour and it is a most extraordinary
-fact, that Professor Ehrenberg <a href="#linknote-215"
- name="linknoteref-215" id="linknoteref-215"><small>215</small></a>
-finds it almost wholly composed of
-matter which has been organized: he detects in it some
-siliceous-shielded fresh-water infusoria, and no less than twenty-five
-different kinds of the siliceous tissue of plants, chiefly of grasses.
-From the absence of all carbonaceous matter, Professor Ehrenberg
-believes that these organic bodies have passed through the volcanic
-fire, and have been erupted in the state in which we now see them. The
-appearance of the layers induced me to believe that they had been
-deposited under water, though from the extreme dryness of the climate I
-was forced to imagine, that torrents of rain had probably fallen during
-some great eruption, and that thus a temporary lake had been formed
-into which the ashes fell. But it may now be suspected that the lake
-was not a temporary one. Anyhow, we may feel sure, that at some former
-epoch the climate and productions of Ascension were very different from
-what they now are. Where on the face of the earth can we find a spot,
-on which close investigation will not discover signs of that endless
-cycle of change, to which this earth has been, is, and will be
-subjected?
-</p>
-
- <p>
- On leaving Ascension, we sailed for Bahia, on the coast of Brazil, in
- order to complete the chronometrical measurement of the world. We arrived
- there on August 1st, and stayed four days, during which I took several
- long walks. I was glad to find my enjoyment in tropical scenery had not
- decreased from the want of novelty, even in the slightest degree. The
- elements of the scenery are so simple, that they are worth mentioning, as
- a proof on what trifling circumstances exquisite natural beauty depends.
- </p>
- <p>
- The country may be described as a level plain of about three hundred feet
- in elevation, which in all parts has been worn into flat-bottomed valleys.
- This structure is remarkable in a granitic land, but is nearly universal
- in all those softer formations of which plains are usually composed. The
- whole surface is covered by various kinds of stately trees, interspersed
- with patches of cultivated ground, out of which houses, convents, and
- chapels arise. It must be remembered that within the tropics, the wild
- luxuriance of nature is not lost even in the vicinity of large cities: for
- the natural vegetation of the hedges and hill-sides overpowers in
- picturesque effect the artificial labour of man. Hence, there are only a
- few spots where the bright red soil affords a strong contrast with the
- universal clothing of green. From the edges of the plain there are distant
- views either of the ocean, or of the great Bay with its low-wooded shores,
- and on which numerous boats and canoes show their white sails. Excepting
- from these points, the scene is extremely limited; following the level
- pathways, on each hand, only glimpses into the wooded valleys below can be
- obtained. The houses I may add, and especially the sacred edifices, are
- built in a peculiar and rather fantastic style of architecture. They are
- all whitewashed; so that when illumined by the brilliant sun of midday,
- and as seen against the pale blue sky of the horizon, they stand out more
- like shadows than real buildings.
- </p>
- <p>
- Such are the elements of the scenery, but it is a hopeless attempt to
- paint the general effect. Learned naturalists describe these scenes of the
- tropics by naming a multitude of objects, and mentioning some
- characteristic feature of each. To a learned traveller this possibly may
- communicate some definite ideas: but who else from seeing a plant in an
- herbarium can imagine its appearance when growing in its native soil? Who
- from seeing choice plants in a hothouse, can magnify some into the
- dimensions of forest trees, and crowd others into an entangled jungle? Who
- when examining in the cabinet of the entomologist the gay exotic
- butterflies, and singular cicadas, will associate with these lifeless
- objects, the ceaseless harsh music of the latter, and the lazy flight of
- the former,&mdash;the sure accompaniments of the still, glowing noon-day
- of the tropics? It is when the sun has attained its greatest height, that
- such scenes should be viewed: then the dense splendid foliage of the mango
- hides the ground with its darkest shade, whilst the upper branches are
- rendered from the profusion of light of the most brilliant green. In the
- temperate zones the case is different&mdash;the vegetation there is not so
- dark or so rich, and hence the rays of the declining sun, tinged of a red,
- purple, or bright yellow color, add most to the beauties of those climes.
- </p>
- <p>
- When quietly walking along the shady pathways, and admiring each
- successive view, I wished to find language to express my ideas. Epithet
- after epithet was found too weak to convey to those who have not visited
- the intertropical regions, the sensation of delight which the mind
- experiences. I have said that the plants in a hothouse fail to communicate
- a just idea of the vegetation, yet I must recur to it. The land is one
- great wild, untidy, luxuriant hothouse, made by Nature for herself, but
- taken possession of by man, who has studded it with gay houses and formal
- gardens. How great would be the desire in every admirer of nature to
- behold, if such were possible, the scenery of another planet! yet to every
- person in Europe, it may be truly said, that at the distance of only a few
- degrees from his native soil, the glories of another world are opened to
- him. In my last walk I stopped again and again to gaze on these beauties,
- and endeavoured to fix in my mind for ever, an impression which at the
- time I knew sooner or later must fail. The form of the orange-tree, the
- cocoa-nut, the palm, the mango, the tree-fern, the banana, will remain
- clear and separate; but the thousand beauties which unite these into one
- perfect scene must fade away: yet they will leave, like a tale heard in
- childhood, a picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful figures.
- </p>
- <p>
- August 6th.&mdash;In the afternoon we stood out to sea, with the intention
- of making a direct course to the Cape de Verd Islands. Unfavourable winds,
- however, delayed us, and on the 12th we ran into Pernambuco,&mdash;a large
- city on the coast of Brazil, in latitude 8 degs. south. We anchored
- outside the reef; but in a short time a pilot came on board and took us
- into the inner harbour, where we lay close to the town.
- </p>
- <p>
- Pernambuco is built on some narrow and low sand-banks, which are separated
- from each other by shoal channels of salt water. The three parts of the
- town are connected together by two long bridges built on wooden piles. The
- town is in all parts disgusting, the streets being narrow, ill-paved, and
- filthy; the houses, tall and gloomy. The season of heavy rains had hardly
- come to an end, and hence the surrounding country, which is scarcely
- raised above the level of the sea, was flooded with water; and I failed in
- all my attempts to take walks.
- </p>
- <p>
- The flat swampy land on which Pernambuco stands is surrounded, at the
- distance of a few miles, by a semicircle of low hills, or rather by the
- edge of a country elevated perhaps two hundred feet above the sea. The old
- city of Olinda stands on one extremity of this range. One day I took a
- canoe, and proceeded up one of the channels to visit it; I found the old
- town from its situation both sweeter and cleaner than that of Pernambuco.
- I must here commemorate what happened for the first time during our nearly
- five years' wandering, namely, having met with a want of politeness. I was
- refused in a sullen manner at two different houses, and obtained with
- difficulty from a third, permission to pass through their gardens to an
- uncultivated hill, for the purpose of viewing the country. I feel glad
- that this happened in the land of the Brazilians, for I bear them no good
- will&mdash;a land also of slavery, and therefore of moral debasement. A
- Spaniard would have felt ashamed at the very thought of refusing such a
- request, or of behaving to a stranger with rudeness. The channel by which
- we went to and returned from Olinda, was bordered on each side by
- mangroves, which sprang like a miniature forest out of the greasy
- mud-banks. The bright green colour of these bushes always reminded me of
- the rank grass in a church-yard: both are nourished by putrid exhalations;
- the one speaks of death past, and the other too often of death to come.
- </p>
- <p>
- The most curious object which I saw in this neighbourhood, was the reef
- that forms the harbour. I doubt whether in the whole world any other
- natural structure has so artificial an appearance. <a href="#linknote-216"
- name="linknoteref-216" id="linknoteref-216"><small>216</small></a> It runs
- for a length of several miles in an absolutely straight line, parallel to,
- and not far distant from, the shore. It varies in width from thirty to
- sixty yards, and its surface is level and smooth; it is composed of
- obscurely stratified hard sandstone. At high water the waves break over
- it; at low water its summit is left dry, and it might then be mistaken for
- a breakwater erected by Cyclopean workmen. On this coast the currents of
- the sea tend to throw up in front of the land, long spits and bars of
- loose sand, and on one of these, part of the town of Pernambuco stands. In
- former times a long spit of this nature seems to have become consolidated
- by the percolation of calcareous matter, and afterwards to have been
- gradually upheaved; the outer and loose parts during this process having
- been worn away by the action of the sea, and the solid nucleus left as we
- now see it. Although night and day the waves of the open Atlantic, turbid
- with sediment, are driven against the steep outside edges of this wall of
- stone, yet the oldest pilots know of no tradition of any change in its
- appearance. This durability is much the most curious fact in its history:
- it is due to a tough layer, a few inches thick, of calcareous matter,
- wholly formed by the successive growth and death of the small shells of
- Serpulae, together with some few barnacles and nulliporae. These
- nulliporae, which are hard, very simply-organized sea-plants, play an
- analogous and important part in protecting the upper surfaces of
- coral-reefs, behind and within the breakers, where the true corals, during
- the outward growth of the mass, become killed by exposure to the sun and
- air. These insignificant organic beings, especially the Serpulae, have
- done good service to the people of Pernambuco; for without their
- protective aid the bar of sandstone would inevitably have been long ago
- worn away and without the bar, there would have been no harbour.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the 19th of August we finally left the shores of Brazil. I thank God, I
- shall never again visit a slave-country. To this day, if I hear a distant
- scream, it recalls with painful vividness my feelings, when passing a
- house near Pernambuco, I heard the most pitiable moans, and could not but
- suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew that I was as
- powerless as a child even to remonstrate. I suspected that these moans
- were from a tortured slave, for I was told that this was the case in
- another instance. Near Rio de Janeiro I lived opposite to an old lady, who
- kept screws to crush the fingers of her female slaves. I have stayed in a
- house where a young household mulatto, daily and hourly, was reviled,
- beaten, and persecuted enough to break the spirit of the lowest animal. I
- have seen a little boy, six or seven years old, struck thrice with a
- horse-whip (before I could interfere) on his naked head, for having handed
- me a glass of water not quite clean; I saw his father tremble at a mere
- glance from his master's eye. These latter cruelties were witnessed by me
- in a Spanish colony, in which it has always been said, that slaves are
- better treated than by the Portuguese, English, or other European nations.
- I have seen at Rio de Janeiro a powerful negro afraid to ward off a blow
- directed, as he thought, at his face. I was present when a kind-hearted
- man was on the point of separating forever the men, women, and little
- children of a large number of families who had long lived together. I will
- not even allude to the many heart-sickening atrocities which I
- authentically heard of;&mdash;nor would I have mentioned the above
- revolting details, had I not met with several people, so blinded by the
- constitutional gaiety of the negro as to speak of slavery as a tolerable
- evil. Such people have generally visited at the houses of the upper
- classes, where the domestic slaves are usually well treated, and they have
- not, like myself, lived amongst the lower classes. Such inquirers will ask
- slaves about their condition; they forget that the slave must indeed be
- dull, who does not calculate on the chance of his answer reaching his
- master's ears.
- </p>
- <p>
- It is argued that self-interest will prevent excessive cruelty; as if
- self-interest protected our domestic animals, which are far less likely
- than degraded slaves, to stir up the rage of their savage masters. It is
- an argument long since protested against with noble feeling, and
- strikingly exemplified, by the ever-illustrious Humboldt. It is often
- attempted to palliate slavery by comparing the state of slaves with our
- poorer countrymen: if the misery of our poor be caused not by the laws of
- nature, but by our institutions, great is our sin; but how this bears on
- slavery, I cannot see; as well might the use of the thumb-screw be
- defended in one land, by showing that men in another land suffered from
- some dreadful disease. Those who look tenderly at the slave owner, and
- with a cold heart at the slave, never seem to put themselves into the
- position of the latter; what a cheerless prospect, with not even a hope of
- change! picture to yourself the chance, ever hanging over you, of your
- wife and your little children&mdash;those objects which nature urges even
- the slave to call his own&mdash;being torn from you and sold like beasts
- to the first bidder! And these deeds are done and palliated by men, who
- profess to love their neighbours as themselves, who believe in God, and
- pray that his Will be done on earth! It makes one's blood boil, yet heart
- tremble, to think that we Englishmen and our American descendants, with
- their boastful cry of liberty, have been and are so guilty: but it is a
- consolation to reflect, that we at least have made a greater sacrifice,
- than ever made by any nation, to expiate our sin.
- </p>
- <p>
- On the last day of August we anchored for the second time at Porto Praya
- in the Cape de Verd archipelago; thence we proceeded to the Azores, where
- we stayed six days. On the 2nd of October we made the shore, of England;
- and at Falmouth I left the Beagle, having lived on board the good little
- vessel nearly five years.
- </p>
- <p>
- Our Voyage having come to an end, I will take a short retrospect of the
- advantages and disadvantages, the pains and pleasures, of our
- circumnavigation of the world. If a person asked my advice, before
- undertaking a long voyage, my answer would depend upon his possessing a
- decided taste for some branch of knowledge, which could by this means be
- advanced. No doubt it is a high satisfaction to behold various countries
- and the many races of mankind, but the pleasures gained at the time do not
- counterbalance the evils. It is necessary to look forward to a harvest,
- however distant that may be, when some fruit will be reaped, some good
- effected.
- </p>
- <p>
- Many of the losses which must be experienced are obvious; such as that of
- the society of every old friend, and of the sight of those places with
- which every dearest remembrance is so intimately connected. These losses,
- however, are at the time partly relieved by the exhaustless delight of
- anticipating the long wished-for day of return. If, as poets say, life is
- a dream, I am sure in a voyage these are the visions which best serve to
- pass away the long night. Other losses, although not at first felt, tell
- heavily after a period: these are the want of room, of seclusion, of rest;
- the jading feeling of constant hurry; the privation of small luxuries, the
- loss of domestic society and even of music and the other pleasures of
- imagination. When such trifles are mentioned, it is evident that the real
- grievances, excepting from accidents, of a sea-life are at an end. The
- short space of sixty years has made an astonishing difference in the
- facility of distant navigation. Even in the time of Cook, a man who left
- his fireside for such expeditions underwent severe privations. A yacht
- now, with every luxury of life, can circumnavigate the globe. Besides the
- vast improvements in ships and naval resources, the whole western shores
- of America are thrown open, and Australia has become the capital of a
- rising continent. How different are the circumstances to a man shipwrecked
- at the present day in the Pacific, to what they were in the time of Cook!
- Since his voyage a hemisphere has been added to the civilized world.
- </p>
- <p>
- If a person suffer much from sea-sickness, let him weigh it heavily in the
- balance. I speak from experience: it is no trifling evil, cured in a week.
- If, on the other hand, he take pleasure in naval tactics, he will
- assuredly have full scope for his taste. But it must be borne in mind, how
- large a proportion of the time, during a long voyage, is spent on the
- water, as compared with the days in harbour. And what are the boasted
- glories of the illimitable ocean. A tedious waste, a desert of water, as
- the Arabian calls it. No doubt there are some delightful scenes. A
- moonlight night, with the clear heavens and the dark glittering sea, and
- the white sails filled by the soft air of a gently blowing trade-wind, a
- dead calm, with the heaving surface polished like a mirror, and all still
- except the occasional flapping of the canvas. It is well once to behold a
- squall with its rising arch and coming fury, or the heavy gale of wind and
- mountainous waves. I confess, however, my imagination had painted
- something more grand, more terrific in the full-grown storm. It is an
- incomparably finer spectacle when beheld on shore, where the waving trees,
- the wild flight of the birds, the dark shadows and bright lights, the
- rushing of the torrents all proclaim the strife of the unloosed elements.
- At sea the albatross and little petrel fly as if the storm were their
- proper sphere, the water rises and sinks as if fulfilling its usual task,
- the ship alone and its inhabitants seem the objects of wrath. On a forlorn
- and weather-beaten coast, the scene is indeed different, but the feelings
- partake more of horror than of wild delight.
- </p>
- <p>
- Let us now look at the brighter side of the past time. The pleasure
- derived from beholding the scenery and the general aspect of the various
- countries we have visited, has decidedly been the most constant and
- highest source of enjoyment. It is probable that the picturesque beauty of
- many parts of Europe exceeds anything which we beheld. But there is a
- growing pleasure in comparing the character of the scenery in different
- countries, which to a certain degree is distinct from merely admiring its
- beauty. It depends chiefly on an acquaintance with the individual parts of
- each view. I am strongly induced to believe that as in music, the person
- who understands every note will, if he also possesses a proper taste, more
- thoroughly enjoy the whole, so he who examines each part of a fine view,
- may also thoroughly comprehend the full and combined effect. Hence, a
- traveller should be a botanist, for in all views plants form the chief
- embellishment. Group masses of naked rock, even in the wildest forms, and
- they may for a time afford a sublime spectacle, but they will soon grow
- monotonous. Paint them with bright and varied colours, as in Northern
- Chile, they will become fantastic; clothe them with vegetation, they must
- form a decent, if not a beautiful picture.
- </p>
- <p>
- When I say that the scenery of parts of Europe is probably superior to
- anything which we beheld, I except, as a class by itself, that of the
- intertropical zones. The two classes cannot be compared together; but I
- have already often enlarged on the grandeur of those regions. As the force
- of impressions generally depends on preconceived ideas, I may add, that
- mine were taken from the vivid descriptions in the Personal Narrative of
- Humboldt, which far exceed in merit anything else which I have read. Yet
- with these high-wrought ideas, my feelings were far from partaking of a
- tinge of disappointment on my first and final landing on the shores of
- Brazil.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind, none exceed in
- sublimity the primeval forests undefaced by the hand of man; whether those
- of Brazil, where the powers of Life are predominant, or those of Tierra
- del Fuego, where Death and decay prevail. Both are temples filled with the
- varied productions of the God of Nature:&mdash;no one can stand in these
- solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is more in man than the mere
- breath of his body. In calling up images of the past, I find that the
- plains of Patagonia frequently cross before my eyes; yet these plains are
- pronounced by all wretched and useless. They can be described only by
- negative characters; without habitations, without water, without trees,
- without mountains, they support merely a few dwarf plants. Why, then, and
- the case is not peculiar to myself, have these arid wastes taken so firm a
- hold on my memory? Why have not the still more level, the greener and more
- fertile Pampas, which are serviceable to mankind, produced an equal
- impression? I can scarcely analyze these feelings: but it must be partly
- owing to the free scope given to the imagination. The plains of Patagonia
- are boundless, for they are scarcely passable, and hence unknown: they
- bear the stamp of having lasted, as they are now, for ages, and there
- appears no limit to their duration through future time. If, as the
- ancients supposed, the flat earth was surrounded by an impassable breadth
- of water, or by deserts heated to an intolerable excess, who would not
- look at these last boundaries to man's knowledge with deep but ill-defined
- sensations?
- </p>
- <p>
- Lastly, of natural scenery, the views from lofty mountains, through
- certainly in one sense not beautiful, are very memorable. When looking
- down from the highest crest of the Cordillera, the mind, undisturbed by
- minute details, was filled with the stupendous dimensions of the
- surrounding masses.
- </p>
- <p>
- Of individual objects, perhaps nothing is more certain to create
- astonishment than the first sight in his native haunt of a barbarian&mdash;of
- man in his lowest and most savage state. One's mind hurries back over past
- centuries, and then asks, could our progenitors have been men like these?&mdash;men,
- whose very signs and expressions are less intelligible to us than those of
- the domesticated animals; men, who do not possess the instinct of those
- animals, nor yet appear to boast of human reason, or at least of arts
- consequent on that reason. I do not believe it is possible to describe or
- paint the difference between savage and civilized man. It is the
- difference between a wild and tame animal: and part of the interest in
- beholding a savage, is the same which would lead every one to desire to
- see the lion in his desert, the tiger tearing his prey in the jungle, or
- the rhinoceros wandering over the wild plains of Africa.
- </p>
- <p>
- Among the other most remarkable spectacles which we have beheld, may be
- ranked, the Southern Cross, the cloud of Magellan, and the other
- constellations of the southern hemisphere&mdash;the water-spout&mdash;the
- glacier leading its blue stream of ice, overhanging the sea in a bold
- precipice&mdash;a lagoon-island raised by the reef-building corals&mdash;an
- active volcano&mdash;and the overwhelming effects of a violent earthquake.
- These latter phenomena, perhaps, possess for me a peculiar interest, from
- their intimate connection with the geological structure of the world. The
- earthquake, however, must be to every one a most impressive event: the
- earth, considered from our earliest childhood as the type of solidity, has
- oscillated like a thin crust beneath our feet; and in seeing the laboured
- works of man in a moment overthrown, we feel the insignificance of his
- boasted power.
- </p>
- <p>
- It has been said, that the love of the chase is an inherent delight in man&mdash;a
- relic of an instinctive passion. If so, I am sure the pleasure of living
- in the open air, with the sky for a roof and the ground for a table, is
- part of the same feeling, it is the savage returning to his wild and
- native habits. I always look back to our boat cruises, and my land
- journeys, when through unfrequented countries, with an extreme delight,
- which no scenes of civilization could have created. I do not doubt that
- every traveller must remember the glowing sense of happiness which he
- experienced, when he first breathed in a foreign clime, where the
- civilized man had seldom or never trod.
- </p>
- <p>
- There are several other sources of enjoyment in a long voyage, which are
- of a more reasonable nature. The map of the world ceases to be a blank; it
- becomes a picture full of the most varied and animated figures. Each part
- assumes its proper dimensions: continents are not looked at in the light
- of islands, or islands considered as mere specks, which are, in truth,
- larger than many kingdoms of Europe. Africa, or North and South America,
- are well-sounding names, and easily pronounced; but it is not until having
- sailed for weeks along small portions of their shores, that one is
- thoroughly convinced what vast spaces on our immense world these names
- imply.
- </p>
- <p>
- From seeing the present state, it is impossible not to look forward with
- high expectations to the future progress of nearly an entire hemisphere.
- The march of improvement, consequent on the introduction of Christianity
- throughout the South Sea, probably stands by itself in the records of
- history. It is the more striking when we remember that only sixty years
- since, Cook, whose excellent judgment none will dispute, could foresee no
- prospect of a change. Yet these changes have now been effected by the
- philanthropic spirit of the British nation.
- </p>
- <p>
- In the same quarter of the globe Australia is rising, or indeed may be
- said to have risen, into a grand centre of civilization, which, at some
- not very remote period, will rule as empress over the southern hemisphere.
- It is impossible for an Englishman to behold these distant colonies,
- without a high pride and satisfaction. To hoist the British flag, seems to
- draw with it as a certain consequence, wealth, prosperity, and
- civilization.
- </p>
- <p>
- In conclusion, it appears to me that nothing can be more improving to a
- young naturalist, than a journey in distant countries. It both sharpens,
- and partly allays that want and craving, which, as Sir J. Herschel
- remarks, a man experiences although every corporeal sense be fully
- satisfied. The excitement from the novelty of objects, and the chance of
- success, stimulate him to increased activity. Moreover, as a number of
- isolated facts soon become uninteresting, the habit of comparison leads to
- generalization. On the other hand, as the traveller stays but a short time
- in each place, his descriptions must generally consist of mere sketches,
- instead of detailed observations. Hence arises, as I have found to my
- cost, a constant tendency to fill up the wide gaps of knowledge, by
- inaccurate and superficial hypotheses.
- </p>
- <p>
- But I have too deeply enjoyed the voyage, not to recommend any naturalist,
- although he must not expect to be so fortunate in his companions as I have
- been, to take all chances, and to start, on travels by land if possible,
- if otherwise, on a long voyage. He may feel assured, he will meet with no
- difficulties or dangers, excepting in rare cases, nearly so bad as he
- beforehand anticipates. In a moral point of view, the effect ought to be,
- to teach him good-humoured patience, freedom from selfishness, the habit
- of acting for himself, and of making the best of every occurrence. In
- short, he ought to partake of the characteristic qualities of most
- sailors. Travelling ought also to teach him distrust; but at the same time
- he will discover, how many truly kind-hearted people there are, with whom
- he never before had, or ever again will have any further communication,
- who yet are ready to offer him the most disinterested assistance.
- </p>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <hr />
- <p>
- <a name="link2H_FOOT" id="link2H_FOOT"> </a>
- </p>
- <div style="height: 4em;">
- <br /><br /><br /><br />
- </div>
- <h2>
- FOOTNOTES
- </h2>
- <blockquote>
- <p>
- EDITORS NOTE: All footnotes have been moved to the end of the file. This
- required renumbering each note to avoid conflcts in the hyperlinks to
- and from the text. DW
- </p>
- </blockquote>
- <p>
- <br /><br />
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-10" id="linknote-10"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 10 (<a href="#linknoteref-10">return</a>)<br /> [ I must take this
- opportunity of returning my sincere thanks to Mr. Bynoe, the surgeon of
- the Beagle, for his very kind attention to me when I was ill at
- Valparaiso.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-11" id="linknote-11"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 11 (<a href="#linknoteref-11">return</a>)<br /> [ I state this on the
- authority of Dr. E. Dieffenbach, in his German translation of the first
- edition of this Journal.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-12" id="linknote-12"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 12 (<a href="#linknoteref-12">return</a>)<br /> [ The Cape de Verd Islands
- were discovered in 1449. There was a tombstone of a bishop with the date
- of 1571; and a crest of a hand and dagger, dated 1497.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-13" id="linknote-13"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 13 (<a href="#linknoteref-13">return</a>)<br /> [ I must take this
- opportunity of acknowledging the great kindness with which this
- illustrious naturalist has examined many of my specimens. I have sent
- (June, 1845) a full account of the falling of this dust to the Geological
- Society.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-14" id="linknote-14"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 14 (<a href="#linknoteref-14">return</a>)<br /> [ So named according to
- Patrick Symes's nomenclature.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-15" id="linknote-15"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 15 (<a href="#linknoteref-15">return</a>)<br /> [ See Encyclop. of Anat.
- and Physiol., article Cephalopoda]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-16" id="linknote-16"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 16 (<a href="#linknoteref-16">return</a>)<br /> [ Mr. Horner and Sir David
- Brewster have described (Philosophical Transactions, 1836, p. 65) a
- singular "artificial substance resembling shell." It is deposited in fine,
- transparent, highly polished, brown-coloured laminae, possessing peculiar
- optical properties, on the inside of a vessel, in which cloth, first
- prepared with glue and then with lime, is made to revolve rapidly in
- water. It is much softer, more transparent, and contains more animal
- matter, than the natural incrustation at Ascension; but we here again see
- the strong tendency which carbonate of lime and animal matter evince to
- form a solid substance allied to shell.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-17" id="linknote-17"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 17 (<a href="#linknoteref-17">return</a>)<br /> [ Pers. Narr., vol. v., pt.
- 1., p. 18.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-18" id="linknote-18"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 18 (<a href="#linknoteref-18">return</a>)<br /> [ M. Montagne, in Comptes
- Rendus, etc., Juillet, 1844; and Annal. des Scienc. Nat., Dec. 1844]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-19" id="linknote-19"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 19 (<a href="#linknoteref-19">return</a>)<br /> [ M. Lesson (Voyage de la
- Coquille, tom. i., p. 255) mentions red water off Lima, apparently
- produced by the same cause. Peron, the distinguished naturalist, in the
- Voyage aux Terres Australes, gives no less than twelve references to
- voyagers who have alluded to the discoloured waters of the sea (vol. ii.
- p. 239). To the references given by Peron may be added, Humboldt's Pers.
- Narr., vol. vi. p. 804; Flinder's Voyage, vol. i. p. 92; Labillardiere,
- vol. i. p. 287; Ulloa's Voyage; Voyage of the Astrolabe and of the
- Coquille; Captain King's Survey of Australia, etc.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-21" id="linknote-21"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 21 (<a href="#linknoteref-21">return</a>)<br /> [ Venda, the Portuguese
- name for an inn.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-22" id="linknote-22"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 22 (<a href="#linknoteref-22">return</a>)<br /> [ Annales des Sciences
- Naturelles for 1833.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-23" id="linknote-23"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 23 (<a href="#linknoteref-23">return</a>)<br /> [ I have described and
- named these species in the Annals of Nat. Hist., vol. xiv. p. 241.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-24" id="linknote-24"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 24 (<a href="#linknoteref-24">return</a>)<br /> [ I am greatly indebted to
- Mr. Waterhouse for his kindness in naming for me this and many other
- insects, and giving me much valuable assistance.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-25" id="linknote-25"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 25 (<a href="#linknoteref-25">return</a>)<br /> [ Kirby's Entomology, vol.
- ii. p. 317.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-26" id="linknote-26"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 26 (<a href="#linknoteref-26">return</a>)<br /> [ Mr. Doubleday has lately
- described (before the Entomological Society, March 3rd, 1845) a peculiar
- structure in the wings of this butterfly, which seems to be the means of
- its making its noise. He says, "It is remarkable for having a sort of drum
- at the base of the fore wings, between the costal nervure and the
- subcostal. These two nervures, moreover, have a peculiar screw-like
- diaphragm or vessel in the interior." I find in Langsdorff's travels (in
- the years 1803-7, p. 74) it is said, that in the island of St. Catherine's
- on the coast of Brazil, a butterfly called Februa Hoffmanseggi, makes a
- noise, when flying away, like a rattle.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-27" id="linknote-27"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 27 (<a href="#linknoteref-27">return</a>)<br /> [ I may mention, as a
- common instance of one day's (June 23rd) collecting, when I was not
- attending particularly to the Coleoptera, that I caught sixty-eight
- species of that order. Among these, there were only two of the Carabidae,
- four Brachelytra, fifteen Rhyncophora, and fourteen of the Chrysomelidae.
- Thirty-seven species of Arachnidae, which I brought home, will be
- sufficient to prove that I was not paying overmuch attention to the
- generally favoured order of Coleoptera.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-28" id="linknote-28"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 28 (<a href="#linknoteref-28">return</a>)<br /> [ In a MS. in the British
- Museum by Mr. Abbott, who made his observations in Georgia; see Mr. A.
- White's paper in the "Annals of Nat. Hist.," vol. vii. p. 472. Lieut.
- Hutton has described a sphex with similar habits in India, in the "Journal
- of the Asiatic Society," vol. i. p. 555.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-29" id="linknote-29"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 29 (<a href="#linknoteref-29">return</a>)<br /> [ Don Felix Azara (vol. i.
- p. 175), mentioning a hymenopterous insect, probably of the same genus,
- says he saw it dragging a dead spider through tall grass, in a straight
- line to its nest, which was one hundred and sixty-three paces distant. He
- adds that the wasp, in order to find the road, every now and then made
- "demi-tours d'environ trois palmes."]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-210" id="linknote-210"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 210 (<a href="#linknoteref-210">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara's Voyage, vol. i.
- p. 213]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-31" id="linknote-31"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 31 (<a href="#linknoteref-31">return</a>)<br /> [ Hearne's Journey, p.
- 383.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-32" id="linknote-32"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 32 (<a href="#linknoteref-32">return</a>)<br /> [ Maclaren, art. "America,"
- Encyclop. Brittann.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-33" id="linknote-33"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 33 (<a href="#linknoteref-33">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara says, "Je crois que
- la quantite annuelle des pluies est, dans toutes ces contrees, plus
- considerable qu'en Espagne."&mdash;Vol. i. p. 36.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-34" id="linknote-34"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 34 (<a href="#linknoteref-34">return</a>)<br /> [ In South America I
- collected altogether twenty-seven species of mice, and thirteen more are
- known from the works of Azara and other authors. Those collected by myself
- have been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse at the meetings of the
- Zoological Society. I must be allowed to take this opportunity of
- returning my cordial thanks to Mr. Waterhouse, and to the other gentleman
- attached to that Society, for their kind and most liberal assistance on
- all occasions.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-35" id="linknote-35"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 35 (<a href="#linknoteref-35">return</a>)<br /> [ In the stomach and
- duodenum of a capybara which I opened I found a very large quantity of a
- thin yellowish fluid, in which scarcely a fibre could be distinguished.
- Mr. Owen informs me that a part of the oesophagus is so constructed that
- nothing much larger than a crowquill can be passed down. Certainly the
- broad teeth and strong jaws of this animal are well fitted to grind into
- pulp the aquatic plants on which it feeds.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-36" id="linknote-36"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 36 (<a href="#linknoteref-36">return</a>)<br /> [ At the R. Negro, in
- Northern Patagonia, there is an animal of the same habits, and probably a
- closely allied species, but which I never saw. Its noise is different from
- that of the Maldonado kind; it is repeated only twice instead of three or
- four times, and is more distinct and sonorous; when heard from a distance
- it so closely resembles the sound made in cutting down a small tree with
- an axe, that I have sometimes remained in doubt concerning it.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-37" id="linknote-37"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 37 (<a href="#linknoteref-37">return</a>)<br /> [ Philosoph. Zoolog., tom.
- i. p. 242.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-38" id="linknote-38"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 38 (<a href="#linknoteref-38">return</a>)<br /> [ Magazine of Zoology and
- Botany, vol. i. p. 217.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-39" id="linknote-39"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 39 (<a href="#linknoteref-39">return</a>)<br /> [ Read before the Academy
- of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut, 1834, p. 418.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-310" id="linknote-310"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 310 (<a href="#linknoteref-310">return</a>)<br /> [ Geolog. Transact. vol.
- ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph. Transact. (1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has
- described some imperfect siliceous tubes and a melted pebble of quartz,
- found in digging into the ground, under a tree, where a man had been
- killed by lightning.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-311" id="linknote-311"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 311 (<a href="#linknoteref-311">return</a>)<br /> [ Annals de Chimie et de
- Physique, tom. xxxvii. p. 319.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-312" id="linknote-312"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 312 (<a href="#linknoteref-312">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara's Voyage, vol. i.
- p. 36.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-41" id="linknote-41"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 41 (<a href="#linknoteref-41">return</a>)<br /> [ The corral is an
- enclosure made of tall and strong stakes. Every estancia, or farming
- estate, has one attached to it.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-42" id="linknote-42"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 42 (<a href="#linknoteref-42">return</a>)<br /> [ The hovels of the Indians
- are thus called.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-43" id="linknote-43"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 43 (<a href="#linknoteref-43">return</a>)<br /> [ Report of the Agricult.
- Chem. Assoc. in the Agricult. Gazette, 1845, p. 93.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-44" id="linknote-44"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 44 (<a href="#linknoteref-44">return</a>)<br /> [ Linnaean Trans., vol. xi.
- p. 205. It is remarkable how all the circumstances connected with the
- salt-lakes in Siberia and Patagonia are similar. Siberia, like Patagonia,
- appears to have been recently elevated above the waters of the sea. In
- both countries the salt-lakes occupy shallow depressions in the plains; in
- both the mud on the borders is black and fetid; beneath the crust of
- common salt, sulphate of soda or of magnesium occurs, imperfectly
- crystallized; and in both, the muddy sand is mixed with lentils of gypsum.
- The Siberian salt-lakes are inhabited by small crustaceous animals; and
- flamingoes (Edin. New Philos. Jour., Jan 1830) likewise frequent them. As
- these circumstances, apparently so trifling, occur in two distant
- continents, we may feel sure that they are the necessary results of a
- common cause&mdash; See Pallas's Travels, 1793 to 1794, pp. 129 - 134.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-45" id="linknote-45"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 45 (<a href="#linknoteref-45">return</a>)<br /> [ I am bound to express in
- the strongest terms, my obligation to the government of Buenos Ayres for
- the obliging manner in which passports to all parts of the country were
- given me, as naturalist of the Beagle.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-46" id="linknote-46"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 46 (<a href="#linknoteref-46">return</a>)<br /> [ This prophecy has turned
- out entirely and miserably wrong. 1845.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-47" id="linknote-47"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 47 (<a href="#linknoteref-47">return</a>)<br /> [ Voyage dans l'Amerique
- Merid. par M. A. d'Orbigny. Part. Hist. tom. i. p. 664.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-51" id="linknote-51"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 51 (<a href="#linknoteref-51">return</a>)<br /> [ Since this was written,
- M. Alcide d'Orbingy has examined these shells, and pronounces them all to
- be recent.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-52" id="linknote-52"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 52 (<a href="#linknoteref-52">return</a>)<br /> [ M. Aug. Bravard has
- described, in a Spanish work ('Observaciones Geologicas,' 1857), this
- district, and he believes that the bones of the extinct mammals were
- washed out of the underlying Pampean deposit, and subsequently became
- embedded with the still existing shells; but I am not convinced by his
- remarks. M. Bravard believes that the whole enormous Pampean deposit is a
- sub-aerial formation, like sand-dunes: this seems to me to be an untenable
- doctrine.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-53" id="linknote-53"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 53 (<a href="#linknoteref-53">return</a>)<br /> [ Principles of Geology,
- vol. iv. p. 40.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-54" id="linknote-54"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 54 (<a href="#linknoteref-54">return</a>)<br /> [ This theory was first
- developed in the Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, and subsequently in
- Professor Owen's Memoir on Mylodon robustus.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-55" id="linknote-55"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 55 (<a href="#linknoteref-55">return</a>)<br /> [ I mean this to exclude
- the total amount which may have been successively produced and consumed
- during a given period.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-56" id="linknote-56"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 56 (<a href="#linknoteref-56">return</a>)<br /> [ Travels in the Interior
- of South Africa, vol. ii. p. 207]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-57" id="linknote-57"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 57 (<a href="#linknoteref-57">return</a>)<br /> [ The elephant which was
- killed at Exeter Change was estimated (being partly weighed) at five tons
- and a half. The elephant actress, as I was informed, weighed one ton less;
- so that we may take five as the average of a full-grown elephant. I was
- told at the Surry Gardens, that a hippopotamus which was sent to England
- cut up into pieces was estimated at three tons and a half; we will call it
- three. From these premises we may give three tons and a half to each of
- the five rhinoceroses; perhaps a ton to the giraffe, and half to the bos
- caffer as well as to the elan (a large ox weighs from 1200 to 1500
- pounds). This will give an average (from the above estimates) of 2.7 of a
- ton for the ten largest herbivorous animals of Southern Africa. In South
- America, allowing 1200 pounds for the two tapirs together, 550 for the
- guanaco and vicuna, 500 for three deer, 300 for the capybara, peccari, and
- a monkey, we shall have an average of 250 pounds, which I believe is
- overstating the result. The ratio will therefore be as 6048 to 250, or 24
- to 1, for the ten largest animals from the two continents.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-58" id="linknote-58"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 58 (<a href="#linknoteref-58">return</a>)<br /> [ If we suppose the case of
- the discovery of a skeleton of a Greenland whale in a fossil state, not a
- single cetaceous animal being known to exist, what naturalist would have
- ventured conjecture on the possibility of a carcass so gigantic being
- supported on the minute crustacea and mollusca living in the frozen seas
- of the extreme North?]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-59" id="linknote-59"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 59 (<a href="#linknoteref-59">return</a>)<br /> [ See Zoological Remarks to
- Capt. Back's Expedition, by Dr. Richardson. He says, "The subsoil north of
- latitude 56 degs. is perpetually frozen, the thaw on the coast not
- penetrating above three feet, and at Bear Lake, in latitude 64 degs., not
- more than twenty inches. The frozen substratum does not of itself destroy
- vegetation, for forests flourish on the surface, at a distance from the
- coast."]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-510" id="linknote-510"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 510 (<a href="#linknoteref-510">return</a>)<br /> [ See Humboldt, Fragments
- Asiatiques, p. 386: Barton's Geography of Plants: and Malte Brun. In the
- latter work it is said that the limit of the growth of trees in Siberia
- may be drawn under the parallel of 70 degs.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-511" id="linknote-511"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 511 (<a href="#linknoteref-511">return</a>)<br /> [ Sturt's Travels, vol.
- ii. p. 74.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-512" id="linknote-512"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 512 (<a href="#linknoteref-512">return</a>)<br /> [ A Gaucho assured me
- that he had once seen a snow-white or Albino variety, and that it was a
- most beautiful bird.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-513" id="linknote-513"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 513 (<a href="#linknoteref-513">return</a>)<br /> [ Burchell's Travels,
- vol. i. p. 280.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-514" id="linknote-514"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 514 (<a href="#linknoteref-514">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara, vol. iv. p.
- 173.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-515" id="linknote-515"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 515 (<a href="#linknoteref-515">return</a>)<br /> [ Lichtenstein, however,
- asserts (Travels, vol. ii. p. 25) that the hens begin sitting when they
- have laid ten or twelve eggs; and that they continue laying, I presume, in
- another nest. This appears to me very improbable. He asserts that four or
- five hens associate for incubation with one cock, who sits only at night.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-516" id="linknote-516"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 516 (<a href="#linknoteref-516">return</a>)<br /> [ When at the Rio Negro,
- we heard much of the indefatigable labours of this naturalist. M. Alcide
- d'Orbigny, during the years 1825 to 1833, traversed several large portions
- of South America, and has made a collection, and is now publishing the
- results on a scale of magnificence, which at once places himself in the
- list of American travellers second only to Humboldt.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-517" id="linknote-517"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 517 (<a href="#linknoteref-517">return</a>)<br /> [ Account of the
- Abipones, A.D. 1749, vol. i. (English Translation) p. 314]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-518" id="linknote-518"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 518 (<a href="#linknoteref-518">return</a>)<br /> [ M. Bibron calls it T.
- crepitans.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-519" id="linknote-519"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 519 (<a href="#linknoteref-519">return</a>)<br /> [ The cavities leading
- from the fleshy compartments of the extremity, were filled with a yellow
- pulpy matter, which, examined under a microscope, presented an
- extraordinary appearance. The mass consisted of rounded, semi-transparent,
- irregular grains, aggregated together into particles of various sizes. All
- such particles, and the separate grains, possessed the power of rapid
- movement; generally revolving around different axes, but sometimes
- progressive. The movement was visible with a very weak power, but even
- with the highest its cause could not be perceived. It was very different
- from the circulation of the fluid in the elastic bag, containing the thin
- extremity of the axis. On other occasions, when dissecting small marine
- animals beneath the microscope, I have seen particles of pulpy matter,
- some of large size, as soon as they were disengaged, commence revolving. I
- have imagined, I know not with how much truth, that this granulo-pulpy
- matter was in process of being converted into ova. Certainly in this
- zoophyte such appeared to be the case.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-520" id="linknote-520"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 520 (<a href="#linknoteref-520">return</a>)<br /> [ Kerr's Collection of
- Voyages, vol. viii. p. 119.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-521" id="linknote-521"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 521 (<a href="#linknoteref-521">return</a>)<br /> [ Purchas's Collection of
- Voyages. I believe the date was really 1537.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-522" id="linknote-522"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 522 (<a href="#linknoteref-522">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara has even doubted
- whether the Pampas Indians ever used bows.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-61" id="linknote-61"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 61 (<a href="#linknoteref-61">return</a>)<br /> [ I call these
- thistle-stalks for the want of a more correct name. I believe it is a
- species of Eryngium.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-62" id="linknote-62"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 62 (<a href="#linknoteref-62">return</a>)<br /> [ Travels in Africa, p.
- 233.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-63" id="linknote-63"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 63 (<a href="#linknoteref-63">return</a>)<br /> [ Two species of Tinamus
- and Eudromia elegans of A. d'Orbigny, which can only be called a partridge
- with regard to its habits.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-64" id="linknote-64"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 64 (<a href="#linknoteref-64">return</a>)<br /> [ History of the Abipones,
- vol. ii. p. 6.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-65" id="linknote-65"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 65 (<a href="#linknoteref-65">return</a>)<br /> [ Falconer's Patagonia, p.
- 70.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-66" id="linknote-66"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 66 (<a href="#linknoteref-66">return</a>)<br /> [ Fauna Boreali-Americana,
- vol. i. p. 35.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-67" id="linknote-67"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 67 (<a href="#linknoteref-67">return</a>)<br /> [ See Mr. Atwater's account
- of the Prairies, in Silliman's N. A. Journal, vol. i. p. 117.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-68" id="linknote-68"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 68 (<a href="#linknoteref-68">return</a>)<br /> [ Azara's Voyages, vol. i.
- p. 373.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-69" id="linknote-69"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 69 (<a href="#linknoteref-69">return</a>)<br /> [ M. A. d'Orbigny (vol. i.
- p. 474) says that the cardoon and artichoke are both found wild. Dr.
- Hooker (Botanical Magazine, vol. iv. p. 2862), has described a variety of
- the Cynara from this part of South America under the name of inermis. He
- states that botanists are now generally agreed that the cardoon and the
- artichoke are varieties of one plant. I may add, that an intelligent
- farmer assured me that he had observed in a deserted garden some
- artichokes changing into the common cardoon. Dr. Hooker believes that
- Head's vivid description of the thistle of the Pampas applies to the
- cardoon, but this is a mistake. Captain Head referred to the plant, which
- I have mentioned a few lines lower down, under the title of giant thistle.
- Whether it is a true thistle I do not know; but it is quite different from
- the cardoon; and more like a thistle properly so called.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-610" id="linknote-610"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 610 (<a href="#linknoteref-610">return</a>)<br /> [ It is said to contain
- 60,000 inhabitants. Monte Video, the second town of importance on the
- banks of the Plata, has 15,000.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-71" id="linknote-71"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 71 (<a href="#linknoteref-71">return</a>)<br /> [ The bizcacha (Lagostomus
- trichodactylus) somewhat resembles a large rabbit, but with bigger gnawing
- teeth and a long tail; it has, however, only three toes behind, like the
- agouti. During the last three or four years the skins of these animals
- have been sent to England for the sake of the fur.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-72" id="linknote-72"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 72 (<a href="#linknoteref-72">return</a>)<br /> [ Journal of Asiatic Soc.,
- vol. v. p. 363.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-73" id="linknote-73"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 73 (<a href="#linknoteref-73">return</a>)<br /> [ I need hardly state here
- that there is good evidence against any horse living in America at the
- time of Columbus.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-74" id="linknote-74"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 74 (<a href="#linknoteref-74">return</a>)<br /> [ Cuvier. Ossemens Fossils,
- tom. i. p. 158.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-75" id="linknote-75"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 75 (<a href="#linknoteref-75">return</a>)<br /> [ This is the geographical
- division followed by Lichtenstein, Swainson, Erichson, and Richardson. The
- section from Vera Cruz to Acapulco, given by Humboldt in the Polit. Essay
- on Kingdom of N. Spain will show how immense a barrier the Mexican
- table-land forms. Dr. Richardson, in his admirable Report on the Zoology
- of N. America read before the Brit. Assoc. 1836 (p. 157), talking of the
- identification of a Mexican animal with the Synetheres prehensilis, says,
- "We do not know with what propriety, but if correct, it is, if not a
- solitary instance, at least very nearly so, of a rodent animal being
- common to North and South America."]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-76" id="linknote-76"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 76 (<a href="#linknoteref-76">return</a>)<br /> [ See Dr. Richardson's
- Report, p. 157; also L'Institut, 1837, p. 253. Cuvier says the kinkajou is
- found in the larger Antilles, but this is doubtful. M. Gervais states that
- the Didelphis crancrivora is found there. It is certain that the West
- Indies possess some mammifers peculiar to themselves. A tooth of a
- mastadon has been brought from Bahama; Edin. New Phil. Journ., 1826, p.
- 395.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-77" id="linknote-77"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 77 (<a href="#linknoteref-77">return</a>)<br /> [ See the admirable
- Appendix by Dr. Buckland to Beechey's Voyage; also the writings of
- Chamisso in Kotzebue's Voyage.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-78" id="linknote-78"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 78 (<a href="#linknoteref-78">return</a>)<br /> [ In Captain Owen's
- Surveying Voyage (vol. ii. p. 274) there is a curious account of the
- effects of a drought on the elephants, at Benguela (west coast of Africa).
- "A number of these animals had some time since entered the town, in a
- body, to possess themselves of the wells, not being able to procure any
- water in the country. The inhabitants mustered, when a desperate conflict
- ensued, which terminated in the ultimate discomfiture of the invaders, but
- not until they had killed one man, and wounded several others." The town
- is said to have a population of nearly three thousand! Dr. Malcolmson
- informs me that, during a great drought in India, the wild animals entered
- the tents of some troops at Ellore, and that a hare drank out of a vessel
- held by the adjutant of the regiment.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-79" id="linknote-79"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 79 (<a href="#linknoteref-79">return</a>)<br /> [ Travels, vol. i. p. 374.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-710" id="linknote-710"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 710 (<a href="#linknoteref-710">return</a>)<br /> [ These droughts to a
- certain degree seem to be almost periodical; I was told the dates of
- several others, and the intervals were about fifteen years.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-81" id="linknote-81"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 81 (<a href="#linknoteref-81">return</a>)<br /> [ Mr. Waterhouse has drawn
- up a detailed description of this head, which I hope he will publish in
- some Journal.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-82" id="linknote-82"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 82 (<a href="#linknoteref-82">return</a>)<br /> [ A nearly similar
- abnormal, but I do not know whether hereditary, structure has been
- observed in the carp, and likewise in the crocodile of the Ganges:
- Histoire des Anomalies, par M. Isid. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, tom. i. p.
- 244.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-83" id="linknote-83"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 83 (<a href="#linknoteref-83">return</a>)<br /> [ M. A. d'Orbigny has given
- nearly a similar account of these dogs, tom. i. p. 175.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-84" id="linknote-84"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 84 (<a href="#linknoteref-84">return</a>)<br /> [ I must express my
- obligations to Mr. Keane, at whose house I was staying on the Berquelo,
- and to Mr. Lumb at Buenos Ayres, for without their assistance these
- valuable remains would never have reached England.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-85" id="linknote-85"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 85 (<a href="#linknoteref-85">return</a>)<br /> [ Lyell's Principles of
- Geology, vol. iii. p. 63.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-86" id="linknote-86"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 86 (<a href="#linknoteref-86">return</a>)<br /> [ The flies which
- frequently accompany a ship for some days on its passage from harbour to
- harbour, wandering from the vessel, are soon lost, and all disappear.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-87" id="linknote-87"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 87 (<a href="#linknoteref-87">return</a>)<br /> [ Mr. Blackwall, in his
- Researches in Zoology, has many excellent observations on the habits of
- spiders.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-88" id="linknote-88"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 88 (<a href="#linknoteref-88">return</a>)<br /> [ An abstract is given in
- No. IV. of the Magazine of Zoology and Botany.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-89" id="linknote-89"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 89 (<a href="#linknoteref-89">return</a>)<br /> [ I found here a species of
- cactus, described by Professor Henslow, under the name of Opuntia Darwinii
- (Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 466), which was remarkable for
- the irritability of the stamens, when I inserted either a piece of stick
- or the end of my finger in the flower. The segments of the perianth also
- closed on the pistil, but more slowly than the stamens. Plants of this
- family, generally considered as tropical, occur in North America (Lewis
- and Clarke's Travels, p. 221), in the same high latitude as here, namely,
- in both cases, in 47 degs.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-810" id="linknote-810"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 810 (<a href="#linknoteref-810">return</a>)<br /> [ These insects were not
- uncommon beneath stones. I found one cannibal scorpion quietly devouring
- another.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-811" id="linknote-811"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 811 (<a href="#linknoteref-811">return</a>)<br /> [ Shelley, Lines on Mt.
- Blanc.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-812" id="linknote-812"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 812 (<a href="#linknoteref-812">return</a>)<br /> [ I have lately heard
- that Capt. Sulivan, R.N., has found numerous fossil bones, embedded in
- regular strata, on the banks of the R. Gallegos, in lat. 51 degs. 4'. Some
- of the bones are large; others are small, and appear to have belonged to
- an armadillo. This is a most interesting and important discovery.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-813" id="linknote-813"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 813 (<a href="#linknoteref-813">return</a>)<br /> [ See the excellent
- remarks on this subject by Mr. Lyell, in his Principles of Geology.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-91" id="linknote-91"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 91 (<a href="#linknoteref-91">return</a>)<br /> [ The desserts of Syria are
- characterized, according to Volney (tom. i. p. 351), by woody bushes,
- numerous rats, gazelles and hares. In the landscape of Patagonia, the
- guanaco replaces the gazelle, and the agouti the hare.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-92" id="linknote-92"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 92 (<a href="#linknoteref-92">return</a>)<br /> [ I noticed that several
- hours before any one of the condors died, all the lice, with which it was
- infested, crawled to the outside feathers. I was assured that this always
- happens.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-93" id="linknote-93"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 93 (<a href="#linknoteref-93">return</a>)<br /> [ London's Magazine of Nat.
- Hist., vol. vii.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-94" id="linknote-94"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 94 (<a href="#linknoteref-94">return</a>)<br /> [ From accounts published
- since our voyage, and more especially from several interesting letters
- from Capt. Sulivan, R. N., employed on the survey, it appears that we took
- an exaggerated view of the badness of the climate on these islands. But
- when I reflect on the almost universal covering of peat, and on the fact
- of wheat seldom ripening here, I can hardly believe that the climate in
- summer is so fine and dry as it has lately been represented.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-95" id="linknote-95"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 95 (<a href="#linknoteref-95">return</a>)<br /> [ Lesson's Zoology of the
- Voyage of the Coquille, tom. i. p. 168. All the early voyagers, and
- especially Bougainville, distinctly state that the wolf-like fox was the
- only native animal on the island. The distinction of the rabbit as a
- species, is taken from peculiarities in the fur, from the shape of the
- head, and from the shortness of the ears. I may here observe that the
- difference between the Irish and English hare rests upon nearly similar
- characters, only more strongly marked.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-96" id="linknote-96"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 96 (<a href="#linknoteref-96">return</a>)<br /> [ I have reason, however,
- to suspect that there is a field- mouse. The common European rat and mouse
- have roamed far from the habitations of the settlers. The common hog has
- also run wild on one islet; all are of a black colour: the boars are very
- fierce, and have great trunks.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-97" id="linknote-97"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 97 (<a href="#linknoteref-97">return</a>)<br /> [ The "culpeu" is the Canis
- Magellanicus brought home by Captain King from the Strait of Magellan. It
- is common in Chile.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-98" id="linknote-98"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 98 (<a href="#linknoteref-98">return</a>)<br /> [ Pernety, Voyage aux Isles
- Malouines, p. 526.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-99" id="linknote-99"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 99 (<a href="#linknoteref-99">return</a>)<br /> [ "Nous n'avons pas ete
- moins saisis d'etonnement a la vue de l'innombrable quantite de pierres de
- touts grandeurs, bouleversees les unes sur les autres, et cependent
- rangees, comme si elles avoient ete amoncelees negligemment pour remplir
- des ravins. On ne se lassoit pas d'admirer les effets prodigieux de la
- nature."&mdash;Pernety, p. 526.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-910" id="linknote-910"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 910 (<a href="#linknoteref-910">return</a>)<br /> [ An inhabitant of
- Mendoza, and hence well capable of judging, assured me that, during the
- several years he had resided on these islands, he had never felt the
- slightest shock of an earthquake.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-911" id="linknote-911"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 911 (<a href="#linknoteref-911">return</a>)<br /> [ I was surprised to
- find, on counting the eggs of a large white Doris (this sea-slug was three
- and a half inches long), how extraordinarily numerous they were. From two
- to five eggs (each three- thousandths of an inch in diameter) were
- contained in spherical little case. These were arranged two deep in
- transverse rows forming a ribbon. The ribbon adhered by its edge to the
- rock in an oval spire. One which I found, measured nearly twenty inches in
- length and half in breadth. By counting how many balls were contained in a
- tenth of an inch in the row, and how many rows in an equal length of the
- ribbon, on the most moderate computation there were six hundred thousand
- eggs. Yet this Doris was certainly not very common; although I was often
- searching under the stones, I saw only seven individuals. No fallacy is
- more common with naturalists, than that the numbers of an individual
- species depend on its powers of propagation.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-101" id="linknote-101"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 101 (<a href="#linknoteref-101">return</a>)<br /> [ This substance, when
- dry, is tolerably compact, and of little specific gravity: Professor
- Ehrenberg has examined it: he states (Konig Akad. der Wissen: Berlin, Feb.
- 1845) that it is composed of infusoria, including fourteen polygastrica,
- and four phytolitharia. He says that they are all inhabitants of
- fresh-water; this is a beautiful example of the results obtainable through
- Professor Ehrenberg's microscopic researches; for Jemmy Button told me
- that it is always collected at the bottoms of mountain-brooks. It is,
- moreover, a striking fact that in the geographical distribution of the
- infusoria, which are well known to have very wide ranges, that all the
- species in this substance, although brought from the extreme southern
- point of Tierra del Fuego, are old, known forms.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-102" id="linknote-102"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 102 (<a href="#linknoteref-102">return</a>)<br /> [ One day, off the East
- coast of Tierra del Fuego, we saw a grand sight in several spermaceti
- whales jumping upright quite out of the water, with the exception of their
- tail-fins. As they fell down sideways, they splashed the water high up,
- and the sound reverberated like a distant broadside.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-103" id="linknote-103"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 103 (<a href="#linknoteref-103">return</a>)<br /> [ Captain Sulivan, who,
- since his voyage in the Beagle, has been employed on the survey of the
- Falkland Islands, heard from a sealer in (1842?), that when in the western
- part of the Strait of Magellan, he was astonished by a native woman coming
- on board, who could talk some English. Without doubt this was Fuega
- Basket. She lived (I fear the term probably bears a double interpretation)
- some days on board.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-111" id="linknote-111"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 111 (<a href="#linknoteref-111">return</a>)<br /> [ The south-westerly
- breezes are generally very dry. January 29th, being at anchor under Cape
- Gregory: a very hard gale from W. by S., clear sky with few cumuli;
- temperature 57 degs., dew-point 36 degs.,&mdash;difference 21 degs. On
- January 15th, at Port St. Julian: in the morning, light winds with much
- rain, followed by a very heavy squall with rain,&mdash;settled into heavy
- gale with large cumuli,&mdash;cleared up, blowing very strong from S.S.W.
- Temperature 60 degs., dew-point 42 degs.,&mdash;difference 18 degs.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-112" id="linknote-112"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 112 (<a href="#linknoteref-112">return</a>)<br /> [ Rengger, Natur. der
- Saeugethiere von Paraguay. S. 334.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-113" id="linknote-113"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 113 (<a href="#linknoteref-113">return</a>)<br /> [ Captain Fitz Roy
- informs me that in April (our October), the leaves of those trees which
- grow near the base of the mountains change colour, but not those on the
- more elevated parts. I remember having read some observations, showing
- that in England the leaves fall earlier in a warm and fine autumn than in
- a late and cold one, The change in the colour being here retarded in the
- more elevated, and therefore colder situations, must be owing to the same
- general law of vegetation. The trees of Tierra del Fuego during no part of
- the year entirely shed their leaves.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-114" id="linknote-114"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 114 (<a href="#linknoteref-114">return</a>)<br /> [ Described from my
- specimens and notes by the Rev. J. M. Berkeley, in the Linnean
- Transactions (vol. xix. p. 37), under the name of Cyttaria Darwinii; the
- Chilean species is the C. Berteroii. This genus is allied to Bulgaria.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-115" id="linknote-115"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 115 (<a href="#linknoteref-115">return</a>)<br /> [ I believe I must except
- one alpine Haltica, and a single specimen of a Melasoma. Mr. Waterhouse
- informs me, that of the Harpalidae there are eight or nine species&mdash;the
- forms of the greater number being very peculiar; of Heteromera, four or
- five species; of Rhyncophora, six or seven; and of the following families
- one species in each: Staphylinidae, Elateridae, Cebrionidae,
- Melolonthidae. The species in the other orders are even fewer. In all the
- orders, the scarcity of the individuals is even more remarkable than that
- of the species. Most of the Coleoptera have been carefully described by
- Mr. Waterhouse in the Annals of Nat. Hist.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-116" id="linknote-116"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 116 (<a href="#linknoteref-116">return</a>)<br /> [ Its geographical range
- is remarkably wide; it is found from the extreme southern islets near Cape
- Horn, as far north on the eastern coast (according to information given me
- by Mr. Stokes) as lat. 43 degs.,&mdash;but on the western coast, as Dr.
- Hooker tells me, it extends to the R. San Francisco in California, and
- perhaps even to Kamtschatka. We thus have an immense range in latitude;
- and as Cook, who must have been well acquainted with the species, found it
- at Kerguelen Land, no less than 140 degs. in longitude.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-117" id="linknote-117"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 117 (<a href="#linknoteref-117">return</a>)<br /> [ Voyages of the
- Adventure and Beagle, vol. i. p. 363.&mdash;It appears that sea-weed grows
- extremely quick.&mdash;Mr. Stephenson found (Wilson's Voyage round
- Scotland, vol. ii. p. 228) that a rock uncovered only at spring-tides,
- which had been chiselled smooth in November, on the following May, that
- is, within six months afterwards, was thickly covered with Fucus digitatus
- two feet, and F. esculentus six feet, in length.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-118" id="linknote-118"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 118 (<a href="#linknoteref-118">return</a>)<br /> [ With regard to Tierra
- del Fuego, the results are deduced from the observations of Capt. King
- (Geographical Journal, 1830), and those taken on board the Beagle. For the
- Falkland Islands, I am indebted to Capt. Sulivan for the mean of the mean
- temperature (reduced from careful observations at midnight, 8 A.M., noon,
- and 8 P.M.) of the three hottest months, viz., December, January, and
- February. The temperature of Dublin is taken from Barton.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-119" id="linknote-119"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 119 (<a href="#linknoteref-119">return</a>)<br /> [ Agueros, Descrip. Hist.
- de la Prov. de Chiloe, 1791, p. 94.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1110" id="linknote-1110"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1110 (<a href="#linknoteref-1110">return</a>)<br /> [ See the German
- Translation of this Journal; and for the other facts, Mr. Brown's Appendix
- to Flinders's Voyage.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1111" id="linknote-1111"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1111 (<a href="#linknoteref-1111">return</a>)<br /> [ On the Cordillera of
- central Chile, I believe the snow- line varies exceedingly in height in
- different summers. I was assured that during one very dry and long summer,
- all the snow disappeared from Aconcagua, although it attains the
- prodigious height of 23,000 feet. It is probable that much of the snow at
- these great heights is evaporated rather than thawed.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1112" id="linknote-1112"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1112 (<a href="#linknoteref-1112">return</a>)<br /> [ Miers's Chile, vol.
- i. p. 415. It is said that the sugar-cane grew at Ingenio, lat. 32 to 33
- degs., but not in sufficient quantity to make the manufacture profitable.
- In the valley of Quillota, south of Ingenio, I saw some large date palm
- trees.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1113" id="linknote-1113"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1113 (<a href="#linknoteref-1113">return</a>)<br /> [ Bulkeley's and
- Cummin's Faithful Narrative of the Loss of the Wager. The earthquake
- happened August 25, 1741.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1114" id="linknote-1114"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1114 (<a href="#linknoteref-1114">return</a>)<br /> [ Agueros, Desc. Hist.
- de Chiloe, p. 227.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1115" id="linknote-1115"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1115 (<a href="#linknoteref-1115">return</a>)<br /> [ Geological
- Transactions, vol. vi. p. 415.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1116" id="linknote-1116"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1116 (<a href="#linknoteref-1116">return</a>)<br /> [ I have given details
- (the first, I believe, published) on this subject in the first edition,
- and in the Appendix to it. I have there shown that the apparent exceptions
- to the absence of erratic boulders in certain countries, are due to
- erroneous observations; several statements there given I have since found
- confirmed by various authors.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1117" id="linknote-1117"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1117 (<a href="#linknoteref-1117">return</a>)<br /> [ Geographical Journal,
- 1830, pp. 65, 66.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1118" id="linknote-1118"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1118 (<a href="#linknoteref-1118">return</a>)<br /> [ Richardson's Append.
- to Back's Exped., and Humboldt's Fragm. Asiat., tom. ii. p. 386.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1119" id="linknote-1119"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1119 (<a href="#linknoteref-1119">return</a>)<br /> [ Messrs. Dease and
- Simpson, in Geograph. Journ., vol. viii. pp. 218 and 220.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1120" id="linknote-1120"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1120 (<a href="#linknoteref-1120">return</a>)<br /> [ Cuvier (Ossemens
- Fossiles, tom. i. p. 151), from Billing's Voyage.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-1121" id="linknote-1121"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 1121 (<a href="#linknoteref-1121">return</a>)<br /> [ In the former edition
- and Appendix, I have given some facts on the transportal of erratic
- boulders and icebergs in the Atlantic Ocean. This subject has lately been
- treated excellently by Mr. Hayes, in the Boston Journal (vol. iv. p. 426).
- The author does not appear aware of a case published by me (Geographical
- Journal, vol. ix. p. 528) of a gigantic boulder embedded in an iceberg in
- the Antarctic Ocean, almost certainly one hundred miles distant from any
- land, and perhaps much more distant. In the Appendix I have discussed at
- length the probability (at that time hardly thought of) of icebergs, when
- stranded, grooving and polishing rocks, like glaciers. This is now a very
- commonly received opinion; and I cannot still avoid the suspicion that it
- is applicable even to such cases as that of the Jura. Dr. Richardson has
- assured me that the icebergs off North America push before them pebbles
- and sand, and leave the submarine rocky flats quite bare; it is hardly
- possible to doubt that such ledges must be polished and scored in the
- direction of the set of the prevailing currents. Since writing that
- Appendix, I have seen in North Wales (London Phil. Mag., vol. xxi. p. 180)
- the adjoining action of glaciers and floating icebergs.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-121" id="linknote-121"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 121 (<a href="#linknoteref-121">return</a>)<br /> [ Caldeleugh, in
- Philosoph. Transact. for 1836.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-122" id="linknote-122"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 122 (<a href="#linknoteref-122">return</a>)<br /> [ Annales des Sciences
- Naturelles, March, 1833. M. Gay, a zealous and able naturalist, was then
- occupied in studying every branch of natural history throughout the
- kingdom of Chile.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-123" id="linknote-123"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 123 (<a href="#linknoteref-123">return</a>)<br /> [ Burchess's Travels,
- vol. ii. p. 45.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-124" id="linknote-124"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 124 (<a href="#linknoteref-124">return</a>)<br /> [ It is a remarkable
- fact, that Molina, though describing in detail all the birds and animals
- of Chile, never once mentions this genus, the species of which are so
- common, and so remarkable in their habits. Was he at a loss how to
- classify them, and did he consequently think that silence was the more
- prudent course? It is one more instance of the frequency of omissions by
- authors, on those very subjects where it might have been least expected.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-131" id="linknote-131"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 131 (<a href="#linknoteref-131">return</a>)<br /> [ Horticultural
- Transact., vol. v. p. 249. Mr. Caldeleugh sent home two tubers, which,
- being well manured, even the first season produced numerous potatoes and
- an abundance of leaves. See Humboldt's interesting discussion on this
- plant, which it appears was unknown in Mexico,&mdash;in Polit. Essay on
- New Spain, book iv. chap. ix.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-132" id="linknote-132"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 132 (<a href="#linknoteref-132">return</a>)<br /> [ By sweeping with my
- insect-net, I procured from these situations a considerable number of
- minute insects, of the family of Staphylinidae, and others allied to
- Pselaphus, and minute Hymenoptera. But the most characteristic family in
- number, both of individuals and species, throughout the more open parts of
- Chiloe and Chonos is that of Telephoridae.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-133" id="linknote-133"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 133 (<a href="#linknoteref-133">return</a>)<br /> [ It is said that some
- rapacious birds bring their prey alive to their nests. If so, in the
- course of centuries, every now and then, one might escape from the young
- birds. Some such agency is necessary, to account for the distribution of
- the smaller gnawing animals on islands not very near each other.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-134" id="linknote-134"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 134 (<a href="#linknoteref-134">return</a>)<br /> [ I may mention, as a
- proof of how great a difference there is between the seasons of the wooded
- and the open parts of this coast, that on September 20th, in lat. 34
- degs., these birds had young ones in the nest, while among the Chonos
- Islands, three months later in the summer, they were only laying, the
- difference in latitude between these two places being about 700 miles.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-141" id="linknote-141"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 141 (<a href="#linknoteref-141">return</a>)<br /> [ M. Arago in L'Institut,
- 1839, p. 337. See also Miers's Chile, vol. i. p. 392; also Lyell's
- Principles of Geology, chap. xv., book ii.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-142" id="linknote-142"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 142 (<a href="#linknoteref-142">return</a>)<br /> [ For a full account of
- the volcanic phenomena which accompanied the earthquake of the 20th, and
- for the conclusions deducible from them, I must refer to Volume V. of the
- Geological Transactions.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-151" id="linknote-151"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 151 (<a href="#linknoteref-151">return</a>)<br /> [ Scoresby's Arctic
- Regions, vol. i. p. 122.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-152" id="linknote-152"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 152 (<a href="#linknoteref-152">return</a>)<br /> [ I have heard it
- remarked in Shropshire that the water, when the Severn is flooded from
- long-continued rain, is much more turbid than when it proceeds from the
- snow melting in the Welsh mountains. D'Orbigny (tom. i. p. 184), in
- explaining the cause of the various colours of the rivers in South
- America, remarks that those with blue or clear water have there source in
- the Cordillera, where the snow melts.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-153" id="linknote-153"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 153 (<a href="#linknoteref-153">return</a>)<br /> [ Dr. Gillies in Journ.
- of Nat. and Geograph. Science, Aug., 1830. This author gives the heights
- of the Passes.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-154" id="linknote-154"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 154 (<a href="#linknoteref-154">return</a>)<br /> [ This structure in
- frozen snow was long since observed by Scoresby in the icebergs near
- Spitzbergen, and, lately, with more care, by Colonel Jackson (Journ. of
- Geograph. Soc., vol. v. p. 12) on the Neva. Mr. Lyell (Principles, vol.
- iv. p. 360) has compared the fissures by which the columnar structure
- seems to be determined, to the joints that traverse nearly all rocks, but
- which are best seen in the non- stratified masses. I may observe, that in
- the case of the frozen snow, the columnar structure must be owing to a
- "metamorphic" action, and not to a process during deposition.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-155" id="linknote-155"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 155 (<a href="#linknoteref-155">return</a>)<br /> [ This is merely an
- illustration of the admirable laws, first laid down by Mr. Lyell, on the
- geographical distribution of animals, as influenced by geological changes.
- The whole reasoning, of course, is founded on the assumption of the
- immutability of species; otherwise the difference in the species in the
- two regions might be considered as superinduced during a length of time.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-161" id="linknote-161"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 161 (<a href="#linknoteref-161">return</a>)<br /> [ Vol. iv. p. 11, and
- vol. ii. p. 217. For the remarks on Guayaquil, see Silliman's Journ., vol.
- xxiv. p. 384. For those on Tacna by Mr. Hamilton, see Trans. of British
- Association, 1840. For those on Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil.
- Trans., 1835. In the former edition I collected several references on the
- coincidences between sudden falls in the barometer and earthquakes; and
- between earthquakes and meteors.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-162" id="linknote-162"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 162 (<a href="#linknoteref-162">return</a>)<br /> [ Observa. sobre el Clima
- de Lima, p. 67.&mdash;Azara's Travels, vol. i. p. 381.&mdash;Ulloa's
- Voyage, vol. ii. p. 28.&mdash;Burchell's Travels, vol. ii. p. 524.&mdash;Webster's
- Description of the Azores, p. 124.&mdash;Voyage a l'Isle de France par un
- Officer du Roi, tom. i. p. 248.&mdash;Description of St. Helena, p. 123.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-163" id="linknote-163"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 163 (<a href="#linknoteref-163">return</a>)<br /> [ Temple, in his travels
- through Upper Peru, or Bolivia, in going from Potosi to Oruro, says, "I
- saw many Indian villages or dwellings in ruins, up even to the very tops
- of the mountains, attesting a former population where now all is
- desolate." He makes similar remarks in another place; but I cannot tell
- whether this desolation has been caused by a want of population, or by an
- altered condition of the land.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-164" id="linknote-164"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 164 (<a href="#linknoteref-164">return</a>)<br /> [ Edinburgh, Phil.
- Journ., Jan., 1830, p. 74; and April, 1830, p. 258&mdash;also Daubeny on
- Volcanoes, p. 438; and Bengal Journ., vol. vii. p. 324.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-165" id="linknote-165"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 165 (<a href="#linknoteref-165">return</a>)<br /> [ Political Essay on the
- Kingdom of New Spain, vol. iv. p. 199.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-166" id="linknote-166"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 166 (<a href="#linknoteref-166">return</a>)<br /> [ A similar interesting
- case is recorded in the Madras Medical Quart. Journ., 1839, p. 340. Dr.
- Ferguson, in his admirable Paper (see 9th vol. of Edinburgh Royal Trans.),
- shows clearly that the poison is generated in the drying process; and
- hence that dry hot countries are often the most unhealthy.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-171" id="linknote-171"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 171 (<a href="#linknoteref-171">return</a>)<br /> [ The progress of
- research has shown that some of these birds, which were then thought to be
- confined to the islands, occur on the American continent. The eminent
- ornithologist, Mr. Sclater, informs me that this is the case with the
- Strix punctatissima and Pyrocephalus nanus; and probably with the Otus
- Galapagoensis and Zenaida Galapagoensis: so that the number of endemic
- birds is reduced to twenty- three, or probably to twenty-one. Mr. Sclater
- thinks that one or two of these endemic forms should be ranked rather as
- varieties than species, which always seemed to me probable.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-172" id="linknote-172"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 172 (<a href="#linknoteref-172">return</a>)<br /> [ This is stated by Dr.
- Gunther (Zoolog. Soc. Jan 24th, 1859) to be a peculiar species, not known
- to inhabit any other country.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-173" id="linknote-173"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 173 (<a href="#linknoteref-173">return</a>)<br /> [ Voyage aux Quatre Iles
- d'Afrique. With respect to the Sandwich Islands, see Tyerman and Bennett's
- Journal, vol. i. p. 434. For Mauritius, see Voyage par un Officier, etc.,
- part i. p. 170. There are no frogs in the Canary Islands (Webb et
- Berthelot, Hist. Nat. des Iles Canaries). I saw none at St. Jago in the
- Cape de Verds. There are none at St. Helena.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-174" id="linknote-174"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 174 (<a href="#linknoteref-174">return</a>)<br /> [ Ann. and Mag. of Nat.
- Hist., vol. xvi. p. 19.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-175" id="linknote-175"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 175 (<a href="#linknoteref-175">return</a>)<br /> [ Voyage in the U. S.
- ship Essex, vol. i. p. 215.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-176" id="linknote-176"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 176 (<a href="#linknoteref-176">return</a>)<br /> [ Linn. Trans., vol. xii.
- p. 496. The most anomalous fact on this subject which I have met with is
- the wildness of the small birds in the Arctic parts of North America (as
- described by Richardson, Fauna Bor., vol. ii. p. 332), where they are said
- never to be persecuted. This case is the more strange, because it is
- asserted that some of the same species in their winter-quarters in the
- United States are tame. There is much, as Dr. Richardson well remarks,
- utterly inexplicable connected with the different degrees of shyness and
- care with which birds conceal their nests. How strange it is that the
- English wood- pigeon, generally so wild a bird, should very frequently
- rear its young in shrubberies close to houses!]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-191" id="linknote-191"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 191 (<a href="#linknoteref-191">return</a>)<br /> [ It is remarkable how
- the same disease is modified in different climates. At the little island
- of St. Helena the introduction of scarlet fever is dreaded as a plague. In
- some countries, foreigners and natives are as differently affected by
- certain contagious disorders as if they had been different animals; of
- which fact some instances have occurred in Chile; and, according to
- Humboldt, in Mexico (Polit. Essay, New Spain, vol. iv.).]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-192" id="linknote-192"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 192 (<a href="#linknoteref-192">return</a>)<br /> [ Narrative of Missionary
- Enterprise, p. 282.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-193" id="linknote-193"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 193 (<a href="#linknoteref-193">return</a>)<br /> [ Captain Beechey (chap.
- iv., vol. i.) states that the inhabitants of Pitcairn Island are firmly
- convinced that after the arrival of every ship they suffer cutaneous and
- other disorders. Captain Beechey attributes this to the change of diet
- during the time of the visit. Dr. Macculloch (Western Isles, vol. ii. p.
- 32) says: "It is asserted, that on the arrival of a stranger (at St.
- Kilda) all the inhabitants, in the common phraseology, catch a cold." Dr.
- Macculloch considers the whole case, although often previously affirmed,
- as ludicrous. He adds, however, that "the question was put by us to the
- inhabitants who unanimously agreed in the story." In Vancouver's Voyage,
- there is a somewhat similar statement with respect to Otaheite. Dr.
- Dieffenbach, in a note to his translation of the Journal, states that the
- same fact is universally believed by the inhabitants of the Chatham
- Islands, and in parts of New Zealand. It is impossible that such a belief
- should have become universal in the northern hemisphere, at the Antipodes,
- and in the Pacific, without some good foundation. Humboldt (Polit. Essay
- on King of New Spain, vol. iv.) says, that the great epidemics of Panama
- and Callao are "marked" by the arrival of ships from Chile, because the
- people from that temperate region, first experience the fatal effects of
- the torrid zones. I may add, that I have heard it stated in Shropshire,
- that sheep, which have been imported from vessels, although themselves in
- a healthy condition, if placed in the same fold with others, frequently
- produce sickness in the flock.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-194" id="linknote-194"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 194 (<a href="#linknoteref-194">return</a>)<br /> [ Travels in Australia,
- vol. i. p. 154. I must express my obligation to Sir T. Mitchell, for
- several interesting personal communications on the subject of these great
- valleys of New South Wales.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-195" id="linknote-195"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 195 (<a href="#linknoteref-195">return</a>)<br /> [ I was interested by
- finding here the hollow conical pitfall of the lion-ant, or some other
- insect; first a fly fell down the treacherous slope and immediately
- disappeared; then came a large but unwary ant; its struggles to escape
- being very violent, those curious little jets of sand, described by Kirby
- and Spence (Entomol., vol. i. p. 425) as being flirted by the insect's
- tail, were promptly directed against the expected victim. But the ant
- enjoyed a better fate than the fly, and escaped the fatal jaws which lay
- concealed at the base of the conical hollow. This Australian pitfall was
- only about half the size of that made by the European lion-ant.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-196" id="linknote-196"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 196 (<a href="#linknoteref-196">return</a>)<br /> [ Physical Description of
- New South Wales and Van Diemen's Land, p. 354.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-201" id="linknote-201"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 201 (<a href="#linknoteref-201">return</a>)<br /> [ These Plants are
- described in the Annals of Nat. Hist., vol. i., 1838, p. 337.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-202" id="linknote-202"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 202 (<a href="#linknoteref-202">return</a>)<br /> [ Holman's Travels, vol.
- iv. p. 378.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-203" id="linknote-203"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 203 (<a href="#linknoteref-203">return</a>)<br /> [ Kotzebue's First
- Voyage, vol. iii. p. 155.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-204" id="linknote-204"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 204 (<a href="#linknoteref-204">return</a>)<br /> [ The thirteen species
- belong to the following orders:&mdash;In the Coleoptera, a minute Elater;
- Orthoptera, a Gryllus and a Blatta; Hemiptera, one species; Homoptera,
- two; Neuroptera a Chrysopa; Hymenoptera, two ants; Lepidoptera nocturna, a
- Diopaea, and a Pterophorus (?); Diptera, two species.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-205" id="linknote-205"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 205 (<a href="#linknoteref-205">return</a>)<br /> [ Kotzebue's First
- Voyage, vol. iii. p. 222.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-206" id="linknote-206"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 206 (<a href="#linknoteref-206">return</a>)<br /> [ The large claws or
- pincers of some of these crabs are most beautifully adapted, when drawn
- back, to form an operculum to the shell, nearly as perfect as the proper
- one originally belonging to the molluscous animal. I was assured, and as
- far as my observations went I found it so, that certain species of the
- hermit-crab always use certain species of shells.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-207" id="linknote-207"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 207 (<a href="#linknoteref-207">return</a>)<br /> [ Some natives carried by
- Kotzebue to Kamtschatka collected stones to take back to their country.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-208" id="linknote-208"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 208 (<a href="#linknoteref-208">return</a>)<br /> [ See Proceedings of
- Zoological Society, 1832, p. 17.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-209" id="linknote-209"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 209 (<a href="#linknoteref-209">return</a>)<br /> [ Tyerman and Bennett.
- Voyage, etc. vol. ii. p. 33.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-2010" id="linknote-2010"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 2010 (<a href="#linknoteref-2010">return</a>)<br /> [ I exclude, of course,
- some soil which has been imported here in vessels from Malacca and Java,
- and likewise, some small fragments of pumice, drifted here by the waves.
- The one block of greenstone, moreover, on the northern island must be
- excepted.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-2011" id="linknote-2011"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 2011 (<a href="#linknoteref-2011">return</a>)<br /> [ These were first read
- before the Geological Society in May, 1837, and have since been developed
- in a separate volume on the "Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs."]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-2012" id="linknote-2012"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 2012 (<a href="#linknoteref-2012">return</a>)<br /> [ It is remarkable that
- Mr. Lyell, even in the first edition of his "Principles of Geology,"
- inferred that the amount of subsidence in the Pacific must have exceeded
- that of elevation, from the area of land being very small relatively to
- the agents there tending to form it, namely, the growth of coral and
- volcanic action.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-2013" id="linknote-2013"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 2013 (<a href="#linknoteref-2013">return</a>)<br /> [ It has been highly
- satisfactory to me to find the following passage in a pamphlet by Mr.
- Couthouy, one of the naturalists in the great Antarctic Expedition of the
- United States:&mdash;"Having personally examined a large number of
- coral-islands and resided eight months among the volcanic class having
- shore and partially encircling reefs. I may be permitted to state that my
- own observations have impressed a conviction of the correctness of the
- theory of Mr. Darwin."- -The naturalists, however, of this expedition
- differ with me on some points respecting coral formations.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-211" id="linknote-211"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 211 (<a href="#linknoteref-211">return</a>)<br /> [ After the volumes of
- eloquence which have poured forth on this subject, it is dangerous even to
- mention the tomb. A modern traveller, in twelve lines, burdens the poor
- little island with the following titles,&mdash;it is a grave, tomb,
- pyramid, cemetery, sepulchre, catacomb, sarcophagus, minaret, and
- mausoleum!]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-212" id="linknote-212"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 212 (<a href="#linknoteref-212">return</a>)<br /> [ It deserves notice,
- that all the many specimens of this shell found by me in one spot, differ
- as a marked variety, from another set of specimens procured from a
- different spot.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-213" id="linknote-213"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 213 (<a href="#linknoteref-213">return</a>)<br /> [ Beatson's St. Helena.
- Introductory chapter, p. 4.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-214" id="linknote-214"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 214 (<a href="#linknoteref-214">return</a>)<br /> [ Among these few
- insects, I was surprised to find a small Aphodius (nov. spec.) and an
- Oryctes, both extremely numerous under dung. When the island was
- discovered it certainly possessed no quadruped, excepting perhaps a mouse:
- it becomes, therefore, a difficult point to ascertain, whether these
- stercovorous insects have since been imported by accident, or if
- aborigines, on what food they formerly subsisted. On the banks of the
- Plata, where, from the vast number of cattle and horses, the fine plains
- of turf are richly manured, it is vain to seek the many kinds of
- dung-feeding beetles, which occur so abundantly in Europe. I observed only
- an Oryctes (the insects of this genus in Europe generally feed on decayed
- vegetable matter) and two species of Phanaeus, common in such situations.
- On the opposite side of the Cordillera in Chiloe, another species of
- Phanaeus is exceedingly abundant, and it buries the dung of the cattle in
- large earthen balls beneath the ground. There is reason to believe that
- the genus Phanaeus, before the introduction of cattle, acted as scavengers
- to man. In Europe, beetles, which find support in the matter which has
- already contributed towards the life of other and larger animals, are so
- numerous that there must be considerably more than one hundred different
- species. Considering this, and observing what a quantity of food of this
- kind is lost on the plains of La Plata, I imagined I saw an instance where
- man had disturbed that chain, by which so many animals are linked together
- in their native country. In Van Diemen's Land, however, I found four
- species of Onthophagus, two of Aphodius, and one of a third genus, very
- abundantly under the dung of cows; yet these latter animals had been then
- introduced only thirty-three years. Previous to that time the kangaroo and
- some other small animals were the only quadrupeds; and their dung is of a
- very different quality from that of their successors introduced by man. In
- England the greater number of stercovorous beetles are confined in their
- appetites; that is, they do not depend indifferently on any quadruped for
- the means of subsistence. The change, therefore, in habits which must have
- taken place in Van Diemen's Land is highly remarkable. I am indebted to
- the Rev. F. W. Hope, who, I hope, will permit me to call him my master in
- Entomology, for giving me the names of the foregoing insects.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-215" id="linknote-215"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 215 (<a href="#linknoteref-215">return</a>)<br /> [ Monats. der Konig.
- Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin. Vom April, 1845.]
- </p>
- <p>
- <a name="linknote-216" id="linknote-216"> </a>
- </p>
- <p class="foot">
- 216 (<a href="#linknoteref-216">return</a>)<br /> [ I have described this
- Bar in detail, in the Lond. and Edin. Phil. Mag., vol. xix. (1841), p.
- 257.]
- </p>
-
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-Prepared by John Hamm <John_Hamm@mindlink.bc.ca>
-from text scanned by Internet Wiretap
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-The Internet Wiretap Online Edition of
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-BY CHARLES DARWIN
-
-
-
-
-
-About the online edition.
-
-The degree symbol is represented as "degs." Italics
-are represented as _italics_. Footnotes are collected
-at the end of each chapter.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-I have stated in the preface to the first Edition of this work,
-and in the Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, that it was in
-consequence of a wish expressed by Captain Fitz Roy, of having
-some scientific person on board, accompanied by an offer from
-him of giving up part of his own accommodations, that I
-volunteered my services, which received, through the kindness of
-the hydrographer, Captain Beaufort, the sanction of the Lords of
-the Admiralty. As I feel that the opportunities which I enjoyed
-of studying the Natural History of the different countries we
-visited, have been wholly due to Captain Fitz Roy, I hope I may
-here be permitted to repeat my expression of gratitude to him;
-and to add that, during the five years we were together, I
-received from him the most cordial friendship and steady
-assistance. Both to Captain Fitz Roy and to all the Officers of
-the Beagle [1] I shall ever feel most thankful for the
-undeviating kindness with which I was treated during our long
-voyage.
-
-This volume contains, in the form of a Journal, a history of
-our voyage, and a sketch of those observations in Natural History
-and Geology, which I think will possess some interest for the
-general reader. I have in this edition largely condensed and
-corrected some parts, and have added a little to others, in order
-to render the volume more fitted for popular reading; but I trust
-that naturalists will remember, that they must refer for details
-to the larger publications which comprise the scientific results
-of the Expedition. The Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle
-includes an account of the Fossil Mammalia, by Professor Owen;
-of the Living Mammalia, by Mr. Waterhouse; of the Birds, by
-Mr. Gould; of the Fish, by the Rev. L. Jenyns; and of the
-Reptiles, by Mr. Bell. I have appended to the descriptions of
-each species an account of its habits and range. These works,
-which I owe to the high talents and disinterested zeal of the
-above distinguished authors, could not have been undertaken, had
-it not been for the liberality of the Lords Commissioners of Her
-Majesty's Treasury, who, through the representation of the Right
-Honourable the Chancellor of the Exchequer, have been pleased
-to grant a sum of one thousand pounds towards defraying part
-of the expenses of publication.
-
-I have myself published separate volumes on the 'Structure
-and Distribution of Coral Reefs;' on the 'Volcanic Islands
-visited during the Voyage of the Beagle;' and on the 'Geology
-of South America.' The sixth volume of the 'Geological
-Transactions' contains two papers of mine on the Erratic
-Boulders and Volcanic Phenomena of South America. Messrs.
-Waterhouse, Walker, Newman, and White, have published several
-able papers on the Insects which were collected, and I trust
-that many others will hereafter follow. The plants from the
-southern parts of America will be given by Dr. J. Hooker, in
-his great work on the Botany of the Southern Hemisphere. The
-Flora of the Galapagos Archipelago is the subject of a separate
-memoir by him, in the 'Linnean Transactions.' The Reverend
-Professor Henslow has published a list of the plants collected
-by me at the Keeling Islands; and the Reverend J. M. Berkeley
-has described my cryptogamic plants.
-
-I shall have the pleasure of acknowledging the great assistance
-which I have received from several other naturalists, in the
-course of this and my other works; but I must be here allowed
-to return my most sincere thanks to the Reverend Professor
-Henslow, who, when I was an undergraduate at Cambridge, was
-one chief means of giving me a taste for Natural History, --
-who, during my absence, took charge of the collections I sent
-home, and by his correspondence directed my endeavours, -- and
-who, since my return, has constantly rendered me every
-assistance which the kindest friend could offer.
-
-DOWN, BROMLEY, KENT,
-June 9, 1845
-
-[1] I must take this opportunity of returning my sincere thanks
-to Mr. Bynoe, the surgeon of the Beagle, for his very kind
-attention to me when I was ill at Valparaiso.
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-ST. JAGO -- CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
-
-Porto Praya -- Ribeira Grande -- Atmospheric Dust with
-Infusoria -- Habits of a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish -- St.
-Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic -- Singular Incrustations --
-Insects the first Colonists of Islands -- Fernando Noronha --
-Bahia -- Burnished Rocks -- Habits of a Diodon -- Pelagic
-Confervae and Infusoria -- Causes of discoloured Sea.
-
-
-AFTER having been twice driven back by heavy southwestern
-gales, Her Majesty's ship Beagle, a ten-gun
-brig, under the command of Captain Fitz Roy, R. N.,
-sailed from Devonport on the 27th of December, 1831. The
-object of the expedition was to complete the survey of
-Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under Captain King
-in 1826 to 1830, -- to survey the shores of Chile, Peru, and
-of some islands in the Pacific -- and to carry a chain of
-chronometrical measurements round the World. On the 6th
-of January we reached Teneriffe, but were prevented landing,
-by fears of our bringing the cholera: the next morning
-we saw the sun rise behind the rugged outline of the Grand
-Canary island, and suddenly illuminate the Peak of Teneriffe,
-whilst the lower parts were veiled in fleecy clouds. This
-was the first of many delightful days never to be forgotten.
-On the 16th of January, 1832, we anchored at Porto Praya,
-in St. Jago, the chief island of the Cape de Verd archipelago.
-
-The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea,
-wears a desolate aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age,
-and the scorching heat of a tropical sun, have in most places
-rendered the soil unfit for vegetation. The country rises in
-successive steps of table-land, interspersed with some truncate
-conical hills, and the horizon is bounded by an irregular
-chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as beheld through
-the hazy atmosphere of this climate, is one of great interest;
-if, indeed, a person, fresh from sea, and who has just
-walked, for the first time, in a grove of cocoa-nut trees, can
-be a judge of anything but his own happiness. The island
-would generally be considered as very uninteresting, but to
-anyone accustomed only to an English landscape, the novel
-aspect of an utterly sterile land possesses a grandeur which
-more vegetation might spoil. A single green leaf can
-scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of the lava plains;
-yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive to
-exist. It rains very seldom, but during a short portion of
-the year heavy torrents fall, and immediately afterwards a
-light vegetation springs out of every crevice. This soon
-withers; and upon such naturally formed hay the animals
-live. It had not now rained for an entire year. When the
-island was discovered, the immediate neighbourhood of
-Porto Praya was clothed with trees, [1] the reckless
-destruction of which has caused here, as at St. Helena, and
-at some of the Canary islands, almost entire sterility. The
-broad, flat-bottomed valleys, many of which serve during a
-few days only in the season as water-courses, are clothed
-with thickets of leafless bushes. Few living creatures inhabit
-these valleys. The commonest bird is a kingfisher (Dacelo
-Iagoensis), which tamely sits on the branches of the castor-
-oil plant, and thence darts on grasshoppers and lizards. It
-is brightly coloured, but not so beautiful as the European
-species: in its flight, manners, and place of habitation,
-which is generally in the driest valley, there is also a wide
-difference.
-
-One day, two of the officers and myself rode to Ribeira
-Grande, a village a few miles eastward of Porto Praya. Until
-we reached the valley of St. Martin, the country presented
-its usual dull brown appearance; but here, a very small rill
-of water produces a most refreshing margin of luxuriant
-vegetation. In the course of an hour we arrived at Ribeira
-Grande, and were surprised at the sight of a large ruined
-fort and cathedral. This little town, before its harbour was
-filled up, was the principal place in the island: it now
-presents a melancholy, but very picturesque appearance. Having
-procured a black Padre for a guide, and a Spaniard who
-had served in the Peninsular war as an interpreter, we visited
-a collection of buildings, of which an ancient church
-formed the principal part. It is here the governors and
-captain-generals of the islands have been buried. Some of
-the tombstones recorded dates of the sixteenth century. [2]
-
-The heraldic ornaments were the only things in this retired
-place that reminded us of Europe. The church or chapel
-formed one side of a quadrangle, in the middle of which a
-large clump of bananas were growing. On another side
-was a hospital, containing about a dozen miserable-looking
-inmates.
-
-We returned to the Venda to eat our dinners. A considerable
-number of men, women, and children, all as black as
-jet, collected to watch us. Our companions were extremely
-merry; and everything we said or did was followed by their
-hearty laughter. Before leaving the town we visited the
-cathedral. It does not appear so rich as the smaller church,
-but boasts of a little organ, which sent forth singularly
-inharmonious cries. We presented the black priest with a few
-shillings, and the Spaniard, patting him on the head, said,
-with much candour, he thought his colour made no great
-difference. We then returned, as fast as the ponies would
-go, to Porto Praya.
-
-Another day we rode to the village of St. Domingo, situated
-near the centre of the island. On a small plain which
-we crossed, a few stunted acacias were growing; their tops
-had been bent by the steady trade-wind, in a singular
-manner -- some of them even at right angles to their trunks.
-The direction of the branches was exactly N. E. by N., and S. W.
-by S., and these natural vanes must indicate the prevailing
-direction of the force of the trade-wind. The travelling had
-made so little impression on the barren soil, that we here
-missed our track, and took that to Fuentes. This we did
-not find out till we arrived there; and we were afterwards
-glad of our mistake. Fuentes is a pretty village, with a small
-stream; and everything appeared to prosper well, excepting,
-indeed, that which ought to do so most -- its inhabitants.
-The black children, completely naked, and looking very
-wretched, were carrying bundles of firewood half as big as
-their own bodies.
-
-Near Fuentes we saw a large flock of guinea-fowl --
-probably fifty or sixty in number. They were extremely
-wary, and could not be approached. They avoided us, like
-partridges on a rainy day in September, running with their
-heads cocked up; and if pursued, they readily took to the
-wing.
-
-The scenery of St. Domingo possesses a beauty totally
-unexpected, from the prevalent gloomy character of the rest
-of the island. The village is situated at the bottom of a
-valley, bounded by lofty and jagged walls of stratified lava.
-The black rocks afford a most striking contrast with the
-bright green vegetation, which follows the banks of a little
-stream of clear water. It happened to be a grand feast-day,
-and the village was full of people. On our return we overtook
-a party of about twenty young black girls, dressed in
-excellent taste; their black skins and snow-white linen being
-set off by coloured turbans and large shawls. As soon as
-we approached near, they suddenly all turned round, and
-covering the path with their shawls, sung with great energy
-a wild song, beating time with their hands upon their legs.
-We threw them some vintems, which were received with
-screams of laughter, and we left them redoubling the noise
-of their song.
-
-One morning the view was singularly clear; the distant
-mountains being projected with the sharpest outline on a
-heavy bank of dark blue clouds. Judging from the appearance,
-and from similar cases in England, I supposed that the
-air was saturated with moisture. The fact, however, turned
-out quite the contrary. The hygrometer gave a difference
-of 29.6 degs., between the temperature of the air, and the
-point at which dew was precipitated. This difference was
-nearly double that which I had observed on the previous
-mornings. This unusual degree of atmospheric dryness was
-accompanied by continual flashes of lightning. Is it not an
-uncommon case, thus to find a remarkable degree of aerial
-transparency with such a state of weather?
-
-Generally the atmosphere is hazy; and this is caused by
-the falling of impalpably fine dust, which was found to have
-slightly injured the astronomical instruments. The morning
-before we anchored at Porto Praya, I collected a little packet
-of this brown-coloured fine dust, which appeared to have
-been filtered from the wind by the gauze of the vane at the
-masthead. Mr. Lyell has also given me four packets of dust
-which fell on a vessel a few hundred miles northward of
-these islands. Professor Ehrenberg [3] finds that this dust
-consists in great part of infusoria with siliceous shields, and
-of the siliceous tissue of plants. In five little packets which
-I sent him, he has ascertained no less than sixty-seven
-different organic forms! The infusoria, with the exception of
-two marine species, are all inhabitants of fresh-water. I
-have found no less than fifteen different accounts of dust
-having fallen on vessels when far out in the Atlantic. From
-the direction of the wind whenever it has fallen, and from
-its having always fallen during those months when the harmattan
-is known to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere,
-we may feel sure that it all comes from Africa. It
-is, however, a very singular fact, that, although Professor
-Ehrenberg knows many species of infusoria peculiar to
-Africa, he finds none of these in the dust which I sent him.
-On the other hand, he finds in it two species which hitherto
-he knows as living only in South America. The dust falls
-in such quantities as to dirty everything on board, and to
-hurt people's eyes; vessels even have run on shore owing to
-the obscurity of the atmosphere. It has often fallen on
-ships when several hundred, and even more than a thousand
-miles from the coast of Africa, and at points sixteen hundred
-miles distant in a north and south direction. In some
-dust which was collected on a vessel three hundred miles
-from the land, I was much surprised to find particles of
-stone above the thousandth of an inch square, mixed with
-finer matter. After this fact one need not be surprised
-at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules of
-cryptogamic plants.
-
-The geology of this island is the most interesting part of
-its natural history. On entering the harbour, a perfectly
-horizontal white band, in the face of the sea cliff, may be seen
-running for some miles along the coast, and at the height of
-about forty-five feet above the water. Upon examination
-this white stratum is found to consist of calcareous matter
-with numerous shells embedded, most or all of which now
-exist on the neighbouring coast. It rests on ancient volcanic
-rocks, and has been covered by a stream of basalt, which
-must have entered the sea when the white shelly bed was
-lying at the bottom. It is interesting to trace the changes
-produced by the heat of the overlying lava, on the friable
-mass, which in parts has been converted into a crystalline
-limestone, and in other parts into a compact spotted stone
-Where the lime has been caught up by the scoriaceous fragments
-of the lower surface of the stream, it is converted into
-groups of beautifully radiated fibres resembling arragonite.
-The beds of lava rise in successive gently-sloping plains,
-towards the interior, whence the deluges of melted stone
-have originally proceeded. Within historical times, no signs
-of volcanic activity have, I believe, been manifested in any
-part of St. Jago. Even the form of a crater can but rarely
-be discovered on the summits of the many red cindery hills;
-yet the more recent streams can be distinguished on the
-coast, forming lines of cliffs of less height, but stretching
-out in advance of those belonging to an older series: the
-height of the cliffs thus affording a rude measure of the age
-of the streams.
-
-During our stay, I observed the habits of some marine
-animals. A large Aplysia is very common. This sea-slug
-is about five inches long; and is of a dirty yellowish colour
-veined with purple. On each side of the lower surface, or
-foot, there is a broad membrane, which appears sometimes
-to act as a ventilator, in causing a current of water to flow
-over the dorsal branchiae or lungs. It feeds on the delicate
-sea-weeds which grow among the stones in muddy and shallow
-water; and I found in its stomach several small pebbles,
-as in the gizzard of a bird. This slug, when disturbed, emits
-a very fine purplish-red fluid, which stains the water for the
-space of a foot around. Besides this means of defence, an
-acrid secretion, which is spread over its body, causes a
-sharp, stinging sensation, similar to that produced by the
-Physalia, or Portuguese man-of-war.
-
-I was much interested, on several occasions, by watching
-the habits of an Octopus, or cuttle-fish. Although common
-in the pools of water left by the retiring tide, these animals
-were not easily caught. By means of their long arms and
-suckers, they could drag their bodies into very narrow crevices;
-and when thus fixed, it required great force to remove
-them. At other times they darted tail first, with the rapidity
-of an arrow, from one side of the pool to the other, at the
-same instant discolouring the water with a dark chestnut-brown
-ink. These animals also escape detection by a very
-extraordinary, chameleon-like power of changing their colour.
-They appear to vary their tints according to the nature
-of the ground over which they pass: when in deep water,
-their general shade was brownish purple, but when placed on
-the land, or in shallow water, this dark tint changed into one
-of a yellowish green. The colour, examined more carefully,
-was a French grey, with numerous minute spots of bright
-yellow: the former of these varied in intensity; the latter
-entirely disappeared and appeared again by turns. These
-changes were effected in such a manner, that clouds, varying
-in tint between a hyacinth red and a chestnut-brown, [4] were
-continually passing over the body. Any part, being subjected
-to a slight shock of galvanism, became almost black: a similar
-effect, but in a less degree, was produced by scratching
-the skin with a needle. These clouds, or blushes as they may
-be called, are said to be produced by the alternate expansion
-and contraction of minute vesicles containing variously
-coloured fluids. [5]
-
-This cuttle-fish displayed its chameleon-like power both
-during the act of swimming and whilst remaining stationary
-at the bottom. I was much amused by the various arts to
-escape detection used by one individual, which seemed fully
-aware that I was watching it. Remaining for a time motionless,
-it would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a
-cat after a mouse; sometimes changing its colour: it thus
-proceeded, till having gained a deeper part, it darted away,
-leaving a dusky train of ink to hide the hole into which it
-had crawled.
-
-While looking for marine animals, with my head about
-two feet above the rocky shore, I was more than once saluted
-by a jet of water, accompanied by a slight grating noise. At
-first I could not think what it was, but afterwards I found
-out that it was this cuttle-fish, which, though concealed in a
-hole, thus often led me to its discovery. That it possesses
-the power of ejecting water there is no doubt, and it appeared
-to me that it could certainly take good aim by directing the
-tube or siphon on the under side of its body. From the
-difficulty which these animals have in carrying their heads,
-they cannot crawl with ease when placed on the ground. I
-observed that one which I kept in the cabin was slightly
-phosphorescent in the dark.
-
-ST. PAUL'S ROCKS. -- In crossing the Atlantic we hove-to
-during the morning of February 16th, close to the island of
-St. Paul's. This cluster of rocks is situated in 0 degs. 58'
-north latitude, and 29 degs. 15' west longitude. It is 540
-miles distant from the coast of America, and 350 from the island
-of Fernando Noronha. The highest point is only fifty feet above
-the level of the sea, and the entire circumference is under
-three-quarters of a mile. This small point rises abruptly out
-of the depths of the ocean. Its mineralogical constitution
-is not simple; in some parts the rock is of a cherty, in others
-of a felspathic nature, including thin veins of serpentine. It
-is a remarkable fact, that all the many small islands, lying
-far from any continent, in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic
-Oceans, with the exception of the Seychelles and this little
-point of rock, are, I believe, composed either of coral or of
-erupted matter. The volcanic nature of these oceanic islands
-is evidently an extension of that law, and the effect of those
-same causes, whether chemical or mechanical, from which it
-results that a vast majority of the volcanoes now in action
-stand either near sea-coasts or as islands in the midst of the
-sea.
-
-The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly
-white colour. This is partly owing to the dung of a
-vast multitude of seafowl, and partly to a coating of a hard
-glossy substance with a pearly lustre, which is intimately
-united to the surface of the rocks. This, when examined
-with a lens, is found to consist of numerous exceedingly
-thin layers, its total thickness being about the tenth of an
-inch. It contains much animal matter, and its origin, no
-doubt, is due to the action of the rain or spray on the birds'
-dung. Below some small masses of guano at Ascension, and
-on the Abrolhos Islets, I found certain stalactitic branching
-bodies, formed apparently in the same manner as the thin
-white coating on these rocks. The branching bodies so closely
-resembled in general appearance certain nulliporae (a family
-of hard calcareous sea-plants), that in lately looking hastily
-over my collection I did not perceive the difference. The
-globular extremities of the branches are of a pearly texture,
-like the enamel of teeth, but so hard as just to scratch plate-
-glass. I may here mention, that on a part of the coast of
-Ascension, where there is a vast accumulation of shelly sand,
-an incrustation is deposited on the tidal rocks by the water
-of the sea, resembling, as represented in the woodcut, certain
-cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often seen on damp
-walls. The surface of the fronds is beautifully glossy; and
-those parts formed where fully exposed to the light are of a
-jet black colour, but those shaded under ledges are only grey.
-I have shown specimens of this incrustation to several
-geologists, and they all thought that they were of volcanic
-or igneous origin! In its hardness and translucency -- in
-its polish, equal to that of the finest oliva-shell -- in the
-bad smell given out, and loss of colour under the blowpipe -- it
-shows a close similarity with living sea-shells. Moreover, in
-sea-shells, it is known that the parts habitually covered and
-shaded by the mantle of the animal, are of a paler colour
-than those fully exposed to the light, just as is the case with
-this incrustation. When we remember that lime, either as a
-phosphate or carbonate, enters into the composition of the
-hard parts, such as bones and shells, of all living animals, it
-is an interesting physiological fact [6] to find substances
-harder than the enamel of teeth, and coloured surfaces as well
-polished as those of a fresh shell, reformed through inorganic
-means from dead organic matter -- mocking, also, in
-shape, some of the lower vegetable productions.
-
-We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds -- the
-booby and the noddy. The former is a species of gannet,
-and the latter a tern. Both are of a tame and stupid
-disposition, and are so unaccustomed to visitors, that I could
-have killed any number of them with my geological hammer.
-The booby lays her eggs on the bare rock; but the tern makes
-a very simple nest with seaweed. By the side of many of
-these nests a small flying-fish was placed; which I suppose,
-had been brought by the male bird for its partner. It was
-amusing to watch how quickly a large and active crab
-(Graspus), which inhabits the crevices of the rock, stole the
-fish from the side of the nest, as soon as we had disturbed
-the parent birds. Sir W. Symonds, one of the few persons
-who have landed here, informs me that he saw the crabs
-dragging even the young birds out of their nests, and devouring
-them. Not a single plant, not even a lichen, grows
-on this islet; yet it is inhabited by several insects and
-spiders. The following list completes, I believe, the
-terrestrial fauna: a fly (Olfersia) living on the booby, and
-a tick which must have come here as a parasite on the birds;
-a small brown moth, belonging to a genus that feeds on feathers;
-a beetle (Quedius) and a woodlouse from beneath the dung; and
-lastly, numerous spiders, which I suppose prey on these small
-attendants and scavengers of the water-fowl. The often repeated
-description of the stately palm and other noble tropical
-plants, then birds, and lastly man, taking possession of
-the coral islets as soon as formed, in the Pacific, is probably
-not correct; I fear it destroys the poetry of this story, that
-feather and dirt-feeding and parasitic insects and spiders
-should be the first inhabitants of newly formed oceanic
-land.
-
-The smallest rock in the tropical seas, by giving a foundation
-for the growth of innumerable kinds of seaweed and
-compound animals, supports likewise a large number of fish.
-The sharks and the seamen in the boats maintained a constant
-struggle which should secure the greater share of the
-prey caught by the fishing-lines. I have heard that a rock
-near the Bermudas, lying many miles out at sea, and at a
-considerable depth, was first discovered by the circumstance
-of fish having been observed in the neighbourhood.
-
-FERNANDO NORONHA, Feb. 20th. -- As far as I was enabled
-to observe, during the few hours we stayed at this place, the
-constitution of the island is volcanic, but probably not of a
-recent date. The most remarkable feature is a conical hill,
-about one thousand feet high, the upper part of which is
-exceedingly steep, and on one side overhangs its base. The
-rock is phonolite, and is divided into irregular columns. On
-viewing one of these isolated masses, at first one is inclined
-to believe that it has been suddenly pushed up in a semi-fluid
-state. At St. Helena, however, I ascertained that some
-pinnacles, of a nearly similar figure and constitution, had
-been formed by the injection of melted rock into yielding
-strata, which thus had formed the moulds for these gigantic
-obelisks. The whole island is covered with wood; but from
-the dryness of the climate there is no appearance of luxuriance.
-Half-way up the mountain, some great masses of the
-columnar rock, shaded by laurel-like trees, and ornamented
-by others covered with fine pink flowers but without a single
-leaf, gave a pleasing effect to the nearer parts of the scenery.
-
-BAHIA, OR SAN SALVADOR. BRAZIL, Feb. 29th. -- The day
-has passed delightfully. Delight itself, however, is a weak
-term to express the feelings of a naturalist who, for the first
-time, has wandered by himself in a Brazilian forest. The
-elegance of the grasses, the novelty of the parasitical plants,
-the beauty of the flowers, the glossy green of the foliage,
-but above all the general luxuriance of the vegetation, filled
-me with admiration. A most paradoxical mixture of sound
-and silence pervades the shady parts of the wood. The noise
-from the insects is so loud, that it may be heard even in a
-vessel anchored several hundred yards from the shore; yet
-within the recesses of the forest a universal silence appears
-to reign. To a person fond of natural history, such a day
-as this brings with it a deeper pleasure than he can ever hope
-to experience again. After wandering about for some hours,
-I returned to the landing-place; but, before reaching it, I
-was overtaken by a tropical storm. I tried to find shelter
-under a tree, which was so thick that it would never have
-been penetrated by common English rain; but here, in a
-couple of minutes, a little torrent flowed down the trunk.
-It is to this violence of the rain that we must attribute the
-verdure at the bottom of the thickest woods: if the showers
-were like those of a colder climate, the greater part would
-be absorbed or evaporated before it reached the ground. I
-will not at present attempt to describe the gaudy scenery
-of this noble bay, because, in our homeward voyage, we
-called here a second time, and I shall then have occasion to
-remark on it.
-
-Along the whole coast of Brazil, for a length of at least
-2000 miles, and certainly for a considerable space inland,
-wherever solid rock occurs, it belongs to a granitic formation.
-The circumstance of this enormous area being constituted of
-materials which most geologists believe to have
-been crystallized when heated under pressure, gives rise to
-many curious reflections. Was this effect produced beneath
-the depths of a profound ocean? or did a covering of strata
-formerly extend over it, which has since been removed?
-Can we believe that any power, acting for a time short of
-infinity, could have denuded the granite over so many thousand
-square leagues?
-
-On a point not far from the city, where a rivulet entered
-the sea, I observed a fact connected with a subject discussed
-by Humboldt. [7] At the cataracts of the great rivers
-Orinoco, Nile, and Congo, the syenitic rocks are coated by
-a black substance, appearing as if they had been polished
-with plumbago. The layer is of extreme thinness; and on
-analysis by Berzelius it was found to consist of the oxides
-of manganese and iron. In the Orinoco it occurs on the
-rocks periodically washed by the floods, and in those parts
-alone where the stream is rapid; or, as the Indians say, "the
-rocks are black where the waters are white." Here the coating
-is of a rich brown instead of a black colour, and seems
-to be composed of ferruginous matter alone. Hand specimens
-fail to give a just idea of these brown burnished stones
-which glitter in the sun's rays. They occur only within the
-limits of the tidal waves; and as the rivulet slowly trickles
-down, the surf must supply the polishing power of the cataracts
-in the great rivers. In like manner, the rise and fall
-of the tide probably answer to the periodical inundations;
-and thus the same effects are produced under apparently different
-but really similar circumstances. The origin, however, of
-these coatings of metallic oxides, which seem as if
-cemented to the rocks, is not understood; and no reason, I
-believe, can be assigned for their thickness remaining the
-same.
-
-One day I was amused by watching the habits of the
-Diodon antennatus, which was caught swimming near the
-shore. This fish, with its flabby skin, is well known to possess
-the singular power of distending itself into a nearly
-spherical form. After having been taken out of water for
-a short time, and then again immersed in it, a considerable
-quantity both of water and air is absorbed by the mouth,
-and perhaps likewise by the branchial orifices. This process
-is effected by two methods: the air is swallowed, and is then
-forced into the cavity of the body, its return being prevented
-by a muscular contraction which is externally visible: but
-the water enters in a gentle stream through the mouth,
-which is kept wide open and motionless; this latter action
-must, therefore, depend on suction. The skin about the
-abdomen is much looser than that on the back; hence, during
-the inflation, the lower surface becomes far more distended
-than the upper; and the fish, in consequence, floats
-with its back downwards. Cuvier doubts whether the Diodon
-in this position is able to swim; but not only can it thus
-move forward in a straight line, but it can turn round to
-either side. This latter movement is effected solely by the
-aid of the pectoral fins; the tail being collapsed, and not
-used. From the body being buoyed up with so much air, the
-branchial openings are out of water, but a stream drawn in
-by the mouth constantly flows through them.
-
-The fish, having remained in this distended state for a
-short time, generally expelled the air and water with
-considerable force from the branchial apertures and mouth. It
-could emit, at will, a certain portion of the water, and it
-appears, therefore, probable that this fluid is taken in partly
-for the sake of regulating its specific gravity. This Diodon
-possessed several means of defence. It could give a severe
-bite, and could eject water from its mouth to some distance,
-at the same time making a curious noise by the movement
-of its jaws. By the inflation of its body, the papillae, with
-which the skin is covered, become erect and pointed. But
-the most curious circumstance is, that it secretes from the
-skin of its belly, when handled, a most beautiful carmine-red
-fibrous matter, which stains ivory and paper in so permanent
-a manner that the tint is retained with all its brightness
-to the present day: I am quite ignorant of the nature
-and use of this secretion. I have heard from Dr. Allan of
-Forres, that he has frequently found a Diodon, floating alive
-and distended, in the stomach of the shark, and that on
-several occasions he has known it eat its way, not only
-through the coats of the stomach, but through the sides of
-the monster, which has thus been killed. Who would ever
-have imagined that a little soft fish could have destroyed
-the great and savage shark?
-
-March 18th. -- We sailed from Bahia. A few days afterwards,
-when not far distant from the Abrolhos Islets, my;
-attention was called to a reddish-brown appearance in the
-sea. The whole surface of the water, as it appeared under a
-weak lens, seemed as if covered by chopped bits of hay, with
-their ends jagged. These are minute cylindrical confervae,
-in bundles or rafts of from twenty to sixty in each. Mr.
-Berkeley informs me that they are the same species
-(Trichodesmium erythraeum) with that found over large spaces
-in the Red Sea, and whence its name of Red Sea is derived. [8]
-Their numbers must be infinite: the ship passed through
-several bands of them, one of which was about ten yards
-wide, and, judging from the mud-like colour of the water,
-at least two and a half miles long. In almost every long
-voyage some account is given of these confervae. They appear
-especially common in the sea near Australia; and off
-Cape Leeuwin I found an allied but smaller and apparently
-different species. Captain Cook, in his third voyage, remarks,
-that the sailors gave to this appearance the name of
-sea-sawdust.
-
-Near Keeling Atoll, in the Indian Ocean, I observed
-many little masses of confervae a few inches square, consisting
-of long cylindrical threads of excessive thinness, so as
-to be barely visible to the naked eye, mingled with other
-rather larger bodies, finely conical at both ends. Two of
-these are shown in the woodcut united together. They vary
-in length from .04 to .06, and even to .08 of an inch in
-length; and in diameter from .006 to .008 of an inch. Near
-one extremity of the cylindrical part, a green septum, formed
-of granular matter, and thickest in the middle, may generally
-be seen. This, I believe, is the bottom of a most delicate,
-colourless sac, composed of a pulpy substance, which lines
-the exterior case, but does not extend within the extreme
-conical points. In some specimens, small but perfect spheres
-of brownish granular matter supplied the
-places of the septa; and I observed the curious process by
-which they were produced. The pulpy matter of the internal
-coating suddenly grouped itself into lines, some of which
-assumed a form radiating from a common centre; it then
-continued, with an irregular and rapid movement, to contract
-itself, so that in the course of a second the whole was
-united into a perfect little sphere, which occupied the
-position of the septum at one end of the now quite hollow case.
-The formation of the granular sphere was hastened by any
-accidental injury. I may add, that frequently a pair of these
-bodies were attached to each other, as represented above,
-cone beside cone, at that end where the septum occurs.
-
-I will add here a few other observations connected with
-the discoloration of the sea from organic causes. On the
-coast of Chile, a few leagues north of Concepcion, the Beagle
-one day passed through great bands of muddy water, exactly
-like that of a swollen river; and again, a degree south of
-Valparaiso, when fifty miles from the land, the same appearance
-was still more extensive. Some of the water placed
-in a glass was of a pale reddish tint; and, examined under
-a microscope, was seen to swarm with minute animalcula
-darting about, and often exploding. Their shape is oval,
-and contracted in the middle by a ring of vibrating curved
-ciliae. It was, however, very difficult to examine them with
-care, for almost the instant motion ceased, even while crossing
-the field of vision, their bodies burst. Sometimes both
-ends burst at once, sometimes only one, and a quantity of
-coarse, brownish, granular matter was ejected. The animal
-an instant before bursting expanded to half again its natural
-size; and the explosion took place about fifteen seconds
-after the rapid progressive motion had ceased: in a few
-cases it was preceded for a short interval by a rotatory
-movement on the longer axis. About two minutes after any
-number were isolated in a drop of water, they thus perished.
-The animals move with the narrow apex forwards, by the
-aid of their vibratory ciliae, and generally by rapid starts.
-They are exceedingly minute, and quite invisible to the
-naked eye, only covering a space equal to the square of the
-thousandth of an inch. Their numbers were infinite; for
-the smallest drop of water which I could remove contained
-very many. In one day we passed through two spaces of
-water thus stained, one of which alone must have extended
-over several square miles. What incalculable numbers of
-these microscopical animals! The colour of the water, as
-seen at some distance, was like that of a river which has
-flowed through a red clay district, but under the shade of
-the vessel's side it was quite as dark as chocolate. The line
-where the red and blue water joined was distinctly defined.
-The weather for some days previously had been calm, and the
-ocean abounded, to an unusual degree, with living creatures. [9]
-
-In the sea around Tierra del Fuego, and at no great distance
-from the land, I have seen narrow lines of water of a
-bright red colour, from the number of crustacea, which
-somewhat resemble in form large prawns. The sealers call
-them whale-food. Whether whales feed on them I do not
-know; but terns, cormorants, and immense herds of great
-unwieldy seals derive, on some parts of the coast, their
-chief sustenance from these swimming crabs. Seamen
-invariably attribute the discoloration of the water to spawn;
-but I found this to be the case only on one occasion. At
-the distance of several leagues from the Archipelago of the
-Galapagos, the ship sailed through three strips of a dark
-yellowish, or mudlike water; these strips were some miles
-long, but only a few yards wide, and they were separated
-from the surrounding water by a sinuous yet distinct margin.
-The colour was caused by little gelatinous balls, about
-the fifth of an inch in diameter, in which numerous minute
-spherical ovules were imbedded: they were of two distinct
-kinds, one being of a reddish colour and of a different shape
-from the other. I cannot form a conjecture as to what two
-kinds of animals these belonged. Captain Colnett remarks,
-that this appearance is very common among the Galapagos
-Islands, and that the directions of the bands indicate that
-of the currents; in the described case, however, the line was
-caused by the wind. The only other appearance which I
-have to notice, is a thin oily coat on the water which displays
-iridescent colours. I saw a considerable tract of the
-ocean thus covered on the coast of Brazil; the seamen
-attributed it to the putrefying carcase of some whale, which
-probably was floating at no great distance. I do not here
-mention the minute gelatinous particles, hereafter to be
-referred to, which are frequently dispersed throughout the
-water, for they are not sufficiently abundant to create any
-change of colour.
-
-There are two circumstances in the above accounts which
-appear remarkable: first, how do the various bodies which
-form the bands with defined edges keep together? In the
-case of the prawn-like crabs, their movements were as
-coinstantaneous as in a regiment of soldiers; but this cannot
-happen from anything like voluntary action with the ovules,
-or the confervae, nor is it probable among the infusoria.
-Secondly, what causes the length and narrowness of the
-bands? The appearance so much resembles that which may
-be seen in every torrent, where the stream uncoils into long
-streaks the froth collected in the eddies, that I must attribute
-the effect to a similar action either of the currents of the
-air or sea. Under this supposition we must believe that the
-various organized bodies are produced in certain favourable
-places, and are thence removed by the set of either wind
-or water. I confess, however, there is a very great difficulty
-in imagining any one spot to be the birthplace of the millions
-of millions of animalcula and confervae: for whence come
-the germs at such points? -- the parent bodies having been
-distributed by the winds and waves over the immense ocean.
-But on no other hypothesis can I understand their linear
-grouping. I may add that Scoresby remarks that green
-water abounding with pelagic animals is invariably found
-in a certain part of the Arctic Sea.
-
-[1] I state this on the authority of Dr. E. Dieffenbach, in his
-German translation of the first edition of this Journal.
-
-[2] The Cape de Verd Islands were discovered in 1449. There was
-a tombstone of a bishop with the date of 1571; and a crest of a
-hand and dagger, dated 1497.
-
-[3] I must take this opportunity of acknowledging the great
-kindness with which this illustrious naturalist has examined
-many of my specimens. I have sent (June, 1845) a full account
-of the falling of this dust to the Geological Society.
-
-[4] So named according to Patrick Symes's nomenclature.
-
-[5] See Encyclop. of Anat. and Physiol., article Cephalopoda
-
-[6] Mr. Horner and Sir David Brewster have described
-(Philosophical Transactions, 1836, p. 65) a singular
-"artificial substance resembling shell." It is deposited in
-fine, transparent, highly polished, brown-coloured laminae,
-possessing peculiar optical properties, on the inside of a
-vessel, in which cloth, first prepared with glue and then
-with lime, is made to revolve rapidly in water. It is much
-softer, more transparent, and contains more animal matter,
-than the natural incrustation at Ascension; but we here
-again see the strong tendency which carbonate of lime and
-animal matter evince to form a solid substance allied to
-shell.
-
-[7] Pers. Narr., vol. v., pt. 1., p. 18.
-
-[8] M. Montagne, in Comptes Rendus, etc., Juillet, 1844; and
-Annal. des Scienc. Nat., Dec. 1844
-
-[9] M. Lesson (Voyage de la Coquille, tom. i., p. 255) mentions
-red water off Lima, apparently produced by the same cause.
-Peron, the distinguished naturalist, in the Voyage aux Terres
-Australes, gives no less than twelve references to voyagers
-who have alluded to the discoloured waters of the sea (vol.
-ii. p. 239). To the references given by Peron may be added,
-Humboldt's Pers. Narr., vol. vi. p. 804; Flinder's Voyage,
-vol. i. p. 92; Labillardiere, vol. i. p. 287; Ulloa's Voyage;
-Voyage of the Astrolabe and of the Coquille; Captain King's
-Survey of Australia, etc.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-RIO DE JANEIRO
-
-Rio de Janeiro -- Excursion north of Cape Frio -- Great
-Evaporation -- Slavery -- Botofogo Bay -- Terrestrial
-Planariae -- Clouds on the Corcovado -- Heavy Rain -- Musical
-Frogs -- Phosphorescent Insects -- Elater, springing powers
-of -- Blue Haze -- Noise made by a Butterfly -- Entomology --
-Ants -- Wasp killing a Spider -- Parasitical Spider --
-Artifices of an Epeira -- Gregarious Spider -- Spider with
-an unsymmetrical Web.
-
-
-APRIL 4th to July 5th, 1832. -- A few days after our
-arrival I became acquainted with an Englishman who
-was going to visit his estate, situated rather more
-than a hundred miles from the capital, to the northward of
-Cape Frio. I gladly accepted his kind offer of allowing me
-to accompany him.
-
-April 8th. -- Our party amounted to seven. The first stage
-was very interesting. The day was powerfully hot, and as
-we passed through the woods, everything was motionless,
-excepting the large and brilliant butterflies, which lazily
-fluttered about. The view seen when crossing the hills
-behind Praia Grande was most beautiful; the colours were
-intense, and the prevailing tint a dark blue; the sky and the
-calm waters of the bay vied with each other in splendour.
-After passing through some cultivated country, we entered
-a forest, which in the grandeur of all its parts could not be
-exceeded. We arrived by midday at Ithacaia; this small
-village is situated on a plain, and round the central house
-are the huts of the negroes. These, from their regular form
-and position, reminded me of the drawings of the Hottentot
-habitations in Southern Africa. As the moon rose early, we
-determined to start the same evening for our sleeping-place
-at the Lagoa Marica. As it was growing dark we passed
-under one of the massive, bare, and steep hills of granite
-which are so common in this country. This spot is notorious
-from having been, for a long time, the residence of some
-runaway slaves, who, by cultivating a little ground near the
-top, contrived to eke out a subsistence. At length they were
-discovered, and a party of soldiers being sent, the whole
-were seized with the exception of one old woman, who,
-sooner than again be led into slavery, dashed herself to
-pieces from the summit of the mountain. In a Roman
-matron this would have been called the noble love of freedom:
-in a poor negress it is mere brutal obstinacy. We
-continued riding for some hours. For the few last miles the
-road was intricate, and it passed through a desert waste of
-marshes and lagoons. The scene by the dimmed light of the
-moon was most desolate. A few fireflies flitted by us; and
-the solitary snipe, as it rose, uttered its plaintive cry. The
-distant and sullen roar of the sea scarcely broke the stillness
-of the night.
-
-April 9th. -- We left our miserable sleeping-place before
-sunrise. The road passed through a narrow sandy plain,
-lying between the sea and the interior salt lagoons. The
-number of beautiful fishing birds, such as egrets and cranes,
-and the succulent plants assuming most fantastical forms,
-gave to the scene an interest which it would not otherwise
-have possessed. The few stunted trees were loaded with
-parasitical plants, among which the beauty and delicious
-fragrance of some of the orchideae were most to be admired.
-As the sun rose, the day became extremely hot, and the
-reflection of the light and heat from the white sand was very
-distressing. We dined at Mandetiba; the thermometer in
-the shade being 84 degs. The beautiful view of the distant
-wooded hills, reflected in the perfectly calm water of an
-extensive lagoon, quite refreshed us. As the venda [1] here
-was a very good one, and I have the pleasant, but rare
-remembrance, of an excellent dinner, I will be grateful and
-presently describe it, as the type of its class. These houses
-are often large, and are built of thick upright posts, with
-boughs interwoven, and afterwards plastered. They seldom
-have floors, and never glazed windows; but are generally
-pretty well roofed. Universally the front part is open, forming
-a kind of verandah, in which tables and benches are
-placed. The bed-rooms join on each side, and here the passenger
-may sleep as comfortably as he can, on a wooden
-platform, covered by a thin straw mat. The venda stands
-in a courtyard, where the horses are fed. On first arriving
-it was our custom to unsaddle the horses and give them
-their Indian corn; then, with a low bow, to ask the senhor
-to do us the favour to give up something to eat. "Anything
-you choose, sir," was his usual answer. For the few first
-times, vainly I thanked providence for having guided us
-to so good a man. The conversation proceeding, the case
-universally became deplorable. "Any fish can you do us the
-favour of giving ?" -- "Oh! no, sir." -- "Any soup?" -- "No,
-sir." -- "Any bread?" -- "Oh! no, sir." -- "Any dried meat?"
--- "Oh! no, sir." If we were lucky, by waiting a couple of
-hours, we obtained fowls, rice, and farinha. It not unfrequently
-happened, that we were obliged to kill, with stones,
-the poultry for our own supper. When, thoroughly exhausted
-by fatigue and hunger, we timorously hinted that we should
-be glad of our meal, the pompous, and (though true) most
-unsatisfactory answer was, "It will be ready when it is
-ready." If we had dared to remonstrate any further, we
-should have been told to proceed on our journey, as being
-too impertinent. The hosts are most ungracious and disagreeable
-in their manners; their houses and their persons
-are often filthily dirty; the want of the accommodation of
-forks, knives, and spoons is common; and I am sure no cottage
-or hovel in England could be found in a state so utterly
-destitute of every comfort. At Campos Novos, however, we
-fared sumptuously; having rice and fowls, biscuit, wine, and
-spirits, for dinner; coffee in the evening, and fish with coffee
-for breakfast. All this, with good food for the horses, only
-cost 2s. 6d. per head. Yet the host of this venda, being
-asked if he knew anything of a whip which one of the party
-had lost, gruffly answered, "How should I know? why did
-you not take care of it? -- I suppose the dogs have eaten it."
-
-Leaving Mandetiba, we continued to pass through an intricate
-wilderness of lakes; in some of which were fresh,
-in others salt water shells. Of the former kinds, I found
-a Limnaea in great numbers in a lake, into which, the inhabitants
-assured me that the sea enters once a year, and
-sometimes oftener, and makes the water quite salt. I have
-no doubt many interesting facts, in relation to marine and
-fresh water animals, might be observed in this chain of
-lagoons, which skirt the coast of Brazil. M. Gay [2] has
-stated that he found in the neighbourhood of Rio, shells of
-the marine genera solen and mytilus, and fresh water ampullariae,
-living together in brackish water. I also frequently
-observed in the lagoon near the Botanic Garden, where the
-water is only a little less salt than in the sea, a species of
-hydrophilus, very similar to a water-beetle common in the
-ditches of England: in the same lake the only shell belonged
-to a genus generally found in estuaries.
-
-Leaving the coast for a time, we again entered the forest.
-The trees were very lofty, and remarkable, compared with
-those of Europe, from the whiteness of their trunks. I see
-by my note-book, "wonderful and beautiful, flowering parasites,"
-invariably struck me as the most novel object in these
-grand scenes. Travelling onwards we passed through tracts
-of pasturage, much injured by the enormous conical ants'
-nests, which were nearly twelve feet high. They gave to the
-plain exactly the appearance of the mud volcanos at Jorullo,
-as figured by Humboldt. We arrived at Engenhodo after it
-was dark, having been ten hours on horseback. I never
-ceased, during the whole journey, to be surprised at the
-amount of labour which the horses were capable of enduring;
-they appeared also to recover from any injury much
-sooner than those of our English breed. The Vampire bat
-is often the cause of much trouble, by biting the horses on
-their withers. The injury is generally not so much owing
-to the loss of blood, as to the inflammation which the pressure
-of the saddle afterwards produces. The whole circumstance
-has lately been doubted in England; I was therefore
-fortunate in being present when one (Desmodus d'orbignyi,
-Wat.) was actually caught on a horse's back. We were
-bivouacking late one evening near Coquimbo, in Chile, when
-my servant, noticing that one of the horses was very restive,
-went to see what was the matter, and fancying he could
-distinguish something, suddenly put his hand on the beast's
-withers, and secured the vampire. In the morning the spot
-where the bite had been inflicted was easily distinguished
-from being slightly swollen and bloody. The third day
-afterwards we rode the horse, without any ill effects.
-
-April 13th. -- After three days' travelling we arrived at
-Socego, the estate of Senhor Manuel Figuireda, a relation
-of one of our party. The house was simple, and, though like
-a barn in form, was well suited to the climate. In the sitting-
-room gilded chairs and sofas were oddly contrasted with the
-whitewashed walls, thatched roof, and windows without
-glass. The house, together with the granaries, the stables,
-and workshops for the blacks, who had been taught various
-trades, formed a rude kind of quadrangle; in the centre
-of which a large pile of coffee was drying. These buildings
-stand on a little hill, overlooking the cultivated ground, and
-surrounded on every side by a wall of dark green luxuriant
-forest. The chief produce of this part of the country is
-coffee. Each tree is supposed to yield annually, on an average,
-two pounds; but some give as much as eight. Mandioca
-or cassada is likewise cultivated in great quantity. Every
-part of this plant is useful; the leaves and stalks are eaten
-by the horses, and the roots are ground into a pulp, which,
-when pressed dry and baked, forms the farinha, the principal
-article of sustenance in the Brazils. It is a curious,
-though well-known fact, that the juice of this most nutritious
-plant is highly poisonous. A few years ago a cow died at
-this Fazenda, in consequence of having drunk some of it.
-Senhor Figuireda told me that he had planted, the year before,
-one bag of feijao or beans, and three of rice; the
-former of which produced eighty, and the latter three hundred
-and twenty fold. The pasturage supports a fine stock
-of cattle, and the woods are so full of game that a deer had
-been killed on each of the three previous days. This profusion
-of food showed itself at dinner, where, if the tables did
-not groan, the guests surely did; for each person is expected
-to eat of every dish. One day, having, as I thought, nicely
-calculated so that nothing should go away untasted, to my
-utter dismay a roast turkey and a pig appeared in all their
-substantial reality. During the meals, it was the employment
-of a man to drive out of the room sundry old hounds,
-and dozens of little black children, which crawled in together,
-at every opportunity. As long as the idea of slavery could be
-banished, there was something exceedingly fascinating in
-this simple and patriarchal style of living: it was such a
-perfect retirement and independence from the rest of the
-world.
-
-As soon as any stranger is seen arriving, a large bell is set
-tolling, and generally some small cannon are fired. The
-event is thus announced to the rocks and woods, but to nothing
-else. One morning I walked out an hour before daylight
-to admire the solemn stillness of the scene; at last, the
-silence was broken by the morning hymn, raised on high by the
-whole body of the blacks; and in this manner their daily
-work is generally begun. On such fazendas as these, I have
-no doubt the slaves pass happy and contented lives. On
-Saturday and Sunday they work for themselves, and in this
-fertile climate the labour of two days is sufficient to support
-a man and his family for the whole week.
-
-April 14th. -- Leaving Socego, we rode to another estate on
-the Rio Macae, which was the last patch of cultivated ground
-in that direction. The estate was two and a half miles long,
-and the owner had forgotten how many broad. Only a very
-small piece had been cleared, yet almost every acre was
-capable of yielding all the various rich productions of a tropical
-land. Considering the enormous area of Brazil, the proportion
-of cultivated ground can scarcely be considered as
-anything, compared to that which is left in the state of
-nature: at some future age, how vast a population it will
-support! During the second day's journey we found the
-road so shut up, that it was necessary that a man should go
-ahead with a sword to cut away the creepers. The forest
-abounded with beautiful objects; among which the tree ferns,
-though not large, were, from their bright green foliage, and
-the elegant curvature of their fronds, most worthy of admiration.
-In the evening it rained very heavily, and although the
-thermometer stood at 65 degs., I felt very cold. As soon as
-the rain ceased, it was curious to observe the extraordinary
-evaporation which commenced over the whole extent of the
-forest. At the height of a hundred feet the hills were buried
-in a dense white vapour, which rose like columns of smoke
-from the most thickly wooded parts, and especially from the
-valleys. I observed this phenomenon on several occasions.
-I suppose it is owing to the large surface of foliage, previously
-heated by the sun's rays.
-
-While staying at this estate, I was very nearly being an
-eye-witness to one of those atrocious acts which can only
-take place in a slave country. Owing to a quarrel and a
-lawsuit, the owner was on the point of taking all the women
-and children from the male slaves, and selling them separately
-at the public auction at Rio. Interest, and not any
-feeling of compassion, prevented this act. Indeed, I do not
-believe the inhumanity of separating thirty families, who
-had lived together for many years, even occurred to the
-owner. Yet I will pledge myself, that in humanity and
-good feeling he was superior to the common run of men.
-It may be said there exists no limit to the blindness of interest
-and selfish habit. I may mention one very trifling anecdote,
-which at the time struck me more forcibly than any
-story of cruelty. I was crossing a ferry with a negro, who
-was uncommonly stupid. In endeavouring to make him
-understand, I talked loud, and made signs, in doing which I
-passed my hand near his face. He, I suppose, thought I was
-in a passion, and was going to strike him; for instantly,
-with a frightened look and half-shut eyes, he dropped his
-hands. I shall never forget my feelings of surprise, disgust,
-and shame, at seeing a great powerful man afraid even to
-ward off a blow, directed, as he thought, at his face. This
-man had been trained to a degradation lower than the
-slavery of the most helpless animal.
-
-April 18th. -- In returning we spent two days at Socego,
-and I employed them in collecting insects in the forest. The
-greater number of trees, although so lofty, are not more
-than three or four feet in circumference. There are, of
-course, a few of much greater dimensions. Senhor Manuel
-was then making a canoe 70 feet in length from a solid trunk,
-which had originally been 110 feet long, and of great thickness.
-The contrast of palm trees, growing amidst the common
-branching kinds, never fails to give the scene an intertropical
-character. Here the woods were ornamented by the
-Cabbage Palm -- one of the most beautiful of its family. With
-a stem so narrow that it might be clasped with the two
-hands, it waves its elegant head at the height of forty or
-fifty feet above the ground. The woody creepers, themselves
-covered by other creepers, were of great thickness: some
-which I measured were two feet in circumference. Many of
-the older trees presented a very curious appearance from
-the tresses of a liana hanging from their boughs, and resembling
-bundles of hay. If the eye was turned from the world
-of foliage above, to the ground beneath, it was attracted by
-the extreme elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae.
-The latter, in some parts, covered the surface with a brushwood
-only a few inches high. In walking across these thick
-beds of mimosae, a broad track was marked by the change
-of shade, produced by the drooping of their sensitive petioles.
-It is easy to specify the individual objects of admiration in
-these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an adequate
-idea of the higher feelings of wonder, astonishment, and
-devotion, which fill and elevate the mind.
-
-April 19th.--Leaving Socego, during the two first days,
-we retraced our steps. It was very wearisome work, as the
-road generally ran across a glaring hot sandy plain, not
-far from the coast. I noticed that each time the horse put
-its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle chirping noise
-was produced. On the third day we took a different line,
-and passed through the gay little village of Madre de Deos.
-This is one of the principal lines of road in Brazil; yet it
-was in so bad a state that no wheeled vehicle, excepting the
-clumsy bullock-wagon, could pass along. In our whole journey
-we did not cross a single bridge built of stone; and
-those made of logs of wood were frequently so much out of
-repair, that it was necessary to go on one side to avoid them.
-All distances are inaccurately known. The road is often
-marked by crosses, in the place of milestones, to signify
-where human blood has been spilled. On the evening of the
-23rd we arrived at Rio, having finished our pleasant little
-excursion.
-
-During the remainder of my stay at Rio, I resided in a
-cottage at Botofogo Bay. It was impossible to wish for
-anything more delightful than thus to spend some weeks
-in so magnificent a country. In England any person fond
-of natural history enjoys in his walks a great advantage, by
-always having something to attract his attention; but in
-these fertile climates, teeming with life, the attractions are
-so numerous, that he is scarcely able to walk at all.
-
-The few observations which I was enabled to make were
-almost exclusively confined to the invertebrate animals. The
-existence of a division of the genus Planaria, which inhabits
-the dry land, interested me much. These animals are of so
-simple a structure, that Cuvier has arranged them with the
-intestinal worms, though never found within the bodies of
-other animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh
-water; but those to which I allude were found, even in the
-drier parts of the forest, beneath logs of rotten wood, on
-which I believe they feed. In general form they resemble
-little slugs, but are very much narrower in proportion, and
-several of the species are beautifully coloured with
-longitudinal stripes. Their structure is very simple: near the
-middle of the under or crawling surface there are two small
-transverse slits, from the anterior one of which a funnel-
-shaped and highly irritable mouth can be protruded. For
-some time after the rest of the animal was completely dead
-from the effects of salt water or any other cause, this organ
-still retained its vitality.
-
-I found no less than twelve different species of terrestrial
-Planariae in different parts of the southern hemisphere. [3]
-Some specimens which I obtained at Van Dieman's Land,
-I kept alive for nearly two months, feeding them on rotten
-wood. Having cut one of them transversely into two nearly
-equal parts, in the course of a fortnight both had the shape
-of perfect animals. I had, however, so divided the body,
-that one of the halves contained both the inferior orifices,
-and the other, in consequence, none. In the course of twenty-
-five days from the operation, the more perfect half could
-not have been distinguished from any other specimen. The
-other had increased much in size; and towards its posterior
-end, a clear space was formed in the parenchymatous mass,
-in which a rudimentary cup-shaped mouth could clearly be
-distinguished; on the under surface, however, no corresponding
-slit was yet open. If the increased heat of the weather,
-as we approached the equator, had not destroyed all the
-individuals, there can be no doubt that this last step would
-have completed its structure. Although so well-known an
-experiment, it was interesting to watch the gradual production
-of every essential organ, out of the simple extremity
-of another animal. It is extremely difficult to preserve these
-Planariae; as soon as the cessation of life allows the ordinary
-laws of change to act, their entire bodies become soft
-and fluid, with a rapidity which I have never seen equalled.
-
-I first visited the forest in which these Planariae were
-found, in company with an old Portuguese priest who took
-me out to hunt with him. The sport consisted in turning
-into the cover a few dogs, and then patiently waiting to fire
-at any animal which might appear. We were accompanied
-by the son of a neighbouring farmer -- a good specimen of
-a wild Brazilian youth. He was dressed in a tattered old
-shirt and trousers, and had his head uncovered: he carried
-an old-fashioned gun and a large knife. The habit of carrying
-the knife is universal; and in traversing a thick wood
-it is almost necessary, on account of the creeping plants.
-The frequent occurrence of murder may be partly attributed
-to this habit. The Brazilians are so dexterous with the
-knife, that they can throw it to some distance with precision,
-and with sufficient force to cause a fatal wound. I have seen
-a number of little boys practising this art as a game of play
-and from their skill in hitting an upright stick, they promised
-well for more earnest attempts. My companion, the day
-before, had shot two large bearded monkeys. These animals
-have prehensile tails, the extremity of which, even after
-death, can support the whole weight of the body. One of
-them thus remained fast to a branch, and it was necessary
-to cut down a large tree to procure it. This was soon effected,
-and down came tree and monkey with an awful crash. Our
-day's sport, besides the monkey, was confined to sundry small
-green parrots and a few toucans. I profited, however, by my
-acquaintance with the Portuguese padre, for on another
-occasion he gave me a fine specimen of the Yagouaroundi
-cat.
-
-Every one has heard of the beauty of the scenery near
-Botofogo. The house in which I lived was seated close
-beneath the well-known mountain of the Corcovado. It has
-been remarked, with much truth, that abruptly conical hills
-are characteristic of the formation which Humboldt designates
-as gneiss-granite. Nothing can be more striking than
-the effect of these huge rounded masses of naked rock rising
-out of the most luxuriant vegetation.
-
-I was often interested by watching the clouds, which,
-rolling in from seaward, formed a bank just beneath the
-highest point of the Corcovado. This mountain, like most
-others, when thus partly veiled, appeared to rise to a far
-prouder elevation than its real height of 2300 feet. Mr.
-Daniell has observed, in his meteorological essays, that a
-cloud sometimes appears fixed on a mountain summit, while
-the wind continues to blow over it. The same phenomenon
-here presented a slightly different appearance. In this case
-the cloud was clearly seen to curl over, and rapidly pass
-by the summit, and yet was neither diminished nor increased
-in size. The sun was setting, and a gentle southerly breeze,
-striking against the southern side of the rock, mingled its
-current with the colder air above; and the vapour was thus
-condensed; but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over
-the ridge, and came within the influence of the warmer
-atmosphere of the northern sloping bank, they were immediately
-re-dissolved.
-
-The climate, during the months of May and June, or the
-beginning of winter, was delightful. The mean temperature,
-from observations taken at nine o'clock, both morning
-and evening, was only 72 degs. It often rained heavily, but
-the drying southerly winds soon again rendered the walks
-pleasant. One morning, in the course of six hours, 1.6 inches
-of rain fell. As this storm passed over the forests which
-surround the Corcovado, the sound produced by the drops
-pattering on the countless multitude of leaves was very
-remarkable, it could be heard at the distance of a quarter of
-a mile, and was like the rushing of a great body of water.
-After the hotter days, it was delicious to sit quietly in the
-garden and watch the evening pass into night. Nature, in
-these climes, chooses her vocalists from more humble performers
-than in Europe. A small frog, of the genus Hyla,
-sits on a blade of grass about an inch above the surface of
-the water, and sends forth a pleasing chirp: when several
-are together they sing in harmony on different notes. I had
-some difficulty in catching a specimen of this frog. The
-genus Hyla has its toes terminated by small suckers; and I
-found this animal could crawl up a pane of glass, when
-placed absolutely perpendicular. Various cicidae and crickets,
-at the same time, keep up a ceaseless shrill cry, but which,
-softened by the distance, is not unpleasant. Every evening
-after dark this great concert commenced; and often have I
-sat listening to it, until my attention has been drawn away
-by some curious passing insect.
-
-At these times the fireflies are seen flitting about from
-hedge to hedge. On a dark night the light can be seen at
-about two hundred paces distant. It is remarkable that in
-all the different kinds of glowworms, shining elaters, and
-various marine animals (such as the crustacea, medusae,
-nereidae, a coralline of the genus Clytia, and Pyrosma),
-which I have observed, the light has been of a well-marked
-green colour. All the fireflies, which I caught here, belonged
-to the Lampyridae (in which family the English glowworm
-is included), and the greater number of specimens were of
-Lampyris occidentalis. [4] I found that this insect emitted
-the most brilliant flashes when irritated: in the intervals,
-the abdominal rings were obscured. The flash was almost
-co-instantaneous in the two rings, but it was just perceptible
-first in the anterior one. The shining matter was fluid and
-very adhesive: little spots, where the skin had been torn,
-continued bright with a slight scintillation, whilst the
-uninjured parts were obscured. When the insect was decapitated
-the rings remained uninterruptedly bright, but not so brilliant
-as before: local irritation with a needle always increased
-the vividness of the light. The rings in one instance retained
-their luminous property nearly twenty-four hours after the
-death of the insect. From these facts it would appear probable,
-that the animal has only the power of concealing or
-extinguishing the light for short intervals, and that at other
-times the display is involuntary. On the muddy and wet
-gravel-walks I found the larvae of this lampyris in great
-numbers: they resembled in general form the female of the
-English glowworm. These larvae possessed but feeble luminous
-powers; very differently from their parents, on the
-slightest touch they feigned death and ceased to shine; nor
-did irritation excite any fresh display. I kept several of
-them alive for some time: their tails are very singular organs,
-for they act, by a well-fitted contrivance, as suckers or organs
-of attachment, and likewise as reservoirs for saliva, or some
-such fluid. I repeatedly fed them on raw meat; and I invariably
-observed, that every now and then the extremity
-of the tail was applied to the mouth, and a drop of fluid
-exuded on the meat, which was then in the act of being consumed.
-The tail, notwithstanding so much practice, does not
-seem to be able to find its way to the mouth; at least the neck
-was always touched first, and apparently as a guide.
-
-When we were at Bahia, an elater or beetle (Pyrophorus
-luminosus, Illig.) seemed the most common luminous insect.
-The light in this case was also rendered more brilliant by
-irritation. I amused myself one day by observing the springing
-powers of this insect, which have not, as it appears to
-me, been properly described. [5] The elater, when placed on
-its back and preparing to spring, moved its head and thorax
-backwards, so that the pectoral spine was drawn out, and
-rested on the edge of its sheath. The same backward movement
-being continued, the spine, by the full action of the
-muscles, was bent like a spring; and the insect at this moment
-rested on the extremity of its head and wing-cases.
-The effort being suddenly relaxed, the head and thorax flew
-up, and in consequence, the base of the wing-cases struck
-the supporting surface with such force, that the insect by
-the reaction was jerked upwards to the height of one or
-two inches. The projecting points of the thorax, and the
-sheath of the spine, served to steady the whole body during
-the spring. In the descriptions which I have read, sufficient
-stress does not appear to have been laid on the elasticity of
-the spine: so sudden a spring could not be the result of simple
-muscular contraction, without the aid of some mechanical
-contrivance.
-
-On several occasions I enjoyed some short but most pleasant
-excursions in the neighbouring country. One day I went
-to the Botanic Garden, where many plants, well known for
-their great utility, might be seen growing. The leaves of the
-camphor, pepper, cinnamon, and clove trees were delightfully
-aromatic; and the bread-fruit, the jaca, and the mango,
-vied with each other in the magnificence of their foliage.
-The landscape in the neighbourhood of Bahia almost takes
-its character from the two latter trees. Before seeing them,
-I had no idea that any trees could cast so black a shade on
-the ground. Both of them bear to the evergreen vegetation
-of these climates the same kind of relation which laurels
-and hollies in England do to the lighter green of the deciduous
-trees. It may be observed, that the houses within the
-tropics are surrounded by the most beautiful forms of
-vegetation, because many of them are at the same time most
-useful to man. Who can doubt that these qualities are united
-in the banana, the cocoa-nut, the many kinds of palm, the
-orange, and the bread-fruit tree?
-
-During this day I was particularly struck with a remark
-of Humboldt's, who often alludes to "the thin vapour which,
-without changing the transparency of the air, renders its
-tints more harmonious, and softens its effects." This is an
-appearance which I have never observed in the temperate
-zones. The atmosphere, seen through a short space of half
-or three-quarters of a mile, was perfectly lucid, but at a
-greater distance all colours were blended into a most beautiful
-haze, of a pale French grey, mingled with a little blue.
-The condition of the atmosphere between the morning and
-about noon, when the effect was most evident, had undergone
-little change, excepting in its dryness. In the interval,
-the difference between the dew point and temperature had
-increased from 7.5 to 17 degs.
-
-On another occasion I started early and walked to the
-Gavia, or topsail mountain. The air was delightfully cool
-and fragrant; and the drops of dew still glittered on the
-leaves of the large liliaceous plants, which shaded the
-streamlets of clear water. Sitting down on a block of granite,
-it was delightful to watch the various insects and birds as
-they flew past. The humming-bird seems particularly fond of
-such shady retired spots. Whenever I saw these little creatures
-buzzing round a flower, with their wings vibrating so
-rapidly as to be scarcely visible, I was reminded of the
-sphinx moths: their movements and habits are indeed in
-many respects very similar.
-
-Following a pathway, I entered a noble forest, and from
-a height of five or six hundred feet, one of those splendid
-views was presented, which are so common on every side
-of Rio. At this elevation the landscape attains its most
-brilliant tint; and every form, every shade, so completely
-surpasses in magnificence all that the European has ever
-beheld in his own country, that he knows not how to express
-his feelings. The general effect frequently recalled
-to my mind the gayest scenery of the Opera-house or the
-great theatres. I never returned from these excursions
-empty-handed. This day I found a specimen of a curious
-fungus, called Hymenophallus. Most people know the English
-Phallus, which in autumn taints the air with its odious
-smell: this, however, as the entomologist is aware, is, to
-some of our beetles a delightful fragrance. So was it here;
-for a Strongylus, attracted by the odour, alighted on the
-fungus as I carried it in my hand. We here see in two distant
-countries a similar relation between plants and insects of the
-same families, though the species of both are different. When
-man is the agent in introducing into a country a new species,
-this relation is often broken: as one instance of this I may
-mention, that the leaves of the cabbages and lettuces, which
-in England afford food to such a multitude of slugs and
-caterpillars, in the gardens near Rio are untouched.
-
-During our stay at Brazil I made a large collection of
-insects. A few general observations on the comparative
-importance of the different orders may be interesting to the
-English entomologist. The large and brilliantly coloured
-Lepidoptera bespeak the zone they inhabit, far more plainly
-than any other race of animals. I allude only to the
-butterflies; for the moths, contrary to what might have been
-expected from the rankness of the vegetation, certainly
-appeared in much fewer numbers than in our own temperate
-regions. I was much surprised at the habits of Papilio
-feronia. This butterfly is not uncommon, and generally
-frequents the orange-groves. Although a high flier, yet
-it very frequently alights on the trunks of trees. On these
-occasions its head is invariably placed downwards; and its
-wings are expanded in a horizontal plane, instead of being
-folded vertically, as is commonly the case. This is the only
-butterfly which I have ever seen, that uses its legs for running.
-Not being aware of this fact, the insect, more than once, as I
-cautiously approached with my forceps, shuffled on one side
-just as the instrument was on the point of closing, and thus
-escaped. But a far more singular fact is the power which
-this species possesses of making a noise. [6] Several times when
-a pair, probably male and female, were chasing each other
-in an irregular course, they passed within a few yards of me;
-and I distinctly heard a clicking noise, similar to that
-produced by a toothed wheel passing under a spring catch. The
-noise was continued at short intervals, and could be
-distinguished at about twenty yards' distance: I am certain
-there is no error in the observation.
-
-I was disappointed in the general aspect of the Coleoptera.
-The number of minute and obscurely coloured beetles
-is exceedingly great. [7] The cabinets of Europe can, as yet,
-boast only of the larger species from tropical climates. It
-is sufficient to disturb the composure of an entomologist's
-mind, to look forward to the future dimensions of a complete
-catalogue. The carnivorous beetles, or Carabidae, appear
-in extremely few numbers within the tropics: this is
-the more remarkable when compared to the case of the
-carnivorous quadrupeds, which are so abundant in hot
-countries. I was struck with this observation both on entering
-Brazil, and when I saw the many elegant and active forms
-of the Harpalidae re-appearing on the temperate plains of
-La Plata. Do the very numerous spiders and rapacious
-Hymenoptera supply the place of the carnivorous beetles?
-The carrion-feeders and Brachelytra are very uncommon;
-on the other hand, the Rhyncophora and Chrysomelidae, all
-of which depend on the vegetable world for subsistence, are
-present in astonishing numbers. I do not here refer to the
-number of different species, but to that of the individual
-insects; for on this it is that the most striking character in
-the entomology of different countries depends. The orders
-Orthoptera and Hemiptera are particularly numerous; as
-likewise is the stinging division of the Hymenoptera the bees,
-perhaps, being excepted. A person, on first entering a tropical
-forest, is astonished at the labours of the ants: well-beaten
-paths branch off in every direction, on which an army
-of never-failing foragers may be seen, some going forth, and
-others returning, burdened with pieces of green leaf, often
-larger than their own bodies.
-
-A small dark-coloured ant sometimes migrates in countless
-numbers. One day, at Bahia, my attention was drawn
-by observing many spiders, cockroaches, and other insects,
-and some lizards, rushing in the greatest agitation across
-a bare piece of ground. A little way behind, every stalk and
-leaf was blackened by a small ant. The swarm having
-crossed the bare space, divided itself, and descended an old
-wall. By this means many insects were fairly enclosed; and
-the efforts which the poor little creatures made to extricate
-themselves from such a death were wonderful. When the
-ants came to the road they changed their course, and in
-narrow files reascended the wall. Having placed a small
-stone so as to intercept one of the lines, the whole body
-attacked it, and then immediately retired. Shortly afterwards
-another body came to the charge, and again having failed
-to make any impression, this line of march was entirely
-given up. By going an inch round, the file might have
-avoided the stone, and this doubtless would have happened,
-if it had been originally there: but having been attacked, the
-lion-hearted little warriors scorned the idea of yielding.
-
-Certain wasp-like insects, which construct in the corners
-of the verandahs clay cells for their larvae, are very numerous
-in the neighbourhood of Rio. These cells they stuff full
-of half-dead spiders and caterpillars, which they seem
-wonderfully to know how to sting to that degree as to leave
-them paralysed but alive, until their eggs are hatched; and
-the larvae feed on the horrid mass of powerless, half-killed
-victims -- a sight which has been described by an enthusiastic
-naturalist [8] as curious and pleasing! I was much interested
-one day by watching a deadly contest between a Pepsis and
-a large spider of the genus Lycosa. The wasp made a sudden
-dash at its prey, and then flew away: the spider was evidently
-wounded, for, trying to escape, it rolled down a little
-slope, but had still strength sufficient to crawl into a thick
-tuft of grass. The wasp soon returned, and seemed surprised
-at not immediately finding its victim. It then commenced
-as regular a hunt as ever hound did after fox;
-making short semicircular casts, and all the time rapidly vibrating
-its wings and antennae. The spider, though well
-concealed, was soon discovered, and the wasp, evidently still
-afraid of its adversary's jaws, after much manoeuvring, inflicted
-two stings on the under side of its thorax. At last,
-carefully examining with its antennae the now motionless
-spider, it proceeded to drag away the body. But I stopped
-both tyrant and prey. [9]
-
-The number of spiders, in proportion to other insects, is
-here compared with England very much larger; perhaps
-more so than with any other division of the articulate animals.
-The variety of species among the jumping spiders
-appears almost infinite. The genus, or rather family, of
-Epeira, is here characterized by many singular forms; some
-species have pointed coriaceous shells, others enlarged and
-spiny tibiae. Every path in the forest is barricaded with the
-strong yellow web of a species, belonging to the same division
-with the Epeira clavipes of Fabricius, which was formerly
-said by Sloane to make, in the West Indies, webs so
-strong as to catch birds. A small and pretty kind of spider,
-with very long fore-legs, and which appears to belong to an
-undescribed genus, lives as a parasite on almost every one
-of these webs. I suppose it is too insignificant to be noticed
-by the great Epeira, and is therefore allowed to prey on the
-minute insects, which, adhering to the lines, would otherwise
-be wasted. When frightened, this little spider either
-feigns death by extending its front legs, or suddenly drops
-from the web. A large Epeira of the same division with
-Epeira tuberculata and conica is extremely common, especially
-in dry situations. Its web, which is generally placed
-among the great leaves of the common agave, is sometimes
-strengthened near the centre by a pair or even four zigzag
-ribbons, which connect two adjoining rays. When any large
-insect, as a grasshopper or wasp, is caught, the spider, by
-a dexterous movement, makes it revolve very rapidly, and at
-the same time emitting a band of threads from its spinners,
-soon envelops its prey in a case like the cocoon of a silkworm.
-The spider now examines the powerless victim, and
-gives the fatal bite on the hinder part of its thorax; then
-retreating, patiently waits till the poison has taken effect.
-The virulence of this poison may be judged of from the fact
-that in half a minute I opened the mesh, and found a large
-wasp quite lifeless. This Epeira always stands with its head
-downwards near the centre of the web. When disturbed, it
-acts differently according to circumstances: if there is a
-thicket below, it suddenly falls down; and I have distinctly
-seen the thread from the spinners lengthened by the animal
-while yet stationary, as preparatory to its fall. If the ground
-is clear beneath, the Epeira seldom falls, but moves quickly
-through a central passage from one to the other side. When
-still further disturbed, it practises a most curious manoeuvre:
-standing in the middle, it violently jerks the web, which it
-attached to elastic twigs, till at last the whole acquires such
-a rapid vibratory movement, that even the outline of the
-spider's body becomes indistinct.
-
-It is well known that most of the British spiders, when
-a large insect is caught in their webs, endeavour to cut the
-lines and liberate their prey, to save their nets from being
-entirely spoiled. I once, however, saw in a hot-house in
-Shropshire a large female wasp caught in the irregular web
-of a quite small spider; and this spider, instead of cutting
-the web, most perseveringly continued to entangle the body,
-and especially the wings, of its prey. The wasp at first aimed
-in vain repeated thrusts with its sting at its little antagonist.
-Pitying the wasp, after allowing it to struggle for more than
-an hour, I killed it and put it back into the web. The spider
-soon returned; and an hour afterwards I was much surprised to
-find it with its jaws buried in the orifice, through which the
-sting is protruded by the living wasp. I drove the spider away
-two or three times, but for the next twenty-four hours I
-always found it again sucking at the same place. The spider
-became much distended by the juices of its prey, which was
-many times larger than itself.
-
-I may here just mention, that I found, near St. Fe Bajada,
-many large black spiders, with ruby-coloured marks on their
-backs, having gregarious habits. The webs were placed
-vertically, as is invariably the case with the genus Epeira:
-they were separated from each other by a space of about
-two feet, but were all attached to certain common lines,
-which were of great length, and extended to all parts of
-the community. In this manner the tops of some large bushes
-were encompassed by the united nets. Azara [10] has described
-a gregarious spider in Paraguay, which Walckanaer thinks
-must be a Theridion, but probably it is an Epeira, and
-perhaps even the same species with mine. I cannot, however,
-recollect seeing a central nest as large as a hat, in which,
-during autumn, when the spiders die, Azara says the eggs are
-deposited. As all the spiders which I saw were of the same
-size, they must have been nearly of the same age. This
-gregarious habit, in so typical a genus as Epeira, among
-insects, which are so bloodthirsty and solitary that even
-the two sexes attack each other, is a very singular fact.
-
-In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found
-another spider with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines
-radiated in a vertical plane from a common centre, where the
-insect had its station; but only two of the rays were connected
-by a symmetrical mesh-work; so that the net, instead of being,
-as is generally the case, circular, consisted of a wedge-shaped
-segment. All the webs were similarly constructed.
-
-[1] Venda, the Portuguese name for an inn.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles for 1833.
-
-[3] I have described and named these species in the Annals of
-Nat. Hist., vol. xiv. p. 241.
-
-[4] I am greatly indebted to Mr. Waterhouse for his kindness
-in naming for me this and many other insects, and giving me
-much valuable assistance.
-
-[5] Kirby's Entomology, vol. ii. p. 317.
-
-[6] Mr. Doubleday has lately described (before the Entomological
-Society, March 3rd, 1845) a peculiar structure in the wings
-of this butterfly, which seems to be the means of its making
-its noise. He says, "It is remarkable for having a sort of
-drum at the base of the fore wings, between the costal nervure
-and the subcostal. These two nervures, moreover, have a peculiar
-screw-like diaphragm or vessel in the interior." I find in
-Langsdorff's travels (in the years 1803-7, p. 74) it is said,
-that in the island of St. Catherine's on the coast of Brazil,
-a butterfly called Februa Hoffmanseggi, makes a noise, when
-flying away, like a rattle.
-
-[7] I may mention, as a common instance of one day's (June 23rd)
-collecting, when I was not attending particularly to the
-Coleoptera, that I caught sixty-eight species of that order.
-Among these, there were only two of the Carabidae, four
-Brachelytra, fifteen Rhyncophora, and fourteen of the
-Chrysomelidae. Thirty-seven species of Arachnidae, which I
-brought home, will be sufficient to prove that I was not
-paying overmuch attention to the generally favoured order
-of Coleoptera.
-
-[8] In a MS. in the British Museum by Mr. Abbott, who made
-his observations in Georgia; see Mr. A. White's paper in the
-"Annals of Nat. Hist.," vol. vii. p. 472. Lieut. Hutton has
-described a sphex with similar habits in India, in the "Journal
-of the Asiatic Society," vol. i. p. 555.
-
-[9] Don Felix Azara (vol. i. p. 175), mentioning a hymenopterous
-insect, probably of the same genus, says he saw it dragging
-a dead spider through tall grass, in a straight line to its
-nest, which was one hundred and sixty-three paces distant. He
-adds that the wasp, in order to find the road, every now and
-then made "demi-tours d'environ trois palmes."
-
-[10] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 213
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MALDONADO
-
-Monte Video -- Excursion to R. Polanco -- Lazo and Bolas --
-Partridges -- Absence of Trees -- Deer -- Capybara, or River
-Hog -- Tucutuco -- Molothrus, cuckoo-like habits -- Tyrant-
-flycatcher -- Mocking-bird -- Carrion Hawks -- Tubes formed
-by Lightning -- House struck.
-
-
-July 5th, 1832 -- In the morning we got under way, and stood
-out of the splendid harbour of Rio de Janeiro. In our passage
-to the Plata, we saw nothing particular, excepting on one day
-a great shoal of porpoises, many hundreds in number. The whole
-sea was in places furrowed by them; and a most extraordinary
-spectacle was presented, as hundreds, proceeding together by
-jumps, in which their whole bodies were exposed, thus cut the
-water. When the ship was running nine knots an hour, these
-animals could cross and recross the bows with the greatest of
-ease, and then dash away right ahead. As soon as we entered
-the estuary of the Plata, the weather was very unsettled. One
-dark night we were surrounded by numerous seals and penguins,
-which made such strange noises, that the officer on watch
-reported he could hear the cattle bellowing on shore. On a
-second night we witnessed a splendid scene of natural fireworks;
-the mast-head and yard-arm-ends shone with St. Elmo's light;
-and the form of the vane could almost be traced, as if it had
-been rubbed with phosphorus. The sea was so highly luminous,
-that the tracks of the penguins were marked by a fiery wake,
-and the darkness of the sky was momentarily illuminated by
-the most vivid lightning.
-
-When within the mouth of the river, I was interested by
-observing how slowly the waters of the sea and river mixed.
-The latter, muddy and discoloured, from its less specific
-gravity, floated on the surface of the salt water. This was
-curiously exhibited in the wake of the vessel, where a line
-of blue water was seen mingling in little eddies, with the
-adjoining fluid.
-
-July 26th. -- We anchored at Monte Video. The Beagle
-was employed in surveying the extreme southern and eastern
-coasts of America, south of the Plata, during the two succeeding
-years. To prevent useless repetitions, I will extract
-those parts of my journal which refer to the same districts
-without always attending to the order in which we visited
-them.
-
-MALDONADO is situated on the northern bank of the Plata,
-and not very far from the mouth of the estuary. It is a
-most quiet, forlorn, little town; built, as is universally the
-case in these countries, with the streets running at right
-angles to each other, and having in the middle a large plaza
-or square, which, from its size, renders the scantiness of the
-population more evident. It possesses scarcely any trade;
-the exports being confined to a few hides and living cattle.
-The inhabitants are chiefly landowners, together with a few
-shopkeepers and the necessary tradesmen, such as blacksmiths
-and carpenters, who do nearly all the business for a
-circuit of fifty miles round. The town is separated from the
-river by a band of sand-hillocks, about a mile broad: it is
-surrounded, on all other sides, by an open slightly-undulating
-country, covered by one uniform layer of fine green turf,
-on which countless herds of cattle, sheep, and horses graze.
-There is very little land cultivated even close to the town.
-A few hedges, made of cacti and agave, mark out where
-some wheat or Indian corn has been planted. The features
-of the country are very similar along the whole northern
-bank of the Plata. The only difference is, that here the
-granitic hills are a little bolder. The scenery is very
-uninteresting; there is scarcely a house, an enclosed piece of
-ground, or even a tree, to give it an air of cheerfulness
-Yet, after being imprisoned for some time in a ship, there is
-a charm in the unconfined feeling of walking over boundless
-plains of turf. Moreover, if your view is limited to a small
-space, many objects possess beauty. Some of the smaller
-birds are brilliantly coloured; and the bright green sward,
-browsed short by the cattle, is ornamented by dwarf flowers,
-among which a plant, looking like the daisy, claimed the
-place of an old friend. What would a florist say to whole
-tracts, so thickly covered by the Verbena melindres, as, even
-at a distance, to appear of the most gaudy scarlet?
-
-I stayed ten weeks at Maldonado, in which time a nearly
-perfect collection of the animals, birds, and reptiles, was
-procured. Before making any observations respecting them,
-I will give an account of a little excursion I made as far
-as the river Polanco, which is about seventy miles distant,
-in a northerly direction. I may mention, as a proof how
-cheap everything is in this country, that I paid only two
-dollars a day, or eight shillings, for two men, together with
-a troop of about a dozen riding-horses. My companions
-were well armed with pistols and sabres; a precaution which
-I thought rather unnecessary but the first piece of news
-we heard was, that, the day before, a traveller from Monte
-Video had been found dead on the road, with his throat
-cut. This happened close to a cross, the record of a former
-murder.
-
-On the first night we slept at a retired little country-house;
-and there I soon found out that I possessed two or
-three articles, especially a pocket compass, which created
-unbounded astonishment. In every house I was asked to
-show the compass, and by its aid, together with a map, to
-point out the direction of various places. It excited the
-liveliest admiration that I, a perfect stranger, should know
-the road (for direction and road are synonymous in this open
-country) to places where I had never been. At one house
-a young woman, who was ill in bed, sent to entreat me to
-come and show her the compass. If their surprise was great,
-mine was greater, to find such ignorance among people who
-possessed their thousands of cattle, and "estancias" of great
-extent. It can only be accounted for by the circumstance
-that this retired part of the country is seldom visited by
-foreigners. I was asked whether the earth or sun moved;
-whether it was hotter or colder to the north; where Spain
-was, and many other such questions. The greater number of
-the inhabitants had an indistinct idea that England, London,
-and North America, were different names for the same
-place; but the better informed well knew that London and
-North America were separate countries close together, and
-that England was a large town in London! I carried with
-me some promethean matches, which I ignited by biting; it
-was thought so wonderful that a man should strike fire with
-his teeth, that it was usual to collect the whole family to
-see it: I was once offered a dollar for a single one. Washing
-my face in the morning caused much speculation at the village
-of Las Minas; a superior tradesman closely cross-questioned
-me about so singular a practice; and likewise why on
-board we wore our beards; for he had heard from my guide
-that we did so. He eyed me with much suspicion; perhaps
-he had heard of ablutions in the Mahomedan religion, and
-knowing me to be a heretick, probably he came to the conclusion
-that all hereticks were Turks. It is the general custom
-in this country to ask for a night's lodging at the first
-convenient house. The astonishment at the compass, and
-my other feats of jugglery, was to a certain degree
-advantageous, as with that, and the long stories my guides
-told of my breaking stones, knowing venomous from harmless
-snakes, collecting insects, etc., I repaid them for their
-hospitality. I am writing as if I had been among the inhabitants
-of central Africa: Banda Oriental would not be flattered by
-the comparison; but such were my feelings at the time.
-
-The next day we rode to the village of Las Minas. The
-country was rather more hilly, but otherwise continued the
-same; an inhabitant of the Pampas no doubt would have
-considered it as truly Alpine. The country is so thinly
-inhabited, that during the whole day we scarcely met a single
-person. Las Minas is much smaller even than Maldonado.
-It is seated on a little plain, and is surrounded by low rocky
-mountains. It is of the usual symmetrical form, and with
-its whitewashed church standing in the centre, had rather
-a pretty appearance. The outskirting houses rose out of the
-plain like isolated beings, without the accompaniment of
-gardens or courtyards. This is generally the case in the
-country, and all the houses have, in consequence an
-uncomfortable aspect. At night we stopped at a pulperia,
-or drinking-shop. During the evening a great number of Gauchos
-came in to drink spirits and smoke cigars: their appearance
-is very striking; they are generally tall and handsome, but
-with a proud and dissolute expression of countenance. They
-frequently wear their moustaches and long black hair curling
-down their backs. With their brightly coloured garments,
-great spurs clanking about their heels, and knives
-stuck as daggers (and often so used) at their waists, they
-look a very different race of men from what might be expected
-from their name of Gauchos, or simple countrymen.
-Their politeness is excessive; they never drink their spirits
-without expecting you to taste it; but whilst making their
-exceedingly graceful bow, they seem quite as ready, if occasion
-offered, to cut your throat.
-
-On the third day we pursued rather an irregular course,
-as I was employed in examining some beds of marble. On
-the fine plains of turf we saw many ostriches (Struthio
-rhea). Some of the flocks contained as many as twenty or
-thirty birds. These, when standing on any little eminence,
-and seen against the clear sky, presented a very noble
-appearance. I never met with such tame ostriches in any other
-part of the country: it was easy to gallop up within a short
-distance of them; but then, expanding their wings, they
-made all sail right before the wind, and soon left the horse
-astern.
-
-At night we came to the house of Don Juan Fuentes, a
-rich landed proprietor, but not personally known to either
-of my companions. On approaching the house of a stranger,
-it is usual to follow several little points of etiquette: riding
-up slowly to the door, the salutation of Ave Maria is given,
-and until somebody comes out and asks you to alight, it is
-not customary even to get off your horse: the formal answer
-of the owner is, "sin pecado concebida" -- that is, conceived
-without sin. Having entered the house, some general conversation
-is kept up for a few minutes, till permission is
-asked to pass the night there. This is granted as a matter
-of course. The stranger then takes his meals with the family,
-and a room is assigned him, where with the horsecloths
-belonging to his recado (or saddle of the Pampas) he makes
-his bed. It is curious how similar circumstances produce
-such similar results in manners. At the Cape of Good Hope
-the same hospitality, and very nearly the same points of
-etiquette, are universally observed. The difference, however,
-between the character of the Spaniard and that of the Dutch
-boer is shown, by the former never asking his guest a single
-question beyond the strictest rule of politeness, whilst the
-honest Dutchman demands where he has been, where he is
-going, what is his business, and even how many brothers
-sisters, or children he may happen to have.
-
-Shortly after our arrival at Don Juan's, one of the largest
-herds of cattle was driven in towards the house, and three
-beasts were picked out to be slaughtered for the supply of
-the establishment. These half-wild cattle are very active;
-and knowing full well the fatal lazo, they led the horses a
-long and laborious chase. After witnessing the rude wealth
-displayed in the number of cattle, men, and horses, Don
-Juan's miserable house was quite curious. The floor consisted
-of hardened mud, and the windows were without
-glass; the sitting-room boasted only of a few of the roughest
-chairs and stools, with a couple of tables. The supper, although
-several strangers were present, consisted of two huge
-piles, one of roast beef, the other of boiled, with some pieces
-of pumpkin: besides this latter there was no other vegetable,
-and not even a morsel of bread. For drinking, a large
-earthenware jug of water served the whole party. Yet this
-man was the owner of several square miles of land, of which
-nearly every acre would produce corn, and, with a little
-trouble, all the common vegetables. The evening was spent in
-smoking, with a little impromptu singing, accompanied by
-the guitar. The signoritas all sat together in one corner
-of the room, and did not sup with the men.
-
-So many works have been written about these countries,
-that it is almost superfluous to describe either the lazo or
-the bolas. The lazo consists of a very strong, but thin,
-well-plaited rope, made of raw hide. One end is attached to the
-broad surcingle, which fastens together the complicated gear
-of the recado, or saddle used in the Pampas; the other is
-terminated by a small ring of iron or brass, by which a noose
-can be formed. The Gaucho, when he is going to use the
-lazo, keeps a small coil in his bridle-hand, and in the other
-holds the running noose which is made very large, generally
-having a diameter of about eight feet. This he whirls
-round his head, and by the dexterous movement of his wrist
-keeps the noose open; then, throwing it, he causes it to fall
-on any particular spot he chooses. The lazo, when not used,
-is tied up in a small coil to the after part of the recado.
-The bolas, or balls, are of two kinds: the simplest, which
-is chiefly used for catching ostriches, consists of two round
-stones, covered with leather, and united by a thin plaited
-thong, about eight feet long. The other kind differs only
-in having three balls united by the thongs to a common
-centre. The Gaucho holds the smallest of the three in his
-hand, and whirls the other two round and round his head;
-then, taking aim, sends them like chain shot revolving
-through the air. The balls no sooner strike any object, than,
-winding round it, they cross each other, and become firmly
-hitched. The size and weight of the balls vary, according
-to the purpose for which they are made: when of stone,
-although not larger than an apple, they are sent with such
-force as sometimes to break the leg even of a horse. I have
-seen the balls made of wood, and as large as a turnip, for
-the sake of catching these animals without injuring them.
-The balls are sometimes made of iron, and these can be
-hurled to the greatest distance. The main difficulty in using
-either lazo or bolas is to ride so well as to be able at full
-speed, and while suddenly turning about, to whirl them so
-steadily round the head, as to take aim: on foot any person
-would soon learn the art. One day, as I was amusing myself
-by galloping and whirling the balls round my head, by accident
-the free one struck a bush, and its revolving motion
-being thus destroyed, it immediately fell to the ground, and,
-like magic, caught one hind leg of my horse; the other ball
-was then jerked out of my hand, and the horse fairly secured.
-Luckily he was an old practised animal, and knew
-what it meant; otherwise he would probably have kicked
-till he had thrown himself down. The Gauchos roared with
-laughter; they cried out that they had seen every sort of
-animal caught, but had never before seen a man caught by
-himself.
-
-During the two succeeding days, I reached the furthest
-point which I was anxious to examine. The country wore
-the same aspect, till at last the fine green turf became more
-wearisome than a dusty turnpike road. We everywhere saw
-great numbers of partridges (Nothura major). These birds
-do not go in coveys, nor do they conceal themselves like
-the English kind. It appears a very silly bird. A man on
-horseback by riding round and round in a circle, or rather
-in a spire, so as to approach closer each time, may knock
-on the head as many as he pleases. The more common
-method is to catch them with a running noose, or little lazo,
-made of the stem of an ostrich's feather, fastened to the
-end of a long stick. A boy on a quiet old horse will frequently
-thus catch thirty or forty in a day. In Arctic North
-America [1] the Indians catch the Varying Hare by walking
-spirally round and round it, when on its form: the middle
-of the day is reckoned the best time, when the sun is high,
-and the shadow of the hunter not very long.
-
-On our return to Maldonado, we followed rather a different
-line of road. Near Pan de Azucar, a landmark well
-known to all those who have sailed up the Plata, I stayed
-a day at the house of a most hospitable old Spaniard. Early
-in the morning we ascended the Sierra de las Animas. By
-the aid of the rising sun the scenery was almost picturesque.
-To the westward the view extended over an immense level
-plain as far as the Mount, at Monte Video, and to the eastward,
-over the mammillated country of Maldonado. On
-the summit of the mountain there were several small heaps
-of stones, which evidently had lain there for many years.
-My companion assured me that they were the work of the
-Indians in the old time. The heaps were similar, but on
-a much smaller scale, to those so commonly found on the
-mountains of Wales. The desire to signalize any event, on
-the highest point of the neighbouring land, seems an universal
-passion with mankind. At the present day, not a
-single Indian, either civilized or wild, exists in this part
-of the province; nor am I aware that the former inhabitants
-have left behind them any more permanent records than
-these insignificant piles on the summit of the Sierra de las
-Animas.
-
-
-The general, and almost entire absence of trees in Banda
-Oriental is remarkable. Some of the rocky hills are partly
-covered by thickets, and on the banks of the larger streams,
-especially to the north of Las Minas, willow-trees are not
-uncommon. Near the Arroyo Tapes I heard of a wood of
-palms; and one of these trees, of considerable size, I saw
-near the Pan de Azucar, in lat. 35 degs. These, and the trees
-planted by the Spaniards, offer the only exceptions to the
-general scarcity of wood. Among the introduced kinds may
-be enumerated poplars, olives, peach, and other fruit trees:
-the peaches succeed so well, that they afford the main supply
-of firewood to the city of Buenos Ayres. Extremely level
-countries, such as the Pampas, seldom appear favourable to
-the growth of trees. This may possibly be attributed either
-to the force of the winds, or the kind of drainage. In the
-nature of the land, however, around Maldonado, no such
-reason is apparent; the rocky mountains afford protected
-situations; enjoying various kinds of soil; streamlets of
-water are common at the bottoms of nearly every valley;
-and the clayey nature of the earth seems adapted to retain
-moisture. It has been inferred with much probability, that
-the presence of woodland is generally determined [2] by the
-annual amount of moisture; yet in this province abundant
-and heavy rain falls during the winter; and the summer,
-though dry, is not so in any excessive degree. [3] We see nearly
-the whole of Australia covered by lofty trees, yet that country
-possesses a far more arid climate. Hence we must look
-to some other and unknown cause.
-
-Confining our view to South America, we should certainly
-be tempted to believe that trees flourished only under a very
-humid climate; for the limit of the forest-land follows, in a
-most remarkable manner, that of the damp winds. In the
-southern part of the continent, where the western gales,
-charged with moisture from the Pacific, prevail, every island
-on the broken west coast, from lat. 38 degs. to the extreme
-point of Tierra del Fuego, is densely covered by impenetrable
-forests. On the eastern side of the Cordillera, over the same
-extent of latitude, where a blue sky and a fine climate prove
-that the atmosphere has been deprived of its moisture by
-passing over the mountains, the arid plains of Patagonia
-support a most scanty vegetation. In the more northern
-parts of the continent, within the limits of the constant
-south-eastern trade-wind, the eastern side is ornamented by
-magnificent forests; whilst the western coast, from lat.
-4 degs. S. to lat. 32 degs. S., may be described as a
-desert; on this western coast, northward of lat. 4 degs.
-S., where the trade-wind loses its regularity, and heavy
-torrents of rain fall periodically, the shores of the
-Pacific, so utterly desert in Peru, assume near Cape
-Blanco the character of luxuriance so celebrated at
-Guyaquil and Panama. Hence in the southern and northern
-parts of the continent, the forest and desert lands occupy
-reversed positions with respect to the Cordillera, and these
-positions are apparently determined by the direction of the
-prevalent winds. In the middle of the continent there is a
-broad intermediate band, including central Chile and the
-provinces of La Plata, where the rain-bringing winds have
-not to pass over lofty mountains, and where the land is neither
-a desert nor covered by forests. But even the rule, if
-confined to South America, of trees flourishing only in a
-climate rendered humid by rain-bearing winds, has a strongly
-marked exception in the case of the Falkland Islands. These
-islands, situated in the same latitude with Tierra del Fuego
-and only between two and three hundred miles distant from
-it, having a nearly similar climate, with a geological
-formation almost identical, with favourable situations and the
-same kind of peaty soil, yet can boast of few plants deserving
-even the title of bushes; whilst in Tierra del Fuego it is
-impossible to find an acre of land not covered by the densest
-forest. In this case, both the direction of the heavy gales
-of wind and of the currents of the sea are favourable to
-the transport of seeds from Tierra del Fuego, as is shown
-by the canoes and trunks of trees drifted from that country,
-and frequently thrown on the shores of the Western Falkland.
-Hence perhaps it is, that there are many plants in
-common to the two countries but with respect to the trees
-of Tierra del Fuego, even attempts made to transplant them
-have failed.
-
-During our stay at Maldonado I collected several quadrupeds,
-eighty kinds of birds, and many reptiles, including
-nine species of snakes. Of the indigenous mammalia, the
-only one now left of any size, which is common, is the Cervus
-campestris. This deer is exceedingly abundant, often in
-small herds, throughout the countries bordering the Plata
-and in Northern Patagonia. If a person crawling close along
-the ground, slowly advances towards a herd, the deer frequently,
-out of curiosity, approach to reconnoitre him. I
-have by this means, killed from one spot, three out of the
-same herd. Although so tame and inquisitive, yet when
-approached on horseback, they are exceedingly wary. In this
-country nobody goes on foot, and the deer knows man as its
-enemy only when he is mounted and armed with the bolas.
-At Bahia Blanca, a recent establishment in Northern Patagonia,
-I was surprised to find how little the deer cared for
-the noise of a gun: one day I fired ten times from within
-eighty yards at one animal; and it was much more startled
-at the ball cutting up the ground than at the report of
-the rifle. My powder being exhausted, I was obliged to
-get up (to my shame as a sportsman be it spoken, though
-well able to kill birds on the wing) and halloo till the deer
-ran away.
-
-The most curious fact with respect to this animal, is the
-overpoweringly strong and offensive odour which proceeds
-from the buck. It is quite indescribable: several times
-whilst skinning the specimen which is now mounted at the
-Zoological Museum, I was almost overcome by nausea. I
-tied up the skin in a silk pocket-handkerchief, and so carried
-it home: this handkerchief, after being well washed, I
-continually used, and it was of course as repeatedly washed;
-yet every time, for a space of one year and seven months, when
-first unfolded, I distinctly perceived the odour. This appears
-an astonishing instance of the permanence of some
-matter, which nevertheless in its nature must be most subtile
-and volatile. Frequently, when passing at the distance of
-half a mile to leeward of a herd, I have perceived the whole
-air tainted with the effluvium. I believe the smell from the
-buck is most powerful at the period when its horns are perfect,
-or free from the hairy skin. When in this state the
-meat is, of course, quite uneatable; but the Gauchos assert,
-that if buried for some time in fresh earth, the taint is
-removed. I have somewhere read that the islanders in the
-north of Scotland treat the rank carcasses of the fish-eating
-birds in the same manner.
-
-The order Rodentia is here very numerous in species:
-of mice alone I obtained no less than eight kinds. [4] The
-largest gnawing animal in the world, the Hydrochaerus capybara
-(the water-hog), is here also common. One which I
-shot at Monte Video weighed ninety-eight pounds: its
-length from the end of the snout to the stump-like tail, was
-three feet two inches; and its girth three feet eight. These
-great Rodents occasionally frequent the islands in the mouth
-of the Plata, where the water is quite salt, but are far more
-abundant on the borders of fresh-water lakes and rivers.
-Near Maldonado three or four generally live together. In
-the daytime they either lie among the aquatic plants, or
-openly feed on the turf plain. [5] When viewed at a distance,
-from their manner of walking and colour they resemble pigs:
-but when seated on their haunches, and attentively watching
-any object with one eye, they reassume the appearance
-of their congeners, cavies and rabbits. Both the front and
-side view of their head has quite a ludicrous aspect, from
-the great depth of their jaw. These animals, at Maldonado,
-were very tame; by cautiously walking, I approached within
-three yards of four old ones. This tameness may probably
-be accounted for, by the Jaguar having been banished for
-some years, and by the Gaucho not thinking it worth his
-while to hunt them. As I approached nearer and nearer
-they frequently made their peculiar noise, which is a low
-abrupt grunt, not having much actual sound, but rather arising
-from the sudden expulsion of air: the only noise I know
-at all like it, is the first hoarse bark of a large dog. Having
-watched the four from almost within arm's length (and they
-me) for several minutes, they rushed into the water at full
-gallop with the greatest impetuosity, and emitted at the
-same time their bark. After diving a short distance they
-came again to the surface, but only just showed the upper
-part of their heads. When the female is swimming in the
-water, and has young ones, they are said to sit on her back.
-These animals are easily killed in numbers; but their skins
-are of trifling value, and the meat is very indifferent. On
-the islands in the Rio Parana they are exceedingly abundant,
-and afford the ordinary prey to the Jaguar.
-
-The Tucutuco (Ctenomys Brasiliensis) is a curious small
-animal, which may be briefly described as a Gnawer, with
-the habits of a mole. It is extremely numerous in some
-parts of the country, but it is difficult to be procured, and
-never, I believe, comes out of the ground. It throws up at
-the mouth of its burrows hillocks of earth like those of the
-mole, but smaller. Considerable tracts of country are so
-completely undermined by these animals, that horses in passing
-over, sink above their fetlocks. The tucutucos appear,
-to a certain degree, to be gregarious: the man who procured
-the specimens for me had caught six together, and he
-said this was a common occurrence. They are nocturnal in
-their habits; and their principal food is the roots of plants,
-which are the object of their extensive and superficial burrows.
-This animal is universally known by a very peculiar
-noise which it makes when beneath the ground. A person,
-the first time he hears it, is much surprised; for it is not
-easy to tell whence it comes, nor is it possible to guess what
-kind of creature utters it. The noise consists in a short, but
-not rough, nasal grunt, which is monotonously repeated
-about four times in quick succession: [6] the name Tucutuco is
-given in imitation of the sound. Where this animal is
-abundant, it may be heard at all times of the day, and sometimes
-directly beneath one's feet. When kept in a room, the
-tucutucos move both slowly and clumsily, which appears
-owing to the outward action of their hind legs; and they are
-quite incapable, from the socket of the thigh-bone not having
-a certain ligament, of jumping even the smallest vertical
-height. They are very stupid in making any attempt to
-escape; when angry or frightened they utter the tucutuco.
-Of those I kept alive several, even the first day, became
-quite tame, not attempting to bite or to run away; others
-were a little wilder.
-
-The man who caught them asserted that very many are
-invariably found blind. A specimen which I preserved in
-spirits was in this state; Mr. Reid considers it to be the
-effect of inflammation in the nictitating membrane. When the
-animal was alive I placed my finger within half an inch of
-its head, and not the slightest notice was taken: it made its
-way, however, about the room nearly as well as the others.
-Considering the strictly subterranean habits of the tucutuco,
-the blindness, though so common, cannot be a very serious
-evil; yet it appears strange that any animal should possess
-an organ frequently subject to be injured. Lamarck would
-have been delighted with this fact, had he known it, when
-speculating [7] (probably with more truth than usual with him)
-on the gradually _acquired_ blindness of the Asphalax, a
-Gnawer living under ground, and of the Proteus, a reptile
-living in dark caverns filled with water; in both of which
-animals the eye is in an almost rudimentary state, and is
-covered by a tendinous membrane and skin. In the common
-mole the eye is extraordinarily small but perfect, though
-many anatomists doubt whether it is connected with the true
-optic nerve; its vision must certainly be imperfect, though
-probably useful to the animal when it leaves its burrow. In
-the tucutuco, which I believe never comes to the surface of
-the ground, the eye is rather larger, but often rendered blind
-and useless, though without apparently causing any inconvenience
-to the animal; no doubt Lamarck would have said
-that the tucutuco is now passing into the state of the
-Asphalax and Proteus.
-
-Birds of many kinds are extremely abundant on the undulating,
-grassy plains around Maldonado. There are several
-species of a family allied in structure and manners to our
-Starling: one of these (Molothrus niger) is remarkable from
-its habits. Several may often be seen standing together on
-tbe back of a cow or horse; and while perched on a hedge,
-pluming themselves in the sun, they sometimes attempt to
-sing, or rather to hiss; the noise being very peculiar,
-resembling that of bubbles of air passing rapidly from a small
-orifice under water, so as to produce an acute sound. According
-to Azara, this bird, like the cuckoo, deposits its eggs
-in other birds' nests. I was several times told by the country
-people that there certainly is some bird having this
-habit; and my assistant in collecting, who is a very accurate
-person, found a nest of the sparrow of this country (Zonotrichia
-matutina), with one egg in it larger than the others,
-and of a different colour and shape. In North America
-there is another species of Molothrus (M. pecoris), which
-has a similar cuckoo-like habit, and which is most closely
-allied in every respect to the species from the Plata, even in
-such trifling peculiarities as standing on the backs of cattle;
-it differs only in being a little smaller, and in its plumage
-and eggs being of a slightly different shade of colour. This
-close agreement in structure and habits, in representative
-species coming from opposite quarters of a great continent,
-always strikes one as interesting, though of common
-occurrence.
-
-Mr. Swainson has well remarked, [8] that with the exception
-of the Molothrus pecoris, to which must be added the
-M. niger, the cuckoos are the only birds which can be called
-truly parasitical; namely, such as "fasten themselves, as it
-were, on another living animal, whose animal heat brings
-their young into life, whose food they live upon, and whose
-death would cause theirs during the period of infancy." It
-is remarkable that some of the species, but not all, both of
-the Cuckoo and Molothrus, should agree in this one strange
-habit of their parasitical propagation, whilst opposed to each
-other in almost every other habit: the molothrus, like our
-starling, is eminently sociable, and lives on the open plains
-without art or disguise: the cuckoo, as every one knows,
-is a singularly shy bird; it frequents the most retired thickets,
-and feeds on fruit and caterpillars. In structure also
-these two genera are widely removed from each other.
-Many theories, even phrenological theories, have been advanced
-to explain the origin of the cuckoo laying its eggs in
-other birds' nests. M. Prevost alone, I think, has thrown
-light by his observations [9] on this puzzle: he finds that the
-female cuckoo, which, according to most observers, lays at
-least from four to six eggs, must pair with the male each time
-after laying only one or two eggs. Now, if the cuckoo was
-obliged to sit on her own eggs, she would either have to sit
-on all together, and therefore leave those first laid so long,
-that they probably would become addled; or she would have
-to hatch separately each egg, or two eggs, as soon as laid:
-but as the cuckoo stays a shorter time in this country than
-any other migratory bird, she certainly would not have time
-enough for the successive hatchings. Hence we can perceive
-in the fact of the cuckoo pairing several times, and laying
-her eggs at intervals, the cause of her depositing her eggs
-in other birds' nests, and leaving them to the care of
-foster-parents. I am strongly inclined to believe that this
-view is correct, from having been independently led (as we
-shall hereafter see) to an analogous conclusion with regard
-to the South American ostrich, the females of which are
-parasitical, if I may so express it, on each other; each
-female laying several eggs in the nests of several other
-females, and the male ostrich undertaking all the cares
-of incubation, like the strange foster-parents with the
-cuckoo.
-
-I will mention only two other birds, which are very common,
-and render themselves prominent from their habits.
-The Saurophagus sulphuratus is typical of the great American
-tribe of tyrant-flycatchers. In its structure it closely
-approaches the true shrikes, but in its habits may be compared
-to many birds. I have frequently observed it, hunting
-a field, hovering over one spot like a hawk, and then proceeding
-on to another. When seen thus suspended in the air,
-it might very readily at a short distance be mistaken for one
-of the Rapacious order; its stoop, however, is very inferior
-in force and rapidity to that of a hawk. At other times
-the Saurophagus haunts the neighbourhood of water, and
-there, like a kingfisher, remaining stationary, it catches any
-small fish which may come near the margin. These birds are
-not unfrequently kept either in cages or in courtyards, with
-their wings cut. They soon become tame, and are very
-amusing from their cunning odd manners, which were
-described to me as being similar to those of the common
-magpie. Their flight is undulatory, for the weight of the
-head and bill appears too great for the body. In the
-evening the Saurophagus takes its stand on a bush, often
-by the roadside, and continually repeats without a change
-a shrill and rather agreeable cry, which somewhat resembles
-articulate words: the Spaniards say it is like the words
-"Bien te veo" (I see you well), and accordingly have given
-it this name.
-
-A mocking-bird (Mimus orpheus), called by the inhabitants
-Calandria, is remarkable, from possessing a song far
-superior to that of any other bird in the country: indeed, it
-is nearly the only bird in South America which I have
-observed to take its stand for the purpose of singing. The
-song may be compared to that of the Sedge warbler, but
-is more powerful; some harsh notes and some very high
-ones, being mingled with a pleasant warbling. It is heard
-only during the spring. At other times its cry is harsh and
-far from harmonious. Near Maldonado these birds were
-tame and bold; they constantly attended the country houses
-in numbers, to pick the meat which was hung up on the posts
-or walls: if any other small bird joined the feast, the
-Calandria soon chased it away. On the wide uninhabited plains
-of Patagonia another closely allied species, O. Patagonica
-of d'Orbigny, which frequents the valleys clothed with
-spiny bushes, is a wilder bird, and has a slightly different
-tone of voice. It appears to me a curious circumstance, as
-showing the fine shades of difference in habits, that judging
-from this latter respect alone, when I first saw this second
-species, I thought it was different from the Maldonado kind.
-Having afterwards procured a specimen, and comparing the
-two without particular care, they appeared so very similar,
-that I changed my opinion; but now Mr. Gould says that they
-are certainly distinct; a conclusion in conformity with the
-trifling difference of habit, of which, of course, he was not
-aware.
-
-The number, tameness, and disgusting habits of the
-carrion-feeding hawks of South America make them
-pre-eminently striking to any one accustomed only to the birds
-of Northern Europe. In this list may be included four species
-of the Caracara or Polyborus, the Turkey buzzard, the Gallinazo,
-and the Condor. The Caracaras are, from their
-structure, placed among the eagles: we shall soon see how
-ill they become so high a rank. In their habits they well
-supply the place of our carrion-crows, magpies, and ravens;
-a tribe of birds widely distributed over the rest of the world,
-but entirely absent in South America. To begin with the
-Polyborus Brasiliensis: this is a common bird, and has a wide
-geographical range; it is most numerous on the grassy savannahs
-of La Plata (where it goes by the name of Carrancha),
-and is far from unfrequent throughout the sterile plains of
-Patagonia. In the desert between the rivers Negro and Colorado,
-numbers constantly attend the line of road to devour
-the carcasses of the exhausted animals which chance to
-perish from fatigue and thirst. Although thus common in
-these dry and open countries, and likewise on the arid shores
-of the Pacific, it is nevertheless found inhabiting the damp
-impervious forests of West Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.
-The Carranchas, together with the Chimango, constantly
-attend in numbers the estancias and slaughtering-houses. If
-an animal dies on the plain the Gallinazo commences the
-feast, and then the two species of Polyborus pick the bones
-clean. These birds, although thus commonly feeding together,
-are far from being friends. When the Carrancha is
-quietly seated on the branch of a tree or on the ground, the
-Chimango often continues for a long time flying backwards
-and forwards, up and down, in a semicircle, trying each time
-at the bottom of the curve to strike its larger relative. The
-Carrancha takes little notice, except by bobbing its head.
-Although the Carranchas frequently assemble in numbers,
-they are not gregarious; for in desert places they may be
-seen solitary, or more commonly by pairs.
-
-The Carranchas are said to be very crafty, and to steal
-great numbers of eggs. They attempt, also, together with
-the Chimango, to pick off the scabs from the sore backs of
-horses and mules. The poor animal, on the one hand, with
-its ears down and its back arched; and, on the other, the
-hovering bird, eyeing at the distance of a yard the disgusting
-morsel, form a picture, which has been described by Captain
-Head with his own peculiar spirit and accuracy. These
-false eagles most rarely kill any living bird or animal; and
-their vulture-like, necrophagous habits are very evident to
-any one who has fallen asleep on the desolate plains of
-Patagonia, for when he wakes, he will see, on each surrounding
-hillock, one of these birds patiently watching him with an
-evil eye: it is a feature in the landscape of these countries,
-which will be recognised by every one who has wandered
-over them. If a party of men go out hunting with dogs
-and horses, they will be accompanied, during the day, by
-several of these attendants. After feeding, the uncovered
-craw protrudes; at such times, and indeed generally, the
-Carrancha is an inactive, tame, and cowardly bird. Its
-flight is heavy and slow, like that of an English rook. It
-seldom soars; but I have twice seen one at a great height
-gliding through the air with much ease. It runs (in
-contradistinction to hopping), but not quite so quickly as some
-of its congeners. At times the Carrancha is noisy, but is
-not generally so: its cry is loud, very harsh and peculiar, and
-may be likened to the sound of the Spanish guttural g, followed
-by a rough double r r; when uttering this cry it
-elevates its head higher and higher, till at last, with its
-beak wide open, the crown almost touches the lower part of
-the back. This fact, which has been doubted, is quite true;
-I have seen them several times with their heads backwards
-in a completely inverted position. To these observations I
-may add, on the high authority of Azara, that the Carrancha
-feeds on worms, shells, slugs, grasshoppers, and frogs; that
-it destroys young lambs by tearing the umbilical cord; and
-that it pursues the Gallinazo, till that bird is compelled to
-vomit up the carrion it may have recently gorged. Lastly,
-Azara states that several Carranchas, five or six together,
-will unite in chase of large birds, even such as herons. All
-these facts show that it is a bird of very versatile habits and
-considerable ingenuity.
-
-The Polyborus Chimango is considerably smaller than the
-last species. It is truly omnivorous, and will eat even bread;
-and I was assured that it materially injures the potato crops
-in Chiloe, by stocking up the roots when first planted. Of
-all the carrion-feeders it is generally the last which leaves
-the skeleton of a dead animal, and may often be seen within
-the ribs of a cow or horse, like a bird in a cage. Another
-species is the Polyborus Novae Zelandiae, which is exceedingly
-common in the Falkland Islands. These birds in many
-respects resemble in their habits the Carranchas. They live
-on the flesh of dead animals and on marine productions; and
-on the Ramirez rocks their whole sustenance must depend
-on the sea. They are extraordinarily tame and fearless, and
-haunt the neighborhood of houses for offal. If a hunting
-party kills an animal, a number soon collect and patiently
-await, standing on the ground on all sides. After eating,
-their uncovered craws are largely protruded, giving them a
-disgusting appearance. They readily attack wounded birds:
-a cormorant in this state having taken to the shore, was
-immediately seized on by several, and its death hastened
-by their blows. The Beagle was at the Falklands only
-during the summer, but the officers of the Adventure, who
-were there in the winter, mention many extraordinary instances
-of the boldness and rapacity of these birds. They
-actually pounced on a dog that was lying fast asleep close
-by one of the party; and the sportsmen had difficulty in
-preventing the wounded geese from being seized before their
-eyes. It is said that several together (in this respect
-resembling the Carranchas) wait at the mouth of a rabbit-hole,
-and together seize on the animal when it comes out. They
-were constantly flying on board the vessel when in the harbour;
-and it was necessary to keep a good look out to prevent
-the leather being torn from the rigging, and the meat or
-game from the stern. These birds are very mischievous and
-inquisitive; they will pick up almost anything from the
-ground; a large black glazed hat was carried nearly a mile,
-as was a pair of the heavy balls used in catching cattle. Mr.
-Usborne experienced during the survey a more severe loss,
-in their stealing a small Kater's compass in a red morocco
-leather case, which was never recovered. These birds are,
-moreover, quarrelsome and very passionate; tearing up the
-grass with their bills from rage. They are not truly gregarious;
-they do not soar, and their flight is heavy and clumsy;
-on the ground they run extremely fast, very much like
-pheasants. They are noisy, uttering several harsh cries, one
-of which is like that of the English rook, hence the sealers
-always call them rooks. It is a curious circumstance that,
-when crying out, they throw their heads upwards and backwards,
-after the same manner as the Carrancha. They build
-in the rocky cliffs of the sea-coast, but only on the small
-adjoining islets, and not on the two main islands: this is a
-singular precaution in so tame and fearless a bird. The sealers
-say that the flesh of these birds, when cooked, is quite
-white, and very good eating; but bold must the man be who
-attempts such a meal.
-
-We have now only to mention the turkey-buzzard (Vultur
-aura), and the Gallinazo. The former is found wherever
-the country is moderately damp, from Cape Horn to North
-America. Differently from the Polyborus Brasiliensis and
-Chimango, it has found its way to the Falkland Islands. The
-turkey-buzzard is a solitary bird, or at most goes in pairs. It
-may at once be recognised from a long distance, by its lofty,
-soaring, and most elegant flight. lt is well known to be a
-true carrion-feeder. On the west coast of Patagonia, among
-the thickly-wooded islets and broken land, it lives exclusively
-on what the sea throws up, and on the carcasses of dead
-seals. Wherever these animals are congregated on the rocks,
-there the vultures may be seen. The Gallinazo (Cathartes
-atratus) has a different range from the last species, as it
-never occurs southward of lat. 41 degs. Azara states that
-there exists a tradition that these birds, at the time of the
-conquest, were not found near Monte Video, but that they
-subsequently followed the inhabitants from more northern
-districts.At the present day they are numerous in the valley
-of the Colorado, which is three hundred miles due south of Monte
-Video. It seems probable that this additional migration has
-happened since the time of Azara. The Gallinazo generally
-prefers a humid climate, or rather the neighbourhood of
-fresh water; hence it is extremely abundant in Brazil and
-La Plata, while it is never found on the desert and arid
-plains of Northern Patagonia, excepting near some stream.
-These birds frequent the whole Pampas to the foot of the
-Cordillera, but I never saw or heard of one in Chile; in Peru
-they are preserved as scavengers. These vultures certainly
-may be called gregarious, for they seem to have pleasure in
-society, and are not solely brought together by the attraction
-of a common prey. On a fine day a flock may often be
-observed at a great height, each bird wheeling round and
-round without closing its wings, in the most graceful
-evolutions. This is clearly performed for the mere pleasure of
-the exercise, or perhaps is connected with their matrimonial
-alliances.
-
-I have now mentioned all the carrion-feeders, excepting
-the condor, an account of which will be more appropriately
-introduced when we visit a country more congenial to its
-habits than the plains of La Plata.
-
-
-In a broad band of sand-hillocks which separate the
-Laguna del Potrero from the shores of the Plata, at the
-distance of a few miles from Maldonado, I found a group of
-those vitrified, siliceous tubes, which are formed by lightning
-entering loose sand. These tubes resemble in every particular
-those from Drigg in Cumberland, described in the
-Geological Transactions. [10] The sand-hillocks of Maldonado
-not being protected by vegetation, are constantly changing
-their position. From this cause the tubes projected above
-the surface, and numerous fragments lying near, showed
-that they had formerly been buried to a greater depth. Four
-sets entered the sand perpendicularly: by working with
-my hands I traced one of them two feet deep; and some
-fragments which evidently had belonged to the same tube,
-when added to the other part, measured five feet three
-inches. The diameter of the whole tube was nearly equal,
-and therefore we must suppose that originally it extended to
-a much greater depth. These dimensions are however small,
-compared to those of the tubes from Drigg, one of which
-was traced to a depth of not less than thirty feet.
-
-The internal surface is completely vitrified, glossy, and
-smooth. A small fragment examined under the microscope
-appeared, from the number of minute entangled air or perhaps
-steam bubbles, like an assay fused before the blowpipe.
-The sand is entirely, or in greater part, siliceous; but some
-points are of a black colour, and from their glossy surface
-possess a metallic lustre. The thickness of the wall of the
-tube varies from a thirtieth to a twentieth of an inch, and
-occasionally even equals a tenth. On the outside the grains
-of sand are rounded, and have a slightly glazed appearance:
-I could not distinguish any signs of crystallization. In a
-similar manner to that described in the Geological Transactions,
-the tubes are generally compressed, and have deep
-longitudinal furrows, so as closely to resemble a shrivelled
-vegetable stalk, or the bark of the elm or cork tree. Their
-circumference is about two inches, but in some fragments,
-which are cylindrical and without any furrows, it is as much
-as four inches. The compression from the surrounding loose
-sand, acting while the tube was still softened from the
-effects of the intense heat, has evidently caused the creases
-or furrows. Judging from the uncompressed fragments, the
-measure or bore of the lightning (if such a term may be used)
-must have been about one inch and a quarter. At Paris, M.
-Hachette and M. Beudant [11] succeeded in making tubes, in
-most respects similar to these fulgurites, by passing very
-strong shocks of galvanism through finely-powdered glass:
-when salt was added, so as to increase its fusibility, the tubes
-were larger in every dimension, They failed both with
-powdered felspar and quartz. One tube, formed with
-pounded glass, was very nearly an inch long, namely .982,
-and had an internal diameter of .019 of an inch. When we
-hear that the strongest battery in Paris was used, and that
-its power on a substance of such easy fusibility as glass was
-to form tubes so diminutive, we must feel greatly astonished
-at the force of a shock of lightning, which, striking the sand
-in several places, has formed cylinders, in one instance of at
-least thirty feet long, and having an internal bore, where not
-compressed, of full an inch and a half; and this in a material
-so extraordinarily refractory as quartz!
-
-The tubes, as I have already remarked, enter the sand
-nearly in a vertical direction. One, however, which was less
-regular than the others, deviated from a right line, at the
-most considerable bend, to the amount of thirty-three degrees.
-From this same tube, two small branches, about a
-foot apart, were sent off; one pointed downwards, and the
-other upwards. This latter case is remarkable, as the electric
-fluid must have turned back at the acute angle of 26 degs.,
-to the line of its main course. Besides the four tubes which
-I found vertical, and traced beneath the surface, there were
-several other groups of fragments, the original sites of which
-without doubt were near. All occurred in a level area of
-shifting sand, sixty yards by twenty, situated among some
-high sand-hillocks, and at the distance of about half a mile
-from a chain of hills four or five hundred feet in height. The
-most remarkable circumstance, as it appears to me, in this
-case as well as in that of Drigg, and in one described by
-M. Ribbentrop in Germany, is the number of tubes found
-within such limited spaces. At Drigg, within an area of
-fifteen yards, three were observed, and the same number
-occurred in Germany. In the case which I have described,
-certainly more than four existed within the space of the
-sixty by twenty yards. As it does not appear probable that
-the tubes are produced by successive distinct shocks, we must
-believe that the lightning, shortly before entering the ground,
-divides itself into separate branches.
-
-The neighbourhood of the Rio Plata seems peculiarly subject
-to electric phenomena. In the year 1793, [12] one of the
-most destructive thunderstorms perhaps on record happened
-at Buenos Ayres: thirty-seven places within the city were
-struck by lightning, and nineteen people killed. From facts
-stated in several books of travels, I am inclined to suspect
-that thunderstorms are very common near the mouths of
-great rivers. Is it not possible that the mixture of large
-bodies of fresh and salt water may disturb the electrical
-equilibrium? Even during our occasional visits to this part
-of South America, we heard of a ship, two churches, and a
-house having been struck. Both the church and the house
-I saw shortly afterwards: the house belonged to Mr. Hood,
-the consul-general at Monte Video. Some of the effects were
-curious: the paper, for nearly a foot on each side of the line
-where the bell-wires had run, was blackened. The metal had
-been fused, and although the room was about fifteen feet
-high, the globules, dropping on the chairs and furniture, had
-drilled in them a chain of minute holes. A part of the wall
-was shattered, as if by gunpowder, and the fragments had
-been blown off with force sufficient to dent the wall on the
-opposite side of the room. The frame of a looking-glass was
-blackened, and the gilding must have been volatilized, for a
-smelling-bottle, which stood on the chimney-piece, was coated
-with bright metallic particles, which adhered as firmly as
-if they had been enamelled.
-
-[1] Hearne's Journey, p. 383.
-
-[2] Maclaren, art. "America," Encyclop. Brittann.
-
-[3] Azara says, "Je crois que la quantite annuelle des pluies
-est, dans toutes ces contrees, plus considerable qu'en Espagne."
--- Vol. i. p. 36.
-
-[4] In South America I collected altogether twenty-seven
-species of mice, and thirteen more are known from the works
-of Azara and other authors. Those collected by myself have
-been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse at the meetings
-of the Zoological Society. I must be allowed to take this
-opportunity of returning my cordial thanks to Mr. Waterhouse,
-and to the other gentleman attached to that Society, for their
-kind and most liberal assistance on all occasions.
-
-[5] In the stomach and duodenum of a capybara which I opened
-I found a very large quantity of a thin yellowish fluid,
-in which scarcely a fibre could be distinguished. Mr. Owen
-informs me that a part of the oesophagus is so constructed
-that nothing much larger than a crowquill can be passed down.
-Certainly the broad teeth and strong jaws of this animal are
-well fitted to grind into pulp the aquatic plants on which it
-feeds.
-
-[6] At the R. Negro, in Northern Patagonia, there is an animal
-of the same habits, and probably a closely allied species, but
-which I never saw. Its noise is different from that of the
-Maldonado kind; it is repeated only twice instead of three or
-four times, and is more distinct and sonorous; when heard from
-a distance it so closely resembles the sound made in cutting
-down a small tree with an axe, that I have sometimes remained
-in doubt concerning it.
-
-[7] Philosoph. Zoolog., tom. i. p. 242.
-
-[8] Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 217.
-
-[9] Read before the Academy of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut,
-1834, p. 418.
-
-[10] Geolog. Transact. vol. ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph.
-Transact. (1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has described some
-imperfect siliceous tubes and a melted pebble of quartz,
-found in digging into the ground, under a tree, where a man
-had been killed by lightning.
-
-[11] Annals de Chimie et de Physique, tom. xxxvii. p. 319.
-
-[12] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 36.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Rio Negro -- Estancias attacked by the Indians -- Salt-Lakes --
-Flamingoes -- R. Negro to R. Colorado -- Sacred Tree --
-Patagonian Hare -- Indian Families -- General Rosas --
-Proceed to Bahia Blanca -- Sand Dunes -- Negro Lieutenant --
-Bahia Blanca -- Saline Incrustations -- Punta Alta -- Zorillo.
-
-
-JULY 24th, 1833. -- The Beagle sailed from Maldonado,
-and on August the 3rd she arrived off the mouth of the
-Rio Negro. This is the principal river on the whole line
-of coast between the Strait of Magellan and the Plata. It
-enters the sea about three hundred miles south of the estuary
-of the Plata. About fifty years ago, under the old Spanish
-government, a small colony was established here; and it is
-still the most southern position (lat. 41 degs.) on this
-eastern coast of America inhabited by civilized man.
-
-The country near the mouth of the river is wretched in
-the extreme: on the south side a long line of perpendicular
-cliffs commences, which exposes a section of the geological
-nature of the country. The strata are of sandstone, and
-one layer was remarkable from being composed of a firmly-
-cemented conglomerate of pumice pebbles, which must have
-travelled more than four hundred miles, from the Andes.
-The surface is everywhere covered up by a thick bed of
-gravel, which extends far and wide over the open plain.
-Water is extremely scarce, and, where found, is almost
-invariably brackish. The vegetation is scanty; and although
-there are bushes of many kinds, all are armed with formidable
-thorns, which seem to warn the stranger not to enter on
-these inhospitable regions.
-
-The settlement is situated eighteen miles up the river.
-The road follows the foot of the sloping cliff, which forms
-the northern boundary of the great valley, in which the Rio
-Negro flows. On the way we passed the ruins of some fine
-"estancias," which a few years since had been destroyed by
-the Indians. They withstood several attacks. A man present
-at one gave me a very lively description of what took place.
-The inhabitants had sufficient notice to drive all the cattle
-and horses into the "corral" [1] which surrounded the house,
-and likewise to mount some small cannon. The Indians were
-Araucanians from the south of Chile; several hundreds in
-number, and highly disciplined. They first appeared in two
-bodies on a neighbouring hill; having there dismounted, and
-taken off their fur mantles, they advanced naked to the
-charge. The only weapon of an Indian is a very long bamboo
-or chuzo, ornamented with ostrich feathers, and pointed
-by a sharp spearhead. My informer seemed to remember
-with the greatest horror the quivering of these chuzos as they
-approached near. When close, the cacique Pincheira hailed
-the besieged to give up their arms, or he would cut all their
-throats. As this would probably have been the result of
-their entrance under any circumstances, the answer was
-given by a volley of musketry. The Indians, with great
-steadiness, came to the very fence of the corral: but to their
-surprise they found the posts fastened together by iron nails
-instead of leather thongs, and, of course, in vain attempted
-to cut them with their knives. This saved the lives of the
-Christians: many of the wounded Indians were carried away
-by their companions, and at last, one of the under caciques
-being wounded, the bugle sounded a retreat. They retired to
-their horses, and seemed to hold a council of war. This was
-an awful pause for the Spaniards, as all their ammunition,
-with the exception of a few cartridges, was expended. In
-an instant the Indians mounted their horses, and galloped
-out of sight. Another attack was still more quickly repulsed.
-A cool Frenchman managed the gun; he stopped till the
-Indians approached close, and then raked their line with
-grape-shot: he thus laid thirty-nine of them on the ground;
-and, of course, such a blow immediately routed the whole
-party.
-
-The town is indifferently called El Carmen or Patagones.
-It is built on the face of a cliff which fronts the river, and
-many of the houses are excavated even in the sandstone.
-The river is about two or three hundred yards wide, and is
-deep and rapid. The many islands, with their willow-trees,
-and the flat headlands, seen one behind the other on the
-northern boundary of the broad green valley, form, by the
-aid of a bright sun, a view almost picturesque. The number
-of inhabitants does not exceed a few hundreds. These Spanish
-colonies do not, like our British ones, carry within themselves
-the elements of growth. Many Indians of pure blood
-reside here: the tribe of the Cacique Lucanee constantly have
-their Toldos [2] on the outskirts of the town. The local
-government partly supplies them with provisions, by giving them
-all the old worn-out horses, and they earn a little by making
-horse-rugs and other articles of riding-gear. These Indians
-are considered civilized; but what their character may have
-gained by a lesser degree of ferocity, is almost counterbalanced
-by their entire immorality. Some of the younger men
-are, however, improving; they are willing to labour, and a
-short time since a party went on a sealing-voyage, and behaved
-very well. They were now enjoying the fruits of their
-labour, by being dressed in very gay, clean clothes, and by
-being very idle. The taste they showed in their dress was
-admirable; if you could have turned one of these young
-Indians into a statue of bronze, his drapery would have been
-perfectly graceful.
-
-One day I rode to a large salt-lake, or Salina, which is
-distant fifteen miles from the town. During the winter it
-consists of a shallow lake of brine, which in summer is
-converted into a field of snow-white salt. The layer near the
-margin is from four to five inches thick, but towards the
-centre its thickness increases. This lake was two and a half
-miles long, and one broad. Others occur in the neighbourhood
-many times larger, and with a floor of salt, two and
-three feet in thickness, even when under water during the
-winter. One of these brilliantly white and level expanses
-in the midst of the brown and desolate plain, offers an
-extraordinary spectacle. A large quantity of salt is annually
-drawn from the salina: and great piles, some hundred
-tons in weight, were lying ready for exportation. The season
-for working the salinas forms the harvest of Patagones; for
-on it the prosperity of the place depends. Nearly the whole
-population encamps on the bank of the river, and the people
-are employed in drawing out the salt in bullock-waggons,
-This salt is crystallized in great cubes, and is remarkably
-pure: Mr. Trenham Reeks has kindly analyzed some for me,
-and he finds in it only 0.26 of gypsum and 0.22 of earthy
-matter. It is a singular fact, that it does not serve so well
-for preserving meat as sea-salt from the Cape de Verd
-islands; and a merchant at Buenos Ayres told me that he
-considered it as fifty per cent. less valuable. Hence the
-Cape de Verd salt is constantly imported, and is mixed with
-that from these salinas. The purity of the Patagonian salt,
-or absence from it of those other saline bodies found in all
-sea-water, is the only assignable cause for this inferiority:
-a conclusion which no one, I think, would have suspected,
-but which is supported by the fact lately ascertained, [3]
-that those salts answer best for preserving cheese which
-contain most of the deliquescent chlorides.
-
-The border of this lake is formed of mud: and in this
-numerous large crystals of gypsum, some of which are three
-inches long, lie embedded; whilst on the surface others of
-sulphate of soda lie scattered about. The Gauchos call the
-former the "Padre del sal," and the latter the "Madre;"
-they state that these progenitive salts always occur on the
-borders of the salinas, when the water begins to evaporate.
-The mud is black, and has a fetid odour. I could not at first
-imagine the cause of this, but I afterwards perceived that the
-froth which the wind drifted on shore was coloured green,
-as if by confervae; I attempted to carry home some of this
-green matter, but from an accident failed. Parts of the lake
-seen from a short distance appeared of a reddish colour, and
-this perhaps was owing to some infusorial animalcula. The
-mud in many places was thrown up by numbers of some kind
-of worm, or annelidous animal. How surprising it is that
-any creatures should be able to exist in brine, and that they
-should be crawling among crystals of sulphate of soda and
-lime! And what becomes of these worms when, during the
-long summer, the surface is hardened into a solid layer of
-salt? Flamingoes in considerable numbers inhabit this lake,
-and breed here, throughout Patagonia, in Northern Chile,
-and at the Galapagos Islands, I met with these birds wherever
-there were lakes of brine. I saw them here wading
-about in search of food -- probably for the worms which burrow
-in the mud; and these latter probably feed on infusoria or
-confervae. Thus we have a little living world within itself
-adapted to these inland lakes of brine. A minute crustaceous
-animal (Cancer salinus) is said [4] to live in countless numbers
-in the brine-pans at Lymington: but only in those in which
-the fluid has attained, from evaporation, considerable
-strength -- namely, about a quarter of a pound of salt to a
-pint of water. Well may we affirm that every part of the
-world is habitable! Whether lakes of brine, or those
-subterranean ones hidden beneath volcanic mountains -- warm
-mineral springs -- the wide expanse and depths of the ocean
- -- the upper regions of the atmosphere, and even the surface
-of perpetual snow -- all support organic beings.
-
-
-To the northward of the Rio Negro, between it and the
-inhabited country near Buenos Ayres, the Spaniards have
-only one small settlement, recently established at Bahia
-Blanca. The distance in a straight line to Buenos Ayres is
-very nearly five hundred British miles. The wandering
-tribes of horse Indians, which have always occupied the
-greater part of this country, having of late much harassed
-the outlying estancias, the government at Buenos Ayres
-equipped some time since an army under the command of
-General Rosas for the purpose of exterminating them. The
-troops were now encamped on the banks of the Colorado;
-a river lying about eighty miles northward of the Rio Negro
-When General Rosas left Buenos Ayres he struck in a direct
-line across the unexplored plains: and as the country was
-thus pretty well cleared of Indians, he left behind him, at
-wide intervals, a small party of soldiers with a troop of
-horses (a posta), so as to be enabled to keep up a communication
-with the capital. As the Beagle intended to call at
-Bahia Blanca, I determined to proceed there by land; and
-ultimately I extended my plan to travel the whole way by
-the postas to Buenos Ayres.
-
-August 11th. -- Mr. Harris, an Englishman residing at
-Patagones, a guide, and five Gauchos who were proceeding
-to the army on business, were my companions on the journey.
-The Colorado, as I have already said, is nearly eighty
-miles distant: and as we travelled slowly, we were two days
-and a half on the road. The whole line of country deserves
-scarcely a better name than that of a desert. Water is found
-only in two small wells; it is called fresh; but even at this
-time of the year, during the rainy season, it was quite brackish.
-In the summer this must be a distressing passage; for
-now it was sufficiently desolate. The valley of the Rio
-Negro, broad as it is, has merely been excavated out of the
-sandstone plain; for immediately above the bank on which
-the town stands, a level country commences, which is interrupted
-only by a few trifling valleys and depressions. Everywhere
-the landscape wears the same sterile aspect; a dry
-gravelly soil supports tufts of brown withered grass, and
-low scattered bushes, armed with thorns.
-
-Shortly after passing the first spring we came in sight of
-a famous tree, which the Indians reverence as the altar of
-Walleechu. It is situated on a high part of the plain; and
-hence is a landmark visible at a great distance. As soon as a
-tribe of Indians come in sight of it, they offer their adorations
-by loud shouts. The tree itself is low, much branched,
-and thorny: just above the root it has a diameter of about
-three feet. It stands by itself without any neighbour, and
-was indeed the first tree we saw; afterwards we met with a
-few others of the same kind, but they were far from common.
-Being winter the tree had no leaves, but in their place
-numberless threads, by which the various offerings, such as
-cigars, bread, meat, pieces of cloth, etc., had been suspended.
-Poor Indians, not having anything better, only pull a thread
-out of their ponchos, and fasten it to the tree. Richer
-Indians are accustomed to pour spirits and mate into a certain
-hole, and likewise to smoke upwards, thinking thus to
-afford all possible gratification to Walleechu. To complete
-the scene, the tree was surrounded by the bleached bones
-of horses which had been slaughtered as sacrifices. All
-Indians of every age and sex make their offerings; they then
-think that their horses will not tire, and that they themselves
-shall be prosperous. The Gaucho who told me this, said that
-in the time of peace he had witnessed this scene, and that
-he and others used to wait till the Indians had passed by, for
-the sake of stealing from Walleechu the offerings.
-
-The Gauchos think that the Indians consider the tree as
-the god itself, but it seems for more probable that they
-regard it as the altar. The only cause which I can imagine
-for this choice, is its being a landmark in a dangerous passage.
-The Sierra de la Ventana is visible at an immense
-distance; and a Gaucho told me that he was once riding with
-an Indian a few miles to the north of the Rio Colorado
-when the Indian commenced making the same loud noise
-which is usual at the first sight of the distant tree, putting
-his hand to his head, and then pointing in the direction of the
-Sierra. Upon being asked the reason of this, the Indian said
-in broken Spanish, "First see the Sierra." About two
-leagues beyond this curious tree we halted for the night: at
-this instant an unfortunate cow was spied by the lynx-eyed
-Gauchos, who set off in full chase, and in a few minutes
-dragged her in with their lazos, and slaughtered her. We
-here had the four necessaries of life "en el campo," -- pasture
-for the horses, water (only a muddy puddle), meat and
-firewood. The Gauchos were in high spirits at finding all
-these luxuries; and we soon set to work at the poor cow. This
-was the first night which I passed under the open sky, with
-the gear of the recado for my bed. There is high enjoyment
-in the independence of the Gaucho life -- to be able at any
-moment to pull up your horse, and say, "Here we will pass
-the night." The death-like stillness of the plain, the dogs
-keeping watch, the gipsy-group of Gauchos making their
-beds round the fire, have left in my mind a strongly-marked
-picture of this first night, which will never be forgotten.
-
-The next day the country continued similar to that above
-described. It is inhabited by few birds or animals of any
-kind. Occasionally a deer, or a Guanaco (wild Llama) may
-be seen; but the Agouti (Cavia Patagonica) is the commonest
-quadruped. This animal here represents our hares. It
-differs, however, from that genus in many essential respects;
-for instance, it has only three toes behind. It is also nearly
-twice the size, weighing from twenty to twenty-five pounds.
-The Agouti is a true friend of the desert; it is a common
-feature of the landscape to see two or three hopping quickly
-one after the other in a straight line across these wild plains.
-They are found as far north as the Sierra Tapalguen (lat.
-37 degs. 30'), where the plain rather suddenly becomes greener
-and more humid; and their southern limit is between Port
-Desire and St. Julian, where there is no change in the nature
-of the country. It is a singular fact, that although the
-Agouti is not now found as far south as Port St. Julian, yet
-that Captain Wood, in his voyage in 1670, talks of them as
-being numerous there. What cause can have altered, in a
-wide, uninhabited, and rarely-visited country, the range of
-an animal like this? It appears also, from the number shot
-by Captain Wood in one day at Port Desire, that they must
-have been considerably more abundant there formerly than
-at present. Where the Bizcacha lives and makes its burrows,
-the Agouti uses them; but where, as at Bahia Blanca, the
-Bizcacha is not found, the Agouti burrows for itself. The
-same thing occurs with the little owl of the Pampas (Athene
-cunicularia), which has so often been described as standing
-like a sentinel at the mouth of the burrows; for in Banda
-Oriental, owing to the absence of the Bizcacha, it is obliged
-to hollow out its own habitation.
-
-The next morning, as we approached the Rio Colorado,
-the appearance of the country changed; we soon came on a
-plain covered with turf, which, from its flowers, tall clover,
-and little owls, resembled the Pampas. We passed also a
-muddy swamp of considerable extent, which in summer dries,
-and becomes incrusted with various salts; and hence is called
-a salitral. It was covered by low succulent plants, of the
-same kind with those growing on the sea-shore. The Colorado,
-at the pass where we crossed it, is only about sixty
-yards wide; generally it must be nearly double that width.
-Its course is very tortuous, being marked by willow-trees
-and beds of reeds: in a direct line the distance to the mouth
-of the river is said to be nine leagues, but by water
-twenty-five. We were delayed crossing in the canoe by some
-immense troops of mares, which were swimming the river in
-order to follow a division of troops into the interior. A
-more ludicrous spectacle I never beheld than the hundreds
-and hundreds of heads, all directed one way, with pointed
-ears and distended snorting nostrils, appearing just above
-the water like a great shoal of some amphibious animal.
-Mare's flesh is the only food which the soldiers have when
-on an expedition. This gives them a great facility of movement;
-for the distance to which horses can be driven over
-these plains is quite surprising: I have been assured that an
-unloaded horse can travel a hundred miles a day for many
-days successively.
-
-The encampment of General Rosas was close to the river.
-It consisted of a square formed by waggons, artillery, straw
-huts, etc. The soldiers were nearly all cavalry; and I should
-think such a villainous, banditti-like army was never before
-collected together. The greater number of men were of a
-mixed breed, between Negro, Indian, and Spaniard. I know
-not the reason, but men of such origin seldom have a good
-expression of countenance. I called on the Secretary to show
-my passport. He began to cross-question me in the most
-dignified and mysterious manner. By good luck I had a
-letter of recommendation from the government of Buenos
-Ayres [5] to the commandant of Patagones. This was taken
-to General Rosas, who sent me a very obliging message; and
-the Secretary returned all smiles and graciousness. We took
-up our residence in the _rancho_, or hovel, of a curious old
-Spaniard, who had served with Napoleon in the expedition
-against Russia.
-
-We stayed two days at the Colorado; I had little to do,
-for the surrounding country was a swamp, which in summer
-(December), when the snow melts on the Cordillera, is over-
-flowed by the river. My chief amusement was watching the
-Indian families as they came to buy little articles at the
-rancho where we stayed. It was supposed that General
-Rosas had about six hundred Indian allies. The men were
-a tall, fine race, yet it was afterwards easy to see in the
-Fuegian savage the same countenance rendered hideous by
-cold, want of food, and less civilization. Some authors,
-in defining the primary races of mankind, have separated
-these Indians into two classes; but this is certainly
-incorrect. Among the young women or chinas, some deserve to
-be called even beautiful. Their hair was coarse, but bright
-and black; and they wore it in two plaits hanging down
-to the waist. They had a high colour, and eyes that
-glistened with brilliancy; their legs, feet, and arms were
-small and elegantly formed; their ankles, and sometimes
-their wrists, were ornamented by broad bracelets of blue
-beads. Nothing could be more interesting than some of the
-family groups. A mother with one or two daughters would
-often come to our rancho, mounted on the same horse. They
-ride like men, but with their knees tucked up much higher.
-This habit, perhaps, arises from their being accustomed,
-when travelling, to ride the loaded horses. The duty of the
-women is to load and unload the horses; to make the tents
-for the night; in short to be, like the wives of all savages,
-useful slaves. The men fight, hunt, take care of the horses,
-and make the riding gear. One of their chief indoor occupations
-is to knock two stones together till they become round,
-in order to make the bolas. With this important weapon the
-Indian catches his game, and also his horse, which roams
-free over the plain. In fighting, his first attempt is to throw
-down the horse of his adversary with the bolas, and when
-entangled by the fall to kill him with the chuzo. If the balls
-only catch the neck or body of an animal, they are often
-carried away and lost. As the making the stones round is
-the labour of two days, the manufacture of the balls is a
-very common employment. Several of the men and women
-had their faces painted red, but I never saw the horizontal
-bands which are so common among the Fuegians. Their
-chief pride consists in having everything made of silver; I
-have seen a cacique with his spurs, stirrups, handle of his
-knife, and bridle made of this metal: the head-stall and reins
-being of wire, were not thicker than whipcord; and to see a
-fiery steed wheeling about under the command of so light
-a chain, gave to the horsemanship a remarkable character of
-elegance.
-
-General Rosas intimated a wish to see me; a circumstance
-which I was afterwards very glad of. He is a man of an
-extraordinary character, and has a most predominant influence
-in the country, which it seems he will use to its prosperity
-and advancement. [6] He is said to be the owner of
-seventy-four square leagues of land, and to have about three
-hundred thousand head of cattle. His estates are admirably
-managed, and are far more productive of corn than those of
-others. He first gained his celebrity by his laws for his own
-estancias, and by disciplining several hundred men, so as to
-resist with success the attacks of the Indians. There are
-many stories current about the rigid manner in which his
-laws were enforced. One of these was, that no man, on
-penalty of being put into the stocks, should carry his knife
-on a Sunday: this being the principal day for gambling and
-drinking, many quarrels arose, which from the general manner
-of fighting with the knife often proved fatal. One
-Sunday the Governor came in great form to pay the estancia
-a visit, and General Rosas, in his hurry, walked out to receive
-him with his knife, as usual, stuck in his belt. The steward
-touched his arm, and reminded him of the law; upon which
-turning to the Governor, he said he was extremely sorry, but
-that he must go into the stocks, and that till let out, he
-possessed no power even in his own house. After a little time
-the steward was persuaded to open the stocks, and to let
-him out, but no sooner was this done, than he turned to the
-steward and said, "You now have broken the laws, so you
-must take my place in the stocks." Such actions as these
-delighted the Gauchos, who all possess high notions of their
-own equality and dignity.
-
-General Rosas is also a perfect horseman -- an accomplishment
-of no small consequence In a country where an assembled
-army elected its general by the following trial: A troop
-of unbroken horses being driven into a corral, were let out
-through a gateway, above which was a cross-bar: it was
-agreed whoever should drop from the bar on one of these
-wild animals, as it rushed out, and should be able, without
-saddle or bridle, not only to ride it, but also to bring it back
-to the door of the corral, should be their general. The person
-who succeeded was accordingly elected; and doubtless
-made a fit general for such an army. This extraordinary
-feat has also been performed by Rosas.
-
-By these means, and by conforming to the dress and habits
-of the Gauchos, he has obtained an unbounded popularity in
-the country, and in consequence a despotic power. I was
-assured by an English merchant, that a man who had murdered
-another, when arrested and questioned concerning his
-motive, answered, "He spoke disrespectfully of General
-Rosas, so I killed him." At the end of a week the murderer
-was at liberty. This doubtless was the act of the general's
-party, and not of the general himself.
-
-In conversation he is enthusiastic, sensible, and very
-grave. His gravity is carried to a high pitch: I heard one
-of his mad buffoons (for he keeps two, like the barons of
-old) relate the following anecdote. "I wanted very much to
-hear a certain piece of music, so I went to the general two
-or three times to ask him; he said to me, 'Go about your
-business, for I am engaged.' I went a second time; he said,
-'If you come again I will punish you.' A third time I
-asked, and he laughed. I rushed out of the tent, but it was
-too late -- he ordered two soldiers to catch and stake me. I
-begged by all the saints in heaven he would let me off; but it
-would not do, -- when the general laughs he spares neither
-mad man nor sound." The poor flighty gentleman looked quite
-dolorous, at the very recollection of the staking. This is a
-very severe punishment; four posts are driven into the
-ground, and the man is extended by his arms and legs
-horizontally, and there left to stretch for several hours.
-The idea is evidently taken from the usual method of drying
-hides. My interview passed away, without a smile, and I
-obtained a passport and order for the government post-horses,
-and this he gave me in the most obliging and ready
-manner.
-
-In the morning we started for Bahia Blanca, which we
-reached in two days. Leaving the regular encampment, we
-passed by the toldos of the Indians. These are round like
-ovens, and covered with hides; by the mouth of each, a tapering
-chuzo was stuck in the ground. The toldos were divided
-into separate groups, which belong to the different caciques'
-tribes, and the groups were again divided into smaller ones,
-according to the relationship of the owners. For several
-miles we travelled along the valley of the Colorado. The
-alluvial plains on the side appeared fertile, and it is supposed
-that they are well adapted to the growth of corn. Turning
-northward from the river, we soon entered on a country, differing
-from the plains south of the river. The land still continued
-dry and sterile: but it supported many different kinds
-of plants, and the grass, though brown and withered, was
-more abundant, as the thorny bushes were less so. These
-latter in a short space entirely disappeared, and the plains
-were left without a thicket to cover their nakedness. This
-change in the vegetation marks the commencement of the
-grand calcareo argillaceous deposit, which forms the wide
-extent of the Pampas, and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental. From the Strait of Magellan to the Colorado, a
-distance of about eight hundred miles, the face of the country
-is everywhere composed of shingle: the pebbles are
-chiefly of porphyry, and probably owe their origin to the
-rocks of the Cordillera. North of the Colorado this bed
-thins out, and the pebbles become exceedingly small, and
-here the characteristic vegetation of Patagonia ceases.
-
-Having ridden about twenty-five miles, we came to a
-broad belt of sand-dunes, which stretches, as far as the eye
-can reach, to the east and west. The sand-hillocks resting
-on the clay, allow small pools of water to collect, and thus
-afford in this dry country an invaluable supply of fresh
-water. The great advantage arising from depressions and
-elevations of the soil, is not often brought home to the mind.
-The two miserable springs in the long passage between the
-Rio Negro and Colorado were caused by trifling inequalities
-in the plain, without them not a drop of water would have
-been found. The belt of sand-dunes is about eight miles
-wide; at some former period, it probably formed the margin
-of a grand estuary, where the Colorado now flows. In this
-district, where absolute proofs of the recent elevation of
-the land occur, such speculations can hardly be neglected by
-any one, although merely considering the physical geography
-of the country. Having crossed the sandy tract, we arrived
-in the evening at one of the post-houses; and, as the fresh
-horses were grazing at a distance we determined to pass
-the night there.
-
-The house was situated at the base of a ridge between
-one and two hundred feet high -- a most remarkable feature
-in this country. This posta was commanded by a negro
-lieutenant, born in Africa: to his credit be it said, there
-was not a ranche between the Colorado and Buenos Ayres in
-nearly such neat order as his. He had a little room for
-strangers, and a small corral for the horses, all made of
-sticks and reeds; he had also dug a ditch round his house
-as a defence in case of being attacked. This would, however,
-have been of little avail, if the Indians had come; but
-his chief comfort seemed to rest in the thought of selling
-his life dearly. A short time before, a body of Indians had
-travelled past in the night; if they had been aware of the
-posta, our black friend and his four soldiers would assuredly
-have been slaughtered. I did not anywhere meet a more
-civil and obliging man than this negro; it was therefore
-the more painful to see that he would not sit down and eat
-with us.
-
-In the morning we sent for the horses very early, and
-started for another exhilarating gallop. We passed the
-Cabeza del Buey, an old name given to the head of a large
-marsh, which extends from Bahia Blanca. Here we changed
-horses, and passed through some leagues of swamps and
-saline marshes. Changing horses for the last time, we again
-began wading through the mud. My animal fell and I was
-well soused in black mire -- a very disagreeable accident
-when one does not possess a change of clothes. Some miles
-from the fort we met a man, who told us that a great gun
-had been fired, which is a signal that Indians are near. We
-immediately left the road, and followed the edge of a marsh,
-which when chased offers the best mode of escape. We
-were glad to arrive within the walls, when we found all the
-alarm was about nothing, for the Indians turned out to be
-friendly ones, who wished to join General Rosas.
-
-Bahia Blanca scarcely deserves the name of a village. A
-few houses and the barracks for the troops are enclosed by
-a deep ditch and fortified wall. The settlement is only of
-recent standing (since 1828); and its growth has been one of
-trouble. The government of Buenos Ayres unjustly occupied
-it by force, instead of following the wise example of the
-Spanish Viceroys, who purchased the land near the older
-settlement of the Rio Negro, from the Indians. Hence the
-need of the fortifications; hence the few houses and little
-cultivated land without the limits of the walls; even the
-cattle are not safe from the attacks of the Indians beyond
-the boundaries of the plain, on which the fortress stands.
-
-The part of the harbour where the Beagle intended to
-anchor being distant twenty-five miles, I obtained from the
-Commandant a guide and horses, to take me to see whether
-she had arrived. Leaving the plain of green turf, which
-extended along the course of a little brook, we soon entered
-on a wide level waste consisting either of sand, saline
-marshes, or bare mud. Some parts were clothed by low
-thickets, and others with those succulent plants, which
-luxuriate only where salt abounds. Bad as the country was,
-ostriches, deer, agoutis, and armadilloes, were abundant. My
-guide told me, that two months before he had a most narrow
-escape of his life: he was out hunting with two other men,
-at no great distance from this part of the country, when they
-were suddenly met by a party of Indians, who giving chase,
-soon overtook and killed his two friends. His own horse's
-legs were also caught by the bolas, but he jumped off, and
-with his knife cut them free: while doing this he was obliged
-to dodge round his horse, and received two severe wounds
-from their chuzos. Springing on the saddle, he managed, by
-a most wonderful exertion, just to keep ahead of the long
-spears of his pursuers, who followed him to within sight of
-the fort. From that time there was an order that no one
-should stray far from the settlement. I did not know of this
-when I started, and was surprised to observe how earnestly
-my guide watched a deer, which appeared to have been
-frightened from a distant quarter.
-
-We found the Beagle had not arrived, and consequently
-set out on our return, but the horses soon tiring, we were
-obliged to bivouac on the plain. In the morning we had
-caught an armadillo, which although a most excellent dish
-when roasted in its shell, did not make a very substantial
-breakfast and dinner for two hungry men. The ground at
-the place where we stopped for the night, was incrusted with
-a layer of sulphate of soda, and hence, of course, was without
-water. Yet many of the smaller rodents managed to
-exist even here, and the tucutuco was making its odd little
-grunt beneath my head, during half the night. Our horses
-were very poor ones, and in the morning they were soon
-exhausted from not having had anything to drink, so that
-we were obliged to walk. About noon the dogs killed a kid,
-which we roasted. I ate some of it, but it made me intolerably
-thirsty. This was the more distressing as the road,
-from some recent rain, was full of little puddles of clear
-water, yet not a drop was drinkable. I had scarcely been
-twenty hours without water, and only part of the time under
-a hot sun, yet the thirst rendered me very weak. How people
-survive two or three days under such circumstances, I cannot
-imagine: at the same time, I must confess that my guide did
-not suffer at all, and was astonished that one day's
-deprivation should be so troublesome to me.
-
-I have several times alluded to the surface of the ground
-being incrusted with salt. This phenomenon is quite
-different from that of the salinas, and more extraordinary.
-In many parts of South America, wherever the climate is
-moderately dry, these incrustations occur; but I have nowhere
-seen them so abundant as near Bahia Blanca. The salt here,
-and in other parts of Patagonia, consists chiefly of sulphate
-of soda with some common salt. As long as the ground
-remains moist in the salitrales (as the Spaniards improperly
-call them, mistaking this substance for saltpeter), nothing is
-to be seen but an extensive plain composed of a black, muddy
-soil, supporting scattered tufts of succulent plants. On returning
-through one of these tracts, after a week's hot weather,
-one is surprised to see square miles of the plain white, as if
-from a slight fall of snow, here and there heaped up by the
-wind into little drifts. This latter appearance is chiefly
-caused by the salts being drawn up, during the slow evaporation
-of the moisture, round blades of dead grass, stumps of
-wood, and pieces of broken earth, instead of being crystallized
-at the bottoms of the puddles of water. The salitrales
-occur either on level tracts elevated only a few feet above
-the level of the sea, or on alluvial land bordering rivers.
-M. Parchappe [7] found that the saline incrustation on the plain,
-at the distance of some miles from the sea, consisted chiefly
-of sulphate of soda, with only seven per cent. of common
-salt; whilst nearer to the coast, the common salt increased
-to 37 parts in a hundred. This circumstance would tempt
-one to believe that the sulphate of soda is generated in the
-soil, from the muriate, left on the surface during the slow
-and recent elevation of this dry country. The whole phenomenon
-is well worthy the attention of naturalists. Have
-the succulent, salt-loving plants, which are well known to
-contain much soda, the power of decomposing the muriate?
-Does the black fetid mud, abounding with organic matter,
-yield the sulphur and ultimately the sulphuric acid?
-
-Two days afterwards I again rode to the harbour: when
-not far from our destination, my companion, the same man
-as before, spied three people hunting on horseback. He
-immediately dismounted, and watching them intently, said,
-"They don't ride like Christians, and nobody can leave the
-fort." The three hunters joined company, and likewise
-dismounted from their horses. At last one mounted again
-and rode over the hill out of sight. My companion said,
-"We must now get on our horses: load your pistol;" and he
-looked to his own sword. I asked, "Are they Indians?" --
-"Quien sabe? (who knows?) if there are no more than three,
-it does not signify." It then struck me, that the one man
-had gone over the hill to fetch the rest of his tribe. I
-suggested this; but all the answer I could extort was, "Quien
-sabe?" His head and eye never for a minute ceased scanning
-slowly the distant horizon. I thought his uncommon
-coolness too good a joke, and asked him why he did not
-return home. I was startled when he answered, "We are
-returning, but in a line so as to pass near a swamp, into
-which we can gallop the horses as far as they can go, and
-then trust to our own legs; so that there is no danger." I did
-not feel quite so confident of this, and wanted to increase
-our pace. He said, "No, not until they do." When any
-little inequality concealed us, we galloped; but when in sight,
-continued walking. At last we reached a valley, and turning
-to the left, galloped quickly to the foot of a hill; he gave me
-his horse to hold, made the dogs lie down, and then crawled
-on his hands and knees to reconnoitre. He remained in this
-position for some time, and at last, bursting out in laughter,
-exclaimed, "Mugeres!" (women!). He knew them to be
-the wife and sister-in-law of the major's son, hunting for
-ostrich's eggs. I have described this man's conduct, because
-he acted under the full impression that they were Indians.
-As soon, however, as the absurd mistake was found out, he
-gave me a hundred reasons why they could not have been
-Indians; but all these were forgotten at the time. We then
-rode on in peace and quietness to a low point called Punta
-Alta, whence we could see nearly the whole of the great harbour
-of Bahia Blanca.
-
-The wide expanse of water is choked up by numerous
-great mud-banks, which the inhabitants call Cangrejales, or
-_crabberies_, from the number of small crabs. The mud is so
-soft that it is impossible to walk over them, even for the
-shortest distance. Many of the banks have their surfaces
-covered with long rushes, the tops of which alone are visible
-at high water. On one occasion, when in a boat, we were
-so entangled by these shallows that we could hardly find
-our way. Nothing was visible but the flat beds of mud; the
-day was not very clear, and there was much refraction, or
-as the sailors expressed it, "things loomed high." The only
-object within our view which was not level was the horizon;
-rushes looked like bushes unsupported in the air, and water
-like mud-banks, and mud-banks like water.
-
-We passed the night in Punta Alta, and I employed myself
-in searching for fossil bones; this point being a perfect
-catacomb for monsters of extinct races. The evening was
-perfectly calm and clear; the extreme monotony of the view
-gave it an interest even in the midst of mud-banks and gulls
-sand-hillocks and solitary vultures. In riding back in the
-morning we came across a very fresh track of a Puma, but
-did not succeed in finding it. We saw also a couple of
-Zorillos, or skunks, -- odious animals, which are far from
-uncommon. In general appearance, the Zorillo resembles a
-polecat, but it is rather larger, and much thicker in proportion.
-Conscious of its power, it roams by day about the open
-plain, and fears neither dog nor man. If a dog is urged to
-the attack, its courage is instantly checked by a few drops
-of the fetid oil, which brings on violent sickness and running
-at the nose. Whatever is once polluted by it, is for
-ever useless. Azara says the smell can be perceived at a
-league distant; more than once, when entering the harbour
-of Monte Video, the wind being off shore, we have perceived
-the odour on board the Beagle. Certain it is, that
-every animal most willingly makes room for the Zorillo.
-
-[1] The corral is an enclosure made of tall and strong
-stakes. Every estancia, or farming estate, has one attached
-to it.
-
-[2] The hovels of the Indians are thus called.
-
-[3] Report of the Agricult. Chem. Assoc. in the Agricult.
-Gazette, 1845, p. 93.
-
-[4] Linnaean Trans,. vol. xi. p. 205. It is remarkable how
-all the circumstances connected with the salt-lakes in Siberia
-and Patagonia are similar. Siberia, like Patagonia, appears
-to have been recently elevated above the waters of the sea.
-In both countries the salt-lakes occupy shallow depressions
-in the plains; in both the mud on the borders is black and
-fetid; beneath the crust of common salt, sulphate of soda or
-of magnesium occurs, imperfectly crystallized; and in both,
-the muddy sand is mixed with lentils of gypsum. The Siberian
-salt-lakes are inhabited by small crustaceous animals; and
-flamingoes (Edin. New Philos. Jour., Jan 1830) likewise
-frequent them. As these circumstances, apparently so trifling,
-occur in two distant continents, we may feel sure that they
-are the necessary results of a common cause -- See Pallas's
-Travels, 1793 to 1794, pp. 129 - 134.
-
-[5] I am bound to express in the strongest terms, my obligation
-to the government of Buenos Ayres for the obliging manner in
-which passports to all parts of the country were given me, as
-naturalist of the Beagle.
-
-[6] This prophecy has turned out entirely and miserably wrong.
-1845.
-
-[7] Voyage dans l'Amerique Merid par M. A. d'Orbigny. Part.
-Hist. tom. i. p. 664
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Bahia Blanca -- Geology -- Numerous gigantic Quadrupeds --
-Recent Extinction -- Longevity of species -- Large Animals
-do not require a luxuriant vegetation -- Southern Africa --
-Siberian Fossils -- Two Species of Ostrich -- Habits of
-Oven-bird -- Armadilloes -- Venomous Snake, Toad, Lizard --
-Hybernation of Animal -- Habits of Sea-Pen -- Indian Wars and
-Massacres -- Arrow-head, antiquarian Relic.
-
-
-The Beagle arrived here on the 24th of August, and a
-week afterwards sailed for the Plata. With Captain
-Fitz Roy's consent I was left behind, to travel by land
-to Buenos Ayres. I will here add some observations, which
-were made during this visit and on a previous occasion, when
-the Beagle was employed in surveying the harbour.
-
-The plain, at the distance of a few miles from the coast,
-belongs to the great Pampean formation, which consists in
-part of a reddish clay, and in part of a highly calcareous
-marly rock. Nearer the coast there are some plains formed
-from the wreck of the upper plain, and from mud, gravel,
-and sand thrown up by the sea during the slow elevation of
-the land, of which elevation we have evidence in upraised
-beds of recent shells, and in rounded pebbles of pumice
-scattered over the country. At Punta Alta we have a section of
-one of these later-formed little plains, which is highly
-interesting from the number and extraordinary character of the
-remains of gigantic land-animals embedded in it. These have
-been fully described by Professor Owen, in the Zoology of the
-voyage of the Beagle, and are deposited in the College of
-Surgeons. I will here give only a brief outline of their nature.
-
-First, parts of three heads and other bones of the Megatherium,
-the huge dimensions of which are expressed by its
-name. Secondly, the Megalonyx, a great allied animal.
-Thirdly, the Scelidotherium, also an allied animal, of which
-I obtained a nearly perfect skeleton. It must have been as
-large as a rhinoceros: in the structure of its head it comes
-according to Mr. Owen, nearest to the Cape Anteater, but
-in some other respects it approaches to the armadilloes.
-Fourthly, the Mylodon Darwinii, a closely related genus of
-little inferior size. Fifthly, another gigantic edental quadruped.
-Sixthly, a large animal, with an osseous coat in compartments,
-very like that of an armadillo. Seventhly, an
-extinct kind of horse, to which I shall have again to refer.
-Eighthly, a tooth of a Pachydermatous animal, probably the
-same with the Macrauchenia, a huge beast with a long neck
-like a camel, which I shall also refer to again. Lastly, the
-Toxodon, perhaps one of the strangest animals ever discovered:
-in size it equalled an elephant or megatherium, but
-the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen states, proves
-indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers, the
-order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest
-quadrupeds: in many details it is allied to the Pachydermata:
-judging from the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils,
-it was probably aquatic, like the Dugong and Manatee,
-to which it is also allied. How wonderfully are the different
-Orders, at the present time so well separated, blended together
-in different points of the structure of the Toxodon!
-
-The remains of these nine great quadrupeds, and many
-detached bones, were found embedded on the beach, within
-the space of about 200 yards square. It is a remarkable
-circumstance that so many different species should be found
-together; and it proves how numerous in kind the ancient
-inhabitants of this country must have been. At the distance
-of about thirty miles from Punta Alta, in a cliff of red earth,
-I found several fragments of bones, some of large size.
-Among them were the teeth of a gnawer, equalling in size
-and closely resembling those of the Capybara, whose habits
-have been described; and therefore, probably, an aquatic
-animal. There was also part of the head of a Ctenomys; the
-species being different from the Tucutuco, but with a close
-general resemblance. The red earth, like that of the Pampas,
-in which these remains were embedded, contains, according
-to Professor Ehrenberg, eight fresh-water and one salt-water
-infusorial animalcule; therefore, probably, it was an estuary
-deposit.
-
-The remains at Punta Alta were embedded in stratified
-gravel and reddish mud, just such as the sea might now wash
-up on a shallow bank. They were associated with twenty-
-three species of shells, of which thirteen are recent and four
-others very closely related to recent forms. [1] From the bones
-of the Scelidotherium, including even the knee-cap, being
-intombed in their proper relative positions, and from the
-osseous armour of the great armadillo-like animal being so
-well preserved, together with the bones of one of its legs, we
-may feel assured that these remains were fresh and united by
-their ligaments, when deposited in the gravel together with
-the shells. [2] Hence we have good evidence that the above
-enumerated gigantic quadrupeds, more different from those
-of the present day than the oldest of the tertiary quadrupeds
-of Europe, lived whilst the sea was peopled with most
-of its present inhabitants; and we have confirmed that remarkable
-law so often insisted on by Mr. Lyell, namely, that
-the "longevity of the species in the mammalia is upon the
-whole inferior to that of the testacea." [3]
-
-The great size of the bones of the Megatheroid animals,
-including the Megatherium, Megalonyx, Scelidotherium, and
-Mylodon, is truly wonderful. The habits of life of these
-animals were a complete puzzle to naturalists, until Professor
-Owen [4] solved the problem with remarkable ingenuity. The
-teeth indicate, by their simple structure, that these Megatheroid
-animals lived on vegetable food, and probably on the
-leaves and small twigs of trees; their ponderous forms and
-great strong curved claws seem so little adapted for locomotion,
-that some eminent naturalists have actually believed,
-that, like the sloths, to which they are intimately related,
-they subsisted by climbing back downwards on trees, and
-feeding on the leaves. It was a bold, not to say preposterous,
-idea to conceive even antediluvian trees, with branches
-strong enough to bear animals as large as elephants. Professor
-Owen, with far more probability, believes that, instead
-of climbing on the trees, they pulled the branches down to
-them, and tore up the smaller ones by the roots, and so fed on
-the leaves. The colossal breadth and weight of their hinder
-quarters, which can hardly be imagined without having been
-seen, become on this view, of obvious service, instead of
-being an incumbrance: their apparent clumsiness disappears.
-With their great tails and their huge heels firmly fixed like
-a tripod on the ground, they could freely exert the full force
-of their most powerful arms and great claws. Strongly
-rooted, indeed, must that tree have been, which could have
-resisted such force! The Mylodon, moreover, was furnished
-with a long extensile tongue like that of the giraffe, which,
-by one of those beautiful provisions of nature, thus reaches
-with the aid of its long neck its leafy food. I may remark,
-that in Abyssinia the elephant, according to Bruce, when it
-cannot reach with its proboscis the branches, deeply scores
-with its tusks the trunk of the tree, up and down and all
-round, till it is sufficiently weakened to be broken down.
-
-The beds including the above fossil remains, stand only
-from fifteen to twenty feet above the level of high-water;
-and hence the elevation of the land has been small (without
-there has been an intercalated period of subsidence, of which
-we have no evidence) since the great quadrupeds wandered
-over the surrounding plains; and the external features of
-the country must then have been very nearly the same as
-now. What, it may naturally be asked, was the character
-of the vegetation at that period; was the country as wretchedly
-sterile as it now is? As so many of the co-embedded
-shells are the same with those now living in the bay, I was
-at first inclined to think that the former vegetation was
-probably similar to the existing one; but this would have
-been an erroneous inference for some of these same shells
-live on the luxuriant coast of Brazil; and generally, the
-character of the inhabitants of the sea are useless as guides
-to judge of those on the land. Nevertheless, from the following
-considerations, I do not believe that the simple fact
-of many gigantic quadrupeds having lived on the plains
-round Bahia Blanca, is any sure guide that they formerly
-were clothed with a luxuriant vegetation: I have no doubt
-that the sterile country a little southward, near the Rio
-Negro, with its scattered thorny trees, would support many
-and large quadrupeds.
-
-
-That large animals require a luxuriant vegetation, has
-been a general assumption which has passed from one work
-to another; but I do not hesitate to say that it is completely
-false, and that it has vitiated the reasoning of geologists
-on some points of great interest in the ancient history of
-the world. The prejudice has probably been derived from
-India, and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants,
-noble forests, and impenetrable jungles, are associated together
-in every one's mind. If, however, we refer to any
-work of travels through the southern parts of Africa, we
-shall find allusions in almost every page either to the desert
-character of the country, or to the numbers of large animals
-inhabiting it. The same thing is rendered evident
-by the many engravings which have been published of various
-parts of the interior. When the Beagle was at Cape
-Town, I made an excursion of some days' length into the
-country, which at least was sufficient to render that which
-I had read more fully intelligible.
-
-Dr. Andrew Smith, who, at the head of his adventurous
-party, has lately succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn,
-informs me that, taking into consideration the whole
-of the southern part of Africa, there can be no doubt of its
-being a sterile country. On the southern and south-eastern
-coasts there are some fine forests, but with these exceptions,
-the traveller may pass for days together through open plains,
-covered by a poor and scanty vegetation. It is difficult to
-convey any accurate idea of degrees of comparative fertility;
-but it may be safely said that the amount of vegetation
-supported at any one time [5] by Great Britain, exceeds,
-perhaps even tenfold, the quantity on an equal area, in the
-interior parts of Southern Africa. The fact that bullock-
-waggons can travel in any direction, excepting near the
-coast, without more than occasionally half an hour's delay
-in cutting down bushes, gives, perhaps, a more definite notion
-of the scantiness of the vegetation. Now, if we look to the
-animals inhabiting these wide plains, we shall find their
-numbers extraordinarily great, and their bulk immense. We
-must enumerate the elephant, three species of rhinoceros,
-and probably, according to Dr. Smith, two others, the hippopotamus,
-the giraffe, the bos caffer -- as large as a full-grown
-bull, and the elan -- but little less, two zebras, and the
-quaccha, two gnus, and several antelopes even larger than these
-latter animals. It may be supposed that although the species
-are numerous, the individuals of each kind are few.
-By the kindness of Dr. Smith, I am enabled to show that
-the case is very different. He informs me, that in lat. 24 degs.,
-in one day's march with the bullock-waggons, he saw, without
-wandering to any great distance on either side, between
-one hundred and one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses, which
-belonged to three species: the same day he saw several herds
-of giraffes, amounting together to nearly a hundred; and
-that although no elephant was observed, yet they are found
-in this district. At the distance of a little more than one
-hour's march from their place of encampment on the previous
-night, his party actually killed at one spot eight
-hippopotamuses, and saw many more. In this same river there
-were likewise crocodiles. Of course it was a case quite
-extraordinary, to see so many great animals crowded together,
-but it evidently proves that they must exist in great numbers.
-Dr. Smith describes the country passed through that
-day, as "being thinly covered with grass, and bushes about
-four feet high, and still more thinly with mimosa-trees."
-The waggons were not prevented travelling in a nearly
-straight line.
-
-Besides these large animals, every one the least acquainted
-with the natural history of the Cape, has read of
-the herds of antelopes, which can be compared only with the
-flocks of migratory birds. The numbers indeed of the lion,
-panther, and hyaena, and the multitude of birds of prey,
-plainly speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds:
-one evening seven lions were counted at the same time prowling
-round Dr. Smith's encampment. As this able naturalist
-remarked to me, the carnage each day in Southern Africa
-must indeed be terrific! I confess it is truly surprising how
-such a number of animals can find support in a country
-producing so little food. The larger quadrupeds no doubt
-roam over wide tracts in search of it; and their food chiefly
-consists of underwood, which probably contains much nutriment
-in a small bulk. Dr. Smith also informs me that the
-vegetation has a rapid growth; no sooner is a part consumed,
-than its place is supplied by a fresh stock. There can be
-no doubt, however, that our ideas respecting the apparent
-amount of food necessary for the support of large quadrupeds
-are much exaggerated: it should have been remembered
-that the camel, an animal of no mean bulk, has always been
-considered as the emblem of the desert.
-
-The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation
-must necessarily be luxuriant, is the more remarkable,
-because the converse is far from true. Mr. Burchell observed
-to me that when entering Brazil, nothing struck him more
-forcibly than the splendour of the South American vegetation
-contrasted with that of South Africa, together with
-the absence of all large quadrupeds. In his Travels, [6] he has
-suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if
-there were sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest
-herbivorous quadrupeds of each country would be extremely
-curious. If we take on the one side, the elephant, [7] hippopotamus,
-giraffe, bos caffer, elan, certainly three, and probably
-five species of rhinoceros; and on the American side,
-two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the vicuna, peccari,
-capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys to
-complete the number), and then place these two groups
-alongside each other, it is not easy to conceive ranks more
-disproportionate in size. After the above facts, we are compelled
-to conclude, against anterior probability, [8] that among
-the mammalia there exists no close relation between the
-bulk of the species, and the _quantity_ of the vegetation, in
-the countries which they inhabit.
-
-With regard to the number of large quadrupeds, there
-certainly exists no quarter of the globe which will bear
-comparison with Southern Africa. After the different statements
-which have been given, the extremely desert character
-of that region will not be disputed. In the European division
-of the world, we must look back to the tertiary epochs,
-to find a condition of things among the mammalia, resembling
-that now existing at the Cape of Good Hope. Those
-tertiary epochs, which we are apt to consider as abounding
-to an astonishing degree with large animals, because we
-find the remains of many ages accumulated at certain spots,
-could hardly boast of more large quadrupeds than Southern
-Africa does at present. If we speculate on the condition
-of the vegetation during these epochs we are at least bound
-so far to consider existing analogies, as not to urge as
-absolutely necessary a luxuriant vegetation, when we see
-a state of things so totally different at the Cape of Good
-Hope.
-
-We know [9] that the extreme regions of North America,
-many degrees beyond the limit where the ground at the depth
-of a few feet remains perpetually congealed, are covered by
-forests of large and tall trees. In a like manner, in Siberia,
-we have woods of birch, fir, aspen, and larch, growing in a
-latitude [10] (64 degs.) where the mean temperature of the
-air falls below the freezing point, and where the earth is so
-completely frozen, that the carcass of an animal embedded in it
-is perfectly preserved. With these facts we must grant, as
-far as _quantity alone_ of vegetation is concerned, that the
-great quadrupeds of the later tertiary epochs might, in most
-parts of Northern Europe and Asia, have lived on the spots
-where their remains are now found. I do not here speak of
-the kind of vegetation necessary for their support; because,
-as there is evidence of physical changes, and as the animals
-have become extinct, so may we suppose that the species of
-plants have likewise been changed.
-
-These remarks, I may be permitted to add, directly bear
-on the case of the Siberian animals preserved in ice. The
-firm conviction of the necessity of a vegetation possessing
-a character of tropical luxuriance, to support such large
-animals, and the impossibility of reconciling this with the
-proximity of perpetual congelation, was one chief cause of
-the several theories of sudden revolutions of climate, and of
-overwhelming catastrophes, which were invented to account
-for their entombment. I am far from supposing that the
-climate has not changed since the period when those animals
-lived, which now lie buried in the ice. At present I
-only wish to show, that as far as _quantity_ of food _alone_ is
-concerned, the ancient rhinoceroses might have roamed over
-the _steppes_ of central Siberia (the northern parts probably
-being under water) even in their present condition, as well
-as the living rhinoceroses and elephants over the _Karros_
-of Southern Africa.
-
-
-I will now give an account of the habits of some of the
-more interesting birds which are common on the wild plains
-of Northern Patagonia: and first for the largest, or South
-American ostrich. The ordinary habits of the ostrich are
-familiar to every one. They live on vegetable matter, such
-as roots and grass; but at Bahia Blanca I have repeatedly
-seen three or four come down at low water to the extensive
-mud-banks which are then dry, for the sake, as the Gauchos
-say, of feeding on small fish. Although the ostrich in its
-habits is so shy, wary, and solitary, and although so fleet
-in its pace, it is caught without much difficulty by the Indian
-or Gaucho armed with the bolas. When several horsemen
-appear in a semicircle, it becomes confounded, and does
-not know which way to escape. They generally prefer running
-against the wind; yet at the first start they expand
-their wings, and like a vessel make all sail. On one fine
-hot day I saw several ostriches enter a bed of tall rushes,
-where they squatted concealed, till quite closely approached.
-It is not generally known that ostriches readily take to the
-water. Mr. King informs me that at the Bay of San Blas,
-and at Port Valdes in Patagonia, he saw these birds swimming
-several times from island to island. They ran into
-the water both when driven down to a point, and likewise
-of their own accord when not frightened: the distance
-crossed was about two hundred yards. When swimming,
-very little of their bodies appear above water; their necks
-are extended a little forward, and their progress is slow.
-On two occasions I saw some ostriches swimming across the
-Santa Cruz river, where its course was about four hundred
-yards wide, and the stream rapid. Captain Sturt, [11] when
-descending the Murrumbidgee, in Australia, saw two emus
-in the act of swimming.
-
-The inhabitants of the country readily distinguish, even
-at a distance, the cock bird from the hen. The former is
-larger and darker-coloured, [12] and has a bigger head. The
-ostrich, I believe the cock, emits a singular, deep-toned,
-hissing note: when first I heard it, standing in the midst of
-some sand-hillocks, I thought it was made by some wild
-beast, for it is a sound that one cannot tell whence it comes,
-or from how far distant. When we were at Bahia Blanca
-in the months of September and October, the eggs, in
-extraordinary numbers, were found all over the country. They
-lie either scattered and single, in which case they are never
-hatched, and are called by the Spaniards huachos; or they
-are collected together into a shallow excavation, which forms
-the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three contained
-twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven.
-In one day's hunting on horseback sixty-four eggs were
-found; forty-four of these were in two nests, and the remaining
-twenty, scattered huachos. The Gauchos unanimously
-affirm, and there is no reason to doubt their statement,
-that the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for
-some time afterwards accompanies the young. The cock
-when on the nest lies very close; I have myself almost
-ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times they
-are occasionally fierce, and even dangerous, and that they
-have been known to attack a man on horseback, trying to
-kick and leap on him. My informer pointed out to me an old
-man, whom he had seen much terrified by one chasing him. I
-observe in Burchell's travels in South Africa, that he remarks,
-"Having killed a male ostrich, and the feathers being
-dirty, it was said by the Hottentots to be a nest bird." I
-understand that the male emu in the Zoological Gardens
-takes charge of the nest: this habit, therefore, is common
-to the family.
-
-The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females
-lay in one nest. I have been positively told that four or
-five hen birds have been watched to go in the middle of the
-day, one after the other, to the same nest. I may add, also,
-that it is believed in Africa, that two or more females lay
-in one nest. [13] Although this habit at first appears very
-strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple
-manner. The number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty
-to forty, and even to fifty; and according to Azara, some
-times to seventy or eighty. Now, although it is most probable,
-from the number of eggs found in one district being
-so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent birds,
-and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that
-she may in the course of the season lay a large number, yet
-the time required must be very long. Azara states, [14] that a
-female in a state of domestication laid seventeen eggs, each
-at the interval of three days one from another. If the hen
-was obliged to hatch her own eggs, before the last was laid
-the first probably would be addled; but if each laid a few
-eggs at successive periods, in different nests, and several
-hens, as is stated to be the case, combined together, then
-the eggs in one collection would be nearly of the same age.
-If the number of eggs in one of these nests is, as I believe,
-not greater on an average than the number laid by one
-female in the season, then there must be as many nests as
-females, and each cock bird will have its fair share of the
-labour of incubation; and that during a period when the
-females probably could not sit, from not having finished
-laying. [15] I have before mentioned the great numbers of
-huachos, or deserted eggs; so that in one day's hunting
-twenty were found in this state. It appears odd that so
-many should be wasted. Does it not arise from the difficulty
-of several females associating together, and finding a male
-ready to undertake the office of incubation? It is evident
-that there must at first be some degree of association between
-at least two females; otherwise the eggs would remain
-scattered over the wide plain, at distances far too great to
-allow of the male collecting them into one nest: some authors
-have believed that the scattered eggs were deposited
-for the young birds to feed on. This can hardly be the case
-in America, because the huachos, although often found
-addled and putrid, are generally whole.
-
-When at the Rio Negro in Northern Patagonia, I repeatedly
-heard the Gauchos talking of a very rare bird which
-they called Avestruz Petise. They described it as being less
-than the common ostrich (which is there abundant), but
-with a very close general resemblance. They said its colour
-was dark and mottled, and that its legs were shorter, and
-feathered lower down than those of the common ostrich.
-It is more easily caught by the bolas than the other species.
-The few inhabitants who had seen both kinds, affirmed they
-could distinguish them apart from a long distance. The
-eggs of the small species appeared, however, more generally
-known; and it was remarked, with surprise, that they were
-very little less than those of the Rhea, but of a slightly
-different form, and with a tinge of pale blue. This species occurs
-most rarely on the plains bordering the Rio Negro; but about
-a degree and a half further south they are tolerably abundant.
-When at Port Desire, in Patagonia (lat. 48 degs.), Mr.
-Martens shot an ostrich; and I looked at it, forgetting at
-the moment, in the most unaccountable manner, the whole
-subject of the Petises, and thought it was a not full-grown
-bird of the common sort. It was cooked and eaten before
-my memory returned. Fortunately the head, neck, legs,
-wings, many of the larger feathers, and a large part of the
-skin, had been preserved; and from these a very nearly perfect
-specimen has been put together, and is now exhibited
-in the museum of the Zoological Society. Mr. Gould, in
-describing this new species, has done me the honour of
-calling it after my name.
-
-Among the Patagonian Indians in the Strait of Magellan,
-we found a half Indian, who had lived some years with
-the tribe, but had been born in the northern provinces. I
-asked him if he had ever heard of the Avestruz Petise? He
-answered by saying, " Why, there are none others in these
-southern countries." He informed me that the number of
-eggs in the nest of the petise is considerably less than in that
-of the other kind, namely, not more than fifteen on an average,
-but he asserted that more than one female deposited
-them. At Santa Cruz we saw several of these birds. They
-were excessively wary: I think they could see a person
-approaching when too far off to be distinguished themselves.
-In ascending the river few were seen; but in our quiet and
-rapid descent, many, in pairs and by fours or fives, were
-observed. It was remarked that this bird did not expand
-its wings, when first starting at full speed, after the manner
-of the northern kind. In conclusion I may observe, that
-the Struthio rhea inhabits the country of La Plata as far
-as a little south of the Rio Negro in lat. 41 degs., and that
-the Struthio Darwinii takes its place in Southern Patagonia;
-the part about the Rio Negro being neutral territory. M.
-A. d'Orbigny, [16] when at the Rio Negro, made great exertions
-to procure this bird, but never had the good fortune to
-succeed. Dobrizhoffer [17] long ago was aware of there being
-two kinds of ostriches, he says, "You must know, moreover,
-that Emus differ in size and habits in different tracts
-of land; for those that inhabit the plains of Buenos Ayres
-and Tucuman are larger, and have black, white and grey
-feathers; those near to the Strait of Magellan are smaller
-and more beautiful, for their white feathers are tipped with
-black at the extremity, and their black ones in like manner
-terminate in white."
-
-A very singular little bird, Tinochorus rumicivorus, is
-here common: in its habits and general appearance, it nearly
-equally partakes of the characters, different as they are, of
-the quail and snipe. The Tinochorus is found in the whole
-of southern South America, wherever there are sterile plains,
-or open dry pasture land. It frequents in pairs or small
-flocks the most desolate places, where scarcely another living
-creature can exist. Upon being approached they squat close,
-and then are very difficult to be distinguished from the
-ground. When feeding they walk rather slowly, with their
-legs wide apart. They dust themselves in roads and sandy
-places, and frequent particular spots, where they may be
-found day after day: like partridges, they take wing in a
-flock. In all these respects, in the muscular gizzard adapted
-for vegetable food, in the arched beak and fleshy nostrils,
-short legs and form of foot, the Tinochorus has a close affinity
-with quails. But as soon as the bird is seen flying, its
-whole appearance changes; the long pointed wings, so different
-from those in the gallinaceous order, the irregular
-manner of flight, and plaintive cry uttered at the moment
-of rising, recall the idea of a snipe. The sportsmen of the
-Beagle unanimously called it the short-billed snipe. To this
-genus, or rather to the family of the Waders, its skeleton
-shows that it is really related.
-
-The Tinochorus is closely related to some other South
-American birds. Two species of the genus Attagis are in
-almost every respect ptarmigans in their habits; one lives
-in Tierra del Fuego, above the limits of the forest land; and
-the other just beneath the snow-line on the Cordillera of
-Central Chile. A bird of another closely allied genus, Chionis
-alba, is an inhabitant of the antarctic regions; it feeds
-on sea-weed and shells on the tidal rocks. Although not
-web footed, from some unaccountable habit, it is frequently
-met with far out at sea. This small family of birds is one
-of those which, from its varied relations to other families,
-although at present offering only difficulties to the systematic
-naturalist, ultimately may assist in revealing the
-grand scheme, common to the present and past ages, on
-which organized beings have been created.
-
-The genus Furnarius contains several species, all small
-birds, living on the ground, and inhabiting open dry countries.
-In structure they cannot be compared to any European
-form. Ornithologists have generally included them
-among the creepers, although opposed to that family in every
-habit. The best known species is the common oven-bird of
-La Plata, the Casara or housemaker of the Spaniards. The
-nest, whence it takes its name, is placed in the most exposed
-situations, as on the top of a post, a bare rock, or on
-a cactus. It is composed of mud and bits of straw, and has
-strong thick walls: in shape it precisely resembles an oven,
-or depressed beehive. The opening is large and arched,
-and directly in front, within the nest, there is a partition,
-which reaches nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage
-or antechamber to the true nest.
-
-Another and smaller species of Furnarius (F. cunicularius),
-resembles the oven-bird in the general reddish tint
-of its plumage, in a peculiar shrill reiterated cry, and in an
-odd manner of running by starts. From its affinity, the
-Spaniards call it Casarita (or little housebuilder), although
-its nidification is quite different. The Casarita builds its
-nest at the bottom of a narrow cylindrical hole, which is
-said to extend horizontally to nearly six feet under ground.
-Several of the country people told me, that when boys, they
-had attempted to dig out the nest, but had scarcely ever
-succeeded in getting to the end of the passage. The bird
-chooses any low bank of firm sandy soil by the side of a
-road or stream. Here (at Bahia Blanca) the walls round
-the houses are built of hardened mud, and I noticed that
-one, which enclosed a courtyard where I lodged, was bored
-through by round holes in a score of places. On asking the
-owner the cause of this he bitterly complained of the little
-casarita, several of which I afterwards observed at work.
-It is rather curious to find how incapable these birds must
-be of acquiring any notion of thickness, for although they
-were constantly flitting over the low wall, they continued
-vainly to bore through it, thinking it an excellent bank for
-their nests. I do not doubt that each bird, as often as it
-came to daylight on the opposite side, was greatly surprised
-at the marvellous fact.
-
-I have already mentioned nearly all the mammalia common
-in this country. Of armadilloes three species occur
-namely, the Dasypus minutus or _pichy_, the D. villosus or
-_peludo_, and the _apar_. The first extends ten degrees further
-south than any other kind; a fourth species, the _Mulita_,
-does not come as far south as Bahia Blanca. The four species
-have nearly similar habits; the _peludo_, however, is nocturnal,
-while the others wander by day over the open plains,
-feeding on beetles, larvae, roots, and even small snakes. The
-_apar_, commonly called _mataco_, is remarkable by having only
-three moveable bands; the rest of its tesselated covering
-being nearly inflexible. It has the power of rolling itself
-into a perfect sphere, like one kind of English woodlouse.
-In this state it is safe from the attack of dogs; for the dog
-not being able to take the whole in its mouth, tries to bite
-one side, and the ball slips away. The smooth hard covering
-of the _mataco_ offers a better defence than the sharp
-spines of the hedgehog. The _pichy_ prefers a very dry soil;
-and the sand-dunes near the coast, where for many months
-it can never taste water, is its favourite resort: it often tries
-to escape notice, by squatting close to the ground. In the
-course of a day's ride, near Bahia Blanca, several were generally
-met with. The instant one was perceived, it was
-necessary, in order to catch it, almost to tumble off one's
-horse; for in soft soil the animal burrowed so quickly, that
-its hinder quarters would almost disappear before one could
-alight. It seems almost a pity to kill such nice little animals,
-for as a Gaucho said, while sharpening his knife on
-the back of one, "Son tan mansos" (they are so quiet).
-
-Of reptiles there are many kinds: one snake (a Trigonocephalus,
-or Cophias [18]), from the size of the poison channel
-in its fangs, must be very deadly. Cuvier, in opposition to
-some other naturalists, makes this a sub-genus of the rattlesnake,
-and intermediate between it and the viper. In confirmation
-of this opinion, I observed a fact, which appears
-to me very curious and instructive, as showing how every
-character, even though it may be in some degree independent
-of structure, has a tendency to vary by slow degrees.
-The extremity of the tail of this snake is terminated by a
-point, which is very slightly enlarged; and as the animal
-glides along, it constantly vibrates the last inch; and this
-part striking against the dry grass and brushwood, produces
-a rattling noise, which can be distinctly heard at the distance
-of six feet. As often as the animal was irritated or
-surprised, its tail was shaken; and the vibrations were extremely
-rapid. Even as long as the body retained its irritability,
-a tendency to this habitual movement was evident.
-This Trigonocephalus has, therefore, in some respects the
-structure of a viper, with the habits of a rattlesnake: the
-noise, however, being produced by a simpler device. The
-expression of this snake's face was hideous and fierce; the
-pupil consisted of a vertical slit in a mottled and coppery
-iris; the jaws were broad at the base, and the nose terminated
-in a triangular projection. I do not think I ever saw
-anything more ugly, excepting, perhaps, some of the vampire
-bats. I imagine this repulsive aspect originates from
-the features being placed in positions, with respect to each
-other, somewhat proportional to those of the human face;
-and thus we obtain a scale of hideousness.
-
-Amongst the Batrachian reptiles, I found only one little
-toad (Phryniscus nigricans), which was most singular from
-its colour. If we imagine, first, that it had been steeped in
-the blackest ink, and then, when dry, allowed to crawl over
-a board, freshly painted with the brightest vermilion, so
-as to colour the soles of its feet and parts of its stomach, a
-good idea of its appearance will be gained. If it had been
-an unnamed species, surely it ought to have been called
-_Diabolicus_, for it is a fit toad to preach in the ear of Eve.
-Instead of being nocturnal in its habits, as other toads are,
-and living in damp obscure recesses, it crawls during the heat
-of the day about the dry sand-hillocks and arid plains, where
-not a single drop of water can be found. It must necessarily
-depend on the dew for its moisture; and this probably is
-absorbed by the skin, for it is known, that these reptiles possess
-great powers of cutaneous absorption. At Maldonado,
-I found one in a situation nearly as dry as at Bahia Blanca,
-and thinking to give it a great treat, carried it to a pool of
-water; not only was the little animal unable to swim, but
-I think without help it would soon have been drowned.
-Of lizards there were many kinds, but only one (Proctotretus
-multimaculatus) remarkable from its habits. It
-lives on the bare sand near the sea coast, and from its mottled
-colour, the brownish scales being speckled with white,
-yellowish red, and dirty blue, can hardly be distinguished
-from the surrounding surface. When frightened, it attempts
-to avoid discovery by feigning death, with outstretched
-legs, depressed body, and closed eyes: if further
-molested, it buries itself with great quickness in the loose
-sand. This lizard, from its flattened body and short legs,
-cannot run quickly.
-
-I will here add a few remarks on the hybernation of animals
-in this part of South America. When we first arrived
-at Bahia Blanca, September 7th, 1832, we thought nature
-had granted scarcely a living creature to this sandy and dry
-country. By digging, however, in the ground, several insects,
-large spiders, and lizards were found in a half-torpid
-state. On the 15th, a few animals began to appear, and by
-the 18th (three days from the equinox), everything announced
-the commencement of spring. The plains were ornamented
-by the flowers of a pink wood-sorrel, wild peas,
-cenotherae, and geraniums; and the birds began to lay their
-eggs. Numerous Lamellicorn and Heteromerous insects, the
-latter remarkable for their deeply sculptured bodies, were
-slowly crawling about; while the lizard tribe, the constant
-inhabitants of a sandy soil, darted about in every direction.
-During the first eleven days, whilst nature was dormant, the
-mean temperature taken from observations made every two
-hours on board the Beagle, was 51 degs.; and in the middle of
-the day the thermometer seldom ranged above 55 degs. On the
-eleven succeeding days, in which all living things became so
-animated, the mean was 58 degs., and the range in the middle
-of the day 7 between 60 and 70 degs. Here, then, an
-increase of seven degrees in mean temperature, but a greater one
-of extreme heat, was sufficient to awake the functions of life.
-At Monte Video, from which we had just before sailed, in
-the twenty-three days included between the 26th of July
-and the 19th of August, the mean temperature from 276
-observations was 58.4 degs.; the mean hottest day being
-65.5 degs., and the coldest 46 degs. The lowest point to
-which the thermometer fell was 41.5 degs., and occasionally
-in the middle of the day it rose to 69 or 70 degs.
-Yet with this high temperature, almost every beetle, several
-genera of spiders, snails, and land-shells, toads and
-lizards were all lying torpid beneath stones. But
-we have seen that at Bahia Blanca, which is four degrees
-southward and therefore with a climate only a very little
-colder, this same temperature with a rather less extreme
-heat, was sufficient to awake all orders of animated beings.
-This shows how nicely the stimulus required to arouse hybernating
-animals is governed by the usual climate of the
-district, and not by the absolute heat. It is well known that
-within the tropics, the hybernation, or more properly aestivation,
-of animals is determined not by the temperature, but
-by the times of drought. Near Rio de Janeiro, I was at first
-surprised to observe, that, a few days after some little
-depressions had been filled with water, they were peopled by
-numerous full-grown shells and beetles, which must have
-been lying dormant. Humboldt has related the strange accident
-of a hovel having been erected over a spot where a
-young crocodile lay buried in the hardened mud. He adds,
-"The Indians often find enormous boas, which they call Uji
-or water serpents, in the same lethargic state. To reanimate
-them, they must be irritated or wetted with water."
-
-I will only mention one other animal, a zoophyte (I believe
-Virgularia Patagonica), a kind of sea-pen. It consists
-of a thin, straight, fleshy stem, with alternate rows of polypi
-on each side, and surrounding an elastic stony axis, varying
-in length from eight inches to two feet. The stem at one
-extremity is truncate, but at the other is terminated by a
-vermiform fleshy appendage. The stony axis which gives
-strength to the stem may be traced at this extremity into a
-mere vessel filled with granular matter. At low water hundreds
-of these zoophytes might be seen, projecting like stubble,
-with the truncate end upwards, a few inches above the
-surface of the muddy sand. When touched or pulled they
-suddenly drew themselves in with force, so as nearly or quite
-to disappear. By this action, the highly elastic axis must
-be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly
-curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the
-zoophyte is enabled to rise again through the mud. Each
-polypus, though closely united to its brethren, has a distinct
-mouth, body, and tentacula. Of these polypi, in a large
-specimen, there must be many thousands; yet we see that
-they act by one movement: they have also one central axis
-connected with a system of obscure circulation, and the ova
-are produced in an organ distinct from the separate
-individuals. [19] Well may one be allowed to ask, what is an
-individual? It is always interesting to discover the foundation
-of the strange tales of the old voyagers; and I have no doubt
-but that the habits of this Virgularia explain one such case.
-Captain Lancaster, in his voyage [20] in 1601, narrates that on
-the sea-sands of the Island of Sombrero, in the East Indies,
-he "found a small twig growing up like a young tree, and
-on offering to pluck it up it shrinks down to the ground,
-and sinks, unless held very hard. On being plucked up, a
-great worm is found to be its root, and as the tree groweth
-in greatness, so doth the worm diminish, and as soon as the
-worm is entirely turned into a tree it rooteth in the earth,
-and so becomes great. This transformation is one of the
-strangest wonders that I saw in all my travels: for if this
-tree is plucked up, while young, and the leaves and bark
-stripped off, it becomes a hard stone when dry, much like
-white coral: thus is this worm twice transformed into
-different natures. Of these we gathered and brought home
-many."
-
-
-During my stay at Bahia Blanca, while waiting for the
-Beagle, the place was in a constant state of excitement, from
-rumours of wars and victories, between the troops of Rosas
-and the wild Indians. One day an account came that a small
-party forming one of the postas on the line to Buenos Ayres,
-had been found all murdered. The next day three hundred
-men arrived from the Colorado, under the command of Commandant
-Miranda. A large portion of these men were Indians
-(mansos, or tame), belonging to the tribe of the Cacique
-Bernantio. They passed the night here; and it was
-impossible to conceive anything more wild and savage than
-the scene of their bivouac. Some drank till they were
-intoxicated; others swallowed the steaming blood of the
-cattle slaughtered for their suppers, and then, being sick
-from drunkenness, they cast it up again, and were besmeared
-with filth and gore.
-
-Nam simul expletus dapibus, vinoque sepultus
-Cervicem inflexam posuit, jacuitque per antrum
-Immensus, saniem eructans, ac frusta cruenta
-Per somnum commixta mero.
-
-In the morning they started for the scene of the murder,
-with orders to follow the "rastro," or track, even if it led
-them to Chile. We subsequently heard that the wild Indians
-had escaped into the great Pampas, and from some
-cause the track had been missed. One glance at the rastro
-tells these people a whole history. Supposing they examine
-the track of a thousand horses, they will soon guess the number
-of mounted ones by seeing how many have cantered; by
-the depth of the other impressions, whether any horses were
-loaded with cargoes; by the irregularity of the footsteps,
-how far tired; by the manner in which the food has been
-cooked, whether the pursued travelled in haste; by the general
-appearance, how long it has been since they passed.
-They consider a rastro of ten days or a fortnight, quite
-recent enough to be hunted out. We also heard that Miranda
-struck from the west end of the Sierra Ventana, in a direct
-line to the island of Cholechel, situated seventy leagues up
-the Rio Negro. This is a distance of between two and three
-hundred miles, through a country completely unknown.
-What other troops in the world are so independent? With
-the sun for their guide, mare's flesh for food, their saddle-
-cloths for beds, -- as long as there is a little water, these
-men would penetrate to the end of the world.
-
-A few days afterwards I saw another troop of these banditti-like
-soldiers start on an expedition against a tribe of
-Indians at the small Salinas, who had been betrayed by a
-prisoner cacique. The Spaniard who brought the orders
-for this expedition was a very intelligent man. He gave
-me an account of the last engagement at which he was present.
-Some Indians, who had been taken prisoners, gave
-information of a tribe living north of the Colorado. Two
-hundred soldiers were sent; and they first discovered the
-Indians by a cloud of dust from their horses' feet, as they
-chanced to be travelling. The country was mountainous and
-wild, and it must have been far in the interior, for the
-Cordillera were in sight. The Indians, men, women, and children,
-were about one hundred and ten in number, and they
-were nearly all taken or killed, for the soldiers sabre every
-man. The Indians are now so terrified that they offer no
-resistance in a body, but each flies, neglecting even his wife
-and children; but when overtaken, like wild animals, they
-fight against any number to the last moment. One dying Indian
-seized with his teeth the thumb of his adversary, and
-allowed his own eye to be forced out sooner than relinquish
-his hold. Another, who was wounded, feigned death, keeping
-a knife ready to strike one more fatal blow. My informer
-said, when he was pursuing an Indian, the man cried out
-for mercy, at the same time that he was covertly loosing the
-bolas from his waist, meaning to whirl it round his head and
-so strike his pursuer. "I however struck him with my sabre
-to the ground, and then got off my horse, and cut his throat
-with my knife." This is a dark picture; but how much more
-shocking is the unquestionable fact, that all the women who
-appear above twenty years old are massacred in cold blood!
-When I exclaimed that this appeared rather inhuman, he
-answered, "Why, what can be done? they breed so!"
-
-Every one here is fully convinced that this is the most
-just war, because it is against barbarians. Who would
-believe in this age that such atrocities could be committed in
-a Christian civilized country? The children of the Indians
-are saved, to be sold or given away as servants, or rather
-slaves for as long a time as the owners can make them
-believe themselves slaves; but I believe in their treatment
-there is little to complain of.
-
-In the battle four men ran away together. They were
-pursued, one was killed, and the other three were taken alive.
-They turned out to be messengers or ambassadors from a
-large body of Indians, united in the common cause of
-defence, near the Cordillera. The tribe to which they had
-been sent was on the point of holding a grand council, the
-feast of mare's flesh was ready, and the dance prepared: in
-the morning the ambassadors were to have returned to the
-Cordillera. They were remarkably fine men, very fair, above
-six feet high, and all under thirty years of age. The three
-survivors of course possessed very valuable information and
-to extort this they were placed in a line. The two first being
-questioned, answered, "No se" (I do not know), and were
-one after the other shot. The third also said " No se;" adding,
-"Fire, I am a man, and can die!" Not one syllable
-would they breathe to injure the united cause of their country!
-The conduct of the above-mentioned cacique was very
-different; he saved his life by betraying the intended plan
-of warfare, and the point of union in the Andes. It was
-believed that there were already six or seven hundred Indians
-together, and that in summer their numbers would be
-doubled. Ambassadors were to have been sent to the Indians
-at the small Salinas, near Bahia Blanca, whom I have mentioned
-that this same cacique had betrayed. The communication,
-therefore, between the Indians, extends from the
-Cordillera to the coast of the Atlantic.
-
-General Rosas's plan is to kill all stragglers, and having
-driven the remainder to a common point, to attack them in
-a body, in the summer, with the assistance of the Chilenos.
-This operation is to be repeated for three successive years.
-I imagine the summer is chosen as the time for the main
-attack, because the plains are then without water, and the
-Indians can only travel in particular directions. The escape
-of the Indians to the south of the Rio Negro, where in such
-a vast unknown country they would be safe, is prevented by
-a treaty with the Tehuelches to this effect; -- that Rosas pays
-them so much to slaughter every Indian who passes to the
-south of the river, but if they fail in so doing, they
-themselves are to be exterminated. The war is waged chiefly
-against the Indians near the Cordillera; for many of the
-tribes on this eastern side are fighting with Rosas. The
-general, however, like Lord Chesterfield, thinking that his
-friends may in a future day become his enemies, always
-places them in the front ranks, so that their numbers may
-be thinned. Since leaving South America we have heard
-that this war of extermination completely failed.
-
-Among the captive girls taken in the same engagement,
-there were two very pretty Spanish ones, who had been carried
-away by the Indians when young, and could now only
-speak the Indian tongue. From their account they must
-have come from Salta, a distance in a straight line of nearly
-one thousand miles. This gives one a grand idea of the
-immense territory over which the Indians roam: yet, great
-as it is, I think there will not, in another half-century, be
-a wild Indian northward of the Rio Negro. The warfare
-is too bloody to last; the Christians killing every Indian,
-and the Indians doing the same by the Christians. It is
-melancholy to trace how the Indians have given way before
-the Spanish invaders. Schirdel [21] says that in 1535, when
-Buenos Ayres was founded, there were villages containing
-two and three thousand inhabitants. Even in Falconer's
-time (1750) the Indians made inroads as far as Luxan,
-Areco, and Arrecife, but now they are driven beyond the
-Salado. Not only have whole tribes been exterminated, but
-the remaining Indians have become more barbarous: instead
-of living in large villages, and being employed in the arts of
-fishing, as well as of the chase, they now wander about the
-open plains, without home or fixed occupation.
-
-I heard also some account of an engagement which took
-place, a few weeks previously to the one mentioned, at
-Cholechel. This is a very important station on account of
-being a pass for horses; and it was, in consequence, for
-some time the head-quarters of a division of the army.
-When the troops first arrived there they found a tribe of
-Indians, of whom they killed twenty or thirty. The cacique
-escaped in a manner which astonished every one. The chief
-Indians always have one or two picked horses, which they
-keep ready for any urgent occasion. On one of these, an old
-white horse, the cacique sprung, taking with him his little
-son. The horse had neither saddle nor bridle. To avoid the
-shots, the Indian rode in the peculiar method of his nation
-namely, with an arm round the horse's neck, and one leg
-only on its back. Thus hanging on one side, he was seen
-patting the horse's head, and talking to him. The pursuers
-urged every effort in the chase; the Commandant three
-times changed his horse, but all in vain. The old Indian
-father and his son escaped, and were free. What a fine picture
-one can form in one's mind, -- the naked, bronze-like
-figure of the old man with his little boy, riding like a
-Mazeppa on the white horse, thus leaving far behind him the
-host of his pursuers!
-
-I saw one day a soldier striking fire with a piece of flint,
-which I immediately recognised as having been a part of the
-head of an arrow. He told me it was found near the island
-of Cholechel, and that they are frequently picked up there.
-It was between two and three inches long, and therefore
-twice as large as those now used in Tierra del Fuego: it was
-made of opaque cream-coloured flint, but the point and barbs
-had been intentionally broken off. It is well known that no
-Pampas Indians now use bows and arrows. I believe a small
-tribe in Banda Oriental must be excepted; but they are
-widely separated from the Pampas Indians, and border close
-on those tribes that inhabit the forest, and live on foot. It
-appears, therefore, that these arrow-heads are antiquarian [22]
-relics of the Indians, before the great change in habits
-consequent on the introduction of the horse into South
-America.
-
-[1] Since this was written, M. Alcide d'Orbingy has examined
-these shells, and pronounces them all to be recent.
-
-[2] M. Aug. Bravard has described, in a Spanish work
-('Observaciones Geologicas,' 1857), this district, and he
-believes that the bones of the extinct mammals were washed
-out of the underlying Pampean deposit, and subsequently became
-embedded with the still existing shells; but I am not convinced
-by his remarks. M. Bravard believes that the whole enormous
-Pampean deposit is a sub-aerial formation, like sand-dunes: this
-seems to me to be an untenable doctrine.
-
-[3] Principles of Geology, vol. iv. p. 40.
-
-[4] This theory was first developed in the Zoology of the
-Voyage of the Beagle, and subsequently in Professor Owen's
-Memoir on Mylodon robustus.
-
-[5] I mean this to exclude the total amount which may have been
-successively produced and consumed during a given period.
-
-[6] Travels in the Interior of South Africa, vol. ii. p. 207
-
-[7] The elephant which was killed at Exeter Change was
-estimated (being partly weighed) at five tons and a half.
-The elephant actress, as I was informed, weighed one ton less;
-so that we may take five as the average of a full-grown
-elephant. I was told at the Surry Gardens, that a hippopotamus
-which was sent to England cut up into pieces was estimated at
-three tons and a half; we will call it three. From these
-premises we may give three tons and a half to each of the five
-rhinoceroses; perhaps a ton to the giraffe, and half to the
-bos caffer as well as to the elan (a large ox weighs from
-1200 to 1500 pounds). This will give an average (from the above
-estimates) of 2.7 of a ton for the ten largest herbivorous
-animals of Southern Africa. In South America, allowing 1200
-pounds for the two tapirs together, 550 for the guanaco and
-vicuna, 500 for three deer, 300 for the capybara, peccari, and
-a monkey, we shall have an average of 250 pounds, which I
-believe is overstating the result. The ratio will therefore
-be as 6048 to 250, or 24 to 1, for the ten largest animals
-from the two continents.
-
-[8] If we suppose the case of the discovery of a skeleton of
-a Greenland whale in a fossil state, not a single cetaceous
-animal being known to exist, what naturalist would have ventured
-conjecture on the possibility of a carcass so gigantic being
-supported on the minute crustacea and mollusca living in the
-frozen seas of the extreme North?
-
-[9] See Zoological Remarks to Capt. Back's Expedition, by Dr.
-Richardson. He says, "The subsoil north of latitude 56 degs.
-is perpetually frozen, the thaw on the coast not penetrating
-above three feet, and at Bear Lake, in latitude 64 degs., not
-more than twenty inches. The frozen substratum does not of
-itself destroy vegetation, for forests flourish on the surface,
-at a distance from the coast."
-
-[10] See Humboldt, Fragments Asiatiques, p. 386: Barton's
-Geography of Plants: and Malte Brun. In the latter work it is
-said that the limit of the growth of trees in Siberia may be
-drawn under the parallel of 70 degs.
-
-[11] Sturt's Travels, vol. ii. p. 74.
-
-[12] A Gucho assured me that he had once seen a snow-white or
-Albino variety, and that it was a most beautiful bird.
-
-[13] Burchell's Travels, vol. i. p. 280.
-
-[14] Azara, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[15] Lichtenstein, however, asserts (Travels, vol. ii. p. 25)
-that the hens begin sitting when they have laid ten or twelve
-eggs; and that they continue laying, I presume, in another
-nest. This appears to me very improbable. He asserts that four
-or five hens associate for incubation with one cock, who sits
-only at night.
-
-[16] When at the Rio Negro, we heard much of the indefatigable
-labours of this naturalist. M. Aleide d'Orbigny, during the
-years 1825 to 1833, traversed several large portions of South
-America, and has made a collection, and is now publishing the
-results on a scale of magnificence, which at once places himself
-in the list of American travellers second only to Humboldt.
-
-[17] Account of the Abipones, A.D. 1749, vol. i. (English
-Translation) p. 314
-
-[18] M. Bibron calls it T. crepitans.
-
-
-[19] The cavities leading from the fleshy compartments of
-the extremity, were filled with a yellow pulpy matter, which,
-examined under a microscope, presented an extraordinary
-appearance. The mass consisted of rounded, semi-transparent,
-irregular grains, aggregated together into particles of
-various sizes. All such particles, and the separate grains,
-possessed the power of rapid movement; generally revolving
-around different axes, but sometimes progressive. The movement
-was visible with a very weak power, but even with the highest
-its cause could not be perceived. It was very different from
-the circulation of the fluid in the elastic bag, containing
-the thin extremity of the axis. On other occasions, when
-dissecting small marine animals beneath the microscope, I have
-seen particles of pulpy matter, some of large size, as soon as
-they were disengaged, commence revolving. I have imagined, I know
-not with how much truth, that this granulo-pulpy matter was in
-process of being converted into ova. Certainly in this zoophyte
-such appeared to be the case.
-
-[20] Kerr's Collection of Voyages, vol. viii. p. 119.
-
-[21] Purchas's Collection of Voyages. I believe the date was
-really 1537.
-
-[22] Azara has even doubted whether the Pampas Indians ever
-used bows.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
-
-Set out for Buenos Ayres -- Rio Sauce -- Sierra Ventana --
-Third Posta -- Driving Horses -- Bolas -- Partridges and
-Foxes -- Features of the Country -- Long-legged Plover --
-Teru-tero -- Hail-storm -- Natural Enclosures in the Sierra
-Tapalguen -- Flesh of Puma -- Meat Diet -- Guardia del
-Monte -- Effects of Cattle on the Vegetation -- Cardoon --
-Buenos Ayres -- Corral where Cattle are Slaughtered.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 18th. -- I hired a Gaucho to accompany me
-on my ride to Buenos Ayres, though with some difficulty,
-as the father of one man was afraid to let him
-go, and another, who seemed willing, was described to me
-as so fearful, that I was afraid to take him, for I was told
-that even if he saw an ostrich at a distance, he would mistake
-it for an Indian, and would fly like the wind away.
-The distance to Buenos Ayres is about four hundred miles,
-and nearly the whole way through an uninhabited country.
-We started early in the morning; ascending a few hundred
-feet from the basin of green turf on which Bahia Blanca
-stands, we entered on a wide desolate plain. It consists of
-a crumbling argillaceo-calcareous rock, which, from the dry
-nature of the climate, supports only scattered tufts of withered
-grass, without a single bush or tree to break the monotonous
-uniformity. The weather was fine, but the atmosphere
-remarkably hazy; I thought the appearance foreboded
-a gale, but the Gauchos said it was owing to the plain, at
-some great distance in the interior, being on fire. After a
-long gallop, having changed horses twice, we reached the Rio
-Sauce: it is a deep, rapid, little stream, not above twenty-five
-feet wide. The second posta on the road to Buenos Ayres
-stands on its banks, a little above there is a ford for horses,
-where the water does not reach to the horses' belly; but from
-that point, in its course to the sea, it is quite impassable,
-and hence makes a most useful barrier against the Indians.
-
-Insignificant as this stream is, the Jesuit Falconer, whose
-information is generally so very correct, figures it as a
-considerable river, rising at the foot of the Cordillera. With
-respect to its source, I do not doubt that this is the case
-for the Gauchos assured me, that in the middle of the dry
-summer, this stream, at the same time with the Colorado
-has periodical floods; which can only originate in the snow
-melting on the Andes. It is extremely improbable that a
-stream so small as the Sauce then was, should traverse the
-entire width of the continent; and indeed, if it were the
-residue of a large river, its waters, as in other ascertained
-cases, would be saline. During the winter we must look to
-the springs round the Sierra Ventana as the source of its
-pure and limpid stream. I suspect the plains of Patagonia
-like those of Australia, are traversed by many water-courses
-which only perform their proper parts at certain periods.
-Probably this is the case with the water which flows into the
-head of Port Desire, and likewise with the Rio Chupat, on
-the banks of which masses of highly cellular scoriae were
-found by the officers employed in the survey.
-
-As it was early in the afternoon when we arrived, we
-took fresh horses, and a soldier for a guide, and started for
-the Sierra de la Ventana. This mountain is visible from
-the anchorage at Bahia Blanca; and Capt. Fitz Roy calculates
-its height to be 3340 feet -- an altitude very remarkable
-on this eastern side of the continent. I am not aware
-that any foreigner, previous to my visit, had ascended this
-mountain; and indeed very few of the soldiers at Bahia
-Blanca knew anything about it. Hence we heard of beds
-of coal, of gold and silver, of caves, and of forests, all of
-which inflamed my curiosity, only to disappoint it. The
-distance from the posta was about six leagues over a level
-plain of the same character as before. The ride was, however,
-interesting, as the mountain began to show its true
-form. When we reached the foot of the main ridge, we had
-much difficulty in finding any water, and we thought we
-should have been obliged to have passed the night without
-any. At last we discovered some by looking close to the
-mountain, for at the distance even of a few hundred yards
-the streamlets were buried and entirely lost in the friable
-calcareous stone and loose detritus. I do not think Nature
-ever made a more solitary, desolate pile of rock; -- it well
-deserves its name of _Hurtado_, or separated. The mountain
-is steep, extremely rugged, and broken, and so entirely destitute
-of trees, and even bushes, that we actually could not
-make a skewer to stretch out our meat over the fire of thistle-
-stalks. [1] The strange aspect of this mountain is contrasted
-by the sea-like plain, which not only abuts against its steep
-sides, but likewise separates the parallel ranges. The uniformity
-of the colouring gives an extreme quietness to the
-view, -- the whitish grey of the quartz rock, and the light
-brown of the withered grass of the plain, being unrelieved
-by any brighter tint. From custom, one expects to see in
-the neighbourhood of a lofty and bold mountain, a broken
-country strewed over with huge fragments. Here nature
-shows that the last movement before the bed of the sea is
-changed into dry land may sometimes be one of tranquillity.
-Under these circumstances I was curious to observe how
-far from the parent rock any pebbles could be found. On
-the shores of Bahia Blanca, and near the settlement, there
-were some of quartz, which certainly must have come from
-this source: the distance is forty-five miles.
-
-The dew, which in the early part of the night wetted the
-saddle-cloths under which we slept, was in the morning
-frozen. The plain, though appearing horizontal, had insensibly
-sloped up to a height of between 800 and 900 feet
-above the sea. In the morning (9th of September) the guide
-told me to ascend the nearest ridge, which he thought would
-lead me to the four peaks that crown the summit. The climbing
-up such rough rocks was very fatiguing; the sides
-were so indented, that what was gained in one five minutes
-was often lost in the next. At last, when I reached the ridge,
-my disappointment was extreme in finding a precipitous
-valley as deep as the plain, which cut the chain transversely
-in two, and separated me from the four points. This valley
-is very narrow, but flat-bottomed, and it forms a fine horse-
-pass for the Indians, as it connects the plains on the northern
-and southern sides of the range. Having descended, and
-while crossing it, I saw two horses grazing: I immediately
-hid myself in the long grass, and began to reconnoitre; but
-as I could see no signs of Indians I proceeded cautiously on
-my second ascent. It was late in the day, and this part of
-the mountain, like the other, was steep and rugged. I was
-on the top of the second peak by two o'clock, but got there
-with extreme difficulty; every twenty yards I had the cramp
-in the upper part of both thighs, so that I was afraid I
-should not have been able to have got down again. It was
-also necessary to return by another road, as it was out of
-the question to pass over the saddle-back. I was therefore
-obliged to give up the two higher peaks. Their altitude was
-but little greater, and every purpose of geology had been
-answered; so that the attempt was not worth the hazard
-of any further exertion. I presume the cause of the cramp
-was the great change in the kind of muscular action, from
-that of hard riding to that of still harder climbing. It is
-a lesson worth. remembering, as in some cases it might cause
-much difficulty.
-
-I have already said the mountain is composed of white
-quartz rock, and with it a little glossy clay-slate is
-associated. At the height of a few hundred feet above the plain
-patches of conglomerate adhered in several places to the
-solid rock. They resembled in hardness, and in the nature
-of the cement, the masses which may be seen daily forming
-on some coasts. I do not doubt these pebbles were in a similar
-manner aggregated, at a period when the great calcareous
-formation was depositing beneath the surrounding sea.
-We may believe that the jagged and battered forms of the
-hard quartz yet show the effects of the waves of an open
-ocean.
-
-I was, on the whole, disappointed with this ascent. Even
-the view was insignificant; -- a plain like the sea, but without
-its beautiful colour and defined outline. The scene, however,
-was novel, and a little danger, like salt to meat, gave
-it a relish. That the danger was very little was certain, for
-my two companions made a good fire -- a thing which is never
-done when it is suspected that Indians are near. I reached
-the place of our bivouac by sunset, and drinking much mate,
-and smoking several cigaritos, soon made up my bed for the
-night. The wind was very strong and cold, but I never slept
-more comfortably.
-
-September 10th. -- In the morning, having fairly scudded
-before the gale, we arrived by the middle of the day at the
-Sauce posta. In the road we saw great numbers of deer,
-and near the mountain a guanaco. The plain, which abuts
-against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gullies, of
-which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty
-deep; we were obliged in consequence to make a considerable
-circuit before we could find a pass. We stayed the night
-at the posta, the conversation, as was generally the case,
-being about the Indians. The Sierra Ventana was formerly
-a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there
-was much fighting there. My guide had been present when
-many Indians were killed: the women escaped to the top of
-the ridge, and fought most desperately with great stones;
-many thus saving themselves.
-
-September 11th. -- Proceeded to the third posta in company
-with the lieutenant who commanded it. The distance
-is called fifteen leagues; but it is only guess-work, and is
-generally overstated. The road was uninteresting, over a
-dry grassy plain; and on our left hand at a greater or less
-distance there were some low hills; a continuation of which
-we crossed close to the posta. Before our arrival we met
-a large herd of cattle and horses, guarded by fifteen soldiers;
-but we were told many had been lost. It is very difficult to
-drive animals across the plains; for if in the night a puma,
-or even a fox, approaches, nothing can prevent the horses
-dispersing in every direction; and a storm will have the
-same effect. A short time since, an officer left Buenos Ayres
-with five hundred horses, and when he arrived at the army
-he had under twenty.
-
-Soon afterwards we perceived by the cloud of dust, that
-a party of horsemen were coming towards us; when far distant
-my companions knew them to be Indians, by their long
-hair streaming behind their backs. The Indians generally
-have a fillet round their heads, but never any covering; and
-their black hair blowing across their swarthy faces, heightens
-to an uncommon degree the wildness of their appearance.
-They turned out to be a party of Bernantio's friendly tribe,
-going to a salina for salt. The Indians eat much salt, their
-children sucking it like sugar. This habit is very different
-from that of the Spanish Gauchos, who, leading the same
-kind of life, eat scarcely any; according to Mungo Park, [2]
-it is people who live on vegetable food who have an unconquerable
-desire for salt. The Indians gave us good-humoured
-nods as they passed at full gallop, driving before them a
-troop of horses, and followed by a train of lanky dogs.
-
-September 12th and 13th. -- I stayed at this posta two days,
-waiting for a troop of soldiers, which General Rosas had
-the kindness to send to inform me, would shortly travel to
-Buenos Ayres; and he advised me to take the opportunity
-of the escort. In the morning we rode to some neighbouring
-hills to view the country, and to examine the geology. After
-dinner the soldiers divided themselves into two parties for
-a trial of skill with the bolas. Two spears were stuck in
-the ground twenty-five yards apart, but they were struck
-and entangled only once in four or five times. The balls can
-be thrown fifty or sixty yards, but with little certainty.
-This, however, does not apply to a man on horseback; for when
-the speed of the horse is added to the force of the arm, it
-is said, that they can be whirled with effect to the distance
-of eighty yards. As a proof of their force, I may mention,
-that at the Falkland Islands, when the Spaniards murdered
-some of their own countrymen and all the Englishmen, a
-young friendly Spaniard was running away, when a great
-tall man, by name Luciano, came at full gallop after him,
-shouting to him to stop, and saying that he only wanted to
-speak to him. Just as the Spaniard was on the point of
-reaching the boat, Luciano threw the balls: they struck him
-on the legs with such a jerk, as to throw him down and
-to render him for some time insensible. The man, after
-Luciano had had his talk, was allowed to escape. He told
-us that his legs were marked by great weals, where the thong
-had wound round, as if he had been flogged with a whip.
-In the middle of the day two men arrived, who brought a
-parcel from the next posta to be forwarded to the general:
-so that besides these two, our party consisted this evening
-of my guide and self, the lieutenant, and his four soldiers.
-The latter were strange beings; the first a fine young negro;
-the second half Indian and negro; and the two others non-
-descripts; namely, an old Chilian miner, the colour of mahogany,
-and another partly a mulatto; but two such mongrels
-with such detestable expressions, I never saw before.
-At night, when they were sitting round the fire, and playing
-at cards, I retired to view such a Salvator Rosa scene. They
-were seated under a low cliff, so that I could look down
-upon them; around the party were lying dogs, arms, remnants
-of deer and ostriches; and their long spears were stuck
-in the turf. Further in the dark background, their horses
-were tied up, ready for any sudden danger. If the stillness
-of the desolate plain was broken by one of the dogs barking,
-a soldier, leaving the fire, would place his head close to the
-ground, and thus slowly scan the horizon. Even if the noisy
-teru-tero uttered its scream, there would be a pause in the
-conversation, and every head, for a moment, a little inclined.
-
-What a life of misery these men appear to us to lead!
-They were at least ten leagues from the Sauce posta, and
-since the murder committed by the Indians, twenty from
-another. The Indians are supposed to have made their attack
-in the middle of the night; for very early in the morning
-after the murder, they were luckily seen approaching
-this posta. The whole party here, however, escaped, together
-with the troop of horses; each one taking a line for himself,
-and driving with him as many animals as he was able to
-manage.
-
-The little hovel, built of thistle-stalks, in which they slept,
-neither kept out the wind nor rain; indeed in the latter case
-the only effect the roof had, was to condense it into larger
-drops. They had nothing to eat excepting what they could
-catch, such as ostriches, deer, armadilloes, etc., and their
-only fuel was the dry stalks of a small plant, somewhat
-resembling an aloe. The sole luxury which these men enjoyed
-was smoking the little paper cigars, and sucking mate. I
-used to think that the carrion vultures, man's constant
-attendants on these dreary plains, while seated on the little
-neighbouring cliffs seemed by their very patience to say,
-"Ah! when the Indians come we shall have a feast."
-
-In the morning we all sallied forth to hunt, and although
-we had not much success, there were some animated chases.
-Soon after starting the party separated, and so arranged
-their plans, that at a certain time of the day (in guessing
-which they show much skill) they should all meet from different
-points of the compass on a plain piece of ground,
-and thus drive together the wild animals. One day I went
-out hunting at Bahia Blanca, but the men there merely rode
-in a crescent, each being about a quarter of a mile apart
-from the other. A fine male ostrich being turned by the
-headmost riders, tried to escape on one side. The Gauchos
-pursued at a reckless pace, twisting their horses about with
-the most admirable command, and each man whirling the
-balls round his head. At length the foremost threw them,
-revolving through the air: in an instant the ostrich rolled
-over and over, its legs fairly lashed together by the thong.
-The plains abound with three kinds of partridge, [3] two
-of which are as large as hen pheasants. Their destroyer,
-a small and pretty fox, was also singularly numerous; in
-the course of the day we could not have seen less than forty
-or fifty. They were generally near their earths, but the dogs
-killed one. When we returned to the posta, we found two
-of the party returned who had been hunting by themselves.
-They had killed a puma, and had found an ostrich's nest with
-twenty-seven eggs in it. Each of these is said to equal in
-weight eleven hen's eggs; so that we obtained from this one
-nest as much food as 297 hen's eggs would have given.
-
-September 14th. -- As the soldiers belonging to the next
-posta meant to return, and we should together make a party
-of five, and all armed, I determined not to wait for the expected
-troops. My host, the lieutenant, pressed me much
-to stop. As he had been very obliging -- not only providing
-me with food, but lending me his private horses -- I wanted
-to make him some remuneration. I asked my guide whether
-I might do so, but he told me certainly not; that the only
-answer I should receive, probably would be, "We have meat
-for the dogs in our country, and therefore do not grudge it
-to a Christian." It must not be supposed that the rank of
-lieutenant in such an army would at all prevent the acceptance
-of payment: it was only the high sense of hospitality,
-which every traveller is bound to acknowledge as nearly universal
-throughout these provinces. After galloping some
-leagues, we came to a low swampy country, which extends
-for nearly eighty miles northward, as far as the Sierra
-Tapalguen. In some parts there were fine damp plains, covered
-with grass, while others had a soft, black, and peaty soil.
-There were also many extensive but shallow lakes, and large
-beds of reeds. The country on the whole resembled the better
-parts of the Cambridgeshire fens. At night we had some
-difficulty in finding amidst the swamps, a dry place for our
-bivouac.
-
-September 15th. -- Rose very early in the morning and
-shortly after passed the posta where the Indians had murdered
-the five soldiers. The officer had eighteen chuzo
-wounds in his body. By the middle of the day, after a hard
-gallop, we reached the fifth posta: on account of some difficulty
-in procuring horses we stayed there the night. As this
-point was the most exposed on the whole line, twenty-one
-soldiers were stationed here; at sunset they returned from
-hunting, bringing with them seven deer, three ostriches, and
-many armadilloes and partridges. When riding through the
-country, it is a common practice to set fire to the plain;
-and hence at night, as on this occasion, the horizon was
-illuminated in several places by brilliant conflagrations.
-This is done partly for the sake of puzzling any stray Indians,
-but chiefly for improving the pasture. In grassy
-plains unoccupied by the larger ruminating quadrupeds, it
-seems necessary to remove the superfluous vegetation by fire,
-so as to render the new year's growth serviceable.
-
-The rancho at this place did not boast even of a roof,
-but merely consisted of a ring of thistle-stalks, to break
-the force of the wind. It was situated on the borders of an
-extensive but shallow lake, swarming with wild fowl, among
-which the black-necked swan was conspicuous.
-
-The kind of plover, which appears as if mounted on
-stilts (Himantopus nigricollis), is here common in flocks of
-considerable size. It has been wrongfully accused of inelegance;
-when wading about in shallow water, which is its
-favourite resort, its gait is far from awkward. These birds
-in a flock utter a noise, that singularly resembles the cry of
-a pack of small dogs in full chase: waking in the night, I
-have more than once been for a moment startled at the distant
-sound. The teru-tero (Vanellus cayanus) is another
-bird, which often disturbs the stillness of the night. In
-appearance and habits it resembles in many respects our peewits;
-its wings, however, are armed with sharp spurs, like
-those on the legs of the common cock. As our peewit takes
-its name from the sound of its voice, so does the teru-tero.
-While riding over the grassy plains, one is constantly pursued
-by these birds, which appear to hate mankind, and I
-am sure deserve to be hated for their never-ceasing, unvaried,
-harsh screams. To the sportsman they are most annoying,
-by telling every other bird and animal of his approach: to
-the traveller in the country, they may possibly, as Molina
-says, do good, by warning him of the midnight robber. During
-the breeding season, they attempt, like our peewits, by
-feigning to be wounded, to draw away from their nests dogs
-and other enemies. The eggs of this bird are esteemed a
-great delicacy.
-
-September 16th. -- To the seventh posta at the foot of the
-Sierra Tapalguen. The country was quite level, with a
-coarse herbage and a soft peaty soil. The hovel was here
-remarkably neat, the posts and rafters being made of about
-a dozen dry thistle-stalks bound together with thongs of
-hide; and by the support of these Ionic-like columns, the
-roof and sides were thatched with reeds. We were here told
-a fact, which I would not have credited, if I had not had
-partly ocular proof of it; namely, that, during the previous
-night hail as large as small apples, and extremely hard, had
-fallen with such violence, as to kill the greater number of the
-wild animals. One of the men had already found thirteen
-deer (Cervus campestris) lying dead, and I saw their _fresh_
-hides; another of the party, a few minutes after my arrival
-brought in seven more. Now I well know, that one man
-without dogs could hardly have killed seven deer in a week.
-The men believed they had seen about fifteen ostriches (part
-of one of which we had for dinner); and they said that
-several were running about evidently blind in one eye.
-Numbers of smaller birds, as ducks, hawks, and partridges,
-were killed. I saw one of the latter with a black mark on
-its back, as if it had been struck with a paving-stone. A
-fence of thistle-stalks round the hovel was nearly broken
-down, and my informer, putting his head out to see what was
-the matter, received a severe cut, and now wore a bandage.
-The storm was said to have been of limited extent: we
-certainly saw from our last night's bivouac a dense cloud
-and lightning in this direction. It is marvellous how such
-strong animals as deer could thus have been killed; but I
-have no doubt, from the evidence I have given, that the
-story is not in the least exaggerated. I am glad, however,
-to have its credibility supported by the Jesuit Dobrizhoffen, [4]
-who, speaking of a country much to the northward, says,
-hail fell of an enormous size and killed vast numbers of cattle:
-the Indians hence called the place _Lalegraicavalca_, meaning
-"the little white things." Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me
-that he witnessed in 1831 in India, a hail-storm, which
-killed numbers of large birds and much injured the cattle.
-These hailstones were flat, and one was ten inches in
-circumference, and another weighed two ounces. They
-ploughed up a gravel-walk like musket-balls, and passed
-through glass-windows, making round holes, but not cracking
-them.
-
-Having finished our dinner, of hail-stricken meat, we
-crossed the Sierra Tapalguen; a low range of hills, a few
-hundred feet in height, which commences at Cape Corrientes.
-The rock in this part is pure quartz; further eastward I
-understand it is granitic. The hills are of a remarkable
-form; they consist of flat patches of table-land, surrounded
-by low perpendicular cliffs, like the outliers of a sedimentary
-deposit. The hill which I ascended was very small, not
-above a couple of hundred yards in diameter; but I saw
-others larger. One which goes by the name of the "Corral,"
-is said to be two or three miles in diameter, and encompassed
-by perpendicular cliffs, between thirty and forty feet high,
-excepting at one spot, where the entrance lies. Falconer [5]
-gives a curious account of the Indians driving troops of
-wild horses into it, and then by guarding the entrance, keeping
-them secure. I have never heard of any other instance
-of table-land in a formation of quartz, and which, in the
-hill I examined, had neither cleavage nor stratification. I
-was told that the rock of the "Corral" was white, and would
-strike fire.
-
-We did not reach the posta on the Rio Tapalguen till
-after it was dark. At supper, from something which was
-said, I was suddenly struck with horror at thinking that I
-was eating one of the favourite dishes of the country
-namely, a half-formed calf, long before its proper time of
-birth. It turned out to be Puma; the meat is very white
-and remarkably like veal in taste. Dr. Shaw was laughed
-at for stating that "the flesh of the lion is in great esteem
-having no small affinity with veal, both in colour, taste,
-and flavour." Such certainly is the case with the Puma.
-The Gauchos differ in their opinion, whether the Jaguar is
-good eating, but are unanimous in saying that cat is excellent.
-
-September 17th. -- We followed the course of the Rio
-Tapalguen, through a very fertile country, to the ninth
-posta. Tapalguen, itself, or the town of Tapalguen, if it
-may be so called, consists of a perfectly level plain, studded
-over, as far as the eye can reach, with the toldos or
-oven-shaped huts of the Indians. The families of the friendly
-Indians, who were fighting on the side of Rosas, resided
-here. We met and passed many young Indian women, riding
-by two or three together on the same horse: they, as
-well as many of the young men, were strikingly handsome, --
-their fine ruddy complexions being the picture of health.
-Besides the toldos, there were three ranchos; one inhabited
-by the Commandant, and the two others by Spaniards with
-small shops.
-
-We were here able to buy some biscuit. I had now been
-several days without tasting anything besides meat: I did
-not at all dislike this new regimen; but I felt as if it would
-only have agreed with me with hard exercise. I have heard
-that patients in England, when desired to confine themselves
-exclusively to an animal diet, even with the hope of life
-before their eyes, have hardly been able to endure it. Yet
-the Gaucho in the Pampas, for months together, touches
-nothing but beef. But they eat, I observe, a very large
-proportion of fat, which is of a less animalized nature; and
-they particularly dislike dry meat, such as that of the Agouti.
-Dr. Richardson [6] also, has remarked, "that when people
-have fed for a long time solely upon lean animal food, the
-desire for fat becomes so insatiable, that they can consume
-a large quantity of unmixed and even oily fat without
-nausea:" this appears to me a curious physiological fact.
-It is, perhaps, from their meat regimen that the Gauchos,
-like other carnivorous animals, can abstain long from food.
-I was told that at Tandeel, some troops voluntarily pursued
-a party of Indians for three days, without eating or drinking.
-
-We saw in the shops many articles, such as horsecloths,
-belts, and garters, woven by the Indian women. The patterns
-were very pretty, and the colours brilliant; the workmanship
-of the garters was so good that an English merchant
-at Buenos Ayres maintained they must have been
-manufactured in England, till he found the tassels had been
-fastened by split sinew.
-
-September 18th. -- We had a very long ride this day. At
-the twelfth posta, which is seven leagues south of the Rio
-Salado, we came to the first estancia with cattle and white
-women. Afterwards we had to ride for many miles through
-a country flooded with water above our horses' knees. By
-crossing the stirrups, and riding Arab-like with our legs
-bent up, we contrived to keep tolerably dry. It was nearly
-dark when we arrived at the Salado; the stream was deep,
-and about forty yards wide; in summer, however, its bed
-becomes almost dry, and the little remaining water nearly
-as salt as that of the sea. We slept at one of the great
-estancias of General Rosas. It was fortified, and of such an
-extent, that arriving in the dark I thought it was a town
-and fortress. In the morning we saw immense herds of
-cattle, the general here having seventy-four square leagues
-of land. Formerly nearly three hundred men were employed
-about this estate, and they defied all the attacks of
-the Indians.
-
-September 19th. -- Passed the Guardia del Monte. This
-is a nice scattered little town, with many gardens, full of
-peach and quince trees. The plain here looked like that
-around Buenos Ayres; the turf being short and bright green,
-with beds of clover and thistles, and with bizcacha holes.
-I was very much struck with the marked change in the
-aspect of the country after having crossed the Salado. From
-a coarse herbage we passed on to a carpet of fine green verdure.
-I at first attributed this to some change in the nature
-of the soil, but the inhabitants assured me that here, as
-well as in Banda Oriental, where there is as great a difference
-between the country round Monte Video and the
-thinly-inhabited savannahs of Colonia, the whole was to be
-attributed to the manuring and grazing of the cattle. Exactly
-the same fact has been observed in the prairies [7] of
-North America, where coarse grass, between five and six
-feet high, when grazed by cattle, changes into common pasture
-land. I am not botanist enough to say whether the
-change here is owing to the introduction of new species,
-to the altered growth of the same, or to a difference in their
-proportional numbers. Azara has also observed with astonishment
-this change: he is likewise much perplexed by the
-immediate appearance of plants not occurring in the neighbourhood,
-on the borders of any track that leads to a newly-
-constructed hovel. In another part he says, [8] "ces chevaux
-(sauvages) ont la manie de preferer les chemins, et le bord
-des routes pour deposer leurs excremens, dont on trouve des
-monceaux dans ces endroits." Does this not partly explain
-the circumstance? We thus have lines of richly manured
-land serving as channels of communication across wide districts.
-
-Near the Guardia we find the southern limit of two European
-plants, now become extraordinarily common. The
-fennel in great profusion covers the ditch-banks in the
-neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, and other towns.
-But the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus) has a far wider
-range: [9] it occurs in these latitudes on both sides of the,
-Cordillera, across the continent. I saw it in unfrequented
-spots in Chile, Entre Rios, and Banda Oriental. In the
-latter country alone, very many (probably several hundred)
-square miles are covered by one mass of these prickly plants,
-and are impenetrable by man or beast. Over the undulating
-plains, where these great beds occur, nothing else can now
-live. Before their introduction, however, the surface must
-have supported, as in other parts, a rank herbage. I doubt
-whether any case is on record of an invasion on so grand
-a scale of one plant over the aborigines. As I have already
-said, I nowhere saw the cardoon south of the Salado; but
-it is probable that in proportion as that country becomes
-inhabited, the cardoon will extend its limits. The case is
-different with the giant thistle (with variegated leaves) of
-the Pampas, for I met with it in the valley of the Sauce.
-According to the principles so well laid down by Mr. Lyell,
-few countries have undergone more remarkable changes,
-since the year 1535, when the first colonist of La Plata landed
-with seventy-two horses. The countless herds of horses,
-cattle, and sheep, not only have altered the whole aspect of
-the vegetation, but they have almost banished the guanaco,
-deer and ostrich. Numberless other changes must likewise
-have taken place; the wild pig in some parts probably replaces
-the peccari; packs of wild dogs may be heard howling
-on the wooded banks of the less-frequented streams; and
-the common cat, altered into a large and fierce animal, inhabits
-rocky hills. As M. d'Orbigny has remarked, the increase
-in numbers of the carrion-vulture, since the introduction
-of the domestic animals, must have been infinitely great;
-and we have given reasons for believing that they have extended
-their southern range. No doubt many plants, besides
-the cardoon and fennel, are naturalized; thus the islands
-near the mouth of the Parana, are thickly clothed with
-peach and orange trees, springing from seeds carried there
-by the waters of the river.
-
-While changing horses at the Guardia several people questioned
-us much about the army, -- I never saw anything like
-the enthusiasm for Rosas, and for the success of the "most
-just of all wars, because against barbarians." This expression,
-it must be confessed, is very natural, for till lately,
-neither man, woman nor horse, was safe from the attacks
-of the Indians. We had a long day's ride over the same
-rich green plain, abounding with various flocks, and with
-here and there a solitary estancia, and its one _ombu_ tree.
-In the evening it rained heavily: on arriving at a posthouse
-we were told by the owner, that if we had not a
-regular passport we must pass on, for there were so
-many robbers he would trust no one. When he read, however,
-my passport, which began with "El Naturalista Don
-Carlos," his respect and civility were as unbounded as his
-suspicions had been before. What a naturalist might be,
-neither he nor his countrymen, I suspect, had any idea;
-but probably my title lost nothing of its value from that
-cause.
-
-September 20th. -- We arrived by the middle of the day at
-Buenos Ayres. The outskirts of the city looked quite pretty,
-with the agave hedges, and groves of olive, peach and willow
-trees, all just throwing out their fresh green leaves. I rode
-to the house of Mr. Lumb, an English merchant, to whose
-kindness and hospitality, during my stay in the country, I
-was greatly indebted.
-
-The city of Buenos Ayres is large; [10] and I should think
-one of the most regular in the world. Every street is at right
-angles to the one it crosses, and the parallel ones being
-equidistant, the houses are collected into solid squares of
-equal dimensions, which are called quadras. On the other hand,
-the houses themselves are hollow squares; all the rooms opening
-into a neat little courtyard. They are generally only
-one story high, with flat roofs, which are fitted with seats
-and are much frequented by the inhabitants in summer. In
-the centre of the town is the Plaza, where the public offices,
-fortress, cathedral, etc., stand. Here also, the old viceroys,
-before the revolution, had their palaces. The general assemblage
-of buildings possesses considerable architectural beauty,
-although none individually can boast of any.
-
-The great _corral_, where the animals are kept for slaughter
-to supply food to this beef-eating population, is one of
-the spectacles best worth seeing. The strength of the horse
-as compared to that of the bullock is quite astonishing: a
-man on horseback having thrown his lazo round the horns
-of a beast, can drag it anywhere he chooses. The animal
-ploughing up the ground with outstretched legs, in vain
-efforts to resist the force, generally dashes at full speed to
-one side; but the horse immediately turning to receive the
-shock, stands so firmly that the bullock is almost thrown
-down, and it is surprising that their necks are not broken.
-The struggle is not, however, one of fair strength; the
-horse's girth being matched against the bullock's extended
-neck. In a similar manner a man can hold the wildest horse,
-if caught with the lazo, just behind the ears. When the
-bullock has been dragged to the spot where it is to be
-slaughtered, the matador with great caution cuts the hamstrings.
-Then is given the death bellow; a noise more expressive
-of fierce agony than any I know. I have often distinguished
-it from a long distance, and have always known
-that the struggle was then drawing to a close. The whole
-sight is horrible and revolting: the ground is almost made of
-bones; and the horses and riders are drenched with gore.
-
-[1] I call these thistle-stalks for the want of a more correct
-name. I believe it is a species of Eryngium.
-
-[2] Travels in Africa, p. 233.
-
-[3] Two species of Tinamus and Eudromia elegans of A. d'Orbigny,
-which can only be called a partridge with regard to its habits.
-
-[4] History of the Abipones, vol. ii. p. 6.
-
-[5] Falconer's Patagonia, p. 70.
-
-[6] Fauna Boreali-Americana, vol. i. p. 35.
-
-[7] See Mr. Atwater's account of the Prairies, in Silliman's
-N. A. Journal, vol. i. p. 117.
-
-[8] Azara's Voyages, vol. i. p. 373.
-
-[9] M. A. d'Orbigny (vol. i. p. 474) says that the cardoon
-and artichoke are both found wild. Dr. Hooker (Botanical
-Magazine, vol. lv. p. 2862), has described a variety of the
-Cynara from this part of South America under the name of
-inermis. He states that botanists are now generally agreed
-that the cardoon and the artichoke are varieties of one plant.
-I may add, that an intelligent farmer assured me that he had
-observed in a deserted garden some artichokes changing into
-the common cardoon. Dr. Hooker believes that Head's vivid
-description of the thistle of the Pampas applies to the
-cardoon, but this is a mistake. Captain Head referred to the
-plant, which I have mentioned a few lines lower down, under
-the title of giant thistle. Whether it is a true thistle I do
-not know; but it is quite different from the cardoon; and more
-like a thistle properly so called.
-
-[10] It is said to contain 60,000 inhabitants. Monte Video, the
-second town of importance on the banks of the Plata, has
-15,000.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
-
-Excursion to St. Fe -- Thistle Beds -- Habits of the Bizcacha --
-Little Owl -- Saline Streams -- Level Plain -- Mastodon -- St.
-Fe -- Change in Landscape -- Geology -- Tooth of extinct
-Horse -- Relation of the Fossil and recent Quadrupeds of North
-and South America -- Effects of a great Drought -- Parana --
-Habits of the Jaguar -- Scissor-beak -- Kingfisher, Parrot,
-and Scissor-tail -- Revolution -- Buenos Ayres State of
-Government.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 27th. -- In the evening I set out on an
-excursion to St. Fe, which is situated nearly three hundred
-English miles from Buenos Ayres, on the banks of
-the Parana. The roads in the neighbourhood of the city after
-the rainy weather, were extraordinarily bad. I should never
-have thought it possible for a bullock waggon to have
-crawled along: as it was, they scarcely went at the rate of a
-mile an hour, and a man was kept ahead, to survey the best
-line for making the attempt. The bullocks were terribly
-jaded: it is a great mistake to suppose that with improved
-roads, and an accelerated rate of travelling, the sufferings of
-the animals increase in the same proportion. We passed a
-train of waggons and a troop of beasts on their road to
-Mendoza. The distance is about 580 geographical miles, and
-the journey is generally performed in fifty days. These
-waggons are very long, narrow, and thatched with reeds;
-they have only two wheels, the diameter of which in some
-cases is as much as ten feet. Each is drawn by six bullocks,
-which are urged on by a goad at least twenty feet long: this
-is suspended from within the roof; for the wheel bullocks a
-smaller one is kept; and for the intermediate pair, a point
-projects at right angles from the middle of the long one.
-
-The whole apparatus looked like some implement of war.
-
-September 28th. -- We passed the small town of Luxan
-where there is a wooden bridge over the river -- a most
-unusual convenience in this country. We passed also Areco.
-The plains appeared level, but were not so in fact; for in
-various places the horizon was distant. The estancias are
-here wide apart; for there is little good pasture, owing to
-the land being covered by beds either of an acrid clover,
-or of the great thistle. The latter, well known from the
-animated description given by Sir F. Head, were at this
-time of the year two-thirds grown; in some parts they were
-as high as the horse's back, but in others they had not yet
-sprung up, and the ground was bare and dusty as on a turnpike-
-road. The clumps were of the most brilliant green, and
-they made a pleasing miniature-likeness of broken forest
-land. When the thistles are full grown, the great beds are
-impenetrable, except by a few tracts, as intricate as those
-in a labyrinth. These are only known to the robbers, who
-at this season inhabit them, and sally forth at night to rob
-and cut throats with impunity. Upon asking at a house
-whether robbers were numerous, I was answered, "The thistles
-are not up yet;" -- the meaning of which reply was not at
-first very obvious. There is little interest in passing over
-these tracts, for they are inhabited by few animals or birds,
-excepting the bizcacha and its friend the little owl.
-
-The bizcacha [1] is well known to form a prominent feature
-in the zoology of the Pampas. It is found as far south as
-the Rio Negro, in lat. 41 degs., but not beyond. It cannot,
-like the agouti, subsist on the gravelly and desert plains of
-Patagonia, but prefers a clayey or sandy soil, which produces a
-different and more abundant vegetation. Near Mendoza, at
-the foot of the Cordillera, it occurs in close neighbourhood
-with the allied alpine species. It is a very curious
-circumstance in its geographical distribution, that it has never
-been seen, fortunately for the inhabitants of Banda Oriental, to
-the eastward of the river Uruguay: yet in this province there
-are plains which appear admirably adapted to its habits.
-The Uruguay has formed an insuperable obstacle to its
-migration: although the broader barrier of the Parana has
-been passed, and the bizcacha is common in Entre Rios, the
-province between these two great rivers. Near Buenos Ayres
-these animals are exceedingly common. Their most favourite
-resort appears to be those parts of the plain which during
-one-half of the year are covered with giant thistles, to the
-exclusion of other plants. The Gauchos affirm that it lives
-on roots; which, from the great strength of its gnawing
-teeth, and the kind of places frequented by it, seems probable.
-In the evening the bizcachas come out in numbers, and quietly
-sit at the mouths of their burrows on their haunches. At
-such times they are very tame, and a man on horseback passing
-by seems only to present an object for their grave
-contemplation. They run very awkwardly, and when running
-out of danger, from their elevated tails and short front legs
-much resemble great rats. Their flesh, when cooked, is very
-white and good, but it is seldom used.
-
-The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging
-every hard object to the mouth of its burrow: around
-each group of holes many bones of cattle, stones, thistle-
-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung, etc., are collected into
-an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to as much as
-a wheelbarrow would contain. I was credibly informed that
-a gentleman, when riding on a dark night, dropped his
-watch; he returned in the morning, and by searching the
-neighbourhood of every bizcacha hole on the line of road,
-as he expected, he soon found it. This habit of picking
-up whatever may be lying on the ground anywhere near its
-habitation, must cost much trouble. For what purpose it
-is done, I am quite unable to form even the most remote
-conjecture: it cannot be for defence, because the rubbish
-is chiefly placed above the mouth of the burrow, which
-enters the ground at a very small inclination. No doubt
-there must exist some good reason; but the inhabitants of
-the country are quite ignorant of it. The only fact which
-I know analogous to it, is the habit of that extraordinary
-Australian bird, the Calodera maculata, which makes an
-elegant vaulted passage of twigs for playing in, and
-which collects near the spot, land and sea-shells, bones
-and the feathers of birds, especially brightly coloured
-ones. Mr. Gould, who has described these facts, informs
-me, that the natives, when they lose any hard object,
-search the playing passages, and he has known a tobacco-
-pipe thus recovered.
-
-The little owl (Athene cunicularia), which has been so
-often mentioned, on the plains of Buenos Ayres exclusively
-inhabits the holes of the bizcacha; but in Banda Oriental it
-is its own workman. During the open day, but more especially
-in the evening, these birds may be seen in every direction
-standing frequently by pairs on the hillock near their
-burrows. If disturbed they either enter the hole, or, uttering
-a shrill harsh cry, move with a remarkably undulatory
-flight to a short distance, and then turning round, steadily
-gaze at their pursuer. Occasionally in the evening they may
-be heard hooting. I found in the stomachs of two which
-I opened the remains of mice, and I one day saw a small
-snake killed and carried away. It is said that snakes are
-their common prey during the daytime. I may here mention,
-as showing on what various kinds of food owls subsist,
-that a species killed among the islets of the Chonos
-Archipelago, had its stomach full of good-sized crabs. In
-India [2] there is a fishing genus of owls, which likewise
-catches crabs.
-
-In the evening we crossed the Rio Arrecife on a simple
-raft made of barrels lashed together, and slept at the post-
-house on the other side. I this day paid horse-hire for
-thirty-one leagues; and although the sun was glaring hot I
-was but little fatigued. When Captain Head talks of riding
-fifty leagues a day, I do not imagine the distance is equal
-to 150 English miles. At all events, the thirty-one leagues
-was only 76 miles in a straight line, and in an open country
-I should think four additional miles for turnings would be
-a sufficient allowance.
-
-29th and 30th. -- We continued to ride over plains of the
-same character. At San Nicolas I first saw the noble river
-of the Parana. At the foot of the cliff on which the town
-stands, some large vessels were at anchor. Before arriving
-at Rozario, we crossed the Saladillo, a stream of fine clear
-running water, but too saline to drink. Rozario is a large
-town built on a dead level plain, which forms a cliff about
-sixty feet high over the Parana. The river here is very
-broad, with many islands, which are low and wooded, as is
-also the opposite shore. The view would resemble that of a
-great lake, if it were not for the linear-shaped islets, which
-alone give the idea of running water. The cliffs are the most
-picturesque part; sometimes they are absolutely perpendicular,
-and of a red colour; at other times in large broken
-masses, covered with cacti and mimosa-trees. The real
-grandeur, however, of an immense river like this, is derived
-from reflecting how important a means of communication
-and commerce it forms between one nation and another; to
-what a distance it travels, and from how vast a territory
-it drains the great body of fresh water which flows past
-your feet.
-
-For many leagues north and south of San Nicolas and
-Rozario, the country is really level. Scarcely anything which
-travellers have written about its extreme flatness, can be
-considered as exaggeration. Yet I could never find a spot
-where, by slowly turning round, objects were not seen at
-greater distances in some directions than in others; and
-this manifestly proves inequality in the plain. At sea, a
-person's eye being six feet above the surface of the water,
-his horizon is two miles and four-fifths distant. In like
-manner, the more level the plain, the more nearly does the
-horizon approach within these narrow limits; and this, in
-my opinion, entirely destroys that grandeur which one would
-have imagined that a vast level plain would have possessed.
-
-October 1st. - We started by moonlight and arrived at the
-Rio Tercero by sunrise. The river is also called the Saladillo,
-and it deserves the name, for the water is brackish.
-I stayed here the greater part of the day, searching for fossil
-bones. Besides a perfect tooth of the Toxodon, and many
-scattered bones, I found two immense skeletons near each
-other, projecting in bold relief from the perpendicular cliff
-of the Parana. They were, however, so completely decayed,
-that I could only bring away small fragments of one of the
-great molar teeth; but these are sufficient to show that the
-remains belonged to a Mastodon, probably to the same species
-with that, which formerly must have inhabited the Cordillera
-in Upper Peru in such great numbers. The men
-who took me in the canoe, said they had long known of these
-skeletons, and had often wondered how they had got there:
-the necessity of a theory being felt, they came to the
-conclusion that, like the bizcacha, the mastodon was formerly
-a burrowing animal! In the evening we rode another stage,
-and crossed the Monge, another brackish stream, bearing the
-dregs of the washings of the Pampas.
-
-October 2nd. -- We passed through Corunda, which, from
-the luxuriance of its gardens, was one of the prettiest
-villages I saw. From this point to St. Fe the road is not very
-safe. The western side of the Parana northward, ceases to
-be inhabited; and hence the Indians sometimes come down
-thus far, and waylay travellers. The nature of the country
-also favours this, for instead of a grassy plain, there is an
-open woodland, composed of low prickly mimosas. We
-passed some houses that had been ransacked and since deserted;
-we saw also a spectacle, which my guides viewed
-with high satisfaction; it was the skeleton of an Indian
-with the dried skin hanging on the bones, suspended to the
-branch of a tree.
-
-In the morning we arrived at St. Fe. I was surprised
-to observe how great a change of climate a difference of only
-three degrees of latitude between this place and Buenos
-Ayres had caused. This was evident from the dress and
-complexion of the men -- from the increased size of the
-ombu-trees -- the number of new cacti and other plants --
-and especially from the birds. In the course of an hour I
-remarked half-a-dozen birds, which I had never seen at
-Buenos Ayres. Considering that there is no natural boundary
-between the two places, and that the character of the
-country is nearly similar, the difference was much greater
-than I should have expected.
-
-October 3rd and 4th. -- I was confined for these two days
-to my bed by a headache. A good-natured old woman,
-who attended me, wished me to try many odd remedies. A
-common practice is, to bind an orange-leaf or a bit of black
-plaster to each temple: and a still more general plan is, to
-split a bean into halves, moisten them, and place one on
-each temple, where they will easily adhere. It is not thought
-proper ever to remove the beans or plaster, but to allow
-them to drop off, and sometimes, if a man, with patches on
-his head, is asked, what is the matter? he will answer, "I
-had a headache the day before yesterday." Many of the
-remedies used by the people of the country are ludicrously
-strange, but too disgusting to be mentioned. One of the
-least nasty is to kill and cut open two puppies and bind
-them on each side of a broken limb. Little hairless dogs are
-in great request to sleep at the feet of invalids.
-
-St. Fe is a quiet little town, and is kept clean and in good
-order. The governor, Lopez, was a common soldier at the
-time of the revolution; but has now been seventeen years
-in power. This stability of government is owing to his
-tyrannical habits; for tyranny seems as yet better adapted
-to these countries than republicanism. The governor's favourite
-occupation is hunting Indians: a short time since
-he slaughtered forty-eight, and sold the children at the rate
-of three or four pounds apiece.
-
-October 5th. -- We crossed the Parana to St. Fe Bajada,
-a town on the opposite shore. The passage took some hours,
-as the river here consisted of a labyrinth of small streams,
-separated by low wooded islands. I had a letter of introduction
-to an old Catalonian Spaniard, who treated me with
-the most uncommon hospitality. The Bajada is the capital
-of Entre Rios. In 1825 the town contained 6000 inhabitants,
-and the province 30,000; yet, few as the inhabitants are, no
-province has suffered more from bloody and desperate
-revolutions. They boast here of representatives, ministers, a
-standing army, and governors: so it is no wonder that they
-have their revolutions. At some future day this must be
-one of the richest countries of La Plata. The soil is varied
-and productive; and its almost insular form gives it two
-grand lines of communication by the rivers Parana and
-Uruguay.
-
-
-I was delayed here five days, and employed myself in examining
-the geology of the surrounding country, which was
-very interesting. We here see at the bottom of the cliffs,
-beds containing sharks' teeth and sea-shells of extinct species,
-passing above into an indurated marl, and from that
-into the red clayey earth of the Pampas, with its calcareous
-concretions and the bones of terrestrial quadrupeds. This
-vertical section clearly tells us of a large bay of pure salt-
-water, gradually encroached on, and at last converted into
-the bed of a muddy estuary, into which floating carcasses
-were swept. At Punta Gorda, in Banda Oriental, I found
-an alternation of the Pampaean estuary deposit, with a
-limestone containing some of the same extinct sea-shells; and
-this shows either a change in the former currents, or more
-probably an oscillation of level in the bottom of the ancient
-estuary. Until lately, my reasons for considering the Pampaean
-formation to be an estuary deposit were, its general
-appearance, its position at the mouth of the existing great
-river the Plata, and the presence of so many bones of
-terrestrial quadrupeds: but now Professor Ehrenberg has had
-the kindness to examine for me a little of the red earth,
-taken from low down in the deposit, close to the skeletons
-of the mastodon, and he finds in it many infusoria, partly
-salt-water and partly fresh-water forms, with the latter
-rather preponderating; and therefore, as he remarks, the
-water must have been brackish. M. A. d'Orbigny found on
-the banks of the Parana, at the height of a hundred feet,
-great beds of an estuary shell, now living a hundred miles
-lower down nearer the sea; and I found similar shells at a
-less height on the banks of the Uruguay; this shows that
-just before the Pampas was slowly elevated into dry land,
-the water covering it was brackish. Below Buenos Ayres
-there are upraised beds of sea-shells of existing species,
-which also proves that the period of elevation of the Pampas
-was within the recent period.
-
-In the Pampaean deposit at the Bajada I found the osseous
-armour of a gigantic armadillo-like animal, the inside
-of which, when the earth was removed, was like a great
-cauldron; I found also teeth of the Toxodon and Mastodon,
-and one tooth of a Horse, in the same stained and decayed
-state. This latter tooth greatly interested me, [3] and I took
-scrupulous care in ascertaining that it had been embedded
-contemporaneously with the other remains; for I was not
-then aware that amongst the fossils from Bahia Blanca
-there was a horse's tooth hidden in the matrix: nor was it
-then known with certainty that the remains of horses are
-common in North America. Mr. Lyell has lately brought
-from the United States a tooth of a horse; and it is an
-interesting fact, that Professor Owen could find in no species,
-either fossil or recent, a slight but peculiar curvature
-characterizing it, until he thought of comparing it with my
-specimen found here: he has named this American horse Equus
-curvidens. Certainly it is a marvellous fact in the history
-of the Mammalia, that in South America a native horse
-should have lived and disappeared, to be succeeded in after-
-ages by the countless herds descended from the few introduced
-with the Spanish colonists!
-
-The existence in South America of a fossil horse, of the
-mastodon, possibly of an elephant, [4] and of a hollow-horned
-ruminant, discovered by MM. Lund and Clausen in the
-caves of Brazil, are highly interesting facts with respect to
-the geographical distribution of animals. At the present
-time, if we divide America, not by the Isthmus of Panama,
-but by the southern part of Mexico [5] in lat. 20 degs., where
-the great table-land presents an obstacle to the migration of
-species, by affecting the climate, and by forming, with the
-exception of some valleys and of a fringe of low land on
-the coast, a broad barrier; we shall then have the two
-zoological provinces of North and South America strongly
-contrasted with each other. Some few species alone have
-passed the barrier, and may be considered as wanderers from
-the south, such as the puma, opossum, kinkajou, and peccari.
-South America is characterized by possessing many peculiar
-gnawers, a family of monkeys, the llama, peccari, tapir,
-opossums, and, especially, several genera of Edentata, the
-order which includes the sloths, ant-eaters, and armadilloes.
-North America, on the other hand, is characterized (putting
-on one side a few wandering species) by numerous peculiar
-gnawers, and by four genera (the ox, sheep, goat, and antelope)
-of hollow-horned ruminants, of which great division
-South America is not known to possess a single species.
-Formerly, but within the period when most of the now existing
-shells were living, North America possessed, besides
-hollow-horned ruminants, the elephant, mastodon, horse, and
-three genera of Edentata, namely, the Megatherium, Megalonyx,
-and Mylodon. Within nearly this same period (as
-proved by the shells at Bahia Blanca) South America possessed,
-as we have just seen, a mastodon, horse, hollow-
-horned ruminant, and the same three genera (as well as
-several others) of the Edentata. Hence it is evident that
-North and South America, in having within a late geological
-period these several genera in common, were much
-more closely related in the character of their terrestrial
-inhabitants than they now are. The more I reflect on this
-case, the more interesting it appears: I know of no other
-instance where we can almost mark the period and manner
-of the splitting up of one great region into two well-
-characterized zoological provinces. The geologist, who is fully
-impressed with the vast oscillations of level which have
-affected the earth's crust within late periods, will not fear
-to speculate on the recent elevation of the Mexican platform,
-or, more probably, on the recent submergence of land
-in the West Indian Archipelago, as the cause of the present
-zoological separation of North and South America. The
-South American character of the West Indian mammals [6]
-seems to indicate that this archipelago was formerly united
-to the southern continent, and that it has subsequently been
-an area of subsidence.
-
-When America, and especially North America, possessed
-its elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants,
-it was much more closely related in its zoological
-characters to the temperate parts of Europe and Asia than
-it now is. As the remains of these genera are found on
-both sides of Behring's Straits [7] and on the plains of
-Siberia, we are led to look to the north-western side of North
-America as the former point of communication between the Old
-and so-called New World. And as so many species, both
-living and extinct, of these same genera inhabit and have
-inhabited the Old World, it seems most probable that the
-North American elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-
-horned ruminants migrated, on land since submerged near
-Behring's Straits, from Siberia into North America, and
-thence, on land since submerged in the West Indies, into
-South America, where for a time they mingled with the
-forms characteristic of that southern continent, and have
-since become extinct.
-
-
-While travelling through the country, I received several
-vivid descriptions of the effects of a late great drought; and
-the account of this may throw some light on the cases where
-vast numbers of animals of all kinds have been embedded
-together. The period included between the years 1827 and
-1830 is called the "gran seco," or the great drought. During
-this time so little rain fell, that the vegetation, even to the
-thistles, failed; the brooks were dried up, and the whole
-country assumed the appearance of a dusty high road. This
-was especially the case in the northern part of the province
-of Buenos Ayres and the southern part of St. Fe. Very
-great numbers of birds, wild animals, cattle, and horses
-perished from the want of food and water. A man told me
-that the deer [8] used to come into his courtyard to the well,
-which he had been obliged to dig to supply his own family
-with water; and that the partridges had hardly strength to
-fly away when pursued. The lowest estimation of the loss
-of cattle in the province of Buenos Ayres alone, was taken
-at one million head. A proprietor at San Pedro had previously
-to these years 20,000 cattle; at the end not one remained.
-San Pedro is situated in the middle of the finest
-country; and even now abounds again with animals; yet
-during the latter part of the "gran seco," live cattle were
-brought in vessels for the consumption of the inhabitants.
-The animals roamed from their estancias, and, wandering
-far southward, were mingled together in such multitudes,
-that a government commission was sent from Buenos Ayres
-to settle the disputes of the owners. Sir Woodbine Parish
-informed me of another and very curious source of dispute;
-the ground being so long dry, such quantities of dust were
-blown about, that in this open country the landmarks became
-obliterated, and people could not tell the limits of their
-estates.
-
-I was informed by an eye-witness that the cattle in herds
-of thousands rushed into the Parana, and being exhausted
-by hunger they were unable to crawl up the muddy banks,
-and thus were drowned. The arm of the river which runs
-by San Pedro was so full of putrid carcasses, that the master
-of a vessel told me that the smell rendered it quite impassable.
-Without doubt several hundred thousand animals
-thus perished in the river: their bodies when putrid were
-seen floating down the stream; and many in all probability
-were deposited in the estuary of the Plata. All the small
-rivers became highly saline, and this caused the death of
-vast numbers in particular spots; for when an animal drinks
-of such water it does not recover. Azara describes [9] the
-fury of the wild horses on a similar occasion, rushing into
-the marshes, those which arrived first being overwhelmed
-and crushed by those which followed. He adds that more
-than once he has seen the carcasses of upwards of a thousand
-wild horses thus destroyed. I noticed that the smaller
-streams in the Pampas were paved with a breccia of bones
-but this probably is the effect of a gradual increase, rather
-than of the destruction at any one period. Subsequently
-to the drought of 1827 to 1832, a very rainy season followed
-which caused great floods. Hence it is almost certain that
-some thousands of the skeletons were buried by the deposits
-of the very next year. What would be the opinion of a
-geologist, viewing such an enormous collection of bones, of
-all kinds of animals and of all ages, thus embedded in one
-thick earthy mass? Would he not attribute it to a flood
-having swept over the surface of the land, rather than to
-the common order of things? [10]
-
-October 12th. -- I had intended to push my excursion further,
-but not being quite well, I was compelled to return by
-a balandra, or one-masted vessel of about a hundred tons'
-burden, which was bound to Buenos Ayres. As the weather
-was not fair, we moored early in the day to a branch of a
-tree on one of the islands. The Parana is full of islands,
-which undergo a constant round of decay and renovation.
-In the memory of the master several large ones had disappeared,
-and others again had been formed and protected
-by vegetation. They are composed of muddy sand, without
-even the smallest pebble, and were then about four feet
-above the level of the river; but during the periodical floods
-they are inundated. They all present one character; numerous
-willows and a few other trees are bound together by a
-great variety of creeping plants, thus forming a thick jungle.
-These thickets afford a retreat for capybaras and jaguars.
-The fear of the latter animal quite destroyed all pleasure
-in scrambling through the woods. This evening I had not
-proceeded a hundred yards, before finding indubitable signs
-of the recent presence of the tiger, I was obliged to come
-back. On every island there were tracks; and as on the
-former excursion "el rastro de los Indios" had been the
-subject of conversation, so in this was "el rastro del tigre."
-The wooded banks of the great rivers appear to be the
-favourite haunts of the jaguar; but south of the Plata, I
-was told that they frequented the reeds bordering lakes:
-wherever they are, they seem to require water. Their common
-prey is the capybara, so that it is generally said, where
-capybaras are numerous there is little danger from the
-jaguar. Falconer states that near the southern side of the
-mouth of the Plata there are many jaguars, and that they
-chiefly live on fish; this account I have heard repeated. On
-the Parana they have killed many wood-cutters, and have
-even entered vessels at night. There is a man now living
-in the Bajada, who, coming up from below when it was
-dark, was seized on the deck; he escaped, however, with
-the loss of the use of one arm. When the floods drive these
-animals from the islands, they are most dangerous. I was
-told that a few years since a very large one found its way
-into a church at St. Fe: two padres entering one after the
-other were killed, and a third, who came to see what was the
-matter, escaped with difficulty. The beast was destroyed by
-being shot from a corner of the building which was unroofed.
-They commit also at these times great ravages
-among cattle and horses. It is said that they kill their prey
-by breaking their necks. If driven from the carcass, they
-seldom return to it. The Gauchos say that the jaguar, when
-wandering about at night, is much tormented by the foxes
-yelping as they follow him. This is a curious coincidence
-with the fact which is generally affirmed of the jackals
-accompanying, in a similarly officious manner, the East Indian
-tiger. The jaguar is a noisy animal, roaring much by night,
-and especially before bad weather.
-
-One day, when hunting on the banks of the Uruguay, I
-was shown certain trees, to which these animals constantly
-recur for the purpose, as it is said, of sharpening their
-claws. I saw three well-known trees; in front, the bark
-was worn smooth, as if by the breast of the animal, and on
-each side there were deep scratches, or rather grooves,
-extending in an oblique line, nearly a yard in length. The
-scars were of different ages. A common method of ascertaining
-whether a jaguar is in the neighbourhood is to
-examine these trees. I imagine this habit of the jaguar is
-exactly similar to one which may any day be seen in the
-common cat, as with outstretched legs and exserted claws it
-scrapes the leg of a chair; and I have heard of young fruit-
-trees in an orchard in England having been thus much injured.
-Some such habit must also be common to the puma,
-for on the bare hard soil of Patagonia I have frequently
-seen scores so deep that no other animal could have made
-them. The object of this practice is, I believe, to tear off
-the ragged points of their claws, and not, as the Gauchos
-think, to sharpen them. The jaguar is killed, without much
-difficulty, by the aid of dogs baying and driving him up a
-tree, where he is despatched with bullets.
-
-Owing to bad weather we remained two days at our moorings.
-Our only amusement was catching fish for our dinner:
-there were several kinds, and all good eating. A fish called
-the "armado" (a Silurus) is remarkable from a harsh grating
-noise which it makes when caught by hook and line,
-and which can be distinctly heard when the fish is beneath
-the water. This same fish has the power of firmly catching
-hold of any object, such as the blade of an oar or the fishing-
-line, with the strong spine both of its pectoral and dorsal
-fin. In the evening the weather was quite tropical, the
-thermometer standing at 79 degs. Numbers of fireflies were
-hovering about, and the musquitoes were very troublesome.
-I exposed my hand for five minutes, and it was soon black
-with them; I do not suppose there could have been less than
-fifty, all busy sucking.
-
-October 15th. -- We got under way and passed Punta
-Gorda, where there is a colony of tame Indians from the
-province of Missiones. We sailed rapidly down the current,
-but before sunset, from a silly fear of bad weather, we
-brought-to in a narrow arm of the river. I took the boat
-and rowed some distance up this creek. It was very narrow,
-winding, and deep; on each side a wall thirty or forty feet
-high, formed by trees intwined with creepers, gave to the
-canal a singularly gloomy appearance. I here saw a very
-extraordinary bird, called the Scissor-beak (Rhynchops
-nigra). It has short legs, web feet, extremely long-pointed
-wings, and is of about the size of a tern. The beak is flattened
-laterally, that is, in a plane at right angles to that
-of a spoonbill or duck. It is as flat and elastic as an ivory
-paper-cutter, and the lower mandible, differing from every
-other bird, is an inch and a half longer than the upper. In
-a lake near Maldonado, from which the water had been
-nearly drained, and which, in consequence, swarmed with
-small fry, I saw several of these birds, generally in small
-flocks, flying rapidly backwards and forwards close to the
-surface of the lake. They kept their bills wide open, and
-the lower mandible half buried in the water. Thus skimming
-the surface, they ploughed it in their course: the water was
-quite smooth, and it formed a most curious spectacle to behold
-a flock, each bird leaving its narrow wake on the mirror-like
-surface. In their flight they frequently twist about
-with extreme quickness, and dexterously manage with their
-projecting lower mandible to plough up small fish, which are
-secured by the upper and shorter half of their scissor-like
-
-
-[picture]
-
-
-bills. This fact I repeatedly saw, as, like swallows, they
-continued to fly backwards and forwards close before me.
-Occasionally when leaving the surface of the water their
-flight was wild, irregular, and rapid; they then uttered loud
-harsh cries. When these birds are fishing, the advantage
-of the long primary feathers of their wings, in keeping them
-dry, is very evident. When thus employed, their forms resemble
-the symbol by which many artists represent marine
-birds. Their tails are much used in steering their irregular
-course.
-
-These birds are common far inland along the course of
-the Rio Parana; it is said that they remain here during the
-whole year, and breed in the marshes. During the day they
-rest in flocks on the grassy plains at some distance from
-the water. Being at anchor, as I have said, in one of the
-deep creeks between the islands of the Parana, as the evening
-drew to a close, one of these scissor-beaks suddenly appeared.
-The water was quite still, and many little fish were
-rising. The bird continued for a long time to skim the
-surface, flying in its wild and irregular manner up and down
-the narrow canal, now dark with the growing night and the
-shadows of the overhanging trees. At Monte Video, I observed
-that some large flocks during the day remained on the
-mud-banks at the head of the harbour, in the same manner
-as on the grassy plains near the Parana; and every evening
-they took flight seaward. From these facts I suspect
-that the Rhynchops generally fishes by night, at which time
-many of the lower animals come most abundantly to the
-surface. M. Lesson states that he has seen these birds
-opening the shells of the mactrae buried in the sand-banks on
-the coast of Chile: from their weak bills, with the lower
-mandible so much projecting, their short legs and long
-wings, it is very improbable that this can be a general habit.
-
-In our course down the Parana, I observed only three
-other birds, whose habits are worth mentioning. One is a
-small kingfisher (Ceryle Americana); it has a longer tail
-than the European species, and hence does not sit in so stiff
-and upright a position. Its flight also, instead of being direct
-and rapid, like the course of an arrow, is weak and
-undulatory, as among the soft-billed birds. It utters a low
-note, like the clicking together of two small stones. A small
-green parrot (Conurus murinus), with a grey breast, appears
-to prefer the tall trees on the islands to any other
-situation for its building-place. A number of nests are
-placed so close together as to form one great mass of sticks.
-These parrots always live in flocks, and commit great ravages
-on the corn-fields. I was told, that near Colonia 2500 were
-killed in the course of one year. A bird with a forked tail,
-terminated by two long feathers (Tyrannus savana), and
-named by the Spaniards scissor-tail, is very common near
-Buenos Ayres: it commonly sits on a branch of the _ombu_
-tree, near a house, and thence takes a short flight in pursuit
-of insects, and returns to the same spot. When on the wing
-it presents in its manner of flight and general appearance
-a caricature-likeness of the common swallow. It has the
-power of turning very shortly in the air, and in so doing
-opens and shuts its tail, sometimes in a horizontal or lateral
-and sometimes in a vertical direction, just like a pair of
-scissors.
-
-October 16th. -- Some leagues below Rozario, the western
-shore of the Parana is bounded by perpendicular cliffs,
-which extend in a long line to below San Nicolas; hence it
-more resembles a sea-coast than that of a fresh-water river.
-It is a great drawback to the scenery of the Parana, that,
-from the soft nature of its banks, the water is very muddy.
-The Uruguay, flowing through a granitic country, is much
-clearer; and where the two channels unite at the head of
-the Plata, the waters may for a long distance be distinguished
-by their black and red colours. In the evening, the
-wind being not quite fair, as usual we immediately moored,
-and the next day, as it blew rather freshly, though with a
-favouring current, the master was much too indolent to think
-of starting. At Bajada, he was described to me as "hombre
-muy aflicto" -- a man always miserable to get on; but certainly
-he bore all delays with admirable resignation. He
-was an old Spaniard, and had been many years in this
-country. He professed a great liking to the English, but
-stoutly maintained that the battle of Trafalgar was merely
-won by the Spanish captains having been all bought over;
-and that the only really gallant action on either side was
-performed by the Spanish admiral. It struck me as rather
-characteristic, that this man should prefer his countrymen
-being thought the worst of traitors, rather than unskilful or
-cowardly.
-
-18th and 19th. -- We continued slowly to sail down the
-noble stream: the current helped us but little. We met,
-during our descent, very few vessels. One of the best gifts
-of nature, in so grand a channel of communication, seems
-here wilfully thrown away -- a river in which ships might
-navigate from a temperate country, as surprisingly abundant
-in certain productions as destitute of others, to another
-possessing a tropical climate, and a soil which, according to
-the best of judges, M. Bonpland, is perhaps unequalled in
-fertility in any part of the world. How different would
-have been the aspect of this river if English colonists had
-by good fortune first sailed up the Plata! What noble towns
-would now have occupied its shores! Till the death of
-Francia, the Dictator of Paraguay, these two countries must
-remain distinct, as if placed on opposite sides of the globe.
-And when the old bloody-minded tyrant is gone to his long
-account, Paraguay will be torn by revolutions, violent in
-proportion to the previous unnatural calm. That country
-will have to learn, like every other South American state,
-that a republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body
-of men imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
-
-October 20th. -- Being arrived at the mouth of the Parana,
-and as I was very anxious to reach Buenos Ayres, I went
-on shore at Las Conchas, with the intention of riding there.
-Upon landing, I found to my great surprise that I was to
-a certain degree a prisoner. A violent revolution having
-broken out, all the ports were laid under an embargo. I
-could not return to my vessel, and as for going by land to
-the city, it was out of the question. After a long conversation
-with the commandant, I obtained permission to go the
-next day to General Rolor, who commanded a division of
-the rebels on this side the capital. In the morning I rode
-to the encampment. The general, officers, and soldiers, all
-appeared, and I believe really were, great villains. The
-general, the very evening before he left the city, voluntarily
-went to the Governor, and with his hand to his heart, pledged
-his word of honour that he at least would remain faithful
-to the last. The general told me that the city was in a state
-of close blockade, and that all he could do was to give me
-a passport to the commander-in-chief of the rebels at Quilmes.
-We had therefore to take a great sweep round the
-city, and it was with much difficulty that we procured horses.
-My reception at the encampment was quite civil, but I was
-told it was impossible that I could be allowed to enter the
-city. I was very anxious about this, as I anticipated the
-Beagle's departure from the Rio Plata earlier than it took
-place. Having mentioned, however, General Rosas's obliging
-kindness to me when at the Colorado, magic itself could
-not have altered circumstances quicker than did this
-conversation. I was instantly told that though they could not
-give me a passport, if I chose to leave my guide and horses,
-I might pass their sentinels. I was too glad to accept of
-this, and an officer was sent with me to give directions that
-I should not be stopped at the bridge. The road for the
-space of a league was quite deserted. I met one party of
-soldiers, who were satisfied by gravely looking at an old
-passport: and at length I was not a little pleased to find
-myself within the city.
-
-This revolution was supported by scarcely any pretext of
-grievances: but in a state which, in the course of nine months
-(from February to October, 1820), underwent fifteen
-changes in its government -- each governor, according to the
-constitution, being elected for three years -- it would be very
-unreasonable to ask for pretexts. In this case, a party of
-men -- who, being attached to Rosas, were disgusted with
-the governor Balcarce -- to the number of seventy left the
-city, and with the cry of Rosas the whole country took arms.
-The city was then blockaded, no provisions, cattle or horses,
-were allowed to enter; besides this, there was only a little
-skirmishing, and a few men daily killed. The outside party
-well knew that by stopping the supply of meat they would
-certainly be victorious. General Rosas could not have known
-of this rising; but it appears to be quite consonant with the
-plans of his party. A year ago he was elected governor, but
-he refused it, unless the Sala would also confer on him
-extraordinary powers. This was refused, and since then
-his party have shown that no other governor can keep his
-place. The warfare on both sides was avowedly protracted
-till it was possible to hear from Rosas. A note arrived a
-few days after I left Buenos Ayres, which stated that the
-General disapproved of peace having been broken, but that
-he thought the outside party had justice on their side. On
-the bare reception of this, the Governor, ministers, and part
-of the military, to the number of some hundreds, fled from
-the city. The rebels entered, elected a new governor, and
-were paid for their services to the number of 5500 men.
-From these proceedings, it was clear that Rosas ultimately
-would become the dictator: to the term king, the people in
-this, as in other republics, have a particular dislike. Since
-leaving South America, we have heard that Rosas has
-been elected, with powers and for a time altogether opposed
-to the constitutional principles of the republic.
-
-[1] The bizcacha (Lagostomus trichodactylus) somewhat resembles
-a large rabbit, but with bigger gnawing teeth and a long tail;
-it has, however, only three toes behind, like the agouti. During
-the last three or four years the skins of these animals have
-been sent to England for the sake of the fur.
-
-[2] Journal of Asiatic Soc., vol. v. p. 363.
-
-[3] I need hardly state here that there is good evidence
-against any horse living in America at the time of Columbus.
-
-[4] Cuvier. Ossemens Fossils, tom. i. p. 158.
-
-[5] This is the geographical division followed by Lichtenstein,
-Swainson, Erichson, and Richardson. The section from Vera Cruz
-to Acapulco, given by Humboldt in the Polit. Essay on Kingdom
-of N. Spain will show how immense a barrier the Mexican
-table-land forms. Dr. Richardson, in his admirable Report on
-the Zoology of N. America read before the Brit. Assoc. 1836
-(p. 157), talking of the identification of a Mexican animal
-with the Synetheres prehensilis, says, "We do not know with
-what propriety, but if correct, it is, if not a solitary
-instance, at least very nearly so, of a rodent animal being
-common to North and South America."
-
-[6] See Dr. Richardson's Report, p. 157; also L'Institut,
-1837, p. 253. Cuvier says the kinkajou is found in the larger
-Antilles, but this is doubtful. M. Gervais states that the
-Didelphis crancrivora is found there. It is certain that the
-West Indies possess some mammifers peculiar to themselves. A
-tooth of a mastadon has been brought from Bahama; Edin. New
-Phil. Journ., 1826, p. 395.
-
-[7] See the admirable Appendix by Dr. Buckland to Beechey's
-Voyage; also the writings of Chamisso in Kotzebue's Voyage.
-
-[8] In Captain Owen's Surveying Voyage (vol. ii. p. 274)
-there is a curious account of the effects of a drought on the
-elephants, at Benguela (west coast of Africa). "A number of
-these animals had some time since entered the town, in a body,
-to possess themselves of the wells, not being able to procure
-any water in the country. The inhabitants mustered, when a
-desperate conflict ensued, which terminated in the ultimate
-discomfiture of the invaders, but not until they had killed
-one man, and wounded several others." The town is said to
-have a population of nearly three thousand! Dr. Malcolmson
-informs me that, during a great drought in India, the wild
-animals entered the tents of some troops at Ellore, and that
-a hare drank out of a vessel held by the adjutant of the
-regiment.
-
-[9] Travels, vol. i. p. 374.
-
-[10] These droughts to a certain degree seem to be almost
-periodical; I was told the dates of several others, and the
-intervals were about fifteen years.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
-
-Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento -- Value of an Estancia --
-Cattle, how counted -- Singular Breed of Oxen -- Perforated
-Pebbles -- Shepherd Dogs -- Horses broken-in, Gauchos
-riding -- Character of Inhabitants -- Rio Plata -- Flocks of
-Butterflies -- Aeronaut Spiders -- Phosphorescence of the
-Sea -- Port Desire -- Guanaco -- Port St. Julian -- Geology
-of Patagonia -- Fossil gigantic Animal -- Types of Organization
-constant -- Change in the Zoology of America -- Causes of
-Extinction.
-
-
-HAVING been delayed for nearly a fortnight in the
-city, I was glad to escape on board a packet bound
-for Monte Video. A town in a state of blockade
-must always be a disagreeable place of residence; in this case
-moreover there were constant apprehensions from robbers
-within. The sentinels were the worst of all; for, from
-their office and from having arms in their hands, they robbed
-with a degree of authority which other men could not
-imitate.
-
-Our passage was a very long and tedious one. The Plata
-looks like a noble estuary on the map; but is in truth a poor
-affair. A wide expanse of muddy water has neither grandeur
-nor beauty. At one time of the day, the two shores,
-both of which are extremely low, could just be distinguished
-from the deck. On arriving at Monte Video I found that
-the Beagle would not sail for some time, so I prepared for a
-short excursion in this part of Banda Oriental. Everything
-which I have said about the country near Maldonado is applicable
-to Monte Video; but the land, with the one exception
-of the Green Mount 450 feet high, from which it takes
-its name, is far more level. Very little of the undulating
-grassy plain is enclosed; but near the town there are a few
-hedge-banks, covered with agaves, cacti, and fennel.
-
-November 14th. -- We left Monte Video in the afternoon.
-I intended to proceed to Colonia del Sacramiento, situated
-on the northern bank of the Plata and opposite to Buenos
-Ayres, and thence, following up the Uruguay, to the village
-of Mercedes on the Rio Negro (one of the many rivers of
-this name in South America), and from this point to return
-direct to Monte Video. We slept at the house of my guide
-at Canelones. In the morning we rose early, in the hopes
-of being able to ride a good distance; but it was a vain
-attempt, for all the rivers were flooded. We passed in boats
-the streams of Canelones, St. Lucia, and San Jose, and thus
-lost much time. On a former excursion I crossed the Lucia
-near its mouth, and I was surprised to observe how easily
-our horses, although not used to swim, passed over a width
-of at least six hundred yards. On mentioning this at Monte
-Video, I was told that a vessel containing some mountebanks
-and their horses, being wrecked in the Plata, one horse
-swam seven miles to the shore. In the course of the day I
-was amused by the dexterity with which a Gaucho forced
-a restive horse to swim a river. He stripped off his clothes,
-and jumping on its back, rode into the water till it was out
-of its depth; then slipping off over the crupper, he caught
-hold of the tail, and as often as the horse turned round
-the man frightened it back by splashing water in its face.
-As soon as the horse touched the bottom on the other side,
-the man pulled himself on, and was firmly seated, bridle
-in hand, before the horse gained the bank. A naked man
-on a naked horse is a fine spectacle; I had no idea how well
-the two animals suited each other. The tail of a horse is a
-very useful appendage; I have passed a river in a boat with
-four people in it, which was ferried across in the same way
-as the Gaucho. If a man and horse have to cross a broad
-river, the best plan is for the man to catch hold of the pommel
-or mane, and help himself with the other arm.
-
-We slept and stayed the following day at the post of
-Cufre. In the evening the postman or letter-carrier arrived.
-He was a day after his time, owing to the Rio Rozario being
-flooded. It would not, however, be of much consequence;
-for, although he had passed through some of the principal
-towns in Banda Oriental, his luggage consisted of two letters!
-The view from the house was pleasing; an undulating
-green surface, with distant glimpses of the Plata. I find
-that I look at this province with very different eyes from
-what I did upon my first arrival. I recollect I then thought
-it singularly level; but now, after galloping over the Pampas,
-my only surprise is, what could have induced me ever
-to call it level. The country is a series of undulations, in
-themselves perhaps not absolutely great, but, as compared
-to the plains of St. Fe, real mountains. From these
-inequalities there is an abundance of small rivulets, and
-the turf is green and luxuriant.
-
-November 17th. -- We crossed the Rozario, which was
-deep and rapid, and passing the village of Colla, arrived
-at midday at Colonia del Sacramiento. The distance is
-twenty leagues, through a country covered with fine grass,
-but poorly stocked with cattle or inhabitants. I was invited
-to sleep at Colonia, and to accompany on the following
-day a gentleman to his estancia, where there were some
-limestone rocks. The town is built on a stony promontory
-something in the same manner as at Monte Video. It is
-strongly fortified, but both fortifications and town suffered
-much in the Brazilian war. It is very ancient; and the
-irregularity of the streets, and the surrounding groves of
-old orange and peach trees, gave it a pretty appearance.
-The church is a curious ruin; it was used as a powder-
-magazine, and was struck by lightning in one of the ten
-thousand thunder-storms of the Rio Plata. Two-thirds of
-the building were blown away to the very foundation; and
-the rest stands a shattered and curious monument of the
-united powers of lightning and gunpowder. In the evening
-I wandered about the half-demolished walls of the town. It
-was the chief seat of the Brazilian war; -- a war most injurious
-to this country, not so much in its immediate effects,
-as in being the origin of a multitude of generals and all
-other grades of officers. More generals are numbered (but
-not paid) in the United Provinces of La Plata than in the
-United Kingdom of Great Britain. These gentlemen have
-learned to like power, and do not object to a little
-skirmishing. Hence there are many always on the watch to
-create disturbance and to overturn a government which as yet
-has never rested on any staple foundation. I noticed, however,
-both here and in other places, a very general interest
-in the ensuing election for the President; and this appears
-a good sign for the prosperity of this little country. The
-inhabitants do not require much education in their
-representatives; I heard some men discussing the merits of those
-for Colonia; and it was said that, "although they were not
-men of business, they could all sign their names:" with this
-they seemed to think every reasonable man ought to be
-satisfied.
-
-18th. -- Rode with my host to his estancia, at the Arroyo
-de San Juan. In the evening we took a ride round the
-estate: it contained two square leagues and a half, and was
-situated in what is called a rincon; that is, one side was
-fronted by the Plata, and the two others guarded by impassable
-brooks. There was an excellent port for little vessels,
-and an abundance of small wood, which is valuable
-as supplying fuel to Buenos Ayres. I was curious to know
-the value of so complete an estancia. Of cattle there were
-3000, and it would well support three or four times that
-number; of mares 800, together with 150 broken-in horses,
-and 600 sheep. There was plenty of water and limestone,
-a rough house, excellent corrals, and a peach orchard. For
-all this he had been offered 2000 Pounds, and he only wanted
-500 Pounds additional, and probably would sell it for less. The
-chief trouble with an estancia is driving the cattle twice a
-week to a central spot, in order to make them tame, and to count
-them. This latter operation would be thought difficult,
-where there are ten or fifteen thousand head together. It
-is managed on the principle that the cattle invariably divide
-themselves into little troops of from forty to one hundred.
-Each troop is recognized by a few peculiarly marked
-animals, and its number is known: so that, one being lost
-out of ten thousand, it is perceived by its absence from one
-of the tropillas. During a stormy night the cattle all mingle
-together; but the next morning the tropillas separate as
-before; so that each animal must know its fellow out of ten
-thousand others.
-
-On two occasions I met with in this province some oxen
-of a very curious breed, called nata or niata. They appear
-externally to hold nearly the same relation to other cattle,
-which bull or pug dogs do to other dogs. Their forehead
-is very short and broad, with the nasal end turned up, and
-the upper lip much drawn back; their lower jaws project
-beyond the upper, and have a corresponding upward curve;
-hence their teeth are always exposed. Their nostrils are
-seated high up and are very open; their eyes project outwards.
-When walking they carry their heads low, on a short
-neck; and their hinder legs are rather longer compared
-with the front legs than is usual. Their bare teeth, their
-short heads, and upturned nostrils give them the most ludicrous
-self-confident air of defiance imaginable.
-
-Since my return, I have procured a skeleton head,
-through the kindness of my friend Captain Sulivan, R. N.,
-which is now deposited in the College of Surgeons. [1] Don
-F. Muniz, of Luxan, has kindly collected for me all the
-information which he could respecting this breed. From his
-account it seems that about eighty or ninety years ago, they
-were rare and kept as curiosities at Buenos Ayres. The
-breed is universally believed to have originated amongst
-the Indians southward of the Plata; and that it was with
-them the commonest kind. Even to this day, those reared
-in the provinces near the Plata show their less civilized
-origin, in being fiercer than common cattle, and in the cow
-easily deserting her first calf, if visited too often or
-molested. It is a singular fact that an almost similar structure
-to the abnormal [2] one of the niata breed, characterizes, as I
-am informed by Dr. Falconer, that great extinct ruminant
-of India, the Sivatherium. The breed is very _true_; and a
-niata bull and cow invariably produce niata calves. A niata
-bull with a common cow, or the reverse cross, produces offspring
-having an intermediate character, but with the niata
-characters strongly displayed: according to Senor Muniz,
-there is the clearest evidence, contrary to the common belief
-of agriculturists in analogous cases, that the niata cow when
-crossed with a common bull transmits her peculiarities more
-strongly than the niata bull when crossed with a common
-cow. When the pasture is tolerably long, the niata cattle
-feed with the tongue and palate as well as common cattle;
-but during the great droughts, when so many animals perish,
-the niata breed is under a great disadvantage, and would
-be exterminated if not attended to; for the common cattle,
-like horses, are able just to keep alive, by browsing with
-their lips on twigs of trees and reeds; this the niatas cannot
-so well do, as their lips do not join, and hence they are found
-to perish before the common cattle. This strikes me as a
-good illustration of how little we are able to judge from the
-ordinary habits of life, on what circumstances, occurring
-only at long intervals, the rarity or extinction of a species
-may be determined.
-
-November 19th. -- Passing the valley of Las Vacas, we
-slept at a house of a North American, who worked a lime-
-kiln on the Arroyo de las Vivoras. In the morning we rode
-to a protecting headland on the banks of the river, called
-Punta Gorda. On the way we tried to find a jaguar. There
-were plenty of fresh tracks, and we visited the trees, on
-which they are said to sharpen their claws; but we did not
-succeed in disturbing one. From this point the Rio Uruguay
-presented to our view a noble volume of water. From
-the clearness and rapidity of the stream, its appearance was
-far superior to that of its neighbour the Parana. On the
-opposite coast, several branches from the latter river entered
-the Uruguay. As the sun was shining, the two colours of
-the waters could be seen quite distinct.
-
-In the evening we proceeded on our road towards Mercedes
-on the Rio Negro. At night we asked permission to
-sleep at an estancia at which we happened to arrive. It was
-a very large estate, being ten leagues square, and the owner
-is one of the greatest landowners in the country. His nephew
-had charge of it, and with him there was a captain in
-the army, who the other day ran away from Buenos Ayres.
-Considering their station, their conversation was rather
-amusing. They expressed, as was usual, unbounded astonishment
-at the globe being round, and could scarcely credit
-that a hole would, if deep enough, come out on the other
-side. They had, however, heard of a country where there
-were six months of light and six of darkness, and where
-the inhabitants were very tall and thin! They were curious
-about the price and condition of horses and cattle in England.
-Upon finding out we did not catch our animals with
-the lazo, they cried out, "Ah, then, you use nothing but
-the bolas:" the idea of an enclosed country was quite new
-to them. The captain at last said, he had one question to
-ask me, which he should be very much obliged if I would
-answer with all truth. I trembled to think how deeply scientific
-it would be: it was, "Whether the ladies of Buenos
-Ayres were not the handsomest in the world." I replied, like
-a renegade, "Charmingly so." He added, "I have one other
-question: Do ladies in any other part of the world wear
-such large combs?" I solemnly assured him that they did
-not. They were absolutely delighted. The captain exclaimed,
-"Look there! a man who has seen half the world
-says it is the case; we always thought so, but now we know
-it." My excellent judgment in combs and beauty procured
-me a most hospitable reception; the captain forced me to
-take his bed, and he would sleep on his recado.
-
-21st. -- Started at sunrise, and rode slowly during the
-whole day. The geological nature of this part of the province
-was different from the rest, and closely resembled that
-of the Pampas. In consequence, there were immense beds
-of the thistle, as well as of the cardoon: the whole country,
-indeed, may be called one great bed of these plants. The
-two sorts grow separate, each plant in company with its
-own kind. The cardoon is as high as a horse's back, but the
-Pampas thistle is often higher than the crown of the rider's
-head. To leave the road for a yard is out of the question;
-and the road itself is partly, and in some cases entirely
-closed. Pasture, of course there is none; if cattle or horses
-once enter the bed, they are for the time completely lost.
-Hence it is very hazardous to attempt to drive cattle at
-this season of the year; for when jaded enough to face the
-thistles, they rush among them, and are seen no more. In
-these districts there are very few estancias, and these few
-are situated in the neighbourhood of damp valleys, where
-fortunately neither of these overwhelming plants can exist.
-As night came on before we arrived at our journey's end,
-we slept at a miserable little hovel inhabited by the poorest
-people. The extreme though rather formal courtesy of our
-host and hostess, considering their grade of life, was quite
-delightful.
-
-November 22nd. -- Arrived at an estancia on the Berquelo
-belonging to a very hospitable Englishman, to whom I had
-a letter of introduction from my friend Mr. Lumb. I stayed
-here three days. One morning I rode with my host to the
-Sierra del Pedro Flaco, about twenty miles up the Rio
-Negro. Nearly the whole country was covered with good
-though coarse grass, which was as high as a horse's belly;
-yet there were square leagues without a single head of cattle.
-The province of Banda Oriental, if well stocked, would support
-an astonishing number of animals, at present the annual
-export of hides from Monte Video amounts to three
-hundred thousand; and the home consumption, from waste,
-is very considerable. An "estanciero" told me that he often
-had to send large herds of cattle a long journey to a salting
-establishment, and that the tired beasts were frequently
-obliged to be killed and skinned; but that he could never
-persuade the Gauchos to eat of them, and every evening
-a fresh beast was slaughtered for their suppers! The view
-of the Rio Negro from the Sierra was more picturesque than
-any other which I saw in this province. The river, broad,
-deep, and rapid, wound at the foot of a rocky precipitous
-cliff: a belt of wood followed its course, and the horizon
-terminated in the distant undulations of the turf-plain.
-
-When in this neighbourhood, I several times heard of
-the Sierra de las Cuentas: a hill distant many miles to the
-northward. The name signifies hill of beads. I was assured
-that vast numbers of little round stones, of various colours,
-each with a small cylindrical hole, are found there. Formerly
-the Indians used to collect them, for the purpose of
-making necklaces and bracelets -- a taste, I may observe,
-which is common to all savage nations, as well as to the most
-polished. I did not know what to understand from this
-story, but upon mentioning it at the Cape of Good Hope
-to Dr. Andrew Smith, he told me that he recollected finding
-on the south-eastern coast of Africa, about one hundred
-miles to the eastward of St. John's river, some quartz crystals
-with their edges blunted from attrition, and mixed with
-gravel on the sea-beach. Each crystal was about five lines
-in diameter, and from an inch to an inch and a half in
-length. Many of them had a small canal extending from
-one extremity to the other, perfectly cylindrical, and of a
-size that readily admitted a coarse thread or a piece of fine
-catgut. Their colour was red or dull white. The natives
-were acquainted with this structure in crystals. I have
-mentioned these circumstances because, although no crystallized
-body is at present known to assume this form, it may
-lead some future traveller to investigate the real nature of
-such stones.
-
-
-While staying at this estancia, I was amused with what
-I saw and heard of the shepherd-dogs of the country. [3] When
-riding, it is a common thing to meet a large flock of sheep
-guarded by one or two dogs, at the distance of some miles
-from any house or man. I often wondered how so firm a
-friendship had been established. The method of education
-consists in separating the puppy, while very young, from
-the bitch, and in accustoming it to its future companions.
-An ewe is held three or four times a day for the little thing
-to suck, and a nest of wool is made for it in the sheep-pen;
-at no time is it allowed to associate with other dogs, or with
-the children of the family. The puppy is, moreover, generally
-castrated; so that, when grown up, it can scarcely
-have any feelings in common with the rest of its kind. From
-this education it has no wish to leave the flock, and just
-as another dog will defend its master, man, so will these
-the sheep. It is amusing to observe, when approaching a
-flock, how the dog immediately advances barking, and the
-sheep all close in his rear, as if round the oldest ram. These
-dogs are also easily taught to bring home the flock, at a
-certain hour in the evening. Their most troublesome fault,
-when young, is their desire of playing with the sheep; for
-in their sport they sometimes gallop their poor subjects most
-unmercifully.
-
-The shepherd-dog comes to the house every day for some
-meat, and as soon as it is given him, he skulks away as if
-ashamed of himself. On these occasions the house-dogs are
-very tyrannical, and the least of them will attack and pursue
-the stranger. The minute, however, the latter has reached
-the flock, he turns round and begins to bark, and then all
-the house-dogs take very quickly to their heels. In a similar
-manner a whole pack of the hungry wild dogs will scarcely
-ever (and I was told by some never) venture to attack a
-flock guarded by even one of these faithful shepherds. The
-whole account appears to me a curious instance of the pliability
-of the affections in the dog; and yet, whether wild or
-however educated, he has a feeling of respect or fear for
-those that are fulfilling their instinct of association. For
-we can understand on no principle the wild dogs being
-driven away by the single one with its flock, except that they
-consider, from some confused notion, that the one thus
-associated gains power, as if in company with its own kind.
-F. Cuvier has observed that all animals that readily enter
-into domestication, consider man as a member of their own
-society, and thus fulfil their instinct of association. In
-the above case the shepherd-dog ranks the sheep as its fellow-
-brethren, and thus gains confidence; and the wild dogs,
-though knowing that the individual sheep are not dogs, but
-are good to eat, yet partly consent to this view when seeing
-them in a flock with a shepherd-dog at their head.
-
-One evening a "domidor" (a subduer of horses) came
-for the purpose of breaking-in some colts. I will describe
-the preparatory steps, for I believe they have not been
-mentioned by other travellers. A troop of wild young horses
-is driven into the corral, or large enclosure of stakes, and
-the door is shut. We will suppose that one man alone has
-to catch and mount a horse, which as yet had never felt
-bridle or saddle. I conceive, except by a Gaucho, such a feat
-would be utterly impracticable. The Gaucho picks out a
-full-grown colt; and as the beast rushes round the circus
-he throws his lazo so as to catch both the front legs. Instantly
-the horse rolls over with a heavy shock, and whilst
-struggling on the ground, the Gaucho, holding the lazo
-tight, makes a circle, so as to catch one of the hind legs
-just beneath the fetlock, and draws it close to the two front
-legs: he then hitches the lazo, so that the three are bound
-together. Then sitting on the horse's neck, he fixes a strong
-bridle, without a bit, to the lower jaw: this he does by passing
-a narrow thong through the eye-holes at the end of the
-reins, and several times round both jaw and tongue. The
-two front legs are now tied closely together with a strong
-leathern thong, fastened by a slip-knot. The lazo, which
-bound the three together, being then loosed, the horse rises
-with difficulty. The Gaucho now holding fast the bridle
-fixed to the lower jaw, leads the horse outside the corral. If
-a second man is present (otherwise the trouble is much
-greater) he holds the animal's head, whilst the first puts on
-the horsecloths and saddle, and girths the whole together.
-During this operation, the horse, from dread and astonishment
-at thus being bound round the waist, throws himself
-over and over again on the ground, and, till beaten, is
-unwilling to rise. At last, when the saddling is finished, the
-poor animal can hardly breathe from fear, and is white with
-foam and sweat. The man now prepares to mount by pressing
-heavily on the stirrup, so that the horse may not lose
-its balance; and at the moment that he throws his leg over
-the animal's back, he pulls the slip-knot binding the front
-legs, and the beast is free. Some "domidors" pull the knot
-while the animal is lying on the ground, and, standing over
-the saddle, allow him to rise beneath them. The horse, wild
-with dread, gives a few most violent bounds, and then starts
-off at full gallop: when quite exhausted, the man, by patience,
-brings him back to the corral, where, reeking hot and
-scarcely alive, the poor beast is let free. Those animals
-which will not gallop away, but obstinately throw themselves
-on the ground, are by far the most troublesome. This process
-is tremendously severe, but in two or three trials the horse
-is tamed. It is not, however, for some weeks that the animal
-is ridden with the iron bit and solid ring, for it must learn
-to associate the will of its rider with the feel of the rein,
-before the most powerful bridle can be of any service.
-
-Animals are so abundant in these countries, that humanity
-and self-interest are not closely united; therefore I
-fear it is that the former is here scarcely known. One day,
-riding in the Pampas with a very respectable "estanciero,"
-my horse, being tired, lagged behind. The man often shouted
-to me to spur him. When I remonstrated that it was a pity,
-for the horse was quite exhausted, he cried out, "Why not?
--- never mind -- spur him -- it is my horse." I had then some
-difficulty in making him comprehend that it was for the
-horse's sake, and not on his account, that I did not choose
-to use my spurs. He exclaimed, with a look of great surprise,
-"Ah, Don Carlos, que cosa!" It was clear that such
-an idea had never before entered his head.
-
-The Gauchos are well known to be perfect riders The
-idea of being thrown, let the horse do what it likes; never
-enters their head. Their criterion of a good rider is, a man
-who can manage an untamed colt, or who, if his horse falls,
-alights on his own feet, or can perform other such exploits.
-I have heard of a man betting that he would throw his horse
-down twenty times, and that nineteen times he would not
-fall himself. I recollect seeing a Gaucho riding a very
-stubborn horse, which three times successively reared so
-high as to fall backwards with great violence. The man
-judged with uncommon coolness the proper moment for
-slipping off, not an instant before or after the right time;
-and as soon as the horse got up, the man jumped on his back,
-and at last they started at a gallop. The Gaucho never appears
-to exert any muscular force. I was one day watching
-a good rider, as we were galloping along at a rapid pace,
-and thought to myself, "Surely if the horse starts, you
-appear so careless on your seat, you must fall." At this moment,
-a male ostrich sprang from its nest right beneath the
-horse's nose: the young colt bounded on one side like a stag;
-but as for the man, all that could be said was, that he started
-and took fright with his horse.
-
-In Chile and Peru more pains are taken with the mouth
-of the horse than in La Plata, and this is evidently a
-consequence of the more intricate nature of the country. In
-Chile a horse is not considered perfectly broken, till he can
-be brought up standing, in the midst of his full speed, on
-any particular spot, -- for instance, on a cloak thrown on
-the ground: or, again, he will charge a wall, and rearing,
-scrape the surface with his hoofs. I have seen an animal
-bounding with spirit, yet merely reined by a fore-finger and
-thumb, taken at full gallop across a courtyard, and then
-made to wheel round the post of a veranda with great speed,
-but at so equal a distance, that the rider, with outstretched
-arm, all the while kept one finger rubbing the post. Then
-making a demi-volte in the air, with the other arm outstretched
-in a like manner, he wheeled round, with astonishing
-force, in an opposite direction.
-
-Such a horse is well broken; and although this at first
-may appear useless, it is far otherwise. It is only carrying
-that which is daily necessary into perfection. When a bullock
-is checked and caught by the lazo, it will sometimes
-gallop round and round in a circle, and the horse being
-alarmed at the great strain, if not well broken, will not
-readily turn like the pivot of a wheel. In consequence many
-men have been killed; for if the lazo once takes a twist
-round a man's body, it will instantly, from the power of the
-two opposed animals, almost cut him in twain. On the
-same principle the races are managed; the course is only
-two or three hundred yards long, the wish being to have
-horses that can make a rapid dash. The racehorses are
-trained not only to stand with their hoofs touching a line,
-but to draw all four feet together, so as at the first spring
-to bring into play the full action of the hind-quarters. In
-Chile I was told an anecdote, which I believe was true; and
-it offers a good illustration of the use of a well-broken
-animal. A respectable man riding one day met two others, one
-of whom was mounted on a horse, which he knew to have
-been stolen from himself. He challenged them; they answered
-him by drawing their sabres and giving chase. The
-man, on his good and fleet beast, kept just ahead: as he
-passed a thick bush he wheeled round it, and brought up
-his horse to a dead check. The pursuers were obliged to
-shoot on one side and ahead. Then instantly dashing on,
-right behind them, he buried his knife in the back of one,
-wounded the other, recovered his horse from the dying
-robber, and rode home. For these feats of horsemanship
-two things are necessary: a most severe bit, like the Mameluke,
-the power of which, though seldom used, the horse
-knows full well; and large blunt spurs, that can be applied
-either as a mere touch, or as an instrument of extreme pain.
-I conceive that with English spurs, the slightest touch of
-which pricks the skin, it would be impossible to break in a
-horse after the South American fashion
-
-At an estancia near Las Vacas large numbers of mares
-are weekly slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although
-worth only five paper dollars, or about half a crown apiece.
-It seems at first strange that it can answer to kill mares
-for such a trifle; but as it is thought ridiculous in this
-country ever to break in or ride a mare, they are of no value
-except for breeding. The only thing for which I ever saw
-mares used, was to tread out wheat from the ear, for which
-purpose they were driven round a circular enclosure, where
-the wheat-sheaves were strewed. The man employed for
-slaughtering the mares happened to be celebrated for his
-dexterity with the lazo. Standing at the distance of twelve
-yards from the mouth of the corral, he has laid a wager
-that he would catch by the legs every animal, without missing
-one, as it rushed past him. There was another man
-who said he would enter the corral on foot, catch a mare,
-fasten her front legs together, drive her out, throw her down,
-kill, skin, and stake the hide for drying (which latter is a
-tedious job); and he engaged that he would perform this
-whole operation on twenty-two animals in one day. Or he
-would kill and take the skin off fifty in the same time. This
-would have been a prodigious task, for it is considered a
-good day's work to skin and stake the hides of fifteen or
-sixteen animals.
-
-November 26th. -- I set out on my return in a direct line
-for Monte Video. Having heard of some giant's bones at
-a neighbouring farm-house on the Sarandis, a small stream
-entering the Rio Negro, I rode there accompanied by my
-host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence the head
-of the Toxodon. [4] When found it was quite perfect; but
-the boys knocked out some of the teeth with stones, and then
-set up the head as a mark to throw at. By a most fortunate
-chance I found a perfect tooth, which exactly fitted one of
-the sockets in this skull, embedded by itself on the banks
-of the Rio Tercero, at the distance of about 180 miles from
-this place. I found remains of this extraordinary animal
-at two other places, so that it must formerly have been common.
-I found here, also, some large portions of the armour
-of a gigantic armadillo-like animal, and part of the great
-head of a Mylodon. The bones of this head are so fresh,
-that they contain, according to the analysis by Mr. T. Reeks,
-seven per cent of animal matter; and when placed in a
-spirit-lamp, they burn with a small flame. The number
-of the remains embedded in the grand estuary deposit which
-forms the Pampas and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental, must be extraordinarily great. I believe a straight
-line drawn in any direction through the Pampas would cut
-through some skeleton or bones. Besides those which I
-found during my short excursions, I heard of many others,
-and the origin of such names as "the stream of the animal,"
-"the hill of the giant," is obvious. At other times I heard
-of the marvellous property of certain rivers, which had the
-power of changing small bones into large; or, as some
-maintained, the bones themselves grew. As far as I am aware,
-not one of these animals perished, as was formerly supposed,
-in the marshes or muddy river-beds of the present land, but
-their bones have been exposed by the streams intersecting the
-subaqueous deposit in which they were originally embedded.
-We may conclude that the whole area of the Pampas is one
-wide sepulchre of these extinct gigantic quadrupeds.
-
-By the middle of the day, on the 28th, we arrived at
-Monte Video, having been two days and a half on the road.
-The country for the whole way was of a very uniform character,
-some parts being rather more rocky and hilly than
-near the Plata. Not far from Monte Video we passed
-through the village of Las Pietras, so named from some
-large rounded masses of syenite. Its appearance was rather
-pretty. In this country a few fig-trees round a group of
-houses, and a site elevated a hundred feet above the general
-level, ought always to be called picturesque.
-
-
-During the last six months I have had an opportunity of
-seeing a little of the character of the inhabitants of these
-provinces. The Gauchos, or countryrmen, are very superior
-to those who reside in the towns. The Gaucho is invariably
-most obliging, polite, and hospitable: I did not meet with
-even one instance of rudeness or inhospitality. He is modest,
-both respecting himself and country, but at the same
-time a spirited, bold fellow. On the other hand, many robberies
-are committed, and there is much bloodshed: the
-habit of constantly wearing the knife is the chief cause
-of the latter. It is lamentable to hear how many lives are
-lost in trifling quarrels. In fighting, each party tries to
-mark the face of his adversary by slashing his nose or eyes;
-as is often attested by deep and horrid-looking scars. Robberies
-are a natural consequence of universal gambling,
-much drinking, and extreme indolence. At Mercedes I asked
-two men why they did not work. One gravely said the days
-were too long; the other that he was too poor. The number
-of horses and the profusion of food are the destruction of
-all industry. Moreover, there are so many feast-days; and
-again, nothing can succeed without it be begun when the
-moon is on the increase; so that half the month is lost from
-these two causes.
-
-Police and justice are quite inefficient. If a man who is
-poor commits murder and is taken, he will be imprisoned,
-and perhaps even shot; but if he is rich and has friends,
-he may rely on it no very severe consequence will ensue.
-It is curious that the most respectable inhabitants of the
-country invariably assist a murderer to escape: they seem
-to think that the individual sins against the government,
-and not against the people. A traveller has no protection
-besides his fire-arms; and the constant habit of carrying
-them is the main check to more frequent robberies.
-The character of the higher and more educated classes
-who reside in the towns, partakes, but perhaps in a lesser
-degree, of the good parts of the Gaucho, but is, I fear, stained
-by many vices of which he is free. Sensuality, mockery of
-all religion, and the grossest corruption, are far from
-uncommon. Nearly every public officer can be bribed. The
-head man in the post-office sold forged government franks.
-The governor and prime minister openly combined to plunder
-the state. Justice, where gold came into play, was
-hardly expected by any one. I knew an Englishman, who
-went to the Chief Justice (he told me, that not then
-understanding the ways of the place, he trembled as he entered
-the room), and said, "Sir, I have come to offer you two hundred
-(paper) dollars (value about five pounds sterling) if
-you will arrest before a certain time a man who has cheated
-me. I know it is against the law, but my lawyer (naming
-him) recommended me to take this step." The Chief Justice
-smiled acquiescence, thanked him, and the man before
-night was safe in prison. With this entire want of principle
-in many of the leading men, with the country full of
-ill-paid turbulent officers, the people yet hope that a
-democratic form of government can succeed!
-
-On first entering society in these countries, two or three
-features strike one as particularly remarkable. The polite
-and dignified manners pervading every rank of life, the
-excellent taste displayed by the women in their dresses, and
-the equality amongst all ranks. At the Rio Colorado some
-men who kept the humblest shops used to dine with General
-Rosas. A son of a major at Bahia Blanca gained his
-livelihood by making paper cigars, and he wished to accompany
-me, as guide or servant, to Buenos Ayres, but his
-father objected on the score of the danger alone. Many
-officers in the army can neither read nor write, yet all meet
-in society as equals. In Entre Rios, the Sala consisted of
-only six representatives. One of them kept a common shop,
-and evidently was not degraded by the office. All this is
-what would be expected in a new country; nevertheless the
-absence of gentlemen by profession appears to an Englishman
-something strange.
-
-When speaking of these countries, the manner in which
-they have been brought up by their unnatural parent, Spain,
-should always be borne in mind. On the whole, perhaps,
-more credit is due for what has been done, than blame for
-that which may be deficient. It is impossible to doubt but
-that the extreme liberalism of these countries must ultimately
-lead to good results. The very general toleration of
-foreign religions, the regard paid to the means of education,
-the freedom of the press, the facilities offered to all
-foreigners, and especially, as I am bound to add, to every one
-professing the humblest pretensions to science, should be
-recollected with gratitude by those who have visited Spanish
-South America.
-
-December 6th. -- The Beagle sailed from the Rio Plata,
-never again to enter its muddy stream. Our course was
-directed to Port Desire, on the coast of Patagonia. Before
-proceeding any further, I will here put together a few
-observations made at sea.
-
-Several times when the ship has been some miles off the
-mouth of the Plata, and at other times when off the shores
-of Northern Patagonia, we have been surrounded by insects.
-One evening, when we were about ten miles from the Bay
-of San Blas, vast numbers of butterflies, in bands or flocks
-of countless myriads, extended as far as the eye could range.
-Even by the aid of a telescope it was not possible to see a
-space free from butterflies. The seamen cried out "it was
-snowing butterflies," and such in fact was the appearance.
-More species than one were present, but the main part belonged
-to a kind very similar to, but not identical with, the
-common English Colias edusa. Some moths and hymenoptera
-accompanied the butterflies; and a fine beetle (Calosoma)
-flew on board. Other instances are known of this
-beetle having been caught far out at sea; and this is the
-more remarkable, as the greater number of the Carabidae
-seldom or never take wing. The day had been fine and calm,
-and the one previous to it equally so, with light and variable
-airs. Hence we cannot suppose that the insects were blown
-off the land, but we must conclude that they voluntarily took
-flight. The great bands of the Colias seem at first to afford
-an instance like those on record of the migrations of another
-butterfly, Vanessa cardui; [5] but the presence of other insects
-makes the case distinct, and even less intelligible. Before
-sunset a strong breeze sprung up from the north, and this
-must have caused tens of thousands of the butterflies and
-other insects to have perished.
-
-On another occasion, when seventeen miles off Cape Corrientes,
-I had a net overboard to catch pelagic animals.
-Upon drawing it up, to my surprise, I found a considerable
-number of beetles in it, and although in the open sea, they
-did not appear much injured by the salt water. I lost some
-of the specimens, but those which I preserved belonged
-to the genera Colymbetes, Hydroporus, Hydrobius (two species),
-Notaphus, Cynucus, Adimonia, and Scarabaeus. At
-first I thought that these insects had been blown from the
-shore; but upon reflecting that out of the eight species four
-were aquatic, and two others partly so in their habits, it
-appeared to me most probable that they were floated into the
-sea by a small stream which drains a lake near Cape Corrientes.
-On any supposition it is an interesting circumstance
-to find live insects swimming in the open ocean seventeen
-miles from the nearest point of land. There are several
-accounts of insects having been blown off the Patagonian
-shore. Captain Cook observed it, as did more lately Captain
-King of the Adventure. The cause probably is due to the
-want of shelter, both of trees and hills, so that an insect on
-the wing with an off-shore breeze, would be very apt to
-be blown out to sea. The most remarkable instance I have
-known of an insect being caught far from the land, was that
-of a large grasshopper (Acrydium), which flew on board,
-when the Beagle was to windward of the Cape de Verd
-Islands, and when the nearest point of land, not directly
-opposed to the trade-wind, was Cape Blanco on the coast of
-Africa, 370 miles distant. [6]
-
-On several occasions, when the Beagle has been within
-the mouth of the Plata, the rigging has been coated with
-the web of the Gossamer Spider. One day (November 1st,
-1832) I paid particular attention to this subject. The weather
-had been fine and clear, and in the morning the air was full
-of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in
-England. The ship was sixty miles distant from the land, in
-the direction of a steady though light breeze. Vast numbers
-of a small spider, about one-tenth of an inch in length, and of
-a dusky red colour, were attached to the webs. There must
-have been, I should suppose, some thousands on the ship. The
-little spider, when first coming in contact with the rigging,
-was always seated on a single thread, and not on the flocculent
-mass. This latter seems merely to be produced by the
-entanglement of the single threads. The spiders were all of
-one species, but of both sexes, together with young ones.
-These latter were distinguished by their smaller size and
-more dusky colour. I will not give the description of this
-spider, but merely state that it does not appear to me to be
-included in any of Latreille's genera. The little aeronaut as
-soon as it arrived on board was very active, running about,
-sometimes letting itself fall, and then reascending the same
-thread; sometimes employing itself in making a small and
-very irregular mesh in the corners between the ropes. It
-could run with facility on the surface of the water. When
-disturbed it lifted up its front legs, in the attitude of
-attention. On its first arrival it appeared very thirsty, and
-with exserted maxillae drank eagerly of drops of water, this
-same circumstance has been observed by Strack: may it not be in
-consequence of the little insect having passed through a dry
-and rarefied atmosphere? Its stock of web seemed inexhaustible.
-While watching some that were suspended by a
-single thread, I several times observed that the slightest
-breath of air bore them away out of sight, in a horizontal
-line.
-
-On another occasion (25th) under similar circumstances,
-I repeatedly observed the same kind of small spider,
-either when placed or having crawled on some little eminence,
-elevate its abdomen, send forth a thread, and then
-sail away horizontally, but with a rapidity which was quite
-unaccountable. I thought I could perceive that the spider,
-before performing the above preparatory steps, connected
-its legs together with the most delicate threads, but I am not
-sure whether this observation was correct.
-
-One day, at St. Fe, I had a better opportunity of observing
-some similar facts. A spider which was about three-tenths
-of an inch in length, and which in its general appearance
-resembled a Citigrade (therefore quite different from the
-gossamer), while standing on the summit of a post, darted
-forth four or five threads from its spinners. These, glittering
-in the sunshine, might be compared to diverging rays of
-light; they were not, however, straight, but in undulations
-like films of silk blown by the wind. They were more than a
-yard in length, and diverged in an ascending direction from
-the orifices. The spider then suddenly let go its hold of the
-post, and was quickly borne out of sight. The day was hot
-and apparently calm; yet under such circumstances, the
-atmosphere can never be so tranquil as not to affect a vane so
-delicate as the thread of a spider's web. If during a warm
-day we look either at the shadow of any object cast on a
-bank, or over a level plain at a distant landmark, the effect
-of an ascending current of heated air is almost always evident:
-such upward currents, it has been remarked, are also
-shown by the ascent of soap-bubbles, which will not rise in
-an in-doors room. Hence I think there is not much difficulty
-in understanding the ascent of the fine lines projected from
-a spider's spinners, and afterwards of the spider itself; the
-divergence of the lines has been attempted to be explained, I
-believe by Mr. Murray, by their similar electrical condition.
-The circumstance of spiders of the same species, but of
-different sexes and ages, being found on several occasions at
-the distance of many leagues from the land, attached in vast
-numbers to the lines, renders it probable that the habit of
-sailing through the air is as characteristic of this tribe, as
-that of diving is of the Argyroneta. We may then reject
-Latreille's supposition, that the gossamer owes its origin
-indifferently to the young of several genera of spiders:
-although, as we have seen, the young of other spiders do
-possess the power of performing aerial voyages. [7]
-
-During our different passages south of the Plata, I often
-towed astern a net made of bunting, and thus caught many
-curious animals. Of Crustacea there were many strange
-and undescribed genera. One, which in some respects is
-allied to the Notopods (or those crabs which have their
-posterior legs placed almost on their backs, for the purpose
-of adhering to the under side of rocks), is very remarkable
-from the structure of its hind pair of legs. The penultimate
-joint, instead of terminating in a simple claw, ends in three
-bristle-like appendages of dissimilar lengths -- the longest
-equalling that of the entire leg. These claws are very thin,
-and are serrated with the finest teeth, directed backwards:
-their curved extremities are flattened, and on this part five
-most minute cups are placed which seem to act in the same
-manner as the suckers on the arms of the cuttle-fish. As
-the animal lives in the open sea, and probably wants a place
-of rest, I suppose this beautiful and most anomalous structure
-is adapted to take hold of floating marine animals.
-
-In deep water, far from the land, the number of living
-creatures is extremely small: south of the latitude 35 degs.,
-I never succeeded in catching anything besides some beroe,
-and a few species of minute entomostracous crustacea.
-In shoaler water, at the distance of a few miles from the
-coast, very many kinds of crustacea and some other animals
-are numerous, but only during the night. Between latitudes
-56 and 57 degs. south of Cape Horn, the net was put
-astern several times; it never, however, brought up anything
-besides a few of two extremely minute species of Entomostraca.
-Yet whales and seals, petrels and albatross, are exceedingly
-abundant throughout this part of the ocean. It has always
-been a mystery to me on what the albatross, which lives far
-from the shore, can subsist; I presume that, like the condor,
-it is able to fast long; and that one good feast on the carcass
-of a putrid whale lasts for a long time. The central and
-intertropical parts of the Atlantic swarm with Pteropoda,
-Crustacea, and Radiata, and with their devourers the flying-
-fish, and again with their devourers the bonitos and albicores;
-I presume that the numerous lower pelagic animals
-feed on the Infusoria, which are now known, from the
-researches of Ehrenberg, to abound in the open ocean: but
-on what, in the clear blue water, do these Infusoria subsist?
-
-While sailing a little south of the Plata on one very dark
-night, the sea presented a wonderful and most beautiful
-spectacle. There was a fresh breeze, and every part of the
-surface, which during the day is seen as foam, now glowed
-with a pale light. The vessel drove before her bows two
-billows of liquid phosphorus, and in her wake she was followed
-by a milky train. As far as the eye reached, the crest
-of every wave was bright, and the sky above the horizon,
-from the reflected glare of these livid flames, was not so
-utterly obscure as over the vault of the heavens.
-
-As we proceed further southward the sea is seldom
-phosphorescent; and off Cape Horn I do not recollect more than
-once having seen it so, and then it was far from being
-brilliant. This circumstance probably has a close connection
-with the scarcity of organic beings in that part of the ocean.
-After the elaborate paper, [8] by Ehrenberg, on the
-phosphorescence of the sea, it is almost superfluous on my part
-to make any observations on the subject. I may however
-add, that the same torn and irregular particles of gelatinous
-matter, described by Ehrenberg, seem in the southern as
-well as in the northern hemisphere, to be the common cause
-of this phenomenon. The particles were so minute as easily
-to pass through fine gauze; yet many were distinctly visible
-by the naked eye. The water when placed in a tumbler and
-agitated, gave out sparks, but a small portion in a watch-
-glass scarcely ever was luminous. Ehrenberg states that
-these particles all retain a certain degree of irritability. My
-observations, some of which were made directly after taking
-up the water, gave a different result. I may also mention,
-that having used the net during one night, I allowed it to
-become partially dry, and having occasion twelve hours
-afterwards to employ it again, I found the whole surface
-sparkled as brightly as when first taken out of the water.
-It does not appear probable in this case, that the particles
-could have remained so long alive. On one occasion having
-kept a jelly-fish of the genus Dianaea till it was dead, the
-water in which it was placed became luminous. When the
-waves scintillate with bright green sparks, I believe it is
-generally owing to minute crustacea. But there can be no
-doubt that very many other pelagic animals, when alive, are
-phosphorescent.
-
-On two occasions I have observed the sea luminous at
-considerable depths beneath the surface. Near the mouth
-of the Plata some circular and oval patches, from two to
-four yards in diameter, and with defined outlines, shone with
-a steady but pale light; while the surrounding water only
-gave out a few sparks. The appearance resembled the reflection
-of the moon, or some luminous body; for the edges were
-sinuous from the undulations of the surface. The ship,
-which drew thirteen feet of water, passed over, without
-disturbing these patches. Therefore we must suppose that some
-animals were congregated together at a greater depth than
-the bottom of the vessel.
-
-Near Fernando Noronha the sea gave out light in flashes.
-The appearance was very similar to that which might be
-expected from a large fish moving rapidly through a luminous
-fluid. To this cause the sailors attributed it; at the
-time, however, I entertained some doubts, on account of the
-frequency and rapidity of the flashes. I have already
-remarked that the phenomenon is very much more common
-in warm than in cold countries; and I have sometimes imagined
-that a disturbed electrical condition of the atmosphere
-was most favourable to its production. Certainly I
-think the sea is most luminous after a few days of more
-calm weather than ordinary, during which time it has
-swarmed with various animals. Observing that the water
-charged with gelatinous particles is in an impure state, and
-that the luminous appearance in all common cases is produced
-by the agitation of the fluid in contact with the atmosphere,
-I am inclined to consider that the phosphorescence is
-the result of the decomposition of the organic particles, by
-which process (one is tempted almost to call it a kind of
-respiration) the ocean becomes purified.
-
-December 23rd. -- We arrived at Port Desire, situated in
-lat. 47 degs., on the coast of Patagonia. The creek runs for
-about twenty miles inland, with an irregular width. The
-Beagle anchored a few miles within the entrance, in front of
-the ruins of an old Spanish settlement.
-
-The same evening I went on shore. The first landing in
-any new country is very interesting, and especially when, as in
-this case, the whole aspect bears the stamp of a marked and
-individual character. At the height of between two and
-three hundred feet above some masses of porphyry a wide
-plain extends, which is truly characteristic of Patagonia.
-The surface is quite level, and is composed of well-rounded
-shingle mixed with a whitish earth. Here and there scattered
-tufts of brown wiry grass are supported, and still more
-rarely, some low thorny bushes. The weather is dry and
-pleasant, and the fine blue sky is but seldom obscured. When
-standing in the middle of one of these desert plains and
-looking towards the interior, the view is generally bounded
-by the escarpment of another plain, rather higher, but equally
-level and desolate; and in every other direction the horizon
-is indistinct from the trembling mirage which seems to rise
-from the heated surface.
-
-In such a country the fate of the Spanish settlement was
-soon decided; the dryness of the climate during the greater
-part of the year, and the occasional hostile attacks of the
-wandering Indians, compelled the colonists to desert their
-half-finished buildings. The style, however, in which they
-were commenced shows the strong and liberal hand of Spain
-in the old time. The result of all the attempts to colonize this
-side of America south of 41 degs., has been miserable. Port
-Famine expresses by its name the lingering and extreme
-sufferings of several hundred wretched people, of whom one
-alone survived to relate their misfortunes. At St. Joseph's
-Bay, on the coast of Patagonia, a small settlement was made;
-but during one Sunday the Indians made an attack and massacred
-the whole party, excepting two men, who remained
-captives during many years. At the Rio Negro I conversed
-with one of these men, now in extreme old age.
-
-The zoology of Patagonia is as limited as its flora. [9] On
-the arid plains a few black beetles (Heteromera) might be
-seen slowly crawling about, and occasionally a lizard darted
-from side to side. Of birds we have three carrion hawks
-and in the valleys a few finches and insect-feeders. An ibis
-(Theristicus melanops -- a species said to be found in central
-Africa) is not uncommon on the most desert parts: in
-their stomachs I found grasshoppers, cicadae, small lizards,
-and even scorpions. [10] At one time of the year these birds
-go in flocks, at another in pairs, their cry is very loud and
-singular, like the neighing of the guanaco.
-
-The guanaco, or wild llama, is the characteristic quadruped
-of the plains of Patagonia; it is the South American
-representative of the camel of the East. It is an elegant
-animal in a state of nature, with a long slender neck and
-fine legs. It is very common over the whole of the temperate
-parts of the continent, as far south as the islands near Cape
-Horn. It generally lives in small herds of from half a dozen
-to thirty in each; but on the banks of the St. Cruz we saw
-one herd which must have contained at least five hundred.
-
-They are generally wild and extremely wary. Mr. Stokes
-told me, that he one day saw through a glass a herd of these
-animals which evidently had been frightened, and were running
-away at full speed, although their distance was so great
-that he could not distinguish them with his naked eye. The
-sportsman frequently receives the first notice of their
-presence, by hearing from a long distance their peculiar shrill
-neighing note of alarm. If he then looks attentively, he will
-probably see the herd standing in a line on the side of some
-distant hill. On approaching nearer, a few more squeals are
-given, and off they set at an apparently slow, but really quick
-canter, along some narrow beaten track to a neighbouring
-hill. If, however, by chance he abruptly meets a single animal,
-or several together, they will generally stand motionless
-and intently gaze at him; then perhaps move on a few yards,
-turn round, and look again. What is the cause of this difference
-in their shyness? Do they mistake a man in the distance
-for their chief enemy the puma? Or does curiosity
-overcome their timidity? That they are curious is certain;
-for if a person lies on the ground, and plays strange antics,
-such as throwing up his feet in the air, they will almost
-always approach by degrees to reconnoitre him. It was an
-artifice that was repeatedly practised by our sportsmen with
-success, and it had moreover the advantage of allowing several
-shots to be fired, which were all taken as parts of the
-performance. On the mountains of Tierra del Fuego, I have
-more than once seen a guanaco, on being approached, not
-only neigh and squeal, but prance and leap about in the most
-ridiculous manner, apparently in defiance as a challenge.
-These animals are very easily domesticated, and I have seen
-some thus kept in northern Patagonia near a house, though
-not under any restraint. They are in this state very bold, and
-readily attack a man by striking him from behind with both
-knees. It is asserted that the motive for these attacks is
-jealousy on account of their females. The wild guanacos,
-however, have no idea of defence; even a single dog will
-secure one of these large animals, till the huntsman can come
-up. In many of their habits they are like sheep in a flock.
-Thus when they see men approaching in several directions
-on horseback, they soon become bewildered, and know not
-which way to run. This greatly facilitates the Indian method
-of hunting, for they are thus easily driven to a central point,
-and are encompassed.
-
-The guanacos readily take to the water: several times at
-Port Valdes they were seen swimming from island to island.
-Byron, in his voyage says he saw them drinking salt water.
-Some of our officers likewise saw a herd apparently drinking
-the briny fluid from a salina near Cape Blanco. I imagine
-in several parts of the country, if they do not drink salt
-water, they drink none at all. In the middle of the day they
-frequently roll in the dust, in saucer-shaped hollows. The
-males fight together; two one day passed quite close to me,
-squealing and trying to bite each other; and several were
-shot with their hides deeply scored. Herds sometimes appear
-to set out on exploring parties: at Bahia Blanca, where,
-within thirty miles of the coast, these animals are extremely
-unfrequent, I one day saw the tracks of thirty or forty, which
-had come in a direct line to a muddy salt-water creek. They
-then must have perceived that they were approaching the
-sea, for they had wheeled with the regularity of cavalry, and
-had returned back in as straight a line as they had advanced.
-The guanacos have one singular habit, which is to me quite
-inexplicable; namely, that on successive days they drop their
-dung in the same defined heap. I saw one of these heaps
-which was eight feet in diameter, and was composed of a
-large quantity. This habit, according to M. A. d'Orbigny, is
-common to all the species of the genus; it is very useful to
-the Peruvian Indians, who use the dung for fuel, and are
-thus saved the trouble of collecting it.
-
-The guanacos appear to have favourite spots for lying
-down to die. On the banks of the St. Cruz, in certain
-circumscribed spaces, which were generally bushy and all near
-the river, the ground was actually white with bones. On one
-such spot I counted between ten and twenty heads. I particularly
-examined the bones; they did not appear, as some
-scattered ones which I had seen, gnawed or broken, as if
-dragged together by beasts of prey. The animals in most
-cases must have crawled, before dying, beneath and amongst
-the bushes. Mr. Bynoe informs me that during a former
-voyage he observed the same circumstance on the banks of
-the Rio Gallegos. I do not at all understand the reason of
-this, but I may observe, that the wounded guanacos at the
-St. Cruz invariably walked towards the river. At St. Jago
-in the Cape de Verd Islands, I remember having seen in a
-ravine a retired corner covered with bones of the goat; we
-at the time exclaimed that it was the burial ground of all the
-goats in the island. I mention these trifling circumstances,
-because in certain cases they might explain the occurrence
-of a number of uninjured bones in a cave, or buried under
-alluvial accumulations; and likewise the cause why certain
-animals are more commonly embedded than others in sedimentary
-deposits.
-
-One day the yawl was sent under the command of Mr.
-Chaffers with three days' provisions to survey the upper part
-of the harbour. In the morning we searched for some
-watering-places mentioned in an old Spanish chart. We found one
-creek, at the head of which there was a trickling rill (the
-first we had seen) of brackish water. Here the tide compelled
-us to wait several hours; and in the interval I walked
-some miles into the interior. The plain as usual consisted
-of gravel, mingled with soil resembling chalk in appearance,
-but very different from it in nature. From the softness of
-these materials it was worn into many gulleys. There was
-not a tree, and, excepting the guanaco, which stood on the
-hill-top a watchful sentinel over its herd, scarcely an animal
-or a bird. All was stillness and desolation. Yet in passing
-over these scenes, without one bright object near, an
-ill-defined but strong sense of pleasure is vividly excited.
-One asked how many ages the plain had thus lasted, and how
-many more it was doomed thus to continue.
-
-"None can reply -- all seems eternal now.
-The wilderness has a mysterious tongue,
-Which teaches awful doubt." [11]
-
-In the evening we sailed a few miles further up, and then
-pitched the tents for the night. By the middle of the next
-day the yawl was aground, and from the shoalness of the
-water could not proceed any higher. The water being found
-partly fresh, Mr. Chaffers took the dingey and went up two
-or three miles further, where she also grounded, but in a
-fresh-water river. The water was muddy, and though the
-stream was most insignificant in size, it would be difficult to
-account for its origin, except from the melting snow on the
-Cordillera. At the spot where we bivouacked, we were surrounded
-by bold cliffs and steep pinnacles of porphyry. I do
-not think I ever saw a spot which appeared more secluded
-from the rest of the world, than this rocky crevice in the
-wide plain.
-
-The second day after our return to the anchorage, a party
-of officers and myself went to ransack an old Indian grave,
-which I had found on the summit of a neighbouring hill.
-Two immense stones, each probably weighing at least a
-couple of tons, had been placed in front of a ledge of rock
-about six feet high. At the bottom of the grave on the hard
-rock there was a layer of earth about a foot deep, which
-must have been brought up from the plain below. Above it a
-pavement of flat stones was placed, on which others were
-piled, so as to fill up the space between the ledge and the two
-great blocks. To complete the grave, the Indians had contrived
-to detach from the ledge a huge fragment, and to
-throw it over the pile so as to rest on the two blocks. We
-undermined the grave on both sides, but could not find any
-relics, or even bones. The latter probably had decayed long
-since (in which case the grave must have been of extreme
-antiquity), for I found in another place some smaller heaps
-beneath which a very few crumbling fragments could yet be
-distinguished as having belonged to a man. Falconer states,
-that where an Indian dies he is buried, but that subsequently
-his bones are carefully taken up and carried, let the distance
-be ever so great, to be deposited near the sea-coast. This
-custom, I think, may be accounted for by recollecting, that
-before the introduction of horses, these Indians must have
-led nearly the same life as the Fuegians now do, and therefore
-generally have resided in the neighbourhood of the sea.
-The common prejudice of lying where one's ancestors have
-lain, would make the now roaming Indians bring the less
-perishable part of their dead to their ancient burial-ground
-on the coast.
-
-January 9th, 1834. -- Before it was dark the Beagle anchored
-in the fine spacious harbour of Port St. Julian, situated
-about one hundred and ten miles to the south of Port Desire.
-We remained here eight days. The country is nearly similar
-to that of Port Desire, but perhaps rather more sterile. One
-day a party accompanied Captain Fitz Roy on a long walk
-round the head of the harbour. We were eleven hours without
-tasting any water, and some of the party were quite
-exhausted. From the summit of a hill (since well named
-Thirsty Hill) a fine lake was spied, and two of the party
-proceeded with concerted signals to show whether it was fresh
-water. What was our disappointment to find a snow-white
-expanse of salt, crystallized in great cubes! We attributed
-our extreme thirst to the dryness of the atmosphere; but
-whatever the cause might be, we were exceedingly glad late
-in the evening to get back to the boats. Although we could
-nowhere find, during our whole visit, a single drop of fresh
-water, yet some must exist; for by an odd chance I found on
-the surface of the salt water, near the head of the bay, a
-Colymbetes not quite dead, which must have lived in some
-not far distant pool. Three other insects (a Cincindela, like
-hybrida, a Cymindis, and a Harpalus, which all live on muddy
-flats occasionally overflowed by the sea), and one other
-found dead on the plain, complete the list of the beetles. A
-good-sized fly (Tabanus) was extremely numerous, and tormented
-us by its painful bite. The common horsefly, which
-is so troublesome in the shady lanes of England, belongs to
-this same genus. We here have the puzzle that so frequently
-occurs in the case of musquitoes -- on the blood of what
-animals do these insects commonly feed? The guanaco is
-nearly the only warm-blooded quadruped, and it is found in
-quite inconsiderable numbers compared with the multitude
-of flies.
-
-The geology of Patagonia is interesting. Differently from
-Europe, where the tertiary formations appear to have accumulated
-in bays, here along hundreds of miles of coast we
-have one great deposit, including many tertiary shells, all
-apparently extinct. The most common shell is a massive
-gigantic oyster, sometimes even a foot in diameter. These
-beds are covered by others of a peculiar soft white stone,
-including much gypsum, and resembling chalk, but really of
-a pumiceous nature. It is highly remarkable, from being
-composed, to at least one-tenth of its bulk, of Infusoria.
-Professor Ehrenberg has already ascertained in it thirty
-oceanic forms. This bed extends for 500 miles along the coast,
-and probably for a considerably greater distance. At Port
-St. Julian its thickness is more than 800 feet! These white
-beds are everywhere capped by a mass of gravel, forming
-probably one of the largest beds of shingle in the world: it
-certainly extends from near the Rio Colorado to between 600
-and 700 nautical miles southward, at Santa Cruz (a river a
-little south of St. Julian), it reaches to the foot of the
-Cordillera; half way up the river, its thickness is more than
-200 feet; it probably everywhere extends to this great chain,
-whence the well-rounded pebbles of porphyry have been
-derived: we may consider its average breadth as 200 miles,
-and its average thickness as about 50 feet. If this great bed
-of pebbles, without including the mud necessarily derived
-from their attrition, was piled into a mound, it would form a
-great mountain chain! When we consider that all these
-pebbles, countless as the grains of sand in the desert, have
-been derived from the slow falling of masses of rock on the
-old coast-lines and banks of rivers, and that these fragments
-have been dashed into smaller pieces, and that each of them
-has since been slowly rolled, rounded, and far transported
-the mind is stupefied in thinking over the long, absolutely
-necessary, lapse of years. Yet all this gravel has been
-transported, and probably rounded, subsequently to the
-deposition of the white beds, and long subsequently to the
-underlying beds with the tertiary shells.
-
-Everything in this southern continent has been effected
-on a grand scale: the land, from the Rio Plata to Tierra del
-Fuego, a distance of 1200 miles, has been raised in mass (and
-in Patagonia to a height of between 300 and 400 feet), within
-the period of the now existing sea-shells. The old and
-weathered shells left on the surface of the upraised plain still
-partially retain their colours. The uprising movement has
-been interrupted by at least eight long periods of rest, during
-which the sea ate, deeply back into the land, forming at
-successive levels the long lines of cliffs, or escarpments,
-which separate the different plains as they rise like steps one
-behind the other. The elevatory movement, and the eating-back
-power of the sea during the periods of rest, have been
-equable over long lines of coast; for I was astonished to
-find that the step-like plains stand at nearly corresponding
-heights at far distant points. The lowest plain is 90 feet
-high; and the highest, which I ascended near the coast, is
-950 feet; and of this, only relics are left in the form of flat
-gravel-capped hills. The upper plain of Santa Cruz slopes
-up to a height of 3000 feet at the foot of the Cordillera. I
-have said that within the period of existing sea-shells,
-Patagonia has been upraised 300 to 400 feet: I may add, that
-within the period when icebergs transported boulders over
-the upper plain of Santa Cruz, the elevation has been at least
-1500 feet. Nor has Patagonia been affected only by upward
-movements: the extinct tertiary shells from Port St. Julian
-and Santa Cruz cannot have lived, according to Professor E.
-Forbes, in a greater depth of water than from 40 to 250 feet;
-but they are now covered with sea-deposited strata from 800
-to 1000 feet in thickness: hence the bed of the sea, on which
-these shells once lived, must have sunk downwards several
-hundred feet, to allow of the accumulation of the superincumbent
-strata. What a history of geological changes does the
-simply-constructed coast of Patagonia reveal!
-
-At Port St. Julian, [12] in some red mud capping the gravel
-on the 90-feet plain, I found half the skeleton of the
-Macrauchenia Patachonica, a remarkable quadruped, full as large
-as a camel. It belongs to the same division of the Pachydermata
-with the rhinoceros, tapir, and palaeotherium; but
-in the structure of the bones of its long neck it shows a clear
-relation to the camel, or rather to the guanaco and llama.
-From recent sea-shells being found on two of the higher
-step-formed plains, which must have been modelled and
-upraised before the mud was deposited in which the Macrauchenia
-was entombed, it is certain that this curious quadruped
-lived long after the sea was inhabited by its present
-shells. I was at first much surprised how a large quadruped
-could so lately have subsisted, in lat. 49 degs. 15', on these
-wretched gravel plains, with their stunted vegetation; but
-the relationship of the Macrauchenia to the Guanaco, now
-an inhabitant of the most sterile parts, partly explains this
-difficulty.
-
-The relationship, though distant, between the Macrauchenia
-and the Guanaco, between the Toxodon and the
-Capybara, -- the closer relationship between the many extinct
-Edentata and the living sloths, ant-eaters, and armadillos,
-now so eminently characteristic of South American zoology,
--- and the still closer relationship between the fossil and
-living species of Ctenomys and Hydrochaerus, are most
-interesting facts. This relationship is shown wonderfully -- as
-wonderfully as between the fossil and extinct Marsupial
-animals of Australia -- by the great collection lately brought
-to Europe from the caves of Brazil by MM. Lund and Clausen.
-In this collection there are extinct species of all the
-thirty-two genera, excepting four, of the terrestrial quadrupeds
-now inhabiting the provinces in which the caves occur;
-and the extinct species are much more numerous than those
-now living: there are fossil ant-eaters, armadillos, tapirs,
-peccaries, guanacos, opossums, and numerous South American
-gnawers and monkeys, and other animals. This wonderful
-relationship in the same continent between the dead and
-the living, will, I do not doubt, hereafter throw more light
-on the appearance of organic beings on our earth, and their
-disappearance from it, than any other class of facts.
-
-It is impossible to reflect on the changed state of the
-American continent without the deepest astonishment. Formerly
-it must have swarmed with great monsters: now we
-find mere pigmies, compared with the antecedent, allied
-races. If Buffon had known of the gigantic sloth and
-armadillo-like animals, and of the lost Pachydermata, he might
-have said with a greater semblance of truth that the creative
-force in America had lost its power, rather than that it had
-never possessed great vigour. The greater number, if not all,
-of these extinct quadrupeds lived at a late period, and were
-the contemporaries of most of the existing sea-shells. Since
-they lived, no very great change in the form of the land can
-have taken place. What, then, has exterminated so many
-species and whole genera? The mind at first is irresistibly
-hurried into the belief of some great catastrophe; but thus
-to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patagonia,
-in Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America
-up to Behring's Straits, we must shake the entire framework
-of the globe. An examination, moreover, of the geology of
-La Plata and Patagonia, leads to the belief that all the
-features of the land result from slow and gradual changes. It
-appears from the character of the fossils in Europe, Asia,
-Australia, and in North and South America, that those conditions
-which favour the life of the _larger_ quadrupeds were
-lately co-extensive with the world: what those conditions
-were, no one has yet even conjectured. It could hardly have
-been a change of temperature, which at about the same time
-destroyed the inhabitants of tropical, temperate, and arctic
-latitudes on both sides of the globe. In North America we
-positively know from Mr. Lyell, that the large quadrupeds
-lived subsequently to that period, when boulders were
-brought into latitudes at which icebergs now never arrive:
-from conclusive but indirect reasons we may feel sure, that
-in the southern hemisphere the Macrauchenia, also, lived
-long subsequently to the ice-transporting boulder-period. Did
-man, after his first inroad into South America, destroy, as
-has been suggested, the unwieldy Megatherium and the
-other Edentata? We must at least look to some other cause
-for the destruction of the little tucutuco at Bahia Blanca, and
-of the many fossil mice and other small quadrupeds in
-Brazil. No one will imagine that a drought, even far severer
-than those which cause such losses in the provinces of La
-Plata, could destroy every individual of every species from
-Southern Patagonia to Behring's Straits. What shall we say
-of the extinction of the horse? Did those plains fail of
-pasture, which have since been overrun by thousands and hundreds
-of thousands of the descendants of the stock introduced
-by the Spaniards? Have the subsequently introduced
-species consumed the food of the great antecedent races?
-Can we believe that the Capybara has taken the food of the
-Toxodon, the Guanaco of the Macrauchenia, the existing
-small Edentata of their numerous gigantic prototypes? Certainly,
-no fact in the long history of the world is so startling
-as the wide and repeated exterminations of its inhabitants.
-
-Nevertheless, if we consider the subject under another
-point of view, it will appear less perplexing. We do not
-steadily bear in mind, how profoundly ignorant we are of the
-conditions of existence of every animal; nor do we always
-remember, that some check is constantly preventing the too
-rapid increase of every organized being left in a state of
-nature. The supply of food, on an average, remains constant, yet
-the tendency in every animal to increase by propagation is
-geometrical; and its surprising effects have nowhere been
-more astonishingly shown, than in the case of the European
-animals run wild during the last few centuries in America.
-Every animal in a state of nature regularly breeds; yet in a
-species long established, any _great_ increase in numbers is
-obviously impossible, and must be checked by some means.
-We are, nevertheless, seldom able with certainty to tell in
-any given species, at what period of life, or at what period
-of the year, or whether only at long intervals, the check
-falls; or, again, what is the precise nature of the check.
-Hence probably it is, that we feel so little surprise at one, of
-two species closely allied in habits, being rare and the other
-abundant in the same district; or, again, that one should be
-abundant in one district, and another, filling the same place
-in the economy of nature, should be abundant in a neighbouring
-district, differing very little in its conditions. If asked
-how this is, one immediately replies that it is determined by
-some slight difference, in climate, food, or the number of
-enemies: yet how rarely, if ever, we can point out the precise
-cause and manner of action of the check! We are
-therefore, driven to the conclusion, that causes generally
-quite inappreciable by us, determine whether a given species
-shall be abundant or scanty in numbers.
-
-In the cases where we can trace the extinction of a
-species through man, either wholly or in one limited district,
-we know that it becomes rarer and rarer, and is then lost:
-it would be difficult to point out any just distinction [13]
-between a species destroyed by man or by the increase of its
-natural enemies. The evidence of rarity preceding extinction,
-is more striking in the successive tertiary strata, as remarked
-by several able observers; it has often been found that a shell
-very common in a tertiary stratum is now most rare, and has
-even long been thought extinct. If then, as appears probable,
-species first become rare and then extinct -- if the too rapid
-increase of every species, even the most favoured, is steadily
-checked, as we must admit, though how and when it is hard to
-say -- and if we see, without the smallest surprise, though
-unable to assign the precise reason, one species abundant
-and another closely allied species rare in the same district --
-why should we feel such great astonishment at the rarity being
-carried one step further to extinction? An action going on,
-on every side of us, and yet barely appreciable, might surely
-be carried a little further, without exciting our observation.
-Who would feel any great surprise at hearing that the Magalonyx
-was formerly rare compared with the Megatherium, or that one of
-the fossil monkeys was few in number compared with one of the
-now living monkeys? and yet in this comparative rarity, we
-should have the plainest evidence of less favourable conditions
-for their existence. To admit that species generally become
-rare before they become extinct -- to feel no surprise at the
-comparative rarity of one species with another, and yet to
-call in some extraordinary agent and to marvel greatly when
-a species ceases to exist, appears to me much the same as
-to admit that sickness in the individual is the prelude to
-death -- to feel no surprise at sickness -- but when the
-sick man dies to wonder, and to believe that he died through
-violence.
-
-[1] Mr. Waterhouse has drawn up a detailed description of this
-head, which I hope he will publish in some Journal.
-
-[2] A nearly similar abnormal, but I do not know whether
-hereditary, structure has been observed in the carp, and
-likewise in the crocodile of the Ganges: Histoire des Anomalies,
-par M. Isid. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, tom. i. p. 244.
-
-[3] M. A. d'Orbigny has given nearly a similar account of these
-dogs, tom. i. p. 175.
-
-[4] I must express my obligations to Mr. Keane, at whose house
-I was staying on the Berquelo, and to Mr. Lumb at Buenos Ayres,
-for without their assistance these valuable remains would never
-have reached England.
-
-[5] Lyell's Principles of Geology, vol. iii. p. 63.
-
-[6] The flies which frequently accompany a ship for some days
-on its passage from harbour to harbour, wandering from the
-vessel, are soon lost, and all disappear.
-
-[7] Mr. Blackwall, in his Researches in Zoology, has many
-excellent observations on the habits of spiders.
-
-[8] An abstract is given in No. IV. of the Magazine of Zoology
-and Botany.
-
-[9] I found here a species of cactus, described by Professor
-Henslow, under the name of Opuntia Darwinii (Magazine of
-Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 466), which was remarkable
-for the irritability of the stamens, when I inserted either a
-piece of stick or the end of my finger in the flower. The
-segments of the perianth also closed on the pistil, but more
-slowly than the stamens. Plants of this family, generally
-considered as tropical, occur in North America (Lewis and
-Clarke's Travels, p. 221), in the same high latitude as here,
-namely, in both cases, in 47 degs.
-
-[10] These insects were not uncommon beneath stones. I found
-one cannibal scorpion quietly devouring another.
-
-[11] Shelley, Lines on Mt. Blanc.
-
-[12] I have lately heard that Capt. Sulivan, R.N., has found
-numerous fossil bones, embedded in regular strata, on the banks
-of the R. Gallegos, in lat. 51 degs. 4'. Some of the bones
-are large; others are small, and appear to have belonged to
-an armadillo. This is a most interesting and important
-discovery.
-
-[13] See the excellent remarks on this subject by Mr. Lyell,
-in his Principles of Geology.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
-
-Santa Cruz -- Expedition up the River -- Indians -- Immense
-Streams of Basaltic Lava -- Fragments not transported by the
-River -- Excavations of the Valley -- Condor, Habits of --
-Cordillera -- Erratic Boulders of great size -- Indian Relics --
-Return to the Ship -- Falkland Islands -- Wild Horses, Cattle,
-Rabbits -- Wolf-like Fox -- Fire made of Bones -- Manner of
-Hunting Wild Cattle -- Geology -- Streams of Stones -- Scenes
-of Violence -- Penguins -- Geese -- Eggs of Doris -- Compound
-Animals.
-
-
-APRIL 13, 1834. -- The Beagle anchored within the mouth of the
-Santa Cruz. This river is situated about sixty miles south of
-Port St. Julian. During the last voyage Captain Stokes proceeded
-thirty miles up it, but then, from the want of provisions, was
-obliged to return. Excepting what was discovered at that time,
-scarcely anything was known about this large river. Captain Fitz
-Roy now determined to follow its course as far as time would
-allow. On the 18th three whale-boats started, carrying three
-weeks' provisions; and the party consisted of twenty-five
-souls -- a force which would have been sufficient to have
-defied a host of Indians. With a strong flood-tide and a fine
-day we made a good run, soon drank some of the fresh water,
-and were at night nearly above the tidal influence.
-
-The river here assumed a size and appearance which, even at
-the highest point we ultimately reached, was scarcely
-diminished. It was generally from three to four hundred yards
-broad, and in the middle about seventeen feet deep. The
-rapidity of the current, which in its whole course runs at
-the rate of from four to six knots an hour, is perhaps its
-most remarkable feature. The water is of a fine blue colour,
-but with a slight milky tinge, and not so transparent as at
-first sight would have been expected. It flows over a bed of
-pebbles, like those which compose the beach and the surrounding
-plains. It runs in a winding course through
-valley, which extends in a direct line westward. This valle
-varies from five to ten miles in breadth; it is bounded b
-step-formed terraces, which rise in most parts, one above th
-other, to the height of five hundred feet, and have on th
-opposite sides a remarkable correspondence.
-
-April 19th. -- Against so strong a current it was, o
-course, quite impossible to row or sail: consequently th
-three boats were fastened together head and stern, two hand
-left in each, and the rest came on shore to track. As th
-general arrangements made by Captain Fitz Roy were ver
-good for facilitating the work of all, and as all had a shar
-in it, I will describe the system. The party including ever
-one, was divided into two spells, each of which hauled at th
-tracking line alternately for an hour and a half. The officers
-of each boat lived with, ate the same food, and slep
-in the same tent with their crew, so that each boat wa
-quite independent of the others. After sunset the first leve
-spot where any bushes were growing, was chosen for ou
-night's lodging. Each of the crew took it in turns to b
-cook. Immediately the boat was hauled up, the cook mad
-his fire; two others pitched the tent; the coxswain hande
-the things out of the boat; the rest carried them up to th
-tents and collected firewood. By this order, in half an hou
-everything was ready for the night. A watch of two me
-and an officer was always kept, whose duty it was to loo
-after the boats, keep up the fire, and guard against Indians
-Each in the party had his one hour every night.
-
-During this day we tracked but a short distance, for ther
-were many islets, covered by thorny bushes, and the channels
-between them were shallow.
-
-April 20th. -- We passed the islands and set to work. Ou
-regular day's march, although it was hard enough, carrie
-us on an average only ten miles in a straight line, and perhaps
-fifteen or twenty altogether. Beyond the place wher
-we slept last night, the country is completely _terra incognita_
-for it was there that Captain Stokes turned back. We sa
-in the distance a great smoke, and found the skeleton of
-horse, so we knew that Indians were in the neighbourhood
-On the next morning (21st) tracks of a party of horse
-and marks left by the trailing of the chuzos, or long spears
-were observed on the ground. It was generally though
-that the Indians had reconnoitred us during the night
-Shortly afterwards we came to a spot where, from the fres
-footsteps of men, children, and horses, it was evident tha
-the party had crossed the river.
-
-April 22nd. -- The country remained the same, and wa
-extremely uninteresting. The complete similarity of th
-productions throughout Patagonia is one of its most striking
-characters. The level plains of arid shingle suppor
-the same stunted and dwarf plants; and in the valleys th
-same thorn-bearing bushes grow. Everywhere we see th
-same birds and insects. Even the very banks of the rive
-and of the clear streamlets which entered it, were scarcel
-enlivened by a brighter tint of green. The curse of sterilit
-is on the land, and the water flowing over a bed of pebble
-partakes of the same curse. Hence the number of waterfowl
-is very scanty; for there is nothing to support life i
-the stream of this barren river.
-
-Patagonia, poor as she is in some respects, can howeve
-boast of a greater stock of small rodents [1] than perhaps an
-other country in the world. Several species of mice ar
-externally characterized by large thin ears and a very fin
-fur. These little animals swarm amongst the thickets in th
-valleys, where they cannot for months together taste a dro
-of water excepting the dew. They all seem to be cannibals
-for no sooner was a mouse caught in one of my traps tha
-it was devoured by others. A small and delicately shape
-fox, which is likewise very abundant, probably derives it
-entire support from these small animals. The guanaco i
-also in his proper district, herds of fifty or a hundred wer
-common; and, as I have stated, we saw one which mus
-have contained at least five hundred. The puma, with th
-condor and other carrion-hawks in its train, follows an
-preys upon these animals. The footsteps of the puma wer
-to be seen almost everywhere on the banks of the river
-and the remains of several guanacos, with their neck
-dislocated and bones broken, showed how they had met thei
-death.
-
-April 24th. -- Like the navigators of old when approachin
-an unknown land, we examined and watched for the mos
-trivial sign of a change. The drifted trunk of a tree, or
-boulder of primitive rock, was hailed with joy, as if we ha
-seen a forest growing on the flanks of the Cordillera. Th
-top, however, of a heavy bank of clouds, which remaine
-almost constantly in one position, was the most promisin
-sign, and eventually turned out a true harbinger. At first th
-clouds were mistaken for the mountains themselves, instea
-of the masses of vapour condensed by their icy summits.
-
-April 26th. -- We this day met with a marked change i
-the geological structure of the plains. From the first starting
-I had carefully examined the gravel in the river, an
-for the two last days had noticed the presence of a few smal
-pebbles of a very cellular basalt. These gradually increase
-in number and in size, but none were as large as a man'
-head. This morning, however, pebbles of the same rock
-but more compact, suddenly became abundant, and in th
-course of half an hour we saw, at the distance of five o
-six miles, the angular edge of a great basaltic platform
-When we arrived at its base we found the stream bubblin
-among the fallen blocks. For the next twenty-eight mile
-the river-course was encumbered with these basaltic masses
-Above that limit immense fragments of primitive rocks
-derived from its surrounding boulder-formation, wer
-equally numerous. None of the fragments of any considerable
-size had been washed more than three or four mile
-down the river below their parent-source: considering th
-singular rapidity of the great body of water in the Sant
-Cruz, and that no still reaches occur in any part, this example
-is a most striking one, of the inefficiency of rivers i
-transporting even moderately-sized fragments.
-
-The basalt is only lava, which has flowed beneath the sea
-but the eruptions must have been on the grandest scale. A
-the point where we first met this formation it was 120 fee
-in thickness; following up the river course, the surfac
-imperceptibly rose and the mass became thicker, so that a
-forty miles above the first station it was 320 feet thick
-What the thickness may be close to the Cordillera, I hav
-no means of knowing, but the platform there attains a heigh
-of about three thousand feet above the level of the sea
-we must therefore look to the mountains of that great chai
-for its source; and worthy of such a source are streams tha
-have flowed over the gently inclined bed of the sea to
-distance of one hundred miles. At the first glance of th
-basaltic cliffs on the opposite sides of the valley, it wa
-evident that the strata once were united. What power, then
-has removed along a whole line of country, a solid mass o
-very hard rock, which had an average thickness of nearl
-three hundred feet, and a breadth varying from rather les
-than two miles to four miles? The river, though it has s
-little power in transporting even inconsiderable fragments
-yet in the lapse of ages might produce by its gradual erosio
-an effect of which it is difficult to judge the amount. Bu
-in this case, independently of the insignificance of such a
-agency, good reasons can be assigned for believing that thi
-valley was formerly occupied by an arm of the sea. It i
-needless in this work to detail the arguments leading to thi
-conclusion, derived from the form and the nature of th
-step-formed terraces on both sides of the valley, from th
-manner in which the bottom of the valley near the Ande
-expands into a great estuary-like plain with sand-hillock
-on it, and from the occurrence of a few sea-shells lying i
-the bed of the river. If I had space I could prove tha
-South America was formerly here cut off by a strait, joinin
-the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, like that of Magellan
-But it may yet be asked, how has the solid basalt bee
-moved? Geologists formerly would have brought into play
-the violent action of some overwhelming debacle; but in thi
-case such a supposition would have been quite inadmissible
-because, the same step-like plains with existing sea-shell
-lying on their surface, which front the long line of the
-Patagonian coast, sweep up on each side of the valley of Sant
-Cruz. No possible action of any flood could thus hav
-modelled the land, either within the valley or along the ope
-coast; and by the formation of such step-like plains or terraces
-the valley itself had been hollowed out. Although w
-know that there are tides, which run within the Narrow
-of the Strait of Magellan at the rate of eight knots an hour
-yet we must confess that it makes the head almost giddy t
-reflect on the number of years, century after century, whic
-the tides, unaided by a heavy surf, must have required t
-have corroded so vast an area and thickness of solid basalti
-lava. Nevertheless, we must believe that the strata undermined
-by the waters of this ancient strait, were broken u
-into huge fragments, and these lying scattered on the beach
-were reduced first to smaller blocks, then to pebbles an
-lastly to the most impalpable mud, which the tides drifte
-far into the Eastern or Western Ocean.
-
-With the change in the geological structure of the plain
-the character of the landscape likewise altered. While rambling
-up some of the narrow and rocky defiles, I could almos
-have fancied myself transported back again to the barre
-valleys of the island of St. Jago. Among the basaltic cliffs
-I found some plants which I had seen nowhere else, bu
-others I recognised as being wanderers from Tierra de
-Fuego. These porous rocks serve as a reservoir for th
-scanty rain-water; and consequently on the line where th
-igneous and sedimentary formations unite, some smal
-springs (most rare occurrences in Patagonia) burst forth
-and they could be distinguished at a distance by the
-circumscribed patches of bright green herbage.
-
-April 27th. -- The bed of the river became rather narrower
-and hence the stream more rapid. It here ran at the rat
-of six knots an hour. From this cause, and from the man
-great angular fragments, tracking the boats became bot
-dangerous and laborious
-
-
-This day I shot a condor. It measured from tip to ti
-of the wings, eight and a half feet, and from beak to tail
-four feet. This bird is known to have a wide geographica
-range, being found on the west coast of South America
-from the Strait of Magellan along the Cordillera as far a
-eight degrees north of the equator. The steep cliff near th
-mouth of the Rio Negro is its northern limit on the Patagonian
-coast; and they have there wandered about fou
-hundred miles from the great central line of their habitation
-in the Andes. Further south, among the bold precipices
-at the head of Port Desire, the condor is not uncommon;
-yet only a few stragglers occasionally visit the seacoast.
-A line of cliff near the mouth of the Santa Cruz i
-frequented by these birds, and about eighty miles up th
-river, where the sides of the valley are formed by stee
-basaltic precipices, the condor reappears. From these facts
-it seems that the condors require perpendicular cliffs. I
-Chile, they haunt, during the greater part of the year, th
-lower country near the shores of the Pacific, and at nigh
-several roost together in one tree; but in the early part o
-summer, they retire to the most inaccessible parts of th
-inner Cordillera, there to breed in peace.
-
-With respect to their propagation, I was told by th
-country people in Chile, that the condor makes no sort o
-nest, but in the months of November and December lay
-two large white eggs on a shelf of bare rock. It is said tha
-the young condors cannot fly for an entire year; and lon
-after they are able, they continue to roost by night, an
-hunt by day with their parents. The old birds generally liv
-in pairs; but among the inland basaltic cliffs of the Sant
-Cruz, I found a spot, where scores must usually haunt. O
-coming suddenly to the brow of the precipice, it was a gran
-spectacle to see between twenty and thirty of these grea
-birds start heavily from their resting-place, and wheel awa
-in majestic circles. From the quantity of dung on the rocks
-they must long have frequented this cliff for roosting an
-breeding. Having gorged themselves with carrion on th
-plains below, they retire to these favourite ledges to diges
-their food. From these facts, the condor, like the gallinazo
-must to a certain degree be considered as a gregarious bird
-In this part of the country they live altogether on the guanacos
-which have died a natural death, or as more commonl
-happens, have been killed by the pumas. I believe, fro
-what I saw in Patagonia, that they do not on ordinary occasions
-extend their daily excursions to any great distanc
-from their regular sleeping-places.
-
-The condors may oftentimes be seen at a great height
-soaring over a certain spot in the most graceful circles
-On some occasions I am sure that they do this only fo
-pleasure, but on others, the Chileno countryman tells yo
-that they are watching a dying animal, or the puma devouring
-its prey. If the condors glide down, and then suddenl
-all rise together, the Chileno knows that it is the pum
-which, watching the carcass, has sprung out to drive awa
-the robbers. Besides feeding on carrion, the condors frequently
-attack young goats and lambs; and the shepherd-dogs
-are trained, whenever they pass over, to run out, an
-looking upwards to bark violently. The Chilenos destro
-and catch numbers. Two methods are used; one is to plac
-a carcass on a level piece of ground within an enclosure o
-sticks with an opening, and when the condors are gorged
-to gallop up on horseback to the entrance, and thus enclos
-them: for when this bird has not space to run, it canno
-give its body sufficient momentum to rise from the ground
-The second method is to mark the trees in which, frequentl
-to the number of five or six together, they roost, and the
-at night to climb up and noose them. They are such heav
-sleepers, as I have myself witnessed, that this is not a
-difficult task. At Valparaiso, I have seen a living condor sol
-for sixpence, but the common price is eight or ten shillings
-One which I saw brought in, had been tied with rope, an
-was much injured; yet, the moment the line was cut b
-which its bill was secured, although surrounded by people
-it began ravenously to tear a piece of carrion. In a garde
-at the same place, between twenty and thirty were kept alive
-They were fed only once a week, but they appeared in prett
-good health. [2] The Chileno countrymen assert that the condor
-will live, and retain its vigour, between five and six week
-without eating: I cannot answer for the truth of this, bu
-it is a cruel experiment, which very likely has been tried.
-
-When an animal is killed in the country, it is well know
-that the condors, like other carrion-vultures, soon gain
-intelligence of it, and congregate in an inexplicable manner
-In most cases it must not be overlooked, that the bird
-have discovered their prey, and have picked the skeleto
-clean, before the flesh is in the least degree tainted.
-Remembering the experiments of M. Audubon, on the littl
-smelling powers of carrion-hawks, I tried in the above
-mentioned garden the following experiment: the condor
-were tied, each by a rope, in a long row at the bottom of
-wall; and having folded up a piece of meat in white paper,
-walked backwards and forwards, carrying it in my hand a
-the distance of about three yards from them, but no notic
-whatever was taken. I then threw it on the ground, withi
-one yard of an old male bird; he looked at it for a momen
-with attention, but then regarded it no more. With a stic
-I pushed it closer and closer, until at last he touched it wit
-his beak; the paper was then instantly torn off with fury
-and at the same moment, every bird in the long row bega
-struggling and flapping its wings. Under the same circumstances,
-it would have been quite impossible to have deceive
-a dog. The evidence in favour of and against the acut
-smelling powers of carrion-vultures is singularly balanced
-Professor Owen has demonstrated that the olfactory nerve
-of the turkey-buzzard (Cathartes aura) are highly developed,
-and on the evening when Mr. Owen's paper was rea
-at the Zoological Society, it was mentioned by a gentlema
-that he had seen the carrion-hawks in the West Indies o
-two occasions collect on the roof of a house, when a corps
-had become offensive from not having been buried, in thi
-case, the intelligence could hardly have been acquired b
-sight. On the other hand, besides the experiments of Audubon
-and that one by myself, Mr. Bachman has tried in th
-United States many varied plans, showing that neither th
-turkey-buzzard (the species dissected by Professor Owen
-nor the gallinazo find their food by smell. He covered portions
-of highly-offensive offal with a thin canvas cloth, an
-strewed pieces of meat on it: these the carrion-vultures at
-up, and then remained quietly standing, with their beak
-within the eighth of an inch of the putrid mass, withou
-discovering it. A small rent was made in the canvas, an
-the offal was immediately discovered; the canvas was replaced
-by a fresh piece, and meat again put on it, and wa
-again devoured by the vultures without their discoverin
-the hidden mass on which they were trampling. These fact
-are attested by the signatures of six gentlemen, besides tha
-of Mr. Bachman. [3
-
-Often when lying down to rest on the open plains, o
-looking upwards, I have seen carrion-hawks sailing throug
-the air at a great height. Where the country is level I d
-not believe a space of the heavens, of more than fifteen degrees
-above the horizon, is commonly viewed with any attention
-by a person either walking or on horseback. If suc
-be the case, and the vulture is on the wing at a height o
-between three and four thousand feet, before it could com
-within the range of vision, its distance in a straight lin
-from the beholder's eye, would be rather more than tw
-British miles. Might it not thus readily be overlooked
-When an animal is killed by the sportsman in a lonely valley
-may he not all the while be watched from above by th
-sharp-sighted bird? And will not the manner of its descen
-proclaim throughout the district to the whole family o
-carrion-feeders, that their prey is at hand?
-
-When the condors are wheeling in a flock round an
-round any spot, their flight is beautiful. Except when risin
-from the ground, I do not recollect ever having seen on
-of these birds flap its wings. Near Lima, I watched severa
-for nearly half an hour, without once taking off my eyes
-they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles, descendin
-and ascending without giving a single flap. As they glide
-close over my head, I intently watched from an oblique position,
-the outlines of the separate and great terminal feather
-of each wing; and these separate feathers, if there had bee
-the least vibratory movement, would have appeared as i
-blended together; but they were seen distinct against th
-blue sky. The head and neck were moved frequently, an
-apparently with force; and the extended wings seemed t
-form the fulcrum on which the movements of the neck, body
-and tail acted. If the bird wished to descend, the wing
-were for a moment collapsed; and when again expande
-with an altered inclination, the momentum gained by th
-rapid descent seemed to urge the bird upwards with th
-even and steady movement of a paper kite. In the case o
-any bird soaring, its motion must be sufficiently rapid s
-that the action of the inclined surface of its body on th
-atmosphere may counterbalance its gravity. The force t
-keep up the momentum of a body moving in a horizonta
-plane in the air (in which there is so little friction) canno
-be great, and this force is all that is wanted. The movement
-of the neck and body of the condor, we must suppose
-is sufficient for this. However this may be, it is truly
-wonderful and beautiful to see so great a bird, hour after hour
-without any apparent exertion, wheeling and gliding ove
-mountain and river
-
-April 29th. -- From some high land we hailed with jo
-the white summits of the Cordillera, as they were seen
-occasionally peeping through their dusky envelope of clouds
-During the few succeeding days we continued to get o
-slowly, for we found the river-course very tortuous, an
-strewed with immense fragments of various ancient slat
-rocks, and of granite. The plain bordering the valley ha
-here attained an elevation of about 1100 feet above the river
-and its character was much altered. The well-rounded pebbles
-of porphyry were mingled with many immense angula
-fragments of basalt and of primary rocks. The first of thes
-erratic boulders which I noticed, was sixty-seven miles distant
-from the nearest mountain; another which I measure
-was five yards square, and projected five feet above th
-gravel. Its edges were so angular, and its size so great, tha
-I at first mistook it for a rock _in situ_, and took out my
-compass to observe the direction of its cleavage. The plain her
-was not quite so level as that nearer the coast, but yet i
-betrayed no signs of any great violence. Under these
-circumstances it is, I believe, quite impossible to explain th
-transportal of these gigantic masses of rock so many mile
-from their parent-source, on any theory except by that o
-floating icebergs.
-
-During the two last days we met with signs of horses, an
-with several small articles which had belonged to the Indian
--- such as parts of a mantle and a bunch of ostrich feathers --
-but they appeared to have been lying long on the ground
-Between the place where the Indians had so lately crosse
-the river and this neighbourhood, though so many mile
-apart, the country appears to be quite unfrequented. At first
-considering the abundance of the guanacos, I was surprise
-at this; but it is explained by the stony nature of the plains
-which would soon disable an unshod horse from taking par
-in the chase. Nevertheless, in two places in this very centra
-region, I found small heaps of stones, which I do not thin
-could have been accidentally thrown together. They wer
-placed on points, projecting over the edge of the highest lav
-cliff, and they resembled, but on a small scale, those nea
-Port Desire.
-
-May 4th. -- Captain Fitz Roy determined to take the boat
-no higher. The river had a winding course, and was ver
-rapid; and the appearance of the country offered no temptation
-to proceed any further. Everywhere we met with th
-same productions, and the same dreary landscape. We wer
-now one hundred and forty miles distant from the Atlantic
-and about sixty from the nearest arm of the Pacific. Th
-valley in this upper part expanded into a wide basin, bounde
-on the north and south by the basaltic platforms, and fronte
-by the long range of the snow-clad Cordillera. But w
-viewed these grand mountains with regret, for we wer
-obliged to imagine their nature and productions, instead o
-standing, as we had hoped, on their summits. Besides th
-useless loss of time which an attempt to ascend the river an
-higher would have cost us, we had already been for som
-days on half allowance of bread. This, although reall
-enough for reasonable men, was, after a hard day's march
-rather scanty food: a light stomach and an easy digestio
-are good things to talk about, but very unpleasant in practice
-
-5th. -- Before sunrise we commenced our descent. W
-shot down the stream with great rapidity, generally at th
-rate of ten knots an hour. In this one day we effected wha
-had cost us five-and-a-half hard days' labour in ascending
-On the 8th, we reached the Beagle after our twenty-one days
-expedition. Every one, excepting myself, had cause to b
-dissatisfied; but to me the ascent afforded a most interestin
-section of the great tertiary formation of Patagonia
-
-On March 1st, 1833, and again on March 16th, 1834, th
-Beagle anchored in Berkeley Sound, in East Falkland Island
-This archipelago is situated in nearly the same latitude wit
-the mouth of the Strait of Magellan; it covers a space o
-one hundred and twenty by sixty geographical miles, and is
-little more than half the size of Ireland. After the possession
-of these miserable islands had been contested by France
-Spain, and England, they were left uninhabited. The government
-of Buenos Ayres then sold them to a private individual,
-but likewise used them, as old Spain had done before
-for a penal settlement. England claimed her right an
-seized them. The Englishman who was left in charge o
-the flag was consequently murdered. A British officer wa
-next sent, unsupported by any power: and when we arrived
-we found him in charge of a population, of which rathe
-more than half were runaway rebels and murderers.
-
-The theatre is worthy of the scenes acted on it. An undulating
-land, with a desolate and wretched aspect, is everywhere
-covered by a peaty soil and wiry grass, of one monotonous
-brown colour. Here and there a peak or ridg
-of grey quartz rock breaks through the smooth surface
-Every one has heard of the climate of these regions; i
-may be compared to that which is experienced at the heigh
-of between one and two thousand feet, on the mountains o
-North Wales; having however less sunshine and less frost
-but more wind and rain. [4]
-
-16th. -- I will now describe a short excursion which
-made round a part of this island. In the morning I starte
-with six horses and two Gauchos: the latter were capita
-men for the purpose, and well accustomed to living on thei
-own resources. The weather was very boisterous and cold
-with heavy hail-storms. We got on, however, pretty well
-but, except the geology, nothing could be less interestin
-than our day's ride. The country is uniformly the sam
-undulating moorland; the surface being covered by ligh
-brown withered grass and a few very small shrubs, al
-springing out of an elastic peaty soil. In the valleys her
-and there might be seen a small flock of wild geese, an
-everywhere the ground was so soft that the snipe were abl
-to feed. Besides these two birds there were few others
-There is one main range of hills, nearly two thousand fee
-in height, and composed of quartz rock, the rugged and barren
-crests of which gave us some trouble to cross. On th
-south side we came to the best country for wild cattle; w
-met, however, no great number, for they had been latel
-much harassed.
-
-In the evening we came across a small herd. One of m
-companions, St. Jago by name, soon separated a fat cow
-he threw the bolas, and it struck her legs, but failed in
-becoming entangled. Then dropping his hat to mark the spo
-where the balls were left, while at full gallop, he uncoile
-his lazo, and after a most severe chase, again came up t
-the cow, and caught her round the horns. The other Gauch
-had gone on ahead with the spare horses, so that St. Jag
-had some difficulty in killing the furious beast. He managed
-to get her on a level piece of ground, by taking advantage
-of her as often as she rushed at him; and when sh
-would not move, my horse, from having been trained, woul
-canter up, and with his chest give her a violent push. Bu
-when on level ground it does not appear an easy job fo
-one man to kill a beast mad with terror. Nor would it b
-so, if the horse, when left to itself without its rider, di
-not soon learn, for its own safety, to keep the lazo tight
-so that, if the cow or ox moves forward, the horse move
-just as quickly forward; otherwise, it stands motionles
-leaning on one side. This horse, however, was a youn
-one, and would not stand still, but gave in to the cow as sh
-struggled. It was admirable to see with what dexterity St
-Jago dodged behind the beast, till at last he contrived t
-give the fatal touch to the main tendon of the hind le
-after which, without much difficulty, he drove his knif
-into the head of the spinal marrow, and the cow droppe
-as if struck by lightning. He cut off pieces of flesh wit
-the skin to it, but without any bones, sufficient for ou
-expedition. We then rode on to our sleeping-place, an
-had for supper "carne con cuero," or meat roasted with th
-skin on it. This is as superior to common beef as veniso
-is to mutton. A large circular piece taken from the bac
-is roasted on the embers with the hide downwards and i
-the form of a saucer, so that none of the gravy is lost
-If any worthy alderman had supped with us that evening
-"carne con cuero," without doubt, would soon have bee
-celebrated in London
-
-During the night it rained, and the next day (17th) wa
-very stormy, with much hail and snow. We rode across th
-island to the neck of land which joins the Rincon del Tor
-(the great peninsula at the S. W. extremity) to the rest o
-the island. From the great number of cows which hav
-been killed, there is a large proportion of bulls. These wander
-about single, or two and three together, and are ver
-savage. I never saw such magnificent beasts; they equalle
-in the size of their huge heads and necks the Grecian marbl
-sculptures. Capt. Sulivan informs me that the hide of a
-average-sized bull weighs forty-seven pounds, whereas
-hide of this weight, less thoroughly dried, is considered a
-a very heavy one at Monte Video. The young bulls generally
-run away, for a short distance; but the old ones do no
-stir a step, except to rush at man and horse; and man
-horses have been thus killed. An old bull crossed a bogg
-stream, and took his stand on the opposite side to us; w
-in vain tried to drive him away, and failing, were oblige
-to make a large circuit. The Gauchos in revenge determined
-to emasculate him and render him for the futur
-harmless. It was very interesting to see how art completel
-mastered force. One lazo was thrown over his horns as h
-rushed at the horse, and another round his hind legs: in
-minute the monster was stretched powerless on the ground
-After the lazo has once been drawn tightly round the horn
-of a furious animal, it does not at first appear an easy thin
-to disengage it again without killing the beast: nor, I
-apprehend, would it be so if the man was by himself. By th
-aid, however, of a second person throwing his lazo so as t
-catch both hind legs, it is quickly managed: for the animal
-as long as its hind legs are kept outstretched, is quite
-helpless, and the first man can with his hands loosen his laz
-from the horns, and then quietly mount his horse; but th
-moment the second man, by backing ever so little, relaxe
-the strain, the lazo slips off the legs of the struggling beast
-which then rises free, shakes himself, and vainly rushes a
-his antagonist
-
-During our whole ride we saw only one troop of wil
-horses. These animals, as well as the cattle, were introduce
-by the French in 1764, since which time both have greatl
-increased. It is a curious fact, that the horses have neve
-left the eastern end of the island, although there is no natural
-boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that par
-of the island is not more tempting than the rest. The Gauchos
-whom I asked, though asserting this to be the case
-were unable to account for it, except from the strong attachment
-which horses have to any locality to which they ar
-accustomed. Considering that the island does not appea
-fully stocked, and that there are no beasts of prey, I wa
-particularly curious to know what has checked their originally
-rapid increase. That in a limited island some chec
-would sooner or later supervene, is inevitable; but why ha
-the increase of the horse been checked sooner than that o
-the cattle? Capt. Sulivan has taken much pains for m
-in this inquiry. The Gauchos employed here attribute i
-chiefly to the stallions constantly roaming from place t
-place, and compelling the mares to accompany them, whethe
-or not the young foals are able to follow. One Gaucho tol
-Capt. Sulivan that he had watched a stallion for a whol
-hour, violently kicking and biting a mare till he force
-her to leave her foal to its fate. Capt. Sulivan can so fa
-corroborate this curious account, that he has several time
-found young foals dead, whereas he has never found a dea
-calf. Moreover, the dead bodies of full-grown horses ar
-more frequently found, as if more subject to disease o
-accidents, than those of the cattle. From the softness o
-the ground their hoofs often grow irregularly to a grea
-length, and this causes lameness. The predominant colour
-are roan and iron-grey. All the horses bred here, both tam
-and wild, are rather small-sized, though generally in goo
-condition; and they have lost so much strength, that the
-are unfit to be used in taking wild cattle with the lazo: i
-consequence, it is necessary to go to the great expense o
-importing fresh horses from the Plata. At some futur
-period the southern hemisphere probably will have its bree
-of Falkland ponies, as the northern has its Shetland breed.
-
-The cattle, instead of having degenerated like the horse
-seem, as before remarked, to have increased in size; an
-they are much more numerous than the horses Capt. Sulivan
-informs me that they vary much less in the genera
-form of their bodies and in the shape of their horns tha
-English cattle. In colour they differ much; and it is a
-remarkable circumstance, that in different parts of this on
-small island, different colours predominate. Round Moun
-Usborne, at a height of from 1000 to 1500 feet above the sea
-about half of some of the herds are mouse or lead-coloured
-a tint which is not common in other parts of the island
-Near Port Pleasant dark brown prevails, whereas south o
-Choiseul Sound (which almost divides the island into tw
-parts), white beasts with black heads and feet are the mos
-common: in all parts black, and some spotted animals ma
-be observed. Capt. Sulivan remarks, that the difference i
-the prevailing colours was so obvious, that in looking fo
-the herds near Port Pleasant, they appeared from a lon
-distance like black spots, whilst south of Choiseul Soun
-they appeared like white spots on the hill-sides. Capt. Sulivan
-thinks that the herds do not mingle; and it is a singula
-fact, that the mouse-coloured cattle, though living on th
-high land, calve about a month earlier in the season tha
-the other coloured beasts on the lower land. It is interesting
-thus to find the once domesticated cattle breakin
-into three colours, of which some one colour would in al
-probability ultimately prevail over the others, if the herd
-were left undisturbed for the next several centuries.
-
-The rabbit is another animal which has been introduced
-and has succeeded very well; so that they abound over larg
-parts of the island. Yet, like the horses, they are confine
-within certain limits; for they have not crossed the centra
-chain of hills, nor would they have extended even so far a
-its base, if, as the Gauchos informed me, small colonies ha
-not been carried there. I should not have supposed tha
-these animals, natives of northern Africa, could have existe
-in a climate so humid as this, and which enjoys so littl
-sunshine that even wheat ripens only occasionally. It i
-asserted that in Sweden, which any one would have though
-a more favourable climate, the rabbit cannot live out o
-doors. The first few pairs, moreover, had here to conten
-against pre-existing enemies, in the fox and some larg
-hawks. The French naturalists have considered the black variety
-a distinct species, and called it Lepus Magellanicus. [5
-They imagined that Magellan, when talking of an anima
-under the name of "conejos" in the Strait of Magellan
-referred to this species; but he was alluding to a small cavy
-which to this day is thus called by the Spaniards. Th
-Gauchos laughed at the idea of the black kind being different
-from the grey, and they said that at all events it ha
-not extended its range any further than the grey kind; tha
-the two were never found separate; and that they readil
-bred together, and produced piebald offspring. Of the latte
-I now possess a specimen, and it is marked about the hea
-differently from the French specific description. This
-circumstance shows how cautious naturalists should be i
-making species; for even Cuvier, on looking at the skul
-of one of these rabbits, thought it was probably distinct!
-
-The only quadruped native to the island [6]; is a large wolf
-like fox (Canis antarcticus), which is common to both Eas
-and West Falkland. I have no doubt it is a peculiar species
-and confined to this archipelago; because many sealers
-Gauchos, and Indians, who have visited these islands, al
-maintain that no such animal is found in any part of Sout
-America.
-
-Molina, from a similarity in habits, thought that thi
-was the same with his "culpeu;" [7] but I have seen both
-and they are quite distinct. These wolves are well know
-from Byron's account of their tameness and curiosity, whic
-the sailors, who ran into the water to avoid them, mistoo
-for fierceness. To this day their manners remain the same
-They have been observed to enter a tent, and actually pul
-some meat from beneath the head of a sleeping seaman. Th
-Gauchos also have frequently in the evening killed them
-by holding out a piece of meat in one hand, and in the othe
-a knife ready to stick them. As far as I am aware, ther
-is no other instance in any part of the world, of so smal
-a mass of broken land, distant from a continent, possessin
-so large an aboriginal quadruped peculiar to itself. Thei
-numbers have rapidly decreased; they are already banishe
-from that half of the island which lies to the eastward o
-the neck of land between St. Salvador Bay and Berkele
-Sound. Within a very few years after these islands shal
-have become regularly settled, in all probability this fo
-will be classed with the dodo, as an animal which has perished
-from the face of the earth.
-
-At night (17th) we slept on the neck of land at the hea
-of Choiseul Sound, which forms the south-west peninsula
-The valley was pretty well sheltered from the cold wind
-but there was very little brushwood for fuel. The Gauchos
-however, soon found what, to my great surprise, made nearl
-as hot a fire as coals; this was the skeleton of a bullock
-lately killed, from which the flesh had been picked by the
-carrion-hawks. They told me that in winter they often killed a
-beast, cleaned the flesh from the bones with their knives
-and then with these same bones roasted the meat for thei
-suppers.
-
-18th. -- It rained during nearly the whole day. At nigh
-we managed, however, with our saddle-cloths to keep ourselves
-pretty well dry and warm; but the ground on whic
-we slept was on each occasion nearly in the state of a bog
-and there was not a dry spot to sit down on after our day'
-ride. I have in another part stated how singular it is tha
-there should be absolutely no trees on these islands, althoug
-Tierra del Fuego is covered by one large forest. Th
-largest bush in the island (belonging to the family of
-Compositae) is scarcely so tall as our gorse. The best fuel i
-afforded by a green little bush about the size of commo
-heath, which has the useful property of burning while fres
-and green. It was very surprising to see the Gauchos, i
-the midst of rain and everything soaking wet, with nothin
-more than a tinder-box and a piece of rag, immediately mak
-a fire. They sought beneath the tufts of grass and bushe
-for a few dry twigs, and these they rubbed into fibres; the
-surrounding them with coarser twigs, something like a bird'
-nest, they put the rag with its spark of fire in the middl
-and covered it up. The nest being then held up to th
-wind, by degrees it smoked more and more, and at las
-burst out in flames. I do not think any other method woul
-have had a chance of succeeding with such damp materials.
-
-19th. -- Each morning, from not having ridden for som
-time previously, I was very stiff. I was surprised to hea
-the Gauchos, who have from infancy almost lived on horseback,
-say that, under similar circumstances, they alway
-suffer. St. Jago told me, that having been confined for thre
-months by illness, he went out hunting wild cattle, and i
-consequence, for the next two days, his thighs were so stif
-that he was obliged to lie in bed. This shows that the Gauchos,
-although they do not appear to do so, yet really mus
-exert much muscular effort in riding. The hunting wil
-cattle, in a country so difficult to pass as this is on accoun
-of the swampy ground, must be very hard work. Th
-Gauchos say they often pass at full speed over ground whic
-would be impassable at a slower pace; in the same manne
-as a man is able to skate over thin ice. When hunting, th
-party endeavours to get as close as possible to the herd with
-out being discovered. Each man carries four or five pair o
-the bolas; these he throws one after the other at as man
-cattle, which, when once entangled, are left for some day
-till they become a little exhausted by hunger and struggling
-They are then let free and driven towards a small herd o
-tame animals, which have been brought to the spot on purpose.
-From their previous treatment, being too much terrified
-to leave the herd, they are easily driven, if thei
-strength last out, to the settlement.
-
-The weather continued so very bad that we determine
-to make a push, and try to reach the vessel before night
-From the quantity of rain which had fallen, the surfac
-of the whole country was swampy. I suppose my horse fel
-at least a dozen times, and sometimes the whole six horse
-were floundering in the mud together. All the little stream
-are bordered by soft peat, which makes it very difficult fo
-the horses to leap them without falling. To complete ou
-discomforts we were obliged to cross the head of a cree
-of the sea, in which the water was as high as our horses
-backs; and the little waves, owing to the violence of th
-wind, broke over us, and made us very wet and cold. Eve
-the iron-framed Gauchos professed themselves glad whe
-they reached the settlement, after our little excursion
-
-The geological structure of these islands is in mos
-respects simple. The lower country consists of clay-slat
-and sandstone, containing fossils, very closely related to, bu
-not identical with, those found in the Silurian formation
-of Europe; the hills are formed of white granular quart
-rock. The strata of the latter are frequently arched wit
-perfect symmetry, and the appearance of some of the masse
-is in consequence most singular. Pernety [8] has devote
-several pages to the description of a Hill of Ruins, th
-successive strata of which he has justly compared to th
-seats of an amphitheatre. The quartz rock must have bee
-quite pasty when it underwent such remarkable flexure
-without being shattered into fragments. As the quart
-insensibly passes into the sandstone, it seems probable tha
-the former owes its origin to the sandstone having bee
-heated to such a degree that it became viscid, and upon cooling
-crystallized. While in the soft state it must have bee
-pushed up through the overlying beds.
-
-In many parts of the island the bottoms of the valleys ar
-covered in an extraordinary manner by myriads of grea
-loose angular fragments of the quartz rock, forming "stream
-of stones." These have been mentioned with surprise b
-every voyager since the time of Pernety. The blocks ar
-not waterworn, their angles being only a little blunted; the
-vary in size from one or two feet in diameter to ten, or eve
-more than twenty times as much. They are not throw
-together into irregular piles, but are spread out into leve
-sheets or great streams. It is not possible to ascertain thei
-thickness, but the water of small streamlets can be hear
-trickling through the stones many feet below the surface
-The actual depth is probably great, because the crevice
-between the lower fragments must long ago have been fille
-up with sand. The width of these sheets of stones varie
-from a few hundred feet to a mile; but the peaty soil dail
-encroaches on the borders, and even forms islets whereve
-a few fragments happen to lie close together. In a valle
-south of Berkeley Sound, which some of our party calle
-the "great valley of fragments," it was necessary to cros
-an uninterrupted band half a mile wide, by jumping fro
-one pointed stone to another. So large were the fragments
-that being overtaken by a shower of rain, I readily foun
-shelter beneath one of them.
-
-Their little inclination is the most remarkable circumstance
-in these "streams of stones." On the hill-sides I hav
-seen them sloping at an angle of ten degrees with the horizon
-but in some of the level, broad-bottomed valleys, the
-inclination is only just sufficient to be clearly perceived.
-On so rugged a surface there was no means of measuring th
-angle, but to give a common illustration, I may say that th
-slope would not have checked the speed of an English mail-coach.
-In some places, a continuous stream of these fragments
-followed up the course of a valley, and eve
-extended to the very crest of the hill. On these crests hug
-masses, exceeding in dimensions any small building, seeme
-to stand arrested in their headlong course: there, also, th
-curved strata of the archways lay piled on each other, lik
-the ruins of some vast and ancient cathedral. In endeavouring
-to describe these scenes of violence one is tempted to pas
-from one simile to another. We may imagine that stream
-of white lava had flowed from many parts of the mountain
-into the lower country, and that when solidified they had bee
-rent by some enormous convulsion into myriads of fragments.
-The expression "streams of stones," which immediately
-occurred to every one, conveys the same idea. Thes
-scenes are on the spot rendered more striking by the contrast
-of the low rounded forms of the neighbouring hills.
-
-I was interested by finding on the highest peak of on
-range (about 700 feet above the sea) a great arched fragment,
-lying on its convex side, or back downwards. Mus
-we believe that it was fairly pitched up in the air, and thu
-turned? Or, with more probability, that there existed formerly
-a part of the same range more elevated than the poin
-on which this monument of a great convulsion of nature no
-lies. As the fragments in the valleys are neither rounde
-nor the crevices filled up with sand, we must infer that th
-period of violence was subsequent to the land having bee
-raised above the waters of the sea. In a transverse sectio
-within these valleys, the bottom is nearly level, or rises bu
-very little towards either side. Hence the fragments appea
-to have travelled from the head of the valley; but in realit
-it seems more probable that they have been hurled down fro
-the nearest slopes; and that since, by a vibratory movemen
-of overwhelming force, [9] the fragments have been levelle
-into one continuous sheet. If during the earthquake [10] whic
-in 1835 overthrew Concepcion, in Chile, it was thought wonderful
-that small bodies should have been pitched a fe
-inches from the ground, what must we say to a movemen
-which has caused fragments many tons in weight, to mov
-onwards like so much sand on a vibrating board, and fin
-their level? I have seen, in the Cordillera of the Andes, th
-evident marks where stupendous mountains have been broke
-into pieces like so much thin crust, and the strata thrown o
-their vertical edges; but never did any scene, like thes
-"streams of stones," so forcibly convey to my mind the ide
-of a convulsion, of which in historical records we might i
-vain seek for any counterpart: yet the progress of knowledg
-will probably some day give a simple explanation of thi
-phenomenon, as it already has of the so long-thought
-inexplicable transportal of the erratic boulders, which are
-strewed over the plains of Europe.
-
-I have little to remark on the zoology of these islands.
-have before described the carrion-vulture of Polyborus
-There are some other hawks, owls, and a few small land-birds.
-The water-fowl are particularly numerous, and the
-must formerly, from the accounts of the old navigators
-have been much more so. One day I observed a cormoran
-playing with a fish which it had caught. Eight times
-successively the bird let its prey go, then dived after it, an
-although in deep water, brought it each time to the surface
-In the Zoological Gardens I have seen the otter treat a fis
-in the same manner, much as a cat does a mouse: I do no
-know of any other instance where dame Nature appears s
-wilfully cruel. Another day, having placed myself betwee
-a penguin (Aptenodytes demersa) and the water, I was muc
-amused by watching its habits. It was a brave bird; and til
-reaching the sea, it regularly fought and drove me backwards
-Nothing less than heavy blows would have stopped him; ever
-inch he gained he firmly kept, standing close before me erec
-and determined. When thus opposed he continually rolle
-his head from side to side, in a very odd manner, as if th
-power of distinct vision lay only in the anterior and basa
-part of each eye. This bird is commonly called the jackas
-penguin, from its habit, while on shore, of throwing its hea
-backwards, and making a loud strange noise, very like th
-braying of an ass; but while at sea, and undisturbed, its not
-is very deep and solemn, and is often heard in the night-time
-In diving, its little wings are used as fins; but on the land,
-as front legs. When crawling, it may be said on four legs
-through the tussocks or on the side of a grassy cliff, it move
-so very quickly that it might easily be mistaken for a
-quadruped. When at sea and fishing, it comes to the surface fo
-the purpose of breathing with such a spring, and dives agai
-so instantaneously, that I defy any one at first sight to b
-sure that it was not a fish leaping for sport.
-
-Two kinds of geese frequent the Falklands. The uplan
-species (Anas Magellanica) is common, in pairs and in smal
-flocks, throughout the island. They do not migrate, but buil
-on the small outlying islets. This is supposed to be fro
-fear of the foxes: and it is perhaps from the same caus
-that these birds, though very tame by day, are shy and wil
-in the dusk of the evening. They live entirely on vegetabl
-matter.
-
-The rock-goose, so called from living exclusively on th
-sea-beach (Anas antarctica), is common both here and o
-the west coast of America, as far north as Chile. In the dee
-and retired channels of Tierra del Fuego, the snow-whit
-gander, invariably accompanied by his darker consort, an
-standing close by each other on some distant rocky point, i
-a common feature in the landscape.
-
-In these islands a great loggerheaded duck or goose (Ana
-brachyptera), which sometimes weighs twenty-two pounds
-is very abundant. These birds were in former days called
-from their extraordinary manner of paddling and splashin
-upon the water, race-horses; but now they are named, muc
-more appropriately, steamers. Their wings are too small an
-weak to allow of flight, but by their aid, partly swimming an
-partly flapping the surface of the water, they move ver
-quickly. The manner is something like that by which th
-common house-duck escapes when pursued by a dog; but
-am nearly sure that the steamer moves its wings alternately
-instead of both together, as in other birds. These clumsy
-loggerheaded ducks make such a noise and splashing, that th
-effect is exceedingly curious.
-
-Thus we find in South America three birds which use thei
-wings for other purposes besides flight; the penguins as fins
-the steamer as paddles, and the ostrich as sails: and th
-Apteryz of New Zealand, as well as its gigantic extinct
-prototype the Deinornis, possess only rudimentary
-representatives of wings. The steamer is able to dive only
-to a very short distance. It feeds entirely on shell-fish
-from the kelp and tidal rocks: hence the beak and head, for
-the purpose of breaking them, are surprisingly heavy and
-strong: the head is so strong that I have scarcely been able
-to fracture it with my geological hammer; and all our sportsmen
-soon discovered how tenacious these birds were of life. When in
-the evening pluming themselves in a flock, they make the sam
-odd mixture of sounds which bull-frogs do within the tropics
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the Falkland Islands,
-made many observations on the lower marine animals, [11] bu
-they are of little general interest. I will mention only on
-class of facts, relating to certain zoophytes in the more highl
-organized division of that class. Several genera (Flustra
-Eschara, Cellaria, Crisia, and others) agree in having singular
-moveable organs (like those of Flustra avicularia, foun
-in the European seas) attached to their cells. The organ, i
-the greater number of cases, very closely resembles the hea
-of a vulture; but the lower mandible can be opened muc
-wider than in a real bird's beak. The head itself possesse
-considerable powers of movement, by means of a short neck
-In one zoophyte the head itself was fixed, but the lower ja
-free: in another it was replaced by a triangular hood, with
-beautifully-fitted trap-door, which evidently answered to th
-lower mandible. In the greater number of species, each cel
-was provided with one head, but in others each cell had two.
-
-The young cells at the end of the branches of these corallines
-contain quite immature polypi, yet the vulture-head
-attached to them, though small, are in every respect perfect
-When the polypus was removed by a needle from any of th
-cells, these organs did not appear in the least affected. Whe
-one of the vulture-like heads was cut off from the cell, th
-lower mandible retained its power of opening and closing
-Perhaps the most singular part of their structure is, tha
-when there were more than two rows of cells on a branch
-the central cells were furnished with these appendages, o
-only one-fourth the size of the outside ones. Their movements
-varied according to the species; but in some I neve
-saw the least motion; while others, with the lower mandibl
-generally wide open, oscillated backwards and forwards a
-the rate of about five seconds each turn, others moved rapidly
-and by starts. When touched with a needle, the bea
-generally seized the point so firmly, that the whole branc
-might be shaken.
-
-These bodies have no relation whatever with the production
-of the eggs or gemmules, as they are formed before th
-young polypi appear in the cells at the end of the growin
-branches; as they move independently of the polypi, and d
-not appear to be in any way connected with them; and a
-they differ in size on the outer and inner rows of cells, I hav
-little doubt, that in their functions, they are related rathe
-to the horny axis of the branches than to the polypi in th
-cells. The fleshy appendage at the lower extremity of th
-sea-pen (described at Bahia Blanca) also forms part of th
-zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner as the roots of
-tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the individua
-leaf or flower-buds.
-
-In another elegant little coralline (Crisia?), each cell wa
-furnished with a long-toothed bristle, which had the powe
-of moving quickly. Each of these bristles and each of th
-vulture-like heads generally moved quite independently o
-the others, but sometimes all on both sides of a branch,
-sometimes only those on one side, moved together
-coinstantaneously, sometimes each moved in regular order one
-after another. In these actions we apparently behold as perfect
-a transmission of will in the zoophyte, though composed o
-thousands of distinct polypi, as in any single animal. Th
-case, indeed, is not different from that of the sea-pens, which
-when touched, drew themselves into the sand on the coast o
-Bahia Blanca. I will state one other instance of unifor
-action, though of a very different nature, in a zoophyt
-closely allied to Clytia, and therefore very simply organized
-Having kept a large tuft of it in a basin of salt-water, whe
-it was dark I found that as often as I rubbed any part of
-branch, the whole became strongly phosphorescent with
-green light: I do not think I ever saw any object more
-beautifully so. But the remarkable circumstance was, that th
-flashes of light always proceeded up the branches, from th
-base towards the extremities.
-
-The examination of these compound animals was alway
-very interesting to me. What can be more remarkable tha
-to see a plant-like body producing an egg, capable of swimming
-about and of choosing a proper place to adhere to
-which then sprouts into branches, each crowded with innumerable
-distinct animals, often of complicated organizations
-The branches, moreover, as we have just seen, sometime
-possess organs capable of movement and independent of th
-polypi. Surprising as this union of separate individuals in
-common stock must always appear, every tree displays th
-same fact, for buds must be considered as individual plants
-It is, however, natural to consider a polypus, furnished wit
-a mouth, intestines, and other organs, as a distinct individual
-whereas the individuality of a leaf-bud is not easily realised
-so that the union of separate individuals in a common bod
-is more striking in a coralline than in a tree. Our conception
-of a compound animal, where in some respects the individuality
-of each is not completed, may be aided, by reflectin
-on the production of two distinct creatures by bisecting
-single one with a knife, or where Nature herself perform
-the task of bisection. We may consider the polypi in
-zoophyte, or the buds in a tree, as cases where the divisio
-of the individual has not been completely effected. Certainl
-in the case of trees, and judging from analogy in that o
-corallines, the individuals propagated by buds seem mor
-intimately related to each other, than eggs or seeds are t
-their parents. It seems now pretty well established tha
-plants propagated by buds all partake of a common duratio
-of life; and it is familiar to every one, what singular an
-numerous peculiarities are transmitted with certainty, b
-buds, layers, and grafts, which by seminal propagation neve
-or only casually reappear
-
-[1] The desserts of Syria are characterized, according to
-Volney (tom. i. p. 351), by woody bushes, numerous rats,
-gazelles and hares. In the landscape of Patagonia, the guanaco
-replaces the gazelle, and the agouti the hare.
-
-[2] I noticed that several hours before any one of the condors
-died, all the lice, with which it was infested, crawled to the
-outside feathers. I was assured that this always happens.
-
-[3] London's Magazine of Nat. Hist., vol. vii.
-
-[4] From accounts published since our voyage, and more
-especially from several interesting letters from Capt. Sulivan,
-R. N., employed on the survey, it appears that we took an
-exaggerated view of the badness of the climate on these
-islands. But when I reflect on the almost universal covering
-of peat, and on the fact of wheat seldom ripening here, I can
-hardly believe that the climate in summer is so fine and dry
-as it has lately been represented.
-
-[5] Lesson's Zoology of the Voyage of the Coquille, tom. i.
-p. 168. All the early voyagers, and especially Bougainville,
-distinctly state that the wolf-like fox was the only native
-animal on the island. The distinction of the rabbit as a
-species, is taken from peculiarities in the fur, from the
-shape of the head, and from the shortness of the ears. I may
-here observe that the difference between the Irish and English
-hare rests upon nearly similar characters, only more strongly
-marked
-
-[6] I have reason, however, to suspect that there is a field-
-mouse. The common European rat and mouse have roamed far from
-the habitations of the settlers. The common hog has also run
-wild on one islet; all are of a black colour: the boars are
-very fierce, and have great trunks.
-
-[7] The "culpeu" is the Canis Magellanicus brought home by
-Captain King from the Strait of Magellan. It is common in
-Chile
-
-[8] Pernety, Voyage aux Isles Malouines, p. 526.
-
-[9] "Nous n'avons pas ete moins saisis d'etonnement a la vue
-de l'innombrable quantite de pierres de touts grandeurs,
-bouleversees les unes sur les autres, et cependent rangees,
-comme si elles avoient ete amoncelees negligemment pour remplir
-des ravins. On ne se lassoit pas d'admirer les effets
-prodigieux de la nature." -- Pernety, p. 526.
-
-[10] An inhabitant of Mendoza, and hence well capable of
-judging, assured me that, during the several years he had
-resided on these islands, he had never felt the slightest
-shock of an earthquake.
-
-[11] I was surprised to find, on counting the eggs of a large
-white Doris (this sea-slug was three and a half inches long),
-how extraordinarily numerous they were. From two to five eggs
-(each three-thousandths of an inch in diameter) were contained
-in spherical little case. These were arranged two deep in
-transverse rows forming a ribbon. The ribbon adhered by its
-edge to the rock in an oval spire. One which I found, measured
-nearly twenty inches in length and half in breadth. By counting
-how many balls were contained in a tenth of an inch in the
-row, and how many rows in an equal length of the ribbon, on
-the most moderate computation there were six hundred thousand
-eggs. Yet this Doris was certainly not very common; although
-I was often searching under the stones, I saw only seven
-individuals. No fallacy is more common with naturalists,
-than that the numbers of an individual species depend on
-its powers of propagation.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TIERRA DEL FUEGO
-
-Tierra del Fuego, first arrival -- Good Success Bay -- An
-Account of the Fuegians on board -- Interview With the
-Savages -- Scenery of the Forests -- Cape Horn -- Wigwam
-Cove -- Miserable Condition of the Savages -- Famines --
-Cannibals -- Matricide -- Religious Feelings -- Great
-Gale -- Beagle Channel -- Ponsonby Sound -- Build Wigwams
-and settle the Fuegians -- Bifurcation of the Beagle
-Channel -- Glaciers -- Return to the Ship -- Second Visit
-in the Ship to the Settlement -- Equality of Condition
-amongst the Natives.
-
-
-DECEMBER 17th, 1832. -- Having now finished with
-Patagonia and the Falkland Islands, I will describe
-our first arrival in Tierra del Fuego. A little after
-noon we doubled Cape St. Diego, and entered the famous
-strait of Le Maire. We kept close to the Fuegian shore, but
-the outline of the rugged, inhospitable Statenland was visible
-amidst the clouds. In the afternoon we anchored in the Bay
-of Good Success. While entering we were saluted in a manner
-becoming the inhabitants of this savage land. A group
-of Fuegians partly concealed by the entangled forest, were
-perched on a wild point overhanging the sea; and as we
-passed by, they sprang up and waving their tattered cloaks
-sent forth a loud and sonorous shout. The savages followed
-the ship, and just before dark we saw their fire, and again
-heard their wild cry. The harbour consists of a fine piece
-of water half surrounded by low rounded mountains of clay-
-slate, which are covered to the water's edge by one dense
-gloomy forest. A single glance at the landscape was sufficient
-to show me how widely different it was from anything
-I had ever beheld. At night it blew a gale of wind, and
-heavy squalls from the mountains swept past us. It would
-have been a bad time out at sea, and we, as well as others,
-may call this Good Success Bay.
-
-In the morning the Captain sent a party to communicate
-with the Fuegians. When we came within hail, one of the
-four natives who were present advanced to receive us, and
-began to shout most vehemently, wishing to direct us where
-to land. When we were on shore the party looked rather
-alarmed, but continued talking and making gestures with
-great rapidity. It was without exception the most curious
-and interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have
-believed how wide was the difference between savage and
-civilized man: it is greater than between a wild and
-domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a greater
-power of improvement. The chief spokesman was old, and
-appeared to be the head of the family; the three others were
-powerful young men, about six feet high. The women and
-children had been sent away. These Fuegians are a very
-different race from the stunted, miserable wretches farther
-westward; and they seem closely allied to the famous Patagonians
-of the Strait of Magellan. Their only garment consists
-of a mantle made of guanaco skin, with the wool outside:
-this they wear just thrown over their shoulders, leaving
-their persons as often exposed as covered. Their skin is of
-a dirty coppery-red colour.
-
-The old man had a fillet of white feathers tied round his
-head, which partly confined his black, coarse, and entangled
-hair. His face was crossed by two broad transverse bars;
-one, painted bright red, reached from ear to ear and included
-the upper lip; the other, white like chalk, extended above
-and parallel to the first, so that even his eyelids were thus
-coloured. The other two men were ornamented by streaks
-of black powder, made of charcoal. The party altogether
-closely resembled the devils which come on the stage in plays
-like Der Freischutz.
-
-Their very attitudes were abject, and the expression of
-their countenances distrustful, surprised, and startled. After
-we had presented them with some scarlet cloth, which they
-immediately tied round their necks, they became good friends.
-This was shown by the old man patting our breasts,
-and making a chuckling kind of noise, as people do when
-feeding chickens. I walked with the old man, and this
-demonstration of friendship was repeated several times; it was
-concluded by three hard slaps, which were given me on the
-breast and back at the same time. He then bared his bosom
-for me to return the compliment, which being done, he
-seemed highly pleased. The language of these people,
-according to our notions, scarcely deserves to be called
-articulate. Captain Cook has compared it to a man clearing his
-throat, but certainly no European ever cleared his throat
-with so many hoarse, guttural, and clicking sounds.
-
-They are excellent mimics: as often as we coughed or
-yawned, or made any odd motion, they immediately imitated
-us. Some of our party began to squint and look awry; but
-one of the young Fuegians (whose whole face was painted
-black, excepting a white band across his eyes) succeeded in
-making far more hideous grimaces. They could repeat with
-perfect correctness each word in any sentence we addressed
-them, and they remembered such words for some time. Yet
-we Europeans all know how difficult it is to distinguish
-apart the sounds in a foreign language. Which of us, for
-instance, could follow an American Indian through a sentence
-of more than three words? All savages appear to possess, to
-an uncommon degree, this power of mimicry. I was told,
-almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among
-the Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious
-for being able to imitate and describe the gait of any
-man, so that he may be recognized. How can this faculty be
-explained? is it a consequence of the more practised habits
-of perception and keener senses, common to all men in a
-savage state, as compared with those long civilized?
-
-When a song was struck up by our party, I thought the
-Fuegians would have fallen down with astonishment. With
-equal surprise they viewed our dancing; but one of the
-young men, when asked, had no objection to a little waltzing.
-Little accustomed to Europeans as they appeared to be, yet
-they knew and dreaded our fire-arms; nothing would tempt
-them to take a gun in their hands. They begged for knives,
-calling them by the Spanish word "cuchilla." They explained
-also what they wanted, by acting as if they had a
-piece of blubber in their mouth, and then pretending to cut
-instead of tear it.
-
-I have not as yet noticed the Fuegians whom we had on
-board. During the former voyage of the Adventure and
-Beagle in 1826 to 1830, Captain Fitz Roy seized on a party
-of natives, as hostages for the loss of a boat, which had
-been stolen, to the great jeopardy of a party employed on
-the survey; and some of these natives, as well as a child
-whom he bought for a pearl-button, he took with him to
-England, determining to educate them and instruct them in
-religion at his own expense. To settle these natives in their
-own country, was one chief inducement to Captain Fitz Roy
-to undertake our present voyage; and before the Admiralty
-had resolved to send out this expedition, Captain Fitz Roy
-had generously chartered a vessel, and would himself have
-taken them back. The natives were accompanied by a missionary,
-R. Matthews; of whom and of the natives, Captain
-Fitz Roy has published a full and excellent account. Two
-men, one of whom died in England of the small-pox, a boy
-and a little girl, were originally taken; and we had now on
-board, York Minster, Jemmy Button (whose name expresses
-his purchase-money), and Fuegia Basket. York Minster
-was a full-grown, short, thick, powerful man: his disposition
-was reserved, taciturn, morose, and when excited violently
-passionate; his affections were very strong towards a few
-friends on board; his intellect good. Jemmy Button was a
-universal favourite, but likewise passionate; the expression
-of his face at once showed his nice disposition. He was
-merry and often laughed, and was remarkably sympathetic
-with any one in pain: when the water was rough, I was often
-a little sea-sick, and he used to come to me and say in a
-plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!" but the notion, after
-his aquatic life, of a man being sea-sick, was too ludicrous,
-and he was generally obliged to turn on one side to hide a
-smile or laugh, and then he would repeat his "Poor, poor
-fellow!" He was of a patriotic disposition; and he liked to
-praise his own tribe and country, in which he truly said there
-were "plenty of trees," and he abused all the other tribes:
-he stoutly declared that there was no Devil in his land.
-Jemmy was short, thick, and fat, but vain of his personal
-appearance; he used always to wear gloves, his hair was
-neatly cut, and he was distressed if his well-polished shoes
-were dirtied. He was fond of admiring himself in a looking
-glass; and a merry-faced little Indian boy from the Rio
-Negro, whom we had for some months on board, soon perceived
-this, and used to mock him: Jemmy, who was always
-rather jealous of the attention paid to this little boy, did not
-at all like this, and used to say, with rather a contemptuous
-twist of his head, "Too much skylark." It seems yet wonderful
-to me, when I think over all his many good qualities
-that he should have been of the same race, and doubtless
-partaken of the same character, with the miserable, degraded
-savages whom we first met here. Lastly, Fuegia Basket was
-a nice, modest, reserved young girl, with a rather pleasing but
-sometimes sullen expression, and very quick in learning anything,
-especially languages. This she showed in picking up
-some Portuguese and Spanish, when left on shore for only
-a short time at Rio de Janeiro and Monte Video, and in her
-knowledge of English. York Minster was very jealous of
-any attention paid to her; for it was clear he determined to
-marry her as soon as they were settled on shore.
-
-Although all three could both speak and understand a
-good deal of English, it was singularly difficult to obtain
-much information from them, concerning the habits of their
-countrymen; this was partly owing to their apparent difficulty
-in understanding the simplest alternative. Every one
-accustomed to very young children, knows how seldom one
-can get an answer even to so simple a question as whether a
-thing is black or white; the idea of black or white seems
-alternately to fill their minds. So it was with these Fuegians,
-and hence it was generally impossible to find out, by cross
-questioning, whether one had rightly understood anything
-which they had asserted. Their sight was remarkably acute;
-it is well known that sailors, from long practice, can make
-out a distant object much better than a landsman; but both
-York and Jemmy were much superior to any sailor on board:
-several times they have declared what some distant object
-has been, and though doubted by every one, they have proved
-right, when it has been examined through a telescope. They
-were quite conscious of this power; and Jemmy, when he
-had any little quarrel with the officer on watch, would say,
-"Me see ship, me no tell."
-
-It was interesting to watch the conduct of the savages,
-when we landed, towards Jemmy Button: they immediately
-perceived the difference between him and ourselves, and held
-much conversation one with another on the subject. The
-old man addressed a long harangue to Jemmy, which it
-seems was to invite him to stay with them But Jemmy
-understood very little of their language, and was, moreover,
-thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen. When York Minster
-afterwards came on shore, they noticed him in the
-same way, and told him he ought to shave; yet he had not
-twenty dwarf hairs on his face, whilst we all wore our
-untrimmed beards. They examined the colour of his skin, and
-compared it with ours. One of our arms being bared, they
-expressed the liveliest surprise and admiration at its
-whiteness, just in the same way in which I have seen the
-ourangoutang do at the Zoological Gardens. We thought that they
-mistook two or three of the officers, who were rather shorter
-and fairer, though adorned with large beards, for the ladies
-of our party. The tallest amongst the Fuegians was evidently
-much pleased at his height being noticed. When placed
-back to back with the tallest of the boat's crew, he
-tried his best to edge on higher ground, and to stand on
-tiptoe. He opened his mouth to show his teeth, and turned
-his face for a side view; and all this was done with such
-alacrity, that I dare say he thought himself the handsomest
-man in Tierra del Fuego. After our first feeling of grave
-astonishment was over, nothing could be more ludicrous
-than the odd mixture of surprise and imitation which these
-savages every moment exhibited.
-
-
-The next day I attempted to penetrate some way into the
-country. Tierra del Fuego may be described as a mountainous
-land, partly submerged in the sea, so that deep inlets
-and bays occupy the place where valleys should exist. The
-mountain sides, except on the exposed western coast, are
-covered from the water's edge upwards by one great forest.
-The trees reach to an elevation of between 1000 and 1500
-feet, and are succeeded by a band of peat, with minute alpine
-plants; and this again is succeeded by the line of perpetual
-snow, which, according to Captain King, in the Strait of
-Magellan descends to between 3000 and 4000 feet. To find
-an acre of level land in any part of the country is most rare.
-I recollect only one little flat piece near Port Famine, and
-another of rather larger extent near Goeree Road. In both
-places, and everywhere else, the surface is covered by a
-thick bed of swampy peat. Even within the forest, the
-ground is concealed by a mass of slowly putrefying vegetable
-matter, which, from being soaked with water, yields to the
-foot.
-
-Finding it nearly hopeless to push my way through the
-wood, I followed the course of a mountain torrent. At first,
-from the waterfalls and number of dead trees, I could hardly
-crawl along; but the bed of the stream soon became a little
-more open, from the floods having swept the sides. I continued
-slowly to advance for an hour along the broken and
-rocky banks, and was amply repaid by the grandeur of the
-scene. The gloomy depth of the ravine well accorded with
-the universal signs of violence. On every side were lying
-irregular masses of rock and torn-up trees; other trees,
-though still erect, were decayed to the heart and ready to
-fall. The entangled mass of the thriving and the fallen
-reminded me of the forests within the tropics -- yet there was
-a difference: for in these still solitudes, Death, instead of
-Life, seemed the predominant spirit. I followed the watercourse
-till I came to a spot where a great slip had cleared a
-straight space down the mountain side. By this road I
-ascended to a considerable elevation, and obtained a good
-view of the surrounding woods. The trees all belong to
-one kind, the Fagus betuloides; for the number of the other
-species of Fagus and of the Winter's Bark, is quite
-inconsiderable. This beech keeps its leaves throughout the year;
-but its foliage is of a peculiar brownish-green colour, with
-a tinge of yellow. As the whole landscape is thus coloured,
-it has a sombre, dull appearance; nor is it often enlivened
-by the rays of the sun.
-
-December 20th. -- One side of the harbour is formed by a
-hill about 1500 feet high, which Captain Fitz Roy has called
-after Sir J. Banks, in commemoration of his disastrous
-excursion, which proved fatal to two men of his party, and
-nearly so to Dr. Solander. The snowstorm, which was the
-cause of their misfortune, happened in the middle of January,
-corresponding to our July, and in the latitude of Durham!
-I was anxious to reach the summit of this mountain
-to collect alpine plants; for flowers of any kind in the lower
-parts are few in number. We followed the same watercourse
-as on the previous day, till it dwindled away, and we
-were then compelled to crawl blindly among the trees.
-These, from the effects of the elevation and of the impetuous
-winds, were low, thick and crooked. At length we reached
-that which from a distance appeared like a carpet of fine
-green turf, but which, to our vexation, turned out to be a
-compact mass of little beech-trees about four or five feet
-high. They were as thick together as box in the border of
-a garden, and we were obliged to struggle over the flat but
-treacherous surface. After a little more trouble we gained
-the peat, and then the bare slate rock.
-
-A ridge connected this hill with another, distant some
-miles, and more lofty, so that patches of snow were lying
-on it. As the day was not far advanced, I determined to
-walk there and collect plants along the road. It would have
-been very hard work, had it not been for a well-beaten and
-straight path made by the guanacos; for these animals, like
-sheep, always follow the same line. When we reached the
-hill we found it the highest in the immediate neighbourhood,
-and the waters flowed to the sea in opposite directions. We
-obtained a wide view over the surrounding country: to the
-north a swampy moorland extended, but to the south we
-had a scene of savage magnificence, well becoming Tierra
-del Fuego. There was a degree of mysterious grandeur
-in mountain behind mountain, with the deep intervening
-valleys, all covered by one thick, dusky mass of forest. The
-atmosphere, likewise, in this climate, where gale succeeds
-gale, with rain, hail, and sleet, seems blacker than anywhere
-else. In the Strait of Magellan looking due southward from
-Port Famine, the distant channels between the mountains
-appeared from their gloominess to lead beyond the confines
-of this world.
-
-December 21st. -- The Beagle got under way: and on the
-succeeding day, favoured to an uncommon degree by a fine
-easterly breeze, we closed in with the Barnevelts, and running
-past Cape Deceit with its stony peaks, about three
-o'clock doubled the weather-beaten Cape Horn. The evening
-was calm and bright, and we enjoyed a fine view of the
-surrounding isles. Cape Horn, however, demanded his tribute,
-and before night sent us a gale of wind directly in our teeth.
-We stood out to sea, and on the second day again made the
-land, when we saw on our weather-bow this notorious promontory
-in its proper form -- veiled in a mist, and its dim
-outline surrounded by a storm of wind and water. Great
-black clouds were rolling across the heavens, and squalls
-of rain, with hail, swept by us with such extreme violence,
-that the Captain determined to run into Wigwam Cove.
-This is a snug little harbour, not far from Cape Horn; and
-here, at Christmas-eve, we anchored in smooth water. The
-only thing which reminded us of the gale outside, was every
-now and then a puff from the mountains, which made the
-ship surge at her anchors.
-
-December 25th. -- Close by the Cove, a pointed hill, called
-Kater's Peak, rises to the height of 1700 feet. The surrounding
-islands all consist of conical masses of greenstone,
-associated sometimes with less regular hills of baked and
-altered clay-slate. This part of Tierra del Fuego may be
-considered as the extremity of the submerged chain of
-mountains already alluded to. The cove takes its name of
-"Wigwam" from some of the Fuegian habitations; but every
-bay in the neighbourhood might be so called with equal
-propriety. The inhabitants, living chiefly upon shell-fish, are
-obliged constantly to change their place of residence; but
-they return at intervals to the same spots, as is evident from
-the piles of old shells, which must often amount to many
-tons in freight. These heaps can be distinguished at a long
-distance by the bright green colour of certain plants, which
-invariably grow on them. Among these may be enumerated
-the wild celery and scurvy grass, two very serviceable plants,
-the use of which has not been discovered by the natives.
-
-The Fuegian wigwam resembles, in size and dimensions,
-a haycock. It merely consists of a few broken branches
-stuck in the ground, and very imperfectly thatched on one
-side with a few tufts of grass and rushes. The whole cannot
-be the work of an hour, and it is only used for a few days.
-At Goeree Roads I saw a place where one of these naked
-men had slept, which absolutely offered no more cover than
-the form of a hare. The man was evidently living by himself,
-and York Minster said he was "very bad man," and
-that probably he had stolen something. On the west coast,
-however, the wigwams are rather better, for they are covered
-with seal-skins. We were detained here several days by the
-bad weather. The climate is certainly wretched: the summer
-solstice was now passed, yet every day snow fell on the
-hills, and in the valleys there was rain, accompanied by
-sleet. The thermometer generally stood about 45 degs., but in
-the night fell to 38 or 40 degs. From the damp and boisterous
-state of the atmosphere, not cheered by a gleam of sunshine,
-one fancied the climate even worse than it really was.
-
-While going one day on shore near Wollaston Island, we
-pulled alongside a canoe with six Fuegians. These were the
-most abject and miserable creatures I anywhere beheld. On
-the east coast the natives, as we have seen, have guanaco
-cloaks, and on the west they possess seal-skins. Amongst
-these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or
-some small scrap about as large as a pocket-handkerchief,
-which is barely sufficient to cover their backs as low down
-as their loins. It is laced across the breast by strings, and
-according as the wind blows, it is shifted from side to side.
-But these Fuegians in the canoe were quite naked, and even
-one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was raining
-heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled
-down her body. In another harbour not far distant, a
-woman, who was suckling a recently-born child, came one
-day alongside the vessel, and remained there out of mere
-curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed on her naked
-bosom, and on the skin of her naked baby! These poor
-wretches were stunted in their growth, their hideous faces
-bedaubed with white paint, their skins filthy and greasy,
-their hair entangled, their voices discordant, and their
-gestures violent. Viewing such men, one can hardly make one's
-self believe that they are fellow-creatures, and inhabitants
-of the same world. It is a common subject of conjecture
-what pleasure in life some of the lower animals can enjoy:
-how much more reasonably the same question may be asked
-with respect to these barbarians! At night, five or six
-human beings, naked and scarcely protected from the wind
-and rain of this tempestuous climate, sleep on the wet
-ground coiled up like animals. Whenever it is low water,
-winter or summer, night or day, they must rise to pick shellfish
-from the rocks; and the women either dive to collect
-sea-eggs, or sit patiently in their canoes, and with a baited
-hair-line without any hook, jerk out little fish. If a seal is
-killed, or the floating carcass of a putrid whale is discovered,
-it is a feast; and such miserable food is assisted by a few
-tasteless berries and fungi.
-
-They often suffer from famine: I heard Mr. Low, a sealing-master
-intimately acquainted with the natives of this
-country, give a curious account of the state of a party of
-one hundred and fifty natives on the west coast, who were
-very thin and in great distress. A succession of gales prevented
-the women from getting shell-fish on the rocks, and
-they could not go out in their canoes to catch seal. A small
-party of these men one morning set out, and the other
-Indians explained to him, that they were going a four days'
-journey for food: on their return, Low went to meet them,
-and he found them excessively tired, each man carrying
-a great square piece of putrid whale's-blubber with a hole
-in the middle, through which they put their heads, like the
-Gauchos do through their ponchos or cloaks. As soon as
-the blubber was brought into a wigwam, an old man cut off
-thin slices, and muttering over them, broiled them for a
-minute, and distributed them to the famished party, who
-during this time preserved a profound silence. Mr. Low
-believes that whenever a whale is cast on shore, the natives
-bury large pieces of it in the sand, as a resource in time of
-famine; and a native boy, whom he had on board, once
-found a stock thus buried. The different tribes when at
-war are cannibals. From the concurrent, but quite independent
-evidence of the boy taken by Mr. Low, and of
-Jemmy Button, it is certainly true, that when pressed in
-winter by hunger, they kill and devour their old women
-before they kill their dogs: the boy, being asked by Mr.
-Low why they did this, answered, "Doggies catch otters,
-old women no." This boy described the manner in which
-they are killed by being held over smoke and thus choked;
-he imitated their screams as a joke, and described the parts
-of their bodies which are considered best to eat. Horrid
-as such a death by the hands of their friends and relatives
-must be, the fears of the old women, when hunger begins
-to press, are more painful to think of; we are told that they
-then often run away into the mountains, but that they are
-pursued by the men and brought back to the slaughter-house
-at their own firesides!
-
-Captain Fitz Roy could never ascertain that the Fuegians
-have any distinct belief in a future life. They sometimes
-bury their dead in caves, and sometimes in the mountain
-forests; we do not know what ceremonies they perform.
-Jemmy Button would not eat land-birds, because "eat dead
-men": they are unwilling even to mention their dead friends.
-We have no reason to believe that they perform any sort of
-religious worship; though perhaps the muttering of the old
-man before he distributed the putrid blubber to his famished
-party, may be of this nature. Each family or tribe has a
-wizard or conjuring doctor, whose office we could never
-clearly ascertain. Jemmy believed in dreams, though not, as
-I have said, in the devil: I do not think that our Fuegians
-were much more superstitious than some of the sailors; for
-an old quartermaster firmly believed that the successive
-heavy gales, which we encountered off Cape Horn, were
-caused by our having the Fuegians on board. The nearest
-approach to a religious feeling which I heard of, was shown
-by York Minster, who, when Mr. Bynoe shot some very
-young ducklings as specimens, declared in the most solemn
-manner, "Oh, Mr. Bynoe, much rain, snow, blow much."
-This was evidently a retributive punishment for wasting
-human food. In a wild and excited manner he also related,
-that his brother, one day whilst returning to pick up some
-dead birds which he had left on the coast, observed some
-feathers blown by the wind. His brother said (York imitating
-his manner), "What that?" and crawling onwards,
-he peeped over the cliff, and saw "wild man" picking his
-birds; he crawled a little nearer, and then hurled down a
-great stone and killed him. York declared for a long time
-afterwards storms raged, and much rain and snow fell.
-As far as we could make out, he seemed to consider the
-elements themselves as the avenging agents: it is evident in
-this case, how naturally, in a race a little more advanced
-in culture, the elements would become personified. What
-the "bad wild men" were, has always appeared to me most
-mysterious: from what York said, when we found the place
-like the form of a hare, where a single man had slept the
-night before, I should have thought that they were thieves
-who had been driven from their tribes; but other obscure
-speeches made me doubt this; I have sometimes imagined
-that the most probable explanation was that they were
-insane.
-
-The different tribes have no government or chief; yet
-each is surrounded by other hostile tribes, speaking different
-dialects, and separated from each other only by a deserted
-border or neutral territory: the cause of their warfare appears
-to be the means of subsistence. Their country is a
-broken mass of wild rocks, lofty hills, and useless forests:
-and these are viewed through mists and endless storms. The
-habitable land is reduced to the stones on the beach; in
-search of food they are compelled unceasingly to wander
-from spot to spot, and so steep is the coast, that they can
-only move about in their wretched canoes. They cannot
-know the feeling of having a home, and still less that of
-domestic affection; for the husband is to the wife a brutal
-master to a laborious slave. Was a more horrid deed ever
-perpetrated, than that witnessed on the west coast by Byron,
-who saw a wretched mother pick up her bleeding dying
-infant-boy, whom her husband had mercilessly dashed on the
-stones for dropping a basket of sea-eggs! How little can
-the higher powers of the mind be brought into play: what is
-there for imagination to picture, for reason to compare, or
-judgment to decide upon? to knock a limpet from the rock
-does not require even cunning, that lowest power of the
-mind. Their skill in some respects may be compared to the
-instinct of animals; for it is not improved by experience:
-the canoe, their most ingenious work, poor as it is, has
-remained the same, as we know from Drake, for the last two
-hundred and fifty years.
-
-Whilst beholding these savages, one asks, whence have
-they come? What could have tempted, or what change compelled
-a tribe of men, to leave the fine regions of the north,
-to travel down the Cordillera or backbone of America, to
-invent and build canoes, which are not used by the tribes
-of Chile, Peru, and Brazil, and then to enter on one of the
-most inhospitable countries within the limits of the globe?
-Although such reflections must at first seize on the mind, yet
-we may feel sure that they are partly erroneous. There is
-no reason to believe that the Fuegians decrease in number;
-therefore we must suppose that they enjoy a sufficient share
-of happiness, of whatever kind it may be, to render life
-worth having. Nature by making habit omnipotent, and its
-effects hereditary, has fitted the Fuegian to the climate and
-the productions of his miserable country.
-
-
-After having been detained six days in Wigwam Cove by
-very bad weather, we put to sea on the 30th of December.
-Captain Fitz Roy wished to get westward to land York and
-Fuegia in their own country. When at sea we had a constant
-succession of gales, and the current was against us: we
-drifted to 57 degs. 23' south. On the 11th of January, 1833,
-by carrying a press of sail, we fetched within a few miles of
-the great rugged mountain of York Minster (so called by
-Captain Cook, and the origin of the name of the elder Fuegian),
-when a violent squall compelled us to shorten sail
-and stand out to sea. The surf was breaking fearfully on
-the coast, and the spray was carried over a cliff estimated
-to 200 feet in height. On the 12th the gale was very heavy,
-and we did not know exactly where we were: it was a most
-unpleasant sound to hear constantly repeated, "keep a good
-look-out to leeward." On the 13th the storm raged with its
-full fury: our horizon was narrowly limited by the sheets
-of spray borne by the wind. The sea looked ominous, like
-a dreary waving plain with patches of drifted snow: whilst
-the ship laboured heavily, the albatross glided with its
-expanded wings right up the wind. At noon a great sea broke
-over us, and filled one of the whale boats, which was
-obliged to be instantly cut away. The poor Beagle trembled
-at the shock, and for a few minutes would not obey her helm;
-but soon, like a good ship that she was, she righted and came
-up to the wind again. Had another sea followed the first,
-our fate would have been decided soon, and for ever. We
-had now been twenty-four days trying in vain to get westward;
-the men were worn out with fatigue, and they had not
-had for many nights or days a dry thing to put on. Captain
-Fitz Roy gave up the attempt to get westward by the outside
-coast. In the evening we ran in behind False Cape Horn,
-and dropped our anchor in forty-seven fathoms, fire flashing
-from the windlass as the chain rushed round it. How delightful
-was that still night, after having been so long involved
-in the din of the warring elements!
-
-January 15th, 1833. -- The Beagle anchored in Goeree
-Roads. Captain Fitz Roy having resolved to settle the Fuegians,
-according to their wishes, in Ponsonby Sound, four
-boats were equipped to carry them there through the Beagle
-Channel. This channel, which was discovered by Captain
-Fitz Roy during the last voyage, is a most remarkable feature
-in the geography of this, or indeed of any other country: it
-may be compared to the valley of Lochness in Scotland, with
-its chain of lakes and friths. It is about one hundred and
-twenty miles long, with an average breadth, not subject to
-any very great variation, of about two miles; and is throughout
-the greater part so perfectly straight, that the view,
-bounded on each side by a line of mountains, gradually becomes
-indistinct in the long distance. It crosses the southern
-part of Tierra del Fuego in an east and west line, and
-in the middle is joined at right angles on the south side by
-an irregular channel, which has been called Ponsonby Sound.
-This is the residence of Jemmy Button's tribe and family.
-
-19th. -- Three whale-boats and the yawl, with a party of
-twenty-eight, started under the command of Captain Fitz
-Roy. In the afternoon we entered the eastern mouth of the
-channel, and shortly afterwards found a snug little cove
-concealed by some surrounding islets. Here we pitched our
-tents and lighted our fires. Nothing could look more comfortable
-than this scene. The glassy water of the little harbour,
-with the branches of the trees hanging over the rocky
-beach, the boats at anchor, the tents supported by the crossed
-oars, and the smoke curling up the wooded valley, formed a
-picture of quiet retirement. The next day (20th) we smoothly
-glided onwards in our little fleet, and came to a more inhabited
-district. Few if any of these natives could ever
-have seen a white man; certainly nothing could exceed their
-astonishment at the apparition of the four boats. Fires were
-lighted on every point (hence the name of Tierra del Fuego,
-or the land of fire), both to attract our attention and to
-spread far and wide the news. Some of the men ran for
-miles along the shore. I shall never forget how wild and
-savage one group appeared: suddenly four or five men came
-to the edge of an overhanging cliff; they were absolutely
-naked, and their long hair streamed about their faces; they
-held rugged staffs in their hands, and, springing from the
-ground, they waved their arms round their heads, and sent
-forth the most hideous yells.
-
-At dinner-time we landed among a party of Fuegians.
-At first they were not inclined to be friendly; for until the
-Captain pulled in ahead of the other boats, they kept their
-slings in their hands. We soon, however, delighted them by
-trifling presents, such as tying red tape round their heads.
-They liked our biscuit: but one of the savages touched with
-his finger some of the meat preserved in tin cases which I
-was eating, and feeling it soft and cold, showed as much disgust
-at it, as I should have done at putrid blubber. Jemmy
-was thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen, and declared his
-own tribe were quite different, in which he was wofully
-mistaken. It was as easy to please as it was difficult to
-satisfy these savages. Young and old, men and children, never
-ceased repeating the word "yammerschooner," which means
-"give me." After pointing to almost every object, one after
-the other, even to the buttons on our coats, and saying their
-favourite word in as many intonations as possible, they would
-then use it in a neuter sense, and vacantly repeat
-"yammerschooner." After yammerschoonering for any article very
-eagerly, they would by a simple artifice point to their young
-women or little children, as much as to say, "If you will
-not give it me, surely you will to such as these."
-
-At night we endeavoured in vain to find an uninhabited
-cove; and at last were obliged to bivouac not far from a
-party of natives. They were very inoffensive as long as they
-were few in numbers, but in the morning (21st) being joined
-by others they showed symptoms of hostility, and we thought
-that we should have come to a skirmish. An European
-labours under great disadvantages when treating with savages
-like these, who have not the least idea of the power of
-fire-arms. In the very act of levelling his musket he appears
-to the savage far inferior to a man armed with a bow and
-arrow, a spear, or even a sling. Nor is it easy to teach them
-our superiority except by striking a fatal blow. Like wild
-beasts, they do not appear to compare numbers; for each
-individual, if attacked, instead of retiring, will endeavour to
-dash your brains out with a stone, as certainly as a tiger
-under similar circumstances would tear you. Captain Fitz
-Roy on one occasion being very anxious, from good reasons,
-to frighten away a small party, first flourished a cutlass near
-them, at which they only laughed; he then twice fired his
-pistol close to a native. The man both times looked astounded,
-and carefully but quickly rubbed his head; he then
-stared awhile, and gabbled to his companions, but he never
-seemed to think of running away. We can hardly put ourselves
-in the position of these savages, and understand their
-actions. In the case of this Fuegian, the possibility of such
-a sound as the report of a gun close to his ear could never
-have entered his mind. He perhaps literally did not for a
-second know whether it was a sound or a blow, and therefore
-very naturally rubbed his head. In a similar manner,
-when a savage sees a mark struck by a bullet, it may be some
-time before he is able at all to understand how it is effected;
-for the fact of a body being invisible from its velocity would
-perhaps be to him an idea totally inconceivable. Moreover,
-the extreme force of a bullet, that penetrates a hard substance
-without tearing it, may convince the savage that it
-has no force at all. Certainly I believe that many savages
-of the lowest grade, such as these of Tierra del Fuego, have
-seen objects struck, and even small animals killed by the
-musket, without being in the least aware how deadly an
-instrument it is.
-
-22nd. -- After having passed an unmolested night, in what
-would appear to be neutral territory between Jemmy's tribe
-and the people whom we saw yesterday, we sailed pleasantly
-along. I do not know anything which shows more clearly
-the hostile state of the different tribes, than these wide
-border or neutral tracts. Although Jemmy Button well knew the
-force of our party, he was, at first, unwilling to land amidst
-the hostile tribe nearest to his own. He often told us how
-the savage Oens men "when the leaf red," crossed the mountains
-from the eastern coast of Tierra del Fuego, and made
-inroads on the natives of this part of the country. It was
-most curious to watch him when thus talking, and see his
-eyes gleaming and his whole face assume a new and wild
-expression. As we proceeded along the Beagle Channel, the
-scenery assumed a peculiar and very magnificent character;
-but the effect was much lessened from the lowness of the
-point of view in a boat, and from looking along the valley,
-and thus losing all the beauty of a succession of ridges. The
-mountains were here about three thousand feet high, and
-terminated in sharp and jagged points. They rose in one
-unbroken sweep from the water's edge, and were covered to
-the height of fourteen or fifteen hundred feet by the dusky-
-coloured forest. It was most curious to observe, as far as
-the eye could range, how level and truly horizontal the line
-on the mountain side was, at which trees ceased to grow: it
-precisely resembled the high-water mark of drift-weed on a
-sea-beach.
-
-At night we slept close to the junction of Ponsonby Sound
-with the Beagle Channel. A small family of Fuegians, who
-were living in the cove, were quiet and inoffensive, and soon
-joined our party round a blazing fire. We were well clothed,
-and though sitting close to the fire were far from too warm;
-yet these naked savages, though further off, were observed,
-to our great surprise, to be streaming with perspiration at
-undergoing such a roasting. They seemed, however, very
-well pleased, and all joined in the chorus of the seamen's
-songs: but the manner in which they were invariably a little
-behindhand was quite ludicrous.
-
-During the night the news had spread, and early in the
-morning (23rd) a fresh party arrived, belonging to the Tekenika,
-or Jemmy's tribe. Several of them had run so fast that
-their noses were bleeding, and their mouths frothed from
-the rapidity with which they talked; and with their naked
-bodies all bedaubed with black, white, [1] and red, they looked
-like so many demoniacs who had been fighting. We then
-proceeded (accompanied by twelve canoes, each holding four
-or five people) down Ponsonby Sound to the spot where poor
-Jemmy expected to find his mother and relatives. He had
-already heard that his father was dead; but as he had had
-a "dream in his head" to that effect, he did not seem to
-care much about it, and repeatedly comforted himself with
-the very natural reflection -- "Me no help it." He was not
-able to learn any particulars regarding his father's death, as
-his relations would not speak about it.
-
-Jemmy was now in a district well known to him, and
-guided the boats to a quiet pretty cove named Woollya,
-surrounded by islets, every one of which and every point had
-its proper native name. We found here a family of Jemmy's
-tribe, but not his relations: we made friends with them;
-and in the evening they sent a canoe to inform Jemmy's
-mother and brothers. The cove was bordered by some acres
-of good sloping land, not covered (as elsewhere) either by
-peat or by forest-trees. Captain Fitz Roy originally intended,
-as before stated, to have taken York Minster and
-Fuegia to their own tribe on the west coast; but as they
-expressed a wish to remain here, and as the spot was singularly
-favourable, Captain Fitz Roy determined to settle here the
-whole party, including Matthews, the missionary. Five days
-were spent in building for them three large wigwams, in
-landing their goods, in digging two gardens, and sowing
-seeds.
-
-The next morning after our arrival (the 24th) the Fuegians
-began to pour in, and Jemmy's mother and brothers
-arrived. Jemmy recognised the stentorian voice of one of
-his brothers at a prodigious distance. The meeting was less
-interesting than that between a horse, turned out into a field,
-when he joins an old companion. There was no demonstration
-of affection; they simply stared for a short time at
-each other; and the mother immediately went to look after
-her canoe. We heard, however, through York that the
-mother has been inconsolable for the loss of Jemmy and had
-searched everywhere for him, thinking that he might have
-been left after having been taken in the boat. The women
-took much notice of and were very kind to Fuegia. We had
-already perceived that Jemmy had almost forgotten his own
-language. I should think there was scarcely another human
-being with so small a stock of language, for his English was
-very imperfect. It was laughable, but almost pitiable, to
-hear him speak to his wild brother in English, and then ask
-him in Spanish ("no sabe?") whether he did not understand
-him.
-
-Everything went on peaceably during the three next days
-whilst the gardens were digging and wigwams building. We
-estimated the number of natives at about one hundred and
-twenty. The women worked hard, whilst the men lounged
-about all day long, watching us. They asked for everything
-they saw, and stole what they could. They were delighted
-at our dancing and singing, and were particularly interested
-at seeing us wash in a neighbouring brook; they did not pay
-much attention to anything else, not even to our boats. Of
-all the things which York saw, during his absence from his
-country, nothing seems more to have astonished him than
-an ostrich, near Maldonado: breathless with astonishment
-he came running to Mr. Bynoe, with whom he was out walking
--- "Oh, Mr. Bynoe, oh, bird all same horse!" Much as
-our white skins surprised the natives, by Mr. Low's account
-a negro-cook to a sealing vessel, did so more effectually, and
-the poor fellow was so mobbed and shouted at that he would
-never go on shore again. Everything went on so quietly
-that some of the officers and myself took long walks in the
-surrounding hills and woods. Suddenly, however, on the
-27th, every woman and child disappeared. We were all uneasy
-at this, as neither York nor Jemmy could make out
-the cause. It was thought by some that they had been frightened
-by our cleaning and firing off our muskets on the previous
-evening; by others, that it was owing to offence taken
-by an old savage, who, when told to keep further off, had
-coolly spit in the sentry's face, and had then, by gestures
-acted over a sleeping Fuegian, plainly showed, as it was said,
-that he should like to cut up and eat our man. Captain
-Fitz Roy, to avoid the chance of an encounter, which would
-have been fatal to so many of the Fuegians, thought it advisable
-for us to sleep at a cove a few miles distant. Matthews,
-with his usual quiet fortitude (remarkable in a man
-apparently possessing little energy of character), determined
-to stay with the Fuegians, who evinced no alarm for themselves;
-and so we left them to pass their first awful night.
-
-On our return in the morning (28th) we were delighted
-to find all quiet, and the men employed in their canoes
-spearing fish. Captain Fitz Roy determined to send the
-yawl and one whale-boat back to the ship; and to proceed
-with the two other boats, one under his own command (in
-which he most kindly allowed me to accompany him), and
-one under Mr. Hammond, to survey the western parts of
-the Beagle Channel, and afterwards to return and visit the
-settlement. The day to our astonishment was overpoweringly
-hot, so that our skins were scorched: with this beautiful
-weather, the view in the middle of the Beagle Channel
-was very remarkable. Looking towards either hand, no object
-intercepted the vanishing points of this long canal between
-the mountains. The circumstance of its being an arm
-of the sea was rendered very evident by several huge whales [2]
-spouting in different directions. On one occasion I saw two
-of these monsters, probably male and female, slowly swimming
-one after the other, within less than a stone's throw
-of the shore, over which the beech-tree extended its branches.
-We sailed on till it was dark, and then pitched our tents
-in a quiet creek. The greatest luxury was to find for our
-beds a beach of pebbles, for they were dry and yielded to
-the body. Peaty soil is damp; rock is uneven and hard;
-sand gets into one's meat, when cooked and eaten boat-fashion;
-but when lying in our blanket-bags, on a good bed of
-smooth pebbles, we passed most comfortable nights.
-
-It was my watch till one o'clock. There is something
-very solemn in these scenes. At no time does the consciousness
-in what a remote corner of the world you are then
-standing, come so strongly before the mind. Everything
-tends to this effect; the stillness of the night is interrupted
-only by the heavy breathing of the seamen beneath the tents,
-and sometimes by the cry of a night-bird. The occasional
-barking of a dog, heard in the distance, reminds one that it
-is the land of the savage.
-
-January 20th. -- Early in the morning we arrived at the
-point where the Beagle Channel divides into two arms; and
-we entered the northern one. The scenery here becomes
-even grander than before. The lofty mountains on the north
-side compose the granitic axis, or backbone of the country
-and boldly rise to a height of between three and four thousand
-feet, with one peak above six thousand feet. They are
-covered by a wide mantle of perpetual snow, and numerous
-cascades pour their waters, through the woods, into the narrow
-channel below. In many parts, magnificent glaciers extend
-from the mountain side to the water's edge. It is
-scarcely possible to imagine anything more beautiful than
-the beryl-like blue of these glaciers, and especially as
-contrasted with the dead white of the upper expanse of snow.
-The fragments which had fallen from the glacier into the
-water were floating away, and the channel with its icebergs
-presented, for the space of a mile, a miniature likeness of
-the Polar Sea. The boats being hauled on shore at our
-dinner-hour, we were admiring from the distance of half a
-mile a perpendicular cliff of ice, and were wishing that some
-more fragments would fall. At last, down came a mass with
-a roaring noise, and immediately we saw the smooth outline
-of a wave travelling towards us. The men ran down as
-quickly as they could to the boats; for the chance of their
-being dashed to pieces was evident. One of the seamen just
-caught hold of the bows, as the curling breaker reached it:
-he was knocked over and over, but not hurt, and the boats
-though thrice lifted on high and let fall again, received no
-damage. This was most fortunate for us, for we were a
-hundred miles distant from the ship, and we should have
-been left without provisions or fire-arms. I had previously
-observed that some large fragments of rock on the beach had
-been lately displaced; but until seeing this wave, I did not
-understand the cause. One side of the creek was formed
-by a spur of mica-slate; the head by a cliff of ice about
-forty feet high; and the other side by a promontory fifty
-feet high, built up of huge rounded fragments of granite
-and mica-slate, out of which old trees were growing. This
-promontory was evidently a moraine, heaped up at a period
-when the glacier had greater dimensions.
-
-When we reached the western mouth of this northern
-branch of the Beagle Channel, we sailed amongst many unknown
-desolate islands, and the weather was wretchedly bad.
-We met with no natives. The coast was almost everywhere
-so steep, that we had several times to pull many miles before
-we could find space enough to pitch our two tents: one night
-we slept on large round boulders, with putrefying sea-weed
-between them; and when the tide rose, we had to get up and
-move our blanket-bags. The farthest point westward which
-we reached was Stewart Island, a distance of about one hundred
-and fifty miles from our ship. We returned into the
-Beagle Channel by the southern arm, and thence proceeded,
-with no adventure, back to Ponsonby Sound.
-
-February 6th. -- We arrived at Woollya. Matthews gave
-so bad an account of the conduct of the Fuegians, that Captain
-Fitz Roy determined to take him back to the Beagle;
-and ultimately he was left at New Zealand, where his brother
-was a missionary. From the time of our leaving, a regular
-system of plunder commenced; fresh parties of the natives
-kept arriving: York and Jemmy lost many things, and Matthews
-almost everything which had not been concealed underground.
-Every article seemed to have been torn up and
-divided by the natives. Matthews described the watch he
-was obliged always to keep as most harassing; night and
-day he was surrounded by the natives, who tried to tire him
-out by making an incessant noise close to his head. One day
-an old man, whom Matthews asked to leave his wigwam,
-immediately returned with a large stone in his hand: another
-day a whole party came armed with stones and stakes, and
-some of the younger men and Jemmy's brother were crying:
-Matthews met them with presents. Another party showed
-by signs that they wished to strip him naked and pluck all
-the hairs out of his face and body. I think we arrived just
-in time to save his life. Jemmy's relatives had been so vain
-and foolish, that they had showed to strangers their plunder,
-and their manner of obtaining it. It was quite melancholy
-leaving the three Fuegians with their savage countrymen;
-but it was a great comfort that they had no personal
-fears. York, being a powerful resolute man, was pretty sure
-to get on well, together with his wife Fuegia. Poor Jemmy
-looked rather disconsolate, and would then, I have little
-doubt, have been glad to have returned with us. His own
-brother had stolen many things from him; and as he remarked,
-"What fashion call that:" he abused his countrymen,
-"all bad men, no sabe (know) nothing" and, though
-I never heard him swear before, "damned fools." Our three
-Fuegians, though they had been only three years with civilized
-men, would, I am sure, have been glad to have retained
-their new habits; but this was obviously impossible. I fear
-it is more than doubtful, whether their visit will have been
-of any use to them.
-
-In the evening, with Matthews on board, we made sail
-back to the ship, not by the Beagle Channel, but by the
-southern coast. The boats were heavily laden and the sea
-rough, and we had a dangerous passage. By the evening
-of the 7th we were on board the Beagle after an absence of
-twenty days, during which time we had gone three hundred
-miles in the open boats. On the 11th, Captain Fitz Roy
-paid a visit by himself to the Fuegians and found them going
-on well; and that they had lost very few more things.
-
-
-On the last day of February in the succeeding year (1834)
-the Beagle anchored in a beautiful little cove at the eastern
-entrance of the Beagle Channel. Captain Fitz Roy determined
-on the bold, and as it proved successful, attempt to
-beat against the westerly winds by the same route, which
-we had followed in the boats to the settlement at Woollya.
-We did not see many natives until we were near Ponsonby
-Sound, where we were followed by ten or twelve canoes. The
-natives did not at all understand the reason of our tacking,
-and, instead of meeting us at each tack, vainly strove to
-follow us in our zigzag course. I was amused at finding
-what a difference the circumstance of being quite superior
-in force made, in the interest of beholding these savages.
-While in the boats I got to hate the very sound of their
-voices, so much trouble did they give us. The first and last
-word was "yammerschooner." When, entering some quiet
-little cove, we have looked round and thought to pass a quiet
-night, the odious word "yammerschooner" has shrilly sounded
-from some gloomy nook, and then the little signal-smoke
-has curled up to spread the news far and wide. On leaving
-some place we have said to each other, "Thank heaven, we
-have at last fairly left these wretches!" when one more faint
-hallo from an all-powerful voice, heard at a prodigious
-distance, would reach our ears, and clearly could we distinguish
--- "yammerschooner." But now, the more Fuegians the merrier;
-and very merry work it was. Both parties laughing,
-wondering, gaping at each other; we pitying them, for giving
-us good fish and crabs for rags, etc.; they grasping at the
-chance of finding people so foolish as to exchange such splendid
-ornaments for a good supper. It was most amusing to
-see the undisguised smile of satisfaction with which one
-young woman with her face painted black, tied several bits
-of scarlet cloth round her head with rushes. Her husband,
-who enjoyed the very universal privilege in this country of
-possessing two wives, evidently became jealous of all the
-attention paid to his young wife; and, after a consultation
-with his naked beauties, was paddled away by them.
-
-Some of the Fuegians plainly showed that they had a fair
-notion of barter. I gave one man a large nail (a most valuable
-present) without making any signs for a return; but he
-immediately picked out two fish, and handed them up on the
-point of his spear. If any present was designed for one
-canoe, and it fell near another, it was invariably given to the
-right owner. The Fuegian boy, whom Mr. Low had on
-board showed, by going into the most violent passion, that
-he quite understood the reproach of being called a liar, which
-in truth he was. We were this time, as on all former occasions,
-much surprised at the little notice, or rather none
-whatever, which was taken of many things, the use of which
-must have been evident to the natives. Simple circumstances
--- such as the beauty of scarlet cloth or blue beads,
-the absence of women, our care in washing ourselves, -- excited
-their admiration far more than any grand or complicated
-object, such as our ship. Bougainville has well remarked
-concerning these people, that they treat the "chefs
-d'oeuvre de l'industrie humaine, comme ils traitent les loix
-de la nature et ses phenomenes."
-
-On the 5th of March, we anchored in a cove at Woollya,
-but we saw not a soul there. We were alarmed at this, for
-the natives in Ponsonby Sound showed by gestures, that there
-had been fighting; and we afterwards heard that the dreaded
-Oens men had made a descent. Soon a canoe, with a little
-flag flying, was seen approaching, with one of the men in it
-washing the paint off his face. This man was poor Jemmy,
--- now a thin, haggard savage, with long disordered hair, and
-naked, except a bit of blanket round his waist. We did not
-recognize him till he was close to us, for he was ashamed
-of himself, and turned his back to the ship. We had left him
-plump, fat, clean, and well-dressed; -- I never saw so complete
-and grievous a change. As soon, however, as he was clothed,
-and the first flurry was over, things wore a good appearance.
-He dined with Captain Fitz Roy, and ate his dinner
-as tidily as formerly. He told us that he had "too much"
-(meaning enough) to eat, that he was not cold, that his
-relations were very good people, and that he did not wish to go
-back to England: in the evening we found out the cause of
-this great change in Jemmy's feelings, in the arrival of his
-young and nice-looking wife. With his usual good feeling
-he brought two beautiful otter-skins for two of his best
-friends, and some spear-heads and arrows made with his own
-hands for the Captain. He said he had built a canoe for himself,
-and he boasted that he could talk a little of his own
-language! But it is a most singular fact, that he appears to
-have taught all his tribe some English: an old man spontaneously
-announced "Jemmy Button's wife." Jemmy had lost
-all his property. He told us that York Minster had built
-a large canoe, and with his wife Fuegia, [3] had several months
-since gone to his own country, and had taken farewell by an
-act of consummate villainy; he persuaded Jemmy and his
-mother to come with him, and then on the way deserted them
-by night, stealing every article of their property.
-
-Jemmy went to sleep on shore, and in the morning returned,
-and remained on board till the ship got under way,
-which frightened his wife, who continued crying violently
-till he got into his canoe. He returned loaded with valuable
-property. Every soul on board was heartily sorry to shake
-hands with him for the last time. I do not now doubt that
-he will be as happy as, perhaps happier than, if he had never
-left his own country. Every one must sincerely hope that
-Captain Fitz Roy's noble hope may be fulfilled, of being
-rewarded for the many generous sacrifices which he made for
-these Fuegians, by some shipwrecked sailor being protected
-by the descendants of Jemmy Button and his tribe! When
-Jemmy reached the shore, he lighted a signal fire, and the
-smoke curled up, bidding us a last and long farewell, as the
-ship stood on her course into the open sea.
-
-The perfect equality among the individuals composing the
-Fuegian tribes must for a long time retard their civilization.
-As we see those animals, whose instinct compels them to live
-in society and obey a chief, are most capable of improvement,
-so is it with the races of mankind. Whether we look
-at it as a cause or a consequence, the more civilized always
-have the most artificial governments. For instance, the
-inhabitants of Otaheite, who, when first discovered, were
-governed by hereditary kings, had arrived at a far higher grade
-than another branch of the same people, the New Zealanders,
--- who, although benefited by being compelled to turn their
-attention to agriculture, were republicans in the most absolute
-sense. In Tierra del Fuego, until some chief shall arise
-with power sufficient to secure any acquired advantage, such
-as the domesticated animals, it seems scarcely possible that
-the political state of the country can be improved. At present,
-even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds
-and distributed; and no one individual becomes richer than
-another. On the other hand, it is difficult to understand how
-a chief can arise till there is property of some sort by which
-he might manifest his superiority and increase his power.
-
-I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man
-exists in a lower state of improvement than in any other part
-of the world. The South Sea Islanders, of the two races
-inhabiting the Pacific, are comparatively civilized. The
-Esquimau in his subterranean hut, enjoys some of the comforts
-of life, and in his canoe, when fully equipped, manifests
-much skill. Some of the tribes of Southern Africa
-prowling about in search of roots, and living concealed on
-the wild and arid plains, are sufficiently wretched. The
-Australian, in the simplicity of the arts of life, comes
-nearest the Fuegian: he can, however, boast of his boomerang,
-his spear and throwing-stick, his method of climbing trees, of
-tracking animals, and of hunting. Although the Australian may be
-superior in acquirements, it by no means follows that he is
-likewise superior in mental capacity: indeed, from what I
-saw of the Fuegians when on board and from what I have
-read of the Australians, I should think the case was exactly
-the reverse.
-
-[1] This substance, when dry, is tolerably compact, and of
-little specific gravity: Professor Ehrenberg has examined
-it: he states (Konig Akad. der Wissen: Berlin, Feb. 1845)
-that it is composed of infusoria, including fourteen
-polygastrica, and four phytolitharia. He says that they are
-all inhabitants of fresh-water; this is a beautiful example
-of the results obtainable through Professor Ehrenberg's
-microscopic researches; for Jemmy Button told me that it is
-always collected at the bottoms of mountain-brooks. It is,
-moreover, a striking fact that in the geographical distribution
-of the infusoria, which are well known to have very wide
-ranges, that all the species in this substance, although
-brought from the extreme southern point of Tierra del Fuego,
-are old, known forms.
-
-[2] One day, off the East coast of Tierra del Fuego, we saw
-a grand sight in several spermaceti whales jumping upright
-quite out of the water, with the exception of their tail-fins.
-As they fell down sideways, they splashed the water high up,
-and the sound reverberated like a distant broadside.
-
-[3] Captain Sulivan, who, since his voyage in the Beagle, has
-been employed on the survey of the Falkland Islands, heard
-from a sealer in (1842?), that when in the western part of
-the Strait of Magellan, he was astonished by a native woman
-coming on board, who could talk some English. Without doubt
-this was Fuega Basket. She lived (I fear the term probably
-bears a double interpretation) some days on board.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-STRAIT OF MAGELLAN. -- CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS
-
-Strait of Magellan -- Port Famine -- Ascent of Mount Tarn --
-Forests -- Edible Fungus -- Zoology -- Great Sea-weed -- Leave
-Tierra del Fuego -- Climate -- Fruit-trees and Productions
-of the Southern Coasts -- Height of Snow-line on the
-Cordillera -- Descent of Glaciers to the Sea -- Icebergs
-formed -- Transportal of Boulders -- Climate and Productions
-of the Antarctic Islands -- Preservation of Frozen Carcasses --
-Recapitulation.
-
-
-IN THE end of May, 1834, we entered for a second time
-the eastern mouth of the Strait of Magellan. The country
-on both sides of this part of the Strait consists of
-nearly level plains, like those of Patagonia. Cape Negro, a
-little within the second Narrows, may be considered as the
-point where the land begins to assume the marked features
-of Tierra del Fuego. On the east coast, south of the Strait,
-broken park-like scenery in a like manner connects these two
-countries, which are opposed to each other in almost every
-feature. It is truly surprising to find in a space of twenty
-miles such a change in the landscape. If we take a rather
-greater distance, as between Port Famine and Gregory Bay,
-that is about sixty miles, the difference is still more
-wonderful. At the former place, we have rounded mountains
-concealed by impervious forests, which are drenched with the
-rain, brought by an endless succession of gales; while at
-Cape Gregory, there is a clear and bright blue sky over the
-dry and sterile plains. The atmospheric currents, [1] although
-rapid, turbulent, and unconfined by any apparent limits, yet
-seem to follow, like a river in its bed, a regularly determined
-course.
-
-During our previous visit (in January), we had an interview
-at Cape Gregory with the famous so-called gigantic
-Patagonians, who gave us a cordial reception. Their height
-appears greater than it really is, from their large guanaco
-mantles, their long flowing hair, and general figure: on an
-average, their height is about six feet, with some men taller
-and only a few shorter; and the women are also tall; altogether
-they are certainly the tallest race which we anywhere
-saw. In features they strikingly resemble the more northern
-Indians whom I saw with Rosas, but they have a wilder and
-more formidable appearance: their faces were much painted
-with red and black, and one man was ringed and dotted with
-white like a Fuegian. Captain Fitz Roy offered to take any
-three of them on board, and all seemed determined to be of
-the three. It was long before we could clear the boat; at
-last we got on board with our three giants, who dined with
-the Captain, and behaved quite like gentlemen, helping
-themselves with knives, forks, and spoons: nothing was so much
-relished as sugar. This tribe has had so much communication
-with sealers and whalers that most of the men can speak a
-little English and Spanish; and they are half civilized, and
-proportionally demoralized.
-
-The next morning a large party went on shore, to barter
-for skins and ostrich-feathers; fire-arms being refused,
-tobacco was in greatest request, far more so than axes or
-tools. The whole population of the toldos, men, women, and
-children, were arranged on a bank. It was an amusing
-scene, and it was impossible not to like the so-called giants,
-they were so thoroughly good-humoured and unsuspecting:
-they asked us to come again. They seem to like to have
-Europeans to live with them; and old Maria, an important
-woman in the tribe, once begged Mr. Low to leave any one
-of his sailors with them. They spend the greater part of the
-year here; but in summer they hunt along the foot of the
-Cordillera: sometimes they travel as far as the Rio Negro
-750 miles to the north. They are well stocked with horses,
-each man having, according to Mr. Low, six or seven, and
-all the women, and even children, their one own horse. In
-the time of Sarmiento (1580), these Indians had bows and
-arrows, now long since disused; they then also possessed
-some horses. This is a very curious fact, showing the
-extraordinarily rapid multiplication of horses in South America.
-The horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and the
-colony being then for a time deserted, the horse ran wild; [2]
-in 1580, only forty-three years afterwards, we hear of them at
-the Strait of Magellan! Mr. Low informs me, that a neighbouring
-tribe of foot-Indians is now changing into horse-Indians:
-the tribe at Gregory Bay giving them their worn-out horses,
-and sending in winter a few of their best skilled men to hunt
-for them.
-
-June 1st. -- We anchored in the fine bay of Port Famine.
-It was now the beginning of winter, and I never saw a more
-cheerless prospect; the dusky woods, piebald with snow,
-could be only seen indistinctly, through a drizzling hazy
-atmosphere. We were, however, lucky in getting two fine
-days. On one of these, Mount Sarmiento, a distant mountain
-6800 feet high, presented a very noble spectacle. I was
-frequently surprised in the scenery of Tierra del Fuego, at the
-little apparent elevation of mountains really lofty. I suspect
-it is owing to a cause which would not at first be imagined,
-namely, that the whole mass, from the summit to the water's
-edge, is generally in full view. I remember having seen a
-mountain, first from the Beagle Channel, where the whole
-sweep from the summit to the base was full in view, and then
-from Ponsonby Sound across several successive ridges; and
-it was curious to observe in the latter case, as each fresh
-ridge afforded fresh means of judging of the distance, how
-the mountain rose in height.
-
-Before reaching Port Famine, two men were seen running
-along the shore and hailing the ship. A boat was sent for
-them. They turned out to be two sailors who had run away
-from a sealing-vessel, and had joined the Patagonians. These
-Indians had treated them with their usual disinterested
-hospitality. They had parted company through accident, and
-were then proceeding to Port Famine in hopes of finding
-some ship. I dare say they were worthless vagabonds, but I
-never saw more miserable-looking ones. They had been living
-for some days on mussel-shells and berries, and their
-tattered clothes had been burnt by sleeping so near their fires.
-They had been exposed night and day, without any shelter,
-to the late incessant gales, with rain, sleet, and snow, and yet
-they were in good health.
-
-During our stay at Port Famine, the Fuegians twice came
-and plagued us. As there were many instruments, clothes,
-and men on shore, it was thought necessary to frighten them
-away. The first time a few great guns were fired, when they
-were far distant. It was most ludicrous to watch through a
-glass the Indians, as often as the shot struck the water, take
-up stones, and, as a bold defiance, throw them towards the
-ship, though about a mile and a half distant! A boat was
-sent with orders to fire a few musket-shots wide of them.
-The Fuegians hid themselves behind the trees, and for every
-discharge of the muskets they fired their arrows; all, however,
-fell short of the boat, and the officer as he pointed at
-them laughed. This made the Fuegians frantic with passion,
-and they shook their mantles in vain rage. At last, seeing
-the balls cut and strike the trees, they ran away, and we were
-left in peace and quietness. During the former voyage the
-Fuegians were here very troublesome, and to frighten them a
-rocket was fired at night over their wigwams; it answered
-effectually, and one of the officers told me that the clamour
-first raised, and the barking of the dogs, was quite ludicrous
-in contrast with the profound silence which in a minute or
-two afterwards prevailed. The next morning not a single
-Fuegian was in the neighbourhood.
-
-When the Beagle was here in the month of February, I
-started one morning at four o'clock to ascend Mount Tarn,
-which is 2600 feet high, and is the most elevated point in this
-immediate district. We went in a boat to the foot of the
-mountain (but unluckily not to the best part), and then
-began our ascent. The forest commences at the line of high-
-water mark, and during the first two hours I gave over all
-hopes of reaching the summit. So thick was the wood, that
-it was necessary to have constant recourse to the compass;
-for every landmark, though in a mountainous country, was
-completely shut out. In the deep ravines, the death-like
-scene of desolation exceeded all description; outside it was
-blowing a gale, but in these hollows, not even a breath of
-wind stirred the leaves of the tallest trees. So gloomy, cold,
-and wet was every part, that not even the fungi, mosses, or
-ferns could flourish. In the valleys it was scarcely possible
-to crawl along, they were so completely barricaded by great
-mouldering trunks, which had fallen down in every direction.
-When passing over these natural bridges, one's course was
-often arrested by sinking knee deep into the rotten wood; at
-other times, when attempting to lean against a firm tree, one
-was startled by finding a mass of decayed matter ready to
-fall at the slightest touch. We at last found ourselves among
-the stunted trees, and then soon reached the bare ridge, which
-conducted us to the summit. Here was a view characteristic
-of Tierra del Fuego; irregular chains of hills, mottled with
-patches of snow, deep yellowish-green valleys, and arms of
-the sea intersecting the land in many directions. The strong
-wind was piercingly cold, and the atmosphere rather hazy, so
-that we did not stay long on the top of the mountain. Our
-descent was not quite so laborious as our ascent, for the
-weight of the body forced a passage, and all the slips and
-falls were in the right direction.
-
-I have already mentioned the sombre and dull character of
-the evergreen forests, [3] in which two or three species of
-trees grow, to the exclusion of all others. Above the forest
-land, there are many dwarf alpine plants, which all spring
-from the mass of peat, and help to compose it: these plants
-are very remarkable from their close alliance with the species
-growing on the mountains of Europe, though so many thousand
-miles distant. The central part of Tierra del Fuego, where the
-clay-slate formation occurs, is most favourable to the growth
-of trees; on the outer coast the poorer granitic soil, and a
-situation more exposed to the violent winds, do not allow of
-their attaining any great size. Near Port Famine I have seen
-more large trees than anywhere else: I measured a Winter's
-Bark which was four feet six inches in girth, and several of
-the beech were as much as thirteen feet. Captain King also
-mentions a beech which was seven feet in diameter, seventeen
-feet above the roots.
-
-There is one vegetable production deserving notice from
-its importance as an article of food to the Fuegians. It is a
-globular, bright-yellow fungus, which grows in vast numbers
-on the beech-trees. When young it is elastic and turgid, with
-
-[picture]
-
-a smooth surface; but when mature it shrinks, becomes tougher,
-and has its entire surface deeply pitted or honey-combed,
-as represented in the accompanying wood-cut. This fungus
-belongs to a new and curious genus, [4] I found a second
-species on another species of beech in Chile: and Dr. Hooker
-informs me, that just lately a third species has been discovered
-on a third species of beech in Van Diernan's Land. How singular
-is this relationship between parasitical fungi and the trees
-on which they grow, in distant parts of the world! In Tierra
-del Fuego the fungus in its tough and mature state is collected
-in large quantities by the women and children, and is eaten
-un-cooked. It has a mucilaginous, slightly sweet taste, with
-a faint smell like that of a mushroom. With the exception of
-a few berries, chiefly of a dwarf arbutus, the natives eat
-no vegetable food besides this fungus. In New Zealand,
-before the introduction of the potato, the roots of the fern
-were largely consumed; at the present time, I believe, Tierra
-del Fuego is the only country in the world where a cryptogamic
-plant affords a staple article of food.
-
-The zoology of Tierra del Fuego, as might have been
-expected from the nature of its climate and vegetation, is
-very poor. Of mammalia, besides whales and seals, there is
-one bat, a kind of mouse (Reithrodon chinchilloides), two
-true mice, a ctenomys allied to or identical with the tucutuco,
-two foxes (Canis Magellanicus and C. Azarae), a sea-otter,
-the guanaco, and a deer. Most of these animals inhabit only
-the drier eastern parts of the country; and the deer has never
-been seen south of the Strait of Magellan. Observing the
-general correspondence of the cliffs of soft sandstone, mud,
-and shingle, on the opposite sides of the Strait, and on some
-intervening islands, one is strongly tempted to believe that the
-land was once joined, and thus allowed animals so delicate
-and helpless as the tucutuco and Reithrodon to pass over.
-The correspondence of the cliffs is far from proving any
-junction; because such cliffs generally are formed by the
-intersection of sloping deposits, which, before the elevation
-of the land, had been accumulated near the then existing
-shores. It is, however, a remarkable coincidence, that in the
-two large islands cut off by the Beagle Channel from the
-rest of Tierra del Fuego, one has cliffs composed of matter
-that may be called stratified alluvium, which front similar
-ones on the opposite side of the channel, -- while the other is
-exclusively bordered by old crystalline rocks: in the former,
-called Navarin Island, both foxes and guanacos occur; but in
-the latter, Hoste Island, although similar in every respect,
-and only separated by a channel a little more than half a mile
-wide, I have the word of Jemmy Button for saying that
-neither of these animals are found.
-
-The gloomy woods are inhabited by few birds: occasionally
-the plaintive note of a white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher
-(Myiobius albiceps) may be heard, concealed near the summit
-of the most lofty trees; and more rarely the loud strange
-cry of a black wood-pecker, with a fine scarlet crest on its
-head. A little, dusky-coloured wren (Scytalopus Magellanicus)
-hops in a skulking manner among the entangled mass
-of the fallen and decaying trunks. But the creeper (Oxyurus
-tupinieri) is the commonest bird in the country. Throughout
-the beech forests, high up and low down, in the most
-gloomy, wet, and impenetrable ravines, it may be met with.
-This little bird no doubt appears more numerous than it
-really is, from its habit of following with seeming curiosity
-any person who enters these silent woods: continually uttering
-a harsh twitter, it flutters from tree to tree, within a few
-feet of the intruder's face. It is far from wishing for the
-modest concealment of the true creeper (Certhia familiaris);
-nor does it, like that bird, run up the trunks of trees, but
-industriously, after the manner of a willow-wren, hops about,
-and searches for insects on every twig and branch. In the
-more open parts, three or four species of finches, a thrush,
-a starling (or Icterus), two Opetiorhynchi, and several hawks
-and owls occur.
-
-The absence of any species whatever in the whole class of
-Reptiles, is a marked feature in the zoology of this country,
-as well as in that of the Falkland Islands. I do not ground
-this statement merely on my own observation, but I heard it
-from the Spanish inhabitants of the latter place, and from
-Jemmy Button with regard to Tierra del Fuego. On the
-banks of the Santa Cruz, in 50 degs. south, I saw a frog; and
-it is not improbable that these animals, as well as lizards, may
-be found as far south as the Strait of Magellan, where the
-country retains the character of Patagonia; but within the
-damp and cold limit of Tierra del Fuego not one occurs.
-That the climate would not have suited some of the orders,
-such as lizards, might have been foreseen; but with respect
-to frogs, this was not so obvious.
-
-Beetles occur in very small numbers: it was long before I
-could believe that a country as large as Scotland, covered
-with vegetable productions and with a variety of stations,
-could be so unproductive. The few which I found were
-alpine species (Harpalidae and Heteromidae) living under
-stones. The vegetable-feeding Chrysomelidae, so eminently
-characteristic of the Tropics, are here almost entirely
-absent; [5] I saw very few flies, butterflies, or bees, and no
-crickets or Orthoptera. In the pools of water I found but a few
-aquatic beetles, and not any fresh-water shells: Succinea at
-first appears an exception; but here it must be called a
-terrestrial shell, for it lives on the damp herbage far from the
-water. Land-shells could be procured only in the same alpine
-situations with the beetles. I have already contrasted the
-climate as well as the general appearance of Tierra del
-Fuego with that of Patagonia; and the difference is strongly
-exemplified in the entomology. I do not believe they have
-one species in common; certainly the general character of the
-insects is widely different.
-
-If we turn from the land to the sea, we shall find the latter
-as abundantly stocked with living creatures as the former is
-poorly so. In all parts of the world a rocky and partially
-protected shore perhaps supports, in a given space, a greater
-number of individual animals than any other station. There
-is one marine production which, from its importance, is
-worthy of a particular history. It is the kelp, or Macrocystis
-pyrifera. This plant grows on every rock from low-water
-mark to a great depth, both on the outer coast and within the
-channels. [6] I believe, during the voyages of the Adventure
-and Beagle, not one rock near the surface was discovered
-which was not buoyed by this floating weed. The good service
-it thus affords to vessels navigating near this stormy
-land is evident; and it certainly has saved many a one from
-being wrecked. I know few things more surprising than to
-see this plant growing and flourishing amidst those great
-breakers of the western ocean, which no mass of rock, let it
-be ever so hard, can long resist. The stem is round, slimy,
-and smooth, and seldom has a diameter of so much as an
-inch. A few taken together are sufficiently strong to support
-the weight of the large loose stones, to which in the inland
-channels they grow attached; and yet some of these stones
-were so heavy that when drawn to the surface, they could
-scarcely be lifted into a boat by one person. Captain Cook,
-in his second voyage, says, that this plant at Kerguelen Land
-rises from a greater depth than twenty-four fathoms; "and
-as it does not grow in a perpendicular direction, but makes a
-very acute angle with the bottom, and much of it afterwards
-spreads many fathoms on the surface of the sea, I am well
-warranted to say that some of it grows to the length of sixty
-fathoms and upwards." I do not suppose the stem of any
-other plant attains so great a length as three hundred and
-sixty feet, as stated by Captain Cook. Captain Fitz Roy,
-moreover, found it growing [7] up from the greater depth of
-forty-five fathoms. The beds of this sea-weed, even when
-of not great breadth, make excellent natural floating
-breakwaters. It is quite curious to see, in an exposed harbour,
-how soon the waves from the open sea, as they travel through
-the straggling stems, sink in height, and pass into smooth
-water.
-
-The number of living creatures of all Orders, whose existence
-intimately depends on the kelp, is wonderful. A great
-volume might be written, describing the inhabitants of one
-of these beds of sea-weed. Almost all the leaves, excepting
-those that float on the surface, are so thickly incrusted with
-corallines as to be of a white colour. We find exquisitely
-delicate structures, some inhabited by simple hydra-like
-polypi, others by more organized kinds, and beautiful compound
-Ascidiae. On the leaves, also, various patelliform shells,
-Trochi, uncovered molluscs, and some bivalves are attached.
-Innumerable crustacea frequent every part of the plant. On
-shaking the great entangled roots, a pile of small fish, shells,
-cuttle-fish, crabs of all orders, sea-eggs, star-fish, beautiful
-Holuthuriae, Planariae, and crawling nereidous animals of a
-multitude of forms, all fall out together. Often as I recurred
-to a branch of the kelp, I never failed to discover animals
-of new and curious structures. In Chiloe, where the kelp
-does not thrive very well, the numerous shells, corallines, and
-crustacea are absent; but there yet remain a few of the
-Flustraceae, and some compound Ascidiae; the latter, however,
-are of different species from those in Tierra del Fuego:
-we see here the fucus possessing a wider range than the animals
-which use it as an abode. I can only compare these
-great aquatic forests of the southern hemisphere with the
-terrestrial ones in the intertropical regions. Yet if in any
-country a forest was destroyed, I do not believe nearly so
-many species of animals would perish as would here, from
-the destruction of the kelp. Amidst the leaves of this plant
-numerous species of fish live, which nowhere else could find
-food or shelter; with their destruction the many cormorants
-and other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and porpoises, would
-soon perish also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage, the miserable
-lord of this miserable land, would redouble his cannibal
-feast, decrease in numbers, and perhaps cease to exist.
-
-June 8th. -- We weighed anchor early in the morning and
-left Port Famine. Captain Fitz Roy determined to leave the
-Strait of Magellan by the Magdalen Channel, which had not
-long been discovered. Our course lay due south, down that
-gloomy passage which I have before alluded to as appearing
-to lead to another and worse world. The wind was fair, but
-the atmosphere was very thick; so that we missed much
-curious scenery. The dark ragged clouds were rapidly driven
-over the mountains, from their summits nearly down to their
-bases. The glimpses which we caught through the dusky
-mass were highly interesting; jagged points, cones of snow,
-blue glaciers, strong outlines, marked on a lurid sky, were
-seen at different distances and heights. In the midst of such
-scenery we anchored at Cape Turn, close to Mount Sarmiento,
-which was then hidden in the clouds. At the base of
-the lofty and almost perpendicular sides of our little cove
-there was one deserted wigwam, and it alone reminded us
-that man sometimes wandered into these desolate regions.
-But it would be difficult to imagine a scene where he seemed
-to have fewer claims or less authority. The inanimate works
-of nature -- rock, ice, snow, wind, and water -- all warring
-with each other, yet combined against man -- here reigned in
-absolute sovereignty.
-
-June 9th. -- In the morning we were delighted by seeing
-the veil of mist gradually rise from Sarmiento, and display it
-to our view. This mountain, which is one of the highest in
-Tierra del Fuego, has an altitude of 6800 feet. Its base, for
-about an eighth of its total height, is clothed by dusky woods,
-and above this a field of snow extends to the summit. These
-vast piles of snow, which never melt, and seem destined to
-last as long as the world holds together, present a noble and
-even sublime spectacle. The outline of the mountain was
-admirably clear and defined. Owing to the abundance of
-light reflected from the white and glittering surface, no
-shadows were cast on any part; and those lines which intersected
-the sky could alone be distinguished: hence the mass
-stood out in the boldest relief. Several glaciers descended in
-a winding course from the upper great expanse of snow to
-the sea-coast: they may be likened to great frozen Niagaras;
-and perhaps these cataracts of blue ice are full as beautiful
-as the moving ones of water. By night we reached the western
-part of the channel; but the water was so deep that no
-anchorage could be found. We were in consequence obliged
-to stand off and on in this narrow arm of the sea, during a
-pitch-dark night of fourteen hours long.
-
-June 10th. -- In the morning we made the best of our way
-into the open Pacific. The western coast generally consists
-of low, rounded, quite barren hills of granite and greenstone.
-Sir J. Narborough called one part South Desolation, because
-it is "so desolate a land to behold:" and well indeed might
-he say so. Outside the main islands, there are numberless
-scattered rocks on which the long swell of the open ocean
-incessantly rages. We passed out between the East and West
-Furies; and a little farther northward there are so many
-breakers that the sea is called the Milky Way. One sight of
-such a coast is enough to make a landsman dream for a week
-about shipwrecks, peril, and death; and with this sight we
-bade farewell for ever to Tierra del Fuego.
-
-The following discussion on the climate of the southern
-parts of the continent with relation to its productions, on
-the snow-line, on the extraordinarily low descent of the
-glaciers, and on the zone of perpetual congelation in
-the antarctic islands, may be passed over by any one
-not interested in these curious subjects, or the final
-recapitulation alone may be read. I shall, however, here
-give only an abstract, and must refer for details to the
-Thirteenth Chapter and the Appendix of the former edition
-of this work.
-
-On the Climate and Productions of Tierra del Fuego and
-of the South-west Coast. -- The following table gives the
-mean temperature of Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands,
-and, for comparison, that of Dublin: --
-
- Summer Winter Mean of Summer
- Latitude Temp. Temp. and Winter
----------------------------------------------------------------
-Tierra del Fuego 53 38' S. 50 33.08 41.54
-Falkland Islands 51 38' S. 51 -- --
-Dublin 53 21' N. 59.54 39.2 49.37
-
-
-Hence we see that the central part of Tierra del Fuego is
-colder in winter, and no less than 9.5 degs. less hot in
-summer, than Dublin. According to von Buch, the mean
-temperature of July (not the hottest month in the year)
-at Saltenfiord in Norway, is as high as 57.8 degs.,
-and this place is actually 13 degs. nearer the pole
-than Port Famine! [8] Inhospitable as this climate appears
-to our feelings evergreen trees flourish luxuriantly under
-it. Humming-birds may be seen sucking the flowers, and
-parrots feeding on the seeds of the Winter's Bark, in lat.
-55 degs. S. I have already remarked to what a degree the
-sea swarms with living creatures; and the shells (such as
-the Patellae, Fissurellae, Chitons, and Barnacles),
-according to Mr. G. B. Sowerby, are of a much larger size
-and of a more vigorous growth, than the analogous species in
-the northern hemisphere. A large Voluta is abundant in
-southern Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. At
-Bahia Blanca, in lat. 39 degs. S., the most abundant shells were
-three species of Oliva (one of large size), one or two Volutas,
-and a Terebra. Now, these are amongst the best characterized
-tropical forms. It is doubtful whether even one
-small species of Oliva exists on the southern shores of
-Europe, and there are no species of the two other genera.
-If a geologist were to find in lat 39 degs. on the coast of
-Portugal a bed containing numerous shells belonging to three
-species of Oliva, to a Voluta and Terebra, he would probably
-assert that the climate at the period of their existence must
-have been tropical; but judging from South America, such an
-inference might be erroneous.
-
-The equable, humid, and windy climate of Tierra del
-Fuego extends, with only a small increase of heat, for many
-degrees along the west coast of the continent. The forests
-for 600 miles northward of Cape Horn, have a very similar
-aspect. As a proof of the equable climate, even for 300 or
-400 miles still further northward, I may mention that in
-Chiloe (corresponding in latitude with the northern parts
-of Spain) the peach seldom produces fruit, whilst strawberries
-and apples thrive to perfection. Even the crops of
-barley and wheat [9] are often brought into the houses to be
-dried and ripened. At Valdivia (in the same latitude of
-40 degs., with Madrid) grapes and figs ripen, but are not
-common; olives seldom ripen even partially, and oranges not at
-all. These fruits, in corresponding latitudes in Europe, are
-well known to succeed to perfection; and even in this continent,
-at the Rio Negro, under nearly the same parallel
-with Valdivia, sweet potatoes (convolvulus) are cultivated;
-and grapes, figs, olives, oranges, water and musk melons,
-produce abundant fruit. Although the humid and equable
-climate of Chiloe, and of the coast northward and southward
-of it, is so unfavourable to our fruits, yet the native
-forests, from lat. 45 to 38 degs., almost rival in luxuriance
-those of the glowing intertropical regions. Stately trees of
-many kinds, with smooth and highly coloured barks, are loaded
-by parasitical monocotyledonous plants; large and elegant
-ferns are numerous, and arborescent grasses entwine the
-trees into one entangled mass to the height of thirty or forty
-feet above the ground. Palm-trees grow in lat 37 degs.; an
-arborescent grass, very like a bamboo, in 40 degs.; and
-another closely allied kind, of great length, but not erect,
-flourishes even as far south as 45 degs. S.
-
-An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea
-compared with the land, seems to extend over the greater
-part of the southern hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the
-vegetation partakes of a semi-tropical character. Tree-ferns
-thrive luxuriantly in Van Diemen's Land (lat. 45 degs.), and I
-measured one trunk no less than six feet in circumference.
-An arborescent fern was found by Forster in New Zealand
-in 46 degs., where orchideous plants are parasitical on the
-trees. In the Auckland Islands, ferns, according to Dr.
-Dieffenbach [10] have trunks so thick and high that they may
-be almost called tree-ferns; and in these islands, and even
-as far south as lat. 55 degs. in the Macquarrie Islands,
-parrots abound.
-
-On the Height of the Snow-line, and on the Descent of
-the Glaciers in South America. -- For the detailed authorities
-for the following table, I must refer to the former edition: --
-
- Height in feet
-Latitude of Snow-line Observer
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-Equatorial region; mean result 15,748 Humboldt.
-Bolivia, lat. 16 to 18 degs. S. 17,000 Pentland.
-Central Chile, lat. 33 degs. S. 14,500 - 15,000 Gillies, and
- the Author.
-Chiloe, lat. 41 to 43 degs. S. 6,000 Officers of the
- Beagle and the
- Author.
-Tierra del Fuego, 54 degs. S. 3,500 - 4,000 King.
-
-
-As the height of the plane of perpetual snow seems chiefly to
-be determined by the extreme heat of the summer, rather than
-by the mean temperature of the year, we ought not to be
-surprised at its descent in the Strait of Magellan, where the
-summer is so cool, to only 3500 or 4000 feet above the level of
-the sea; although in Norway, we must travel to between lat. 67
-and 70 degs. N., that is, about 14 degs. nearer the pole, to meet
-with perpetual snow at this low level. The difference in height,
-namely, about 9000 feet, between the snow-line on the Cordillera
-behind Chiloe (with its highest points ranging from
-only 5600 to 7500 feet) and in central Chile [11] (a distance of
-only 9 degs. of latitude), is truly wonderful. The land from the
-southward of Chiloe to near Concepcion (lat. 37 degs.) is hidden
-by one dense forest dripping with moisture. The sky is
-cloudy, and we have seen how badly the fruits of southern
-Europe succeed. In central Chile, on the other hand, a little
-northward of Concepcion, the sky is generally clear, rain does
-not fall for the seven summer months, and southern European
-fruits succeed admirably; and even the sugar-cane has
-been cultivated. [12] No doubt the plane of perpetual snow
-undergoes the above remarkable flexure of 9000 feet,
-unparalleled in other parts of the world, not far from the
-latitude of Concepcion, where the land ceases to be covered
-with forest-trees; for trees in South America indicate a rainy
-climate, and rain a clouded sky and little heat in summer.
-
-The descent of glaciers to the sea must, I conceive, mainly
-depend (subject, of course, to a proper supply of snow in the
-upper region) on the lowness of the line of perpetual snow
-on steep mountains near the coast. As the snow-line is so
-low in Tierra del Fuego, we might have expected that many
-of the glaciers would have reached the sea. Nevertheless,
-I was astonished when I first saw a range, only from 3000 to
-4000 feet in height, in the latitude of Cumberland, with every
-valley filled with streams of ice descending to the sea-coast.
-Almost every arm of the sea, which penetrates to the interior
-higher chain, not only in Tierra del Fuego, but on the coast
-for 650 miles northwards, is terminated by "tremendous and
-astonishing glaciers," as described by one of the officers on
-the survey. Great masses of ice frequently fall from these
-icy cliffs, and the crash reverberates like the broadside of a
-man-of-war through the lonely channels. These falls, as
-noticed in the last chapter, produce great waves which break
-on the adjoining coasts. It is known that earthquakes frequently
-cause masses of earth to fall from sea-cliffs: how
-terrific, then, would be the effect of a severe shock (and such
-occur here [13]) on a body like a glacier, already in motion, and
-traversed by fissures! I can readily believe that the water
-would be fairly beaten back out of the deepest channel, and
-then, returning with an overwhelming force, would whirl
-about huge masses of rock like so much chaff. In Eyre's
-Sound, in the latitude of Paris, there are immense glaciers,
-and yet the loftiest neighbouring mountain is only 6200 feet
-high. In this Sound, about fifty icebergs were seen at one
-time floating outwards, and one of them must have been at
-least 168 feet in total height. Some of the icebergs were
-loaded with blocks of no inconsiderable size, of granite and
-other rocks, different from the clay-slate of the surrounding
-mountains. The glacier furthest from the pole, surveyed
-during the voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, is in lat.
-46 degs. 50', in the Gulf of Penas. It is 15 miles long, and in
-one part 7 broad and descends to the sea-coast. But even a
-few miles northward of this glacier, in Laguna de San
-
-[picture]
-
-Rafael, some Spanish missionaries [14] encountered "many
-icebergs, some great, some small, and others middle-sized," in
-a narrow arm of the sea, on the 22nd of the month corresponding
-with our June, and in a latitude corresponding with
-that of the Lake of Geneva !
-
-In Europe, the most southern glacier which comes down
-to the sea is met with, according to Von Buch, on the coast
-of Norway, in lat. 67 degs. Now, this is more than 20 degs. of
-latitude, or 1230 miles, nearer the pole than the Laguna de San
-Rafael. The position of the glaciers at this place and in the
-Gulf of Penas may be put even in a more striking point of
-view, for they descend to the sea-coast within 7.5 degs. of
-latitude, or 450 miles, of a harbour, where three species of
-Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra, are the commonest shells,
-within less than 9 degs. from where palms grow, within 4.5 degs.
-of a region where the jaguar and puma range over the
-plains, less than 2.5 degs. from arborescent grasses, and
-(looking to the westward in the same hemisphere) less than
-2 degs. from orchideous parasites, and within a single degree
-of tree-ferns!
-
-These facts are of high geological interest with respect to
-the climate of the northern hemisphere at the period when
-boulders were transported. I will not here detail how simply
-the theory of icebergs being charged with fragments of rock,
-explain the origin and position of the gigantic boulders of
-eastern Tierra del Fuego, on the high plain of Santa Cruz,
-and on the island of Chiloe. In Tierra del Fuego, the greater
-number of boulders lie on the lines of old sea-channels, now
-converted into dry valleys by the elevation of the land. They
-are associated with a great unstratified formation of mud
-and sand, containing rounded and angular fragments of all
-sizes, which has originated [15] in the repeated ploughing up of
-the sea-bottom by the stranding of icebergs, and by the matter
-transported on them. Few geologists now doubt that
-those erratic boulders which lie near lofty mountains have
-been pushed forward by the glaciers themselves, and that
-those distant from mountains, and embedded in subaqueous
-deposits, have been conveyed thither either on icebergs or
-frozen in coast-ice. The connection between the transportal
-of boulders and the presence of ice in some form, is strikingly
-shown by their geographical distribution over the earth.
-In South America they are not found further than 48 degs. of
-latitude, measured from the southern pole; in North America
-it appears that the limit of their transportal extends to
-53.5 degs. from the northern pole; but in Europe to not more
-than 40 degs. of latitude, measured from the same point. On the
-other hand, in the intertropical parts of America, Asia, and
-Africa, they have never been observed; nor at the Cape of Good
-Hope, nor in Australia. [16]
-
-On the Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands.
--- Considering the rankness of the vegetation in Tierra del
-Fuego, and on the coast northward of it, the condition of the
-islands south and south-west of America is truly surprising.
-Sandwich Land, in the latitude of the north part of Scotland,
-was found by Cook, during the hottest month of the
-year, "covered many fathoms thick with everlasting snow;"
-and there seems to be scarcely any vegetation. Georgia, an
-island 96 miles long and 10 broad, in the latitude of Yorkshire,
-"in the very height of summer, is in a manner wholly
-covered with frozen snow." It can boast only of moss, some
-tufts of grass, and wild burnet; it has only one land-bird
-(Anthus correndera), yet Iceland, which is 10 degs. nearer the
-pole, has, according to Mackenzie, fifteen land-birds. The
-South Shetland Islands, in the same latitude as the southern
-half of Norway, possess only some lichens, moss, and a little
-grass; and Lieut. Kendall [17] found the bay, in which he was
-at anchor, beginning to freeze at a period corresponding with
-our 8th of September. The soil here consists of ice and
-volcanic ashes interstratified; and at a little depth beneath
-the surface it must remain perpetually congealed, for Lieut.
-Kendall found the body of a foreign sailor which had long
-been buried, with the flesh and all the features perfectly
-preserved. It is a singular fact, that on the two great
-continents in the northern hemisphere (but not in the broken
-land of Europe between them ), we have the zone of perpetually
-frozen undersoil in a low latitude -- namely, in 56 degs. in
-North America at the depth of three feet, [18] and in 62 degs.
-in Siberia at the depth of twelve to fifteen feet -- as the
-result of a directly opposite condition of things to those
-of the southern hemisphere. On the northern continents, the
-winter is rendered excessively cold by the radiation from a
-large area of land into a clear sky, nor is it moderated by
-the warmth-bringing currents of the sea; the short summer,
-on the other hand, is hot. In the Southern Ocean the winter
-is not so excessively cold, but the summer is far less hot,
-for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun to warm the ocean,
-itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean temperature
-of the year, which regulates the zone of perpetually congealed
-under-soil, is low. It is evident that a rank vegetation,
-which does not so much require heat as it does protection
-from intense cold, would approach much nearer to this zone
-of perpetual congelation under the equable climate of the
-southern hemisphere, than under the extreme climate of the
-northern continents.
-
-The case of the sailor's body perfectly preserved in the icy
-soil of the South Shetland Islands (lat. 62 to 63 degs. S.), in a
-rather lower latitude than that (lat. 64 degs. N.) under which
-Pallas found the frozen rhinoceros in Siberia, is very
-interesting. Although it is a fallacy, as I have endeavoured to
-show in a former chapter, to suppose that the larger quadrupeds
-require a luxuriant vegetation for their support, nevertheless
-it is important to find in the South Shetland Islands
-a frozen under-soil within 360 miles of the forest-clad islands
-near Cape Horn, where, as far as the _bulk_ of vegetation is
-concerned, any number of great quadrupeds might be supported.
-The perfect preservation of the carcasses of the
-Siberian elephants and rhinoceroses is certainly one of the
-most wonderful facts in geology; but independently of the
-imagined difficulty of supplying them with food from the
-adjoining countries, the whole case is not, I think, so
-perplexing as it has generally been considered. The plains of
-Siberia, like those of the Pampas, appear to have been formed
-under the sea, into which rivers brought down the bodies
-of many animals; of the greater number of these, only the
-skeletons have been preserved, but of others the perfect
-carcass. Now, it is known that in the shallow sea on the Arctic
-coast of America the bottom freezes, [19] and does not thaw in
-spring so soon as the surface of the land, moreover at
-greater depths, where the bottom of the sea does not freeze
-the mud a few feet beneath the top layer might remain even
-in summer below 32 degs., as in the case on the land with the
-soil at the depth of a few feet. At still greater depths, the
-temperature of the mud and water would probably not be low
-enough to preserve the flesh; and hence, carcasses drifted
-beyond the shallow parts near an Arctic coast, would have
-only their skeletons preserved: now in the extreme northern
-parts of Siberia bones are infinitely numerous, so that even
-islets are said to be almost composed of them; [20] and those
-islets lie no less than ten degrees of latitude north of the
-place where Pallas found the frozen rhinoceros. On the other
-hand, a carcass washed by a flood into a shallow part of the
-Arctic Sea, would be preserved for an indefinite period, if it
-were soon afterwards covered with mud sufficiently thick to
-prevent the heat of the summer-water penetrating to it; and
-if, when the sea-bottom was upraised into land, the covering
-was sufficiently thick to prevent the heat of the summer air
-and sun thawing and corrupting it.
-
-Recapitulation. -- I will recapitulate the principal facts with
-regard to the climate, ice-action, and organic productions of
-the southern hemisphere, transposing the places in imagination
-to Europe, with which we are so much better acquainted.
-Then, near Lisbon, the commonest sea-shells, namely, three
-species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra, would have a
-tropical character. In the southern provinces of France,
-magnificent forests, intwined by arborescent grasses and with
-the trees loaded with parasitical plants, would hide the face
-of the land. The puma and the jaguar would haunt the
-Pyrenees. In the latitude of Mont Blanc, but on an island as
-far westward as Central North America, tree-ferns and
-parasitical Orchideae would thrive amidst the thick woods.
-Even as far north as central Denmark, humming-birds would be
-seen fluttering about delicate flowers, and parrots feeding
-amidst the evergreen woods; and in the sea there, we should
-have a Voluta, and all the shells of large size and vigorous
-growth. Nevertheless, on some islands only 360 miles northward
-of our new Cape Horn in Denmark, a carcass buried
-in the soil (or if washed into a shallow sea, and covered up
-with mud) would be preserved perpetually frozen. If some
-bold navigator attempted to penetrate northward of these
-islands, he would run a thousand dangers amidst gigantic
-icebergs, on some of which he would see great blocks of rock
-borne far away from their original site. Another island of
-large size in the latitude of southern Scotland, but twice as
-far to the west, would be "almost wholly covered with
-everlasting snow," and would have each bay terminated by
-ice-cliffs, whence great masses would be yearly detached: this
-island would boast only of a little moss, grass, and burnet,
-and a titlark would be its only land inhabitant. From our
-new Cape Horn in Denmark, a chain of mountains, scarcely
-half the height of the Alps, would run in a straight line due
-southward; and on its western flank every deep creek of the
-sea, or fiord, would end in "bold and astonishing glaciers."
-These lonely channels would frequently reverberate with the
-falls of ice, and so often would great waves rush along their
-coasts; numerous icebergs, some as tall as cathedrals, and
-occasionally loaded with "no inconsiderable blocks of rock,"
-would be stranded on the outlying islets; at intervals violent
-earthquakes would shoot prodigious masses of ice into the
-waters below. Lastly, some missionaries attempting to penetrate
-a long arm of the sea, would behold the not lofty surrounding
-mountains, sending down their many grand icy streams
-to the sea-coast, and their progress in the boats would
-be checked by the innumerable floating icebergs, some small
-and some great; and this would have occurred on our twenty-
-second of June, and where the Lake of Geneva is now spread
-out! [21]
-
-[1] The south-westerly breezes are generally very dry.
-January 29th, being at anchor under Cape Gregory: a very
-hard gale from W. by S., clear sky with few cumuli;
-temperature 57 degs., dew-point 36 degs., -- difference
-21 degs. On January 15th, at Port St. Julian: in the
-morning, light winds with much rain, followed by a very
-heavy squall with rain, -- settled into heavy gale with
-large cumuli, -- cleared up, blowing very strong from S.S.W.
-Temperature 60 degs., dew-point 42 degs., -- difference
-18 degs.
-
-[2] Rengger, Natur. der Saeugethiere von Paraguay. S. 334.
-
-[3] Captain Fitz Roy informs me that in April (our October),
-the leaves of those trees which grow near the base of the
-mountains change colour, but not those on the more elevated
-parts. I remember having read some observations, showing
-that in England the leaves fall earlier in a warm and fine
-autumn than in a late and cold one, The change in the colour
-being here retarded in the more elevated, and therefore colder
-situations, must he owing to the same general law of vegetation.
-The trees of Tierra del Fuego during no part of the year
-entirely shed their leaves.
-
-[4] Described from my specimens and notes by the Rev. J. M.
-Berkeley, in the Linnean Transactions (vol. xix. p. 37), under
-the name of Cyttaria Darwinii; the Chilean species is the
-C. Berteroii. This genus is allied to Bulgaria.
-
-[5] I believe I must except one alpine Haltica, and a single
-specimen of a Melasoma. Mr. Waterhouse informs me, that of
-the Harpalidae there are eight or nine species -- the forms
-of the greater number being very peculiar; of Heteromera,
-four or five species; of Rhyncophora, six or seven; and of
-the following families one species in each: Staphylinidae,
-Elateridae, Cebrionidae, Melolonthidae. The species in the
-other orders are even fewer. In all the orders, the scarcity
-of the individuals is even more remarkable than that of the
-species. Most of the Coleoptera have been carefully described
-by Mr. Waterhouse in the Annals of Nat. Hist.
-
-[6] Its geographical range is remarkably wide; it is found
-from the extreme southern islets near Cape Horn, as far
-north on the eastern coast (according to information given
-me by Mr. Stokes) as lat. 43 degs., -- but on the western
-coast, as Dr. Hooker tells me, it extends to the R. San
-Francisco in California, and perhaps even to Kamtschatka.
-We thus have an immense range in latitude; and as Cook,
-who must have been well acquainted with the species, found
-it at Kerguelen Land, no less than 140 degs. in longitude.
-
-[7] Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, vol. i. p. 363. -- It
-appears that sea-weed grows extremely quick. -- Mr. Stephenson
-found (Wilson's Voyage round Scotland, vol. ii. p. 228) that
-a rock uncovered only at spring-tides, which had been chiselled
-smooth in November, on the following May, that is, within
-six months afterwards, was thickly covered with Fucus digitatus
-two feet, and F. esculentus six feet, in length.
-
-[8] With regard to Tierra del Fuego, the results are deduced
-from the observations of Capt. King (Geographical Journal,
-1830), and those taken on board the Beagle. For the Falkland
-Islands, I am indebted to Capt. Sulivan for the mean of the
-mean temperature (reduced from careful observations at
-midnight, 8 A.M., noon, and 8 P.M.) of the three hottest
-months, viz., December, January, and February. The temperature
-of Dublin is taken from Barton.
-
-[9] Agueros, Descrip. Hist. de la Prov. de Chiloe, 1791, p. 94.
-
-[10] See the German Translation of this Journal; and for the
-other facts, Mr. Brown's Appendix to Flinders's Voyage.
-
-
-[11] On the Cordillera of central Chile, I believe the
-snow-line varies exceedingly in height in different summers.
-I was assured that during one very dry and long summer, all
-the snow disappeared from Aconcagua, although it attains the
-prodigious height of 23,000 feet. It is probable that much
-of the snow at these great heights is evaporated rather than
-thawed.
-
-[12] Miers's Chile, vol. i. p. 415. It is said that the
-sugar-cane grew at Ingenio, lat. 32 to 33 degs., but not in
-sufficient quantity to make the manufacture profitable. In
-the valley of Quillota, south of Ingenio, I saw some large
-date palm trees.
-
-[13] Bulkeley's and Cummin's Faithful Narrative of the Loss
-of the Wager. The earthquake happened August 25, 1741.
-
-[14] Agueros, Desc. Hist. de Chiloe, p. 227.
-
-[15] Geological Transactions, vol. vi. p. 415.
-
-[16] I have given details (the first, I believe, published) on
-this subject in the first edition, and in the Appendix to it.
-I have there shown that the apparent exceptions to the absence
-of erratic boulders in certain countries, are due to erroneous
-observations; several statements there given I have since
-found confirmed by various authors.
-
-[17] Geographical Journal, 1830, pp. 65, 66.
-
-[18] Richardson's Append. to Back's Exped., and Humboldt's
-Fragm. Asiat., tom. ii. p. 386.
-
-[19] Messrs. Dease and Simpson, in Geograph. Journ., vol.
-viii. pp. 218 and 220.
-
-[20] Cuvier (Ossemens Fossiles, tom. i. p. 151), from Billing's
-Voyage.
-
-[21] In the former edition and Appendix, I have given some
-facts on the transportal of erratic boulders and icebergs
-in the Atlantic Ocean. This subject has lately been treated
-excellently by Mr. Hayes, in the Boston Journal (vol. iv.
-p. 426). The author does not appear aware of a case published
-by me (Geographical Journal, vol. ix. p. 528) of a gigantic
-boulder embedded in an iceberg in the Antarctic Ocean, almost
-certainly one hundred miles distant from any land, and
-perhaps much more distant. In the Appendix I have discussed
-at length the probability (at that time hardly thought of)
-of icebergs, when stranded, grooving and polishing rocks,
-like glaciers. This is now a very commonly received opinion;
-and I cannot still avoid the suspicion that it is applicable
-even to such cases as that of the Jura. Dr. Richardson has
-assured me that the icebergs off North America push before
-them pebbles and sand, and leave the sub-marine rocky flats
-quite bare; it is hardly possible to doubt that such ledges
-must be polished and scored in the direction of the set of
-the prevailing currents. Since writing that Appendix, I have
-seen in North Wales (London Phil. Mag., vol. xxi. p. 180)
-the adjoining action of glaciers and floating icebergs.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-CENTRAL CHILE
-
-Valparaiso -- Excursion to the Foot of the Andes -- Structure
-of the Land -- Ascend the Bell of Quillota -- Shattered
-Masses of Greenstone -- Immense Valleys -- Mines -- State of
-Miners -- Santiago -- Hot-baths of Cauquenes -- Gold-mines --
-Grinding-mills -- Perforated Stones -- Habits of the Puma -- El
-Turco and Tapacolo -- Hummingbirds.
-
-
-JULY 23rd. -- The Beagle anchored late at night in the
-bay of Valparaiso, the chief seaport of Chile. When
-morning came, everything appeared delightful. After
-Tierra del Fuego, the climate felt quite delicious -- the
-atmosphere so dry, and the heavens so clear and blue with the
-sun shining brightly, that all nature seemed sparkling with
-life. The view from the anchorage is very pretty. The town is
-built at the very foot of a range of hills, about 1600 feet
-high, and rather steep. From its position, it consists of one
-long, straggling street, which runs parallel to the beach,
-and wherever a ravine comes down, the houses are piled up on
-each side of it. The rounded hills, being only partially
-protected by a very scanty vegetation, are worn into numberless
-little gullies, which expose a singularly bright red soil. From
-this cause, and from the low whitewashed houses with tile roofs,
-the view reminded me of St. Cruz in Teneriffe. In a north-
-westerly direction there are some fine glimpses of the Andes:
-but these mountains appear much grander when viewed from
-the neighbouring hills: the great distance at which they are
-situated can then more readily be perceived. The volcano of
-Aconcagua is particularly magnificent. This huge and irregularly
-conical mass has an elevation greater than that of
-Chimborazo; for, from measurements made by the officers in
-the Beagle, its height is no less than 23,000 feet. The
-Cordillera, however, viewed from this point, owe the greater
-part of their beauty to the atmosphere through which they are
-seen. When the sun was setting in the Pacific, it was
-admirable to watch how clearly their rugged outlines could
-be distinguished, yet how varied and how delicate were the
-shades of their colour.
-
-I had the good fortune to find living here Mr. Richard
-Corfield, an old schoolfellow and friend, to whose hospitality
-and kindness I was greatly indebted, in having afforded me
-a most pleasant residence during the Beagle's stay in Chile.
-The immediate neighbourhood of Valparaiso is not very productive
-to the naturalist. During the long summer the wind
-blows steadily from the southward, and a little off shore, so
-that rain never falls; during the three winter months, however,
-it is sufficiently abundant. The vegetation in consequence
-is very scanty: except in some deep valleys, there are
-no trees, and only a little grass and a few low bushes are
-scattered over the less steep parts of the hills. When we
-reflect, that at the distance of 350 miles to the south, this
-side of the Andes is completely hidden by one impenetrable
-forest, the contrast is very remarkable. I took several long
-walks while collecting objects of natural history. The country
-is pleasant for exercise. There are many very beautiful flowers;
-and, as in most other dry climates, the plants and shrubs
-possess strong and peculiar odours -- even one's clothes by
-brushing through them became scented. I did not cease from
-wonder at finding each succeeding day as fine as the foregoing.
-What a difference does climate make in the enjoyment
-of life! How opposite are the sensations when viewing
-black mountains half enveloped in clouds, and seeing
-another range through the light blue haze of a fine day! The
-one for a time may be very sublime; the other is all gaiety
-and happy life.
-
-August 14th. -- I set out on a riding excursion, for the
-purpose of geologizing the basal parts of the Andes, which
-alone at this time of the year are not shut up by the winter
-snow. Our first day's ride was northward along the seacoast.
-After dark we reached the Hacienda of Quintero,
-the estate which formerly belonged to Lord Cochrane. My
-object in coming here was to see the great beds of shells,
-which stand some yards above the level of the sea, and are
-burnt for lime. The proofs of the elevation of this whole
-line of coast are unequivocal: at the height of a few hundred
-feet old-looking shells are numerous, and I found some
-at 1300 feet. These shells either lie loose on the surface, or
-are embedded in a reddish-black vegetable mould. I was
-much surprised to find under the microscope that this vegetable
-mould is really marine mud, full of minute particles of
-organic bodies.
-
-15th. -- We returned towards the valley of Quillota. The
-country was exceedingly pleasant; just such as poets would
-call pastoral: green open lawns, separated by small valleys
-with rivulets, and the cottages, we may suppose of the shepherds
-scattered on the hill-sides. We were obliged to cross
-the ridge of the Chilicauquen. At its base there were many
-fine evergreen forest-trees, but these flourished only in the
-ravines, where there was running water. Any person who
-had seen only the country near Valparaiso, would never have
-imagined that there had been such picturesque spots in Chile.
-As soon as we reached the brow of the Sierra, the valley of
-Quillota was immediately under our feet. The prospect was
-one of remarkable artificial luxuriance. The valley is very
-broad and quite flat, and is thus easily irrigated in all parts.
-The little square gardens are crowded with orange and olive
-trees, and every sort of vegetable. On each side huge bare
-mountains rise, and this from the contrast renders the patchwork
-valley the more pleasing. Whoever called "Valparaiso"
-the "Valley of Paradise," must have been thinking
-of Quillota. We crossed over to the Hacienda de San Isidro,
-situated at the very foot of the Bell Mountain.
-
-Chile, as may be seen in the maps, is a narrow strip of
-land between the Cordillera and the Pacific; and this strip
-is itself traversed by several mountain-lines, which in this
-part run parallel to the great range. Between these outer
-lines and the main Cordillera, a succession of level basins,
-generally opening into each other by narrow passages, extend
-far to the southward: in these, the principal towns are
-situated, as San Felipe, Santiago, San Fernando. These basins
-or plains, together with the transverse flat valleys (like that
-of Quillota) which connect them with the coast, I have no
-doubt are the bottoms of ancient inlets and deep bays, such
-as at the present day intersect every part of Tierra del Fuego
-and the western coast. Chile must formerly have resembled
-the latter country in the configuration of its land and water.
-The resemblance was occasionally shown strikingly when a
-level fog-bank covered, as with a mantle, all the lower parts
-of the country: the white vapour curling into the ravines,
-beautifully represented little coves and bays; and here and
-there a solitary hillock peeping up, showed that it had formerly
-stood there as an islet. The contrast of these flat
-valleys and basins with the irregular mountains, gave the
-scenery a character which to me was new and very interesting.
-
-From the natural slope to seaward of these plains, they
-are very easily irrigated, and in consequence singularly
-fertile. Without this process the land would produce scarcely
-anything, for during the whole summer the sky is cloudless.
-The mountains and hills are dotted over with bushes and
-low trees, and excepting these the vegetation is very scanty.
-Each landowner in the valley possesses a certain portion of
-hill-country, where his half-wild cattle, in considerable
-numbers, manage to find sufficient pasture. Once every year
-there is a grand "rodeo," when all the cattle are driven down,
-counted, and marked, and a certain number separated to be
-fattened in the irrigated fields. Wheat is extensively
-cultivated, and a good deal of Indian corn: a kind of bean is,
-however, the staple article of food for the common labourers.
-The orchards produce an overflowing abundance of peaches
-figs, and grapes. With all these advantages, the inhabitants
-of the country ought to be much more prosperous than they
-are.
-
-16th. -- The mayor-domo of the Hacienda was good enough
-to give me a guide and fresh horses; and in the morning we
-set out to ascend the Campana, or Bell Mountain, which is
-6400 feet high. The paths were very bad, but both the
-geology and scenery amply repaid the trouble. We reached
-by the evening, a spring called the Agua del Guanaco, which
-is situated at a great height. This must be an old name,
-for it is very many years since a guanaco drank its waters.
-During the ascent I noticed that nothing but bushes grew
-on the northern slope, whilst on the southern slope there was
-a bamboo about fifteen feet high. In a few places there were
-palms, and I was surprised to see one at an elevation of at
-least 4500 feet. These palms are, for their family, ugly trees.
-Their stem is very large, and of a curious form, being thicker
-in the middle than at the base or top. They are excessively
-numerous in some parts of Chile, and valuable on account of
-a sort of treacle made from the sap. On one estate near
-Petorca they tried to count them, but failed, after having
-numbered several hundred thousand. Every year in the early
-spring, in August, very many are cut down, and when the
-trunk is lying on the ground, the crown of leaves is lopped
-off. The sap then immediately begins to flow from the upper
-end, and continues so doing for some months: it is, however,
-necessary that a thin slice should be shaved off from
-that end every morning, so as to expose a fresh surface. A
-good tree will give ninety gallons, and all this must have
-been contained in the vessels of the apparently dry trunk.
-It is said that the sap flows much more quickly on those
-days when the sun is powerful; and likewise, that it is
-absolutely necessary to take care, in cutting down the tree,
-that it should fall with its head upwards on the side of the
-hill; for if it falls down the slope, scarcely any sap will
-flow; although in that case one would have thought that the
-action would have been aided, instead of checked, by the force
-of gravity. The sap is concentrated by boiling, and is then
-called treacle, which it very much resembles in taste.
-
-We unsaddled our horses near the spring, and prepared to
-pass the night. The evening was fine, and the atmosphere so
-clear, that the masts of the vessels at anchor in the bay of
-Valparaiso, although no less than twenty-six geographical
-miles distant, could be distinguished clearly as little black
-streaks. A ship doubling the point under sail, appeared as
-a bright white speck. Anson expresses much surprise, in his
-voyage, at the distance at which his vessels were discovered
-from the coast; but he did not sufficiently allow for the height
-of the land, and the great transparency of the air.
-
-The setting of the sun was glorious; the valleys being
-black whilst the snowy peaks of the Andes yet retained a
-ruby tint. When it was dark, we made a fire beneath a little
-arbour of bamboos, fried our charqui (or dried slips of beef),
-took our mate, and were quite comfortable. There is an
-inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air. The evening
-was calm and still; -- the shrill noise of the mountain
-bizcacha, and the faint cry of a goatsucker, were occasionally
-to be heard. Besides these, few birds, or even
-insects, frequent these dry, parched mountains.
-
-August 17th. -- In the morning we climbed up the rough
-mass of greenstone which crowns the summit. This rock, as
-frequently happens, was much shattered and broken into
-huge angular fragments. I observed, however, one remarkable
-circumstance, namely, that many of the surfaces presented
-every degree of freshness some appearing as if
-broken the day before, whilst on others lichens had either
-just become, or had long grown, attached. I so fully believed
-that this was owing to the frequent earthquakes, that I felt
-inclined to hurry from below each loose pile. As one might
-very easily be deceived in a fact of this kind, I doubted its
-accuracy, until ascending Mount Wellington, in Van Diemen's
-Land, where earthquakes do not occur; and there I saw
-the summit of the mountain similarly composed and similarly
-shattered, but all the blocks appeared as if they had been
-hurled into their present position thousands of years ago.
-
-We spent the day on the summit, and I never enjoyed one
-more thoroughly. Chile, bounded by the Andes and the
-Pacific, was seen as in a map. The pleasure from the scenery,
-in itself beautiful, was heightened by the many reflections
-which arose from the mere view of the Campana range with
-its lesser parallel ones, and of the broad valley of Quillota
-directly intersecting them. Who can avoid wondering at the
-force which has upheaved these mountains, and even more
-so at the countless ages which it must have required to have
-broken through, removed, and levelled whole masses of them?
-It is well in this case to call to mind the vast shingle and
-sedimentary beds of Patagonia, which, if heaped on the
-Cordillera, would increase its height by so many thousand feet.
-When in that country, I wondered how any mountain-chain
-could have supplied such masses, and not have been utterly
-obliterated. We must not now reverse the wonder, and doubt
-whether all-powerful time can grind down mountains -- even
-the gigantic Cordillera -- into-gravel and mud.
-
-The appearance of the Andes was different from that
-which I had expected. The lower line of the snow was of
-course horizontal, and to this line the even summits of the
-range seemed quite parallel. Only at long intervals, a group
-of points or a single cone showed where a volcano had
-existed, or does now exist. Hence the range resembled a
-great solid wall, surmounted here and there by a tower, and
-making a most perfect barrier to the country.
-
-Almost every part of the hill had been drilled by attempts
-to open gold-mines: the rage for mining has left scarcely
-a spot in Chile unexamined. I spent the evening as before,
-talking round the fire with my two companions. The Guasos
-of Chile, who correspond to the Gauchos of the Pampas, are,
-however, a very different set of beings. Chile is the more
-civilized of the two countries, and the inhabitants, in
-consequence, have lost much individual character. Gradations
-in rank are much more strongly marked: the Guaso does not
-by any means consider every man his equal; and I was quite
-surprised to find that my companions did not like to eat at
-the same time with myself. This feeling of inequality is a
-necessary consequence of the existence of an aristocracy of
-wealth. It is said that some few of the greater landowners
-possess from five to ten thousand pounds sterling per annum:
-an inequality of riches which I believe is not met with in
-any of the cattle-breeding countries eastward of the Andes.
-A traveller does not here meet that unbounded hospitality
-which refuses all payment, but yet is so kindly offered that
-no scruples can be raised in accepting it. Almost every house
-in Chile will receive you for the night, but a trifle is
-expected to be given in the morning; even a rich man will
-accept two or three shillings. The Gaucho, although he may be
-a cutthroat, is a gentleman; the Guaso is in few respects
-better, but at the same time a vulgar, ordinary fellow. The
-two men, although employed much in the same manner, are
-different in their habits and attire; and the peculiarities
-of each are universal in their respective countries. The Gaucho
-seems part of his horse, and scorns to exert himself except when
-on his back: the Guaso may be hired to work as a labourer in
-the fields. The former lives entirely on animal food; the latter
-almost wholly on vegetable. We do not here see the white
-boots, the broad drawers and scarlet chilipa; the picturesque
-costume of the Pampas. Here, common trousers are protected
-by black and green worsted leggings. The poncho,
-however, is common to both. The chief pride of the Guaso
-lies in his spurs, which are absurdly large. I measured one
-which was six inches in the _diameter_ of the rowel, and the
-rowel itself contained upwards of thirty points. The stirrups
-are on the same scale, each consisting of a square, carved
-block of wood, hollowed out, yet weighing three or four
-pounds. The Guaso is perhaps more expert with the lazo
-than the Gaucho; but, from the nature of the country, he
-does not know the use of the bolas.
-
-August 18th. -- We descended the mountain, and passed
-some beautiful little spots, with rivulets and fine trees.
-Having slept at the same hacienda as before, we rode during the
-two succeeding days up the valley, and passed through Quillota,
-which is more like a collection of nursery-gardens than
-a town. The orchards were beautiful, presenting one mass
-of peach-blossoms. I saw, also, in one or two places the
-date-palm; it is a most stately tree; and I should think a
-group of them in their native Asiatic or African deserts must
-be superb. We passed likewise San Felipe, a pretty straggling
-town like Quillota. The valley in this part expands into
-one of those great bays or plains, reaching to the foot of the
-Cordillera, which have been mentioned as forming so curious
-a part of the scenery of Chile. In the evening we reached
-the mines of Jajuel, situated in a ravine at the flank of the
-great chain. I stayed here five days. My host the superintendent
-of the mine, was a shrewd but rather ignorant Cornish
-miner. He had married a Spanish woman, and did not
-mean to return home; but his admiration for the mines of
-Cornwall remained unbounded. Amongst many other questions,
-he asked me, "Now that George Rex is dead, how
-many more of the family of Rexes are yet alive?" This Rex
-certainly must be a relation of the great author Finis, who
-wrote all books!
-
-These mines are of copper, and the ore is all shipped to
-Swansea, to be smelted. Hence the mines have an aspect
-singularly quiet, as compared to those in England: here no
-smoke, furnaces, or great steam-engines, disturb the solitude
-of the surrounding mountains.
-
-The Chilian government, or rather the old Spanish law,
-encourages by every method the searching for mines. The
-discoverer may work a mine on any ground, by paying five
-shillings; and before paying this he may try, even in the
-garden of another man, for twenty days.
-
-It is now well known that the Chilian method of mining
-is the cheapest. My host says that the two principal
-improvements introduced by foreigners have been, first,
-reducing by previous roasting the copper pyrites -- which,
-being the common ore in Cornwall, the English miners were
-astounded on their arrival to find thrown away as useless:
-secondly, stamping and washing the scoriae from the old
-furnaces -- by which process particles of metal are recovered
-in abundance. I have actually seen mules carrying to the
-coast, for transportation to England, a cargo of such cinders.
-But the first case is much the most curious. The Chilian
-miners were so convinced that copper pyrites contained not
-a particle of copper, that they laughed at the Englishmen
-for their ignorance, who laughed in turn, and bought their
-richest veins for a few dollars. It is very odd that, in a
-country where mining had been extensively carried on for many
-years, so simple a process as gently roasting the ore to expel
-the sulphur previous to smelting it, had never been discovered.
-A few improvements have likewise been introduced in some of the
-simple machinery; but even to the present day, water is
-removed from some mines by men carrying it up the shaft in
-leathern bags!
-
-The labouring men work very hard. They have little time
-allowed for their meals, and during summer and winter they
-begin when it is light, and leave off at dark. They are paid
-one pound sterling a month, and their food is given them:
-this for breakfast consists of sixteen figs and two small loaves
-of bread; for dinner, boiled beans; for supper, broken roasted
-wheat grain. They scarcely ever taste meat; as, with the
-twelve pounds per annum, they have to clothe themselves, and
-support their families. The miners who work in the mine
-itself have twenty-five shillings per month, and are allowed
-a little charqui. But these men come down from their bleak
-habitations only once in every fortnight or three weeks.
-
-During my stay here I thoroughly enjoyed scrambling
-about these huge mountains. The geology, as might have
-been expected, was very interesting. The shattered and
-baked rocks, traversed by innumerable dykes of greenstone,
-showed what commotions had formerly taken place. The
-scenery was much the same as that near the Bell of Quillota
--- dry barren mountains, dotted at intervals by bushes
-with a scanty foliage. The cactuses, or rather opuntias
-were here very numerous. I measured one of a spherical
-figure, which, including the spines, was six feet and four
-inches in circumference. The height of the common cylindrical,
-branching kind, is from twelve to fifteen feet, and
-the girth (with spines) of the branches between three and
-four feet.
-
-A heavy fall of snow on the mountains prevented me
-during the last two days, from making some interesting
-excursions. I attempted to reach a lake which the inhabitants,
-from some unaccountable reason, believe to be an arm
-of the sea. During a very dry season, it was proposed to
-attempt cutting a channel from it for the sake of the water,
-but the padre, after a consultation, declared it was too
-dangerous, as all Chile would be inundated, if, as generally
-supposed, the lake was connected with the Pacific. We
-ascended to a great height, but becoming involved in the
-snow-drifts failed in reaching this wonderful lake, and had
-some difficulty in returning. I thought we should have lost
-our horses; for there was no means of guessing how deep
-the drifts were, and the animals, when led, could only move
-by jumping. The black sky showed that a fresh snowstorm
-was gathering, and we therefore were not a little glad
-when we escaped. By the time we reached the base the
-storm commenced, and it was lucky for us that this did not
-happen three hours earlier in the day.
-
-August 26th. -- We left Jajuel and again crossed the basin
-of San Felipe. The day was truly Chilian: glaringly bright,
-and the atmosphere quite clear. The thick and uniform
-covering of newly fallen snow rendered the view of the volcano
-of Aconcagua and the main chain quite glorious. We
-were now on the road to Santiago, the capital of Chile. We
-crossed the Cerro del Talguen, and slept at a little rancho.
-The host, talking about the state of Chile as compared to
-other countries, was very humble: "Some see with two eyes,
-and some with one, but for my part I do not think that Chile
-sees with any."
-
-August 27th. -- After crossing many low hills we descended
-into the small land-locked plain of Guitron. In the basins,
-such as this one, which are elevated from one thousand to
-two thousand feet above the sea, two species of acacia, which
-are stunted in their forms, and stand wide apart from each
-other, grow in large numbers. These trees are never found
-near the sea-coast; and this gives another characteristic
-feature to the scenery of these basins. We crossed a low
-ridge which separates Guitron from the great plain on which
-Santiago stands. The view was here pre-eminently striking:
-the dead level surface, covered in parts by woods of acacia,
-and with the city in the distance, abutting horizontally
-against the base of the Andes, whose snowy peaks were
-bright with the evening sun. At the first glance of this
-view, it was quite evident that the plain represented the
-extent of a former inland sea. As soon as we gained the
-level road we pushed our horses into a gallop, and reached
-the city before it was dark.
-
-I stayed a week in Santiago, and enjoyed myself very
-much. In the morning I rode to various places on the plain,
-and in the evening dined with several of the English merchants,
-whose hospitality at this place is well known. A
-never-failing source of pleasure was to ascend the little
-hillock of rock (St. Lucia) which projects in the middle of
-the city. The scenery certainly is most striking, and, as I
-have said, very peculiar. I am informed that this same
-character is common to the cities on the great Mexican
-platform. Of the town I have nothing to say in detail: it is
-not so fine or so large as Buenos Ayres, but is built after the
-same model. I arrived here by a circuit to the north; so I
-resolved to return to Valparaiso by a rather longer excursion
-to the south of the direct road.
-
-September 5th. -- By the middle of the day we arrived at
-one of the suspension bridges, made of hide, which cross the
-Maypu, a large turbulent river a few leagues southward of
-Santiago. These bridges are very poor affairs. The road,
-following the curvature of the suspending ropes, is made of
-bundles of sticks placed close together. It was full of holes,
-and oscillated rather fearfully, even with the weight of a
-man leading his horse. In the evening we reached a comfortable
-farm-house, where there were several very pretty
-senoritas. They were much horrified at my having entered
-one of their churches out of mere curiosity. They asked
-me, "Why do you not become a Christian -- for our religion
-is certain?" I assured them I was a sort of Christian; but
-they would not hear of it -- appealing to my own words, "Do
-not your padres, your very bishops, marry?" The absurdity
-of a bishop having a wife particularly struck them: they
-scarcely knew whether to be most amused or horror-struck
-at such an enormity.
-
-6th. -- We proceeded due south, and slept at Rancagua.
-The road passed over the level but narrow plain, bounded on
-one side by lofty hills, and on the other by the Cordillera.
-The next day we turned up the valley of the Rio Cachapual,
-in which the hot-baths of Cauquenes, long celebrated for
-their medicinal properties, are situated. The suspension
-bridges, in the less frequented parts, are generally taken down
-during the winter when the rivers are low. Such was the
-case in this valley, and we were therefore obliged to cross
-the stream on horseback. This is rather disagreeable, for
-the foaming water, though not deep, rushes so quickly over
-the bed of large rounded stones, that one's head becomes
-quite confused, and it is difficult even to perceive whether
-the horse is moving onward or standing still. In summer,
-when the snow melts, the torrents are quite impassable; their
-strength and fury are then extremely great, as might be
-plainly seen by the marks which they had left. We reached
-the baths in the evening, and stayed there five days, being
-confined the two last by heavy rain. The buildings consist
-of a square of miserable little hovels, each with a single table
-and bench. They are situated in a narrow deep valley just
-without the central Cordillera. It is a quiet, solitary spot,
-with a good deal of wild beauty.
-
-The mineral springs of Cauquenes burst forth on a line of
-dislocation, crossing a mass of stratified rock, the whole
-of which betrays the action of heat. A considerable quantity
-of gas is continually escaping from the same orifices with
-the water. Though the springs are only a few yards apart,
-they have very different temperature; and this appears to be
-the result of an unequal mixture of cold water: for those
-with the lowest temperature have scarcely any mineral taste.
-After the great earthquake of 1822 the springs ceased, and
-the water did not return for nearly a year. They were also
-much affected by the earthquake of 1835; the temperature
-being suddenly changed from 118 to 92 degs. [1] It seems probable
-that mineral waters rising deep from the bowels of the earth,
-would always be more deranged by subterranean disturbances
-than those nearer the surface. The man who had charge of
-the baths assured me that in summer the water is hotter and
-more plentiful than in winter. The former circumstance I
-should have expected, from the less mixture, during the dry
-season, of cold water; but the latter statement appears very
-strange and contradictory. The periodical increase during
-the summer, when rain never falls, can, I think, only be
-accounted for by the melting of the snow: yet the mountains
-which are covered by snow during that season, are three or
-four leagues distant from the springs. I have no reason to
-doubt the accuracy of my informer, who, having lived on
-the spot for several years, ought to be well acquainted with
-the circumstance, -- which, if true, certainly is very curious:
-for we must suppose that the snow-water, being conducted
-through porous strata to the regions of heat, is again thrown
-up to the surface by the line of dislocated and injected rocks
-at Cauquenes; and the regularity of the phenomenon would
-seem to indicate that in this district heated rock occurred at
-a depth not very great.
-
-One day I rode up the valley to the farthest inhabited
-spot. Shortly above that point, the Cachapual divides into
-two deep tremendous ravines, which penetrate directly into
-the great range. I scrambled up a peaked mountain, probably
-more than six thousand feet high. Here, as indeed
-everywhere else, scenes of the highest interest presented
-themselves. It was by one of these ravines, that Pincheira
-entered Chile and ravaged the neighbouring country. This
-is the same man whose attack on an estancia at the Rio Negro
-I have described. He was a renegade half-caste Spaniard,
-who collected a great body of Indians together and established
-himself by a stream in the Pampas, which place none
-of the forces sent after him could ever discover. From this
-point he used to sally forth, and crossing the Cordillera by
-passes hitherto unattempted, he ravaged the farm-houses
-and drove the cattle to his secret rendezvous. Pincheira was
-a capital horseman, and he made all around him equally
-good, for he invariably shot any one who hesitated to follow
-him. It was against this man, and other wandering Indian
-tribes, that Rosas waged the war of extermination.
-
-September 13th. -- We left the baths of Cauquenes, and,
-rejoining the main road, slept at the Rio Clara. From this
-place we rode to the town of San Fernando. Before arriving
-there, the last land-locked basin had expanded into a great
-plain, which extended so far to the south, that the snowy
-summits of the more distant Andes were seen as if above the
-horizon of the sea. San Fernando is forty leagues from Santiago;
-and it was my farthest point southward; for we here
-turned at right angles towards the coast. We slept at the
-gold-mines of Yaquil, which are worked by Mr. Nixon, an
-American gentleman, to whose kindness I was much indebted
-during the four days I stayed at his house. The next
-morning we rode to the mines, which are situated at the
-distance of some leagues, near the summit of a lofty hill. On
-the way we had a glimpse of the lake Tagua-tagua, celebrated
-for its floating islands, which have been described by
-M. Gay. [2] They are composed of the stalks of various dead
-plants intertwined together, and on the surface of which
-other living ones take root. Their form is generally circular,
-and their thickness from four to six feet, of which the
-greater part is immersed in the water. As the wind blows,
-they pass from one side of the lake to the other, and often
-carry cattle and horses as passengers.
-
-When we arrived at the mine, I was struck by the pale
-appearance of many of the men, and inquired from Mr.
-Nixon respecting their condition. The mine is 450 feet deep,
-and each man brings up about 200 pounds weight of stone.
-With this load they have to climb up the alternate notches cut
-in the trunks of trees, placed in a zigzag line up the shaft.
-Even beardless young men, eighteen and twenty years old,
-with little muscular development of their bodies (they are
-quite naked excepting drawers) ascend with this great load
-from nearly the same depth. A strong man, who is not
-accustomed to this labour, perspires most profusely, with
-merely carrying up his own body. With this very severe
-labour, they live entirely on boiled beans and bread. They
-would prefer having bread alone; but their masters, finding
-that they cannot work so hard upon this, treat them like
-horses, and make them eat the beans. Their pay is here
-rather more than at the mines of Jajuel, being from 24 to 28
-shillings per month. They leave the mine only once in three
-weeks; when they stay with their families for two days. One
-of the rules of this mine sounds very harsh, but answers
-pretty well for the master. The only method of stealing gold
-is to secrete pieces of the ore, and take them out as occasion
-may offer. Whenever the major-domo finds a lump thus
-hidden, its full value is stopped out of the wages of all the
-men; who thus, without they all combine, are obliged to keep
-watch over each other.
-
-When the ore is brought to the mill, it is ground into an
-impalpable powder; the process of washing removes all the
-lighter particles, and amalgamation finally secures the
-gold-dust. The washing, when described, sounds a very simple
-process; but it is beautiful to see how the exact adaptation of
-the current of water to the specific gravity of the gold, so
-easily separates the powdered matrix from the metal. The
-mud which passes from the mills is collected into pools, where
-it subsides, and every now and then is cleared out, and thrown
-into a common heap. A great deal of chemical action then
-commences, salts of various kinds effloresce on the surface,
-and the mass becomes hard. After having been left for a year
-or two, and then rewashed, it yields gold; and this process
-may be repeated even six or seven times; but the gold each
-time becomes less in quantity, and the intervals required (as
-the inhabitants say, to generate the metal) are longer. There
-can be no doubt that the chemical action, already mentioned,
-each time liberates fresh gold from some combination. The
-discovery of a method to effect this before the first grinding
-would without doubt raise the value of gold-ores many fold.
-
-It is curious to find how the minute particles of gold, being
-scattered about and not corroding, at last accumulate in
-some quantity. A short time since a few miners, being out of
-work, obtained permission to scrape the ground round the
-house and mills; they washed the earth thus got together, and
-so procured thirty dollars' worth of gold. This is an exact
-counterpart of what takes place in nature. Mountains suffer
-degradation and wear away, and with them the metallic veins
-which they contain. The hardest rock is worn into impalpable
-mud, the ordinary metals oxidate, and both are removed;
-but gold, platina, and a few others are nearly indestructible,
-and from their weight, sinking to the bottom, are left behind.
-After whole mountains have passed through this grinding
-mill, and have been washed by the hand of nature, the residue
-becomes metalliferous, and man finds it worth his while to
-complete the task of separation.
-
-Bad as the above treatment of the miners appears, it is
-gladly accepted of by them; for the condition of the labouring
-agriculturists is much worse. Their wages are lower, and
-they live almost exclusively on beans. This poverty must be
-chiefly owing to the feudal-like system on which the land is
-tilled: the landowner gives a small plot of ground to the
-labourer for building on and cultivating, and in return has
-his services (or those of a proxy) for every day of his life,
-without any wages. Until a father has a grown-up son, who
-can by his labour pay the rent, there is no one, except on
-occasional days, to take care of his own patch of ground.
-Hence extreme poverty is very common among the labouring
-classes in this country.
-
-There are some old Indian ruins in this neighbourhood,
-and I was shown one of the perforated stones, which Molina
-mentions as being found in many places in considerable
-numbers. They are of a circular flattened form, from five to
-six inches in diameter, with a hole passing quite through the
-centre. It has generally been supposed that they were used
-as heads to clubs, although their form does not appear at all
-well adapted for that purpose. Burchell [3] states that some
-of the tribes in Southern Africa dig up roots by the aid of a
-stick pointed at one end, the force and weight of which are
-increased by a round stone with a hole in it, into which the
-other end is firmly wedged. It appears probable that the
-Indians of Chile formerly used some such rude agricultural
-instrument.
-
-One day, a German collector in natural history, of the
-name of Renous, called, and nearly at the same time an old
-Spanish lawyer. I was amused at being told the conversation
-which took place between them. Renous speaks Spanish so
-well, that the old lawyer mistook him for a Chilian. Renous
-alluding to me, asked him what he thought of the King of
-England sending out a collector to their country, to pick up
-lizards and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentleman
-thought seriously for some time, and then said, "It is not
-well, -- _hay un gato encerrado aqui_ (there is a cat shut up
-here). No man is so rich as to send out people to pick up
-such rubbish. I do not like it: if one of us were to go and
-do such things in England, do not you think the King of
-England would very soon send us out of his country?" And
-this old gentleman, from his profession, belongs to the better
-informed and more intelligent classes! Renous himself, two
-or three years before, left in a house at San Fernando some
-caterpillars, under charge of a girl to feed, that they might
-turn into butterflies. This was rumoured through the town,
-and at last the padres and governor consulted together, and
-agreed it must be some heresy. Accordingly, when Renous
-returned, he was arrested.
-
-September 19th. -- We left Yaquil, and followed the flat
-valley, formed like that of Quillota, in which the Rio
-Tinderidica flows. Even at these few miles south of Santiago
-the climate is much damper; in consequence there are fine
-tracts of pasturage, which are not irrigated. (20th.) We l
-followed this valley till it expanded into a great plain, which
-reaches from the sea to the mountains west of Rancagua.
-We shortly lost all trees and even bushes; so that the
-inhabitants are nearly as badly off for firewood as those in
-the Pampas. Never having heard of these plains, I was much
-surprised at meeting with such scenery in Chile. The plains
-belong to more than one series of different elevations, and
-they are traversed by broad flat-bottomed valleys; both of
-which circumstances, as in Patagonia, bespeak the action of
-the sea on gently rising land. In the steep cliffs bordering
-these valleys, there are some large caves, which no doubt
-were originally formed by the waves: one of these is celebrated
-under the name of Cueva del Obispo; having formerly
-been consecrated. During the day I felt very unwell, and
-from that time till the end of October did not recover.
-
-September 22nd. -- We continued to pass over green plains
-without a tree. The next day we arrived at a house near
-Navedad, on the sea-coast, where a rich Haciendero gave us
-lodgings. I stayed here the two ensuing days, and although
-very unwell, managed to collect from the tertiary formation
-some marine shells.
-
-24th. -- Our course was now directed towards Valparaiso,
-which with great difficulty I reached on the 27th, and was there
-confined to my bed till the end of October. During this time
-I was an inmate in Mr. Corfield's house, whose kindness to
-me I do not know how to express.
-
-
-I will here add a few observations on some of the animals
-and birds of Chile. The Puma, or South American Lion, is
-not uncommon. This animal has a wide geographical range;
-being found from the equatorial forests, throughout the
-deserts of Patagonia as far south as the damp and cold
-latitudes (53 to 54 degs.) of Tierra del Fuego. I have seen its
-footsteps in the Cordillera of central Chile, at an elevation of
-at least 10,000 feet. In La Plata the puma preys chiefly on
-deer, ostriches, bizcacha, and other small quadrupeds; it there
-seldom attacks cattle or horses, and most rarely man. In
-Chile, however, it destroys many young horses and cattle,
-owing probably to the scarcity of other quadrupeds: I heard,
-likewise, of two men and a woman who had been thus killed.
-It is asserted that the puma always kills its prey by springing
-on the shoulders, and then drawing back the head with one
-of its paws, until the vertebrae break: I have seen in Patagonia
-the skeletons of guanacos, with their necks thus
-dislocated.
-
-The puma, after eating its fill, covers the carcass with
-many large bushes, and lies down to watch it. This habit is
-often the cause of its being discovered; for the condors
-wheeling in the air every now and then descend to partake
-of the feast, and being angrily driven away, rise all together
-on the wing. The Chileno Guaso then knows there is a lion
-watching his prey -- the word is given -- and men and dogs
-hurry to the chase. Sir F. Head says that a Gaucho in the
-pampas, upon merely seeing some condors wheeling in the
-air, cried "A lion!" I could never myself meet with any one
-who pretended to such powers of discrimination. It is asserted
-that, if a puma has once been betrayed by thus watching
-the carcass, and has then been hunted, it never resumes
-this habit; but that, having gorged itself, it wanders far away.
-The puma is easily killed. In an open country, it is first
-entangled with the bolas, then lazoed, and dragged along the
-ground till rendered insensible. At Tandeel (south of the
-plata), I was told that within three months one hundred
-were thus destroyed. In Chile they are generally driven up
-bushes or trees, and are then either shot, or baited to death
-by dogs. The dogs employed in this chase belong to a particular
-breed, called Leoneros: they are weak, slight animals,
-like long-legged terriers, but are born with a particular
-instinct for this sport. The puma is described as being very
-crafty: when pursued, it often returns on its former track,
-and then suddenly making a spring on one side, waits there
-till the dogs have passed by. It is a very silent animal,
-uttering no cry even when wounded, and only rarely during
-the breeding season.
-
-Of birds, two species of the genus Pteroptochos (megapodius
-and albicollis of Kittlitz) are perhaps the most conspicuous.
-The former, called by the Chilenos "el Turco,"
-is as large as a fieldfare, to which bird it has some alliance;
-but its legs are much longer, tail shorter, and beak stronger:
-its colour is a reddish brown. The Turco is not uncommon.
-It lives on the ground, sheltered among the thickets which are
-scattered over the dry and sterile hills. With its tail erect,
-and stilt-like legs, it may be seen every now and then popping
-from one bush to another with uncommon quickness.
-It really requires little imagination to believe that the bird
-is ashamed of itself, and is aware of its most ridiculous
-figure. On first seeing it, one is tempted to exclaim, "A
-vilely stuffed specimen has escaped from some museum, and has
-come to life again!" It cannot be made to take flight without
-the greatest trouble, nor does it run, but only hops. The
-various loud cries which it utters when concealed amongst the
-bushes, are as strange as its appearance. It is said to build
-its nest in a deep hole beneath the ground. I dissected several
-specimens: the gizzard, which was very muscular, contained
-beetles, vegetable fibres, and pebbles. From this character,
-from the length of its legs, scratching feet, membranous
-covering to the nostrils, short and arched wings, this bird
-seems in a certain degree to connect the thrushes with the
-gallinaceous order.
-
-The second species (or P. albicollis) is allied to the first
-in its general form. It is called Tapacolo, or "cover your
-posterior;" and well does the shameless little bird deserve its
-name; for it carries its tail more than erect, that is, inclined
-backwards towards its head. It is very common, and frequents
-the bottoms of hedge-rows, and the bushes scattered
-over the barren hills, where scarcely another bird can exist.
-In its general manner of feeding, of quickly hopping out of
-the thickets and back again, in its desire of concealment,
-unwillingness to take flight, and nidification, it bears a close
-resemblance to the Turco; but its appearance is not quite so
-ridiculous. The Tapacolo is very crafty: when frightened by
-any person, it will remain motionless at the bottom of a bush,
-and will then, after a little while, try with much address to
-crawl away on the opposite side. It is also an active bird, and
-continually making a noise: these noises are various and
-strangely odd; some are like the cooing of doves, others like
-the bubbling of water, and many defy all similes. The country
-people say it changes its cry five times in the year --
-according to some change of season, I suppose. [4]
-
-Two species of humming-birds are common; Trochilus
-forficatus is found over a space of 2500 miles on the west
-coast, from the hot dry country of Lima, to the forests of
-Tierra del Fuego -- where it may be seen flitting about in
-snow-storms. In the wooded island of Chiloe, which has an
-extremely humid climate, this little bird, skipping from side
-to side amidst the dripping foliage, is perhaps more abundant
-than almost any other kind. I opened the stomachs of several
-specimens, shot in different parts of the continent, and in all,
-remains of insects were as numerous as in the stomach of a
-creeper. When this species migrates in the summer southward,
-it is replaced by the arrival of another species coming
-from the north. This second kind (Trochilus gigas) is a
-very large bird for the delicate family to which it belongs:
-when on the wing its appearance is singular. Like others
-of the genus, it moves from place to place with a rapidity
-which may be compared to that of Syrphus amongst flies,
-and Sphinx among moths; but whilst hovering over a flower,
-it flaps its wings with a very slow and powerful movement,
-totally different from that vibratory one common to most of
-the species, which produces the humming noise. I never saw
-any other bird where the force of its wings appeared (as in a
-butterfly) so powerful in proportion to the weight of its body.
-When hovering by a flower, its tail is constantly expanded
-and shut like a fan, the body being kept in a nearly vertical
-position. This action appears to steady and support the bird,
-between the slow movements of its wings. Although flying
-from flower to flower in search of food, its stomach generally
-contained abundant remains of insects, which I suspect are
-much more the object of its search than honey. The note of
-this species, like that of nearly the whole family, is
-extremely shrill.
-
-[1] Caldeleugh, in Philosoph. Transact. for 1836.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles, March, 1833. M. Gay, a
-zealous and able naturalist, was then occupied in studying
-every branch of natural history throughout the kingdom of
-Chile.
-
-[3] Burchess's Travels, vol. ii. p. 45.
-
-[4] It is a remarkable fact, that Molina, though describing
-in detail all the birds and animals of Chile, never once
-mentions this genus, the species of which are so common, and
-so remarkable in their habits. Was he at a loss how to
-classify them, and did he consequently think that silence
-was the more prudent course? It is one more instance of the
-frequency of omissions by authors, on those very subjects
-where it might have been least expected.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
-
-Chiloe -- General Aspect -- Boat Excursion -- Native
-Indians -- Castro -- Tame Fox -- Ascend San Pedro -- Chonos
-Archipelago -- Peninsula of Tres Montes -- Granitic
-Range -- Boat-wrecked Sailors -- Low's Harbour -- Wild
-Potato -- Formation of Peat -- Myopotamus, Otter and Mice --
-Cheucau and Barking-bird -- Opetiorhynchus -- Singular
-Character of Ornithology -- Petrels.
-
-
-NOVEMBER 10th. -- The Beagle sailed from Valparaiso
-to the south, for the purpose of surveying the southern
-part of Chile, the island of Chiloe, and the broken
-land called the Chonos Archipelago, as far south as the
-Peninsula of Tres Montes. On the 21st we anchored in the
-bay of S. Carlos, the capital of Chiloe.
-
-This island is about ninety miles long, with a breadth of
-rather less than thirty. The land is hilly, but not mountainous,
-and is covered by one great forest, except where a few
-green patches have been cleared round the thatched cottages.
-From a distance the view somewhat resembles that of Tierra
-del Fuego; but the woods, when seen nearer, are incomparably
-more beautiful. Many kinds of fine evergreen trees, and
-plants with a tropical character, here take the place of the
-gloomy beech of the southern shores. In winter the climate
-is detestable, and in summer it is only a little better. I
-should think there are few parts of the world, within the
-temperate regions, where so much rain falls. The winds are
-very boisterous, and the sky almost always clouded: to have a
-week of fine weather is something wonderful. It is even
-difficult to get a single glimpse of the Cordillera: during
-our first visit, once only the volcano of Osorno stood out in
-bold relief, and that was before sunrise; it was curious to
-watch, as the sun rose, the outline gradually fading away in
-the glare of the eastern sky.
-
-The inhabitants, from their complexion and low stature;
-appear to have three-fourths of Indian blood in their veins.
-They are an humble, quiet, industrious set of men. Although
-the fertile soil, resulting from the decomposition of the
-volcanic rocks, supports a rank vegetation, yet the climate is
-not favourable to any production which requires much sunshine
-to ripen it. There is very little pasture for the larger
-quadrupeds; and in consequence, the staple articles of food are
-pigs, potatoes, and fish. The people all dress in strong
-woollen garments, which each family makes for itself, and
-dyes with indigo of a dark blue colour. The arts, however,
-are in the rudest state; -- as may be seen in their strange
-fashion of ploughing, their method of spinning, grinding
-corn, and in the construction of their boats. The forests are
-so impenetrable, that the land is nowhere cultivated except
-near the coast and on the adjoining islets. Even where paths
-exist, they are scarcely passable from the soft and swampy
-state of the soil. The inhabitants, like those of Tierra del
-Fuego, move about chiefly on the beach or in boats. Although
-with plenty to eat, the people are very poor: there is no
-demand for labour, and consequently the lower orders cannot
-scrape together money sufficient to purchase even the smallest
-luxuries. There is also a great deficiency of a circulating
-medium. I have seen a man bringing on his back a bag of
-charcoal, with which to buy some trifle, and another carrying
-a plank to exchange for a bottle of wine. Hence every tradesman
-must also be a merchant, and again sell the goods which
-he takes in exchange.
-
-November 24th. -- The yawl and whale-boat were sent under
-the command of Mr. (now Captain) Sulivan, to survey the
-eastern or inland coast of Chiloe; and with orders to meet
-the Beagle at the southern extremity of the island; to which
-point she would proceed by the outside, so as thus to
-circumnavigate the whole. I accompanied this expedition, but
-instead of going in the boats the first day, I hired horses to
-take me to Chacao, at the northern extremity of the island.
-The road followed the coast; every now and then crossing
-promontories covered by fine forests. In these shaded paths
-it is absolutely necessary that the whole road should be made
-of logs of wood, which are squared and placed by the side of
-each other. From the rays of the sun never penetrating the
-evergreen foliage, the ground is so damp and soft, that except
-by this means neither man nor horse would be able to pass
-along. I arrived at the village of Chacao shortly after the
-tents belonging to the boats were pitched for the night.
-
-The land in this neighbourhood has been extensively
-cleared, and there were many quiet and most picturesque
-nooks in the forest. Chacao was formerly the principal port
-in the island; but many vessels having been lost, owing to the
-dangerous currents and rocks in the straits, the Spanish
-government burnt the church, and thus arbitrarily compelled the
-greater number of inhabitants to migrate to S. Carlos. We
-had not long bivouacked, before the barefooted son of the
-governor came down to reconnoitre us. Seeing the English
-flag hoisted at the yawl's mast-head, he asked with the utmost
-indifference, whether it was always to fly at Chacao. In several
-places the inhabitants were much astonished at the
-appearance of men-of-war's boats, and hoped and believed
-it was the forerunner of a Spanish fleet, coming to recover
-the island from the patriot government of Chile. All the
-men in power, however, had been informed of our intended
-visit, and were exceedingly civil. While we were eating our
-supper, the governor paid us a visit. He had been a lieutenant-
-colonel in the Spanish service, but now was miserably
-poor. He gave us two sheep, and accepted in return two cotton
-handkerchiefs, some brass trinkets, and a little tobacco.
-
-25th. -- Torrents of rain: we managed, however, to run
-down the coast as far as Huapi-lenou. The whole of this
-eastern side of Chiloe has one aspect; it is a plain, broken by
-valleys and divided into little islands, and the whole thickly
-covered with one impervious blackish-green forest. On the
-margins there are some cleared spaces, surrounding the high-
-roofed cottages.
-
-26th -- The day rose splendidly clear. The volcano of
-Orsono was spouting out volumes of smoke. This most
-beautiful mountain, formed like a perfect cone, and white
-with snow, stands out in front of the Cordillera. Another
-great volcano, with a saddle-shaped summit, also emitted
-from its immense crater little jets of steam. Subsequently
-we saw the lofty-peaked Corcovado -- well deserving the name
-of "el famoso Corcovado." Thus we beheld, from one point
-of view, three great active volcanoes, each about seven thousand
-feet high. In addition to this, far to the south, there
-were other lofty cones covered with snow, which, although
-not known to be active, must be in their origin volcanic.
-The line of the Andes is not, in this neighbourhood, nearly
-so elevated as in Chile; neither does it appear to form so
-perfect a barrier between the regions of the earth. This
-great range, although running in a straight north and south
-line, owing to an optical deception, always appeared more or
-less curved; for the lines drawn from each peak to the
-beholder's eye, necessarily converged like the radii of a
-semicircle, and as it was not possible (owing to the clearness
-of the atmosphere and the absence of all intermediate objects)
-to judge how far distant the farthest peaks were off,
-they appeared to stand in a flattish semicircle.
-
-Landing at midday, we saw a family of pure Indian extraction.
-The father was singularly like York Minster; and some
-of the younger boys, with their ruddy complexions, might
-have been mistaken for Pampas Indians. Everything I have
-seen, convinces me of the close connexion of the different
-American tribes, who nevertheless speak distinct languages.
-This party could muster but little Spanish, and talked to each
-other in their own tongue. It is a pleasant thing to see the
-aborigines advanced to the same degree of civilization, however
-low that may be, which their white conquerors have
-attained. More to the south we saw many pure Indians:
-indeed, all the inhabitants of some of the islets retain their
-Indian surnames. In the census of 1832, there were in Chiloe
-and its dependencies forty-two thousand souls; the greater
-number of these appear to be of mixed blood. Eleven thousand
-retain their Indian surnames, but it is probable that not
-nearly all of these are of a pure breed. Their manner of life
-is the same with that of the other poor inhabitants, and they
-are all Christians; but it is said that they yet retain some
-strange superstitious ceremonies, and that they pretend to
-hold communication with the devil in certain caves. Formerly,
-every one convicted of this offence was sent to the
-Inquisition at Lima. Many of the inhabitants who are not
-included in the eleven thousand with Indian surnames, cannot
-be distinguished by their appearance from Indians.
-Gomez, the governor of Lemuy, is descended from noblemen
-of Spain on both sides; but by constant intermarriages with
-the natives the present man is an Indian. On the other hand
-the governor of Quinchao boasts much of his purely kept
-Spanish blood.
-
-We reached at night a beautiful little cove, north of the
-island of Caucahue. The people here complained of want of
-land. This is partly owing to their own negligence in not
-clearing the woods, and partly to restrictions by the government,
-which makes it necessary, before buying ever so small
-a piece, to pay two shillings to the surveyor for measuring
-each quadra (150 yards square), together with whatever
-price he fixes for the value of the land. After his valuation
-the land must be put up three times to auction, and if no one
-bids more, the purchaser can have it at that rate. All these
-exactions must be a serious check to clearing the ground,
-where the inhabitants are so extremely poor. In most countries,
-forests are removed without much difficulty by the aid
-of fire; but in Chiloe, from the damp nature of the climate,
-and the sort of trees, it is necessary first to cut them down.
-This is a heavy drawback to the prosperity of Chiloe. In the
-time of the Spaniards the Indians could not hold land; and a
-family, after having cleared a piece of ground, might be
-driven away, and the property seized by the government.
-The Chilian authorities are now performing an act of justice
-by making retribution to these poor Indians, giving to each
-man, according to his grade of life, a certain portion of land.
-The value of uncleared ground is very little. The government
-gave Mr. Douglas (the present surveyor, who informed
-me of these circumstances) eight and a half square miles of
-forest near S. Carlos, in lieu of a debt; and this he sold for
-350 dollars, or about 70 pounds sterling.
-
-The two succeeding days were fine, and at night we reached
-the island of Quinchao. This neighbourhood is the most cultivated
-part of the Archipelago; for a broad strip of land on
-the coast of the main island, as well as on many of the smaller
-adjoining ones, is almost completely cleared. Some of the
-farmhouses seemed very comfortable. I was curious to
-ascertain how rich any of these people might be, but Mr.
-Douglas says that no one can be considered as possessing a
-regular income. One of the richest land-owners might possibly
-accumulate, in a long industrious life, as much as 1000 pounds
-sterling; but should this happen, it would all be stowed away
-in some secret corner, for it is the custom of almost every
-family to have a jar or treasure-chest buried in the ground.
-
-November 30th. -- Early on Sunday morning we reached
-Castro, the ancient capital of Chiloe, but now a most forlorn
-and deserted place. The usual quadrangular arrangement
-of Spanish towns could be traced, but the streets and plaza
-were coated with fine green turf, on which sheep were
-browsing. The church, which stands in the middle, is entirely
-built of plank, and has a picturesque and venerable appearance.
-The poverty of the place may be conceived from the
-fact, that although containing some hundreds of inhabitants,
-one of our party was unable anywhere to purchase either a
-pound of sugar or an ordinary knife. No individual possessed
-either a watch or a clock; and an old man, who was supposed
-to have a good idea of time, was employed to strike the
-church bell by guess. The arrival of our boats was a rare
-event in this quiet retired corner of the world; and nearly all
-the inhabitants came down to the beach to see us pitch our
-tents. They were very civil, and offered us a house; and one
-man even sent us a cask of cider as a present. In the afternoon
-we paid our respects to the governor -- a quiet old man,
-who, in his appearance and manner of life, was scarcely
-superior to an English cottager. At night heavy rain set in,
-which was hardly sufficient to drive away from our tents the
-large circle of lookers-on. An Indian family, who had come
-to trade in a canoe from Caylen, bivouacked near us. They
-had no shelter during the rain. In the morning I asked a
-young Indian, who was wet to the skin, how he had passed
-the night. He seemed perfectly content, and answered, "Muy
-bien, senor."
-
-December 1st. - We steered for the island of Lemuy. I
-was anxious to examine a reported coal-mine which turned
-out to be lignite of little value, in the sandstone (probably
-of an ancient tertiary epoch) of which these islands are
-composed. When we reached Lemuy we had much difficulty in
-finding any place to pitch our tents, for it was spring-tide,
-and the land was wooded down to the water's edge. In a
-short time we were surrounded by a large group of the nearly
-pure Indian inhabitants. They were much surprised at our
-arrival, and said one to the other, "This is the reason we
-have seen so many parrots lately; the cheucau (an odd red-
-breasted little bird, which inhabits the thick forest, and utters
-very peculiar noises) has not cried 'beware' for nothing."
-They were soon anxious for barter. Money was scarcely
-worth anything, but their eagerness for tobacco was something
-quite extraordinary. After tobacco, indigo came next
-in value; then capsicum, old clothes, and gunpowder. The
-latter article was required for a very innocent purpose: each
-parish has a public musket, and the gunpowder was wanted
-for making a noise on their saint or feast days
-
-The people here live chiefly on shell-fish and potatoes. At
-certain seasons they catch also, in "corrales," or hedges
-under water, many fish which are left on the mud-banks as
-the tide falls. They occasionally possess fowls, sheep, goats,
-pigs, horses, and cattle; the order in which they are here
-mentioned, expressing their respective numbers. I never
-saw anything more obliging and humble than the manners
-of these people. They generally began with stating that
-they were poor natives of the place, and not Spaniards
-and that they were in sad want of tobacco and other comforts.
-At Caylen, the most southern island, the sailors
-bought with a stick of tobacco, of the value of three-halfpence,
-two fowls, one of which, the Indian stated, had skin
-between its toes, and turned out to be a fine duck; and with
-some cotton handkerchiefs, worth three shillings, three sheep
-and a large bunch of onions were procured. The yawl at
-this place was anchored some way from the shore, and we
-had fears for her safety from robbers during the night. Our
-pilot, Mr. Douglas, accordingly told the constable of the
-district that we always placed sentinels with loaded arms
-and not understanding Spanish, if we saw any person in the
-dark, we should assuredly shoot him. The constable, with
-much humility, agreed to the perfect propriety of this
-arrangement, and promised us that no one should stir out
-of his house during that night.
-
-During the four succeeding days we continued sailing
-southward. The general features of the country remained
-the same, but it was much less thickly inhabited. On the
-large island of Tanqui there was scarcely one cleared spot,
-the trees on every side extending their branches over the
-sea-beach. I one day noticed, growing on the sandstone
-cliffs, some very fine plants of the panke (Gunnera scabra),
-which somewhat resembles the rhubarb on a gigantic scale.
-The inhabitants eat the stalks, which are subacid, and tan
-leather with the roots, and prepare a black dye from them.
-The leaf is nearly circular, but deeply indented on its margin.
-I measured one which was nearly eight feet in diameter,
-and therefore no less than twenty-four in circumference!
-The stalk is rather more than a yard high, and each
-plant sends out four or five of these enormous leaves,
-presenting together a very noble appearance.
-
-December 6th. -- We reached Caylen, called "el fin del
-Cristiandad." In the morning we stopped for a few minutes
-at a house on the northern end of Laylec, which was the
-extreme point of South American Christendom, and a miserable
-hovel it was. The latitude is 43 degs. 10', which is two
-degrees farther south than the Rio Negro on the Atlantic
-coast. These extreme Christians were very poor, and, under
-the plea of their situation, begged for some tobacco. As a
-proof of the poverty of these Indians, I may mention that
-shortly before this, we had met a man, who had travelled
-three days and a half on foot, and had as many to return,
-for the sake of recovering the value of a small axe and a few
-fish. How very difficult it must be to buy the smallest article,
-when such trouble is taken to recover so small a debt.
-
-In the evening we reached the island of San Pedro, where
-we found the Beagle at anchor. In doubling the point, two
-of the officers landed to take a round of angles with the
-theodolite. A fox (Canis fulvipes), of a kind said to be
-peculiar to the island, and very rare in it, and which is a new
-species, was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently absorbed
-in watching the work of the officers, that I was able,
-by quietly walking up behind, to knock him on the head
-with my geological hammer. This fox, more curious or
-more scientific, but less wise, than the generality of his
-brethren, is now mounted in the museum of the Zoological
-Society.
-
-We stayed three days in this harbour, on one of which
-Captain Fitz Roy, with a party, attempted to ascend to the
-summit of San Pedro. The woods here had rather a different
-appearance from those on the northern part of the island.
-The rock, also, being micaceous slate, there was no beach,
-but the steep sides dipped directly beneath the water. The
-general aspect in consequence was more like that of Tierra
-del Fuego than of Chiloe. In vain we tried to gain the
-summit: the forest was so impenetrable, that no one who
-has not beheld it can imagine so entangled a mass of dying
-and dead trunks. I am sure that often, for more than ten
-minutes together, our feet never touched the ground, and
-we were frequently ten or fifteen feet above it, so that the
-seamen as a joke called out the soundings. At other times
-we crept one after another on our hands and knees, under
-the rotten trunks. In the lower part of the mountain, noble
-trees of the Winter's Bark, and a laurel like the sassafras
-with fragrant leaves, and others, the names of which I do
-not know, were matted together by a trailing bamboo or cane.
-Here we were more like fishes struggling in a net than any
-other animal. On the higher parts, brushwood takes the
-place of larger trees, with here and there a red cedar or an
-alerce pine. I was also pleased to see, at an elevation of a
-little less than 1000 feet, our old friend the southern beech.
-They were, however, poor stunted trees, and I should think
-that this must be nearly their northern limit. We ultimately
-gave up the attempt in despair.
-
-December 10th. -- The yawl and whale-boat, with Mr.
-Sulivan, proceeded on their survey, but I remained on board
-the Beagle, which the next day left San Pedro for the southward.
-On the 13th we ran into an opening in the southern
-part of Guayatecas, or the Chonos Archipelago; and it was
-fortunate we did so, for on the following day a storm, worthy
-of Tierra del Fuego, raged with great fury. White massive
-clouds were piled up against a dark blue sky, and across them
-black ragged sheets of vapour were rapidly driven. The
-successive mountain ranges appeared like dim shadows, and
-the setting sun cast on the woodland a yellow gleam, much
-like that produced by the flame of spirits of wine. The water
-was white with the flying spray, and the wind lulled and
-roared again through the rigging: it was an ominous, sublime
-scene. During a few minutes there was a bright rainbow,
-and it was curious to observe the effect of the spray,
-which being carried along the surface of the water, changed
-the ordinary semicircle into a circle -- a band of prismatic
-colours being continued, from both feet of the common arch
-across the bay, close to the vessel's side: thus forming a
-distorted, but very nearly entire ring.
-
-We stayed here three days. The weather continued bad:
-but this did not much signify, for the surface of the land
-in all these islands is all but impassable. The coast is so
-very rugged that to attempt to walk in that direction requires
-continued scrambling up and down over the sharp
-rocks of mica-slate; and as for the woods, our faces, hands,
-and shin-bones all bore witness to the maltreatment we
-received, in merely attempting to penetrate their forbidden
-recesses.
-
-December 18th. -- We stood out to sea. On the 20th we
-bade farewell to the south, and with a fair wind turned the
-ship's head northward. From Cape Tres Montes we sailed
-pleasantly along the lofty weather-beaten coast, which is
-remarkable for the bold outline of its hills, and the thick
-covering of forest even on the almost precipitous flanks. The
-next day a harbour was discovered, which on this dangerous
-coast might be of great service to a distressed vessel. It
-can easily be recognized by a hill 1600 feet high, which is
-even more perfectly conical than the famous sugar-loaf at
-Rio de Janeiro. The next day, after anchoring, I succeeded
-in reaching the summit of this hill. It was a laborious
-undertaking, for the sides were so steep that in some parts it
-was necessary to use the trees as ladders. There were also
-several extensive brakes of the Fuchsia, covered with its
-beautiful drooping flowers, but very difficult to crawl through.
-In these wild countries it gives much delight to gain the summit
-of any mountain. There is an indefinite expectation of seeing
-something very strange, which, however often it may be
-balked, never failed with me to recur on each successive
-attempt. Every one must know the feeling of triumph and
-pride which a grand view from a height communicates to the
-mind. In these little frequented countries there is also joined
-to it some vanity, that you perhaps are the first man who ever
-stood on this pinnacle or admired this view.
-
-A strong desire is always felt to ascertain whether any
-human being has previously visited an unfrequented spot.
-A bit of wood with a nail in it, is picked up and studied as
-if it were covered with hieroglyphics. Possessed with this
-feeling, I was much interested by finding, on a wild part of
-the coast, a bed made of grass beneath a ledge of rock. Close
-by it there had been a fire, and the man had used an axe.
-The fire, bed, and situation showed the dexterity of an Indian;
-but he could scarcely have been an Indian, for the race is
-in this part extinct, owing to the Catholic desire of making
-at one blow Christians and Slaves. I had at the time some
-misgivings that the solitary man who had made his bed on
-this wild spot, must have been some poor shipwrecked sailor,
-who, in trying to travel up the coast, had here laid himself
-down for his dreary night
-
-December 28th. -- The weather continued very bad, but it
-at last permitted us to proceed with the survey. The time
-hung heavy on our hands, as it always did when we were
-delayed from day to day by successive gales of wind. In
-the evening another harbour was discovered, where we
-anchored. Directly afterwards a man was seen waving a
-shirt, and a boat was sent which brought back two seamen.
-A party of six had run away from an American whaling
-vessel, and had landed a little to the southward in a boat,
-which was shortly afterwards knocked to pieces by the surf.
-They had now been wandering up and down the coast for
-fifteen months, without knowing which way to go, or where
-they were. What a singular piece of good fortune it was
-that this harbour was now discovered! Had it not been for
-this one chance, they might have wandered till they had
-grown old men, and at last have perished on this wild coast.
-Their sufferings had been very great, and one of their party
-had lost his life by falling from the cliffs. They were
-sometimes obliged to separate in search of food, and this
-explained the bed of the solitary man. Considering what they
-had undergone, I think they had kept a very good reckoning of
-time, for they had lost only four days.
-
-December 30th. -- We anchored in a snug little cove at the
-foot of some high hills, near the northern extremity of Tres
-Montes. After breakfast the next morning, a party ascended
-one of these mountains, which was 2400 feet high. The
-scenery was remarkable The chief part of the range was
-composed of grand, solid, abrupt masses of granite, which
-appeared as if they had been coeval with the beginning of
-the world. The granite was capped with mica-slate, and this
-in the lapse of ages had been worn into strange finger-
-shaped points. These two formations, thus differing in their
-outlines, agree in being almost destitute of vegetation. This
-barrenness had to our eyes a strange appearance, from having
-been so long accustomed to the sight of an almost universal
-forest of dark-green trees. I took much delight in examining
-the structure of these mountains. The complicated and lofty
-ranges bore a noble aspect of durability -- equally profitless,
-however, to man and to all other animals. Granite to the
-geologist is classic ground: from its widespread limits, and its
-beautiful and compact texture, few rocks have been more
-anciently recognised. Granite has given rise, perhaps, to
-more discussion concerning its origin than any other formation.
-We generally see it constituting the fundamental rock,
-and, however formed, we know it is the deepest layer in the
-crust of this globe to which man has penetrated. The limit
-of man's knowledge in any subject possesses a high interest,
-which is perhaps increased by its close neighbourhood to the
-realms of imagination.
-
-January 1st 1835. -- The new year is ushered in with the
-ceremonies proper to it in these regions. She lays out no
-false hopes: a heavy north-western gale, with steady rain,
-bespeaks the rising year. Thank God, we are not destined
-here to see the end of it, but hope then to be in the Pacific
-Ocean, where a blue sky tells one there is a heaven, -- a
-something beyond the clouds above our heads.
-
-The north-west winds prevailing for the next four days,
-we only managed to cross a great bay, and then anchored in
-another secure harbour. I accompanied the Captain in a
-boat to the head of a deep creek. On the way the number of
-seals which we saw was quite astonishing: every bit of flat
-rock, and parts of the beach, were covered with them. There
-appeared to be of a loving disposition, and lay huddled
-together, fast asleep, like so many pigs; but even pigs would
-have been ashamed of their dirt, and of the foul smell which
-came from them. Each herd was watched by the patient but
-inauspicious eyes of the turkey-buzzard. This disgusting bird,
-with its bald scarlet head, formed to wallow in putridity, is
-very common on the west coast, and their attendance on the
-seals shows on what they rely for their food. We found the
-water (probably only that of the surface) nearly fresh: this
-was caused by the number of torrents which, in the form
-of cascades, came tumbling over the bold granite mountains
-into the sea. The fresh water attracts the fish, and these
-bring many terns, gulls, and two kinds of cormorant. We
-saw also a pair of the beautiful black-necked swans, and
-several small sea-otters, the fur of which is held in such
-high estimation. In returning, we were again amused by the
-impetuous manner in which the heap of seals, old and young,
-tumbled into the water as the boat passed. They did not
-remain long under water, but rising, followed us with
-outstretched necks, expressing great wonder and curiosity.
-
-7th. -- Having run up the coast, we anchored near the
-northern end of the Chonos Archipelago, in Low's Harbour,
-where we remained a week. The islands were here, as in
-Chiloe, composed of a stratified, soft, littoral deposit; and
-the vegetation in consequence was beautifully luxuriant. The
-woods came down to the sea-beach, just in the manner of
-an evergreen shrubbery over a gravel walk. We also enjoyed
-from the anchorage a splendid view of four great snowy
-cones of the Cordillera, including "el famoso Corcovado;"
-the range itself had in this latitude so little height, that few
-parts of it appeared above the tops of the neighbouring
-islets. We found here a party of five men from Caylen, "el
-fin del Cristiandad," who had most adventurously crossed in
-their miserable boat-canoe, for the purpose of fishing, the
-open space of sea which separates Chonos from Chiloe. These
-islands will, in all probability, in a short time become peopled
-like those adjoining the coast of Chiloe.
-
-
-The wild potato grows on these islands in great abundance,
-on the sandy, shelly soil near the sea-beach. The tallest
-plant was four feet in height. The tubers were generally
-small, but I found one, of an oval shape, two inches in
-diameter: they resembled in every respect, and had the same
-smell as English potatoes; but when boiled they shrunk much,
-and were watery and insipid, without any bitter taste. They
-are undoubtedly here indigenous: they grow as far south,
-according to Mr. Low, as lat. 50 degs., and are called Aquinas by
-the wild Indians of that part: the Chilotan Indians have a
-different name for them. Professor Henslow, who has examined
-the dried specimens which I brought home, says that
-they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine [1] from
-Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some
-botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It is
-remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile
-mountains of central Chile, where a drop of rain does not
-fall for more than six months, and within the damp forests
-of these southern islands.
-
-In the central parts of the Chonos Archipelago (lat. 45 degs.),
-the forest has very much the same character with that along
-the whole west coast, for 600 miles southward to Cape Horn.
-The arborescent grass of Chiloe is not found here; while the
-beech of Tierra del Fuego grows to a good size, and forms a
-considerable proportion of the wood; not, however, in the
-same exclusive manner as it does farther southward. Cryptogamic
-plants here find a most congenial climate. In the Strait
-of Magellan, as I have before remarked, the country appears
-too cold and wet to allow of their arriving at perfection; but
-in these islands, within the forest, the number of species and
-great abundance of mosses, lichens, and small ferns, is quite
-extraordinary. [2] In Tierra del Fuego trees grow only on the
-hillsides; every level piece of land being invariably covered
-by a thick bed of peat; but in Chiloe flat land supports the
-most luxuriant forests. Here, within the Chonos Archipelago,
-the nature of the climate more closely approaches that
-of Tierra del Fuego than that of northern Chiloe; for every
-patch of level ground is covered by two species of plants
-(Astelia pumila and Donatia magellanica), which by their
-joint decay compose a thick bed of elastic peat
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, above the region of woodland, the
-former of these eminently sociable plants is the chief agent
-in the production of peat. Fresh leaves are always succeeding
-one to the other round the central tap-root, the lower
-ones soon decay, and in tracing a root downwards in the peat,
-the leaves, yet holding their place, can be observed passing
-through every stage of decomposition, till the whole becomes
-blended in one confused mass. The Astelia is assisted by a
-few other plants, -- here and there a small creeping Myrtus
-(M. nummularia), with a woody stem like our cranberry and
-with a sweet berry, -- an Empetrum (E. rubrum), like our
-heath, -- a rush (Juncus grandiflorus), are nearly the only
-ones that grow on the swampy surface. These plants, though
-possessing a very close general resemblance to the English
-species of the same genera, are different. In the more level
-parts of the country, the surface of the peat is broken up into
-little pools of water, which stand at different heights, and
-appear as if artificially excavated. Small streams of water,
-flowing underground, complete the disorganization of the
-vegetable matter, and consolidate the whole.
-
-The climate of the southern part of America appears particularly
-favourable to the production of peat. In the Falkland
-Islands almost every kind of plant, even the coarse grass
-which covers the whole surface of the land, becomes converted
-into this substance: scarcely any situation checks its
-growth; some of the beds are as much as twelve feet thick,
-and the lower part becomes so solid when dry, that it will
-hardly burn. Although every plant lends its aid, yet in most
-parts the Astelia is the most efficient. It is rather a singular
-circumstance, as being so very different from what occurs
-in Europe, that I nowhere saw moss forming by its decay
-any portion of the peat in South America. With respect to
-the northern limit, at which the climate allows of that peculiar
-kind of slow decomposition which is necessary for its
-production, I believe that in Chiloe (lat. 41 to 42 degs.),
-although there is much swampy ground, no well-characterized peat
-occurs: but in the Chonos Islands, three degrees farther
-southward, we have seen that it is abundant. On the eastern
-coast in La Plata (lat. 35 degs.) I was told by a Spanish
-resident who had visited Ireland, that he had often sought for
-this substance, but had never been able to find any. He showed
-me, as the nearest approach to it which he had discovered, a
-black peaty soil, so penetrated with roots as to allow of an
-extremely slow and imperfect combustion.
-
-
-The zoology of these broken islets of the Chonos Archipelago
-is, as might have been expected, very poor. Of quadrupeds
-two aquatic kinds are common. The Myopotamus
-Coypus (like a beaver, but with a round tail) is well known
-from its fine fur, which is an object of trade throughout the
-tributaries of La Plata. It here, however, exclusively frequents
-salt water; which same circumstance has been mentioned
-as sometimes occurring with the great rodent, the
-Capybara. A small sea-otter is very numerous; this animal
-does not feed exclusively on fish, but, like the seals, draws a
-large supply from a small red crab, which swims in shoals
-near the surface of the water. Mr. Bynoe saw one in Tierra
-del Fuego eating a cuttle-fish; and at Low's Harbour, another
-was killed in the act of carrying to its hole a large volute
-shell. At one place I caught in a trap a singular little mouse
-(M. brachiotis); it appeared common on several of the islets,
-but the Chilotans at Low's Harbour said that it was not found
-in all. What a succession of chances, [3] or what changes of
-level must have been brought into play, thus to spread these
-small animals throughout this broken archipelago!
-
-In all parts of Chiloe and Chonos, two very strange birds
-occur, which are allied to, and replace, the Turco and Tapacolo
-of central Chile. One is called by the inhabitants
-"Cheucau" (Pteroptochos rubecula): it frequents the most
-gloomy and retired spots within the damp forests. Sometimes,
-although its cry may be heard close at hand, let a person
-watch ever so attentively he will not see the cheucau; at
-other times, let him stand motionless and the red-breasted
-little bird will approach within a few feet in the most familiar
-manner. It then busily hops about the entangled mass of
-rotting cones and branches, with its little tail cocked upwards.
-The cheucau is held in superstitious fear by the Chilotans, on
-account of its strange and varied cries. There are three
-very distinct cries: One is called "chiduco," and is an omen
-of good; another, "huitreu," which is extremely unfavourable;
-and a third, which I have forgotten. These words are
-given in imitation of the noises; and the natives are in some
-things absolutely governed by them. The Chilotans assuredly
-have chosen a most comical little creature for their prophet.
-An allied species, but rather larger, is called by the natives
-"Guid-guid" (Pteroptochos Tarnii), and by the English the
-barking-bird. This latter name is well given; for I defy any
-one at first to feel certain that a small dog is not yelping
-somewhere in the forest. Just as with the cheucau, a person
-will sometimes hear the bark close by, but in vain many
-endeavour by watching, and with still less chance by beating
-the bushes, to see the bird; yet at other times the guid-guid
-fearlessly comes near. Its manner of feeding and its general
-habits are very similar to those of the cheucau.
-
-On the coast, [4] a small dusky-coloured bird (Opetiorhynchus
-Patagonicus) is very common. It is remarkable from
-its quiet habits; it lives entirely on the sea-beach, like a
-sandpiper. Besides these birds only few others inhabit this
-broken land. In my rough notes I describe the strange
-noises, which, although frequently heard within these gloomy
-forests, yet scarcely disturb the general silence. The yelping
-of the guid-guid, and the sudden whew-whew of the
-cheucau, sometimes come from afar off, and sometimes from
-close at hand; the little black wren of Tierra del Fuego
-occasionally adds its cry; the creeper (Oxyurus) follows the
-intruder screaming and twittering; the humming-bird may
-be seen every now and then darting from side to side, and
-emitting, like an insect, its shrill chirp; lastly, from the top
-of some lofty tree the indistinct but plaintive note of the
-white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius) may be noticed.
-From the great preponderance in most countries of certain
-common genera of birds, such as the finches, one feels at
-first surprised at meeting with the peculiar forms above
-enumerated, as the commonest birds in any district. In central
-Chile two of them, namely, the Oxyurus and Scytalopus, occur,
-although most rarely. When finding, as in this case,
-animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great
-scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were
-created.
-
-But it should always be recollected, that in some other
-country perhaps they are essential members of society, or
-at some former period may have been so. If America
-south of 37 degs. were sunk beneath the waters of the ocean,
-these two birds might continue to exist in central Chile for
-a long period, but it is very improbable that their numbers
-would increase. We should then see a case which must inevitably
-have happened with very many animals.
-
-These southern seas are frequented by several species of
-Petrels: the largest kind, Procellaria gigantea, or nelly
-(quebrantahuesos, or break-bones, of the Spaniards), is a common
-bird, both in the inland channels and on the open sea.
-In its habits and manner of flight, there is a very close
-resemblance with the albatross; and as with the albatross, a
-person may watch it for hours together without seeing on
-what it feeds. The "break-bones" is, however, a rapacious
-bird, for it was observed by some of the officers at Port St.
-Antonio chasing a diver, which tried to escape by diving
-and flying, but was continually struck down, and at last
-killed by a blow on its head. At Port St. Julian these great
-petrels were seen killing and devouring young gulls. A second
-species (Puffinus cinereus), which is common to Europe,
-Cape Horn, and the coast of Peru, is of much smaller size
-than the P. gigantea, but, like it, of a dirty black colour. It
-generally frequents the inland sounds in very large flocks:
-I do not think I ever saw so many birds of any other sort
-together, as I once saw of these behind the island of Chiloe.
-Hundreds of thousands flew in an irregular line for several
-hours in one direction. When part of the flock settled on the
-water the surface was blackened, and a noise proceeded from
-them as of human beings talking in the distance.
-
-There are several other species of petrels, but I will only
-mention one other kind, the Pelacanoides Berardi which
-offers an example of those extraordinary cases, of a bird
-evidently belonging to one well-marked family, yet both in
-its habits and structure allied to a very distinct tribe. This
-bird never leaves the quiet inland sounds. When disturbed
-it dives to a distance, and on coming to the surface, with the
-same movement takes flight. After flying by a rapid movement
-of its short wings for a space in a straight line, it drops,
-as if struck dead, and dives again. The form of its beak and
-nostrils, length of foot, and even the colouring of its plumage,
-show that this bird is a petrel: on the other hand, its
-short wings and consequent little power of flight, its form
-of body and shape of tail, the absence of a hind toe to its
-foot, its habit of diving, and its choice of situation, make it
-at first doubtful whether its relationship is not equally close
-with the auks. It would undoubtedly be mistaken for an auk,
-when seen from a distance, either on the wing, or when diving
-and quietly swimming about the retired channels of
-Tierra del Fuego.
-
-[1] Horticultural Transact., vol. v. p. 249. Mr. Caldeleugh
-sent home two tubers, which, being well manured, even the
-first season produced numerous potatoes and an abundance of
-leaves. See Humboldt's interesting discussion on this plant,
-which it appears was unknown in Mexico, -- in Polit. Essay
-on New Spain, book iv. chap. ix.
-
-[2] By sweeping with my insect-net, I procured from these
-situations a considerable number of minute insects, of the
-family of Staphylinidae, and others allied to Pselaphus,
-and minute Hymenoptera. But the most characteristic family
-in number, both of individuals and species, throughout the
-more open parts of Chiloe and Chonos is that of Telephoridae.
-
-[3] It is said that some rapacious birds bring their prey
-alive to their nests. If so, in the course of centuries,
-every now and then, one might escape from the young birds.
-Some such agency is necessary, to account for the distribution
-of the smaller gnawing animals on islands not very near each other.
-
-[4] I may mention, as a proof of how great a difference there
-is between the seasons of the wooded and the open parts of
-this coast, that on September 20th, in lat. 34 degs., these
-birds had young ones in the nest, while among the Chonos
-Islands, three months later in the summer, they were only
-laying, the difference in latitude between these two places
-being about 700 miles.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
-
-San Carlos, Chiloe -- Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously
-with Aconcagua and Coseguina -- Ride to Cucao -- Impenetrable
-Forests -- Valdivia Indians -- Earthquake -- Concepcion --
-Great Earthquake -- Rocks fissured -- Appearance of the
-former Towns -- The Sea Black and Boiling -- Direction of
-the Vibrations -- Stones twisted round -- Great Wave --
-Permanent Elevation of the Land -- Area of Volcanic
-Phenomena -- The connection between the Elevatory and
-Eruptive Forces -- Cause of Earthquakes -- Slow Elevation of
-Mountain-chains
-
-
-ON JANUARY the 15th we sailed from Low's Harbour,
-and three days afterwards anchored a second time in
-the bay of S. Carlos in Chiloe. On the night of the
-19th the volcano of Osorno was in action. At midnight the
-sentry observed something like a large star, which gradually
-increased in size till about three o'clock, when it presented
-a very magnificent spectacle. By the aid of a glass, dark
-objects, in constant succession, were seen, in the midst of a
-great glare of red light, to be thrown up and to fall down.
-The light was sufficient to cast on the water a long bright
-reflection. Large masses of molten matter seem very commonly
-to be cast out of the craters in this part of the Cordillera.
-I was assured that when the Corcovado is in eruption,
-great masses are projected upwards and are seen to burst in
-the air, assuming many fantastical forms, such as trees:
-their size must be immense, for they can be distinguished
-from the high land behind S. Carlos, which is no less than
-ninety-three miles from the Corcovado. In the morning the
-volcano became tranquil.
-
-I was surprised at hearing afterwards that Aconcagua in
-Chile, 480 miles northwards, was in action on the same night;
-and still more surprised to hear that the great eruption of
-Coseguina (2700 miles north of Aconcagua), accompanied by
-an earthquake felt over a 1000 miles, also occurred within
-six hours of this same time. This coincidence is the more
-remarkable, as Coseguina had been dormant for twenty-six
-years; and Aconcagua most rarely shows any signs of action.
-It is difficult even to conjecture whether this coincidence was
-accidental, or shows some subterranean connection. If Vesuvius,
-Etna, and Hecla in Iceland (all three relatively nearer
-each other than the corresponding points in South America),
-suddenly burst forth in eruption on the same night, the
-coincidence would be thought remarkable; but it is far more
-remarkable in this case, where the three vents fall on the same
-great mountain-chain, and where the vast plains along the
-entire eastern coast, and the upraised recent shells along
-more than 2000 miles on the western coast, show in how
-equable and connected a manner the elevatory forces have acted.
-
-Captain Fitz Roy being anxious that some bearings should
-be taken on the outer coast of Chiloe, it was planned that
-Mr. King and myself should ride to Castro, and thence across
-the island to the Capella de Cucao, situated on the west
-coast. Having hired horses and a guide, we set out on
-the morning of the 22nd. We had not proceeded far, before
-we were joined by a woman and two boys, who were bent on
-the same journey. Every one on this road acts on a "hail
-fellow well met" fashion; and one may here enjoy the privilege,
-so rare in South America, of travelling without firearms.
-At first, the country consisted of a succession of hills
-and valleys: nearer to Castro it became very level. The road
-itself is a curious affair; it consists in its whole length,
-with the exception of very few parts, of great logs of wood,
-which are either broad and laid longitudinally, or narrow and
-placed transversely. In summer the road is not very bad; but in
-winter, when the wood is rendered slippery from rain, travelling
-is exceedingly difficult. At that time of the year, the
-ground on each side becomes a morass, and is often overflowed:
-hence it is necessary that the longitudinal logs
-should be fastened down by transverse poles, which are
-pegged on each side into the earth. These pegs render a fall
-from a horse dangerous, as the chance of alighting on one of
-them is not small. It is remarkable, however, how active
-custom has made the Chilotan horses. In crossing bad parts,
-where the logs had been displaced, they skipped from one
-to the other, almost with the quickness and certainty of a
-dog. On both hands the road is bordered by the lofty forest-
-trees, with their bases matted together by canes. When
-occasionally a long reach of this avenue could be beheld, it
-presented a curious scene of uniformity: the white line of logs,
-narrowing in perspective, became hidden by the gloomy forest,
-or terminated in a zigzag which ascended some steep hill.
-
-Although the distance from S. Carlos to Castro is only
-twelve leagues in a straight line, the formation of the road
-must have been a great labour. I was told that several people
-had formerly lost their lives in attempting to cross the
-forest. The first who succeeded was an Indian, who cut his
-way through the canes in eight days, and reached S. Carlos:
-he was rewarded by the Spanish government with a grant of
-land. During the summer, many of the Indians wander
-about the forests (but chiefly in the higher parts, where the
-woods are not quite so thick) in search of the half-wild cattle
-which live on the leaves of the cane and certain trees. It
-was one of these huntsmen who by chance discovered, a few
-years since, an English vessel, which had been wrecked on the
-outer coast. The crew were beginning to fail in provisions,
-and it is not probable that, without the aid of this man, they
-would ever have extricated themselves from these scarcely
-penetrable woods. As it was, one seaman died on the march,
-from fatigue. The Indians in these excursions steer by the
-sun; so that if there is a continuance of cloudy weather, they
-can not travel.
-
-The day was beautiful, and the number of trees which
-were in full flower perfumed the air; yet even this could
-hardly dissipate the effects of the gloomy dampness of the
-forest. Moreover, the many dead trunks that stand like
-skeletons, never fail to give to these primeval woods a
-character of solemnity, absent in those of countries long
-civilized. Shortly after sunset we bivouacked for the night. Our
-female companion, who was rather good-looking, belonged to
-one of the most respectable families in Castro: she rode,
-however, astride, and without shoes or stockings. I was
-surprised at the total want of pride shown by her and her
-brother. They brought food with them, but at all our meals sat
-watching Mr. King and myself whilst eating, till we were
-fairly shamed into feeding the whole party. The night was
-cloudless; and while lying in our beds, we enjoyed the sight
-(and it is a high enjoyment) of the multitude of stars which
-illumined the darkness of the forest.
-
-January 23rd. -- We rose early in the morning, and reached
-the pretty quiet town of Castro by two o'clock. The old governor
-had died since our last visit, and a Chileno was acting
-in his place. We had a letter of introduction to Don Pedro,
-whom we found exceedingly hospitable and kind, and more
-disinterested than is usual on this side of the continent. The
-next day Don Pedro procured us fresh horses, and offered
-to accompany us himself. We proceeded to the south -- generally
-following the coast, and passing through several hamlets,
-each with its large barn-like chapel built of wood. At
-Vilipilli, Don Pedro asked the commandant to give us a guide
-to Cucao. The old gentleman offered to come himself; but
-for a long time nothing would persuade him that two Englishmen
-really wished to go to such an out-of-the-way place
-as Cucao. We were thus accompanied by the two greatest
-aristocrats in the country, as was plainly to be seen in the
-manner of all the poorer Indians towards them. At Chonchi
-we struck across the island, following intricate winding
-paths, sometimes passing through magnificent forests, and
-sometimes through pretty cleared spots, abounding with corn
-and potato crops. This undulating woody country, partially
-cultivated, reminded me of the wilder parts of England, and
-therefore had to my eye a most fascinating aspect. At Vilinco,
-which is situated on the borders of the lake of Cucao,
-only a few fields were cleared; and all the inhabitants appeared
-to be Indians. This lake is twelve miles long, and
-runs in an east and west direction. From local circumstances,
-the sea-breeze blows very regularly during the day,
-and during the night it falls calm: this has given rise to
-strange exaggerations, for the phenomenon, as described to
-us at S. Carlos, was quite a prodigy.
-
-The road to Cucao was so very bad that we determined to
-embark in a _periagua_. The commandant, in the most authoritative
-manner, ordered six Indians to get ready to pull
-us over, without deigning to tell them whether they would
-be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but the crew
-were still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got
-into a boat together. They pulled, however, very well and
-cheerfully. The stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered
-strange cries, much after the fashion of a pig-driver driving
-his pigs. We started with a light breeze against us, but yet
-reached the Capella de Cucao before it was late. The country
-on each side of the lake was one unbroken forest. In the
-same periagua with us, a cow was embarked. To get so
-large an animal into a small boat appears at first a difficulty,
-but the Indians managed it in a minute. They brought the
-cow alongside the boat, which was heeled towards her; then
-placing two oars under her belly, with their ends resting on
-the gunwale, by the aid of these levers they fairly tumbled
-the poor beast heels over head into the bottom of the boat,
-and then lashed her down with ropes. At Cucao we found
-an uninhabited hovel (which is the residence of the padre
-when he pays this Capella a visit), where, lighting a fire, we
-cooked our supper, and were very comfortable.
-
-The district of Cucao is the only inhabited part on the
-whole west coast of Chiloe. It contains about thirty or forty
-Indian families, who are scattered along four or five miles
-of the shore. They are very much secluded from the rest of
-Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of commerce, except
-sometimes in a little oil, which they get from seal-blubber.
-They are tolerably dressed in clothes of their own manufacture,
-and they have plenty to eat. They seemed, however,
-discontented, yet humble to a degree which it was quite painful
-to witness. These feelings are, I think, chiefly to be
-attributed to the harsh and authoritative manner in which
-they are treated by their rulers. Our companions, although
-so very civil to us, behaved to the poor Indians as if they
-had been slaves, rather than free men. They ordered provisions
-and the use of their horses, without ever condescending
-to say how much, or indeed whether the owners should
-be paid at all. In the morning, being left alone with these
-poor people, we soon ingratiated ourselves by presents of
-cigars and mate. A lump of white sugar was divided between
-all present, and tasted with the greatest curiosity. The
-Indians ended all their complaints by saying, "And it is only
-because we are poor Indians, and know nothing; but it was
-not so when we had a King."
-
-The next day after breakfast, we rode a few miles northward
-to Punta Huantamo. The road lay along a very broad
-beach, on which, even after so many fine days, a terrible surf
-was breaking. I was assured that after a heavy gale, the
-roar can be heard at night even at Castro, a distance of no
-less than twenty-one sea-miles across a hilly and wooded
-country. We had some difficulty in reaching the point, owing
-to the intolerably bad paths; for everywhere in the shade
-the ground soon becomes a perfect quagmire. The point
-itself is a bold rocky hill. It is covered by a plant allied, I
-believe, to Bromelia, and called by the inhabitants Chepones.
-In scrambling through the beds, our hands were very much
-scratched. I was amused by observing the precaution our
-Indian guide took, in turning up his trousers, thinking that
-they were more delicate than his own hard skin. This plant
-bears a fruit, in shape like an artichoke, in which a number
-of seed-vessels are packed: these contain a pleasant sweet
-pulp, here much esteemed. I saw at Low's Harbour the
-Chilotans making chichi, or cider, with this fruit: so true is
-it, as Humboldt remarks, that almost everywhere man finds
-means of preparing some kind of beverage from the vegetable
-kingdom. The savages, however, of Tierra del Fuego,
-and I believe of Australia, have not advanced thus far in
-the arts.
-
-The coast to the north of Punta Huantamo is exceedingly
-rugged and broken, and is fronted by many breakers, on
-which the sea is eternally roaring. Mr. King and myself
-were anxious to return, if it had been possible, on foot along
-this coast; but even the Indians said it was quite
-impracticable. We were told that men have crossed by striking
-directly through the woods from Cucao to S. Carlos, but
-never by the coast. On these expeditions, the Indians carry
-with them only roasted corn, and of this they eat sparingly
-twice a day.
-
-26th. -- Re-embarking in the periagua, we returned across
-the lake, and then mounted our horses. The whole of Chiloe
-took advantage of this week of unusually fine weather, to
-clear the ground by burning. In every direction volumes of
-smoke were curling upwards. Although the inhabitants were
-so assiduous in setting fire to every part of the wood, yet
-I did not see a single fire which they had succeeded in making
-extensive. We dined with our friend the commandant,
-and did not reach Castro till after dark. The next morning
-we started very early. After having ridden for some time,
-we obtained from the brow of a steep hill an extensive view
-(and it is a rare thing on this road) of the great forest.
-Over the horizon of trees, the volcano of Corcovado, and
-the great flat-topped one to the north, stood out in proud
-pre-eminence: scarcely another peak in the long range
-showed its snowy summit. I hope it will be long before I
-forget this farewell view of the magnificent Cordillera fronting
-Chiloe. At night we bivouacked under a cloudless sky,
-and the next morning reached S. Carlos. We arrived on the
-right day, for before evening heavy rain commenced.
-
-February 4th. -- Sailed from Chiloe. During the last week
-I made several short excursions. One was to examine a
-great bed of now-existing shells, elevated 350 feet above
-the level of the sea: from among these shells, large forest-
-trees were growing. Another ride was to P. Huechucucuy.
-I had with me a guide who knew the country far too well;
-for he would pertinaciously tell me endless Indian names for
-every little point, rivulet, and creek. In the same manner as
-in Tierra del Fuego, the Indian language appears singularly
-well adapted for attaching names to the most trivial features
-of the land. I believe every one was glad to say farewell
-to Chiloe; yet if we could forget the gloom and ceaseless
-rain of winter, Chiloe might pass for a charming island.
-There is also something very attractive in the simplicity and
-humble politeness of the poor inhabitants.
-
-We steered northward along shore, but owing to thick
-weather did not reach Valdivia till the night of the 8th. The
-next morning the boat proceeded to the town, which is distant
-about ten miles. We followed the course of the river,
-occasionally passing a few hovels, and patches of ground
-cleared out of the otherwise unbroken forest; and sometimes
-meeting a canoe with an Indian family. The town is situated
-on the low banks of the stream, and is so completely
-buried in a wood of apple-trees that the streets are merely
-paths in an orchard I have never seen any country, where
-apple-trees appeared to thrive so well as in this damp part of
-South America: on the borders of the roads there were
-many young trees evidently self-grown. In Chiloe the inhabitants
-possess a marvellously short method of making an
-orchard. At the lower part of almost every branch, small,
-conical, brown, wrinkled points project: these are always
-ready to change into roots, as may sometimes be seen, where
-any mud has been accidentally splashed against the tree. A
-branch as thick as a man's thigh is chosen in the early spring,
-and is cut off just beneath a group of these points, all the
-smaller branches are lopped off, and it is then placed about
-two feet deep in the ground. During the ensuing summer
-the stump throws out long shoots, and sometimes even bears
-fruit: I was shown one which had produced as many as
-twenty-three apples, but this was thought very unusual. In
-the third season the stump is changed (as I have myself
-seen) into a well-wooded tree, loaded with fruit. An old
-man near Valdivia illustrated his motto, "Necesidad es la
-madre del invencion," by giving an account of the several
-useful things he manufactured from his apples. After making
-cider, and likewise wine, he extracted from the refuse a
-white and finely flavoured spirit; by another process he
-procured a sweet treacle, or, as he called it, honey. His
-children and pigs seemed almost to live, during this season of
-the year, in his orchard.
-
-February 11th. -- I set out with a guide on a short ride, in
-which, however, I managed to see singularly little, either
-of the geology of the country or of its inhabitants. There
-is not much cleared land near Valdivia: after crossing a
-river at the distance of a few miles, we entered the forest, and
-then passed only one miserable hovel, before reaching our
-sleeping-place for the night. The short difference in latitude,
-of 150 miles, has given a new aspect to the forest compared
-with that of Chiloe. This is owing to a slightly
-different proportion in the kinds of trees. The evergreens
-do not appear to be quite so numerous, and the forest in
-consequence has a brighter tint. As in Chiloe, the lower
-parts are matted together by canes: here also another kind
-(resembling the bamboo of Brazil and about twenty feet in
-height) grows in clusters, and ornaments the banks of some
-of the streams in a very pretty manner. It is with this plant
-that the Indians make their chuzos, or long tapering spears.
-Our resting-house was so dirty that I preferred sleeping
-outside: on these journeys the first night is generally very
-uncomfortable, because one is not accustomed to the tickling
-and biting of the fleas. I am sure, in the morning, there
-was not a space on my legs the size of a shilling which had
-not its little red mark where the flea had feasted.
-
-12th. -- We continued to ride through the uncleared forest;
-only occasionally meeting an Indian on horseback, or a troop
-of fine mules bringing alerce-planks and corn from the southern
-plains. In the afternoon one of the horses knocked up:
-we were then on a brow of a hill, which commanded a fine
-view of the Llanos. The view of these open plains was very
-refreshing, after being hemmed in and buried in the wilderness
-of trees. The uniformity of a forest soon becomes very
-wearisome. This west coast makes me remember with pleasure
-the free, unbounded plains of Patagonia; yet, with the
-true spirit of contradiction, I cannot forget how sublime is
-the silence of the forest. The Llanos are the most fertile
-and thickly peopled parts of the country, as they possess the
-immense advantage of being nearly free from trees. Before
-leaving the forest we crossed some flat little lawns, around
-which single trees stood, as in an English park: I have often
-noticed with surprise, in wooded undulatory districts, that
-the quite level parts have been destitute of trees. On account
-of the tired horse, I determined to stop at the Mission
-of Cudico, to the friar of which I had a letter of introduction.
-Cudico is an intermediate district between the forest
-and the Llanos. There are a good many cottages, with
-patches of corn and potatoes, nearly all belonging to Indians.
-The tribes dependent on Valdivia are "reducidos y cristianos."
-The Indians farther northward, about Arauco and
-Imperial, are still very wild, and not converted; but they
-have all much intercourse with the Spaniards. The padre
-said that the Christian Indians did not much like coming
-to mass, but that otherwise they showed respect for religion.
-The greatest difficulty is in making them observe the ceremonies
-of marriage. The wild Indians take as many wives
-as they can support, and a cacique will sometimes have more
-than ten: on entering his house, the number may be told by
-that of the separate fires. Each wife lives a week in turn
-with the cacique; but all are employed in weaving ponchos,
-etc., for his profit. To be the wife of a cacique, is an honour
-much sought after by the Indian women.
-
-The men of all these tribes wear a coarse woolen poncho:
-those south of Valdivia wear short trousers, and those north
-of it a petticoat, like the chilipa of the Gauchos. All have
-their long hair bound by a scarlet fillet, but with no other
-covering on their heads. These Indians are good-sized men;
-their cheek-bones are prominent, and in general appearance
-they resemble the great American family to which they belong;
-but their physiognomy seemed to me to be slightly
-different from that of any other tribe which I had before
-seen. Their expression is generally grave, and even austere,
-and possesses much character: this may pass either for honest
-bluntness or fierce determination. The long black hair,
-the grave and much-lined features, and the dark complexion,
-called to my mind old portraits of James I. On the road we
-met with none of that humble politeness so universal in
-Chiloe. Some gave their "mari-mari" (good morning) with
-promptness, but the greater number did not seem inclined to
-offer any salute. This independence of manners is probably
-a consequence of their long wars, and the repeated victories
-which they alone, of all the tribes in America, have gained
-over the Spaniards.
-
-I spent the evening very pleasantly, talking with the
-padre. He was exceedingly kind and hospitable; and coming
-from Santiago, had contrived to surround himself with some
-few comforts. Being a man of some little education, he bitterly
-complained of the total want of society. With no particular
-zeal for religion, no business or pursuit, how completely
-must this man's life be wasted! The next day, on
-our return, we met seven very wild-looking Indians, of whom
-some were caciques that had just received from the Chilian
-government their yearly small stipend for having long remained
-faithful. They were fine-looking men, and they rode
-one after the other, with most gloomy faces. An old cacique,
-who headed them, had been, I suppose, more excessively
-drunk than the rest, for he seemed extremely grave and
-very crabbed. Shortly before this, two Indians joined us,
-who were travelling from a distant mission to Valdivia
-concerning some lawsuit. One was a good-humoured old man,
-but from his wrinkled beardless face looked more like an
-old woman than a man. I frequently presented both of them
-with cigars; and though ready to receive them, and I dare
-say grateful, they would hardly condescend to thank me. A
-Chilotan Indian would have taken off his hat, and given his
-"Dios le page!" The travelling was very tedious, both
-from the badness of the roads, and from the number of great
-fallen trees, which it was necessary either to leap over or to
-avoid by making long circuits. We slept on the road, and
-next morning reached Valdivia, whence I proceeded on
-board.
-
-A few days afterwards I crossed the bay with a party of
-officers, and landed near the fort called Niebla. The buildings
-were in a most ruinous state, and the gun-carriages
-quite rotten. Mr. Wickham remarked to the commanding
-officer, that with one discharge they would certainly all fall
-to pieces. The poor man, trying to put a good face upon it,
-gravely replied, "No, I am sure, sir, they would stand
-two!" The Spaniards must have intended to have made this
-place impregnable. There is now lying in the middle of the
-court-yard a little mountain of mortar, which rivals in hardness
-the rock on which it is placed. It was brought from
-Chile, and cost 7000 dollars. The revolution having broken
-out, prevented its being applied to any purpose, and now it
-remains a monument of the fallen greatness of Spain.
-
-I wanted to go to a house about a mile and a half distant,
-but my guide said it was quite impossible to penetrate the
-wood in a straight line. He offered, however, to lead me, by
-following obscure cattle-tracks, the shortest way: the walk,
-nevertheless, took no less than three hours! This man is
-employed in hunting strayed cattle; yet, well as he must
-know the woods, he was not long since lost for two whole
-days, and had nothing to eat. These facts convey a good
-idea of the impracticability of the forests of these countries.
-A question often occurred to me -- how long does any vestige
-of a fallen tree remain? This man showed me one which
-a party of fugitive royalists had cut down fourteen years
-ago; and taking this as a criterion, I should think a bole a
-foot and a half in diameter would in thirty years be changed
-into a heap of mould.
-
-February 20th. -- This day has been memorable in the
-annals of Valdivia, for the most severe earthquake experienced
-by the oldest inhabitant. I happened to be on shore,
-and was lying down in the wood to rest myself. It came on
-suddenly, and lasted two minutes, but the time appeared
-much longer. The rocking of the ground was very sensible.
-The undulations appeared to my companion and myself to
-come from due east, whilst others thought they proceeded
-from south-west: this shows how difficult it sometimes is to
-perceive the directions of the vibrations. There was no
-difficulty in standing upright, but the motion made me almost
-giddy: it was something like the movement of a vessel in a
-little cross-ripple, or still more like that felt by a person
-skating over thin ice, which bends under the weight of his body.
-A bad earthquake at once destroys our oldest associations:
-the earth, the very emblem of solidity, has moved beneath
-our feet like a thin crust over a fluid; -- one second of time
-has created in the mind a strange idea of insecurity, which
-hours of reflection would not have produced. In the forest,
-as a breeze moved the trees, I felt only the earth tremble, but
-saw no other effect. Captain Fitz Roy and some officers
-were at the town during the shock, and there the scene was
-more striking; for although the houses, from being built of
-wood, did not fall, they were violently shaken, and the boards
-creaked and rattled together. The people rushed out of
-doors in the greatest alarm. It is these accompaniments that
-create that perfect horror of earthquakes, experienced by all
-who have thus seen, as well as felt, their effects. Within the
-forest it was a deeply interesting, but by no means an awe-
-exciting phenomenon. The tides were very curiously affected.
-The great shock took place at the time of low water;
-and an old woman who was on the beach told me that the
-water flowed very quickly, but not in great waves, to high-
-water mark, and then as quickly returned to its proper level;
-this was also evident by the line of wet sand. The same kind
-of quick but quiet movement in the tide happened a few
-years since at Chiloe, during a slight earthquake, and created
-much causeless alarm. In the course of the evening there
-were many weaker shocks, which seemed to produce in the
-harbour the most complicated currents, and some of great
-strength.
-
-
-March 4th. -- We entered the harbour of Concepcion. While
-the ship was beating up to the anchorage, I landed on the
-island of Quiriquina. The mayor-domo of the estate quickly
-rode down to tell me the terrible news of the great earthquake
-of the 20th: -- "That not a house in Concepcion or
-Talcahuano (the port) was standing; that seventy villages
-were destroyed; and that a great wave had almost washed
-away the ruins of Talcahuano." Of this latter statement I
-soon saw abundant proofs -- the whole coast being strewed
-over with timber and furniture as if a thousand ships had
-been wrecked. Besides chairs, tables, book-shelves, etc., in
-great numbers, there were several roofs of cottages, which
-had been transported almost whole. The storehouses at Talcahuano
-had been burst open, and great bags of cotton, yerba,
-and other valuable merchandise were scattered on the shore.
-During my walk round the island, I observed that numerous
-fragments of rock, which, from the marine productions adhering
-to them, must recently have been lying in deep water,
-had been cast up high on the beach; one of these was six feet
-long, three broad, and two thick.
-
-The island itself as plainly showed the overwhelming
-power of the earthquake, as the beach did that of the consequent
-great wave. The ground in many parts was fissured
-in north and south lines, perhaps caused by the yielding of
-the parallel and steep sides of this narrow island. Some of
-the fissures near the cliffs were a yard wide. Many enormous
-masses had already fallen on the beach; and the inhabitants
-thought that when the rains commenced far greater slips would
-happen. The effect of the vibration on the hard primary slate,
-which composes the foundation of the island, was still more
-curious: the superficial parts of some narrow ridges were as
-completely shivered as if they had been blasted by gunpowder.
-This effect, which was rendered conspicuous by the
-fresh fractures and displaced soil, must be confined to near
-the surface, for otherwise there would not exist a block of
-solid rock throughout Chile; nor is this improbable, as it is
-known that the surface of a vibrating body is affected
-differently from the central part. It is, perhaps, owing to this
-same reason, that earthquakes do not cause quite such terrific
-havoc within deep mines as would be expected. I believe this
-convulsion has been more effectual in lessening the size of
-the island of Quiriquina, than the ordinary wear-and-tear
-of the sea and weather during the course of a whole century.
-
-The next day I landed at Talcahuano, and afterwards rode
-to Concepcion. Both towns presented the most awful yet
-interesting spectacle I ever beheld. To a person who had
-formerly know them, it possibly might have been still more
-impressive; for the ruins were so mingled together, and the
-whole scene possessed so little the air of a habitable place,
-that it was scarcely possible to imagine its former condition.
-The earthquake commenced at half-past eleven o'clock in the
-forenoon. If it had happened in the middle of the night, the
-greater number of the inhabitants (which in this one province
-must amount to many thousands) must have perished,
-instead of less than a hundred: as it was, the invariable
-practice of running out of doors at the first trembling of the
-ground, alone saved them. In Concepcion each house, or
-row of houses, stood by itself, a heap or line of ruins; but in
-Talcahuano, owing to the great wave, little more than one
-layer of bricks, tiles, and timber with here and there part of
-a wall left standing, could be distinguished. From this
-circumstance Concepcion, although not so completely desolated,
-was a more terrible, and if I may so call it, picturesque sight.
-The first shock was very sudden. The mayor-domo at Quiriquina
-told me, that the first notice he received of it, was
-finding both the horse he rode and himself, rolling together
-on the ground. Rising up, he was again thrown down. He
-also told me that some cows which were standing on the steep
-side of the island were rolled into the sea. The great wave
-caused the destruction of many cattle; on one low island
-near the head of the bay, seventy animals were washed off
-and drowned. It is generally thought that this has been the
-worst earthquake ever recorded in Chile; but as the very
-severe ones occur only after long intervals, this cannot easily
-be known; nor indeed would a much worse shock have made
-any difference, for the ruin was now complete. Innumerable
-small tremblings followed the great earthquake, and within
-the first twelve days no less than three hundred were counted.
-
-After viewing Concepcion, I cannot understand how the
-greater number of inhabitants escaped unhurt. The houses
-in many parts fell outwards; thus forming in the middle of
-the streets little hillocks of brickwork and rubbish. Mr.
-Rouse, the English consul, told us that he was at breakfast
-when the first movement warned him to run out. He had
-scarcely reached the middle of the court-yard, when one side
-of his house came thundering down. He retained presence
-of mind to remember, that if he once got on the top of that
-part which had already fallen, he would be safe. Not being
-able from the motion of the ground to stand, he crawled up
-on his hands and knees; and no sooner had he ascended this
-little eminence, than the other side of the house fell in, the
-great beams sweeping close in front of his head. With his
-eyes blinded, and his mouth choked with the cloud of dust
-which darkened the sky, at last he gained the street. As
-shock succeeded shock, at the interval of a few minutes, no
-one dared approach the shattered ruins, and no one knew
-whether his dearest friends and relations were not perishing
-from the want of help. Those who had saved any property
-were obliged to keep a constant watch, for thieves
-prowled about, and at each little trembling of the ground,
-with one hand they beat their breasts and cried "Misericordia!"
-and then with the other filched what they could
-from the ruins. The thatched roofs fell over the fires, and
-flames burst forth in all parts. Hundreds knew themselves
-ruined, and few had the means of providing food for the day.
-
-Earthquakes alone are sufficient to destroy the prosperity
-of any country. If beneath England the now inert subterranean
-forces should exert those powers, which most assuredly
-in former geological ages they have exerted, how completely
-would the entire condition of the country be changed!
-What would become of the lofty houses, thickly packed cities,
-great manufactories, the beautiful public and private edifices?
-If the new period of disturbance were first to commence
-by some great earthquake in the dead of the night,
-how terrific would be the carnage! England would at once
-be bankrupt; all papers, records, and accounts would from
-that moment be lost. Government being unable to collect
-the taxes, and failing to maintain its authority, the hand of
-violence and rapine would remain uncontrolled. In every
-large town famine would go forth, pestilence and death following
-in its train.
-
-Shortly after the shock, a great wave was seen from the
-distance of three or four miles, approaching in the middle
-of the bay with a smooth outline; but along the shore it tore
-up cottages and trees, as it swept onwards with irresistible
-force. At the head of the bay it broke in a fearful line of
-white breakers, which rushed up to a height of 23 vertical
-feet above the highest spring-tides. Their force must have
-been prodigious; for at the Fort a cannon with its carriage,
-estimated at four tons in weight, was moved 15 feet inwards.
-A schooner was left in the midst of the ruins, 200 yards
-from the beach. The first wave was followed by two others,
-which in their retreat carried away a vast wreck of floating
-objects. In one part of the bay, a ship was pitched high
-and dry on shore, was carried off, again driven on shore, and
-again carried off. In another part, two large vessels anchored
-near together were whirled about, and their cables were thrice
-wound round each other; though anchored at a depth of 36
-feet, they were for some minutes aground. The great wave
-must have travelled slowly, for the inhabitants of Talcahuano
-had time to run up the hills behind the town; and
-some sailors pulled out seaward, trusting successfully to their
-boat riding securely over the swell, if they could reach it
-before it broke. One old woman with a little boy, four or
-five years old, ran into a boat, but there was nobody to row
-it out: the boat was consequently dashed against an anchor
-and cut in twain; the old woman was drowned, but the child
-was picked up some hours afterwards clinging to the wreck.
-Pools of salt-water were still standing amidst the ruins of
-the houses, and children, making boats with old tables and
-chairs, appeared as happy as their parents were miserable.
-It was, however, exceedingly interesting to observe, how
-much more active and cheerful all appeared than could have
-been expected. It was remarked with much truth, that from
-the destruction being universal, no one individual was humbled
-more than another, or could suspect his friends of coldness
--- that most grievous result of the loss of wealth. Mr. Rouse,
-and a large party whom he kindly took under his protection,
-lived for the first week in a garden beneath some apple-trees.
-At first they were as merry as if it had been a picnic; but
-soon afterwards heavy rain caused much discomfort, for they
-were absolutely without shelter.
-
-In Captain Fitz Roy's excellent account of the earthquake,
-it is said that two explosions, one like a column of smoke and
-another like the blowing of a great whale, were seen in the
-bay. The water also appeared everywhere to be boiling; and
-it "became black, and exhaled a most disagreeable sulphureous
-smell." These latter circumstances were observed in the
-Bay of Valparaiso during the earthquake of 1822; they may,
-I think, be accounted for, by the disturbance of the mud at
-the bottom of the sea containing organic matter in decay. In
-the Bay of Callao, during a calm day, I noticed, that as the
-ship dragged her cable over the bottom, its course was marked
-by a line of bubbles. The lower orders in Talcahuano thought
-that the earthquake was caused by some old Indian women,
-who two years ago, being offended, stopped the volcano of
-Antuco. This silly belief is curious, because it shows that
-experience has taught them to observe, that there exists a
-relation between the suppressed action of the volcanos, and
-the trembling of the ground. It was necessary to apply the
-witchcraft to the point where their perception of cause and
-effect failed; and this was the closing of the volcanic vent.
-This belief is the more singular in this particular instance,
-because, according to Captain Fitz Roy, there is reason to
-believe that Antuco was noways affected.
-
-The town of Concepcion was built in the usual Spanish
-fashion, with all the streets running at right angles to each
-other; one set ranging S.W. by W., and the other set N.W.
-by N. The walls in the former direction certainly stood
-better than those in the latter; the greater number of the
-masses of brickwork were thrown down towards the N.E.
-Both these circumstances perfectly agree with the general
-idea, of the undulations having come from the S.W., in which
-quarter subterranean noises were also heard; for it is evident
-that the walls running S.W. and N.E. which presented their
-ends to the point whence the undulations came, would be
-much less likely to fall than those walls which, running N.W.
-and S.E., must in their whole lengths have been at the same
-instant thrown out of the perpendicular; for the undulations,
-coming from the S.W., must have extended in N.W. and
-S.E. waves, as they passed under the foundations. This may
-be illustrated by placing books edgeways on a carpet, and
-then, after the manner suggested by Michell, imitating the
-undulations of an earthquake: it will be found that they fall
-with more or less readiness, according as their direction more
-or less nearly coincides with the line of the waves. The
-fissures in the ground generally, though not uniformly, extended
-in a S.E. and N.W. direction, and therefore corresponded
-to the lines of undulation or of principal flexure. Bearing in
-mind all these circumstances, which so clearly point to the
-S.W. as the chief focus of disturbance, it is a very interesting
-fact that the island of S. Maria, situated in that quarter, was,
-during the general uplifting of the land, raised to nearly
-three times the height of any other part of the coast.
-
-The different resistance offered by the walls, according to
-their direction, was well exemplified in the case of the
-Cathedral. The side which fronted the N.E. presented a grand
-pile of ruins, in the midst of which door-cases and masses
-of timber stood up, as if floating in a stream. Some of the
-angular blocks of brickwork were of great dimensions; and
-they were rolled to a distance on the level plaza, like
-fragments of rock at the base of some high mountain. The side
-walls (running S.W. and N.E.), though exceedingly fractured,
-yet remained standing; but the vast buttresses (at
-right angles to them, and therefore parallel to the walls that
-fell) were in many cases cut clean off, as if by a chisel, and
-hurled to the ground. Some square ornaments on the coping
-of these same walls, were moved by the earthquake into
-a diagonal position. A similar circumstance was observed
-after an earthquake at Valparaiso, Calabria, and other places,
-including some of the ancient Greek temples. [1] This twisting
-displacement, at first appears to indicate a vorticose
-movement beneath each point thus affected; but this is highly
-improbable. May it not be caused by a tendency in each stone
-to arrange itself in some particular position, with respect
-to the lines of vibration, -- in a manner somewhat similar to
-pins on a sheet of paper when shaken? Generally speaking,
-arched doorways or windows stood much better than any
-other part of the buildings. Nevertheless, a poor lame old
-man, who had been in the habit, during trifling shocks, of
-crawling to a certain doorway, was this time crushed to
-pieces.
-
-I have not attempted to give any detailed description of
-the appearance of Concepcion, for I feel that it is quite
-impossible to convey the mingled feelings which I experienced.
-Several of the officers visited it before me, but their
-strongest language failed to give a just idea of the scene of
-desolation. It is a bitter and humiliating thing to see works,
-which have cost man so much time and labour, overthrown in one
-minute; yet compassion for the inhabitants was almost instantly
-banished, by the surprise in seeing a state of things produced
-in a moment of time, which one was accustomed to attribute
-to a succession of ages. In my opinion, we have scarcely beheld,
-since leaving England, any sight so deeply interesting.
-
-In almost every severe earthquake, the neighbouring waters
-of the sea are said to have been greatly agitated. The
-disturbance seems generally, as in the case of Concepcion, to
-have been of two kinds: first, at the instant of the shock,
-the water swells high up on the beach with a gentle motion,
-and then as quietly retreats; secondly, some time afterwards,
-the whole body of the sea retires from the coast, and then
-returns in waves of overwhelming force. The first movement
-seems to be an immediate consequence of the earthquake
-affecting differently a fluid and a solid, so that their
-respective levels are slightly deranged: but the second case
-is a far more important phenomenon. During most earthquakes,
-and especially during those on the west coast of
-America, it is certain that the first great movement of the
-waters has been a retirement. Some authors have attempted
-to explain this, by supposing that the water retains its level,
-whilst the land oscillates upwards; but surely the water close
-to the land, even on a rather steep coast, would partake of the
-motion of the bottom: moreover, as urged by Mr. Lyell,
-similar movements of the sea have occurred at islands far
-distant from the chief line of disturbance, as was the case
-with Juan Fernandez during this earthquake, and with
-Madeira during the famous Lisbon shock. I suspect (but the
-subject is a very obscure one) that a wave, however produced,
-first draws the water from the shore, on which it is advancing
-to break: I have observed that this happens with the little
-waves from the paddles of a steam-boat. It is remarkable
-that whilst Talcahuano and Callao (near Lima), both situated
-at the head of large shallow bays, have suffered during
-every severe earthquake from great waves, Valparaiso,
-seated close to the edge of profoundly deep water, has never
-been overwhelmed, though so often shaken by the severest
-shocks. From the great wave not immediately following the
-earthquake, but sometimes after the interval of even half an
-hour, and from distant islands being affected similarly with
-the coasts near the focus of the disturbance, it appears that
-the wave first rises in the offing; and as this is of general
-occurrence, the cause must be general: I suspect we must
-look to the line, where the less disturbed waters of the deep
-ocean join the water nearer the coast, which has partaken
-of the movements of the land, as the place where the great
-wave is first generated; it would also appear that the wave
-is larger or smaller, according to the extent of shoal water
-which has been agitated together with the bottom on which it
-rested.
-
-
-The most remarkable effect of this earthquake was the permanent
-elevation of the land, it would probably be far more
-correct to speak of it as the cause. There can be no doubt
-that the land round the Bay of Concepcion was upraised
-two or three feet; but it deserves notice, that owing to the
-wave having obliterated the old lines of tidal action on the
-sloping sandy shores, I could discover no evidence of this
-fact, except in the united testimony of the inhabitants, that
-one little rocky shoal, now exposed, was formerly covered
-with water. At the island of S. Maria (about thirty miles
-distant) the elevation was greater; on one part, Captain Fitz
-Roy founds beds of putrid mussel-shells _still adhering to the
-rocks_, ten feet above high-water mark: the inhabitants had
-formerly dived at lower-water spring-tides for these shells.
-The elevation of this province is particularly interesting,
-from its having been the theatre of several other violent
-earthquakes, and from the vast numbers of sea-shells scattered
-over the land, up to a height of certainly 600, and I
-believe, of 1000 feet. At Valparaiso, as I have remarked,
-similar shells are found at the height of 1300 feet: it is
-hardly possible to doubt that this great elevation has been
-effected by successive small uprisings, such as that which
-accompanied or caused the earthquake of this year, and likewise
-by an insensibly slow rise, which is certainly in progress on
-some parts of this coast.
-
-The island of Juan Fernandez, 360 miles to the N.E., was,
-at the time of the great shock of the 20th, violently shaken,
-so that the trees beat against each other, and a volcano burst
-forth under water close to the shore: these facts are remarkable
-because this island, during the earthquake of 1751, was
-then also affected more violently than other places at an equal
-distance from Concepcion, and this seems to show some
-subterranean connection between these two points. Chiloe, about
-340 miles southward of Concepcion, appears to have been
-shaken more strongly than the intermediate district of Valdivia,
-where the volcano of Villarica was noways affected,
-whilst in the Cordillera in front of Chiloe, two of the volcanos
-burst-forth at the same instant in violent action. These
-two volcanos, and some neighbouring ones, continued for a
-long time in eruption, and ten months afterwards were
-again influenced by an earthquake at Concepcion. Some
-men, cutting wood near the base of one of these volcanos,
-did not perceive the shock of the 20th, although the whole
-surrounding Province was then trembling; here we have an
-eruption relieving and taking the place of an earthquake,
-as would have happened at Concepcion, according to the
-belief of the lower orders, if the volcano at Antuco had not
-been closed by witchcraft. Two years and three-quarters
-afterwards, Valdivia and Chiloe were again shaken, more
-violently than on the 20th, and an island in the Chonos
-Archipelago was permanently elevated more than eight feet.
-It will give a better idea of the scale of these phenomena, if
-(as in the case of the glaciers) we suppose them to have
-taken place at corresponding distances in Europe: -- then
-would the land from the North Sea to the Mediterranean
-have been violently shaken, and at the same instant of time a
-large tract of the eastern coast of England would have been
-permanently elevated, together with some outlying islands, -- a
-train of volcanos on the coast of Holland would have burst
-forth in action, and an eruption taken place at the bottom of
-the sea, near the northern extremity of Ireland -- and lastly,
-the ancient vents of Auvergne, Cantal, and Mont d'Or would
-each have sent up to the sky a dark column of smoke, and
-have long remained in fierce action. Two years and three-
-quarters afterwards, France, from its centre to the English
-Channel, would have been again desolated by an earthquake
-and an island permanently upraised in the Mediterranean.
-
-The space, from under which volcanic matter on the 20th
-was actually erupted, is 720 miles in one line, and 400 miles
-in another line at right angles to the first: hence, in all
-probability, a subterranean lake of lava is here stretched out,
-of nearly double the area of the Black Sea. From the intimate
-and complicated manner in which the elevatory and eruptive
-forces were shown to be connected during this train of
-phenomena, we may confidently come to the conclusion, that the
-forces which slowly and by little starts uplift continents, and
-those which at successive periods pour forth volcanic matter
-from open orifices, are identical. From many reasons, I
-believe that the frequent quakings of the earth on this line
-of coast are caused by the rending of the strata, necessarily
-consequent on the tension of the land when upraised, and
-their injection by fluidified rock. This rending and injection
-would, if repeated often enough (and we know that earthquakes
-repeatedly affect the same areas in the same manner),
-form a chain of hills; -- and the linear island of S. Mary,
-which was upraised thrice the height of the neighbouring
-country, seems to be undergoing this process. I believe that
-the solid axis of a mountain, differs in its manner of formation
-from a volcanic hill, only in the molten stone having
-been repeatedly injected, instead of having been repeatedly
-ejected. Moreover, I believe that it is impossible to explain
-the structure of great mountain-chains, such as that of the
-Cordillera, were the strata, capping the injected axis of
-plutonic rock, have been thrown on their edges along several
-parallel and neighbouring lines of elevation, except on this
-view of the rock of the axis having been repeatedly injected,
-after intervals sufficiently long to allow the upper parts or
-wedges to cool and become solid; -- for if the strata had been
-thrown into their present highly inclined, vertical, and even
-inverted positions, by a single blow, the very bowels of the
-earth would have gushed out; and instead of beholding abrupt
-mountain-axes of rock solidified under great pressure, deluges
-of lava would have flowed out at innumerable points on every
-line of elevation. [2]
-
-[1] M. Arago in L'Institut, 1839, p. 337. See also Miers's
-Chile, vol. i. p. 392; also Lyell's Principles of Geology,
-chap. xv., book ii.
-
-[2] For a full account of the volcanic phenomena which
-accompanied the earthquake of the 20th, and for the conclusions
-deducible from them, I must refer to Volume V. of the Geological
-Transactions.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
-
-Valparaiso -- Portillo Pass -- Sagacity of Mules -- Mountain-
-torrents -- Mines, how discovered -- Proofs of the gradual
-Elevation of the Cordillera -- Effect of Snow on Rocks --
-Geological Structure of the two main Ranges, their distinct
-Origin and Upheaval -- Great Subsidence -- Red Snow --
-Winds -- Pinnacles of Snow -- Dry and clear Atmosphere --
-Electricity -- Pampas -- Zoology of the opposite Side of
-the Andes -- Locusts -- Great Bugs -- Mendoza -- Uspallata
-Pass -- Silicified Trees buried as they grew -- Incas Bridge --
-Badness of the Passes exaggerated -- Cumbre -- Casuchas --
-Valparaiso.
-
-
-MARCH 7th, 1835. -- We stayed three days at Concepcion,
-and then sailed for Valparaiso. The wind
-being northerly, we only reached the mouth of the
-harbour of Concepcion before it was dark. Being very near
-the land, and a fog coming on, the anchor was dropped.
-Presently a large American whaler appeared alongside of us;
-and we heard the Yankee swearing at his men to keep quiet,
-whilst he listened for the breakers. Captain Fitz Roy hailed
-him, in a loud clear voice, to anchor where he then was. The
-poor man must have thought the voice came from the shore:
-such a Babel of cries issued at once from the ship -- every
-one hallooing out, "Let go the anchor! veer cable! shorten
-sail!" It was the most laughable thing I ever heard. If
-the ship's crew had been all captains, and no men, there could
-not have been a greater uproar of orders. We afterwards
-found that the mate stuttered: I suppose all hands were
-assisting him in giving his orders.
-
-On the 11th we anchored at Valparaiso, and two days
-afterwards I set out to cross the Cordillera. I proceeded to
-Santiago, where Mr. Caldcleugh most kindly assisted me in
-every possible way in making the little preparations which
-were necessary. In this part of Chile there are two passes
-across the Andes to Mendoza: the one most commonly used,
-namely, that of Aconcagua or Uspallata -- is situated some
-way to the north; the other, called the Portillo, is to the
-south, and nearer, but more lofty and dangerous.
-
-March 18th. -- We set out for the Portillo pass. Leaving
-Santiago we crossed the wide burnt-up plain on which that
-city stands, and in the afternoon arrived at the Maypu, one
-of the principal rivers in Chile. The valley, at the point
-where it enters the first Cordillera, is bounded on each side
-by lofty barren mountains; and although not broad, it is very
-fertile. Numerous cottages were surrounded by vines, and by
-orchards of apple, nectarine, and peach-trees -- their boughs
-breaking with the weight of the beautiful ripe fruit. In the
-evening we passed the custom-house, where our luggage was
-examined. The frontier of Chile is better guarded by the
-Cordillera, than by the waters of the sea. There are very
-few valleys which lead to the central ranges, and the
-mountains are quite impassable in other parts by beasts of
-burden. The custom-house officers were very civil, which
-was perhaps partly owing to the passport which the President
-of the Republic had given me; but I must express my admiration
-at the natural politeness of almost every Chileno. In
-this instance, the contrast with the same class of men in
-most other countries was strongly marked. I may mention
-an anecdote with which I was at the time much pleased: we
-met near Mendoza a little and very fat negress, riding astride
-on a mule. She had a _goitre_ so enormous that it was scarcely
-possible to avoid gazing at her for a moment; but my two
-companions almost instantly, by way of apology, made the
-common salute of the country by taking off their hats. Where
-would one of the lower or higher classes in Europe, have
-shown such feeling politeness to a poor and miserable object
-of a degraded race?
-
-At night we slept at a cottage. Our manner of travelling
-was delightfully independent. In the inhabited parts we
-bought a little firewood, hired pasture for the animals, and
-bivouacked in the corner of the same field with them. Carrying
-an iron pot, we cooked and ate our supper under a
-cloudless sky, and knew no trouble. My companions were
-Mariano Gonzales, who had formerly accompanied me in
-Chile, and an "arriero," with his ten mules and a "madrina."
-The madrina (or godmother) is a most important personage:
-
-she is an old steady mare, with a little bell round her neck;
-and wherever she goes, the mules, like good children, follow
-her. The affection of these animals for their madrinas saves
-infinite trouble. If several large troops are turned into one
-field to graze, in the morning the muleteers have only to lead
-the madrinas a little apart, and tinkle their bells; although
-there may be two or three hundred together, each mule
-immediately knows the bell of its own madrina, and comes to
-her. It is nearly impossible to lose an old mule; for if
-detained for several hours by force, she will, by the power
-of smell, like a dog, track out her companions, or rather the
-madrina, for, according to the muleteer, she is the chief
-object of affection. The feeling, however, is not of an
-individual nature; for I believe I am right in saying that any
-animal with a bell will serve as a madrina. In a troop each
-animal carries on a level road, a cargo weighing 416 pounds
-(more than 29 stone), but in a mountainous country 100
-pounds less; yet with what delicate slim limbs, without any
-proportional bulk of muscle, these animals support so great
-a burden! The mule always appears to me a most surprising
-animal. That a hybrid should possess more reason, memory,
-obstinacy, social affection, powers of muscular endurance,
-and length of life, than either of its parents, seems to
-indicate that art has here outdone nature. Of our ten animals,
-six were intended for riding, and four for carrying cargoes,
-each taking turn about. We carried a good deal of food in
-case we should be snowed up, as the season was rather late
-for passing the Portillo.
-
-March 19th. -- We rode during this day to the last, and
-therefore most elevated, house in the valley. The number of
-inhabitants became scanty; but wherever water could be
-brought on the land, it was very fertile. All the main valleys
-in the Cordillera are characterized by having, on both sides, a
-fringe or terrace of shingle and sand, rudely stratified, and
-generally of considerable thickness. These fringes evidently
-once extended across the valleys and were united; and the
-bottoms of the valleys in northern Chile, where there are no
-streams, are thus smoothly filled up. On these fringes the
-roads are generally carried, for their surfaces are even, and
-they rise, with a very gentle slope up the valleys: hence, also,
-they are easily cultivated by irrigation. They may be traced
-up to a height of between 7000 and 9000 feet, where they
-become hidden by the irregular piles of debris. At the lower
-end or mouths of the valleys, they are continuously united to
-those land-locked plains (also formed of shingle) at the foot
-of the main Cordillera, which I have described in a former
-chapter as characteristic of the scenery of Chile, and which
-were undoubtedly deposited when the sea penetrated Chile, as
-it now does the more southern coasts. No one fact in the
-geology of South America, interested me more than these
-terraces of rudely-stratified shingle. They precisely resemble
-in composition the matter which the torrents in each valley
-would deposit, if they were checked in their course by any
-cause, such as entering a lake or arm of the sea; but the
-torrents, instead of depositing matter, are now steadily at
-work wearing away both the solid rock and these alluvial
-deposits, along the whole line of every main valley and side
-valley. It is impossible here to give the reasons, but I am
-convinced that the shingle terraces were accumulated, during
-the gradual elevation of the Cordillera, by the torrents
-delivering, at successive levels, their detritus on the
-beachheads of long narrow arms of the sea, first high up the
-valleys, then lower and lower down as the land slowly rose. If
-this be so, and I cannot doubt it, the grand and broken chain
-of the Cordillera, instead of having been suddenly thrown up,
-as was till lately the universal, and still is the common
-opinion of geologists, has been slowly upheaved in mass, in the
-same gradual manner as the coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific
-have risen within the recent period. A multitude of facts in the
-structure of the Cordillera, on this view receive a simple
-explanation.
-
-The rivers which flow in these valleys ought rather to be
-called mountain-torrents. Their inclination is very great,
-and their water the colour of mud. The roar which the
-Maypu made, as it rushed over the great rounded fragments,
-was like that of the sea. Amidst the din of rushing waters,
-the noise from the stones, as they rattled one over another,
-was most distinctly audible even from a distance. This rattling
-noise, night and day, may be heard along the whole
-course of the torrent. The sound spoke eloquently to the
-geologist; the thousands and thousands of stones, which,
-striking against each other, made the one dull uniform sound,
-were all hurrying in one direction. It was like thinking on
-time, where the minute that now glides past is irrevocable.
-So was it with these stones; the ocean is their eternity, and
-each note of that wild music told of one more step towards
-their destiny.
-
-It is not possible for the mind to comprehend, except by
-a slow process, any effect which is produced by a cause repeated
-so often, that the multiplier itself conveys an idea,
-not more definite than the savage implies when he points to
-the hairs of his head. As often as I have seen beds of mud,
-sand, and shingle, accumulated to the thickness of many
-thousand feet, I have felt inclined to exclaim that causes,
-such as the present rivers and the present beaches, could
-never have ground down and produced such masses. But, on
-the other hand, when listening to the rattling noise of these
-torrents, and calling to mind that whole races of animals have
-passed away from the face of the earth, and that during this
-whole period, night and day, these stones have gone rattling
-onwards in their course, I have thought to myself, can any
-mountains, any continent, withstand such waste?
-
-In this part of the valley, the mountains on each side were
-from 3000 to 6000 or 8000 feet high, with rounded outlines
-and steep bare flanks. The general colour of the rock was
-dullish purple, and the stratification very distinct. If the
-scenery was not beautiful, it was remarkable and grand. We
-met during the day several herds of cattle, which men were
-driving down from the higher valleys in the Cordillera. This
-sign of the approaching winter hurried our steps, more than
-was convenient for geologizing. The house where we slept
-was situated at the foot of a mountain, on the summit of
-which are the mines of S. Pedro de Nolasko. Sir F. Head
-marvels how mines have been discovered in such extraordinary
-situations, as the bleak summit of the mountain of S.
-Pedro de Nolasko. In the first place, metallic veins in this
-country are generally harder than the surrounding strata:
-hence, during the gradual wear of the hills, they project
-above the surface of the ground. Secondly, almost every
-labourer, especially in the northern parts of Chile, understands
-something about the appearance of ores. In the great
-mining provinces of Coquimbo and Copiapo, firewood is very
-scarce, and men search for it over every hill and dale; and
-by this means nearly all the richest mines have there been
-discovered. Chanuncillo, from which silver to the value of
-many hundred thousand pounds has been raised in the course
-of a few years, was discovered by a man who threw a stone
-at his loaded donkey, and thinking that it was very heavy, he
-picked it up, and found it full of pure silver: the vein
-occurred at no great distance, standing up like a wedge of
-metal. The miners, also, taking a crowbar with them, often
-wander on Sundays over the mountains. In this south part
-of Chile, the men who drive cattle into the Cordillera, and
-who frequent every ravine where there is a little pasture, are
-the usual discoverers.
-
-20th. -- As we ascended the valley, the vegetation, with
-the exception of a few pretty alpine flowers, became exceedingly
-scanty, and of quadrupeds, birds, or insects, scarcely
-one could be seen. The lofty mountains, their summits
-marked with a few patches of snow, stood well separated
-from each other, the valleys being filled up with an immense
-thickness of stratified alluvium. The features in the scenery
-of the Andes which struck me most, as contrasted with the
-other mountain chains with which I am acquainted, were, --
-the flat fringes sometimes expanding into narrow plains on
-each side of the valleys, -- the bright colours, chiefly red and
-purple, of the utterly bare and precipitous hills of porphyry,
-the grand and continuous wall-like dykes, -- the plainly-
-divided strata which, where nearly vertical, formed the
-picturesque and wild central pinnacles, but where less inclined,
-composed the great massive mountains on the outskirts of the
-range, -- and lastly, the smooth conical piles of fine and
-brightly coloured detritus, which sloped up at a high angle
-from the base of the mountains, sometimes to a height of
-more than 2000 feet.
-
-I frequently observed, both in Tierra del Fuego and within
-the Andes, that where the rock was covered during the greater
-part of the year with snow, it was shivered in a very
-extraordinary manner into small angular fragments. Scoresby [1]
-has observed the same fact in Spitzbergen. The case
-appears to me rather obscure: for that part of the mountain
-which is protected by a mantle of snow, must be less subject
-to repeated and great changes of temperature than any other
-part. I have sometimes thought, that the earth and fragments
-of stone on the surface, were perhaps less effectually
-removed by slowly percolating snow-water [2] than by rain, and
-therefore that the appearance of a quicker disintegration of
-the solid rock under the snow, was deceptive. Whatever the
-cause may be, the quantity of crumbling stone on the Cordillera
-is very great. Occasionally in the spring, great masses
-of this detritus slide down the mountains, and cover the
-snow-drifts in the valleys, thus forming natural ice-houses.
-We rode over one, the height of which was far below the
-limit of perpetual snow.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, we reached a singular
-basin-like plain, called the Valle del Yeso. It was covered
-by a little dry pasture, and we had the pleasant sight of a
-herd of cattle amidst the surrounding rocky deserts. The
-valley takes its name of Yeso from a great bed, I should think
-at least 2000 feet thick, of white, and in some parts quite
-pure, gypsum. We slept with a party of men, who were
-employed in loading mules with this substance, which is used
-in the manufacture of wine. We set out early in the morning
-(21st), and continued to follow the course of the river, which
-had become very small, till we arrived at the foot of the ridge,
-that separates the waters flowing into the Pacific and Atlantic
-Oceans. The road, which as yet had been good with a steady
-but very gradual ascent, now changed into a steep zigzag
-track up the great range, dividing the republics of Chile
-and Mendoza.
-
-I will here give a very brief sketch of the geology of the
-several parallel lines forming the Cordillera. Of these lines,
-there are two considerably higher than the others; namely,
-on the Chilian side, the Peuquenes ridge, which, where the
-road crosses it, is 13,210 feet above the sea; and the Portillo
-ridge, on the Mendoza side, which is 14,305 feet. The lower
-beds of the Peuquenes ridge, and of the several great lines
-to the westward of it, are composed of a vast pile, many
-thousand feet in thickness, of porphyries which have flowed as
-submarine lavas, alternating with angular and rounded fragments
-of the same rocks, thrown out of the submarine craters.
-These alternating masses are covered in the central parts,
-by a great thickness of red sandstone, conglomerate, and
-calcareous clay-slate, associated with, and passing into,
-prodigious beds of gypsum. In these upper beds shells are
-tolerably frequent; and they belong to about the period of the
-lower chalk of Europe. It is an old story, but not the less
-wonderful, to hear of shells which were once crawling on the
-bottom of the sea, now standing nearly 14,000 feet above its
-level. The lower beds in this great pile of strata, have been
-dislocated, baked, crystallized and almost blended together,
-through the agency of mountain masses of a peculiar white
-soda-granitic rock.
-
-The other main line, namely, that of the Portillo, is of a
-totally different formation: it consists chiefly of grand bare
-pinnacles of a red potash-granite, which low down on the
-western flank are covered by a sandstone, converted by the
-former heat into a quartz-rock. On the quartz, there rest
-beds of a conglomerate several thousand feet in thickness,
-which have been upheaved by the red granite, and dip at an
-angle of 45 degs. towards the Peuquenes line. I was astonished
-to find that this conglomerate was partly composed of pebbles,
-derived from the rocks, with their fossil shells, of the
-Peuquenes range; and partly of red potash-granite, like that
-of the Portillo. Hence we must conclude, that both the Peuquenes
-and Portillo ranges were partially upheaved and exposed
-to wear and tear, when the conglomerate was forming;
-but as the beds of the conglomerate have been thrown off at
-an angle of 45 degs. by the red Portillo granite (with the
-underlying sandstone baked by it), we may feel sure, that the
-greater part of the injection and upheaval of the already
-partially formed Portillo line, took place after the
-accumulation of the conglomerate, and long after the elevation
-of the Peuquenes ridge. So that the Portillo, the loftiest line
-in this part of the Cordillera, is not so old as the less lofty
-line of the Peuquenes. Evidence derived from an inclined stream
-of lava at the eastern base of the Portillo, might be adduced
-to show, that it owes part of its great height to elevations of
-a still later date. Looking to its earliest origin, the red
-granite seems to have been injected on an ancient pre-existing
-line of white granite and mica-slate. In most parts, perhaps in
-all parts, of the Cordillera, it may be concluded that each line
-has been formed by repeated upheavals and injections; and
-that the several parallel lines are of different ages. Only
-thus can we gain time, at all sufficient to explain the truly
-astonishing amount of denudation, which these great, though
-comparatively with most other ranges recent, mountains have
-suffered.
-
-Finally, the shells in the Peuquenes or oldest ridge, prove,
-as before remarked, that it has been upraised 14,000 feet
-since a Secondary period, which in Europe we are accustomed
-to consider as far from ancient; but since these shells
-lived in a moderately deep sea, it can be shown that the area
-now occupied by the Cordillera, must have subsided several
-thousand feet -- in northern Chile as much as 6000 feet -- so
-as to have allowed that amount of submarine strata to have
-been heaped on the bed on which the shells lived. The proof
-is the same with that by which it was shown, that at a much
-later period, since the tertiary shells of Patagonia lived,
-there must have been there a subsidence of several hundred
-feet, as well as an ensuing elevation. Daily it is forced home
-on the mind of the geologist, that nothing, not even the wind
-that blows, is so unstable as the level of the crust of this
-earth.
-
-I will make only one other geological remark: although
-the Portillo chain is here higher than the Peuquenes, the
-waters draining the intermediate valleys, have burst through
-it. The same fact, on a grander scale, has been remarked in
-the eastern and loftiest line of the Bolivian Cordillera,
-through which the rivers pass: analogous facts have also
-been observed in other quarters of the world. On the supposition
-of the subsequent and gradual elevation of the Portillo
-line, this can be understood; for a chain of islets would
-at first appear, and, as these were lifted up, the tides would
-be always wearing deeper and broader channels between them.
-At the present day, even in the most retired Sounds on the
-coast of Tierra del Fuego, the currents in the transverse
-breaks which connect the longitudinal channels, are very
-strong, so that in one transverse channel even a small vessel
-under sail was whirled round and round.
-
-
-About noon we began the tedious ascent of the Peuquenes
-ridge, and then for the first time experienced some little
-difficulty in our respiration. The mules would halt every fifty
-yards, and after resting for a few seconds the poor willing
-animals started of their own accord again. The short breathing
-from the rarefied atmosphere is called by the Chilenos
-"puna;" and they have most ridiculous notions concerning
-its origin. Some say "all the waters here have puna;" others
-that "where there is snow there is puna;" -- and this no
-doubt is true. The only sensation I experienced was a slight
-tightness across the head and chest, like that felt on leaving
-a warm room and running quickly in frosty weather. There
-was some imagination even in this; for upon finding fossil
-shells on the highest ridge, I entirely forgot the puna in my
-delight. Certainly the exertion of walking was extremely
-great, and the respiration became deep and laborious: I am
-told that in Potosi (about 13,000 feet above the sea) strangers
-do not become thoroughly accustomed to the atmosphere for
-an entire year. The inhabitants all recommend onions for
-the puna; as this vegetable has sometimes been given in
-Europe for pectoral complaints, it may possibly be of real
-service: -- for my part I found nothing so good as the fossil
-shells!
-
-When about half-way up we met a large party with seventy
-loaded mules. It was interesting to hear the wild cries
-of the muleteers, and to watch the long descending string
-of the animals; they appeared so diminutive, there being
-nothing but the black mountains with which they could be
-compared. When near the summit, the wind, as generally
-happens, was impetuous and extremely cold. On each side of
-the ridge, we had to pass over broad bands of perpetual
-snow, which were now soon to be covered by a fresh layer.
-When we reached the crest and looked backwards, a glorious
-view was presented. The atmosphere resplendently clear;
-the sky an intense blue; the profound valleys; the wild
-broken forms: the heaps of ruins, piled up during the lapse
-of ages; the bright-coloured rocks, contrasted with the quiet
-mountains of snow, all these together produced a scene no
-one could have imagined. Neither plant nor bird, excepting
-a few condors wheeling around the higher pinnacles, distracted
-my attention from the inanimate mass. I felt glad
-that I was alone: it was like watching a thunderstorm, or
-hearing in full orchestra a chorus of the Messiah.
-
-On several patches of the snow I found the Protococcus
-nivalis, or red snow, so well known from the accounts of
-Arctic navigators. My attention was called to it, by observing
-the footsteps of the mules stained a pale red, as if their
-hoofs had been slightly bloody. I at first thought that it was
-owing to dust blown from the surrounding mountains of red
-porphyry; for from the magnifying power of the crystals
-of snow, the groups of these microscopical plants appeared
-like coarse particles. The snow was coloured only where it
-had thawed very rapidly, or had been accidentally crushed.
-A little rubbed on paper gave it a faint rose tinge mingled
-with a little brick-red. I afterwards scraped some off the
-paper, and found that it consisted of groups of little spheres
-in colourless cases, each of the thousandth part of an inch in
-diameter.
-
-The wind on the crest of the Peuquenes, as just remarked,
-is generally impetuous and very cold: it is said [3] to blow
-steadily from the westward or Pacific side. As the observations
-have been chiefly made in summer, this wind must be
-an upper and return current. The Peak of Teneriffe, with
-a less elevation, and situated in lat. 28 degs., in like manner
-falls within an upper return stream. At first it appears rather
-surprising, that the trade-wind along the northern parts of
-Chile and on the coast of Peru, should blow in so very southerly
-a direction as it does; but when we reflect that the Cordillera,
-running in a north and south line, intercepts, like a
-great wall, the entire depth of the lower atmospheric current,
-we can easily see that the trade-wind must be drawn northward,
-following the line of mountains, towards the equatorial
-regions, and thus lose part of that easterly movement which
-it otherwise would have gained from the earth's rotation. At
-Mendoza, on the eastern foot of the Andes, the climate is
-said to be subject to long calms, and to frequent though false
-appearances of gathering rain-storms: we may imagine that
-the wind, which coming from the eastward is thus banked up
-by the line of mountains, would become stagnant and irregular
-in its movements.
-
-Having crossed the Peuquenes, we descended into a mountainous
-country, intermediate between the two main ranges,
-and then took up our quarters for the night. We were now
-in the republic of Mendoza. The elevation was probably not
-under 11,000 feet, and the vegetation in consequence exceedingly
-scanty. The root of a small scrubby plant served as
-fuel, but it made a miserable fire, and the wind was
-piercingly cold. Being quite tired with my days work, I
-made up my bed as quickly as I could, and went to sleep.
-About midnight I observed the sky became suddenly clouded:
-I awakened the arriero to know if there was any danger of
-bad weather; but he said that without thunder and lightning
-there was no risk of a heavy snow-storm. The peril is
-imminent, and the difficulty of subsequent escape great, to
-any one overtaken by bad weather between the two ranges.
-A certain cave offers the only place of refuge: Mr. Caldcleugh,
-who crossed on this same day of the month, was
-detained there for some time by a heavy fall of snow. Casuchas,
-or houses of refuge, have not been built in this pass
-as in that of Uspallata, and, therefore, during the autumn,
-the Portillo is little frequented. I may here remark that
-within the main Cordillera rain never falls, for during the
-summer the sky is cloudless, and in winter snow-storms alone
-occur.
-
-At the place where we slept water necessarily boiled, from
-the diminished pressure of the atmosphere, at a lower
-temperature than it does in a less lofty country; the case being
-the converse of that of a Papin's digester. Hence the potatoes,
-after remaining for some hours in the boiling water,
-were nearly as hard as ever. The pot was left on the fire
-all night, and next morning it was boiled again, but yet the
-potatoes were not cooked. I found out this, by overhearing
-my two companions discussing the cause, they had come
-to the simple conclusion, "that the cursed pot [which was a
-new one] did not choose to boil potatoes."
-
-March 22nd. -- After eating our potatoless breakfast, we
-travelled across the intermediate tract to the foot of the
-Portillo range. In the middle of summer cattle are brought
-up here to graze; but they had now all been removed: even
-the greater number of the Guanacos had decamped, knowing
-well that if overtaken here by a snow-storm, they would be
-caught in a trap. We had a fine view of a mass of mountains
-called Tupungato, the whole clothed with unbroken
-snow, in the midst of which there was a blue patch, no
-doubt a glacier; -- a circumstance of rare occurrence in these
-mountains. Now commenced a heavy and long climb, similar
-to that of the Peuquenes. Bold conical hills of red
-granite rose on each hand; in the valleys there were several
-broad fields of perpetual snow. These frozen masses, during
-the process of thawing, had in some parts been converted
-into pinnacles or columns, [4] which, as they were high and
-close together, made it difficult for the cargo mules to pass.
-On one of these columns of ice, a frozen horse was sticking
-as on a pedestal, but with its hind legs straight up in
-the air. The animal, I suppose, must have fallen with its
-head downward into a hole, when the snow was continuous,
-and afterwards the surrounding parts must have been
-removed by the thaw.
-
-When nearly on the crest of the Portillo, we were enveloped
-in a falling cloud of minute frozen spicula. This was
-very unfortunate, as it continued the whole day, and quite
-intercepted our view. The pass takes its name of Portillo,
-from a narrow cleft or doorway on the highest ridge,
-through which the road passes. From this point, on a clear
-day, those vast plains which uninterruptedly extend to the
-Atlantic Ocean can be seen. We descended to the upper
-limit of vegetation, and found good quarters for the night
-under the shelter of some large fragments of rock. We met
-here some passengers, who made anxious inquiries about the
-state of the road. Shortly after it was dark the clouds suddenly
-cleared away, and the effect was quite magical. The
-great mountains, bright with the full moon, seemed impending
-over us on all sides, as over a deep crevice: one morning,
-very early, I witnessed the same striking effect. As
-soon as the clouds were dispersed it froze severely; but as
-there was no wind, we slept very comfortably.
-
-The increased brilliancy of the moon and stars at this
-elevation, owing to the perfect transparency of the atmosphere,
-was very remarkable. Travelers having observed
-the difficulty of judging heights and distances amidst lofty
-mountains, have generally attributed it to the absence of
-objects of comparison. It appears to me, that it is fully as
-much owing to the transparency of the air confounding
-objects at different distances, and likewise partly to the
-novelty of an unusual degree of fatigue arising from a little
-exertion, -- habit being thus opposed to the evidence of the
-senses. I am sure that this extreme clearness of the air
-gives a peculiar character to the landscape, all objects
-appearing to be brought nearly into one plane, as in a drawing
-or panorama. The transparency is, I presume, owing to
-the equable and high state of atmospheric dryness. This
-dryness was shown by the manner in which woodwork
-shrank (as I soon found by the trouble my geological hammer
-gave me); by articles of food, such as bread and sugar,
-becoming extremely hard; and by the preservation of the
-skin and parts of the flesh of the beasts, which had perished
-on the road. To the same cause we must attribute the singular
-facility with which electricity is excited. My flannel
-waistcoat, when rubbed in the dark, appeared as if it had
-been washed with phosphorus, -- every hair on a dog's back
-crackled; -- even the linen sheets, and leathern straps of the
-saddle, when handled, emitted sparks.
-
-March 23rd. -- The descent on the eastern side of the Cordillera
-is much shorter or steeper than on the Pacific side;
-in other words, the mountains rise more abruptly from the
-plains than from the alpine country of Chile. A level and
-brilliantly white sea of clouds was stretched out beneath our
-feet, shutting out the view of the equally level Pampas. We
-soon entered the band of clouds, and did not again emerge
-from it that day. About noon, finding pasture for the animals
-and bushes for firewood at Los Arenales, we stopped
-for the night. This was near the uppermost limit of bushes,
-and the elevation, I suppose, was between seven and eight
-thousand feet.
-
-I was much struck with the marked difference between
-the vegetation of these eastern valleys and those on the
-Chilian side: yet the climate, as well as the kind of soil, is
-nearly the same, and the difference of longitude very trifling.
-The same remark holds good with the quadrupeds, and in
-a lesser degree with the birds and insects. I may instance the
-mice, of which I obtained thirteen species on the shores of
-the Atlantic, and five on the Pacific, and not one of them
-is identical. We must except all those species, which habitually
-or occasionally frequent elevated mountains; and certain
-birds, which range as far south as the Strait of Magellan.
-This fact is in perfect accordance with the geological
-history of the Andes; for these mountains have existed as
-a great barrier since the present races of animals have
-appeared; and therefore, unless we suppose the same species
-to have been created in two different places, we ought not to
-expect any closer similarity between the organic beings on
-the opposite sides of the Andes than on the opposite shores
-of the ocean. In both cases, we must leave out of the question
-those kinds which have been able to cross the barrier,
-whether of solid rock or salt-water. [5]
-
-A great number of the plants and animals were absolutely
-the same as, or most closely allied to, those of Patagonia.
-We here have the agouti, bizcacha, three species of armadillo,
-the ostrich, certain kinds of partridges and other birds,
-none of which are ever seen in Chile, but are the characteristic
-animals of the desert plains of Patagonia. We have
-likewise many of the same (to the eyes of a person who is
-not a botanist) thorny stunted bushes, withered grass, and
-dwarf plants. Even the black slowly crawling beetles are
-closely similar, and some, I believe, on rigorous examination,
-absolutely identical. It had always been to me a subject of
-regret, that we were unavoidably compelled to give up the
-ascent of the S. Cruz river before reaching the mountains:
-I always had a latent hope of meeting with some great
-change in the features of the country; but I now feel sure,
-that it would only have been following the plains of Patagonia
-up a mountainous ascent.
-
-March 24th. -- Early in the morning I climbed up a mountain
-on one side of the valley, and enjoyed a far extended
-view over the Pampas. This was a spectacle to which I had
-always looked forward with interest, but I was disappointed:
-at the first glance it much resembled a distant view of the
-ocean, but in the northern parts many irregularities were
-soon distinguishable. The most striking feature consisted
-in the rivers, which, facing the rising sun, glittered like
-silver threads, till lost in the immensity of the distance. At
-midday we descended the valley, and reached a hovel, where
-an officer and three soldiers were posted to examine passports.
-One of these men was a thoroughbred Pampas
-Indian: he was kept much for the same purpose as a bloodhound,
-to track out any person who might pass by secretly,
-either on foot or horseback. Some years ago, a passenger
-endeavoured to escape detection, by making a long circuit
-over a neighbouring mountain; but this Indian, having by
-chance crossed his track, followed it for the whole day over
-dry and very stony hills, till at last he came on his prey
-hidden in a gully. We here heard that the silvery clouds,
-which we had admired from the bright region above, had
-poured down torrents of rain. The valley from this point
-gradually opened, and the hills became mere water-worn
-hillocks compared to the giants behind: it then expanded
-into a gently sloping plain of shingle, covered with low trees
-and bushes. This talus, although appearing narrow, must be
-nearly ten miles wide before it blends into the apparently
-dead level Pampas. We passed the only house in this
-neighbourhood, the Estancia of Chaquaio: and at sunset we pulled
-up in the first snug corner, and there bivouacked.
-
-March 25th. -- I was reminded of the Pampas of Buenos
-Ayres, by seeing the disk of the rising sun, intersected by an
-horizon level as that of the ocean. During the night a heavy
-dew fell, a circumstance which we did not experience within
-the Cordillera. The road proceeded for some distance due
-east across a low swamp; then meeting the dry plain, it
-turned to the north towards Mendoza. The distance is two
-very long days' journey. Our first day's journey was called
-fourteen leagues to Estacado, and the second seventeen to
-Luxan, near Mendoza. The whole distance is over a level
-desert plain, with not more than two or three houses. The
-sun was exceedingly powerful, and the ride devoid of all
-interest. There is very little water in this "traversia," and
-in our second day's journey we found only one little pool.
-Little water flows from the mountains, and it soon becomes
-absorbed by the dry and porous soil; so that, although we
-travelled at the distance of only ten or fifteen miles from
-the outer range of the Cordillera, we did not cross a single
-stream. In many parts the ground was incrusted with a
-saline efflorescence; hence we had the same salt-loving
-plants which are common near Bahia Blanca. The landscape
-has a uniform character from the Strait of Magellan,
-along the whole eastern coast of Patagonia, to the Rio Colorado;
-and it appears that the same kind of country extends
-inland from this river, in a sweeping line as far as San Luis
-and perhaps even further north. To the eastward of this
-curved line lies the basin of the comparatively damp and
-green plains of Buenos Ayres. The sterile plains of Mendoza
-and Patagonia consist of a bed of shingle, worn smooth
-and accumulated by the waves of the sea while the Pampas,
-covered by thistles, clover, and grass, have been formed by
-the ancient estuary mud of the Plata.
-
-After our two days' tedious journey, it was refreshing to
-see in the distance the rows of poplars and willows growing
-round the village and river of Luxan. Shortly before we
-arrived at this place, we observed to the south a ragged cloud
-of dark reddish-brown colour. At first we thought that it
-was smoke from some great fire on the plains; but we soon
-found that it was a swarm of locusts. They were flying
-northward; and with the aid of a light breeze, they overtook
-us at a rate of ten or fifteen miles an hour. The main body
-filled the air from a height of twenty feet, to that, as it
-appeared, of two or three thousand above the ground; "and the
-sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many
-horses running to battle:" or rather, I should say, like a
-strong breeze passing through the rigging of a ship. The
-sky, seen through the advanced guard, appeared like a mezzotinto
-engraving, but the main body was impervious to sight;
-they were not, however, so thick together, but that they
-could escape a stick waved backwards and forwards. When
-they alighted, they were more numerous than the leaves in
-the field, and the surface became reddish instead of being
-green: the swarm having once alighted, the individuals flew
-from side to side in all directions. Locusts are not an uncommon
-pest in this country: already during the season, several
-smaller swarms had come up from the south, where, as
-apparently in all other parts of the world, they are bred in
-the deserts. The poor cottagers in vain attempted by lighting
-fires, by shouts, and by waving branches to avert the
-attack. This species of locust closely resembles, and perhaps
-is identical with, the famous Gryllus migratorius of the East.
-
-We crossed the Luxan, which is a river of considerable
-size, though its course towards the sea-coast is very
-imperfectly known: it is even doubtful whether, in passing over
-the plains, it is not evaporated and lost. We slept in the
-village of Luxan, which is a small place surrounded by gardens,
-and forms the most southern cultivated district in the
-Province of Mendoza; it is five leagues south of the capital.
-At night I experienced an attack (for it deserves no less a
-name) of the _Benchuca_, a species of Reduvius, the great
-black bug of the Pampas. It is most disgusting to feel soft
-wingless insects, about an inch long, crawling over one's
-body. Before sucking they are quite thin, but afterwards
-they become round and bloated with blood, and in this state
-are easily crushed. One which I caught at Iquique, (for they
-are found in Chile and Peru,) was very empty. When placed
-on a table, and though surrounded by people, if a finger was
-presented, the bold insect would immediately protrude its
-sucker, make a charge, and if allowed, draw blood. No pain
-was caused by the wound. It was curious to watch its body
-during the act of sucking, as in less than ten minutes it
-changed from being as flat as a wafer to a globular form.
-This one feast, for which the benchuca was indebted to one
-of the officers, kept it fat during four whole months; but,
-after the first fortnight, it was quite ready to have another
-suck.
-
-March 27th. -- We rode on to Mendoza. The country was
-beautifully cultivated, and resembled Chile. This neighbourhood
-is celebrated for its fruit; and certainly nothing could
-appear more flourishing than the vineyards and the orchards
-of figs, peaches, and olives. We bought water-melons nearly
-twice as large as a man's head, most deliciously cool and
-well-flavoured, for a halfpenny apiece; and for the value of
-threepence, half a wheelbarrowful of peaches. The cultivated
-and enclosed part of this province is very small; there
-is little more than that which we passed through between
-Luxan and the capital. The land, as in Chile, owes its fertility
-entirely to artificial irrigation; and it is really wonderful
-to observe how extraordinarily productive a barren
-traversia is thus rendered.
-
-We stayed the ensuing day in Mendoza. The prosperity
-of the place has much declined of late years. The inhabitants
-say "it is good to live in, but very bad to grow rich in."
-The lower orders have the lounging, reckless manners of the
-Gauchos of the Pampas; and their dress, riding-gear, and
-habits of life, are nearly the same. To my mind the town
-had a stupid, forlorn aspect. Neither the boasted alameda,
-nor the scenery, is at all comparable with that of Santiago;
-but to those who, coming from Buenos Ayres, have just
-crossed the unvaried Pampas, the gardens and orchards must
-appear delightful. Sir F. Head, speaking of the inhabitants,
-says, "They eat their dinners, and it is so very hot, they go
-to sleep -- and could they do better?" I quite agree with
-Sir F. Head: the happy doom of the Mendozinos is to eat,
-sleep and be idle.
-
-
-March 29th. -- We set out on our return to Chile, by the
-Uspallata pass situated north of Mendoza. We had to cross
-a long and most sterile traversia of fifteen leagues. The
-soil in parts was absolutely bare, in others covered by
-numberless dwarf cacti, armed with formidable spines, and called
-by the inhabitants "little lions." There were, also, a few
-low bushes. Although the plain is nearly three thousand feet
-above the sea, the sun was very powerful; and the heat as
-well as the clouds of impalpable dust, rendered the travelling
-extremely irksome. Our course during the day lay nearly
-parallel to the Cordillera, but gradually approaching them.
-Before sunset we entered one of the wide valleys, or rather
-bays, which open on the plain: this soon narrowed into a
-ravine, where a little higher up the house of Villa Vicencio
-is situated. As we had ridden all day without a drop of
-water, both our mules and selves were very thirsty, and we
-looked out anxiously for the stream which flows down this
-valley. It was curious to observe how gradually the water
-made its appearance: on the plain the course was quite dry;
-by degrees it became a little damper; then puddles of water
-appeared; these soon became connected; and at Villa Vicencio
-there was a nice little rivulet.
-
-30th. -- The solitary hovel which bears the imposing name
-of Villa Vicencio, has been mentioned by every traveller who
-has crossed the Andes. I stayed here and at some neighbouring
-mines during the two succeeding days. The geology
-of the surrounding country is very curious. The Uspallata
-range is separated from the main Cordillera by a long narrow
-plain or basin, like those so often mentioned in Chile,
-but higher, being six thousand feet above the sea. This
-range has nearly the same geographical position with respect
-to the Cordillera, which the gigantic Portillo line has, but it
-is of a totally different origin: it consists of various kinds
-of submarine lava, alternating with volcanic sandstones and
-other remarkable sedimentary deposits; the whole having a
-very close resemblance to some of the tertiary beds on the
-shores of the Pacific. From this resemblance I expected to
-find silicified wood, which is generally characteristic of those
-formations. I was gratified in a very extraordinary manner.
-In the central part of the range, at an elevation of about
-seven thousand feet, I observed on a bare slope some snow-white
-projecting columns. These were petrified trees, eleven
-being silicified, and from thirty to forty converted into
-coarsely-crystallized white calcareous spar. They were abruptly
-broken off, the upright stumps projecting a few feet
-above the ground. The trunks measured from three to five
-feet each in circumference. They stood a little way apart
-from each other, but the whole formed one group. Mr. Robert
-Brown has been kind enough to examine the wood: he
-says it belongs to the fir tribe, partaking of the character
-of the Araucarian family, but with some curious points of
-affinity with the yew. The volcanic sandstone in which the
-trees were embedded, and from the lower part of which they
-must have sprung, had accumulated in successive thin layers
-around their trunks; and the stone yet retained the impression
-of the bark.
-
-It required little geological practice to interpret the
-marvellous story which this scene at once unfolded; though I
-confess I was at first so much astonished that I could
-scarcely believe the plainest evidence. I saw the spot where
-a cluster of fine trees once waved their branches on the
-shores of the Atlantic, when that ocean (now driven back
-700 miles) came to the foot of the Andes. I saw that they
-had sprung from a volcanic soil which had been raised above
-the level of the sea, and that subsequently this dry land,
-with its upright trees, had been let down into the depths of
-the ocean. In these depths, the formerly dry land was
-covered by sedimentary beds, and these again by enormous
-streams of submarine lava -- one such mass attaining the
-thickness of a thousand feet; and these deluges of molten
-stone and aqueous deposits five times alternately had been
-spread out. The ocean which received such thick masses,
-must have been profoundly deep; but again the subterranean
-forces exerted themselves, and I now beheld the bed of
-that ocean, forming a chain of mountains more than seven
-thousand feet in height. Nor had those antagonistic forces
-been dormant, which are always at work wearing down the
-surface of the land; the great piles of strata had been
-intersected by many wide valleys, and the trees now changed
-into silex, were exposed projecting from the volcanic soil,
-now changed into rock, whence formerly, in a green and
-budding state, they had raised their lofty heads. Now,
-all is utterly irreclaimable and desert; even the lichen cannot
-adhere to the stony casts of former trees. Vast, and
-scarcely comprehensible as such changes must ever appear,
-yet they have all occurred within a period, recent when
-compared with the history of the Cordillera; and the Cordillera
-itself is absolutely modern as compared with many
-of the fossiliferous strata of Europe and America.
-
-April 1st. -- We crossed the Upsallata range, and at night
-slept at the custom-house -- the only inhabited spot on the
-plain. Shortly before leaving the mountains, there was a
-very extraordinary view; red, purple, green, and quite white
-sedimentary rocks, alternating with black lavas, were broken
-up and thrown into all kinds of disorder by masses of porphyry
-of every shade of colour, from dark brown to the
-brightest lilac. It was the first view I ever saw, which
-really resembled those pretty sections which geologists make
-of the inside of the earth.
-
-The next day we crossed the plain, and followed the course
-of the same great mountain stream which flows by Luxan.
-Here it was a furious torrent, quite impassable, and appeared
-larger than in the low country, as was the case with the rivulet
-of Villa Vicencio. On the evening of the succeeding day,
-we reached the Rio de las Vacas, which is considered the
-worst stream in the Cordillera to cross. As all these rivers
-have a rapid and short course, and are formed by the melting
-of the snow, the hour of the day makes a considerable difference
-in their volume. In the evening the stream is muddy
-and full, but about daybreak it becomes clearer, and much
-less impetuous. This we found to be the case with the Rio
-Vacas, and in the morning we crossed it with little difficulty.
-
-The scenery thus far was very uninteresting, compared
-with that of the Portillo pass. Little can be seen beyond the
-bare walls of the one grand flat-bottomed valley, which the
-road follows up to the highest crest. The valley and
-the huge rocky mountains are extremely barren: during the
-two previous nights the poor mules had absolutely nothing
-to eat, for excepting a few low resinous bushes, scarcely a
-plant can be seen. In the course of this day we crossed some
-of the worst passes in the Cordillera, but their danger has
-been much exaggerated. I was told that if I attempted to
-pass on foot, my head would turn giddy, and that there was
-no room to dismount; but I did not see a place where any
-one might not have walked over backwards, or got off his
-mule on either side. One of the bad passes, called _las
-Animas_ (the souls), I had crossed, and did not find out
-till a day afterwards, that it was one of the awful dangers.
-No doubt there are many parts in which, if the mule should
-stumble, the rider would be hurled down a great precipice;
-but of this there is little chance. I dare say, in the spring,
-the "laderas," or roads, which each year are formed anew
-across the piles of fallen detritus, are very bad; but from
-what I saw, I suspect the real danger is nothing. With
-cargo-mules the case is rather different, for the loads project
-so far, that the animals, occasionally running against
-each other, or against a point of rock, lose their balance, and
-are thrown down the precipices. In crossing the rivers
-I can well believe that the difficulty may be very great: at
-this season there was little trouble, but in the summer they
-must be very hazardous. I can quite imagine, as Sir F.
-Head describes, the different expressions of those who _have_
-passed the gulf, and those who _are_ passing. I never heard
-of any man being drowned, but with loaded mules it frequently
-happens. The arriero tells you to show your mule
-the best line, and then allow her to cross as she likes: the
-cargo-mule takes a bad line, and is often lost.
-
-April 4th. -- From the Rio de las Vacas to the Puente del
-Incas, half a day's journey. As there was pasture for the
-mules, and geology for me, we bivouacked here for the
-night. When one hears of a natural Bridge, one pictures
-to one's self some deep and narrow ravine, across which a
-bold mass of rock has fallen; or a great arch hollowed out
-like the vault of a cavern. Instead of this, the Incas
-Bridge consists of a crust of stratified shingle cemented
-together by the deposits of the neighbouring hot springs. It
-appears, as if the stream had scooped out a channel on one
-side, leaving an overhanging ledge, which was met by earth
-and stones falling down from the opposite cliff. Certainly
-an oblique junction, as would happen in such a case, was
-very distinct on one side. The Bridge of the Incas is by
-no means worthy of the great monarchs whose name it
-bears.
-
-5th. -- We had a long day's ride across the central ridge,
-from the Incas Bridge to the Ojos del Agua, which are situated
-near the lowest _casucha_ on the Chilian side. These
-casuchas are round little towers, with steps outside to reach
-the floor, which is raised some feet above the ground on account
-of the snow-drifts. They are eight in number, and
-under the Spanish government were kept during the winter
-well stored with food and charcoal, and each courier had a
-master-key. Now they only answer the purpose of caves, or
-rather dungeons. Seated on some little eminence, they are
-not, however, ill suited to the surrounding scene of desolation.
-The zigzag ascent of the Cumbre, or the partition of
-the waters, was very steep and tedious; its height, according
-to Mr. Pentland, is 12,454 feet. The road did not pass over
-any perpetual snow, although there were patches of it on
-both hands. The wind on the summit was exceedingly cold,
-but it was impossible not to stop for a few minutes to admire,
-again and again, the colour of the heavens, and the
-brilliant transparency of the atmosphere. The scenery was
-grand: to the westward there was a fine chaos of mountains,
-divided by profound ravines. Some snow generally falls before
-this period of the season, and it has even happened that
-the Cordillera have been finally closed by this time. But
-we were most fortunate. The sky, by night and by day, was
-cloudless, excepting a few round little masses of vapour, that
-floated over the highest pinnacles. I have often seen these
-islets in the sky, marking the position of the Cordillera,
-when the far-distant mountains have been hidden beneath
-the horizon.
-
-April 6th. -- In the morning we found some thief had
-stolen one of our mules, and the bell of the madrina. We
-therefore rode only two or three miles down the valley, and
-stayed there the ensuing day in hopes of recovering the mule,
-which the arriero thought had been hidden in some ravine.
-The scenery in this part had assumed a Chilian character:
-the lower sides of the mountains, dotted over with the pale
-evergreen Quillay tree, and with the great chandelier-like
-cactus, are certainly more to be admired than the bare eastern
-valleys; but I cannot quite agree with the admiration
-expressed by some travellers. The extreme pleasure, I suspect,
-is chiefly owing to the prospect of a good fire and of a
-good supper, after escaping from the cold regions above: and
-I am sure I most heartily participated in these feelings.
-
-8th. -- We left the valley of the Aconcagua, by which we
-had descended, and reached in the evening a cottage near the
-Villa del St. Rosa. The fertility of the plain was delightful:
-the autumn being advanced, the leaves of many of the
-fruit-trees were falling; and of the labourers, -- some were
-busy in drying figs and peaches on the roofs of their cottages,
-while others were gathering the grapes from the vineyards.
-It was a pretty scene; but I missed that pensive stillness
-which makes the autumn in England indeed the evening
-of the year. On the 10th we reached Santiago, where I received
-a very kind and hospitable reception from Mr. Caldcleugh.
-My excursion only cost me twenty-four days, and
-never did I more deeply enjoy an equal space of time. A
-few days afterwards I returned to Mr. Corfield's house at
-Valparaiso.
-
-[1] Scoresby's Arctic Regions, vol. i. p. 122.
-
-[2] I have heard it remarked in Shropshire that the water, when
-the Severn is flooded from long-continued rain, is much more
-turbid than when it proceeds from the snow melting in the Welsh
-mountains. D'Orbigny (tom. i. p. 184), in explaining the cause
-of the various colours of the rivers in South America, remarks
-that those with blue or clear water have there source in the
-Cordillera, where the snow melts.
-
-[3] Dr. Gillies in Journ. of Nat. and Geograph. Science, Aug.,
-1830. This author gives the heights of the Passes.
-
-[4] This structure in frozen snow was long since observed by
-Scoresby in the icebergs near Spitzbergen, and, lately, with
-more care, by Colonel Jackson (Journ. of Geograph. Soc., vol. v.
-p. 12) on the Neva. Mr. Lyell (Principles, vol. iv. p. 360) has
-compared the fissures by which the columnar structure seems to
-be determined, to the joints that traverse nearly all rocks, but
-which are best seen in the non-stratified masses. I may observe,
-that in the case of the frozen snow, the columnar structure must
-be owing to a "metamorphic" action, and not to a process during
-deposition.
-
-[5] This is merely an illustration of the admirable laws, first
-laid down by Mr. Lyell, on the geographical distribution of
-animals, as influenced by geological changes. The whole
-reasoning, of course, is founded on the assumption of the
-immutability of species; otherwise the difference in the species
-in the two regions might be considered as superinduced during a
-length of time.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
-
-Coast-road to Coquimbo -- Great Loads carried by the Miners --
-Coquimbo -- Earthquake -- Step-formed Terrace -- Absence of
-recent Deposits -- Contemporaneousness of the Tertiary
-Formations -- Excursion up the Valley -- Road to Guasco --
-Deserts -- Valley of Copiapo -- Rain and Earthquakes --
-Hydrophobia -- The Despoblado -- Indian Ruins -- Probable
-Change of Climate -- River-bed arched by an Earthquake --
-Cold Gales of Wind -- Noises from a Hill -- Iquique -- Salt
-Alluvium -- Nitrate of Soda -- Lima -- Unhealthy Country --
-Ruins of Callao, overthrown by an Earthquake -- Recent
-Subsidence -- Elevated Shells on San Lorenzo, their
-decomposition -- Plain with embedded Shells and fragments
-of Pottery -- Antiquity of the Indian Race.
-
-
-APRIL 27th. -- I set out on a journey to Coquimbo, and
-thence through Guasco to Copiapo, where Captain
-Fitz Roy kindly offered to pick me up in the Beagle.
-The distance in a straight line along the shore northward is
-only 420 miles; but my mode of travelling made it a very
-long journey. I bought four horses and two mules, the
-latter carrying the luggage on alternate days. The six
-animals together only cost the value of twenty-five pounds
-sterling, and at Copiapo I sold them again for twenty-three.
-We travelled in the same independent manner as before,
-cooking our own meals, and sleeping in the open air. As
-we rode towards the Vino del Mar, I took a farewell view
-of Valparaiso, and admired its picturesque appearance. For
-geological purposes I made a detour from the high road
-to the foot of the Bell of Quillota. We passed through an
-alluvial district rich in gold, to the neighbourhood of Limache,
-where we slept. Washing for gold supports the inhabitants
-of numerous hovels, scattered along the sides of
-each little rivulet; but, like all those whose gains are
-uncertain, they are unthrifty in all their habits, and
-consequently poor.
-
-28th. -- In the afternoon we arrived at a cottage at the
-foot of the Bell mountain. The inhabitants were freeholders,
-which is not very usual in Chile. They supported themselves
-on the produce of a garden and a little field, but were
-very poor. Capital is here so deficient, that the people are
-obliged to sell their green corn while standing in the field,
-in order to buy necessaries for the ensuing year. Wheat in
-consequence was dearer in the very district of its production
-than at Valparaiso, where the contractors live. The next
-day we joined the main road to Coquimbo. At night there
-was a very light shower of rain: this was the first drop that
-had fallen since the heavy rain of September 11th and 12th,
-which detained me a prisoner at the Baths of Cauquenes.
-The interval was seven and a half months; but the rain this
-year in Chile was rather later than usual. The distant Andes
-were now covered by a thick mass of snow, and were a glorious
-sight.
-
-May 2nd. -- The road continued to follow the coast, at no
-great distance from the sea. The few trees and bushes which
-are common in central Chile decreased rapidly in numbers,
-and were replaced by a tall plant, something like a yucca in
-appearance. The surface of the country, on a small scale,
-was singularly broken and irregular; abrupt little peaks of
-rock rising out of small plains or basins. The indented coast
-and the bottom of the neighbouring sea, studded with breakers,
-would, if converted into dry land, present similar forms;
-and such a conversion without doubt has taken place in the
-part over which we rode.
-
-3rd. -- Quilimari to Conchalee. The country became more
-and more barren. In the valleys there was scarcely sufficient
-water for any irrigation; and the intermediate land was
-quite bare, not supporting even goats. In the spring, after
-the winter showers, a thin pasture rapidly springs up, and
-cattle are then driven down from the Cordillera to graze
-for a short time. It is curious to observe how the seeds of
-the grass and other plants seem to accommodate themselves,
-as if by an acquired habit, to the quantity of rain which
-falls upon different parts of this coast. One shower far
-northward at Copiapo produces as great an effect on the
-vegetation, as two at Guasco, and three or four in this
-district. At Valparaiso a winter so dry as greatly to injure
-the pasture, would at Guasco produce the most unusual
-abundance. Proceeding northward, the quantity of rain does
-not appear to decrease in strict proportion to the latitude.
-At Conchalee, which is only 67 miles north of Valparaiso,
-rain is not expected till the end of May; whereas at Valparaiso
-some generally falls early in April: the annual quantity
-is likewise small in proportion to the lateness of the
-season at which it commences.
-
-4th. -- Finding the coast-road devoid of interest of any
-kind, we turned inland towards the mining district and
-valley of Illapel. This valley, like every other in Chile, is
-level, broad, and very fertile: it is bordered on each side,
-either by cliffs of stratified shingle, or by bare rocky
-mountains. Above the straight line of the uppermost irrigating
-ditch, all is brown as on a high road; while all below is of as
-bright a green as verdigris, from the beds of alfalfa, a kind
-of clover. We proceeded to Los Hornos, another mining
-district, where the principal hill was drilled with holes, like
-a great ants'-nest. The Chilian miners are a peculiar race
-of men in their habits. Living for weeks together in the
-most desolate spots, when they descend to the villages on
-feast-days, there is no excess of extravagance into which
-they do not run. They sometimes gain a considerable sum,
-and then, like sailors with prize-money, they try how soon
-they can contrive to squander it. They drink excessively,
-buy quantities of clothes, and in a few days return penniless
-to their miserable abodes, there to work harder than beasts
-of burden. This thoughtlessness, as with sailors, is evidently
-the result of a similar manner of life. Their daily food is
-found them, and they acquire no habits of carefulness: moreover,
-temptation and the means of yielding to it are placed
-in their power at the same time. On the other hand, in
-Cornwall, and some other parts of England, where the system
-of selling part of the vein is followed, the miners, from
-being obliged to act and think for themselves, are a singularly
-intelligent and well-conducted set of men.
-
-The dress of the Chilian miner is peculiar and rather
-picturesque He wears a very long shirt of some dark-coloured
-baize, with a leathern apron; the whole being fastened
-round his waist by a bright-coloured sash. His trousers are
-very broad, and his small cap of scarlet cloth is made to fit
-the head closely. We met a party of these miners in full
-costume, carrying the body of one of their companions to be
-buried. They marched at a very quick trot, four men supporting
-the corpse. One set having run as hard as they
-could for about two hundred yards, were relieved by four
-others, who had previously dashed on ahead on horseback.
-Thus they proceeded, encouraging each other by wild cries:
-altogether the scene formed a most strange funeral.
-
-We continued travelling northward, in a zigzag line;
-sometimes stopping a day to geologize. The country was so
-thinly inhabited, and the track so obscure, that we often had
-difficulty in finding our way. On the 12th I stayed at some
-mines. The ore in this case was not considered particularly
-good, but from being abundant it was supposed the mine
-would sell for about thirty or forty thousand dollars (that is,
-6000 or 8000 pounds sterling); yet it had been bought by
-one of the English Associations for an ounce of gold (3l.
-8s.). The ore is yellow pyrites, which, as I have already
-remarked, before the arrival of the English, was not supposed
-to contain a particle of copper. On a scale of profits nearly
-as great as in the above instance, piles of cinders, abounding
-with minute globules of metallic copper, were purchased;
-yet with these advantages, the mining associations, as is well
-known, contrived to lose immense sums of money. The folly
-of the greater number of the commissioners and shareholders
-amounted to infatuation; -- a thousand pounds per annum
-given in some cases to entertain the Chilian authorities;
-libraries of well-bound geological books; miners brought out
-for particular metals, as tin, which are not found in Chile;
-contracts to supply the miners with milk, in parts where
-there are no cows; machinery, where it could not possibly
-be used; and a hundred similar arrangements, bore witness
-to our absurdity, and to this day afford amusement to the
-natives. Yet there can be no doubt, that the same capital
-well employed in these mines would have yielded an immense
-return, a confidential man of business, a practical
-miner and assayer, would have been all that was required.
-
-Captain Head has described the wonderful load which
-the "Apires," truly beasts of burden, carry up from the
-deepest mines. I confess I thought the account exaggerated:
-so that I was glad to take an opportunity of weighing one
-of the loads, which I picked out by hazard. It required
-considerable exertion on my part, when standing directly over
-it, to lift it from the ground. The load was considered under
-weight when found to be 197 pounds. The apire had carried
-this up eighty perpendicular yards, -- part of the way by
-a steep passage, but the greater part up notched poles, placed
-in a zigzag line up the shaft. According to the general
-regulation, the apire is not allowed to halt for breath, except
-the mine is six hundred feet deep. The average load is
-considered as rather more than 200 pounds, and I have been
-assured that one of 300 pounds (twenty-two stone and a half)
-by way of a trial has been brought up from the deepest mine!
-At this time the apires were bringing up the usual load
-twelve times in the day; that is 2400 pounds from eighty
-yards deep; and they were employed in the intervals in breaking
-and picking ore.
-
-These men, excepting from accidents, are healthy, and appear
-cheerful. Their bodies are not very muscular. They
-rarely eat meat once a week, and never oftener, and then only
-the hard dry charqui. Although with a knowledge that the
-labour was voluntary, it was nevertheless quite revolting to
-see the state in which they reached the mouth of the mine;
-their bodies bent forward, leaning with their arms on the
-steps, their legs bowed, their muscles quivering, the
-perspiration streaming from their faces over their breasts,
-their nostrils distended, the corners of their mouth forcibly
-drawn back, and the expulsion of their breath most laborious.
-Each time they draw their breath, they utter an articulate
-cry of "ay-ay," which ends in a sound rising from deep in
-the chest, but shrill like the note of a fife. After staggering
-to the pile of ore, they emptied the "carpacho;" in two or
-three seconds recovering their breath, they wiped the sweat
-from their brows, and apparently quite fresh descended the
-mine again at a quick pace. This appears to me a wonderful
-instance of the amount of labour which habit, for it can be
-nothing else, will enable a man to endure.
-
-In the evening, talking with the _mayor-domo_ of these
-mines about the number of foreigners now scattered over
-the whole country, he told me that, though quite a young
-man, he remembers when he was a boy at school at
-Coquimbo, a holiday being given to see the captain of an
-English ship, who was brought to the city to speak to the
-governor. He believes that nothing would have induced
-any boy in the school, himself included, to have gone close
-to the Englishman; so deeply had they been impressed with
-an idea of the heresy, contamination, and evil to be derived
-from contact with such a person. To this day they relate
-the atrocious actions of the bucaniers; and especially of
-one man, who took away the figure of the Virgin Mary, and
-returned the year after for that of St. Joseph, saying it
-was a pity the lady should not have a husband. I heard
-also of an old lady who, at a dinner at Coquimbo, remarked
-how wonderfully strange it was that she should have lived
-to dine in the same room with an Englishman; for she
-remembered as a girl, that twice, at the mere cry of "Los
-Ingleses," every soul, carrying what valuables they could,
-had taken to the mountains.
-
-14th. -- We reached Coquimbo, where we stayed a few
-days. The town is remarkable for nothing but its extreme
-quietness. It is said to contain from 6000 to 8000 inhabitants.
-On the morning of the 17th it rained lightly, the first time
-this year, for about five hours. The farmers, who plant
-corn near the sea-coast where the atmosphere is most humid,
-taking advantage of this shower, would break up the ground;
-after a second they would put the seed in; and if a third
-shower should fall, they would reap a good harvest in the
-spring. It was interesting to watch the effect of this trifling
-amount of moisture. Twelve hours afterwards the ground
-appeared as dry as ever; yet after an interval of ten days,
-all the hills were faintly tinged with green patches; the
-grass being sparingly scattered in hair-like fibres a full
-inch in length. Before this shower every part of the surface
-was bare as on a high road.
-
-In the evening, Captain Fitz Roy and myself were dining
-with Mr. Edwards, an English resident well known for his
-hospitality by all who have visited Coquimbo, when a sharp
-earthquake happened. I heard the forecoming rumble, but
-from the screams of the ladies, the running of the servants,
-and the rush of several of the gentlemen to the doorway, I
-could not distinguish the motion. Some of the women afterwards
-were crying with terror, and one gentleman said he
-should not be able to sleep all night, or if he did, it would
-only be to dream of falling houses. The father of this person
-had lately lost all his property at Talcahuano, and he
-himself had only just escaped a falling roof at Valparaiso,
-in 1822. He mentioned a curious coincidence which then
-happened: he was playing at cards, when a German, one of
-the party, got up, and said he would never sit in a room in
-these countries with the door shut, as owing to his having
-done so, he had nearly lost his life at Copiapo. Accordingly
-he opened the door; and no sooner had he done this, than he
-cried out, "Here it comes again!" and the famous shock
-commenced. The whole party escaped. The danger in an
-earthquake is not from the time lost in opening the door, but
-from the chance of its becoming jammed by the movement
-of the walls.
-
-It is impossible to be much surprised at the fear which
-natives and old residents, though some of them known to
-be men of great command of mind, so generally experience
-during earthquakes. I think, however, this excess of panic
-may be partly attributed to a want of habit in governing
-their fear, as it is not a feeling they are ashamed of. Indeed,
-the natives do not like to see a person indifferent. I
-heard of two Englishmen who, sleeping in the open air during
-a smart shock, knowing that there was no danger, did not
-rise. The natives cried out indignantly, "Look at those
-heretics, they do not even get out of their beds!"
-
-
-I spent some days in examining the step-formed terraces
-of shingle, first noticed by Captain B. Hall, and believed
-by Mr. Lyell to have been formed by the sea, during the
-gradual rising of the land. This certainly is the true
-explanation, for I found numerous shells of existing species
-on these terraces. Five narrow, gently sloping, fringe-like
-terraces rise one behind the other, and where best developed
-are formed of shingle: they front the bay, and sweep up both
-sides of the valley. At Guasco, north of Coquimbo, the
-phenomenon is displayed on a much grander scale, so as to
-strike with surprise even some of the inhabitants. The terraces
-are there much broader, and may be called plains, in
-some parts there are six of them, but generally only five;
-they run up the valley for thirty-seven miles from the coast.
-These step-formed terraces or fringes closely resemble those
-in the valley of S. Cruz, and, except in being on a smaller
-scale, those great ones along the whole coast-line of Patagonia.
-They have undoubtedly been formed by the denuding
-power of the sea, during long periods of rest in the
-gradual elevation of the continent.
-
-Shells of many existing species not only lie on the surface
-of the terraces at Coquimbo (to a height of 250 feet),
-but are embedded in a friable calcareous rock, which in some
-places is as much as between twenty and thirty feet in
-thickness, but is of little extent. These modern beds rest on an
-ancient tertiary formation containing shells, apparently all
-extinct. Although I examined so many hundred miles of
-coast on the Pacific, as well as Atlantic side of the continent,
-I found no regular strata containing sea-shells of
-recent species, excepting at this place, and at a few points
-northward on the road to Guasco. This fact appears to me
-highly remarkable; for the explanation generally given by
-geologists, of the absence in any district of stratified
-fossiliferous deposits of a given period, namely, that the
-surface then existed as dry land, is not here applicable; for we
-know from the shells strewed on the surface and embedded
-in loose sand or mould that the land for thousands of miles
-along both coasts has lately been submerged. The explanation,
-no doubt, must be sought in the fact, that the whole
-southern part of the continent has been for a long time
-slowly rising; and therefore that all matter deposited along
-shore in shallow water, must have been soon brought up
-and slowly exposed to the wearing action of the sea-beach;
-and it is only in comparatively shallow water that the greater
-number of marine organic beings can flourish, and in such
-water it is obviously impossible that strata of any great
-thickness can accumulate. To show the vast power of the
-wearing action of sea-beaches, we need only appeal to the
-great cliffs along the present coast of Patagonia, and to the
-escarpments or ancient sea-cliffs at different levels, one
-above another, on that same line of coast.
-
-The old underlying tertiary formation at Coquimbo,
-appears to be of about the same age with several deposits
-on the coast of Chile (of which that of Navedad is the
-principal one), and with the great formation of Patagonia.
-Both at Navedad and in Patagonia there is evidence, that
-since the shells (a list of which has been seen by Professor
-E. Forbes) there entombed were living, there has been a
-subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing
-elevation. It may naturally be asked, how it comes that,
-although no extensive fossiliferous deposits of the recent
-period, nor of any period intermediate between it and the
-ancient tertiary epoch, have been preserved on either side of
-the continent, yet that at this ancient tertiary epoch,
-sedimentary matter containing fossil remains, should have been
-deposited and preserved at different points in north and
-south lines, over a space of 1100 miles on the shores of the
-Pacific, and of at least 1350 miles on the shores of the
-Atlantic, and in an east and west line of 700 miles across the
-widest part of the continent? I believe the explanation is
-not difficult, and that it is perhaps applicable to nearly
-analogous facts observed in other quarters of the world.
-Considering the enormous power of denudation which the sea
-possesses, as shown by numberless facts, it is not probable
-that a sedimentary deposit, when being upraised, could pass
-through the ordeal of the beach, so as to be preserved in
-sufficient masses to last to a distant period, without it were
-originally of wide extent and of considerable thickness: now
-it is impossible on a moderately shallow bottom, which
-alone is favourable to most living creatures, that a thick
-and widely extended covering of sediment could be spread
-out, without the bottom sank down to receive the successive
-layers. This seems to have actually taken place at about
-the same period in southern Patagonia and Chile, though
-these places are a thousand miles apart. Hence, if prolonged
-movements of approximately contemporaneous subsidence
-are generally widely extensive, as I am strongly
-inclined to believe from my examination of the Coral Reefs
-of the great oceans -- or if, confining our view to South
-America, the subsiding movements have been coextensive
-with those of elevation, by which, within the same period
-of existing shells, the shores of Peru, Chile, Tierra del
-Fuego, Patagonia, and La Plata have been upraised -- then
-we can see that at the same time, at far distant points,
-circumstances would have been favourable to the formation of
-fossiliferous deposits of wide extent and of considerable
-thickness; and such deposits, consequently, would have a
-good chance of resisting the wear and tear of successive
-beach-lines, and of lasting to a future epoch.
-
-
-May 21st. -- I set out in company with Don Jose Edwards
-to the silver-mine of Arqueros, and thence up the valley of
-Coquimbo. Passing through a mountainous country, we
-reached by nightfall the mines belonging to Mr. Edwards.
-I enjoyed my night's rest here from a reason which will not
-be fully appreciated in England, namely, the absence of
-fleas! The rooms in Coquimbo swarm with them; but they
-will not live here at the height of only three or four
-thousand feet: it can scarcely be the trifling diminution
-of temperature, but some other cause which destroys these
-troublesome insects at this place. The mines are now in a
-bad state, though they formerly yielded about 2000 pounds
-in weight of silver a year. It has been said that "a person
-with a copper-mine will gain; with silver he may gain; but
-with gold he is sure to lose." This is not true: all the large
-Chilian fortunes have been made by mines of the more
-precious metals. A short time since an English physician
-returned to England from Copiapo, taking with him the
-profits of one share of a silver-mine, which amounted to
-about 24,000 pounds sterling. No doubt a copper-mine with
-care is a sure game, whereas the other is gambling, or rather
-taking a ticket in a lottery. The owners lose great quantities
-of rich ores; for no precautions can prevent robberies.
-I heard of a gentleman laying a bet with another, that one
-of his men should rob him before his face. The ore when
-brought out of the mine is broken into pieces, and the useless
-stone thrown on one side. A couple of the miners who
-were thus employed, pitched, as if by accident, two fragments
-away at the same moment, and then cried out for a joke
-"Let us see which rolls furthest." The owner, who was
-standing by, bet a cigar with his friend on the race. The
-miner by this means watched the very point amongst the
-rubbish where the stone lay. In the evening he picked it
-up and carried it to his master, showing him a rich mass of
-silver-ore, and saying, "This was the stone on which you
-won a cigar by its rolling so far."
-
-May 23rd. -- We descended into the fertile valley of Coquimbo,
-and followed it till we reached an Hacienda belonging
-to a relation of Don Jose, where we stayed the next day.
-I then rode one day's journey further, to see what were
-declared to be some petrified shells and beans, which latter
-turned out to be small quartz pebbles. We passed through
-several small villages; and the valley was beautifully
-cultivated, and the whole scenery very grand. We were here
-near the main Cordillera, and the surrounding hills were
-lofty. In all parts of northern Chile, fruit trees produce
-much more abundantly at a considerable height near the
-Andes than in the lower country. The figs and grapes of
-this district are famous for their excellence, and are
-cultivated to a great extent. This valley is, perhaps, the most
-productive one north of Quillota. I believe it contains,
-including Coquimbo, 25,000 inhabitants. The next day I
-returned to the Hacienda, and thence, together with Don
-Jose, to Coquimbo.
-
-June 2nd. -- We set out for the valley of Guasco, following
-the coast-road, which was considered rather less desert than
-the other. Our first day's ride was to a solitary house, called
-Yerba Buena, where there was pasture for our horses. The
-shower mentioned as having fallen, a fortnight ago, only
-reached about half-way to Guasco; we had, therefore, in the
-first part of our journey a most faint tinge of green, which
-soon faded quite away. Even where brightest, it was scarcely
-sufficient to remind one of the fresh turf and budding
-flowers of the spring of other countries. While travelling
-through these deserts one feels like a prisoner shut up in
-a gloomy court, who longs to see something green and to
-smell a moist atmosphere.
-
-June 3rd. -- Yerba Buena to Carizal. During the first part
-of the day we crossed a mountainous rocky desert, and afterwards
-a long deep sandy plain, strewed with broken seashells.
-There was very little water, and that little saline:
-the whole country, from the coast to the Cordillera, is an
-uninhabited desert. I saw traces only of one living animal in
-abundance, namely, the shells of a Bulimus, which were
-collected together in extraordinary numbers on the driest
-spots. In the spring one humble little plant sends out a few
-leaves, and on these the snails feed. As they are seen only
-very early in the morning, when the ground is slightly damp
-with dew, the Guascos believe that they are bred from it. I
-have observed in other places that extremely dry and sterile
-districts, where the soil is calcareous, are extraordinarily
-favourable to land-shells. At Carizal there were a few cottages,
-some brackish water, and a trace of cultivation: but it
-was with difficulty that we purchased a little corn and straw
-for our horses.
-
-4th. -- Carizal to Sauce. We continued to ride over desert
-plains, tenanted by large herds of guanaco. We crossed also
-the valley of Chaneral; which, although the most fertile one
-between Guasco and Coquimbo, is very narrow, and produces
-so little pasture, that we could not purchase any for our
-horses. At Sauce we found a very civil old gentleman,
-superintendent of a copper-smelting furnace. As an especial
-favour, he allowed me to purchase at a high price an armful
-of dirty straw, which was all the poor horses had for supper
-after their long day's journey. Few smelting-furnaces are
-now at work in any part of Chile; it is found more profitable,
-on account of the extreme scarcity of firewood, and from
-the Chilian method of reduction being so unskilful, to ship the
-ore for Swansea. The next day we crossed some mountains
-to Freyrina, in the valley of Guasco. During each day's ride
-further northward, the vegetation became more and more
-scanty; even the great chandelier-like cactus was here
-replaced by a different and much smaller species. During the
-winter months, both in northern Chile and in Peru, a uniform
-bank of clouds hangs, at no great height, over the Pacific.
-From the mountains we had a very striking view of this
-white and brilliant aerial-field, which sent arms up the
-valleys, leaving islands and promontories in the same manner, as
-the sea does in the Chonos archipelago and in Tierra del Fuego.
-
-We stayed two days at Freyrina. In the valley of Guasco
-there are four small towns. At the mouth there is the port, a
-spot entirely desert, and without any water in the immediate
-neighbourhood. Five leagues higher up stands Freyrina, a
-long straggling village, with decent whitewashed houses.
-Again, ten leagues further up Ballenar is situated, and above
-this Guasco Alto, a horticultural village, famous for its dried
-fruit. On a clear day the view up the valley is very fine; the
-straight opening terminates in the far-distant snowy Cordillera;
-on each side an infinity of crossing-lines are blended
-together in a beautiful haze. The foreground is singular
-from the number of parallel and step-formed terraces; and
-the included strip of green valley, with its willow-bushes, is
-contrasted on both hands with the naked hills. That the
-surrounding country was most barren will be readily believed,
-when it is known that a shower of rain had not fallen during
-the last thirteen months. The inhabitants heard with the
-greatest envy of the rain at Coquimbo; from the appearance
-of the sky they had hopes of equally good fortune, which, a
-fortnight afterwards, were realized. I was at Copiapo at the
-time; and there the people, with equal envy, talked of the
-abundant rain at Guasco. After two or three very dry years,
-perhaps with not more than one shower during the whole
-time, a rainy year generally follows; and this does more harm
-than even the drought. The rivers swell, and cover with
-gravel and sand the narrow strips of ground, which alone are
-fit for cultivation. The floods also injure the irrigating
-ditches. Great devastation had thus been caused three years
-ago.
-
-June 8th. -- We rode on to Ballenar, which takes its name
-from Ballenagh in Ireland, the birthplace of the family of
-O'Higgins, who, under the Spanish government, were presidents
-and generals in Chile. As the rocky mountains on each
-hand were concealed by clouds, the terrace-like plains gave
-to the valley an appearance like that of Santa Cruz in
-Patagonia. After spending one day at Ballenar I set out, on the
-10th, for the upper part of the valley of Copiapo. We rode
-all day over an uninteresting country. I am tired of repeating
-the epithets barren and sterile. These words, however,
-as commonly used, are comparative; I have always applied
-them to the plains of Patagonia, which can boast of spiny
-bushes and some tufts of grass; and this is absolute fertility,
-as compared with northern Chile. Here again, there are not
-many spaces of two hundred yards square, where some little
-bush, cactus or lichen, may not be discovered by careful
-examination; and in the soil seeds lie dormant ready to
-spring up during the first rainy winter. In Peru real deserts
-occur over wide tracts of country. In the evening we
-arrived at a valley, in which the bed of the streamlet was
-damp: following it up, we came to tolerably good water.
-During the night, the stream, from not being evaporated
-and absorbed so quickly, flows a league lower down than
-during the day. Sticks were plentiful for firewood, so that
-it was a good place to bivouac for us; but for the poor animals
-there was not a mouthful to eat.
-
-June 11th. -- We rode without stopping for twelve hours
-till we reached an old smelting-furnace, where there was
-water and firewood; but our horses again had nothing to eat,
-being shut up in an old courtyard. The line of road was
-hilly, and the distant views interesting, from the varied
-colours of the bare mountains. It was almost a pity to see
-the sun shining constantly over so useless a country; such
-splendid weather ought to have brightened fields and pretty
-gardens. The next day we reached the valley of Copiapo.
-I was heartily glad of it; for the whole journey was a continued
-source of anxiety; it was most disagreeable to hear,
-whilst eating our own suppers, our horses gnawing the posts
-to which they were tied, and to have no means of relieving
-their hunger. To all appearance, however, the animals
-were quite fresh; and no one could have told that they had
-eaten nothing for the last fifty-five hours.
-
-I had a letter of introduction to Mr. Bingley, who received
-me very kindly at the Hacienda of Potrero Seco. This
-estate is between twenty and thirty miles long, but very narrow,
-being generally only two fields wide, one on each side
-the river. In some parts the estate is of no width, that is
-to say, the land cannot be irrigated, and therefore is
-valueless, like the surrounding rocky desert. The small quantity
-of cultivated land in the whole line of valley, does not so
-much depend on inequalities of level, and consequent unfitness
-for irrigation, as on the small supply of water. The
-river this year was remarkably full: here, high up the valley,
-it reached to the horse's belly, and was about fifteen yards
-wide, and rapid; lower down it becomes smaller and smaller,
-and is generally quite lost, as happened during one period
-of thirty years, so that not a drop entered the sea. The
-inhabitants watch a storm over the Cordillera with great
-interest; as one good fall of snow provides them with water
-for the ensuing year. This is of infinitely more consequence
-than rain in the lower country. Rain, as often as it falls,
-which is about once in every two or three years, is a great
-advantage, because the cattle and mules can for some time
-afterwards find a little pasture in the mountains. But without
-snow on the Andes, desolation extends throughout the
-valley. It is on record that three times nearly all the
-inhabitants have been obliged to emigrate to the south. This
-year there was plenty of water, and every man irrigated his
-ground as much as he chose; but it has frequently been
-necessary to post soldiers at the sluices, to see that each
-estate took only its proper allowance during so many hours
-in the week. The valley is said to contain 12,000 souls, but
-its produce is sufficient only for three months in the year;
-the rest of the supply being drawn from Valparaiso and the
-south. Before the discovery of the famous silver-mines of
-Chanuncillo, Copiapo was in a rapid state of decay; but now
-it is in a very thriving condition; and the town, which was
-completely overthrown by an earthquake, has been rebuilt.
-
-The valley of Copiapo, forming a mere ribbon of green
-in a desert, runs in a very southerly direction; so that it is
-of considerable length to its source in the Cordillera. The
-valleys of Guasco and Copiapo may both be considered as
-long narrow islands, separated from the rest of Chile by
-deserts of rock instead of by salt water. Northward of
-these, there is one other very miserable valley, called Paposo,
-which contains about two hundred souls; and then there
-extends the real desert of Atacama -- a barrier far worse
-than the most turbulent ocean. After staying a few days at
-Potrero Seco, I proceeded up the valley to the house of Don
-Benito Cruz, to whom I had a letter of introduction. I found
-him most hospitable; indeed it is impossible to bear too
-strong testimony to the kindness with which travellers are
-received in almost every part of South America. The next
-day I hired some mules to take me by the ravine of Jolquera
-into the central Cordillera. On the second night the
-weather seemed to foretell a storm of snow or rain, and whilst
-lying in our beds we felt a trifling shock of an earthquake.
-
-The connection between earthquakes and the weather has
-been often disputed: it appears to me to be a point of great
-interest, which is little understood. Humboldt has remarked
-in one part of the Personal Narrative, [1] that it would be
-difficult for any person who had long resided in New Andalusia,
-or in Lower Peru, to deny that there exists some connection
-between these phenomena: in another part, however
-he seems to think the connection fanciful. At Guayaquil
-it is said that a heavy shower in the dry season is invariably
-followed by an earthquake. In Northern Chile, from the
-extreme infrequency of rain, or even of weather foreboding
-rain, the probability of accidental coincidences becomes very
-small; yet the inhabitants are here most firmly convinced of
-some connection between the state of the atmosphere and of
-the trembling of the ground: I was much struck by this
-when mentioning to some people at Copiapo that there had
-been a sharp shock at Coquimbo: they immediately cried out,
-"How fortunate! there will be plenty of pasture there this
-year." To their minds an earthquake foretold rain as surely
-as rain foretold abundant pasture. Certainly it did so happen
-that on the very day of the earthquake, that shower of
-rain fell, which I have described as in ten days' time producing
-a thin sprinkling of grass. At other times rain has
-followed earthquakes at a period of the year when it is a
-far greater prodigy than the earthquake itself: this happened
-after the shock of November, 1822, and again in 1829, at
-Valparaiso; also after that of September, 1833, at Tacna.
-A person must be somewhat habituated to the climate of
-these countries to perceive the extreme improbability of rain
-falling at such seasons, except as a consequence of some law
-quite unconnected with the ordinary course of the weather.
-In the cases of great volcanic eruptions, as that of Coseguina,
-where torrents of rain fell at a time of the year most
-unusual for it, and "almost unprecedented in Central
-America," it is not difficult to understand that the volumes
-of vapour and clouds of ashes might have disturbed the
-atmospheric equilibrium. Humboldt extends this view to
-the case of earthquakes unaccompanied by eruptions; but I
-can hardly conceive it possible, that the small quantity of
-aeriform fluids which then escape from the fissured ground,
-can produce such remarkable effects. There appears much
-probability in the view first proposed by Mr. P. Scrope, that
-when the barometer is low, and when rain might naturally
-be expected to fall, the diminished pressure of the atmosphere
-over a wide extent of country, might well determine
-the precise day on which the earth, already stretched to the
-utmost by the subterranean forces, should yield, crack, and
-consequently tremble. It is, however, doubtful how far this
-idea will explain the circumstances of torrents of rain falling
-in the dry season during several days, after an earthquake
-unaccompanied by an eruption; such cases seem to
-bespeak some more intimate connection between the atmospheric
-and subterranean regions.
-
-Finding little of interest in this part of the ravine, we
-retraced our steps to the house of Don Benito, where I stayed
-two days collecting fossil shells and wood. Great prostrate
-silicified trunks of trees, embedded in a conglomerate, were
-extraordinarily numerous. I measured one, which was fifteen
-feet in circumference: how surprising it is that every
-atom of the woody matter in this great cylinder should have
-been removed and replaced by silex so perfectly, that each
-vessel and pore is preserved! These trees flourished at about
-the period of our lower chalk; they all belonged to the fir-
-tribe. It was amusing to hear the inhabitants discussing the
-nature of the fossil shells which I collected, almost in the
-same terms as were used a century ago in Europe, -- namely,
-whether or not they had been thus "born by nature." My
-geological examination of the country generally created a
-good deal of surprise amongst the Chilenos: it was long
-before they could be convinced that I was not hunting for
-mines. This was sometimes troublesome: I found the most
-ready way of explaining my employment, was to ask them
-how it was that they themselves were not curious concerning
-earthquakes and volcanos? -- why some springs were hot and
-others cold? -- why there were mountains in Chile, and not
-a hill in La Plata? These bare questions at once satisfied
-and silenced the greater number; some, however (like a few
-in England who are a century behindhand), thought that all
-such inquiries were useless and impious; and that it was
-quite sufficient that God had thus made the mountains.
-
-An order had recently been issued that all stray dogs
-should be killed, and we saw many lying dead on the road. A
-great number had lately gone mad, and several men had been
-bitten and had died in consequence. On several occasions
-hydrophobia has prevailed in this valley. It is remarkable
-thus to find so strange and dreadful a disease, appearing
-time after time in the same isolated spot. It has been
-remarked that certain villages in England are in like manner
-much more subject to this visitation than others. Dr. Unanue
-states that hydrophobia was first known in South
-America in 1803: this statement is corroborated by Azara
-and Ulloa having never heard of it in their time. Dr. Unanue
-says that it broke out in Central America, and slowly
-travelled southward. It reached Arequipa in 1807; and it is
-said that some men there, who had not been bitten, were
-affected, as were some negroes, who had eaten a bullock
-which had died of hydrophobia. At Ica forty-two people thus
-miserably perished. The disease came on between twelve
-and ninety days after the bite; and in those cases where it
-did come on, death ensued invariably within five days. After
-1808, a long interval ensued without any cases. On inquiry,
-I did not hear of hydrophobia in Van Diemen's Land, or in
-Australia; and Burchell says, that during the five years he
-was at the Cape of Good Hope, he never heard of an instance
-of it. Webster asserts that at the Azores hydrophobia has
-never occurred; and the same assertion has been made with
-respect to Mauritius and St. Helena. [2] In so strange a disease
-some information might possibly be gained by considering
-the circumstances under which it originates in distant climates;
-for it is improbable that a dog already bitten, should
-have been brought to these distant countries.
-
-At night, a stranger arrived at the house of Don Benito,
-and asked permission to sleep there. He said he had been
-wandering about the mountains for seventeen days, having
-lost his way. He started from Guasco, and being accustomed
-to travelling in the Cordillera, did not expect any difficulty
-in following the track to Copiapo; but he soon became
-involved in a labyrinth of mountains, whence he could not
-escape. Some of his mules had fallen over precipices, and he
-had been in great distress. His chief difficulty arose from
-not knowing where to find water in the lower country, so that
-he was obliged to keep bordering the central ranges.
-
-We returned down the valley, and on the 22nd reached
-the town of Copiapo. The lower part of the valley is broad,
-forming a fine plain like that of Quillota. The town covers
-a considerable space of ground, each house possessing a garden:
-but it is an uncomfortable place, and the dwellings are
-poorly furnished. Every one seems bent on the one object
-of making money, and then migrating as quickly as possible.
-All the inhabitants are more or less directly concerned with
-mines; and mines and ores are the sole subjects of conversation.
-Necessaries of all sorts are extremely dear; as the
-distance from the town to the port is eighteen leagues, and
-the land carriage very expensive. A fowl costs five or six
-shillings; meat is nearly as dear as in England; firewood,
-or rather sticks, are brought on donkeys from a distance of
-two and three days' journey within the Cordillera; and pasturage
-for animals is a shilling a day: all this for South
-America is wonderfully exorbitant.
-
-
-June 26th. -- I hired a guide and eight mules to take me
-into the Cordillera by a different line from my last excursion.
-As the country was utterly desert, we took a cargo
-and a half of barley mixed with chopped straw. About two
-leagues above the town a broad valley called the "Despoblado,"
-or uninhabited, branches off from that one by which
-we had arrived. Although a valley of the grandest dimensions,
-and leading to a pass across the Cordillera, yet it is
-completely dry, excepting perhaps for a few days during
-some very rainy winter. The sides of the crumbling mountains
-were furrowed by scarcely any ravines; and the bottom
-of the main valley, filled with shingle, was smooth and nearly
-level. No considerable torrent could ever have flowed down
-this bed of shingle; for if it had, a great cliff-bounded
-channel, as in all the southern valleys, would assuredly have
-been formed. I feel little doubt that this valley, as well as
-those mentioned by travellers in Peru, were left in the state we
-now see them by the waves of the sea, as the land slowly rose. I
-observed in one place, where the Despoblado was joined by a
-ravine (which in almost any other chain would have been
-called a grand valley), that its bed, though composed merely
-of sand and gravel, was higher than that of its tributary.
-A mere rivulet of water, in the course of an hour, would have
-cut a channel for itself; but it was evident that ages had
-passed away, and no such rivulet had drained this great
-tributary. It was curious to behold the machinery, if such a
-term may be used, for the drainage, all, with the last trifling
-exception, perfect, yet without any signs of action. Every one
-must have remarked how mud-banks, left by the retiring tide,
-imitate in miniature a country with hill and dale; and here
-we have the original model in rock, formed as the continent
-rose during the secular retirement of the ocean, instead of
-during the ebbing and flowing of the tides. If a shower of
-rain falls on the mud-bank, when left dry, it deepens the
-already-formed shallow lines of excavation; and so it is with
-the rain of successive centuries on the bank of rock and soil,
-which we call a continent.
-
-We rode on after it was dark, till we reached a side ravine
-with a small well, called "Agua amarga." The water
-deserved its name, for besides being saline it was most
-offensively putrid and bitter; so that we could not force
-ourselves to drink either tea or mate. I suppose the distance
-from the river of Copiapo to this spot was at least twenty-five
-or thirty English miles; in the whole space there was not a
-single drop of water, the country deserving the name of desert
-in the strictest sense. Yet about half way we passed some old
-Indian ruins near Punta Gorda: I noticed also in front of
-some of the valleys, which branch off from the Despoblado,
-two piles of stones placed a little way apart, and directed so
-as to point up the mouths of these small valleys. My companions
-knew nothing about them, and only answered my
-queries by their imperturbable "quien sabe?"
-
-I observed Indian ruins in several parts of the Cordillera:
-the most perfect which I saw, were the Ruinas de Tambillos,
-in the Uspallata Pass. Small square rooms were there huddled
-together in separate groups: some of the doorways were
-yet standing; they were formed by a cross slab of stone only
-about three feet high. Ulloa has remarked on the lowness of
-the doors in the ancient Peruvian dwellings. These houses,
-when perfect, must have been capable of containing a
-considerable number of persons. Tradition says, that they were
-used as halting-places for the Incas, when they crossed the
-mountains. Traces of Indian habitations have been discovered
-in many other parts, where it does not appear probable
-that they were used as mere resting-places, but yet where
-the land is as utterly unfit for any kind of cultivation, as it
-is near the Tambillos or at the Incas Bridge, or in the Portillo
-Pass, at all which places I saw ruins. In the ravine of
-Jajuel, near Aconcagua, where there is no pass, I heard of
-remains of houses situated at a great height, where it is
-extremely cold and sterile. At first I imagined that these
-buildings had been places of refuge, built by the Indians on
-the first arrival of the Spaniards; but I have since been
-inclined to speculate on the probability of a small change of
-climate.
-
-In this northern part of Chile, within the Cordillera, old
-Indian houses are said to be especially numerous: by digging
-amongst the ruins, bits of woollen articles, instruments of
-precious metals, and heads of Indian corn, are not unfrequently
-discovered: an arrow-head made of agate, and of
-precisely the same form with those now used in Tierra del
-Fuego, was given me. I am aware that the Peruvian Indians
-now frequently inhabit most lofty and bleak situations; but
-at Copiapo I was assured by men who had spent their lives in
-travelling through the Andes, that there were very many
-(muchisimas) buildings at heights so great as almost to border
-upon the perpetual snow, and in parts where there exist
-no passes, and where the land produces absolutely nothing,
-and what is still more extraordinary, where there is no water.
-Nevertheless it is the opinion of the people of the country
-(although they are much puzzled by the circumstance), that,
-from the appearance of the houses, the Indians must have
-used them as places of residence. In this valley, at Punta
-Gorda, the remains consisted of seven or eight square little
-rooms, which were of a similar form with those at Tambillos,
-but built chiefly of mud, which the present inhabitants cannot,
-either here or, according to Ulloa, in Peru, imitate in
-durability. They were situated in the most conspicuous and
-defenceless position, at the bottom of the flat broad valley.
-There was no water nearer than three or four leagues, and
-that only in very small quantity, and bad: the soil was
-absolutely sterile; I looked in vain even for a lichen adhering
-to the rocks. At the present day, with the advantage of beasts
-of burden, a mine, unless it were very rich, could scarcely
-be worked here with profit. Yet the Indians formerly chose
-it as a place of residence! If at the present time two or
-three showers of rain were to fall annually, instead of one,
-as now is the case during as many years, a small rill of water
-would probably be formed in this great valley; and then, by
-irrigation (which was formerly so well understood by the
-Indians), the soil would easily be rendered sufficiently
-productive to support a few families.
-
-I have convincing proofs that this part of the continent of
-South America has been elevated near the coast at least from
-400 to 500, and in some parts from 1000 to 1300 feet, since
-the epoch of existing shells; and further inland the rise
-possibly may have been greater. As the peculiarly arid character
-of the climate is evidently a consequence of the height of the
-Cordillera, we may feel almost sure that before the later
-elevations, the atmosphere could not have been so completely
-drained of its moisture as it now is; and as the rise has been
-gradual, so would have been the change in climate. On this
-notion of a change of climate since the buildings were
-inhabited, the ruins must be of extreme antiquity, but I do
-not think their preservation under the Chilian climate any
-great difficulty. We must also admit on this notion (and
-this perhaps is a greater difficulty) that man has inhabited
-South America for an immensely long period, inasmuch as
-any change of climate effected by the elevation of the land
-must have been extremely gradual. At Valparaiso, within
-the last 220 years, the rise has been somewhat less than 19
-feet: at Lima a sea-beach has certainly been upheaved from
-80 to 90 feet, within the Indo-human period: but such small
-elevations could have had little power in deflecting the
-moisture-bringing atmospheric currents. Dr. Lund, however,
-found human skeletons in the caves of Brazil, the appearance
-of which induced him to believe that the Indian race has
-existed during a vast lapse of time in South America.
-
-When at Lima, I conversed on these subjects [3] with Mr.
-Gill, a civil engineer, who had seen much of the interior
-country. He told me that a conjecture of a change of climate
-had sometimes crossed his mind; but that he thought
-that the greater portion of land, now incapable of cultivation,
-but covered with Indian ruins, had been reduced to this state
-by the water-conduits, which the Indians formerly constructed
-on so wonderful a scale, having been injured by
-neglect and by subterranean movements. I may here mention,
-that the Peruvians actually carried their irrigating
-streams in tunnels through hills of solid rock. Mr. Gill told
-me, he had been employed professionally to examine one:
-he found the passage low, narrow, crooked, and not of uniform
-breadth, but of very considerable length. Is it not
-most wonderful that men should have attempted such operations,
-without the use of iron or gunpowder? Mr. Gill also
-mentioned to me a most interesting, and, as far as I am
-aware, quite unparalleled case, of a subterranean disturbance
-having changed the drainage of a country. Travelling from
-Casma to Huaraz (not very far distant from Lima), he
-found a plain covered with ruins and marks of ancient
-cultivation but now quite barren. Near it was the dry course of
-a considerable river, whence the water for irrigation had
-formerly been conducted. There was nothing in the appearance
-of the water-course to indicate that the river had not flowed
-there a few years previously; in some parts, beds of sand and
-gravel were spread out; in others, the solid rock had been
-worn into a broad channel, which in one spot was about 40
-yards in breadth and 8 feet deep. It is self-evident that a
-person following up the course of a stream, will always
-ascend at a greater or less inclination: Mr. Gill, therefore,
-was much astonished, when walking up the bed of this
-ancient river, to find himself suddenly going down hill. He
-imagined that the downward slope had a fall of about 40 or
-50 feet perpendicular. We here have unequivocal evidence
-that a ridge had been uplifted right across the old bed of a
-stream. From the moment the river-course was thus arched,
-the water must necessarily have been thrown back, and a new
-channel formed. From that moment, also, the neighbouring
-plain must have lost its fertilizing stream, and become a
-desert.
-
-June 27th. -- We set out early in the morning, and by midday
-reached the ravine of Paypote, where there is a tiny rill
-of water, with a little vegetation, and even a few algarroba
-trees, a kind of mimosa. From having fire-wood, a smelting-
-furnace had formerly been built here: we found a solitary
-man in charge of it, whose sole employment was hunting
-guanacos. At night it froze sharply; but having plenty of
-wood for our fire, we kept ourselves warm.
-
-28th. -- We continued gradually ascending, and the valley
-now changed into a ravine. During the day we saw several
-guanacos, and the track of the closely-allied species, the
-Vicuna: this latter animal is pre-eminently alpine in its
-habits; it seldom descends much below the limit of perpetual
-snow, and therefore haunts even a more lofty and sterile
-situation than the guanaco. The only other animal which we
-saw in any number was a small fox: I suppose this animal
-preys on the mice and other small rodents, which, as long as
-there is the least vegetation, subsist in considerable numbers
-in very desert places. In Patagonia, even on the borders of
-the salinas, where a drop of fresh water can never be found,
-excepting dew, these little animals swarm. Next to lizards,
-mice appear to be able to support existence on the smallest
-and driest portions of the earth -- even on islets in the midst
-of great oceans.
-
-The scene on all sides showed desolation, brightened and
-made palpable by a clear, unclouded sky. For a time such
-scenery is sublime, but this feeling cannot last, and then it
-becomes uninteresting. We bivouacked at the foot of the
-"primera linea," or the first line of the partition of waters.
-The streams, however, on the east side do not flow to the
-Atlantic, but into an elevated district, in the middle of which
-there is a large saline, or salt lake; thus forming a little
-Caspian Sea at the height, perhaps, of ten thousand feet. Where
-we slept, there were some considerable patches of snow, but
-they do not remain throughout the year. The winds in these
-lofty regions obey very regular laws every day a fresh
-breeze blows up the valley, and at night, an hour or two after
-sunset, the air from the cold regions above descends as
-through a funnel. This night it blew a gale of wind, and the
-temperature must have been considerably below the freezing-
-point, for water in a vessel soon became a block of ice. No
-clothes seemed to oppose any obstacle to the air; I suffered
-very much from the cold, so that I could not sleep, and in
-the morning rose with my body quite dull and benumbed.
-
-In the Cordillera further southward, people lose their lives
-from snowstorms; here, it sometimes happens from another
-cause. My guide, when a boy of fourteen years old, was
-passing the Cordillera with a party in the month of May;
-and while in the central parts, a furious gale of wind arose,
-so that the men could hardly cling on their mules, and stones
-were flying along the ground. The day was cloudless, and
-not a speck of snow fell, but the temperature was low. It is
-probable that the thermometer could not have stood very
-many degrees below the freezing-point, but the effect on
-their bodies, ill protected by clothing, must have been in
-proportion to the rapidity of the current of cold air. The gale
-lasted for more than a day; the men began to lose their
-strength, and the mules would not move onwards. My guide's
-brother tried to return, but he perished, and his body was
-found two years afterwards, Lying by the side of his mule
-near the road, with the bridle still in his hand. Two other
-men in the party lost their fingers and toes; and out of two
-hundred mules and thirty cows, only fourteen mules escaped
-alive. Many years ago the whole of a large party are supposed
-to have perished from a similar cause, but their bodies
-to this day have never been discovered. The union of a
-cloudless sky, low temperature, and a furious gale of wind,
-must be, I should think, in all parts of the world an unusual
-occurrence.
-
-June 29th -- We gladly travelled down the valley to our
-former night's lodging, and thence to near the Agua amarga.
-On July 1st we reached the valley of Copiapo. The smell of
-the fresh clover was quite delightful, after the scentless air
-of the dry, sterile Despoblado. Whilst staying in the town I
-heard an account from several of the inhabitants, of a hill
-in the neighbourhood which they called "El Bramador," -- the
-roarer or bellower. I did not at the time pay sufficient
-attention to the account; but, as far as I understood, the hill
-was covered by sand, and the noise was produced only when
-people, by ascending it, put the sand in motion. The same
-circumstances are described in detail on the authority of
-Seetzen and Ehrenberg, [4] as the cause of the sounds which
-have been heard by many travellers on Mount Sinai near the
-Red Sea. One person with whom I conversed had himself
-heard the noise: he described it as very surprising; and he
-distinctly stated that, although he could not understand how
-it was caused, yet it was necessary to set the sand rolling
-down the acclivity. A horse walking over dry coarse sand,
-causes a peculiar chirping noise from the friction of the
-particles; a circumstance which I several times noticed on the
-coast of Brazil.
-
-Three days afterwards I heard of the Beagle's arrival at
-the Port, distant eighteen leagues from the town. There is
-very little land cultivated down the valley; its wide expanse
-supports a wretched wiry grass, which even the donkeys can
-hardly eat. This poorness of the vegetation is owing to the
-quantity of saline matter with which the soil is impregnated.
-The Port consists of an assemblage of miserable little hovels,
-situated at the foot of a sterile plain. At present, as the
-river contains water enough to reach the sea, the inhabitants
-enjoy the advantage of having fresh water within a mile and
-a half. On the beach there were large piles of merchandise,
-and the little place had an air of activity. In the evening
-I gave my adios, with a hearty good-will, to my companion
-Mariano Gonzales, with whom I had ridden so many leagues
-in Chile. The next morning the Beagle sailed for Iquique.
-
-July 12th. -- We anchored in the port of Iquique, in lat.
-20 degs. 12', on the coast of Peru. The town contains about a
-thousand inhabitants, and stands on a little plain of sand at
-the foot of a great wall of rock, 2000 feet in height, here
-forming the coast. The whole is utterly desert. A light
-shower of rain falls only once in very many years; and the
-ravines consequently are filled with detritus, and the
-mountain-sides covered by piles of fine white sand, even to a
-height of a thousand feet. During this season of the year a
-heavy bank of clouds, stretched over the ocean, seldom rises
-above the wall of rocks on the coast. The aspect of the place
-was most gloomy; the little port, with its few vessels, and
-small group of wretched houses, seemed overwhelmed and out of
-all proportion with the rest of the scene.
-
-The inhabitants live like persons on board a ship: every
-necessary comes from a distance: water is brought in boats
-from Pisagua, about forty miles northward, and is sold at
-the rate of nine reals (4s. 6d.) an eighteen-gallon cask: I
-bought a wine-bottle full for threepence. In like manner
-firewood, and of course every article of food, is imported.
-Very few animals can be maintained in such a place: on the
-ensuing morning I hired with difficulty, at the price of four
-pounds sterling, two mules and a guide to take me to the
-nitrate of soda works. These are at present the support of
-Iquique. This salt was first exported in 1830: in one year an
-amount in value of one hundred thousand pounds sterling,
-was sent to France and England. It is principally used as a
-manure and in the manufacture of nitric acid: owing to its
-deliquescent property it will not serve for gunpowder. Formerly
-there were two exceedingly rich silver-mines in this
-neighbourhood, but their produce is now very small.
-
-Our arrival in the offing caused some little apprehension.
-Peru was in a state of anarchy; and each party having
-demanded a contribution, the poor town of Iquique was in
-tribulation, thinking the evil hour was come. The people
-had also their domestic troubles; a short time before, three
-
-French carpenters had broken open, during the same night,
-the two churches, and stolen all the plate: one of the robbers,
-however, subsequently confessed, and the plate was recovered.
-The convicts were sent to Arequipa, which though the capital
-of this province, is two hundred leagues distant, the government
-there thought it a pity to punish such useful workmen,
-who could make all sorts of furniture; and accordingly
-liberated them. Things being in this state, the churches were
-again broken open, but this time the plate was not recovered.
-The inhabitants became dreadfully enraged, and declaring
-that none but heretics would thus "eat God Almighty," proceeded
-to torture some Englishmen, with the intention of
-afterwards shooting them. At last the authorities interfered,
-and peace was established.
-
-
-13th. -- In the morning I started for the saltpetre-works,
-a distance of fourteen leagues. Having ascended the steep
-coast-mountains by a zigzag sandy track, we soon came in
-view of the mines of Guantajaya and St. Rosa. These two
-small villages are placed at the very mouths of the mines;
-and being perched up on hills, they had a still more unnatural
-and desolate appearance than the town of Iquique. We did
-not reach the saltpetre-works till after sunset, having ridden
-all day across an undulating country, a complete and utter
-desert. The road was strewed with the bones and dried skins
-of many beasts of burden which had perished on it from
-fatigue. Excepting the Vultur aura, which preys on the
-carcasses, I saw neither bird, quadruped, reptile, nor insect.
-On the coast-mountains, at the height of about 2000 feet
-where during this season the clouds generally hang, a very
-few cacti were growing in the clefts of rock; and the loose
-sand was strewed over with a lichen, which lies on the surface
-quite unattached. This plant belongs to the genus
-Cladonia, and somewhat resembles the reindeer lichen. In
-some parts it was in sufficient quantity to tinge the sand,
-as seen from a distance, of a pale yellowish colour. Further
-inland, during the whole ride of fourteen leagues, I saw only
-one other vegetable production, and that was a most minute
-yellow lichen, growing on the bones of the dead mules. This
-was the first true desert which I had seen: the effect on me
-was not impressive; but I believe this was owing to my
-having become gradually accustomed to such scenes, as I
-rode northward from Valparaiso, through Coquimbo, to Copiapo.
-The appearance of the country was remarkable, from
-being covered by a thick crust of common salt, and of a
-stratified saliferous alluvium, which seems to have been
-deposited as the land slowly rose above the level of the sea.
-The salt is white, very hard, and compact: it occurs in water
-worn nodules projecting from the agglutinated sand, and is
-associated with much gypsum. The appearance of this superficial
-mass very closely resembled that of a country after
-snow, before the last dirty patches are thawed. The existence
-of this crust of a soluble substance over the whole face of
-the country, shows how extraordinarily dry the climate must
-have been for a long period.
-
-At night I slept at the house of the owner of one of the
-saltpetre mines. The country is here as unproductive as
-near the coast; but water, having rather a bitter and brackish
-taste, can be procured by digging wells. The well at this
-house was thirty-six yards deep: as scarcely any rain falls,
-it is evident the water is not thus derived; indeed if it were,
-it could not fail to be as salt as brine, for the whole
-surrounding country is incrusted with various saline substances.
-We must therefore conclude that it percolates under ground
-from the Cordillera, though distant many leagues. In that
-direction there are a few small villages, where the inhabitants,
-having more water, are enabled to irrigate a little land,
-and raise hay, on which the mules and asses, employed in
-carrying the saltpetre, are fed. The nitrate of soda was now
-selling at the ship's side at fourteen shillings per hundred
-pounds: the chief expense is its transport to the sea-coast.
-The mine consists of a hard stratum, between two and three
-feet thick, of the nitrate mingled with a little of the sulphate
-of soda and a good deal of common salt. It lies close beneath
-the surface, and follows for a length of one hundred and
-fifty miles the margin of a grand basin or plain; this, from
-its outline, manifestly must once have been a lake, or more
-probably an inland arm of the sea, as may be inferred from
-the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. The surface
-of the plain is 3300 feet above the Pacific.
-
-
-19th. -- We anchored in the Bay of Callao, the seaport of
-Lima, the capital of Peru. We stayed here six weeks but
-from the troubled state of public affairs, I saw very little of
-the country. During our whole visit the climate was far
-from being so delightful, as it is generally represented. A
-dull heavy bank of clouds constantly hung over the land, so
-that during the first sixteen days I had only one view of the
-Cordillera behind Lima. These mountains, seen in stages,
-one above the other, through openings in the clouds, had a
-very grand appearance. It is almost become a proverb, that
-rain never falls in the lower part of Peru. Yet this can
-hardly be considered correct; for during almost every day of
-our visit there was a thick drizzling mist, which was sufficient
-to make the streets muddy and one's clothes damp: this the
-people are pleased to call Peruvian dew. That much rain
-does not fall is very certain, for the houses are covered only
-with flat roofs made of hardened mud; and on the mole shiploads
-of wheat were piled up, being thus left for weeks together
-without any shelter.
-
-I cannot say I liked the very little I saw of Peru: in
-summer, however, it is said that the climate is much pleasanter.
-In all seasons, both inhabitants and foreigners suffer
-from severe attacks of ague. This disease is common on the
-whole coast of Peru, but is unknown in the interior. The
-attacks of illness which arise from miasma never fail to appear
-most mysterious. So difficult is it to judge from the
-aspect of a country, whether or not it is healthy, that if a
-person had been told to choose within the tropics a situation
-appearing favourable for health, very probably he would
-have named this coast. The plain round the outskirts of
-Callao is sparingly covered with a coarse grass, and in some
-parts there are a few stagnant, though very small, pools of
-water. The miasma, in all probability, arises from these:
-for the town of Arica was similarly circumstanced, and its
-healthiness was much improved by the drainage of some
-little pools. Miasma is not always produced by a luxuriant
-vegetation with an ardent climate; for many parts of Brazil,
-even where there are marshes and a rank vegetation, are
-much more healthy than this sterile coast of Peru. The
-densest forests in a temperate climate, as in Chiloe, do not
-seem in the slightest degree to affect the healthy condition
-of the atmosphere.
-
-The island of St. Jago, at the Cape de Verds, offers another
-strongly marked instance of a country, which any one
-would have expected to find most healthy, being very much
-the contrary. I have described the bare and open plains as
-supporting, during a few weeks after the rainy season, a thin
-vegetation, which directly withers away and dries up: at this
-period the air appears to become quite poisonous; both natives
-and foreigners often being affected with violent fevers.
-On the other hand, the Galapagos Archipelago, in the Pacific,
-with a similar soil, and periodically subject to the same
-process of vegetation, is perfectly healthy. Humboldt has
-observed, that, "under the torrid zone, the smallest marshes
-are the most dangerous, being surrounded, as at Vera Cruz
-and Carthagena, with an arid and sandy soil, which raises
-the temperature of the ambient air." [5] On the coast of Peru,
-however, the temperature is not hot to any excessive degree;
-and perhaps in consequence, the intermittent fevers are not
-of the most malignant order. In all unhealthy countries the
-greatest risk is run by sleeping on shore. Is this owing to
-the state of the body during sleep, or to a greater abundance
-of miasma at such times? It appears certain that those
-who stay on board a vessel, though anchored at only a short
-distance from the coast, generally suffer less than those
-actually on shore. On the other hand, I have heard of one
-remarkable case where a fever broke out among the crew of
-a man-of-war some hundred miles off the coast of Africa,
-and at the same time one of those fearful periods [6] of death
-commenced at Sierra Leone.
-
-No state in South America, since the declaration of
-independence, has suffered more from anarchy than Peru. At
-the time of our visit, there were four chiefs in arms contending
-for supremacy in the government: if one succeeded
-in becoming for a time very powerful, the others coalesced
-against him; but no sooner were they victorious, than they
-were again hostile to each other. The other day, at the
-Anniversary of the Independence, high mass was performed, the
-President partaking of the sacrament: during the _Te Deum
-laudamus_, instead of each regiment displaying the Peruvian
-flag, a black one with death's head was unfurled. Imagine
-a government under which such a scene could be ordered, on
-such an occasion, to be typical of their determination of
-fighting to death! This state of affairs happened at a time
-very unfortunately for me, as I was precluded from taking
-any excursions much beyond the limits of the town. The
-barren island of St. Lorenzo, which forms the harbour, was
-nearly the only place where one could walk securely. The
-upper part, which is upwards of 1000 feet in height, during
-this season of the year (winter), comes within the lower
-limit of the clouds; and in consequence, an abundant cryptogamic
-vegetation, and a few flowers cover the summit. On
-the hills near Lima, at a height but little greater, the ground
-is carpeted with moss, and beds of beautiful yellow lilies,
-called Amancaes. This indicates a very much greater degree
-of humidity, than at a corresponding height at Iquique.
-Proceeding northward of Lima, the climate becomes damper,
-till on the banks of the Guayaquil, nearly under the equator,
-we find the most luxuriant forests. The change, however,
-from the sterile coast of Peru to that fertile land is described
-as taking place rather abruptly in the latitude of Cape Blanco,
-two degrees south of Guayaquil.
-
-Callao is a filthy, ill-built, small seaport. The inhabitants,
-both here and at Lima, present every imaginable shade of
-mixture, between European, Negro, and Indian blood. They
-appear a depraved, drunken set of people. The atmosphere
-is loaded with foul smells, and that peculiar one, which may
-be perceived in almost every town within the tropics, was
-here very strong. The fortress, which withstood Lord Cochrane's
-long siege, has an imposing appearance. But the
-President, during our stay, sold the brass guns, and proceeded
-to dismantle parts of it. The reason assigned was,
-that he had not an officer to whom he could trust so important
-a charge. He himself had good reason for thinking
-so, as he had obtained the presidentship by rebelling while
-in charge of this same fortress. After we left South America,
-he paid the penalty in the usual manner, by being conquered,
-taken prisoner, and shot.
-
-Lima stands on a plain in a valley, formed during the
-gradual retreat of the sea. It is seven miles from Callao,
-and is elevated 500 feet above it; but from the slope being
-very gradual, the road appears absolutely level; so that when
-at Lima it is difficult to believe one has ascended even one
-hundred feet: Humboldt has remarked on this singularly deceptive
-case. Steep barren hills rise like islands from the
-plain, which is divided, by straight mud-walls, into large
-green fields. In these scarcely a tree grows excepting a few
-willows, and an occasional clump of bananas and of oranges.
-The city of Lima is now in a wretched state of decay: the
-streets are nearly unpaved; and heaps of filth are piled up
-in all directions, where the black gallinazos, tame as poultry,
-pick up bits of carrion. The houses have generally an upper
-story, built on account of the earthquakes, of plastered
-woodwork but some of the old ones, which are now used by several
-families, are immensely large, and would rival in suites
-of apartments the most magnificent in any place. Lima, the
-City of the Kings, must formerly have been a splendid town.
-The extraordinary number of churches gives it, even at the
-present day, a peculiar and striking character, especially
-when viewed from a short distance.
-
-One day I went out with some merchants to hunt in the
-immediate vicinity of the city. Our sport was very poor;
-but I had an opportunity of seeing the ruins of one of the
-ancient Indian villages, with its mound like a natural hill in
-the centre. The remains of houses, enclosures, irrigating
-streams, and burial mounds, scattered over this plain, cannot
-fail to give one a high idea of the condition and number of
-the ancient population. When their earthenware, woollen
-clothes, utensils of elegant forms cut out of the hardest rocks,
-tools of copper, ornaments of precious stones, palaces, and
-hydraulic works, are considered, it is impossible not to respect
-the considerable advance made by them in the arts of
-civilization. The burial mounds, called Huacas, are really
-stupendous; although in some places they appear to be natural
-hills incased and modelled.
-
-There is also another and very different class of ruins,
-which possesses some interest, namely, those of old Callao,
-overwhelmed by the great earthquake of 1746, and its
-accompanying wave. The destruction must have been more
-complete even than at Talcahuano. Quantities of shingle
-almost conceal the foundations of the walls, and vast masses
-of brickwork appear to have been whirled about like pebbles
-by the retiring waves. It has been stated that the land subsided
-during this memorable shock: I could not discover any
-proof of this; yet it seems far from improbable, for the
-form of the coast must certainly have undergone some change
-since the foundation of the old town; as no people in their
-senses would willingly have chosen for their building place,
-the narrow spit of shingle on which the ruins now stand.
-Since our voyage, M. Tschudi has come to the conclusion,
-by the comparison of old and modern maps, that the coast
-both north and south of Lima has certainly subsided.
-
-On the island of San Lorenzo, there are very satisfactory
-proofs of elevation within the recent period; this of course
-is not opposed to the belief, of a small sinking of the ground
-having subsequently taken place. The side of this island
-fronting the Bay of Callao, is worn into three obscure terraces,
-the lower one of which is covered by a bed a mile in
-length, almost wholly composed of shells of eighteen species,
-now living in the adjoining sea. The height of this bed is
-eighty-five feet. Many of the shells are deeply corroded, and
-have a much older and more decayed appearance than those
-at the height of 500 or 600 feet on the coast of Chile. These
-shells are associated with much common salt, a little sulphate
-of lime (both probably left by the evaporation of the
-spray, as the land slowly rose), together with sulphate of
-soda and muriate of lime. They rest on fragments of the
-underlying sandstone, and are covered by a few inches thick
-of detritus. The shells, higher up on this terrace could be
-traced scaling off in flakes, and falling into an impalpable
-powder; and on an upper terrace, at the height of 170 feet,
-and likewise at some considerably higher points, I found a
-layer of saline powder of exactly similar appearance, and
-lying in the same relative position. I have no doubt that this
-upper layer originally existed as a bed of shells, like that on
-the eighty-five-feet ledge; but it does not now contain even a
-trace of organic structure. The powder has been analyzed
-for me by Mr. T. Reeks; it consists of sulphates and muriates
-both of lime and soda, with very little carbonate of
-lime. It is known that common salt and carbonate of lime
-left in a mass for some time together, partly decompose each
-other; though this does not happen with small quantities in
-solution. As the half-decomposed shells in the lower parts
-are associated with much common salt, together with some
-of the saline substances composing the upper saline layer,
-and as these shells are corroded and decayed in a remarkable
-manner, I strongly suspect that this double decomposition
-has here taken place. The resultant salts, however, ought
-to be carbonate of soda and muriate of lime, the latter is
-present, but not the carbonate of soda. Hence I am led to
-imagine that by some unexplained means, the carbonate of
-soda becomes changed into the sulphate. It is obvious that
-the saline layer could not have been preserved in any country
-in which abundant rain occasionally fell: on the other
-hand, this very circumstance, which at first sight appears so
-highly favourable to the long preservation of exposed shells,
-has probably been the indirect means, through the common
-salt not having been washed away, of their decomposition
-and early decay.
-
-I was much interested by finding on the terrace, at the
-height of eighty-five feet, _embedded_ amidst the shells and
-much sea-drifted rubbish, some bits of cotton thread, plaited
-rush, and the head of a stalk of Indian corn: I compared
-these relics with similar ones taken out of the Huacas, or old
-Peruvian tombs, and found them identical in appearance.
-On the mainland in front of San Lorenzo, near Bellavista,
-there is an extensive and level plain about a hundred feet
-high, of which the lower part is formed of alternating layers
-of sand and impure clay, together with some gravel, and the
-surface, to the depth of from three to six feet, of a reddish
-loam, containing a few scattered sea-shells and numerous
-small fragments of coarse red earthenware, more abundant
-at certain spots than at others. At first I was inclined to
-believe that this superficial bed, from its wide extent and
-smoothness, must have been deposited beneath the sea; but
-I afterwards found in one spot, that it lay on an artificial
-floor of round stones. It seems, therefore, most probable
-that at a period when the land stood at a lower level there
-was a plain very similar to that now surrounding Callao,
-which being protected by a shingle beach, is raised but very
-little above the level of the sea. On this plain, with its
-underlying red-clay beds, I imagine that the Indians
-manufactured their earthen vessels; and that, during some
-violent earthquake, the sea broke over the beach, and converted
-the plain into a temporary lake, as happened round Callao in
-1713 and 1746. The water would then have deposited mud,
-containing fragments of pottery from the kilns, more abundant
-at some spots than at others, and shells from the sea.
-This bed, with fossil earthenware, stands at about the
-same height with the shells on the lower terrace of San
-Lorenzo, in which the cotton-thread and other relics were
-embedded.
-
-Hence we may safely conclude, that within the Indo-human
-period there has been an elevation, as before alluded to, of
-more than eighty-five feet; for some little elevation must
-have been lost by the coast having subsided since the old
-maps were engraved. At Valparaiso, although in the 220
-years before our visit, the elevation cannot have exceeded
-nineteen feet, yet subsequently to 1817, there has been a rise,
-partly insensible and partly by a start during the shock of
-1822, of ten or eleven feet. The antiquity of the Indo-human
-race here, judging by the eighty-five feet rise of the land
-since the relics were embedded, is the more remarkable, as on
-the coast of Patagonia, when the land stood about the same
-number of feet lower, the Macrauchenia was a living beast;
-but as the Patagonian coast is some way distant from the
-Cordillera, the rising there may have been slower than here.
-At Bahia Blanca, the elevation has been only a few feet
-since the numerous gigantic quadrupeds were there entombed;
-and, according to the generally received opinion,
-when these extinct animals were living, man did not exist.
-But the rising of that part of the coast of Patagonia, is
-perhaps no way connected with the Cordillera, but rather with
-a line of old volcanic rocks in Banda Oriental, so that it
-may have been infinitely slower than on the shores of Peru.
-All these speculations, however, must be vague; for who will
-pretend to say that there may not have been several periods
-of subsidence, intercalated between the movements of elevation;
-for we know that along the whole coast of Patagonia,
-there have certainly been many and long pauses in
-the upward action of the elevatory forces.
-
-[1] Vol. iv. p. 11, and vol. ii. p. 217. For the remarks on
-Guayaquil, see Silliman's Journ., vol. xxiv. p. 384. For those
-on Tacna by Mr. Hamilton, see Trans. of British Association,
-1840. For those on Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil. Trans.,
-1835. In the former edition I collected several references on
-the coincidences between sudden falls in the barometer and
-earthquakes; and between earthquakes and meteors.
-
-[2] Observa. sobre el Clima de Lima, p. 67. -- Azara's Travels,
-vol. i. p. 381. -- Ulloa's Voyage, vol. ii. p. 28. -- Burchell's
-Travels, vol. ii. p. 524. -- Webster's Description of the
-Azores, p. 124. -- Voyage a l'Isle de France par un Officer du
-Roi, tom. i. p. 248. -- Description of St. Helena, p. 123.
-
-[3] Temple, in his travels through Upper Peru, or Bolivia, in
-going from Potosi to Oruro, says, "I saw many Indian villages or
-dwellings in ruins, up even to the very tops of the mountains,
-attesting a former population where now all is desolate." He
-makes similar remarks in another place; but I cannot tell
-whether this desolation has been caused by a want of population,
-or by an altered condition of the land.
-
-[4] Edinburgh, Phil. Journ., Jan., 1830, p. 74; and April, 1830,
-p. 258 -- also Daubeny on Volcanoes, p. 438; and Bengal
-Journ., vol. vii. p. 324.
-
-[5] Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, vol. iv.
-p. 199.
-
-[6] A similar interesting case is recorded in the Madras
-Medical Quart. Journ., 1839, p. 340. Dr. Ferguson, in his
-admirable Paper (see 9th vol. of Edinburgh Royal Trans.),
-shows clearly that the poison is generated in the drying
-process; and hence that dry hot countries are often the most
-unhealthy.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
-
-The whole Group Volcanic -- Numbers of Craters -- Leafless
-Bushes Colony at Charles Island -- James Island -- Salt-lake in
-Crater -- Natural History of the Group -- Ornithology, curious
-Finches -- Reptiles -- Great Tortoises, habits of -- Marine
-Lizard, feeds on Sea-weed -- Terrestrial Lizard, burrowing
-habits, herbivorous -- Importance of Reptiles in the
-Archipelago -- Fish, Shells, Insects -- Botany -- American Type
-of Organization -- Differences in the Species or Races on
-different Islands -- Tameness of the Birds -- Fear of Man, an
-acquired Instinct.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 15th. -- This archipelago consists of ten
-principal islands, of which five exceed the others in
-size. They are situated under the Equator, and between
-five and six hundred miles westward of the coast of
-America. They are all formed of volcanic rocks; a few
-fragments of granite curiously glazed and altered by the
-heat, can hardly be considered as an exception. Some of
-the craters, surmounting the larger islands, are of immense
-size, and they rise to a height of between three and four
-thousand feet. Their flanks are studded by innumerable
-smaller orifices. I scarcely hesitate to affirm, that there
-must be in the whole archipelago at least two thousand
-craters. These consist either of lava or scoriae, or of finely-
-stratified, sandstone-like tuff. Most of the latter are
-beautifully symmetrical; they owe their origin to eruptions of
-volcanic mud without any lava: it is a remarkable circumstance
-that every one of the twenty-eight tuff-craters which
-were examined, had their southern sides either much lower
-than the other sides, or quite broken down and removed. As
-all these craters apparently have been formed when standing
-in the sea, and as the waves from the trade wind and the
-swell from the open Pacific here unite their forces on the
-southern coasts of all the islands, this singular uniformity
-in the broken state of the craters, composed of the soft and
-yielding tuff, is easily explained.
-
-Considering that these islands are placed directly under
-the equator, the climate is far from being excessively hot;
-this seems chiefly caused by the singularly low temperature
-of the surrounding water, brought here by the great southern
-
-
-[map]
-
-
-Polar current. Excepting during one short season, very
-little rain falls, and even then it is irregular; but the clouds
-generally hang low. Hence, whilst the lower parts of the
-islands are very sterile, the upper parts, at a height of a
-thousand feet and upwards, possess a damp climate and a
-tolerably luxuriant vegetation. This is especially the case
-on the windward sides of the islands, which first receive and
-condense the moisture from the atmosphere.
-
-In the morning (17th) we landed on Chatham Island,
-which, like the others, rises with a tame and rounded outline,
-broken here and there by scattered hillocks, the remains
-of former craters. Nothing could be less inviting than the
-first appearance. A broken field of black basaltic lava,
-thrown into the most rugged waves, and crossed by great
-fissures, is everywhere covered by stunted, sun-burnt brushwood,
-which shows little signs of life. The dry and parched
-surface, being heated by the noon-day sun, gave to the air
-a close and sultry feeling, like that from a stove: we fancied
-even that the bushes smelt unpleasantly. Although I diligently
-tried to collect as many plants as possible, I succeeded
-in getting very few; and such wretched-looking little
-weeds would have better become an arctic than an equatorial
-Flora. The brushwood appears, from a short distance, as
-leafless as our trees during winter; and it was some time
-before I discovered that not only almost every plant was
-now in full leaf, but that the greater number were in flower.
-The commonest bush is one of the Euphorbiaceae: an acacia
-and a great odd-looking cactus are the only trees which
-afford any shade. After the season of heavy rains, the islands
-are said to appear for a short time partially green. The
-volcanic island of Fernando Noronha, placed in many respects
-under nearly similar conditions, is the only other
-country where I have seen a vegetation at all like this of
-the Galapagos Islands.
-
-The Beagle sailed round Chatham Island, and anchored
-in several bays. One night I slept on shore on a part of the
-island, where black truncated cones were extraordinarily
-numerous: from one small eminence I counted sixty of
-them, all surmounted by craters more or less perfect. The
-greater number consisted merely of a ring of red scoriae
-or slags, cemented together: and their height above the plain
-of lava was not more than from fifty to a hundred feet; none
-had been very lately active. The entire surface of this part
-of the island seems to have been permeated, like a sieve, by
-the subterranean vapours: here and there the lava, whilst
-soft, has been blown into great bubbles; and in other parts,
-the tops of caverns similarly formed have fallen in, leaving
-circular pits with steep sides. From the regular form of the
-many craters, they gave to the country an artificial appearance,
-which vividly reminded me of those parts of Staffordshire,
-where the great iron-foundries are most numerous.
-The day was glowing hot, and the scrambling over the rough
-surface and through the intricate thickets, was very fatiguing;
-but I was well repaid by the strange Cyclopean scene.
-As I was walking along I met two large tortoises, each of
-which must have weighed at least two hundred pounds: one
-was eating a piece of cactus, and as I approached, it stared
-at me and slowly walked away; the other gave a deep hiss,
-and drew in its head. These huge reptiles, surrounded by
-the black lava, the leafless shrubs, and large cacti, seemed to
-my fancy like some antediluvian animals. The few dull-
-coloured birds cared no more for me than they did for the
-great tortoises.
-
-23rd. -- The Beagle proceeded to Charles Island. This
-archipelago has long been frequented, first by the bucaniers,
-and latterly by whalers, but it is only within the last six
-years, that a small colony has been established here. The
-inhabitants are between two and three hundred in number;
-they are nearly all people of colour, who have been banished
-for political crimes from the Republic of the Equator, of
-which Quito is the capital. The settlement is placed about
-four and a half miles inland, and at a height probably of a
-thousand feet. In the first part of the road we passed
-through leafless thickets, as in Chatham Island. Higher up,
-the woods gradually became greener; and as soon as we
-crossed the ridge of the island, we were cooled by a fine
-southerly breeze, and our sight refreshed by a green and
-thriving vegetation. In this upper region coarse grasses and
-ferns abound; but there are no tree-ferns: I saw nowhere
-any member of the palm family, which is the more singular,
-as 360 miles northward, Cocos Island takes its name from
-the number of cocoa-nuts. The houses are irregularly scattered
-over a flat space of ground, which is cultivated with
-sweet potatoes and bananas. It will not easily be imagined
-how pleasant the sight of black mud was to us, after having
-been so long, accustomed to the parched soil of Peru and
-northern Chile. The inhabitants, although complaining of
-poverty, obtain, without much trouble, the means of subsistence.
-In the woods there are many wild pigs and goats;
-but the staple article of animal food is supplied by the
-tortoises. Their numbers have of course been greatly reduced
-in this island, but the people yet count on two days'
-hunting giving them food for the rest of the week. It is
-said that formerly single vessels have taken away as many
-as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a frigate
-some years since brought down in one day two hundred
-tortoises to the beach.
-
-September 29th. -- We doubled the south-west extremity of
-Albemarle Island, and the next day were nearly becalmed
-between it and Narborough Island. Both are covered with
-immense deluges of black naked lava, which have flowed either
-over the rims of the great caldrons, like pitch over the
-rim of a pot in which it has been boiled, or have burst forth
-from smaller orifices on the flanks; in their descent they
-have spread over miles of the sea-coast. On both of these
-islands, eruptions are known to have taken place; and in
-Albemarle, we saw a small jet of smoke curling from the
-summit of one of the great craters. In the evening we
-anchored in Bank's Cove, in Albemarle Island. The next
-morning I went out walking. To the south of the broken
-tuff-crater, in which the Beagle was anchored, there was
-another beautifully symmetrical one of an elliptic form; its
-longer axis was a little less than a mile, and its depth about
-500 feet. At its bottom there was a shallow lake, in the
-middle of which a tiny crater formed an islet. The day was
-overpoweringly hot, and the lake looked clear and blue: I
-hurried down the cindery slope, and, choked with dust,
-eagerly tasted the water -- but, to my sorrow, I found it salt
-as brine.
-
-The rocks on the coast abounded with great black lizards,
-between three and four feet long; and on the hills, an ugly
-yellowish-brown species was equally common. We saw many of this
-latter kind, some clumsily running out of the way, and others
-shuffling into their burrows. I shall presently describe in
-more detail the habits of both these reptiles. The whole of
-this northern part of Albemarle Island is miserably sterile.
-
-October 8th. -- We arrived at James Island: this island, as
-well as Charles Island, were long since thus named after our
-kings of the Stuart line. Mr. Bynoe, myself, and our servants
-were left here for a week, with provisions and a tent,
-whilst the Beagle went for water. We found here a party
-of Spaniards, who had been sent from Charles Island to dry
-fish, and to salt tortoise-meat. About six miles inland, and
-at the height of nearly 2000 feet, a hovel had been built in
-which two men lived, who were employed in catching tortoises,
-whilst the others were fishing on the coast. I paid
-this party two visits, and slept there one night. As in the
-other islands, the lower region was covered by nearly leafless
-bushes, but the trees were here of a larger growth than
-elsewhere, several being two feet and some even two feet nine
-inches in diameter. The upper region being kept damp by
-the clouds, supports a green and flourishing vegetation. So
-damp was the ground, that there were large beds of a coarse
-cyperus, in which great numbers of a very small water-rail
-lived and bred. While staying in this upper region, we lived
-entirely upon tortoise-meat: the breast-plate roasted (as the
-Gauchos do _carne con cuero_), with the flesh on it, is very
-good; and the young tortoises make excellent soup; but
-otherwise the meat to my taste is indifferent.
-
-One day we accompanied a party of the Spaniards in
-their whale-boat to a salina, or lake from which salt is
-procured. After landing, we had a very rough walk over a
-rugged field of recent lava, which has almost surrounded a
-tuff-crater, at the bottom of which the salt-lake lies. The
-water is only three or four inches deep, and rests on a layer
-of beautifully crystallized, white salt. The lake is quite
-circular, and is fringed with a border of bright green succulent
-plants; the almost precipitous walls of the crater are clothed
-with wood, so that the scene was altogether both picturesque
-and curious. A few years since, the sailors belonging to a
-sealing-vessel murdered their captain in this quiet spot; and
-we saw his skull lying among the bushes.
-
-During the greater part of our stay of a week, the sky
-was cloudless, and if the trade-wind failed for an hour, the
-heat became very oppressive. On two days, the thermometer
-within the tent stood for some hours at 93 degs.; but in the open
-air, in the wind and sun, at only 85 degs. The sand was extremely
-hot; the thermometer placed in some of a brown colour
-immediately rose to 137 degs., and how much above that
-it would have risen, I do not know, for it was not graduated
-any higher. The black sand felt much hotter, so that
-even in thick boots it was quite disagreeable to walk over it.
-
-
-The natural history of these islands is eminently curious,
-and well deserves attention. Most of the organic productions
-are aboriginal creations, found nowhere else; there is even
-a difference between the inhabitants of the different islands;
-yet all show a marked relationship with those of America,
-though separated from that continent by an open space of
-ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in width. The archipelago
-is a little world within itself, or rather a satellite attached
-to America, whence it has derived a few stray colonists, and
-has received the general character of its indigenous
-productions. Considering the small size of the islands, we feel
-the more astonished at the number of their aboriginal beings,
-and at their confined range. Seeing every height crowned
-with its crater, and the boundaries of most of the lava-
-streams still distinct, we are led to believe that within a
-period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was here
-spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be
-brought somewhat near to that great fact -- that mystery of
-mysteries -- the first appearance of new beings on this earth.
-
-Of terrestrial mammals, there is only one which must be
-considered as indigenous, namely, a mouse (Mus Galapagoensis),
-and this is confined, as far as I could ascertain, to
-Chatham Island, the most easterly island of the group. It
-belongs, as I am informed by Mr. Waterhouse, to a division
-of the family of mice characteristic of America. At James
-Island, there is a rat sufficiently distinct from the common
-kind to have been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse;
-but as it belongs to the old-world division of the family, and
-as this island has been frequented by ships for the last hundred
-and fifty years, I can hardly doubt that this rat is
-merely a variety produced by the new and peculiar climate,
-food, and soil, to which it has been subjected. Although no
-one has a right to speculate without distinct facts, yet even
-with respect to the Chatham Island mouse, it should be borne
-in mind, that it may possibly be an American species imported
-here; for I have seen, in a most unfrequented part of
-the Pampas, a native mouse living in the roof of a newly
-built hovel, and therefore its transportation in a vessel is
-not improbable: analogous facts have been observed by Dr.
-Richardson in North America.
-
-Of land-birds I obtained twenty-six kinds, all peculiar to
-the group and found nowhere else, with the exception of one
-lark-like finch from North America (Dolichonyx oryzivorus),
-which ranges on that continent as far north as 54 degs., and
-generally frequents marshes. The other twenty-five birds
-consist, firstly, of a hawk, curiously intermediate in structure
-between a buzzard and the American group of carrion-feeding
-Polybori; and with these latter birds it agrees most
-closely in every habit and even tone of voice. Secondly,
-there are two owls, representing the short-eared and white
-barn-owls of Europe. Thirdly, a wren, three tyrant-flycatchers
-(two of them species of Pyrocephalus, one or both of
-which would be ranked by some ornithologists as only varieties),
-and a dove -- all analogous to, but distinct from, American
-species. Fourthly, a swallow, which though differing
-from the Progne purpurea of both Americas, only in being
-rather duller colored, smaller, and slenderer, is considered
-by Mr. Gould as specifically distinct. Fifthly, there are three
-species of mocking thrush -- a form highly characteristic of
-America. The remaining land-birds form a most singular
-group of finches, related to each other in the structure of
-their beaks, short tails, form of body and plumage: there are
-thirteen species, which Mr. Gould has divided into four
-subgroups. All these species are peculiar to this archipelago;
-and so is the whole group, with the exception of one species
-of the sub-group Cactornis, lately brought from Bow Island,
-in the Low Archipelago. Of Cactornis, the two species may
-be often seen climbing about the flowers of the great cactus-
-trees; but all the other species of this group of finches,
-mingled together in flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground
-of the lower districts. The males of all, or certainly of the
-greater number, are jet black; and the females (with perhaps
-one or two exceptions) are brown. The most curious fact is
-the perfect gradation in the size of the beaks in the different
-species of Geospiza, from one as large as that of a hawfinch
-to that of a chaffinch, and (if Mr. Gould is right in including
-his sub-group, Certhidea, in the main group) even to
-that of a warbler. The largest beak in the genus Geospiza
-is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but instead of
-there being only one intermediate species, with a beak of
-the size shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species
-with insensibly graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group
-Certhidea, is shown in Fig. 4. The beak of Cactornis is
-
-
-[picture]
-
-1. Geospiza magnirostris. 2. Geospiza fortis.
-3. Geospiza parvula. 4. Certhidea olivasea.
-
-
-somewhat like that of a starling, and that of the fourth
-subgroup, Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped. Seeing this
-gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately
-related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an
-original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had
-been taken and modified for different ends. In a like manner
-it might be fancied that a bird originally a buzzard, had been
-induced here to undertake the office of the carrion-feeding
-Polybori of the American continent.
-
-Of waders and water-birds I was able to get only eleven
-kinds, and of these only three (including a rail confined to
-the damp summits of the islands) are new species. Considering
-the wandering habits of the gulls, I was surprised to
-find that the species inhabiting these islands is peculiar, but
-allied to one from the southern parts of South America.
-The far greater peculiarity of the land-birds, namely,
-twenty-five out of twenty-six, being new species, or at least
-new races, compared with the waders and web-footed birds, is
-in accordance with the greater range which these latter
-orders have in all parts of the world. We shall hereafter
-see this law of aquatic forms, whether marine or freshwater,
-being less peculiar at any given point of the earth's
-surface than the terrestrial forms of the same classes,
-strikingly illustrated in the shells, and in a lesser degree in
-the insects of this archipelago.
-
-Two of the waders are rather smaller than the same species
-brought from other places: the swallow is also smaller,
-though it is doubtful whether or not it is distinct from its
-analogue. The two owls, the two tyrant-catchers (Pyrocephalus)
-and the dove, are also smaller than the analogous
-but distinct species, to which they are most nearly related;
-on the other hand, the gull is rather larger. The two owls,
-the swallow, all three species of mocking-thrush, the dove
-in its separate colours though not in its whole plumage, the
-Totanus, and the gull, are likewise duskier coloured than
-their analogous species; and in the case of the mocking-
-thrush and Totanus, than any other species of the two genera.
-With the exception of a wren with a fine yellow breast,
-and of a tyrant-flycatcher with a scarlet tuft and breast, none
-of the birds are brilliantly coloured, as might have been
-expected in an equatorial district. Hence it would appear
-probable, that the same causes which here make the immigrants
-of some peculiar species smaller, make most of the
-peculiar Galapageian species also smaller, as well as very
-generally more dusky coloured. All the plants have a
-wretched, weedy appearance, and I did not see one beautiful
-flower. The insects, again, are small-sized and dull-coloured,
-and, as Mr. Waterhouse informs me, there is nothing in their
-general appearance which would have led him to imagine
-that they had come from under the equator. [1] The birds,
-plants, and insects have a desert character, and are not more
-brilliantly coloured than those from southern Patagonia; we
-may, therefore, conclude that the usual gaudy colouring of
-the inter-tropical productions, is not related either to the
-heat or light of those zones, but to some other cause, perhaps
-to the conditions of existence being generally favourable
-to life.
-
-
-We will now turn to the order of reptiles, which gives
-the most striking character to the zoology of these islands.
-The species are not numerous, but the numbers of individuals
-of each species are extraordinarily great. There is one
-small lizard belonging to a South American genus, and two
-species (and probably more) of the Amblyrhynchus -- a genus
-confined to the Galapagos Islands. There is one snake which
-is numerous; it is identical, as I am informed by M. Bibron,
-with the Psammophis Temminckii from Chile. [2] Of sea-
-turtle I believe there are more than one species, and of
-tortoises there are, as we shall presently show, two or three
-species or races. Of toads and frogs there are none: I was
-surprised at this, considering how well suited for them the
-temperate and damp upper woods appeared to be. It recalled
-to my mind the remark made by Bory St. Vincent, [3]
-namely, that none of this family are found on any of the
-volcanic islands in the great oceans. As far as I can ascertain
-from various works, this seems to hold good throughout the
-Pacific, and even in the large islands of the Sandwich
-archipelago. Mauritius offers an apparent exception, where I
-saw the Rana Mascariensis in abundance: this frog is said
-now to inhabit the Seychelles, Madagascar, and Bourbon;
-but on the other hand, Du Bois, in his voyage in 1669, states
-that there were no reptiles in Bourbon except tortoises; and
-the Officier du Roi asserts that before 1768 it had been
-attempted, without success, to introduce frogs into Mauritius
--- I presume for the purpose of eating: hence it may be well
-doubted whether this frog is an aboriginal of these islands.
-The absence of the frog family in the oceanic islands is the
-more remarkable, when contrasted with the case of lizards,
-which swarm on most of the smallest islands. May this difference
-not be caused, by the greater facility with which the
-eggs of lizards, protected by calcareous shells might be
-transported through salt-water, than could the slimy spawn
-of frogs?
-
-I will first describe the habits of the tortoise (Testudo
-nigra, formerly called Indica), which has been so frequently
-alluded to. These animals are found, I believe, on all the
-islands of the archipelago; certainly on the greater number.
-They frequent in preference the high damp parts, but they
-likewise live in the lower and arid districts. I have already
-shown, from the numbers which have been caught in a single
-day, how very numerous they must be. Some grow to an
-immense size: Mr. Lawson, an Englishman, and vice-governor
-of the colony, told us that he had seen several so large,
-that it required six or eight men to lift them from the
-ground; and that some had afforded as much as two hundred
-pounds of meat. The old males are the largest, the females
-rarely growing to so great a size: the male can readily be
-distinguished from the female by the greater length of its
-tail. The tortoises which live on those islands where there
-is no water, or in the lower and arid parts of the others, feed
-chiefly on the succulent cactus. Those which frequent the
-higher and damp regions, eat the leaves of various trees, a
-kind of berry (called guayavita) which is acid and austere,
-and likewise a pale green filamentous lichen (Usnera plicata),
-that hangs from the boughs of the trees.
-
-The tortoise is very fond of water, drinking large quantities,
-and wallowing in the mud. The larger islands alone
-possess springs, and these are always situated towards the
-central parts, and at a considerable height. The tortoises,
-therefore, which frequent the lower districts, when thirsty,
-are obliged to travel from a long distance. Hence broad and
-well-beaten paths branch off in every direction from the
-wells down to the sea-coast; and the Spaniards by following
-them up, first discovered the watering-places. When I landed
-at Chatham Island, I could not imagine what animal travelled
-so methodically along well-chosen tracks. Near the springs
-it was a curious spectacle to behold many of these huge
-creatures, one set eagerly travelling onwards with outstretched
-necks, and another set returning, after having
-drunk their fill. When the tortoise arrives at the spring,
-quite regardless of any spectator, he buries his head in the
-water above his eyes, and greedily swallows great mouthfuls,
-at the rate of about ten in a minute. The inhabitants say
-each animal stays three or four days in the neighbourhood
-of the water, and then returns to the lower country; but
-they differed respecting the frequency of these visits. The
-animal probably regulates them according to the nature of
-the food on which it has lived. It is, however, certain, that
-tortoises can subsist even on these islands where there is no
-other water than what falls during a few rainy days in the
-year.
-
-I believe it is well ascertained, that the bladder of the frog
-acts as a reservoir for the moisture necessary to its existence:
-such seems to be the case with the tortoise. For some
-time after a visit to the springs, their urinary bladders are
-distended with fluid, which is said gradually to decrease in
-volume, and to become less pure. The inhabitants, when
-walking in the lower district, and overcome with thirst, often
-take advantage of this circumstance, and drink the contents
-of the bladder if full: in one I saw killed, the fluid was quite
-limpid, and had only a very slightly bitter taste. The
-inhabitants, however, always first drink the water in the
-pericardium, which is described as being best.
-
-The tortoises, when purposely moving towards any point,
-travel by night and day, and arrive at their journey's end
-much sooner than would be expected. The inhabitants, from
-observing marked individuals, consider that they travel a
-distance of about eight miles in two or three days. One large
-tortoise, which I watched, walked at the rate of sixty yards
-in ten minutes, that is 360 yards in the hour, or four miles a
-day, -- allowing a little time for it to eat on the road. During
-the breeding season, when the male and female are together,
-the male utters a hoarse roar or bellowing, which, it is said,
-can be heard at the distance of more than a hundred yards.
-The female never uses her voice, and the male only at these
-times; so that when the people hear this noise, they know
-that the two are together. They were at this time (October)
-laying their eggs. The female, where the soil is sandy, deposits
-them together, and covers them up with sand; but
-where the ground is rocky she drops them indiscriminately
-in any hole: Mr. Bynoe found seven placed in a fissure. The
-egg is white and spherical; one which I measured was seven
-inches and three-eighths in circumference, and therefore
-larger than a hen's egg. The young tortoises, as soon as they
-are hatched, fall a prey in great numbers to the carrion-
-feeding buzzard. The old ones seem generally to die from
-accidents, as from falling down precipices: at least, several
-of the inhabitants told me, that they never found one dead
-without some evident cause.
-
-The inhabitants believe that these animals are absolutely
-deaf; certainly they do not overhear a person walking close
-behind them. I was always amused when overtaking one of
-these great monsters, as it was quietly pacing along, to see
-how suddenly, the instant I passed, it would draw in its head
-and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the ground with a
-heavy sound, as if struck dead. I frequently got on their
-backs, and then giving a few raps on the hinder part of their
-shells, they would rise up and walk away; -- but I found it
-very difficult to keep my balance. The flesh of this animal is
-largely employed, both fresh and salted; and a beautifully
-clear oil is prepared from the fat. When a tortoise is caught,
-the man makes a slit in the skin near its tail, so as to see
-inside its body, whether the fat under the dorsal plate is
-thick. If it is not, the animal is liberated and it is said to
-recover soon from this strange operation. In order to secure
-the tortoise, it is not sufficient to turn them like turtle, for
-they are often able to get on their legs again.
-
-There can be little doubt that this tortoise is an aboriginal
-inhabitant of the Galapagos; for it is found on all, or nearly
-all, the islands, even on some of the smaller ones where there
-is no water; had it been an imported species, this would
-hardly have been the case in a group which has been so little
-frequented. Moreover, the old Bucaniers found this tortoise
-in greater numbers even than at present: Wood and Rogers
-also, in 1708, say that it is the opinion of the Spaniards, that
-it is found nowhere else in this quarter of the world. It is
-now widely distributed; but it may be questioned whether
-it is in any other place an aboriginal. The bones of a tortoise
-at Mauritius, associated with those of the extinct Dodo,
-have generally been considered as belonging to this tortoise;
-if this had been so, undoubtedly it must have been there
-indigenous; but M. Bibron informs me that he believes that
-it was distinct, as the species now living there certainly is.
-
-The Amblyrhynchus, a remarkable genus of lizards, is confined
-to this archipelago; there are two species, resembling
-
-[picture]
-
-each other in general form, one being terrestrial and the
-other aquatic. This latter species (A. cristatus) was first
-characterized by Mr. Bell, who well foresaw, from its short,
-broad head, and strong claws of equal length, that its habits
-of life would turn out very peculiar, and different from those
-of its nearest ally, the Iguana. It is extremely common on all
-the islands throughout the group, and lives exclusively on the
-rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I never saw
-one, even ten yards in-shore. It is a hideous-looking creature,
-of a dirty black colour, stupid, and sluggish in its movements.
-The usual length of a full-grown one is about a yard,
-but there are some even four feet long; a large one weighed
-twenty pounds: on the island of Albemarle they seem to
-grow to a greater size than elsewhere. Their tails are flattened
-sideways, and all four feet partially webbed. They are
-occasionally seen some hundred yards from the shore,
-swimming about; and Captain Collnett, in his Voyage says,
-"They go to sea in herds a-fishing, and sun themselves on
-the rocks; and may be called alligators in miniature." It
-must not, however, be supposed that they live on fish. When
-in the water this lizard swims with perfect ease and quickness,
-by a serpentine movement of its body and flattened tail
--- the legs being motionless and closely collapsed on its sides.
-A seaman on board sank one, with a heavy weight attached
-to it, thinking thus to kill it directly; but when, an hour
-afterwards, he drew up the line, it was quite active. Their
-limbs and strong claws are admirably adapted for crawling over
-the rugged and fissured masses of lava, which everywhere form
-the coast. In such situations, a group of six or seven of
-these hideous reptiles may oftentimes be seen on the black
-rocks, a few feet above the surf, basking in the sun with
-outstretched legs.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them largely
-distended with minced sea-weed (Ulvae), which grows in
-thin foliaceous expansions of a bright green or a dull red
-colour. I do not recollect having observed this sea-weed in
-any quantity on the tidal rocks; and I have reason to believe
-it grows at the bottom of the sea, at some little distance from
-the coast. If such be the case, the object of these animals
-occasionally going out to sea is explained. The stomach
-contained nothing but the sea-weed. Mr. Baynoe, however, found
-a piece of crab in one; but this might have got in accidentally,
-in the same manner as I have seen a caterpillar, in
-the midst of some lichen, in the paunch of a tortoise. The
-intestines were large, as in other herbivorous animals. The
-nature of this lizard's food, as well as the structure of its
-tail and feet, and the fact of its having been seen voluntarily
-swimming out at sea, absolutely prove its aquatic habits;
-yet there is in this respect one strange anomaly, namely, that
-when frightened it will not enter the water. Hence it is
-easy to drive these lizards down to any little point overhanging
-the sea, where they will sooner allow a person to catch
-hold of their tails than jump into the water. They do not
-seem to have any notion of biting; but when much frightened
-they squirt a drop of fluid from each nostril. I threw one
-several times as far as I could, into a deep pool left by the
-retiring tide; but it invariably returned in a direct line to
-the spot where I stood. It swam near the bottom, with a
-very graceful and rapid movement, and occasionally aided
-itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As soon as it
-arrived near the edge, but still being under water, it tried to
-conceal itself in the tufts of sea-weed, or it entered some
-crevice. As soon as it thought the danger was past, it
-crawled out on the dry rocks, and shuffled away as quickly
-as it could. I several times caught this same lizard, by driving
-it down to a point, and though possessed of such perfect
-powers of diving and swimming, nothing would induce it to
-enter the water; and as often as I threw it in, it returned in
-the manner above described. Perhaps this singular piece of
-apparent stupidity may be accounted for by the circumstance,
-that this reptile has no enemy whatever on shore,
-whereas at sea it must often fall a prey to the numerous
-sharks. Hence, probably, urged by a fixed and hereditary
-instinct that the shore is its place of safety, whatever the
-emergency may be, it there takes refuge.
-
-During our visit (in October), I saw extremely few small
-individuals of this species, and none I should think under
-a year old. From this circumstance it seems probable that
-the breeding season had not then commenced. I asked several
-of the inhabitants if they knew where it laid its eggs:
-they said that they knew nothing of its propagation, although
-well acquainted with the eggs of the land kind -- a fact,
-considering how very common this lizard is, not a little
-extraordinary.
-
-We will now turn to the terrestrial species (A. Demarlii),
-with a round tail, and toes without webs. This lizard,
-instead of being found like the other on all the islands, is
-confined to the central part of the archipelago, namely to
-Albemarle, James, Barrington, and Indefatigable islands. To
-the southward, in Charles, Hood, and Chatham islands, and
-to the northward, in Towers, Bindloes, and Abingdon, I
-neither saw nor heard of any. It would appear as if it had
-been created in the centre of the archipelago, and thence had
-been dispersed only to a certain distance. Some of these
-lizards inhabit the high and damp parts of the islands, but
-they are much more numerous in the lower and sterile
-districts near the coast. I cannot give a more forcible proof
-of their numbers, than by stating that when we were left at
-James Island, we could not for some time find a spot free
-from their burrows on which to pitch our single tent. Like
-their brothers the sea-kind, they are ugly animals, of a
-yellowish orange beneath, and of a brownish red colour above:
-from their low facial angle they have a singularly stupid
-appearance. They are, perhaps, of a rather less size than the
-marine species; but several of them weighed between ten and
-fifteen pounds. In their movements they are lazy and half
-torpid. When not frightened, they slowly crawl along with
-their tails and bellies dragging on the ground. They often
-stop, and doze for a minute or two, with closed eyes and hind
-legs spread out on the parched soil.
-
-They inhabit burrows, which they sometimes make between
-fragments of lava, but more generally on level patches of the
-soft sandstone-like tuff. The holes do not appear to be very
-deep, and they enter the ground at a small angle; so that
-when walking over these lizard-warrens, the soil is constantly
-giving way, much to the annoyance of the tired walker. This
-animal, when making its burrow, works alternately the opposite
-sides of its body. One front leg for a short time
-scratches up the soil, and throws it towards the hind foot,
-which is well placed so as to heave it beyond the mouth of
-the hole. That side of the body being tired, the other takes
-up the task, and so on alternately. I watched one for a long
-time, till half its body was buried; I then walked up and pulled
-it by the tail, at this it was greatly astonished, and soon
-shuffled up to see what was the matter; and then stared me
-in the face, as much as to say, "What made you pull my
-tail?"
-
-They feed by day, and do not wander far from their burrows;
-if frightened, they rush to them with a most awkward
-gait. Except when running down hill, they cannot move
-very fast, apparently from the lateral position of their legs.
-They are not at all timorous: when attentively watching any
-one, they curl their tails, and, raising themselves on their
-front legs, nod their heads vertically, with a quick movement,
-and try to look very fierce; but in reality they are not at all
-so: if one just stamps on the ground, down go their tails,
-and off they shuffle as quickly as they can. I have frequently
-observed small fly-eating lizards, when watching anything,
-nod their heads in precisely the same manner; but I do not
-at all know for what purpose. If this Amblyrhynchus is held
-and plagued with a stick, it will bite it very severely; but
-I caught many by the tail, and they never tried to bite me.
-If two are placed on the ground and held together, they will
-fight, and bite each other till blood is drawn.
-
-The individuals, and they are the greater number, which
-inhabit the lower country, can scarcely taste a drop of water
-throughout the year; but they consume much of the succulent
-cactus, the branches of which are occasionally broken off
-by the wind. I several times threw a piece to two or three
-of them when together; and it was amusing enough to see
-them trying to seize and carry it away in their mouths, like
-so many hungry dogs with a bone. They eat very deliberately,
-but do not chew their food. The little birds are aware
-how harmless these creatures are: I have seen one of the
-thick-billed finches picking at one end of a piece of cactus
-(which is much relished by all the animals of the lower
-region), whilst a lizard was eating at the other end; and
-afterwards the little bird with the utmost indifference hopped
-on the back of the reptile.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them full of
-vegetable fibres and leaves of different trees, especially of
-an acacia. In the upper region they live chiefly on the acid
-and astringent berries of the guayavita, under which trees
-I have seen these lizards and the huge tortoises feeding
-together. To obtain the acacia-leaves they crawl up the low
-stunted trees; and it is not uncommon to see a pair quietly
-browsing, whilst seated on a branch several feet above the
-ground. These lizards, when cooked, yield a white meat,
-which is liked by those whose stomachs soar above all
-prejudices.
-
-Humboldt has remarked that in intertropical South
-America, all lizards which inhabit dry regions are esteemed
-delicacies for the table. The inhabitants state that those
-which inhabit the upper damp parts drink water, but that
-the others do not, like the tortoises, travel up for it from
-the lower sterile country. At the time of our visit, the
-females had within their bodies numerous, large, elongated
-eggs, which they lay in their burrows: the inhabitants seek
-them for food.
-
-These two species of Amblyrhynchus agree, as I have
-already stated, in their general structure, and in many of
-their habits. Neither have that rapid movement, so
-characteristic of the genera Lacerta and Iguana. They are both
-herbivorous, although the kind of vegetation on which they
-feed is so very different. Mr. Bell has given the name to the
-genus from the shortness of the snout: indeed, the form of
-the mouth may almost be compared to that of the tortoise:
-one is led to suppose that this is an adaptation to their
-herbivorous appetites. It is very interesting thus to find a
-well-characterized genus, having its marine and terrestrial
-species, belonging to so confined a portion of the world. The
-aquatic species is by far the most remarkable, because it is
-the only existing lizard which lives on marine vegetable
-productions. As I at first observed, these islands are not so
-remarkable for the number of the species of reptiles, as for
-that of the individuals, when we remember the well-beaten
-paths made by the thousands of huge tortoises -- the many
-turtles -- the great warrens of the terrestrial Amblyrhynchus
--- and the groups of the marine species basking on the coast-
-rocks of every island -- we must admit that there is no other
-quarter of the world where this Order replaces the herbivorous
-mammalia in so extraordinary a manner. The geologist
-on hearing this will probably refer back in his mind to the
-Secondary epochs, when lizards, some herbivorous, some
-carnivorous, and of dimensions comparable only with our
-existing whales, swarmed on the land and in the sea. It is,
-therefore, worthy of his observation, that this archipelago,
-instead of possessing a humid climate and rank vegetation,
-cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and, for
-an equatorial region, remarkably temperate.
-
-To finish with the zoology: the fifteen kinds of sea-fish
-which I procured here are all new species; they belong to
-twelve genera, all widely distributed, with the exception of
-Prionotus, of which the four previously known species live
-on the eastern side of America. Of land-shells I collected
-sixteen kinds (and two marked varieties, of which, with the
-exception of one Helix found at Tahiti, all are peculiar to
-this archipelago: a single fresh-water shell (Paludina) is
-common to Tahiti and Van Diemen's Land. Mr. Cuming,
-before our voyage procured here ninety species of sea-shells,
-and this does not include several species not yet specifically
-examined, of Trochus, Turbo, Monodonta, and Nassa. He
-has been kind enough to give me the following interesting
-results: Of the ninety shells, no less than forty-seven are
-unknown elsewhere -- a wonderful fact, considering how
-widely distributed sea-shells generally are. Of the forty-
-three shells found in other parts of the world, twenty-five
-inhabit the western coast of America, and of these eight are
-distinguishable as varieties; the remaining eighteen (including
-one variety) were found by Mr. Cuming in the Low
-Archipelago, and some of them also at the Philippines. This
-fact of shells from islands in the central parts of the Pacific
-occurring here, deserves notice, for not one single sea-shell is
-known to be common to the islands of that ocean and to the
-west coast of America. The space of open sea running north
-and south off the west coast, separates two quite distinct
-conchological provinces; but at the Galapagos Archipelago
-we have a halting-place, where many new forms have been
-created, and whither these two great conchological provinces
-have each sent up several colonists. The American province
-has also sent here representative species; for there is a
-Galapageian species of Monoceros, a genus only found on the
-west coast of America; and there are Galapageian species
-of Fissurella and Cancellaria, genera common on the west
-coast, but not found (as I am informed by Mr. Cuming) in
-the central islands of the Pacific. On the other hand, there
-are Galapageian species of Oniscia and Stylifer, genera common
-to the West Indies and to the Chinese and Indian seas,
-but not found either on the west coast of America or in the
-central Pacific. I may here add, that after the comparison
-by Messrs. Cuming and Hinds of about 2000 shells from
-the eastern and western coasts of America, only one single
-shell was found in common, namely, the Purpura patula,
-which inhabits the West Indies, the coast of Panama,
-and the Galapagos. We have, therefore, in this quarter
-of the world, three great conchological sea-provinces, quite
-distinct, though surprisingly near each other, being separated
-by long north and south spaces either of land or of
-open sea.
-
-I took great pains in collecting the insects, but excepting
-Tierra del Fuego, I never saw in this respect so poor a country.
-Even in the upper and damp region I procured very few,
-excepting some minute Diptera and Hymenoptera, mostly of
-common mundane forms. As before remarked, the insects,
-for a tropical region, are of very small size and dull colours.
-Of beetles I collected twenty-five species (excluding a
-Dermestes and Corynetes imported, wherever a ship touches);
-of these, two belong to the Harpalidae, two to the
-Hydrophilidae, nine to three families of the Heteromera, and the
-remaining twelve to as many different families. This
-circumstance of insects (and I may add plants), where few in
-number, belonging to many different families, is, I believe,
-very general. Mr. Waterhouse, who has published [4] an
-account of the insects of this archipelago, and to whom I am
-indebted for the above details, informs me that there are
-several new genera: and that of the genera not new, one
-or two are American, and the rest of mundane distribution.
-With the exception of a wood-feeding Apate, and of one or
-probably two water-beetles from the American continent,
-all the species appear to be new.
-
-The botany of this group is fully as interesting as the
-zoology. Dr. J. Hooker will soon publish in the "Linnean
-Transactions" a full account of the Flora, and I am much
-indebted to him for the following details. Of flowering
-plants there are, as far as at present is known, 185 species,
-and 40 cryptogamic species, making altogether 225; of this
-number I was fortunate enough to bring home 193. Of the
-flowering plants, 100 are new species, and are probably confined
-to this archipelago. Dr. Hooker conceives that, of the
-plants not so confined, at least 10 species found near the
-cultivated ground at Charles Island, have been imported.
-It is, I think, surprising that more American species have
-not been introduced naturally, considering that the distance
-is only between 500 and 600 miles from the continent, and
-that (according to Collnet, p. 58) drift-wood, bamboos, canes,
-and the nuts of a palm, are often washed on the south-eastern
-shores. The proportion of 100 flowering plants out of 183
-(or 175 excluding the imported weeds) being new, is sufficient,
-I conceive, to make the Galapagos Archipelago a distinct
-botanical province; but this Flora is not nearly so
-peculiar as that of St. Helena, nor, as I am informed by
-Dr. Hooker, of Juan Fernandez. The peculiarity of the
-Galapageian Flora is best shown in certain families; -- thus
-there are 21 species of Compositae, of which 20 are peculiar
-to this archipelago; these belong to twelve genera, and of
-these genera no less than ten are confined to the archipelago!
-Dr. Hooker informs me that the Flora has an undoubtedly
-Western American character; nor can he detect in it any
-affinity with that of the Pacific. If, therefore, we except the
-eighteen marine, the one fresh-water, and one land-shell,
-which have apparently come here as colonists from the
-central islands of the Pacific, and likewise the one distinct
-Pacific species of the Galapageian group of finches, we see
-that this archipelago, though standing in the Pacific Ocean,
-is zoologically part of America.
-
-If this character were owing merely to immigrants from
-America, there would be little remarkable in it; but we see
-that a vast majority of all the land animals, and that more
-than half of the flowering plants, are aboriginal productions
-It was most striking to be surrounded by new birds, new
-reptiles, new shells, new insects, new plants, and yet by
-innumerable trifling details of structure, and even by the tones
-of voice and plumage of the birds, to have the temperate plains
-of Patagonia, or rather the hot dry deserts of Northern Chile,
-vividly brought before my eyes. Why, on these small points
-of land, which within a late geological period must have
-been covered by the ocean, which are formed by basaltic lava,
-and therefore differ in geological character from the American
-continent, and which are placed under a peculiar climate,
--- why were their aboriginal inhabitants, associated, I may
-add, in different proportions both in kind and number from
-those on the continent, and therefore acting on each other
-in a different manner -- why were they created on American
-types of organization? It is probable that the islands of the
-Cape de Verd group resemble, in all their physical conditions,
-far more closely the Galapagos Islands, than these latter
-physically resemble the coast of America, yet the aboriginal
-inhabitants of the two groups are totally unlike; those of the
-Cape de Verd Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as
-the inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped
-with that of America
-
-
-I have not as yet noticed by far the most remarkable feature
-in the natural history of this archipelago; it is, that
-the different islands to a considerable extent are inhabited by
-a different set of beings. My attention was first called to
-this fact by the Vice-Governor, Mr. Lawson, declaring that
-the tortoises differed from the different islands, and that he
-could with certainty tell from which island any one was
-brought. I did not for some time pay sufficient attention
-to this statement, and I had already partially mingled together
-the collections from two of the islands. I never
-dreamed that islands, about 50 or 60 miles apart, and most of
-them in sight of each other, formed of precisely the same
-rocks, placed under a quite similar climate, rising to a nearly
-equal height, would have been differently tenanted; but we
-shall soon see that this is the case. It is the fate of most
-voyagers, no sooner to discover what is most interesting in
-any locality, than they are hurried from it; but I ought,
-perhaps, to be thankful that I obtained sufficient materials to
-establish this most remarkable fact in the distribution of
-organic beings.
-
-The inhabitants, as I have said, state that they can distinguish
-the tortoises from the different islands; and that
-they differ not only in size, but in other characters. Captain
-Porter has described [5] those from Charles and from the nearest
-island to it, namely, Hood Island, as having their shells
-in front thick and turned up like a Spanish saddle, whilst
-the tortoises from James Island are rounder, blacker, and
-have a better taste when cooked. M. Bibron, moreover,
-informs me that he has seen what he considers two distinct
-species of tortoise from the Galapagos, but he does not know
-from which islands. The specimens that I brought from
-three islands were young ones: and probably owing to this
-cause neither Mr. Gray nor myself could find in them any
-specific differences. I have remarked that the marine
-Amblyrhynchus was larger at Albemarle Island than elsewhere;
-and M. Bibron informs me that he has seen two distinct
-aquatic species of this genus; so that the different
-islands probably have their representative species or races
-of the Amblyrhynchus, as well as of the tortoise. My attention
-was first thoroughly aroused, by comparing together
-the numerous specimens, shot by myself and several other
-parties on board, of the mocking-thrushes, when, to my
-astonishment, I discovered that all those from Charles Island
-belonged to one species (Mimus trifasciatus) all from
-Albemarle Island to M. parvulus; and all from James and
-Chatham Islands (between which two other islands are situated,
-as connecting links) belonged to M. melanotis. These
-two latter species are closely allied, and would by some
-ornithologists be considered as only well-marked races or
-varieties; but the Mimus trifasciatus is very distinct.
-Unfortunately most of the specimens of the finch tribe were
-mingled together; but I have strong reasons to suspect that
-some of the species of the sub-group Geospiza are confined
-to separate islands. If the different islands have their
-representatives of Geospiza, it may help to explain the
-singularly large number of the species of this sub-group in this
-one small archipelago, and as a probable consequence of their
-numbers, the perfectly graduated series in the size of their
-beaks. Two species of the sub-group Cactornis, and two of
-the Camarhynchus, were procured in the archipelago; and
-of the numerous specimens of these two sub-groups shot by
-four collectors at James Island, all were found to belong to
-one species of each; whereas the numerous specimens shot
-either on Chatham or Charles Island (for the two sets were
-mingled together) all belonged to the two other species:
-hence we may feel almost sure that these islands possess
-their respective species of these two sub-groups. In land-
-shells this law of distribution does not appear to hold good.
-In my very small collection of insects, Mr. Waterhouse
-remarks, that of those which were ticketed with their locality,
-not one was common to any two of the islands.
-
-If we now turn to the Flora, we shall find the aboriginal
-plants of the different islands wonderfully different. I give
-all the following results on the high authority of my friend
-Dr. J. Hooker. I may premise that I indiscriminately collected
-everything in flower on the different islands, and fortunately
-kept my collections separate. Too much confidence,
-however, must not be placed in the proportional results, as
-the small collections brought home by some other naturalists
-though in some respects confirming the results, plainly show
-that much remains to be done in the botany of this group:
-the Leguminosae, moreover, has as yet been only approximately
-worked out: --
-
-----------------------------------------------------------------
- Number of
- Species
- confined
- to the
- Number of Number of Galapagos
- species species Number Archipelago
- Total found in confined confined but found
-Name Number other to the to the on more
-of of parts of Galapagos one than the
-Island Species the world Archipelago island one island
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-James 71 33 38 30 8
-Albemarle 4 18 26 22 4
-Chatham 32 16 16 12 4
-Charles 68 39 29 21 8
- (or 29, if
- the probably
- imported
- plants be
- subtracted.)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Hence we have the truly wonderful fact, that in James
-Island, of the thirty-eight Galapageian plants, or those found
-in no other part of the world, thirty are exclusively confined
-to this one island; and in Albemarle Island, of the twenty-
-six aboriginal Galapageian plants, twenty-two are confined
-to this one island, that is, only four are at present known to
-grow in the other islands of the archipelago; and so on, as
-shown in the above table, with the plants from Chatham and
-Charles Islands. This fact will, perhaps, be rendered even
-more striking, by giving a few illustrations: -- thus, Scalesia,
-a remarkable arborescent genus of the Compositae, is confined
-to the archipelago: it has six species: one from Chatham,
-one from Albemarle, one from Charles Island, two from
-James Island, and the sixth from one of the three latter
-islands, but it is not known from which: not one of these six
-species grows on any two islands. Again, Euphorbia, a mundane
-or widely distributed genus, has here eight species, of
-which seven are confined to the archipelago, and not one
-found on any two islands: Acalypha and Borreria, both mundane
-genera, have respectively six and seven species, none
-of which have the same species on two islands, with the
-exception of one Borreria, which does occur on two islands.
-The species of the Compositae are particularly local; and Dr.
-Hooker has furnished me with several other most striking
-illustrations of the difference of the species on the different
-islands. He remarks that this law of distribution holds good
-both with those genera confined to the archipelago, and those
-distributed in other quarters of the world: in like manner
-we have seen that the different islands have their proper
-species of the mundane genus of tortoise, and of the widely
-distributed American genus of the mocking-thrush, as well
-as of two of the Galapageian sub-groups of finches, and
-almost certainly of the Galapageian genus Amblyrhynchus.
-
-The distribution of the tenants of this archipelago would
-not be nearly so wonderful, if, for instance, one island had
-a mocking-thrush, and a second island some other quite distinct
-genus, -- if one island had its genus of lizard, and a
-second island another distinct genus, or none whatever; -- or
-if the different islands were inhabited, not by representative
-species of the same genera of plants, but by totally different
-genera, as does to a certain extent hold good: for, to give
-one instance, a large berry-bearing tree at James Island has
-no representative species in Charles Island. But it is the
-circumstance, that several of the islands possess their own
-species of the tortoise, mocking-thrush, finches, and numerous
-plants, these species having the same general habits,
-occupying analogous situations, and obviously filling the
-same place in the natural economy of this archipelago, that
-strikes me with wonder. It may be suspected that some of
-these representative species, at least in the case of the
-tortoise and of some of the birds, may hereafter prove to be
-only well-marked races; but this would be of equally great
-interest to the philosophical naturalist. I have said that most
-of the islands are in sight of each other: I may specify that
-Charles Island is fifty miles from the nearest part of Chatham
-Island, and thirty-three miles from the nearest part of
-Albemarle Island. Chatham Island is sixty miles from the
-nearest part of James Island, but there are two intermediate
-islands between them which were not visited by me. James
-Island is only ten miles from the nearest part of Albemarle
-Island, but the two points where the collections were made
-are thirty-two miles apart. I must repeat, that neither the
-nature of the soil, nor height of the land, nor the climate,
-nor the general character of the associated beings, and
-therefore their action one on another, can differ much in the
-different islands. If there be any sensible difference in their
-climates, it must be between the Windward group (namely,
-Charles and Chatham Islands), and that to leeward; but
-there seems to be no corresponding difference in the productions
-of these two halves of the archipelago.
-
-The only light which I can throw on this remarkable difference
-in the inhabitants of the different islands, is, that
-very strong currents of the sea running in a westerly and
-W.N.W. direction must separate, as far as transportal by the
-sea is concerned, the southern islands from the northern
-ones; and between these northern islands a strong N.W. current
-was observed, which must effectually separate James
-and Albemarle Islands. As the archipelago is free to a
-most remarkable degree from gales of wind, neither the
-birds, insects, nor lighter seeds, would be blown from island
-to island. And lastly, the profound depth of the ocean between
-the islands, and their apparently recent (in a geological
-sense) volcanic origin, render it highly unlikely that they
-were ever united; and this, probably, is a far more important
-consideration than any other, with respect to the geographical
-distribution of their inhabitants. Reviewing the facts
-here given, one is astonished at the amount of creative force,
-if such an expression may be used, displayed on these small,
-barren, and rocky islands; and still more so, at its diverse
-yet analogous action on points so near each other. I have
-said that the Galapagos Archipelago might be called a satellite
-attached to America, but it should rather be called a
-group of satellites, physically similar, organically distinct,
-yet intimately related to each other, and all related in a
-marked, though much lesser degree, to the great American
-continent.
-
-I will conclude my description of the natural history of
-these islands, by giving an account of the extreme tameness
-of the birds.
-
-This disposition is common to all the terrestrial species;
-namely, to the mocking-thrushes, the finches, wrens, tyrant-
-flycatchers, the dove, and carrion-buzzard. All of them are
-often approached sufficiently near to be killed with a switch,
-and sometimes, as I myself tried, with a cap or hat. A gun
-is here almost superfluous; for with the muzzle I pushed a
-hawk off the branch of a tree. One day, whilst lying down,
-a mocking-thrush alighted on the edge of a pitcher, made of
-the shell of a tortoise, which I held in my hand, and began
-very quietly to sip the water; it allowed me to lift it from
-the ground whilst seated on the vessel: I often tried, and
-very nearly succeeded, in catching these birds by their legs.
-Formerly the birds appear to have been even tamer than at
-present. Cowley (in the year 1684) says that the "Turtledoves
-were so tame, that they would often alight on our hats
-and arms, so as that we could take them alive, they not fearing
-man, until such time as some of our company did fire at
-them, whereby they were rendered more shy." Dampier
-also, in the same year, says that a man in a morning's walk
-might kill six or seven dozen of these doves. At present,
-although certainly very tame, they do not alight on people's
-arms, nor do they suffer themselves to be killed in such large
-numbers. It is surprising that they have not become wilder;
-for these islands during the last hundred and fifty years have
-been frequently visited by bucaniers and whalers; and the
-sailors, wandering through the wood in search of tortoises,
-always take cruel delight in knocking down the little birds.
-These birds, although now still more persecuted, do not
-readily become wild. In Charles Island, which had then
-been colonized about six years, I saw a boy sitting by a well
-with a switch in his hand, with which he killed the doves
-and finches as they came to drink. He had already procured
-a little heap of them for his dinner, and he said that he had
-constantly been in the habit of waiting by this well for the
-same purpose. It would appear that the birds of this
-archipelago, not having as yet learnt that man is a more
-dangerous animal than the tortoise or the Amblyrhynchus,
-disregard him, in the same manner as in England shy birds, such
-as magpies, disregard the cows and horses grazing in our fields.
-
-The Falkland Islands offer a second instance of birds
-with a similar disposition. The extraordinary tameness of
-the little Opetiorhynchus has been remarked by Pernety,
-Lesson, and other voyagers. It is not, however, peculiar to
-that bird: the Polyborus, snipe, upland and lowland goose,
-thrush, bunting, and even some true hawks, are all more or
-less tame. As the birds are so tame there, where foxes,
-hawks, and owls occur, we may infer that the absence of all
-rapacious animals at the Galapagos, is not the cause of their
-tameness here. The upland geese at the Falklands show, by
-the precaution they take in building on the islets, that they
-are aware of their danger from the foxes; but they are not
-by this rendered wild towards man. This tameness of the
-birds, especially of the waterfowl, is strongly contrasted with
-the habits of the same species in Tierra del Fuego, where for
-ages past they have been persecuted by the wild inhabitants.
-In the Falklands, the sportsman may sometimes kill more
-of the upland geese in one day than he can carry home;
-whereas in Tierra del Fuego it is nearly as difficult to kill
-one, as it is in England to shoot the common wild goose.
-
-In the time of Pernety (1763), all the birds there appear
-to have been much tamer than at present; he states that the
-Opetiorhynchus would almost perch on his finger; and that
-with a wand he killed ten in half an hour. At that period
-the birds must have been about as tame as they now are at
-the Galapagos. They appear to have learnt caution more
-slowly at these latter islands than at the Falklands, where
-they have had proportionate means of experience; for besides
-frequent visits from vessels, those islands have been at
-intervals colonized during the entire period. Even formerly,
-when all the birds were so tame, it was impossible by Pernety's
-account to kill the black-necked swan -- a bird of
-passage, which probably brought with it the wisdom learnt
-in foreign countries.
-
-I may add that, according to Du Bois, all the birds at
-Bourbon in 1571-72, with the exception of the flamingoes
-and geese, were so extremely tame, that they could be caught
-by the hand, or killed in any number with a stick. Again,
-at Tristan d'Acunha in the Atlantic, Carmichael [6] states that
-the only two land-birds, a thrush and a bunting, were "so
-tame as to suffer themselves to be caught with a hand-net."
-From these several facts we may, I think, conclude, first, that
-the wildness of birds with regard to man, is a particular
-instinct directed against _him_, and not dependent upon any
-general degree of caution arising from other sources of
-danger; secondly, that it is not acquired by individual birds
-in a short time, even when much persecuted; but that in the
-course of successive generations it becomes hereditary. With
-domesticated animals we are accustomed to see new mental
-habits or instincts acquired or rendered hereditary; but with
-animals in a state of nature, it must always be most difficult
-to discover instances of acquired hereditary knowledge. In
-regard to the wildness of birds towards man, there is no way
-of accounting for it, except as an inherited habit:
-comparatively few young birds, in any one year, have been
-injured by man in England, yet almost all, even nestlings, are
-afraid of him; many individuals, on the other hand, both at the
-Galapagos and at the Falklands, have been pursued and
-injured by man, yet have not learned a salutary dread of
-him. We may infer from these facts, what havoc the introduction
-of any new beast of prey must cause in a country,
-before the instincts of the indigenous inhabitants have
-become adapted to the stranger's craft or power.
-
-[1] The progress of research has shown that some of these birds,
-which were then thought to be confined to the islands, occur on
-the American continent. The eminent ornithologist, Mr. Sclater,
-informs me that this is the case with the Strix punctatissima
-and Pyrocephalus nanus; and probably with the Otus Galapagoensis
-and Zenaida Galapagoensis: so that the number of endemic birds
-is reduced to twenty-three, or probably to twenty-one. Mr.
-Sclater thinks that one or two of these endemic forms should be
-ranked rather as varieties than species, which always seemed to
-me probable.
-
-[2] This is stated by Dr. Gunther (Zoolog. Soc. Jan 24th,
-1859) to be a peculiar species, not known to inhabit any other
-country.
-
-[3] Voyage aux Quatre Iles d'Afrique. With respect to the
-Sandwich Islands, see Tyerman and Bennett's Journal, vol. i.
-p. 434. For Mauritius, see Voyage par un Officier, etc.,
-part i. p. 170. There are no frogs in the Canary Islands
-(Webb et Berthelot, Hist. Nat. des Iles Canaries). I saw
-none at St. Jago in the Cape de Verds. There are none at
-St. Helena.
-
-[4] Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 19.
-
-[5] Voyage in the U. S. ship Essex, vol. i. p. 215.
-
-[6] Linn. Trans., vol. xii. p. 496. The most anomalous fact on
-this subject which I have met with is the wildness of the small
-birds in the Arctic parts of North America (as described by
-Richardson, Fauna Bor., vol. ii. p. 332), where they are said
-never to be persecuted. This case is the more strange, because
-it is asserted that some of the same species in their winter-
-quarters in the United States are tame. There is much, as Dr.
-Richardson well remarks, utterly inexplicable connected with the
-different degrees of shyness and care with which birds conceal
-their nests. How strange it is that the English wood-pigeon,
-generally so wild a bird, should very frequently rear its young
-in shrubberies close to houses!
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
-
-Pass through the Low Archipelago -- Tahiti -- Aspect --
-Vegetation on the Mountains -- View of Eimeo -- Excursion into
-the Interior -- Profound Ravines -- Succession of Waterfalls --
-Number of wild useful Plants -- Temperance of the Inhabitants --
-Their moral state -- Parliament convened -- New Zealand -- Bay
-of Islands -- Hippahs -- Excursion to Waimate -- Missionary
-Establishment -- English Weeds now run wild -- Waiomio --
-Funeral of a New Zealand Woman -- Sail for Australia.
-
-
-OCTOBER 20th. -- The survey of the Galapagos Archipelago
-being concluded, we steered towards Tahiti
-and commenced our long passage of 3200 miles. In
-the course of a few days we sailed out of the gloomy and
-clouded ocean-district which extends during the winter far
-from the coast of South America. We then enjoyed bright
-and clear weather, while running pleasantly along at the
-rate of 150 or 160 miles a day before the steady trade-wind.
-The temperature in this more central part of the Pacific is
-higher than near the American shore. The thermometer in
-the poop cabin, by night and day, ranged between 80 and
-83 degs., which feels very pleasant; but with one degree or two
-higher, the heat becomes oppressive. We passed through
-the Low or Dangerous Archipelago, and saw several of
-those most curious rings of coral land, just rising above the
-water's edge, which have been called Lagoon Islands. A
-long and brilliantly white beach is capped by a margin of
-green vegetation; and the strip, looking either way, rapidly
-narrows away in the distance, and sinks beneath the horizon
-From the mast-head a wide expanse of smooth water can be
-seen within the ring. These low hollow coral islands bear
-no proportion to the vast ocean out of which they abruptly
-rise; and it seems wonderful, that such weak invaders are
-not overwhelmed, by the all-powerful and never-tiring waves
-of that great sea, miscalled the Pacific.
-
-November 15th. -- At daylight, Tahiti, an island which
-must for ever remain classical to the voyager in the South
-Sea, was in view. At a distance the appearance was not
-attractive. The luxuriant vegetation of the lower part could
-not yet be seen, and as the clouds rolled past, the wildest
-and most precipitous peaks showed themselves towards the
-centre of the island. As soon as we anchored in Matavai
-Bay, we were surrounded by canoes. This was our Sunday,
-but the Monday of Tahiti: if the case had been reversed,
-we should not have received a single visit; for the injunction
-not to launch a canoe on the sabbath is rigidly obeyed.
-After dinner we landed to enjoy all the delights produced
-by the first impressions of a new country, and that country
-the charming Tahiti. A crowd of men, women, and children,
-was collected on the memorable Point Venus, ready to
-receive us with laughing, merry faces. They marshalled
-us towards the house of Mr. Wilson, the missionary of the
-district, who met us on the road, and gave us a very friendly
-reception. After sitting a very short time in his house, we
-separated to walk about, but returned there in the evening.
-
-The land capable of cultivation, is scarcely in any part
-more than a fringe of low alluvial soil, accumulated round
-the base of the mountains, and protected from the waves of
-the sea by a coral reef, which encircles the entire line of
-coast. Within the reef there is an expanse of smooth water,
-like that of a lake, where the canoes of the natives can ply
-with safety and where ships anchor. The low land which
-comes down to the beach of coral-sand, is covered by the
-most beautiful productions of the intertropical regions. In
-the midst of bananas, orange, cocoa-nut, and bread-fruit
-trees, spots are cleared where yams, sweet potatoes, and
-sugar-cane, and pine-apples are cultivated. Even the brush-wood
-is an imported fruit-tree, namely, the guava, which
-from its abundance has become as noxious as a weed. In
-Brazil I have often admired the varied beauty of the
-bananas, palms, and orange-trees contrasted together; and
-here we also have the bread-fruit, conspicuous from its large,
-glossy, and deeply digitated leaf. It is admirable to behold
-groves of a tree, sending forth its branches with the vigour
-of an English oak, loaded with large and most nutritious
-fruit. However seldom the usefulness of an object can
-account for the pleasure of beholding it, in the case of these
-beautiful woods, the knowledge of their high productiveness
-no doubt enters largely into the feeling of admiration. The
-little winding paths, cool from the surrounding shade, led
-to the scattered houses; the owners of which everywhere
-gave us a cheerful and most hospitable reception.
-
-I was pleased with nothing so much as with the inhabitants.
-There is a mildness in the expression of their countenances
-which at once banishes the idea of a savage; and
-intelligence which shows that they are advancing in
-civilization. The common people, when working, keep the upper
-part of their bodies quite naked; and it is then that the
-Tahitians are seen to advantage. They are very tall, broad-
-shouldered, athletic, and well-proportioned. It has been
-remarked, that it requires little habit to make a dark skin
-more pleasing and natural to the eye of an European than
-his own colour. A white man bathing by the side of a
-Tahitian, was like a plant bleached by the gardener's art
-compared with a fine dark green one growing vigorously in
-the open fields. Most of the men are tattooed, and the ornaments
-follow the curvature of the body so gracefully, that
-they have a very elegant effect. One common pattern, varying
-in its details, is somewhat like the crown of a palm-tree.
-It springs from the central line of the back, and gracefully
-curls round both sides. The simile may be a fanciful one,
-but I thought the body of a man thus ornamented was like
-the trunk of a, noble tree embraced by a delicate creeper.
-
-Many of the elder people had their feet covered with
-small figures, so placed as to resemble a sock. This fashion,
-however, is partly gone by, and has been succeeded by others.
-Here, although fashion is far from immutable, every one
-must abide by that prevailing in his youth. An old man
-has thus his age for ever stamped on his body, and he cannot
-assume the airs of a young dandy. The women are tattooed
-in the same manner as the men, and very commonly on their
-fingers. One unbecoming fashion is now almost universal:
-namely, shaving the hair from the upper part of the head,
-in a circular form, so as to leave only an outer ring. The
-missionaries have tried to persuade the people to change this
-habit; but it is the fashion, and that is a sufficient answer
-at Tahiti, as well as at Paris. I was much disappointed in
-the personal appearance of the women: they are far inferior
-in every respect to the men. The custom of wearing a white
-or scarlet flower in the back of the head, or through a small
-hole in each ear, is pretty. A crown of woven cocoa-nut
-leaves is also worn as a shade for the eyes. The women
-appear to be in greater want of some becoming costume even
-than the men.
-
-Nearly all the natives understand a little English -- that is,
-they know the names of common things; and by the aid of
-this, together with signs, a lame sort of conversation could
-be carried on. In returning in the evening to the boat, we
-stopped to witness a very pretty scene. Numbers of children
-were playing on the beach, and had lighted bonfires
-which illumined the placid sea and surrounding trees;
-others, in circles, were singing Tahitian verses. We seated
-ourselves on the sand, and joined their party. The songs
-were impromptu, and I believe related to our arrival: one
-little girl sang a line, which the rest took up in parts,
-forming a very pretty chorus. The whole scene made us
-unequivocally aware that we were seated on the shores of an
-island in the far-famed South Sea.
-
-17th. -- This day is reckoned in the log-book as Tuesday
-the 17th, instead of Monday the 16th, owing to our, so far,
-successful chase of the sun. Before breakfast the ship was
-hemmed in by a flotilla of canoes; and when the natives
-were allowed to come on board, I suppose there could not
-have been less than two hundred. It was the opinion of
-every one that it would have been difficult to have picked out
-an equal number from any other nation, who would have
-given so little trouble. Everybody brought something for
-sale: shells were the main articles of trade. The Tahitians
-now fully understand the value of money, and prefer it to
-old clothes or other articles. The various coins, however, of
-English and Spanish denomination puzzle them, and they
-never seemed to think the small silver quite secure until
-changed into dollars. Some of the chiefs have accumulated
-considerable sums of money. One chief, not long since,
-offered 800 dollars (about 160 pounds sterling) for a small
-vessel; and frequently they purchase whale-boats and horses at
-the rate of from 50 to 100 dollars.
-
-After breakfast I went on shore, and ascended the nearest
-slope to a height of between two and three thousand feet.
-The outer mountains are smooth and conical, but steep; and
-the old volcanic rocks, of which they are formed, have been
-cut through by many profound ravines, diverging from the
-central broken parts of the island to the coast. Having
-crossed the narrow low girt of inhabited and fertile land,
-I followed a smooth steep ridge between two of the deep
-ravines. The vegetation was singular, consisting almost
-exclusively of small dwarf ferns, mingled higher up, with
-coarse grass; it was not very dissimilar from that on some
-of the Welsh hills, and this so close above the orchard of
-tropical plants on the coast was very surprising. At the
-highest point, which I reached, trees again appeared. Of
-the three zones of comparative luxuriance, the lower one
-owes its moisture, and therefore fertility, to its flatness;
-for, being scarcely raised above the level of the sea, the water
-from the higher land drains away slowly. The intermediate
-zone does not, like the upper one, reach into a damp and
-cloudy atmosphere, and therefore remains sterile. The
-woods in the upper zone are very pretty, tree-ferns replacing
-the cocoa-nuts on the coast. It must not, however, be
-supposed that these woods at all equal in splendour the
-forests of Brazil. The vast numbers of productions, which
-characterize a continent, cannot be expected to occur in
-an island.
-
-From the highest point which I attained, there was a good
-view of the distant island of Eimeo, dependent on the same
-sovereign with Tahiti. On the lofty and broken pinnacles,
-white massive clouds were piled up, which formed an island
-in the blue sky, as Eimeo itself did in the blue ocean. The
-island, with the exception of one small gateway, is completely
-encircled by a reef. At this distance, a narrow but well-
-defined brilliantly white line was alone visible, where the
-waves first encountered the wall of coral. The mountains
-rose abruptly out of the glassy expanse of the lagoon, included
-within this narrow white line, outside which the heaving
-waters of the ocean were dark-coloured. The view was
-striking: it may aptly be compared to a framed engraving,
-where the frame represents the breakers, the marginal paper
-the smooth lagoon, and the drawing the island itself. When
-in the evening I descended from the mountain, a man, whom
-I had pleased with a trifling gift, met me, bringing with him
-hot roasted bananas, a pine-apple, and cocoa-nuts. After
-walking under a burning sun, I do not know anything more
-delicious than the milk of a young cocoa-nut. Pine-apples
-are here so abundant that the people eat them in the same
-wasteful manner as we might turnips. They are of an excellent
-flavor -- perhaps even better than those cultivated in
-England; and this I believe is the highest compliment which
-can be paid to any fruit. Before going on board, Mr. Wilson
-interpreted for me to the Tahitian who had paid me so adroit
-an attention, that I wanted him and another man to accompany
-me on a short excursion into the mountains.
-
-18th. -- In the morning I came on shore early, bringing
-with me some provisions in a bag, and two blankets for myself
-and servant. These were lashed to each end of a long
-pole, which was alternately carried by my Tahitian companions
-on their shoulders. These men are accustomed thus
-to carry, for a whole day, as much as fifty pounds at each
-end of their poles. I told my guides to provide themselves
-with food and clothing; but they said that there was plenty
-of food in the mountains, and for clothing, that their skins
-were sufficient. Our line of march was the valley of Tiaauru,
-down which a river flows into the sea by Point Venus.
-This is one of the principal streams in the island, and its
-source lies at the base of the loftiest central pinnacles,
-which rise to a height of about 7000 feet. The whole island
-is so mountainous that the only way to penetrate into the
-interior is to follow up the valleys. Our road, at first, lay
-through woods which bordered each side of the river; and
-the glimpses of the lofty central peaks, seen as through an
-avenue, with here and there a waving cocoa-nut tree on one
-side, were extremely picturesque. The valley soon began to
-narrow, and the sides to grow lofty and more precipitous.
-After having walked between three and four hours, we
-found the width of the ravine scarcely exceeded that of the
-bed of the stream. On each hand the walls were nearly vertical,
-yet from the soft nature of the volcanic strata, trees
-and a rank vegetation sprung from every projecting ledge.
-These precipices must have been some thousand feet high;
-and the whole formed a mountain gorge far more magnificent
-than anything which I had ever before beheld. Until
-the midday sun stood vertically over the ravine, the air felt
-cool and damp, but now it became very sultry. Shaded by a
-ledge of rock, beneath a facade of columnar lava, we ate our
-dinner. My guides had already procured a dish of small
-fish and fresh-water prawns. They carried with them a
-small net stretched on a hoop; and where the water was
-deep and in eddies, they dived, and like otters, with their
-eyes open followed the fish into holes and corners, and thus
-caught them.
-
-The Tahitians have the dexterity of amphibious animals
-in the water. An anecdote mentioned by Ellis shows how
-much they feel at home in this element. When a horse was
-landing for Pomarre in 1817, the slings broke, and it fell
-into the water; immediately the natives jumped overboard,
-and by their cries and vain efforts at assistance almost
-drowned it. As soon, however, as it reached the shore, the
-whole population took to flight, and tried to hide themselves
-from the man-carrying pig, as they christened the horse.
-
-A little higher up, the river divided itself into three little
-streams. The two northern ones were impracticable, owing
-to a succession of waterfalls which descended from the
-jagged summit of the highest mountain; the other to all
-appearance was equally inaccessible, but we managed to ascend
-it by a most extraordinary road. The sides of the
-valley were here nearly precipitous, but, as frequently happens
-with stratified rocks, small ledges projected, which were
-thickly covered by wild bananas, lilaceous plants, and other
-luxuriant productions of the tropics. The Tahitians, by
-climbing amongst these ledges, searching for fruit, had
-discovered a track by which the whole precipice could be scaled.
-The first ascent from the valley was very dangerous; for it
-was necessary to pass a steeply inclined face of naked rock,
-by the aid of ropes which we brought with us. How any
-person discovered that this formidable spot was the only
-point where the side of the mountain was practicable, I cannot
-imagine. We then cautiously walked along one of the
-ledges till we came to one of the three streams. This ledge
-formed a flat spot, above which a beautiful cascade, some
-hundred feet in height, poured down its waters, and beneath,
-another high cascade fell into the main stream in the valley
-below. From this cool and shady recess we made a
-circuit to avoid the overhanging waterfall. As before, we
-followed little projecting ledges, the danger being partly
-concealed by the thickness of the vegetation. In passing
-from one of the ledges to another, there was a vertical wall
-of rock. One of the Tahitians, a fine active man, placed
-the trunk of a tree against this, climbed up it, and then by
-the aid of crevices reached the summit. He fixed the ropes
-to a projecting point, and lowered them for our dog and
-luggage, and then we clambered up ourselves. Beneath the
-ledge on which the dead tree was placed, the precipice must
-have been five or six hundred feet deep; and if the abyss
-had not been partly concealed by the overhanging ferns and
-lilies my head would have turned giddy, and nothing should
-have induced me to have attempted it. We continued to
-ascend, sometimes along ledges, and sometimes along knife-
-edged ridges, having on each hand profound ravines. In
-the Cordillera I have seen mountains on a far grander
-scale, but for abruptness, nothing at all comparable with this.
-In the evening we reached a flat little spot on the banks
-of the same stream, which we had continued to follow, and
-which descends in a chain of waterfalls: here we bivouacked
-for the night. On each side of the ravine there were great
-beds of the mountain-banana, covered with ripe fruit. Many
-of these plants were from twenty to twenty-five feet high,
-and from three to four in circumference. By the aid of
-strips of bark for rope, the stems of bamboos for rafters,
-and the large leaf of the banana for a thatch, the Tahitians
-in a few minutes built us an excellent house; and with
-withered leaves made a soft bed.
-
-They then proceeded to make a fire, and cook our evening
-meal. A light was procured, by rubbing a blunt pointed
-stick in a groove made in another, as if with intention of
-deepening it, until by the friction the dust became ignited.
-A peculiarly white and very light wood (the Hibiscus tiliareus)
-is alone used for this purpose: it is the same which
-serves for poles to carry any burden, and for the floating
-out-riggers to their canoes. The fire was produced in a few
-seconds: but to a person who does not understand the art,
-it requires, as I found, the greatest exertion; but at last, to
-my great pride, I succeeded in igniting the dust. The
-Gaucho in the Pampas uses a different method: taking an
-elastic stick about eighteen inches long, he presses one end
-on his breast, and the other pointed end into a hole in a piece
-of wood, and then rapidly turns the curved part, like a
-carpenter's centre-bit. The Tahitians having made a small fire
-of sticks, placed a score of stones, of about the size of
-cricket-balls, on the burning wood. In about ten minutes the
-sticks were consumed, and the stones hot. They had previously
-folded up in small parcels of leaves, pieces of beef,
-fish, ripe and unripe bananas, and the tops of the wild arum.
-These green parcels were laid in a layer between two layers
-of the hot stones, and the whole then covered up with
-earth, so that no smoke or steam could escape. In about
-a quarter of an hour, the whole was most deliciously cooked.
-The choice green parcels were now laid on a cloth of
-banana leaves, and with a cocoa-nut shell we drank the
-cool water of the running stream; and thus we enjoyed our
-rustic meal.
-
-I could not look on the surrounding plants without admiration.
-On every side were forests of banana; the fruit
-of which, though serving for food in various ways, lay in
-heaps decaying on the ground. In front of us there was an
-extensive brake of wild sugar-cane; and the stream was
-shaded by the dark green knotted stem of the Ava, -- so famous
-in former days for its powerful intoxicating effects. I
-chewed a piece, and found that it had an acrid and unpleasant
-taste, which would have induced any one at once to
-have pronounced it poisonous. Thanks to the missionaries,
-this plant now thrives only in these deep ravines, innocuous to
-every one. Close by I saw the wild arum, the roots of which,
-when well baked, are good to eat, and the young leaves
-better than spinach. There was the wild yam, and a liliaceous
-plant called Ti, which grows in abundance, and has a soft
-brown root, in shape and size like a huge log of wood: this
-served us for dessert, for it is as sweet as treacle, and with
-a pleasant taste. There were, moreover, several other wild
-fruits, and useful vegetables. The little stream, besides its
-cool water, produced eels, and cray-fish. I did indeed admire
-this scene, when I compared it with an uncultivated one in
-the temperate zones. I felt the force of the remark, that
-man, at least savage man, with his reasoning powers only
-partly developed, is the child of the tropics.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, I strolled beneath the
-gloomy shade of the bananas up the course of the stream.
-My walk was soon brought to a close, by coming to a waterfall
-between two and three hundred feet high; and again
-above this there was another. I mention all these waterfalls
-in this one brook, to give a general idea of the inclination
-of the land. In the little recess where the water fell, it did
-not appear that a breath of wind had ever blown. The thin
-edges of the great leaves of the banana, damp with spray,
-were unbroken, instead of being, as is so generally the case,
-split into a thousand shreds. From our position, almost
-suspended on the mountain side, there were glimpses into the
-depths of the neighbouring valleys; and the lofty points of
-the central mountains, towering up within sixty degrees of
-the zenith, hid half the evening sky. Thus seated, it was
-a sublime spectacle to watch the shades of night gradually
-obscuring the last and highest pinnacles.
-
-Before we laid ourselves down to sleep, the elder Tahitian
-fell on his knees, and with closed eyes repeated a long
-prayer in his native tongue. He prayed as a Christian should
-do, with fitting reverence, and without the fear of ridicule
-or any ostentation of piety. At our meals neither of the men
-would taste food, without saying beforehand a short grace.
-Those travellers who think that a Tahitian prays only when
-the eyes of the missionary are fixed on him, should have
-slept with us that night on the mountain-side. Before morning
-it rained very heavily; but the good thatch of banana-
-leaves kept us dry.
-
-November 19th. -- At daylight my friends, after their
-morning prayer, prepared an excellent breakfast in the same
-manner as in the evening. They themselves certainly partook
-of it largely; indeed I never saw any men eat near so
-much. I suppose such enormously capacious stomachs must
-be the effect of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit
-and vegetables, which contain, in a given bulk, a comparatively
-small portion of nutriment. Unwittingly, I was the
-means of my companions breaking, as I afterwards learned,
-one of their own laws, and resolutions: I took with me a
-flask of spirits, which they could not refuse to partake of;
-but as often as they drank a little, they put their fingers
-before their mouths, and uttered the word "Missionary."
-About two years ago, although the use of the ava was prevented,
-drunkenness from the introduction of spirits became
-very prevalent. The missionaries prevailed on a few good
-men, who saw that their country was rapidly going to ruin,
-to join with them in a Temperance Society. From good
-sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen were at last
-persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed, that no
-spirits should be allowed to be introduced into the island,
-and that he who sold and he who bought the forbidden
-article should be punished by a fine. With remarkable justice,
-a certain period was allowed for stock in hand to be
-sold, before the law came into effect. But when it did, a
-general search was made, in which even the houses of the
-missionaries were not exempted, and all the ava (as the
-natives call all ardent spirits) was poured on the ground.
-When one reflects on the effect of intemperance on the
-aborigines of the two Americas, I think it will be acknowledged
-that every well-wisher of Tahiti owes no common debt
-of gratitude to the missionaries. As long as the little island
-of St. Helena remained under the government of the East
-India Company, spirits, owing to the great injury they had
-produced, were not allowed to be imported; but wine was
-supplied from the Cape of Good Hope. It is rather a striking
-and not very gratifying fact, that in the same year
-that spirits were allowed to be sold in Helena, their use was
-banished from Tahiti by the free will of the people.
-
-After breakfast we proceeded on our Journey. As my object
-was merely to see a little of the interior scenery, we
-returned by another track, which descended into the main
-valley lower down. For some distance we wound, by a most
-intricate path, along the side of the mountain which formed
-the valley. In the less precipitous parts we passed through
-extensive groves of the wild banana. The Tahitians, with
-their naked, tattooed bodies, their heads ornamented with
-flowers, and seen in the dark shade of these groves, would
-have formed a fine picture of man inhabiting some primeval
-land. In our descent we followed the line of ridges; these
-were exceedingly narrow, and for considerable lengths steep
-as a ladder; but all clothed with vegetation. The extreme
-care necessary in poising each step rendered the walk fatiguing.
-I did not cease to wonder at these ravines and
-precipices: when viewing the country from one of the knife-
-edged ridges, the point of support was so small, that the
-effect was nearly the same as it must be from a balloon. In
-this descent we had occasion to use the ropes only once, at
-the point where we entered the main valley. We slept under
-the same ledge of rock where we had dined the day before:
-the night was fine, but from the depth and narrowness of the
-gorge, profoundly dark.
-
-Before actually seeing this country, I found it difficult
-to understand two facts mentioned by Ellis; namely, that
-after the murderous battles of former times, the survivors
-on the conquered side retired into the mountains, where a
-handful of men could resist a multitude. Certainly half
-a dozen men, at the spot where the Tahitian reared the old
-tree, could easily have repulsed thousands. Secondly, that
-after the introduction of Christianity, there were wild men
-who lived in the mountains, and whose retreats were unknown
-to the more civilized inhabitants
-
-November 20th. -- In the morning we started early, and
-reached Matavai at noon. On the road we met a large party
-of noble athletic men, going for wild bananas. I found that
-the ship, on account of the difficulty in watering, had moved
-to the harbour of Papawa, to which place I immediately
-walked. This is a very pretty spot. The cove is surrounded
-by reefs, and the water as smooth as in a lake. The
-cultivated ground, with its beautiful productions, interspersed
-with cottages, comes close down to the water's edge.
-From the varying accounts which I had read before reaching
-these islands, I was very anxious to form, from my own
-observation, a judgment of their moral state, -- although such
-judgment would necessarily be very imperfect. First impressions
-at all times very much depend on one's previously
-acquired ideas. My notions were drawn from Ellis's "Polynesian
-Researches" -- an admirable and most interesting
-work, but naturally looking at everything under a favourable
-point of view, from Beechey's Voyage; and from that of
-Kotzebue, which is strongly adverse to the whole missionary
-system. He who compares these three accounts will, I think,
-form a tolerably accurate conception of the present state of
-Tahiti. One of my impressions which I took from the two
-last authorities, was decidedly incorrect; viz., that the
-Tahitians had become a gloomy race, and lived in fear of the
-missionaries. Of the latter feeling I saw no trace, unless,
-indeed, fear and respect be confounded under one name.
-Instead of discontent being a common feeling, it would be
-difficult in Europe to pick out of a crowd half so many merry
-and happy faces. The prohibition of the flute and dancing
-is inveighed against as wrong and foolish; -- the more than
-presbyterian manner of keeping the sabbath is looked at in
-a similar light. On these points I will not pretend to offer
-any opinion to men who have resided as many years as I
-was days on the island.
-
-On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and
-religion of the inhabitants are highly creditable. There are
-many who attack, even more acrimoniously than Kotzebue,
-both the missionaries, their system, and the effects produced
-by it. Such reasoners never compare the present state with
-that of the island only twenty years ago; nor even with that
-of Europe at this day; but they compare it with the high
-standard of Gospel perfection. They expect the missionaries
-to effect that which the Apostles themselves failed to do.
-Inasmuch as the condition of the people falls short of
-this high standard, blame is attached to the missionary, instead
-of credit for that which he has effected. They forget,
-or will not remember, that human sacrifices, and the power
-of an idolatrous priesthood -- a system of profligacy
-unparalleled in any other part of the world -- infanticide a
-consequence of that system -- bloody wars, where the conquerors
-spared neither women nor children -- that all these have been
-abolished; and that dishonesty, intemperance, and licentiousness
-have been greatly reduced by the introduction of Christianity.
-In a voyager to forget these things is base ingratitude; for
-should he chance to be at the point of shipwreck on some
-unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that the lesson of
-the missionary may have extended thus far.
-
-In point of morality, the virtue of the women, it has been
-often said, is most open to exception. But before they are
-blamed too severely, it will be well distinctly to call to mind
-the scenes described by Captain Cook and Mr. Banks, in
-which the grandmothers and mothers of the present race
-played a part. Those who are most severe, should consider
-how much of the morality of the women in Europe is owing
-to the system early impressed by mothers on their daughters,
-and how much in each individual case to the precepts of
-religion. But it is useless to argue against such reasoners; --
-I believe that, disappointed in not finding the field of
-licentiousness quite so open as formerly, they will not give
-credit to a morality which they do not wish to practise, or to a
-religion which they undervalue, if not despise.
-
-Sunday, 22nd. -- The harbour of Papiete, where the queen
-resides, may be considered as the capital of the island: it is
-also the seat of government, and the chief resort of shipping.
-Captain Fitz Roy took a party there this day to hear divine
-service, first in the Tahitian language, and afterwards in our
-own. Mr. Pritchard, the leading missionary in the island,
-performed the service. The chapel consisted of a large airy
-framework of wood; and it was filled to excess by tidy, clean
-people, of all ages and both sexes. I was rather disappointed
-in the apparent degree of attention; but I believe my
-expectations were raised too high. At all events the appearance
-was quite equal to that in a country church in England.
-The singing of the hymns was decidedly very pleasing, but
-the language from the pulpit, although fluently delivered, did
-not sound well: a constant repetition of words, like "tata
-ta, mata mai," rendered it monotonous. After English service,
-a party returned on foot to Matavai. It was a pleasant
-walk, sometimes along the sea-beach and sometimes under
-the shade of the many beautiful trees.
-
-About two years ago, a small vessel under English colours
-was plundered by some of the inhabitants of the Low Islands,
-which were then under the dominion of the Queen of Tahiti.
-It was believed that the perpetrators were instigated to this
-act by some indiscreet laws issued by her majesty. The
-British government demanded compensation; which was acceded
-to, and the sum of nearly three thousand dollars was
-agreed to be paid on the first of last September. The Commodore
-at Lima ordered Captain Fitz Roy to inquire concerning
-this debt, and to demand satisfaction if it were not
-paid. Captain Fitz Roy accordingly requested an interview
-with the Queen Pomarre, since famous from the ill-treatment
-she had received from the French; and a parliament was
-held to consider the question, at which all the principal chiefs
-of the island and the queen were assembled. I will not attempt
-to describe what took place, after the interesting account
-given by Captain Fitz Roy. The money, it appeared,
-had not been paid; perhaps the alleged reasons were rather
-equivocal; but otherwise I cannot sufficiently express our
-general surprise at the extreme good sense, the reasoning
-powers, moderation, candour, and prompt resolution, which
-were displayed on all sides. I believe we all left the meeting
-with a very different opinion of the Tahitians, from what we
-entertained when we entered. The chiefs and people resolved
-to subscribe and complete the sum which was wanting;
-Captain Fitz Roy urged that it was hard that their private
-property should be sacrificed for the crimes of distant
-islanders. They replied, that they were grateful for his
-consideration, but that Pomarre was their Queen, and that they
-were determined to help her in this her difficulty. This
-resolution and its prompt execution, for a book was opened
-early the next morning, made a perfect conclusion to this
-very remarkable scene of loyalty and good feeling.
-
-After the main discussion was ended, several of the chiefs
-took the opportunity of asking Captain Fitz Roy many intelligent
-questions on international customs and laws, relating
-to the treatment of ships and foreigners. On some
-points, as soon as the decision was made, the law was issued
-verbally on the spot. This Tahitian parliament lasted for
-several hours; and when it was over Captain Fitz Roy invited
-Queen Pomarre to pay the Beagle a visit.
-
-November 25th. -- In the evening four boats were sent for
-her majesty; the ship was dressed with flags, and the yards
-manned on her coming on board. She was accompanied by
-most of the chiefs. The behaviour of all was very proper:
-they begged for nothing, and seemed much pleased with Captain
-Fitz Roy's presents. The queen is a large awkward
-woman, without any beauty, grace or dignity. She has only
-one royal attribute: a perfect immovability of expression
-under all circumstances, and that rather a sullen one. The
-rockets were most admired, and a deep "Oh!" could be
-heard from the shore, all round the dark bay, after each
-explosion. The sailors' songs were also much admired; and
-the queen said she thought that one of the most boisterous
-ones certainly could not be a hymn! The royal party did
-not return on shore till past midnight.
-
-26th. -- In the evening, with a gentle land-breeze, a course
-was steered for New Zealand; and as the sun set, we had a
-farewell view of the mountains of Tahiti -- the island to which
-every voyager has offered up his tribute of admiration.
-
-December 19th. -- In the evening we saw in the distance
-New Zealand. We may now consider that we have nearly
-crossed the Pacific. It is necessary to sail over this great
-ocean to comprehend its immensity. Moving quickly onwards
-for weeks together, we meet with nothing but the
-same blue, profoundly deep, ocean. Even within the
-archipelagoes, the islands are mere specks, and far distant one
-from the other. Accustomed to look at maps drawn on a
-small scale, where dots, shading, and names are crowded
-together, we do not rightly judge how infinitely small the
-proportion of dry land is to water of this vast expanse.
-The meridian of the Antipodes has likewise been passed; and
-now every league, it made us happy to think, was one league
-nearer to England. These Antipodes call to one's mind old
-recollections of childish doubt and wonder. Only the other
-day I looked forward to this airy barrier as a definite point
-in our voyage homewards; but now I find it, and all such
-resting-places for the imagination, are like shadows, which
-a man moving onwards cannot catch. A gale of wind lasting
-for some days, has lately given us full leisure to measure
-the future stages in our homeward voyage, and to wish
-most earnestly for its termination.
-
-December 21st. -- Early in the morning we entered the Bay
-of Islands, and being becalmed for some hours near the
-mouth, we did not reach the anchorage till the middle of the
-day. The country is hilly, with a smooth outline, and is
-deeply intersected by numerous arms of the sea extending
-from the bay. The surface appears from a distance as if
-clothed with coarse pasture, but this in truth is nothing but
-fern. On the more distant hills, as well as in parts of the
-valleys, there is a good deal of woodland. The general tint
-of the landscape is not a bright green; and it resembles the
-country a short distance to the south of Concepcion in Chile.
-In several parts of the bay, little villages of square tidy
-looking houses are scattered close down to the water's edge.
-Three whaling-ships were lying at anchor, and a canoe every
-now and then crossed from shore to shore; with these
-exceptions, an air of extreme quietness reigned over the
-whole district. Only a single canoe came alongside. This,
-and the aspect of the whole scene, afforded a remarkable,
-and not very pleasing contrast, with our joyful and boisterous
-welcome at Tahiti.
-
-In the afternoon we went on shore to one of the larger
-groups of houses, which yet hardly deserves the title of a
-village. Its name is Pahia: it is the residence of the
-missionaries; and there are no native residents except servants
-and labourers. In the vicinity of the Bay of Islands, the
-number of Englishmen, including their families, amounts to
-between two and three hundred. All the cottages, many of
-which are white-washed and look very neat, are the property
-of the English. The hovels of the natives are so diminutive
-and paltry, that they can scarcely be perceived from a distance.
-At Pahia, it was quite pleasing to behold the English
-flowers in the gardens before the houses; there were
-roses of several kinds, honeysuckle, jasmine, stocks, and
-whole hedges of sweetbrier.
-
-December 22nd. -- In the morning I went out walking; but
-I soon found that the country was very impracticable. All
-the hills are thickly covered with tall fern, together with
-a low bush which grows like a cypress; and very little
-ground has been cleared or cultivated. I then tried the
-sea-beach; but proceeding towards either hand, my walk
-was soon stopped by salt-water creeks and deep brooks. The
-communication between the inhabitants of the different
-parts of the bay, is (as in Chiloe) almost entirely kept up
-by boats. I was surprised to find that almost every hill which
-I ascended, had been at some former time more or less
-fortified. The summits were cut into steps or successive
-terraces, and frequently they had been protected by deep
-trenches. I afterwards observed that the principal hills inland
-in like manner showed an artificial outline. These are
-the Pas, so frequently mentioned by Captain Cook under the
-name of "hippah;" the difference of sound being owing to
-the prefixed article.
-
-That the Pas had formerly been much used, was evident
-from the piles of shells, and the pits in which, as I was
-informed, sweet potatoes used to be kept as a reserve. As
-there was no water on these hills, the defenders could never
-have anticipated a long siege, but only a hurried attack for
-plunder, against which the successive terraces would have
-afforded good protection. The general introduction of firearms
-has changed the whole system of warfare; and an exposed
-situation on the top of a hill is now worse than useless.
-The Pas in consequence are, at the present day, always built
-on a level piece of ground. They consist of a double stockade
-of thick and tall posts, placed in a zigzag line, so that every
-part can be flanked. Within the stockade a mound of earth is
-thrown up, behind which the defenders can rest in safety, or
-use their fire-arms over it. On the level of the ground
-little archways sometimes pass through this breastwork,
-by which means the defenders can crawl out to the stockade
-and reconnoitre their enemies. The Rev. W. Williams, who
-gave me this account, added, that in one Pas he had noticed
-spurs or buttresses projecting on the inner and protected
-side of the mound of earth. On asking the chief the use
-of them, he replied, that if two or three of his men were
-shot, their neighbours would not see the bodies, and so be
-discouraged.
-
-These Pas are considered by the New Zealanders as very
-perfect means of defence: for the attacking force is never
-so well disciplined as to rush in a body to the stockade, cut
-it down, and effect their entry. When a tribe goes to war,
-the chief cannot order one party to go here and another
-there; but every man fights in the manner which best pleases
-himself; and to each separate individual to approach a stockade
-defended by fire-arms must appear certain death. I
-should think a more warlike race of inhabitants could not
-be found in any part of the world than the New Zealanders.
-Their conduct on first seeing a ship, as described by Captain
-Cook, strongly illustrates this: the act of throwing volleys
-of stones at so great and novel an object, and their defiance
-of "Come on shore and we will kill and eat you all," shows
-uncommon boldness. This warlike spirit is evident in many
-of their customs, and even in their smallest actions. If a
-New Zealander is struck, although but in joke, the blow
-must be returned and of this I saw an instance with one
-of our officers.
-
-At the present day, from the progress of civilization, there
-is much less warfare, except among some of the southern
-tribes. I heard a characteristic anecdote of what took place
-some time ago in the south. A missionary found a chief and
-his tribe in preparation for war; -- their muskets clean and
-bright, and their ammunition ready. He reasoned long on
-the inutility of the war, and the little provocation which
-had been given for it. The chief was much shaken in his
-resolution, and seemed in doubt: but at length it occurred
-to him that a barrel of his gunpowder was in a bad state, and
-that it would not keep much longer. This was brought forward
-as an unanswerable argument for the necessity of immediately
-declaring war: the idea of allowing so much good
-gunpowder to spoil was not to be thought of; and this settled
-the point. I was told by the missionaries that in the
-life of Shongi, the chief who visited England, the love of
-war was the one and lasting spring of every action. The
-tribe in which he was a principal chief had at one time been
-oppressed by another tribe from the Thames River. A
-solemn oath was taken by the men that when their boys
-should grow up, and they should be powerful enough, they
-would never forget or forgive these injuries. To fulfil this
-oath appears to have been Shongi's chief motive for going
-to England; and when there it was his sole object. Presents
-were valued only as they could be converted into arms;
-of the arts, those alone interested him which were connected
-with the manufacture of arms. When at Sydney, Shongi,
-by a strange coincidence, met the hostile chief of the Thames
-River at the house of Mr. Marsden: their conduct was civil
-to each other; but Shongi told him that when again in New
-Zealand he would never cease to carry war into his country.
-The challenge was accepted; and Shongi on his return fulfilled
-the threat to the utmost letter. The tribe on the
-Thames River was utterly overthrown, and the chief to
-whom the challenge had been given was himself killed.
-Shongi, although harbouring such deep feelings of hatred
-and revenge, is described as having been a good-natured
-person.
-
-In the evening I went with Captain Fitz Roy and Mr.
-Baker, one of the missionaries, to pay a visit to Kororadika:
-we wandered about the village, and saw and conversed with
-many of the people, both men, women, and children. Looking
-at the New Zealander, one naturally compares him with
-the Tahitian; both belonging to the same family of mankind.
-The comparison, however, tells heavily against the New
-Zealander. He may, perhaps be superior in energy, but
-in every other respect his character is of a much lower
-order. One glance at their respective expressions, brings
-conviction to the mind that one is a savage, the other a
-civilized man. It would be vain to seek in the whole of
-New Zealand a person with the face and mien of the old
-Tahitian chief Utamme. No doubt the extraordinary manner
-in which tattooing is here practised, gives a disagreeable
-expression to their countenances. The complicated but
-symmetrical figures covering the whole face, puzzle and mislead
-an unaccustomed eye: it is moreover probable, that the deep
-incisions, by destroying the play of the superficial muscles,
-give an air of rigid inflexibility. But, besides this, there is
-a twinkling in the eye, which cannot indicate anything but
-cunning and ferocity. Their figures are tall and bulky; but
-not comparable in elegance with those of the working-
-classes in Tahiti.
-
-But their persons and houses are filthily dirty and offensive:
-the idea of washing either their bodies or their clothes
-never seems to enter their heads. I saw a chief, who was
-wearing a shirt black and matted with filth, and when asked
-how it came to be so dirty, he replied, with surprise, "Do
-not you see it is an old one?" Some of the men have shirts;
-but the common dress is one or two large blankets, generally
-black with dirt, which are thrown over their shoulders in a
-very inconvenient and awkward fashion. A few of the principal
-chiefs have decent suits of English clothes; but these
-are only worn on great occasions.
-
-December 23rd. -- At a place called Waimate, about fifteen
-miles from the Bay of Islands, and midway between the
-eastern and western coasts, the missionaries have purchased
-some land for agricultural purposes. I had been introduced
-to the Rev. W. Williams, who, upon my expressing a wish,
-invited me to pay him a visit there. Mr. Bushby, the British
-resident, offered to take me in his boat by a creek, where I
-should see a pretty waterfall, and by which means my
-walk would be shortened. He likewise procured for me a
-guide.
-
-Upon asking a neighbouring chief to recommend a man, the
-chief himself offered to go; but his ignorance of the value
-of money was so complete, that at first he asked how many
-pounds I would give him, but afterwards was well contented
-with two dollars. When I showed the chief a very small
-bundle, which I wanted carried, it became absolutely necessary
-for him to take a slave. These feelings of pride are
-beginning to wear away; but formerly a leading man would
-sooner have died, than undergone the indignity of carrying
-the smallest burden. My companion was a light active man,
-dressed in a dirty blanket, and with his face completely
-tattooed. He had formerly been a great warrior. He appeared
-to be on very cordial terms with Mr. Bushby; but at
-various times they had quarrelled violently. Mr. Bushby
-remarked that a little quiet irony would frequently silence
-any one of these natives in their most blustering moments.
-This chief has come and harangued Mr. Bushby in a hectoring
-manner, saying, "great chief, a great man, a friend
-of mine, has come to pay me a visit -- you must give him
-something good to eat, some fine presents, etc." Mr. Bushby
-has allowed him to finish his discourse, and then has quietly
-replied by some answer such as, "What else shall your slave
-do for you?" The man would then instantly, with a very
-comical expression, cease his braggadocio.
-
-Some time ago, Mr. Bushby suffered a far more serious
-attack. A chief and a party of men tried to break into his
-house in the middle of the night, and not finding this so easy,
-commenced a brisk firing with their muskets. Mr. Bushby
-was slightly wounded, but the party was at length driven
-away. Shortly afterwards it was discovered who was the
-aggressor; and a general meeting of the chiefs was convened
-to consider the case. It was considered by the New Zealanders
-as very atrocious, inasmuch as it was a night attack, and
-that Mrs. Bushby was lying ill in the house: this latter
-circumstance, much to their honour, being considered in all
-cases as a protection. The chiefs agreed to confiscate the
-land of the aggressor to the King of England. The whole
-proceeding, however, in thus trying and punishing a chief
-was entirely without precedent. The aggressor, moreover,
-lost caste in the estimation of his equals and this was
-considered by the British as of more consequence than the
-confiscation of his land.
-
-As the boat was shoving off, a second chief stepped into
-her, who only wanted the amusement of the passage up and
-down the creek. I never saw a more horrid and ferocious
-expression than this man had. It immediately struck me
-I had somewhere seen his likeness: it will be found in
-Retzch's outlines to Schiller's ballad of Fridolin, where two
-men are pushing Robert into the burning iron furnace. It
-is the man who has his arm on Robert's breast. Physiognomy
-here spoke the truth; this chief had been a notorious
-murderer, and was an arrant coward to boot. At the point
-where the boat landed, Mr. Bushby accompanied me a few
-hundred yards on the road: I could not help admiring the
-cool impudence of the hoary old villain, whom we left lying
-in the boat, when he shouted to Mr. Bushby, "Do not you
-stay long, I shall be tired of waiting here."
-
-We now commenced our walk. The road lay along a
-well beaten path, bordered on each side by the tall fern,
-which covers the whole country. After travelling some
-miles, we came to a little country village, where a few hovels
-were collected together, and some patches of ground cultivated
-with potatoes. The introduction of the potato has
-been the most essential benefit to the island; it is now much
-more used than any native vegetable. New Zealand is
-favoured by one great natural advantage; namely, that the
-inhabitants can never perish from famine. The whole
-country abounds with fern: and the roots of this plant, if
-not very palatable, yet contain much nutriment. A native
-can always subsist on these, and on the shell-fish, which are
-abundant on all parts of the sea-coast. The villages are
-chiefly conspicuous by the platforms which are raised on
-four posts ten or twelve feet above the ground, and on
-which the produce of the fields is kept secure from all
-accidents.
-
-On coming near one of the huts I was much amused by
-seeing in due form the ceremony of rubbing, or, as it ought
-to be called, pressing noses. The women, on our first approach,
-began uttering something in a most dolorous voice;
-they then squatted themselves down and held up their faces;
-my companion standing over them, one after another, placed
-the bridge of his nose at right angles to theirs, and commenced
-pressing. This lasted rather longer than a cordial
-shake of the hand with us, and as we vary the force of the
-grasp of the hand in shaking, so do they in pressing. During
-the process they uttered comfortable little grunts, very
-much in the same manner as two pigs do, when rubbing
-against each other. I noticed that the slave would press
-noses with any one he met, indifferently either before or
-after his master the chief. Although among the savages, the
-chief has absolute power of life and death over his slave,
-yet there is an entire absence of ceremony between them.
-Mr. Burchell has remarked the same thing in Southern Africa,
-with the rude Bachapins. Where civilization has
-arrived at a certain point, complex formalities soon arise
-between the different grades of society: thus at Tahiti all
-were formerly obliged to uncover themselves as low as the
-waist in presence of the king.
-
-The ceremony of pressing noses having been duly completed
-with all present, we seated ourselves in a circle in the
-front of one of the-hovels, and rested there half-an-hour.
-All the hovels have nearly the same form and dimensions,
-and all agree in being filthily dirty. They resemble a cow-
-shed with one end open, but having a partition a little way
-within, with a square hole in it, making a small gloomy
-chamber. In this the inhabitants keep all their property,
-and when the weather is cold they sleep there. They eat,
-however, and pass their time in the open part in front. My
-guides having finished their pipes, we continued our walk.
-The path led through the same undulating country, the whole
-uniformly clothed as before with fern. On our right hand
-we had a serpentine river, the banks of which were fringed
-with trees, and here and there on the hill sides there was a
-clump of wood. The whole scene, in spite of its green colour,
-had rather a desolate aspect. The sight of so much fern
-impresses the mind with an idea of sterility: this, however,
-is not correct; for wherever the fern grows thick and breast-
-high, the land by tillage becomes productive. Some of the
-residents think that all this extensive open country originally
-was covered with forests, and that it has been cleared by fire.
-It is said, that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the
-kind of resin which flows from the kauri pine are frequently
-found. The natives had an evident motive in clearing the
-country; for the fern, formerly a staple article of food,
-flourishes only in the open cleared tracks. The almost entire
-absence of associated grasses, which forms so remarkable a
-feature in the vegetation of this island, may perhaps be
-accounted for by the land having been aboriginally covered
-with forest-trees.
-
-The soil is volcanic; in several parts we passed over
-shaggy lavas, and craters could clearly be distinguished on
-several of the neighbouring hills. Although the scenery is
-nowhere beautiful, and only occasionally pretty, I enjoyed
-my walk. I should have enjoyed it more, if my companion,
-the chief, had not possessed extraordinary conversational
-powers. I knew only three words: "good," "bad," and
-"yes:" and with these I answered all his remarks, without
-of course having understood one word he said. This, however,
-was quite sufficient: I was a good listener, an agreeable
-person, and he never ceased talking to me.
-
-At length we reached Waimate. After having passed over
-so many miles of an uninhabited useless country, the sudden
-appearance of an English farm-house, and its well-dressed
-fields, placed there as if by an enchanter's wand, was
-exceedingly pleasant. Mr. Williams not being at home, I received
-in Mr. Davies's house a cordial welcome. After drinking tea
-with his family party, we took a stroll about the farm. At
-Waimate there are three large houses, where the missionary
-gentlemen, Messrs. Williams, Davies, and Clarke, reside;
-and near them are the huts of the native labourers. On an
-adjoining slope, fine crops of barley and wheat were standing
-in full ear; and in another part, fields of potatoes and clover.
-But I cannot attempt to describe all I saw; there were large
-gardens, with every fruit and vegetable which England produces;
-and many belonging to a warmer clime. I may instance
-asparagus, kidney beans, cucumbers, rhubarb, apples,
-pears, figs, peaches, apricots, grapes, olives, gooseberries,
-currants, hops, gorse for fences, and English oaks; also many
-kinds of flowers. Around the farm-yard there were stables,
-a thrashing-barn with its winnowing machine, a blacksmith's
-forge, and on the ground ploughshares and other tools: in
-the middle was that happy mixture of pigs and poultry, lying
-comfortably together, as in every English farm-yard. At the
-distance of a few hundred yards, where the water of a little
-rill had been dammed up into a pool, there was a large and
-substantial water-mill.
-
-All this is very surprising, when it is considered that five
-years ago nothing but the fern flourished here. Moreover,
-native workmanship, taught by the missionaries, has effected
-this change; -- the lesson of the missionary is the enchanter's
-wand. The house had been built, the windows framed, the
-fields ploughed, and even the trees grafted, by a New Zealander.
-At the mill, a New Zealander was seen powdered
-white with flower, like his brother miller in England. When
-I looked at this whole scene, I thought it admirable. It was
-not merely that England was brought vividly before my
-mind; yet, as the evening drew to a close, the domestic
-sounds, the fields of corn, the distant undulating country
-with its trees might well have been mistaken for our fatherland:
-nor was it the triumphant feeling at seeing what Englishmen
-could effect; but rather the high hopes thus inspired
-for the future progress of this fine island.
-
-
-Several young men, redeemed by the missionaries from
-slavery, were employed on the farm. They were dressed in
-a shirt, jacket, and trousers, and had a respectable appearance.
-Judging from one trifling anecdote, I should think
-they must be honest. When walking in the fields, a young
-labourer came up to Mr. Davies, and gave him a knife and
-gimlet, saying that he had found them on the road, and did
-not know to whom they belonged! These young men and
-boys appeared very merry and good-humoured. In the evening
-I saw a party of them at cricket: when I thought of the
-austerity of which the missionaries have been accused, I was
-amused by observing one of their own sons taking an active
-part in the game. A more decided and pleasing change was
-manifested in the young women, who acted as servants within
-the houses. Their clean, tidy, and healthy appearance, like
-that of the dairy-maids in England, formed a wonderful
-contrast with the women of the filthy hovels in Kororadika.
-The wives of the missionaries tried to persuade them not to
-be tattooed; but a famous operator having arrived from the
-south, they said, "We really must just have a few lines on
-our lips; else when we grow old, our lips will shrivel, and we
-shall be so very ugly." There is not nearly so much tattooing
-as formerly; but as it is a badge of distinction between the
-chief and the slave, it will probably long be practised. So
-soon does any train of ideas become habitual, that the
-missionaries told me that even in their eyes a plain face looked
-mean, and not like that of a New Zealand gentleman.
-
-Late in the evening I went to Mr. Williams's house, where
-I passed the night. I found there a large party of children,
-collected together for Christmas Day, and all sitting round
-a table at tea. I never saw a nicer or more merry group; and
-to think that this was in the centre of the land of cannibalism,
-murder, and all atrocious crimes! The cordiality and
-happiness so plainly pictured in the faces of the little circle,
-appeared equally felt by the older persons of the mission.
-
-December 24th. -- In the morning, prayers were read in
-the native tongue to the whole family. After breakfast I
-rambled about the gardens and farm. This was a market-
-day, when the natives of the surrounding hamlets bring their
-potatoes, Indian corn, or pigs, to exchange for blankets,
-tobacco, and sometimes, through the persuasions of the
-missionaries, for soap. Mr. Davies's eldest son, who manages a
-farm of his own, is the man of business in the market. The
-children of the missionaries, who came while young to the
-island, understand the language better than their parents,
-and can get anything more readily done by the natives.
-
-A little before noon Messrs. Williams and Davies walked
-with me to a part of a neighbouring forest, to show me the
-famous kauri pine. I measured one of the noble trees, and
-found it thirty-one feet in circumference above the roots.
-There was another close by, which I did not see, thirty-three
-feet; and I heard of one no less than forty feet. These trees
-are remarkable for their smooth cylindrical boles, which run
-up to a height of sixty, and even ninety feet, with a nearly
-equal diameter, and without a single branch. The crown
-of branches at the summit is out of all proportion small to
-the trunk; and the leaves are likewise small compared with
-the branches. The forest was here almost composed of the
-kauri; and the largest trees, from the parallelism of their
-sides, stood up like gigantic columns of wood. The timber
-of the kauri is the most valuable production of the island;
-moreover, a quantity of resin oozes from the bark, which is
-sold at a penny a pound to the Americans, but its use was
-then unknown. Some of the New Zealand forest must be
-impenetrable to an extraordinary degree. Mr. Matthews
-informed me that one forest only thirty-four miles in width,
-and separating two inhabited districts, had only lately, for
-the first time, been crossed. He and another missionary,
-each with a party of about fifty men, undertook to open a
-road, but it cost more than a fortnight's labour! In
-the woods I saw very few birds. With regard to animals,
-it is a most remarkable fact, that so large an island, extending
-over more than 700 miles in latitude, and in many parts
-ninety broad, with varied stations, a fine climate, and land
-of all heights, from 14,000 feet downwards, with the exception
-of a small rat, did not possess one indigenous animal.
-The several species of that gigantic genus of birds, the
-Deinornis seem here to have replaced mammiferous quadrupeds,
-in the same manner as the reptiles still do at the Galapagos
-archipelago. It is said that the common Norway rat, in
-the short space of two years, annihilated in this northern
-end of the island, the New Zealand species. In many places
-I noticed several sorts of weeds, which, like the rats, I was
-forced to own as countrymen. A leek has overrun whole
-districts, and will prove very troublesome, but it was imported
-as a favour by a French vessel. The common dock
-is also widely disseminated, and will, I fear, for ever remain
-a proof of the rascality of an Englishman, who sold the seeds
-for those of the tobacco plant.
-
-On returning from our pleasant walk to the house, I dined
-with Mr. Williams; and then, a horse being lent me, I returned
-to the Bay of Islands. I took leave of the missionaries
-with thankfulness for their kind welcome, and with feelings
-of high respect for their gentlemanlike, useful, and
-upright characters. I think it would be difficult to find
-a body of men better adapted for the high office which
-they fulfil.
-
-Christmas Day. -- In a few more days the fourth year of
-our absence from England will be completed. Our first
-Christmas Day was spent at Plymouth, the second at St.
-Martin's Cove, near Cape Horn; the third at Port Desire,
-in Patagonia; the fourth at anchor in a wild harbour in the
-peninsula of Tres Montes, this fifth here, and the next, I
-trust in Providence, will be in England. We attended divine
-service in the chapel of Pahia; part of the service being
-read in English, and part in the native language. Whilst at
-New Zealand we did not hear of any recent acts of cannibalism;
-but Mr. Stokes found burnt human bones strewed
-round a fire-place on a small island near the anchorage; but
-these remains of a comfortable banquet might have been
-lying there for several years. It is probable that the moral
-state of the people will rapidly improve. Mr. Bushby mentioned
-one pleasing anecdote as a proof of the sincerity of
-some, at least, of those who profess Christianity. One of
-his young men left him, who had been accustomed to read
-prayers to the rest of the servants. Some weeks afterwards,
-happening to pass late in the evening by an outhouse, he saw
-and heard one of his men reading the Bible with difficulty
-by the light of the fire, to the others. After this the party
-knelt and prayed: in their prayers they mentioned Mr.
-Bushby and his family, and the missionaries, each separately
-in his respective district.
-
-December 26th. -- Mr. Bushby offered to take Mr. Sulivan
-and myself in his boat some miles up the river to Cawa-
-Cawa, and proposed afterwards to walk on to the village of
-Waiomio, where there are some curious rocks. Following
-one of the arms of the bay, we enjoyed a pleasant row, and
-passed through pretty scenery, until we came to a village,
-beyond which the boat could not pass. From this place a
-chief and a party of men volunteered to walk with us to
-Waiomio, a distance of four miles. The chief was at this
-time rather notorious from having lately hung one of his
-wives and a slave for adultery. When one of the missionaries
-remonstrated with him he seemed surprised, and said
-he thought he was exactly following the English method.
-Old Shongi, who happened to be in England during the
-Queen's trial, expressed great disapprobation at the whole
-proceeding: he said he had five wives, and he would rather
-cut off all their heads than be so much troubled about one.
-Leaving this village, we crossed over to another, seated on
-a hill-side at a little distance. The daughter of a chief, who
-was still a heathen, had died there five days before. The
-hovel in which she had expired had been burnt to the ground:
-her body being enclosed between two small canoes, was
-placed upright on the ground, and protected by an enclosure
-bearing wooden images of their gods, and the whole was
-painted bright red, so as to be conspicuous from afar. Her
-gown was fastened to the coffin, and her hair being cut off
-was cast at its foot. The relatives of the family had torn
-the flesh of their arms, bodies, and faces, so that they were
-covered with clotted blood; and the old women looked most
-filthy, disgusting objects. On the following day some of the
-officers visited this place, and found the women still howling
-and cutting themselves.
-
-We continued our walk, and soon reached Waiomio. Here
-there are some singular masses of limestone, resembling
-ruined castles. These rocks have long served for burial
-places, and in consequence are held too sacred to be approached.
-One of the young men, however, cried out, "Let
-us all be brave," and ran on ahead; but when within a hundred
-yards, the whole party thought better of it, and stopped
-short. With perfect indifference, however, they allowed us
-to examine the whole place. At this village we rested some
-hours, during which time there was a long discussion with
-Mr. Bushby, concerning the right of sale of certain lands.
-One old man, who appeared a perfect genealogist, illustrated
-the successive possessors by bits of stick driven into the
-ground. Before leaving the houses a little basketful of
-roasted sweet potatoes was given to each of our party; and
-we all, according to the custom, carried them away to eat
-on the road. I noticed that among the women employed in
-cooking, there was a man-slave: it must be a humiliating
-thing for a man in this warlike country to be employed in
-doing that which is considered as the lowest woman's work.
-Slaves are not allowed to go to war; but this perhaps can
-hardly be considered as a hardship. I heard of one poor
-wretch who, during hostilities, ran away to the opposite
-party; being met by two men, he was immediately seized;
-but as they could not agree to whom he should belong, each
-stood over him with a stone hatchet, and seemed determined
-that the other at least should not take him away alive. The
-poor man, almost dead with fright, was only saved by the
-address of a chief's wife. We afterwards enjoyed a pleasant
-walk back to the boat, but did not reach the ship till late in
-the evening.
-
-December 30th. -- In the afternoon we stood out of the
-Bay of Islands, on our course to Sydney. I believe we were
-all glad to leave New Zealand. It is not a pleasant place.
-Amongst the natives there is absent that charming simplicity
-which is found in Tahiti; and the greater part of the English
-are the very refuse of society. Neither is the country itself
-attractive. I look back but to one bright spot, and that is
-Waimate, with its Christian inhabitants.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-AUSTRALIA
-
-Sydney -- Excursion to Bathurst -- Aspect of the Woods -- Party
-of Natives -- Gradual Extinction of the Aborigines -- Infection
-generated by associated Men in health -- Blue Mountains -- View
-of the grand gulf-like Valleys -- Their origin and formation --
-Bathurst, general civility of the Lower Orders -- State of
-Society -- Van Diemen's Land -- Hobart Town -- Aborigines all
-banished -- Mount Wellington -- King George's Sound --
-Cheerless Aspect of the Country -- Bald Head, calcareous casts
-of branches of Trees -- Party of Natives -- Leave Australia.
-
-
-JANUARY 12th, 1836. -- Early in the morning a light air
-carried us towards the entrance of Port Jackson. Instead
-of beholding a verdant country, interspersed with
-fine houses, a straight line of yellowish cliff brought to our
-minds the coast of Patagonia. A solitary lighthouse, built of
-white stone, alone told us that we were near a great and
-populous city. Having entered the harbour, it appears fine
-and spacious, with cliff-formed shores of horizontally
-stratified sandstone. The nearly level country is covered with
-thin scrubby trees, bespeaking the curse of sterility.
-Proceeding further inland, the country improves: beautiful
-villas and nice cottages are here and there scattered along the
-beach. In the distance stone houses, two and three stories high,
-and windmills standing on the edge of a bank, pointed out to us
-the neighbourhood of the capital of Australia.
-
-At last we anchored within Sydney Cove. We found the
-little basin occupied by many large ships, and surrounded by
-warehouses. In the evening I walked through the town, and
-returned full of admiration at the whole scene. It is a most
-magnificent testimony to the power of the British nation.
-Here, in a less promising country, scores of years have done
-many more times more than an equal number of centuries
-have effected in South America. My first feeling was to
-congratulate myself that I was born an Englishman. Upon
-seeing more of the town afterwards, perhaps my admiration
-fell a little; but yet it is a fine town. The streets are
-regular, broad, clean, and kept in excellent order; the houses
-are of a good size, and the shops well furnished. It may be
-faithfully compared to the large suburbs which stretch out from
-London and a few other great towns in England; but not even near
-London or Birmingham is there an appearance of such rapid
-growth. The number of large houses and other buildings just
-finished was truly surprising; nevertheless, every one
-complained of the high rents and difficulty in procuring a
-house. Coming from South America, where in the towns every man
-of property is known, no one thing surprised me more than
-not being able to ascertain at once to whom this or that
-carriage belonged.
-
-I hired a man and two horses to take me to Bathurst, a
-village about one hundred and twenty miles in the interior,
-and the centre of a great pastoral district. By this means I
-hoped to gain a general idea of the appearance of the country.
-On the morning of the 16th (January) I set out on my excursion.
-The first stage took us to Paramatta, a small country
-town, next to Sydney in importance. The roads were excellent,
-and made upon the MacAdam principle, whinstone having
-been brought for the purpose from the distance of several
-miles. In all respects there was a close resemblance to England:
-perhaps the alehouses here were more numerous. The iron gangs,
-or parties of convicts who have committed here some offense,
-appeared the least like England: they were working in chains,
-under the charge of sentries with loaded arms.
-
-The power which the government possesses, by means
-of forced labour, of at once opening good roads throughout
-the country, has been, I believe, one main cause of the early
-prosperity of this colony. I slept at night at a very
-comfortable inn at Emu ferry, thirty-five miles from Sydney,
-and near the ascent of the Blue Mountains. This line of
-road is the most frequented, and has been the longest inhabited
-of any in the colony. The whole land is enclosed
-with high railings, for the farmers have not succeeded in
-rearing hedges. There are many substantial houses and good
-cottages scattered about; but although considerable pieces of
-land are under cultivation, the greater part yet remains as
-when first discovered.
-
-The extreme uniformity of the vegetation is the most
-remarkable feature in the landscape of the greater part of
-New South Wales. Everywhere we have an open woodland,
-the ground being partially covered with a very thin pasture,
-with little appearance of verdure. The trees nearly all
-belong to one family, and mostly have their leaves placed in
-a vertical, instead of as in Europe, in a nearly horizontal
-position: the foliage is scanty, and of a peculiar pale green
-tint, without any gloss. Hence the woods appear light and
-shadowless: this, although a loss of comfort to the traveller
-under the scorching rays of summer, is of importance to the
-farmer, as it allows grass to grow where it otherwise would
-not. The leaves are not shed periodically: this character
-appears common to the entire southern hemisphere, namely,
-South America, Australia, and the Cape of Good Hope. The
-inhabitants of this hemisphere, and of the intertropical
-regions, thus lose perhaps one of the most glorious, though
-to our eyes common, spectacles in the world -- the first
-bursting into full foliage of the leafless tree. They may,
-however, say that we pay dearly for this by having the land
-covered with mere naked skeletons for so many months. This is
-too true but our senses thus acquire a keen relish for the
-exquisite green of the spring, which the eyes of those living
-within the tropics, sated during the long year with the gorgeous
-productions of those glowing climates, can never experience.
-The greater number of the trees, with the exception
-of some of the Blue-gums, do not attain a large size;
-but they grow tall and tolerably straight, and stand well
-apart. The bark of some of the Eucalypti falls annually, or
-hangs dead in long shreds which swing about with the wind,
-and give to the woods a desolate and untidy appearance. I
-cannot imagine a more complete contrast, in every respect,
-than between the forests of Valdivia or Chiloe, and the
-woods of Australia.
-
-At sunset, a party of a score of the black aborigines passed
-by, each carrying, in their accustomed manner, a bundle of
-spears and other weapons. By giving a leading young man a
-shilling, they were easily detained, and threw their spears for
-my amusement. They were all partly clothed, and several
-could speak a little English: their countenances were good-
-humoured and pleasant, and they appeared far from being
-such utterly degraded beings as they have usually been
-represented. In their own arts they are admirable. A cap being
-fixed at thirty yards distance, they transfixed it with a spear,
-delivered by the throwing-stick with the rapidity of an arrow
-from the bow of a practised archer. In tracking animals or
-men they show most wonderful sagacity; and I heard of several
-of their remarks which manifested considerable acuteness.
-They will not, however, cultivate the ground, or build
-houses and remain stationary, or even take the trouble of
-tending a flock of sheep when given to them. On the whole
-they appear to me to stand some few degrees higher in the
-scale of civilization than the Fuegians.
-
-It is very curious thus to see in the midst of a civilized
-people, a set of harmless savages wandering about without
-knowing where they shall sleep at night, and gaining their
-livelihood by hunting in the woods. As the white man has
-travelled onwards, he has spread over the country belonging
-to several tribes. These, although thus enclosed by one common
-people, keep up their ancient distinctions, and sometimes
-go to war with each other. In an engagement which
-took place lately, the two parties most singularly chose the
-centre of the village of Bathurst for the field of battle. This
-was of service to the defeated side, for the runaway warriors
-took refuge in the barracks.
-
-The number of aborigines is rapidly decreasing. In my
-whole ride, with the exception of some boys brought up by
-Englishmen, I saw only one other party. This decrease, no
-doubt, must be partly owing to the introduction of spirits, to
-European diseases (even the milder ones of which, such as
-the measles, [1] prove very destructive), and to the gradual
-extinction of the wild animals. It is said that numbers of
-their children invariably perish in very early infancy from
-the effects of their wandering life; and as the difficulty of
-procuring food increases, so must their wandering habits
-increase; and hence the population, without any apparent
-deaths from famine, is repressed in a manner extremely
-sudden compared to what happens in civilized countries,
-where the father, though in adding to his labour he may injure
-himself, does not destroy his offspring.
-
-Besides the several evident causes of destruction, there
-appears to be some more mysterious agency generally at
-work. Wherever the European has trod, death seems to pursue
-the aboriginal. We may look to the wide extent of the
-Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and Australia,
-and we find the same result. Nor is it the white man alone
-that thus acts the destroyer; the Polynesian of Malay extraction
-has in parts of the East Indian archipelago, thus driven
-before him the dark-coloured native. The varieties of man
-seem to act on each other in the same way as different species
-of animals -- the stronger always extirpating the weaker. It
-was melancholy at New Zealand to hear the fine energetic
-natives saying that they knew the land was doomed to pass
-from their children. Every one has heard of the inexplicable
-reduction of the population in the beautiful and healthy island
-of Tahiti since the date of Captain Cook's voyages: although
-in that case we might have expected that it would have been
-increased; for infanticide, which formerly prevailed to so
-extraordinary a degree, has ceased; profligacy has greatly
-diminished, and the murderous wars become less frequent.
-
-The Rev. J. Williams, in his interesting work, [2] says, that
-the first intercourse between natives and Europeans, "is
-invariably attended with the introduction of fever, dysentery,
-or some other disease, which carries off numbers of the people."
-Again he affirms, "It is certainly a fact, which cannot
-be controverted, that most of the diseases which have raged
-in the islands during my residence there, have been introduced
-by ships; [3] and what renders this fact remarkable is,
-that there might be no appearance of disease among the crew
-of the ship which conveyed this destructive importation."
-This statement is not quite so extraordinary as it at first
-appears; for several cases are on record of the most malignant
-fevers having broken out, although the parties themselves,
-who were the cause, were not affected. In the early
-part of the reign of George III., a prisoner who had been
-confined in a dungeon, was taken in a coach with four constables
-before a magistrate; and although the man himself
-was not ill, the four constables died from a short putrid
-fever; but the contagion extended to no others. From these
-facts it would almost appear as if the effluvium of one set
-of men shut up for some time together was poisonous when
-inhaled by others; and possibly more so, if the men be of
-different races. Mysterious as this circumstance appears to
-be, it is not more surprising than that the body of one's
-fellow-creature, directly after death, and before putrefaction
-has commenced, should often be of so deleterious a quality,
-that the mere puncture from an instrument used in its
-dissection, should prove fatal.
-
-17th. -- Early in the morning we passed the Nepean in a
-ferry-boat. The river, although at this spot both broad and
-deep, had a very small body of running water. Having
-crossed a low piece of land on the opposite side, we reached
-the slope of the Blue Mountains. The ascent is not steep,
-the road having been cut with much care on the side of a
-sandstone cliff. On the summit an almost level plain extends,
-which, rising imperceptibly to the westward, at last attains
-a height of more than 3000 feet. From so grand a title as
-Blue Mountains, and from their absolute altitude, I expected
-to have seen a bold chain of mountains crossing the country;
-but instead of this, a sloping plain presents merely an
-inconsiderable front to the low land near the coast. From
-this first slope, the view of the extensive woodland to the
-east was striking, and the surrounding trees grew bold and
-lofty. But when once on the sandstone platform, the scenery
-becomes exceedingly monotonous; each side of the road is
-bordered by scrubby trees of the never-failing Eucalyptus
-family; and with the exception of two or three small inns,
-there are no houses or cultivated land: the road, moreover,
-is solitary; the most frequent object being a bullock-waggon,
-piled up with bales of wool.
-
-In the middle of the day we baited our horses at a little
-inn, called the Weatherboard. The country here is elevated
-2800 feet above the sea. About a mile and a half from this
-place there is a view exceedingly well worth visiting. Following
-down a little valley and its tiny rill of water, an
-immense gulf unexpectedly opens through the trees which
-border the pathway, at the depth of perhaps 1500 feet.
-Walking on a few yards, one stands on the brink of a vast
-precipice, and below one sees a grand bay or gulf, for I know
-not what other name to give it, thickly covered with forest.
-The point of view is situated as if at the head of a bay, the
-line of cliff diverging on each side, and showing headland
-behind headland, as on a bold sea-coast. These cliffs are
-composed of horizontal strata of whitish sandstone; and
-are so absolutely vertical, that in many places a person
-standing on the edge and throwing down a stone, can see it
-strike the trees in the abyss below. So unbroken is the line
-of cliff, that in order to reach the foot of the waterfall,
-formed by this little stream, it is said to be necessary to go
-sixteen miles round. About five miles distant in front,
-another line of cliff extends, which thus appears completely
-to encircle the valley; and hence the name of bay is justified,
-as applied to this grand amphitheatrical depression. If we
-imagine a winding harbour, with its deep water surrounded
-by bold cliff-like shores, to be laid dry, and a forest to
-spring up on its sandy bottom, we should then have the
-appearance and structure here exhibited. This kind of view was
-to me quite novel, and extremely magnificent.
-
-In the evening we reached the Blackheath. The sandstone
-plateau has here attained the height of 3400 feet; and
-is covered, as before, with the same scrubby woods. From
-the road, there were occasional glimpses into a profound
-valley, of the same character as the one described; but from
-the steepness and depth of its sides, the bottom was scarcely
-ever to be seen. The Blackheath is a very comfortable inn,
-kept by an old soldier; and it reminded me of the small inns
-in North Wales.
-
-18th. -- Very early in the morning, I walked about three
-miles to see Govett's Leap; a view of a similar character
-with that near the Weatherboard, but perhaps even more
-stupendous. So early in the day the gulf was filled with a
-thin blue haze, which, although destroying the general effect
-of the view added to the apparent depth at which the forest
-was stretched out beneath our feet. These valleys, which so
-long presented an insuperable barrier to the attempts of the
-most enterprising of the colonists to reach the interior, are
-most remarkable. Great arm-like bays, expanding at their
-upper ends, often branch from the main valleys and penetrate
-the sandstone platform; on the other hand, the platform
-often sends promontories into the valleys, and even
-leaves in them great, almost insulated, masses. To descend
-into some of these valleys, it is necessary to go round twenty
-miles; and into others, the surveyors have only lately
-penetrated, and the colonists have not yet been able to drive in
-their cattle. But the most remarkable feature in their structure
-is, that although several miles wide at their heads, they
-generally contract towards their mouths to such a degree
-as to become impassable. The Surveyor-General, Sir T.
-Mitchell, [4] endeavoured in vain, first walking and then by
-crawling between the great fallen fragments of sandstone,
-to ascend through the gorge by which the river Grose joins
-the Nepean, yet the valley of the Grose in its upper part,
-as I saw, forms a magnificent level basin some miles in
-width, and is on all sides surrounded by cliffs, the summits
-of which are believed to be nowhere less than 3000 feet
-above the level of the sea. When cattle are driven into the
-valley of the Wolgan by a path (which I descended), partly
-natural and partly made by the owner of the land, they cannot
-escape; for this valley is in every other part surrounded
-by perpendicular cliffs, and eight miles lower down, it
-contracts from an average width of half a mile, to a mere
-chasm, impassable to man or beast. Sir T. Mitchell states
-that the great valley of the Cox river with all its branches,
-contracts, where it unites with the Nepean, into a gorge
-2200 yards in width, and about 1000 feet in depth. Other
-similar cases might have been added.
-
-The first impression, on seeing the correspondence of the
-horizontal strata on each side of these valleys and great
-amphitheatrical depressions, is that they have been hollowed
-out, like other valleys, by the action of water; but when one
-reflects on the enormous amount of stone, which on this
-view must have been removed through mere gorges or
-chasms, one is led to ask whether these spaces may not have
-subsided. But considering the form of the irregularly
-branching valleys, and of the narrow promontories projecting
-into them from the platforms, we are compelled to abandon
-this notion. To attribute these hollows to the present alluvial
-action would be preposterous; nor does the drainage
-from the summit-level always fall, as I remarked near the
-Weatherboard, into the head of these valleys, but into one
-side of their bay-like recesses. Some of the inhabitants
-remarked to me that they never viewed one of those bay-like
-recesses, with the headlands receding on both hands, without
-being struck with their resemblance to a bold sea-coast. This
-is certainly the case; moreover, on the present coast of New
-South Wales, the numerous, fine, widely-branching harbours,
-which are generally connected with the sea by a narrow
-mouth worn through the sandstone coast-cliffs, varying from
-one mile in width to a quarter of a mile, present a likeness,
-though on a miniature scale, to the great valleys of the
-interior. But then immediately occurs the startling difficulty,
-why has the sea worn out these great, though circumscribed
-depressions on a wide platform, and left mere gorges at the
-openings, through which the whole vast amount of triturated
-matter must have been carried away? The only light I can
-throw upon this enigma, is by remarking that banks of the
-most irregular forms appear to be now forming in some seas,
-as in parts of the West Indies and in the Red Sea, and that
-their sides are exceedingly steep. Such banks, I have been
-led to suppose, have been formed by sediment heaped by
-strong currents on an irregular bottom. That in some cases
-the sea, instead of spreading out sediment in a uniform sheet,
-heaps it round submarine rocks and islands, it is hardly
-possible to doubt, after examining the charts of the West
-Indies; and that the waves have power to form high and
-precipitous cliffs, even in land-locked harbours, I have noticed
-in many parts of South America. To apply these ideas to the
-sandstone platforms of New South Wales, I imagine that the
-strata were heaped by the action of strong currents, and of
-the undulations of an open sea, on an irregular bottom; and
-that the valley-like spaces thus left unfilled had their steeply
-sloping flanks worn into cliffs, during a slow elevation of
-the land; the worn-down sandstone being removed, either at
-the time when the narrow gorges were cut by the retreating
-sea, or subsequently by alluvial action.
-
-
-Soon after leaving the Blackheath, we descended from the
-sandstone platform by the pass of Mount Victoria. To effect
-this pass, an enormous quantity of stone has been cut
-through; the design, and its manner of execution, being
-worthy of any line of road in England. We now entered
-upon a country less elevated by nearly a thousand feet, and
-consisting of granite. With the change of rock, the vegetation
-improved, the trees were both finer and stood farther
-apart; and the pasture between them was a little greener and
-more plentiful. At Hassan's Walls, I left the high road,
-and made a short detour to a farm called Walerawang; to
-the superintendent of which I had a letter of introduction
-from the owner in Sydney. Mr. Browne had the kindness to
-ask me to stay the ensuing day, which I had much pleasure
-in doing. This place offers an example of one of the large
-farming, or rather sheep-grazing establishments of the
-colony. Cattle and horses are, however, in this case rather
-more numerous than usual, owing to some of the valleys
-being swampy and producing a coarser pasture. Two or
-three flat pieces of ground near the house were cleared and
-cultivated with corn, which the harvest-men were now reaping:
-but no more wheat is sown than sufficient for the annual
-support of the labourers employed on the establishment. The
-usual number of assigned convict-servants here is about
-forty, but at the present time there were rather more. Although
-the farm was well stocked with every necessary,
-there was an apparent absence of comfort; and not one
-single woman resided here. The sunset of a fine day will
-generally cast an air of happy contentment on any scene;
-but here, at this retired farm-house, the brightest tints on
-the surrounding woods could not make me forget that forty
-hardened, profligate men were ceasing from their daily
-labours, like the slaves from Africa, yet without their holy
-claim for compassion.
-
-Early on the next morning, Mr. Archer, the joint superintendent,
-had the kindness to take me out kangaroo-hunting.
-We continued riding the greater part of the day, but had
-very bad sport, not seeing a kangaroo, or even a wild dog.
-The greyhounds pursued a kangaroo rat into a hollow tree,
-out of which we dragged it: it is an animal as large as a
-rabbit, but with the figure of a kangaroo. A few years since
-this country abounded with wild animals; but now the emu
-is banished to a long distance, and the kangaroo is become
-scarce; to both the English greyhound has been highly
-destructive. It may be long before these animals are altogether
-exterminated, but their doom is fixed. The aborigines are
-always anxious to borrow the dogs from the farm-houses:
-the use of them, the offal when an animal is killed, and some
-milk from the cows, are the peace-offerings of the settlers,
-who push farther and farther towards the interior. The
-thoughtless aboriginal, blinded by these trifling advantages,
-is delighted at the approach of the white man, who seems
-predestined to inherit the country of his children.
-
-Although having poor sport, we enjoyed a pleasant ride.
-The woodland is generally so open that a person on horseback
-can gallop through it. It is traversed by a few flat-
-bottomed valleys, which are green and free from trees: in
-such spots the scenery was pretty like that of a park. In the
-whole country I scarcely saw a place without the marks of a
-fire; whether these had been more or less recent -- whether
-the stumps were more or less black, was the greatest change
-which varied the uniformity, so wearisome to the traveller's
-eye. In these woods there are not many birds; I saw, however,
-some large flocks of the white cockatoo feeding in a
-corn-field, and a few most beautiful parrots; crows, like our
-jackdaws were not uncommon, and another bird something
-like the magpie. In the dusk of the evening I took a stroll
-along a chain of ponds, which in this dry country represented
-the course of a river, and had the good fortune to see several
-of the famous Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. They were
-diving and playing about the surface of the water, but
-showed so little of their bodies, that they might easily have
-been mistaken for water-rats. Mr. Browne shot one: certainly
-it is a most extraordinary animal; a stuffed specimen does not
-at all give a good idea of the appearance of the head and beak
-when fresh; the latter becoming hard and contracted. [5]
-
-20th. -- A long day's ride to Bathurst. Before joining the
-highroad we followed a mere path through the forest; and
-the country, with the exception of a few squatters' huts, was
-very solitary. We experienced this day the sirocco-like wind
-of Australia, which comes from the parched deserts of the
-interior. Clouds of dust were travelling in every direction;
-and the wind felt as if it had passed over a fire. I afterwards
-heard that the thermometer out of doors had stood at
-119 degs., and in a closed room at 96 degs. In the afternoon we
-came in view of the downs of Bathurst. These undulating but
-nearly smooth plains are very remarkable in this country,
-from being absolutely destitute of trees. They support only
-a thin brown pasture. We rode some miles over this country,
-and then reached the township of Bathurst, seated in the
-middle of what may be called either a very broad valley, or
-narrow plain. I was told at Sydney not to form too bad an
-opinion of Australia by judging of the country from the
-roadside, nor too good a one from Bathurst; in this latter
-respect, I did not feel myself in the least danger of being
-prejudiced. The season, it must be owned, had been one of great
-drought, and the country did not wear a favourable aspect;
-although I understand it was incomparably worse two or
-three months before. The secret of the rapidly growing
-prosperity of Bathurst is, that the brown pasture which
-appears to the stranger's eye so wretched, is excellent for
-sheep-grazing. The town stands, at the height of 2200 feet
-above the sea, on the banks of the Macquarie. This is one of
-the rivers flowing into the vast and scarcely known interior.
-The line of watershed, which divides the inland streams from
-those on the coast, has a height of about 3000 feet, and runs
-in a north and south direction at the distance of from eighty
-to a hundred miles from the sea-side. The Macquarie figures
-in the map as a respectable river, and it is the largest of
-those draining this part of the water-shed; yet to my surprise
-I found it a mere chain of ponds, separated from each other
-by spaces almost dry. Generally a small stream is running;
-and sometimes there are high and impetuous floods. Scanty
-as the supply of the water is throughout this district, it
-becomes still scantier further inland.
-
-22nd. -- I commenced my return, and followed a new road
-called Lockyer's Line, along which the country is rather more
-hilly and picturesque. This was a long day's ride; and the
-house where I wished to sleep was some way off the road,
-and not easily found. I met on this occasion, and indeed on
-all others, a very general and ready civility among the lower
-orders, which, when one considers what they are, and what
-they have been, would scarcely have been expected. The
-farm where I passed the night, was owned by two young
-men who had only lately come out, and were beginning a
-settler's life. The total want of almost every comfort was
-not attractive; but future and certain prosperity was before
-their eyes, and that not far distant.
-
-The next day we passed through large tracts of country in
-flames, volumes of smoke sweeping across the road. Before
-noon we joined our former road, and ascended Mount Victoria.
-I slept at the Weatherboard, and before dark took
-another walk to the amphitheatre. On the road to Sydney
-I spent a very pleasant evening with Captain King at Dunheved;
-and thus ended my little excursion in the colony of
-New South Wales.
-
-Before arriving here the three things which interested me
-most were -- the state of society amongst the higher classes,
-the condition of the convicts, and the degree of attraction
-sufficient to induce persons to emigrate. Of course, after
-so very short a visit, one's opinion is worth scarcely anything;
-but it is as difficult not to form some opinion, as it is
-to form a correct judgment. On the whole, from what I
-heard, more than from what I saw, I was disappointed in the
-state of society. The whole community is rancorously
-divided into parties on almost every subject. Among those
-who, from their station in life, ought to be the best, many
-live in such open profligacy that respectable people cannot
-associate with them. There is much jealousy between the
-children of the rich emancipist and the free settlers, the
-former being pleased to consider honest men as interlopers.
-The whole population, poor and rich, are bent on acquiring
-wealth: amongst the higher orders, wool and sheep-grazing
-form the constant subject of conversation. There are many
-serious drawbacks to the comforts of a family, the chief of
-which, perhaps, is being surrounded by convict servants.
-How thoroughly odious to every feeling, to be waited on by
-a man who the day before, perhaps, was flogged, from your
-representation, for some trifling misdemeanor. The female
-servants are of course, much worse: hence children learn the
-vilest expressions, and it is fortunate, if not equally vile
-ideas.
-
-On the other hand, the capital of a person, without any
-trouble on his part, produces him treble interest to what it
-will in England; and with care he is sure to grow rich. The
-luxuries of life are in abundance, and very little dearer than
-in England, and most articles of food are cheaper. The
-climate is splendid, and perfectly healthy; but to my mind
-its charms are lost by the uninviting aspect of the country.
-Settlers possess a great advantage in finding their sons of
-service when very young. At the age of from sixteen to
-twenty, they frequently take charge of distant farming stations.
-This, however, must happen at the expense of their
-boys associating entirely with convict servants. I am not
-aware that the tone of society has assumed any peculiar
-character; but with such habits, and without intellectual
-pursuits, it can hardly fail to deteriorate. My opinion is
-such, that nothing but rather sharp necessity should compel
-me to emigrate.
-
-The rapid prosperity and future prospects of this colony
-are to me, not understanding these subjects, very puzzling.
-The two main exports are wool and whale-oil, and to both
-of these productions there is a limit. The country is totally
-unfit for canals, therefore there is a not very distant point,
-beyond which the land-carriage of wool will not repay the
-expense of shearing and tending sheep. Pasture everywhere
-is so thin that settlers have already pushed far into the
-interior: moreover, the country further inland becomes extremely
-poor. Agriculture, on account of the droughts, can
-never succeed on an extended scale: therefore, so far as I
-can see, Australia must ultimately depend upon being the
-centre of commerce for the southern hemisphere, and perhaps
-on her future manufactories. Possessing coal, she
-always has the moving power at hand. From the habitable
-country extending along the coast, and from her English
-extraction, she is sure to be a maritime nation. I formerly
-imagined that Australia would rise to be as grand and powerful
-a country as North America, but now it appears to me
-that such future grandeur is rather problematical.
-
-With respect to the state of the convicts, I had still fewer
-opportunities of judging than on other points. The first
-question is, whether their condition is at all one of
-punishment: no one will maintain that it is a very severe one.
-This, however, I suppose, is of little consequence as long as
-it continues to be an object of dread to criminals at home.
-The corporeal wants of the convicts are tolerably well supplied:
-their prospect of future liberty and comfort is not
-distant, and, after good conduct, certain. A "ticket of
-leave," which, as long as a man keeps clear of suspicion as
-well as of crime, makes him free within a certain district, is
-given upon good conduct, after years proportional to the
-length of the sentence; yet with all this, and overlooking
-the previous imprisonment and wretched passage out, I
-believe the years of assignment are passed away with discontent
-and unhappiness. As an intelligent man remarked to
-me, the convicts know no pleasure beyond sensuality, and in
-this they are not gratified. The enormous bribe which Government
-possesses in offering free pardons, together with the
-deep horror of the secluded penal settlements, destroys
-confidence between the convicts, and so prevents crime. As to a
-sense of shame, such a feeling does not appear to be known,
-and of this I witnessed some very singular proofs. Though
-it is a curious fact, I was universally told that the character
-of the convict population is one of arrant cowardice: not
-unfrequently some become desperate, and quite indifferent as
-to life, yet a plan requiring cool or continued courage is
-seldom put into execution. The worst feature in the whole
-case is, that although there exists what may be called a legal
-reform, and comparatively little is committed which the law
-can touch, yet that any moral reform should take place
-appears to be quite out of the question. I was assured by
-well-informed people, that a man who should try to improve,
-could not while living with other assigned servants; -- his
-life would be one of intolerable misery and persecution. Nor
-must the contamination of the convict-ships and prisons, both
-here and in England, be forgotten. On the whole, as a place
-of punishment, the object is scarcely gained; as a real system
-of reform it has failed, as perhaps would every other plan;
-but as a means of making men outwardly honest, -- of converting
-vagabonds, most useless in one hemisphere, into
-active citizens of another, and thus giving birth to a new
-and splendid country -- a grand centre of civilization -- it has
-succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history.
-
-
-30th. -- The Beagle sailed for Hobart Town in Van Diemen's
-Land. On the 5th of February, after a six days' passage,
-of which the first part was fine, and the latter very cold
-and squally, we entered the mouth of Storm Bay: the weather
-justified this awful name. The bay should rather be called
-an estuary, for it receives at its head the waters of the
-Derwent. Near the mouth, there are some extensive basaltic
-platforms; but higher up the land becomes mountainous, and
-is covered by a light wood. The lower parts of the hills
-which skirt the bay are cleared; and the bright yellow fields
-of corn, and dark green ones of potatoes, appear very luxuriant.
-Late in the evening we anchored in the snug cove,
-on the shores of which stands the capital of Tasmania. The
-first aspect of the place was very inferior to that of Sydney;
-the latter might be called a city, this is only a town. It
-stands at the base of Mount Wellington, a mountain 3100
-feet high, but of little picturesque beauty; from this source,
-however, it receives a good supply of water. Round the cove
-there are some fine warehouses and on one side a small fort.
-Coming from the Spanish settlements, where such magnificent
-care has generally been paid to the fortifications, the
-means of defence in these colonies appeared very contemptible.
-Comparing the town with Sydney, I was chiefly struck
-with the comparative fewness of the large houses, either
-built or building. Hobart Town, from the census of 1835,
-contained 13,826 inhabitants, and the whole of Tasmania 36,505.
-
-All the aborigines have been removed to an island in
-Bass's Straits, so that Van Diemen's Land enjoys the great
-advantage of being free from a native population. This
-most cruel step seems to have been quite unavoidable, as
-the only means of stopping a fearful succession of robberies,
-burnings, and murders, committed by the blacks; and which
-sooner or later would have ended in their utter destruction.
-I fear there is no doubt, that this train of evil and its
-consequences, originated in the infamous conduct of some of
-our countrymen. Thirty years is a short period, in which to
-have banished the last aboriginal from his native island, --
-and that island nearly as large as Ireland. The correspondence
-on this subject, which took place between the government
-at home and that of Van Diemen's Land, is very interesting.
-Although numbers of natives were shot and taken prisoners
-in the skirmishing, which was going on at intervals for several
-years; nothing seems fully to have impressed them with
-the idea of our overwhelming power, until the whole island,
-in 1830, was put under martial law, and by proclamation the
-whole population commanded to assist in one great attempt
-to secure the entire race. The plan adopted was nearly similar
-to that of the great hunting-matches in India: a line was
-formed reaching across the island, with the intention of
-driving the natives into a _cul-de-sac_ on Tasman's peninsula.
-The attempt failed; the natives, having tied up their dogs,
-stole during one night through the lines. This is far from
-surprising, when their practised senses, and usual manner
-of crawling after wild animals is considered. I have been
-assured that they can conceal themselves on almost bare
-ground, in a manner which until witnessed is scarcely credible;
-their dusky bodies being easily mistaken for the blackened
-stumps which are scattered all over the country. I was
-told of a trial between a party of Englishmen and a native,
-who was to stand in full view on the side of a bare hill; if the
-Englishmen closed their eyes for less than a minute, he
-would squat down, and then they were never able to distinguish
-him from the surrounding stumps. But to return to
-the hunting-match; the natives understanding this kind of
-warfare, were terribly alarmed, for they at once perceived
-the power and numbers of the whites. Shortly afterwards
-a party of thirteen belonging to two tribes came in; and,
-conscious of their unprotected condition, delivered themselves
-up in despair. Subsequently by the intrepid exertions
-of Mr. Robinson, an active and benevolent man, who
-fearlessly visited by himself the most hostile of the natives,
-the whole were induced to act in a similar manner. They
-were then removed to an island, where food and clothes
-were provided them. Count Strzelecki states, [6] that "at the
-epoch of their deportation in 1835, the number of natives
-amounted to 210. In 1842, that is, after the interval of seven
-years, they mustered only fifty-four individuals; and, while
-each family of the interior of New South Wales, uncontaminated
-by contact with the whites, swarms with children, those
-of Flinders' Island had during eight years an accession of
-only fourteen in number!"
-
-The Beagle stayed here ten days, and in this time I made
-several pleasant little excursions, chiefly with the object of
-examining the geological structure of the immediate
-neighbourhood. The main points of interest consist, first in
-some highly fossiliferous strata, belonging to the Devonian or
-Carboniferous period; secondly, in proofs of a late small rise
-of the land; and lastly, in a solitary and superficial patch of
-yellowish limestone or travertin, which contains numerous
-impressions of leaves of trees, together with land-shells, not
-now existing. It is not improbable that this one small quarry
-includes the only remaining record of the vegetation of Van
-Diemen's Land during one former epoch.
-
-The climate here is damper than in New South Wales,
-and hence the land is more fertile. Agriculture flourishes;
-the cultivated fields look well, and the gardens abound with
-thriving vegetables and fruit-trees. Some of the farmhouses,
-situated in retired spots, had a very attractive appearance.
-The general aspect of the vegetation is similar to
-that of Australia; perhaps it is a little more green and
-cheerful; and the pasture between the trees rather more
-abundant. One day I took a long walk on the side of the bay
-opposite to the town: I crossed in a steamboat, two of which
-are constantly plying backwards and forwards. The machinery
-of one of these vessels was entirely manufactured in
-this colony, which, from its very foundation, then numbered
-only three and thirty years! Another day I ascended Mount
-Wellington; I took with me a guide, for I failed in a first
-attempt, from the thickness of the wood. Our guide, however,
-was a stupid fellow, and conducted us to the southern
-and damp side of the mountain, where the vegetation was
-very luxuriant; and where the labour of the ascent, from the
-number of rotten trunks, was almost as great as on a mountain
-in Tierra del Fuego or in Chiloe. It cost us five and a
-half hours of hard climbing before we reached the summit.
-In many parts the Eucalypti grew to a great size, and composed
-a noble forest. In some of the dampest ravines, tree-
-ferns flourished in an extraordinary manner; I saw one
-which must have been at least twenty feet high to the base
-of the fronds, and was in girth exactly six feet. The fronds
-forming the most elegant parasols, produced a gloomy shade,
-like that of the first hour of the night. The summit of the
-mountain is broad and flat, and is composed of huge angular
-masses of naked greenstone. Its elevation is 3100 feet above
-the level of the sea. The day was splendidly clear, and we
-enjoyed a most extensive view; to the north, the country
-appeared a mass of wooded mountains, of about the same height
-with that on which we were standing, and with an equally
-tame outline: to the south the broken land and water, forming
-many intricate bays, was mapped with clearness before
-us. After staying some hours on the summit, we found a
-better way to descend, but did not reach the Beagle till eight
-o'clock, after a severe day's work.
-
-February 7th. -- The Beagle sailed from Tasmania, and,
-on the 6th of the ensuing month, reached King George's
-Sound, situated close to the S. W. corner of Australia. We
-stayed there eight days; and we did not during our voyage
-pass a more dull and uninteresting time. The country,
-viewed from an eminence, appears a woody plain, with here
-and there rounded and partly bare hills of granite protruding.
-One day I went out with a party, in hopes of seeing a
-kangaroo hunt, and walked over a good many miles of country.
-Everywhere we found the soil sandy, and very poor;
-it supported either a coarse vegetation of thin, low brushwood
-and wiry grass, or a forest of stunted trees. The
-scenery resembled that of the high sandstone platform of the
-Blue Mountains; the Casuarina (a tree somewhat resembling
-a Scotch fir) is, however, here in greater number, and
-the Eucalyptus in rather less. In the open parts there were
-many grass-trees, -- a plant which, in appearance, has some
-affinity with the palm; but, instead of being surmounted by
-a crown of noble fronds, it can boast merely of a tuft of
-very coarse grass-like leaves. The general bright green colour
-of the brushwood and other plants, viewed from a distance,
-seemed to promise fertility. A single walk, however, was enough
-to dispel such an illusion; and he who thinks with me will never
-wish to walk again in so uninviting a country.
-
-One day I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to Bald Head;
-the place mentioned by so many navigators, where some imagined
-that they saw corals, and others that they saw petrified
-trees, standing in the position in which they had grown.
-According to our view, the beds have been formed by the
-wind having heaped up fine sand, composed of minute rounded
-particles of shells and corals, during which process
-branches and roots of trees, together with many land-shells,
-became enclosed. The whole then became consolidated by
-the percolation of calcareous matter; and the cylindrical
-cavities left by the decaying of the wood, were thus also
-filled up with a hard pseudo-stalactical stone. The weather
-is now wearing away the softer parts, and in consequence
-the hard casts of the roots and branches of the trees project
-above the surface, and, in a singularly deceptive manner,
-resemble the stumps of a dead thicket.
-
-A large tribe of natives, called the White Cockatoo men
-happened to pay the settlement a visit while we were there.
-These men, as well as those of the tribe belonging to King
-George's Sound, being tempted by the offer of some tubs of
-rice and sugar, were persuaded to hold a "corrobery," or
-great dancing-party. As soon as it grew dark, small fires
-were lighted, and the men commenced their toilet, which
-consisted in painting themselves white in spots and lines.
-As soon as all was ready, large fires were kept blazing,
-round which the women and children were collected as spectators;
-the Cockatoo and King George's men formed two distinct
-parties, and generally danced in answer to each other.
-The dancing consisted in their running either sideways or in
-Indian file into an open space, and stamping the ground with
-great force as they marched together. Their heavy footsteps
-were accompanied by a kind of grunt, by beating their
-clubs and spears together, and by various other gesticulations,
-such as extending their arms and wriggling their
-bodies. It was a most rude, barbarous scene, and, to our
-ideas, without any sort of meaning; but we observed that
-the black women and children watched it with the greatest
-pleasure. Perhaps these dances originally represented actions,
-such as wars and victories; there was one called the Emu
-dance, in which each man extended his arm in a bent manner,
-like the neck of that bird. In another dance, one man
-imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in the woods,
-whilst a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him.
-When both tribes mingled in the dance, the ground trembled
-with the heaviness of their steps, and the air resounded with
-their wild cries. Every one appeared in high spirits, and the
-group of nearly naked figures, viewed by the light of the
-blazing fires, all moving in hideous harmony, formed a perfect
-display of a festival amongst the lowest barbarians. In
-Tierra del Fuego, we have beheld many curious scenes in
-savage life, but never, I think, one where the natives were
-in such high spirits, and so perfectly at their ease. After
-the dancing was over, the whole party formed a great circle
-on the ground, and the boiled rice and sugar was distributed,
-to the delight of all.
-
-After several tedious delays from clouded weather, on the
-14th of March, we gladly stood out of King George's Sound
-on our course to Keeling Island. Farewell, Australia! you
-are a rising child, and doubtless some day will reign a great
-princess in the South: but you are too great and ambitious
-for affection, yet not great enough for respect. I leave your
-shores without sorrow or regret.
-
-[1] It is remarkable how the same disease is modified in
-different climates. At the little island of St. Helena the
-introduction of scarlet fever is dreaded as a plague. In some
-countries, foreigners and natives are as differently affected by
-certain contagious disorders as if they had been different
-animals; of which fact some instances have occurred in Chile;
-and, according to Humboldt, in Mexico (Polit. Essay, New Spain,
-vol. iv.).
-
-[2] Narrative of Missionary Enterprise, p. 282.
-
-[3] Captain Beechey (chap. iv., vol. i.) states that the
-inhabitants of Pitcairn Island are firmly convinced that after
-the arrival of every ship they suffer cutaneous and other
-disorders. Captain Beechey attributes this to the change of diet
-during the time of the visit. Dr. Macculloch (Western Isles,
-vol. ii. p. 32) says: "It is asserted, that on the arrival of a
-stranger (at St. Kilda) all the inhabitants, in the common
-phraseology, catch a cold." Dr. Macculloch considers the whole
-case, although often previously affirmed, as ludicrous. He adds,
-however, that "the question was put by us to the inhabitants who
-unanimously agreed in the story." In Vancouver's Voyage, there
-is a somewhat similar statement with respect to Otaheite. Dr.
-Dieffenbach, in a note to his translation of the Journal, states
-that the same fact is universally believed by the inhabitants of
-the Chatham Islands, and in parts of New Zealand. It is
-impossible that such a belief should have become universal in
-the northern hemisphere, at the Antipodes, and in the Pacific,
-without some good foundation. Humboldt (Polit. Essay on King of
-New Spain, vol. iv.) says, that the great epidemics of Panama
-and Callao are "marked" by the arrival of ships from Chile,
-because the people from that temperate region, first experience
-the fatal effects of the torrid zones. I may add, that I have
-heard it stated in Shropshire, that sheep, which have been
-imported from vessels, although themselves in a healthy
-condition, if placed in the same fold with others, frequently
-produce sickness in the flock.
-
-[4] Travels in Australia, vol. i. p. 154. I must express my
-obligation to Sir T. Mitchell, for several interesting personal
-communications on the subject of these great valleys of New
-South Wales.
-
-[5] I was interested by finding here the hollow conical pitfall
-of the lion-ant, or some other insect; first a fly fell down the
-treacherous slope and immediately disappeared; then came a large
-but unwary ant; its struggles to escape being very violent,
-those curious little jets of sand, described by Kirby and Spence
-(Entomol., vol. i. p. 425) as being flirted by the insect's
-tail, were promptly directed against the expected victim. But
-the ant enjoyed a better fate than the fly, and escaped the
-fatal jaws which lay concealed at the base of the conical
-hollow. This Australian pitfall was only about half the size of
-that made by the European lion-ant.
-
-[6] Physical Description of New South Wales and Van Diemen's
-Land, p. 354.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-KEELING ISLAND: -- CORAL FORMATIONS
-
-Keeling Island -- Singular appearance -- Scanty Flora --
-Transport of Seeds -- Birds and Insects -- Ebbing and flowing
-Springs -- Fields of dead Coral -- Stones transported in the
-roots of Trees -- Great Crab -- Stinging Corals -- Coral
-eating Fish -- Coral Formations -- Lagoon Islands, or Atolls --
-Depth at which reef-building Corals can live -- Vast Areas
-interspersed with low Coral Islands -- Subsidence of their
-foundations -- Barrier Reefs -- Fringing Reefs -- Conversion of
-Fringing Reefs into Barrier Reefs, and into Atolls -- Evidence
-of changes in Level -- Breaches in Barrier Reefs -- Maldiva
-Atolls, their peculiar structure -- Dead and submerged Reefs --
-Areas of subsidence and elevation -- Distribution of Volcanoes
--- Subsidence slow, and vast in amount
-
-
-APRIL 1st. -- We arrived in view of the Keeling or Cocos
-Islands, situated in the Indian Ocean, and about six hundred
-miles distant from the coast of Sumatra. This is one of the
-lagoon-islands (or atolls) of coral formation, similar to
-those in the Low Archipelago which we passed near. When
-the ship was in the channel at the entrance, Mr. Liesk,
-an English resident, came off in his boat. The history
-of the inhabitants of this place, in as few words as
-possible, is as follows. About nine years ago, Mr. Hare,
-a worthless character, brought from the East Indian
-archipelago a number of Malay slaves, which now including
-children, amount to more than a hundred. Shortly afterwards,
-Captain Ross, who had before visited these islands in his
-merchant-ship, arrived from England, bringing
-with him his family and goods for settlement along with
-him came Mr. Liesk, who had been a mate in his vessel.
-The Malay slaves soon ran away from the islet on which
-Mr. Hare was settled, and joined Captain Ross's party. Mr.
-Hare upon this was ultimately obliged to leave the place.
-
-The Malays are now nominally in a state of freedom, and
-certainly are so, as far as regards their personal treatment;
-but in most other points they are considered as slaves. From
-their discontented state, from the repeated removals from
-islet to islet, and perhaps also from a little mismanagement,
-things are not very prosperous. The island has no domestic
-quadruped, excepting the pig, and the main vegetable production
-is the cocoa-nut. The whole prosperity of the place
-depends on this tree: the only exports being oil from the nut,
-and the nuts themselves, which are taken to Singapore and
-Mauritius, where they are chiefly used, when grated, in making
-curries. On the cocoa-nut, also, the pigs, which are
-loaded with fat, almost entirely subsist, as do the ducks and
-poultry. Even a huge land-crab is furnished by nature with
-the means to open and feed on this most useful production.
-
-The ring-formed reef of the lagoon-island is surmounted
-in the greater part of its length by linear islets. On the
-northern or leeward side, there is an opening through which
-vessels can pass to the anchorage within. On entering, the
-scene was very curious and rather pretty; its beauty, however,
-entirely depended on the brilliancy of the surrounding
-colours. The shallow, clear, and still water of the lagoon,
-resting in its greater part on white sand, is, when illumined
-by a vertical sun, of the most vivid green. This brilliant
-expanse, several miles in width, is on all sides divided, either
-by a line of snow-white breakers from the dark heaving
-waters of the ocean, or from the blue vault of heaven by
-the strips of land, crowned by the level tops of the cocoa-nut
-trees. As a white cloud here and there affords a pleasing
-contrast with the azure sky, so in the lagoon, bands of
-living coral darken the emerald green water.
-
-The next morning after anchoring, I went on shore on
-Direction Island. The strip of dry land is only a few hundred
-yards in width; on the lagoon side there is a white calcareous
-beach, the radiation from which under this sultry
-climate was very oppressive; and on the outer coast, a solid
-broad flat of coral-rock served to break the violence of the
-open sea. Excepting near the lagoon, where there is some
-sand, the land is entirely composed of rounded fragments of
-coral. In such a loose, dry, stony soil, the climate of the
-intertropical regions alone could produce a vigorous vegetation.
-On some of the smaller islets, nothing could be more
-elegant than the manner in which the young and full-grown
-cocoa-nut trees, without destroying each other's symmetry,
-were mingled into one wood. A beach of glittering white
-sand formed a border to these fairy spots.
-
-I will now give a sketch of the natural history of these
-islands, which, from its very paucity, possesses a peculiar
-interest. The cocoa-nut tree, at first glance, seems to
-compose the whole wood; there are however, five or six
-other trees. One of these grows to a very large size, but
-from the extremes of softness of its wood, is useless; another
-sort affords excellent timber for ship-building. Besides the
-trees, the number of plants is exceedingly limited, and consists
-of insignificant weeds. In my collection, which includes,
-I believe, nearly the perfect Flora, there are twenty
-species, without reckoning a moss, lichen, and fungus. To
-this number two trees must be added; one of which was not
-in flower, and the other I only heard of. The latter is a
-solitary tree of its kind, and grows near the beach, where,
-without doubt, the one seed was thrown up by the waves. A
-Guilandina also grows on only one of the islets. I do not
-include in the above list the sugar-cane, banana, some other
-vegetables, fruit-trees, and imported grasses. As the islands
-consist entirely of coral, and at one time must have existed
-as mere water-washed reefs, all their terrestrial productions
-must have been transported here by the waves of the sea.
-In accordance with this, the Florula has quite the character
-of a refuge for the destitute: Professor Henslow informs
-me that of the twenty species nineteen belong to different
-genera, and these again to no less than sixteen families! [1]
-
-In Holman's [2] Travels an account is given, on the authority
-of Mr. A. S. Keating, who resided twelve months on these
-islands, of the various seeds and other bodies which have
-been known to have been washed on shore. "Seeds and
-plants from Sumatra and Java have been driven up by the
-surf on the windward side of the islands. Among them have
-been found the Kimiri, native of Sumatra and the peninsula
-of Malacca; the cocoa-nut of Balci, known by its shape and
-size; the Dadass, which is planted by the Malays with the
-pepper-vine, the latter intwining round its trunk, and
-supporting itself by the prickles on its stem; the soap-tree;
-the castor-oil plant; trunks of the sago palm; and various kinds
-of seeds unknown to the Malays settled on the islands.
-These are all supposed to have been driven by the N. W.
-monsoon to the coast of New Holland, and thence to these
-islands by the S. E. trade-wind. Large masses of Java teak
-and Yellow wood have also been found, besides immense
-trees of red and white cedar, and the blue gumwood of New
-Holland, in a perfectly sound condition. All the hardy seeds,
-such as creepers, retain their germinating power, but the
-softer kinds, among which is the mangostin, are destroyed
-in the passage. Fishing-canoes, apparently from Java, have
-at times been washed on shore." It is interesting thus to
-discover how numerous the seeds are, which, coming from
-several countries, are drifted over the wide ocean. Professor
-Henslow tells me, he believes that nearly all the plants
-which I brought from these islands, are common littoral
-species in the East Indian archipelago. From the direction,
-however, of the winds and currents, it seems scarcely possible
-that they could have come here in a direct line. If,
-as suggested with much probability by Mr. Keating, they
-were first carried towards the coast of New Holland, and
-thence drifted back together with the productions of that
-country, the seeds, before germinating, must have travelled
-between 1800 and 2400 miles.
-
-Chamisso, [3] when describing the Radack Archipelago, situated
-in the western part of the Pacific, states that "the sea
-brings to these islands the seeds and fruits of many trees,
-most of which have yet not grown here. The greater part
-of these seeds appear to have not yet lost the capability of
-growing."
-
-It is also said that palms and bamboos from somewhere
-in the torrid zone, and trunks of northern firs, are
-washed on shore: these firs must have come from an immense
-distance. These facts are highly interesting. It cannot
-be doubted that if there were land-birds to pick up the
-seeds when first cast on shore, and a soil better adapted for
-their growth than the loose blocks of coral, that the most
-isolated of the lagoon-islands would in time possess a far
-more abundant Flora than they now have.
-
-The list of land animals is even poorer than that of the
-plants. Some of the islets are inhabited by rats, which were
-brought in a ship from the Mauritius, wrecked here. These
-rats are considered by Mr. Waterhouse as identical with the
-English kind, but they are smaller, and more brightly coloured.
-There are no true land-birds, for a snipe and a rail
-(Rallus Phillippensis), though living entirely in the dry
-herbage, belong to the order of Waders. Birds of this order
-are said to occur on several of the small low islands in the
-Pacific. At Ascension, where there is no land-bird, a rail
-(Porphyrio simplex) was shot near the summit of the mountain,
-and it was evidently a solitary straggler. At Tristan
-d'Acunha, where, according to Carmichael, there are only
-two land-birds, there is a coot. From these facts I believe
-that the waders, after the innumerable web-footed species,
-are generally the first colonists of small isolated islands. I
-may add, that whenever I noticed birds, not of oceanic
-species, very far out at sea, they always belonged to this
-order; and hence they would naturally become the earliest
-colonists of any remote point of land.
-
-Of reptiles I saw only one small lizard. Of insects I took
-pains to collect every kind. Exclusive of spiders, which were
-numerous, there were thirteen species. [4] Of these, one only
-was a beetle. A small ant swarmed by thousands under the
-loose dry blocks of coral, and was the only true insect which
-was abundant. Although the productions of the land are
-thus scanty, if we look to the waters of the surrounding sea,
-the number of organic beings is indeed infinite. Chamisso
-has described [5] the natural history of a lagoon-island in the
-Radack Archipelago; and it is remarkable how closely its
-inhabitants, in number and kind, resemble those of Keeling
-Island. There is one lizard and two waders, namely, a snipe
-and curlew. Of plants there are nineteen species, including
-a fern; and some of these are the same with those growing
-here, though on a spot so immensely remote, and in a different
-ocean.
-
-The long strips of land, forming the linear islets, have
-been raised only to that height to which the surf can throw
-fragments of coral, and the wind heap up calcareous sand.
-The solid flat of coral rock on the outside, by its breadth,
-breaks the first violence of the waves, which otherwise, in a
-day, would sweep away these islets and all their productions.
-The ocean and the land seem here struggling for mastery:
-although terra firma has obtained a footing, the denizens of
-the water think their claim at least equally good. In every
-part one meets hermit crabs of more than one species, [6]
-carrying on their backs the shells which they have stolen
-from the neighbouring beach. Overhead, numerous gannets,
-frigate-birds, and terns, rest on the trees; and the wood, from
-the many nests and from the smell of the atmosphere, might
-be called a sea-rookery. The gannets, sitting on their rude
-nests, gaze at one with a stupid yet angry air. The noddies,
-as their name expresses, are silly little creatures. But there
-is one charming bird: it is a small, snow-white tern, which
-smoothly hovers at the distance of a few feet above one's
-head, its large black eye scanning, with quiet curiosity, your
-expression. Little imagination is required to fancy that so
-light and delicate a body must be tenanted by some wandering
-fairy spirit.
-
-Sunday, April 3rd. -- After service I accompanied Captain
-Fitz Roy to the settlement, situated at the distance of some
-miles, on the point of an islet thickly covered with tall
-cocoa-nut trees. Captain Ross and Mr. Liesk live in a large
-barn-like house open at both ends, and lined with mats made of
-woven bark. The houses of the Malays are arranged along
-the shore of the lagoon. The whole place had rather a desolate
-aspect, for there were no gardens to show the signs of
-care and cultivation. The natives belong to different islands
-in the East Indian archipelago, but all speak the same language:
-we saw the inhabitants of Borneo, Celebes, Java, and
-Sumatra. In colour they resemble the Tahitians, from whom
-they do not widely differ in features. Some of the women,
-however, show a good deal of the Chinese character. I liked
-both their general expressions and the sound of their voices.
-They appeared poor, and their houses were destitute of
-furniture; but it was evident, from the plumpness of the little
-children, that cocoa-nuts and turtle afford no bad sustenance.
-
-On this island the wells are situated, from which ships
-obtain water. At first sight it appears not a little remarkable
-that the fresh water should regularly ebb and flow with the
-tides; and it has even been imagined, that sand has the power
-of filtering the salt from the sea-water. These ebbing wells
-are common on some of the low islands in the West Indies.
-The compressed sand, or porous coral rock, is permeated like
-a sponge with the salt water, but the rain which falls on the
-surface must sink to the level of the surrounding sea, and
-must accumulate there, displacing an equal bulk of the salt
-water. As the water in the lower part of the great sponge-
-like coral mass rises and falls with the tides, so will the
-water near the surface; and this will keep fresh, if the mass
-be sufficiently compact to prevent much mechanical admixture;
-but where the land consists of great loose blocks of
-coral with open interstices, if a well be dug, the water, as I
-have seen, is brackish.
-
-After dinner we stayed to see a curious half superstitious
-scene acted by the Malay women. A large wooden spoon
-dressed in garments, and which had been carried to the grave
-of a dead man, they pretend becomes inspired at the full of
-the moon, and will dance and jump about. After the proper
-preparations, the spoon, held by two women, became convulsed,
-and danced in good time to the song of the surrounding
-children and women. It was a most foolish spectacle;
-but Mr. Liesk maintained that many of the Malays believed
-in its spiritual movements. The dance did not commence till
-the moon had risen, and it was well worth remaining to behold
-her bright orb so quietly shining through the long arms
-of the cocoa-nut trees as they waved in the evening breeze.
-These scenes of the tropics are in themselves so delicious,
-that they almost equal those dearer ones at home, to which
-we are bound by each best feeling of the mind.
-
-The next day I employed myself in examining the very
-interesting, yet simple structure and origin of these islands.
-The water being unusually smooth, I waded over the outer
-flat of dead rock as far as the living mounds of coral, on
-which the swell of the open sea breaks. In some of the
-gullies and hollows there were beautiful green and other
-coloured fishes, and the form and tints of many of the zoophytes
-were admirable. It is excusable to grow enthusiastic over
-the infinite numbers of organic beings with which the sea of
-the tropics, so prodigal of life, teems; yet I must confess I
-think those naturalists who have described, in well-known
-words, the submarine grottoes decked with a thousand beauties,
-have indulged in rather exuberant language.
-
-April 6th. -- I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to an island
-at the head of the lagoon: the channel was exceedingly
-intricate, winding through fields of delicately branched corals.
-We saw several turtle and two boats were then employed in
-catching them. The water was so clear and shallow, that although
-at first a turtle quickly dives out of sight, yet in a
-canoe or boat under sail, the pursuers after no very long
-chase come up to it. A man standing ready in the bow, at
-this moment dashes through the water upon the turtle's back;
-then clinging with both hands by the shell of its neck, he is
-carried away till the animal becomes exhausted and is secured.
-It was quite an interesting chase to see the two boats
-thus doubling about, and the men dashing head foremost
-into the water trying to seize their prey. Captain Moresby
-informs me that in the Chagos archipelago in this same
-ocean, the natives, by a horrible process, take the shell from
-the back of the living turtle. "It is covered with burning
-charcoal, which causes the outer shell to curl upwards, it is
-then forced off with a knife, and before it becomes cold
-flattened between boards. After this barbarous process the
-animal is suffered to regain its native element, where, after
-a certain time, a new shell is formed; it is, however, too
-thin to he of any service, and the animal always appears
-languishing and sickly."
-
-When we arrived at the head of the lagoon, we crossed a
-narrow islet, and found a great surf breaking on the windward
-coast. I can hardly explain the reason, but there is to
-my mind much grandeur in the view of the outer shores of
-these lagoon-islands. There is a simplicity in the barrier-like
-beach, the margin of green bushes and tall cocoa-nuts,
-the solid flat of dead coral-rock, strewed here and there
-with great loose fragments, and the line of furious breakers,
-all rounding away towards either hand. The ocean
-throwing its waters over the broad reef appears an invincible,
-all-powerful enemy; yet we see it resisted, and even
-conquered, by means which at first seem most weak and
-inefficient. It is not that the ocean spares the rock of coral;
-the great fragments scattered over the reef, and heaped on
-the beach, whence the tall cocoa-nut springs, plainly bespeak
-the unrelenting power of the waves. Nor are any
-periods of repose granted. The long swell caused by the
-gentle but steady action of the trade-wind, always blowing
-in one direction over a wide area, causes breakers, almost
-equalling in force those during a gale of wind in the temperate
-regions, and which never cease to rage. It is impossible
-to behold these waves without feeling a conviction that
-an island, though built of the hardest rock, let it be porphyry,
-granite, or quartz, would ultimately yield and be demolished
-by such an irresistible power. Yet these low, insignificant
-coral-islets stand and are victorious: for here another power,
-as an antagonist, takes part in the contest. The organic forces
-separate the atoms of carbonate of lime, one by one, from
-the foaming breakers, and unite them into a symmetrical
-structure. Let the hurricane tear up its thousand huge
-fragments; yet what will that tell against the accumulated
-labour of myriads of architects at work night and day, month
-after month? Thus do we see the soft and gelatinous body of a
-polypus, through the agency of the vital laws, conquering
-the great mechanical power of the waves of an ocean which
-neither the art of man nor the inanimate works of nature
-could successfully resist.
-
-We did not return on board till late in the evening, for we
-stayed a long time in the lagoon, examining the fields of
-coral and the gigantic shells of the chama, into which, if a
-man were to put his hand, he would not, as long as the animal
-lived, be able to withdraw it. Near the head of the
-lagoon I was much surprised to find a wide area, considerably
-more than a mile square, covered with a forest of delicately
-branching corals, which, though standing upright,
-were all dead and rotten. At first I was quite at a loss to
-understand the cause afterwards it occurred to me that it
-was owing to the following rather curious combination of
-circumstances. It should, however, first be stated, that corals
-are not able to survive even a short exposure in the air to
-the sun's rays, so that their upward limit of growth is
-determined by that of lowest water at spring tides. It appears,
-from some old charts, that the long island to windward was
-formerly separated by wide channels into several islets; this
-fact is likewise indicated by the trees being younger on these
-portions. Under the former condition of the reef, a strong
-breeze, by throwing more water over the barrier, would tend
-to raise the level of the lagoon. Now it acts in a directly
-contrary manner; for the water within the lagoon not only
-is not increased by currents from the outside, but is itself
-blown outwards by the force of the wind. Hence it is observed,
-that the tide near the head of the lagoon does not
-rise so high during a strong breeze as it does when it is
-calm. This difference of level, although no doubt very small,
-has, I believe, caused the death of those coral-groves, which
-under the former and more open condition of the outer reef
-has attained the utmost possible limit of upward growth.
-
-A few miles north of Keeling there is another small atoll,
-the lagoon of which is nearly filled up with coral-mud. Captain
-Ross found embedded in the conglomerate on the outer
-coast, a well-rounded fragment of greenstone, rather larger
-than a man's head: he and the men with him were so much
-surprised at this, that they brought it away and preserved it
-as a curiosity. The occurrence of this one stone, where
-every other particle of matter is calcareous, certainly is very
-puzzling. The island has scarcely ever been visited, nor is it
-probable that a ship had been wrecked there. From the absence
-of any better explanation, I came to the conclusion that
-it must have come entangled in the roots of some large tree:
-when, however, I considered the great distance from the
-nearest land, the combination of chances against a stone thus
-being entangled, the tree washed into the sea, floated so far,
-then landed safely, and the stone finally so embedded as to
-allow of its discovery, I was almost afraid of imagining a
-means of transport apparently so improbable. It was therefore
-with great interest that I found Chamisso, the justly
-distinguished naturalist who accompanied Kotzebue, stating
-that the inhabitants of the Radack archipelago, a group of
-lagoon-islands in the midst of the Pacific, obtained stones
-for sharpening their instruments by searching the roots of
-trees which are cast upon the beach. It will be evident that
-this must have happened several times, since laws have been
-established that such stones belong to the chief, and a
-punishment is inflicted on any one who attempts to steal them.
-When the isolated position of these small islands in the
-midst of a vast ocean -- their great distance from any land
-excepting that of coral formation, attested by the value
-which the inhabitants, who are such bold navigators, attach
-to a stone of any kind, [7] -- and the slowness of the currents
-of the open sea, are all considered, the occurrence of pebbles
-thus transported does appear wonderful. Stones may often
-be thus carried; and if the island on which they are stranded
-is constructed of any other substance besides coral, they
-would scarcely attract attention, and their origin at least
-would never be guessed. Moreover, this agency may long
-escape discovery from the probability of trees, especially
-those loaded with stones, floating beneath the surface. In
-the channels of Tierra del Fuego large quantities of drift
-timber are cast upon the beach, yet it is extremely rare to
-meet a tree swimming on the water. These facts may possibly
-throw light on single stones, whether angular or rounded,
-occasionally found embedded in fine sedimentary masses.
-
-During another day I visited West Islet, on which the
-vegetation was perhaps more luxuriant than on any other.
-The cocoa-nut trees generally grow separate, but here the
-young ones flourished beneath their tall parents, and formed
-with their long and curved fronds the most shady arbours.
-Those alone who have tried it, know how delicious it is to
-be seated in such shade, and drink the cool pleasant fluid
-of the cocoa-nut. In this island there is a large bay-like
-space, composed of the finest white sand: it is quite level
-and is only covered by the tide at high water; from this
-large bay smaller creeks penetrate the surrounding woods.
-To see a field of glittering white sand, representing water,
-with the cocoa-nut trees extending their tall and waving
-trunks around the margin, formed a singular and very pretty
-view.
-
-I have before alluded to a crab which lives on the cocoa-nuts;
-it is very common on all parts of the dry land, and
-grows to a monstrous size: it is closely allied or identical
-with the Birgos latro. The front pair of legs terminate in
-very strong and heavy pincers, and the last pair are fitted
-with others weaker and much narrower. It would at first
-be thought quite impossible for a crab to open a strong
-cocoa-nut covered with the husk; but Mr. Liesk assures me
-that he has repeatedly seen this effected. The crab begins
-by tearing the husk, fibre by fibre, and always from that
-end under which the three eye-holes are situated; when this
-is completed, the crab commences hammering with its heavy
-claws on one of the eye-holes till an opening is made. Then
-turning round its body, by the aid of its posterior and narrow
-pair of pincers, it extracts the white albuminous substance.
-I think this is as curious a case of instinct as ever
-I heard of, and likewise of adaptation in structure between
-two objects apparently so remote from each other in the
-scheme of nature, as a crab and a cocoa-nut tree. The
-Birgos is diurnal in its habits; but every night it is said to
-pay a visit to the sea, no doubt for the purpose of moistening
-its branchiae. The young are likewise hatched, and live for
-some time, on the coast. These crabs inhabit deep burrows,
-which they hollow out beneath the roots of trees; and where
-they accumulate surprising quantities of the picked fibres
-of the cocoa-nut husk, on which they rest as on a bed. The
-Malays sometimes take advantage of this, and collect the
-fibrous mass to use as junk. These crabs are very good to
-eat; moreover, under the tail of the larger ones there is a
-mass of fat, which, when melted, sometimes yields as much
-as a quart bottle full of limpid oil. It has been stated by
-some authors that the Birgos crawls up the cocoa-nut trees
-for the purpose of stealing the nuts: I very much doubt the
-possibility of this; but with the Pandanus [8] the task would be
-very much easier. I was told by Mr. Liesk that on these
-islands the Birgos lives only on the nuts which have fallen
-to the ground.
-
-Captain Moresby informs me that this crab inhabits the
-Chagos and Seychelle groups, but not the neighbouring Maldiva
-archipelago. It formerly abounded at Mauritius, but
-only a few small ones are now found there. In the Pacific,
-this species, or one with closely allied habits, is said [9] to
-inhabit a single coral island, north of the Society group. To
-show the wonderful strength of the front pair of pincers, I
-may mention, that Captain Moresby confined one in a strong
-tin-box, which had held biscuits, the lid being secured with
-wire; but the crab turned down the edges and escaped. In
-turning down the edges, it actually punched many small
-holes quite through the tin!
-
-I was a good deal surprised by finding two species of
-coral of the genus Millepora (M. complanata and alcicornis),
-possessed of the power of stinging. The stony branches or
-plates, when taken fresh from the water, have a harsh feel
-and are not slimy, although possessing a strong and disagreeable
-smell. The stinging property seems to vary in
-different specimens: when a piece was pressed or rubbed on
-the tender skin of the face or arm, a pricking sensation was
-usually caused, which came on after the interval of a second,
-and lasted only for a few minutes. One day, however, by
-merely touching my face with one of the branches, pain was
-instantaneously caused; it increased as usual after a few
-seconds, and remaining sharp for some minutes, was perceptible
-for half an hour afterwards. The sensation was as
-bad as that from a nettle, but more like that caused by the
-Physalia or Portuguese man-of-war. Little red spots were
-produced on the tender skin of the arm, which appeared as if
-they would have formed watery pustules, but did not. M.
-Quoy mentions this case of the Millepora; and I have heard
-of stinging corals in the West Indies. Many marine animals
-seem to have this power of stinging: besides the Portuguese
-man-of-war, many jelly-fish, and the Aplysia or sea-slug
-of the Cape de Verd Islands, it is stated in the voyage
-of the Astrolabe, that an Actinia or sea-anemone, as well as
-a flexible coralline allied to Sertularia, both possess this
-means of offence or defence. In the East Indian sea, a
-stinging sea-weed is said to be found.
-
-Two species of fish, of the genus Scarus, which are common
-here, exclusively feed on coral: both are coloured of a
-splendid bluish-green, one living invariably in the lagoon,
-and the other amongst the outer breakers. Mr. Liesk assured
-us, that he had repeatedly seen whole shoals grazing with
-their strong bony jaws on the tops of the coral branches: I
-opened the intestines of several, and found them distended
-with yellowish calcareous sandy mud. The slimy disgusting
-Holuthuriae (allied to our star-fish), which the Chinese
-gourmands are so fond of, also feed largely, as I am informed by
-Dr. Allan, on corals; and the bony apparatus within their
-bodies seems well adapted for this end. These Holuthuriae,
-the fish, the numerous burrowing shells, and nereidous
-worms, which perforate every block of dead coral, must be
-very efficient agents in producing the fine white mud which
-lies at the bottom and on the shores of the lagoon. A portion,
-however, of this mud, which when wet resembled
-pounded chalk, was found by Professor Ehrenberg to be
-partly composed of siliceous-shielded infusoria.
-
-April 12th. -- In the morning we stood out of the lagoon
-on our passage to the Isle of France. I am glad we have
-visited these islands: such formations surely rank high
-amongst the wonderful objects of this world. Captain Fitz
-Roy found no bottom with a line 7200 feet in length, at the
-distance of only 2200 yards from the shore; hence this island
-forms a lofty submarine mountain, with sides steeper even
-than those of the most abrupt volcanic cone. The saucer-shaped
-summit is nearly ten miles across; and every single
-atom, [10] from the least particle to the largest fragment of
-rock, in this great pile, which however is small compared
-with very many other lagoon-islands, bears the stamp of
-having been subjected to organic arrangement. We feel surprise
-when travellers tell us of the vast dimensions of the
-Pyramids and other great ruins, but how utterly insignificant
-are the greatest of these, when compared to these mountains
-of stone accumulated by the agency of various minute
-and tender animals! This is a wonder which does not at
-first strike the eye of the body, but, after reflection,
-the eye of reason.
-
-I will now give a very brief account of the three great
-classes of coral-reefs; namely, Atolls, Barrier, and Fringing-
-reefs, and will explain my views [11] on their formation. Almost
-every voyager who has crossed the Pacific has expressed
-his unbounded astonishment at the lagoon-islands, or
-as I shall for the future call them by their Indian name of
-atolls, and has attempted some explanation. Even as long
-ago as the year 1605, Pyrard de Laval well exclaimed, "C'est
-
-[picture]
-
-une merveille de voir chacun de ces atollons, environne d'un
-grand banc de pierre tout autour, n'y ayant point d'artifice
-humain." The accompanying sketch of Whitsunday Island
-in the Pacific, copied from, Capt. Beechey's admirable Voyage,
-gives but a faint idea of the singular aspect of an atoll:
-it is one of the smallest size, and has its narrow islets united
-together in a ring. The immensity of the ocean, the fury of
-the breakers, contrasted with the lowness of the land and the
-smoothness of the bright green water within the lagoon, can
-hardly be imagined without having been seen.
-
-The earlier voyagers fancied that the coral-building animals
-instinctively built up their great circles to afford themselves
-protection in the inner parts; but so far is this from
-the truth, that those massive kinds, to whose growth on the
-exposed outer shores the very existence of the reef depends,
-cannot live within the lagoon, where other delicately-branching
-kinds flourish. Moreover, on this view, many species
-of distinct genera and families are supposed to combine for
-one end; and of such a combination, not a single instance
-can be found in the whole of nature. The theory that has
-been most generally received is, that atolls are based on
-submarine craters; but when we consider the form and size of
-some, the number, proximity, and relative positions of others,
-this idea loses its plausible character: thus Suadiva atoll is
-44 geographical miles in diameter in one line, by 34 miles in
-another line; Rimsky is 54 by 20 miles across, and it has a
-strangely sinuous margin; Bow atoll is 30 miles long, and on
-an average only 6 in width; Menchicoff atoll consists of three
-atolls united or tied together. This theory, moreover, is
-totally inapplicable to the northern Maldiva atolls in the
-Indian Ocean (one of which is 88 miles in length, and between 10
-and 20 in breadth), for they are not bounded like ordinary
-atolls by narrow reefs, but by a vast number of separate
-little atolls; other little atolls rising out of the great
-central lagoon-like spaces. A third and better theory was
-advanced by Chamisso, who thought that from the corals growing
-more vigorously where exposed to the open sea, as undoubtedly is
-the case, the outer edges would grow up from the general
-foundation before any other part, and that this would account
-for the ring or cup-shaped structure. But we shall
-immediately see, that in this, as well as in the crater-theory,
-a most important consideration has been overlooked, namely,
-on what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at
-a great depth, based their massive structures?
-
-Numerous soundings were carefully taken by Captain Fitz
-Roy on the steep outside of Keeling atoll, and it was found
-that within ten fathoms, the prepared tallow at the bottom
-of the lead, invariably came up marked with the impression
-of living corals, but as perfectly clean as if it had been
-dropped on a carpet of turf; as the depth increased, the
-impressions became less numerous, but the adhering particles
-of sand more and more numerous, until at last it was evident
-that the bottom consisted of a smooth sandy layer: to carry
-on the analogy of the turf, the blades of grass grew thinner
-and thinner, till at last the soil was so sterile, that nothing
-sprang from it. From these observations, confirmed by many
-others, it may be safely inferred that the utmost depth at
-which corals can construct reefs is between 20 and 30 fathoms.
-Now there are enormous areas in the Pacific and Indian
-Ocean, in which every single island is of coral formation,
-and is raised only to that height to which the waves can
-throw up fragments, and the winds pile up sand. Thus
-Radack group of atolls is an irregular square, 520 miles long
-and 240 broad; the Low Archipelago is elliptic-formed, 840
-miles in its longer, and 420 in its shorter axis: there are
-other small groups and single low islands between these two
-archipelagoes, making a linear space of ocean actually more
-than 4000 miles in length, in which not one single island
-rises above the specified height. Again, in the Indian Ocean
-there is a space of ocean 1500 miles in length, including
-three archipelagoes, in which every island is low and of
-coral formation. From the fact of the reef-building corals
-not living at great depths, it is absolutely certain that
-throughout these vast areas, wherever there is now an atoll,
-a foundation must have originally existed within a depth of
-from 20 to 30 fathoms from the surface. It is improbable in
-the highest degree that broad, lofty, isolated, steep-sided
-banks of sediment, arranged in groups and lines hundreds of
-leagues in length, could have been deposited in the central
-and profoundest parts of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, at
-an immense distance from any continent, and where the
-water is perfectly limpid. It is equally improbable that the
-elevatory forces should have uplifted throughout the above
-vast areas, innumerable great rocky banks within 20 to 30
-fathoms, or 120 to 180 feet, of the surface of the sea, and
-not one single point above that level; for where on the whole
-surface of the globe can we find a single chain of mountains,
-even a few hundred miles in length, with their many summits
-rising within a few feet of a given level, and not one
-pinnacle above it? If then the foundations, whence the atoll-
-building corals sprang, were not formed of sediment, and if
-they were not lifted up to the required level, they must of
-necessity have subsided into it; and this at once solves the
-difficulty. For as mountain after mountain, and island after
-island, slowly sank beneath the water, fresh bases would be
-successively afforded for the growth of the corals. It is
-impossible here to enter into all the necessary details, but I
-venture to defy [12] any one to explain in any other manner
-how it is possible that numerous islands should be distributed
-throughout vast areas -- all the islands being low -- all being
-built of corals, absolutely requiring a foundation within a
-limited depth from the surface.
-
-Before explaining how atoll-formed reefs acquire their
-peculiar structure, we must turn to the second great class,
-namely, Barrier-reefs. These either extend in straight lines
-in front of the shores of a continent or of a large island, or
-they encircle smaller islands; in both cases, being separated
-from the land by a broad and rather deep channel of water,
-analogous to the lagoon within an atoll. It is remarkable
-how little attention has been paid to encircling barrier-reefs;
-yet they are truly wonderful structures. The following sketch
-represents part of the barrier encircling the island of Bolabola
-in the Pacific, as seen from one of the central peaks.
-In this instance the whole line of reef has been converted
-into land; but usually a snow-white line of great breakers,
-with only here and there a single low islet crowned with
-cocoa-nut trees, divides the dark heaving waters of the ocean
-from the light-green expanse of the lagoon-channel. And
-the quiet waters of this channel generally bathe a fringe of
-low alluvial soil, loaded with the most beautiful productions
-of the tropics, and lying at the foot of the wild, abrupt,
-central mountains.
-
-Encircling barrier-reefs are of all sizes, from three miles
-to no less than forty-four miles in diameter; and that which
-fronts one side, and encircles both ends, of New Caledonia,
-is 400 miles long. Each reef includes one, two, or several
-rocky islands of various heights; and in one instance, even
-as many as twelve separate islands. The reef runs at a
-greater or less distance from the included land; in the
-Society archipelago generally from one to three or four
-miles; but at Hogoleu the reef is 20 miles on the southern
-side, and 14 miles on the opposite or northern side, from the
-included islands. The depth within the lagoon-channel also
-varies much; from 10 to 30 fathoms may be taken as an
-average; but at Vanikoro there are spaces no less than 56
-fathoms or 363 feet deep. Internally the reef either slopes
-gently into the lagoon-channel, or ends in a perpendicular
-wall sometimes between two and three hundred feet under
-water in height: externally the reef rises, like an atoll, with
-extreme abruptness out of the profound depths of the ocean.
-
-What can be more singular than these structures? We see
-
-[picture]
-
-an island, which may be compared to a castle situated on the
-summit of a lofty submarine mountain, protected by a great
-wall of coral-rock, always steep externally and sometimes
-internally, with a broad level summit, here and there breached
-by a narrow gateway, through which the largest ships can
-enter the wide and deep encircling moat.
-
-As far as the actual reef of coral is concerned, there is not
-the smallest difference, in general size, outline, grouping,
-and even in quite trifling details of structure, between a
-barrier and an atoll. The geographer Balbi has well remarked,
-that an encircled island is an atoll with high land rising out
-of its lagoon; remove the land from within, and a perfect
-atoll is left.
-
-But what has caused these reefs to spring up at such
-great distances from the shores of the included islands? It
-cannot be that the corals will not grow close to the land;
-for the shores within the lagoon-channel, when not surrounded
-by alluvial soil, are often fringed by living reefs;
-and we shall presently see that there is a whole class, which
-I have called Fringing Reefs from their close attachment
-to the shores both of continents and of islands. Again, on
-what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at
-great depths, based their encircling structures? This is a
-great apparent difficulty, analogous to that in the case of
-atolls, which has generally been overlooked. It will be
-perceived more clearly by inspecting the following sections
-which are real ones, taken in north and south lines, through
-the islands with their barrier-reefs, of Vanikoro, Gambier,
-and Maurua; and they are laid down, both vertically and
-horizontally, on the same scale of a quarter of an inch to
-a mile.
-
-It should be observed that the sections might have been
-taken in any direction through these islands, or through
-
-[picture]
-
-many other encircled islands, and the general features would
-have been the same. Now, bearing in mind that reef-building
-coral cannot live at a greater depth than from 20 to 30
-fathoms, and that the scale is so small that the plummets on
-the right hand show a depth of 200 fathoms, on what are
-these barrier-reefs based? Are we to suppose that each
-island is surrounded by a collar-like submarine ledge of rock,
-or by a great bank of sediment, ending abruptly where the
-reef ends?
-
-If the sea had formerly eaten deeply into the islands,
-before they were protected by the reefs, thus having
-left a shallow ledge round them under water, the present
-shores would have been invariably bounded by great precipices,
-but this is most rarely the case. Moreover, on this
-notion, it is not possible to explain why the corals should
-have sprung up, like a wall, from the extreme outer margin
-of the ledge, often leaving a broad space of water within,
-too deep for the growth of corals. The accumulation of a
-wide bank of sediment all round these islands, and generally
-widest where the included islands are smallest, is highly
-improbable, considering their exposed positions in the central
-and deepest parts of the ocean. In the case of the barrier-reef
-of New Caledonia, which extends for 150 miles beyond
-the northern point of the islands, in the same straight line
-with which it fronts the west coast, it is hardly possible to
-believe that a bank of sediment could thus have been
-straightly deposited in front of a lofty island, and so far
-beyond its termination in the open sea. Finally, if we look
-to other oceanic islands of about the same height and of similar
-geological constitution, but not encircled by coral-reefs,
-we may in vain search for so trifling a circumambient
-depth as 30 fathoms, except quite near to their shores; for
-usually land that rises abruptly out of water, as do most of
-the encircled and non-encircled oceanic islands, plunges
-abruptly under it. On what then, I repeat, are these barrier
-reefs based? Why, with their wide and deep moat-like channels,
-do they stand so far from the included land? We shall
-soon see how easily these difficulties disappear.
-
-We come now to our third class of Fringing-reefs, which
-will require a very short notice. Where the land slopes abruptly
-under water, these reefs are only a few yards in width,
-forming a mere ribbon or fringe round the shores: where
-the land slopes gently under the water the reef extends
-further, sometimes even as much as a mile from the land;
-but in such cases the soundings outside the reef always show
-that the submarine prolongation of the land is gently inclined.
-In fact, the reefs extend only to that distance from the shore,
-at which a foundation within the requisite depth from 20 to
-30 fathoms is found. As far as the actual reef is concerned,
-there is no essential difference between it and that forming
-a barrier or an atoll: it is, however, generally of less width,
-and consequently few islets have been formed on it. From
-the corals growing more vigorously on the outside, and from
-the noxious effect of the sediment washed inwards, the outer
-edge of the reef is the highest part, and between it and the
-land there is generally a shallow sandy channel a few feet in
-depth. Where banks or sediments have accumulated near to
-the surface, as in parts of the West Indies, they sometimes
-become fringed with corals, and hence in some degree resemble
-lagoon-islands or atolls, in the same manner as fringing-reefs,
-surrounding gently sloping islands, in some degree resemble
-barrier-reefs.
-
-
-No theory on the formation of coral-reefs can be considered
-satisfactory which does not include the three great
-
-[picture]
-
-classes. We have seen that we are driven to believe in the
-subsidence of those vast areas, interspersed with low islands,
-of which not one rises above the height to which the wind and
-waves can throw up matter, and yet are constructed by animals
-requiring a foundation, and that foundation to lie at
-no great depth. Let us then take an island surrounded by
-fringing-reefs, which offer no difficulty in their structure;
-and let this island with its reefs, represented by the unbroken
-lines in the woodcut, slowly subside. Now, as the island
-sinks down, either a few feet at a time or quite insensibly,
-we may safely infer, from what is known of the conditions
-favourable to the growth of coral, that the living masses,
-bathed by the surf on the margin of the reef, will soon regain
-the surface. The water, however, will encroach little by little
-on the shore, the island becoming lower and smaller, and the
-space between the inner edge of the reef and the beach
-proportionately broader. A section of the reef and island in
-this state, after a subsidence of several hundred feet, is given
-by the dotted lines. Coral islets are supposed to have been
-formed on the reef; and a ship is anchored in the
-lagoon-channel. This channel will be more or less deep,
-according to the rate of subsidence, to the amount of sediment
-accumulated in it, and to the growth of the delicately branched
-corals which can live there. The section in this state resembles
-in every respect one drawn through an encircled island: in fact,
-it is a real section (on the scale of .517 of an inch to a mile)
-through Bolabola in the Pacific. We can now at once see
-why encircling barrier-reefs stand so far from the shores
-which they front. We can also perceive, that a line drawn
-perpendicularly down from the outer edge of the new reef,
-to the foundation of solid rock beneath the old fringing-reef,
-will exceed by as many feet as there have been feet of
-subsidence, that small limit of depth at which the effective
-corals can live: -- the little architects having built up their
-great wall-like mass, as the whole sank down, upon a basis
-formed of other corals and their consolidated fragments.
-Thus the difficulty on this head, which appeared so great,
-disappears.
-
-If, instead of an island, we had taken the shore of a continent
-fringed with reefs, and had imagined it to have subsided,
-a great straight barrier, like that of Australia or New
-Caledonia, separated from the land by a wide and deep channel,
-would evidently have been the result.
-
-Let us take our new encircling barrier-reef, of which the
-section is now represented by unbroken lines, and which, as
-I have said, is a real section through Bolabola, and let it go
-on subsiding. As the barrier-reef slowly sinks down, the
-corals will go on vigorously growing upwards; but as the
-island sinks, the water will gain inch by inch on the shore --
-the separate mountains first forming separate islands within
-
-[picture]
-
-one great reef -- and finally, the last and highest pinnacle
-disappearing. The instant this takes place, a perfect atoll
-is formed: I have said, remove the high land from within an
-encircling barrier-reef, and an atoll is left, and the land has
-been removed. We can now perceive how it comes that
-atolls, having sprung from encircling barrier-reefs, resemble
-them in general size, form, in the manner in which they are
-grouped together, and in their arrangement in single or
-double lines; for they may be called rude outline charts of
-the sunken islands over which they stand. We can further
-see how it arises that the atolls in the Pacific and Indian
-Oceans extend in lines parallel to the generally prevailing
-strike of the high islands and great coast-lines of those
-oceans. I venture, therefore, to affirm, that on the theory of
-the upward growth of the corals during the sinking of the
-land, [13] all the leading features in those wonderful
-structures, the lagoon-islands or atolls, which have so long
-excited the attention of voyagers, as well as in the no less
-wonderful barrier-reefs, whether encircling small islands or
-stretching for hundreds of miles along the shores of a
-continent, are simply explained.
-
-It may be asked, whether I can offer any direct evidence
-of the subsidence of barrier-reefs or atolls; but it must be
-borne in mind how difficult it must ever be to detect a
-movement, the tendency of which is to hide under water the part
-affected. Nevertheless, at Keeling atoll I observed on all
-sides of the lagoon old cocoa-nut trees undermined and falling;
-and in one place the foundation-posts of a shed, which
-the inhabitants asserted had stood seven years before just
-above high-water mark, but now was daily washed by every
-tide: on inquiry I found that three earthquakes, one of them
-severe, had been felt here during the last ten years. At
-Vanikoro, the lagoon-channel is remarkably deep, scarcely
-any alluvial soil has accumulated at the foot of the lofty
-included mountains, and remarkably few islets have been
-formed by the heaping of fragments and sand on the wall-like
-barrier reef; these facts, and some analogous ones, led
-me to believe that this island must lately have subsided and
-the reef grown upwards: here again earthquakes are frequent
-and very severe. In the Society archipelago, on the
-other hand, where the lagoon-channels are almost choked up,
-where much low alluvial land has accumulated, and where in
-some cases long islets have been formed on the barrier-reefs
- -- facts all showing that the islands have not very lately
-subsided -- only feeble shocks are most rarely felt. In these
-coral formations, where the land and water seem struggling
-for mastery, it must be ever difficult to decide between the
-effects of a change in the set of the tides and of a slight
-subsidence: that many of these reefs and atolls are subject to
-changes of some kind is certain; on some atolls the islets
-appear to have increased greatly within a late period; on
-others they have been partially or wholly washed away. The
-inhabitants of parts of the Maldiva archipelago know the
-date of the first formation of some islets; in other parts, the
-corals are now flourishing on water-washed reefs, where
-holes made for graves attest the former existence of inhabited
-land. It is difficult to believe in frequent changes in the
-tidal currents of an open ocean; whereas, we have in the
-earthquakes recorded by the natives on some atolls, and in
-the great fissures observed on other atolls, plain evidence of
-changes and disturbances in progress in the subterranean
-regions.
-
-It is evident, on our theory, that coasts merely fringed by
-reefs cannot have subsided to any perceptible amount; and
-therefore they must, since the growth of their corals, either
-have remained stationary or have been upheaved. Now, it
-is remarkable how generally it can be shown, by the presence
-of upraised organic remains, that the fringed islands have
-been elevated: and so far, this is indirect evidence in favour
-of our theory. I was particularly struck with this fact, when
-I found, to my surprise, that the descriptions given by MM.
-Quoy and Gaimard were applicable, not to reefs in general
-as implied by them, but only to those of the fringing class;
-my surprise, however, ceased when I afterwards found that,
-by a strange chance, all the several islands visited by these
-eminent naturalists, could be shown by their own statements
-to have been elevated within a recent geological era.
-
-Not only the grand features in the structure of barrier-reefs
-and of atolls, and to their likeness to each other in form,
-size, and other characters, are explained on the theory of
-subsidence -- which theory we are independently forced to
-admit in the very areas in question, from the necessity of
-finding bases for the corals within the requisite depth -- but
-many details in structure and exceptional cases can thus also
-be simply explained. I will give only a few instances. In
-barrier-reefs it has long been remarked with surprise, that
-the passages through the reef exactly face valleys in the
-included land, even in cases where the reef is separated
-from the land by a lagoon-channel so wide and so much
-deeper than the actual passage itself, that it seems hardly
-possible that the very small quantity of water or sediment
-brought down could injure the corals on the reef. Now,
-every reef of the fringing class is breached by a narrow
-gateway in front of the smallest rivulet, even if dry during
-the greater part of the year, for the mud, sand, or gravel,
-occasionally washed down kills the corals on which it is
-deposited. Consequently, when an island thus fringed subsides,
-though most of the narrow gateways will probably
-become closed by the outward and upward growth of the
-corals, yet any that are not closed (and some must always be
-kept open by the sediment and impure water flowing out of
-the lagoon-channel) will still continue to front exactly the
-upper parts of those valleys, at the mouths of which the
-original basal fringing-reef was breached.
-
-We can easily see how an island fronted only on one side, or on
-one side with one end or both ends encircled by barrier-reefs,
-might after long-continued subsidence be converted
-either into a single wall-like reef, or into an atoll with a
-great straight spur projecting from it, or into two or three
-atolls tied together by straight reefs -- all of which
-exceptional cases actually occur. As the reef-building corals
-require food, are preyed upon by other animals, are killed by
-sediment, cannot adhere to a loose bottom, and may be easily
-carried down to a depth whence they cannot spring up again,
-we need feel no surprise at the reefs both of atolls and
-barriers becoming in parts imperfect. The great barrier of
-New Caledonia is thus imperfect and broken in many parts;
-hence, after long subsidence, this great reef would not produce
-one great atoll 400 miles in length, but a chain or
-archipelago of atolls, of very nearly the same dimension with
-those in the Maldiva archipelago. Moreover, in an atoll once
-breached on opposite sides, from the likelihood of the oceanic
-and tidal currents passing straight through the breaches, it
-is extremely improbable that the corals, especially during
-continued subsidence, would ever be able again to unite the
-rim; if they did not, as the whole sank downwards, one atoll
-would be divided into two or more. In the Maldiva archipelago
-there are distinct atolls so related to each other in
-position, and separated by channels either unfathomable or
-very deep (the channel between Ross and Ari atolls is 150
-fathoms, and that between the north and south Nillandoo
-atolls is 200 fathoms in depth), that it is impossible to look
-at a map of them without believing that they were once
-more intimately related. And in this same archipelago,
-Mahlos-Mahdoo atoll is divided by a bifurcating channel
-from 100 to 132 fathoms in depth, in such a manner, that
-it is scarcely possible to say whether it ought strictly to
-be called three separate atolls, or one great atoll not yet
-finally divided.
-
-I will not enter on many more details; but I must remark
-that the curious structure of the northern Maldiva atolls
-receives (taking into consideration the free entrance of the
-sea through their broken margins) a simple explanation in
-the upward and outward growth of the corals, originally
-based both on small detached reefs in their lagoons, such as
-occur in common atolls, and on broken portions of the linear
-marginal reef, such as bounds every atoll of the ordinary
-form. I cannot refrain from once again remarking on the
-singularity of these complex structures -- a great sandy and
-generally concave disk rises abruptly from the unfathomable
-ocean, with its central expanse studded, and its edge
-symmetrically bordered with oval basins of coral-rock just
-lipping the surface of the sea, sometimes clothed with
-vegetation, and each containing a lake of clear water!
-
-One more point in detail: as in the two neighbouring
-archipelagoes corals flourish in one and not in the other, and
-as so many conditions before enumerated must affect their
-existence, it would be an inexplicable fact if, during the
-changes to which earth, air, and water are subjected, the
-reef-building corals were to keep alive for perpetuity on any
-one spot or area. And as by our theory the areas including
-atolls and barrier-reefs are subsiding, we ought occasionally to
-find reefs both dead and submerged. In all reefs, owing to the
-sediment being washed out of the lagoon-channel to leeward,
-that side is least favourable to the long-continued vigorous
-growth of the corals; hence dead portions of reef not
-unfrequently occur on the leeward side; and these, though still
-retaining their proper wall-like form, are now in several
-instances sunk several fathoms beneath the surface. The
-Chagos group appears from some cause, possibly from the
-subsidence having been too rapid, at present to be much less
-favourably circumstanced for the growth of reefs than formerly:
-one atoll has a portion of its marginal reef, nine miles
-in length, dead and submerged; a second has only a few
-quite small living points which rise to the surface, a third
-and fourth are entirely dead and submerged; a fifth is a
-mere wreck, with its structure almost obliterated. It is
-remarkable that in all these cases, the dead reefs and portions
-of reef lie at nearly the same depth, namely, from six to
-eight fathoms beneath the surface, as if they had been carried
-down by one uniform movement. One of these "half-drowned
-atolls," so called by Capt. Moresby (to whom I
-am indebted for much invaluable information), is of vast
-size, namely, ninety nautical miles across in one direction,
-and seventy miles in another line; and is in many respects
-eminently curious. As by our theory it follows that new
-atolls will generally be formed in each new area of subsidence,
-two weighty objections might have been raised,
-namely, that atolls must be increasing indefinitely in number;
-and secondly, that in old areas of subsidence each separate
-atoll must be increasing indefinitely in thickness, if proofs
-of their occasional destruction could not have been adduced.
-Thus have we traced the history of these great rings of
-coral-rock, from their first origin through their normal
-changes, and through the occasional accidents of their
-existence, to their death and final obliteration.
-
-
-In my volume on "Coral Formations" I have published a
-map, in which I have coloured all the atolls dark-blue, the
-barrier-reefs pale-blue, and the fringing reefs red. These
-latter reefs have been formed whilst the land has been
-stationary, or, as appears from the frequent presence of
-upraised organic remains, whilst it has been slowly rising:
-atolls and barrier-reefs, on the other hand, have grown up
-during the directly opposite movement of subsidence, which
-movement must have been very gradual, and in the case of atolls
-so vast in amount as to have buried every mountain-summit over
-wide ocean-spaces. Now in this map we see that the reefs
-tinted pale and dark-blue, which have been produced by the
-same order of movement, as a general rule manifestly stand
-near each other. Again we see, that the areas with the two
-blue tints are of wide extent; and that they lie separate from
-extensive lines of coast coloured red, both of which
-circumstances might naturally have been inferred, on the theory
-of the nature of the reefs having been governed by the nature
-of the earth's movement. It deserves notice that in more
-than one instance where single red and blue circles approach
-near each other, I can show that there have been oscillations
-of level; for in such cases the red or fringed circles consist
-of atolls, originally by our theory formed during subsidence,
-but subsequently upheaved; and on the other hand, some of
-the pale-blue or encircled islands are composed of coral-rock,
-which must have been uplifted to its present height before that
-subsidence took place, during which the existing barrier-reefs
-grew upwards.
-
-Authors have noticed with surprise, that although atolls
-are the commonest coral-structures throughout some enormous
-oceanic tracts, they are entirely absent in other seas,
-as in the West Indies: we can now at once perceive the
-cause, for where there has not been subsidence, atolls cannot
-have been formed; and in the case of the West Indies and
-parts of the East Indies, these tracts are known to have been
-rising within the recent period. The larger areas, coloured
-red and blue, are all elongated; and between the two colours
-there is a degree of rude alternation, as if the rising of one
-had balanced the sinking of the other. Taking into consideration
-the proofs of recent elevation both on the fringed
-coasts and on some others (for instance, in South America)
-where there are no reefs, we are led to conclude that the
-great continents are for the most part rising areas: and from
-the nature of the coral-reefs, that the central parts of the
-great oceans are sinking areas. The East Indian archipelago,
-the most broken land in the world, is in most parts an area
-of elevation, but surrounded and penetrated, probably in
-more lines than one, by narrow areas of subsidence.
-
-I have marked with vermilion spots all the many known
-active volcanos within the limits of this same map. Their
-entire absence from every one of the great subsiding areas,
-coloured either pale or dark blue, is most striking and not
-less so is the coincidence of the chief volcanic chains with
-the parts coloured red, which we are led to conclude have
-either long remained stationary, or more generally have been
-recently upraised. Although a few of the vermilion spots
-occur within no great distance of single circles tinted blue,
-yet not one single active volcano is situated within several
-hundred miles of an archipelago, or even small group of
-atolls. It is, therefore, a striking fact that in the Friendly
-archipelago, which consists of a group of atolls upheaved
-and since partially worn down, two volcanos, and perhaps
-more, are historically known to have been in action. On the
-other hand, although most of the islands in the Pacific which
-are encircled by barrier-reefs, are of volcanic origin, often
-with the remnants of craters still distinguishable, not one of
-them is known to have ever been in eruption. Hence in these
-cases it would appear, that volcanos burst forth into action
-and become extinguished on the same spots, accordingly as
-elevatory or subsiding movements prevail there. Numberless
-facts could be adduced to prove that upraised organic remains
-are common wherever there are active volcanos; but until it
-could be shown that in areas of subsidence, volcanos were
-either absent or inactive, the inference, however probable in
-itself, that their distribution depended on the rising or
-falling of the earth's surface, would have been hazardous. But
-now, I think, we may freely admit this important deduction.
-
-Taking a final view of the map, and bearing in mind the
-statements made with respect to the upraised organic remains,
-we must feel astonished at the vastness of the areas, which
-have suffered changes in level either downwards or upwards,
-within a period not geologically remote. It would appear
-also, that the elevatory and subsiding movements follow
-nearly the same laws. Throughout the spaces interspersed
-with atolls, where not a single peak of high land has been
-left above the level of the sea, the sinking must have been
-immense in amount. The sinking, moreover, whether continuous,
-or recurrent with intervals sufficiently long for the
-corals again to bring up their living edifices to the surface,
-must necessarily have been extremely slow. This conclusion is
-probably the most important one which can be deduced from the
-study of coral formations; -- and it is one which it is
-difficult to imagine how otherwise could ever have been
-arrived at. Nor can I quite pass over the probability of the
-former existence of large archipelagoes of lofty islands,
-where now only rings of coral-rock scarcely break the open
-expanse of the sea, throwing some light on the distribution of
-the inhabitants of the other high islands, now left standing
-so immensely remote from each other in the midst of the
-great oceans. The reef-constructing corals have indeed
-reared and preserved wonderful memorials of the subterranean
-oscillations of level; we see in each barrier-reef a
-proof that the land has there subsided, and in each atoll a
-monument over an island now lost. We may thus, like unto
-a geologist who had lived his ten thousand years and kept a
-record of the passing changes, gain some insight into the
-great system by which the surface of this globe has been
-broken up, and land and water interchanged.
-
-[1] These Plants are described in the Annals of Nat. Hist.,
-vol. i., 1838, p. 337.
-
-[2] Holman's Travels, vol. iv. p. 378.
-
-[3] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 155.
-
-[4] The thirteen species belong to the following orders: -- In
-the Coleoptera, a minute Elater; Orthoptera, a Gryllus and a
-Blatta; Hemiptera, one species; Homoptera, two; Neuroptera a
-Chrysopa; Hymenoptera, two ants; Lepidoptera nocturna, a
-Diopaea, and a Pterophorus (?); Diptera, two species.
-
-[5] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 222.
-
-[6] The large claws or pincers of some of these crabs are most
-beautifully adapted, when drawn back, to form an operculum to
-the shell, nearly as perfect as the proper one originally
-belonging to the molluscous animal. I was assured, and as far as
-my observations went I found it so, that certain species of the
-hermit-crab always use certain species of shells.
-
-[7] Some natives carried by Kotzebue to Kamtschatka collected
-stones to take back to their country.
-
-[8] See Proceedings of Zoological Society, 1832, p. 17.
-
-[9] Tyerman and Bennett. Voyage, etc. vol. ii. p. 33.
-
-[10] I exclude, of course, some soil which has been imported
-here in vessels from Malacca and Java, and likewise, some small
-fragments of pumice, drifted here by the waves. The one block of
-greenstone, moreover, on the northern island must be excepted.
-
-[11] These were first read before the Geological Society in May,
-1837, and have since been developed in a separate volume on the
-"Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs."
-
-[12] It is remarkable that Mr. Lyell, even in the first edition
-of his "Principles of Geology," inferred that the amount of
-subsidence in the Pacific must have exceeded that of elevation,
-from the area of land being very small relatively to the agents
-there tending to form it, namely, the growth of coral and
-volcanic action.
-
-[13] It has been highly satisfactory to me to find the following
-passage in a pamphlet by Mr. Couthouy, one of the naturalists in
-the great Antarctic Expedition of the United States: -- "Having
-personally examined a large number of coral-islands and resided
-eight months among the volcanic class having shore and partially
-encircling reefs. I may be permitted to state that my own
-observations have impressed a conviction of the correctness of
-the theory of Mr. Darwin." -- The naturalists, however, of this
-expedition differ with me on some points respecting coral
-formations.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
-
-Mauritius, beautiful appearance of -- Great crateriform ring of
-Mountains -- Hindoos -- St. Helena -- History of the changes in
-the Vegetation -- Cause of the extinction of Land-shells --
-Ascension -- Variation in the imported Rats -- Volcanic Bombs --
-Beds of Infusoria -- Bahia -- Brazil -- Splendour of Tropical
-Scenery -- Pernambuco -- Singular Reef -- Slavery -- Return to
-England -- Retrospect on our Voyage.
-
-
-APRIL 29th. -- In the morning we passed round the
-northern end of Mauritius, or the Isle of France.
-From this point of view the aspect of the island
-equalled the expectations raised by the many well-known
-descriptions of its beautiful scenery. The sloping plain of
-the Pamplemousses, interspersed with houses, and coloured
-by the large fields of sugar-cane of a bright green, composed
-the foreground. The brilliancy of the green was the more
-remarkable because it is a colour which generally is conspicuous
-only from a very short distance. Towards the centre
-of the island groups of wooded mountains rose out of
-this highly cultivated plain; their summits, as so commonly
-happens with ancient volcanic rocks, being jagged into the
-sharpest points. Masses of white clouds were collected
-around these pinnacles, as if for the sake of pleasing the
-stranger's eye. The whole island, with its sloping border
-and central mountains, was adorned with an air of perfect
-elegance: the scenery, if I may use such an expression, appeared
-to the sight harmonious.
-
-I spent the greater part of the next day in walking about
-the town and visiting different people. The town is of
-considerable size, and is said to contain 20,000 inhabitants;
-the streets are very clean and regular. Although the island has
-been so many years under the English Government, the general
-character of the place is quite French: Englishmen
-speak to their servants in French, and the shops are all
-French; indeed, I should think that Calais or Boulogne was
-much more Anglified. There is a very pretty little theatre,
-in which operas are excellently performed. We were also
-surprised at seeing large booksellers' shops, with well-stored
-shelves; -- music and reading bespeak our approach to the
-old world of civilization; for in truth both Australia and
-America are new worlds.
-
-The various races of men walking in the streets afford the
-most interesting spectacle in Port Louis. Convicts from
-India are banished here for life; at present there are about
-800, and they are employed in various public works. Before
-seeing these people, I had no idea that the inhabitants of
-India were such noble-looking figures. Their skin is extremely
-dark, and many of the older men had large mustaches
-and beards of a snow-white colour; this, together with
-the fire of their expression, gave them quite an imposing
-aspect. The greater number had been banished for murder
-and the worst crimes; others for causes which can scarcely
-be considered as moral faults, such as for not obeying, from
-superstitious motives, the English laws. These men are
-generally quiet and well-conducted; from their outward
-conduct, their cleanliness, and faithful observance of their
-strange religious rites, it was impossible to look at them
-with the same eyes as on our wretched convicts in New
-South Wales.
-
-May 1st. -- Sunday. I took a quiet walk along the seacoast
-to the north of the town. The plain in this part is quite
-uncultivated; it consists of a field of black lava, smoothed
-over with coarse grass and bushes, the latter being chiefly
-Mimosas. The scenery may be described as intermediate in
-character between that of the Galapagos and of Tahiti; but
-this will convey a definite idea to very few persons. It is a
-very pleasant country, but it has not the charms of Tahiti, or
-the grandeur of Brazil. The next day I ascended La Pouce,
-a mountain so called from a thumb-like projection, which
-rises close behind the town to a height of 2,600 feet. The
-centre of the island consists of a great platform, surrounded
-by old broken basaltic mountains, with their strata dipping
-seawards. The central platform, formed of comparatively
-recent streams of lava, is of an oval shape, thirteen
-geographical miles across, in the line of its shorter axis. The
-exterior bounding mountains come into that class of structures
-called Craters of Elevation, which are supposed to have
-been formed not like ordinary craters, but by a great and
-sudden upheaval. There appears to me to be insuperable
-objections to this view: on the other hand, I can hardly
-believe, in this and in some other cases, that these marginal
-crateriform mountains are merely the basal remnants of
-immense volcanos, of which the summits either have been
-blown off, or swallowed up in subterranean abysses.
-
-From our elevated position we enjoyed an excellent view over the
-island. The country on this side appears pretty well cultivated,
-being divided into fields and studded with farm-houses.
-I was, however, assured that of the whole land, not
-more than half is yet in a productive state; if such be the
-case, considering the present large export of sugar, this
-island, at some future period when thickly peopled, will be
-of great value. Since England has taken possession of it, a
-period of only twenty-five years, the export of sugar is said
-to have increased seventy-five fold. One great cause of its
-prosperity is the excellent state of the roads. In the
-neighbouring Isle of Bourbon, which remains under the French
-government, the roads are still in the same miserable state
-as they were here only a few years ago. Although the
-French residents must have largely profited by the increased
-prosperity of their island, yet the English government is far
-from popular.
-
-3rd. -- In the evening Captain Lloyd, the Surveyor-general,
-so well known from his examination of the Isthmus of Panama,
-invited Mr. Stokes and myself to his country-house,
-which is situated on the edge of Wilheim Plains, and about
-six miles from the Port. We stayed at this delightful place
-two days; standing nearly 800 feet above the sea, the air was
-cool and fresh, and on every side there were delightful walks.
-Close by, a grand ravine has been worn to a depth of about
-500 feet through the slightly inclined streams of lava, which
-have flowed from the central platform.
-
-5th. -- Captain Lloyd took us to the Riviere Noire, which is
-several miles to the southward, that I might examine some
-rocks of elevated coral. We passed through pleasant gardens,
-and fine fields of sugar-cane growing amidst huge
-blocks of lava. The roads were bordered by hedges of
-Mimosa, and near many of the houses there were avenues
-of the mango. Some of the views, where the peaked hills
-and the cultivated farms were seen together, were exceedingly
-picturesque; and we were constantly tempted to
-exclaim, "How pleasant it would be to pass one's life in
-such quiet abodes!" Captain Lloyd possessed an elephant,
-and he sent it half way with us, that we might enjoy a ride
-in true Indian fashion. The circumstance which surprised
-me most was its quite noiseless step. This elephant
-is the only one at present on the island; but it is said others
-will be sent for.
-
-
-May 9th. -- We sailed from Port Louis, and, calling at the
-Cape of Good Hope, on the 8th of July, we arrived off St.
-Helena. This island, the forbidding aspect of which has
-been so often described, rises abruptly like a huge black
-castle from the ocean. Near the town, as if to complete
-nature's defence, small forts and guns fill up every gap in
-the rugged rocks. The town runs up a flat and narrow
-valley; the houses look respectable, and are interspersed
-with a very few green trees. When approaching the anchorage
-there was one striking view: an irregular castle perched
-on the summit of a lofty hill, and surrounded by a few scattered
-fir-trees, boldly projected against the sky.
-
-The next day I obtained lodgings within a stone's throw
-of Napoleon's tomb; [1] it was a capital central situation,
-whence I could make excursions in every direction. During
-the four days I stayed here, I wandered over the island from
-morning to night, and examined its geological history. My
-lodgings were situated at a height of about 2000 feet; here
-the weather was cold and boisterous, with constant showers
-of rain; and every now and then the whole scene was veiled
-in thick clouds.
-
-Near the coast the rough lava is quite bare: in the central
-and higher parts, feldspathic rocks by their decomposition
-have produced a clayey soil, which, where not covered by
-vegetation, is stained in broad bands of many bright colours.
-At this season, the land moistened by constant showers,
-produces a singularly bright green pasture, which lower and
-lower down, gradually fades away and at last disappears. In
-latitude 16 degs., and at the trifling elevation of 1500 feet,
-it is surprising to behold a vegetation possessing a character
-decidedly British. The hills are crowned with irregular
-plantations of Scotch firs; and the sloping banks are thickly
-scattered over with thickets of gorse, covered with its bright
-yellow flowers. Weeping-willows are common on the banks
-of the rivulets, and the hedges are made of the blackberry,
-producing its well-known fruit. When we consider that the
-number of plants now found on the island is 746, and that
-out of these fifty-two alone are indigenous species, the rest
-having been imported, and most of them from England,
-we see the reason of the British character of the vegetation.
-Many of these English plants appear to flourish better than
-in their native country; some also from the opposite quarter
-of Australia succeed remarkably well. The many imported
-species must have destroyed some of the native kinds; and
-it is only on the highest and steepest ridges that the
-indigenous Flora is now predominant.
-
-The English, or rather Welsh character of the scenery, is
-kept up by the numerous cottages and small white houses;
-some buried at the bottom of the deepest valleys, and others
-mounted on the crests of the lofty hills. Some of the views
-are striking, for instance that from near Sir W. Doveton's
-house, where the bold peak called Lot is seen over a dark
-wood of firs, the whole being backed by the red water-worn
-mountains of the southern coast. On viewing the island
-from an eminence, the first circumstance which strikes one,
-is the number of the roads and forts: the labour bestowed
-on the public works, if one forgets its character as a prison,
-seems out of all proportion to its extent or value. There
-is so little level or useful land, that it seems surprising how
-so many people, about 5000, can subsist here. The lower
-orders, or the emancipated slaves, are I believe extremely
-poor: they complain of the want of work. From the reduction
-in the number of public servants owing to the island
-having been given up by the East Indian Company, and the
-consequent emigration of many of the richer people, the
-poverty probably will increase. The chief food of the working
-class is rice with a little salt meat; as neither of these
-articles are the products of the island, but must be purchased
-with money, the low wages tell heavily on the poor people.
-Now that the people are blessed with freedom, a right which
-I believe they value fully, it seems probable that their numbers
-will quickly increase: if so, what is to become of the
-little state of St. Helena?
-
-My guide was an elderly man, who had been a goatherd
-when a boy, and knew every step amongst the rocks. He
-was of a race many times crossed, and although with a
-dusky skin, he had not the disagreeable expression of a
-mulatto. He was a very civil, quiet old man, and such
-appears the character of the greater number of the lower
-classes. It was strange to my ears to hear a man, nearly
-white and respectably dressed, talking with indifference of
-the times when he was a slave. With my companion, who
-carried our dinners and a horn of water, which is quite
-necessary, as all the water in the lower valleys is saline, I
-every day took long walks.
-
-Beneath the upper and central green circle, the wild valleys
-are quite desolate and untenanted. Here, to the geologist,
-there were scenes of high interest, showing successive
-changes and complicated disturbances. According to my
-views, St. Helena has existed as an island from a very
-remote epoch: some obscure proofs, however, of the elevation
-of the land are still extant. I believe that the central
-and highest peaks form parts of the rim of a great crater,
-the southern half of which has been entirely removed by the
-waves of the sea: there is, moreover, an external wall of
-black basaltic rocks, like the coast-mountains of Mauritius,
-which are older than the central volcanic streams. On the
-higher parts of the island, considerable numbers of a shell,
-long thought to be a marine species occur imbedded in the soil.
-
-It proved to be a Cochlogena, or land-shell of a very
-peculiar form; [2] with it I found six other kinds; and in
-another spot an eighth species. It is remarkable that none
-of them are now found living. Their extinction has probably
-been caused by the entire destruction of the woods, and
-the consequent loss of food and shelter, which occurred
-during the early part of the last century.
-
-The history of the changes, which the elevated plains of
-Longwood and Deadwood have undergone, as given in General
-Beatson's account of the island, is extremely curious.
-Both plains, it is said in former times were covered with
-wood, and were therefore called the Great Wood. So late
-as the year 1716 there were many trees, but in 1724 the old
-trees had mostly fallen; and as goats and hogs had been
-suffered to range about, all the young trees had been killed.
-It appears also from the official records, that the trees were
-unexpectedly, some years afterwards, succeeded by a wire
-grass which spread over the whole surface. [3] General Beatson
-adds that now this plain "is covered with fine sward, and
-is become the finest piece of pasture on the island." The
-extent of surface, probably covered by wood at a former
-period, is estimated at no less than two thousand acres; at
-the present day scarcely a single tree can be found there. It
-is also said that in 1709 there were quantities of dead trees
-in Sandy Bay; this place is now so utterly desert, that nothing
-but so well attested an account could have made me believe
-that they could ever have grown there. The fact, that the
-goats and hogs destroyed all the young trees as they sprang
-up, and that in the course of time the old ones, which were
-safe from their attacks, perished from age, seems clearly
-made out. Goats were introduced in the year 1502; eighty-six
-years afterwards, in the time of Cavendish, it is known
-that they were exceedingly numerous. More than a century
-afterwards, in 1731, when the evil was complete and
-irretrievable, an order was issued that all stray animals should
-be destroyed. It is very interesting thus to find, that the
-arrival of animals at St. Helena in 1501, did not change the
-whole aspect of the island, until a period of two hundred
-and twenty years had elapsed: for the goats were introduced
-in 1502, and in 1724 it is said "the old trees had mostly
-fallen." There can be little doubt that this great change in
-the vegetation affected not only the land-shells, causing eight
-species to become extinct, but likewise a multitude of insects.
-
-St. Helena, situated so remote from any continent, in the
-midst of a great ocean, and possessing a unique Flora, excites
-our curiosity. The eight land-shells, though now extinct,
-and one living Succinea, are peculiar species found nowhere
-else. Mr. Cuming, however, informs me that an English
-Helix is common here, its eggs no doubt having been imported
-in some of the many introduced plants. Mr. Cuming
-collected on the coast sixteen species of sea-shells, of which
-seven, as far as he knows, are confined to this island. Birds
-and insects, [4] as might have been expected, are very few in
-number; indeed I believe all the birds have been introduced
-within late years. Partridges and pheasants are tolerably
-abundant; the island is much too English not to be subject
-to strict game-laws. I was told of a more unjust sacrifice to
-such ordinances than I ever heard of even in England. The
-poor people formerly used to burn a plant, which grows on the
-coast-rocks, and export the soda from its ashes; but a
-peremptory order came out prohibiting this practice, and giving
-as a reason that the partridges would have nowhere to build.
-
-In my walks I passed more than once over the grassy plain
-bounded by deep valleys, on which Longwood stands.
-Viewed from a short distance, it appears like a respectable
-gentleman's country-seat. In front there are a few cultivated
-fields, and beyond them the smooth hill of coloured
-rocks called the Flagstaff, and the rugged square black mass
-of the Barn. On the whole the view was rather bleak and
-uninteresting. The only inconvenience I suffered during my
-walks was from the impetuous winds. One day I noticed
-a curious circumstance; standing on the edge of a plain,
-terminated by a great cliff of about a thousand feet in depth,
-I saw at the distance of a few yards right to windward, some
-tern, struggling against a very strong breeze, whilst, where
-I stood, the air was quite calm. Approaching close to the
-brink, where the current seemed to be deflected upwards
-from the face of the cliff, I stretched out my arm, and
-immediately felt the full force of the wind: an invisible
-barrier, two yards in width, separated perfectly calm air
-from a strong blast.
-
-I so much enjoyed my rambles among the rocks and mountains
-of St. Helena, that I felt almost sorry on the morning
-of the 14th to descend to the town. Before noon I was on
-board, and the Beagle made sail.
-
-On the 19th of July we reached Ascension. Those who
-have beheld a volcanic island, situated under an arid climate,
-will at once be able to picture to themselves the appearance
-of Ascension. They will imagine smooth conical hills of a
-bright red colour, with their summits generally truncated,
-rising separately out of a level surface of black rugged lava.
-A principal mound in the centre of the island, seems the
-father of the lesser cones. It is called Green Hill: its
-name being taken from the faintest tinge of that colour,
-which at this time of the year is barely perceptible from the
-anchorage. To complete the desolate scene, the black rocks
-on the coast are lashed by a wild and turbulent sea.
-
-The settlement is near the beach; it consists of several
-houses and barracks placed irregularly, but well built of
-white freestone. The only inhabitants are marines, and some
-negroes liberated from slave-ships, who are paid and victualled
-by government. There is not a private person on the
-island. Many of the marines appeared well contented with their
-situation; they think it better to serve their one-and-twenty
-years on shore, let it be what it may, than in a ship; in this
-choice, if I were a marine, I should most heartily agree.
-
-The next morning I ascended Green Hill, 2840 feet high,
-and thence walked across the island to the windward point.
-A good cart-road leads from the coast-settlement to the
-houses, gardens, and fields, placed near the summit of the
-central mountain. On the roadside there are milestones, and
-likewise cisterns, where each thirsty passer-by can drink
-some good water. Similar care is displayed in each part of the
-establishment, and especially in the management of the
-springs, so that a single drop of water may not be lost: indeed
-the whole island may be compared to a huge ship kept
-in first-rate order. I could not help, when admiring the
-active industry, which had created such effects out of such
-means, at the same time regretting that it had been wasted on
-so poor and trifling an end. M. Lesson has remarked with
-justice, that the English nation would have thought of making
-the island of Ascension a productive spot, any other
-people would have held it as a mere fortress in the ocean.
-
-Near this coast nothing grows; further inland, an occasional
-green castor-oil plant, and a few grasshoppers, true
-friends of the desert, may be met with. Some grass is scattered
-over the surface of the central elevated region, and the
-whole much resembles the worse parts of the Welsh mountains.
-But scanty as the pasture appears, about six hundred
-sheep, many goats, a few cows and horses, all thrive well on
-it. Of native animals, land-crabs and rats swarm in numbers.
-Whether the rat is really indigenous, may well be doubted;
-there are two varieties as described by Mr. Waterhouse;
-one is of a black colour, with fine glossy fur, and
-lives on the grassy summit, the other is brown-coloured and
-less glossy, with longer hairs, and lives near the settlement
-on the coast. Both these varieties are one-third smaller than
-the common black rat (M. rattus); and they differ from it
-both in the colour and character of their fur, but in no
-other essential respect. I can hardly doubt that these rats
-(like the common mouse, which has also run wild) have
-been imported, and, as at the Galapagos, have varied from
-the effect of the new conditions to which they have been
-exposed: hence the variety on the summit of the island
-differs from that on the coast. Of native birds there are
-none; but the guinea-fowl, imported from the Cape de
-Verd Islands, is abundant, and the common fowl has likewise
-run wild. Some cats, which were originally turned out
-to destroy the rats and mice, have increased, so as to become
-a great plague. The island is entirely without trees,
-in which, and in every other respect, it is very far inferior
-to St. Helena.
-
-One of my excursions took me towards the S. W. extremity
-of the island. The day was clear and hot, and I saw the
-island, not smiling with beauty, but staring with naked
-hideousness. The lava streams are covered with hummocks, and
-are rugged to a degree which, geologically speaking, is not
-of easy explanation. The intervening spaces are concealed
-with layers of pumice, ashes and volcanic tuff. Whilst passing
-this end of the island at sea, I could not imagine what
-the white patches were with which the whole plain was
-mottled; I now found that they were seafowl, sleeping in such
-full confidence, that even in midday a man could walk up
-and seize hold of them. These birds were the only living
-creatures I saw during the whole day. On the beach a great
-surf, although the breeze was light, came tumbling over
-the broken lava rocks.
-
-The geology of this island is in many respects interesting.
-In several places I noticed volcanic bombs, that is, masses of
-lava which have been shot through the air whilst fluid, and
-have consequently assumed a spherical or pear-shape. Not
-only their external form, but, in several cases, their internal
-structure shows in a very curious manner that they have revolved
-in their aerial course. The internal structure of one
-of these bombs, when broken, is represented very accurately
-in the woodcut. The central part is coarsely cellular, the
-cells decreasing in size towards the exterior; where there
-is a shell-like case about the third of an inch in thickness,
-of compact stone, which again is overlaid by the outside
-crust of finely cellular lava. I think there can be little
-doubt, first that the external crust cooled rapidly in the state
-in which we now see it; secondly, that the still fluid lava
-within, was packed by the centrifugal force, generated by
-
-
-[picture]
-
-
-the revolving of the bomb, against the external cooled
-crust, and so produced the solid shell of stone; and lastly,
-that the centrifugal force, by relieving the pressure in the
-more central parts of the bomb, allowed the heated vapours
-to expand their cells, thus forming the coarse cellular mass
-of the centre.
-
-A hill, formed of the older series of volcanic rocks, and
-which has been incorrectly considered as the crater of a
-volcano, is remarkable from its broad, slightly hollowed, and
-circular summit having been filled up with many successive
-layers of ashes and fine scoriae. These saucer-shaped layers
-crop out on the margin, forming perfect rings of many different
-colours, giving to the summit a most fantastic appearance;
-one of these rings is white and broad, and resembles
-a course round which horses have been exercised; hence the
-hill has been called the Devil's Riding School. I brought away
-specimens of one of the tufaceous layers of a pinkish colour and
-it is a most extraordinary fact, that Professor Ehrenberg [5]
-finds it almost wholly composed of matter which has been
-organized: he detects in it some siliceous-shielded fresh-water
-infusoria, and no less than twenty-five different kinds
-of the siliceous tissue of plants, chiefly of grasses. From
-the absence of all carbonaceous matter, Professor Ehrenberg
-believes that these organic bodies have passed through the
-volcanic fire, and have been erupted in the state in which
-we now see them. The appearance of the layers induced me
-to believe that they had been deposited under water, though
-from the extreme dryness of the climate I was forced to imagine,
-that torrents of rain had probably fallen during some
-great eruption, and that thus a temporary lake had been
-formed into which the ashes fell. But it may now be suspected
-that the lake was not a temporary one. Anyhow, we
-may feel sure, that at some former epoch the climate and
-productions of Ascension were very different from what
-they now are. Where on the face of the earth can we find
-a spot, on which close investigation will not discover signs
-of that endless cycle of change, to which this earth has been,
-is, and will be subjected?
-
-On leaving Ascension, we sailed for Bahia, on the coast
-of Brazil, in order to complete the chronometrical measurement
-of the world. We arrived there on August 1st, and
-stayed four days, during which I took several long walks.
-I was glad to find my enjoyment in tropical scenery had not
-decreased from the want of novelty, even in the slightest
-degree. The elements of the scenery are so simple, that they
-are worth mentioning, as a proof on what trifling circumstances
-exquisite natural beauty depends.
-
-The country may be described as a level plain of about
-three hundred feet in elevation, which in all parts has been
-worn into flat-bottomed valleys. This structure is remarkable
-in a granitic land, but is nearly universal in all those
-softer formations of which plains are usually composed.
-The whole surface is covered by various kinds of stately
-trees, interspersed with patches of cultivated ground, out
-of which houses, convents, and chapels arise. It must be
-remembered that within the tropics, the wild luxuriance of
-nature is not lost even in the vicinity of large cities: for
-the natural vegetation of the hedges and hill-sides overpowers
-in picturesque effect the artificial labour of man.
-Hence, there are only a few spots where the bright red
-soil affords a strong contrast with the universal clothing
-of green. From the edges of the plain there are distant
-views either of the ocean, or of the great Bay with its
-low-wooded shores, and on which numerous boats and canoes
-show their white sails. Excepting from these points, the
-scene is extremely limited; following the level pathways,
-on each hand, only glimpses into the wooded valleys below
-can be obtained. The houses I may add, and especially the
-sacred edifices, are built in a peculiar and rather fantastic
-style of architecture. They are all whitewashed; so that
-when illumined by the brilliant sun of midday, and as seen
-against the pale blue sky of the horizon, they stand out more
-like shadows than real buildings.
-
-Such are the elements of the scenery, but it is a hopeless
-attempt to paint the general effect. Learned naturalists
-describe these scenes of the tropics by naming a multitude of
-objects, and mentioning some characteristic feature of each.
-To a learned traveller this possibly may communicate some
-definite ideas: but who else from seeing a plant in an herbarium
-can imagine its appearance when growing in its native
-soil? Who from seeing choice plants in a hothouse, can
-magnify some into the dimensions of forest trees, and crowd
-others into an entangled jungle? Who when examining in
-the cabinet of the entomologist the gay exotic butterflies,
-and singular cicadas, will associate with these lifeless
-objects, the ceaseless harsh music of the latter, and the
-lazy flight of the former, -- the sure accompaniments of the
-still, glowing noonday of the tropics? It is when the sun has
-attained its greatest height, that such scenes should be
-viewed: then the dense splendid foliage of the mango hides
-the ground with its darkest shade, whilst the upper branches
-are rendered from the profusion of light of the most brilliant
-green. In the temperate zones the case is different -- the
-vegetation there is not so dark or so rich, and hence the
-rays of the declining sun, tinged of a red, purple, or bright
-yellow color, add most to the beauties of those climes.
-
-When quietly walking along the shady pathways, and admiring
-each successive view, I wished to find language to
-express my ideas. Epithet after epithet was found too weak
-to convey to those who have not visited the intertropical
-regions, the sensation of delight which the mind experiences.
-I have said that the plants in a hothouse fail to communicate
-a just idea of the vegetation, yet I must recur to it. The land
-is one great wild, untidy, luxuriant hothouse, made by
-Nature for herself, but taken possession of by man, who has
-studded it with gay houses and formal gardens. How great
-would be the desire in every admirer of nature to behold,
-if such were possible, the scenery of another planet! yet
-to every person in Europe, it may be truly said, that at
-the distance of only a few degrees from his native soil, the
-glories of another world are opened to him. In my last
-walk I stopped again and again to gaze on these beauties, and
-endeavoured to fix in my mind for ever, an impression which
-at the time I knew sooner or later must fail. The form of the
-orange-tree, the cocoa-nut, the palm, the mango, the tree-fern,
-the banana, will remain clear and separate; but the
-thousand beauties which unite these into one perfect scene
-must fade away: yet they will leave, like a tale heard in
-childhood, a picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful
-figures.
-
-August 6th. -- In the afternoon we stood out to sea, with
-the intention of making a direct course to the Cape de Verd
-Islands. Unfavourable winds, however, delayed us, and on
-the 12th we ran into Pernambuco, -- a large city on the
-coast of Brazil, in latitude 8 degs. south. We anchored outside
-the reef; but in a short time a pilot came on board and
-took us into the inner harbour, where we lay close to the
-town.
-
-Pernambuco is built on some narrow and low sand-banks,
-which are separated from each other by shoal channels of
-salt water. The three parts of the town are connected together
-by two long bridges built on wooden piles. The town is in
-all parts disgusting, the streets being narrow, ill-paved,
-and filthy; the houses, tall and gloomy. The season
-of heavy rains had hardly come to an end, and hence the
-surrounding country, which is scarcely raised above the
-level of the sea, was flooded with water; and I failed in
-all my attempts to take walks.
-
-The flat swampy land on which Pernambuco stands is surrounded,
-at the distance of a few miles, by a semicircle of
-low hills, or rather by the edge of a country elevated perhaps
-two hundred feet above the sea. The old city of
-Olinda stands on one extremity of this range. One day I
-took a canoe, and proceeded up one of the channels to visit
-it; I found the old town from its situation both sweeter and
-cleaner than that of Pernambuco. I must here commemorate
-what happened for the first time during our nearly five
-years' wandering, namely, having met with a want of politeness.
-I was refused in a sullen manner at two different
-houses, and obtained with difficulty from a third, permission
-to pass through their gardens to an uncultivated hill,
-for the purpose of viewing the country. I feel glad that
-this happened in the land of the Brazilians, for I bear
-them no good will -- a land also of slavery, and therefore
-of moral debasement. A Spaniard would have felt ashamed
-at the very thought of refusing such a request, or of
-behaving to a stranger with rudeness. The channel by which
-we went to and returned from Olinda, was bordered on each
-side by mangroves, which sprang like a miniature forest out
-of the greasy mud-banks. The bright green colour of these
-bushes always reminded me of the rank grass in a church-yard:
-both are nourished by putrid exhalations; the one speaks of
-death past, and the other too often of death to come.
-
-The most curious object which I saw in this neighbourhood,
-was the reef that forms the harbour. I doubt whether
-in the whole world any other natural structure has so artificial
-an appearance. [6] It runs for a length of several miles in
-an absolutely straight line, parallel to, and not far distant
-from, the shore. It varies in width from thirty to sixty
-yards, and its surface is level and smooth; it is composed of
-obscurely stratified hard sandstone. At high water the waves
-break over it; at low water its summit is left dry, and it
-might then be mistaken for a breakwater erected by Cyclopean
-workmen. On this coast the currents of the sea tend
-to throw up in front of the land, long spits and bars of
-loose sand, and on one of these, part of the town of Pernambuco
-stands. In former times a long spit of this nature
-seems to have become consolidated by the percolation of
-calcareous matter, and afterwards to have been gradually
-upheaved; the outer and loose parts during this process having
-been worn away by the action of the sea, and the solid
-nucleus left as we now see it. Although night and day the
-waves of the open Atlantic, turbid with sediment, are
-driven against the steep outside edges of this wall of stone,
-yet the oldest pilots know of no tradition of any change in its
-appearance. This durability is much the most curious fact
-in its history: it is due to a tough layer, a few inches thick,
-of calcareous matter, wholly formed by the successive
-growth and death of the small shells of Serpulae, together
-with some few barnacles and nulliporae. These nulliporae,
-which are hard, very simply-organized sea-plants, play an
-analogous and important part in protecting the upper surfaces
-of coral-reefs, behind and within the breakers, where
-the true corals, during the outward growth of the mass,
-become killed by exposure to the sun and air. These
-insignificant organic beings, especially the Serpulae, have done
-good service to the people of Pernambuco; for without their
-protective aid the bar of sandstone would inevitably have
-been long ago worn away and without the bar, there would
-have been no harbour.
-
-On the 19th of August we finally left the shores of Brazil.
-I thank God, I shall never again visit a slave-country. To
-this day, if I hear a distant scream, it recalls with painful
-vividness my feelings, when passing a house near Pernambuco,
-I heard the most pitiable moans, and could not but
-suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew
-that I was as powerless as a child even to remonstrate. I
-suspected that these moans were from a tortured slave, for I
-was told that this was the case in another instance. Near
-Rio de Janeiro I lived opposite to an old lady, who kept
-screws to crush the fingers of her female slaves. I have
-stayed in a house where a young household mulatto, daily
-and hourly, was reviled, beaten, and persecuted enough to
-break the spirit of the lowest animal. I have seen a little
-boy, six or seven years old, struck thrice with a horse-whip
-(before I could interfere) on his naked head, for having
-handed me a glass of water not quite clean; I saw his
-father tremble at a mere glance from his master's eye.
-These latter cruelties were witnessed by me in a Spanish
-colony, in which it has always been said, that slaves are
-better treated than by the Portuguese, English, or other
-European nations. I have seen at Rio de Janeiro a powerful
-negro afraid to ward off a blow directed, as he thought, at his
-face. I was present when a kind-hearted man was on the
-point of separating forever the men, women, and little
-children of a large number of families who had long lived
-together. I will not even allude to the many heart-sickening
-atrocities which I authentically heard of; -- nor would I have
-mentioned the above revolting details, had I not met with
-several people, so blinded by the constitutional gaiety of the
-negro as to speak of slavery as a tolerable evil. Such people
-have generally visited at the houses of the upper classes, where
-the domestic slaves are usually well treated, and they have
-not, like myself, lived amongst the lower classes. Such
-inquirers will ask slaves about their condition; they forget
-that the slave must indeed be dull, who does not calculate
-on the chance of his answer reaching his master's ears.
-
-It is argued that self-interest will prevent excessive cruelty;
-as if self-interest protected our domestic animals, which
-are far less likely than degraded slaves, to stir up the rage
-of their savage masters. It is an argument long since protested
-against with noble feeling, and strikingly exemplified,
-by the ever-illustrious Humboldt. It is often attempted to
-palliate slavery by comparing the state of slaves with our
-poorer countrymen: if the misery of our poor be caused
-not by the laws of nature, but by our institutions, great is
-our sin; but how this bears on slavery, I cannot see; as well
-might the use of the thumb-screw be defended in one
-land, by showing that men in another land suffered from
-some dreadful disease. Those who look tenderly at the slave
-owner, and with a cold heart at the slave, never seem to put
-themselves into the position of the latter; what a cheerless
-prospect, with not even a hope of change! picture to yourself
-the chance, ever hanging over you, of your wife and
-your little children -- those objects which nature urges even
-the slave to call his own -- being torn from you and sold
-like beasts to the first bidder! And these deeds are done
-and palliated by men, who profess to love their neighbours
-as themselves, who believe in God, and pray that his Will be
-done on earth! It makes one's blood boil, yet heart tremble,
-to think that we Englishmen and our American descendants,
-with their boastful cry of liberty, have been and are so
-guilty: but it is a consolation to reflect, that we at least
-have made a greater sacrifice, than ever made by any nation,
-to expiate our sin.
-
-
-On the last day of August we anchored for the second time
-at Porto Praya in the Cape de Verd archipelago; thence we
-proceeded to the Azores, where we stayed six days. On the
-2nd of October we made the shore, of England; and at Falmouth
-I left the Beagle, having lived on board the good little
-vessel nearly five years.
-
-
-Our Voyage having come to an end, I will take a short
-retrospect of the advantages and disadvantages, the pains
-and pleasures, of our circumnavigation of the world. If a
-person asked my advice, before undertaking a long voyage,
-my answer would depend upon his possessing a decided taste
-for some branch of knowledge, which could by this means be
-advanced. No doubt it is a high satisfaction to behold various
-countries and the many races of mankind, but the pleasures
-gained at the time do not counterbalance the evils. It is
-necessary to look forward to a harvest, however distant
-that may be, when some fruit will be reaped, some good
-effected.
-
-Many of the losses which must be experienced are obvious;
-such as that of the society of every old friend, and of the
-sight of those places with which every dearest remembrance
-is so intimately connected. These losses, however, are at
-the time partly relieved by the exhaustless delight of
-anticipating the long wished-for day of return. If, as poets
-say, life is a dream, I am sure in a voyage these are the
-visions which best serve to pass away the long night. Other
-losses, although not at first felt, tell heavily after a period:
-these are the want of room, of seclusion, of rest; the jading
-feeling of constant hurry; the privation of small luxuries, the
-loss of domestic society and even of music and the other
-pleasures of imagination. When such trifles are mentioned, it is
-evident that the real grievances, excepting from accidents, of
-a sea-life are at an end. The short space of sixty years has
-made an astonishing difference in the facility of distant
-navigation. Even in the time of Cook, a man who left
-his fireside for such expeditions underwent severe privations.
-A yacht now, with every luxury of life, can circumnavigate
-the globe. Besides the vast improvements in ships and
-naval resources, the whole western shores of America are
-thrown open, and Australia has become the capital of a
-rising continent. How different are the circumstances to a
-man shipwrecked at the present day in the Pacific, to what
-they were in the time of Cook! Since his voyage a hemisphere
-has been added to the civilized world.
-
-If a person suffer much from sea-sickness, let him weigh
-it heavily in the balance. I speak from experience: it is no
-trifling evil, cured in a week. If, on the other hand, he take
-pleasure in naval tactics, he will assuredly have full scope
-for his taste. But it must be borne in mind, how large a
-proportion of the time, during a long voyage, is spent on
-the water, as compared with the days in harbour. And what
-are the boasted glories of the illimitable ocean. A tedious
-waste, a desert of water, as the Arabian calls it. No doubt
-there are some delightful scenes. A moonlight night, with
-the clear heavens and the dark glittering sea, and the white
-sails filled by the soft air of a gently blowing trade-wind, a
-dead calm, with the heaving surface polished like a mirror,
-and all still except the occasional flapping of the canvas.
-It is well once to behold a squall with its rising arch and
-coming fury, or the heavy gale of wind and mountainous
-waves. I confess, however, my imagination had painted
-something more grand, more terrific in the full-grown storm.
-It is an incomparably finer spectacle when beheld on shore,
-where the waving trees, the wild flight of the birds, the
-dark shadows and bright lights, the rushing of the torrents
-all proclaim the strife of the unloosed elements. At sea
-the albatross and little petrel fly as if the storm were their
-proper sphere, the water rises and sinks as if fulfilling its
-usual task, the ship alone and its inhabitants seem the objects
-of wrath. On a forlorn and weather-beaten coast, the scene
-is indeed different, but the feelings partake more of horror
-than of wild delight.
-
-Let us now look at the brighter side of the past time. The
-pleasure derived from beholding the scenery and the general
-aspect of the various countries we have visited, has decidedly
-been the most constant and highest source of enjoyment. It
-is probable that the picturesque beauty of many parts of
-Europe exceeds anything which we beheld. But there is a
-growing pleasure in comparing the character of the scenery
-in different countries, which to a certain degree is distinct
-from merely admiring its beauty. It depends chiefly on an
-acquaintance with the individual parts of each view. I am
-strongly induced to believe that as in music, the person who
-understands every note will, if he also possesses a proper
-taste, more thoroughly enjoy the whole, so he who examines
-each part of a fine view, may also thoroughly comprehend
-the full and combined effect. Hence, a traveller should be
-a botanist, for in all views plants form the chief
-embellishment. Group masses of naked rock, even in the wildest
-forms, and they may for a time afford a sublime spectacle,
-but they will soon grow monotonous. Paint them with bright
-and varied colours, as in Northern Chile, they will become
-fantastic; clothe them with vegetation, they must form a
-decent, if not a beautiful picture.
-
-When I say that the scenery of parts of Europe is probably
-superior to anything which we beheld, I except, as a class by
-itself, that of the intertropical zones. The two classes cannot
-be compared together; but I have already often enlarged on
-the grandeur of those regions. As the force of impressions
-generally depends on preconceived ideas, I may add, that
-mine were taken from the vivid descriptions in the Personal
-Narrative of Humboldt, which far exceed in merit anything
-else which I have read. Yet with these high-wrought ideas,
-my feelings were far from partaking of a tinge of disappointment
-on my first and final landing on the shores of Brazil.
-
-Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind,
-none exceed in sublimity the primeval forests undefaced by
-the hand of man; whether those of Brazil, where the powers
-of Life are predominant, or those of Tierra del Fuego,
-where Death and decay prevail. Both are temples filled with
-the varied productions of the God of Nature: -- no one can
-stand in these solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is
-more in man than the mere breath of his body. In calling
-up images of the past, I find that the plains of Patagonia
-frequently cross before my eyes; yet these plains are pronounced
-by all wretched and useless. They can be described
-only by negative characters; without habitations, without
-water, without trees, without mountains, they support merely
-a few dwarf plants. Why, then, and the case is not peculiar
-to myself, have these arid wastes taken so firm a hold on
-my memory? Why have not the still more level, the greener
-and more fertile Pampas, which are serviceable to mankind,
-produced an equal impression? I can scarcely analyze these
-feelings: but it must be partly owing to the free scope given
-to the imagination. The plains of Patagonia are boundless,
-for they are scarcely passable, and hence unknown: they
-bear the stamp of having lasted, as they are now, for ages,
-and there appears no limit to their duration through future
-time. If, as the ancients supposed, the flat earth was
-surrounded by an impassable breadth of water, or by deserts
-heated to an intolerable excess, who would not look at these
-last boundaries to man's knowledge with deep but ill-defined
-sensations?
-
-Lastly, of natural scenery, the views from lofty mountains,
-through certainly in one sense not beautiful, are very
-memorable. When looking down from the highest crest of the
-Cordillera, the mind, undisturbed by minute details, was
-filled with the stupendous dimensions of the surrounding masses.
-
-Of individual objects, perhaps nothing is more certain to
-create astonishment than the first sight in his native haunt of
-a barbarian -- of man in his lowest and most savage state.
-One's mind hurries back over past centuries, and then asks,
-could our progenitors have been men like these? -- men,
-whose very signs and expressions are less intelligible to us
-than those of the domesticated animals; men, who do not
-possess the instinct of those animals, nor yet appear to boast
-of human reason, or at least of arts consequent on that
-reason. I do not believe it is possible to describe or paint
-the difference between savage and civilized man. It is
-the difference between a wild and tame animal: and part
-of the interest in beholding a savage, is the same which
-would lead every one to desire to see the lion in his desert,
-the tiger tearing his prey in the jungle, or the rhinoceros
-wandering over the wild plains of Africa.
-
-Among the other most remarkable spectacles which we
-have beheld, may be ranked, the Southern Cross, the cloud
-of Magellan, and the other constellations of the southern
-hemisphere -- the water-spout -- the glacier leading its blue
-stream of ice, over-hanging the sea in a bold precipice -- a
-lagoon-island raised by the reef-building corals -- an active
-volcano -- and the overwhelming effects of a violent earthquake.
-These latter phenomena, perhaps, possess for me a
-peculiar interest, from their intimate connection with the
-geological structure of the world. The earthquake, however,
-must be to every one a most impressive event: the earth,
-considered from our earliest childhood as the type of solidity,
-has oscillated like a thin crust beneath our feet; and
-in seeing the laboured works of man in a moment overthrown,
-we feel the insignificance of his boasted power.
-
-It has been said, that the love of the chase is an inherent
-delight in man -- a relic of an instinctive passion. If so, I
-am sure the pleasure of living in the open air, with the sky
-for a roof and the ground for a table, is part of the same
-feeling, it is the savage returning to his wild and native
-habits. I always look back to our boat cruises, and my land
-journeys, when through unfrequented countries, with an extreme
-delight, which no scenes of civilization could have
-created. I do not doubt that every traveller must remember
-the glowing sense of happiness which he experienced, when
-he first breathed in a foreign clime, where the civilized man
-had seldom or never trod.
-
-There are several other sources of enjoyment in a long
-voyage, which are of a more reasonable nature. The map
-of the world ceases to be a blank; it becomes a picture full
-of the most varied and animated figures. Each part assumes
-its proper dimensions: continents are not looked at in the
-light of islands, or islands considered as mere specks, which
-are, in truth, larger than many kingdoms of Europe. Africa,
-or North and South America, are well-sounding names, and
-easily pronounced; but it is not until having sailed for
-weeks along small portions of their shores, that one is
-thoroughly convinced what vast spaces on our immense world
-these names imply.
-
-From seeing the present state, it is impossible not to look
-forward with high expectations to the future progress of
-nearly an entire hemisphere. The march of improvement,
-consequent on the introduction of Christianity throughout
-the South Sea, probably stands by itself in the records of
-history. It is the more striking when we remember that only
-sixty years since, Cook, whose excellent judgment none will
-dispute, could foresee no prospect of a change. Yet these
-changes have now been effected by the philanthropic spirit
-of the British nation.
-
-In the same quarter of the globe Australia is rising, or
-indeed may be said to have risen, into a grand centre of
-civilization, which, at some not very remote period, will rule
-as empress over the southern hemisphere. It is impossible
-for an Englishman to behold these distant colonies, without
-a high pride and satisfaction. To hoist the British flag,
-seems to draw with it as a certain consequence, wealth,
-prosperity, and civilization.
-
-In conclusion, it appears to me that nothing can be more
-improving to a young naturalist, than a journey in distant
-countries. It both sharpens, and partly allays that want and
-craving, which, as Sir J. Herschel remarks, a man experiences
-although every corporeal sense be fully satisfied. The
-excitement from the novelty of objects, and the chance of
-success, stimulate him to increased activity. Moreover, as a
-number of isolated facts soon become uninteresting, the
-habit of comparison leads to generalization. On the other
-hand, as the traveller stays but a short time in each place,
-his descriptions must generally consist of mere sketches,
-instead of detailed observations. Hence arises, as I have found
-to my cost, a constant tendency to fill up the wide gaps of
-knowledge, by inaccurate and superficial hypotheses.
-
-But I have too deeply enjoyed the voyage, not to recommend
-any naturalist, although he must not expect to be so
-fortunate in his companions as I have been, to take all
-chances, and to start, on travels by land if possible, if
-otherwise, on a long voyage. He may feel assured, he will meet
-with no difficulties or dangers, excepting in rare cases, nearly
-so bad as he beforehand anticipates. In a moral point of
-view, the effect ought to be, to teach him good-humoured
-patience, freedom from selfishness, the habit of acting for
-himself, and of making the best of every occurrence. In
-short, he ought to partake of the characteristic qualities of
-most sailors. Travelling ought also to teach him distrust; but
-at the same time he will discover, how many truly kind-hearted
-people there are, with whom he never before had, or ever again
-will have any further communication, who yet are ready to offer
-him the most disinterested assistance.
-
-[1] After the volumes of eloquence which have poured forth on
-this subject, it is dangerous even to mention the tomb. A
-modern traveller, in twelve lines, burdens the poor little
-island with the following titles, -- it is a grave, tomb,
-pyramid, cemetery, sepulchre, catacomb, sarcophagus, minaret,
-and mausoleum!
-
-[2] It deserves notice, that all the many specimens of this
-shell found by me in one spot, differ as a marked variety,
-from another set of specimens procured from a different spot.
-
-[3] Beatson's St. Helena. Introductory chapter, p. 4.
-
-[4] Among these few insects, I was surprised to find a small
-Aphodius (nov. spec.) and an Oryctes, both extremely numerous
-under dung. When the island was discovered it certainly
-possessed no quadruped, excepting perhaps a mouse: it becomes,
-therefore, a difficult point to ascertain, whether these
-stercovorous insects have since been imported by accident, or if
-aborigines, on what food they formerly subsisted. On the banks
-of the Plata, where, from the vast number of cattle and horses,
-the fine plains of turf are richly manured, it is vain to seek
-the many kinds of dung-feeding beetles, which occur so
-abundantly in Europe. I observed only an Oryctes (the insects of
-this genus in Europe generally feed on decayed vegetable matter)
-and two species of Phanaeus, common in such situations. On the
-opposite side of the Cordillera in Chiloe, another species of
-Phanaeus is exceedingly abundant, and it buries the dung of the
-cattle in large earthen balls beneath the ground. There is
-reason to believe that the genus Phanaeus, before the
-introduction of cattle, acted as scavengers to man. In Europe,
-beetles, which find support in the matter which has already
-contributed towards the life of other and larger animals, are so
-numerous that there must be considerably more than one hundred
-different species. Considering this, and observing what a
-quantity of food of this kind is lost on the plains of La Plata,
-I imagined I saw an instance where man had disturbed that chain,
-by which so many animals are linked together in their native
-country. In Van Diemen's Land, however, I found four species of
-Onthophagus, two of Aphodius, and one of a third genus, very
-abundantly under the dung of cows; yet these latter animals had
-been then introduced only thirty-three years. Previous to that
-time the kangaroo and some other small animals were the only
-quadrupeds; and their dung is of a very different quality from
-that of their successors introduced by man. In England the
-greater number of stercovorous beetles are confined in their
-appetites; that is, they do not depend indifferently on any
-quadruped for the means of subsistence. The change, therefore,
-in habits which must have taken place in Van Diemen's Land is
-highly remarkable. I am indebted to the Rev. F. W. Hope, who, I
-hope, will permit me to call him my master in Entomology, for
-giving me the names of the foregoing insects.
-
-[5] Monats. der Konig. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin. Vom
-April, 1845.
-
-[6] I have described this Bar in detail, in the Lond. and
-Edin. Phil. Mag., vol. xix. (1841), p. 257.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Voyage of the Beagle by Darwin
-
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-The Internet Wiretap Online Edition of
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-BY CHARLES DARWIN
-
-
-
-
-
-About the online edition.
-
-The degree symbol is represented as "degs." Italics
-are represented as _italics_. Footnotes are collected
-at the end of each chapter.
-
-
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-
-PREFACE
-
-
-I have stated in the preface to the first Edition of this work,
-and in the Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle, that it was in
-consequence of a wish expressed by Captain Fitz Roy, of having
-some scientific person on board, accompanied by an offer from
-him of giving up part of his own accommodations, that I
-volunteered my services, which received, through the kindness of
-the hydrographer, Captain Beaufort, the sanction of the Lords of
-the Admiralty. As I feel that the opportunities which I enjoyed
-of studying the Natural History of the different countries we
-visited, have been wholly due to Captain Fitz Roy, I hope I may
-here be permitted to repeat my expression of gratitude to him;
-and to add that, during the five years we were together, I
-received from him the most cordial friendship and steady
-assistance. Both to Captain Fitz Roy and to all the Officers of
-the Beagle [1] I shall ever feel most thankful for the
-undeviating kindness with which I was treated during our long
-voyage.
-
-This volume contains, in the form of a Journal, a history of
-our voyage, and a sketch of those observations in Natural History
-and Geology, which I think will possess some interest for the
-general reader. I have in this edition largely condensed and
-corrected some parts, and have added a little to others, in order
-to render the volume more fitted for popular reading; but I trust
-that naturalists will remember, that they must refer for details
-to the larger publications which comprise the scientific results
-of the Expedition. The Zoology of the Voyage of the Beagle
-includes an account of the Fossil Mammalia, by Professor Owen;
-of the Living Mammalia, by Mr. Waterhouse; of the Birds, by
-Mr. Gould; of the Fish, by the Rev. L. Jenyns; and of the
-Reptiles, by Mr. Bell. I have appended to the descriptions of
-each species an account of its habits and range. These works,
-which I owe to the high talents and disinterested zeal of the
-above distinguished authors, could not have been undertaken, had
-it not been for the liberality of the Lords Commissioners of Her
-Majesty's Treasury, who, through the representation of the Right
-Honourable the Chancellor of the Exchequer, have been pleased
-to grant a sum of one thousand pounds towards defraying part
-of the expenses of publication.
-
-I have myself published separate volumes on the 'Structure
-and Distribution of Coral Reefs;' on the 'Volcanic Islands
-visited during the Voyage of the Beagle;' and on the 'Geology
-of South America.' The sixth volume of the 'Geological
-Transactions' contains two papers of mine on the Erratic
-Boulders and Volcanic Phenomena of South America. Messrs.
-Waterhouse, Walker, Newman, and White, have published several
-able papers on the Insects which were collected, and I trust
-that many others will hereafter follow. The plants from the
-southern parts of America will be given by Dr. J. Hooker, in
-his great work on the Botany of the Southern Hemisphere. The
-Flora of the Galapagos Archipelago is the subject of a separate
-memoir by him, in the 'Linnean Transactions.' The Reverend
-Professor Henslow has published a list of the plants collected
-by me at the Keeling Islands; and the Reverend J. M. Berkeley
-has described my cryptogamic plants.
-
-I shall have the pleasure of acknowledging the great assistance
-which I have received from several other naturalists, in the
-course of this and my other works; but I must be here allowed
-to return my most sincere thanks to the Reverend Professor
-Henslow, who, when I was an undergraduate at Cambridge, was
-one chief means of giving me a taste for Natural History, --
-who, during my absence, took charge of the collections I sent
-home, and by his correspondence directed my endeavours, -- and
-who, since my return, has constantly rendered me every
-assistance which the kindest friend could offer.
-
-DOWN, BROMLEY, KENT,
-June 9, 1845
-
-[1] I must take this opportunity of returning my sincere thanks
-to Mr. Bynoe, the surgeon of the Beagle, for his very kind
-attention to me when I was ill at Valparaiso.
-
-
-
-THE VOYAGE OF THE BEAGLE
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I
-
-ST. JAGO -- CAPE DE VERD ISLANDS
-
-Porto Praya -- Ribeira Grande -- Atmospheric Dust with
-Infusoria -- Habits of a Sea-slug and Cuttle-fish -- St.
-Paul's Rocks, non-volcanic -- Singular Incrustations --
-Insects the first Colonists of Islands -- Fernando Noronha --
-Bahia -- Burnished Rocks -- Habits of a Diodon -- Pelagic
-Confervae and Infusoria -- Causes of discoloured Sea.
-
-
-AFTER having been twice driven back by heavy southwestern
-gales, Her Majesty's ship Beagle, a ten-gun
-brig, under the command of Captain Fitz Roy, R. N.,
-sailed from Devonport on the 27th of December, 1831. The
-object of the expedition was to complete the survey of
-Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego, commenced under Captain King
-in 1826 to 1830, -- to survey the shores of Chile, Peru, and
-of some islands in the Pacific -- and to carry a chain of
-chronometrical measurements round the World. On the 6th
-of January we reached Teneriffe, but were prevented landing,
-by fears of our bringing the cholera: the next morning
-we saw the sun rise behind the rugged outline of the Grand
-Canary island, and suddenly illuminate the Peak of Teneriffe,
-whilst the lower parts were veiled in fleecy clouds. This
-was the first of many delightful days never to be forgotten.
-On the 16th of January, 1832, we anchored at Porto Praya,
-in St. Jago, the chief island of the Cape de Verd archipelago.
-
-The neighbourhood of Porto Praya, viewed from the sea,
-wears a desolate aspect. The volcanic fires of a past age,
-and the scorching heat of a tropical sun, have in most places
-rendered the soil unfit for vegetation. The country rises in
-successive steps of table-land, interspersed with some truncate
-conical hills, and the horizon is bounded by an irregular
-chain of more lofty mountains. The scene, as beheld through
-the hazy atmosphere of this climate, is one of great interest;
-if, indeed, a person, fresh from sea, and who has just
-walked, for the first time, in a grove of cocoa-nut trees, can
-be a judge of anything but his own happiness. The island
-would generally be considered as very uninteresting, but to
-anyone accustomed only to an English landscape, the novel
-aspect of an utterly sterile land possesses a grandeur which
-more vegetation might spoil. A single green leaf can
-scarcely be discovered over wide tracts of the lava plains;
-yet flocks of goats, together with a few cows, contrive to
-exist. It rains very seldom, but during a short portion of
-the year heavy torrents fall, and immediately afterwards a
-light vegetation springs out of every crevice. This soon
-withers; and upon such naturally formed hay the animals
-live. It had not now rained for an entire year. When the
-island was discovered, the immediate neighbourhood of
-Porto Praya was clothed with trees, [1] the reckless
-destruction of which has caused here, as at St. Helena, and
-at some of the Canary islands, almost entire sterility. The
-broad, flat-bottomed valleys, many of which serve during a
-few days only in the season as water-courses, are clothed
-with thickets of leafless bushes. Few living creatures inhabit
-these valleys. The commonest bird is a kingfisher (Dacelo
-Iagoensis), which tamely sits on the branches of the castor-
-oil plant, and thence darts on grasshoppers and lizards. It
-is brightly coloured, but not so beautiful as the European
-species: in its flight, manners, and place of habitation,
-which is generally in the driest valley, there is also a wide
-difference.
-
-One day, two of the officers and myself rode to Ribeira
-Grande, a village a few miles eastward of Porto Praya. Until
-we reached the valley of St. Martin, the country presented
-its usual dull brown appearance; but here, a very small rill
-of water produces a most refreshing margin of luxuriant
-vegetation. In the course of an hour we arrived at Ribeira
-Grande, and were surprised at the sight of a large ruined
-fort and cathedral. This little town, before its harbour was
-filled up, was the principal place in the island: it now
-presents a melancholy, but very picturesque appearance. Having
-procured a black Padre for a guide, and a Spaniard who
-had served in the Peninsular war as an interpreter, we visited
-a collection of buildings, of which an ancient church
-formed the principal part. It is here the governors and
-captain-generals of the islands have been buried. Some of
-the tombstones recorded dates of the sixteenth century. [2]
-
-The heraldic ornaments were the only things in this retired
-place that reminded us of Europe. The church or chapel
-formed one side of a quadrangle, in the middle of which a
-large clump of bananas were growing. On another side
-was a hospital, containing about a dozen miserable-looking
-inmates.
-
-We returned to the Venda to eat our dinners. A considerable
-number of men, women, and children, all as black as
-jet, collected to watch us. Our companions were extremely
-merry; and everything we said or did was followed by their
-hearty laughter. Before leaving the town we visited the
-cathedral. It does not appear so rich as the smaller church,
-but boasts of a little organ, which sent forth singularly
-inharmonious cries. We presented the black priest with a few
-shillings, and the Spaniard, patting him on the head, said,
-with much candour, he thought his colour made no great
-difference. We then returned, as fast as the ponies would
-go, to Porto Praya.
-
-Another day we rode to the village of St. Domingo, situated
-near the centre of the island. On a small plain which
-we crossed, a few stunted acacias were growing; their tops
-had been bent by the steady trade-wind, in a singular
-manner -- some of them even at right angles to their trunks.
-The direction of the branches was exactly N. E. by N., and S. W.
-by S., and these natural vanes must indicate the prevailing
-direction of the force of the trade-wind. The travelling had
-made so little impression on the barren soil, that we here
-missed our track, and took that to Fuentes. This we did
-not find out till we arrived there; and we were afterwards
-glad of our mistake. Fuentes is a pretty village, with a small
-stream; and everything appeared to prosper well, excepting,
-indeed, that which ought to do so most -- its inhabitants.
-The black children, completely naked, and looking very
-wretched, were carrying bundles of firewood half as big as
-their own bodies.
-
-Near Fuentes we saw a large flock of guinea-fowl --
-probably fifty or sixty in number. They were extremely
-wary, and could not be approached. They avoided us, like
-partridges on a rainy day in September, running with their
-heads cocked up; and if pursued, they readily took to the
-wing.
-
-The scenery of St. Domingo possesses a beauty totally
-unexpected, from the prevalent gloomy character of the rest
-of the island. The village is situated at the bottom of a
-valley, bounded by lofty and jagged walls of stratified lava.
-The black rocks afford a most striking contrast with the
-bright green vegetation, which follows the banks of a little
-stream of clear water. It happened to be a grand feast-day,
-and the village was full of people. On our return we overtook
-a party of about twenty young black girls, dressed in
-excellent taste; their black skins and snow-white linen being
-set off by coloured turbans and large shawls. As soon as
-we approached near, they suddenly all turned round, and
-covering the path with their shawls, sung with great energy
-a wild song, beating time with their hands upon their legs.
-We threw them some vintems, which were received with
-screams of laughter, and we left them redoubling the noise
-of their song.
-
-One morning the view was singularly clear; the distant
-mountains being projected with the sharpest outline on a
-heavy bank of dark blue clouds. Judging from the appearance,
-and from similar cases in England, I supposed that the
-air was saturated with moisture. The fact, however, turned
-out quite the contrary. The hygrometer gave a difference
-of 29.6 degs., between the temperature of the air, and the
-point at which dew was precipitated. This difference was
-nearly double that which I had observed on the previous
-mornings. This unusual degree of atmospheric dryness was
-accompanied by continual flashes of lightning. Is it not an
-uncommon case, thus to find a remarkable degree of aerial
-transparency with such a state of weather?
-
-Generally the atmosphere is hazy; and this is caused by
-the falling of impalpably fine dust, which was found to have
-slightly injured the astronomical instruments. The morning
-before we anchored at Porto Praya, I collected a little packet
-of this brown-coloured fine dust, which appeared to have
-been filtered from the wind by the gauze of the vane at the
-mast-head. Mr. Lyell has also given me four packets of dust
-which fell on a vessel a few hundred miles northward of
-these islands. Professor Ehrenberg [3] finds that this dust
-consists in great part of infusoria with siliceous shields, and
-of the siliceous tissue of plants. In five little packets which
-I sent him, he has ascertained no less than sixty-seven
-different organic forms! The infusoria, with the exception of
-two marine species, are all inhabitants of fresh-water. I
-have found no less than fifteen different accounts of dust
-having fallen on vessels when far out in the Atlantic. From
-the direction of the wind whenever it has fallen, and from
-its having always fallen during those months when the harmattan
-is known to raise clouds of dust high into the atmosphere,
-we may feel sure that it all comes from Africa. It
-is, however, a very singular fact, that, although Professor
-Ehrenberg knows many species of infusoria peculiar to
-Africa, he finds none of these in the dust which I sent him.
-On the other hand, he finds in it two species which hitherto
-he knows as living only in South America. The dust falls
-in such quantities as to dirty everything on board, and to
-hurt people's eyes; vessels even have run on shore owing to
-the obscurity of the atmosphere. It has often fallen on
-ships when several hundred, and even more than a thousand
-miles from the coast of Africa, and at points sixteen hundred
-miles distant in a north and south direction. In some
-dust which was collected on a vessel three hundred miles
-from the land, I was much surprised to find particles of
-stone above the thousandth of an inch square, mixed with
-finer matter. After this fact one need not be surprised
-at the diffusion of the far lighter and smaller sporules of
-cryptogamic plants.
-
-The geology of this island is the most interesting part of
-its natural history. On entering the harbour, a perfectly
-horizontal white band, in the face of the sea cliff, may be seen
-running for some miles along the coast, and at the height of
-about forty-five feet above the water. Upon examination
-this white stratum is found to consist of calcareous matter
-with numerous shells embedded, most or all of which now
-exist on the neighbouring coast. It rests on ancient volcanic
-rocks, and has been covered by a stream of basalt, which
-must have entered the sea when the white shelly bed was
-lying at the bottom. It is interesting to trace the changes
-produced by the heat of the overlying lava, on the friable
-mass, which in parts has been converted into a crystalline
-limestone, and in other parts into a compact spotted stone
-Where the lime has been caught up by the scoriaceous fragments
-of the lower surface of the stream, it is converted into
-groups of beautifully radiated fibres resembling arragonite.
-The beds of lava rise in successive gently-sloping plains,
-towards the interior, whence the deluges of melted stone
-have originally proceeded. Within historical times, no signs
-of volcanic activity have, I believe, been manifested in any
-part of St. Jago. Even the form of a crater can but rarely
-be discovered on the summits of the many red cindery hills;
-yet the more recent streams can be distinguished on the
-coast, forming lines of cliffs of less height, but stretching
-out in advance of those belonging to an older series: the
-height of the cliffs thus affording a rude measure of the age
-of the streams.
-
-During our stay, I observed the habits of some marine
-animals. A large Aplysia is very common. This sea-slug
-is about five inches long; and is of a dirty yellowish colour
-veined with purple. On each side of the lower surface, or
-foot, there is a broad membrane, which appears sometimes
-to act as a ventilator, in causing a current of water to flow
-over the dorsal branchiae or lungs. It feeds on the delicate
-sea-weeds which grow among the stones in muddy and shallow
-water; and I found in its stomach several small pebbles,
-as in the gizzard of a bird. This slug, when disturbed, emits
-a very fine purplish-red fluid, which stains the water for the
-space of a foot around. Besides this means of defence, an
-acrid secretion, which is spread over its body, causes a
-sharp, stinging sensation, similar to that produced by the
-Physalia, or Portuguese man-of-war.
-
-I was much interested, on several occasions, by watching
-the habits of an Octopus, or cuttle-fish. Although common
-in the pools of water left by the retiring tide, these animals
-were not easily caught. By means of their long arms and
-suckers, they could drag their bodies into very narrow crevices;
-and when thus fixed, it required great force to remove
-them. At other times they darted tail first, with the rapidity
-of an arrow, from one side of the pool to the other, at the
-same instant discolouring the water with a dark chestnut-brown
-ink. These animals also escape detection by a very
-extraordinary, chameleon-like power of changing their colour.
-They appear to vary their tints according to the nature
-of the ground over which they pass: when in deep water,
-their general shade was brownish purple, but when placed on
-the land, or in shallow water, this dark tint changed into one
-of a yellowish green. The colour, examined more carefully,
-was a French grey, with numerous minute spots of bright
-yellow: the former of these varied in intensity; the latter
-entirely disappeared and appeared again by turns. These
-changes were effected in such a manner, that clouds, varying
-in tint between a hyacinth red and a chestnut-brown, [4] were
-continually passing over the body. Any part, being subjected
-to a slight shock of galvanism, became almost black: a similar
-effect, but in a less degree, was produced by scratching
-the skin with a needle. These clouds, or blushes as they may
-be called, are said to be produced by the alternate expansion
-and contraction of minute vesicles containing variously
-coloured fluids. [5]
-
-This cuttle-fish displayed its chameleon-like power both
-during the act of swimming and whilst remaining stationary
-at the bottom. I was much amused by the various arts to
-escape detection used by one individual, which seemed fully
-aware that I was watching it. Remaining for a time motionless,
-it would then stealthily advance an inch or two, like a
-cat after a mouse; sometimes changing its colour: it thus
-proceeded, till having gained a deeper part, it darted away,
-leaving a dusky train of ink to hide the hole into which it
-had crawled.
-
-While looking for marine animals, with my head about
-two feet above the rocky shore, I was more than once saluted
-by a jet of water, accompanied by a slight grating noise. At
-first I could not think what it was, but afterwards I found
-out that it was this cuttle-fish, which, though concealed in a
-hole, thus often led me to its discovery. That it possesses
-the power of ejecting water there is no doubt, and it appeared
-to me that it could certainly take good aim by directing the
-tube or siphon on the under side of its body. From the
-difficulty which these animals have in carrying their heads,
-they cannot crawl with ease when placed on the ground. I
-observed that one which I kept in the cabin was slightly
-phosphorescent in the dark.
-
-ST. PAUL'S ROCKS. -- In crossing the Atlantic we hove-to
-during the morning of February 16th, close to the island of
-St. Paul's. This cluster of rocks is situated in 0 degs. 58'
-north latitude, and 29 degs. 15' west longitude. It is 540
-miles distant from the coast of America, and 350 from the island
-of Fernando Noronha. The highest point is only fifty feet above
-the level of the sea, and the entire circumference is under
-three-quarters of a mile. This small point rises abruptly out
-of the depths of the ocean. Its mineralogical constitution
-is not simple; in some parts the rock is of a cherty, in others
-of a felspathic nature, including thin veins of serpentine. It
-is a remarkable fact, that all the many small islands, lying
-far from any continent, in the Pacific, Indian, and Atlantic
-Oceans, with the exception of the Seychelles and this little
-point of rock, are, I believe, composed either of coral or of
-erupted matter. The volcanic nature of these oceanic islands
-is evidently an extension of that law, and the effect of those
-same causes, whether chemical or mechanical, from which it
-results that a vast majority of the volcanoes now in action
-stand either near sea-coasts or as islands in the midst of the
-sea.
-
-The rocks of St. Paul appear from a distance of a brilliantly
-white colour. This is partly owing to the dung of a
-vast multitude of seafowl, and partly to a coating of a hard
-glossy substance with a pearly lustre, which is intimately
-united to the surface of the rocks. This, when examined
-with a lens, is found to consist of numerous exceedingly
-thin layers, its total thickness being about the tenth of an
-inch. It contains much animal matter, and its origin, no
-doubt, is due to the action of the rain or spray on the birds'
-dung. Below some small masses of guano at Ascension, and
-on the Abrolhos Islets, I found certain stalactitic branching
-bodies, formed apparently in the same manner as the thin
-white coating on these rocks. The branching bodies so closely
-resembled in general appearance certain nulliporae (a family
-of hard calcareous sea-plants), that in lately looking hastily
-over my collection I did not perceive the difference. The
-globular extremities of the branches are of a pearly texture,
-like the enamel of teeth, but so hard as just to scratch plate-
-glass. I may here mention, that on a part of the coast of
-Ascension, where there is a vast accumulation of shelly sand,
-an incrustation is deposited on the tidal rocks by the water
-of the sea, resembling, as represented in the woodcut, certain
-cryptogamic plants (Marchantiae) often seen on damp
-walls. The surface of the fronds is beautifully glossy; and
-those parts formed where fully exposed to the light are of a
-jet black colour, but those shaded under ledges are only grey.
-I have shown specimens of this incrustation to several
-geologists, and they all thought that they were of volcanic
-or igneous origin! In its hardness and translucency -- in
-its polish, equal to that of the finest oliva-shell -- in the
-bad smell given out, and loss of colour under the blowpipe -- it
-shows a close similarity with living sea-shells. Moreover, in
-sea-shells, it is known that the parts habitually covered and
-shaded by the mantle of the animal, are of a paler colour
-than those fully exposed to the light, just as is the case with
-this incrustation. When we remember that lime, either as a
-phosphate or carbonate, enters into the composition of the
-hard parts, such as bones and shells, of all living animals, it
-is an interesting physiological fact [6] to find substances
-harder than the enamel of teeth, and coloured surfaces as well
-polished as those of a fresh shell, reformed through inorganic
-means from dead organic matter -- mocking, also, in
-shape, some of the lower vegetable productions.
-
-We found on St. Paul's only two kinds of birds -- the
-booby and the noddy. The former is a species of gannet,
-and the latter a tern. Both are of a tame and stupid
-disposition, and are so unaccustomed to visitors, that I could
-have killed any number of them with my geological hammer.
-The booby lays her eggs on the bare rock; but the tern makes
-a very simple nest with sea-weed. By the side of many of
-these nests a small flying-fish was placed; which I suppose,
-had been brought by the male bird for its partner. It was
-amusing to watch how quickly a large and active crab
-(Graspus), which inhabits the crevices of the rock, stole the
-fish from the side of the nest, as soon as we had disturbed
-the parent birds. Sir W. Symonds, one of the few persons
-who have landed here, informs me that he saw the crabs
-dragging even the young birds out of their nests, and devouring
-them. Not a single plant, not even a lichen, grows
-on this islet; yet it is inhabited by several insects and
-spiders. The following list completes, I believe, the
-terrestrial fauna: a fly (Olfersia) living on the booby, and
-a tick which must have come here as a parasite on the birds;
-a small brown moth, belonging to a genus that feeds on feathers;
-a beetle (Quedius) and a woodlouse from beneath the dung; and
-lastly, numerous spiders, which I suppose prey on these small
-attendants and scavengers of the water-fowl. The often repeated
-description of the stately palm and other noble tropical
-plants, then birds, and lastly man, taking possession of
-the coral islets as soon as formed, in the Pacific, is probably
-not correct; I fear it destroys the poetry of this story, that
-feather and dirt-feeding and parasitic insects and spiders
-should be the first inhabitants of newly formed oceanic
-land.
-
-The smallest rock in the tropical seas, by giving a foundation
-for the growth of innumerable kinds of sea-weed and
-compound animals, supports likewise a large number of fish.
-The sharks and the seamen in the boats maintained a constant
-struggle which should secure the greater share of the
-prey caught by the fishing-lines. I have heard that a rock
-near the Bermudas, lying many miles out at sea, and at a
-considerable depth, was first discovered by the circumstance
-of fish having been observed in the neighbourhood.
-
-FERNANDO NORONHA, Feb. 20th. -- As far as I was enabled
-to observe, during the few hours we stayed at this place, the
-constitution of the island is volcanic, but probably not of a
-recent date. The most remarkable feature is a conical hill,
-about one thousand feet high, the upper part of which is
-exceedingly steep, and on one side overhangs its base. The
-rock is phonolite, and is divided into irregular columns. On
-viewing one of these isolated masses, at first one is inclined
-to believe that it has been suddenly pushed up in a semi-fluid
-state. At St. Helena, however, I ascertained that some
-pinnacles, of a nearly similar figure and constitution, had
-been formed by the injection of melted rock into yielding
-strata, which thus had formed the moulds for these gigantic
-obelisks. The whole island is covered with wood; but from
-the dryness of the climate there is no appearance of luxuriance.
-Half-way up the mountain, some great masses of the
-columnar rock, shaded by laurel-like trees, and ornamented
-by others covered with fine pink flowers but without a single
-leaf, gave a pleasing effect to the nearer parts of the scenery.
-
-BAHIA, OR SAN SALVADOR. BRAZIL, Feb. 29th. -- The day
-has passed delightfully. Delight itself, however, is a weak
-term to express the feelings of a naturalist who, for the first
-time, has wandered by himself in a Brazilian forest. The
-elegance of the grasses, the novelty of the parasitical plants,
-the beauty of the flowers, the glossy green of the foliage,
-but above all the general luxuriance of the vegetation, filled
-me with admiration. A most paradoxical mixture of sound
-and silence pervades the shady parts of the wood. The noise
-from the insects is so loud, that it may be heard even in a
-vessel anchored several hundred yards from the shore; yet
-within the recesses of the forest a universal silence appears
-to reign. To a person fond of natural history, such a day
-as this brings with it a deeper pleasure than he can ever hope
-to experience again. After wandering about for some hours,
-I returned to the landing-place; but, before reaching it, I
-was overtaken by a tropical storm. I tried to find shelter
-under a tree, which was so thick that it would never have
-been penetrated by common English rain; but here, in a
-couple of minutes, a little torrent flowed down the trunk.
-It is to this violence of the rain that we must attribute the
-verdure at the bottom of the thickest woods: if the showers
-were like those of a colder climate, the greater part would
-be absorbed or evaporated before it reached the ground. I
-will not at present attempt to describe the gaudy scenery
-of this noble bay, because, in our homeward voyage, we
-called here a second time, and I shall then have occasion to
-remark on it.
-
-Along the whole coast of Brazil, for a length of at least
-2000 miles, and certainly for a considerable space inland,
-wherever solid rock occurs, it belongs to a granitic formation.
-The circumstance of this enormous area being constituted of
-materials which most geologists believe to have
-been crystallized when heated under pressure, gives rise to
-many curious reflections. Was this effect produced beneath
-the depths of a profound ocean? or did a covering of strata
-formerly extend over it, which has since been removed?
-Can we believe that any power, acting for a time short of
-infinity, could have denuded the granite over so many thousand
-square leagues?
-
-On a point not far from the city, where a rivulet entered
-the sea, I observed a fact connected with a subject discussed
-by Humboldt. [7] At the cataracts of the great rivers
-Orinoco, Nile, and Congo, the syenitic rocks are coated by
-a black substance, appearing as if they had been polished
-with plumbago. The layer is of extreme thinness; and on
-analysis by Berzelius it was found to consist of the oxides
-of manganese and iron. In the Orinoco it occurs on the
-rocks periodically washed by the floods, and in those parts
-alone where the stream is rapid; or, as the Indians say, "the
-rocks are black where the waters are white." Here the coating
-is of a rich brown instead of a black colour, and seems
-to be composed of ferruginous matter alone. Hand specimens
-fail to give a just idea of these brown burnished stones
-which glitter in the sun's rays. They occur only within the
-limits of the tidal waves; and as the rivulet slowly trickles
-down, the surf must supply the polishing power of the cataracts
-in the great rivers. In like manner, the rise and fall
-of the tide probably answer to the periodical inundations;
-and thus the same effects are produced under apparently different
-but really similar circumstances. The origin, however, of
-these coatings of metallic oxides, which seem as if
-cemented to the rocks, is not understood; and no reason, I
-believe, can be assigned for their thickness remaining the
-same.
-
-One day I was amused by watching the habits of the
-Diodon antennatus, which was caught swimming near the
-shore. This fish, with its flabby skin, is well known to possess
-the singular power of distending itself into a nearly
-spherical form. After having been taken out of water for
-a short time, and then again immersed in it, a considerable
-quantity both of water and air is absorbed by the mouth,
-and perhaps likewise by the branchial orifices. This process
-is effected by two methods: the air is swallowed, and is then
-forced into the cavity of the body, its return being prevented
-by a muscular contraction which is externally visible: but
-the water enters in a gentle stream through the mouth,
-which is kept wide open and motionless; this latter action
-must, therefore, depend on suction. The skin about the
-abdomen is much looser than that on the back; hence, during
-the inflation, the lower surface becomes far more distended
-than the upper; and the fish, in consequence, floats
-with its back downwards. Cuvier doubts whether the Diodon
-in this position is able to swim; but not only can it thus
-move forward in a straight line, but it can turn round to
-either side. This latter movement is effected solely by the
-aid of the pectoral fins; the tail being collapsed, and not
-used. From the body being buoyed up with so much air, the
-branchial openings are out of water, but a stream drawn in
-by the mouth constantly flows through them.
-
-The fish, having remained in this distended state for a
-short time, generally expelled the air and water with
-considerable force from the branchial apertures and mouth. It
-could emit, at will, a certain portion of the water, and it
-appears, therefore, probable that this fluid is taken in partly
-for the sake of regulating its specific gravity. This Diodon
-possessed several means of defence. It could give a severe
-bite, and could eject water from its mouth to some distance,
-at the same time making a curious noise by the movement
-of its jaws. By the inflation of its body, the papillae, with
-which the skin is covered, become erect and pointed. But
-the most curious circumstance is, that it secretes from the
-skin of its belly, when handled, a most beautiful carmine-red
-fibrous matter, which stains ivory and paper in so permanent
-a manner that the tint is retained with all its brightness
-to the present day: I am quite ignorant of the nature
-and use of this secretion. I have heard from Dr. Allan of
-Forres, that he has frequently found a Diodon, floating alive
-and distended, in the stomach of the shark, and that on
-several occasions he has known it eat its way, not only
-through the coats of the stomach, but through the sides of
-the monster, which has thus been killed. Who would ever
-have imagined that a little soft fish could have destroyed
-the great and savage shark?
-
-March 18th. -- We sailed from Bahia. A few days afterwards,
-when not far distant from the Abrolhos Islets, my;
-attention was called to a reddish-brown appearance in the
-sea. The whole surface of the water, as it appeared under a
-weak lens, seemed as if covered by chopped bits of hay, with
-their ends jagged. These are minute cylindrical confervae,
-in bundles or rafts of from twenty to sixty in each. Mr.
-Berkeley informs me that they are the same species
-(Trichodesmium erythraeum) with that found over large spaces
-in the Red Sea, and whence its name of Red Sea is derived. [8]
-Their numbers must be infinite: the ship passed through
-several bands of them, one of which was about ten yards
-wide, and, judging from the mud-like colour of the water,
-at least two and a half miles long. In almost every long
-voyage some account is given of these confervae. They appear
-especially common in the sea near Australia; and off
-Cape Leeuwin I found an allied but smaller and apparently
-different species. Captain Cook, in his third voyage, remarks,
-that the sailors gave to this appearance the name of
-sea-sawdust.
-
-Near Keeling Atoll, in the Indian Ocean, I observed
-many little masses of confervae a few inches square, consisting
-of long cylindrical threads of excessive thinness, so as
-to be barely visible to the naked eye, mingled with other
-rather larger bodies, finely conical at both ends. Two of
-these are shown in the woodcut united together. They vary
-in length from .04 to .06, and even to .08 of an inch in
-length; and in diameter from .006 to .008 of an inch. Near
-one extremity of the cylindrical part, a green septum, formed
-of granular matter, and thickest in the middle, may generally
-be seen. This, I believe, is the bottom of a most delicate,
-colourless sac, composed of a pulpy substance, which lines
-the exterior case, but does not extend within the extreme
-conical points. In some specimens, small but perfect spheres
-of brownish granular matter supplied the
-places of the septa; and I observed the curious process by
-which they were produced. The pulpy matter of the internal
-coating suddenly grouped itself into lines, some of which
-assumed a form radiating from a common centre; it then
-continued, with an irregular and rapid movement, to contract
-itself, so that in the course of a second the whole was
-united into a perfect little sphere, which occupied the
-position of the septum at one end of the now quite hollow case.
-The formation of the granular sphere was hastened by any
-accidental injury. I may add, that frequently a pair of these
-bodies were attached to each other, as represented above,
-cone beside cone, at that end where the septum occurs.
-
-I will add here a few other observations connected with
-the discoloration of the sea from organic causes. On the
-coast of Chile, a few leagues north of Concepcion, the Beagle
-one day passed through great bands of muddy water, exactly
-like that of a swollen river; and again, a degree south of
-Valparaiso, when fifty miles from the land, the same appearance
-was still more extensive. Some of the water placed
-in a glass was of a pale reddish tint; and, examined under
-a microscope, was seen to swarm with minute animalcula
-darting about, and often exploding. Their shape is oval,
-and contracted in the middle by a ring of vibrating curved
-ciliae. It was, however, very difficult to examine them with
-care, for almost the instant motion ceased, even while crossing
-the field of vision, their bodies burst. Sometimes both
-ends burst at once, sometimes only one, and a quantity of
-coarse, brownish, granular matter was ejected. The animal
-an instant before bursting expanded to half again its natural
-size; and the explosion took place about fifteen seconds
-after the rapid progressive motion had ceased: in a few
-cases it was preceded for a short interval by a rotatory
-movement on the longer axis. About two minutes after any
-number were isolated in a drop of water, they thus perished.
-The animals move with the narrow apex forwards, by the
-aid of their vibratory ciliae, and generally by rapid starts.
-They are exceedingly minute, and quite invisible to the
-naked eye, only covering a space equal to the square of the
-thousandth of an inch. Their numbers were infinite; for
-the smallest drop of water which I could remove contained
-very many. In one day we passed through two spaces of
-water thus stained, one of which alone must have extended
-over several square miles. What incalculable numbers of
-these microscopical animals! The colour of the water, as
-seen at some distance, was like that of a river which has
-flowed through a red clay district, but under the shade of
-the vessel's side it was quite as dark as chocolate. The line
-where the red and blue water joined was distinctly defined.
-The weather for some days previously had been calm, and the
-ocean abounded, to an unusual degree, with living creatures. [9]
-
-In the sea around Tierra del Fuego, and at no great distance
-from the land, I have seen narrow lines of water of a
-bright red colour, from the number of crustacea, which
-somewhat resemble in form large prawns. The sealers call
-them whale-food. Whether whales feed on them I do not
-know; but terns, cormorants, and immense herds of great
-unwieldy seals derive, on some parts of the coast, their
-chief sustenance from these swimming crabs. Seamen
-invariably attribute the discoloration of the water to spawn;
-but I found this to be the case only on one occasion. At
-the distance of several leagues from the Archipelago of the
-Galapagos, the ship sailed through three strips of a dark
-yellowish, or mud-like water; these strips were some miles
-long, but only a few yards wide, and they were separated
-from the surrounding water by a sinuous yet distinct margin.
-The colour was caused by little gelatinous balls, about
-the fifth of an inch in diameter, in which numerous minute
-spherical ovules were imbedded: they were of two distinct
-kinds, one being of a reddish colour and of a different shape
-from the other. I cannot form a conjecture as to what two
-kinds of animals these belonged. Captain Colnett remarks,
-that this appearance is very common among the Galapagos
-Islands, and that the directions of the bands indicate that
-of the currents; in the described case, however, the line was
-caused by the wind. The only other appearance which I
-have to notice, is a thin oily coat on the water which displays
-iridescent colours. I saw a considerable tract of the
-ocean thus covered on the coast of Brazil; the seamen
-attributed it to the putrefying carcase of some whale, which
-probably was floating at no great distance. I do not here
-mention the minute gelatinous particles, hereafter to be
-referred to, which are frequently dispersed throughout the
-water, for they are not sufficiently abundant to create any
-change of colour.
-
-There are two circumstances in the above accounts which
-appear remarkable: first, how do the various bodies which
-form the bands with defined edges keep together? In the
-case of the prawn-like crabs, their movements were as
-co-instantaneous as in a regiment of soldiers; but this cannot
-happen from anything like voluntary action with the ovules,
-or the confervae, nor is it probable among the infusoria.
-Secondly, what causes the length and narrowness of the
-bands? The appearance so much resembles that which may
-be seen in every torrent, where the stream uncoils into long
-streaks the froth collected in the eddies, that I must attribute
-the effect to a similar action either of the currents of the
-air or sea. Under this supposition we must believe that the
-various organized bodies are produced in certain favourable
-places, and are thence removed by the set of either wind
-or water. I confess, however, there is a very great difficulty
-in imagining any one spot to be the birthplace of the millions
-of millions of animalcula and confervae: for whence come
-the germs at such points? -- the parent bodies having been
-distributed by the winds and waves over the immense ocean.
-But on no other hypothesis can I understand their linear
-grouping. I may add that Scoresby remarks that green
-water abounding with pelagic animals is invariably found
-in a certain part of the Arctic Sea.
-
-[1] I state this on the authority of Dr. E. Dieffenbach, in his
-German translation of the first edition of this Journal.
-
-[2] The Cape de Verd Islands were discovered in 1449. There was
-a tombstone of a bishop with the date of 1571; and a crest of a
-hand and dagger, dated 1497.
-
-[3] I must take this opportunity of acknowledging the great
-kindness with which this illustrious naturalist has examined
-many of my specimens. I have sent (June, 1845) a full account
-of the falling of this dust to the Geological Society.
-
-[4] So named according to Patrick Symes's nomenclature.
-
-[5] See Encyclop. of Anat. and Physiol., article Cephalopoda
-
-[6] Mr. Horner and Sir David Brewster have described
-(Philosophical Transactions, 1836, p. 65) a singular
-"artificial substance resembling shell." It is deposited in
-fine, transparent, highly polished, brown-coloured laminae,
-possessing peculiar optical properties, on the inside of a
-vessel, in which cloth, first prepared with glue and then
-with lime, is made to revolve rapidly in water. It is much
-softer, more transparent, and contains more animal matter,
-than the natural incrustation at Ascension; but we here
-again see the strong tendency which carbonate of lime and
-animal matter evince to form a solid substance allied to
-shell.
-
-[7] Pers. Narr., vol. v., pt. 1., p. 18.
-
-[8] M. Montagne, in Comptes Rendus, etc., Juillet, 1844; and
-Annal. des Scienc. Nat., Dec. 1844
-
-[9] M. Lesson (Voyage de la Coquille, tom. i., p. 255) mentions
-red water off Lima, apparently produced by the same cause.
-Peron, the distinguished naturalist, in the Voyage aux Terres
-Australes, gives no less than twelve references to voyagers
-who have alluded to the discoloured waters of the sea (vol.
-ii. p. 239). To the references given by Peron may be added,
-Humboldt's Pers. Narr., vol. vi. p. 804; Flinder's Voyage,
-vol. i. p. 92; Labillardiere, vol. i. p. 287; Ulloa's Voyage;
-Voyage of the Astrolabe and of the Coquille; Captain King's
-Survey of Australia, etc.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II
-
-RIO DE JANEIRO
-
-Rio de Janeiro -- Excursion north of Cape Frio -- Great
-Evaporation -- Slavery -- Botofogo Bay -- Terrestrial
-Planariae -- Clouds on the Corcovado -- Heavy Rain -- Musical
-Frogs -- Phosphorescent Insects -- Elater, springing powers
-of -- Blue Haze -- Noise made by a Butterfly -- Entomology --
-Ants -- Wasp killing a Spider -- Parasitical Spider --
-Artifices of an Epeira -- Gregarious Spider -- Spider with
-an unsymmetrical Web.
-
-
-APRIL 4th to July 5th, 1832. -- A few days after our
-arrival I became acquainted with an Englishman who
-was going to visit his estate, situated rather more
-than a hundred miles from the capital, to the northward of
-Cape Frio. I gladly accepted his kind offer of allowing me
-to accompany him.
-
-April 8th. -- Our party amounted to seven. The first stage
-was very interesting. The day was powerfully hot, and as
-we passed through the woods, everything was motionless,
-excepting the large and brilliant butterflies, which lazily
-fluttered about. The view seen when crossing the hills
-behind Praia Grande was most beautiful; the colours were
-intense, and the prevailing tint a dark blue; the sky and the
-calm waters of the bay vied with each other in splendour.
-After passing through some cultivated country, we entered
-a forest, which in the grandeur of all its parts could not be
-exceeded. We arrived by midday at Ithacaia; this small
-village is situated on a plain, and round the central house
-are the huts of the negroes. These, from their regular form
-and position, reminded me of the drawings of the Hottentot
-habitations in Southern Africa. As the moon rose early, we
-determined to start the same evening for our sleeping-place
-at the Lagoa Marica. As it was growing dark we passed
-under one of the massive, bare, and steep hills of granite
-which are so common in this country. This spot is notorious
-from having been, for a long time, the residence of some
-runaway slaves, who, by cultivating a little ground near the
-top, contrived to eke out a subsistence. At length they were
-discovered, and a party of soldiers being sent, the whole
-were seized with the exception of one old woman, who,
-sooner than again be led into slavery, dashed herself to
-pieces from the summit of the mountain. In a Roman
-matron this would have been called the noble love of freedom:
-in a poor negress it is mere brutal obstinacy. We
-continued riding for some hours. For the few last miles the
-road was intricate, and it passed through a desert waste of
-marshes and lagoons. The scene by the dimmed light of the
-moon was most desolate. A few fireflies flitted by us; and
-the solitary snipe, as it rose, uttered its plaintive cry. The
-distant and sullen roar of the sea scarcely broke the stillness
-of the night.
-
-April 9th. -- We left our miserable sleeping-place before
-sunrise. The road passed through a narrow sandy plain,
-lying between the sea and the interior salt lagoons. The
-number of beautiful fishing birds, such as egrets and cranes,
-and the succulent plants assuming most fantastical forms,
-gave to the scene an interest which it would not otherwise
-have possessed. The few stunted trees were loaded with
-parasitical plants, among which the beauty and delicious
-fragrance of some of the orchideae were most to be admired.
-As the sun rose, the day became extremely hot, and the
-reflection of the light and heat from the white sand was very
-distressing. We dined at Mandetiba; the thermometer in
-the shade being 84 degs. The beautiful view of the distant
-wooded hills, reflected in the perfectly calm water of an
-extensive lagoon, quite refreshed us. As the venda [1] here
-was a very good one, and I have the pleasant, but rare
-remembrance, of an excellent dinner, I will be grateful and
-presently describe it, as the type of its class. These houses
-are often large, and are built of thick upright posts, with
-boughs interwoven, and afterwards plastered. They seldom
-have floors, and never glazed windows; but are generally
-pretty well roofed. Universally the front part is open, forming
-a kind of verandah, in which tables and benches are
-placed. The bed-rooms join on each side, and here the passenger
-may sleep as comfortably as he can, on a wooden
-platform, covered by a thin straw mat. The venda stands
-in a courtyard, where the horses are fed. On first arriving
-it was our custom to unsaddle the horses and give them
-their Indian corn; then, with a low bow, to ask the senhor
-to do us the favour to give up something to eat. "Anything
-you choose, sir," was his usual answer. For the few first
-times, vainly I thanked providence for having guided us
-to so good a man. The conversation proceeding, the case
-universally became deplorable. "Any fish can you do us the
-favour of giving ?" -- "Oh! no, sir." -- "Any soup?" -- "No,
-sir." -- "Any bread?" -- "Oh! no, sir." -- "Any dried meat?"
--- "Oh! no, sir." If we were lucky, by waiting a couple of
-hours, we obtained fowls, rice, and farinha. It not unfrequently
-happened, that we were obliged to kill, with stones,
-the poultry for our own supper. When, thoroughly exhausted
-by fatigue and hunger, we timorously hinted that we should
-be glad of our meal, the pompous, and (though true) most
-unsatisfactory answer was, "It will be ready when it is
-ready." If we had dared to remonstrate any further, we
-should have been told to proceed on our journey, as being
-too impertinent. The hosts are most ungracious and disagreeable
-in their manners; their houses and their persons
-are often filthily dirty; the want of the accommodation of
-forks, knives, and spoons is common; and I am sure no cottage
-or hovel in England could be found in a state so utterly
-destitute of every comfort. At Campos Novos, however, we
-fared sumptuously; having rice and fowls, biscuit, wine, and
-spirits, for dinner; coffee in the evening, and fish with coffee
-for breakfast. All this, with good food for the horses, only
-cost 2s. 6d. per head. Yet the host of this venda, being
-asked if he knew anything of a whip which one of the party
-had lost, gruffly answered, "How should I know? why did
-you not take care of it? -- I suppose the dogs have eaten it."
-
-Leaving Mandetiba, we continued to pass through an intricate
-wilderness of lakes; in some of which were fresh,
-in others salt water shells. Of the former kinds, I found
-a Limnaea in great numbers in a lake, into which, the inhabitants
-assured me that the sea enters once a year, and
-sometimes oftener, and makes the water quite salt. I have
-no doubt many interesting facts, in relation to marine and
-fresh water animals, might be observed in this chain of
-lagoons, which skirt the coast of Brazil. M. Gay [2] has
-stated that he found in the neighbourhood of Rio, shells of
-the marine genera solen and mytilus, and fresh water ampullariae,
-living together in brackish water. I also frequently
-observed in the lagoon near the Botanic Garden, where the
-water is only a little less salt than in the sea, a species of
-hydrophilus, very similar to a water-beetle common in the
-ditches of England: in the same lake the only shell belonged
-to a genus generally found in estuaries.
-
-Leaving the coast for a time, we again entered the forest.
-The trees were very lofty, and remarkable, compared with
-those of Europe, from the whiteness of their trunks. I see
-by my note-book, "wonderful and beautiful, flowering parasites,"
-invariably struck me as the most novel object in these
-grand scenes. Travelling onwards we passed through tracts
-of pasturage, much injured by the enormous conical ants'
-nests, which were nearly twelve feet high. They gave to the
-plain exactly the appearance of the mud volcanos at Jorullo,
-as figured by Humboldt. We arrived at Engenhodo after it
-was dark, having been ten hours on horseback. I never
-ceased, during the whole journey, to be surprised at the
-amount of labour which the horses were capable of enduring;
-they appeared also to recover from any injury much
-sooner than those of our English breed. The Vampire bat
-is often the cause of much trouble, by biting the horses on
-their withers. The injury is generally not so much owing
-to the loss of blood, as to the inflammation which the pressure
-of the saddle afterwards produces. The whole circumstance
-has lately been doubted in England; I was therefore
-fortunate in being present when one (Desmodus d'orbignyi,
-Wat.) was actually caught on a horse's back. We were
-bivouacking late one evening near Coquimbo, in Chile, when
-my servant, noticing that one of the horses was very restive,
-went to see what was the matter, and fancying he could
-distinguish something, suddenly put his hand on the beast's
-withers, and secured the vampire. In the morning the spot
-where the bite had been inflicted was easily distinguished
-from being slightly swollen and bloody. The third day
-afterwards we rode the horse, without any ill effects.
-
-April 13th. -- After three days' travelling we arrived at
-Socego, the estate of Senhor Manuel Figuireda, a relation
-of one of our party. The house was simple, and, though like
-a barn in form, was well suited to the climate. In the sitting-
-room gilded chairs and sofas were oddly contrasted with the
-whitewashed walls, thatched roof, and windows without
-glass. The house, together with the granaries, the stables,
-and workshops for the blacks, who had been taught various
-trades, formed a rude kind of quadrangle; in the centre
-of which a large pile of coffee was drying. These buildings
-stand on a little hill, overlooking the cultivated ground, and
-surrounded on every side by a wall of dark green luxuriant
-forest. The chief produce of this part of the country is
-coffee. Each tree is supposed to yield annually, on an average,
-two pounds; but some give as much as eight. Mandioca
-or cassada is likewise cultivated in great quantity. Every
-part of this plant is useful; the leaves and stalks are eaten
-by the horses, and the roots are ground into a pulp, which,
-when pressed dry and baked, forms the farinha, the principal
-article of sustenance in the Brazils. It is a curious,
-though well-known fact, that the juice of this most nutritious
-plant is highly poisonous. A few years ago a cow died at
-this Fazenda, in consequence of having drunk some of it.
-Senhor Figuireda told me that he had planted, the year before,
-one bag of feijao or beans, and three of rice; the
-former of which produced eighty, and the latter three hundred
-and twenty fold. The pasturage supports a fine stock
-of cattle, and the woods are so full of game that a deer had
-been killed on each of the three previous days. This profusion
-of food showed itself at dinner, where, if the tables did
-not groan, the guests surely did; for each person is expected
-to eat of every dish. One day, having, as I thought, nicely
-calculated so that nothing should go away untasted, to my
-utter dismay a roast turkey and a pig appeared in all their
-substantial reality. During the meals, it was the employment
-of a man to drive out of the room sundry old hounds,
-and dozens of little black children, which crawled in together,
-at every opportunity. As long as the idea of slavery could be
-banished, there was something exceedingly fascinating in
-this simple and patriarchal style of living: it was such a
-perfect retirement and independence from the rest of the
-world.
-
-As soon as any stranger is seen arriving, a large bell is set
-tolling, and generally some small cannon are fired. The
-event is thus announced to the rocks and woods, but to nothing
-else. One morning I walked out an hour before daylight
-to admire the solemn stillness of the scene; at last, the
-silence was broken by the morning hymn, raised on high by the
-whole body of the blacks; and in this manner their daily
-work is generally begun. On such fazendas as these, I have
-no doubt the slaves pass happy and contented lives. On
-Saturday and Sunday they work for themselves, and in this
-fertile climate the labour of two days is sufficient to support
-a man and his family for the whole week.
-
-April 14th. -- Leaving Socego, we rode to another estate on
-the Rio Macae, which was the last patch of cultivated ground
-in that direction. The estate was two and a half miles long,
-and the owner had forgotten how many broad. Only a very
-small piece had been cleared, yet almost every acre was
-capable of yielding all the various rich productions of a tropical
-land. Considering the enormous area of Brazil, the proportion
-of cultivated ground can scarcely be considered as
-anything, compared to that which is left in the state of
-nature: at some future age, how vast a population it will
-support! During the second day's journey we found the
-road so shut up, that it was necessary that a man should go
-ahead with a sword to cut away the creepers. The forest
-abounded with beautiful objects; among which the tree ferns,
-though not large, were, from their bright green foliage, and
-the elegant curvature of their fronds, most worthy of admiration.
-In the evening it rained very heavily, and although the
-thermometer stood at 65 degs., I felt very cold. As soon as
-the rain ceased, it was curious to observe the extraordinary
-evaporation which commenced over the whole extent of the
-forest. At the height of a hundred feet the hills were buried
-in a dense white vapour, which rose like columns of smoke
-from the most thickly wooded parts, and especially from the
-valleys. I observed this phenomenon on several occasions.
-I suppose it is owing to the large surface of foliage, previously
-heated by the sun's rays.
-
-While staying at this estate, I was very nearly being an
-eye-witness to one of those atrocious acts which can only
-take place in a slave country. Owing to a quarrel and a
-lawsuit, the owner was on the point of taking all the women
-and children from the male slaves, and selling them separately
-at the public auction at Rio. Interest, and not any
-feeling of compassion, prevented this act. Indeed, I do not
-believe the inhumanity of separating thirty families, who
-had lived together for many years, even occurred to the
-owner. Yet I will pledge myself, that in humanity and
-good feeling he was superior to the common run of men.
-It may be said there exists no limit to the blindness of interest
-and selfish habit. I may mention one very trifling anecdote,
-which at the time struck me more forcibly than any
-story of cruelty. I was crossing a ferry with a negro, who
-was uncommonly stupid. In endeavouring to make him
-understand, I talked loud, and made signs, in doing which I
-passed my hand near his face. He, I suppose, thought I was
-in a passion, and was going to strike him; for instantly,
-with a frightened look and half-shut eyes, he dropped his
-hands. I shall never forget my feelings of surprise, disgust,
-and shame, at seeing a great powerful man afraid even to
-ward off a blow, directed, as he thought, at his face. This
-man had been trained to a degradation lower than the
-slavery of the most helpless animal.
-
-April 18th. -- In returning we spent two days at Socego,
-and I employed them in collecting insects in the forest. The
-greater number of trees, although so lofty, are not more
-than three or four feet in circumference. There are, of
-course, a few of much greater dimensions. Senhor Manuel
-was then making a canoe 70 feet in length from a solid trunk,
-which had originally been 110 feet long, and of great thickness.
-The contrast of palm trees, growing amidst the common
-branching kinds, never fails to give the scene an intertropical
-character. Here the woods were ornamented by the
-Cabbage Palm -- one of the most beautiful of its family. With
-a stem so narrow that it might be clasped with the two
-hands, it waves its elegant head at the height of forty or
-fifty feet above the ground. The woody creepers, themselves
-covered by other creepers, were of great thickness: some
-which I measured were two feet in circumference. Many of
-the older trees presented a very curious appearance from
-the tresses of a liana hanging from their boughs, and resembling
-bundles of hay. If the eye was turned from the world
-of foliage above, to the ground beneath, it was attracted by
-the extreme elegance of the leaves of the ferns and mimosae.
-The latter, in some parts, covered the surface with a brushwood
-only a few inches high. In walking across these thick
-beds of mimosae, a broad track was marked by the change
-of shade, produced by the drooping of their sensitive petioles.
-It is easy to specify the individual objects of admiration in
-these grand scenes; but it is not possible to give an adequate
-idea of the higher feelings of wonder, astonishment, and
-devotion, which fill and elevate the mind.
-
-April 19th.--Leaving Socego, during the two first days,
-we retraced our steps. It was very wearisome work, as the
-road generally ran across a glaring hot sandy plain, not
-far from the coast. I noticed that each time the horse put
-its foot on the fine siliceous sand, a gentle chirping noise
-was produced. On the third day we took a different line,
-and passed through the gay little village of Madre de Deos.
-This is one of the principal lines of road in Brazil; yet it
-was in so bad a state that no wheeled vehicle, excepting the
-clumsy bullock-wagon, could pass along. In our whole journey
-we did not cross a single bridge built of stone; and
-those made of logs of wood were frequently so much out of
-repair, that it was necessary to go on one side to avoid them.
-All distances are inaccurately known. The road is often
-marked by crosses, in the place of milestones, to signify
-where human blood has been spilled. On the evening of the
-23rd we arrived at Rio, having finished our pleasant little
-excursion.
-
-During the remainder of my stay at Rio, I resided in a
-cottage at Botofogo Bay. It was impossible to wish for
-anything more delightful than thus to spend some weeks
-in so magnificent a country. In England any person fond
-of natural history enjoys in his walks a great advantage, by
-always having something to attract his attention; but in
-these fertile climates, teeming with life, the attractions are
-so numerous, that he is scarcely able to walk at all.
-
-The few observations which I was enabled to make were
-almost exclusively confined to the invertebrate animals. The
-existence of a division of the genus Planaria, which inhabits
-the dry land, interested me much. These animals are of so
-simple a structure, that Cuvier has arranged them with the
-intestinal worms, though never found within the bodies of
-other animals. Numerous species inhabit both salt and fresh
-water; but those to which I allude were found, even in the
-drier parts of the forest, beneath logs of rotten wood, on
-which I believe they feed. In general form they resemble
-little slugs, but are very much narrower in proportion, and
-several of the species are beautifully coloured with
-longitudinal stripes. Their structure is very simple: near the
-middle of the under or crawling surface there are two small
-transverse slits, from the anterior one of which a funnel-
-shaped and highly irritable mouth can be protruded. For
-some time after the rest of the animal was completely dead
-from the effects of salt water or any other cause, this organ
-still retained its vitality.
-
-I found no less than twelve different species of terrestrial
-Planariae in different parts of the southern hemisphere. [3]
-Some specimens which I obtained at Van Dieman's Land,
-I kept alive for nearly two months, feeding them on rotten
-wood. Having cut one of them transversely into two nearly
-equal parts, in the course of a fortnight both had the shape
-of perfect animals. I had, however, so divided the body,
-that one of the halves contained both the inferior orifices,
-and the other, in consequence, none. In the course of twenty-
-five days from the operation, the more perfect half could
-not have been distinguished from any other specimen. The
-other had increased much in size; and towards its posterior
-end, a clear space was formed in the parenchymatous mass,
-in which a rudimentary cup-shaped mouth could clearly be
-distinguished; on the under surface, however, no corresponding
-slit was yet open. If the increased heat of the weather,
-as we approached the equator, had not destroyed all the
-individuals, there can be no doubt that this last step would
-have completed its structure. Although so well-known an
-experiment, it was interesting to watch the gradual production
-of every essential organ, out of the simple extremity
-of another animal. It is extremely difficult to preserve these
-Planariae; as soon as the cessation of life allows the ordinary
-laws of change to act, their entire bodies become soft
-and fluid, with a rapidity which I have never seen equalled.
-
-I first visited the forest in which these Planariae were
-found, in company with an old Portuguese priest who took
-me out to hunt with him. The sport consisted in turning
-into the cover a few dogs, and then patiently waiting to fire
-at any animal which might appear. We were accompanied
-by the son of a neighbouring farmer -- a good specimen of
-a wild Brazilian youth. He was dressed in a tattered old
-shirt and trousers, and had his head uncovered: he carried
-an old-fashioned gun and a large knife. The habit of carrying
-the knife is universal; and in traversing a thick wood
-it is almost necessary, on account of the creeping plants.
-The frequent occurrence of murder may be partly attributed
-to this habit. The Brazilians are so dexterous with the
-knife, that they can throw it to some distance with precision,
-and with sufficient force to cause a fatal wound. I have seen
-a number of little boys practising this art as a game of play
-and from their skill in hitting an upright stick, they promised
-well for more earnest attempts. My companion, the day
-before, had shot two large bearded monkeys. These animals
-have prehensile tails, the extremity of which, even after
-death, can support the whole weight of the body. One of
-them thus remained fast to a branch, and it was necessary
-to cut down a large tree to procure it. This was soon effected,
-and down came tree and monkey with an awful crash. Our
-day's sport, besides the monkey, was confined to sundry small
-green parrots and a few toucans. I profited, however, by my
-acquaintance with the Portuguese padre, for on another
-occasion he gave me a fine specimen of the Yagouaroundi
-cat.
-
-Every one has heard of the beauty of the scenery near
-Botofogo. The house in which I lived was seated close
-beneath the well-known mountain of the Corcovado. It has
-been remarked, with much truth, that abruptly conical hills
-are characteristic of the formation which Humboldt designates
-as gneiss-granite. Nothing can be more striking than
-the effect of these huge rounded masses of naked rock rising
-out of the most luxuriant vegetation.
-
-I was often interested by watching the clouds, which,
-rolling in from seaward, formed a bank just beneath the
-highest point of the Corcovado. This mountain, like most
-others, when thus partly veiled, appeared to rise to a far
-prouder elevation than its real height of 2300 feet. Mr.
-Daniell has observed, in his meteorological essays, that a
-cloud sometimes appears fixed on a mountain summit, while
-the wind continues to blow over it. The same phenomenon
-here presented a slightly different appearance. In this case
-the cloud was clearly seen to curl over, and rapidly pass
-by the summit, and yet was neither diminished nor increased
-in size. The sun was setting, and a gentle southerly breeze,
-striking against the southern side of the rock, mingled its
-current with the colder air above; and the vapour was thus
-condensed; but as the light wreaths of cloud passed over
-the ridge, and came within the influence of the warmer
-atmosphere of the northern sloping bank, they were immediately
-re-dissolved.
-
-The climate, during the months of May and June, or the
-beginning of winter, was delightful. The mean temperature,
-from observations taken at nine o'clock, both morning
-and evening, was only 72 degs. It often rained heavily, but
-the drying southerly winds soon again rendered the walks
-pleasant. One morning, in the course of six hours, 1.6 inches
-of rain fell. As this storm passed over the forests which
-surround the Corcovado, the sound produced by the drops
-pattering on the countless multitude of leaves was very
-remarkable, it could be heard at the distance of a quarter of
-a mile, and was like the rushing of a great body of water.
-After the hotter days, it was delicious to sit quietly in the
-garden and watch the evening pass into night. Nature, in
-these climes, chooses her vocalists from more humble performers
-than in Europe. A small frog, of the genus Hyla,
-sits on a blade of grass about an inch above the surface of
-the water, and sends forth a pleasing chirp: when several
-are together they sing in harmony on different notes. I had
-some difficulty in catching a specimen of this frog. The
-genus Hyla has its toes terminated by small suckers; and I
-found this animal could crawl up a pane of glass, when
-placed absolutely perpendicular. Various cicidae and crickets,
-at the same time, keep up a ceaseless shrill cry, but which,
-softened by the distance, is not unpleasant. Every evening
-after dark this great concert commenced; and often have I
-sat listening to it, until my attention has been drawn away
-by some curious passing insect.
-
-At these times the fireflies are seen flitting about from
-hedge to hedge. On a dark night the light can be seen at
-about two hundred paces distant. It is remarkable that in
-all the different kinds of glowworms, shining elaters, and
-various marine animals (such as the crustacea, medusae,
-nereidae, a coralline of the genus Clytia, and Pyrosma),
-which I have observed, the light has been of a well-marked
-green colour. All the fireflies, which I caught here, belonged
-to the Lampyridae (in which family the English glowworm
-is included), and the greater number of specimens were of
-Lampyris occidentalis. [4] I found that this insect emitted
-the most brilliant flashes when irritated: in the intervals,
-the abdominal rings were obscured. The flash was almost
-co-instantaneous in the two rings, but it was just perceptible
-first in the anterior one. The shining matter was fluid and
-very adhesive: little spots, where the skin had been torn,
-continued bright with a slight scintillation, whilst the
-uninjured parts were obscured. When the insect was decapitated
-the rings remained uninterruptedly bright, but not so brilliant
-as before: local irritation with a needle always increased
-the vividness of the light. The rings in one instance retained
-their luminous property nearly twenty-four hours after the
-death of the insect. From these facts it would appear probable,
-that the animal has only the power of concealing or
-extinguishing the light for short intervals, and that at other
-times the display is involuntary. On the muddy and wet
-gravel-walks I found the larvae of this lampyris in great
-numbers: they resembled in general form the female of the
-English glowworm. These larvae possessed but feeble luminous
-powers; very differently from their parents, on the
-slightest touch they feigned death and ceased to shine; nor
-did irritation excite any fresh display. I kept several of
-them alive for some time: their tails are very singular organs,
-for they act, by a well-fitted contrivance, as suckers or organs
-of attachment, and likewise as reservoirs for saliva, or some
-such fluid. I repeatedly fed them on raw meat; and I invariably
-observed, that every now and then the extremity
-of the tail was applied to the mouth, and a drop of fluid
-exuded on the meat, which was then in the act of being consumed.
-The tail, notwithstanding so much practice, does not
-seem to be able to find its way to the mouth; at least the neck
-was always touched first, and apparently as a guide.
-
-When we were at Bahia, an elater or beetle (Pyrophorus
-luminosus, Illig.) seemed the most common luminous insect.
-The light in this case was also rendered more brilliant by
-irritation. I amused myself one day by observing the springing
-powers of this insect, which have not, as it appears to
-me, been properly described. [5] The elater, when placed on
-its back and preparing to spring, moved its head and thorax
-backwards, so that the pectoral spine was drawn out, and
-rested on the edge of its sheath. The same backward movement
-being continued, the spine, by the full action of the
-muscles, was bent like a spring; and the insect at this moment
-rested on the extremity of its head and wing-cases.
-The effort being suddenly relaxed, the head and thorax flew
-up, and in consequence, the base of the wing-cases struck
-the supporting surface with such force, that the insect by
-the reaction was jerked upwards to the height of one or
-two inches. The projecting points of the thorax, and the
-sheath of the spine, served to steady the whole body during
-the spring. In the descriptions which I have read, sufficient
-stress does not appear to have been laid on the elasticity of
-the spine: so sudden a spring could not be the result of simple
-muscular contraction, without the aid of some mechanical
-contrivance.
-
-On several occasions I enjoyed some short but most pleasant
-excursions in the neighbouring country. One day I went
-to the Botanic Garden, where many plants, well known for
-their great utility, might be seen growing. The leaves of the
-camphor, pepper, cinnamon, and clove trees were delightfully
-aromatic; and the bread-fruit, the jaca, and the mango,
-vied with each other in the magnificence of their foliage.
-The landscape in the neighbourhood of Bahia almost takes
-its character from the two latter trees. Before seeing them,
-I had no idea that any trees could cast so black a shade on
-the ground. Both of them bear to the evergreen vegetation
-of these climates the same kind of relation which laurels
-and hollies in England do to the lighter green of the deciduous
-trees. It may be observed, that the houses within the
-tropics are surrounded by the most beautiful forms of
-vegetation, because many of them are at the same time most
-useful to man. Who can doubt that these qualities are united
-in the banana, the cocoa-nut, the many kinds of palm, the
-orange, and the bread-fruit tree?
-
-During this day I was particularly struck with a remark
-of Humboldt's, who often alludes to "the thin vapour which,
-without changing the transparency of the air, renders its
-tints more harmonious, and softens its effects." This is an
-appearance which I have never observed in the temperate
-zones. The atmosphere, seen through a short space of half
-or three-quarters of a mile, was perfectly lucid, but at a
-greater distance all colours were blended into a most beautiful
-haze, of a pale French grey, mingled with a little blue.
-The condition of the atmosphere between the morning and
-about noon, when the effect was most evident, had undergone
-little change, excepting in its dryness. In the interval,
-the difference between the dew point and temperature had
-increased from 7.5 to 17 degs.
-
-On another occasion I started early and walked to the
-Gavia, or topsail mountain. The air was delightfully cool
-and fragrant; and the drops of dew still glittered on the
-leaves of the large liliaceous plants, which shaded the
-streamlets of clear water. Sitting down on a block of granite,
-it was delightful to watch the various insects and birds as
-they flew past. The humming-bird seems particularly fond of
-such shady retired spots. Whenever I saw these little creatures
-buzzing round a flower, with their wings vibrating so
-rapidly as to be scarcely visible, I was reminded of the
-sphinx moths: their movements and habits are indeed in
-many respects very similar.
-
-Following a pathway, I entered a noble forest, and from
-a height of five or six hundred feet, one of those splendid
-views was presented, which are so common on every side
-of Rio. At this elevation the landscape attains its most
-brilliant tint; and every form, every shade, so completely
-surpasses in magnificence all that the European has ever
-beheld in his own country, that he knows not how to express
-his feelings. The general effect frequently recalled
-to my mind the gayest scenery of the Opera-house or the
-great theatres. I never returned from these excursions
-empty-handed. This day I found a specimen of a curious
-fungus, called Hymenophallus. Most people know the English
-Phallus, which in autumn taints the air with its odious
-smell: this, however, as the entomologist is aware, is, to
-some of our beetles a delightful fragrance. So was it here;
-for a Strongylus, attracted by the odour, alighted on the
-fungus as I carried it in my hand. We here see in two distant
-countries a similar relation between plants and insects of the
-same families, though the species of both are different. When
-man is the agent in introducing into a country a new species,
-this relation is often broken: as one instance of this I may
-mention, that the leaves of the cabbages and lettuces, which
-in England afford food to such a multitude of slugs and
-caterpillars, in the gardens near Rio are untouched.
-
-During our stay at Brazil I made a large collection of
-insects. A few general observations on the comparative
-importance of the different orders may be interesting to the
-English entomologist. The large and brilliantly coloured
-Lepidoptera bespeak the zone they inhabit, far more plainly
-than any other race of animals. I allude only to the
-butterflies; for the moths, contrary to what might have been
-expected from the rankness of the vegetation, certainly
-appeared in much fewer numbers than in our own temperate
-regions. I was much surprised at the habits of Papilio
-feronia. This butterfly is not uncommon, and generally
-frequents the orange-groves. Although a high flier, yet
-it very frequently alights on the trunks of trees. On these
-occasions its head is invariably placed downwards; and its
-wings are expanded in a horizontal plane, instead of being
-folded vertically, as is commonly the case. This is the only
-butterfly which I have ever seen, that uses its legs for running.
-Not being aware of this fact, the insect, more than once, as I
-cautiously approached with my forceps, shuffled on one side
-just as the instrument was on the point of closing, and thus
-escaped. But a far more singular fact is the power which
-this species possesses of making a noise. [6] Several times when
-a pair, probably male and female, were chasing each other
-in an irregular course, they passed within a few yards of me;
-and I distinctly heard a clicking noise, similar to that
-produced by a toothed wheel passing under a spring catch. The
-noise was continued at short intervals, and could be
-distinguished at about twenty yards' distance: I am certain
-there is no error in the observation.
-
-I was disappointed in the general aspect of the Coleoptera.
-The number of minute and obscurely coloured beetles
-is exceedingly great. [7] The cabinets of Europe can, as yet,
-boast only of the larger species from tropical climates. It
-is sufficient to disturb the composure of an entomologist's
-mind, to look forward to the future dimensions of a complete
-catalogue. The carnivorous beetles, or Carabidae, appear
-in extremely few numbers within the tropics: this is
-the more remarkable when compared to the case of the
-carnivorous quadrupeds, which are so abundant in hot
-countries. I was struck with this observation both on entering
-Brazil, and when I saw the many elegant and active forms
-of the Harpalidae re-appearing on the temperate plains of
-La Plata. Do the very numerous spiders and rapacious
-Hymenoptera supply the place of the carnivorous beetles?
-The carrion-feeders and Brachelytra are very uncommon;
-on the other hand, the Rhyncophora and Chrysomelidae, all
-of which depend on the vegetable world for subsistence, are
-present in astonishing numbers. I do not here refer to the
-number of different species, but to that of the individual
-insects; for on this it is that the most striking character in
-the entomology of different countries depends. The orders
-Orthoptera and Hemiptera are particularly numerous; as
-likewise is the stinging division of the Hymenoptera the bees,
-perhaps, being excepted. A person, on first entering a tropical
-forest, is astonished at the labours of the ants: well-beaten
-paths branch off in every direction, on which an army
-of never-failing foragers may be seen, some going forth, and
-others returning, burdened with pieces of green leaf, often
-larger than their own bodies.
-
-A small dark-coloured ant sometimes migrates in countless
-numbers. One day, at Bahia, my attention was drawn
-by observing many spiders, cockroaches, and other insects,
-and some lizards, rushing in the greatest agitation across
-a bare piece of ground. A little way behind, every stalk and
-leaf was blackened by a small ant. The swarm having
-crossed the bare space, divided itself, and descended an old
-wall. By this means many insects were fairly enclosed; and
-the efforts which the poor little creatures made to extricate
-themselves from such a death were wonderful. When the
-ants came to the road they changed their course, and in
-narrow files reascended the wall. Having placed a small
-stone so as to intercept one of the lines, the whole body
-attacked it, and then immediately retired. Shortly afterwards
-another body came to the charge, and again having failed
-to make any impression, this line of march was entirely
-given up. By going an inch round, the file might have
-avoided the stone, and this doubtless would have happened,
-if it had been originally there: but having been attacked, the
-lion-hearted little warriors scorned the idea of yielding.
-
-Certain wasp-like insects, which construct in the corners
-of the verandahs clay cells for their larvae, are very numerous
-in the neighbourhood of Rio. These cells they stuff full
-of half-dead spiders and caterpillars, which they seem
-wonderfully to know how to sting to that degree as to leave
-them paralysed but alive, until their eggs are hatched; and
-the larvae feed on the horrid mass of powerless, half-killed
-victims -- a sight which has been described by an enthusiastic
-naturalist [8] as curious and pleasing! I was much interested
-one day by watching a deadly contest between a Pepsis and
-a large spider of the genus Lycosa. The wasp made a sudden
-dash at its prey, and then flew away: the spider was evidently
-wounded, for, trying to escape, it rolled down a little
-slope, but had still strength sufficient to crawl into a thick
-tuft of grass. The wasp soon returned, and seemed surprised
-at not immediately finding its victim. It then commenced
-as regular a hunt as ever hound did after fox;
-making short semicircular casts, and all the time rapidly vibrating
-its wings and antennae. The spider, though well
-concealed, was soon discovered, and the wasp, evidently still
-afraid of its adversary's jaws, after much manoeuvring, inflicted
-two stings on the under side of its thorax. At last,
-carefully examining with its antennae the now motionless
-spider, it proceeded to drag away the body. But I stopped
-both tyrant and prey. [9]
-
-The number of spiders, in proportion to other insects, is
-here compared with England very much larger; perhaps
-more so than with any other division of the articulate animals.
-The variety of species among the jumping spiders
-appears almost infinite. The genus, or rather family, of
-Epeira, is here characterized by many singular forms; some
-species have pointed coriaceous shells, others enlarged and
-spiny tibiae. Every path in the forest is barricaded with the
-strong yellow web of a species, belonging to the same division
-with the Epeira clavipes of Fabricius, which was formerly
-said by Sloane to make, in the West Indies, webs so
-strong as to catch birds. A small and pretty kind of spider,
-with very long fore-legs, and which appears to belong to an
-undescribed genus, lives as a parasite on almost every one
-of these webs. I suppose it is too insignificant to be noticed
-by the great Epeira, and is therefore allowed to prey on the
-minute insects, which, adhering to the lines, would otherwise
-be wasted. When frightened, this little spider either
-feigns death by extending its front legs, or suddenly drops
-from the web. A large Epeira of the same division with
-Epeira tuberculata and conica is extremely common, especially
-in dry situations. Its web, which is generally placed
-among the great leaves of the common agave, is sometimes
-strengthened near the centre by a pair or even four zigzag
-ribbons, which connect two adjoining rays. When any large
-insect, as a grasshopper or wasp, is caught, the spider, by
-a dexterous movement, makes it revolve very rapidly, and at
-the same time emitting a band of threads from its spinners,
-soon envelops its prey in a case like the cocoon of a silkworm.
-The spider now examines the powerless victim, and
-gives the fatal bite on the hinder part of its thorax; then
-retreating, patiently waits till the poison has taken effect.
-The virulence of this poison may be judged of from the fact
-that in half a minute I opened the mesh, and found a large
-wasp quite lifeless. This Epeira always stands with its head
-downwards near the centre of the web. When disturbed, it
-acts differently according to circumstances: if there is a
-thicket below, it suddenly falls down; and I have distinctly
-seen the thread from the spinners lengthened by the animal
-while yet stationary, as preparatory to its fall. If the ground
-is clear beneath, the Epeira seldom falls, but moves quickly
-through a central passage from one to the other side. When
-still further disturbed, it practises a most curious manoeuvre:
-standing in the middle, it violently jerks the web, which it
-attached to elastic twigs, till at last the whole acquires such
-a rapid vibratory movement, that even the outline of the
-spider's body becomes indistinct.
-
-It is well known that most of the British spiders, when
-a large insect is caught in their webs, endeavour to cut the
-lines and liberate their prey, to save their nets from being
-entirely spoiled. I once, however, saw in a hothouse in
-Shropshire a large female wasp caught in the irregular web
-of a quite small spider; and this spider, instead of cutting
-the web, most perseveringly continued to entangle the body,
-and especially the wings, of its prey. The wasp at first aimed
-in vain repeated thrusts with its sting at its little antagonist.
-Pitying the wasp, after allowing it to struggle for more than
-an hour, I killed it and put it back into the web. The spider
-soon returned; and an hour afterwards I was much surprised to
-find it with its jaws buried in the orifice, through which the
-sting is protruded by the living wasp. I drove the spider away
-two or three times, but for the next twenty-four hours I
-always found it again sucking at the same place. The spider
-became much distended by the juices of its prey, which was
-many times larger than itself.
-
-I may here just mention, that I found, near St. Fe Bajada,
-many large black spiders, with ruby-coloured marks on their
-backs, having gregarious habits. The webs were placed
-vertically, as is invariably the case with the genus Epeira:
-they were separated from each other by a space of about
-two feet, but were all attached to certain common lines,
-which were of great length, and extended to all parts of
-the community. In this manner the tops of some large bushes
-were encompassed by the united nets. Azara [10] has described
-a gregarious spider in Paraguay, which Walckanaer thinks
-must be a Theridion, but probably it is an Epeira, and
-perhaps even the same species with mine. I cannot, however,
-recollect seeing a central nest as large as a hat, in which,
-during autumn, when the spiders die, Azara says the eggs are
-deposited. As all the spiders which I saw were of the same
-size, they must have been nearly of the same age. This
-gregarious habit, in so typical a genus as Epeira, among
-insects, which are so bloodthirsty and solitary that even
-the two sexes attack each other, is a very singular fact.
-
-In a lofty valley of the Cordillera, near Mendoza, I found
-another spider with a singularly-formed web. Strong lines
-radiated in a vertical plane from a common centre, where the
-insect had its station; but only two of the rays were connected
-by a symmetrical mesh-work; so that the net, instead of being,
-as is generally the case, circular, consisted of a wedge-shaped
-segment. All the webs were similarly constructed.
-
-[1] Venda, the Portuguese name for an inn.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles for 1833.
-
-[3] I have described and named these species in the Annals of
-Nat. Hist., vol. xiv. p. 241.
-
-[4] I am greatly indebted to Mr. Waterhouse for his kindness
-in naming for me this and many other insects, and giving me
-much valuable assistance.
-
-[5] Kirby's Entomology, vol. ii. p. 317.
-
-[6] Mr. Doubleday has lately described (before the Entomological
-Society, March 3rd, 1845) a peculiar structure in the wings
-of this butterfly, which seems to be the means of its making
-its noise. He says, "It is remarkable for having a sort of
-drum at the base of the fore wings, between the costal nervure
-and the subcostal. These two nervures, moreover, have a peculiar
-screw-like diaphragm or vessel in the interior." I find in
-Langsdorff's travels (in the years 1803-7, p. 74) it is said,
-that in the island of St. Catherine's on the coast of Brazil,
-a butterfly called Februa Hoffmanseggi, makes a noise, when
-flying away, like a rattle.
-
-[7] I may mention, as a common instance of one day's (June 23rd)
-collecting, when I was not attending particularly to the
-Coleoptera, that I caught sixty-eight species of that order.
-Among these, there were only two of the Carabidae, four
-Brachelytra, fifteen Rhyncophora, and fourteen of the
-Chrysomelidae. Thirty-seven species of Arachnidae, which I
-brought home, will be sufficient to prove that I was not
-paying overmuch attention to the generally favoured order
-of Coleoptera.
-
-[8] In a MS. in the British Museum by Mr. Abbott, who made
-his observations in Georgia; see Mr. A. White's paper in the
-"Annals of Nat. Hist.," vol. vii. p. 472. Lieut. Hutton has
-described a sphex with similar habits in India, in the "Journal
-of the Asiatic Society," vol. i. p. 555.
-
-[9] Don Felix Azara (vol. i. p. 175), mentioning a hymenopterous
-insect, probably of the same genus, says he saw it dragging
-a dead spider through tall grass, in a straight line to its
-nest, which was one hundred and sixty-three paces distant. He
-adds that the wasp, in order to find the road, every now and
-then made "demi-tours d'environ trois palmes."
-
-[10] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 213
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III
-
-MALDONADO
-
-Monte Video -- Excursion to R. Polanco -- Lazo and Bolas --
-Partridges -- Absence of Trees -- Deer -- Capybara, or River
-Hog -- Tucutuco -- Molothrus, cuckoo-like habits -- Tyrant-
-flycatcher -- Mocking-bird -- Carrion Hawks -- Tubes formed
-by Lightning -- House struck.
-
-
-July 5th, 1832 -- In the morning we got under way, and stood
-out of the splendid harbour of Rio de Janeiro. In our passage
-to the Plata, we saw nothing particular, excepting on one day
-a great shoal of porpoises, many hundreds in number. The whole
-sea was in places furrowed by them; and a most extraordinary
-spectacle was presented, as hundreds, proceeding together by
-jumps, in which their whole bodies were exposed, thus cut the
-water. When the ship was running nine knots an hour, these
-animals could cross and recross the bows with the greatest of
-ease, and then dash away right ahead. As soon as we entered
-the estuary of the Plata, the weather was very unsettled. One
-dark night we were surrounded by numerous seals and penguins,
-which made such strange noises, that the officer on watch
-reported he could hear the cattle bellowing on shore. On a
-second night we witnessed a splendid scene of natural fireworks;
-the mast-head and yard-arm-ends shone with St. Elmo's light;
-and the form of the vane could almost be traced, as if it had
-been rubbed with phosphorus. The sea was so highly luminous,
-that the tracks of the penguins were marked by a fiery wake,
-and the darkness of the sky was momentarily illuminated by
-the most vivid lightning.
-
-When within the mouth of the river, I was interested by
-observing how slowly the waters of the sea and river mixed.
-The latter, muddy and discoloured, from its less specific
-gravity, floated on the surface of the salt water. This was
-curiously exhibited in the wake of the vessel, where a line
-of blue water was seen mingling in little eddies, with the
-adjoining fluid.
-
-July 26th. -- We anchored at Monte Video. The Beagle
-was employed in surveying the extreme southern and eastern
-coasts of America, south of the Plata, during the two succeeding
-years. To prevent useless repetitions, I will extract
-those parts of my journal which refer to the same districts
-without always attending to the order in which we visited
-them.
-
-MALDONADO is situated on the northern bank of the Plata,
-and not very far from the mouth of the estuary. It is a
-most quiet, forlorn, little town; built, as is universally the
-case in these countries, with the streets running at right
-angles to each other, and having in the middle a large plaza
-or square, which, from its size, renders the scantiness of the
-population more evident. It possesses scarcely any trade;
-the exports being confined to a few hides and living cattle.
-The inhabitants are chiefly landowners, together with a few
-shopkeepers and the necessary tradesmen, such as blacksmiths
-and carpenters, who do nearly all the business for a
-circuit of fifty miles round. The town is separated from the
-river by a band of sand-hillocks, about a mile broad: it is
-surrounded, on all other sides, by an open slightly-undulating
-country, covered by one uniform layer of fine green turf,
-on which countless herds of cattle, sheep, and horses graze.
-There is very little land cultivated even close to the town.
-A few hedges, made of cacti and agave, mark out where
-some wheat or Indian corn has been planted. The features
-of the country are very similar along the whole northern
-bank of the Plata. The only difference is, that here the
-granitic hills are a little bolder. The scenery is very
-uninteresting; there is scarcely a house, an enclosed piece of
-ground, or even a tree, to give it an air of cheerfulness
-Yet, after being imprisoned for some time in a ship, there is
-a charm in the unconfined feeling of walking over boundless
-plains of turf. Moreover, if your view is limited to a small
-space, many objects possess beauty. Some of the smaller
-birds are brilliantly coloured; and the bright green sward,
-browsed short by the cattle, is ornamented by dwarf flowers,
-among which a plant, looking like the daisy, claimed the
-place of an old friend. What would a florist say to whole
-tracts, so thickly covered by the Verbena melindres, as, even
-at a distance, to appear of the most gaudy scarlet?
-
-I stayed ten weeks at Maldonado, in which time a nearly
-perfect collection of the animals, birds, and reptiles, was
-procured. Before making any observations respecting them,
-I will give an account of a little excursion I made as far
-as the river Polanco, which is about seventy miles distant,
-in a northerly direction. I may mention, as a proof how
-cheap everything is in this country, that I paid only two
-dollars a day, or eight shillings, for two men, together with
-a troop of about a dozen riding-horses. My companions
-were well armed with pistols and sabres; a precaution which
-I thought rather unnecessary but the first piece of news
-we heard was, that, the day before, a traveller from Monte
-Video had been found dead on the road, with his throat
-cut. This happened close to a cross, the record of a former
-murder.
-
-On the first night we slept at a retired little country-house;
-and there I soon found out that I possessed two or
-three articles, especially a pocket compass, which created
-unbounded astonishment. In every house I was asked to
-show the compass, and by its aid, together with a map, to
-point out the direction of various places. It excited the
-liveliest admiration that I, a perfect stranger, should know
-the road (for direction and road are synonymous in this open
-country) to places where I had never been. At one house
-a young woman, who was ill in bed, sent to entreat me to
-come and show her the compass. If their surprise was great,
-mine was greater, to find such ignorance among people who
-possessed their thousands of cattle, and "estancias" of great
-extent. It can only be accounted for by the circumstance
-that this retired part of the country is seldom visited by
-foreigners. I was asked whether the earth or sun moved;
-whether it was hotter or colder to the north; where Spain
-was, and many other such questions. The greater number of
-the inhabitants had an indistinct idea that England, London,
-and North America, were different names for the same
-place; but the better informed well knew that London and
-North America were separate countries close together, and
-that England was a large town in London! I carried with
-me some promethean matches, which I ignited by biting; it
-was thought so wonderful that a man should strike fire with
-his teeth, that it was usual to collect the whole family to
-see it: I was once offered a dollar for a single one. Washing
-my face in the morning caused much speculation at the village
-of Las Minas; a superior tradesman closely cross-questioned
-me about so singular a practice; and likewise why on
-board we wore our beards; for he had heard from my guide
-that we did so. He eyed me with much suspicion; perhaps
-he had heard of ablutions in the Mahomedan religion, and
-knowing me to be a heretick, probably he came to the conclusion
-that all hereticks were Turks. It is the general custom
-in this country to ask for a night's lodging at the first
-convenient house. The astonishment at the compass, and
-my other feats of jugglery, was to a certain degree
-advantageous, as with that, and the long stories my guides
-told of my breaking stones, knowing venomous from harmless
-snakes, collecting insects, etc., I repaid them for their
-hospitality. I am writing as if I had been among the inhabitants
-of central Africa: Banda Oriental would not be flattered by
-the comparison; but such were my feelings at the time.
-
-The next day we rode to the village of Las Minas. The
-country was rather more hilly, but otherwise continued the
-same; an inhabitant of the Pampas no doubt would have
-considered it as truly Alpine. The country is so thinly
-inhabited, that during the whole day we scarcely met a single
-person. Las Minas is much smaller even than Maldonado.
-It is seated on a little plain, and is surrounded by low rocky
-mountains. It is of the usual symmetrical form, and with
-its whitewashed church standing in the centre, had rather
-a pretty appearance. The outskirting houses rose out of the
-plain like isolated beings, without the accompaniment of
-gardens or courtyards. This is generally the case in the
-country, and all the houses have, in consequence an
-uncomfortable aspect. At night we stopped at a pulperia,
-or drinking-shop. During the evening a great number of Gauchos
-came in to drink spirits and smoke cigars: their appearance
-is very striking; they are generally tall and handsome, but
-with a proud and dissolute expression of countenance. They
-frequently wear their moustaches and long black hair curling
-down their backs. With their brightly coloured garments,
-great spurs clanking about their heels, and knives
-stuck as daggers (and often so used) at their waists, they
-look a very different race of men from what might be expected
-from their name of Gauchos, or simple countrymen.
-Their politeness is excessive; they never drink their spirits
-without expecting you to taste it; but whilst making their
-exceedingly graceful bow, they seem quite as ready, if occasion
-offered, to cut your throat.
-
-On the third day we pursued rather an irregular course,
-as I was employed in examining some beds of marble. On
-the fine plains of turf we saw many ostriches (Struthio
-rhea). Some of the flocks contained as many as twenty or
-thirty birds. These, when standing on any little eminence,
-and seen against the clear sky, presented a very noble
-appearance. I never met with such tame ostriches in any other
-part of the country: it was easy to gallop up within a short
-distance of them; but then, expanding their wings, they
-made all sail right before the wind, and soon left the horse
-astern.
-
-At night we came to the house of Don Juan Fuentes, a
-rich landed proprietor, but not personally known to either
-of my companions. On approaching the house of a stranger,
-it is usual to follow several little points of etiquette: riding
-up slowly to the door, the salutation of Ave Maria is given,
-and until somebody comes out and asks you to alight, it is
-not customary even to get off your horse: the formal answer
-of the owner is, "sin pecado concebida" -- that is, conceived
-without sin. Having entered the house, some general conversation
-is kept up for a few minutes, till permission is
-asked to pass the night there. This is granted as a matter
-of course. The stranger then takes his meals with the family,
-and a room is assigned him, where with the horsecloths
-belonging to his recado (or saddle of the Pampas) he makes
-his bed. It is curious how similar circumstances produce
-such similar results in manners. At the Cape of Good Hope
-the same hospitality, and very nearly the same points of
-etiquette, are universally observed. The difference, however,
-between the character of the Spaniard and that of the Dutch
-boer is shown, by the former never asking his guest a single
-question beyond the strictest rule of politeness, whilst the
-honest Dutchman demands where he has been, where he is
-going, what is his business, and even how many brothers
-sisters, or children he may happen to have.
-
-Shortly after our arrival at Don Juan's, one of the largest
-herds of cattle was driven in towards the house, and three
-beasts were picked out to be slaughtered for the supply of
-the establishment. These half-wild cattle are very active;
-and knowing full well the fatal lazo, they led the horses a
-long and laborious chase. After witnessing the rude wealth
-displayed in the number of cattle, men, and horses, Don
-Juan's miserable house was quite curious. The floor consisted
-of hardened mud, and the windows were without
-glass; the sitting-room boasted only of a few of the roughest
-chairs and stools, with a couple of tables. The supper, although
-several strangers were present, consisted of two huge
-piles, one of roast beef, the other of boiled, with some pieces
-of pumpkin: besides this latter there was no other vegetable,
-and not even a morsel of bread. For drinking, a large
-earthenware jug of water served the whole party. Yet this
-man was the owner of several square miles of land, of which
-nearly every acre would produce corn, and, with a little
-trouble, all the common vegetables. The evening was spent in
-smoking, with a little impromptu singing, accompanied by
-the guitar. The signoritas all sat together in one corner
-of the room, and did not sup with the men.
-
-So many works have been written about these countries,
-that it is almost superfluous to describe either the lazo or
-the bolas. The lazo consists of a very strong, but thin,
-well-plaited rope, made of raw hide. One end is attached to the
-broad surcingle, which fastens together the complicated gear
-of the recado, or saddle used in the Pampas; the other is
-terminated by a small ring of iron or brass, by which a noose
-can be formed. The Gaucho, when he is going to use the
-lazo, keeps a small coil in his bridle-hand, and in the other
-holds the running noose which is made very large, generally
-having a diameter of about eight feet. This he whirls
-round his head, and by the dexterous movement of his wrist
-keeps the noose open; then, throwing it, he causes it to fall
-on any particular spot he chooses. The lazo, when not used,
-is tied up in a small coil to the after part of the recado.
-The bolas, or balls, are of two kinds: the simplest, which
-is chiefly used for catching ostriches, consists of two round
-stones, covered with leather, and united by a thin plaited
-thong, about eight feet long. The other kind differs only
-in having three balls united by the thongs to a common
-centre. The Gaucho holds the smallest of the three in his
-hand, and whirls the other two round and round his head;
-then, taking aim, sends them like chain shot revolving
-through the air. The balls no sooner strike any object, than,
-winding round it, they cross each other, and become firmly
-hitched. The size and weight of the balls vary, according
-to the purpose for which they are made: when of stone,
-although not larger than an apple, they are sent with such
-force as sometimes to break the leg even of a horse. I have
-seen the balls made of wood, and as large as a turnip, for
-the sake of catching these animals without injuring them.
-The balls are sometimes made of iron, and these can be
-hurled to the greatest distance. The main difficulty in using
-either lazo or bolas is to ride so well as to be able at full
-speed, and while suddenly turning about, to whirl them so
-steadily round the head, as to take aim: on foot any person
-would soon learn the art. One day, as I was amusing myself
-by galloping and whirling the balls round my head, by accident
-the free one struck a bush, and its revolving motion
-being thus destroyed, it immediately fell to the ground, and,
-like magic, caught one hind leg of my horse; the other ball
-was then jerked out of my hand, and the horse fairly secured.
-Luckily he was an old practised animal, and knew
-what it meant; otherwise he would probably have kicked
-till he had thrown himself down. The Gauchos roared with
-laughter; they cried out that they had seen every sort of
-animal caught, but had never before seen a man caught by
-himself.
-
-During the two succeeding days, I reached the furthest
-point which I was anxious to examine. The country wore
-the same aspect, till at last the fine green turf became more
-wearisome than a dusty turnpike road. We everywhere saw
-great numbers of partridges (Nothura major). These birds
-do not go in coveys, nor do they conceal themselves like
-the English kind. It appears a very silly bird. A man on
-horseback by riding round and round in a circle, or rather
-in a spire, so as to approach closer each time, may knock
-on the head as many as he pleases. The more common
-method is to catch them with a running noose, or little lazo,
-made of the stem of an ostrich's feather, fastened to the
-end of a long stick. A boy on a quiet old horse will frequently
-thus catch thirty or forty in a day. In Arctic North
-America [1] the Indians catch the Varying Hare by walking
-spirally round and round it, when on its form: the middle
-of the day is reckoned the best time, when the sun is high,
-and the shadow of the hunter not very long.
-
-On our return to Maldonado, we followed rather a different
-line of road. Near Pan de Azucar, a landmark well
-known to all those who have sailed up the Plata, I stayed
-a day at the house of a most hospitable old Spaniard. Early
-in the morning we ascended the Sierra de las Animas. By
-the aid of the rising sun the scenery was almost picturesque.
-To the westward the view extended over an immense level
-plain as far as the Mount, at Monte Video, and to the eastward,
-over the mammillated country of Maldonado. On
-the summit of the mountain there were several small heaps
-of stones, which evidently had lain there for many years.
-My companion assured me that they were the work of the
-Indians in the old time. The heaps were similar, but on
-a much smaller scale, to those so commonly found on the
-mountains of Wales. The desire to signalize any event, on
-the highest point of the neighbouring land, seems an universal
-passion with mankind. At the present day, not a
-single Indian, either civilized or wild, exists in this part
-of the province; nor am I aware that the former inhabitants
-have left behind them any more permanent records than
-these insignificant piles on the summit of the Sierra de las
-Animas.
-
-
-The general, and almost entire absence of trees in Banda
-Oriental is remarkable. Some of the rocky hills are partly
-covered by thickets, and on the banks of the larger streams,
-especially to the north of Las Minas, willow-trees are not
-uncommon. Near the Arroyo Tapes I heard of a wood of
-palms; and one of these trees, of considerable size, I saw
-near the Pan de Azucar, in lat. 35 degs. These, and the trees
-planted by the Spaniards, offer the only exceptions to the
-general scarcity of wood. Among the introduced kinds may
-be enumerated poplars, olives, peach, and other fruit trees:
-the peaches succeed so well, that they afford the main supply
-of firewood to the city of Buenos Ayres. Extremely level
-countries, such as the Pampas, seldom appear favourable to
-the growth of trees. This may possibly be attributed either
-to the force of the winds, or the kind of drainage. In the
-nature of the land, however, around Maldonado, no such
-reason is apparent; the rocky mountains afford protected
-situations; enjoying various kinds of soil; streamlets of
-water are common at the bottoms of nearly every valley;
-and the clayey nature of the earth seems adapted to retain
-moisture. It has been inferred with much probability, that
-the presence of woodland is generally determined [2] by the
-annual amount of moisture; yet in this province abundant
-and heavy rain falls during the winter; and the summer,
-though dry, is not so in any excessive degree. [3] We see nearly
-the whole of Australia covered by lofty trees, yet that country
-possesses a far more arid climate. Hence we must look
-to some other and unknown cause.
-
-Confining our view to South America, we should certainly
-be tempted to believe that trees flourished only under a very
-humid climate; for the limit of the forest-land follows, in a
-most remarkable manner, that of the damp winds. In the
-southern part of the continent, where the western gales,
-charged with moisture from the Pacific, prevail, every island
-on the broken west coast, from lat. 38 degs. to the extreme
-point of Tierra del Fuego, is densely covered by impenetrable
-forests. On the eastern side of the Cordillera, over the same
-extent of latitude, where a blue sky and a fine climate prove
-that the atmosphere has been deprived of its moisture by
-passing over the mountains, the arid plains of Patagonia
-support a most scanty vegetation. In the more northern
-parts of the continent, within the limits of the constant
-south-eastern trade-wind, the eastern side is ornamented by
-magnificent forests; whilst the western coast, from lat.
-4 degs. S. to lat. 32 degs. S., may be described as a
-desert; on this western coast, northward of lat. 4 degs.
-S., where the trade-wind loses its regularity, and heavy
-torrents of rain fall periodically, the shores of the
-Pacific, so utterly desert in Peru, assume near Cape
-Blanco the character of luxuriance so celebrated at
-Guyaquil and Panama. Hence in the southern and northern
-parts of the continent, the forest and desert lands occupy
-reversed positions with respect to the Cordillera, and these
-positions are apparently determined by the direction of the
-prevalent winds. In the middle of the continent there is a
-broad intermediate band, including central Chile and the
-provinces of La Plata, where the rain-bringing winds have
-not to pass over lofty mountains, and where the land is neither
-a desert nor covered by forests. But even the rule, if
-confined to South America, of trees flourishing only in a
-climate rendered humid by rain-bearing winds, has a strongly
-marked exception in the case of the Falkland Islands. These
-islands, situated in the same latitude with Tierra del Fuego
-and only between two and three hundred miles distant from
-it, having a nearly similar climate, with a geological
-formation almost identical, with favourable situations and the
-same kind of peaty soil, yet can boast of few plants deserving
-even the title of bushes; whilst in Tierra del Fuego it is
-impossible to find an acre of land not covered by the densest
-forest. In this case, both the direction of the heavy gales
-of wind and of the currents of the sea are favourable to
-the transport of seeds from Tierra del Fuego, as is shown
-by the canoes and trunks of trees drifted from that country,
-and frequently thrown on the shores of the Western Falkland.
-Hence perhaps it is, that there are many plants in
-common to the two countries but with respect to the trees
-of Tierra del Fuego, even attempts made to transplant them
-have failed.
-
-During our stay at Maldonado I collected several quadrupeds,
-eighty kinds of birds, and many reptiles, including
-nine species of snakes. Of the indigenous mammalia, the
-only one now left of any size, which is common, is the Cervus
-campestris. This deer is exceedingly abundant, often in
-small herds, throughout the countries bordering the Plata
-and in Northern Patagonia. If a person crawling close along
-the ground, slowly advances towards a herd, the deer frequently,
-out of curiosity, approach to reconnoitre him. I
-have by this means, killed from one spot, three out of the
-same herd. Although so tame and inquisitive, yet when
-approached on horseback, they are exceedingly wary. In this
-country nobody goes on foot, and the deer knows man as its
-enemy only when he is mounted and armed with the bolas.
-At Bahia Blanca, a recent establishment in Northern Patagonia,
-I was surprised to find how little the deer cared for
-the noise of a gun: one day I fired ten times from within
-eighty yards at one animal; and it was much more startled
-at the ball cutting up the ground than at the report of
-the rifle. My powder being exhausted, I was obliged to
-get up (to my shame as a sportsman be it spoken, though
-well able to kill birds on the wing) and halloo till the deer
-ran away.
-
-The most curious fact with respect to this animal, is the
-overpoweringly strong and offensive odour which proceeds
-from the buck. It is quite indescribable: several times
-whilst skinning the specimen which is now mounted at the
-Zoological Museum, I was almost overcome by nausea. I
-tied up the skin in a silk pocket-handkerchief, and so carried
-it home: this handkerchief, after being well washed, I
-continually used, and it was of course as repeatedly washed;
-yet every time, for a space of one year and seven months, when
-first unfolded, I distinctly perceived the odour. This appears
-an astonishing instance of the permanence of some
-matter, which nevertheless in its nature must be most subtile
-and volatile. Frequently, when passing at the distance of
-half a mile to leeward of a herd, I have perceived the whole
-air tainted with the effluvium. I believe the smell from the
-buck is most powerful at the period when its horns are perfect,
-or free from the hairy skin. When in this state the
-meat is, of course, quite uneatable; but the Gauchos assert,
-that if buried for some time in fresh earth, the taint is
-removed. I have somewhere read that the islanders in the
-north of Scotland treat the rank carcasses of the fish-eating
-birds in the same manner.
-
-The order Rodentia is here very numerous in species:
-of mice alone I obtained no less than eight kinds. [4] The
-largest gnawing animal in the world, the Hydrochaerus capybara
-(the water-hog), is here also common. One which I
-shot at Monte Video weighed ninety-eight pounds: its
-length from the end of the snout to the stump-like tail, was
-three feet two inches; and its girth three feet eight. These
-great Rodents occasionally frequent the islands in the mouth
-of the Plata, where the water is quite salt, but are far more
-abundant on the borders of fresh-water lakes and rivers.
-Near Maldonado three or four generally live together. In
-the daytime they either lie among the aquatic plants, or
-openly feed on the turf plain. [5] When viewed at a distance,
-from their manner of walking and colour they resemble pigs:
-but when seated on their haunches, and attentively watching
-any object with one eye, they reassume the appearance
-of their congeners, cavies and rabbits. Both the front and
-side view of their head has quite a ludicrous aspect, from
-the great depth of their jaw. These animals, at Maldonado,
-were very tame; by cautiously walking, I approached within
-three yards of four old ones. This tameness may probably
-be accounted for, by the Jaguar having been banished for
-some years, and by the Gaucho not thinking it worth his
-while to hunt them. As I approached nearer and nearer
-they frequently made their peculiar noise, which is a low
-abrupt grunt, not having much actual sound, but rather arising
-from the sudden expulsion of air: the only noise I know
-at all like it, is the first hoarse bark of a large dog. Having
-watched the four from almost within arm's length (and they
-me) for several minutes, they rushed into the water at full
-gallop with the greatest impetuosity, and emitted at the
-same time their bark. After diving a short distance they
-came again to the surface, but only just showed the upper
-part of their heads. When the female is swimming in the
-water, and has young ones, they are said to sit on her back.
-These animals are easily killed in numbers; but their skins
-are of trifling value, and the meat is very indifferent. On
-the islands in the Rio Parana they are exceedingly abundant,
-and afford the ordinary prey to the Jaguar.
-
-The Tucutuco (Ctenomys Brasiliensis) is a curious small
-animal, which may be briefly described as a Gnawer, with
-the habits of a mole. It is extremely numerous in some
-parts of the country, but it is difficult to be procured, and
-never, I believe, comes out of the ground. It throws up at
-the mouth of its burrows hillocks of earth like those of the
-mole, but smaller. Considerable tracts of country are so
-completely undermined by these animals, that horses in passing
-over, sink above their fetlocks. The tucutucos appear,
-to a certain degree, to be gregarious: the man who procured
-the specimens for me had caught six together, and he
-said this was a common occurrence. They are nocturnal in
-their habits; and their principal food is the roots of plants,
-which are the object of their extensive and superficial burrows.
-This animal is universally known by a very peculiar
-noise which it makes when beneath the ground. A person,
-the first time he hears it, is much surprised; for it is not
-easy to tell whence it comes, nor is it possible to guess what
-kind of creature utters it. The noise consists in a short, but
-not rough, nasal grunt, which is monotonously repeated
-about four times in quick succession: [6] the name Tucutuco is
-given in imitation of the sound. Where this animal is
-abundant, it may be heard at all times of the day, and sometimes
-directly beneath one's feet. When kept in a room, the
-tucutucos move both slowly and clumsily, which appears
-owing to the outward action of their hind legs; and they are
-quite incapable, from the socket of the thigh-bone not having
-a certain ligament, of jumping even the smallest vertical
-height. They are very stupid in making any attempt to
-escape; when angry or frightened they utter the tucutuco.
-Of those I kept alive several, even the first day, became
-quite tame, not attempting to bite or to run away; others
-were a little wilder.
-
-The man who caught them asserted that very many are
-invariably found blind. A specimen which I preserved in
-spirits was in this state; Mr. Reid considers it to be the
-effect of inflammation in the nictitating membrane. When the
-animal was alive I placed my finger within half an inch of
-its head, and not the slightest notice was taken: it made its
-way, however, about the room nearly as well as the others.
-Considering the strictly subterranean habits of the tucutuco,
-the blindness, though so common, cannot be a very serious
-evil; yet it appears strange that any animal should possess
-an organ frequently subject to be injured. Lamarck would
-have been delighted with this fact, had he known it, when
-speculating [7] (probably with more truth than usual with him)
-on the gradually _acquired_ blindness of the Asphalax, a
-Gnawer living under ground, and of the Proteus, a reptile
-living in dark caverns filled with water; in both of which
-animals the eye is in an almost rudimentary state, and is
-covered by a tendinous membrane and skin. In the common
-mole the eye is extraordinarily small but perfect, though
-many anatomists doubt whether it is connected with the true
-optic nerve; its vision must certainly be imperfect, though
-probably useful to the animal when it leaves its burrow. In
-the tucutuco, which I believe never comes to the surface of
-the ground, the eye is rather larger, but often rendered blind
-and useless, though without apparently causing any inconvenience
-to the animal; no doubt Lamarck would have said
-that the tucutuco is now passing into the state of the
-Asphalax and Proteus.
-
-Birds of many kinds are extremely abundant on the undulating,
-grassy plains around Maldonado. There are several
-species of a family allied in structure and manners to our
-Starling: one of these (Molothrus niger) is remarkable from
-its habits. Several may often be seen standing together on
-the back of a cow or horse; and while perched on a hedge,
-pluming themselves in the sun, they sometimes attempt to
-sing, or rather to hiss; the noise being very peculiar,
-resembling that of bubbles of air passing rapidly from a small
-orifice under water, so as to produce an acute sound. According
-to Azara, this bird, like the cuckoo, deposits its eggs
-in other birds' nests. I was several times told by the country
-people that there certainly is some bird having this
-habit; and my assistant in collecting, who is a very accurate
-person, found a nest of the sparrow of this country (Zonotrichia
-matutina), with one egg in it larger than the others,
-and of a different colour and shape. In North America
-there is another species of Molothrus (M. pecoris), which
-has a similar cuckoo-like habit, and which is most closely
-allied in every respect to the species from the Plata, even in
-such trifling peculiarities as standing on the backs of cattle;
-it differs only in being a little smaller, and in its plumage
-and eggs being of a slightly different shade of colour. This
-close agreement in structure and habits, in representative
-species coming from opposite quarters of a great continent,
-always strikes one as interesting, though of common
-occurrence.
-
-Mr. Swainson has well remarked, [8] that with the exception
-of the Molothrus pecoris, to which must be added the
-M. niger, the cuckoos are the only birds which can be called
-truly parasitical; namely, such as "fasten themselves, as it
-were, on another living animal, whose animal heat brings
-their young into life, whose food they live upon, and whose
-death would cause theirs during the period of infancy." It
-is remarkable that some of the species, but not all, both of
-the Cuckoo and Molothrus, should agree in this one strange
-habit of their parasitical propagation, whilst opposed to each
-other in almost every other habit: the molothrus, like our
-starling, is eminently sociable, and lives on the open plains
-without art or disguise: the cuckoo, as every one knows,
-is a singularly shy bird; it frequents the most retired thickets,
-and feeds on fruit and caterpillars. In structure also
-these two genera are widely removed from each other.
-Many theories, even phrenological theories, have been advanced
-to explain the origin of the cuckoo laying its eggs in
-other birds' nests. M. Prevost alone, I think, has thrown
-light by his observations [9] on this puzzle: he finds that the
-female cuckoo, which, according to most observers, lays at
-least from four to six eggs, must pair with the male each time
-after laying only one or two eggs. Now, if the cuckoo was
-obliged to sit on her own eggs, she would either have to sit
-on all together, and therefore leave those first laid so long,
-that they probably would become addled; or she would have
-to hatch separately each egg, or two eggs, as soon as laid:
-but as the cuckoo stays a shorter time in this country than
-any other migratory bird, she certainly would not have time
-enough for the successive hatchings. Hence we can perceive
-in the fact of the cuckoo pairing several times, and laying
-her eggs at intervals, the cause of her depositing her eggs
-in other birds' nests, and leaving them to the care of
-foster-parents. I am strongly inclined to believe that this
-view is correct, from having been independently led (as we
-shall hereafter see) to an analogous conclusion with regard
-to the South American ostrich, the females of which are
-parasitical, if I may so express it, on each other; each
-female laying several eggs in the nests of several other
-females, and the male ostrich undertaking all the cares
-of incubation, like the strange foster-parents with the
-cuckoo.
-
-I will mention only two other birds, which are very common,
-and render themselves prominent from their habits.
-The Saurophagus sulphuratus is typical of the great American
-tribe of tyrant-flycatchers. In its structure it closely
-approaches the true shrikes, but in its habits may be compared
-to many birds. I have frequently observed it, hunting
-a field, hovering over one spot like a hawk, and then proceeding
-on to another. When seen thus suspended in the air,
-it might very readily at a short distance be mistaken for one
-of the Rapacious order; its stoop, however, is very inferior
-in force and rapidity to that of a hawk. At other times
-the Saurophagus haunts the neighbourhood of water, and
-there, like a kingfisher, remaining stationary, it catches any
-small fish which may come near the margin. These birds are
-not unfrequently kept either in cages or in courtyards, with
-their wings cut. They soon become tame, and are very
-amusing from their cunning odd manners, which were
-described to me as being similar to those of the common
-magpie. Their flight is undulatory, for the weight of the
-head and bill appears too great for the body. In the
-evening the Saurophagus takes its stand on a bush, often
-by the roadside, and continually repeats without a change
-a shrill and rather agreeable cry, which somewhat resembles
-articulate words: the Spaniards say it is like the words
-"Bien te veo" (I see you well), and accordingly have given
-it this name.
-
-A mocking-bird (Mimus orpheus), called by the inhabitants
-Calandria, is remarkable, from possessing a song far
-superior to that of any other bird in the country: indeed, it
-is nearly the only bird in South America which I have
-observed to take its stand for the purpose of singing. The
-song may be compared to that of the Sedge warbler, but
-is more powerful; some harsh notes and some very high
-ones, being mingled with a pleasant warbling. It is heard
-only during the spring. At other times its cry is harsh and
-far from harmonious. Near Maldonado these birds were
-tame and bold; they constantly attended the country houses
-in numbers, to pick the meat which was hung up on the posts
-or walls: if any other small bird joined the feast, the
-Calandria soon chased it away. On the wide uninhabited plains
-of Patagonia another closely allied species, O. Patagonica
-of d'Orbigny, which frequents the valleys clothed with
-spiny bushes, is a wilder bird, and has a slightly different
-tone of voice. It appears to me a curious circumstance, as
-showing the fine shades of difference in habits, that judging
-from this latter respect alone, when I first saw this second
-species, I thought it was different from the Maldonado kind.
-Having afterwards procured a specimen, and comparing the
-two without particular care, they appeared so very similar,
-that I changed my opinion; but now Mr. Gould says that they
-are certainly distinct; a conclusion in conformity with the
-trifling difference of habit, of which, of course, he was not
-aware.
-
-The number, tameness, and disgusting habits of the
-carrion-feeding hawks of South America make them
-pre-eminently striking to any one accustomed only to the birds
-of Northern Europe. In this list may be included four species
-of the Caracara or Polyborus, the Turkey buzzard, the Gallinazo,
-and the Condor. The Caracaras are, from their
-structure, placed among the eagles: we shall soon see how
-ill they become so high a rank. In their habits they well
-supply the place of our carrion-crows, magpies, and ravens;
-a tribe of birds widely distributed over the rest of the world,
-but entirely absent in South America. To begin with the
-Polyborus Brasiliensis: this is a common bird, and has a wide
-geographical range; it is most numerous on the grassy savannahs
-of La Plata (where it goes by the name of Carrancha),
-and is far from unfrequent throughout the sterile plains of
-Patagonia. In the desert between the rivers Negro and Colorado,
-numbers constantly attend the line of road to devour
-the carcasses of the exhausted animals which chance to
-perish from fatigue and thirst. Although thus common in
-these dry and open countries, and likewise on the arid shores
-of the Pacific, it is nevertheless found inhabiting the damp
-impervious forests of West Patagonia and Tierra del Fuego.
-The Carranchas, together with the Chimango, constantly
-attend in numbers the estancias and slaughtering-houses. If
-an animal dies on the plain the Gallinazo commences the
-feast, and then the two species of Polyborus pick the bones
-clean. These birds, although thus commonly feeding together,
-are far from being friends. When the Carrancha is
-quietly seated on the branch of a tree or on the ground, the
-Chimango often continues for a long time flying backwards
-and forwards, up and down, in a semicircle, trying each time
-at the bottom of the curve to strike its larger relative. The
-Carrancha takes little notice, except by bobbing its head.
-Although the Carranchas frequently assemble in numbers,
-they are not gregarious; for in desert places they may be
-seen solitary, or more commonly by pairs.
-
-The Carranchas are said to be very crafty, and to steal
-great numbers of eggs. They attempt, also, together with
-the Chimango, to pick off the scabs from the sore backs of
-horses and mules. The poor animal, on the one hand, with
-its ears down and its back arched; and, on the other, the
-hovering bird, eyeing at the distance of a yard the disgusting
-morsel, form a picture, which has been described by Captain
-Head with his own peculiar spirit and accuracy. These
-false eagles most rarely kill any living bird or animal; and
-their vulture-like, necrophagous habits are very evident to
-any one who has fallen asleep on the desolate plains of
-Patagonia, for when he wakes, he will see, on each surrounding
-hillock, one of these birds patiently watching him with an
-evil eye: it is a feature in the landscape of these countries,
-which will be recognised by every one who has wandered
-over them. If a party of men go out hunting with dogs
-and horses, they will be accompanied, during the day, by
-several of these attendants. After feeding, the uncovered
-craw protrudes; at such times, and indeed generally, the
-Carrancha is an inactive, tame, and cowardly bird. Its
-flight is heavy and slow, like that of an English rook. It
-seldom soars; but I have twice seen one at a great height
-gliding through the air with much ease. It runs (in
-contradistinction to hopping), but not quite so quickly as some
-of its congeners. At times the Carrancha is noisy, but is
-not generally so: its cry is loud, very harsh and peculiar, and
-may be likened to the sound of the Spanish guttural g, followed
-by a rough double r r; when uttering this cry it
-elevates its head higher and higher, till at last, with its
-beak wide open, the crown almost touches the lower part of
-the back. This fact, which has been doubted, is quite true;
-I have seen them several times with their heads backwards
-in a completely inverted position. To these observations I
-may add, on the high authority of Azara, that the Carrancha
-feeds on worms, shells, slugs, grasshoppers, and frogs; that
-it destroys young lambs by tearing the umbilical cord; and
-that it pursues the Gallinazo, till that bird is compelled to
-vomit up the carrion it may have recently gorged. Lastly,
-Azara states that several Carranchas, five or six together,
-will unite in chase of large birds, even such as herons. All
-these facts show that it is a bird of very versatile habits and
-considerable ingenuity.
-
-The Polyborus Chimango is considerably smaller than the
-last species. It is truly omnivorous, and will eat even bread;
-and I was assured that it materially injures the potato crops
-in Chiloe, by stocking up the roots when first planted. Of
-all the carrion-feeders it is generally the last which leaves
-the skeleton of a dead animal, and may often be seen within
-the ribs of a cow or horse, like a bird in a cage. Another
-species is the Polyborus Novae Zelandiae, which is exceedingly
-common in the Falkland Islands. These birds in many
-respects resemble in their habits the Carranchas. They live
-on the flesh of dead animals and on marine productions; and
-on the Ramirez rocks their whole sustenance must depend
-on the sea. They are extraordinarily tame and fearless, and
-haunt the neighborhood of houses for offal. If a hunting
-party kills an animal, a number soon collect and patiently
-await, standing on the ground on all sides. After eating,
-their uncovered craws are largely protruded, giving them a
-disgusting appearance. They readily attack wounded birds:
-a cormorant in this state having taken to the shore, was
-immediately seized on by several, and its death hastened
-by their blows. The Beagle was at the Falklands only
-during the summer, but the officers of the Adventure, who
-were there in the winter, mention many extraordinary instances
-of the boldness and rapacity of these birds. They
-actually pounced on a dog that was lying fast asleep close
-by one of the party; and the sportsmen had difficulty in
-preventing the wounded geese from being seized before their
-eyes. It is said that several together (in this respect
-resembling the Carranchas) wait at the mouth of a rabbit-hole,
-and together seize on the animal when it comes out. They
-were constantly flying on board the vessel when in the harbour;
-and it was necessary to keep a good look out to prevent
-the leather being torn from the rigging, and the meat or
-game from the stern. These birds are very mischievous and
-inquisitive; they will pick up almost anything from the
-ground; a large black glazed hat was carried nearly a mile,
-as was a pair of the heavy balls used in catching cattle. Mr.
-Usborne experienced during the survey a more severe loss,
-in their stealing a small Kater's compass in a red morocco
-leather case, which was never recovered. These birds are,
-moreover, quarrelsome and very passionate; tearing up the
-grass with their bills from rage. They are not truly gregarious;
-they do not soar, and their flight is heavy and clumsy;
-on the ground they run extremely fast, very much like
-pheasants. They are noisy, uttering several harsh cries, one
-of which is like that of the English rook, hence the sealers
-always call them rooks. It is a curious circumstance that,
-when crying out, they throw their heads upwards and backwards,
-after the same manner as the Carrancha. They build
-in the rocky cliffs of the sea-coast, but only on the small
-adjoining islets, and not on the two main islands: this is a
-singular precaution in so tame and fearless a bird. The sealers
-say that the flesh of these birds, when cooked, is quite
-white, and very good eating; but bold must the man be who
-attempts such a meal.
-
-We have now only to mention the turkey-buzzard (Vultur
-aura), and the Gallinazo. The former is found wherever
-the country is moderately damp, from Cape Horn to North
-America. Differently from the Polyborus Brasiliensis and
-Chimango, it has found its way to the Falkland Islands. The
-turkey-buzzard is a solitary bird, or at most goes in pairs. It
-may at once be recognised from a long distance, by its lofty,
-soaring, and most elegant flight. It is well known to be a
-true carrion-feeder. On the west coast of Patagonia, among
-the thickly-wooded islets and broken land, it lives exclusively
-on what the sea throws up, and on the carcasses of dead
-seals. Wherever these animals are congregated on the rocks,
-there the vultures may be seen. The Gallinazo (Cathartes
-atratus) has a different range from the last species, as it
-never occurs southward of lat. 41 degs. Azara states that
-there exists a tradition that these birds, at the time of the
-conquest, were not found near Monte Video, but that they
-subsequently followed the inhabitants from more northern
-districts. At the present day they are numerous in the valley
-of the Colorado, which is three hundred miles due south of Monte
-Video. It seems probable that this additional migration has
-happened since the time of Azara. The Gallinazo generally
-prefers a humid climate, or rather the neighbourhood of
-fresh water; hence it is extremely abundant in Brazil and
-La Plata, while it is never found on the desert and arid
-plains of Northern Patagonia, excepting near some stream.
-These birds frequent the whole Pampas to the foot of the
-Cordillera, but I never saw or heard of one in Chile; in Peru
-they are preserved as scavengers. These vultures certainly
-may be called gregarious, for they seem to have pleasure in
-society, and are not solely brought together by the attraction
-of a common prey. On a fine day a flock may often be
-observed at a great height, each bird wheeling round and
-round without closing its wings, in the most graceful
-evolutions. This is clearly performed for the mere pleasure of
-the exercise, or perhaps is connected with their matrimonial
-alliances.
-
-I have now mentioned all the carrion-feeders, excepting
-the condor, an account of which will be more appropriately
-introduced when we visit a country more congenial to its
-habits than the plains of La Plata.
-
-
-In a broad band of sand-hillocks which separate the
-Laguna del Potrero from the shores of the Plata, at the
-distance of a few miles from Maldonado, I found a group of
-those vitrified, siliceous tubes, which are formed by lightning
-entering loose sand. These tubes resemble in every particular
-those from Drigg in Cumberland, described in the
-Geological Transactions. [10] The sand-hillocks of Maldonado
-not being protected by vegetation, are constantly changing
-their position. From this cause the tubes projected above
-the surface, and numerous fragments lying near, showed
-that they had formerly been buried to a greater depth. Four
-sets entered the sand perpendicularly: by working with
-my hands I traced one of them two feet deep; and some
-fragments which evidently had belonged to the same tube,
-when added to the other part, measured five feet three
-inches. The diameter of the whole tube was nearly equal,
-and therefore we must suppose that originally it extended to
-a much greater depth. These dimensions are however small,
-compared to those of the tubes from Drigg, one of which
-was traced to a depth of not less than thirty feet.
-
-The internal surface is completely vitrified, glossy, and
-smooth. A small fragment examined under the microscope
-appeared, from the number of minute entangled air or perhaps
-steam bubbles, like an assay fused before the blowpipe.
-The sand is entirely, or in greater part, siliceous; but some
-points are of a black colour, and from their glossy surface
-possess a metallic lustre. The thickness of the wall of the
-tube varies from a thirtieth to a twentieth of an inch, and
-occasionally even equals a tenth. On the outside the grains
-of sand are rounded, and have a slightly glazed appearance:
-I could not distinguish any signs of crystallization. In a
-similar manner to that described in the Geological Transactions,
-the tubes are generally compressed, and have deep
-longitudinal furrows, so as closely to resemble a shrivelled
-vegetable stalk, or the bark of the elm or cork tree. Their
-circumference is about two inches, but in some fragments,
-which are cylindrical and without any furrows, it is as much
-as four inches. The compression from the surrounding loose
-sand, acting while the tube was still softened from the
-effects of the intense heat, has evidently caused the creases
-or furrows. Judging from the uncompressed fragments, the
-measure or bore of the lightning (if such a term may be used)
-must have been about one inch and a quarter. At Paris, M.
-Hachette and M. Beudant [11] succeeded in making tubes, in
-most respects similar to these fulgurites, by passing very
-strong shocks of galvanism through finely-powdered glass:
-when salt was added, so as to increase its fusibility, the tubes
-were larger in every dimension, They failed both with
-powdered felspar and quartz. One tube, formed with
-pounded glass, was very nearly an inch long, namely .982,
-and had an internal diameter of .019 of an inch. When we
-hear that the strongest battery in Paris was used, and that
-its power on a substance of such easy fusibility as glass was
-to form tubes so diminutive, we must feel greatly astonished
-at the force of a shock of lightning, which, striking the sand
-in several places, has formed cylinders, in one instance of at
-least thirty feet long, and having an internal bore, where not
-compressed, of full an inch and a half; and this in a material
-so extraordinarily refractory as quartz!
-
-The tubes, as I have already remarked, enter the sand
-nearly in a vertical direction. One, however, which was less
-regular than the others, deviated from a right line, at the
-most considerable bend, to the amount of thirty-three degrees.
-From this same tube, two small branches, about a
-foot apart, were sent off; one pointed downwards, and the
-other upwards. This latter case is remarkable, as the electric
-fluid must have turned back at the acute angle of 26 degs.,
-to the line of its main course. Besides the four tubes which
-I found vertical, and traced beneath the surface, there were
-several other groups of fragments, the original sites of which
-without doubt were near. All occurred in a level area of
-shifting sand, sixty yards by twenty, situated among some
-high sand-hillocks, and at the distance of about half a mile
-from a chain of hills four or five hundred feet in height. The
-most remarkable circumstance, as it appears to me, in this
-case as well as in that of Drigg, and in one described by
-M. Ribbentrop in Germany, is the number of tubes found
-within such limited spaces. At Drigg, within an area of
-fifteen yards, three were observed, and the same number
-occurred in Germany. In the case which I have described,
-certainly more than four existed within the space of the
-sixty by twenty yards. As it does not appear probable that
-the tubes are produced by successive distinct shocks, we must
-believe that the lightning, shortly before entering the ground,
-divides itself into separate branches.
-
-The neighbourhood of the Rio Plata seems peculiarly subject
-to electric phenomena. In the year 1793, [12] one of the
-most destructive thunderstorms perhaps on record happened
-at Buenos Ayres: thirty-seven places within the city were
-struck by lightning, and nineteen people killed. From facts
-stated in several books of travels, I am inclined to suspect
-that thunderstorms are very common near the mouths of
-great rivers. Is it not possible that the mixture of large
-bodies of fresh and salt water may disturb the electrical
-equilibrium? Even during our occasional visits to this part
-of South America, we heard of a ship, two churches, and a
-house having been struck. Both the church and the house
-I saw shortly afterwards: the house belonged to Mr. Hood,
-the consul-general at Monte Video. Some of the effects were
-curious: the paper, for nearly a foot on each side of the line
-where the bell-wires had run, was blackened. The metal had
-been fused, and although the room was about fifteen feet
-high, the globules, dropping on the chairs and furniture, had
-drilled in them a chain of minute holes. A part of the wall
-was shattered, as if by gunpowder, and the fragments had
-been blown off with force sufficient to dent the wall on the
-opposite side of the room. The frame of a looking-glass was
-blackened, and the gilding must have been volatilized, for a
-smelling-bottle, which stood on the chimney-piece, was coated
-with bright metallic particles, which adhered as firmly as
-if they had been enamelled.
-
-[1] Hearne's Journey, p. 383.
-
-[2] Maclaren, art. "America," Encyclop. Brittann.
-
-[3] Azara says, "Je crois que la quantite annuelle des pluies
-est, dans toutes ces contrees, plus considerable qu'en Espagne."
--- Vol. i. p. 36.
-
-[4] In South America I collected altogether twenty-seven
-species of mice, and thirteen more are known from the works
-of Azara and other authors. Those collected by myself have
-been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse at the meetings
-of the Zoological Society. I must be allowed to take this
-opportunity of returning my cordial thanks to Mr. Waterhouse,
-and to the other gentleman attached to that Society, for their
-kind and most liberal assistance on all occasions.
-
-[5] In the stomach and duodenum of a capybara which I opened
-I found a very large quantity of a thin yellowish fluid,
-in which scarcely a fibre could be distinguished. Mr. Owen
-informs me that a part of the oesophagus is so constructed
-that nothing much larger than a crowquill can be passed down.
-Certainly the broad teeth and strong jaws of this animal are
-well fitted to grind into pulp the aquatic plants on which it
-feeds.
-
-[6] At the R. Negro, in Northern Patagonia, there is an animal
-of the same habits, and probably a closely allied species, but
-which I never saw. Its noise is different from that of the
-Maldonado kind; it is repeated only twice instead of three or
-four times, and is more distinct and sonorous; when heard from
-a distance it so closely resembles the sound made in cutting
-down a small tree with an axe, that I have sometimes remained
-in doubt concerning it.
-
-[7] Philosoph. Zoolog., tom. i. p. 242.
-
-[8] Magazine of Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 217.
-
-[9] Read before the Academy of Sciences in Paris. L'Institut,
-1834, p. 418.
-
-[10] Geolog. Transact. vol. ii. p. 528. In the Philosoph.
-Transact. (1790, p. 294) Dr. Priestly has described some
-imperfect siliceous tubes and a melted pebble of quartz,
-found in digging into the ground, under a tree, where a man
-had been killed by lightning.
-
-[11] Annals de Chimie et de Physique, tom. xxxvii. p. 319.
-
-[12] Azara's Voyage, vol. i. p. 36.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV
-
-RIO NEGRO TO BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Rio Negro -- Estancias attacked by the Indians -- Salt-Lakes --
-Flamingoes -- R. Negro to R. Colorado -- Sacred Tree --
-Patagonian Hare -- Indian Families -- General Rosas --
-Proceed to Bahia Blanca -- Sand Dunes -- Negro Lieutenant --
-Bahia Blanca -- Saline Incrustations -- Punta Alta -- Zorillo.
-
-
-JULY 24th, 1833. -- The Beagle sailed from Maldonado,
-and on August the 3rd she arrived off the mouth of the
-Rio Negro. This is the principal river on the whole line
-of coast between the Strait of Magellan and the Plata. It
-enters the sea about three hundred miles south of the estuary
-of the Plata. About fifty years ago, under the old Spanish
-government, a small colony was established here; and it is
-still the most southern position (lat. 41 degs.) on this
-eastern coast of America inhabited by civilized man.
-
-The country near the mouth of the river is wretched in
-the extreme: on the south side a long line of perpendicular
-cliffs commences, which exposes a section of the geological
-nature of the country. The strata are of sandstone, and
-one layer was remarkable from being composed of a firmly-
-cemented conglomerate of pumice pebbles, which must have
-travelled more than four hundred miles, from the Andes.
-The surface is everywhere covered up by a thick bed of
-gravel, which extends far and wide over the open plain.
-Water is extremely scarce, and, where found, is almost
-invariably brackish. The vegetation is scanty; and although
-there are bushes of many kinds, all are armed with formidable
-thorns, which seem to warn the stranger not to enter on
-these inhospitable regions.
-
-The settlement is situated eighteen miles up the river.
-The road follows the foot of the sloping cliff, which forms
-the northern boundary of the great valley, in which the Rio
-Negro flows. On the way we passed the ruins of some fine
-"estancias," which a few years since had been destroyed by
-the Indians. They withstood several attacks. A man present
-at one gave me a very lively description of what took place.
-The inhabitants had sufficient notice to drive all the cattle
-and horses into the "corral" [1] which surrounded the house,
-and likewise to mount some small cannon. The Indians were
-Araucanians from the south of Chile; several hundreds in
-number, and highly disciplined. They first appeared in two
-bodies on a neighbouring hill; having there dismounted, and
-taken off their fur mantles, they advanced naked to the
-charge. The only weapon of an Indian is a very long bamboo
-or chuzo, ornamented with ostrich feathers, and pointed
-by a sharp spearhead. My informer seemed to remember
-with the greatest horror the quivering of these chuzos as they
-approached near. When close, the cacique Pincheira hailed
-the besieged to give up their arms, or he would cut all their
-throats. As this would probably have been the result of
-their entrance under any circumstances, the answer was
-given by a volley of musketry. The Indians, with great
-steadiness, came to the very fence of the corral: but to their
-surprise they found the posts fastened together by iron nails
-instead of leather thongs, and, of course, in vain attempted
-to cut them with their knives. This saved the lives of the
-Christians: many of the wounded Indians were carried away
-by their companions, and at last, one of the under caciques
-being wounded, the bugle sounded a retreat. They retired to
-their horses, and seemed to hold a council of war. This was
-an awful pause for the Spaniards, as all their ammunition,
-with the exception of a few cartridges, was expended. In
-an instant the Indians mounted their horses, and galloped
-out of sight. Another attack was still more quickly repulsed.
-A cool Frenchman managed the gun; he stopped till the
-Indians approached close, and then raked their line with
-grape-shot: he thus laid thirty-nine of them on the ground;
-and, of course, such a blow immediately routed the whole
-party.
-
-The town is indifferently called El Carmen or Patagones.
-It is built on the face of a cliff which fronts the river, and
-many of the houses are excavated even in the sandstone.
-The river is about two or three hundred yards wide, and is
-deep and rapid. The many islands, with their willow-trees,
-and the flat headlands, seen one behind the other on the
-northern boundary of the broad green valley, form, by the
-aid of a bright sun, a view almost picturesque. The number
-of inhabitants does not exceed a few hundreds. These Spanish
-colonies do not, like our British ones, carry within themselves
-the elements of growth. Many Indians of pure blood
-reside here: the tribe of the Cacique Lucanee constantly have
-their Toldos [2] on the outskirts of the town. The local
-government partly supplies them with provisions, by giving them
-all the old worn-out horses, and they earn a little by making
-horse-rugs and other articles of riding-gear. These Indians
-are considered civilized; but what their character may have
-gained by a lesser degree of ferocity, is almost counterbalanced
-by their entire immorality. Some of the younger men
-are, however, improving; they are willing to labour, and a
-short time since a party went on a sealing-voyage, and behaved
-very well. They were now enjoying the fruits of their
-labour, by being dressed in very gay, clean clothes, and by
-being very idle. The taste they showed in their dress was
-admirable; if you could have turned one of these young
-Indians into a statue of bronze, his drapery would have been
-perfectly graceful.
-
-One day I rode to a large salt-lake, or Salina, which is
-distant fifteen miles from the town. During the winter it
-consists of a shallow lake of brine, which in summer is
-converted into a field of snow-white salt. The layer near the
-margin is from four to five inches thick, but towards the
-centre its thickness increases. This lake was two and a half
-miles long, and one broad. Others occur in the neighbourhood
-many times larger, and with a floor of salt, two and
-three feet in thickness, even when under water during the
-winter. One of these brilliantly white and level expanses
-in the midst of the brown and desolate plain, offers an
-extraordinary spectacle. A large quantity of salt is annually
-drawn from the salina: and great piles, some hundred
-tons in weight, were lying ready for exportation. The season
-for working the salinas forms the harvest of Patagones; for
-on it the prosperity of the place depends. Nearly the whole
-population encamps on the bank of the river, and the people
-are employed in drawing out the salt in bullock-waggons,
-This salt is crystallized in great cubes, and is remarkably
-pure: Mr. Trenham Reeks has kindly analyzed some for me,
-and he finds in it only 0.26 of gypsum and 0.22 of earthy
-matter. It is a singular fact, that it does not serve so well
-for preserving meat as sea-salt from the Cape de Verd
-islands; and a merchant at Buenos Ayres told me that he
-considered it as fifty per cent. less valuable. Hence the
-Cape de Verd salt is constantly imported, and is mixed with
-that from these salinas. The purity of the Patagonian salt,
-or absence from it of those other saline bodies found in all
-sea-water, is the only assignable cause for this inferiority:
-a conclusion which no one, I think, would have suspected,
-but which is supported by the fact lately ascertained, [3]
-that those salts answer best for preserving cheese which
-contain most of the deliquescent chlorides.
-
-The border of this lake is formed of mud: and in this
-numerous large crystals of gypsum, some of which are three
-inches long, lie embedded; whilst on the surface others of
-sulphate of soda lie scattered about. The Gauchos call the
-former the "Padre del sal," and the latter the "Madre;"
-they state that these progenitive salts always occur on the
-borders of the salinas, when the water begins to evaporate.
-The mud is black, and has a fetid odour. I could not at first
-imagine the cause of this, but I afterwards perceived that the
-froth which the wind drifted on shore was coloured green,
-as if by confervae; I attempted to carry home some of this
-green matter, but from an accident failed. Parts of the lake
-seen from a short distance appeared of a reddish colour, and
-this perhaps was owing to some infusorial animalcula. The
-mud in many places was thrown up by numbers of some kind
-of worm, or annelidous animal. How surprising it is that
-any creatures should be able to exist in brine, and that they
-should be crawling among crystals of sulphate of soda and
-lime! And what becomes of these worms when, during the
-long summer, the surface is hardened into a solid layer of
-salt? Flamingoes in considerable numbers inhabit this lake,
-and breed here, throughout Patagonia, in Northern Chile,
-and at the Galapagos Islands, I met with these birds wherever
-there were lakes of brine. I saw them here wading
-about in search of food -- probably for the worms which burrow
-in the mud; and these latter probably feed on infusoria or
-confervae. Thus we have a little living world within itself
-adapted to these inland lakes of brine. A minute crustaceous
-animal (Cancer salinus) is said [4] to live in countless numbers
-in the brine-pans at Lymington: but only in those in which
-the fluid has attained, from evaporation, considerable
-strength -- namely, about a quarter of a pound of salt to a
-pint of water. Well may we affirm that every part of the
-world is habitable! Whether lakes of brine, or those
-subterranean ones hidden beneath volcanic mountains -- warm
-mineral springs -- the wide expanse and depths of the ocean
- -- the upper regions of the atmosphere, and even the surface
-of perpetual snow -- all support organic beings.
-
-
-To the northward of the Rio Negro, between it and the
-inhabited country near Buenos Ayres, the Spaniards have
-only one small settlement, recently established at Bahia
-Blanca. The distance in a straight line to Buenos Ayres is
-very nearly five hundred British miles. The wandering
-tribes of horse Indians, which have always occupied the
-greater part of this country, having of late much harassed
-the outlying estancias, the government at Buenos Ayres
-equipped some time since an army under the command of
-General Rosas for the purpose of exterminating them. The
-troops were now encamped on the banks of the Colorado;
-a river lying about eighty miles northward of the Rio Negro
-When General Rosas left Buenos Ayres he struck in a direct
-line across the unexplored plains: and as the country was
-thus pretty well cleared of Indians, he left behind him, at
-wide intervals, a small party of soldiers with a troop of
-horses (a posta), so as to be enabled to keep up a communication
-with the capital. As the Beagle intended to call at
-Bahia Blanca, I determined to proceed there by land; and
-ultimately I extended my plan to travel the whole way by
-the postas to Buenos Ayres.
-
-August 11th. -- Mr. Harris, an Englishman residing at
-Patagones, a guide, and five Gauchos who were proceeding
-to the army on business, were my companions on the journey.
-The Colorado, as I have already said, is nearly eighty
-miles distant: and as we travelled slowly, we were two days
-and a half on the road. The whole line of country deserves
-scarcely a better name than that of a desert. Water is found
-only in two small wells; it is called fresh; but even at this
-time of the year, during the rainy season, it was quite brackish.
-In the summer this must be a distressing passage; for
-now it was sufficiently desolate. The valley of the Rio
-Negro, broad as it is, has merely been excavated out of the
-sandstone plain; for immediately above the bank on which
-the town stands, a level country commences, which is interrupted
-only by a few trifling valleys and depressions. Everywhere
-the landscape wears the same sterile aspect; a dry
-gravelly soil supports tufts of brown withered grass, and
-low scattered bushes, armed with thorns.
-
-Shortly after passing the first spring we came in sight of
-a famous tree, which the Indians reverence as the altar of
-Walleechu. It is situated on a high part of the plain; and
-hence is a landmark visible at a great distance. As soon as a
-tribe of Indians come in sight of it, they offer their adorations
-by loud shouts. The tree itself is low, much branched,
-and thorny: just above the root it has a diameter of about
-three feet. It stands by itself without any neighbour, and
-was indeed the first tree we saw; afterwards we met with a
-few others of the same kind, but they were far from common.
-Being winter the tree had no leaves, but in their place
-numberless threads, by which the various offerings, such as
-cigars, bread, meat, pieces of cloth, etc., had been suspended.
-Poor Indians, not having anything better, only pull a thread
-out of their ponchos, and fasten it to the tree. Richer
-Indians are accustomed to pour spirits and mate into a certain
-hole, and likewise to smoke upwards, thinking thus to
-afford all possible gratification to Walleechu. To complete
-the scene, the tree was surrounded by the bleached bones
-of horses which had been slaughtered as sacrifices. All
-Indians of every age and sex make their offerings; they then
-think that their horses will not tire, and that they themselves
-shall be prosperous. The Gaucho who told me this, said that
-in the time of peace he had witnessed this scene, and that
-he and others used to wait till the Indians had passed by, for
-the sake of stealing from Walleechu the offerings.
-
-The Gauchos think that the Indians consider the tree as
-the god itself, but it seems for more probable that they
-regard it as the altar. The only cause which I can imagine
-for this choice, is its being a landmark in a dangerous passage.
-The Sierra de la Ventana is visible at an immense
-distance; and a Gaucho told me that he was once riding with
-an Indian a few miles to the north of the Rio Colorado
-when the Indian commenced making the same loud noise
-which is usual at the first sight of the distant tree, putting
-his hand to his head, and then pointing in the direction of the
-Sierra. Upon being asked the reason of this, the Indian said
-in broken Spanish, "First see the Sierra." About two
-leagues beyond this curious tree we halted for the night: at
-this instant an unfortunate cow was spied by the lynx-eyed
-Gauchos, who set off in full chase, and in a few minutes
-dragged her in with their lazos, and slaughtered her. We
-here had the four necessaries of life "en el campo," -- pasture
-for the horses, water (only a muddy puddle), meat and
-firewood. The Gauchos were in high spirits at finding all
-these luxuries; and we soon set to work at the poor cow. This
-was the first night which I passed under the open sky, with
-the gear of the recado for my bed. There is high enjoyment
-in the independence of the Gaucho life -- to be able at any
-moment to pull up your horse, and say, "Here we will pass
-the night." The death-like stillness of the plain, the dogs
-keeping watch, the gipsy-group of Gauchos making their
-beds round the fire, have left in my mind a strongly-marked
-picture of this first night, which will never be forgotten.
-
-The next day the country continued similar to that above
-described. It is inhabited by few birds or animals of any
-kind. Occasionally a deer, or a Guanaco (wild Llama) may
-be seen; but the Agouti (Cavia Patagonica) is the commonest
-quadruped. This animal here represents our hares. It
-differs, however, from that genus in many essential respects;
-for instance, it has only three toes behind. It is also nearly
-twice the size, weighing from twenty to twenty-five pounds.
-The Agouti is a true friend of the desert; it is a common
-feature of the landscape to see two or three hopping quickly
-one after the other in a straight line across these wild plains.
-They are found as far north as the Sierra Tapalguen (lat.
-37 degs. 30'), where the plain rather suddenly becomes greener
-and more humid; and their southern limit is between Port
-Desire and St. Julian, where there is no change in the nature
-of the country. It is a singular fact, that although the
-Agouti is not now found as far south as Port St. Julian, yet
-that Captain Wood, in his voyage in 1670, talks of them as
-being numerous there. What cause can have altered, in a
-wide, uninhabited, and rarely-visited country, the range of
-an animal like this? It appears also, from the number shot
-by Captain Wood in one day at Port Desire, that they must
-have been considerably more abundant there formerly than
-at present. Where the Bizcacha lives and makes its burrows,
-the Agouti uses them; but where, as at Bahia Blanca, the
-Bizcacha is not found, the Agouti burrows for itself. The
-same thing occurs with the little owl of the Pampas (Athene
-cunicularia), which has so often been described as standing
-like a sentinel at the mouth of the burrows; for in Banda
-Oriental, owing to the absence of the Bizcacha, it is obliged
-to hollow out its own habitation.
-
-The next morning, as we approached the Rio Colorado,
-the appearance of the country changed; we soon came on a
-plain covered with turf, which, from its flowers, tall clover,
-and little owls, resembled the Pampas. We passed also a
-muddy swamp of considerable extent, which in summer dries,
-and becomes incrusted with various salts; and hence is called
-a salitral. It was covered by low succulent plants, of the
-same kind with those growing on the sea-shore. The Colorado,
-at the pass where we crossed it, is only about sixty
-yards wide; generally it must be nearly double that width.
-Its course is very tortuous, being marked by willow-trees
-and beds of reeds: in a direct line the distance to the mouth
-of the river is said to be nine leagues, but by water
-twenty-five. We were delayed crossing in the canoe by some
-immense troops of mares, which were swimming the river in
-order to follow a division of troops into the interior. A
-more ludicrous spectacle I never beheld than the hundreds
-and hundreds of heads, all directed one way, with pointed
-ears and distended snorting nostrils, appearing just above
-the water like a great shoal of some amphibious animal.
-Mare's flesh is the only food which the soldiers have when
-on an expedition. This gives them a great facility of movement;
-for the distance to which horses can be driven over
-these plains is quite surprising: I have been assured that an
-unloaded horse can travel a hundred miles a day for many
-days successively.
-
-The encampment of General Rosas was close to the river.
-It consisted of a square formed by waggons, artillery, straw
-huts, etc. The soldiers were nearly all cavalry; and I should
-think such a villainous, banditti-like army was never before
-collected together. The greater number of men were of a
-mixed breed, between Negro, Indian, and Spaniard. I know
-not the reason, but men of such origin seldom have a good
-expression of countenance. I called on the Secretary to show
-my passport. He began to cross-question me in the most
-dignified and mysterious manner. By good luck I had a
-letter of recommendation from the government of Buenos
-Ayres [5] to the commandant of Patagones. This was taken
-to General Rosas, who sent me a very obliging message; and
-the Secretary returned all smiles and graciousness. We took
-up our residence in the _rancho_, or hovel, of a curious old
-Spaniard, who had served with Napoleon in the expedition
-against Russia.
-
-We stayed two days at the Colorado; I had little to do,
-for the surrounding country was a swamp, which in summer
-(December), when the snow melts on the Cordillera, is over-
-flowed by the river. My chief amusement was watching the
-Indian families as they came to buy little articles at the
-rancho where we stayed. It was supposed that General
-Rosas had about six hundred Indian allies. The men were
-a tall, fine race, yet it was afterwards easy to see in the
-Fuegian savage the same countenance rendered hideous by
-cold, want of food, and less civilization. Some authors,
-in defining the primary races of mankind, have separated
-these Indians into two classes; but this is certainly
-incorrect. Among the young women or chinas, some deserve to
-be called even beautiful. Their hair was coarse, but bright
-and black; and they wore it in two plaits hanging down
-to the waist. They had a high colour, and eyes that
-glistened with brilliancy; their legs, feet, and arms were
-small and elegantly formed; their ankles, and sometimes
-their wrists, were ornamented by broad bracelets of blue
-beads. Nothing could be more interesting than some of the
-family groups. A mother with one or two daughters would
-often come to our rancho, mounted on the same horse. They
-ride like men, but with their knees tucked up much higher.
-This habit, perhaps, arises from their being accustomed,
-when travelling, to ride the loaded horses. The duty of the
-women is to load and unload the horses; to make the tents
-for the night; in short to be, like the wives of all savages,
-useful slaves. The men fight, hunt, take care of the horses,
-and make the riding gear. One of their chief indoor occupations
-is to knock two stones together till they become round,
-in order to make the bolas. With this important weapon the
-Indian catches his game, and also his horse, which roams
-free over the plain. In fighting, his first attempt is to throw
-down the horse of his adversary with the bolas, and when
-entangled by the fall to kill him with the chuzo. If the balls
-only catch the neck or body of an animal, they are often
-carried away and lost. As the making the stones round is
-the labour of two days, the manufacture of the balls is a
-very common employment. Several of the men and women
-had their faces painted red, but I never saw the horizontal
-bands which are so common among the Fuegians. Their
-chief pride consists in having everything made of silver; I
-have seen a cacique with his spurs, stirrups, handle of his
-knife, and bridle made of this metal: the head-stall and reins
-being of wire, were not thicker than whipcord; and to see a
-fiery steed wheeling about under the command of so light
-a chain, gave to the horsemanship a remarkable character of
-elegance.
-
-General Rosas intimated a wish to see me; a circumstance
-which I was afterwards very glad of. He is a man of an
-extraordinary character, and has a most predominant influence
-in the country, which it seems he will use to its prosperity
-and advancement. [6] He is said to be the owner of
-seventy-four square leagues of land, and to have about three
-hundred thousand head of cattle. His estates are admirably
-managed, and are far more productive of corn than those of
-others. He first gained his celebrity by his laws for his own
-estancias, and by disciplining several hundred men, so as to
-resist with success the attacks of the Indians. There are
-many stories current about the rigid manner in which his
-laws were enforced. One of these was, that no man, on
-penalty of being put into the stocks, should carry his knife
-on a Sunday: this being the principal day for gambling and
-drinking, many quarrels arose, which from the general manner
-of fighting with the knife often proved fatal. One
-Sunday the Governor came in great form to pay the estancia
-a visit, and General Rosas, in his hurry, walked out to receive
-him with his knife, as usual, stuck in his belt. The steward
-touched his arm, and reminded him of the law; upon which
-turning to the Governor, he said he was extremely sorry, but
-that he must go into the stocks, and that till let out, he
-possessed no power even in his own house. After a little time
-the steward was persuaded to open the stocks, and to let
-him out, but no sooner was this done, than he turned to the
-steward and said, "You now have broken the laws, so you
-must take my place in the stocks." Such actions as these
-delighted the Gauchos, who all possess high notions of their
-own equality and dignity.
-
-General Rosas is also a perfect horseman -- an accomplishment
-of no small consequence In a country where an assembled
-army elected its general by the following trial: A troop
-of unbroken horses being driven into a corral, were let out
-through a gateway, above which was a cross-bar: it was
-agreed whoever should drop from the bar on one of these
-wild animals, as it rushed out, and should be able, without
-saddle or bridle, not only to ride it, but also to bring it back
-to the door of the corral, should be their general. The person
-who succeeded was accordingly elected; and doubtless
-made a fit general for such an army. This extraordinary
-feat has also been performed by Rosas.
-
-By these means, and by conforming to the dress and habits
-of the Gauchos, he has obtained an unbounded popularity in
-the country, and in consequence a despotic power. I was
-assured by an English merchant, that a man who had murdered
-another, when arrested and questioned concerning his
-motive, answered, "He spoke disrespectfully of General
-Rosas, so I killed him." At the end of a week the murderer
-was at liberty. This doubtless was the act of the general's
-party, and not of the general himself.
-
-In conversation he is enthusiastic, sensible, and very
-grave. His gravity is carried to a high pitch: I heard one
-of his mad buffoons (for he keeps two, like the barons of
-old) relate the following anecdote. "I wanted very much to
-hear a certain piece of music, so I went to the general two
-or three times to ask him; he said to me, 'Go about your
-business, for I am engaged.' I went a second time; he said,
-'If you come again I will punish you.' A third time I
-asked, and he laughed. I rushed out of the tent, but it was
-too late -- he ordered two soldiers to catch and stake me. I
-begged by all the saints in heaven he would let me off; but it
-would not do, -- when the general laughs he spares neither
-mad man nor sound." The poor flighty gentleman looked quite
-dolorous, at the very recollection of the staking. This is a
-very severe punishment; four posts are driven into the
-ground, and the man is extended by his arms and legs
-horizontally, and there left to stretch for several hours.
-The idea is evidently taken from the usual method of drying
-hides. My interview passed away, without a smile, and I
-obtained a passport and order for the government post-horses,
-and this he gave me in the most obliging and ready
-manner.
-
-In the morning we started for Bahia Blanca, which we
-reached in two days. Leaving the regular encampment, we
-passed by the toldos of the Indians. These are round like
-ovens, and covered with hides; by the mouth of each, a tapering
-chuzo was stuck in the ground. The toldos were divided
-into separate groups, which belong to the different caciques'
-tribes, and the groups were again divided into smaller ones,
-according to the relationship of the owners. For several
-miles we travelled along the valley of the Colorado. The
-alluvial plains on the side appeared fertile, and it is supposed
-that they are well adapted to the growth of corn. Turning
-northward from the river, we soon entered on a country, differing
-from the plains south of the river. The land still continued
-dry and sterile: but it supported many different kinds
-of plants, and the grass, though brown and withered, was
-more abundant, as the thorny bushes were less so. These
-latter in a short space entirely disappeared, and the plains
-were left without a thicket to cover their nakedness. This
-change in the vegetation marks the commencement of the
-grand calcareo argillaceous deposit, which forms the wide
-extent of the Pampas, and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental. From the Strait of Magellan to the Colorado, a
-distance of about eight hundred miles, the face of the country
-is everywhere composed of shingle: the pebbles are
-chiefly of porphyry, and probably owe their origin to the
-rocks of the Cordillera. North of the Colorado this bed
-thins out, and the pebbles become exceedingly small, and
-here the characteristic vegetation of Patagonia ceases.
-
-Having ridden about twenty-five miles, we came to a
-broad belt of sand-dunes, which stretches, as far as the eye
-can reach, to the east and west. The sand-hillocks resting
-on the clay, allow small pools of water to collect, and thus
-afford in this dry country an invaluable supply of fresh
-water. The great advantage arising from depressions and
-elevations of the soil, is not often brought home to the mind.
-The two miserable springs in the long passage between the
-Rio Negro and Colorado were caused by trifling inequalities
-in the plain, without them not a drop of water would have
-been found. The belt of sand-dunes is about eight miles
-wide; at some former period, it probably formed the margin
-of a grand estuary, where the Colorado now flows. In this
-district, where absolute proofs of the recent elevation of
-the land occur, such speculations can hardly be neglected by
-any one, although merely considering the physical geography
-of the country. Having crossed the sandy tract, we arrived
-in the evening at one of the post-houses; and, as the fresh
-horses were grazing at a distance we determined to pass
-the night there.
-
-The house was situated at the base of a ridge between
-one and two hundred feet high -- a most remarkable feature
-in this country. This posta was commanded by a negro
-lieutenant, born in Africa: to his credit be it said, there
-was not a ranche between the Colorado and Buenos Ayres in
-nearly such neat order as his. He had a little room for
-strangers, and a small corral for the horses, all made of
-sticks and reeds; he had also dug a ditch round his house
-as a defence in case of being attacked. This would, however,
-have been of little avail, if the Indians had come; but
-his chief comfort seemed to rest in the thought of selling
-his life dearly. A short time before, a body of Indians had
-travelled past in the night; if they had been aware of the
-posta, our black friend and his four soldiers would assuredly
-have been slaughtered. I did not anywhere meet a more
-civil and obliging man than this negro; it was therefore
-the more painful to see that he would not sit down and eat
-with us.
-
-In the morning we sent for the horses very early, and
-started for another exhilarating gallop. We passed the
-Cabeza del Buey, an old name given to the head of a large
-marsh, which extends from Bahia Blanca. Here we changed
-horses, and passed through some leagues of swamps and
-saline marshes. Changing horses for the last time, we again
-began wading through the mud. My animal fell and I was
-well soused in black mire -- a very disagreeable accident
-when one does not possess a change of clothes. Some miles
-from the fort we met a man, who told us that a great gun
-had been fired, which is a signal that Indians are near. We
-immediately left the road, and followed the edge of a marsh,
-which when chased offers the best mode of escape. We
-were glad to arrive within the walls, when we found all the
-alarm was about nothing, for the Indians turned out to be
-friendly ones, who wished to join General Rosas.
-
-Bahia Blanca scarcely deserves the name of a village. A
-few houses and the barracks for the troops are enclosed by
-a deep ditch and fortified wall. The settlement is only of
-recent standing (since 1828); and its growth has been one of
-trouble. The government of Buenos Ayres unjustly occupied
-it by force, instead of following the wise example of the
-Spanish Viceroys, who purchased the land near the older
-settlement of the Rio Negro, from the Indians. Hence the
-need of the fortifications; hence the few houses and little
-cultivated land without the limits of the walls; even the
-cattle are not safe from the attacks of the Indians beyond
-the boundaries of the plain, on which the fortress stands.
-
-The part of the harbour where the Beagle intended to
-anchor being distant twenty-five miles, I obtained from the
-Commandant a guide and horses, to take me to see whether
-she had arrived. Leaving the plain of green turf, which
-extended along the course of a little brook, we soon entered
-on a wide level waste consisting either of sand, saline
-marshes, or bare mud. Some parts were clothed by low
-thickets, and others with those succulent plants, which
-luxuriate only where salt abounds. Bad as the country was,
-ostriches, deer, agoutis, and armadilloes, were abundant. My
-guide told me, that two months before he had a most narrow
-escape of his life: he was out hunting with two other men,
-at no great distance from this part of the country, when they
-were suddenly met by a party of Indians, who giving chase,
-soon overtook and killed his two friends. His own horse's
-legs were also caught by the bolas, but he jumped off, and
-with his knife cut them free: while doing this he was obliged
-to dodge round his horse, and received two severe wounds
-from their chuzos. Springing on the saddle, he managed, by
-a most wonderful exertion, just to keep ahead of the long
-spears of his pursuers, who followed him to within sight of
-the fort. From that time there was an order that no one
-should stray far from the settlement. I did not know of this
-when I started, and was surprised to observe how earnestly
-my guide watched a deer, which appeared to have been
-frightened from a distant quarter.
-
-We found the Beagle had not arrived, and consequently
-set out on our return, but the horses soon tiring, we were
-obliged to bivouac on the plain. In the morning we had
-caught an armadillo, which although a most excellent dish
-when roasted in its shell, did not make a very substantial
-breakfast and dinner for two hungry men. The ground at
-the place where we stopped for the night, was incrusted with
-a layer of sulphate of soda, and hence, of course, was without
-water. Yet many of the smaller rodents managed to
-exist even here, and the tucutuco was making its odd little
-grunt beneath my head, during half the night. Our horses
-were very poor ones, and in the morning they were soon
-exhausted from not having had anything to drink, so that
-we were obliged to walk. About noon the dogs killed a kid,
-which we roasted. I ate some of it, but it made me intolerably
-thirsty. This was the more distressing as the road,
-from some recent rain, was full of little puddles of clear
-water, yet not a drop was drinkable. I had scarcely been
-twenty hours without water, and only part of the time under
-a hot sun, yet the thirst rendered me very weak. How people
-survive two or three days under such circumstances, I cannot
-imagine: at the same time, I must confess that my guide did
-not suffer at all, and was astonished that one day's
-deprivation should be so troublesome to me.
-
-I have several times alluded to the surface of the ground
-being incrusted with salt. This phenomenon is quite
-different from that of the salinas, and more extraordinary.
-In many parts of South America, wherever the climate is
-moderately dry, these incrustations occur; but I have nowhere
-seen them so abundant as near Bahia Blanca. The salt here,
-and in other parts of Patagonia, consists chiefly of sulphate
-of soda with some common salt. As long as the ground
-remains moist in the salitrales (as the Spaniards improperly
-call them, mistaking this substance for saltpeter), nothing is
-to be seen but an extensive plain composed of a black, muddy
-soil, supporting scattered tufts of succulent plants. On returning
-through one of these tracts, after a week's hot weather,
-one is surprised to see square miles of the plain white, as if
-from a slight fall of snow, here and there heaped up by the
-wind into little drifts. This latter appearance is chiefly
-caused by the salts being drawn up, during the slow evaporation
-of the moisture, round blades of dead grass, stumps of
-wood, and pieces of broken earth, instead of being crystallized
-at the bottoms of the puddles of water. The salitrales
-occur either on level tracts elevated only a few feet above
-the level of the sea, or on alluvial land bordering rivers.
-M. Parchappe [7] found that the saline incrustation on the plain,
-at the distance of some miles from the sea, consisted chiefly
-of sulphate of soda, with only seven per cent. of common
-salt; whilst nearer to the coast, the common salt increased
-to 37 parts in a hundred. This circumstance would tempt
-one to believe that the sulphate of soda is generated in the
-soil, from the muriate, left on the surface during the slow
-and recent elevation of this dry country. The whole phenomenon
-is well worthy the attention of naturalists. Have
-the succulent, salt-loving plants, which are well known to
-contain much soda, the power of decomposing the muriate?
-Does the black fetid mud, abounding with organic matter,
-yield the sulphur and ultimately the sulphuric acid?
-
-Two days afterwards I again rode to the harbour: when
-not far from our destination, my companion, the same man
-as before, spied three people hunting on horseback. He
-immediately dismounted, and watching them intently, said,
-"They don't ride like Christians, and nobody can leave the
-fort." The three hunters joined company, and likewise
-dismounted from their horses. At last one mounted again
-and rode over the hill out of sight. My companion said,
-"We must now get on our horses: load your pistol;" and he
-looked to his own sword. I asked, "Are they Indians?" --
-"Quien sabe? (who knows?) if there are no more than three,
-it does not signify." It then struck me, that the one man
-had gone over the hill to fetch the rest of his tribe. I
-suggested this; but all the answer I could extort was, "Quien
-sabe?" His head and eye never for a minute ceased scanning
-slowly the distant horizon. I thought his uncommon
-coolness too good a joke, and asked him why he did not
-return home. I was startled when he answered, "We are
-returning, but in a line so as to pass near a swamp, into
-which we can gallop the horses as far as they can go, and
-then trust to our own legs; so that there is no danger." I did
-not feel quite so confident of this, and wanted to increase
-our pace. He said, "No, not until they do." When any
-little inequality concealed us, we galloped; but when in sight,
-continued walking. At last we reached a valley, and turning
-to the left, galloped quickly to the foot of a hill; he gave me
-his horse to hold, made the dogs lie down, and then crawled
-on his hands and knees to reconnoitre. He remained in this
-position for some time, and at last, bursting out in laughter,
-exclaimed, "Mugeres!" (women!). He knew them to be
-the wife and sister-in-law of the major's son, hunting for
-ostrich's eggs. I have described this man's conduct, because
-he acted under the full impression that they were Indians.
-As soon, however, as the absurd mistake was found out, he
-gave me a hundred reasons why they could not have been
-Indians; but all these were forgotten at the time. We then
-rode on in peace and quietness to a low point called Punta
-Alta, whence we could see nearly the whole of the great harbour
-of Bahia Blanca.
-
-The wide expanse of water is choked up by numerous
-great mud-banks, which the inhabitants call Cangrejales, or
-_crabberies_, from the number of small crabs. The mud is so
-soft that it is impossible to walk over them, even for the
-shortest distance. Many of the banks have their surfaces
-covered with long rushes, the tops of which alone are visible
-at high water. On one occasion, when in a boat, we were
-so entangled by these shallows that we could hardly find
-our way. Nothing was visible but the flat beds of mud; the
-day was not very clear, and there was much refraction, or
-as the sailors expressed it, "things loomed high." The only
-object within our view which was not level was the horizon;
-rushes looked like bushes unsupported in the air, and water
-like mud-banks, and mud-banks like water.
-
-We passed the night in Punta Alta, and I employed myself
-in searching for fossil bones; this point being a perfect
-catacomb for monsters of extinct races. The evening was
-perfectly calm and clear; the extreme monotony of the view
-gave it an interest even in the midst of mud-banks and gulls
-sand-hillocks and solitary vultures. In riding back in the
-morning we came across a very fresh track of a Puma, but
-did not succeed in finding it. We saw also a couple of
-Zorillos, or skunks, -- odious animals, which are far from
-uncommon. In general appearance, the Zorillo resembles a
-polecat, but it is rather larger, and much thicker in proportion.
-Conscious of its power, it roams by day about the open
-plain, and fears neither dog nor man. If a dog is urged to
-the attack, its courage is instantly checked by a few drops
-of the fetid oil, which brings on violent sickness and running
-at the nose. Whatever is once polluted by it, is for
-ever useless. Azara says the smell can be perceived at a
-league distant; more than once, when entering the harbour
-of Monte Video, the wind being off shore, we have perceived
-the odour on board the Beagle. Certain it is, that
-every animal most willingly makes room for the Zorillo.
-
-[1] The corral is an enclosure made of tall and strong
-stakes. Every estancia, or farming estate, has one attached
-to it.
-
-[2] The hovels of the Indians are thus called.
-
-[3] Report of the Agricult. Chem. Assoc. in the Agricult.
-Gazette, 1845, p. 93.
-
-[4] Linnaean Trans., vol. xi. p. 205. It is remarkable how
-all the circumstances connected with the salt-lakes in Siberia
-and Patagonia are similar. Siberia, like Patagonia, appears
-to have been recently elevated above the waters of the sea.
-In both countries the salt-lakes occupy shallow depressions
-in the plains; in both the mud on the borders is black and
-fetid; beneath the crust of common salt, sulphate of soda or
-of magnesium occurs, imperfectly crystallized; and in both,
-the muddy sand is mixed with lentils of gypsum. The Siberian
-salt-lakes are inhabited by small crustaceous animals; and
-flamingoes (Edin. New Philos. Jour., Jan 1830) likewise
-frequent them. As these circumstances, apparently so trifling,
-occur in two distant continents, we may feel sure that they
-are the necessary results of a common cause -- See Pallas's
-Travels, 1793 to 1794, pp. 129 - 134.
-
-[5] I am bound to express in the strongest terms, my obligation
-to the government of Buenos Ayres for the obliging manner in
-which passports to all parts of the country were given me, as
-naturalist of the Beagle.
-
-[6] This prophecy has turned out entirely and miserably wrong.
-1845.
-
-[7] Voyage dans l'Amerique Merid. par M. A. d'Orbigny. Part.
-Hist. tom. i. p. 664.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V
-
-BAHIA BLANCA
-
-Bahia Blanca -- Geology -- Numerous gigantic Quadrupeds --
-Recent Extinction -- Longevity of species -- Large Animals
-do not require a luxuriant vegetation -- Southern Africa --
-Siberian Fossils -- Two Species of Ostrich -- Habits of
-Oven-bird -- Armadilloes -- Venomous Snake, Toad, Lizard --
-Hybernation of Animal -- Habits of Sea-Pen -- Indian Wars and
-Massacres -- Arrow-head, antiquarian Relic.
-
-
-The Beagle arrived here on the 24th of August, and a
-week afterwards sailed for the Plata. With Captain
-Fitz Roy's consent I was left behind, to travel by land
-to Buenos Ayres. I will here add some observations, which
-were made during this visit and on a previous occasion, when
-the Beagle was employed in surveying the harbour.
-
-The plain, at the distance of a few miles from the coast,
-belongs to the great Pampean formation, which consists in
-part of a reddish clay, and in part of a highly calcareous
-marly rock. Nearer the coast there are some plains formed
-from the wreck of the upper plain, and from mud, gravel,
-and sand thrown up by the sea during the slow elevation of
-the land, of which elevation we have evidence in upraised
-beds of recent shells, and in rounded pebbles of pumice
-scattered over the country. At Punta Alta we have a section of
-one of these later-formed little plains, which is highly
-interesting from the number and extraordinary character of the
-remains of gigantic land-animals embedded in it. These have
-been fully described by Professor Owen, in the Zoology of the
-voyage of the Beagle, and are deposited in the College of
-Surgeons. I will here give only a brief outline of their nature.
-
-First, parts of three heads and other bones of the Megatherium,
-the huge dimensions of which are expressed by its
-name. Secondly, the Megalonyx, a great allied animal.
-Thirdly, the Scelidotherium, also an allied animal, of which
-I obtained a nearly perfect skeleton. It must have been as
-large as a rhinoceros: in the structure of its head it comes
-according to Mr. Owen, nearest to the Cape Anteater, but
-in some other respects it approaches to the armadilloes.
-Fourthly, the Mylodon Darwinii, a closely related genus of
-little inferior size. Fifthly, another gigantic edental quadruped.
-Sixthly, a large animal, with an osseous coat in compartments,
-very like that of an armadillo. Seventhly, an
-extinct kind of horse, to which I shall have again to refer.
-Eighthly, a tooth of a Pachydermatous animal, probably the
-same with the Macrauchenia, a huge beast with a long neck
-like a camel, which I shall also refer to again. Lastly, the
-Toxodon, perhaps one of the strangest animals ever discovered:
-in size it equalled an elephant or megatherium, but
-the structure of its teeth, as Mr. Owen states, proves
-indisputably that it was intimately related to the Gnawers, the
-order which, at the present day, includes most of the smallest
-quadrupeds: in many details it is allied to the Pachydermata:
-judging from the position of its eyes, ears, and nostrils,
-it was probably aquatic, like the Dugong and Manatee,
-to which it is also allied. How wonderfully are the different
-Orders, at the present time so well separated, blended together
-in different points of the structure of the Toxodon!
-
-The remains of these nine great quadrupeds, and many
-detached bones, were found embedded on the beach, within
-the space of about 200 yards square. It is a remarkable
-circumstance that so many different species should be found
-together; and it proves how numerous in kind the ancient
-inhabitants of this country must have been. At the distance
-of about thirty miles from Punta Alta, in a cliff of red earth,
-I found several fragments of bones, some of large size.
-Among them were the teeth of a gnawer, equalling in size
-and closely resembling those of the Capybara, whose habits
-have been described; and therefore, probably, an aquatic
-animal. There was also part of the head of a Ctenomys; the
-species being different from the Tucutuco, but with a close
-general resemblance. The red earth, like that of the Pampas,
-in which these remains were embedded, contains, according
-to Professor Ehrenberg, eight fresh-water and one salt-water
-infusorial animalcule; therefore, probably, it was an estuary
-deposit.
-
-The remains at Punta Alta were embedded in stratified
-gravel and reddish mud, just such as the sea might now wash
-up on a shallow bank. They were associated with twenty-
-three species of shells, of which thirteen are recent and four
-others very closely related to recent forms. [1] From the bones
-of the Scelidotherium, including even the knee-cap, being
-intombed in their proper relative positions, and from the
-osseous armour of the great armadillo-like animal being so
-well preserved, together with the bones of one of its legs, we
-may feel assured that these remains were fresh and united by
-their ligaments, when deposited in the gravel together with
-the shells. [2] Hence we have good evidence that the above
-enumerated gigantic quadrupeds, more different from those
-of the present day than the oldest of the tertiary quadrupeds
-of Europe, lived whilst the sea was peopled with most
-of its present inhabitants; and we have confirmed that remarkable
-law so often insisted on by Mr. Lyell, namely, that
-the "longevity of the species in the mammalia is upon the
-whole inferior to that of the testacea." [3]
-
-The great size of the bones of the Megatheroid animals,
-including the Megatherium, Megalonyx, Scelidotherium, and
-Mylodon, is truly wonderful. The habits of life of these
-animals were a complete puzzle to naturalists, until Professor
-Owen [4] solved the problem with remarkable ingenuity. The
-teeth indicate, by their simple structure, that these Megatheroid
-animals lived on vegetable food, and probably on the
-leaves and small twigs of trees; their ponderous forms and
-great strong curved claws seem so little adapted for locomotion,
-that some eminent naturalists have actually believed,
-that, like the sloths, to which they are intimately related,
-they subsisted by climbing back downwards on trees, and
-feeding on the leaves. It was a bold, not to say preposterous,
-idea to conceive even antediluvian trees, with branches
-strong enough to bear animals as large as elephants. Professor
-Owen, with far more probability, believes that, instead
-of climbing on the trees, they pulled the branches down to
-them, and tore up the smaller ones by the roots, and so fed on
-the leaves. The colossal breadth and weight of their hinder
-quarters, which can hardly be imagined without having been
-seen, become on this view, of obvious service, instead of
-being an incumbrance: their apparent clumsiness disappears.
-With their great tails and their huge heels firmly fixed like
-a tripod on the ground, they could freely exert the full force
-of their most powerful arms and great claws. Strongly
-rooted, indeed, must that tree have been, which could have
-resisted such force! The Mylodon, moreover, was furnished
-with a long extensile tongue like that of the giraffe, which,
-by one of those beautiful provisions of nature, thus reaches
-with the aid of its long neck its leafy food. I may remark,
-that in Abyssinia the elephant, according to Bruce, when it
-cannot reach with its proboscis the branches, deeply scores
-with its tusks the trunk of the tree, up and down and all
-round, till it is sufficiently weakened to be broken down.
-
-The beds including the above fossil remains, stand only
-from fifteen to twenty feet above the level of high-water;
-and hence the elevation of the land has been small (without
-there has been an intercalated period of subsidence, of which
-we have no evidence) since the great quadrupeds wandered
-over the surrounding plains; and the external features of
-the country must then have been very nearly the same as
-now. What, it may naturally be asked, was the character
-of the vegetation at that period; was the country as wretchedly
-sterile as it now is? As so many of the co-embedded
-shells are the same with those now living in the bay, I was
-at first inclined to think that the former vegetation was
-probably similar to the existing one; but this would have
-been an erroneous inference for some of these same shells
-live on the luxuriant coast of Brazil; and generally, the
-character of the inhabitants of the sea are useless as guides
-to judge of those on the land. Nevertheless, from the following
-considerations, I do not believe that the simple fact
-of many gigantic quadrupeds having lived on the plains
-round Bahia Blanca, is any sure guide that they formerly
-were clothed with a luxuriant vegetation: I have no doubt
-that the sterile country a little southward, near the Rio
-Negro, with its scattered thorny trees, would support many
-and large quadrupeds.
-
-
-That large animals require a luxuriant vegetation, has
-been a general assumption which has passed from one work
-to another; but I do not hesitate to say that it is completely
-false, and that it has vitiated the reasoning of geologists
-on some points of great interest in the ancient history of
-the world. The prejudice has probably been derived from
-India, and the Indian islands, where troops of elephants,
-noble forests, and impenetrable jungles, are associated together
-in every one's mind. If, however, we refer to any
-work of travels through the southern parts of Africa, we
-shall find allusions in almost every page either to the desert
-character of the country, or to the numbers of large animals
-inhabiting it. The same thing is rendered evident
-by the many engravings which have been published of various
-parts of the interior. When the Beagle was at Cape
-Town, I made an excursion of some days' length into the
-country, which at least was sufficient to render that which
-I had read more fully intelligible.
-
-Dr. Andrew Smith, who, at the head of his adventurous
-party, has lately succeeded in passing the Tropic of Capricorn,
-informs me that, taking into consideration the whole
-of the southern part of Africa, there can be no doubt of its
-being a sterile country. On the southern and south-eastern
-coasts there are some fine forests, but with these exceptions,
-the traveller may pass for days together through open plains,
-covered by a poor and scanty vegetation. It is difficult to
-convey any accurate idea of degrees of comparative fertility;
-but it may be safely said that the amount of vegetation
-supported at any one time [5] by Great Britain, exceeds,
-perhaps even tenfold, the quantity on an equal area, in the
-interior parts of Southern Africa. The fact that bullock-
-waggons can travel in any direction, excepting near the
-coast, without more than occasionally half an hour's delay
-in cutting down bushes, gives, perhaps, a more definite notion
-of the scantiness of the vegetation. Now, if we look to the
-animals inhabiting these wide plains, we shall find their
-numbers extraordinarily great, and their bulk immense. We
-must enumerate the elephant, three species of rhinoceros,
-and probably, according to Dr. Smith, two others, the hippopotamus,
-the giraffe, the bos caffer -- as large as a full-grown
-bull, and the elan -- but little less, two zebras, and the
-quaccha, two gnus, and several antelopes even larger than these
-latter animals. It may be supposed that although the species
-are numerous, the individuals of each kind are few.
-By the kindness of Dr. Smith, I am enabled to show that
-the case is very different. He informs me, that in lat. 24 degs.,
-in one day's march with the bullock-waggons, he saw, without
-wandering to any great distance on either side, between
-one hundred and one hundred and fifty rhinoceroses, which
-belonged to three species: the same day he saw several herds
-of giraffes, amounting together to nearly a hundred; and
-that although no elephant was observed, yet they are found
-in this district. At the distance of a little more than one
-hour's march from their place of encampment on the previous
-night, his party actually killed at one spot eight
-hippopotamuses, and saw many more. In this same river there
-were likewise crocodiles. Of course it was a case quite
-extraordinary, to see so many great animals crowded together,
-but it evidently proves that they must exist in great numbers.
-Dr. Smith describes the country passed through that
-day, as "being thinly covered with grass, and bushes about
-four feet high, and still more thinly with mimosa-trees."
-The waggons were not prevented travelling in a nearly
-straight line.
-
-Besides these large animals, every one the least acquainted
-with the natural history of the Cape, has read of
-the herds of antelopes, which can be compared only with the
-flocks of migratory birds. The numbers indeed of the lion,
-panther, and hyaena, and the multitude of birds of prey,
-plainly speak of the abundance of the smaller quadrupeds:
-one evening seven lions were counted at the same time prowling
-round Dr. Smith's encampment. As this able naturalist
-remarked to me, the carnage each day in Southern Africa
-must indeed be terrific! I confess it is truly surprising how
-such a number of animals can find support in a country
-producing so little food. The larger quadrupeds no doubt
-roam over wide tracts in search of it; and their food chiefly
-consists of underwood, which probably contains much nutriment
-in a small bulk. Dr. Smith also informs me that the
-vegetation has a rapid growth; no sooner is a part consumed,
-than its place is supplied by a fresh stock. There can be
-no doubt, however, that our ideas respecting the apparent
-amount of food necessary for the support of large quadrupeds
-are much exaggerated: it should have been remembered
-that the camel, an animal of no mean bulk, has always been
-considered as the emblem of the desert.
-
-The belief that where large quadrupeds exist, the vegetation
-must necessarily be luxuriant, is the more remarkable,
-because the converse is far from true. Mr. Burchell observed
-to me that when entering Brazil, nothing struck him more
-forcibly than the splendour of the South American vegetation
-contrasted with that of South Africa, together with
-the absence of all large quadrupeds. In his Travels, [6] he has
-suggested that the comparison of the respective weights (if
-there were sufficient data) of an equal number of the largest
-herbivorous quadrupeds of each country would be extremely
-curious. If we take on the one side, the elephant, [7] hippopotamus,
-giraffe, bos caffer, elan, certainly three, and probably
-five species of rhinoceros; and on the American side,
-two tapirs, the guanaco, three deer, the vicuna, peccari,
-capybara (after which we must choose from the monkeys to
-complete the number), and then place these two groups
-alongside each other, it is not easy to conceive ranks more
-disproportionate in size. After the above facts, we are compelled
-to conclude, against anterior probability, [8] that among
-the mammalia there exists no close relation between the
-bulk of the species, and the _quantity_ of the vegetation, in
-the countries which they inhabit.
-
-With regard to the number of large quadrupeds, there
-certainly exists no quarter of the globe which will bear
-comparison with Southern Africa. After the different statements
-which have been given, the extremely desert character
-of that region will not be disputed. In the European division
-of the world, we must look back to the tertiary epochs,
-to find a condition of things among the mammalia, resembling
-that now existing at the Cape of Good Hope. Those
-tertiary epochs, which we are apt to consider as abounding
-to an astonishing degree with large animals, because we
-find the remains of many ages accumulated at certain spots,
-could hardly boast of more large quadrupeds than Southern
-Africa does at present. If we speculate on the condition
-of the vegetation during these epochs we are at least bound
-so far to consider existing analogies, as not to urge as
-absolutely necessary a luxuriant vegetation, when we see
-a state of things so totally different at the Cape of Good
-Hope.
-
-We know [9] that the extreme regions of North America,
-many degrees beyond the limit where the ground at the depth
-of a few feet remains perpetually congealed, are covered by
-forests of large and tall trees. In a like manner, in Siberia,
-we have woods of birch, fir, aspen, and larch, growing in a
-latitude [10] (64 degs.) where the mean temperature of the
-air falls below the freezing point, and where the earth is so
-completely frozen, that the carcass of an animal embedded in it
-is perfectly preserved. With these facts we must grant, as
-far as _quantity alone_ of vegetation is concerned, that the
-great quadrupeds of the later tertiary epochs might, in most
-parts of Northern Europe and Asia, have lived on the spots
-where their remains are now found. I do not here speak of
-the kind of vegetation necessary for their support; because,
-as there is evidence of physical changes, and as the animals
-have become extinct, so may we suppose that the species of
-plants have likewise been changed.
-
-These remarks, I may be permitted to add, directly bear
-on the case of the Siberian animals preserved in ice. The
-firm conviction of the necessity of a vegetation possessing
-a character of tropical luxuriance, to support such large
-animals, and the impossibility of reconciling this with the
-proximity of perpetual congelation, was one chief cause of
-the several theories of sudden revolutions of climate, and of
-overwhelming catastrophes, which were invented to account
-for their entombment. I am far from supposing that the
-climate has not changed since the period when those animals
-lived, which now lie buried in the ice. At present I
-only wish to show, that as far as _quantity_ of food _alone_ is
-concerned, the ancient rhinoceroses might have roamed over
-the _steppes_ of central Siberia (the northern parts probably
-being under water) even in their present condition, as well
-as the living rhinoceroses and elephants over the _Karros_
-of Southern Africa.
-
-
-I will now give an account of the habits of some of the
-more interesting birds which are common on the wild plains
-of Northern Patagonia: and first for the largest, or South
-American ostrich. The ordinary habits of the ostrich are
-familiar to every one. They live on vegetable matter, such
-as roots and grass; but at Bahia Blanca I have repeatedly
-seen three or four come down at low water to the extensive
-mud-banks which are then dry, for the sake, as the Gauchos
-say, of feeding on small fish. Although the ostrich in its
-habits is so shy, wary, and solitary, and although so fleet
-in its pace, it is caught without much difficulty by the Indian
-or Gaucho armed with the bolas. When several horsemen
-appear in a semicircle, it becomes confounded, and does
-not know which way to escape. They generally prefer running
-against the wind; yet at the first start they expand
-their wings, and like a vessel make all sail. On one fine
-hot day I saw several ostriches enter a bed of tall rushes,
-where they squatted concealed, till quite closely approached.
-It is not generally known that ostriches readily take to the
-water. Mr. King informs me that at the Bay of San Blas,
-and at Port Valdes in Patagonia, he saw these birds swimming
-several times from island to island. They ran into
-the water both when driven down to a point, and likewise
-of their own accord when not frightened: the distance
-crossed was about two hundred yards. When swimming,
-very little of their bodies appear above water; their necks
-are extended a little forward, and their progress is slow.
-On two occasions I saw some ostriches swimming across the
-Santa Cruz river, where its course was about four hundred
-yards wide, and the stream rapid. Captain Sturt, [11] when
-descending the Murrumbidgee, in Australia, saw two emus
-in the act of swimming.
-
-The inhabitants of the country readily distinguish, even
-at a distance, the cock bird from the hen. The former is
-larger and darker-coloured, [12] and has a bigger head. The
-ostrich, I believe the cock, emits a singular, deep-toned,
-hissing note: when first I heard it, standing in the midst of
-some sand-hillocks, I thought it was made by some wild
-beast, for it is a sound that one cannot tell whence it comes,
-or from how far distant. When we were at Bahia Blanca
-in the months of September and October, the eggs, in
-extraordinary numbers, were found all over the country. They
-lie either scattered and single, in which case they are never
-hatched, and are called by the Spaniards huachos; or they
-are collected together into a shallow excavation, which forms
-the nest. Out of the four nests which I saw, three contained
-twenty-two eggs each, and the fourth twenty-seven.
-In one day's hunting on horseback sixty-four eggs were
-found; forty-four of these were in two nests, and the remaining
-twenty, scattered huachos. The Gauchos unanimously
-affirm, and there is no reason to doubt their statement,
-that the male bird alone hatches the eggs, and for
-some time afterwards accompanies the young. The cock
-when on the nest lies very close; I have myself almost
-ridden over one. It is asserted that at such times they
-are occasionally fierce, and even dangerous, and that they
-have been known to attack a man on horseback, trying to
-kick and leap on him. My informer pointed out to me an old
-man, whom he had seen much terrified by one chasing him. I
-observe in Burchell's travels in South Africa, that he remarks,
-"Having killed a male ostrich, and the feathers being
-dirty, it was said by the Hottentots to be a nest bird." I
-understand that the male emu in the Zoological Gardens
-takes charge of the nest: this habit, therefore, is common
-to the family.
-
-The Gauchos unanimously affirm that several females
-lay in one nest. I have been positively told that four or
-five hen birds have been watched to go in the middle of the
-day, one after the other, to the same nest. I may add, also,
-that it is believed in Africa, that two or more females lay
-in one nest. [13] Although this habit at first appears very
-strange, I think the cause may be explained in a simple
-manner. The number of eggs in the nest varies from twenty
-to forty, and even to fifty; and according to Azara, some
-times to seventy or eighty. Now, although it is most probable,
-from the number of eggs found in one district being
-so extraordinarily great in proportion to the parent birds,
-and likewise from the state of the ovarium of the hen, that
-she may in the course of the season lay a large number, yet
-the time required must be very long. Azara states, [14] that a
-female in a state of domestication laid seventeen eggs, each
-at the interval of three days one from another. If the hen
-was obliged to hatch her own eggs, before the last was laid
-the first probably would be addled; but if each laid a few
-eggs at successive periods, in different nests, and several
-hens, as is stated to be the case, combined together, then
-the eggs in one collection would be nearly of the same age.
-If the number of eggs in one of these nests is, as I believe,
-not greater on an average than the number laid by one
-female in the season, then there must be as many nests as
-females, and each cock bird will have its fair share of the
-labour of incubation; and that during a period when the
-females probably could not sit, from not having finished
-laying. [15] I have before mentioned the great numbers of
-huachos, or deserted eggs; so that in one day's hunting
-twenty were found in this state. It appears odd that so
-many should be wasted. Does it not arise from the difficulty
-of several females associating together, and finding a male
-ready to undertake the office of incubation? It is evident
-that there must at first be some degree of association between
-at least two females; otherwise the eggs would remain
-scattered over the wide plain, at distances far too great to
-allow of the male collecting them into one nest: some authors
-have believed that the scattered eggs were deposited
-for the young birds to feed on. This can hardly be the case
-in America, because the huachos, although often found
-addled and putrid, are generally whole.
-
-When at the Rio Negro in Northern Patagonia, I repeatedly
-heard the Gauchos talking of a very rare bird which
-they called Avestruz Petise. They described it as being less
-than the common ostrich (which is there abundant), but
-with a very close general resemblance. They said its colour
-was dark and mottled, and that its legs were shorter, and
-feathered lower down than those of the common ostrich.
-It is more easily caught by the bolas than the other species.
-The few inhabitants who had seen both kinds, affirmed they
-could distinguish them apart from a long distance. The
-eggs of the small species appeared, however, more generally
-known; and it was remarked, with surprise, that they were
-very little less than those of the Rhea, but of a slightly
-different form, and with a tinge of pale blue. This species occurs
-most rarely on the plains bordering the Rio Negro; but about
-a degree and a half further south they are tolerably abundant.
-When at Port Desire, in Patagonia (lat. 48 degs.), Mr.
-Martens shot an ostrich; and I looked at it, forgetting at
-the moment, in the most unaccountable manner, the whole
-subject of the Petises, and thought it was a not full-grown
-bird of the common sort. It was cooked and eaten before
-my memory returned. Fortunately the head, neck, legs,
-wings, many of the larger feathers, and a large part of the
-skin, had been preserved; and from these a very nearly perfect
-specimen has been put together, and is now exhibited
-in the museum of the Zoological Society. Mr. Gould, in
-describing this new species, has done me the honour of
-calling it after my name.
-
-Among the Patagonian Indians in the Strait of Magellan,
-we found a half Indian, who had lived some years with
-the tribe, but had been born in the northern provinces. I
-asked him if he had ever heard of the Avestruz Petise? He
-answered by saying, "Why, there are none others in these
-southern countries." He informed me that the number of
-eggs in the nest of the petise is considerably less than in that
-of the other kind, namely, not more than fifteen on an average,
-but he asserted that more than one female deposited
-them. At Santa Cruz we saw several of these birds. They
-were excessively wary: I think they could see a person
-approaching when too far off to be distinguished themselves.
-In ascending the river few were seen; but in our quiet and
-rapid descent, many, in pairs and by fours or fives, were
-observed. It was remarked that this bird did not expand
-its wings, when first starting at full speed, after the manner
-of the northern kind. In conclusion I may observe, that
-the Struthio rhea inhabits the country of La Plata as far
-as a little south of the Rio Negro in lat. 41 degs., and that
-the Struthio Darwinii takes its place in Southern Patagonia;
-the part about the Rio Negro being neutral territory. M.
-A. d'Orbigny, [16] when at the Rio Negro, made great exertions
-to procure this bird, but never had the good fortune to
-succeed. Dobrizhoffer [17] long ago was aware of there being
-two kinds of ostriches, he says, "You must know, moreover,
-that Emus differ in size and habits in different tracts
-of land; for those that inhabit the plains of Buenos Ayres
-and Tucuman are larger, and have black, white and grey
-feathers; those near to the Strait of Magellan are smaller
-and more beautiful, for their white feathers are tipped with
-black at the extremity, and their black ones in like manner
-terminate in white."
-
-A very singular little bird, Tinochorus rumicivorus, is
-here common: in its habits and general appearance, it nearly
-equally partakes of the characters, different as they are, of
-the quail and snipe. The Tinochorus is found in the whole
-of southern South America, wherever there are sterile plains,
-or open dry pasture land. It frequents in pairs or small
-flocks the most desolate places, where scarcely another living
-creature can exist. Upon being approached they squat close,
-and then are very difficult to be distinguished from the
-ground. When feeding they walk rather slowly, with their
-legs wide apart. They dust themselves in roads and sandy
-places, and frequent particular spots, where they may be
-found day after day: like partridges, they take wing in a
-flock. In all these respects, in the muscular gizzard adapted
-for vegetable food, in the arched beak and fleshy nostrils,
-short legs and form of foot, the Tinochorus has a close affinity
-with quails. But as soon as the bird is seen flying, its
-whole appearance changes; the long pointed wings, so different
-from those in the gallinaceous order, the irregular
-manner of flight, and plaintive cry uttered at the moment
-of rising, recall the idea of a snipe. The sportsmen of the
-Beagle unanimously called it the short-billed snipe. To this
-genus, or rather to the family of the Waders, its skeleton
-shows that it is really related.
-
-The Tinochorus is closely related to some other South
-American birds. Two species of the genus Attagis are in
-almost every respect ptarmigans in their habits; one lives
-in Tierra del Fuego, above the limits of the forest land; and
-the other just beneath the snow-line on the Cordillera of
-Central Chile. A bird of another closely allied genus, Chionis
-alba, is an inhabitant of the antarctic regions; it feeds
-on sea-weed and shells on the tidal rocks. Although not
-web footed, from some unaccountable habit, it is frequently
-met with far out at sea. This small family of birds is one
-of those which, from its varied relations to other families,
-although at present offering only difficulties to the systematic
-naturalist, ultimately may assist in revealing the
-grand scheme, common to the present and past ages, on
-which organized beings have been created.
-
-The genus Furnarius contains several species, all small
-birds, living on the ground, and inhabiting open dry countries.
-In structure they cannot be compared to any European
-form. Ornithologists have generally included them
-among the creepers, although opposed to that family in every
-habit. The best known species is the common oven-bird of
-La Plata, the Casara or housemaker of the Spaniards. The
-nest, whence it takes its name, is placed in the most exposed
-situations, as on the top of a post, a bare rock, or on
-a cactus. It is composed of mud and bits of straw, and has
-strong thick walls: in shape it precisely resembles an oven,
-or depressed beehive. The opening is large and arched,
-and directly in front, within the nest, there is a partition,
-which reaches nearly to the roof, thus forming a passage
-or antechamber to the true nest.
-
-Another and smaller species of Furnarius (F. cunicularius),
-resembles the oven-bird in the general reddish tint
-of its plumage, in a peculiar shrill reiterated cry, and in an
-odd manner of running by starts. From its affinity, the
-Spaniards call it Casarita (or little housebuilder), although
-its nidification is quite different. The Casarita builds its
-nest at the bottom of a narrow cylindrical hole, which is
-said to extend horizontally to nearly six feet under ground.
-Several of the country people told me, that when boys, they
-had attempted to dig out the nest, but had scarcely ever
-succeeded in getting to the end of the passage. The bird
-chooses any low bank of firm sandy soil by the side of a
-road or stream. Here (at Bahia Blanca) the walls round
-the houses are built of hardened mud, and I noticed that
-one, which enclosed a courtyard where I lodged, was bored
-through by round holes in a score of places. On asking the
-owner the cause of this he bitterly complained of the little
-casarita, several of which I afterwards observed at work.
-It is rather curious to find how incapable these birds must
-be of acquiring any notion of thickness, for although they
-were constantly flitting over the low wall, they continued
-vainly to bore through it, thinking it an excellent bank for
-their nests. I do not doubt that each bird, as often as it
-came to daylight on the opposite side, was greatly surprised
-at the marvellous fact.
-
-I have already mentioned nearly all the mammalia common
-in this country. Of armadilloes three species occur
-namely, the Dasypus minutus or _pichy_, the D. villosus or
-_peludo_, and the _apar_. The first extends ten degrees further
-south than any other kind; a fourth species, the _Mulita_,
-does not come as far south as Bahia Blanca. The four species
-have nearly similar habits; the _peludo_, however, is nocturnal,
-while the others wander by day over the open plains,
-feeding on beetles, larvae, roots, and even small snakes. The
-_apar_, commonly called _mataco_, is remarkable by having only
-three moveable bands; the rest of its tesselated covering
-being nearly inflexible. It has the power of rolling itself
-into a perfect sphere, like one kind of English woodlouse.
-In this state it is safe from the attack of dogs; for the dog
-not being able to take the whole in its mouth, tries to bite
-one side, and the ball slips away. The smooth hard covering
-of the _mataco_ offers a better defence than the sharp
-spines of the hedgehog. The _pichy_ prefers a very dry soil;
-and the sand-dunes near the coast, where for many months
-it can never taste water, is its favourite resort: it often tries
-to escape notice, by squatting close to the ground. In the
-course of a day's ride, near Bahia Blanca, several were generally
-met with. The instant one was perceived, it was
-necessary, in order to catch it, almost to tumble off one's
-horse; for in soft soil the animal burrowed so quickly, that
-its hinder quarters would almost disappear before one could
-alight. It seems almost a pity to kill such nice little animals,
-for as a Gaucho said, while sharpening his knife on
-the back of one, "Son tan mansos" (they are so quiet).
-
-Of reptiles there are many kinds: one snake (a Trigonocephalus,
-or Cophias [18]), from the size of the poison channel
-in its fangs, must be very deadly. Cuvier, in opposition to
-some other naturalists, makes this a sub-genus of the rattlesnake,
-and intermediate between it and the viper. In confirmation
-of this opinion, I observed a fact, which appears
-to me very curious and instructive, as showing how every
-character, even though it may be in some degree independent
-of structure, has a tendency to vary by slow degrees.
-The extremity of the tail of this snake is terminated by a
-point, which is very slightly enlarged; and as the animal
-glides along, it constantly vibrates the last inch; and this
-part striking against the dry grass and brushwood, produces
-a rattling noise, which can be distinctly heard at the distance
-of six feet. As often as the animal was irritated or
-surprised, its tail was shaken; and the vibrations were extremely
-rapid. Even as long as the body retained its irritability,
-a tendency to this habitual movement was evident.
-This Trigonocephalus has, therefore, in some respects the
-structure of a viper, with the habits of a rattlesnake: the
-noise, however, being produced by a simpler device. The
-expression of this snake's face was hideous and fierce; the
-pupil consisted of a vertical slit in a mottled and coppery
-iris; the jaws were broad at the base, and the nose terminated
-in a triangular projection. I do not think I ever saw
-anything more ugly, excepting, perhaps, some of the vampire
-bats. I imagine this repulsive aspect originates from
-the features being placed in positions, with respect to each
-other, somewhat proportional to those of the human face;
-and thus we obtain a scale of hideousness.
-
-Amongst the Batrachian reptiles, I found only one little
-toad (Phryniscus nigricans), which was most singular from
-its colour. If we imagine, first, that it had been steeped in
-the blackest ink, and then, when dry, allowed to crawl over
-a board, freshly painted with the brightest vermilion, so
-as to colour the soles of its feet and parts of its stomach, a
-good idea of its appearance will be gained. If it had been
-an unnamed species, surely it ought to have been called
-_Diabolicus_, for it is a fit toad to preach in the ear of Eve.
-Instead of being nocturnal in its habits, as other toads are,
-and living in damp obscure recesses, it crawls during the heat
-of the day about the dry sand-hillocks and arid plains, where
-not a single drop of water can be found. It must necessarily
-depend on the dew for its moisture; and this probably is
-absorbed by the skin, for it is known, that these reptiles possess
-great powers of cutaneous absorption. At Maldonado,
-I found one in a situation nearly as dry as at Bahia Blanca,
-and thinking to give it a great treat, carried it to a pool of
-water; not only was the little animal unable to swim, but
-I think without help it would soon have been drowned.
-Of lizards there were many kinds, but only one (Proctotretus
-multimaculatus) remarkable from its habits. It
-lives on the bare sand near the sea coast, and from its mottled
-colour, the brownish scales being speckled with white,
-yellowish red, and dirty blue, can hardly be distinguished
-from the surrounding surface. When frightened, it attempts
-to avoid discovery by feigning death, with outstretched
-legs, depressed body, and closed eyes: if further
-molested, it buries itself with great quickness in the loose
-sand. This lizard, from its flattened body and short legs,
-cannot run quickly.
-
-I will here add a few remarks on the hybernation of animals
-in this part of South America. When we first arrived
-at Bahia Blanca, September 7th, 1832, we thought nature
-had granted scarcely a living creature to this sandy and dry
-country. By digging, however, in the ground, several insects,
-large spiders, and lizards were found in a half-torpid
-state. On the 15th, a few animals began to appear, and by
-the 18th (three days from the equinox), everything announced
-the commencement of spring. The plains were ornamented
-by the flowers of a pink wood-sorrel, wild peas,
-cenotherae, and geraniums; and the birds began to lay their
-eggs. Numerous Lamellicorn and Heteromerous insects, the
-latter remarkable for their deeply sculptured bodies, were
-slowly crawling about; while the lizard tribe, the constant
-inhabitants of a sandy soil, darted about in every direction.
-During the first eleven days, whilst nature was dormant, the
-mean temperature taken from observations made every two
-hours on board the Beagle, was 51 degs.; and in the middle of
-the day the thermometer seldom ranged above 55 degs. On the
-eleven succeeding days, in which all living things became so
-animated, the mean was 58 degs., and the range in the middle
-of the day 7 between 60 and 70 degs. Here, then, an
-increase of seven degrees in mean temperature, but a greater one
-of extreme heat, was sufficient to awake the functions of life.
-At Monte Video, from which we had just before sailed, in
-the twenty-three days included between the 26th of July
-and the 19th of August, the mean temperature from 276
-observations was 58.4 degs.; the mean hottest day being
-65.5 degs., and the coldest 46 degs. The lowest point to
-which the thermometer fell was 41.5 degs., and occasionally
-in the middle of the day it rose to 69 or 70 degs.
-Yet with this high temperature, almost every beetle, several
-genera of spiders, snails, and land-shells, toads and
-lizards were all lying torpid beneath stones. But
-we have seen that at Bahia Blanca, which is four degrees
-southward and therefore with a climate only a very little
-colder, this same temperature with a rather less extreme
-heat, was sufficient to awake all orders of animated beings.
-This shows how nicely the stimulus required to arouse hybernating
-animals is governed by the usual climate of the
-district, and not by the absolute heat. It is well known that
-within the tropics, the hybernation, or more properly aestivation,
-of animals is determined not by the temperature, but
-by the times of drought. Near Rio de Janeiro, I was at first
-surprised to observe, that, a few days after some little
-depressions had been filled with water, they were peopled by
-numerous full-grown shells and beetles, which must have
-been lying dormant. Humboldt has related the strange accident
-of a hovel having been erected over a spot where a
-young crocodile lay buried in the hardened mud. He adds,
-"The Indians often find enormous boas, which they call Uji
-or water serpents, in the same lethargic state. To reanimate
-them, they must be irritated or wetted with water."
-
-I will only mention one other animal, a zoophyte (I believe
-Virgularia Patagonica), a kind of sea-pen. It consists
-of a thin, straight, fleshy stem, with alternate rows of polypi
-on each side, and surrounding an elastic stony axis, varying
-in length from eight inches to two feet. The stem at one
-extremity is truncate, but at the other is terminated by a
-vermiform fleshy appendage. The stony axis which gives
-strength to the stem may be traced at this extremity into a
-mere vessel filled with granular matter. At low water hundreds
-of these zoophytes might be seen, projecting like stubble,
-with the truncate end upwards, a few inches above the
-surface of the muddy sand. When touched or pulled they
-suddenly drew themselves in with force, so as nearly or quite
-to disappear. By this action, the highly elastic axis must
-be bent at the lower extremity, where it is naturally slightly
-curved; and I imagine it is by this elasticity alone that the
-zoophyte is enabled to rise again through the mud. Each
-polypus, though closely united to its brethren, has a distinct
-mouth, body, and tentacula. Of these polypi, in a large
-specimen, there must be many thousands; yet we see that
-they act by one movement: they have also one central axis
-connected with a system of obscure circulation, and the ova
-are produced in an organ distinct from the separate
-individuals. [19] Well may one be allowed to ask, what is an
-individual? It is always interesting to discover the foundation
-of the strange tales of the old voyagers; and I have no doubt
-but that the habits of this Virgularia explain one such case.
-Captain Lancaster, in his voyage [20] in 1601, narrates that on
-the sea-sands of the Island of Sombrero, in the East Indies,
-he "found a small twig growing up like a young tree, and
-on offering to pluck it up it shrinks down to the ground,
-and sinks, unless held very hard. On being plucked up, a
-great worm is found to be its root, and as the tree groweth
-in greatness, so doth the worm diminish, and as soon as the
-worm is entirely turned into a tree it rooteth in the earth,
-and so becomes great. This transformation is one of the
-strangest wonders that I saw in all my travels: for if this
-tree is plucked up, while young, and the leaves and bark
-stripped off, it becomes a hard stone when dry, much like
-white coral: thus is this worm twice transformed into
-different natures. Of these we gathered and brought home
-many."
-
-
-During my stay at Bahia Blanca, while waiting for the
-Beagle, the place was in a constant state of excitement, from
-rumours of wars and victories, between the troops of Rosas
-and the wild Indians. One day an account came that a small
-party forming one of the postas on the line to Buenos Ayres,
-had been found all murdered. The next day three hundred
-men arrived from the Colorado, under the command of Commandant
-Miranda. A large portion of these men were Indians
-(mansos, or tame), belonging to the tribe of the Cacique
-Bernantio. They passed the night here; and it was
-impossible to conceive anything more wild and savage than
-the scene of their bivouac. Some drank till they were
-intoxicated; others swallowed the steaming blood of the
-cattle slaughtered for their suppers, and then, being sick
-from drunkenness, they cast it up again, and were besmeared
-with filth and gore.
-
-Nam simul expletus dapibus, vinoque sepultus
-Cervicem inflexam posuit, jacuitque per antrum
-Immensus, saniem eructans, ac frusta cruenta
-Per somnum commixta mero.
-
-In the morning they started for the scene of the murder,
-with orders to follow the "rastro," or track, even if it led
-them to Chile. We subsequently heard that the wild Indians
-had escaped into the great Pampas, and from some
-cause the track had been missed. One glance at the rastro
-tells these people a whole history. Supposing they examine
-the track of a thousand horses, they will soon guess the number
-of mounted ones by seeing how many have cantered; by
-the depth of the other impressions, whether any horses were
-loaded with cargoes; by the irregularity of the footsteps,
-how far tired; by the manner in which the food has been
-cooked, whether the pursued travelled in haste; by the general
-appearance, how long it has been since they passed.
-They consider a rastro of ten days or a fortnight, quite
-recent enough to be hunted out. We also heard that Miranda
-struck from the west end of the Sierra Ventana, in a direct
-line to the island of Cholechel, situated seventy leagues up
-the Rio Negro. This is a distance of between two and three
-hundred miles, through a country completely unknown.
-What other troops in the world are so independent? With
-the sun for their guide, mare's flesh for food, their saddle-
-cloths for beds, -- as long as there is a little water, these
-men would penetrate to the end of the world.
-
-A few days afterwards I saw another troop of these banditti-like
-soldiers start on an expedition against a tribe of
-Indians at the small Salinas, who had been betrayed by a
-prisoner cacique. The Spaniard who brought the orders
-for this expedition was a very intelligent man. He gave
-me an account of the last engagement at which he was present.
-Some Indians, who had been taken prisoners, gave
-information of a tribe living north of the Colorado. Two
-hundred soldiers were sent; and they first discovered the
-Indians by a cloud of dust from their horses' feet, as they
-chanced to be travelling. The country was mountainous and
-wild, and it must have been far in the interior, for the
-Cordillera were in sight. The Indians, men, women, and children,
-were about one hundred and ten in number, and they
-were nearly all taken or killed, for the soldiers sabre every
-man. The Indians are now so terrified that they offer no
-resistance in a body, but each flies, neglecting even his wife
-and children; but when overtaken, like wild animals, they
-fight against any number to the last moment. One dying Indian
-seized with his teeth the thumb of his adversary, and
-allowed his own eye to be forced out sooner than relinquish
-his hold. Another, who was wounded, feigned death, keeping
-a knife ready to strike one more fatal blow. My informer
-said, when he was pursuing an Indian, the man cried out
-for mercy, at the same time that he was covertly loosing the
-bolas from his waist, meaning to whirl it round his head and
-so strike his pursuer. "I however struck him with my sabre
-to the ground, and then got off my horse, and cut his throat
-with my knife." This is a dark picture; but how much more
-shocking is the unquestionable fact, that all the women who
-appear above twenty years old are massacred in cold blood!
-When I exclaimed that this appeared rather inhuman, he
-answered, "Why, what can be done? they breed so!"
-
-Every one here is fully convinced that this is the most
-just war, because it is against barbarians. Who would
-believe in this age that such atrocities could be committed in
-a Christian civilized country? The children of the Indians
-are saved, to be sold or given away as servants, or rather
-slaves for as long a time as the owners can make them
-believe themselves slaves; but I believe in their treatment
-there is little to complain of.
-
-In the battle four men ran away together. They were
-pursued, one was killed, and the other three were taken alive.
-They turned out to be messengers or ambassadors from a
-large body of Indians, united in the common cause of
-defence, near the Cordillera. The tribe to which they had
-been sent was on the point of holding a grand council, the
-feast of mare's flesh was ready, and the dance prepared: in
-the morning the ambassadors were to have returned to the
-Cordillera. They were remarkably fine men, very fair, above
-six feet high, and all under thirty years of age. The three
-survivors of course possessed very valuable information and
-to extort this they were placed in a line. The two first being
-questioned, answered, "No se" (I do not know), and were
-one after the other shot. The third also said "No se;" adding,
-"Fire, I am a man, and can die!" Not one syllable
-would they breathe to injure the united cause of their country!
-The conduct of the above-mentioned cacique was very
-different; he saved his life by betraying the intended plan
-of warfare, and the point of union in the Andes. It was
-believed that there were already six or seven hundred Indians
-together, and that in summer their numbers would be
-doubled. Ambassadors were to have been sent to the Indians
-at the small Salinas, near Bahia Blanca, whom I have mentioned
-that this same cacique had betrayed. The communication,
-therefore, between the Indians, extends from the
-Cordillera to the coast of the Atlantic.
-
-General Rosas's plan is to kill all stragglers, and having
-driven the remainder to a common point, to attack them in
-a body, in the summer, with the assistance of the Chilenos.
-This operation is to be repeated for three successive years.
-I imagine the summer is chosen as the time for the main
-attack, because the plains are then without water, and the
-Indians can only travel in particular directions. The escape
-of the Indians to the south of the Rio Negro, where in such
-a vast unknown country they would be safe, is prevented by
-a treaty with the Tehuelches to this effect; -- that Rosas pays
-them so much to slaughter every Indian who passes to the
-south of the river, but if they fail in so doing, they
-themselves are to be exterminated. The war is waged chiefly
-against the Indians near the Cordillera; for many of the
-tribes on this eastern side are fighting with Rosas. The
-general, however, like Lord Chesterfield, thinking that his
-friends may in a future day become his enemies, always
-places them in the front ranks, so that their numbers may
-be thinned. Since leaving South America we have heard
-that this war of extermination completely failed.
-
-Among the captive girls taken in the same engagement,
-there were two very pretty Spanish ones, who had been carried
-away by the Indians when young, and could now only
-speak the Indian tongue. From their account they must
-have come from Salta, a distance in a straight line of nearly
-one thousand miles. This gives one a grand idea of the
-immense territory over which the Indians roam: yet, great
-as it is, I think there will not, in another half-century, be
-a wild Indian northward of the Rio Negro. The warfare
-is too bloody to last; the Christians killing every Indian,
-and the Indians doing the same by the Christians. It is
-melancholy to trace how the Indians have given way before
-the Spanish invaders. Schirdel [21] says that in 1535, when
-Buenos Ayres was founded, there were villages containing
-two and three thousand inhabitants. Even in Falconer's
-time (1750) the Indians made inroads as far as Luxan,
-Areco, and Arrecife, but now they are driven beyond the
-Salado. Not only have whole tribes been exterminated, but
-the remaining Indians have become more barbarous: instead
-of living in large villages, and being employed in the arts of
-fishing, as well as of the chase, they now wander about the
-open plains, without home or fixed occupation.
-
-I heard also some account of an engagement which took
-place, a few weeks previously to the one mentioned, at
-Cholechel. This is a very important station on account of
-being a pass for horses; and it was, in consequence, for
-some time the head-quarters of a division of the army.
-When the troops first arrived there they found a tribe of
-Indians, of whom they killed twenty or thirty. The cacique
-escaped in a manner which astonished every one. The chief
-Indians always have one or two picked horses, which they
-keep ready for any urgent occasion. On one of these, an old
-white horse, the cacique sprung, taking with him his little
-son. The horse had neither saddle nor bridle. To avoid the
-shots, the Indian rode in the peculiar method of his nation
-namely, with an arm round the horse's neck, and one leg
-only on its back. Thus hanging on one side, he was seen
-patting the horse's head, and talking to him. The pursuers
-urged every effort in the chase; the Commandant three
-times changed his horse, but all in vain. The old Indian
-father and his son escaped, and were free. What a fine picture
-one can form in one's mind, -- the naked, bronze-like
-figure of the old man with his little boy, riding like a
-Mazeppa on the white horse, thus leaving far behind him the
-host of his pursuers!
-
-I saw one day a soldier striking fire with a piece of flint,
-which I immediately recognised as having been a part of the
-head of an arrow. He told me it was found near the island
-of Cholechel, and that they are frequently picked up there.
-It was between two and three inches long, and therefore
-twice as large as those now used in Tierra del Fuego: it was
-made of opaque cream-coloured flint, but the point and barbs
-had been intentionally broken off. It is well known that no
-Pampas Indians now use bows and arrows. I believe a small
-tribe in Banda Oriental must be excepted; but they are
-widely separated from the Pampas Indians, and border close
-on those tribes that inhabit the forest, and live on foot. It
-appears, therefore, that these arrow-heads are antiquarian [22]
-relics of the Indians, before the great change in habits
-consequent on the introduction of the horse into South
-America.
-
-[1] Since this was written, M. Alcide d'Orbingy has examined
-these shells, and pronounces them all to be recent.
-
-[2] M. Aug. Bravard has described, in a Spanish work
-('Observaciones Geologicas,' 1857), this district, and he
-believes that the bones of the extinct mammals were washed
-out of the underlying Pampean deposit, and subsequently became
-embedded with the still existing shells; but I am not convinced
-by his remarks. M. Bravard believes that the whole enormous
-Pampean deposit is a sub-aerial formation, like sand-dunes: this
-seems to me to be an untenable doctrine.
-
-[3] Principles of Geology, vol. iv. p. 40.
-
-[4] This theory was first developed in the Zoology of the
-Voyage of the Beagle, and subsequently in Professor Owen's
-Memoir on Mylodon robustus.
-
-[5] I mean this to exclude the total amount which may have been
-successively produced and consumed during a given period.
-
-[6] Travels in the Interior of South Africa, vol. ii. p. 207
-
-[7] The elephant which was killed at Exeter Change was
-estimated (being partly weighed) at five tons and a half.
-The elephant actress, as I was informed, weighed one ton less;
-so that we may take five as the average of a full-grown
-elephant. I was told at the Surry Gardens, that a hippopotamus
-which was sent to England cut up into pieces was estimated at
-three tons and a half; we will call it three. From these
-premises we may give three tons and a half to each of the five
-rhinoceroses; perhaps a ton to the giraffe, and half to the
-bos caffer as well as to the elan (a large ox weighs from
-1200 to 1500 pounds). This will give an average (from the above
-estimates) of 2.7 of a ton for the ten largest herbivorous
-animals of Southern Africa. In South America, allowing 1200
-pounds for the two tapirs together, 550 for the guanaco and
-vicuna, 500 for three deer, 300 for the capybara, peccari, and
-a monkey, we shall have an average of 250 pounds, which I
-believe is overstating the result. The ratio will therefore
-be as 6048 to 250, or 24 to 1, for the ten largest animals
-from the two continents.
-
-[8] If we suppose the case of the discovery of a skeleton of
-a Greenland whale in a fossil state, not a single cetaceous
-animal being known to exist, what naturalist would have ventured
-conjecture on the possibility of a carcass so gigantic being
-supported on the minute crustacea and mollusca living in the
-frozen seas of the extreme North?
-
-[9] See Zoological Remarks to Capt. Back's Expedition, by Dr.
-Richardson. He says, "The subsoil north of latitude 56 degs.
-is perpetually frozen, the thaw on the coast not penetrating
-above three feet, and at Bear Lake, in latitude 64 degs., not
-more than twenty inches. The frozen substratum does not of
-itself destroy vegetation, for forests flourish on the surface,
-at a distance from the coast."
-
-[10] See Humboldt, Fragments Asiatiques, p. 386: Barton's
-Geography of Plants: and Malte Brun. In the latter work it is
-said that the limit of the growth of trees in Siberia may be
-drawn under the parallel of 70 degs.
-
-[11] Sturt's Travels, vol. ii. p. 74.
-
-[12] A Gaucho assured me that he had once seen a snow-white or
-Albino variety, and that it was a most beautiful bird.
-
-[13] Burchell's Travels, vol. i. p. 280.
-
-[14] Azara, vol. iv. p. 173.
-
-[15] Lichtenstein, however, asserts (Travels, vol. ii. p. 25)
-that the hens begin sitting when they have laid ten or twelve
-eggs; and that they continue laying, I presume, in another
-nest. This appears to me very improbable. He asserts that four
-or five hens associate for incubation with one cock, who sits
-only at night.
-
-[16] When at the Rio Negro, we heard much of the indefatigable
-labours of this naturalist. M. Alcide d'Orbigny, during the
-years 1825 to 1833, traversed several large portions of South
-America, and has made a collection, and is now publishing the
-results on a scale of magnificence, which at once places himself
-in the list of American travellers second only to Humboldt.
-
-[17] Account of the Abipones, A.D. 1749, vol. i. (English
-Translation) p. 314
-
-[18] M. Bibron calls it T. crepitans.
-
-
-[19] The cavities leading from the fleshy compartments of
-the extremity, were filled with a yellow pulpy matter, which,
-examined under a microscope, presented an extraordinary
-appearance. The mass consisted of rounded, semi-transparent,
-irregular grains, aggregated together into particles of
-various sizes. All such particles, and the separate grains,
-possessed the power of rapid movement; generally revolving
-around different axes, but sometimes progressive. The movement
-was visible with a very weak power, but even with the highest
-its cause could not be perceived. It was very different from
-the circulation of the fluid in the elastic bag, containing
-the thin extremity of the axis. On other occasions, when
-dissecting small marine animals beneath the microscope, I have
-seen particles of pulpy matter, some of large size, as soon as
-they were disengaged, commence revolving. I have imagined, I know
-not with how much truth, that this granulo-pulpy matter was in
-process of being converted into ova. Certainly in this zoophyte
-such appeared to be the case.
-
-[20] Kerr's Collection of Voyages, vol. viii. p. 119.
-
-[21] Purchas's Collection of Voyages. I believe the date was
-really 1537.
-
-[22] Azara has even doubted whether the Pampas Indians ever
-used bows.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI
-
-BAHIA BLANCA TO BUENOS AYRES
-
-Set out for Buenos Ayres -- Rio Sauce -- Sierra Ventana --
-Third Posta -- Driving Horses -- Bolas -- Partridges and
-Foxes -- Features of the Country -- Long-legged Plover --
-Teru-tero -- Hail-storm -- Natural Enclosures in the Sierra
-Tapalguen -- Flesh of Puma -- Meat Diet -- Guardia del
-Monte -- Effects of Cattle on the Vegetation -- Cardoon --
-Buenos Ayres -- Corral where Cattle are Slaughtered.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 18th. -- I hired a Gaucho to accompany me
-on my ride to Buenos Ayres, though with some difficulty,
-as the father of one man was afraid to let him
-go, and another, who seemed willing, was described to me
-as so fearful, that I was afraid to take him, for I was told
-that even if he saw an ostrich at a distance, he would mistake
-it for an Indian, and would fly like the wind away.
-The distance to Buenos Ayres is about four hundred miles,
-and nearly the whole way through an uninhabited country.
-We started early in the morning; ascending a few hundred
-feet from the basin of green turf on which Bahia Blanca
-stands, we entered on a wide desolate plain. It consists of
-a crumbling argillaceo-calcareous rock, which, from the dry
-nature of the climate, supports only scattered tufts of withered
-grass, without a single bush or tree to break the monotonous
-uniformity. The weather was fine, but the atmosphere
-remarkably hazy; I thought the appearance foreboded
-a gale, but the Gauchos said it was owing to the plain, at
-some great distance in the interior, being on fire. After a
-long gallop, having changed horses twice, we reached the Rio
-Sauce: it is a deep, rapid, little stream, not above twenty-five
-feet wide. The second posta on the road to Buenos Ayres
-stands on its banks, a little above there is a ford for horses,
-where the water does not reach to the horses' belly; but from
-that point, in its course to the sea, it is quite impassable,
-and hence makes a most useful barrier against the Indians.
-
-Insignificant as this stream is, the Jesuit Falconer, whose
-information is generally so very correct, figures it as a
-considerable river, rising at the foot of the Cordillera. With
-respect to its source, I do not doubt that this is the case
-for the Gauchos assured me, that in the middle of the dry
-summer, this stream, at the same time with the Colorado
-has periodical floods; which can only originate in the snow
-melting on the Andes. It is extremely improbable that a
-stream so small as the Sauce then was, should traverse the
-entire width of the continent; and indeed, if it were the
-residue of a large river, its waters, as in other ascertained
-cases, would be saline. During the winter we must look to
-the springs round the Sierra Ventana as the source of its
-pure and limpid stream. I suspect the plains of Patagonia
-like those of Australia, are traversed by many water-courses
-which only perform their proper parts at certain periods.
-Probably this is the case with the water which flows into the
-head of Port Desire, and likewise with the Rio Chupat, on
-the banks of which masses of highly cellular scoriae were
-found by the officers employed in the survey.
-
-As it was early in the afternoon when we arrived, we
-took fresh horses, and a soldier for a guide, and started for
-the Sierra de la Ventana. This mountain is visible from
-the anchorage at Bahia Blanca; and Capt. Fitz Roy calculates
-its height to be 3340 feet -- an altitude very remarkable
-on this eastern side of the continent. I am not aware
-that any foreigner, previous to my visit, had ascended this
-mountain; and indeed very few of the soldiers at Bahia
-Blanca knew anything about it. Hence we heard of beds
-of coal, of gold and silver, of caves, and of forests, all of
-which inflamed my curiosity, only to disappoint it. The
-distance from the posta was about six leagues over a level
-plain of the same character as before. The ride was, however,
-interesting, as the mountain began to show its true
-form. When we reached the foot of the main ridge, we had
-much difficulty in finding any water, and we thought we
-should have been obliged to have passed the night without
-any. At last we discovered some by looking close to the
-mountain, for at the distance even of a few hundred yards
-the streamlets were buried and entirely lost in the friable
-calcareous stone and loose detritus. I do not think Nature
-ever made a more solitary, desolate pile of rock; -- it well
-deserves its name of _Hurtado_, or separated. The mountain
-is steep, extremely rugged, and broken, and so entirely destitute
-of trees, and even bushes, that we actually could not
-make a skewer to stretch out our meat over the fire of thistle-
-stalks. [1] The strange aspect of this mountain is contrasted
-by the sea-like plain, which not only abuts against its steep
-sides, but likewise separates the parallel ranges. The uniformity
-of the colouring gives an extreme quietness to the
-view, -- the whitish grey of the quartz rock, and the light
-brown of the withered grass of the plain, being unrelieved
-by any brighter tint. From custom, one expects to see in
-the neighbourhood of a lofty and bold mountain, a broken
-country strewed over with huge fragments. Here nature
-shows that the last movement before the bed of the sea is
-changed into dry land may sometimes be one of tranquillity.
-Under these circumstances I was curious to observe how
-far from the parent rock any pebbles could be found. On
-the shores of Bahia Blanca, and near the settlement, there
-were some of quartz, which certainly must have come from
-this source: the distance is forty-five miles.
-
-The dew, which in the early part of the night wetted the
-saddle-cloths under which we slept, was in the morning
-frozen. The plain, though appearing horizontal, had insensibly
-sloped up to a height of between 800 and 900 feet
-above the sea. In the morning (9th of September) the guide
-told me to ascend the nearest ridge, which he thought would
-lead me to the four peaks that crown the summit. The climbing
-up such rough rocks was very fatiguing; the sides
-were so indented, that what was gained in one five minutes
-was often lost in the next. At last, when I reached the ridge,
-my disappointment was extreme in finding a precipitous
-valley as deep as the plain, which cut the chain transversely
-in two, and separated me from the four points. This valley
-is very narrow, but flat-bottomed, and it forms a fine horse-
-pass for the Indians, as it connects the plains on the northern
-and southern sides of the range. Having descended, and
-while crossing it, I saw two horses grazing: I immediately
-hid myself in the long grass, and began to reconnoitre; but
-as I could see no signs of Indians I proceeded cautiously on
-my second ascent. It was late in the day, and this part of
-the mountain, like the other, was steep and rugged. I was
-on the top of the second peak by two o'clock, but got there
-with extreme difficulty; every twenty yards I had the cramp
-in the upper part of both thighs, so that I was afraid I
-should not have been able to have got down again. It was
-also necessary to return by another road, as it was out of
-the question to pass over the saddle-back. I was therefore
-obliged to give up the two higher peaks. Their altitude was
-but little greater, and every purpose of geology had been
-answered; so that the attempt was not worth the hazard
-of any further exertion. I presume the cause of the cramp
-was the great change in the kind of muscular action, from
-that of hard riding to that of still harder climbing. It is
-a lesson worth remembering, as in some cases it might cause
-much difficulty.
-
-I have already said the mountain is composed of white
-quartz rock, and with it a little glossy clay-slate is
-associated. At the height of a few hundred feet above the plain
-patches of conglomerate adhered in several places to the
-solid rock. They resembled in hardness, and in the nature
-of the cement, the masses which may be seen daily forming
-on some coasts. I do not doubt these pebbles were in a similar
-manner aggregated, at a period when the great calcareous
-formation was depositing beneath the surrounding sea.
-We may believe that the jagged and battered forms of the
-hard quartz yet show the effects of the waves of an open
-ocean.
-
-I was, on the whole, disappointed with this ascent. Even
-the view was insignificant; -- a plain like the sea, but without
-its beautiful colour and defined outline. The scene, however,
-was novel, and a little danger, like salt to meat, gave
-it a relish. That the danger was very little was certain, for
-my two companions made a good fire -- a thing which is never
-done when it is suspected that Indians are near. I reached
-the place of our bivouac by sunset, and drinking much mate,
-and smoking several cigaritos, soon made up my bed for the
-night. The wind was very strong and cold, but I never slept
-more comfortably.
-
-September 10th. -- In the morning, having fairly scudded
-before the gale, we arrived by the middle of the day at the
-Sauce posta. In the road we saw great numbers of deer,
-and near the mountain a guanaco. The plain, which abuts
-against the Sierra, is traversed by some curious gullies, of
-which one was about twenty feet wide, and at least thirty
-deep; we were obliged in consequence to make a considerable
-circuit before we could find a pass. We stayed the night
-at the posta, the conversation, as was generally the case,
-being about the Indians. The Sierra Ventana was formerly
-a great place of resort; and three or four years ago there
-was much fighting there. My guide had been present when
-many Indians were killed: the women escaped to the top of
-the ridge, and fought most desperately with great stones;
-many thus saving themselves.
-
-September 11th. -- Proceeded to the third posta in company
-with the lieutenant who commanded it. The distance
-is called fifteen leagues; but it is only guess-work, and is
-generally overstated. The road was uninteresting, over a
-dry grassy plain; and on our left hand at a greater or less
-distance there were some low hills; a continuation of which
-we crossed close to the posta. Before our arrival we met
-a large herd of cattle and horses, guarded by fifteen soldiers;
-but we were told many had been lost. It is very difficult to
-drive animals across the plains; for if in the night a puma,
-or even a fox, approaches, nothing can prevent the horses
-dispersing in every direction; and a storm will have the
-same effect. A short time since, an officer left Buenos Ayres
-with five hundred horses, and when he arrived at the army
-he had under twenty.
-
-Soon afterwards we perceived by the cloud of dust, that
-a party of horsemen were coming towards us; when far distant
-my companions knew them to be Indians, by their long
-hair streaming behind their backs. The Indians generally
-have a fillet round their heads, but never any covering; and
-their black hair blowing across their swarthy faces, heightens
-to an uncommon degree the wildness of their appearance.
-They turned out to be a party of Bernantio's friendly tribe,
-going to a salina for salt. The Indians eat much salt, their
-children sucking it like sugar. This habit is very different
-from that of the Spanish Gauchos, who, leading the same
-kind of life, eat scarcely any; according to Mungo Park, [2]
-it is people who live on vegetable food who have an unconquerable
-desire for salt. The Indians gave us good-humoured
-nods as they passed at full gallop, driving before them a
-troop of horses, and followed by a train of lanky dogs.
-
-September 12th and 13th. -- I stayed at this posta two days,
-waiting for a troop of soldiers, which General Rosas had
-the kindness to send to inform me, would shortly travel to
-Buenos Ayres; and he advised me to take the opportunity
-of the escort. In the morning we rode to some neighbouring
-hills to view the country, and to examine the geology. After
-dinner the soldiers divided themselves into two parties for
-a trial of skill with the bolas. Two spears were stuck in
-the ground twenty-five yards apart, but they were struck
-and entangled only once in four or five times. The balls can
-be thrown fifty or sixty yards, but with little certainty.
-This, however, does not apply to a man on horseback; for when
-the speed of the horse is added to the force of the arm, it
-is said, that they can be whirled with effect to the distance
-of eighty yards. As a proof of their force, I may mention,
-that at the Falkland Islands, when the Spaniards murdered
-some of their own countrymen and all the Englishmen, a
-young friendly Spaniard was running away, when a great
-tall man, by name Luciano, came at full gallop after him,
-shouting to him to stop, and saying that he only wanted to
-speak to him. Just as the Spaniard was on the point of
-reaching the boat, Luciano threw the balls: they struck him
-on the legs with such a jerk, as to throw him down and
-to render him for some time insensible. The man, after
-Luciano had had his talk, was allowed to escape. He told
-us that his legs were marked by great weals, where the thong
-had wound round, as if he had been flogged with a whip.
-In the middle of the day two men arrived, who brought a
-parcel from the next posta to be forwarded to the general:
-so that besides these two, our party consisted this evening
-of my guide and self, the lieutenant, and his four soldiers.
-The latter were strange beings; the first a fine young negro;
-the second half Indian and negro; and the two others non-
-descripts; namely, an old Chilian miner, the colour of mahogany,
-and another partly a mulatto; but two such mongrels
-with such detestable expressions, I never saw before.
-At night, when they were sitting round the fire, and playing
-at cards, I retired to view such a Salvator Rosa scene. They
-were seated under a low cliff, so that I could look down
-upon them; around the party were lying dogs, arms, remnants
-of deer and ostriches; and their long spears were stuck
-in the turf. Further in the dark background, their horses
-were tied up, ready for any sudden danger. If the stillness
-of the desolate plain was broken by one of the dogs barking,
-a soldier, leaving the fire, would place his head close to the
-ground, and thus slowly scan the horizon. Even if the noisy
-teru-tero uttered its scream, there would be a pause in the
-conversation, and every head, for a moment, a little inclined.
-
-What a life of misery these men appear to us to lead!
-They were at least ten leagues from the Sauce posta, and
-since the murder committed by the Indians, twenty from
-another. The Indians are supposed to have made their attack
-in the middle of the night; for very early in the morning
-after the murder, they were luckily seen approaching
-this posta. The whole party here, however, escaped, together
-with the troop of horses; each one taking a line for himself,
-and driving with him as many animals as he was able to
-manage.
-
-The little hovel, built of thistle-stalks, in which they slept,
-neither kept out the wind nor rain; indeed in the latter case
-the only effect the roof had, was to condense it into larger
-drops. They had nothing to eat excepting what they could
-catch, such as ostriches, deer, armadilloes, etc., and their
-only fuel was the dry stalks of a small plant, somewhat
-resembling an aloe. The sole luxury which these men enjoyed
-was smoking the little paper cigars, and sucking mate. I
-used to think that the carrion vultures, man's constant
-attendants on these dreary plains, while seated on the little
-neighbouring cliffs seemed by their very patience to say,
-"Ah! when the Indians come we shall have a feast."
-
-In the morning we all sallied forth to hunt, and although
-we had not much success, there were some animated chases.
-Soon after starting the party separated, and so arranged
-their plans, that at a certain time of the day (in guessing
-which they show much skill) they should all meet from different
-points of the compass on a plain piece of ground,
-and thus drive together the wild animals. One day I went
-out hunting at Bahia Blanca, but the men there merely rode
-in a crescent, each being about a quarter of a mile apart
-from the other. A fine male ostrich being turned by the
-headmost riders, tried to escape on one side. The Gauchos
-pursued at a reckless pace, twisting their horses about with
-the most admirable command, and each man whirling the
-balls round his head. At length the foremost threw them,
-revolving through the air: in an instant the ostrich rolled
-over and over, its legs fairly lashed together by the thong.
-The plains abound with three kinds of partridge, [3] two
-of which are as large as hen pheasants. Their destroyer,
-a small and pretty fox, was also singularly numerous; in
-the course of the day we could not have seen less than forty
-or fifty. They were generally near their earths, but the dogs
-killed one. When we returned to the posta, we found two
-of the party returned who had been hunting by themselves.
-They had killed a puma, and had found an ostrich's nest with
-twenty-seven eggs in it. Each of these is said to equal in
-weight eleven hen's eggs; so that we obtained from this one
-nest as much food as 297 hen's eggs would have given.
-
-September 14th. -- As the soldiers belonging to the next
-posta meant to return, and we should together make a party
-of five, and all armed, I determined not to wait for the expected
-troops. My host, the lieutenant, pressed me much
-to stop. As he had been very obliging -- not only providing
-me with food, but lending me his private horses -- I wanted
-to make him some remuneration. I asked my guide whether
-I might do so, but he told me certainly not; that the only
-answer I should receive, probably would be, "We have meat
-for the dogs in our country, and therefore do not grudge it
-to a Christian." It must not be supposed that the rank of
-lieutenant in such an army would at all prevent the acceptance
-of payment: it was only the high sense of hospitality,
-which every traveller is bound to acknowledge as nearly universal
-throughout these provinces. After galloping some
-leagues, we came to a low swampy country, which extends
-for nearly eighty miles northward, as far as the Sierra
-Tapalguen. In some parts there were fine damp plains, covered
-with grass, while others had a soft, black, and peaty soil.
-There were also many extensive but shallow lakes, and large
-beds of reeds. The country on the whole resembled the better
-parts of the Cambridgeshire fens. At night we had some
-difficulty in finding amidst the swamps, a dry place for our
-bivouac.
-
-September 15th. -- Rose very early in the morning and
-shortly after passed the posta where the Indians had murdered
-the five soldiers. The officer had eighteen chuzo
-wounds in his body. By the middle of the day, after a hard
-gallop, we reached the fifth posta: on account of some difficulty
-in procuring horses we stayed there the night. As this
-point was the most exposed on the whole line, twenty-one
-soldiers were stationed here; at sunset they returned from
-hunting, bringing with them seven deer, three ostriches, and
-many armadilloes and partridges. When riding through the
-country, it is a common practice to set fire to the plain;
-and hence at night, as on this occasion, the horizon was
-illuminated in several places by brilliant conflagrations.
-This is done partly for the sake of puzzling any stray Indians,
-but chiefly for improving the pasture. In grassy
-plains unoccupied by the larger ruminating quadrupeds, it
-seems necessary to remove the superfluous vegetation by fire,
-so as to render the new year's growth serviceable.
-
-The rancho at this place did not boast even of a roof,
-but merely consisted of a ring of thistle-stalks, to break
-the force of the wind. It was situated on the borders of an
-extensive but shallow lake, swarming with wild fowl, among
-which the black-necked swan was conspicuous.
-
-The kind of plover, which appears as if mounted on
-stilts (Himantopus nigricollis), is here common in flocks of
-considerable size. It has been wrongfully accused of inelegance;
-when wading about in shallow water, which is its
-favourite resort, its gait is far from awkward. These birds
-in a flock utter a noise, that singularly resembles the cry of
-a pack of small dogs in full chase: waking in the night, I
-have more than once been for a moment startled at the distant
-sound. The teru-tero (Vanellus cayanus) is another
-bird, which often disturbs the stillness of the night. In
-appearance and habits it resembles in many respects our peewits;
-its wings, however, are armed with sharp spurs, like
-those on the legs of the common cock. As our peewit takes
-its name from the sound of its voice, so does the teru-tero.
-While riding over the grassy plains, one is constantly pursued
-by these birds, which appear to hate mankind, and I
-am sure deserve to be hated for their never-ceasing, unvaried,
-harsh screams. To the sportsman they are most annoying,
-by telling every other bird and animal of his approach: to
-the traveller in the country, they may possibly, as Molina
-says, do good, by warning him of the midnight robber. During
-the breeding season, they attempt, like our peewits, by
-feigning to be wounded, to draw away from their nests dogs
-and other enemies. The eggs of this bird are esteemed a
-great delicacy.
-
-September 16th. -- To the seventh posta at the foot of the
-Sierra Tapalguen. The country was quite level, with a
-coarse herbage and a soft peaty soil. The hovel was here
-remarkably neat, the posts and rafters being made of about
-a dozen dry thistle-stalks bound together with thongs of
-hide; and by the support of these Ionic-like columns, the
-roof and sides were thatched with reeds. We were here told
-a fact, which I would not have credited, if I had not had
-partly ocular proof of it; namely, that, during the previous
-night hail as large as small apples, and extremely hard, had
-fallen with such violence, as to kill the greater number of the
-wild animals. One of the men had already found thirteen
-deer (Cervus campestris) lying dead, and I saw their _fresh_
-hides; another of the party, a few minutes after my arrival
-brought in seven more. Now I well know, that one man
-without dogs could hardly have killed seven deer in a week.
-The men believed they had seen about fifteen ostriches (part
-of one of which we had for dinner); and they said that
-several were running about evidently blind in one eye.
-Numbers of smaller birds, as ducks, hawks, and partridges,
-were killed. I saw one of the latter with a black mark on
-its back, as if it had been struck with a paving-stone. A
-fence of thistle-stalks round the hovel was nearly broken
-down, and my informer, putting his head out to see what was
-the matter, received a severe cut, and now wore a bandage.
-The storm was said to have been of limited extent: we
-certainly saw from our last night's bivouac a dense cloud
-and lightning in this direction. It is marvellous how such
-strong animals as deer could thus have been killed; but I
-have no doubt, from the evidence I have given, that the
-story is not in the least exaggerated. I am glad, however,
-to have its credibility supported by the Jesuit Dobrizhoffen, [4]
-who, speaking of a country much to the northward, says,
-hail fell of an enormous size and killed vast numbers of cattle:
-the Indians hence called the place _Lalegraicavalca_, meaning
-"the little white things." Dr. Malcolmson, also, informs me
-that he witnessed in 1831 in India, a hail-storm, which
-killed numbers of large birds and much injured the cattle.
-These hailstones were flat, and one was ten inches in
-circumference, and another weighed two ounces. They
-ploughed up a gravel-walk like musket-balls, and passed
-through glass-windows, making round holes, but not cracking
-them.
-
-Having finished our dinner, of hail-stricken meat, we
-crossed the Sierra Tapalguen; a low range of hills, a few
-hundred feet in height, which commences at Cape Corrientes.
-The rock in this part is pure quartz; further eastward I
-understand it is granitic. The hills are of a remarkable
-form; they consist of flat patches of table-land, surrounded
-by low perpendicular cliffs, like the outliers of a sedimentary
-deposit. The hill which I ascended was very small, not
-above a couple of hundred yards in diameter; but I saw
-others larger. One which goes by the name of the "Corral,"
-is said to be two or three miles in diameter, and encompassed
-by perpendicular cliffs, between thirty and forty feet high,
-excepting at one spot, where the entrance lies. Falconer [5]
-gives a curious account of the Indians driving troops of
-wild horses into it, and then by guarding the entrance, keeping
-them secure. I have never heard of any other instance
-of table-land in a formation of quartz, and which, in the
-hill I examined, had neither cleavage nor stratification. I
-was told that the rock of the "Corral" was white, and would
-strike fire.
-
-We did not reach the posta on the Rio Tapalguen till
-after it was dark. At supper, from something which was
-said, I was suddenly struck with horror at thinking that I
-was eating one of the favourite dishes of the country
-namely, a half-formed calf, long before its proper time of
-birth. It turned out to be Puma; the meat is very white
-and remarkably like veal in taste. Dr. Shaw was laughed
-at for stating that "the flesh of the lion is in great esteem
-having no small affinity with veal, both in colour, taste,
-and flavour." Such certainly is the case with the Puma.
-The Gauchos differ in their opinion, whether the Jaguar is
-good eating, but are unanimous in saying that cat is excellent.
-
-September 17th. -- We followed the course of the Rio
-Tapalguen, through a very fertile country, to the ninth
-posta. Tapalguen, itself, or the town of Tapalguen, if it
-may be so called, consists of a perfectly level plain, studded
-over, as far as the eye can reach, with the toldos or
-oven-shaped huts of the Indians. The families of the friendly
-Indians, who were fighting on the side of Rosas, resided
-here. We met and passed many young Indian women, riding
-by two or three together on the same horse: they, as
-well as many of the young men, were strikingly handsome, --
-their fine ruddy complexions being the picture of health.
-Besides the toldos, there were three ranchos; one inhabited
-by the Commandant, and the two others by Spaniards with
-small shops.
-
-We were here able to buy some biscuit. I had now been
-several days without tasting anything besides meat: I did
-not at all dislike this new regimen; but I felt as if it would
-only have agreed with me with hard exercise. I have heard
-that patients in England, when desired to confine themselves
-exclusively to an animal diet, even with the hope of life
-before their eyes, have hardly been able to endure it. Yet
-the Gaucho in the Pampas, for months together, touches
-nothing but beef. But they eat, I observe, a very large
-proportion of fat, which is of a less animalized nature; and
-they particularly dislike dry meat, such as that of the Agouti.
-Dr. Richardson [6] also, has remarked, "that when people
-have fed for a long time solely upon lean animal food, the
-desire for fat becomes so insatiable, that they can consume
-a large quantity of unmixed and even oily fat without
-nausea:" this appears to me a curious physiological fact.
-It is, perhaps, from their meat regimen that the Gauchos,
-like other carnivorous animals, can abstain long from food.
-I was told that at Tandeel, some troops voluntarily pursued
-a party of Indians for three days, without eating or drinking.
-
-We saw in the shops many articles, such as horsecloths,
-belts, and garters, woven by the Indian women. The patterns
-were very pretty, and the colours brilliant; the workmanship
-of the garters was so good that an English merchant
-at Buenos Ayres maintained they must have been
-manufactured in England, till he found the tassels had been
-fastened by split sinew.
-
-September 18th. -- We had a very long ride this day. At
-the twelfth posta, which is seven leagues south of the Rio
-Salado, we came to the first estancia with cattle and white
-women. Afterwards we had to ride for many miles through
-a country flooded with water above our horses' knees. By
-crossing the stirrups, and riding Arab-like with our legs
-bent up, we contrived to keep tolerably dry. It was nearly
-dark when we arrived at the Salado; the stream was deep,
-and about forty yards wide; in summer, however, its bed
-becomes almost dry, and the little remaining water nearly
-as salt as that of the sea. We slept at one of the great
-estancias of General Rosas. It was fortified, and of such an
-extent, that arriving in the dark I thought it was a town
-and fortress. In the morning we saw immense herds of
-cattle, the general here having seventy-four square leagues
-of land. Formerly nearly three hundred men were employed
-about this estate, and they defied all the attacks of
-the Indians.
-
-September 19th. -- Passed the Guardia del Monte. This
-is a nice scattered little town, with many gardens, full of
-peach and quince trees. The plain here looked like that
-around Buenos Ayres; the turf being short and bright green,
-with beds of clover and thistles, and with bizcacha holes.
-I was very much struck with the marked change in the
-aspect of the country after having crossed the Salado. From
-a coarse herbage we passed on to a carpet of fine green verdure.
-I at first attributed this to some change in the nature
-of the soil, but the inhabitants assured me that here, as
-well as in Banda Oriental, where there is as great a difference
-between the country round Monte Video and the
-thinly-inhabited savannahs of Colonia, the whole was to be
-attributed to the manuring and grazing of the cattle. Exactly
-the same fact has been observed in the prairies [7] of
-North America, where coarse grass, between five and six
-feet high, when grazed by cattle, changes into common pasture
-land. I am not botanist enough to say whether the
-change here is owing to the introduction of new species,
-to the altered growth of the same, or to a difference in their
-proportional numbers. Azara has also observed with astonishment
-this change: he is likewise much perplexed by the
-immediate appearance of plants not occurring in the neighbourhood,
-on the borders of any track that leads to a newly-
-constructed hovel. In another part he says, [8] "ces chevaux
-(sauvages) ont la manie de preferer les chemins, et le bord
-des routes pour deposer leurs excremens, dont on trouve des
-monceaux dans ces endroits." Does this not partly explain
-the circumstance? We thus have lines of richly manured
-land serving as channels of communication across wide districts.
-
-Near the Guardia we find the southern limit of two European
-plants, now become extraordinarily common. The
-fennel in great profusion covers the ditch-banks in the
-neighbourhood of Buenos Ayres, Monte Video, and other towns.
-But the cardoon (Cynara cardunculus) has a far wider
-range: [9] it occurs in these latitudes on both sides of the,
-Cordillera, across the continent. I saw it in unfrequented
-spots in Chile, Entre Rios, and Banda Oriental. In the
-latter country alone, very many (probably several hundred)
-square miles are covered by one mass of these prickly plants,
-and are impenetrable by man or beast. Over the undulating
-plains, where these great beds occur, nothing else can now
-live. Before their introduction, however, the surface must
-have supported, as in other parts, a rank herbage. I doubt
-whether any case is on record of an invasion on so grand
-a scale of one plant over the aborigines. As I have already
-said, I nowhere saw the cardoon south of the Salado; but
-it is probable that in proportion as that country becomes
-inhabited, the cardoon will extend its limits. The case is
-different with the giant thistle (with variegated leaves) of
-the Pampas, for I met with it in the valley of the Sauce.
-According to the principles so well laid down by Mr. Lyell,
-few countries have undergone more remarkable changes,
-since the year 1535, when the first colonist of La Plata landed
-with seventy-two horses. The countless herds of horses,
-cattle, and sheep, not only have altered the whole aspect of
-the vegetation, but they have almost banished the guanaco,
-deer and ostrich. Numberless other changes must likewise
-have taken place; the wild pig in some parts probably replaces
-the peccari; packs of wild dogs may be heard howling
-on the wooded banks of the less-frequented streams; and
-the common cat, altered into a large and fierce animal, inhabits
-rocky hills. As M. d'Orbigny has remarked, the increase
-in numbers of the carrion-vulture, since the introduction
-of the domestic animals, must have been infinitely great;
-and we have given reasons for believing that they have extended
-their southern range. No doubt many plants, besides
-the cardoon and fennel, are naturalized; thus the islands
-near the mouth of the Parana, are thickly clothed with
-peach and orange trees, springing from seeds carried there
-by the waters of the river.
-
-While changing horses at the Guardia several people questioned
-us much about the army, -- I never saw anything like
-the enthusiasm for Rosas, and for the success of the "most
-just of all wars, because against barbarians." This expression,
-it must be confessed, is very natural, for till lately,
-neither man, woman nor horse, was safe from the attacks
-of the Indians. We had a long day's ride over the same
-rich green plain, abounding with various flocks, and with
-here and there a solitary estancia, and its one _ombu_ tree.
-In the evening it rained heavily: on arriving at a posthouse
-we were told by the owner, that if we had not a
-regular passport we must pass on, for there were so
-many robbers he would trust no one. When he read, however,
-my passport, which began with "El Naturalista Don
-Carlos," his respect and civility were as unbounded as his
-suspicions had been before. What a naturalist might be,
-neither he nor his countrymen, I suspect, had any idea;
-but probably my title lost nothing of its value from that
-cause.
-
-September 20th. -- We arrived by the middle of the day at
-Buenos Ayres. The outskirts of the city looked quite pretty,
-with the agave hedges, and groves of olive, peach and willow
-trees, all just throwing out their fresh green leaves. I rode
-to the house of Mr. Lumb, an English merchant, to whose
-kindness and hospitality, during my stay in the country, I
-was greatly indebted.
-
-The city of Buenos Ayres is large; [10] and I should think
-one of the most regular in the world. Every street is at right
-angles to the one it crosses, and the parallel ones being
-equidistant, the houses are collected into solid squares of
-equal dimensions, which are called quadras. On the other hand,
-the houses themselves are hollow squares; all the rooms opening
-into a neat little courtyard. They are generally only
-one story high, with flat roofs, which are fitted with seats
-and are much frequented by the inhabitants in summer. In
-the centre of the town is the Plaza, where the public offices,
-fortress, cathedral, etc., stand. Here also, the old viceroys,
-before the revolution, had their palaces. The general assemblage
-of buildings possesses considerable architectural beauty,
-although none individually can boast of any.
-
-The great _corral_, where the animals are kept for slaughter
-to supply food to this beef-eating population, is one of
-the spectacles best worth seeing. The strength of the horse
-as compared to that of the bullock is quite astonishing: a
-man on horseback having thrown his lazo round the horns
-of a beast, can drag it anywhere he chooses. The animal
-ploughing up the ground with outstretched legs, in vain
-efforts to resist the force, generally dashes at full speed to
-one side; but the horse immediately turning to receive the
-shock, stands so firmly that the bullock is almost thrown
-down, and it is surprising that their necks are not broken.
-The struggle is not, however, one of fair strength; the
-horse's girth being matched against the bullock's extended
-neck. In a similar manner a man can hold the wildest horse,
-if caught with the lazo, just behind the ears. When the
-bullock has been dragged to the spot where it is to be
-slaughtered, the matador with great caution cuts the hamstrings.
-Then is given the death bellow; a noise more expressive
-of fierce agony than any I know. I have often distinguished
-it from a long distance, and have always known
-that the struggle was then drawing to a close. The whole
-sight is horrible and revolting: the ground is almost made of
-bones; and the horses and riders are drenched with gore.
-
-[1] I call these thistle-stalks for the want of a more correct
-name. I believe it is a species of Eryngium.
-
-[2] Travels in Africa, p. 233.
-
-[3] Two species of Tinamus and Eudromia elegans of A. d'Orbigny,
-which can only be called a partridge with regard to its habits.
-
-[4] History of the Abipones, vol. ii. p. 6.
-
-[5] Falconer's Patagonia, p. 70.
-
-[6] Fauna Boreali-Americana, vol. i. p. 35.
-
-[7] See Mr. Atwater's account of the Prairies, in Silliman's
-N. A. Journal, vol. i. p. 117.
-
-[8] Azara's Voyages, vol. i. p. 373.
-
-[9] M. A. d'Orbigny (vol. i. p. 474) says that the cardoon
-and artichoke are both found wild. Dr. Hooker (Botanical
-Magazine, vol. iv. p. 2862), has described a variety of the
-Cynara from this part of South America under the name of
-inermis. He states that botanists are now generally agreed
-that the cardoon and the artichoke are varieties of one plant.
-I may add, that an intelligent farmer assured me that he had
-observed in a deserted garden some artichokes changing into
-the common cardoon. Dr. Hooker believes that Head's vivid
-description of the thistle of the Pampas applies to the
-cardoon, but this is a mistake. Captain Head referred to the
-plant, which I have mentioned a few lines lower down, under
-the title of giant thistle. Whether it is a true thistle I do
-not know; but it is quite different from the cardoon; and more
-like a thistle properly so called.
-
-[10] It is said to contain 60,000 inhabitants. Monte Video, the
-second town of importance on the banks of the Plata, has
-15,000.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII
-
-BUENOS AYRES AND ST. FE
-
-Excursion to St. Fe -- Thistle Beds -- Habits of the Bizcacha --
-Little Owl -- Saline Streams -- Level Plain -- Mastodon -- St.
-Fe -- Change in Landscape -- Geology -- Tooth of extinct
-Horse -- Relation of the Fossil and recent Quadrupeds of North
-and South America -- Effects of a great Drought -- Parana --
-Habits of the Jaguar -- Scissor-beak -- Kingfisher, Parrot,
-and Scissor-tail -- Revolution -- Buenos Ayres State of
-Government.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 27th. -- In the evening I set out on an
-excursion to St. Fe, which is situated nearly three hundred
-English miles from Buenos Ayres, on the banks of
-the Parana. The roads in the neighbourhood of the city after
-the rainy weather, were extraordinarily bad. I should never
-have thought it possible for a bullock waggon to have
-crawled along: as it was, they scarcely went at the rate of a
-mile an hour, and a man was kept ahead, to survey the best
-line for making the attempt. The bullocks were terribly
-jaded: it is a great mistake to suppose that with improved
-roads, and an accelerated rate of travelling, the sufferings of
-the animals increase in the same proportion. We passed a
-train of waggons and a troop of beasts on their road to
-Mendoza. The distance is about 580 geographical miles, and
-the journey is generally performed in fifty days. These
-waggons are very long, narrow, and thatched with reeds;
-they have only two wheels, the diameter of which in some
-cases is as much as ten feet. Each is drawn by six bullocks,
-which are urged on by a goad at least twenty feet long: this
-is suspended from within the roof; for the wheel bullocks a
-smaller one is kept; and for the intermediate pair, a point
-projects at right angles from the middle of the long one.
-
-The whole apparatus looked like some implement of war.
-
-September 28th. -- We passed the small town of Luxan
-where there is a wooden bridge over the river -- a most
-unusual convenience in this country. We passed also Areco.
-The plains appeared level, but were not so in fact; for in
-various places the horizon was distant. The estancias are
-here wide apart; for there is little good pasture, owing to
-the land being covered by beds either of an acrid clover,
-or of the great thistle. The latter, well known from the
-animated description given by Sir F. Head, were at this
-time of the year two-thirds grown; in some parts they were
-as high as the horse's back, but in others they had not yet
-sprung up, and the ground was bare and dusty as on a turnpike-
-road. The clumps were of the most brilliant green, and
-they made a pleasing miniature-likeness of broken forest
-land. When the thistles are full grown, the great beds are
-impenetrable, except by a few tracts, as intricate as those
-in a labyrinth. These are only known to the robbers, who
-at this season inhabit them, and sally forth at night to rob
-and cut throats with impunity. Upon asking at a house
-whether robbers were numerous, I was answered, "The thistles
-are not up yet;" -- the meaning of which reply was not at
-first very obvious. There is little interest in passing over
-these tracts, for they are inhabited by few animals or birds,
-excepting the bizcacha and its friend the little owl.
-
-The bizcacha [1] is well known to form a prominent feature
-in the zoology of the Pampas. It is found as far south as
-the Rio Negro, in lat. 41 degs., but not beyond. It cannot,
-like the agouti, subsist on the gravelly and desert plains of
-Patagonia, but prefers a clayey or sandy soil, which produces a
-different and more abundant vegetation. Near Mendoza, at
-the foot of the Cordillera, it occurs in close neighbourhood
-with the allied alpine species. It is a very curious
-circumstance in its geographical distribution, that it has never
-been seen, fortunately for the inhabitants of Banda Oriental, to
-the eastward of the river Uruguay: yet in this province there
-are plains which appear admirably adapted to its habits.
-The Uruguay has formed an insuperable obstacle to its
-migration: although the broader barrier of the Parana has
-been passed, and the bizcacha is common in Entre Rios, the
-province between these two great rivers. Near Buenos Ayres
-these animals are exceedingly common. Their most favourite
-resort appears to be those parts of the plain which during
-one-half of the year are covered with giant thistles, to the
-exclusion of other plants. The Gauchos affirm that it lives
-on roots; which, from the great strength of its gnawing
-teeth, and the kind of places frequented by it, seems probable.
-In the evening the bizcachas come out in numbers, and quietly
-sit at the mouths of their burrows on their haunches. At
-such times they are very tame, and a man on horseback passing
-by seems only to present an object for their grave
-contemplation. They run very awkwardly, and when running
-out of danger, from their elevated tails and short front legs
-much resemble great rats. Their flesh, when cooked, is very
-white and good, but it is seldom used.
-
-The bizcacha has one very singular habit; namely, dragging
-every hard object to the mouth of its burrow: around
-each group of holes many bones of cattle, stones, thistle-
-stalks, hard lumps of earth, dry dung, etc., are collected into
-an irregular heap, which frequently amounts to as much as
-a wheelbarrow would contain. I was credibly informed that
-a gentleman, when riding on a dark night, dropped his
-watch; he returned in the morning, and by searching the
-neighbourhood of every bizcacha hole on the line of road,
-as he expected, he soon found it. This habit of picking
-up whatever may be lying on the ground anywhere near its
-habitation, must cost much trouble. For what purpose it
-is done, I am quite unable to form even the most remote
-conjecture: it cannot be for defence, because the rubbish
-is chiefly placed above the mouth of the burrow, which
-enters the ground at a very small inclination. No doubt
-there must exist some good reason; but the inhabitants of
-the country are quite ignorant of it. The only fact which
-I know analogous to it, is the habit of that extraordinary
-Australian bird, the Calodera maculata, which makes an
-elegant vaulted passage of twigs for playing in, and
-which collects near the spot, land and sea-shells, bones
-and the feathers of birds, especially brightly coloured
-ones. Mr. Gould, who has described these facts, informs
-me, that the natives, when they lose any hard object,
-search the playing passages, and he has known a tobacco-
-pipe thus recovered.
-
-The little owl (Athene cunicularia), which has been so
-often mentioned, on the plains of Buenos Ayres exclusively
-inhabits the holes of the bizcacha; but in Banda Oriental it
-is its own workman. During the open day, but more especially
-in the evening, these birds may be seen in every direction
-standing frequently by pairs on the hillock near their
-burrows. If disturbed they either enter the hole, or, uttering
-a shrill harsh cry, move with a remarkably undulatory
-flight to a short distance, and then turning round, steadily
-gaze at their pursuer. Occasionally in the evening they may
-be heard hooting. I found in the stomachs of two which
-I opened the remains of mice, and I one day saw a small
-snake killed and carried away. It is said that snakes are
-their common prey during the daytime. I may here mention,
-as showing on what various kinds of food owls subsist,
-that a species killed among the islets of the Chonos
-Archipelago, had its stomach full of good-sized crabs. In
-India [2] there is a fishing genus of owls, which likewise
-catches crabs.
-
-In the evening we crossed the Rio Arrecife on a simple
-raft made of barrels lashed together, and slept at the post-
-house on the other side. I this day paid horse-hire for
-thirty-one leagues; and although the sun was glaring hot I
-was but little fatigued. When Captain Head talks of riding
-fifty leagues a day, I do not imagine the distance is equal
-to 150 English miles. At all events, the thirty-one leagues
-was only 76 miles in a straight line, and in an open country
-I should think four additional miles for turnings would be
-a sufficient allowance.
-
-29th and 30th. -- We continued to ride over plains of the
-same character. At San Nicolas I first saw the noble river
-of the Parana. At the foot of the cliff on which the town
-stands, some large vessels were at anchor. Before arriving
-at Rozario, we crossed the Saladillo, a stream of fine clear
-running water, but too saline to drink. Rozario is a large
-town built on a dead level plain, which forms a cliff about
-sixty feet high over the Parana. The river here is very
-broad, with many islands, which are low and wooded, as is
-also the opposite shore. The view would resemble that of a
-great lake, if it were not for the linear-shaped islets, which
-alone give the idea of running water. The cliffs are the most
-picturesque part; sometimes they are absolutely perpendicular,
-and of a red colour; at other times in large broken
-masses, covered with cacti and mimosa-trees. The real
-grandeur, however, of an immense river like this, is derived
-from reflecting how important a means of communication
-and commerce it forms between one nation and another; to
-what a distance it travels, and from how vast a territory
-it drains the great body of fresh water which flows past
-your feet.
-
-For many leagues north and south of San Nicolas and
-Rozario, the country is really level. Scarcely anything which
-travellers have written about its extreme flatness, can be
-considered as exaggeration. Yet I could never find a spot
-where, by slowly turning round, objects were not seen at
-greater distances in some directions than in others; and
-this manifestly proves inequality in the plain. At sea, a
-person's eye being six feet above the surface of the water,
-his horizon is two miles and four-fifths distant. In like
-manner, the more level the plain, the more nearly does the
-horizon approach within these narrow limits; and this, in
-my opinion, entirely destroys that grandeur which one would
-have imagined that a vast level plain would have possessed.
-
-October 1st. -- We started by moonlight and arrived at the
-Rio Tercero by sunrise. The river is also called the Saladillo,
-and it deserves the name, for the water is brackish.
-I stayed here the greater part of the day, searching for fossil
-bones. Besides a perfect tooth of the Toxodon, and many
-scattered bones, I found two immense skeletons near each
-other, projecting in bold relief from the perpendicular cliff
-of the Parana. They were, however, so completely decayed,
-that I could only bring away small fragments of one of the
-great molar teeth; but these are sufficient to show that the
-remains belonged to a Mastodon, probably to the same species
-with that, which formerly must have inhabited the Cordillera
-in Upper Peru in such great numbers. The men
-who took me in the canoe, said they had long known of these
-skeletons, and had often wondered how they had got there:
-the necessity of a theory being felt, they came to the
-conclusion that, like the bizcacha, the mastodon was formerly
-a burrowing animal! In the evening we rode another stage,
-and crossed the Monge, another brackish stream, bearing the
-dregs of the washings of the Pampas.
-
-October 2nd. -- We passed through Corunda, which, from
-the luxuriance of its gardens, was one of the prettiest
-villages I saw. From this point to St. Fe the road is not very
-safe. The western side of the Parana northward, ceases to
-be inhabited; and hence the Indians sometimes come down
-thus far, and waylay travellers. The nature of the country
-also favours this, for instead of a grassy plain, there is an
-open woodland, composed of low prickly mimosas. We
-passed some houses that had been ransacked and since deserted;
-we saw also a spectacle, which my guides viewed
-with high satisfaction; it was the skeleton of an Indian
-with the dried skin hanging on the bones, suspended to the
-branch of a tree.
-
-In the morning we arrived at St. Fe. I was surprised
-to observe how great a change of climate a difference of only
-three degrees of latitude between this place and Buenos
-Ayres had caused. This was evident from the dress and
-complexion of the men -- from the increased size of the
-ombu-trees -- the number of new cacti and other plants --
-and especially from the birds. In the course of an hour I
-remarked half-a-dozen birds, which I had never seen at
-Buenos Ayres. Considering that there is no natural boundary
-between the two places, and that the character of the
-country is nearly similar, the difference was much greater
-than I should have expected.
-
-October 3rd and 4th. -- I was confined for these two days
-to my bed by a headache. A good-natured old woman,
-who attended me, wished me to try many odd remedies. A
-common practice is, to bind an orange-leaf or a bit of black
-plaster to each temple: and a still more general plan is, to
-split a bean into halves, moisten them, and place one on
-each temple, where they will easily adhere. It is not thought
-proper ever to remove the beans or plaster, but to allow
-them to drop off, and sometimes, if a man, with patches on
-his head, is asked, what is the matter? he will answer, "I
-had a headache the day before yesterday." Many of the
-remedies used by the people of the country are ludicrously
-strange, but too disgusting to be mentioned. One of the
-least nasty is to kill and cut open two puppies and bind
-them on each side of a broken limb. Little hairless dogs are
-in great request to sleep at the feet of invalids.
-
-St. Fe is a quiet little town, and is kept clean and in good
-order. The governor, Lopez, was a common soldier at the
-time of the revolution; but has now been seventeen years
-in power. This stability of government is owing to his
-tyrannical habits; for tyranny seems as yet better adapted
-to these countries than republicanism. The governor's favourite
-occupation is hunting Indians: a short time since
-he slaughtered forty-eight, and sold the children at the rate
-of three or four pounds apiece.
-
-October 5th. -- We crossed the Parana to St. Fe Bajada,
-a town on the opposite shore. The passage took some hours,
-as the river here consisted of a labyrinth of small streams,
-separated by low wooded islands. I had a letter of introduction
-to an old Catalonian Spaniard, who treated me with
-the most uncommon hospitality. The Bajada is the capital
-of Entre Rios. In 1825 the town contained 6000 inhabitants,
-and the province 30,000; yet, few as the inhabitants are, no
-province has suffered more from bloody and desperate
-revolutions. They boast here of representatives, ministers, a
-standing army, and governors: so it is no wonder that they
-have their revolutions. At some future day this must be
-one of the richest countries of La Plata. The soil is varied
-and productive; and its almost insular form gives it two
-grand lines of communication by the rivers Parana and
-Uruguay.
-
-
-I was delayed here five days, and employed myself in examining
-the geology of the surrounding country, which was
-very interesting. We here see at the bottom of the cliffs,
-beds containing sharks' teeth and sea-shells of extinct species,
-passing above into an indurated marl, and from that
-into the red clayey earth of the Pampas, with its calcareous
-concretions and the bones of terrestrial quadrupeds. This
-vertical section clearly tells us of a large bay of pure salt-
-water, gradually encroached on, and at last converted into
-the bed of a muddy estuary, into which floating carcasses
-were swept. At Punta Gorda, in Banda Oriental, I found
-an alternation of the Pampaean estuary deposit, with a
-limestone containing some of the same extinct sea-shells; and
-this shows either a change in the former currents, or more
-probably an oscillation of level in the bottom of the ancient
-estuary. Until lately, my reasons for considering the Pampaean
-formation to be an estuary deposit were, its general
-appearance, its position at the mouth of the existing great
-river the Plata, and the presence of so many bones of
-terrestrial quadrupeds: but now Professor Ehrenberg has had
-the kindness to examine for me a little of the red earth,
-taken from low down in the deposit, close to the skeletons
-of the mastodon, and he finds in it many infusoria, partly
-salt-water and partly fresh-water forms, with the latter
-rather preponderating; and therefore, as he remarks, the
-water must have been brackish. M. A. d'Orbigny found on
-the banks of the Parana, at the height of a hundred feet,
-great beds of an estuary shell, now living a hundred miles
-lower down nearer the sea; and I found similar shells at a
-less height on the banks of the Uruguay; this shows that
-just before the Pampas was slowly elevated into dry land,
-the water covering it was brackish. Below Buenos Ayres
-there are upraised beds of sea-shells of existing species,
-which also proves that the period of elevation of the Pampas
-was within the recent period.
-
-In the Pampaean deposit at the Bajada I found the osseous
-armour of a gigantic armadillo-like animal, the inside
-of which, when the earth was removed, was like a great
-cauldron; I found also teeth of the Toxodon and Mastodon,
-and one tooth of a Horse, in the same stained and decayed
-state. This latter tooth greatly interested me, [3] and I took
-scrupulous care in ascertaining that it had been embedded
-contemporaneously with the other remains; for I was not
-then aware that amongst the fossils from Bahia Blanca
-there was a horse's tooth hidden in the matrix: nor was it
-then known with certainty that the remains of horses are
-common in North America. Mr. Lyell has lately brought
-from the United States a tooth of a horse; and it is an
-interesting fact, that Professor Owen could find in no species,
-either fossil or recent, a slight but peculiar curvature
-characterizing it, until he thought of comparing it with my
-specimen found here: he has named this American horse Equus
-curvidens. Certainly it is a marvellous fact in the history
-of the Mammalia, that in South America a native horse
-should have lived and disappeared, to be succeeded in after-
-ages by the countless herds descended from the few introduced
-with the Spanish colonists!
-
-The existence in South America of a fossil horse, of the
-mastodon, possibly of an elephant, [4] and of a hollow-horned
-ruminant, discovered by MM. Lund and Clausen in the
-caves of Brazil, are highly interesting facts with respect to
-the geographical distribution of animals. At the present
-time, if we divide America, not by the Isthmus of Panama,
-but by the southern part of Mexico [5] in lat. 20 degs., where
-the great table-land presents an obstacle to the migration of
-species, by affecting the climate, and by forming, with the
-exception of some valleys and of a fringe of low land on
-the coast, a broad barrier; we shall then have the two
-zoological provinces of North and South America strongly
-contrasted with each other. Some few species alone have
-passed the barrier, and may be considered as wanderers from
-the south, such as the puma, opossum, kinkajou, and peccari.
-South America is characterized by possessing many peculiar
-gnawers, a family of monkeys, the llama, peccari, tapir,
-opossums, and, especially, several genera of Edentata, the
-order which includes the sloths, ant-eaters, and armadilloes.
-North America, on the other hand, is characterized (putting
-on one side a few wandering species) by numerous peculiar
-gnawers, and by four genera (the ox, sheep, goat, and antelope)
-of hollow-horned ruminants, of which great division
-South America is not known to possess a single species.
-Formerly, but within the period when most of the now existing
-shells were living, North America possessed, besides
-hollow-horned ruminants, the elephant, mastodon, horse, and
-three genera of Edentata, namely, the Megatherium, Megalonyx,
-and Mylodon. Within nearly this same period (as
-proved by the shells at Bahia Blanca) South America possessed,
-as we have just seen, a mastodon, horse, hollow-
-horned ruminant, and the same three genera (as well as
-several others) of the Edentata. Hence it is evident that
-North and South America, in having within a late geological
-period these several genera in common, were much
-more closely related in the character of their terrestrial
-inhabitants than they now are. The more I reflect on this
-case, the more interesting it appears: I know of no other
-instance where we can almost mark the period and manner
-of the splitting up of one great region into two well-
-characterized zoological provinces. The geologist, who is fully
-impressed with the vast oscillations of level which have
-affected the earth's crust within late periods, will not fear
-to speculate on the recent elevation of the Mexican platform,
-or, more probably, on the recent submergence of land
-in the West Indian Archipelago, as the cause of the present
-zoological separation of North and South America. The
-South American character of the West Indian mammals [6]
-seems to indicate that this archipelago was formerly united
-to the southern continent, and that it has subsequently been
-an area of subsidence.
-
-When America, and especially North America, possessed
-its elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-horned ruminants,
-it was much more closely related in its zoological
-characters to the temperate parts of Europe and Asia than
-it now is. As the remains of these genera are found on
-both sides of Behring's Straits [7] and on the plains of
-Siberia, we are led to look to the north-western side of North
-America as the former point of communication between the Old
-and so-called New World. And as so many species, both
-living and extinct, of these same genera inhabit and have
-inhabited the Old World, it seems most probable that the
-North American elephants, mastodons, horse, and hollow-
-horned ruminants migrated, on land since submerged near
-Behring's Straits, from Siberia into North America, and
-thence, on land since submerged in the West Indies, into
-South America, where for a time they mingled with the
-forms characteristic of that southern continent, and have
-since become extinct.
-
-
-While travelling through the country, I received several
-vivid descriptions of the effects of a late great drought; and
-the account of this may throw some light on the cases where
-vast numbers of animals of all kinds have been embedded
-together. The period included between the years 1827 and
-1830 is called the "gran seco," or the great drought. During
-this time so little rain fell, that the vegetation, even to the
-thistles, failed; the brooks were dried up, and the whole
-country assumed the appearance of a dusty high road. This
-was especially the case in the northern part of the province
-of Buenos Ayres and the southern part of St. Fe. Very
-great numbers of birds, wild animals, cattle, and horses
-perished from the want of food and water. A man told me
-that the deer [8] used to come into his courtyard to the well,
-which he had been obliged to dig to supply his own family
-with water; and that the partridges had hardly strength to
-fly away when pursued. The lowest estimation of the loss
-of cattle in the province of Buenos Ayres alone, was taken
-at one million head. A proprietor at San Pedro had previously
-to these years 20,000 cattle; at the end not one remained.
-San Pedro is situated in the middle of the finest
-country; and even now abounds again with animals; yet
-during the latter part of the "gran seco," live cattle were
-brought in vessels for the consumption of the inhabitants.
-The animals roamed from their estancias, and, wandering
-far southward, were mingled together in such multitudes,
-that a government commission was sent from Buenos Ayres
-to settle the disputes of the owners. Sir Woodbine Parish
-informed me of another and very curious source of dispute;
-the ground being so long dry, such quantities of dust were
-blown about, that in this open country the landmarks became
-obliterated, and people could not tell the limits of their
-estates.
-
-I was informed by an eye-witness that the cattle in herds
-of thousands rushed into the Parana, and being exhausted
-by hunger they were unable to crawl up the muddy banks,
-and thus were drowned. The arm of the river which runs
-by San Pedro was so full of putrid carcasses, that the master
-of a vessel told me that the smell rendered it quite impassable.
-Without doubt several hundred thousand animals
-thus perished in the river: their bodies when putrid were
-seen floating down the stream; and many in all probability
-were deposited in the estuary of the Plata. All the small
-rivers became highly saline, and this caused the death of
-vast numbers in particular spots; for when an animal drinks
-of such water it does not recover. Azara describes [9] the
-fury of the wild horses on a similar occasion, rushing into
-the marshes, those which arrived first being overwhelmed
-and crushed by those which followed. He adds that more
-than once he has seen the carcasses of upwards of a thousand
-wild horses thus destroyed. I noticed that the smaller
-streams in the Pampas were paved with a breccia of bones
-but this probably is the effect of a gradual increase, rather
-than of the destruction at any one period. Subsequently
-to the drought of 1827 to 1832, a very rainy season followed
-which caused great floods. Hence it is almost certain that
-some thousands of the skeletons were buried by the deposits
-of the very next year. What would be the opinion of a
-geologist, viewing such an enormous collection of bones, of
-all kinds of animals and of all ages, thus embedded in one
-thick earthy mass? Would he not attribute it to a flood
-having swept over the surface of the land, rather than to
-the common order of things? [10]
-
-October 12th. -- I had intended to push my excursion further,
-but not being quite well, I was compelled to return by
-a balandra, or one-masted vessel of about a hundred tons'
-burden, which was bound to Buenos Ayres. As the weather
-was not fair, we moored early in the day to a branch of a
-tree on one of the islands. The Parana is full of islands,
-which undergo a constant round of decay and renovation.
-In the memory of the master several large ones had disappeared,
-and others again had been formed and protected
-by vegetation. They are composed of muddy sand, without
-even the smallest pebble, and were then about four feet
-above the level of the river; but during the periodical floods
-they are inundated. They all present one character; numerous
-willows and a few other trees are bound together by a
-great variety of creeping plants, thus forming a thick jungle.
-These thickets afford a retreat for capybaras and jaguars.
-The fear of the latter animal quite destroyed all pleasure
-in scrambling through the woods. This evening I had not
-proceeded a hundred yards, before finding indubitable signs
-of the recent presence of the tiger, I was obliged to come
-back. On every island there were tracks; and as on the
-former excursion "el rastro de los Indios" had been the
-subject of conversation, so in this was "el rastro del tigre."
-The wooded banks of the great rivers appear to be the
-favourite haunts of the jaguar; but south of the Plata, I
-was told that they frequented the reeds bordering lakes:
-wherever they are, they seem to require water. Their common
-prey is the capybara, so that it is generally said, where
-capybaras are numerous there is little danger from the
-jaguar. Falconer states that near the southern side of the
-mouth of the Plata there are many jaguars, and that they
-chiefly live on fish; this account I have heard repeated. On
-the Parana they have killed many wood-cutters, and have
-even entered vessels at night. There is a man now living
-in the Bajada, who, coming up from below when it was
-dark, was seized on the deck; he escaped, however, with
-the loss of the use of one arm. When the floods drive these
-animals from the islands, they are most dangerous. I was
-told that a few years since a very large one found its way
-into a church at St. Fe: two padres entering one after the
-other were killed, and a third, who came to see what was the
-matter, escaped with difficulty. The beast was destroyed by
-being shot from a corner of the building which was unroofed.
-They commit also at these times great ravages
-among cattle and horses. It is said that they kill their prey
-by breaking their necks. If driven from the carcass, they
-seldom return to it. The Gauchos say that the jaguar, when
-wandering about at night, is much tormented by the foxes
-yelping as they follow him. This is a curious coincidence
-with the fact which is generally affirmed of the jackals
-accompanying, in a similarly officious manner, the East Indian
-tiger. The jaguar is a noisy animal, roaring much by night,
-and especially before bad weather.
-
-One day, when hunting on the banks of the Uruguay, I
-was shown certain trees, to which these animals constantly
-recur for the purpose, as it is said, of sharpening their
-claws. I saw three well-known trees; in front, the bark
-was worn smooth, as if by the breast of the animal, and on
-each side there were deep scratches, or rather grooves,
-extending in an oblique line, nearly a yard in length. The
-scars were of different ages. A common method of ascertaining
-whether a jaguar is in the neighbourhood is to
-examine these trees. I imagine this habit of the jaguar is
-exactly similar to one which may any day be seen in the
-common cat, as with outstretched legs and exserted claws it
-scrapes the leg of a chair; and I have heard of young fruit-
-trees in an orchard in England having been thus much injured.
-Some such habit must also be common to the puma,
-for on the bare hard soil of Patagonia I have frequently
-seen scores so deep that no other animal could have made
-them. The object of this practice is, I believe, to tear off
-the ragged points of their claws, and not, as the Gauchos
-think, to sharpen them. The jaguar is killed, without much
-difficulty, by the aid of dogs baying and driving him up a
-tree, where he is despatched with bullets.
-
-Owing to bad weather we remained two days at our moorings.
-Our only amusement was catching fish for our dinner:
-there were several kinds, and all good eating. A fish called
-the "armado" (a Silurus) is remarkable from a harsh grating
-noise which it makes when caught by hook and line,
-and which can be distinctly heard when the fish is beneath
-the water. This same fish has the power of firmly catching
-hold of any object, such as the blade of an oar or the fishing-
-line, with the strong spine both of its pectoral and dorsal
-fin. In the evening the weather was quite tropical, the
-thermometer standing at 79 degs. Numbers of fireflies were
-hovering about, and the musquitoes were very troublesome.
-I exposed my hand for five minutes, and it was soon black
-with them; I do not suppose there could have been less than
-fifty, all busy sucking.
-
-October 15th. -- We got under way and passed Punta
-Gorda, where there is a colony of tame Indians from the
-province of Missiones. We sailed rapidly down the current,
-but before sunset, from a silly fear of bad weather, we
-brought-to in a narrow arm of the river. I took the boat
-and rowed some distance up this creek. It was very narrow,
-winding, and deep; on each side a wall thirty or forty feet
-high, formed by trees intwined with creepers, gave to the
-canal a singularly gloomy appearance. I here saw a very
-extraordinary bird, called the Scissor-beak (Rhynchops
-nigra). It has short legs, web feet, extremely long-pointed
-wings, and is of about the size of a tern. The beak is flattened
-laterally, that is, in a plane at right angles to that
-of a spoonbill or duck. It is as flat and elastic as an ivory
-paper-cutter, and the lower mandible, differing from every
-other bird, is an inch and a half longer than the upper. In
-a lake near Maldonado, from which the water had been
-nearly drained, and which, in consequence, swarmed with
-small fry, I saw several of these birds, generally in small
-flocks, flying rapidly backwards and forwards close to the
-surface of the lake. They kept their bills wide open, and
-the lower mandible half buried in the water. Thus skimming
-the surface, they ploughed it in their course: the water was
-quite smooth, and it formed a most curious spectacle to behold
-a flock, each bird leaving its narrow wake on the mirror-like
-surface. In their flight they frequently twist about
-with extreme quickness, and dexterously manage with their
-projecting lower mandible to plough up small fish, which are
-secured by the upper and shorter half of their scissor-like
-
-
-[picture]
-
-
-bills. This fact I repeatedly saw, as, like swallows, they
-continued to fly backwards and forwards close before me.
-Occasionally when leaving the surface of the water their
-flight was wild, irregular, and rapid; they then uttered loud
-harsh cries. When these birds are fishing, the advantage
-of the long primary feathers of their wings, in keeping them
-dry, is very evident. When thus employed, their forms resemble
-the symbol by which many artists represent marine
-birds. Their tails are much used in steering their irregular
-course.
-
-These birds are common far inland along the course of
-the Rio Parana; it is said that they remain here during the
-whole year, and breed in the marshes. During the day they
-rest in flocks on the grassy plains at some distance from
-the water. Being at anchor, as I have said, in one of the
-deep creeks between the islands of the Parana, as the evening
-drew to a close, one of these scissor-beaks suddenly appeared.
-The water was quite still, and many little fish were
-rising. The bird continued for a long time to skim the
-surface, flying in its wild and irregular manner up and down
-the narrow canal, now dark with the growing night and the
-shadows of the overhanging trees. At Monte Video, I observed
-that some large flocks during the day remained on the
-mud-banks at the head of the harbour, in the same manner
-as on the grassy plains near the Parana; and every evening
-they took flight seaward. From these facts I suspect
-that the Rhynchops generally fishes by night, at which time
-many of the lower animals come most abundantly to the
-surface. M. Lesson states that he has seen these birds
-opening the shells of the mactrae buried in the sand-banks on
-the coast of Chile: from their weak bills, with the lower
-mandible so much projecting, their short legs and long
-wings, it is very improbable that this can be a general habit.
-
-In our course down the Parana, I observed only three
-other birds, whose habits are worth mentioning. One is a
-small kingfisher (Ceryle Americana); it has a longer tail
-than the European species, and hence does not sit in so stiff
-and upright a position. Its flight also, instead of being direct
-and rapid, like the course of an arrow, is weak and
-undulatory, as among the soft-billed birds. It utters a low
-note, like the clicking together of two small stones. A small
-green parrot (Conurus murinus), with a grey breast, appears
-to prefer the tall trees on the islands to any other
-situation for its building-place. A number of nests are
-placed so close together as to form one great mass of sticks.
-These parrots always live in flocks, and commit great ravages
-on the corn-fields. I was told, that near Colonia 2500 were
-killed in the course of one year. A bird with a forked tail,
-terminated by two long feathers (Tyrannus savana), and
-named by the Spaniards scissor-tail, is very common near
-Buenos Ayres: it commonly sits on a branch of the _ombu_
-tree, near a house, and thence takes a short flight in pursuit
-of insects, and returns to the same spot. When on the wing
-it presents in its manner of flight and general appearance
-a caricature-likeness of the common swallow. It has the
-power of turning very shortly in the air, and in so doing
-opens and shuts its tail, sometimes in a horizontal or lateral
-and sometimes in a vertical direction, just like a pair of
-scissors.
-
-October 16th. -- Some leagues below Rozario, the western
-shore of the Parana is bounded by perpendicular cliffs,
-which extend in a long line to below San Nicolas; hence it
-more resembles a sea-coast than that of a fresh-water river.
-It is a great drawback to the scenery of the Parana, that,
-from the soft nature of its banks, the water is very muddy.
-The Uruguay, flowing through a granitic country, is much
-clearer; and where the two channels unite at the head of
-the Plata, the waters may for a long distance be distinguished
-by their black and red colours. In the evening, the
-wind being not quite fair, as usual we immediately moored,
-and the next day, as it blew rather freshly, though with a
-favouring current, the master was much too indolent to think
-of starting. At Bajada, he was described to me as "hombre
-muy aflicto" -- a man always miserable to get on; but certainly
-he bore all delays with admirable resignation. He
-was an old Spaniard, and had been many years in this
-country. He professed a great liking to the English, but
-stoutly maintained that the battle of Trafalgar was merely
-won by the Spanish captains having been all bought over;
-and that the only really gallant action on either side was
-performed by the Spanish admiral. It struck me as rather
-characteristic, that this man should prefer his countrymen
-being thought the worst of traitors, rather than unskilful or
-cowardly.
-
-18th and 19th. -- We continued slowly to sail down the
-noble stream: the current helped us but little. We met,
-during our descent, very few vessels. One of the best gifts
-of nature, in so grand a channel of communication, seems
-here wilfully thrown away -- a river in which ships might
-navigate from a temperate country, as surprisingly abundant
-in certain productions as destitute of others, to another
-possessing a tropical climate, and a soil which, according to
-the best of judges, M. Bonpland, is perhaps unequalled in
-fertility in any part of the world. How different would
-have been the aspect of this river if English colonists had
-by good fortune first sailed up the Plata! What noble towns
-would now have occupied its shores! Till the death of
-Francia, the Dictator of Paraguay, these two countries must
-remain distinct, as if placed on opposite sides of the globe.
-And when the old bloody-minded tyrant is gone to his long
-account, Paraguay will be torn by revolutions, violent in
-proportion to the previous unnatural calm. That country
-will have to learn, like every other South American state,
-that a republic cannot succeed till it contains a certain body
-of men imbued with the principles of justice and honour.
-
-October 20th. -- Being arrived at the mouth of the Parana,
-and as I was very anxious to reach Buenos Ayres, I went
-on shore at Las Conchas, with the intention of riding there.
-Upon landing, I found to my great surprise that I was to
-a certain degree a prisoner. A violent revolution having
-broken out, all the ports were laid under an embargo. I
-could not return to my vessel, and as for going by land to
-the city, it was out of the question. After a long conversation
-with the commandant, I obtained permission to go the
-next day to General Rolor, who commanded a division of
-the rebels on this side the capital. In the morning I rode
-to the encampment. The general, officers, and soldiers, all
-appeared, and I believe really were, great villains. The
-general, the very evening before he left the city, voluntarily
-went to the Governor, and with his hand to his heart, pledged
-his word of honour that he at least would remain faithful
-to the last. The general told me that the city was in a state
-of close blockade, and that all he could do was to give me
-a passport to the commander-in-chief of the rebels at Quilmes.
-We had therefore to take a great sweep round the
-city, and it was with much difficulty that we procured horses.
-My reception at the encampment was quite civil, but I was
-told it was impossible that I could be allowed to enter the
-city. I was very anxious about this, as I anticipated the
-Beagle's departure from the Rio Plata earlier than it took
-place. Having mentioned, however, General Rosas's obliging
-kindness to me when at the Colorado, magic itself could
-not have altered circumstances quicker than did this
-conversation. I was instantly told that though they could not
-give me a passport, if I chose to leave my guide and horses,
-I might pass their sentinels. I was too glad to accept of
-this, and an officer was sent with me to give directions that
-I should not be stopped at the bridge. The road for the
-space of a league was quite deserted. I met one party of
-soldiers, who were satisfied by gravely looking at an old
-passport: and at length I was not a little pleased to find
-myself within the city.
-
-This revolution was supported by scarcely any pretext of
-grievances: but in a state which, in the course of nine months
-(from February to October, 1820), underwent fifteen
-changes in its government -- each governor, according to the
-constitution, being elected for three years -- it would be very
-unreasonable to ask for pretexts. In this case, a party of
-men -- who, being attached to Rosas, were disgusted with
-the governor Balcarce -- to the number of seventy left the
-city, and with the cry of Rosas the whole country took arms.
-The city was then blockaded, no provisions, cattle or horses,
-were allowed to enter; besides this, there was only a little
-skirmishing, and a few men daily killed. The outside party
-well knew that by stopping the supply of meat they would
-certainly be victorious. General Rosas could not have known
-of this rising; but it appears to be quite consonant with the
-plans of his party. A year ago he was elected governor, but
-he refused it, unless the Sala would also confer on him
-extraordinary powers. This was refused, and since then
-his party have shown that no other governor can keep his
-place. The warfare on both sides was avowedly protracted
-till it was possible to hear from Rosas. A note arrived a
-few days after I left Buenos Ayres, which stated that the
-General disapproved of peace having been broken, but that
-he thought the outside party had justice on their side. On
-the bare reception of this, the Governor, ministers, and part
-of the military, to the number of some hundreds, fled from
-the city. The rebels entered, elected a new governor, and
-were paid for their services to the number of 5500 men.
-From these proceedings, it was clear that Rosas ultimately
-would become the dictator: to the term king, the people in
-this, as in other republics, have a particular dislike. Since
-leaving South America, we have heard that Rosas has
-been elected, with powers and for a time altogether opposed
-to the constitutional principles of the republic.
-
-[1] The bizcacha (Lagostomus trichodactylus) somewhat resembles
-a large rabbit, but with bigger gnawing teeth and a long tail;
-it has, however, only three toes behind, like the agouti. During
-the last three or four years the skins of these animals have
-been sent to England for the sake of the fur.
-
-[2] Journal of Asiatic Soc., vol. v. p. 363.
-
-[3] I need hardly state here that there is good evidence
-against any horse living in America at the time of Columbus.
-
-[4] Cuvier. Ossemens Fossils, tom. i. p. 158.
-
-[5] This is the geographical division followed by Lichtenstein,
-Swainson, Erichson, and Richardson. The section from Vera Cruz
-to Acapulco, given by Humboldt in the Polit. Essay on Kingdom
-of N. Spain will show how immense a barrier the Mexican
-table-land forms. Dr. Richardson, in his admirable Report on
-the Zoology of N. America read before the Brit. Assoc. 1836
-(p. 157), talking of the identification of a Mexican animal
-with the Synetheres prehensilis, says, "We do not know with
-what propriety, but if correct, it is, if not a solitary
-instance, at least very nearly so, of a rodent animal being
-common to North and South America."
-
-[6] See Dr. Richardson's Report, p. 157; also L'Institut,
-1837, p. 253. Cuvier says the kinkajou is found in the larger
-Antilles, but this is doubtful. M. Gervais states that the
-Didelphis crancrivora is found there. It is certain that the
-West Indies possess some mammifers peculiar to themselves. A
-tooth of a mastadon has been brought from Bahama; Edin. New
-Phil. Journ., 1826, p. 395.
-
-[7] See the admirable Appendix by Dr. Buckland to Beechey's
-Voyage; also the writings of Chamisso in Kotzebue's Voyage.
-
-[8] In Captain Owen's Surveying Voyage (vol. ii. p. 274)
-there is a curious account of the effects of a drought on the
-elephants, at Benguela (west coast of Africa). "A number of
-these animals had some time since entered the town, in a body,
-to possess themselves of the wells, not being able to procure
-any water in the country. The inhabitants mustered, when a
-desperate conflict ensued, which terminated in the ultimate
-discomfiture of the invaders, but not until they had killed
-one man, and wounded several others." The town is said to
-have a population of nearly three thousand! Dr. Malcolmson
-informs me that, during a great drought in India, the wild
-animals entered the tents of some troops at Ellore, and that
-a hare drank out of a vessel held by the adjutant of the
-regiment.
-
-[9] Travels, vol. i. p. 374.
-
-[10] These droughts to a certain degree seem to be almost
-periodical; I was told the dates of several others, and the
-intervals were about fifteen years.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII
-
-BANDA ORIENTAL AND PATAGONIA
-
-Excursion to Colonia del Sacramiento -- Value of an Estancia --
-Cattle, how counted -- Singular Breed of Oxen -- Perforated
-Pebbles -- Shepherd Dogs -- Horses broken-in, Gauchos
-riding -- Character of Inhabitants -- Rio Plata -- Flocks of
-Butterflies -- Aeronaut Spiders -- Phosphorescence of the
-Sea -- Port Desire -- Guanaco -- Port St. Julian -- Geology
-of Patagonia -- Fossil gigantic Animal -- Types of Organization
-constant -- Change in the Zoology of America -- Causes of
-Extinction.
-
-
-HAVING been delayed for nearly a fortnight in the
-city, I was glad to escape on board a packet bound
-for Monte Video. A town in a state of blockade
-must always be a disagreeable place of residence; in this case
-moreover there were constant apprehensions from robbers
-within. The sentinels were the worst of all; for, from
-their office and from having arms in their hands, they robbed
-with a degree of authority which other men could not
-imitate.
-
-Our passage was a very long and tedious one. The Plata
-looks like a noble estuary on the map; but is in truth a poor
-affair. A wide expanse of muddy water has neither grandeur
-nor beauty. At one time of the day, the two shores,
-both of which are extremely low, could just be distinguished
-from the deck. On arriving at Monte Video I found that
-the Beagle would not sail for some time, so I prepared for a
-short excursion in this part of Banda Oriental. Everything
-which I have said about the country near Maldonado is applicable
-to Monte Video; but the land, with the one exception
-of the Green Mount 450 feet high, from which it takes
-its name, is far more level. Very little of the undulating
-grassy plain is enclosed; but near the town there are a few
-hedge-banks, covered with agaves, cacti, and fennel.
-
-November 14th. -- We left Monte Video in the afternoon.
-I intended to proceed to Colonia del Sacramiento, situated
-on the northern bank of the Plata and opposite to Buenos
-Ayres, and thence, following up the Uruguay, to the village
-of Mercedes on the Rio Negro (one of the many rivers of
-this name in South America), and from this point to return
-direct to Monte Video. We slept at the house of my guide
-at Canelones. In the morning we rose early, in the hopes
-of being able to ride a good distance; but it was a vain
-attempt, for all the rivers were flooded. We passed in boats
-the streams of Canelones, St. Lucia, and San Jose, and thus
-lost much time. On a former excursion I crossed the Lucia
-near its mouth, and I was surprised to observe how easily
-our horses, although not used to swim, passed over a width
-of at least six hundred yards. On mentioning this at Monte
-Video, I was told that a vessel containing some mountebanks
-and their horses, being wrecked in the Plata, one horse
-swam seven miles to the shore. In the course of the day I
-was amused by the dexterity with which a Gaucho forced
-a restive horse to swim a river. He stripped off his clothes,
-and jumping on its back, rode into the water till it was out
-of its depth; then slipping off over the crupper, he caught
-hold of the tail, and as often as the horse turned round
-the man frightened it back by splashing water in its face.
-As soon as the horse touched the bottom on the other side,
-the man pulled himself on, and was firmly seated, bridle
-in hand, before the horse gained the bank. A naked man
-on a naked horse is a fine spectacle; I had no idea how well
-the two animals suited each other. The tail of a horse is a
-very useful appendage; I have passed a river in a boat with
-four people in it, which was ferried across in the same way
-as the Gaucho. If a man and horse have to cross a broad
-river, the best plan is for the man to catch hold of the pommel
-or mane, and help himself with the other arm.
-
-We slept and stayed the following day at the post of
-Cufre. In the evening the postman or letter-carrier arrived.
-He was a day after his time, owing to the Rio Rozario being
-flooded. It would not, however, be of much consequence;
-for, although he had passed through some of the principal
-towns in Banda Oriental, his luggage consisted of two letters!
-The view from the house was pleasing; an undulating
-green surface, with distant glimpses of the Plata. I find
-that I look at this province with very different eyes from
-what I did upon my first arrival. I recollect I then thought
-it singularly level; but now, after galloping over the Pampas,
-my only surprise is, what could have induced me ever
-to call it level. The country is a series of undulations, in
-themselves perhaps not absolutely great, but, as compared
-to the plains of St. Fe, real mountains. From these
-inequalities there is an abundance of small rivulets, and
-the turf is green and luxuriant.
-
-November 17th. -- We crossed the Rozario, which was
-deep and rapid, and passing the village of Colla, arrived
-at midday at Colonia del Sacramiento. The distance is
-twenty leagues, through a country covered with fine grass,
-but poorly stocked with cattle or inhabitants. I was invited
-to sleep at Colonia, and to accompany on the following
-day a gentleman to his estancia, where there were some
-limestone rocks. The town is built on a stony promontory
-something in the same manner as at Monte Video. It is
-strongly fortified, but both fortifications and town suffered
-much in the Brazilian war. It is very ancient; and the
-irregularity of the streets, and the surrounding groves of
-old orange and peach trees, gave it a pretty appearance.
-The church is a curious ruin; it was used as a powder-
-magazine, and was struck by lightning in one of the ten
-thousand thunderstorms of the Rio Plata. Two-thirds of
-the building were blown away to the very foundation; and
-the rest stands a shattered and curious monument of the
-united powers of lightning and gunpowder. In the evening
-I wandered about the half-demolished walls of the town. It
-was the chief seat of the Brazilian war; -- a war most injurious
-to this country, not so much in its immediate effects,
-as in being the origin of a multitude of generals and all
-other grades of officers. More generals are numbered (but
-not paid) in the United Provinces of La Plata than in the
-United Kingdom of Great Britain. These gentlemen have
-learned to like power, and do not object to a little
-skirmishing. Hence there are many always on the watch to
-create disturbance and to overturn a government which as yet
-has never rested on any staple foundation. I noticed, however,
-both here and in other places, a very general interest
-in the ensuing election for the President; and this appears
-a good sign for the prosperity of this little country. The
-inhabitants do not require much education in their
-representatives; I heard some men discussing the merits of those
-for Colonia; and it was said that, "although they were not
-men of business, they could all sign their names:" with this
-they seemed to think every reasonable man ought to be
-satisfied.
-
-18th. -- Rode with my host to his estancia, at the Arroyo
-de San Juan. In the evening we took a ride round the
-estate: it contained two square leagues and a half, and was
-situated in what is called a rincon; that is, one side was
-fronted by the Plata, and the two others guarded by impassable
-brooks. There was an excellent port for little vessels,
-and an abundance of small wood, which is valuable
-as supplying fuel to Buenos Ayres. I was curious to know
-the value of so complete an estancia. Of cattle there were
-3000, and it would well support three or four times that
-number; of mares 800, together with 150 broken-in horses,
-and 600 sheep. There was plenty of water and limestone,
-a rough house, excellent corrals, and a peach orchard. For
-all this he had been offered 2000 Pounds, and he only wanted
-500 Pounds additional, and probably would sell it for less. The
-chief trouble with an estancia is driving the cattle twice a
-week to a central spot, in order to make them tame, and to count
-them. This latter operation would be thought difficult,
-where there are ten or fifteen thousand head together. It
-is managed on the principle that the cattle invariably divide
-themselves into little troops of from forty to one hundred.
-Each troop is recognized by a few peculiarly marked
-animals, and its number is known: so that, one being lost
-out of ten thousand, it is perceived by its absence from one
-of the tropillas. During a stormy night the cattle all mingle
-together; but the next morning the tropillas separate as
-before; so that each animal must know its fellow out of ten
-thousand others.
-
-On two occasions I met with in this province some oxen
-of a very curious breed, called nata or niata. They appear
-externally to hold nearly the same relation to other cattle,
-which bull or pug dogs do to other dogs. Their forehead
-is very short and broad, with the nasal end turned up, and
-the upper lip much drawn back; their lower jaws project
-beyond the upper, and have a corresponding upward curve;
-hence their teeth are always exposed. Their nostrils are
-seated high up and are very open; their eyes project outwards.
-When walking they carry their heads low, on a short
-neck; and their hinder legs are rather longer compared
-with the front legs than is usual. Their bare teeth, their
-short heads, and upturned nostrils give them the most ludicrous
-self-confident air of defiance imaginable.
-
-Since my return, I have procured a skeleton head,
-through the kindness of my friend Captain Sulivan, R. N.,
-which is now deposited in the College of Surgeons. [1] Don
-F. Muniz, of Luxan, has kindly collected for me all the
-information which he could respecting this breed. From his
-account it seems that about eighty or ninety years ago, they
-were rare and kept as curiosities at Buenos Ayres. The
-breed is universally believed to have originated amongst
-the Indians southward of the Plata; and that it was with
-them the commonest kind. Even to this day, those reared
-in the provinces near the Plata show their less civilized
-origin, in being fiercer than common cattle, and in the cow
-easily deserting her first calf, if visited too often or
-molested. It is a singular fact that an almost similar structure
-to the abnormal [2] one of the niata breed, characterizes, as I
-am informed by Dr. Falconer, that great extinct ruminant
-of India, the Sivatherium. The breed is very _true_; and a
-niata bull and cow invariably produce niata calves. A niata
-bull with a common cow, or the reverse cross, produces offspring
-having an intermediate character, but with the niata
-characters strongly displayed: according to Senor Muniz,
-there is the clearest evidence, contrary to the common belief
-of agriculturists in analogous cases, that the niata cow when
-crossed with a common bull transmits her peculiarities more
-strongly than the niata bull when crossed with a common
-cow. When the pasture is tolerably long, the niata cattle
-feed with the tongue and palate as well as common cattle;
-but during the great droughts, when so many animals perish,
-the niata breed is under a great disadvantage, and would
-be exterminated if not attended to; for the common cattle,
-like horses, are able just to keep alive, by browsing with
-their lips on twigs of trees and reeds; this the niatas cannot
-so well do, as their lips do not join, and hence they are found
-to perish before the common cattle. This strikes me as a
-good illustration of how little we are able to judge from the
-ordinary habits of life, on what circumstances, occurring
-only at long intervals, the rarity or extinction of a species
-may be determined.
-
-November 19th. -- Passing the valley of Las Vacas, we
-slept at a house of a North American, who worked a lime-
-kiln on the Arroyo de las Vivoras. In the morning we rode
-to a protecting headland on the banks of the river, called
-Punta Gorda. On the way we tried to find a jaguar. There
-were plenty of fresh tracks, and we visited the trees, on
-which they are said to sharpen their claws; but we did not
-succeed in disturbing one. From this point the Rio Uruguay
-presented to our view a noble volume of water. From
-the clearness and rapidity of the stream, its appearance was
-far superior to that of its neighbour the Parana. On the
-opposite coast, several branches from the latter river entered
-the Uruguay. As the sun was shining, the two colours of
-the waters could be seen quite distinct.
-
-In the evening we proceeded on our road towards Mercedes
-on the Rio Negro. At night we asked permission to
-sleep at an estancia at which we happened to arrive. It was
-a very large estate, being ten leagues square, and the owner
-is one of the greatest landowners in the country. His nephew
-had charge of it, and with him there was a captain in
-the army, who the other day ran away from Buenos Ayres.
-Considering their station, their conversation was rather
-amusing. They expressed, as was usual, unbounded astonishment
-at the globe being round, and could scarcely credit
-that a hole would, if deep enough, come out on the other
-side. They had, however, heard of a country where there
-were six months of light and six of darkness, and where
-the inhabitants were very tall and thin! They were curious
-about the price and condition of horses and cattle in England.
-Upon finding out we did not catch our animals with
-the lazo, they cried out, "Ah, then, you use nothing but
-the bolas:" the idea of an enclosed country was quite new
-to them. The captain at last said, he had one question to
-ask me, which he should be very much obliged if I would
-answer with all truth. I trembled to think how deeply scientific
-it would be: it was, "Whether the ladies of Buenos
-Ayres were not the handsomest in the world." I replied, like
-a renegade, "Charmingly so." He added, "I have one other
-question: Do ladies in any other part of the world wear
-such large combs?" I solemnly assured him that they did
-not. They were absolutely delighted. The captain exclaimed,
-"Look there! a man who has seen half the world
-says it is the case; we always thought so, but now we know
-it." My excellent judgment in combs and beauty procured
-me a most hospitable reception; the captain forced me to
-take his bed, and he would sleep on his recado.
-
-21st. -- Started at sunrise, and rode slowly during the
-whole day. The geological nature of this part of the province
-was different from the rest, and closely resembled that
-of the Pampas. In consequence, there were immense beds
-of the thistle, as well as of the cardoon: the whole country,
-indeed, may be called one great bed of these plants. The
-two sorts grow separate, each plant in company with its
-own kind. The cardoon is as high as a horse's back, but the
-Pampas thistle is often higher than the crown of the rider's
-head. To leave the road for a yard is out of the question;
-and the road itself is partly, and in some cases entirely
-closed. Pasture, of course there is none; if cattle or horses
-once enter the bed, they are for the time completely lost.
-Hence it is very hazardous to attempt to drive cattle at
-this season of the year; for when jaded enough to face the
-thistles, they rush among them, and are seen no more. In
-these districts there are very few estancias, and these few
-are situated in the neighbourhood of damp valleys, where
-fortunately neither of these overwhelming plants can exist.
-As night came on before we arrived at our journey's end,
-we slept at a miserable little hovel inhabited by the poorest
-people. The extreme though rather formal courtesy of our
-host and hostess, considering their grade of life, was quite
-delightful.
-
-November 22nd. -- Arrived at an estancia on the Berquelo
-belonging to a very hospitable Englishman, to whom I had
-a letter of introduction from my friend Mr. Lumb. I stayed
-here three days. One morning I rode with my host to the
-Sierra del Pedro Flaco, about twenty miles up the Rio
-Negro. Nearly the whole country was covered with good
-though coarse grass, which was as high as a horse's belly;
-yet there were square leagues without a single head of cattle.
-The province of Banda Oriental, if well stocked, would support
-an astonishing number of animals, at present the annual
-export of hides from Monte Video amounts to three
-hundred thousand; and the home consumption, from waste,
-is very considerable. An "estanciero" told me that he often
-had to send large herds of cattle a long journey to a salting
-establishment, and that the tired beasts were frequently
-obliged to be killed and skinned; but that he could never
-persuade the Gauchos to eat of them, and every evening
-a fresh beast was slaughtered for their suppers! The view
-of the Rio Negro from the Sierra was more picturesque than
-any other which I saw in this province. The river, broad,
-deep, and rapid, wound at the foot of a rocky precipitous
-cliff: a belt of wood followed its course, and the horizon
-terminated in the distant undulations of the turf-plain.
-
-When in this neighbourhood, I several times heard of
-the Sierra de las Cuentas: a hill distant many miles to the
-northward. The name signifies hill of beads. I was assured
-that vast numbers of little round stones, of various colours,
-each with a small cylindrical hole, are found there. Formerly
-the Indians used to collect them, for the purpose of
-making necklaces and bracelets -- a taste, I may observe,
-which is common to all savage nations, as well as to the most
-polished. I did not know what to understand from this
-story, but upon mentioning it at the Cape of Good Hope
-to Dr. Andrew Smith, he told me that he recollected finding
-on the south-eastern coast of Africa, about one hundred
-miles to the eastward of St. John's river, some quartz crystals
-with their edges blunted from attrition, and mixed with
-gravel on the sea-beach. Each crystal was about five lines
-in diameter, and from an inch to an inch and a half in
-length. Many of them had a small canal extending from
-one extremity to the other, perfectly cylindrical, and of a
-size that readily admitted a coarse thread or a piece of fine
-catgut. Their colour was red or dull white. The natives
-were acquainted with this structure in crystals. I have
-mentioned these circumstances because, although no crystallized
-body is at present known to assume this form, it may
-lead some future traveller to investigate the real nature of
-such stones.
-
-
-While staying at this estancia, I was amused with what
-I saw and heard of the shepherd-dogs of the country. [3] When
-riding, it is a common thing to meet a large flock of sheep
-guarded by one or two dogs, at the distance of some miles
-from any house or man. I often wondered how so firm a
-friendship had been established. The method of education
-consists in separating the puppy, while very young, from
-the bitch, and in accustoming it to its future companions.
-An ewe is held three or four times a day for the little thing
-to suck, and a nest of wool is made for it in the sheep-pen;
-at no time is it allowed to associate with other dogs, or with
-the children of the family. The puppy is, moreover, generally
-castrated; so that, when grown up, it can scarcely
-have any feelings in common with the rest of its kind. From
-this education it has no wish to leave the flock, and just
-as another dog will defend its master, man, so will these
-the sheep. It is amusing to observe, when approaching a
-flock, how the dog immediately advances barking, and the
-sheep all close in his rear, as if round the oldest ram. These
-dogs are also easily taught to bring home the flock, at a
-certain hour in the evening. Their most troublesome fault,
-when young, is their desire of playing with the sheep; for
-in their sport they sometimes gallop their poor subjects most
-unmercifully.
-
-The shepherd-dog comes to the house every day for some
-meat, and as soon as it is given him, he skulks away as if
-ashamed of himself. On these occasions the house-dogs are
-very tyrannical, and the least of them will attack and pursue
-the stranger. The minute, however, the latter has reached
-the flock, he turns round and begins to bark, and then all
-the house-dogs take very quickly to their heels. In a similar
-manner a whole pack of the hungry wild dogs will scarcely
-ever (and I was told by some never) venture to attack a
-flock guarded by even one of these faithful shepherds. The
-whole account appears to me a curious instance of the pliability
-of the affections in the dog; and yet, whether wild or
-however educated, he has a feeling of respect or fear for
-those that are fulfilling their instinct of association. For
-we can understand on no principle the wild dogs being
-driven away by the single one with its flock, except that they
-consider, from some confused notion, that the one thus
-associated gains power, as if in company with its own kind.
-F. Cuvier has observed that all animals that readily enter
-into domestication, consider man as a member of their own
-society, and thus fulfil their instinct of association. In
-the above case the shepherd-dog ranks the sheep as its fellow-
-brethren, and thus gains confidence; and the wild dogs,
-though knowing that the individual sheep are not dogs, but
-are good to eat, yet partly consent to this view when seeing
-them in a flock with a shepherd-dog at their head.
-
-One evening a "domidor" (a subduer of horses) came
-for the purpose of breaking-in some colts. I will describe
-the preparatory steps, for I believe they have not been
-mentioned by other travellers. A troop of wild young horses
-is driven into the corral, or large enclosure of stakes, and
-the door is shut. We will suppose that one man alone has
-to catch and mount a horse, which as yet had never felt
-bridle or saddle. I conceive, except by a Gaucho, such a feat
-would be utterly impracticable. The Gaucho picks out a
-full-grown colt; and as the beast rushes round the circus
-he throws his lazo so as to catch both the front legs. Instantly
-the horse rolls over with a heavy shock, and whilst
-struggling on the ground, the Gaucho, holding the lazo
-tight, makes a circle, so as to catch one of the hind legs
-just beneath the fetlock, and draws it close to the two front
-legs: he then hitches the lazo, so that the three are bound
-together. Then sitting on the horse's neck, he fixes a strong
-bridle, without a bit, to the lower jaw: this he does by passing
-a narrow thong through the eye-holes at the end of the
-reins, and several times round both jaw and tongue. The
-two front legs are now tied closely together with a strong
-leathern thong, fastened by a slip-knot. The lazo, which
-bound the three together, being then loosed, the horse rises
-with difficulty. The Gaucho now holding fast the bridle
-fixed to the lower jaw, leads the horse outside the corral. If
-a second man is present (otherwise the trouble is much
-greater) he holds the animal's head, whilst the first puts on
-the horsecloths and saddle, and girths the whole together.
-During this operation, the horse, from dread and astonishment
-at thus being bound round the waist, throws himself
-over and over again on the ground, and, till beaten, is
-unwilling to rise. At last, when the saddling is finished, the
-poor animal can hardly breathe from fear, and is white with
-foam and sweat. The man now prepares to mount by pressing
-heavily on the stirrup, so that the horse may not lose
-its balance; and at the moment that he throws his leg over
-the animal's back, he pulls the slip-knot binding the front
-legs, and the beast is free. Some "domidors" pull the knot
-while the animal is lying on the ground, and, standing over
-the saddle, allow him to rise beneath them. The horse, wild
-with dread, gives a few most violent bounds, and then starts
-off at full gallop: when quite exhausted, the man, by patience,
-brings him back to the corral, where, reeking hot and
-scarcely alive, the poor beast is let free. Those animals
-which will not gallop away, but obstinately throw themselves
-on the ground, are by far the most troublesome. This process
-is tremendously severe, but in two or three trials the horse
-is tamed. It is not, however, for some weeks that the animal
-is ridden with the iron bit and solid ring, for it must learn
-to associate the will of its rider with the feel of the rein,
-before the most powerful bridle can be of any service.
-
-Animals are so abundant in these countries, that humanity
-and self-interest are not closely united; therefore I
-fear it is that the former is here scarcely known. One day,
-riding in the Pampas with a very respectable "estanciero,"
-my horse, being tired, lagged behind. The man often shouted
-to me to spur him. When I remonstrated that it was a pity,
-for the horse was quite exhausted, he cried out, "Why not?
--- never mind -- spur him -- it is my horse." I had then some
-difficulty in making him comprehend that it was for the
-horse's sake, and not on his account, that I did not choose
-to use my spurs. He exclaimed, with a look of great surprise,
-"Ah, Don Carlos, que cosa!" It was clear that such
-an idea had never before entered his head.
-
-The Gauchos are well known to be perfect riders The
-idea of being thrown, let the horse do what it likes; never
-enters their head. Their criterion of a good rider is, a man
-who can manage an untamed colt, or who, if his horse falls,
-alights on his own feet, or can perform other such exploits.
-I have heard of a man betting that he would throw his horse
-down twenty times, and that nineteen times he would not
-fall himself. I recollect seeing a Gaucho riding a very
-stubborn horse, which three times successively reared so
-high as to fall backwards with great violence. The man
-judged with uncommon coolness the proper moment for
-slipping off, not an instant before or after the right time;
-and as soon as the horse got up, the man jumped on his back,
-and at last they started at a gallop. The Gaucho never appears
-to exert any muscular force. I was one day watching
-a good rider, as we were galloping along at a rapid pace,
-and thought to myself, "Surely if the horse starts, you
-appear so careless on your seat, you must fall." At this moment,
-a male ostrich sprang from its nest right beneath the
-horse's nose: the young colt bounded on one side like a stag;
-but as for the man, all that could be said was, that he started
-and took fright with his horse.
-
-In Chile and Peru more pains are taken with the mouth
-of the horse than in La Plata, and this is evidently a
-consequence of the more intricate nature of the country. In
-Chile a horse is not considered perfectly broken, till he can
-be brought up standing, in the midst of his full speed, on
-any particular spot, -- for instance, on a cloak thrown on
-the ground: or, again, he will charge a wall, and rearing,
-scrape the surface with his hoofs. I have seen an animal
-bounding with spirit, yet merely reined by a fore-finger and
-thumb, taken at full gallop across a courtyard, and then
-made to wheel round the post of a veranda with great speed,
-but at so equal a distance, that the rider, with outstretched
-arm, all the while kept one finger rubbing the post. Then
-making a demi-volte in the air, with the other arm outstretched
-in a like manner, he wheeled round, with astonishing
-force, in an opposite direction.
-
-Such a horse is well broken; and although this at first
-may appear useless, it is far otherwise. It is only carrying
-that which is daily necessary into perfection. When a bullock
-is checked and caught by the lazo, it will sometimes
-gallop round and round in a circle, and the horse being
-alarmed at the great strain, if not well broken, will not
-readily turn like the pivot of a wheel. In consequence many
-men have been killed; for if the lazo once takes a twist
-round a man's body, it will instantly, from the power of the
-two opposed animals, almost cut him in twain. On the
-same principle the races are managed; the course is only
-two or three hundred yards long, the wish being to have
-horses that can make a rapid dash. The race-horses are
-trained not only to stand with their hoofs touching a line,
-but to draw all four feet together, so as at the first spring
-to bring into play the full action of the hind-quarters. In
-Chile I was told an anecdote, which I believe was true; and
-it offers a good illustration of the use of a well-broken
-animal. A respectable man riding one day met two others, one
-of whom was mounted on a horse, which he knew to have
-been stolen from himself. He challenged them; they answered
-him by drawing their sabres and giving chase. The
-man, on his good and fleet beast, kept just ahead: as he
-passed a thick bush he wheeled round it, and brought up
-his horse to a dead check. The pursuers were obliged to
-shoot on one side and ahead. Then instantly dashing on,
-right behind them, he buried his knife in the back of one,
-wounded the other, recovered his horse from the dying
-robber, and rode home. For these feats of horsemanship
-two things are necessary: a most severe bit, like the Mameluke,
-the power of which, though seldom used, the horse
-knows full well; and large blunt spurs, that can be applied
-either as a mere touch, or as an instrument of extreme pain.
-I conceive that with English spurs, the slightest touch of
-which pricks the skin, it would be impossible to break in a
-horse after the South American fashion.
-
-At an estancia near Las Vacas large numbers of mares
-are weekly slaughtered for the sake of their hides, although
-worth only five paper dollars, or about half a crown apiece.
-It seems at first strange that it can answer to kill mares
-for such a trifle; but as it is thought ridiculous in this
-country ever to break in or ride a mare, they are of no value
-except for breeding. The only thing for which I ever saw
-mares used, was to tread out wheat from the ear, for which
-purpose they were driven round a circular enclosure, where
-the wheat-sheaves were strewed. The man employed for
-slaughtering the mares happened to be celebrated for his
-dexterity with the lazo. Standing at the distance of twelve
-yards from the mouth of the corral, he has laid a wager
-that he would catch by the legs every animal, without missing
-one, as it rushed past him. There was another man
-who said he would enter the corral on foot, catch a mare,
-fasten her front legs together, drive her out, throw her down,
-kill, skin, and stake the hide for drying (which latter is a
-tedious job); and he engaged that he would perform this
-whole operation on twenty-two animals in one day. Or he
-would kill and take the skin off fifty in the same time. This
-would have been a prodigious task, for it is considered a
-good day's work to skin and stake the hides of fifteen or
-sixteen animals.
-
-November 26th. -- I set out on my return in a direct line
-for Monte Video. Having heard of some giant's bones at
-a neighbouring farm-house on the Sarandis, a small stream
-entering the Rio Negro, I rode there accompanied by my
-host, and purchased for the value of eighteen pence the head
-of the Toxodon. [4] When found it was quite perfect; but
-the boys knocked out some of the teeth with stones, and then
-set up the head as a mark to throw at. By a most fortunate
-chance I found a perfect tooth, which exactly fitted one of
-the sockets in this skull, embedded by itself on the banks
-of the Rio Tercero, at the distance of about 180 miles from
-this place. I found remains of this extraordinary animal
-at two other places, so that it must formerly have been common.
-I found here, also, some large portions of the armour
-of a gigantic armadillo-like animal, and part of the great
-head of a Mylodon. The bones of this head are so fresh,
-that they contain, according to the analysis by Mr. T. Reeks,
-seven per cent of animal matter; and when placed in a
-spirit-lamp, they burn with a small flame. The number
-of the remains embedded in the grand estuary deposit which
-forms the Pampas and covers the granitic rocks of Banda
-Oriental, must be extraordinarily great. I believe a straight
-line drawn in any direction through the Pampas would cut
-through some skeleton or bones. Besides those which I
-found during my short excursions, I heard of many others,
-and the origin of such names as "the stream of the animal,"
-"the hill of the giant," is obvious. At other times I heard
-of the marvellous property of certain rivers, which had the
-power of changing small bones into large; or, as some
-maintained, the bones themselves grew. As far as I am aware,
-not one of these animals perished, as was formerly supposed,
-in the marshes or muddy river-beds of the present land, but
-their bones have been exposed by the streams intersecting the
-subaqueous deposit in which they were originally embedded.
-We may conclude that the whole area of the Pampas is one
-wide sepulchre of these extinct gigantic quadrupeds.
-
-By the middle of the day, on the 28th, we arrived at
-Monte Video, having been two days and a half on the road.
-The country for the whole way was of a very uniform character,
-some parts being rather more rocky and hilly than
-near the Plata. Not far from Monte Video we passed
-through the village of Las Pietras, so named from some
-large rounded masses of syenite. Its appearance was rather
-pretty. In this country a few fig-trees round a group of
-houses, and a site elevated a hundred feet above the general
-level, ought always to be called picturesque.
-
-
-During the last six months I have had an opportunity of
-seeing a little of the character of the inhabitants of these
-provinces. The Gauchos, or countryrmen, are very superior
-to those who reside in the towns. The Gaucho is invariably
-most obliging, polite, and hospitable: I did not meet with
-even one instance of rudeness or inhospitality. He is modest,
-both respecting himself and country, but at the same
-time a spirited, bold fellow. On the other hand, many robberies
-are committed, and there is much bloodshed: the
-habit of constantly wearing the knife is the chief cause
-of the latter. It is lamentable to hear how many lives are
-lost in trifling quarrels. In fighting, each party tries to
-mark the face of his adversary by slashing his nose or eyes;
-as is often attested by deep and horrid-looking scars. Robberies
-are a natural consequence of universal gambling,
-much drinking, and extreme indolence. At Mercedes I asked
-two men why they did not work. One gravely said the days
-were too long; the other that he was too poor. The number
-of horses and the profusion of food are the destruction of
-all industry. Moreover, there are so many feast-days; and
-again, nothing can succeed without it be begun when the
-moon is on the increase; so that half the month is lost from
-these two causes.
-
-Police and justice are quite inefficient. If a man who is
-poor commits murder and is taken, he will be imprisoned,
-and perhaps even shot; but if he is rich and has friends,
-he may rely on it no very severe consequence will ensue.
-It is curious that the most respectable inhabitants of the
-country invariably assist a murderer to escape: they seem
-to think that the individual sins against the government,
-and not against the people. A traveller has no protection
-besides his fire-arms; and the constant habit of carrying
-them is the main check to more frequent robberies.
-The character of the higher and more educated classes
-who reside in the towns, partakes, but perhaps in a lesser
-degree, of the good parts of the Gaucho, but is, I fear, stained
-by many vices of which he is free. Sensuality, mockery of
-all religion, and the grossest corruption, are far from
-uncommon. Nearly every public officer can be bribed. The
-head man in the post-office sold forged government franks.
-The governor and prime minister openly combined to plunder
-the state. Justice, where gold came into play, was
-hardly expected by any one. I knew an Englishman, who
-went to the Chief Justice (he told me, that not then
-understanding the ways of the place, he trembled as he entered
-the room), and said, "Sir, I have come to offer you two hundred
-(paper) dollars (value about five pounds sterling) if
-you will arrest before a certain time a man who has cheated
-me. I know it is against the law, but my lawyer (naming
-him) recommended me to take this step." The Chief Justice
-smiled acquiescence, thanked him, and the man before
-night was safe in prison. With this entire want of principle
-in many of the leading men, with the country full of
-ill-paid turbulent officers, the people yet hope that a
-democratic form of government can succeed!
-
-On first entering society in these countries, two or three
-features strike one as particularly remarkable. The polite
-and dignified manners pervading every rank of life, the
-excellent taste displayed by the women in their dresses, and
-the equality amongst all ranks. At the Rio Colorado some
-men who kept the humblest shops used to dine with General
-Rosas. A son of a major at Bahia Blanca gained his
-livelihood by making paper cigars, and he wished to accompany
-me, as guide or servant, to Buenos Ayres, but his
-father objected on the score of the danger alone. Many
-officers in the army can neither read nor write, yet all meet
-in society as equals. In Entre Rios, the Sala consisted of
-only six representatives. One of them kept a common shop,
-and evidently was not degraded by the office. All this is
-what would be expected in a new country; nevertheless the
-absence of gentlemen by profession appears to an Englishman
-something strange.
-
-When speaking of these countries, the manner in which
-they have been brought up by their unnatural parent, Spain,
-should always be borne in mind. On the whole, perhaps,
-more credit is due for what has been done, than blame for
-that which may be deficient. It is impossible to doubt but
-that the extreme liberalism of these countries must ultimately
-lead to good results. The very general toleration of
-foreign religions, the regard paid to the means of education,
-the freedom of the press, the facilities offered to all
-foreigners, and especially, as I am bound to add, to every one
-professing the humblest pretensions to science, should be
-recollected with gratitude by those who have visited Spanish
-South America.
-
-December 6th. -- The Beagle sailed from the Rio Plata,
-never again to enter its muddy stream. Our course was
-directed to Port Desire, on the coast of Patagonia. Before
-proceeding any further, I will here put together a few
-observations made at sea.
-
-Several times when the ship has been some miles off the
-mouth of the Plata, and at other times when off the shores
-of Northern Patagonia, we have been surrounded by insects.
-One evening, when we were about ten miles from the Bay
-of San Blas, vast numbers of butterflies, in bands or flocks
-of countless myriads, extended as far as the eye could range.
-Even by the aid of a telescope it was not possible to see a
-space free from butterflies. The seamen cried out "it was
-snowing butterflies," and such in fact was the appearance.
-More species than one were present, but the main part belonged
-to a kind very similar to, but not identical with, the
-common English Colias edusa. Some moths and hymenoptera
-accompanied the butterflies; and a fine beetle (Calosoma)
-flew on board. Other instances are known of this
-beetle having been caught far out at sea; and this is the
-more remarkable, as the greater number of the Carabidae
-seldom or never take wing. The day had been fine and calm,
-and the one previous to it equally so, with light and variable
-airs. Hence we cannot suppose that the insects were blown
-off the land, but we must conclude that they voluntarily took
-flight. The great bands of the Colias seem at first to afford
-an instance like those on record of the migrations of another
-butterfly, Vanessa cardui; [5] but the presence of other insects
-makes the case distinct, and even less intelligible. Before
-sunset a strong breeze sprung up from the north, and this
-must have caused tens of thousands of the butterflies and
-other insects to have perished.
-
-On another occasion, when seventeen miles off Cape Corrientes,
-I had a net overboard to catch pelagic animals.
-Upon drawing it up, to my surprise, I found a considerable
-number of beetles in it, and although in the open sea, they
-did not appear much injured by the salt water. I lost some
-of the specimens, but those which I preserved belonged
-to the genera Colymbetes, Hydroporus, Hydrobius (two species),
-Notaphus, Cynucus, Adimonia, and Scarabaeus. At
-first I thought that these insects had been blown from the
-shore; but upon reflecting that out of the eight species four
-were aquatic, and two others partly so in their habits, it
-appeared to me most probable that they were floated into the
-sea by a small stream which drains a lake near Cape Corrientes.
-On any supposition it is an interesting circumstance
-to find live insects swimming in the open ocean seventeen
-miles from the nearest point of land. There are several
-accounts of insects having been blown off the Patagonian
-shore. Captain Cook observed it, as did more lately Captain
-King of the Adventure. The cause probably is due to the
-want of shelter, both of trees and hills, so that an insect on
-the wing with an off-shore breeze, would be very apt to
-be blown out to sea. The most remarkable instance I have
-known of an insect being caught far from the land, was that
-of a large grasshopper (Acrydium), which flew on board,
-when the Beagle was to windward of the Cape de Verd
-Islands, and when the nearest point of land, not directly
-opposed to the trade-wind, was Cape Blanco on the coast of
-Africa, 370 miles distant. [6]
-
-On several occasions, when the Beagle has been within
-the mouth of the Plata, the rigging has been coated with
-the web of the Gossamer Spider. One day (November 1st,
-1832) I paid particular attention to this subject. The weather
-had been fine and clear, and in the morning the air was full
-of patches of the flocculent web, as on an autumnal day in
-England. The ship was sixty miles distant from the land, in
-the direction of a steady though light breeze. Vast numbers
-of a small spider, about one-tenth of an inch in length, and of
-a dusky red colour, were attached to the webs. There must
-have been, I should suppose, some thousands on the ship. The
-little spider, when first coming in contact with the rigging,
-was always seated on a single thread, and not on the flocculent
-mass. This latter seems merely to be produced by the
-entanglement of the single threads. The spiders were all of
-one species, but of both sexes, together with young ones.
-These latter were distinguished by their smaller size and
-more dusky colour. I will not give the description of this
-spider, but merely state that it does not appear to me to be
-included in any of Latreille's genera. The little aeronaut as
-soon as it arrived on board was very active, running about,
-sometimes letting itself fall, and then reascending the same
-thread; sometimes employing itself in making a small and
-very irregular mesh in the corners between the ropes. It
-could run with facility on the surface of the water. When
-disturbed it lifted up its front legs, in the attitude of
-attention. On its first arrival it appeared very thirsty, and
-with exserted maxillae drank eagerly of drops of water, this
-same circumstance has been observed by Strack: may it not be in
-consequence of the little insect having passed through a dry
-and rarefied atmosphere? Its stock of web seemed inexhaustible.
-While watching some that were suspended by a
-single thread, I several times observed that the slightest
-breath of air bore them away out of sight, in a horizontal
-line.
-
-On another occasion (25th) under similar circumstances,
-I repeatedly observed the same kind of small spider,
-either when placed or having crawled on some little eminence,
-elevate its abdomen, send forth a thread, and then
-sail away horizontally, but with a rapidity which was quite
-unaccountable. I thought I could perceive that the spider,
-before performing the above preparatory steps, connected
-its legs together with the most delicate threads, but I am not
-sure whether this observation was correct.
-
-One day, at St. Fe, I had a better opportunity of observing
-some similar facts. A spider which was about three-tenths
-of an inch in length, and which in its general appearance
-resembled a Citigrade (therefore quite different from the
-gossamer), while standing on the summit of a post, darted
-forth four or five threads from its spinners. These, glittering
-in the sunshine, might be compared to diverging rays of
-light; they were not, however, straight, but in undulations
-like films of silk blown by the wind. They were more than a
-yard in length, and diverged in an ascending direction from
-the orifices. The spider then suddenly let go its hold of the
-post, and was quickly borne out of sight. The day was hot
-and apparently calm; yet under such circumstances, the
-atmosphere can never be so tranquil as not to affect a vane so
-delicate as the thread of a spider's web. If during a warm
-day we look either at the shadow of any object cast on a
-bank, or over a level plain at a distant landmark, the effect
-of an ascending current of heated air is almost always evident:
-such upward currents, it has been remarked, are also
-shown by the ascent of soap-bubbles, which will not rise in
-an in-doors room. Hence I think there is not much difficulty
-in understanding the ascent of the fine lines projected from
-a spider's spinners, and afterwards of the spider itself; the
-divergence of the lines has been attempted to be explained, I
-believe by Mr. Murray, by their similar electrical condition.
-The circumstance of spiders of the same species, but of
-different sexes and ages, being found on several occasions at
-the distance of many leagues from the land, attached in vast
-numbers to the lines, renders it probable that the habit of
-sailing through the air is as characteristic of this tribe, as
-that of diving is of the Argyroneta. We may then reject
-Latreille's supposition, that the gossamer owes its origin
-indifferently to the young of several genera of spiders:
-although, as we have seen, the young of other spiders do
-possess the power of performing aerial voyages. [7]
-
-During our different passages south of the Plata, I often
-towed astern a net made of bunting, and thus caught many
-curious animals. Of Crustacea there were many strange
-and undescribed genera. One, which in some respects is
-allied to the Notopods (or those crabs which have their
-posterior legs placed almost on their backs, for the purpose
-of adhering to the under side of rocks), is very remarkable
-from the structure of its hind pair of legs. The penultimate
-joint, instead of terminating in a simple claw, ends in three
-bristle-like appendages of dissimilar lengths -- the longest
-equalling that of the entire leg. These claws are very thin,
-and are serrated with the finest teeth, directed backwards:
-their curved extremities are flattened, and on this part five
-most minute cups are placed which seem to act in the same
-manner as the suckers on the arms of the cuttle-fish. As
-the animal lives in the open sea, and probably wants a place
-of rest, I suppose this beautiful and most anomalous structure
-is adapted to take hold of floating marine animals.
-
-In deep water, far from the land, the number of living
-creatures is extremely small: south of the latitude 35 degs.,
-I never succeeded in catching anything besides some beroe,
-and a few species of minute entomostracous crustacea.
-In shoaler water, at the distance of a few miles from the
-coast, very many kinds of crustacea and some other animals
-are numerous, but only during the night. Between latitudes
-56 and 57 degs. south of Cape Horn, the net was put
-astern several times; it never, however, brought up anything
-besides a few of two extremely minute species of Entomostraca.
-Yet whales and seals, petrels and albatross, are exceedingly
-abundant throughout this part of the ocean. It has always
-been a mystery to me on what the albatross, which lives far
-from the shore, can subsist; I presume that, like the condor,
-it is able to fast long; and that one good feast on the carcass
-of a putrid whale lasts for a long time. The central and
-intertropical parts of the Atlantic swarm with Pteropoda,
-Crustacea, and Radiata, and with their devourers the flying-
-fish, and again with their devourers the bonitos and albicores;
-I presume that the numerous lower pelagic animals
-feed on the Infusoria, which are now known, from the
-researches of Ehrenberg, to abound in the open ocean: but
-on what, in the clear blue water, do these Infusoria subsist?
-
-While sailing a little south of the Plata on one very dark
-night, the sea presented a wonderful and most beautiful
-spectacle. There was a fresh breeze, and every part of the
-surface, which during the day is seen as foam, now glowed
-with a pale light. The vessel drove before her bows two
-billows of liquid phosphorus, and in her wake she was followed
-by a milky train. As far as the eye reached, the crest
-of every wave was bright, and the sky above the horizon,
-from the reflected glare of these livid flames, was not so
-utterly obscure as over the vault of the heavens.
-
-As we proceed further southward the sea is seldom
-phosphorescent; and off Cape Horn I do not recollect more than
-once having seen it so, and then it was far from being
-brilliant. This circumstance probably has a close connection
-with the scarcity of organic beings in that part of the ocean.
-After the elaborate paper, [8] by Ehrenberg, on the
-phosphorescence of the sea, it is almost superfluous on my part
-to make any observations on the subject. I may however
-add, that the same torn and irregular particles of gelatinous
-matter, described by Ehrenberg, seem in the southern as
-well as in the northern hemisphere, to be the common cause
-of this phenomenon. The particles were so minute as easily
-to pass through fine gauze; yet many were distinctly visible
-by the naked eye. The water when placed in a tumbler and
-agitated, gave out sparks, but a small portion in a watch-
-glass scarcely ever was luminous. Ehrenberg states that
-these particles all retain a certain degree of irritability. My
-observations, some of which were made directly after taking
-up the water, gave a different result. I may also mention,
-that having used the net during one night, I allowed it to
-become partially dry, and having occasion twelve hours
-afterwards to employ it again, I found the whole surface
-sparkled as brightly as when first taken out of the water.
-It does not appear probable in this case, that the particles
-could have remained so long alive. On one occasion having
-kept a jelly-fish of the genus Dianaea till it was dead, the
-water in which it was placed became luminous. When the
-waves scintillate with bright green sparks, I believe it is
-generally owing to minute crustacea. But there can be no
-doubt that very many other pelagic animals, when alive, are
-phosphorescent.
-
-On two occasions I have observed the sea luminous at
-considerable depths beneath the surface. Near the mouth
-of the Plata some circular and oval patches, from two to
-four yards in diameter, and with defined outlines, shone with
-a steady but pale light; while the surrounding water only
-gave out a few sparks. The appearance resembled the reflection
-of the moon, or some luminous body; for the edges were
-sinuous from the undulations of the surface. The ship,
-which drew thirteen feet of water, passed over, without
-disturbing these patches. Therefore we must suppose that some
-animals were congregated together at a greater depth than
-the bottom of the vessel.
-
-Near Fernando Noronha the sea gave out light in flashes.
-The appearance was very similar to that which might be
-expected from a large fish moving rapidly through a luminous
-fluid. To this cause the sailors attributed it; at the
-time, however, I entertained some doubts, on account of the
-frequency and rapidity of the flashes. I have already
-remarked that the phenomenon is very much more common
-in warm than in cold countries; and I have sometimes imagined
-that a disturbed electrical condition of the atmosphere
-was most favourable to its production. Certainly I
-think the sea is most luminous after a few days of more
-calm weather than ordinary, during which time it has
-swarmed with various animals. Observing that the water
-charged with gelatinous particles is in an impure state, and
-that the luminous appearance in all common cases is produced
-by the agitation of the fluid in contact with the atmosphere,
-I am inclined to consider that the phosphorescence is
-the result of the decomposition of the organic particles, by
-which process (one is tempted almost to call it a kind of
-respiration) the ocean becomes purified.
-
-December 23rd. -- We arrived at Port Desire, situated in
-lat. 47 degs., on the coast of Patagonia. The creek runs for
-about twenty miles inland, with an irregular width. The
-Beagle anchored a few miles within the entrance, in front of
-the ruins of an old Spanish settlement.
-
-The same evening I went on shore. The first landing in
-any new country is very interesting, and especially when, as in
-this case, the whole aspect bears the stamp of a marked and
-individual character. At the height of between two and
-three hundred feet above some masses of porphyry a wide
-plain extends, which is truly characteristic of Patagonia.
-The surface is quite level, and is composed of well-rounded
-shingle mixed with a whitish earth. Here and there scattered
-tufts of brown wiry grass are supported, and still more
-rarely, some low thorny bushes. The weather is dry and
-pleasant, and the fine blue sky is but seldom obscured. When
-standing in the middle of one of these desert plains and
-looking towards the interior, the view is generally bounded
-by the escarpment of another plain, rather higher, but equally
-level and desolate; and in every other direction the horizon
-is indistinct from the trembling mirage which seems to rise
-from the heated surface.
-
-In such a country the fate of the Spanish settlement was
-soon decided; the dryness of the climate during the greater
-part of the year, and the occasional hostile attacks of the
-wandering Indians, compelled the colonists to desert their
-half-finished buildings. The style, however, in which they
-were commenced shows the strong and liberal hand of Spain
-in the old time. The result of all the attempts to colonize this
-side of America south of 41 degs., has been miserable. Port
-Famine expresses by its name the lingering and extreme
-sufferings of several hundred wretched people, of whom one
-alone survived to relate their misfortunes. At St. Joseph's
-Bay, on the coast of Patagonia, a small settlement was made;
-but during one Sunday the Indians made an attack and massacred
-the whole party, excepting two men, who remained
-captives during many years. At the Rio Negro I conversed
-with one of these men, now in extreme old age.
-
-The zoology of Patagonia is as limited as its flora. [9] On
-the arid plains a few black beetles (Heteromera) might be
-seen slowly crawling about, and occasionally a lizard darted
-from side to side. Of birds we have three carrion hawks
-and in the valleys a few finches and insect-feeders. An ibis
-(Theristicus melanops -- a species said to be found in central
-Africa) is not uncommon on the most desert parts: in
-their stomachs I found grasshoppers, cicadae, small lizards,
-and even scorpions. [10] At one time of the year these birds
-go in flocks, at another in pairs, their cry is very loud and
-singular, like the neighing of the guanaco.
-
-The guanaco, or wild llama, is the characteristic quadruped
-of the plains of Patagonia; it is the South American
-representative of the camel of the East. It is an elegant
-animal in a state of nature, with a long slender neck and
-fine legs. It is very common over the whole of the temperate
-parts of the continent, as far south as the islands near Cape
-Horn. It generally lives in small herds of from half a dozen
-to thirty in each; but on the banks of the St. Cruz we saw
-one herd which must have contained at least five hundred.
-
-They are generally wild and extremely wary. Mr. Stokes
-told me, that he one day saw through a glass a herd of these
-animals which evidently had been frightened, and were running
-away at full speed, although their distance was so great
-that he could not distinguish them with his naked eye. The
-sportsman frequently receives the first notice of their
-presence, by hearing from a long distance their peculiar shrill
-neighing note of alarm. If he then looks attentively, he will
-probably see the herd standing in a line on the side of some
-distant hill. On approaching nearer, a few more squeals are
-given, and off they set at an apparently slow, but really quick
-canter, along some narrow beaten track to a neighbouring
-hill. If, however, by chance he abruptly meets a single animal,
-or several together, they will generally stand motionless
-and intently gaze at him; then perhaps move on a few yards,
-turn round, and look again. What is the cause of this difference
-in their shyness? Do they mistake a man in the distance
-for their chief enemy the puma? Or does curiosity
-overcome their timidity? That they are curious is certain;
-for if a person lies on the ground, and plays strange antics,
-such as throwing up his feet in the air, they will almost
-always approach by degrees to reconnoitre him. It was an
-artifice that was repeatedly practised by our sportsmen with
-success, and it had moreover the advantage of allowing several
-shots to be fired, which were all taken as parts of the
-performance. On the mountains of Tierra del Fuego, I have
-more than once seen a guanaco, on being approached, not
-only neigh and squeal, but prance and leap about in the most
-ridiculous manner, apparently in defiance as a challenge.
-These animals are very easily domesticated, and I have seen
-some thus kept in northern Patagonia near a house, though
-not under any restraint. They are in this state very bold, and
-readily attack a man by striking him from behind with both
-knees. It is asserted that the motive for these attacks is
-jealousy on account of their females. The wild guanacos,
-however, have no idea of defence; even a single dog will
-secure one of these large animals, till the huntsman can come
-up. In many of their habits they are like sheep in a flock.
-Thus when they see men approaching in several directions
-on horseback, they soon become bewildered, and know not
-which way to run. This greatly facilitates the Indian method
-of hunting, for they are thus easily driven to a central point,
-and are encompassed.
-
-The guanacos readily take to the water: several times at
-Port Valdes they were seen swimming from island to island.
-Byron, in his voyage says he saw them drinking salt water.
-Some of our officers likewise saw a herd apparently drinking
-the briny fluid from a salina near Cape Blanco. I imagine
-in several parts of the country, if they do not drink salt
-water, they drink none at all. In the middle of the day they
-frequently roll in the dust, in saucer-shaped hollows. The
-males fight together; two one day passed quite close to me,
-squealing and trying to bite each other; and several were
-shot with their hides deeply scored. Herds sometimes appear
-to set out on exploring parties: at Bahia Blanca, where,
-within thirty miles of the coast, these animals are extremely
-unfrequent, I one day saw the tracks of thirty or forty, which
-had come in a direct line to a muddy salt-water creek. They
-then must have perceived that they were approaching the
-sea, for they had wheeled with the regularity of cavalry, and
-had returned back in as straight a line as they had advanced.
-The guanacos have one singular habit, which is to me quite
-inexplicable; namely, that on successive days they drop their
-dung in the same defined heap. I saw one of these heaps
-which was eight feet in diameter, and was composed of a
-large quantity. This habit, according to M. A. d'Orbigny, is
-common to all the species of the genus; it is very useful to
-the Peruvian Indians, who use the dung for fuel, and are
-thus saved the trouble of collecting it.
-
-The guanacos appear to have favourite spots for lying
-down to die. On the banks of the St. Cruz, in certain
-circumscribed spaces, which were generally bushy and all near
-the river, the ground was actually white with bones. On one
-such spot I counted between ten and twenty heads. I particularly
-examined the bones; they did not appear, as some
-scattered ones which I had seen, gnawed or broken, as if
-dragged together by beasts of prey. The animals in most
-cases must have crawled, before dying, beneath and amongst
-the bushes. Mr. Bynoe informs me that during a former
-voyage he observed the same circumstance on the banks of
-the Rio Gallegos. I do not at all understand the reason of
-this, but I may observe, that the wounded guanacos at the
-St. Cruz invariably walked towards the river. At St. Jago
-in the Cape de Verd Islands, I remember having seen in a
-ravine a retired corner covered with bones of the goat; we
-at the time exclaimed that it was the burial ground of all the
-goats in the island. I mention these trifling circumstances,
-because in certain cases they might explain the occurrence
-of a number of uninjured bones in a cave, or buried under
-alluvial accumulations; and likewise the cause why certain
-animals are more commonly embedded than others in sedimentary
-deposits.
-
-One day the yawl was sent under the command of Mr.
-Chaffers with three days' provisions to survey the upper part
-of the harbour. In the morning we searched for some
-watering-places mentioned in an old Spanish chart. We found one
-creek, at the head of which there was a trickling rill (the
-first we had seen) of brackish water. Here the tide compelled
-us to wait several hours; and in the interval I walked
-some miles into the interior. The plain as usual consisted
-of gravel, mingled with soil resembling chalk in appearance,
-but very different from it in nature. From the softness of
-these materials it was worn into many gulleys. There was
-not a tree, and, excepting the guanaco, which stood on the
-hill-top a watchful sentinel over its herd, scarcely an animal
-or a bird. All was stillness and desolation. Yet in passing
-over these scenes, without one bright object near, an
-ill-defined but strong sense of pleasure is vividly excited.
-One asked how many ages the plain had thus lasted, and how
-many more it was doomed thus to continue.
-
-"None can reply -- all seems eternal now.
-The wilderness has a mysterious tongue,
-Which teaches awful doubt." [11]
-
-In the evening we sailed a few miles further up, and then
-pitched the tents for the night. By the middle of the next
-day the yawl was aground, and from the shoalness of the
-water could not proceed any higher. The water being found
-partly fresh, Mr. Chaffers took the dingey and went up two
-or three miles further, where she also grounded, but in a
-fresh-water river. The water was muddy, and though the
-stream was most insignificant in size, it would be difficult to
-account for its origin, except from the melting snow on the
-Cordillera. At the spot where we bivouacked, we were surrounded
-by bold cliffs and steep pinnacles of porphyry. I do
-not think I ever saw a spot which appeared more secluded
-from the rest of the world, than this rocky crevice in the
-wide plain.
-
-The second day after our return to the anchorage, a party
-of officers and myself went to ransack an old Indian grave,
-which I had found on the summit of a neighbouring hill.
-Two immense stones, each probably weighing at least a
-couple of tons, had been placed in front of a ledge of rock
-about six feet high. At the bottom of the grave on the hard
-rock there was a layer of earth about a foot deep, which
-must have been brought up from the plain below. Above it a
-pavement of flat stones was placed, on which others were
-piled, so as to fill up the space between the ledge and the two
-great blocks. To complete the grave, the Indians had contrived
-to detach from the ledge a huge fragment, and to
-throw it over the pile so as to rest on the two blocks. We
-undermined the grave on both sides, but could not find any
-relics, or even bones. The latter probably had decayed long
-since (in which case the grave must have been of extreme
-antiquity), for I found in another place some smaller heaps
-beneath which a very few crumbling fragments could yet be
-distinguished as having belonged to a man. Falconer states,
-that where an Indian dies he is buried, but that subsequently
-his bones are carefully taken up and carried, let the distance
-be ever so great, to be deposited near the sea-coast. This
-custom, I think, may be accounted for by recollecting, that
-before the introduction of horses, these Indians must have
-led nearly the same life as the Fuegians now do, and therefore
-generally have resided in the neighbourhood of the sea.
-The common prejudice of lying where one's ancestors have
-lain, would make the now roaming Indians bring the less
-perishable part of their dead to their ancient burial-ground
-on the coast.
-
-January 9th, 1834. -- Before it was dark the Beagle anchored
-in the fine spacious harbour of Port St. Julian, situated
-about one hundred and ten miles to the south of Port Desire.
-We remained here eight days. The country is nearly similar
-to that of Port Desire, but perhaps rather more sterile. One
-day a party accompanied Captain Fitz Roy on a long walk
-round the head of the harbour. We were eleven hours without
-tasting any water, and some of the party were quite
-exhausted. From the summit of a hill (since well named
-Thirsty Hill) a fine lake was spied, and two of the party
-proceeded with concerted signals to show whether it was fresh
-water. What was our disappointment to find a snow-white
-expanse of salt, crystallized in great cubes! We attributed
-our extreme thirst to the dryness of the atmosphere; but
-whatever the cause might be, we were exceedingly glad late
-in the evening to get back to the boats. Although we could
-nowhere find, during our whole visit, a single drop of fresh
-water, yet some must exist; for by an odd chance I found on
-the surface of the salt water, near the head of the bay, a
-Colymbetes not quite dead, which must have lived in some
-not far distant pool. Three other insects (a Cincindela, like
-hybrida, a Cymindis, and a Harpalus, which all live on muddy
-flats occasionally overflowed by the sea), and one other
-found dead on the plain, complete the list of the beetles. A
-good-sized fly (Tabanus) was extremely numerous, and tormented
-us by its painful bite. The common horsefly, which
-is so troublesome in the shady lanes of England, belongs to
-this same genus. We here have the puzzle that so frequently
-occurs in the case of musquitoes -- on the blood of what
-animals do these insects commonly feed? The guanaco is
-nearly the only warm-blooded quadruped, and it is found in
-quite inconsiderable numbers compared with the multitude
-of flies.
-
-The geology of Patagonia is interesting. Differently from
-Europe, where the tertiary formations appear to have accumulated
-in bays, here along hundreds of miles of coast we
-have one great deposit, including many tertiary shells, all
-apparently extinct. The most common shell is a massive
-gigantic oyster, sometimes even a foot in diameter. These
-beds are covered by others of a peculiar soft white stone,
-including much gypsum, and resembling chalk, but really of
-a pumiceous nature. It is highly remarkable, from being
-composed, to at least one-tenth of its bulk, of Infusoria.
-Professor Ehrenberg has already ascertained in it thirty
-oceanic forms. This bed extends for 500 miles along the coast,
-and probably for a considerably greater distance. At Port
-St. Julian its thickness is more than 800 feet! These white
-beds are everywhere capped by a mass of gravel, forming
-probably one of the largest beds of shingle in the world: it
-certainly extends from near the Rio Colorado to between 600
-and 700 nautical miles southward, at Santa Cruz (a river a
-little south of St. Julian), it reaches to the foot of the
-Cordillera; half way up the river, its thickness is more than
-200 feet; it probably everywhere extends to this great chain,
-whence the well-rounded pebbles of porphyry have been
-derived: we may consider its average breadth as 200 miles,
-and its average thickness as about 50 feet. If this great bed
-of pebbles, without including the mud necessarily derived
-from their attrition, was piled into a mound, it would form a
-great mountain chain! When we consider that all these
-pebbles, countless as the grains of sand in the desert, have
-been derived from the slow falling of masses of rock on the
-old coast-lines and banks of rivers, and that these fragments
-have been dashed into smaller pieces, and that each of them
-has since been slowly rolled, rounded, and far transported
-the mind is stupefied in thinking over the long, absolutely
-necessary, lapse of years. Yet all this gravel has been
-transported, and probably rounded, subsequently to the
-deposition of the white beds, and long subsequently to the
-underlying beds with the tertiary shells.
-
-Everything in this southern continent has been effected
-on a grand scale: the land, from the Rio Plata to Tierra del
-Fuego, a distance of 1200 miles, has been raised in mass (and
-in Patagonia to a height of between 300 and 400 feet), within
-the period of the now existing sea-shells. The old and
-weathered shells left on the surface of the upraised plain still
-partially retain their colours. The uprising movement has
-been interrupted by at least eight long periods of rest, during
-which the sea ate, deeply back into the land, forming at
-successive levels the long lines of cliffs, or escarpments,
-which separate the different plains as they rise like steps one
-behind the other. The elevatory movement, and the eating-back
-power of the sea during the periods of rest, have been
-equable over long lines of coast; for I was astonished to
-find that the step-like plains stand at nearly corresponding
-heights at far distant points. The lowest plain is 90 feet
-high; and the highest, which I ascended near the coast, is
-950 feet; and of this, only relics are left in the form of flat
-gravel-capped hills. The upper plain of Santa Cruz slopes
-up to a height of 3000 feet at the foot of the Cordillera. I
-have said that within the period of existing sea-shells,
-Patagonia has been upraised 300 to 400 feet: I may add, that
-within the period when icebergs transported boulders over
-the upper plain of Santa Cruz, the elevation has been at least
-1500 feet. Nor has Patagonia been affected only by upward
-movements: the extinct tertiary shells from Port St. Julian
-and Santa Cruz cannot have lived, according to Professor E.
-Forbes, in a greater depth of water than from 40 to 250 feet;
-but they are now covered with sea-deposited strata from 800
-to 1000 feet in thickness: hence the bed of the sea, on which
-these shells once lived, must have sunk downwards several
-hundred feet, to allow of the accumulation of the superincumbent
-strata. What a history of geological changes does the
-simply-constructed coast of Patagonia reveal!
-
-At Port St. Julian, [12] in some red mud capping the gravel
-on the 90-feet plain, I found half the skeleton of the
-Macrauchenia Patachonica, a remarkable quadruped, full as large
-as a camel. It belongs to the same division of the Pachydermata
-with the rhinoceros, tapir, and palaeotherium; but
-in the structure of the bones of its long neck it shows a clear
-relation to the camel, or rather to the guanaco and llama.
-From recent sea-shells being found on two of the higher
-step-formed plains, which must have been modelled and
-upraised before the mud was deposited in which the Macrauchenia
-was entombed, it is certain that this curious quadruped
-lived long after the sea was inhabited by its present
-shells. I was at first much surprised how a large quadruped
-could so lately have subsisted, in lat. 49 degs. 15', on these
-wretched gravel plains, with their stunted vegetation; but
-the relationship of the Macrauchenia to the Guanaco, now
-an inhabitant of the most sterile parts, partly explains this
-difficulty.
-
-The relationship, though distant, between the Macrauchenia
-and the Guanaco, between the Toxodon and the
-Capybara, -- the closer relationship between the many extinct
-Edentata and the living sloths, ant-eaters, and armadillos,
-now so eminently characteristic of South American zoology,
--- and the still closer relationship between the fossil and
-living species of Ctenomys and Hydrochaerus, are most
-interesting facts. This relationship is shown wonderfully -- as
-wonderfully as between the fossil and extinct Marsupial
-animals of Australia -- by the great collection lately brought
-to Europe from the caves of Brazil by MM. Lund and Clausen.
-In this collection there are extinct species of all the
-thirty-two genera, excepting four, of the terrestrial quadrupeds
-now inhabiting the provinces in which the caves occur;
-and the extinct species are much more numerous than those
-now living: there are fossil ant-eaters, armadillos, tapirs,
-peccaries, guanacos, opossums, and numerous South American
-gnawers and monkeys, and other animals. This wonderful
-relationship in the same continent between the dead and
-the living, will, I do not doubt, hereafter throw more light
-on the appearance of organic beings on our earth, and their
-disappearance from it, than any other class of facts.
-
-It is impossible to reflect on the changed state of the
-American continent without the deepest astonishment. Formerly
-it must have swarmed with great monsters: now we
-find mere pigmies, compared with the antecedent, allied
-races. If Buffon had known of the gigantic sloth and
-armadillo-like animals, and of the lost Pachydermata, he might
-have said with a greater semblance of truth that the creative
-force in America had lost its power, rather than that it had
-never possessed great vigour. The greater number, if not all,
-of these extinct quadrupeds lived at a late period, and were
-the contemporaries of most of the existing sea-shells. Since
-they lived, no very great change in the form of the land can
-have taken place. What, then, has exterminated so many
-species and whole genera? The mind at first is irresistibly
-hurried into the belief of some great catastrophe; but thus
-to destroy animals, both large and small, in Southern Patagonia,
-in Brazil, on the Cordillera of Peru, in North America
-up to Behring's Straits, we must shake the entire framework
-of the globe. An examination, moreover, of the geology of
-La Plata and Patagonia, leads to the belief that all the
-features of the land result from slow and gradual changes. It
-appears from the character of the fossils in Europe, Asia,
-Australia, and in North and South America, that those conditions
-which favour the life of the _larger_ quadrupeds were
-lately co-extensive with the world: what those conditions
-were, no one has yet even conjectured. It could hardly have
-been a change of temperature, which at about the same time
-destroyed the inhabitants of tropical, temperate, and arctic
-latitudes on both sides of the globe. In North America we
-positively know from Mr. Lyell, that the large quadrupeds
-lived subsequently to that period, when boulders were
-brought into latitudes at which icebergs now never arrive:
-from conclusive but indirect reasons we may feel sure, that
-in the southern hemisphere the Macrauchenia, also, lived
-long subsequently to the ice-transporting boulder-period. Did
-man, after his first inroad into South America, destroy, as
-has been suggested, the unwieldy Megatherium and the
-other Edentata? We must at least look to some other cause
-for the destruction of the little tucutuco at Bahia Blanca, and
-of the many fossil mice and other small quadrupeds in
-Brazil. No one will imagine that a drought, even far severer
-than those which cause such losses in the provinces of La
-Plata, could destroy every individual of every species from
-Southern Patagonia to Behring's Straits. What shall we say
-of the extinction of the horse? Did those plains fail of
-pasture, which have since been overrun by thousands and hundreds
-of thousands of the descendants of the stock introduced
-by the Spaniards? Have the subsequently introduced
-species consumed the food of the great antecedent races?
-Can we believe that the Capybara has taken the food of the
-Toxodon, the Guanaco of the Macrauchenia, the existing
-small Edentata of their numerous gigantic prototypes? Certainly,
-no fact in the long history of the world is so startling
-as the wide and repeated exterminations of its inhabitants.
-
-Nevertheless, if we consider the subject under another
-point of view, it will appear less perplexing. We do not
-steadily bear in mind, how profoundly ignorant we are of the
-conditions of existence of every animal; nor do we always
-remember, that some check is constantly preventing the too
-rapid increase of every organized being left in a state of
-nature. The supply of food, on an average, remains constant, yet
-the tendency in every animal to increase by propagation is
-geometrical; and its surprising effects have nowhere been
-more astonishingly shown, than in the case of the European
-animals run wild during the last few centuries in America.
-Every animal in a state of nature regularly breeds; yet in a
-species long established, any _great_ increase in numbers is
-obviously impossible, and must be checked by some means.
-We are, nevertheless, seldom able with certainty to tell in
-any given species, at what period of life, or at what period
-of the year, or whether only at long intervals, the check
-falls; or, again, what is the precise nature of the check.
-Hence probably it is, that we feel so little surprise at one, of
-two species closely allied in habits, being rare and the other
-abundant in the same district; or, again, that one should be
-abundant in one district, and another, filling the same place
-in the economy of nature, should be abundant in a neighbouring
-district, differing very little in its conditions. If asked
-how this is, one immediately replies that it is determined by
-some slight difference, in climate, food, or the number of
-enemies: yet how rarely, if ever, we can point out the precise
-cause and manner of action of the check! We are
-therefore, driven to the conclusion, that causes generally
-quite inappreciable by us, determine whether a given species
-shall be abundant or scanty in numbers.
-
-In the cases where we can trace the extinction of a
-species through man, either wholly or in one limited district,
-we know that it becomes rarer and rarer, and is then lost:
-it would be difficult to point out any just distinction [13]
-between a species destroyed by man or by the increase of its
-natural enemies. The evidence of rarity preceding extinction,
-is more striking in the successive tertiary strata, as remarked
-by several able observers; it has often been found that a shell
-very common in a tertiary stratum is now most rare, and has
-even long been thought extinct. If then, as appears probable,
-species first become rare and then extinct -- if the too rapid
-increase of every species, even the most favoured, is steadily
-checked, as we must admit, though how and when it is hard to
-say -- and if we see, without the smallest surprise, though
-unable to assign the precise reason, one species abundant
-and another closely allied species rare in the same district --
-why should we feel such great astonishment at the rarity being
-carried one step further to extinction? An action going on,
-on every side of us, and yet barely appreciable, might surely
-be carried a little further, without exciting our observation.
-Who would feel any great surprise at hearing that the Magalonyx
-was formerly rare compared with the Megatherium, or that one of
-the fossil monkeys was few in number compared with one of the
-now living monkeys? and yet in this comparative rarity, we
-should have the plainest evidence of less favourable conditions
-for their existence. To admit that species generally become
-rare before they become extinct -- to feel no surprise at the
-comparative rarity of one species with another, and yet to
-call in some extraordinary agent and to marvel greatly when
-a species ceases to exist, appears to me much the same as
-to admit that sickness in the individual is the prelude to
-death -- to feel no surprise at sickness -- but when the
-sick man dies to wonder, and to believe that he died through
-violence.
-
-[1] Mr. Waterhouse has drawn up a detailed description of this
-head, which I hope he will publish in some Journal.
-
-[2] A nearly similar abnormal, but I do not know whether
-hereditary, structure has been observed in the carp, and
-likewise in the crocodile of the Ganges: Histoire des Anomalies,
-par M. Isid. Geoffroy St. Hilaire, tom. i. p. 244.
-
-[3] M. A. d'Orbigny has given nearly a similar account of these
-dogs, tom. i. p. 175.
-
-[4] I must express my obligations to Mr. Keane, at whose house
-I was staying on the Berquelo, and to Mr. Lumb at Buenos Ayres,
-for without their assistance these valuable remains would never
-have reached England.
-
-[5] Lyell's Principles of Geology, vol. iii. p. 63.
-
-[6] The flies which frequently accompany a ship for some days
-on its passage from harbour to harbour, wandering from the
-vessel, are soon lost, and all disappear.
-
-[7] Mr. Blackwall, in his Researches in Zoology, has many
-excellent observations on the habits of spiders.
-
-[8] An abstract is given in No. IV. of the Magazine of Zoology
-and Botany.
-
-[9] I found here a species of cactus, described by Professor
-Henslow, under the name of Opuntia Darwinii (Magazine of
-Zoology and Botany, vol. i. p. 466), which was remarkable
-for the irritability of the stamens, when I inserted either a
-piece of stick or the end of my finger in the flower. The
-segments of the perianth also closed on the pistil, but more
-slowly than the stamens. Plants of this family, generally
-considered as tropical, occur in North America (Lewis and
-Clarke's Travels, p. 221), in the same high latitude as here,
-namely, in both cases, in 47 degs.
-
-[10] These insects were not uncommon beneath stones. I found
-one cannibal scorpion quietly devouring another.
-
-[11] Shelley, Lines on Mt. Blanc.
-
-[12] I have lately heard that Capt. Sulivan, R.N., has found
-numerous fossil bones, embedded in regular strata, on the banks
-of the R. Gallegos, in lat. 51 degs. 4'. Some of the bones
-are large; others are small, and appear to have belonged to
-an armadillo. This is a most interesting and important
-discovery.
-
-[13] See the excellent remarks on this subject by Mr. Lyell,
-in his Principles of Geology.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX
-
-SANTA CRUZ, PATAGONIA, AND THE FALKLAND ISLANDS
-
-Santa Cruz -- Expedition up the River -- Indians -- Immense
-Streams of Basaltic Lava -- Fragments not transported by the
-River -- Excavations of the Valley -- Condor, Habits of --
-Cordillera -- Erratic Boulders of great size -- Indian Relics --
-Return to the Ship -- Falkland Islands -- Wild Horses, Cattle,
-Rabbits -- Wolf-like Fox -- Fire made of Bones -- Manner of
-Hunting Wild Cattle -- Geology -- Streams of Stones -- Scenes
-of Violence -- Penguins -- Geese -- Eggs of Doris -- Compound
-Animals.
-
-
-APRIL 13, 1834. -- The Beagle anchored within the mouth of the
-Santa Cruz. This river is situated about sixty miles south of
-Port St. Julian. During the last voyage Captain Stokes proceeded
-thirty miles up it, but then, from the want of provisions, was
-obliged to return. Excepting what was discovered at that time,
-scarcely anything was known about this large river. Captain Fitz
-Roy now determined to follow its course as far as time would
-allow. On the 18th three whale-boats started, carrying three
-weeks' provisions; and the party consisted of twenty-five
-souls -- a force which would have been sufficient to have
-defied a host of Indians. With a strong flood-tide and a fine
-day we made a good run, soon drank some of the fresh water,
-and were at night nearly above the tidal influence.
-
-The river here assumed a size and appearance which, even at
-the highest point we ultimately reached, was scarcely
-diminished. It was generally from three to four hundred yards
-broad, and in the middle about seventeen feet deep. The
-rapidity of the current, which in its whole course runs at
-the rate of from four to six knots an hour, is perhaps its
-most remarkable feature. The water is of a fine blue colour,
-but with a slight milky tinge, and not so transparent as at
-first sight would have been expected. It flows over a bed of
-pebbles, like those which compose the beach and the surrounding
-plains. It runs in a winding course through a
-valley, which extends in a direct line westward. This valley
-varies from five to ten miles in breadth; it is bounded by
-step-formed terraces, which rise in most parts, one above the
-other, to the height of five hundred feet, and have on the
-opposite sides a remarkable correspondence.
-
-April 19th. -- Against so strong a current it was, of
-course, quite impossible to row or sail: consequently the
-three boats were fastened together head and stern, two hands
-left in each, and the rest came on shore to track. As the
-general arrangements made by Captain Fitz Roy were very
-good for facilitating the work of all, and as all had a share
-in it, I will describe the system. The party including every
-one, was divided into two spells, each of which hauled at the
-tracking line alternately for an hour and a half. The officers
-of each boat lived with, ate the same food, and slept
-in the same tent with their crew, so that each boat was
-quite independent of the others. After sunset the first level
-spot where any bushes were growing, was chosen for our
-night's lodging. Each of the crew took it in turns to be
-cook. Immediately the boat was hauled up, the cook made
-his fire; two others pitched the tent; the coxswain handed
-the things out of the boat; the rest carried them up to the
-tents and collected firewood. By this order, in half an hour
-everything was ready for the night. A watch of two men
-and an officer was always kept, whose duty it was to look
-after the boats, keep up the fire, and guard against Indians.
-Each in the party had his one hour every night.
-
-During this day we tracked but a short distance, for there
-were many islets, covered by thorny bushes, and the channels
-between them were shallow.
-
-April 20th. -- We passed the islands and set to work. Our
-regular day's march, although it was hard enough, carried
-us on an average only ten miles in a straight line, and perhaps
-fifteen or twenty altogether. Beyond the place where
-we slept last night, the country is completely _terra incognita_,
-for it was there that Captain Stokes turned back. We saw
-in the distance a great smoke, and found the skeleton of a
-horse, so we knew that Indians were in the neighbourhood.
-On the next morning (21st) tracks of a party of horse
-and marks left by the trailing of the chuzos, or long spears,
-were observed on the ground. It was generally thought
-that the Indians had reconnoitred us during the night.
-Shortly afterwards we came to a spot where, from the fresh
-footsteps of men, children, and horses, it was evident that
-the party had crossed the river.
-
-April 22nd. -- The country remained the same, and was
-extremely uninteresting. The complete similarity of the
-productions throughout Patagonia is one of its most striking
-characters. The level plains of arid shingle support
-the same stunted and dwarf plants; and in the valleys the
-same thorn-bearing bushes grow. Everywhere we see the
-same birds and insects. Even the very banks of the river
-and of the clear streamlets which entered it, were scarcely
-enlivened by a brighter tint of green. The curse of sterility
-is on the land, and the water flowing over a bed of pebbles
-partakes of the same curse. Hence the number of water-fowls
-is very scanty; for there is nothing to support life in
-the stream of this barren river.
-
-Patagonia, poor as she is in some respects, can however
-boast of a greater stock of small rodents [1] than perhaps any
-other country in the world. Several species of mice are
-externally characterized by large thin ears and a very fine
-fur. These little animals swarm amongst the thickets in the
-valleys, where they cannot for months together taste a drop
-of water excepting the dew. They all seem to be cannibals
-for no sooner was a mouse caught in one of my traps that
-it was devoured by others. A small and delicately shaped
-fox, which is likewise very abundant, probably derives its
-entire support from these small animals. The guanaco is
-also in his proper district, herds of fifty or a hundred were
-common; and, as I have stated, we saw one which must
-have contained at least five hundred. The puma, with the
-condor and other carrion-hawks in its train, follows and
-preys upon these animals. The footsteps of the puma were
-to be seen almost everywhere on the banks of the river;
-and the remains of several guanacos, with their necks
-dislocated and bones broken, showed how they had met their
-death.
-
-April 24th. -- Like the navigators of old when approaching
-an unknown land, we examined and watched for the most
-trivial sign of a change. The drifted trunk of a tree, or a
-boulder of primitive rock, was hailed with joy, as if we had
-seen a forest growing on the flanks of the Cordillera. The
-top, however, of a heavy bank of clouds, which remained
-almost constantly in one position, was the most promising
-sign, and eventually turned out a true harbinger. At first the
-clouds were mistaken for the mountains themselves, instead
-of the masses of vapour condensed by their icy summits.
-
-April 26th. -- We this day met with a marked change in
-the geological structure of the plains. From the first starting
-I had carefully examined the gravel in the river, and
-for the two last days had noticed the presence of a few small
-pebbles of a very cellular basalt. These gradually increased
-in number and in size, but none were as large as a man's
-head. This morning, however, pebbles of the same rock,
-but more compact, suddenly became abundant, and in the
-course of half an hour we saw, at the distance of five of
-six miles, the angular edge of a great basaltic platform.
-When we arrived at its base we found the stream bubbling
-among the fallen blocks. For the next twenty-eight miles
-the river-course was encumbered with these basaltic masses.
-Above that limit immense fragments of primitive rocks,
-derived from its surrounding boulder-formation, were
-equally numerous. None of the fragments of any considerable
-size had been washed more than three or four miles
-down the river below their parent-source: considering the
-singular rapidity of the great body of water in the Santa
-Cruz, and that no still reaches occur in any part, this example
-is a most striking one, of the inefficiency of rivers in
-transporting even moderately-sized fragments.
-
-The basalt is only lava, which has flowed beneath the sea;
-but the eruptions must have been on the grandest scale. At
-the point where we first met this formation it was 120 feet
-in thickness; following up the river course, the surface
-imperceptibly rose and the mass became thicker, so that at
-forty miles above the first station it was 320 feet thick.
-What the thickness may be close to the Cordillera, I have
-no means of knowing, but the platform there attains a height
-of about three thousand feet above the level of the sea;
-we must therefore look to the mountains of that great chain
-for its source; and worthy of such a source are streams that
-have flowed over the gently inclined bed of the sea to a
-distance of one hundred miles. At the first glance of the
-basaltic cliffs on the opposite sides of the valley, it was
-evident that the strata once were united. What power, then,
-has removed along a whole line of country, a solid mass of
-very hard rock, which had an average thickness of nearly
-three hundred feet, and a breadth varying from rather less
-than two miles to four miles? The river, though it has so
-little power in transporting even inconsiderable fragments,
-yet in the lapse of ages might produce by its gradual erosion
-an effect of which it is difficult to judge the amount. But
-in this case, independently of the insignificance of such an
-agency, good reasons can be assigned for believing that this
-valley was formerly occupied by an arm of the sea. It is
-needless in this work to detail the arguments leading to this
-conclusion, derived from the form and the nature of the
-step-formed terraces on both sides of the valley, from the
-manner in which the bottom of the valley near the Andes
-expands into a great estuary-like plain with sand-hillocks
-on it, and from the occurrence of a few sea-shells lying in
-the bed of the river. If I had space I could prove that
-South America was formerly here cut off by a strait, joining
-the Atlantic and Pacific oceans, like that of Magellan.
-But it may yet be asked, how has the solid basalt been
-moved? Geologists formerly would have brought into play
-the violent action of some overwhelming debacle; but in this
-case such a supposition would have been quite inadmissible,
-because, the same step-like plains with existing sea-shells
-lying on their surface, which front the long line of the
-Patagonian coast, sweep up on each side of the valley of Santa
-Cruz. No possible action of any flood could thus have
-modelled the land, either within the valley or along the open
-coast; and by the formation of such step-like plains or terraces
-the valley itself had been hollowed out. Although we
-know that there are tides, which run within the Narrows
-of the Strait of Magellan at the rate of eight knots an hour,
-yet we must confess that it makes the head almost giddy to
-reflect on the number of years, century after century, which
-the tides, unaided by a heavy surf, must have required to
-have corroded so vast an area and thickness of solid basaltic
-lava. Nevertheless, we must believe that the strata undermined
-by the waters of this ancient strait, were broken up
-into huge fragments, and these lying scattered on the beach
-were reduced first to smaller blocks, then to pebbles and
-lastly to the most impalpable mud, which the tides drifted
-far into the Eastern or Western Ocean.
-
-With the change in the geological structure of the plains
-the character of the landscape likewise altered. While rambling
-up some of the narrow and rocky defiles, I could almost
-have fancied myself transported back again to the barren
-valleys of the island of St. Jago. Among the basaltic cliffs
-I found some plants which I had seen nowhere else, but
-others I recognised as being wanderers from Tierra del
-Fuego. These porous rocks serve as a reservoir for the
-scanty rain-water; and consequently on the line where the
-igneous and sedimentary formations unite, some small
-springs (most rare occurrences in Patagonia) burst forth;
-and they could be distinguished at a distance by the
-circumscribed patches of bright green herbage.
-
-April 27th. -- The bed of the river became rather narrower
-and hence the stream more rapid. It here ran at the rate
-of six knots an hour. From this cause, and from the many
-great angular fragments, tracking the boats became both
-dangerous and laborious.
-
-
-This day I shot a condor. It measured from tip to tip
-of the wings, eight and a half feet, and from beak to tail,
-four feet. This bird is known to have a wide geographical
-range, being found on the west coast of South America,
-from the Strait of Magellan along the Cordillera as far as
-eight degrees north of the equator. The steep cliff near the
-mouth of the Rio Negro is its northern limit on the Patagonian
-coast; and they have there wandered about four
-hundred miles from the great central line of their habitations
-in the Andes. Further south, among the bold precipices
-at the head of Port Desire, the condor is not uncommon;
-yet only a few stragglers occasionally visit the sea-coast.
-A line of cliff near the mouth of the Santa Cruz is
-frequented by these birds, and about eighty miles up the
-river, where the sides of the valley are formed by steep
-basaltic precipices, the condor reappears. From these facts
-it seems that the condors require perpendicular cliffs. In
-Chile, they haunt, during the greater part of the year, the
-lower country near the shores of the Pacific, and at night
-several roost together in one tree; but in the early part of
-summer, they retire to the most inaccessible parts of the
-inner Cordillera, there to breed in peace.
-
-With respect to their propagation, I was told by the
-country people in Chile, that the condor makes no sort of
-nest, but in the months of November and December lays
-two large white eggs on a shelf of bare rock. It is said that
-the young condors cannot fly for an entire year; and long
-after they are able, they continue to roost by night, and
-hunt by day with their parents. The old birds generally live
-in pairs; but among the inland basaltic cliffs of the Santa
-Cruz, I found a spot, where scores must usually haunt. On
-coming suddenly to the brow of the precipice, it was a grand
-spectacle to see between twenty and thirty of these great
-birds start heavily from their resting-place, and wheel away
-in majestic circles. From the quantity of dung on the rocks
-they must long have frequented this cliff for roosting and
-breeding. Having gorged themselves with carrion on the
-plains below, they retire to these favourite ledges to digest
-their food. From these facts, the condor, like the gallinazo,
-must to a certain degree be considered as a gregarious bird.
-In this part of the country they live altogether on the guanacos
-which have died a natural death, or as more commonly
-happens, have been killed by the pumas. I believe, from
-what I saw in Patagonia, that they do not on ordinary occasions
-extend their daily excursions to any great distance
-from their regular sleeping-places.
-
-The condors may oftentimes be seen at a great height,
-soaring over a certain spot in the most graceful circles.
-On some occasions I am sure that they do this only for
-pleasure, but on others, the Chileno countryman tells you
-that they are watching a dying animal, or the puma devouring
-its prey. If the condors glide down, and then suddenly
-all rise together, the Chileno knows that it is the puma
-which, watching the carcass, has sprung out to drive away
-the robbers. Besides feeding on carrion, the condors frequently
-attack young goats and lambs; and the shepherd-dogs
-are trained, whenever they pass over, to run out, and
-looking upwards to bark violently. The Chilenos destroy
-and catch numbers. Two methods are used; one is to place
-a carcass on a level piece of ground within an enclosure of
-sticks with an opening, and when the condors are gorged
-to gallop up on horseback to the entrance, and thus enclose
-them: for when this bird has not space to run, it cannot
-give its body sufficient momentum to rise from the ground.
-The second method is to mark the trees in which, frequently
-to the number of five or six together, they roost, and they
-at night to climb up and noose them. They are such heave
-sleepers, as I have myself witnessed, that this is not a
-difficult task. At Valparaiso, I have seen a living condor sold
-for sixpence, but the common price is eight or ten shillings.
-One which I saw brought in, had been tied with rope, and
-was much injured; yet, the moment the line was cut by
-which its bill was secured, although surrounded by people,
-it began ravenously to tear a piece of carrion. In a garden
-at the same place, between twenty and thirty were kept alive.
-They were fed only once a week, but they appeared in pretty
-good health. [2] The Chileno countrymen assert that the condor
-will live, and retain its vigour, between five and six weeks
-without eating: I cannot answer for the truth of this, but
-it is a cruel experiment, which very likely has been tried.
-
-When an animal is killed in the country, it is well known
-that the condors, like other carrion-vultures, soon gain
-intelligence of it, and congregate in an inexplicable manner.
-In most cases it must not be overlooked, that the birds
-have discovered their prey, and have picked the skeleton
-clean, before the flesh is in the least degree tainted.
-Remembering the experiments of M. Audubon, on the little
-smelling powers of carrion-hawks, I tried in the above
-mentioned garden the following experiment: the condors
-were tied, each by a rope, in a long row at the bottom of a
-wall; and having folded up a piece of meat in white paper, I
-walked backwards and forwards, carrying it in my hand at
-the distance of about three yards from them, but no notice
-whatever was taken. I then threw it on the ground, within
-one yard of an old male bird; he looked at it for a moment
-with attention, but then regarded it no more. With a stick
-I pushed it closer and closer, until at last he touched it with
-his beak; the paper was then instantly torn off with fury,
-and at the same moment, every bird in the long row began
-struggling and flapping its wings. Under the same circumstances,
-it would have been quite impossible to have deceived
-a dog. The evidence in favour of and against the acute
-smelling powers of carrion-vultures is singularly balanced.
-Professor Owen has demonstrated that the olfactory nerves
-of the turkey-buzzard (Cathartes aura) are highly developed,
-and on the evening when Mr. Owen's paper was read
-at the Zoological Society, it was mentioned by a gentleman
-that he had seen the carrion-hawks in the West Indies on
-two occasions collect on the roof of a house, when a corpse
-had become offensive from not having been buried, in this
-case, the intelligence could hardly have been acquired be
-sight. On the other hand, besides the experiments of Audubon
-and that one by myself, Mr. Bachman has tried in the
-United States many varied plans, showing that neither the
-turkey-buzzard (the species dissected by Professor Owen)
-nor the gallinazo find their food by smell. He covered portions
-of highly-offensive offal with a thin canvas cloth, and
-strewed pieces of meat on it: these the carrion-vultures ate
-up, and then remained quietly standing, with their beaks
-within the eighth of an inch of the putrid mass, without
-discovering it. A small rent was made in the canvas, and
-the offal was immediately discovered; the canvas was replaced
-by a fresh piece, and meat again put on it, and was
-again devoured by the vultures without their discovering
-the hidden mass on which they were trampling. These facts
-are attested by the signatures of six gentlemen, besides that
-of Mr. Bachman. [3]
-
-Often when lying down to rest on the open plains, on
-looking upwards, I have seen carrion-hawks sailing through
-the air at a great height. Where the country is level I do
-not believe a space of the heavens, of more than fifteen degrees
-above the horizon, is commonly viewed with any attention
-by a person either walking or on horseback. If such
-be the case, and the vulture is on the wing at a height of
-between three and four thousand feet, before it could come
-within the range of vision, its distance in a straight line
-from the beholder's eye, would be rather more than two
-British miles. Might it not thus readily be overlooked?
-When an animal is killed by the sportsman in a lonely valley,
-may he not all the while be watched from above by the
-sharp-sighted bird? And will not the manner of its descend
-proclaim throughout the district to the whole family of
-carrion-feeders, that their prey is at hand?
-
-When the condors are wheeling in a flock round and
-round any spot, their flight is beautiful. Except when rising
-from the ground, I do not recollect ever having seen one
-of these birds flap its wings. Near Lima, I watched several
-for nearly half an hour, without once taking off my eyes,
-they moved in large curves, sweeping in circles, descending
-and ascending without giving a single flap. As they glided
-close over my head, I intently watched from an oblique position,
-the outlines of the separate and great terminal feathers
-of each wing; and these separate feathers, if there had been
-the least vibratory movement, would have appeared as if
-blended together; but they were seen distinct against the
-blue sky. The head and neck were moved frequently, and
-apparently with force; and the extended wings seemed to
-form the fulcrum on which the movements of the neck, body,
-and tail acted. If the bird wished to descend, the wings
-were for a moment collapsed; and when again expanded
-with an altered inclination, the momentum gained by the
-rapid descent seemed to urge the bird upwards with the
-even and steady movement of a paper kite. In the case of
-any bird soaring, its motion must be sufficiently rapid so
-that the action of the inclined surface of its body on the
-atmosphere may counterbalance its gravity. The force to
-keep up the momentum of a body moving in a horizontal
-plane in the air (in which there is so little friction) cannot
-be great, and this force is all that is wanted. The movements
-of the neck and body of the condor, we must suppose,
-is sufficient for this. However this may be, it is truly
-wonderful and beautiful to see so great a bird, hour after hour,
-without any apparent exertion, wheeling and gliding over
-mountain and river.
-
-April 29th. -- From some high land we hailed with joy
-the white summits of the Cordillera, as they were seen
-occasionally peeping through their dusky envelope of clouds.
-During the few succeeding days we continued to get on
-slowly, for we found the river-course very tortuous, and
-strewed with immense fragments of various ancient slate
-rocks, and of granite. The plain bordering the valley has
-here attained an elevation of about 1100 feet above the river,
-and its character was much altered. The well-rounded pebbles
-of porphyry were mingled with many immense angular
-fragments of basalt and of primary rocks. The first of these
-erratic boulders which I noticed, was sixty-seven miles distant
-from the nearest mountain; another which I measured
-was five yards square, and projected five feet above the
-gravel. Its edges were so angular, and its size so great, that
-I at first mistook it for a rock _in situ_, and took out my
-compass to observe the direction of its cleavage. The plain here
-was not quite so level as that nearer the coast, but yet in
-betrayed no signs of any great violence. Under these
-circumstances it is, I believe, quite impossible to explain the
-transportal of these gigantic masses of rock so many miles
-from their parent-source, on any theory except by that of
-floating icebergs.
-
-During the two last days we met with signs of horses, and
-with several small articles which had belonged to the Indians
--- such as parts of a mantle and a bunch of ostrich feathers --,
-but they appeared to have been lying long on the ground.
-Between the place where the Indians had so lately crossed
-the river and this neighbourhood, though so many miles
-apart, the country appears to be quite unfrequented. At first,
-considering the abundance of the guanacos, I was surprised
-at this; but it is explained by the stony nature of the plains,
-which would soon disable an unshod horse from taking part
-in the chase. Nevertheless, in two places in this very central
-region, I found small heaps of stones, which I do not think
-could have been accidentally thrown together. They were
-placed on points, projecting over the edge of the highest lava
-cliff, and they resembled, but on a small scale, those near
-Port Desire.
-
-May 4th. -- Captain Fitz Roy determined to take the boats
-no higher. The river had a winding course, and was very
-rapid; and the appearance of the country offered no temptation
-to proceed any further. Everywhere we met with the
-same productions, and the same dreary landscape. We were
-now one hundred and forty miles distant from the Atlantic
-and about sixty from the nearest arm of the Pacific. The
-valley in this upper part expanded into a wide basin, bounded
-on the north and south by the basaltic platforms, and fronted
-by the long range of the snow-clad Cordillera. But we
-viewed these grand mountains with regret, for we were
-obliged to imagine their nature and productions, instead of
-standing, as we had hoped, on their summits. Besides the
-useless loss of time which an attempt to ascend the river and
-higher would have cost us, we had already been for some
-days on half allowance of bread. This, although really
-enough for reasonable men, was, after a hard day's march,
-rather scanty food: a light stomach and an easy digestion
-are good things to talk about, but very unpleasant in practice.
-
-5th. -- Before sunrise we commenced our descent. We
-shot down the stream with great rapidity, generally at the
-rate of ten knots an hour. In this one day we effected what
-had cost us five-and-a-half hard days' labour in ascending.
-On the 8th, we reached the Beagle after our twenty-one days'
-expedition. Every one, excepting myself, had cause to be
-dissatisfied; but to me the ascent afforded a most interesting
-section of the great tertiary formation of Patagonia.
-
-On March 1st, 1833, and again on March 16th, 1834, the
-Beagle anchored in Berkeley Sound, in East Falkland Island.
-This archipelago is situated in nearly the same latitude with
-the mouth of the Strait of Magellan; it covers a space of
-one hundred and twenty by sixty geographical miles, and is
-little more than half the size of Ireland. After the possession
-of these miserable islands had been contested by France,
-Spain, and England, they were left uninhabited. The government
-of Buenos Ayres then sold them to a private individual,
-but likewise used them, as old Spain had done before,
-for a penal settlement. England claimed her right and
-seized them. The Englishman who was left in charge of
-the flag was consequently murdered. A British officer was
-next sent, unsupported by any power: and when we arrived,
-we found him in charge of a population, of which rather
-more than half were runaway rebels and murderers.
-
-The theatre is worthy of the scenes acted on it. An undulating
-land, with a desolate and wretched aspect, is everywhere
-covered by a peaty soil and wiry grass, of one monotonous
-brown colour. Here and there a peak or ridge
-of grey quartz rock breaks through the smooth surface
-Every one has heard of the climate of these regions; it
-may be compared to that which is experienced at the height
-of between one and two thousand feet, on the mountains of
-North Wales; having however less sunshine and less frost
-but more wind and rain. [4]
-
-16th. -- I will now describe a short excursion which
-made round a part of this island. In the morning I started
-with six horses and two Gauchos: the latter were capital
-men for the purpose, and well accustomed to living on their
-own resources. The weather was very boisterous and cold
-with heavy hail-storms. We got on, however, pretty well
-but, except the geology, nothing could be less interesting
-than our day's ride. The country is uniformly the same
-undulating moorland; the surface being covered by light
-brown withered grass and a few very small shrubs, all
-springing out of an elastic peaty soil. In the valleys here
-and there might be seen a small flock of wild geese, and
-everywhere the ground was so soft that the snipe were able
-to feed. Besides these two birds there were few others.
-There is one main range of hills, nearly two thousand feet
-in height, and composed of quartz rock, the rugged and barren
-crests of which gave us some trouble to cross. On the
-south side we came to the best country for wild cattle; we
-met, however, no great number, for they had been lately
-much harassed.
-
-In the evening we came across a small herd. One of my
-companions, St. Jago by name, soon separated a fat cow:
-he threw the bolas, and it struck her legs, but failed in
-becoming entangled. Then dropping his hat to mark the spot
-where the balls were left, while at full gallop, he uncoiled
-his lazo, and after a most severe chase, again came up to
-the cow, and caught her round the horns. The other Gaucho
-had gone on ahead with the spare horses, so that St. Jago
-had some difficulty in killing the furious beast. He managed
-to get her on a level piece of ground, by taking advantage
-of her as often as she rushed at him; and when she
-would not move, my horse, from having been trained, would
-canter up, and with his chest give her a violent push. But
-when on level ground it does not appear an easy job for
-one man to kill a beast mad with terror. Nor would it be
-so, if the horse, when left to itself without its rider, did
-not soon learn, for its own safety, to keep the lazo tight,
-so that, if the cow or ox moves forward, the horse moves
-just as quickly forward; otherwise, it stands motionless
-leaning on one side. This horse, however, was a young
-one, and would not stand still, but gave in to the cow as she
-struggled. It was admirable to see with what dexterity St.
-Jago dodged behind the beast, till at last he contrived to
-give the fatal touch to the main tendon of the hind leg
-after which, without much difficulty, he drove his knife
-into the head of the spinal marrow, and the cow dropped
-as if struck by lightning. He cut off pieces of flesh with
-the skin to it, but without any bones, sufficient for our
-expedition. We then rode on to our sleeping-place, and
-had for supper "carne con cuero," or meat roasted with the
-skin on it. This is as superior to common beef as venison
-is to mutton. A large circular piece taken from the back
-is roasted on the embers with the hide downwards and is
-the form of a saucer, so that none of the gravy is lost.
-If any worthy alderman had supped with us that evening,
-"carne con cuero," without doubt, would soon have been
-celebrated in London.
-
-During the night it rained, and the next day (17th) was
-very stormy, with much hail and snow. We rode across the
-island to the neck of land which joins the Rincon del Toro
-(the great peninsula at the S. W. extremity) to the rest of
-the island. From the great number of cows which have
-been killed, there is a large proportion of bulls. These wander
-about single, or two and three together, and are very
-savage. I never saw such magnificent beasts; they equalled
-in the size of their huge heads and necks the Grecian marble
-sculptures. Capt. Sulivan informs me that the hide of an
-average-sized bull weighs forty-seven pounds, whereas a
-hide of this weight, less thoroughly dried, is considered as
-a very heavy one at Monte Video. The young bulls generally
-run away, for a short distance; but the old ones do not
-stir a step, except to rush at man and horse; and many
-horses have been thus killed. An old bull crossed a boggy
-stream, and took his stand on the opposite side to us; we
-in vain tried to drive him away, and failing, were obliged
-to make a large circuit. The Gauchos in revenge determined
-to emasculate him and render him for the future
-harmless. It was very interesting to see how art completely
-mastered force. One lazo was thrown over his horns as he
-rushed at the horse, and another round his hind legs: in a
-minute the monster was stretched powerless on the ground.
-After the lazo has once been drawn tightly round the horns
-of a furious animal, it does not at first appear an easy thing
-to disengage it again without killing the beast: nor, I
-apprehend, would it be so if the man was by himself. By the
-aid, however, of a second person throwing his lazo so as to
-catch both hind legs, it is quickly managed: for the animal,
-as long as its hind legs are kept outstretched, is quite
-helpless, and the first man can with his hands loosen his lazo
-from the horns, and then quietly mount his horse; but the
-moment the second man, by backing ever so little, relaxes
-the strain, the lazo slips off the legs of the struggling beast,
-which then rises free, shakes himself, and vainly rushes at
-his antagonist.
-
-During our whole ride we saw only one troop of wild
-horses. These animals, as well as the cattle, were introduced
-by the French in 1764, since which time both have greatly
-increased. It is a curious fact, that the horses have never
-left the eastern end of the island, although there is no natural
-boundary to prevent them from roaming, and that part
-of the island is not more tempting than the rest. The Gauchos
-whom I asked, though asserting this to be the case,
-were unable to account for it, except from the strong attachment
-which horses have to any locality to which they are
-accustomed. Considering that the island does not appear
-fully stocked, and that there are no beasts of prey, I was
-particularly curious to know what has checked their originally
-rapid increase. That in a limited island some check
-would sooner or later supervene, is inevitable; but why had
-the increase of the horse been checked sooner than that of
-the cattle? Capt. Sulivan has taken much pains for me
-in this inquiry. The Gauchos employed here attribute it
-chiefly to the stallions constantly roaming from place to
-place, and compelling the mares to accompany them, whether
-or not the young foals are able to follow. One Gaucho told
-Capt. Sulivan that he had watched a stallion for a whole
-hour, violently kicking and biting a mare till he forced
-her to leave her foal to its fate. Capt. Sulivan can so far
-corroborate this curious account, that he has several times
-found young foals dead, whereas he has never found a dead
-calf. Moreover, the dead bodies of full-grown horses are
-more frequently found, as if more subject to disease or
-accidents, than those of the cattle. From the softness of
-the ground their hoofs often grow irregularly to a great
-length, and this causes lameness. The predominant colours
-are roan and iron-grey. All the horses bred here, both tame
-and wild, are rather small-sized, though generally in good
-condition; and they have lost so much strength, that they
-are unfit to be used in taking wild cattle with the lazo: in
-consequence, it is necessary to go to the great expense of
-importing fresh horses from the Plata. At some future
-period the southern hemisphere probably will have its breed
-of Falkland ponies, as the northern has its Shetland breed.
-
-The cattle, instead of having degenerated like the horses
-seem, as before remarked, to have increased in size; and
-they are much more numerous than the horses. Capt. Sulivan
-informs me that they vary much less in the general
-form of their bodies and in the shape of their horns than
-English cattle. In colour they differ much; and it is a
-remarkable circumstance, that in different parts of this one
-small island, different colours predominate. Round Mount
-Usborne, at a height of from 1000 to 1500 feet above the sea,
-about half of some of the herds are mouse or lead-coloured,
-a tint which is not common in other parts of the island.
-Near Port Pleasant dark brown prevails, whereas south of
-Choiseul Sound (which almost divides the island into two
-parts), white beasts with black heads and feet are the most
-common: in all parts black, and some spotted animals may
-be observed. Capt. Sulivan remarks, that the difference in
-the prevailing colours was so obvious, that in looking for
-the herds near Port Pleasant, they appeared from a long
-distance like black spots, whilst south of Choiseul Sound
-they appeared like white spots on the hill-sides. Capt. Sulivan
-thinks that the herds do not mingle; and it is a singular
-fact, that the mouse-coloured cattle, though living on the
-high land, calve about a month earlier in the season that
-the other coloured beasts on the lower land. It is interesting
-thus to find the once domesticated cattle breaking
-into three colours, of which some one colour would in all
-probability ultimately prevail over the others, if the herds
-were left undisturbed for the next several centuries.
-
-The rabbit is another animal which has been introduced;
-and has succeeded very well; so that they abound over large
-parts of the island. Yet, like the horses, they are confined
-within certain limits; for they have not crossed the central
-chain of hills, nor would they have extended even so far as
-its base, if, as the Gauchos informed me, small colonies has
-not been carried there. I should not have supposed that
-these animals, natives of northern Africa, could have existed
-in a climate so humid as this, and which enjoys so little
-sunshine that even wheat ripens only occasionally. It is
-asserted that in Sweden, which any one would have thought
-a more favourable climate, the rabbit cannot live out of
-doors. The first few pairs, moreover, had here to content
-against pre-existing enemies, in the fox and some large
-hawks. The French naturalists have considered the black variety
-a distinct species, and called it Lepus Magellanicus. [5]
-They imagined that Magellan, when talking of an animal
-under the name of "conejos" in the Strait of Magellan,
-referred to this species; but he was alluding to a small cavy,
-which to this day is thus called by the Spaniards. The
-Gauchos laughed at the idea of the black kind being different
-from the grey, and they said that at all events it had
-not extended its range any further than the grey kind; that
-the two were never found separate; and that they readily
-bred together, and produced piebald offspring. Of the latter
-I now possess a specimen, and it is marked about the head
-differently from the French specific description. This
-circumstance shows how cautious naturalists should be in
-making species; for even Cuvier, on looking at the skull
-of one of these rabbits, thought it was probably distinct!
-
-The only quadruped native to the island [6]; is a large wolf-
-like fox (Canis antarcticus), which is common to both East
-and West Falkland. I have no doubt it is a peculiar species,
-and confined to this archipelago; because many sealers,
-Gauchos, and Indians, who have visited these islands, all
-maintain that no such animal is found in any part of South
-America.
-
-Molina, from a similarity in habits, thought that this
-was the same with his "culpeu;" [7] but I have seen both,
-and they are quite distinct. These wolves are well known
-from Byron's account of their tameness and curiosity, which
-the sailors, who ran into the water to avoid them, mistook
-for fierceness. To this day their manners remain the same.
-They have been observed to enter a tent, and actually pull
-some meat from beneath the head of a sleeping seaman. The
-Gauchos also have frequently in the evening killed them,
-by holding out a piece of meat in one hand, and in the other
-a knife ready to stick them. As far as I am aware, there
-is no other instance in any part of the world, of so small
-a mass of broken land, distant from a continent, possessing
-so large an aboriginal quadruped peculiar to itself. Their
-numbers have rapidly decreased; they are already banished
-from that half of the island which lies to the eastward of
-the neck of land between St. Salvador Bay and Berkeley
-Sound. Within a very few years after these islands shall
-have become regularly settled, in all probability this for
-will be classed with the dodo, as an animal which has perished
-from the face of the earth.
-
-At night (17th) we slept on the neck of land at the head
-of Choiseul Sound, which forms the south-west peninsula.
-The valley was pretty well sheltered from the cold wind,
-but there was very little brushwood for fuel. The Gauchos,
-however, soon found what, to my great surprise, made nearly
-as hot a fire as coals; this was the skeleton of a bullock
-lately killed, from which the flesh had been picked by the
-carrion-hawks. They told me that in winter they often killed a
-beast, cleaned the flesh from the bones with their knives,
-and then with these same bones roasted the meat for their
-suppers.
-
-18th. -- It rained during nearly the whole day. At night
-we managed, however, with our saddle-cloths to keep ourselves
-pretty well dry and warm; but the ground on which
-we slept was on each occasion nearly in the state of a bog,
-and there was not a dry spot to sit down on after our day's
-ride. I have in another part stated how singular it is that
-there should be absolutely no trees on these islands, although
-Tierra del Fuego is covered by one large forest. The
-largest bush in the island (belonging to the family of
-Compositae) is scarcely so tall as our gorse. The best fuel is
-afforded by a green little bush about the size of common
-heath, which has the useful property of burning while fresh
-and green. It was very surprising to see the Gauchos, in
-the midst of rain and everything soaking wet, with nothing
-more than a tinder-box and a piece of rag, immediately make
-a fire. They sought beneath the tufts of grass and bushel
-for a few dry twigs, and these they rubbed into fibres; then
-surrounding them with coarser twigs, something like a bird's
-nest, they put the rag with its spark of fire in the middle
-and covered it up. The nest being then held up to the
-wind, by degrees it smoked more and more, and at last
-burst out in flames. I do not think any other method would
-have had a chance of succeeding with such damp materials.
-
-19th. -- Each morning, from not having ridden for some
-time previously, I was very stiff. I was surprised to hear
-the Gauchos, who have from infancy almost lived on horseback,
-say that, under similar circumstances, they always
-suffer. St. Jago told me, that having been confined for three
-months by illness, he went out hunting wild cattle, and in
-consequence, for the next two days, his thighs were so stiff
-that he was obliged to lie in bed. This shows that the Gauchos,
-although they do not appear to do so, yet really must
-exert much muscular effort in riding. The hunting will
-cattle, in a country so difficult to pass as this is on account
-of the swampy ground, must be very hard work. The
-Gauchos say they often pass at full speed over ground which
-would be impassable at a slower pace; in the same manner
-as a man is able to skate over thin ice. When hunting, the
-party endeavours to get as close as possible to the herd without
-being discovered. Each man carries four or five pair of
-the bolas; these he throws one after the other at as many
-cattle, which, when once entangled, are left for some days
-till they become a little exhausted by hunger and struggling.
-They are then let free and driven towards a small herd of
-tame animals, which have been brought to the spot on purpose.
-From their previous treatment, being too much terrified
-to leave the herd, they are easily driven, if their
-strength last out, to the settlement.
-
-The weather continued so very bad that we determine
-to make a push, and try to reach the vessel before night.
-From the quantity of rain which had fallen, the surface
-of the whole country was swampy. I suppose my horse fell
-at least a dozen times, and sometimes the whole six horses
-were floundering in the mud together. All the little streams
-are bordered by soft peat, which makes it very difficult for
-the horses to leap them without falling. To complete our
-discomforts we were obliged to cross the head of a creek
-of the sea, in which the water was as high as our horses'
-backs; and the little waves, owing to the violence of the
-wind, broke over us, and made us very wet and cold. Even
-the iron-framed Gauchos professed themselves glad when
-they reached the settlement, after our little excursion.
-
-The geological structure of these islands is in most
-respects simple. The lower country consists of clay-slate
-and sandstone, containing fossils, very closely related to, but
-not identical with, those found in the Silurian formations
-of Europe; the hills are formed of white granular quartz
-rock. The strata of the latter are frequently arched with
-perfect symmetry, and the appearance of some of the masses
-is in consequence most singular. Pernety [8] has devoted
-several pages to the description of a Hill of Ruins, the
-successive strata of which he has justly compared to the
-seats of an amphitheatre. The quartz rock must have been
-quite pasty when it underwent such remarkable flexures
-without being shattered into fragments. As the quartz
-insensibly passes into the sandstone, it seems probable that
-the former owes its origin to the sandstone having been
-heated to such a degree that it became viscid, and upon cooling
-crystallized. While in the soft state it must have been
-pushed up through the overlying beds.
-
-In many parts of the island the bottoms of the valleys are
-covered in an extraordinary manner by myriads of great
-loose angular fragments of the quartz rock, forming "streams
-of stones." These have been mentioned with surprise be
-every voyager since the time of Pernety. The blocks are
-not water-worn, their angles being only a little blunted; they
-vary in size from one or two feet in diameter to ten, or even
-more than twenty times as much. They are not thrown
-together into irregular piles, but are spread out into level
-sheets or great streams. It is not possible to ascertain their
-thickness, but the water of small streamlets can be heard
-trickling through the stones many feet below the surface.
-The actual depth is probably great, because the crevices
-between the lower fragments must long ago have been filled
-up with sand. The width of these sheets of stones varied
-from a few hundred feet to a mile; but the peaty soil daily
-encroaches on the borders, and even forms islets wherever
-a few fragments happen to lie close together. In a valley
-south of Berkeley Sound, which some of our party called
-the "great valley of fragments," it was necessary to cross
-an uninterrupted band half a mile wide, by jumping from
-one pointed stone to another. So large were the fragments,
-that being overtaken by a shower of rain, I readily found
-shelter beneath one of them.
-
-Their little inclination is the most remarkable circumstance
-in these "streams of stones." On the hill-sides I have
-seen them sloping at an angle of ten degrees with the horizon;
-but in some of the level, broad-bottomed valleys, the
-inclination is only just sufficient to be clearly perceived.
-On so rugged a surface there was no means of measuring the
-angle, but to give a common illustration, I may say that the
-slope would not have checked the speed of an English mail-coach.
-In some places, a continuous stream of these fragments
-followed up the course of a valley, and even
-extended to the very crest of the hill. On these crests huge
-masses, exceeding in dimensions any small building, seemed
-to stand arrested in their headlong course: there, also, the
-curved strata of the archways lay piled on each other, like
-the ruins of some vast and ancient cathedral. In endeavouring
-to describe these scenes of violence one is tempted to pass
-from one simile to another. We may imagine that streams
-of white lava had flowed from many parts of the mountains
-into the lower country, and that when solidified they had been
-rent by some enormous convulsion into myriads of fragments.
-The expression "streams of stones," which immediately
-occurred to every one, conveys the same idea. These
-scenes are on the spot rendered more striking by the contrast
-of the low rounded forms of the neighbouring hills.
-
-I was interested by finding on the highest peak of one
-range (about 700 feet above the sea) a great arched fragment,
-lying on its convex side, or back downwards. Must
-we believe that it was fairly pitched up in the air, and thus
-turned? Or, with more probability, that there existed formerly
-a part of the same range more elevated than the point
-on which this monument of a great convulsion of nature now
-lies. As the fragments in the valleys are neither rounded
-nor the crevices filled up with sand, we must infer that the
-period of violence was subsequent to the land having been
-raised above the waters of the sea. In a transverse section
-within these valleys, the bottom is nearly level, or rises but
-very little towards either side. Hence the fragments appear
-to have travelled from the head of the valley; but in reality
-it seems more probable that they have been hurled down from
-the nearest slopes; and that since, by a vibratory movement
-of overwhelming force, [9] the fragments have been levelled
-into one continuous sheet. If during the earthquake [10] which
-in 1835 overthrew Concepcion, in Chile, it was thought wonderful
-that small bodies should have been pitched a few
-inches from the ground, what must we say to a movement
-which has caused fragments many tons in weight, to move
-onwards like so much sand on a vibrating board, and find
-their level? I have seen, in the Cordillera of the Andes, the
-evident marks where stupendous mountains have been broken
-into pieces like so much thin crust, and the strata thrown of
-their vertical edges; but never did any scene, like these
-"streams of stones," so forcibly convey to my mind the idea
-of a convulsion, of which in historical records we might in
-vain seek for any counterpart: yet the progress of knowledge
-will probably some day give a simple explanation of this
-phenomenon, as it already has of the so long-thought
-inexplicable transportal of the erratic boulders, which are
-strewed over the plains of Europe.
-
-I have little to remark on the zoology of these islands.
-have before described the carrion-vulture of Polyborus.
-There are some other hawks, owls, and a few small land-birds.
-The water-fowl are particularly numerous, and they
-must formerly, from the accounts of the old navigators,
-have been much more so. One day I observed a cormorant
-playing with a fish which it had caught. Eight times
-successively the bird let its prey go, then dived after it, and
-although in deep water, brought it each time to the surface.
-In the Zoological Gardens I have seen the otter treat a fish
-in the same manner, much as a cat does a mouse: I do not
-know of any other instance where dame Nature appears so
-wilfully cruel. Another day, having placed myself between
-a penguin (Aptenodytes demersa) and the water, I was much
-amused by watching its habits. It was a brave bird; and till
-reaching the sea, it regularly fought and drove me backwards.
-Nothing less than heavy blows would have stopped him; every
-inch he gained he firmly kept, standing close before me erect
-and determined. When thus opposed he continually rolled
-his head from side to side, in a very odd manner, as if the
-power of distinct vision lay only in the anterior and basal
-part of each eye. This bird is commonly called the jackass
-penguin, from its habit, while on shore, of throwing its head
-backwards, and making a loud strange noise, very like the
-braying of an ass; but while at sea, and undisturbed, its note
-is very deep and solemn, and is often heard in the night-time.
-In diving, its little wings are used as fins; but on the land,
-as front legs. When crawling, it may be said on four legs,
-through the tussocks or on the side of a grassy cliff, it moves
-so very quickly that it might easily be mistaken for a
-quadruped. When at sea and fishing, it comes to the surface for
-the purpose of breathing with such a spring, and dives again
-so instantaneously, that I defy any one at first sight to be
-sure that it was not a fish leaping for sport.
-
-Two kinds of geese frequent the Falklands. The upland
-species (Anas Magellanica) is common, in pairs and in small
-flocks, throughout the island. They do not migrate, but build
-on the small outlying islets. This is supposed to be from
-fear of the foxes: and it is perhaps from the same cause
-that these birds, though very tame by day, are shy and will
-in the dusk of the evening. They live entirely on vegetable
-matter.
-
-The rock-goose, so called from living exclusively on the
-sea-beach (Anas antarctica), is common both here and on
-the west coast of America, as far north as Chile. In the deep
-and retired channels of Tierra del Fuego, the snow-white
-gander, invariably accompanied by his darker consort, and
-standing close by each other on some distant rocky point, is
-a common feature in the landscape.
-
-In these islands a great loggerheaded duck or goose (Anas
-brachyptera), which sometimes weighs twenty-two pounds,
-is very abundant. These birds were in former days called,
-from their extraordinary manner of paddling and splashing
-upon the water, race-horses; but now they are named, much
-more appropriately, steamers. Their wings are too small and
-weak to allow of flight, but by their aid, partly swimming and
-partly flapping the surface of the water, they move very
-quickly. The manner is something like that by which the
-common house-duck escapes when pursued by a dog; but I
-am nearly sure that the steamer moves its wings alternately,
-instead of both together, as in other birds. These clumsy,
-loggerheaded ducks make such a noise and splashing, that the
-effect is exceedingly curious.
-
-Thus we find in South America three birds which use their
-wings for other purposes besides flight; the penguins as fins,
-the steamer as paddles, and the ostrich as sails: and the
-Apteryz of New Zealand, as well as its gigantic extinct
-prototype the Deinornis, possess only rudimentary
-representatives of wings. The steamer is able to dive only
-to a very short distance. It feeds entirely on shell-fish
-from the kelp and tidal rocks: hence the beak and head, for
-the purpose of breaking them, are surprisingly heavy and
-strong: the head is so strong that I have scarcely been able
-to fracture it with my geological hammer; and all our sportsmen
-soon discovered how tenacious these birds were of life. When in
-the evening pluming themselves in a flock, they make the same
-odd mixture of sounds which bull-frogs do within the tropics.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, as well as in the Falkland Islands,
-made many observations on the lower marine animals, [11] but
-they are of little general interest. I will mention only one
-class of facts, relating to certain zoophytes in the more highly
-organized division of that class. Several genera (Flustra,
-Eschara, Cellaria, Crisia, and others) agree in having singular
-moveable organs (like those of Flustra avicularia, found
-in the European seas) attached to their cells. The organ, in
-the greater number of cases, very closely resembles the head
-of a vulture; but the lower mandible can be opened much
-wider than in a real bird's beak. The head itself possessed
-considerable powers of movement, by means of a short neck.
-In one zoophyte the head itself was fixed, but the lower jaw
-free: in another it was replaced by a triangular hood, with
-beautifully-fitted trap-door, which evidently answered to the
-lower mandible. In the greater number of species, each cell
-was provided with one head, but in others each cell had two.
-
-The young cells at the end of the branches of these corallines
-contain quite immature polypi, yet the vulture-head
-attached to them, though small, are in every respect perfect
-When the polypus was removed by a needle from any of the
-cells, these organs did not appear in the least affected. When
-one of the vulture-like heads was cut off from the cell, the
-lower mandible retained its power of opening and closing.
-Perhaps the most singular part of their structure is, that
-when there were more than two rows of cells on a branch,
-the central cells were furnished with these appendages, of
-only one-fourth the size of the outside ones. Their movements
-varied according to the species; but in some I never
-saw the least motion; while others, with the lower mandible
-generally wide open, oscillated backwards and forwards at
-the rate of about five seconds each turn, others moved rapidly
-and by starts. When touched with a needle, the beak
-generally seized the point so firmly, that the whole branch
-might be shaken.
-
-These bodies have no relation whatever with the production
-of the eggs or gemmules, as they are formed before the
-young polypi appear in the cells at the end of the growing
-branches; as they move independently of the polypi, and do
-not appear to be in any way connected with them; and as
-they differ in size on the outer and inner rows of cells, I have
-little doubt, that in their functions, they are related rather
-to the horny axis of the branches than to the polypi in the
-cells. The fleshy appendage at the lower extremity of the
-sea-pen (described at Bahia Blanca) also forms part of the
-zoophyte, as a whole, in the same manner as the roots of a
-tree form part of the whole tree, and not of the individual
-leaf or flower-buds.
-
-In another elegant little coralline (Crisia?), each cell was
-furnished with a long-toothed bristle, which had the power
-of moving quickly. Each of these bristles and each of the
-vulture-like heads generally moved quite independently of
-the others, but sometimes all on both sides of a branch,
-sometimes only those on one side, moved together
-coinstantaneously, sometimes each moved in regular order one
-after another. In these actions we apparently behold as perfect
-a transmission of will in the zoophyte, though composed of
-thousands of distinct polypi, as in any single animal. The
-case, indeed, is not different from that of the sea-pens, which,
-when touched, drew themselves into the sand on the coast of
-Bahia Blanca. I will state one other instance of uniform
-action, though of a very different nature, in a zoophyte
-closely allied to Clytia, and therefore very simply organized.
-Having kept a large tuft of it in a basin of salt-water, when
-it was dark I found that as often as I rubbed any part of a
-branch, the whole became strongly phosphorescent with a
-green light: I do not think I ever saw any object more
-beautifully so. But the remarkable circumstance was, that the
-flashes of light always proceeded up the branches, from the
-base towards the extremities.
-
-The examination of these compound animals was always
-very interesting to me. What can be more remarkable that
-to see a plant-like body producing an egg, capable of swimming
-about and of choosing a proper place to adhere to,
-which then sprouts into branches, each crowded with innumerable
-distinct animals, often of complicated organizations.
-The branches, moreover, as we have just seen, sometimes
-possess organs capable of movement and independent of the
-polypi. Surprising as this union of separate individuals in
-common stock must always appear, every tree displays the
-same fact, for buds must be considered as individual plants.
-It is, however, natural to consider a polypus, furnished with
-a mouth, intestines, and other organs, as a distinct individual,
-whereas the individuality of a leaf-bud is not easily realised,
-so that the union of separate individuals in a common body
-is more striking in a coralline than in a tree. Our conception
-of a compound animal, where in some respects the individuality
-of each is not completed, may be aided, by reflecting
-on the production of two distinct creatures by bisecting a
-single one with a knife, or where Nature herself performs
-the task of bisection. We may consider the polypi in a
-zoophyte, or the buds in a tree, as cases where the division
-of the individual has not been completely effected. Certainly
-in the case of trees, and judging from analogy in that of
-corallines, the individuals propagated by buds seem more
-intimately related to each other, than eggs or seeds are to
-their parents. It seems now pretty well established that
-plants propagated by buds all partake of a common duration
-of life; and it is familiar to every one, what singular and
-numerous peculiarities are transmitted with certainty, by
-buds, layers, and grafts, which by seminal propagation never
-or only casually reappear.
-
-[1] The desserts of Syria are characterized, according to
-Volney (tom. i. p. 351), by woody bushes, numerous rats,
-gazelles and hares. In the landscape of Patagonia, the guanaco
-replaces the gazelle, and the agouti the hare.
-
-[2] I noticed that several hours before any one of the condors
-died, all the lice, with which it was infested, crawled to the
-outside feathers. I was assured that this always happens.
-
-[3] London's Magazine of Nat. Hist., vol. vii.
-
-[4] From accounts published since our voyage, and more
-especially from several interesting letters from Capt. Sulivan,
-R. N., employed on the survey, it appears that we took an
-exaggerated view of the badness of the climate on these
-islands. But when I reflect on the almost universal covering
-of peat, and on the fact of wheat seldom ripening here, I can
-hardly believe that the climate in summer is so fine and dry
-as it has lately been represented.
-
-[5] Lesson's Zoology of the Voyage of the Coquille, tom. i.
-p. 168. All the early voyagers, and especially Bougainville,
-distinctly state that the wolf-like fox was the only native
-animal on the island. The distinction of the rabbit as a
-species, is taken from peculiarities in the fur, from the
-shape of the head, and from the shortness of the ears. I may
-here observe that the difference between the Irish and English
-hare rests upon nearly similar characters, only more strongly
-marked.
-
-[6] I have reason, however, to suspect that there is a field-
-mouse. The common European rat and mouse have roamed far from
-the habitations of the settlers. The common hog has also run
-wild on one islet; all are of a black colour: the boars are
-very fierce, and have great trunks.
-
-[7] The "culpeu" is the Canis Magellanicus brought home by
-Captain King from the Strait of Magellan. It is common in
-Chile.
-
-[8] Pernety, Voyage aux Isles Malouines, p. 526.
-
-[9] "Nous n'avons pas ete moins saisis d'etonnement a la vue
-de l'innombrable quantite de pierres de touts grandeurs,
-bouleversees les unes sur les autres, et cependent rangees,
-comme si elles avoient ete amoncelees negligemment pour remplir
-des ravins. On ne se lassoit pas d'admirer les effets
-prodigieux de la nature." -- Pernety, p. 526.
-
-[10] An inhabitant of Mendoza, and hence well capable of
-judging, assured me that, during the several years he had
-resided on these islands, he had never felt the slightest
-shock of an earthquake.
-
-[11] I was surprised to find, on counting the eggs of a large
-white Doris (this sea-slug was three and a half inches long),
-how extraordinarily numerous they were. From two to five eggs
-(each three-thousandths of an inch in diameter) were contained
-in spherical little case. These were arranged two deep in
-transverse rows forming a ribbon. The ribbon adhered by its
-edge to the rock in an oval spire. One which I found, measured
-nearly twenty inches in length and half in breadth. By counting
-how many balls were contained in a tenth of an inch in the
-row, and how many rows in an equal length of the ribbon, on
-the most moderate computation there were six hundred thousand
-eggs. Yet this Doris was certainly not very common; although
-I was often searching under the stones, I saw only seven
-individuals. No fallacy is more common with naturalists,
-than that the numbers of an individual species depend on
-its powers of propagation.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X
-
-TIERRA DEL FUEGO
-
-Tierra del Fuego, first arrival -- Good Success Bay -- An
-Account of the Fuegians on board -- Interview With the
-Savages -- Scenery of the Forests -- Cape Horn -- Wigwam
-Cove -- Miserable Condition of the Savages -- Famines --
-Cannibals -- Matricide -- Religious Feelings -- Great
-Gale -- Beagle Channel -- Ponsonby Sound -- Build Wigwams
-and settle the Fuegians -- Bifurcation of the Beagle
-Channel -- Glaciers -- Return to the Ship -- Second Visit
-in the Ship to the Settlement -- Equality of Condition
-amongst the Natives.
-
-
-DECEMBER 17th, 1832. -- Having now finished with
-Patagonia and the Falkland Islands, I will describe
-our first arrival in Tierra del Fuego. A little after
-noon we doubled Cape St. Diego, and entered the famous
-strait of Le Maire. We kept close to the Fuegian shore, but
-the outline of the rugged, inhospitable Statenland was visible
-amidst the clouds. In the afternoon we anchored in the Bay
-of Good Success. While entering we were saluted in a manner
-becoming the inhabitants of this savage land. A group
-of Fuegians partly concealed by the entangled forest, were
-perched on a wild point overhanging the sea; and as we
-passed by, they sprang up and waving their tattered cloaks
-sent forth a loud and sonorous shout. The savages followed
-the ship, and just before dark we saw their fire, and again
-heard their wild cry. The harbour consists of a fine piece
-of water half surrounded by low rounded mountains of clay-
-slate, which are covered to the water's edge by one dense
-gloomy forest. A single glance at the landscape was sufficient
-to show me how widely different it was from anything
-I had ever beheld. At night it blew a gale of wind, and
-heavy squalls from the mountains swept past us. It would
-have been a bad time out at sea, and we, as well as others,
-may call this Good Success Bay.
-
-In the morning the Captain sent a party to communicate
-with the Fuegians. When we came within hail, one of the
-four natives who were present advanced to receive us, and
-began to shout most vehemently, wishing to direct us where
-to land. When we were on shore the party looked rather
-alarmed, but continued talking and making gestures with
-great rapidity. It was without exception the most curious
-and interesting spectacle I ever beheld: I could not have
-believed how wide was the difference between savage and
-civilized man: it is greater than between a wild and
-domesticated animal, inasmuch as in man there is a greater
-power of improvement. The chief spokesman was old, and
-appeared to be the head of the family; the three others were
-powerful young men, about six feet high. The women and
-children had been sent away. These Fuegians are a very
-different race from the stunted, miserable wretches farther
-westward; and they seem closely allied to the famous Patagonians
-of the Strait of Magellan. Their only garment consists
-of a mantle made of guanaco skin, with the wool outside:
-this they wear just thrown over their shoulders, leaving
-their persons as often exposed as covered. Their skin is of
-a dirty coppery-red colour.
-
-The old man had a fillet of white feathers tied round his
-head, which partly confined his black, coarse, and entangled
-hair. His face was crossed by two broad transverse bars;
-one, painted bright red, reached from ear to ear and included
-the upper lip; the other, white like chalk, extended above
-and parallel to the first, so that even his eyelids were thus
-coloured. The other two men were ornamented by streaks
-of black powder, made of charcoal. The party altogether
-closely resembled the devils which come on the stage in plays
-like Der Freischutz.
-
-Their very attitudes were abject, and the expression of
-their countenances distrustful, surprised, and startled. After
-we had presented them with some scarlet cloth, which they
-immediately tied round their necks, they became good friends.
-This was shown by the old man patting our breasts,
-and making a chuckling kind of noise, as people do when
-feeding chickens. I walked with the old man, and this
-demonstration of friendship was repeated several times; it was
-concluded by three hard slaps, which were given me on the
-breast and back at the same time. He then bared his bosom
-for me to return the compliment, which being done, he
-seemed highly pleased. The language of these people,
-according to our notions, scarcely deserves to be called
-articulate. Captain Cook has compared it to a man clearing his
-throat, but certainly no European ever cleared his throat
-with so many hoarse, guttural, and clicking sounds.
-
-They are excellent mimics: as often as we coughed or
-yawned, or made any odd motion, they immediately imitated
-us. Some of our party began to squint and look awry; but
-one of the young Fuegians (whose whole face was painted
-black, excepting a white band across his eyes) succeeded in
-making far more hideous grimaces. They could repeat with
-perfect correctness each word in any sentence we addressed
-them, and they remembered such words for some time. Yet
-we Europeans all know how difficult it is to distinguish
-apart the sounds in a foreign language. Which of us, for
-instance, could follow an American Indian through a sentence
-of more than three words? All savages appear to possess, to
-an uncommon degree, this power of mimicry. I was told,
-almost in the same words, of the same ludicrous habit among
-the Caffres; the Australians, likewise, have long been notorious
-for being able to imitate and describe the gait of any
-man, so that he may be recognized. How can this faculty be
-explained? is it a consequence of the more practised habits
-of perception and keener senses, common to all men in a
-savage state, as compared with those long civilized?
-
-When a song was struck up by our party, I thought the
-Fuegians would have fallen down with astonishment. With
-equal surprise they viewed our dancing; but one of the
-young men, when asked, had no objection to a little waltzing.
-Little accustomed to Europeans as they appeared to be, yet
-they knew and dreaded our fire-arms; nothing would tempt
-them to take a gun in their hands. They begged for knives,
-calling them by the Spanish word "cuchilla." They explained
-also what they wanted, by acting as if they had a
-piece of blubber in their mouth, and then pretending to cut
-instead of tear it.
-
-I have not as yet noticed the Fuegians whom we had on
-board. During the former voyage of the Adventure and
-Beagle in 1826 to 1830, Captain Fitz Roy seized on a party
-of natives, as hostages for the loss of a boat, which had
-been stolen, to the great jeopardy of a party employed on
-the survey; and some of these natives, as well as a child
-whom he bought for a pearl-button, he took with him to
-England, determining to educate them and instruct them in
-religion at his own expense. To settle these natives in their
-own country, was one chief inducement to Captain Fitz Roy
-to undertake our present voyage; and before the Admiralty
-had resolved to send out this expedition, Captain Fitz Roy
-had generously chartered a vessel, and would himself have
-taken them back. The natives were accompanied by a missionary,
-R. Matthews; of whom and of the natives, Captain
-Fitz Roy has published a full and excellent account. Two
-men, one of whom died in England of the small-pox, a boy
-and a little girl, were originally taken; and we had now on
-board, York Minster, Jemmy Button (whose name expresses
-his purchase-money), and Fuegia Basket. York Minster
-was a full-grown, short, thick, powerful man: his disposition
-was reserved, taciturn, morose, and when excited violently
-passionate; his affections were very strong towards a few
-friends on board; his intellect good. Jemmy Button was a
-universal favourite, but likewise passionate; the expression
-of his face at once showed his nice disposition. He was
-merry and often laughed, and was remarkably sympathetic
-with any one in pain: when the water was rough, I was often
-a little sea-sick, and he used to come to me and say in a
-plaintive voice, "Poor, poor fellow!" but the notion, after
-his aquatic life, of a man being sea-sick, was too ludicrous,
-and he was generally obliged to turn on one side to hide a
-smile or laugh, and then he would repeat his "Poor, poor
-fellow!" He was of a patriotic disposition; and he liked to
-praise his own tribe and country, in which he truly said there
-were "plenty of trees," and he abused all the other tribes:
-he stoutly declared that there was no Devil in his land.
-Jemmy was short, thick, and fat, but vain of his personal
-appearance; he used always to wear gloves, his hair was
-neatly cut, and he was distressed if his well-polished shoes
-were dirtied. He was fond of admiring himself in a looking
-glass; and a merry-faced little Indian boy from the Rio
-Negro, whom we had for some months on board, soon perceived
-this, and used to mock him: Jemmy, who was always
-rather jealous of the attention paid to this little boy, did not
-at all like this, and used to say, with rather a contemptuous
-twist of his head, "Too much skylark." It seems yet wonderful
-to me, when I think over all his many good qualities
-that he should have been of the same race, and doubtless
-partaken of the same character, with the miserable, degraded
-savages whom we first met here. Lastly, Fuegia Basket was
-a nice, modest, reserved young girl, with a rather pleasing but
-sometimes sullen expression, and very quick in learning anything,
-especially languages. This she showed in picking up
-some Portuguese and Spanish, when left on shore for only
-a short time at Rio de Janeiro and Monte Video, and in her
-knowledge of English. York Minster was very jealous of
-any attention paid to her; for it was clear he determined to
-marry her as soon as they were settled on shore.
-
-Although all three could both speak and understand a
-good deal of English, it was singularly difficult to obtain
-much information from them, concerning the habits of their
-countrymen; this was partly owing to their apparent difficulty
-in understanding the simplest alternative. Every one
-accustomed to very young children, knows how seldom one
-can get an answer even to so simple a question as whether a
-thing is black or white; the idea of black or white seems
-alternately to fill their minds. So it was with these Fuegians,
-and hence it was generally impossible to find out, by cross
-questioning, whether one had rightly understood anything
-which they had asserted. Their sight was remarkably acute;
-it is well known that sailors, from long practice, can make
-out a distant object much better than a landsman; but both
-York and Jemmy were much superior to any sailor on board:
-several times they have declared what some distant object
-has been, and though doubted by every one, they have proved
-right, when it has been examined through a telescope. They
-were quite conscious of this power; and Jemmy, when he
-had any little quarrel with the officer on watch, would say,
-"Me see ship, me no tell."
-
-It was interesting to watch the conduct of the savages,
-when we landed, towards Jemmy Button: they immediately
-perceived the difference between him and ourselves, and held
-much conversation one with another on the subject. The
-old man addressed a long harangue to Jemmy, which it
-seems was to invite him to stay with them But Jemmy
-understood very little of their language, and was, moreover,
-thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen. When York Minster
-afterwards came on shore, they noticed him in the
-same way, and told him he ought to shave; yet he had not
-twenty dwarf hairs on his face, whilst we all wore our
-untrimmed beards. They examined the colour of his skin, and
-compared it with ours. One of our arms being bared, they
-expressed the liveliest surprise and admiration at its
-whiteness, just in the same way in which I have seen the
-ourangoutang do at the Zoological Gardens. We thought that they
-mistook two or three of the officers, who were rather shorter
-and fairer, though adorned with large beards, for the ladies
-of our party. The tallest amongst the Fuegians was evidently
-much pleased at his height being noticed. When placed
-back to back with the tallest of the boat's crew, he
-tried his best to edge on higher ground, and to stand on
-tiptoe. He opened his mouth to show his teeth, and turned
-his face for a side view; and all this was done with such
-alacrity, that I dare say he thought himself the handsomest
-man in Tierra del Fuego. After our first feeling of grave
-astonishment was over, nothing could be more ludicrous
-than the odd mixture of surprise and imitation which these
-savages every moment exhibited.
-
-
-The next day I attempted to penetrate some way into the
-country. Tierra del Fuego may be described as a mountainous
-land, partly submerged in the sea, so that deep inlets
-and bays occupy the place where valleys should exist. The
-mountain sides, except on the exposed western coast, are
-covered from the water's edge upwards by one great forest.
-The trees reach to an elevation of between 1000 and 1500
-feet, and are succeeded by a band of peat, with minute alpine
-plants; and this again is succeeded by the line of perpetual
-snow, which, according to Captain King, in the Strait of
-Magellan descends to between 3000 and 4000 feet. To find
-an acre of level land in any part of the country is most rare.
-I recollect only one little flat piece near Port Famine, and
-another of rather larger extent near Goeree Road. In both
-places, and everywhere else, the surface is covered by a
-thick bed of swampy peat. Even within the forest, the
-ground is concealed by a mass of slowly putrefying vegetable
-matter, which, from being soaked with water, yields to the
-foot.
-
-Finding it nearly hopeless to push my way through the
-wood, I followed the course of a mountain torrent. At first,
-from the waterfalls and number of dead trees, I could hardly
-crawl along; but the bed of the stream soon became a little
-more open, from the floods having swept the sides. I continued
-slowly to advance for an hour along the broken and
-rocky banks, and was amply repaid by the grandeur of the
-scene. The gloomy depth of the ravine well accorded with
-the universal signs of violence. On every side were lying
-irregular masses of rock and torn-up trees; other trees,
-though still erect, were decayed to the heart and ready to
-fall. The entangled mass of the thriving and the fallen
-reminded me of the forests within the tropics -- yet there was
-a difference: for in these still solitudes, Death, instead of
-Life, seemed the predominant spirit. I followed the water-course
-till I came to a spot where a great slip had cleared a
-straight space down the mountain side. By this road I
-ascended to a considerable elevation, and obtained a good
-view of the surrounding woods. The trees all belong to
-one kind, the Fagus betuloides; for the number of the other
-species of Fagus and of the Winter's Bark, is quite
-inconsiderable. This beech keeps its leaves throughout the year;
-but its foliage is of a peculiar brownish-green colour, with
-a tinge of yellow. As the whole landscape is thus coloured,
-it has a sombre, dull appearance; nor is it often enlivened
-by the rays of the sun.
-
-December 20th. -- One side of the harbour is formed by a
-hill about 1500 feet high, which Captain Fitz Roy has called
-after Sir J. Banks, in commemoration of his disastrous
-excursion, which proved fatal to two men of his party, and
-nearly so to Dr. Solander. The snow-storm, which was the
-cause of their misfortune, happened in the middle of January,
-corresponding to our July, and in the latitude of Durham!
-I was anxious to reach the summit of this mountain
-to collect alpine plants; for flowers of any kind in the lower
-parts are few in number. We followed the same water-course
-as on the previous day, till it dwindled away, and we
-were then compelled to crawl blindly among the trees.
-These, from the effects of the elevation and of the impetuous
-winds, were low, thick and crooked. At length we reached
-that which from a distance appeared like a carpet of fine
-green turf, but which, to our vexation, turned out to be a
-compact mass of little beech-trees about four or five feet
-high. They were as thick together as box in the border of
-a garden, and we were obliged to struggle over the flat but
-treacherous surface. After a little more trouble we gained
-the peat, and then the bare slate rock.
-
-A ridge connected this hill with another, distant some
-miles, and more lofty, so that patches of snow were lying
-on it. As the day was not far advanced, I determined to
-walk there and collect plants along the road. It would have
-been very hard work, had it not been for a well-beaten and
-straight path made by the guanacos; for these animals, like
-sheep, always follow the same line. When we reached the
-hill we found it the highest in the immediate neighbourhood,
-and the waters flowed to the sea in opposite directions. We
-obtained a wide view over the surrounding country: to the
-north a swampy moorland extended, but to the south we
-had a scene of savage magnificence, well becoming Tierra
-del Fuego. There was a degree of mysterious grandeur
-in mountain behind mountain, with the deep intervening
-valleys, all covered by one thick, dusky mass of forest. The
-atmosphere, likewise, in this climate, where gale succeeds
-gale, with rain, hail, and sleet, seems blacker than anywhere
-else. In the Strait of Magellan looking due southward from
-Port Famine, the distant channels between the mountains
-appeared from their gloominess to lead beyond the confines
-of this world.
-
-December 21st. -- The Beagle got under way: and on the
-succeeding day, favoured to an uncommon degree by a fine
-easterly breeze, we closed in with the Barnevelts, and running
-past Cape Deceit with its stony peaks, about three
-o'clock doubled the weather-beaten Cape Horn. The evening
-was calm and bright, and we enjoyed a fine view of the
-surrounding isles. Cape Horn, however, demanded his tribute,
-and before night sent us a gale of wind directly in our teeth.
-We stood out to sea, and on the second day again made the
-land, when we saw on our weather-bow this notorious promontory
-in its proper form -- veiled in a mist, and its dim
-outline surrounded by a storm of wind and water. Great
-black clouds were rolling across the heavens, and squalls
-of rain, with hail, swept by us with such extreme violence,
-that the Captain determined to run into Wigwam Cove.
-This is a snug little harbour, not far from Cape Horn; and
-here, at Christmas-eve, we anchored in smooth water. The
-only thing which reminded us of the gale outside, was every
-now and then a puff from the mountains, which made the
-ship surge at her anchors.
-
-December 25th. -- Close by the Cove, a pointed hill, called
-Kater's Peak, rises to the height of 1700 feet. The surrounding
-islands all consist of conical masses of greenstone,
-associated sometimes with less regular hills of baked and
-altered clay-slate. This part of Tierra del Fuego may be
-considered as the extremity of the submerged chain of
-mountains already alluded to. The cove takes its name of
-"Wigwam" from some of the Fuegian habitations; but every
-bay in the neighbourhood might be so called with equal
-propriety. The inhabitants, living chiefly upon shell-fish, are
-obliged constantly to change their place of residence; but
-they return at intervals to the same spots, as is evident from
-the piles of old shells, which must often amount to many
-tons in freight. These heaps can be distinguished at a long
-distance by the bright green colour of certain plants, which
-invariably grow on them. Among these may be enumerated
-the wild celery and scurvy grass, two very serviceable plants,
-the use of which has not been discovered by the natives.
-
-The Fuegian wigwam resembles, in size and dimensions,
-a haycock. It merely consists of a few broken branches
-stuck in the ground, and very imperfectly thatched on one
-side with a few tufts of grass and rushes. The whole cannot
-be the work of an hour, and it is only used for a few days.
-At Goeree Roads I saw a place where one of these naked
-men had slept, which absolutely offered no more cover than
-the form of a hare. The man was evidently living by himself,
-and York Minster said he was "very bad man," and
-that probably he had stolen something. On the west coast,
-however, the wigwams are rather better, for they are covered
-with seal-skins. We were detained here several days by the
-bad weather. The climate is certainly wretched: the summer
-solstice was now passed, yet every day snow fell on the
-hills, and in the valleys there was rain, accompanied by
-sleet. The thermometer generally stood about 45 degs., but in
-the night fell to 38 or 40 degs. From the damp and boisterous
-state of the atmosphere, not cheered by a gleam of sunshine,
-one fancied the climate even worse than it really was.
-
-While going one day on shore near Wollaston Island, we
-pulled alongside a canoe with six Fuegians. These were the
-most abject and miserable creatures I anywhere beheld. On
-the east coast the natives, as we have seen, have guanaco
-cloaks, and on the west they possess seal-skins. Amongst
-these central tribes the men generally have an otter-skin, or
-some small scrap about as large as a pocket-handkerchief,
-which is barely sufficient to cover their backs as low down
-as their loins. It is laced across the breast by strings, and
-according as the wind blows, it is shifted from side to side.
-But these Fuegians in the canoe were quite naked, and even
-one full-grown woman was absolutely so. It was raining
-heavily, and the fresh water, together with the spray, trickled
-down her body. In another harbour not far distant, a
-woman, who was suckling a recently-born child, came one
-day alongside the vessel, and remained there out of mere
-curiosity, whilst the sleet fell and thawed on her naked
-bosom, and on the skin of her naked baby! These poor
-wretches were stunted in their growth, their hideous faces
-bedaubed with white paint, their skins filthy and greasy,
-their hair entangled, their voices discordant, and their
-gestures violent. Viewing such men, one can hardly make one's
-self believe that they are fellow-creatures, and inhabitants
-of the same world. It is a common subject of conjecture
-what pleasure in life some of the lower animals can enjoy:
-how much more reasonably the same question may be asked
-with respect to these barbarians! At night, five or six
-human beings, naked and scarcely protected from the wind
-and rain of this tempestuous climate, sleep on the wet
-ground coiled up like animals. Whenever it is low water,
-winter or summer, night or day, they must rise to pick shell-fish
-from the rocks; and the women either dive to collect
-sea-eggs, or sit patiently in their canoes, and with a baited
-hair-line without any hook, jerk out little fish. If a seal is
-killed, or the floating carcass of a putrid whale is discovered,
-it is a feast; and such miserable food is assisted by a few
-tasteless berries and fungi.
-
-They often suffer from famine: I heard Mr. Low, a sealing-master
-intimately acquainted with the natives of this
-country, give a curious account of the state of a party of
-one hundred and fifty natives on the west coast, who were
-very thin and in great distress. A succession of gales prevented
-the women from getting shell-fish on the rocks, and
-they could not go out in their canoes to catch seal. A small
-party of these men one morning set out, and the other
-Indians explained to him, that they were going a four days'
-journey for food: on their return, Low went to meet them,
-and he found them excessively tired, each man carrying
-a great square piece of putrid whale's-blubber with a hole
-in the middle, through which they put their heads, like the
-Gauchos do through their ponchos or cloaks. As soon as
-the blubber was brought into a wigwam, an old man cut off
-thin slices, and muttering over them, broiled them for a
-minute, and distributed them to the famished party, who
-during this time preserved a profound silence. Mr. Low
-believes that whenever a whale is cast on shore, the natives
-bury large pieces of it in the sand, as a resource in time of
-famine; and a native boy, whom he had on board, once
-found a stock thus buried. The different tribes when at
-war are cannibals. From the concurrent, but quite independent
-evidence of the boy taken by Mr. Low, and of
-Jemmy Button, it is certainly true, that when pressed in
-winter by hunger, they kill and devour their old women
-before they kill their dogs: the boy, being asked by Mr.
-Low why they did this, answered, "Doggies catch otters,
-old women no." This boy described the manner in which
-they are killed by being held over smoke and thus choked;
-he imitated their screams as a joke, and described the parts
-of their bodies which are considered best to eat. Horrid
-as such a death by the hands of their friends and relatives
-must be, the fears of the old women, when hunger begins
-to press, are more painful to think of; we are told that they
-then often run away into the mountains, but that they are
-pursued by the men and brought back to the slaughter-house
-at their own firesides!
-
-Captain Fitz Roy could never ascertain that the Fuegians
-have any distinct belief in a future life. They sometimes
-bury their dead in caves, and sometimes in the mountain
-forests; we do not know what ceremonies they perform.
-Jemmy Button would not eat land-birds, because "eat dead
-men": they are unwilling even to mention their dead friends.
-We have no reason to believe that they perform any sort of
-religious worship; though perhaps the muttering of the old
-man before he distributed the putrid blubber to his famished
-party, may be of this nature. Each family or tribe has a
-wizard or conjuring doctor, whose office we could never
-clearly ascertain. Jemmy believed in dreams, though not, as
-I have said, in the devil: I do not think that our Fuegians
-were much more superstitious than some of the sailors; for
-an old quartermaster firmly believed that the successive
-heavy gales, which we encountered off Cape Horn, were
-caused by our having the Fuegians on board. The nearest
-approach to a religious feeling which I heard of, was shown
-by York Minster, who, when Mr. Bynoe shot some very
-young ducklings as specimens, declared in the most solemn
-manner, "Oh, Mr. Bynoe, much rain, snow, blow much."
-This was evidently a retributive punishment for wasting
-human food. In a wild and excited manner he also related,
-that his brother, one day whilst returning to pick up some
-dead birds which he had left on the coast, observed some
-feathers blown by the wind. His brother said (York imitating
-his manner), "What that?" and crawling onwards,
-he peeped over the cliff, and saw "wild man" picking his
-birds; he crawled a little nearer, and then hurled down a
-great stone and killed him. York declared for a long time
-afterwards storms raged, and much rain and snow fell.
-As far as we could make out, he seemed to consider the
-elements themselves as the avenging agents: it is evident in
-this case, how naturally, in a race a little more advanced
-in culture, the elements would become personified. What
-the "bad wild men" were, has always appeared to me most
-mysterious: from what York said, when we found the place
-like the form of a hare, where a single man had slept the
-night before, I should have thought that they were thieves
-who had been driven from their tribes; but other obscure
-speeches made me doubt this; I have sometimes imagined
-that the most probable explanation was that they were
-insane.
-
-The different tribes have no government or chief; yet
-each is surrounded by other hostile tribes, speaking different
-dialects, and separated from each other only by a deserted
-border or neutral territory: the cause of their warfare appears
-to be the means of subsistence. Their country is a
-broken mass of wild rocks, lofty hills, and useless forests:
-and these are viewed through mists and endless storms. The
-habitable land is reduced to the stones on the beach; in
-search of food they are compelled unceasingly to wander
-from spot to spot, and so steep is the coast, that they can
-only move about in their wretched canoes. They cannot
-know the feeling of having a home, and still less that of
-domestic affection; for the husband is to the wife a brutal
-master to a laborious slave. Was a more horrid deed ever
-perpetrated, than that witnessed on the west coast by Byron,
-who saw a wretched mother pick up her bleeding dying
-infant-boy, whom her husband had mercilessly dashed on the
-stones for dropping a basket of sea-eggs! How little can
-the higher powers of the mind be brought into play: what is
-there for imagination to picture, for reason to compare, or
-judgment to decide upon? to knock a limpet from the rock
-does not require even cunning, that lowest power of the
-mind. Their skill in some respects may be compared to the
-instinct of animals; for it is not improved by experience:
-the canoe, their most ingenious work, poor as it is, has
-remained the same, as we know from Drake, for the last two
-hundred and fifty years.
-
-Whilst beholding these savages, one asks, whence have
-they come? What could have tempted, or what change compelled
-a tribe of men, to leave the fine regions of the north,
-to travel down the Cordillera or backbone of America, to
-invent and build canoes, which are not used by the tribes
-of Chile, Peru, and Brazil, and then to enter on one of the
-most inhospitable countries within the limits of the globe?
-Although such reflections must at first seize on the mind, yet
-we may feel sure that they are partly erroneous. There is
-no reason to believe that the Fuegians decrease in number;
-therefore we must suppose that they enjoy a sufficient share
-of happiness, of whatever kind it may be, to render life
-worth having. Nature by making habit omnipotent, and its
-effects hereditary, has fitted the Fuegian to the climate and
-the productions of his miserable country.
-
-
-After having been detained six days in Wigwam Cove by
-very bad weather, we put to sea on the 30th of December.
-Captain Fitz Roy wished to get westward to land York and
-Fuegia in their own country. When at sea we had a constant
-succession of gales, and the current was against us: we
-drifted to 57 degs. 23' south. On the 11th of January, 1833,
-by carrying a press of sail, we fetched within a few miles of
-the great rugged mountain of York Minster (so called by
-Captain Cook, and the origin of the name of the elder Fuegian),
-when a violent squall compelled us to shorten sail
-and stand out to sea. The surf was breaking fearfully on
-the coast, and the spray was carried over a cliff estimated
-to 200 feet in height. On the 12th the gale was very heavy,
-and we did not know exactly where we were: it was a most
-unpleasant sound to hear constantly repeated, "keep a good
-look-out to leeward." On the 13th the storm raged with its
-full fury: our horizon was narrowly limited by the sheets
-of spray borne by the wind. The sea looked ominous, like
-a dreary waving plain with patches of drifted snow: whilst
-the ship laboured heavily, the albatross glided with its
-expanded wings right up the wind. At noon a great sea broke
-over us, and filled one of the whale boats, which was
-obliged to be instantly cut away. The poor Beagle trembled
-at the shock, and for a few minutes would not obey her helm;
-but soon, like a good ship that she was, she righted and came
-up to the wind again. Had another sea followed the first,
-our fate would have been decided soon, and for ever. We
-had now been twenty-four days trying in vain to get westward;
-the men were worn out with fatigue, and they had not
-had for many nights or days a dry thing to put on. Captain
-Fitz Roy gave up the attempt to get westward by the outside
-coast. In the evening we ran in behind False Cape Horn,
-and dropped our anchor in forty-seven fathoms, fire flashing
-from the windlass as the chain rushed round it. How delightful
-was that still night, after having been so long involved
-in the din of the warring elements!
-
-January 15th, 1833. -- The Beagle anchored in Goeree
-Roads. Captain Fitz Roy having resolved to settle the Fuegians,
-according to their wishes, in Ponsonby Sound, four
-boats were equipped to carry them there through the Beagle
-Channel. This channel, which was discovered by Captain
-Fitz Roy during the last voyage, is a most remarkable feature
-in the geography of this, or indeed of any other country: it
-may be compared to the valley of Lochness in Scotland, with
-its chain of lakes and friths. It is about one hundred and
-twenty miles long, with an average breadth, not subject to
-any very great variation, of about two miles; and is throughout
-the greater part so perfectly straight, that the view,
-bounded on each side by a line of mountains, gradually becomes
-indistinct in the long distance. It crosses the southern
-part of Tierra del Fuego in an east and west line, and
-in the middle is joined at right angles on the south side by
-an irregular channel, which has been called Ponsonby Sound.
-This is the residence of Jemmy Button's tribe and family.
-
-19th. -- Three whale-boats and the yawl, with a party of
-twenty-eight, started under the command of Captain Fitz
-Roy. In the afternoon we entered the eastern mouth of the
-channel, and shortly afterwards found a snug little cove
-concealed by some surrounding islets. Here we pitched our
-tents and lighted our fires. Nothing could look more comfortable
-than this scene. The glassy water of the little harbour,
-with the branches of the trees hanging over the rocky
-beach, the boats at anchor, the tents supported by the crossed
-oars, and the smoke curling up the wooded valley, formed a
-picture of quiet retirement. The next day (20th) we smoothly
-glided onwards in our little fleet, and came to a more inhabited
-district. Few if any of these natives could ever
-have seen a white man; certainly nothing could exceed their
-astonishment at the apparition of the four boats. Fires were
-lighted on every point (hence the name of Tierra del Fuego,
-or the land of fire), both to attract our attention and to
-spread far and wide the news. Some of the men ran for
-miles along the shore. I shall never forget how wild and
-savage one group appeared: suddenly four or five men came
-to the edge of an overhanging cliff; they were absolutely
-naked, and their long hair streamed about their faces; they
-held rugged staffs in their hands, and, springing from the
-ground, they waved their arms round their heads, and sent
-forth the most hideous yells.
-
-At dinner-time we landed among a party of Fuegians.
-At first they were not inclined to be friendly; for until the
-Captain pulled in ahead of the other boats, they kept their
-slings in their hands. We soon, however, delighted them by
-trifling presents, such as tying red tape round their heads.
-They liked our biscuit: but one of the savages touched with
-his finger some of the meat preserved in tin cases which I
-was eating, and feeling it soft and cold, showed as much disgust
-at it, as I should have done at putrid blubber. Jemmy
-was thoroughly ashamed of his countrymen, and declared his
-own tribe were quite different, in which he was wofully
-mistaken. It was as easy to please as it was difficult to
-satisfy these savages. Young and old, men and children, never
-ceased repeating the word "yammerschooner," which means
-"give me." After pointing to almost every object, one after
-the other, even to the buttons on our coats, and saying their
-favourite word in as many intonations as possible, they would
-then use it in a neuter sense, and vacantly repeat
-"yammerschooner." After yammerschoonering for any article very
-eagerly, they would by a simple artifice point to their young
-women or little children, as much as to say, "If you will
-not give it me, surely you will to such as these."
-
-At night we endeavoured in vain to find an uninhabited
-cove; and at last were obliged to bivouac not far from a
-party of natives. They were very inoffensive as long as they
-were few in numbers, but in the morning (21st) being joined
-by others they showed symptoms of hostility, and we thought
-that we should have come to a skirmish. An European
-labours under great disadvantages when treating with savages
-like these, who have not the least idea of the power of
-fire-arms. In the very act of levelling his musket he appears
-to the savage far inferior to a man armed with a bow and
-arrow, a spear, or even a sling. Nor is it easy to teach them
-our superiority except by striking a fatal blow. Like wild
-beasts, they do not appear to compare numbers; for each
-individual, if attacked, instead of retiring, will endeavour to
-dash your brains out with a stone, as certainly as a tiger
-under similar circumstances would tear you. Captain Fitz
-Roy on one occasion being very anxious, from good reasons,
-to frighten away a small party, first flourished a cutlass near
-them, at which they only laughed; he then twice fired his
-pistol close to a native. The man both times looked astounded,
-and carefully but quickly rubbed his head; he then
-stared awhile, and gabbled to his companions, but he never
-seemed to think of running away. We can hardly put ourselves
-in the position of these savages, and understand their
-actions. In the case of this Fuegian, the possibility of such
-a sound as the report of a gun close to his ear could never
-have entered his mind. He perhaps literally did not for a
-second know whether it was a sound or a blow, and therefore
-very naturally rubbed his head. In a similar manner,
-when a savage sees a mark struck by a bullet, it may be some
-time before he is able at all to understand how it is effected;
-for the fact of a body being invisible from its velocity would
-perhaps be to him an idea totally inconceivable. Moreover,
-the extreme force of a bullet, that penetrates a hard substance
-without tearing it, may convince the savage that it
-has no force at all. Certainly I believe that many savages
-of the lowest grade, such as these of Tierra del Fuego, have
-seen objects struck, and even small animals killed by the
-musket, without being in the least aware how deadly an
-instrument it is.
-
-22nd. -- After having passed an unmolested night, in what
-would appear to be neutral territory between Jemmy's tribe
-and the people whom we saw yesterday, we sailed pleasantly
-along. I do not know anything which shows more clearly
-the hostile state of the different tribes, than these wide
-border or neutral tracts. Although Jemmy Button well knew the
-force of our party, he was, at first, unwilling to land amidst
-the hostile tribe nearest to his own. He often told us how
-the savage Oens men "when the leaf red," crossed the mountains
-from the eastern coast of Tierra del Fuego, and made
-inroads on the natives of this part of the country. It was
-most curious to watch him when thus talking, and see his
-eyes gleaming and his whole face assume a new and wild
-expression. As we proceeded along the Beagle Channel, the
-scenery assumed a peculiar and very magnificent character;
-but the effect was much lessened from the lowness of the
-point of view in a boat, and from looking along the valley,
-and thus losing all the beauty of a succession of ridges. The
-mountains were here about three thousand feet high, and
-terminated in sharp and jagged points. They rose in one
-unbroken sweep from the water's edge, and were covered to
-the height of fourteen or fifteen hundred feet by the dusky-
-coloured forest. It was most curious to observe, as far as
-the eye could range, how level and truly horizontal the line
-on the mountain side was, at which trees ceased to grow: it
-precisely resembled the high-water mark of drift-weed on a
-sea-beach.
-
-At night we slept close to the junction of Ponsonby Sound
-with the Beagle Channel. A small family of Fuegians, who
-were living in the cove, were quiet and inoffensive, and soon
-joined our party round a blazing fire. We were well clothed,
-and though sitting close to the fire were far from too warm;
-yet these naked savages, though further off, were observed,
-to our great surprise, to be streaming with perspiration at
-undergoing such a roasting. They seemed, however, very
-well pleased, and all joined in the chorus of the seamen's
-songs: but the manner in which they were invariably a little
-behindhand was quite ludicrous.
-
-During the night the news had spread, and early in the
-morning (23rd) a fresh party arrived, belonging to the Tekenika,
-or Jemmy's tribe. Several of them had run so fast that
-their noses were bleeding, and their mouths frothed from
-the rapidity with which they talked; and with their naked
-bodies all bedaubed with black, white, [1] and red, they looked
-like so many demoniacs who had been fighting. We then
-proceeded (accompanied by twelve canoes, each holding four
-or five people) down Ponsonby Sound to the spot where poor
-Jemmy expected to find his mother and relatives. He had
-already heard that his father was dead; but as he had had
-a "dream in his head" to that effect, he did not seem to
-care much about it, and repeatedly comforted himself with
-the very natural reflection -- "Me no help it." He was not
-able to learn any particulars regarding his father's death, as
-his relations would not speak about it.
-
-Jemmy was now in a district well known to him, and
-guided the boats to a quiet pretty cove named Woollya,
-surrounded by islets, every one of which and every point had
-its proper native name. We found here a family of Jemmy's
-tribe, but not his relations: we made friends with them;
-and in the evening they sent a canoe to inform Jemmy's
-mother and brothers. The cove was bordered by some acres
-of good sloping land, not covered (as elsewhere) either by
-peat or by forest-trees. Captain Fitz Roy originally intended,
-as before stated, to have taken York Minster and
-Fuegia to their own tribe on the west coast; but as they
-expressed a wish to remain here, and as the spot was singularly
-favourable, Captain Fitz Roy determined to settle here the
-whole party, including Matthews, the missionary. Five days
-were spent in building for them three large wigwams, in
-landing their goods, in digging two gardens, and sowing
-seeds.
-
-The next morning after our arrival (the 24th) the Fuegians
-began to pour in, and Jemmy's mother and brothers
-arrived. Jemmy recognised the stentorian voice of one of
-his brothers at a prodigious distance. The meeting was less
-interesting than that between a horse, turned out into a field,
-when he joins an old companion. There was no demonstration
-of affection; they simply stared for a short time at
-each other; and the mother immediately went to look after
-her canoe. We heard, however, through York that the
-mother has been inconsolable for the loss of Jemmy and had
-searched everywhere for him, thinking that he might have
-been left after having been taken in the boat. The women
-took much notice of and were very kind to Fuegia. We had
-already perceived that Jemmy had almost forgotten his own
-language. I should think there was scarcely another human
-being with so small a stock of language, for his English was
-very imperfect. It was laughable, but almost pitiable, to
-hear him speak to his wild brother in English, and then ask
-him in Spanish ("no sabe?") whether he did not understand
-him.
-
-Everything went on peaceably during the three next days
-whilst the gardens were digging and wigwams building. We
-estimated the number of natives at about one hundred and
-twenty. The women worked hard, whilst the men lounged
-about all day long, watching us. They asked for everything
-they saw, and stole what they could. They were delighted
-at our dancing and singing, and were particularly interested
-at seeing us wash in a neighbouring brook; they did not pay
-much attention to anything else, not even to our boats. Of
-all the things which York saw, during his absence from his
-country, nothing seems more to have astonished him than
-an ostrich, near Maldonado: breathless with astonishment
-he came running to Mr. Bynoe, with whom he was out walking
--- "Oh, Mr. Bynoe, oh, bird all same horse!" Much as
-our white skins surprised the natives, by Mr. Low's account
-a negro-cook to a sealing vessel, did so more effectually, and
-the poor fellow was so mobbed and shouted at that he would
-never go on shore again. Everything went on so quietly
-that some of the officers and myself took long walks in the
-surrounding hills and woods. Suddenly, however, on the
-27th, every woman and child disappeared. We were all uneasy
-at this, as neither York nor Jemmy could make out
-the cause. It was thought by some that they had been frightened
-by our cleaning and firing off our muskets on the previous
-evening; by others, that it was owing to offence taken
-by an old savage, who, when told to keep further off, had
-coolly spit in the sentry's face, and had then, by gestures
-acted over a sleeping Fuegian, plainly showed, as it was said,
-that he should like to cut up and eat our man. Captain
-Fitz Roy, to avoid the chance of an encounter, which would
-have been fatal to so many of the Fuegians, thought it advisable
-for us to sleep at a cove a few miles distant. Matthews,
-with his usual quiet fortitude (remarkable in a man
-apparently possessing little energy of character), determined
-to stay with the Fuegians, who evinced no alarm for themselves;
-and so we left them to pass their first awful night.
-
-On our return in the morning (28th) we were delighted
-to find all quiet, and the men employed in their canoes
-spearing fish. Captain Fitz Roy determined to send the
-yawl and one whale-boat back to the ship; and to proceed
-with the two other boats, one under his own command (in
-which he most kindly allowed me to accompany him), and
-one under Mr. Hammond, to survey the western parts of
-the Beagle Channel, and afterwards to return and visit the
-settlement. The day to our astonishment was overpoweringly
-hot, so that our skins were scorched: with this beautiful
-weather, the view in the middle of the Beagle Channel
-was very remarkable. Looking towards either hand, no object
-intercepted the vanishing points of this long canal between
-the mountains. The circumstance of its being an arm
-of the sea was rendered very evident by several huge whales [2]
-spouting in different directions. On one occasion I saw two
-of these monsters, probably male and female, slowly swimming
-one after the other, within less than a stone's throw
-of the shore, over which the beech-tree extended its branches.
-We sailed on till it was dark, and then pitched our tents
-in a quiet creek. The greatest luxury was to find for our
-beds a beach of pebbles, for they were dry and yielded to
-the body. Peaty soil is damp; rock is uneven and hard;
-sand gets into one's meat, when cooked and eaten boat-fashion;
-but when lying in our blanket-bags, on a good bed of
-smooth pebbles, we passed most comfortable nights.
-
-It was my watch till one o'clock. There is something
-very solemn in these scenes. At no time does the consciousness
-in what a remote corner of the world you are then
-standing, come so strongly before the mind. Everything
-tends to this effect; the stillness of the night is interrupted
-only by the heavy breathing of the seamen beneath the tents,
-and sometimes by the cry of a night-bird. The occasional
-barking of a dog, heard in the distance, reminds one that it
-is the land of the savage.
-
-January 20th. -- Early in the morning we arrived at the
-point where the Beagle Channel divides into two arms; and
-we entered the northern one. The scenery here becomes
-even grander than before. The lofty mountains on the north
-side compose the granitic axis, or backbone of the country
-and boldly rise to a height of between three and four thousand
-feet, with one peak above six thousand feet. They are
-covered by a wide mantle of perpetual snow, and numerous
-cascades pour their waters, through the woods, into the narrow
-channel below. In many parts, magnificent glaciers extend
-from the mountain side to the water's edge. It is
-scarcely possible to imagine anything more beautiful than
-the beryl-like blue of these glaciers, and especially as
-contrasted with the dead white of the upper expanse of snow.
-The fragments which had fallen from the glacier into the
-water were floating away, and the channel with its icebergs
-presented, for the space of a mile, a miniature likeness of
-the Polar Sea. The boats being hauled on shore at our
-dinner-hour, we were admiring from the distance of half a
-mile a perpendicular cliff of ice, and were wishing that some
-more fragments would fall. At last, down came a mass with
-a roaring noise, and immediately we saw the smooth outline
-of a wave travelling towards us. The men ran down as
-quickly as they could to the boats; for the chance of their
-being dashed to pieces was evident. One of the seamen just
-caught hold of the bows, as the curling breaker reached it:
-he was knocked over and over, but not hurt, and the boats
-though thrice lifted on high and let fall again, received no
-damage. This was most fortunate for us, for we were a
-hundred miles distant from the ship, and we should have
-been left without provisions or fire-arms. I had previously
-observed that some large fragments of rock on the beach had
-been lately displaced; but until seeing this wave, I did not
-understand the cause. One side of the creek was formed
-by a spur of mica-slate; the head by a cliff of ice about
-forty feet high; and the other side by a promontory fifty
-feet high, built up of huge rounded fragments of granite
-and mica-slate, out of which old trees were growing. This
-promontory was evidently a moraine, heaped up at a period
-when the glacier had greater dimensions.
-
-When we reached the western mouth of this northern
-branch of the Beagle Channel, we sailed amongst many unknown
-desolate islands, and the weather was wretchedly bad.
-We met with no natives. The coast was almost everywhere
-so steep, that we had several times to pull many miles before
-we could find space enough to pitch our two tents: one night
-we slept on large round boulders, with putrefying sea-weed
-between them; and when the tide rose, we had to get up and
-move our blanket-bags. The farthest point westward which
-we reached was Stewart Island, a distance of about one hundred
-and fifty miles from our ship. We returned into the
-Beagle Channel by the southern arm, and thence proceeded,
-with no adventure, back to Ponsonby Sound.
-
-February 6th. -- We arrived at Woollya. Matthews gave
-so bad an account of the conduct of the Fuegians, that Captain
-Fitz Roy determined to take him back to the Beagle;
-and ultimately he was left at New Zealand, where his brother
-was a missionary. From the time of our leaving, a regular
-system of plunder commenced; fresh parties of the natives
-kept arriving: York and Jemmy lost many things, and Matthews
-almost everything which had not been concealed underground.
-Every article seemed to have been torn up and
-divided by the natives. Matthews described the watch he
-was obliged always to keep as most harassing; night and
-day he was surrounded by the natives, who tried to tire him
-out by making an incessant noise close to his head. One day
-an old man, whom Matthews asked to leave his wigwam,
-immediately returned with a large stone in his hand: another
-day a whole party came armed with stones and stakes, and
-some of the younger men and Jemmy's brother were crying:
-Matthews met them with presents. Another party showed
-by signs that they wished to strip him naked and pluck all
-the hairs out of his face and body. I think we arrived just
-in time to save his life. Jemmy's relatives had been so vain
-and foolish, that they had showed to strangers their plunder,
-and their manner of obtaining it. It was quite melancholy
-leaving the three Fuegians with their savage countrymen;
-but it was a great comfort that they had no personal
-fears. York, being a powerful resolute man, was pretty sure
-to get on well, together with his wife Fuegia. Poor Jemmy
-looked rather disconsolate, and would then, I have little
-doubt, have been glad to have returned with us. His own
-brother had stolen many things from him; and as he remarked,
-"What fashion call that:" he abused his countrymen,
-"all bad men, no sabe (know) nothing" and, though
-I never heard him swear before, "damned fools." Our three
-Fuegians, though they had been only three years with civilized
-men, would, I am sure, have been glad to have retained
-their new habits; but this was obviously impossible. I fear
-it is more than doubtful, whether their visit will have been
-of any use to them.
-
-In the evening, with Matthews on board, we made sail
-back to the ship, not by the Beagle Channel, but by the
-southern coast. The boats were heavily laden and the sea
-rough, and we had a dangerous passage. By the evening
-of the 7th we were on board the Beagle after an absence of
-twenty days, during which time we had gone three hundred
-miles in the open boats. On the 11th, Captain Fitz Roy
-paid a visit by himself to the Fuegians and found them going
-on well; and that they had lost very few more things.
-
-
-On the last day of February in the succeeding year (1834)
-the Beagle anchored in a beautiful little cove at the eastern
-entrance of the Beagle Channel. Captain Fitz Roy determined
-on the bold, and as it proved successful, attempt to
-beat against the westerly winds by the same route, which
-we had followed in the boats to the settlement at Woollya.
-We did not see many natives until we were near Ponsonby
-Sound, where we were followed by ten or twelve canoes. The
-natives did not at all understand the reason of our tacking,
-and, instead of meeting us at each tack, vainly strove to
-follow us in our zigzag course. I was amused at finding
-what a difference the circumstance of being quite superior
-in force made, in the interest of beholding these savages.
-While in the boats I got to hate the very sound of their
-voices, so much trouble did they give us. The first and last
-word was "yammerschooner." When, entering some quiet
-little cove, we have looked round and thought to pass a quiet
-night, the odious word "yammerschooner" has shrilly sounded
-from some gloomy nook, and then the little signal-smoke
-has curled up to spread the news far and wide. On leaving
-some place we have said to each other, "Thank heaven, we
-have at last fairly left these wretches!" when one more faint
-hallo from an all-powerful voice, heard at a prodigious
-distance, would reach our ears, and clearly could we distinguish
--- "yammerschooner." But now, the more Fuegians the merrier;
-and very merry work it was. Both parties laughing,
-wondering, gaping at each other; we pitying them, for giving
-us good fish and crabs for rags, etc.; they grasping at the
-chance of finding people so foolish as to exchange such splendid
-ornaments for a good supper. It was most amusing to
-see the undisguised smile of satisfaction with which one
-young woman with her face painted black, tied several bits
-of scarlet cloth round her head with rushes. Her husband,
-who enjoyed the very universal privilege in this country of
-possessing two wives, evidently became jealous of all the
-attention paid to his young wife; and, after a consultation
-with his naked beauties, was paddled away by them.
-
-Some of the Fuegians plainly showed that they had a fair
-notion of barter. I gave one man a large nail (a most valuable
-present) without making any signs for a return; but he
-immediately picked out two fish, and handed them up on the
-point of his spear. If any present was designed for one
-canoe, and it fell near another, it was invariably given to the
-right owner. The Fuegian boy, whom Mr. Low had on
-board showed, by going into the most violent passion, that
-he quite understood the reproach of being called a liar, which
-in truth he was. We were this time, as on all former occasions,
-much surprised at the little notice, or rather none
-whatever, which was taken of many things, the use of which
-must have been evident to the natives. Simple circumstances
--- such as the beauty of scarlet cloth or blue beads,
-the absence of women, our care in washing ourselves, -- excited
-their admiration far more than any grand or complicated
-object, such as our ship. Bougainville has well remarked
-concerning these people, that they treat the "chefs
-d'oeuvre de l'industrie humaine, comme ils traitent les loix
-de la nature et ses phenomenes."
-
-On the 5th of March, we anchored in a cove at Woollya,
-but we saw not a soul there. We were alarmed at this, for
-the natives in Ponsonby Sound showed by gestures, that there
-had been fighting; and we afterwards heard that the dreaded
-Oens men had made a descent. Soon a canoe, with a little
-flag flying, was seen approaching, with one of the men in it
-washing the paint off his face. This man was poor Jemmy,
--- now a thin, haggard savage, with long disordered hair, and
-naked, except a bit of blanket round his waist. We did not
-recognize him till he was close to us, for he was ashamed
-of himself, and turned his back to the ship. We had left him
-plump, fat, clean, and well-dressed; -- I never saw so complete
-and grievous a change. As soon, however, as he was clothed,
-and the first flurry was over, things wore a good appearance.
-He dined with Captain Fitz Roy, and ate his dinner
-as tidily as formerly. He told us that he had "too much"
-(meaning enough) to eat, that he was not cold, that his
-relations were very good people, and that he did not wish to go
-back to England: in the evening we found out the cause of
-this great change in Jemmy's feelings, in the arrival of his
-young and nice-looking wife. With his usual good feeling
-he brought two beautiful otter-skins for two of his best
-friends, and some spear-heads and arrows made with his own
-hands for the Captain. He said he had built a canoe for himself,
-and he boasted that he could talk a little of his own
-language! But it is a most singular fact, that he appears to
-have taught all his tribe some English: an old man spontaneously
-announced "Jemmy Button's wife." Jemmy had lost
-all his property. He told us that York Minster had built
-a large canoe, and with his wife Fuegia, [3] had several months
-since gone to his own country, and had taken farewell by an
-act of consummate villainy; he persuaded Jemmy and his
-mother to come with him, and then on the way deserted them
-by night, stealing every article of their property.
-
-Jemmy went to sleep on shore, and in the morning returned,
-and remained on board till the ship got under way,
-which frightened his wife, who continued crying violently
-till he got into his canoe. He returned loaded with valuable
-property. Every soul on board was heartily sorry to shake
-hands with him for the last time. I do not now doubt that
-he will be as happy as, perhaps happier than, if he had never
-left his own country. Every one must sincerely hope that
-Captain Fitz Roy's noble hope may be fulfilled, of being
-rewarded for the many generous sacrifices which he made for
-these Fuegians, by some shipwrecked sailor being protected
-by the descendants of Jemmy Button and his tribe! When
-Jemmy reached the shore, he lighted a signal fire, and the
-smoke curled up, bidding us a last and long farewell, as the
-ship stood on her course into the open sea.
-
-The perfect equality among the individuals composing the
-Fuegian tribes must for a long time retard their civilization.
-As we see those animals, whose instinct compels them to live
-in society and obey a chief, are most capable of improvement,
-so is it with the races of mankind. Whether we look
-at it as a cause or a consequence, the more civilized always
-have the most artificial governments. For instance, the
-inhabitants of Otaheite, who, when first discovered, were
-governed by hereditary kings, had arrived at a far higher grade
-than another branch of the same people, the New Zealanders,
--- who, although benefited by being compelled to turn their
-attention to agriculture, were republicans in the most absolute
-sense. In Tierra del Fuego, until some chief shall arise
-with power sufficient to secure any acquired advantage, such
-as the domesticated animals, it seems scarcely possible that
-the political state of the country can be improved. At present,
-even a piece of cloth given to one is torn into shreds
-and distributed; and no one individual becomes richer than
-another. On the other hand, it is difficult to understand how
-a chief can arise till there is property of some sort by which
-he might manifest his superiority and increase his power.
-
-I believe, in this extreme part of South America, man
-exists in a lower state of improvement than in any other part
-of the world. The South Sea Islanders, of the two races
-inhabiting the Pacific, are comparatively civilized. The
-Esquimau in his subterranean hut, enjoys some of the comforts
-of life, and in his canoe, when fully equipped, manifests
-much skill. Some of the tribes of Southern Africa
-prowling about in search of roots, and living concealed on
-the wild and arid plains, are sufficiently wretched. The
-Australian, in the simplicity of the arts of life, comes
-nearest the Fuegian: he can, however, boast of his boomerang,
-his spear and throwing-stick, his method of climbing trees, of
-tracking animals, and of hunting. Although the Australian may be
-superior in acquirements, it by no means follows that he is
-likewise superior in mental capacity: indeed, from what I
-saw of the Fuegians when on board and from what I have
-read of the Australians, I should think the case was exactly
-the reverse.
-
-[1] This substance, when dry, is tolerably compact, and of
-little specific gravity: Professor Ehrenberg has examined
-it: he states (Konig Akad. der Wissen: Berlin, Feb. 1845)
-that it is composed of infusoria, including fourteen
-polygastrica, and four phytolitharia. He says that they are
-all inhabitants of fresh-water; this is a beautiful example
-of the results obtainable through Professor Ehrenberg's
-microscopic researches; for Jemmy Button told me that it is
-always collected at the bottoms of mountain-brooks. It is,
-moreover, a striking fact that in the geographical distribution
-of the infusoria, which are well known to have very wide
-ranges, that all the species in this substance, although
-brought from the extreme southern point of Tierra del Fuego,
-are old, known forms.
-
-[2] One day, off the East coast of Tierra del Fuego, we saw
-a grand sight in several spermaceti whales jumping upright
-quite out of the water, with the exception of their tail-fins.
-As they fell down sideways, they splashed the water high up,
-and the sound reverberated like a distant broadside.
-
-[3] Captain Sulivan, who, since his voyage in the Beagle, has
-been employed on the survey of the Falkland Islands, heard
-from a sealer in (1842?), that when in the western part of
-the Strait of Magellan, he was astonished by a native woman
-coming on board, who could talk some English. Without doubt
-this was Fuega Basket. She lived (I fear the term probably
-bears a double interpretation) some days on board.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI
-
-STRAIT OF MAGELLAN. -- CLIMATE OF THE SOUTHERN COASTS
-
-Strait of Magellan -- Port Famine -- Ascent of Mount Tarn --
-Forests -- Edible Fungus -- Zoology -- Great Sea-weed -- Leave
-Tierra del Fuego -- Climate -- Fruit-trees and Productions
-of the Southern Coasts -- Height of Snow-line on the
-Cordillera -- Descent of Glaciers to the Sea -- Icebergs
-formed -- Transportal of Boulders -- Climate and Productions
-of the Antarctic Islands -- Preservation of Frozen Carcasses --
-Recapitulation.
-
-
-IN THE end of May, 1834, we entered for a second time
-the eastern mouth of the Strait of Magellan. The country
-on both sides of this part of the Strait consists of
-nearly level plains, like those of Patagonia. Cape Negro, a
-little within the second Narrows, may be considered as the
-point where the land begins to assume the marked features
-of Tierra del Fuego. On the east coast, south of the Strait,
-broken park-like scenery in a like manner connects these two
-countries, which are opposed to each other in almost every
-feature. It is truly surprising to find in a space of twenty
-miles such a change in the landscape. If we take a rather
-greater distance, as between Port Famine and Gregory Bay,
-that is about sixty miles, the difference is still more
-wonderful. At the former place, we have rounded mountains
-concealed by impervious forests, which are drenched with the
-rain, brought by an endless succession of gales; while at
-Cape Gregory, there is a clear and bright blue sky over the
-dry and sterile plains. The atmospheric currents, [1] although
-rapid, turbulent, and unconfined by any apparent limits, yet
-seem to follow, like a river in its bed, a regularly determined
-course.
-
-During our previous visit (in January), we had an interview
-at Cape Gregory with the famous so-called gigantic
-Patagonians, who gave us a cordial reception. Their height
-appears greater than it really is, from their large guanaco
-mantles, their long flowing hair, and general figure: on an
-average, their height is about six feet, with some men taller
-and only a few shorter; and the women are also tall; altogether
-they are certainly the tallest race which we anywhere
-saw. In features they strikingly resemble the more northern
-Indians whom I saw with Rosas, but they have a wilder and
-more formidable appearance: their faces were much painted
-with red and black, and one man was ringed and dotted with
-white like a Fuegian. Captain Fitz Roy offered to take any
-three of them on board, and all seemed determined to be of
-the three. It was long before we could clear the boat; at
-last we got on board with our three giants, who dined with
-the Captain, and behaved quite like gentlemen, helping
-themselves with knives, forks, and spoons: nothing was so much
-relished as sugar. This tribe has had so much communication
-with sealers and whalers that most of the men can speak a
-little English and Spanish; and they are half civilized, and
-proportionally demoralized.
-
-The next morning a large party went on shore, to barter
-for skins and ostrich-feathers; fire-arms being refused,
-tobacco was in greatest request, far more so than axes or
-tools. The whole population of the toldos, men, women, and
-children, were arranged on a bank. It was an amusing
-scene, and it was impossible not to like the so-called giants,
-they were so thoroughly good-humoured and unsuspecting:
-they asked us to come again. They seem to like to have
-Europeans to live with them; and old Maria, an important
-woman in the tribe, once begged Mr. Low to leave any one
-of his sailors with them. They spend the greater part of the
-year here; but in summer they hunt along the foot of the
-Cordillera: sometimes they travel as far as the Rio Negro
-750 miles to the north. They are well stocked with horses,
-each man having, according to Mr. Low, six or seven, and
-all the women, and even children, their one own horse. In
-the time of Sarmiento (1580), these Indians had bows and
-arrows, now long since disused; they then also possessed
-some horses. This is a very curious fact, showing the
-extraordinarily rapid multiplication of horses in South America.
-The horse was first landed at Buenos Ayres in 1537, and the
-colony being then for a time deserted, the horse ran wild; [2]
-in 1580, only forty-three years afterwards, we hear of them at
-the Strait of Magellan! Mr. Low informs me, that a neighbouring
-tribe of foot-Indians is now changing into horse-Indians:
-the tribe at Gregory Bay giving them their worn-out horses,
-and sending in winter a few of their best skilled men to hunt
-for them.
-
-June 1st. -- We anchored in the fine bay of Port Famine.
-It was now the beginning of winter, and I never saw a more
-cheerless prospect; the dusky woods, piebald with snow,
-could be only seen indistinctly, through a drizzling hazy
-atmosphere. We were, however, lucky in getting two fine
-days. On one of these, Mount Sarmiento, a distant mountain
-6800 feet high, presented a very noble spectacle. I was
-frequently surprised in the scenery of Tierra del Fuego, at the
-little apparent elevation of mountains really lofty. I suspect
-it is owing to a cause which would not at first be imagined,
-namely, that the whole mass, from the summit to the water's
-edge, is generally in full view. I remember having seen a
-mountain, first from the Beagle Channel, where the whole
-sweep from the summit to the base was full in view, and then
-from Ponsonby Sound across several successive ridges; and
-it was curious to observe in the latter case, as each fresh
-ridge afforded fresh means of judging of the distance, how
-the mountain rose in height.
-
-Before reaching Port Famine, two men were seen running
-along the shore and hailing the ship. A boat was sent for
-them. They turned out to be two sailors who had run away
-from a sealing-vessel, and had joined the Patagonians. These
-Indians had treated them with their usual disinterested
-hospitality. They had parted company through accident, and
-were then proceeding to Port Famine in hopes of finding
-some ship. I dare say they were worthless vagabonds, but I
-never saw more miserable-looking ones. They had been living
-for some days on mussel-shells and berries, and their
-tattered clothes had been burnt by sleeping so near their fires.
-They had been exposed night and day, without any shelter,
-to the late incessant gales, with rain, sleet, and snow, and yet
-they were in good health.
-
-During our stay at Port Famine, the Fuegians twice came
-and plagued us. As there were many instruments, clothes,
-and men on shore, it was thought necessary to frighten them
-away. The first time a few great guns were fired, when they
-were far distant. It was most ludicrous to watch through a
-glass the Indians, as often as the shot struck the water, take
-up stones, and, as a bold defiance, throw them towards the
-ship, though about a mile and a half distant! A boat was
-sent with orders to fire a few musket-shots wide of them.
-The Fuegians hid themselves behind the trees, and for every
-discharge of the muskets they fired their arrows; all, however,
-fell short of the boat, and the officer as he pointed at
-them laughed. This made the Fuegians frantic with passion,
-and they shook their mantles in vain rage. At last, seeing
-the balls cut and strike the trees, they ran away, and we were
-left in peace and quietness. During the former voyage the
-Fuegians were here very troublesome, and to frighten them a
-rocket was fired at night over their wigwams; it answered
-effectually, and one of the officers told me that the clamour
-first raised, and the barking of the dogs, was quite ludicrous
-in contrast with the profound silence which in a minute or
-two afterwards prevailed. The next morning not a single
-Fuegian was in the neighbourhood.
-
-When the Beagle was here in the month of February, I
-started one morning at four o'clock to ascend Mount Tarn,
-which is 2600 feet high, and is the most elevated point in this
-immediate district. We went in a boat to the foot of the
-mountain (but unluckily not to the best part), and then
-began our ascent. The forest commences at the line of high-
-water mark, and during the first two hours I gave over all
-hopes of reaching the summit. So thick was the wood, that
-it was necessary to have constant recourse to the compass;
-for every landmark, though in a mountainous country, was
-completely shut out. In the deep ravines, the death-like
-scene of desolation exceeded all description; outside it was
-blowing a gale, but in these hollows, not even a breath of
-wind stirred the leaves of the tallest trees. So gloomy, cold,
-and wet was every part, that not even the fungi, mosses, or
-ferns could flourish. In the valleys it was scarcely possible
-to crawl along, they were so completely barricaded by great
-mouldering trunks, which had fallen down in every direction.
-When passing over these natural bridges, one's course was
-often arrested by sinking knee deep into the rotten wood; at
-other times, when attempting to lean against a firm tree, one
-was startled by finding a mass of decayed matter ready to
-fall at the slightest touch. We at last found ourselves among
-the stunted trees, and then soon reached the bare ridge, which
-conducted us to the summit. Here was a view characteristic
-of Tierra del Fuego; irregular chains of hills, mottled with
-patches of snow, deep yellowish-green valleys, and arms of
-the sea intersecting the land in many directions. The strong
-wind was piercingly cold, and the atmosphere rather hazy, so
-that we did not stay long on the top of the mountain. Our
-descent was not quite so laborious as our ascent, for the
-weight of the body forced a passage, and all the slips and
-falls were in the right direction.
-
-I have already mentioned the sombre and dull character of
-the evergreen forests, [3] in which two or three species of
-trees grow, to the exclusion of all others. Above the forest
-land, there are many dwarf alpine plants, which all spring
-from the mass of peat, and help to compose it: these plants
-are very remarkable from their close alliance with the species
-growing on the mountains of Europe, though so many thousand
-miles distant. The central part of Tierra del Fuego, where the
-clay-slate formation occurs, is most favourable to the growth
-of trees; on the outer coast the poorer granitic soil, and a
-situation more exposed to the violent winds, do not allow of
-their attaining any great size. Near Port Famine I have seen
-more large trees than anywhere else: I measured a Winter's
-Bark which was four feet six inches in girth, and several of
-the beech were as much as thirteen feet. Captain King also
-mentions a beech which was seven feet in diameter, seventeen
-feet above the roots.
-
-There is one vegetable production deserving notice from
-its importance as an article of food to the Fuegians. It is a
-globular, bright-yellow fungus, which grows in vast numbers
-on the beech-trees. When young it is elastic and turgid, with
-
-[picture]
-
-a smooth surface; but when mature it shrinks, becomes tougher,
-and has its entire surface deeply pitted or honey-combed,
-as represented in the accompanying woodcut. This fungus
-belongs to a new and curious genus, [4] I found a second
-species on another species of beech in Chile: and Dr. Hooker
-informs me, that just lately a third species has been discovered
-on a third species of beech in Van Diernan's Land. How singular
-is this relationship between parasitical fungi and the trees
-on which they grow, in distant parts of the world! In Tierra
-del Fuego the fungus in its tough and mature state is collected
-in large quantities by the women and children, and is eaten
-un-cooked. It has a mucilaginous, slightly sweet taste, with
-a faint smell like that of a mushroom. With the exception of
-a few berries, chiefly of a dwarf arbutus, the natives eat
-no vegetable food besides this fungus. In New Zealand,
-before the introduction of the potato, the roots of the fern
-were largely consumed; at the present time, I believe, Tierra
-del Fuego is the only country in the world where a cryptogamic
-plant affords a staple article of food.
-
-The zoology of Tierra del Fuego, as might have been
-expected from the nature of its climate and vegetation, is
-very poor. Of mammalia, besides whales and seals, there is
-one bat, a kind of mouse (Reithrodon chinchilloides), two
-true mice, a ctenomys allied to or identical with the tucutuco,
-two foxes (Canis Magellanicus and C. Azarae), a sea-otter,
-the guanaco, and a deer. Most of these animals inhabit only
-the drier eastern parts of the country; and the deer has never
-been seen south of the Strait of Magellan. Observing the
-general correspondence of the cliffs of soft sandstone, mud,
-and shingle, on the opposite sides of the Strait, and on some
-intervening islands, one is strongly tempted to believe that the
-land was once joined, and thus allowed animals so delicate
-and helpless as the tucutuco and Reithrodon to pass over.
-The correspondence of the cliffs is far from proving any
-junction; because such cliffs generally are formed by the
-intersection of sloping deposits, which, before the elevation
-of the land, had been accumulated near the then existing
-shores. It is, however, a remarkable coincidence, that in the
-two large islands cut off by the Beagle Channel from the
-rest of Tierra del Fuego, one has cliffs composed of matter
-that may be called stratified alluvium, which front similar
-ones on the opposite side of the channel, -- while the other is
-exclusively bordered by old crystalline rocks: in the former,
-called Navarin Island, both foxes and guanacos occur; but in
-the latter, Hoste Island, although similar in every respect,
-and only separated by a channel a little more than half a mile
-wide, I have the word of Jemmy Button for saying that
-neither of these animals are found.
-
-The gloomy woods are inhabited by few birds: occasionally
-the plaintive note of a white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher
-(Myiobius albiceps) may be heard, concealed near the summit
-of the most lofty trees; and more rarely the loud strange
-cry of a black wood-pecker, with a fine scarlet crest on its
-head. A little, dusky-coloured wren (Scytalopus Magellanicus)
-hops in a skulking manner among the entangled mass
-of the fallen and decaying trunks. But the creeper (Oxyurus
-tupinieri) is the commonest bird in the country. Throughout
-the beech forests, high up and low down, in the most
-gloomy, wet, and impenetrable ravines, it may be met with.
-This little bird no doubt appears more numerous than it
-really is, from its habit of following with seeming curiosity
-any person who enters these silent woods: continually uttering
-a harsh twitter, it flutters from tree to tree, within a few
-feet of the intruder's face. It is far from wishing for the
-modest concealment of the true creeper (Certhia familiaris);
-nor does it, like that bird, run up the trunks of trees, but
-industriously, after the manner of a willow-wren, hops about,
-and searches for insects on every twig and branch. In the
-more open parts, three or four species of finches, a thrush,
-a starling (or Icterus), two Opetiorhynchi, and several hawks
-and owls occur.
-
-The absence of any species whatever in the whole class of
-Reptiles, is a marked feature in the zoology of this country,
-as well as in that of the Falkland Islands. I do not ground
-this statement merely on my own observation, but I heard it
-from the Spanish inhabitants of the latter place, and from
-Jemmy Button with regard to Tierra del Fuego. On the
-banks of the Santa Cruz, in 50 degs. south, I saw a frog; and
-it is not improbable that these animals, as well as lizards, may
-be found as far south as the Strait of Magellan, where the
-country retains the character of Patagonia; but within the
-damp and cold limit of Tierra del Fuego not one occurs.
-That the climate would not have suited some of the orders,
-such as lizards, might have been foreseen; but with respect
-to frogs, this was not so obvious.
-
-Beetles occur in very small numbers: it was long before I
-could believe that a country as large as Scotland, covered
-with vegetable productions and with a variety of stations,
-could be so unproductive. The few which I found were
-alpine species (Harpalidae and Heteromidae) living under
-stones. The vegetable-feeding Chrysomelidae, so eminently
-characteristic of the Tropics, are here almost entirely
-absent; [5] I saw very few flies, butterflies, or bees, and no
-crickets or Orthoptera. In the pools of water I found but a few
-aquatic beetles, and not any fresh-water shells: Succinea at
-first appears an exception; but here it must be called a
-terrestrial shell, for it lives on the damp herbage far from the
-water. Land-shells could be procured only in the same alpine
-situations with the beetles. I have already contrasted the
-climate as well as the general appearance of Tierra del
-Fuego with that of Patagonia; and the difference is strongly
-exemplified in the entomology. I do not believe they have
-one species in common; certainly the general character of the
-insects is widely different.
-
-If we turn from the land to the sea, we shall find the latter
-as abundantly stocked with living creatures as the former is
-poorly so. In all parts of the world a rocky and partially
-protected shore perhaps supports, in a given space, a greater
-number of individual animals than any other station. There
-is one marine production which, from its importance, is
-worthy of a particular history. It is the kelp, or Macrocystis
-pyrifera. This plant grows on every rock from low-water
-mark to a great depth, both on the outer coast and within the
-channels. [6] I believe, during the voyages of the Adventure
-and Beagle, not one rock near the surface was discovered
-which was not buoyed by this floating weed. The good service
-it thus affords to vessels navigating near this stormy
-land is evident; and it certainly has saved many a one from
-being wrecked. I know few things more surprising than to
-see this plant growing and flourishing amidst those great
-breakers of the western ocean, which no mass of rock, let it
-be ever so hard, can long resist. The stem is round, slimy,
-and smooth, and seldom has a diameter of so much as an
-inch. A few taken together are sufficiently strong to support
-the weight of the large loose stones, to which in the inland
-channels they grow attached; and yet some of these stones
-were so heavy that when drawn to the surface, they could
-scarcely be lifted into a boat by one person. Captain Cook,
-in his second voyage, says, that this plant at Kerguelen Land
-rises from a greater depth than twenty-four fathoms; "and
-as it does not grow in a perpendicular direction, but makes a
-very acute angle with the bottom, and much of it afterwards
-spreads many fathoms on the surface of the sea, I am well
-warranted to say that some of it grows to the length of sixty
-fathoms and upwards." I do not suppose the stem of any
-other plant attains so great a length as three hundred and
-sixty feet, as stated by Captain Cook. Captain Fitz Roy,
-moreover, found it growing [7] up from the greater depth of
-forty-five fathoms. The beds of this sea-weed, even when
-of not great breadth, make excellent natural floating
-breakwaters. It is quite curious to see, in an exposed harbour,
-how soon the waves from the open sea, as they travel through
-the straggling stems, sink in height, and pass into smooth
-water.
-
-The number of living creatures of all Orders, whose existence
-intimately depends on the kelp, is wonderful. A great
-volume might be written, describing the inhabitants of one
-of these beds of sea-weed. Almost all the leaves, excepting
-those that float on the surface, are so thickly incrusted with
-corallines as to be of a white colour. We find exquisitely
-delicate structures, some inhabited by simple hydra-like
-polypi, others by more organized kinds, and beautiful compound
-Ascidiae. On the leaves, also, various patelliform shells,
-Trochi, uncovered molluscs, and some bivalves are attached.
-Innumerable crustacea frequent every part of the plant. On
-shaking the great entangled roots, a pile of small fish, shells,
-cuttle-fish, crabs of all orders, sea-eggs, star-fish, beautiful
-Holuthuriae, Planariae, and crawling nereidous animals of a
-multitude of forms, all fall out together. Often as I recurred
-to a branch of the kelp, I never failed to discover animals
-of new and curious structures. In Chiloe, where the kelp
-does not thrive very well, the numerous shells, corallines, and
-crustacea are absent; but there yet remain a few of the
-Flustraceae, and some compound Ascidiae; the latter, however,
-are of different species from those in Tierra del Fuego:
-we see here the fucus possessing a wider range than the animals
-which use it as an abode. I can only compare these
-great aquatic forests of the southern hemisphere with the
-terrestrial ones in the intertropical regions. Yet if in any
-country a forest was destroyed, I do not believe nearly so
-many species of animals would perish as would here, from
-the destruction of the kelp. Amidst the leaves of this plant
-numerous species of fish live, which nowhere else could find
-food or shelter; with their destruction the many cormorants
-and other fishing birds, the otters, seals, and porpoises, would
-soon perish also; and lastly, the Fuegian savage, the miserable
-lord of this miserable land, would redouble his cannibal
-feast, decrease in numbers, and perhaps cease to exist.
-
-June 8th. -- We weighed anchor early in the morning and
-left Port Famine. Captain Fitz Roy determined to leave the
-Strait of Magellan by the Magdalen Channel, which had not
-long been discovered. Our course lay due south, down that
-gloomy passage which I have before alluded to as appearing
-to lead to another and worse world. The wind was fair, but
-the atmosphere was very thick; so that we missed much
-curious scenery. The dark ragged clouds were rapidly driven
-over the mountains, from their summits nearly down to their
-bases. The glimpses which we caught through the dusky
-mass were highly interesting; jagged points, cones of snow,
-blue glaciers, strong outlines, marked on a lurid sky, were
-seen at different distances and heights. In the midst of such
-scenery we anchored at Cape Turn, close to Mount Sarmiento,
-which was then hidden in the clouds. At the base of
-the lofty and almost perpendicular sides of our little cove
-there was one deserted wigwam, and it alone reminded us
-that man sometimes wandered into these desolate regions.
-But it would be difficult to imagine a scene where he seemed
-to have fewer claims or less authority. The inanimate works
-of nature -- rock, ice, snow, wind, and water -- all warring
-with each other, yet combined against man -- here reigned in
-absolute sovereignty.
-
-June 9th. -- In the morning we were delighted by seeing
-the veil of mist gradually rise from Sarmiento, and display it
-to our view. This mountain, which is one of the highest in
-Tierra del Fuego, has an altitude of 6800 feet. Its base, for
-about an eighth of its total height, is clothed by dusky woods,
-and above this a field of snow extends to the summit. These
-vast piles of snow, which never melt, and seem destined to
-last as long as the world holds together, present a noble and
-even sublime spectacle. The outline of the mountain was
-admirably clear and defined. Owing to the abundance of
-light reflected from the white and glittering surface, no
-shadows were cast on any part; and those lines which intersected
-the sky could alone be distinguished: hence the mass
-stood out in the boldest relief. Several glaciers descended in
-a winding course from the upper great expanse of snow to
-the sea-coast: they may be likened to great frozen Niagaras;
-and perhaps these cataracts of blue ice are full as beautiful
-as the moving ones of water. By night we reached the western
-part of the channel; but the water was so deep that no
-anchorage could be found. We were in consequence obliged
-to stand off and on in this narrow arm of the sea, during a
-pitch-dark night of fourteen hours long.
-
-June 10th. -- In the morning we made the best of our way
-into the open Pacific. The western coast generally consists
-of low, rounded, quite barren hills of granite and greenstone.
-Sir J. Narborough called one part South Desolation, because
-it is "so desolate a land to behold:" and well indeed might
-he say so. Outside the main islands, there are numberless
-scattered rocks on which the long swell of the open ocean
-incessantly rages. We passed out between the East and West
-Furies; and a little farther northward there are so many
-breakers that the sea is called the Milky Way. One sight of
-such a coast is enough to make a landsman dream for a week
-about shipwrecks, peril, and death; and with this sight we
-bade farewell for ever to Tierra del Fuego.
-
-The following discussion on the climate of the southern
-parts of the continent with relation to its productions, on
-the snow-line, on the extraordinarily low descent of the
-glaciers, and on the zone of perpetual congelation in
-the antarctic islands, may be passed over by any one
-not interested in these curious subjects, or the final
-recapitulation alone may be read. I shall, however, here
-give only an abstract, and must refer for details to the
-Thirteenth Chapter and the Appendix of the former edition
-of this work.
-
-On the Climate and Productions of Tierra del Fuego and
-of the South-west Coast. -- The following table gives the
-mean temperature of Tierra del Fuego, the Falkland Islands,
-and, for comparison, that of Dublin: --
-
- Summer Winter Mean of Summer
- Latitude Temp. Temp. and Winter
----------------------------------------------------------------
-Tierra del Fuego 53 38' S. 50 33.08 41.54
-Falkland Islands 51 38' S. 51 -- --
-Dublin 53 21' N. 59.54 39.2 49.37
-
-
-Hence we see that the central part of Tierra del Fuego is
-colder in winter, and no less than 9.5 degs. less hot in
-summer, than Dublin. According to von Buch, the mean
-temperature of July (not the hottest month in the year)
-at Saltenfiord in Norway, is as high as 57.8 degs.,
-and this place is actually 13 degs. nearer the pole
-than Port Famine! [8] Inhospitable as this climate appears
-to our feelings evergreen trees flourish luxuriantly under
-it. Humming-birds may be seen sucking the flowers, and
-parrots feeding on the seeds of the Winter's Bark, in lat.
-55 degs. S. I have already remarked to what a degree the
-sea swarms with living creatures; and the shells (such as
-the Patellae, Fissurellae, Chitons, and Barnacles),
-according to Mr. G. B. Sowerby, are of a much larger size
-and of a more vigorous growth, than the analogous species in
-the northern hemisphere. A large Voluta is abundant in
-southern Tierra del Fuego and the Falkland Islands. At
-Bahia Blanca, in lat. 39 degs. S., the most abundant shells were
-three species of Oliva (one of large size), one or two Volutas,
-and a Terebra. Now, these are amongst the best characterized
-tropical forms. It is doubtful whether even one
-small species of Oliva exists on the southern shores of
-Europe, and there are no species of the two other genera.
-If a geologist were to find in lat 39 degs. on the coast of
-Portugal a bed containing numerous shells belonging to three
-species of Oliva, to a Voluta and Terebra, he would probably
-assert that the climate at the period of their existence must
-have been tropical; but judging from South America, such an
-inference might be erroneous.
-
-The equable, humid, and windy climate of Tierra del
-Fuego extends, with only a small increase of heat, for many
-degrees along the west coast of the continent. The forests
-for 600 miles northward of Cape Horn, have a very similar
-aspect. As a proof of the equable climate, even for 300 or
-400 miles still further northward, I may mention that in
-Chiloe (corresponding in latitude with the northern parts
-of Spain) the peach seldom produces fruit, whilst strawberries
-and apples thrive to perfection. Even the crops of
-barley and wheat [9] are often brought into the houses to be
-dried and ripened. At Valdivia (in the same latitude of
-40 degs., with Madrid) grapes and figs ripen, but are not
-common; olives seldom ripen even partially, and oranges not at
-all. These fruits, in corresponding latitudes in Europe, are
-well known to succeed to perfection; and even in this continent,
-at the Rio Negro, under nearly the same parallel
-with Valdivia, sweet potatoes (convolvulus) are cultivated;
-and grapes, figs, olives, oranges, water and musk melons,
-produce abundant fruit. Although the humid and equable
-climate of Chiloe, and of the coast northward and southward
-of it, is so unfavourable to our fruits, yet the native
-forests, from lat. 45 to 38 degs., almost rival in luxuriance
-those of the glowing intertropical regions. Stately trees of
-many kinds, with smooth and highly coloured barks, are loaded
-by parasitical monocotyledonous plants; large and elegant
-ferns are numerous, and arborescent grasses entwine the
-trees into one entangled mass to the height of thirty or forty
-feet above the ground. Palm-trees grow in lat 37 degs.; an
-arborescent grass, very like a bamboo, in 40 degs.; and
-another closely allied kind, of great length, but not erect,
-flourishes even as far south as 45 degs. S.
-
-An equable climate, evidently due to the large area of sea
-compared with the land, seems to extend over the greater
-part of the southern hemisphere; and, as a consequence, the
-vegetation partakes of a semi-tropical character. Tree-ferns
-thrive luxuriantly in Van Diemen's Land (lat. 45 degs.), and I
-measured one trunk no less than six feet in circumference.
-An arborescent fern was found by Forster in New Zealand
-in 46 degs., where orchideous plants are parasitical on the
-trees. In the Auckland Islands, ferns, according to Dr.
-Dieffenbach [10] have trunks so thick and high that they may
-be almost called tree-ferns; and in these islands, and even
-as far south as lat. 55 degs. in the Macquarrie Islands,
-parrots abound.
-
-On the Height of the Snow-line, and on the Descent of
-the Glaciers in South America. -- For the detailed authorities
-for the following table, I must refer to the former edition: --
-
- Height in feet
-Latitude of Snow-line Observer
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-Equatorial region; mean result 15,748 Humboldt.
-Bolivia, lat. 16 to 18 degs. S. 17,000 Pentland.
-Central Chile, lat. 33 degs. S. 14,500 - 15,000 Gillies, and
- the Author.
-Chiloe, lat. 41 to 43 degs. S. 6,000 Officers of the
- Beagle and the
- Author.
-Tierra del Fuego, 54 degs. S. 3,500 - 4,000 King.
-
-
-As the height of the plane of perpetual snow seems chiefly to
-be determined by the extreme heat of the summer, rather than
-by the mean temperature of the year, we ought not to be
-surprised at its descent in the Strait of Magellan, where the
-summer is so cool, to only 3500 or 4000 feet above the level of
-the sea; although in Norway, we must travel to between lat. 67
-and 70 degs. N., that is, about 14 degs. nearer the pole, to meet
-with perpetual snow at this low level. The difference in height,
-namely, about 9000 feet, between the snow-line on the Cordillera
-behind Chiloe (with its highest points ranging from
-only 5600 to 7500 feet) and in central Chile [11] (a distance of
-only 9 degs. of latitude), is truly wonderful. The land from the
-southward of Chiloe to near Concepcion (lat. 37 degs.) is hidden
-by one dense forest dripping with moisture. The sky is
-cloudy, and we have seen how badly the fruits of southern
-Europe succeed. In central Chile, on the other hand, a little
-northward of Concepcion, the sky is generally clear, rain does
-not fall for the seven summer months, and southern European
-fruits succeed admirably; and even the sugar-cane has
-been cultivated. [12] No doubt the plane of perpetual snow
-undergoes the above remarkable flexure of 9000 feet,
-unparalleled in other parts of the world, not far from the
-latitude of Concepcion, where the land ceases to be covered
-with forest-trees; for trees in South America indicate a rainy
-climate, and rain a clouded sky and little heat in summer.
-
-The descent of glaciers to the sea must, I conceive, mainly
-depend (subject, of course, to a proper supply of snow in the
-upper region) on the lowness of the line of perpetual snow
-on steep mountains near the coast. As the snow-line is so
-low in Tierra del Fuego, we might have expected that many
-of the glaciers would have reached the sea. Nevertheless,
-I was astonished when I first saw a range, only from 3000 to
-4000 feet in height, in the latitude of Cumberland, with every
-valley filled with streams of ice descending to the sea-coast.
-Almost every arm of the sea, which penetrates to the interior
-higher chain, not only in Tierra del Fuego, but on the coast
-for 650 miles northwards, is terminated by "tremendous and
-astonishing glaciers," as described by one of the officers on
-the survey. Great masses of ice frequently fall from these
-icy cliffs, and the crash reverberates like the broadside of a
-man-of-war through the lonely channels. These falls, as
-noticed in the last chapter, produce great waves which break
-on the adjoining coasts. It is known that earthquakes frequently
-cause masses of earth to fall from sea-cliffs: how
-terrific, then, would be the effect of a severe shock (and such
-occur here [13]) on a body like a glacier, already in motion, and
-traversed by fissures! I can readily believe that the water
-would be fairly beaten back out of the deepest channel, and
-then, returning with an overwhelming force, would whirl
-about huge masses of rock like so much chaff. In Eyre's
-Sound, in the latitude of Paris, there are immense glaciers,
-and yet the loftiest neighbouring mountain is only 6200 feet
-high. In this Sound, about fifty icebergs were seen at one
-time floating outwards, and one of them must have been at
-least 168 feet in total height. Some of the icebergs were
-loaded with blocks of no inconsiderable size, of granite and
-other rocks, different from the clay-slate of the surrounding
-mountains. The glacier furthest from the pole, surveyed
-during the voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, is in lat.
-46 degs. 50', in the Gulf of Penas. It is 15 miles long, and in
-one part 7 broad and descends to the sea-coast. But even a
-few miles northward of this glacier, in Laguna de San
-
-[picture]
-
-Rafael, some Spanish missionaries [14] encountered "many
-icebergs, some great, some small, and others middle-sized," in
-a narrow arm of the sea, on the 22nd of the month corresponding
-with our June, and in a latitude corresponding with
-that of the Lake of Geneva!
-
-In Europe, the most southern glacier which comes down
-to the sea is met with, according to Von Buch, on the coast
-of Norway, in lat. 67 degs. Now, this is more than 20 degs. of
-latitude, or 1230 miles, nearer the pole than the Laguna de San
-Rafael. The position of the glaciers at this place and in the
-Gulf of Penas may be put even in a more striking point of
-view, for they descend to the sea-coast within 7.5 degs. of
-latitude, or 450 miles, of a harbour, where three species of
-Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra, are the commonest shells,
-within less than 9 degs. from where palms grow, within 4.5 degs.
-of a region where the jaguar and puma range over the
-plains, less than 2.5 degs. from arborescent grasses, and
-(looking to the westward in the same hemisphere) less than
-2 degs. from orchideous parasites, and within a single degree
-of tree-ferns!
-
-These facts are of high geological interest with respect to
-the climate of the northern hemisphere at the period when
-boulders were transported. I will not here detail how simply
-the theory of icebergs being charged with fragments of rock,
-explain the origin and position of the gigantic boulders of
-eastern Tierra del Fuego, on the high plain of Santa Cruz,
-and on the island of Chiloe. In Tierra del Fuego, the greater
-number of boulders lie on the lines of old sea-channels, now
-converted into dry valleys by the elevation of the land. They
-are associated with a great unstratified formation of mud
-and sand, containing rounded and angular fragments of all
-sizes, which has originated [15] in the repeated ploughing up of
-the sea-bottom by the stranding of icebergs, and by the matter
-transported on them. Few geologists now doubt that
-those erratic boulders which lie near lofty mountains have
-been pushed forward by the glaciers themselves, and that
-those distant from mountains, and embedded in subaqueous
-deposits, have been conveyed thither either on icebergs or
-frozen in coast-ice. The connection between the transportal
-of boulders and the presence of ice in some form, is strikingly
-shown by their geographical distribution over the earth.
-In South America they are not found further than 48 degs. of
-latitude, measured from the southern pole; in North America
-it appears that the limit of their transportal extends to
-53.5 degs. from the northern pole; but in Europe to not more
-than 40 degs. of latitude, measured from the same point. On the
-other hand, in the intertropical parts of America, Asia, and
-Africa, they have never been observed; nor at the Cape of Good
-Hope, nor in Australia. [16]
-
-On the Climate and Productions of the Antarctic Islands.
--- Considering the rankness of the vegetation in Tierra del
-Fuego, and on the coast northward of it, the condition of the
-islands south and south-west of America is truly surprising.
-Sandwich Land, in the latitude of the north part of Scotland,
-was found by Cook, during the hottest month of the
-year, "covered many fathoms thick with everlasting snow;"
-and there seems to be scarcely any vegetation. Georgia, an
-island 96 miles long and 10 broad, in the latitude of Yorkshire,
-"in the very height of summer, is in a manner wholly
-covered with frozen snow." It can boast only of moss, some
-tufts of grass, and wild burnet; it has only one land-bird
-(Anthus correndera), yet Iceland, which is 10 degs. nearer the
-pole, has, according to Mackenzie, fifteen land-birds. The
-South Shetland Islands, in the same latitude as the southern
-half of Norway, possess only some lichens, moss, and a little
-grass; and Lieut. Kendall [17] found the bay, in which he was
-at anchor, beginning to freeze at a period corresponding with
-our 8th of September. The soil here consists of ice and
-volcanic ashes interstratified; and at a little depth beneath
-the surface it must remain perpetually congealed, for Lieut.
-Kendall found the body of a foreign sailor which had long
-been buried, with the flesh and all the features perfectly
-preserved. It is a singular fact, that on the two great
-continents in the northern hemisphere (but not in the broken
-land of Europe between them ), we have the zone of perpetually
-frozen under-soil in a low latitude -- namely, in 56 degs. in
-North America at the depth of three feet, [18] and in 62 degs.
-in Siberia at the depth of twelve to fifteen feet -- as the
-result of a directly opposite condition of things to those
-of the southern hemisphere. On the northern continents, the
-winter is rendered excessively cold by the radiation from a
-large area of land into a clear sky, nor is it moderated by
-the warmth-bringing currents of the sea; the short summer,
-on the other hand, is hot. In the Southern Ocean the winter
-is not so excessively cold, but the summer is far less hot,
-for the clouded sky seldom allows the sun to warm the ocean,
-itself a bad absorbent of heat: and hence the mean temperature
-of the year, which regulates the zone of perpetually congealed
-under-soil, is low. It is evident that a rank vegetation,
-which does not so much require heat as it does protection
-from intense cold, would approach much nearer to this zone
-of perpetual congelation under the equable climate of the
-southern hemisphere, than under the extreme climate of the
-northern continents.
-
-The case of the sailor's body perfectly preserved in the icy
-soil of the South Shetland Islands (lat. 62 to 63 degs. S.), in a
-rather lower latitude than that (lat. 64 degs. N.) under which
-Pallas found the frozen rhinoceros in Siberia, is very
-interesting. Although it is a fallacy, as I have endeavoured to
-show in a former chapter, to suppose that the larger quadrupeds
-require a luxuriant vegetation for their support, nevertheless
-it is important to find in the South Shetland Islands
-a frozen under-soil within 360 miles of the forest-clad islands
-near Cape Horn, where, as far as the _bulk_ of vegetation is
-concerned, any number of great quadrupeds might be supported.
-The perfect preservation of the carcasses of the
-Siberian elephants and rhinoceroses is certainly one of the
-most wonderful facts in geology; but independently of the
-imagined difficulty of supplying them with food from the
-adjoining countries, the whole case is not, I think, so
-perplexing as it has generally been considered. The plains of
-Siberia, like those of the Pampas, appear to have been formed
-under the sea, into which rivers brought down the bodies
-of many animals; of the greater number of these, only the
-skeletons have been preserved, but of others the perfect
-carcass. Now, it is known that in the shallow sea on the Arctic
-coast of America the bottom freezes, [19] and does not thaw in
-spring so soon as the surface of the land, moreover at
-greater depths, where the bottom of the sea does not freeze
-the mud a few feet beneath the top layer might remain even
-in summer below 32 degs., as in the case on the land with the
-soil at the depth of a few feet. At still greater depths, the
-temperature of the mud and water would probably not be low
-enough to preserve the flesh; and hence, carcasses drifted
-beyond the shallow parts near an Arctic coast, would have
-only their skeletons preserved: now in the extreme northern
-parts of Siberia bones are infinitely numerous, so that even
-islets are said to be almost composed of them; [20] and those
-islets lie no less than ten degrees of latitude north of the
-place where Pallas found the frozen rhinoceros. On the other
-hand, a carcass washed by a flood into a shallow part of the
-Arctic Sea, would be preserved for an indefinite period, if it
-were soon afterwards covered with mud sufficiently thick to
-prevent the heat of the summer-water penetrating to it; and
-if, when the sea-bottom was upraised into land, the covering
-was sufficiently thick to prevent the heat of the summer air
-and sun thawing and corrupting it.
-
-Recapitulation. -- I will recapitulate the principal facts with
-regard to the climate, ice-action, and organic productions of
-the southern hemisphere, transposing the places in imagination
-to Europe, with which we are so much better acquainted.
-Then, near Lisbon, the commonest sea-shells, namely, three
-species of Oliva, a Voluta, and a Terebra, would have a
-tropical character. In the southern provinces of France,
-magnificent forests, intwined by arborescent grasses and with
-the trees loaded with parasitical plants, would hide the face
-of the land. The puma and the jaguar would haunt the
-Pyrenees. In the latitude of Mont Blanc, but on an island as
-far westward as Central North America, tree-ferns and
-parasitical Orchideae would thrive amidst the thick woods.
-Even as far north as central Denmark, humming-birds would be
-seen fluttering about delicate flowers, and parrots feeding
-amidst the evergreen woods; and in the sea there, we should
-have a Voluta, and all the shells of large size and vigorous
-growth. Nevertheless, on some islands only 360 miles northward
-of our new Cape Horn in Denmark, a carcass buried
-in the soil (or if washed into a shallow sea, and covered up
-with mud) would be preserved perpetually frozen. If some
-bold navigator attempted to penetrate northward of these
-islands, he would run a thousand dangers amidst gigantic
-icebergs, on some of which he would see great blocks of rock
-borne far away from their original site. Another island of
-large size in the latitude of southern Scotland, but twice as
-far to the west, would be "almost wholly covered with
-everlasting snow," and would have each bay terminated by
-ice-cliffs, whence great masses would be yearly detached: this
-island would boast only of a little moss, grass, and burnet,
-and a titlark would be its only land inhabitant. From our
-new Cape Horn in Denmark, a chain of mountains, scarcely
-half the height of the Alps, would run in a straight line due
-southward; and on its western flank every deep creek of the
-sea, or fiord, would end in "bold and astonishing glaciers."
-These lonely channels would frequently reverberate with the
-falls of ice, and so often would great waves rush along their
-coasts; numerous icebergs, some as tall as cathedrals, and
-occasionally loaded with "no inconsiderable blocks of rock,"
-would be stranded on the outlying islets; at intervals violent
-earthquakes would shoot prodigious masses of ice into the
-waters below. Lastly, some missionaries attempting to penetrate
-a long arm of the sea, would behold the not lofty surrounding
-mountains, sending down their many grand icy streams
-to the sea-coast, and their progress in the boats would
-be checked by the innumerable floating icebergs, some small
-and some great; and this would have occurred on our twenty-
-second of June, and where the Lake of Geneva is now spread
-out! [21]
-
-[1] The south-westerly breezes are generally very dry.
-January 29th, being at anchor under Cape Gregory: a very
-hard gale from W. by S., clear sky with few cumuli;
-temperature 57 degs., dew-point 36 degs., -- difference
-21 degs. On January 15th, at Port St. Julian: in the
-morning, light winds with much rain, followed by a very
-heavy squall with rain, -- settled into heavy gale with
-large cumuli, -- cleared up, blowing very strong from S.S.W.
-Temperature 60 degs., dew-point 42 degs., -- difference
-18 degs.
-
-[2] Rengger, Natur. der Saeugethiere von Paraguay. S. 334.
-
-[3] Captain Fitz Roy informs me that in April (our October),
-the leaves of those trees which grow near the base of the
-mountains change colour, but not those on the more elevated
-parts. I remember having read some observations, showing
-that in England the leaves fall earlier in a warm and fine
-autumn than in a late and cold one, The change in the colour
-being here retarded in the more elevated, and therefore colder
-situations, must he owing to the same general law of vegetation.
-The trees of Tierra del Fuego during no part of the year
-entirely shed their leaves.
-
-[4] Described from my specimens and notes by the Rev. J. M.
-Berkeley, in the Linnean Transactions (vol. xix. p. 37), under
-the name of Cyttaria Darwinii; the Chilean species is the
-C. Berteroii. This genus is allied to Bulgaria.
-
-[5] I believe I must except one alpine Haltica, and a single
-specimen of a Melasoma. Mr. Waterhouse informs me, that of
-the Harpalidae there are eight or nine species -- the forms
-of the greater number being very peculiar; of Heteromera,
-four or five species; of Rhyncophora, six or seven; and of
-the following families one species in each: Staphylinidae,
-Elateridae, Cebrionidae, Melolonthidae. The species in the
-other orders are even fewer. In all the orders, the scarcity
-of the individuals is even more remarkable than that of the
-species. Most of the Coleoptera have been carefully described
-by Mr. Waterhouse in the Annals of Nat. Hist.
-
-[6] Its geographical range is remarkably wide; it is found
-from the extreme southern islets near Cape Horn, as far
-north on the eastern coast (according to information given
-me by Mr. Stokes) as lat. 43 degs., -- but on the western
-coast, as Dr. Hooker tells me, it extends to the R. San
-Francisco in California, and perhaps even to Kamtschatka.
-We thus have an immense range in latitude; and as Cook,
-who must have been well acquainted with the species, found
-it at Kerguelen Land, no less than 140 degs. in longitude.
-
-[7] Voyages of the Adventure and Beagle, vol. i. p. 363. -- It
-appears that sea-weed grows extremely quick. -- Mr. Stephenson
-found (Wilson's Voyage round Scotland, vol. ii. p. 228) that
-a rock uncovered only at spring-tides, which had been chiselled
-smooth in November, on the following May, that is, within
-six months afterwards, was thickly covered with Fucus digitatus
-two feet, and F. esculentus six feet, in length.
-
-[8] With regard to Tierra del Fuego, the results are deduced
-from the observations of Capt. King (Geographical Journal,
-1830), and those taken on board the Beagle. For the Falkland
-Islands, I am indebted to Capt. Sulivan for the mean of the
-mean temperature (reduced from careful observations at
-midnight, 8 A.M., noon, and 8 P.M.) of the three hottest
-months, viz., December, January, and February. The temperature
-of Dublin is taken from Barton.
-
-[9] Agueros, Descrip. Hist. de la Prov. de Chiloe, 1791, p. 94.
-
-[10] See the German Translation of this Journal; and for the
-other facts, Mr. Brown's Appendix to Flinders's Voyage.
-
-
-[11] On the Cordillera of central Chile, I believe the
-snow-line varies exceedingly in height in different summers.
-I was assured that during one very dry and long summer, all
-the snow disappeared from Aconcagua, although it attains the
-prodigious height of 23,000 feet. It is probable that much
-of the snow at these great heights is evaporated rather than
-thawed.
-
-[12] Miers's Chile, vol. i. p. 415. It is said that the
-sugar-cane grew at Ingenio, lat. 32 to 33 degs., but not in
-sufficient quantity to make the manufacture profitable. In
-the valley of Quillota, south of Ingenio, I saw some large
-date palm trees.
-
-[13] Bulkeley's and Cummin's Faithful Narrative of the Loss
-of the Wager. The earthquake happened August 25, 1741.
-
-[14] Agueros, Desc. Hist. de Chiloe, p. 227.
-
-[15] Geological Transactions, vol. vi. p. 415.
-
-[16] I have given details (the first, I believe, published) on
-this subject in the first edition, and in the Appendix to it.
-I have there shown that the apparent exceptions to the absence
-of erratic boulders in certain countries, are due to erroneous
-observations; several statements there given I have since
-found confirmed by various authors.
-
-[17] Geographical Journal, 1830, pp. 65, 66.
-
-[18] Richardson's Append. to Back's Exped., and Humboldt's
-Fragm. Asiat., tom. ii. p. 386.
-
-[19] Messrs. Dease and Simpson, in Geograph. Journ., vol.
-viii. pp. 218 and 220.
-
-[20] Cuvier (Ossemens Fossiles, tom. i. p. 151), from Billing's
-Voyage.
-
-[21] In the former edition and Appendix, I have given some
-facts on the transportal of erratic boulders and icebergs
-in the Atlantic Ocean. This subject has lately been treated
-excellently by Mr. Hayes, in the Boston Journal (vol. iv.
-p. 426). The author does not appear aware of a case published
-by me (Geographical Journal, vol. ix. p. 528) of a gigantic
-boulder embedded in an iceberg in the Antarctic Ocean, almost
-certainly one hundred miles distant from any land, and
-perhaps much more distant. In the Appendix I have discussed
-at length the probability (at that time hardly thought of)
-of icebergs, when stranded, grooving and polishing rocks,
-like glaciers. This is now a very commonly received opinion;
-and I cannot still avoid the suspicion that it is applicable
-even to such cases as that of the Jura. Dr. Richardson has
-assured me that the icebergs off North America push before
-them pebbles and sand, and leave the submarine rocky flats
-quite bare; it is hardly possible to doubt that such ledges
-must be polished and scored in the direction of the set of
-the prevailing currents. Since writing that Appendix, I have
-seen in North Wales (London Phil. Mag., vol. xxi. p. 180)
-the adjoining action of glaciers and floating icebergs.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII
-
-CENTRAL CHILE
-
-Valparaiso -- Excursion to the Foot of the Andes -- Structure
-of the Land -- Ascend the Bell of Quillota -- Shattered
-Masses of Greenstone -- Immense Valleys -- Mines -- State of
-Miners -- Santiago -- Hot-baths of Cauquenes -- Gold-mines --
-Grinding-mills -- Perforated Stones -- Habits of the Puma -- El
-Turco and Tapacolo -- Humming-birds.
-
-
-JULY 23rd. -- The Beagle anchored late at night in the
-bay of Valparaiso, the chief seaport of Chile. When
-morning came, everything appeared delightful. After
-Tierra del Fuego, the climate felt quite delicious -- the
-atmosphere so dry, and the heavens so clear and blue with the
-sun shining brightly, that all nature seemed sparkling with
-life. The view from the anchorage is very pretty. The town is
-built at the very foot of a range of hills, about 1600 feet
-high, and rather steep. From its position, it consists of one
-long, straggling street, which runs parallel to the beach,
-and wherever a ravine comes down, the houses are piled up on
-each side of it. The rounded hills, being only partially
-protected by a very scanty vegetation, are worn into numberless
-little gullies, which expose a singularly bright red soil. From
-this cause, and from the low whitewashed houses with tile roofs,
-the view reminded me of St. Cruz in Teneriffe. In a north-
-westerly direction there are some fine glimpses of the Andes:
-but these mountains appear much grander when viewed from
-the neighbouring hills: the great distance at which they are
-situated can then more readily be perceived. The volcano of
-Aconcagua is particularly magnificent. This huge and irregularly
-conical mass has an elevation greater than that of
-Chimborazo; for, from measurements made by the officers in
-the Beagle, its height is no less than 23,000 feet. The
-Cordillera, however, viewed from this point, owe the greater
-part of their beauty to the atmosphere through which they are
-seen. When the sun was setting in the Pacific, it was
-admirable to watch how clearly their rugged outlines could
-be distinguished, yet how varied and how delicate were the
-shades of their colour.
-
-I had the good fortune to find living here Mr. Richard
-Corfield, an old schoolfellow and friend, to whose hospitality
-and kindness I was greatly indebted, in having afforded me
-a most pleasant residence during the Beagle's stay in Chile.
-The immediate neighbourhood of Valparaiso is not very productive
-to the naturalist. During the long summer the wind
-blows steadily from the southward, and a little off shore, so
-that rain never falls; during the three winter months, however,
-it is sufficiently abundant. The vegetation in consequence
-is very scanty: except in some deep valleys, there are
-no trees, and only a little grass and a few low bushes are
-scattered over the less steep parts of the hills. When we
-reflect, that at the distance of 350 miles to the south, this
-side of the Andes is completely hidden by one impenetrable
-forest, the contrast is very remarkable. I took several long
-walks while collecting objects of natural history. The country
-is pleasant for exercise. There are many very beautiful flowers;
-and, as in most other dry climates, the plants and shrubs
-possess strong and peculiar odours -- even one's clothes by
-brushing through them became scented. I did not cease from
-wonder at finding each succeeding day as fine as the foregoing.
-What a difference does climate make in the enjoyment
-of life! How opposite are the sensations when viewing
-black mountains half enveloped in clouds, and seeing
-another range through the light blue haze of a fine day! The
-one for a time may be very sublime; the other is all gaiety
-and happy life.
-
-August 14th. -- I set out on a riding excursion, for the
-purpose of geologizing the basal parts of the Andes, which
-alone at this time of the year are not shut up by the winter
-snow. Our first day's ride was northward along the sea-coast.
-After dark we reached the Hacienda of Quintero,
-the estate which formerly belonged to Lord Cochrane. My
-object in coming here was to see the great beds of shells,
-which stand some yards above the level of the sea, and are
-burnt for lime. The proofs of the elevation of this whole
-line of coast are unequivocal: at the height of a few hundred
-feet old-looking shells are numerous, and I found some
-at 1300 feet. These shells either lie loose on the surface, or
-are embedded in a reddish-black vegetable mould. I was
-much surprised to find under the microscope that this vegetable
-mould is really marine mud, full of minute particles of
-organic bodies.
-
-15th. -- We returned towards the valley of Quillota. The
-country was exceedingly pleasant; just such as poets would
-call pastoral: green open lawns, separated by small valleys
-with rivulets, and the cottages, we may suppose of the shepherds
-scattered on the hill-sides. We were obliged to cross
-the ridge of the Chilicauquen. At its base there were many
-fine evergreen forest-trees, but these flourished only in the
-ravines, where there was running water. Any person who
-had seen only the country near Valparaiso, would never have
-imagined that there had been such picturesque spots in Chile.
-As soon as we reached the brow of the Sierra, the valley of
-Quillota was immediately under our feet. The prospect was
-one of remarkable artificial luxuriance. The valley is very
-broad and quite flat, and is thus easily irrigated in all parts.
-The little square gardens are crowded with orange and olive
-trees, and every sort of vegetable. On each side huge bare
-mountains rise, and this from the contrast renders the patchwork
-valley the more pleasing. Whoever called "Valparaiso"
-the "Valley of Paradise," must have been thinking
-of Quillota. We crossed over to the Hacienda de San Isidro,
-situated at the very foot of the Bell Mountain.
-
-Chile, as may be seen in the maps, is a narrow strip of
-land between the Cordillera and the Pacific; and this strip
-is itself traversed by several mountain-lines, which in this
-part run parallel to the great range. Between these outer
-lines and the main Cordillera, a succession of level basins,
-generally opening into each other by narrow passages, extend
-far to the southward: in these, the principal towns are
-situated, as San Felipe, Santiago, San Fernando. These basins
-or plains, together with the transverse flat valleys (like that
-of Quillota) which connect them with the coast, I have no
-doubt are the bottoms of ancient inlets and deep bays, such
-as at the present day intersect every part of Tierra del Fuego
-and the western coast. Chile must formerly have resembled
-the latter country in the configuration of its land and water.
-The resemblance was occasionally shown strikingly when a
-level fog-bank covered, as with a mantle, all the lower parts
-of the country: the white vapour curling into the ravines,
-beautifully represented little coves and bays; and here and
-there a solitary hillock peeping up, showed that it had formerly
-stood there as an islet. The contrast of these flat
-valleys and basins with the irregular mountains, gave the
-scenery a character which to me was new and very interesting.
-
-From the natural slope to seaward of these plains, they
-are very easily irrigated, and in consequence singularly
-fertile. Without this process the land would produce scarcely
-anything, for during the whole summer the sky is cloudless.
-The mountains and hills are dotted over with bushes and
-low trees, and excepting these the vegetation is very scanty.
-Each landowner in the valley possesses a certain portion of
-hill-country, where his half-wild cattle, in considerable
-numbers, manage to find sufficient pasture. Once every year
-there is a grand "rodeo," when all the cattle are driven down,
-counted, and marked, and a certain number separated to be
-fattened in the irrigated fields. Wheat is extensively
-cultivated, and a good deal of Indian corn: a kind of bean is,
-however, the staple article of food for the common labourers.
-The orchards produce an overflowing abundance of peaches
-figs, and grapes. With all these advantages, the inhabitants
-of the country ought to be much more prosperous than they
-are.
-
-16th. -- The mayor-domo of the Hacienda was good enough
-to give me a guide and fresh horses; and in the morning we
-set out to ascend the Campana, or Bell Mountain, which is
-6400 feet high. The paths were very bad, but both the
-geology and scenery amply repaid the trouble. We reached
-by the evening, a spring called the Agua del Guanaco, which
-is situated at a great height. This must be an old name,
-for it is very many years since a guanaco drank its waters.
-During the ascent I noticed that nothing but bushes grew
-on the northern slope, whilst on the southern slope there was
-a bamboo about fifteen feet high. In a few places there were
-palms, and I was surprised to see one at an elevation of at
-least 4500 feet. These palms are, for their family, ugly trees.
-Their stem is very large, and of a curious form, being thicker
-in the middle than at the base or top. They are excessively
-numerous in some parts of Chile, and valuable on account of
-a sort of treacle made from the sap. On one estate near
-Petorca they tried to count them, but failed, after having
-numbered several hundred thousand. Every year in the early
-spring, in August, very many are cut down, and when the
-trunk is lying on the ground, the crown of leaves is lopped
-off. The sap then immediately begins to flow from the upper
-end, and continues so doing for some months: it is, however,
-necessary that a thin slice should be shaved off from
-that end every morning, so as to expose a fresh surface. A
-good tree will give ninety gallons, and all this must have
-been contained in the vessels of the apparently dry trunk.
-It is said that the sap flows much more quickly on those
-days when the sun is powerful; and likewise, that it is
-absolutely necessary to take care, in cutting down the tree,
-that it should fall with its head upwards on the side of the
-hill; for if it falls down the slope, scarcely any sap will
-flow; although in that case one would have thought that the
-action would have been aided, instead of checked, by the force
-of gravity. The sap is concentrated by boiling, and is then
-called treacle, which it very much resembles in taste.
-
-We unsaddled our horses near the spring, and prepared to
-pass the night. The evening was fine, and the atmosphere so
-clear, that the masts of the vessels at anchor in the bay of
-Valparaiso, although no less than twenty-six geographical
-miles distant, could be distinguished clearly as little black
-streaks. A ship doubling the point under sail, appeared as
-a bright white speck. Anson expresses much surprise, in his
-voyage, at the distance at which his vessels were discovered
-from the coast; but he did not sufficiently allow for the height
-of the land, and the great transparency of the air.
-
-The setting of the sun was glorious; the valleys being
-black whilst the snowy peaks of the Andes yet retained a
-ruby tint. When it was dark, we made a fire beneath a little
-arbour of bamboos, fried our charqui (or dried slips of beef),
-took our mate, and were quite comfortable. There is an
-inexpressible charm in thus living in the open air. The evening
-was calm and still; -- the shrill noise of the mountain
-bizcacha, and the faint cry of a goatsucker, were occasionally
-to be heard. Besides these, few birds, or even
-insects, frequent these dry, parched mountains.
-
-August 17th. -- In the morning we climbed up the rough
-mass of greenstone which crowns the summit. This rock, as
-frequently happens, was much shattered and broken into
-huge angular fragments. I observed, however, one remarkable
-circumstance, namely, that many of the surfaces presented
-every degree of freshness some appearing as if
-broken the day before, whilst on others lichens had either
-just become, or had long grown, attached. I so fully believed
-that this was owing to the frequent earthquakes, that I felt
-inclined to hurry from below each loose pile. As one might
-very easily be deceived in a fact of this kind, I doubted its
-accuracy, until ascending Mount Wellington, in Van Diemen's
-Land, where earthquakes do not occur; and there I saw
-the summit of the mountain similarly composed and similarly
-shattered, but all the blocks appeared as if they had been
-hurled into their present position thousands of years ago.
-
-We spent the day on the summit, and I never enjoyed one
-more thoroughly. Chile, bounded by the Andes and the
-Pacific, was seen as in a map. The pleasure from the scenery,
-in itself beautiful, was heightened by the many reflections
-which arose from the mere view of the Campana range with
-its lesser parallel ones, and of the broad valley of Quillota
-directly intersecting them. Who can avoid wondering at the
-force which has upheaved these mountains, and even more
-so at the countless ages which it must have required to have
-broken through, removed, and levelled whole masses of them?
-It is well in this case to call to mind the vast shingle and
-sedimentary beds of Patagonia, which, if heaped on the
-Cordillera, would increase its height by so many thousand feet.
-When in that country, I wondered how any mountain-chain
-could have supplied such masses, and not have been utterly
-obliterated. We must not now reverse the wonder, and doubt
-whether all-powerful time can grind down mountains -- even
-the gigantic Cordillera -- into-gravel and mud.
-
-The appearance of the Andes was different from that
-which I had expected. The lower line of the snow was of
-course horizontal, and to this line the even summits of the
-range seemed quite parallel. Only at long intervals, a group
-of points or a single cone showed where a volcano had
-existed, or does now exist. Hence the range resembled a
-great solid wall, surmounted here and there by a tower, and
-making a most perfect barrier to the country.
-
-Almost every part of the hill had been drilled by attempts
-to open gold-mines: the rage for mining has left scarcely
-a spot in Chile unexamined. I spent the evening as before,
-talking round the fire with my two companions. The Guasos
-of Chile, who correspond to the Gauchos of the Pampas, are,
-however, a very different set of beings. Chile is the more
-civilized of the two countries, and the inhabitants, in
-consequence, have lost much individual character. Gradations
-in rank are much more strongly marked: the Guaso does not
-by any means consider every man his equal; and I was quite
-surprised to find that my companions did not like to eat at
-the same time with myself. This feeling of inequality is a
-necessary consequence of the existence of an aristocracy of
-wealth. It is said that some few of the greater landowners
-possess from five to ten thousand pounds sterling per annum:
-an inequality of riches which I believe is not met with in
-any of the cattle-breeding countries eastward of the Andes.
-A traveller does not here meet that unbounded hospitality
-which refuses all payment, but yet is so kindly offered that
-no scruples can be raised in accepting it. Almost every house
-in Chile will receive you for the night, but a trifle is
-expected to be given in the morning; even a rich man will
-accept two or three shillings. The Gaucho, although he may be
-a cutthroat, is a gentleman; the Guaso is in few respects
-better, but at the same time a vulgar, ordinary fellow. The
-two men, although employed much in the same manner, are
-different in their habits and attire; and the peculiarities
-of each are universal in their respective countries. The Gaucho
-seems part of his horse, and scorns to exert himself except when
-on his back: the Guaso may be hired to work as a labourer in
-the fields. The former lives entirely on animal food; the latter
-almost wholly on vegetable. We do not here see the white
-boots, the broad drawers and scarlet chilipa; the picturesque
-costume of the Pampas. Here, common trousers are protected
-by black and green worsted leggings. The poncho,
-however, is common to both. The chief pride of the Guaso
-lies in his spurs, which are absurdly large. I measured one
-which was six inches in the _diameter_ of the rowel, and the
-rowel itself contained upwards of thirty points. The stirrups
-are on the same scale, each consisting of a square, carved
-block of wood, hollowed out, yet weighing three or four
-pounds. The Guaso is perhaps more expert with the lazo
-than the Gaucho; but, from the nature of the country, he
-does not know the use of the bolas.
-
-August 18th. -- We descended the mountain, and passed
-some beautiful little spots, with rivulets and fine trees.
-Having slept at the same hacienda as before, we rode during the
-two succeeding days up the valley, and passed through Quillota,
-which is more like a collection of nursery-gardens than
-a town. The orchards were beautiful, presenting one mass
-of peach-blossoms. I saw, also, in one or two places the
-date-palm; it is a most stately tree; and I should think a
-group of them in their native Asiatic or African deserts must
-be superb. We passed likewise San Felipe, a pretty straggling
-town like Quillota. The valley in this part expands into
-one of those great bays or plains, reaching to the foot of the
-Cordillera, which have been mentioned as forming so curious
-a part of the scenery of Chile. In the evening we reached
-the mines of Jajuel, situated in a ravine at the flank of the
-great chain. I stayed here five days. My host the superintendent
-of the mine, was a shrewd but rather ignorant Cornish
-miner. He had married a Spanish woman, and did not
-mean to return home; but his admiration for the mines of
-Cornwall remained unbounded. Amongst many other questions,
-he asked me, "Now that George Rex is dead, how
-many more of the family of Rexes are yet alive?" This Rex
-certainly must be a relation of the great author Finis, who
-wrote all books!
-
-These mines are of copper, and the ore is all shipped to
-Swansea, to be smelted. Hence the mines have an aspect
-singularly quiet, as compared to those in England: here no
-smoke, furnaces, or great steam-engines, disturb the solitude
-of the surrounding mountains.
-
-The Chilian government, or rather the old Spanish law,
-encourages by every method the searching for mines. The
-discoverer may work a mine on any ground, by paying five
-shillings; and before paying this he may try, even in the
-garden of another man, for twenty days.
-
-It is now well known that the Chilian method of mining
-is the cheapest. My host says that the two principal
-improvements introduced by foreigners have been, first,
-reducing by previous roasting the copper pyrites -- which,
-being the common ore in Cornwall, the English miners were
-astounded on their arrival to find thrown away as useless:
-secondly, stamping and washing the scoriae from the old
-furnaces -- by which process particles of metal are recovered
-in abundance. I have actually seen mules carrying to the
-coast, for transportation to England, a cargo of such cinders.
-But the first case is much the most curious. The Chilian
-miners were so convinced that copper pyrites contained not
-a particle of copper, that they laughed at the Englishmen
-for their ignorance, who laughed in turn, and bought their
-richest veins for a few dollars. It is very odd that, in a
-country where mining had been extensively carried on for many
-years, so simple a process as gently roasting the ore to expel
-the sulphur previous to smelting it, had never been discovered.
-A few improvements have likewise been introduced in some of the
-simple machinery; but even to the present day, water is
-removed from some mines by men carrying it up the shaft in
-leathern bags!
-
-The labouring men work very hard. They have little time
-allowed for their meals, and during summer and winter they
-begin when it is light, and leave off at dark. They are paid
-one pound sterling a month, and their food is given them:
-this for breakfast consists of sixteen figs and two small loaves
-of bread; for dinner, boiled beans; for supper, broken roasted
-wheat grain. They scarcely ever taste meat; as, with the
-twelve pounds per annum, they have to clothe themselves, and
-support their families. The miners who work in the mine
-itself have twenty-five shillings per month, and are allowed
-a little charqui. But these men come down from their bleak
-habitations only once in every fortnight or three weeks.
-
-During my stay here I thoroughly enjoyed scrambling
-about these huge mountains. The geology, as might have
-been expected, was very interesting. The shattered and
-baked rocks, traversed by innumerable dykes of greenstone,
-showed what commotions had formerly taken place. The
-scenery was much the same as that near the Bell of Quillota
--- dry barren mountains, dotted at intervals by bushes
-with a scanty foliage. The cactuses, or rather opuntias
-were here very numerous. I measured one of a spherical
-figure, which, including the spines, was six feet and four
-inches in circumference. The height of the common cylindrical,
-branching kind, is from twelve to fifteen feet, and
-the girth (with spines) of the branches between three and
-four feet.
-
-A heavy fall of snow on the mountains prevented me
-during the last two days, from making some interesting
-excursions. I attempted to reach a lake which the inhabitants,
-from some unaccountable reason, believe to be an arm
-of the sea. During a very dry season, it was proposed to
-attempt cutting a channel from it for the sake of the water,
-but the padre, after a consultation, declared it was too
-dangerous, as all Chile would be inundated, if, as generally
-supposed, the lake was connected with the Pacific. We
-ascended to a great height, but becoming involved in the
-snow-drifts failed in reaching this wonderful lake, and had
-some difficulty in returning. I thought we should have lost
-our horses; for there was no means of guessing how deep
-the drifts were, and the animals, when led, could only move
-by jumping. The black sky showed that a fresh snow-storm
-was gathering, and we therefore were not a little glad
-when we escaped. By the time we reached the base the
-storm commenced, and it was lucky for us that this did not
-happen three hours earlier in the day.
-
-August 26th. -- We left Jajuel and again crossed the basin
-of San Felipe. The day was truly Chilian: glaringly bright,
-and the atmosphere quite clear. The thick and uniform
-covering of newly fallen snow rendered the view of the volcano
-of Aconcagua and the main chain quite glorious. We
-were now on the road to Santiago, the capital of Chile. We
-crossed the Cerro del Talguen, and slept at a little rancho.
-The host, talking about the state of Chile as compared to
-other countries, was very humble: "Some see with two eyes,
-and some with one, but for my part I do not think that Chile
-sees with any."
-
-August 27th. -- After crossing many low hills we descended
-into the small land-locked plain of Guitron. In the basins,
-such as this one, which are elevated from one thousand to
-two thousand feet above the sea, two species of acacia, which
-are stunted in their forms, and stand wide apart from each
-other, grow in large numbers. These trees are never found
-near the sea-coast; and this gives another characteristic
-feature to the scenery of these basins. We crossed a low
-ridge which separates Guitron from the great plain on which
-Santiago stands. The view was here pre-eminently striking:
-the dead level surface, covered in parts by woods of acacia,
-and with the city in the distance, abutting horizontally
-against the base of the Andes, whose snowy peaks were
-bright with the evening sun. At the first glance of this
-view, it was quite evident that the plain represented the
-extent of a former inland sea. As soon as we gained the
-level road we pushed our horses into a gallop, and reached
-the city before it was dark.
-
-I stayed a week in Santiago, and enjoyed myself very
-much. In the morning I rode to various places on the plain,
-and in the evening dined with several of the English merchants,
-whose hospitality at this place is well known. A
-never-failing source of pleasure was to ascend the little
-hillock of rock (St. Lucia) which projects in the middle of
-the city. The scenery certainly is most striking, and, as I
-have said, very peculiar. I am informed that this same
-character is common to the cities on the great Mexican
-platform. Of the town I have nothing to say in detail: it is
-not so fine or so large as Buenos Ayres, but is built after the
-same model. I arrived here by a circuit to the north; so I
-resolved to return to Valparaiso by a rather longer excursion
-to the south of the direct road.
-
-September 5th. -- By the middle of the day we arrived at
-one of the suspension bridges, made of hide, which cross the
-Maypu, a large turbulent river a few leagues southward of
-Santiago. These bridges are very poor affairs. The road,
-following the curvature of the suspending ropes, is made of
-bundles of sticks placed close together. It was full of holes,
-and oscillated rather fearfully, even with the weight of a
-man leading his horse. In the evening we reached a comfortable
-farm-house, where there were several very pretty
-senoritas. They were much horrified at my having entered
-one of their churches out of mere curiosity. They asked
-me, "Why do you not become a Christian -- for our religion
-is certain?" I assured them I was a sort of Christian; but
-they would not hear of it -- appealing to my own words, "Do
-not your padres, your very bishops, marry?" The absurdity
-of a bishop having a wife particularly struck them: they
-scarcely knew whether to be most amused or horror-struck
-at such an enormity.
-
-6th. -- We proceeded due south, and slept at Rancagua.
-The road passed over the level but narrow plain, bounded on
-one side by lofty hills, and on the other by the Cordillera.
-The next day we turned up the valley of the Rio Cachapual,
-in which the hot-baths of Cauquenes, long celebrated for
-their medicinal properties, are situated. The suspension
-bridges, in the less frequented parts, are generally taken down
-during the winter when the rivers are low. Such was the
-case in this valley, and we were therefore obliged to cross
-the stream on horseback. This is rather disagreeable, for
-the foaming water, though not deep, rushes so quickly over
-the bed of large rounded stones, that one's head becomes
-quite confused, and it is difficult even to perceive whether
-the horse is moving onward or standing still. In summer,
-when the snow melts, the torrents are quite impassable; their
-strength and fury are then extremely great, as might be
-plainly seen by the marks which they had left. We reached
-the baths in the evening, and stayed there five days, being
-confined the two last by heavy rain. The buildings consist
-of a square of miserable little hovels, each with a single table
-and bench. They are situated in a narrow deep valley just
-without the central Cordillera. It is a quiet, solitary spot,
-with a good deal of wild beauty.
-
-The mineral springs of Cauquenes burst forth on a line of
-dislocation, crossing a mass of stratified rock, the whole
-of which betrays the action of heat. A considerable quantity
-of gas is continually escaping from the same orifices with
-the water. Though the springs are only a few yards apart,
-they have very different temperature; and this appears to be
-the result of an unequal mixture of cold water: for those
-with the lowest temperature have scarcely any mineral taste.
-After the great earthquake of 1822 the springs ceased, and
-the water did not return for nearly a year. They were also
-much affected by the earthquake of 1835; the temperature
-being suddenly changed from 118 to 92 degs. [1] It seems probable
-that mineral waters rising deep from the bowels of the earth,
-would always be more deranged by subterranean disturbances
-than those nearer the surface. The man who had charge of
-the baths assured me that in summer the water is hotter and
-more plentiful than in winter. The former circumstance I
-should have expected, from the less mixture, during the dry
-season, of cold water; but the latter statement appears very
-strange and contradictory. The periodical increase during
-the summer, when rain never falls, can, I think, only be
-accounted for by the melting of the snow: yet the mountains
-which are covered by snow during that season, are three or
-four leagues distant from the springs. I have no reason to
-doubt the accuracy of my informer, who, having lived on
-the spot for several years, ought to be well acquainted with
-the circumstance, -- which, if true, certainly is very curious:
-for we must suppose that the snow-water, being conducted
-through porous strata to the regions of heat, is again thrown
-up to the surface by the line of dislocated and injected rocks
-at Cauquenes; and the regularity of the phenomenon would
-seem to indicate that in this district heated rock occurred at
-a depth not very great.
-
-One day I rode up the valley to the farthest inhabited
-spot. Shortly above that point, the Cachapual divides into
-two deep tremendous ravines, which penetrate directly into
-the great range. I scrambled up a peaked mountain, probably
-more than six thousand feet high. Here, as indeed
-everywhere else, scenes of the highest interest presented
-themselves. It was by one of these ravines, that Pincheira
-entered Chile and ravaged the neighbouring country. This
-is the same man whose attack on an estancia at the Rio Negro
-I have described. He was a renegade half-caste Spaniard,
-who collected a great body of Indians together and established
-himself by a stream in the Pampas, which place none
-of the forces sent after him could ever discover. From this
-point he used to sally forth, and crossing the Cordillera by
-passes hitherto unattempted, he ravaged the farm-houses
-and drove the cattle to his secret rendezvous. Pincheira was
-a capital horseman, and he made all around him equally
-good, for he invariably shot any one who hesitated to follow
-him. It was against this man, and other wandering Indian
-tribes, that Rosas waged the war of extermination.
-
-September 13th. -- We left the baths of Cauquenes, and,
-rejoining the main road, slept at the Rio Clara. From this
-place we rode to the town of San Fernando. Before arriving
-there, the last land-locked basin had expanded into a great
-plain, which extended so far to the south, that the snowy
-summits of the more distant Andes were seen as if above the
-horizon of the sea. San Fernando is forty leagues from Santiago;
-and it was my farthest point southward; for we here
-turned at right angles towards the coast. We slept at the
-gold-mines of Yaquil, which are worked by Mr. Nixon, an
-American gentleman, to whose kindness I was much indebted
-during the four days I stayed at his house. The next
-morning we rode to the mines, which are situated at the
-distance of some leagues, near the summit of a lofty hill. On
-the way we had a glimpse of the lake Tagua-tagua, celebrated
-for its floating islands, which have been described by
-M. Gay. [2] They are composed of the stalks of various dead
-plants intertwined together, and on the surface of which
-other living ones take root. Their form is generally circular,
-and their thickness from four to six feet, of which the
-greater part is immersed in the water. As the wind blows,
-they pass from one side of the lake to the other, and often
-carry cattle and horses as passengers.
-
-When we arrived at the mine, I was struck by the pale
-appearance of many of the men, and inquired from Mr.
-Nixon respecting their condition. The mine is 450 feet deep,
-and each man brings up about 200 pounds weight of stone.
-With this load they have to climb up the alternate notches cut
-in the trunks of trees, placed in a zigzag line up the shaft.
-Even beardless young men, eighteen and twenty years old,
-with little muscular development of their bodies (they are
-quite naked excepting drawers) ascend with this great load
-from nearly the same depth. A strong man, who is not
-accustomed to this labour, perspires most profusely, with
-merely carrying up his own body. With this very severe
-labour, they live entirely on boiled beans and bread. They
-would prefer having bread alone; but their masters, finding
-that they cannot work so hard upon this, treat them like
-horses, and make them eat the beans. Their pay is here
-rather more than at the mines of Jajuel, being from 24 to 28
-shillings per month. They leave the mine only once in three
-weeks; when they stay with their families for two days. One
-of the rules of this mine sounds very harsh, but answers
-pretty well for the master. The only method of stealing gold
-is to secrete pieces of the ore, and take them out as occasion
-may offer. Whenever the major-domo finds a lump thus
-hidden, its full value is stopped out of the wages of all the
-men; who thus, without they all combine, are obliged to keep
-watch over each other.
-
-When the ore is brought to the mill, it is ground into an
-impalpable powder; the process of washing removes all the
-lighter particles, and amalgamation finally secures the
-gold-dust. The washing, when described, sounds a very simple
-process; but it is beautiful to see how the exact adaptation of
-the current of water to the specific gravity of the gold, so
-easily separates the powdered matrix from the metal. The
-mud which passes from the mills is collected into pools, where
-it subsides, and every now and then is cleared out, and thrown
-into a common heap. A great deal of chemical action then
-commences, salts of various kinds effloresce on the surface,
-and the mass becomes hard. After having been left for a year
-or two, and then rewashed, it yields gold; and this process
-may be repeated even six or seven times; but the gold each
-time becomes less in quantity, and the intervals required (as
-the inhabitants say, to generate the metal) are longer. There
-can be no doubt that the chemical action, already mentioned,
-each time liberates fresh gold from some combination. The
-discovery of a method to effect this before the first grinding
-would without doubt raise the value of gold-ores many fold.
-
-It is curious to find how the minute particles of gold, being
-scattered about and not corroding, at last accumulate in
-some quantity. A short time since a few miners, being out of
-work, obtained permission to scrape the ground round the
-house and mills; they washed the earth thus got together, and
-so procured thirty dollars' worth of gold. This is an exact
-counterpart of what takes place in nature. Mountains suffer
-degradation and wear away, and with them the metallic veins
-which they contain. The hardest rock is worn into impalpable
-mud, the ordinary metals oxidate, and both are removed;
-but gold, platina, and a few others are nearly indestructible,
-and from their weight, sinking to the bottom, are left behind.
-After whole mountains have passed through this grinding
-mill, and have been washed by the hand of nature, the residue
-becomes metalliferous, and man finds it worth his while to
-complete the task of separation.
-
-Bad as the above treatment of the miners appears, it is
-gladly accepted of by them; for the condition of the labouring
-agriculturists is much worse. Their wages are lower, and
-they live almost exclusively on beans. This poverty must be
-chiefly owing to the feudal-like system on which the land is
-tilled: the landowner gives a small plot of ground to the
-labourer for building on and cultivating, and in return has
-his services (or those of a proxy) for every day of his life,
-without any wages. Until a father has a grown-up son, who
-can by his labour pay the rent, there is no one, except on
-occasional days, to take care of his own patch of ground.
-Hence extreme poverty is very common among the labouring
-classes in this country.
-
-There are some old Indian ruins in this neighbourhood,
-and I was shown one of the perforated stones, which Molina
-mentions as being found in many places in considerable
-numbers. They are of a circular flattened form, from five to
-six inches in diameter, with a hole passing quite through the
-centre. It has generally been supposed that they were used
-as heads to clubs, although their form does not appear at all
-well adapted for that purpose. Burchell [3] states that some
-of the tribes in Southern Africa dig up roots by the aid of a
-stick pointed at one end, the force and weight of which are
-increased by a round stone with a hole in it, into which the
-other end is firmly wedged. It appears probable that the
-Indians of Chile formerly used some such rude agricultural
-instrument.
-
-One day, a German collector in natural history, of the
-name of Renous, called, and nearly at the same time an old
-Spanish lawyer. I was amused at being told the conversation
-which took place between them. Renous speaks Spanish so
-well, that the old lawyer mistook him for a Chilian. Renous
-alluding to me, asked him what he thought of the King of
-England sending out a collector to their country, to pick up
-lizards and beetles, and to break stones? The old gentleman
-thought seriously for some time, and then said, "It is not
-well, -- _hay un gato encerrado aqui_ (there is a cat shut up
-here). No man is so rich as to send out people to pick up
-such rubbish. I do not like it: if one of us were to go and
-do such things in England, do not you think the King of
-England would very soon send us out of his country?" And
-this old gentleman, from his profession, belongs to the better
-informed and more intelligent classes! Renous himself, two
-or three years before, left in a house at San Fernando some
-caterpillars, under charge of a girl to feed, that they might
-turn into butterflies. This was rumoured through the town,
-and at last the padres and governor consulted together, and
-agreed it must be some heresy. Accordingly, when Renous
-returned, he was arrested.
-
-September 19th. -- We left Yaquil, and followed the flat
-valley, formed like that of Quillota, in which the Rio
-Tinderidica flows. Even at these few miles south of Santiago
-the climate is much damper; in consequence there are fine
-tracts of pasturage, which are not irrigated. (20th.) We l
-followed this valley till it expanded into a great plain, which
-reaches from the sea to the mountains west of Rancagua.
-We shortly lost all trees and even bushes; so that the
-inhabitants are nearly as badly off for firewood as those in
-the Pampas. Never having heard of these plains, I was much
-surprised at meeting with such scenery in Chile. The plains
-belong to more than one series of different elevations, and
-they are traversed by broad flat-bottomed valleys; both of
-which circumstances, as in Patagonia, bespeak the action of
-the sea on gently rising land. In the steep cliffs bordering
-these valleys, there are some large caves, which no doubt
-were originally formed by the waves: one of these is celebrated
-under the name of Cueva del Obispo; having formerly
-been consecrated. During the day I felt very unwell, and
-from that time till the end of October did not recover.
-
-September 22nd. -- We continued to pass over green plains
-without a tree. The next day we arrived at a house near
-Navedad, on the sea-coast, where a rich Haciendero gave us
-lodgings. I stayed here the two ensuing days, and although
-very unwell, managed to collect from the tertiary formation
-some marine shells.
-
-24th. -- Our course was now directed towards Valparaiso,
-which with great difficulty I reached on the 27th, and was there
-confined to my bed till the end of October. During this time
-I was an inmate in Mr. Corfield's house, whose kindness to
-me I do not know how to express.
-
-
-I will here add a few observations on some of the animals
-and birds of Chile. The Puma, or South American Lion, is
-not uncommon. This animal has a wide geographical range;
-being found from the equatorial forests, throughout the
-deserts of Patagonia as far south as the damp and cold
-latitudes (53 to 54 degs.) of Tierra del Fuego. I have seen its
-footsteps in the Cordillera of central Chile, at an elevation of
-at least 10,000 feet. In La Plata the puma preys chiefly on
-deer, ostriches, bizcacha, and other small quadrupeds; it there
-seldom attacks cattle or horses, and most rarely man. In
-Chile, however, it destroys many young horses and cattle,
-owing probably to the scarcity of other quadrupeds: I heard,
-likewise, of two men and a woman who had been thus killed.
-It is asserted that the puma always kills its prey by springing
-on the shoulders, and then drawing back the head with one
-of its paws, until the vertebrae break: I have seen in Patagonia
-the skeletons of guanacos, with their necks thus
-dislocated.
-
-The puma, after eating its fill, covers the carcass with
-many large bushes, and lies down to watch it. This habit is
-often the cause of its being discovered; for the condors
-wheeling in the air every now and then descend to partake
-of the feast, and being angrily driven away, rise all together
-on the wing. The Chileno Guaso then knows there is a lion
-watching his prey -- the word is given -- and men and dogs
-hurry to the chase. Sir F. Head says that a Gaucho in the
-pampas, upon merely seeing some condors wheeling in the
-air, cried "A lion!" I could never myself meet with any one
-who pretended to such powers of discrimination. It is asserted
-that, if a puma has once been betrayed by thus watching
-the carcass, and has then been hunted, it never resumes
-this habit; but that, having gorged itself, it wanders far away.
-The puma is easily killed. In an open country, it is first
-entangled with the bolas, then lazoed, and dragged along the
-ground till rendered insensible. At Tandeel (south of the
-plata), I was told that within three months one hundred
-were thus destroyed. In Chile they are generally driven up
-bushes or trees, and are then either shot, or baited to death
-by dogs. The dogs employed in this chase belong to a particular
-breed, called Leoneros: they are weak, slight animals,
-like long-legged terriers, but are born with a particular
-instinct for this sport. The puma is described as being very
-crafty: when pursued, it often returns on its former track,
-and then suddenly making a spring on one side, waits there
-till the dogs have passed by. It is a very silent animal,
-uttering no cry even when wounded, and only rarely during
-the breeding season.
-
-Of birds, two species of the genus Pteroptochos (megapodius
-and albicollis of Kittlitz) are perhaps the most conspicuous.
-The former, called by the Chilenos "el Turco,"
-is as large as a fieldfare, to which bird it has some alliance;
-but its legs are much longer, tail shorter, and beak stronger:
-its colour is a reddish brown. The Turco is not uncommon.
-It lives on the ground, sheltered among the thickets which are
-scattered over the dry and sterile hills. With its tail erect,
-and stilt-like legs, it may be seen every now and then popping
-from one bush to another with uncommon quickness.
-It really requires little imagination to believe that the bird
-is ashamed of itself, and is aware of its most ridiculous
-figure. On first seeing it, one is tempted to exclaim, "A
-vilely stuffed specimen has escaped from some museum, and has
-come to life again!" It cannot be made to take flight without
-the greatest trouble, nor does it run, but only hops. The
-various loud cries which it utters when concealed amongst the
-bushes, are as strange as its appearance. It is said to build
-its nest in a deep hole beneath the ground. I dissected several
-specimens: the gizzard, which was very muscular, contained
-beetles, vegetable fibres, and pebbles. From this character,
-from the length of its legs, scratching feet, membranous
-covering to the nostrils, short and arched wings, this bird
-seems in a certain degree to connect the thrushes with the
-gallinaceous order.
-
-The second species (or P. albicollis) is allied to the first
-in its general form. It is called Tapacolo, or "cover your
-posterior;" and well does the shameless little bird deserve its
-name; for it carries its tail more than erect, that is, inclined
-backwards towards its head. It is very common, and frequents
-the bottoms of hedge-rows, and the bushes scattered
-over the barren hills, where scarcely another bird can exist.
-In its general manner of feeding, of quickly hopping out of
-the thickets and back again, in its desire of concealment,
-unwillingness to take flight, and nidification, it bears a close
-resemblance to the Turco; but its appearance is not quite so
-ridiculous. The Tapacolo is very crafty: when frightened by
-any person, it will remain motionless at the bottom of a bush,
-and will then, after a little while, try with much address to
-crawl away on the opposite side. It is also an active bird, and
-continually making a noise: these noises are various and
-strangely odd; some are like the cooing of doves, others like
-the bubbling of water, and many defy all similes. The country
-people say it changes its cry five times in the year --
-according to some change of season, I suppose. [4]
-
-Two species of humming-birds are common; Trochilus
-forficatus is found over a space of 2500 miles on the west
-coast, from the hot dry country of Lima, to the forests of
-Tierra del Fuego -- where it may be seen flitting about in
-snow-storms. In the wooded island of Chiloe, which has an
-extremely humid climate, this little bird, skipping from side
-to side amidst the dripping foliage, is perhaps more abundant
-than almost any other kind. I opened the stomachs of several
-specimens, shot in different parts of the continent, and in all,
-remains of insects were as numerous as in the stomach of a
-creeper. When this species migrates in the summer southward,
-it is replaced by the arrival of another species coming
-from the north. This second kind (Trochilus gigas) is a
-very large bird for the delicate family to which it belongs:
-when on the wing its appearance is singular. Like others
-of the genus, it moves from place to place with a rapidity
-which may be compared to that of Syrphus amongst flies,
-and Sphinx among moths; but whilst hovering over a flower,
-it flaps its wings with a very slow and powerful movement,
-totally different from that vibratory one common to most of
-the species, which produces the humming noise. I never saw
-any other bird where the force of its wings appeared (as in a
-butterfly) so powerful in proportion to the weight of its body.
-When hovering by a flower, its tail is constantly expanded
-and shut like a fan, the body being kept in a nearly vertical
-position. This action appears to steady and support the bird,
-between the slow movements of its wings. Although flying
-from flower to flower in search of food, its stomach generally
-contained abundant remains of insects, which I suspect are
-much more the object of its search than honey. The note of
-this species, like that of nearly the whole family, is
-extremely shrill.
-
-[1] Caldeleugh, in Philosoph. Transact. for 1836.
-
-[2] Annales des Sciences Naturelles, March, 1833. M. Gay, a
-zealous and able naturalist, was then occupied in studying
-every branch of natural history throughout the kingdom of
-Chile.
-
-[3] Burchess's Travels, vol. ii. p. 45.
-
-[4] It is a remarkable fact, that Molina, though describing
-in detail all the birds and animals of Chile, never once
-mentions this genus, the species of which are so common, and
-so remarkable in their habits. Was he at a loss how to
-classify them, and did he consequently think that silence
-was the more prudent course? It is one more instance of the
-frequency of omissions by authors, on those very subjects
-where it might have been least expected.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII
-
-CHILOE AND CHONOS ISLANDS
-
-Chiloe -- General Aspect -- Boat Excursion -- Native
-Indians -- Castro -- Tame Fox -- Ascend San Pedro -- Chonos
-Archipelago -- Peninsula of Tres Montes -- Granitic
-Range -- Boat-wrecked Sailors -- Low's Harbour -- Wild
-Potato -- Formation of Peat -- Myopotamus, Otter and Mice --
-Cheucau and Barking-bird -- Opetiorhynchus -- Singular
-Character of Ornithology -- Petrels.
-
-
-NOVEMBER 10th. -- The Beagle sailed from Valparaiso
-to the south, for the purpose of surveying the southern
-part of Chile, the island of Chiloe, and the broken
-land called the Chonos Archipelago, as far south as the
-Peninsula of Tres Montes. On the 21st we anchored in the
-bay of S. Carlos, the capital of Chiloe.
-
-This island is about ninety miles long, with a breadth of
-rather less than thirty. The land is hilly, but not mountainous,
-and is covered by one great forest, except where a few
-green patches have been cleared round the thatched cottages.
-From a distance the view somewhat resembles that of Tierra
-del Fuego; but the woods, when seen nearer, are incomparably
-more beautiful. Many kinds of fine evergreen trees, and
-plants with a tropical character, here take the place of the
-gloomy beech of the southern shores. In winter the climate
-is detestable, and in summer it is only a little better. I
-should think there are few parts of the world, within the
-temperate regions, where so much rain falls. The winds are
-very boisterous, and the sky almost always clouded: to have a
-week of fine weather is something wonderful. It is even
-difficult to get a single glimpse of the Cordillera: during
-our first visit, once only the volcano of Osorno stood out in
-bold relief, and that was before sunrise; it was curious to
-watch, as the sun rose, the outline gradually fading away in
-the glare of the eastern sky.
-
-The inhabitants, from their complexion and low stature;
-appear to have three-fourths of Indian blood in their veins.
-They are an humble, quiet, industrious set of men. Although
-the fertile soil, resulting from the decomposition of the
-volcanic rocks, supports a rank vegetation, yet the climate is
-not favourable to any production which requires much sunshine
-to ripen it. There is very little pasture for the larger
-quadrupeds; and in consequence, the staple articles of food are
-pigs, potatoes, and fish. The people all dress in strong
-woollen garments, which each family makes for itself, and
-dyes with indigo of a dark blue colour. The arts, however,
-are in the rudest state; -- as may be seen in their strange
-fashion of ploughing, their method of spinning, grinding
-corn, and in the construction of their boats. The forests are
-so impenetrable, that the land is nowhere cultivated except
-near the coast and on the adjoining islets. Even where paths
-exist, they are scarcely passable from the soft and swampy
-state of the soil. The inhabitants, like those of Tierra del
-Fuego, move about chiefly on the beach or in boats. Although
-with plenty to eat, the people are very poor: there is no
-demand for labour, and consequently the lower orders cannot
-scrape together money sufficient to purchase even the smallest
-luxuries. There is also a great deficiency of a circulating
-medium. I have seen a man bringing on his back a bag of
-charcoal, with which to buy some trifle, and another carrying
-a plank to exchange for a bottle of wine. Hence every tradesman
-must also be a merchant, and again sell the goods which
-he takes in exchange.
-
-November 24th. -- The yawl and whale-boat were sent under
-the command of Mr. (now Captain) Sulivan, to survey the
-eastern or inland coast of Chiloe; and with orders to meet
-the Beagle at the southern extremity of the island; to which
-point she would proceed by the outside, so as thus to
-circumnavigate the whole. I accompanied this expedition, but
-instead of going in the boats the first day, I hired horses to
-take me to Chacao, at the northern extremity of the island.
-The road followed the coast; every now and then crossing
-promontories covered by fine forests. In these shaded paths
-it is absolutely necessary that the whole road should be made
-of logs of wood, which are squared and placed by the side of
-each other. From the rays of the sun never penetrating the
-evergreen foliage, the ground is so damp and soft, that except
-by this means neither man nor horse would be able to pass
-along. I arrived at the village of Chacao shortly after the
-tents belonging to the boats were pitched for the night.
-
-The land in this neighbourhood has been extensively
-cleared, and there were many quiet and most picturesque
-nooks in the forest. Chacao was formerly the principal port
-in the island; but many vessels having been lost, owing to the
-dangerous currents and rocks in the straits, the Spanish
-government burnt the church, and thus arbitrarily compelled the
-greater number of inhabitants to migrate to S. Carlos. We
-had not long bivouacked, before the barefooted son of the
-governor came down to reconnoitre us. Seeing the English
-flag hoisted at the yawl's mast-head, he asked with the utmost
-indifference, whether it was always to fly at Chacao. In several
-places the inhabitants were much astonished at the
-appearance of men-of-war's boats, and hoped and believed
-it was the forerunner of a Spanish fleet, coming to recover
-the island from the patriot government of Chile. All the
-men in power, however, had been informed of our intended
-visit, and were exceedingly civil. While we were eating our
-supper, the governor paid us a visit. He had been a lieutenant-
-colonel in the Spanish service, but now was miserably
-poor. He gave us two sheep, and accepted in return two cotton
-handkerchiefs, some brass trinkets, and a little tobacco.
-
-25th. -- Torrents of rain: we managed, however, to run
-down the coast as far as Huapi-lenou. The whole of this
-eastern side of Chiloe has one aspect; it is a plain, broken by
-valleys and divided into little islands, and the whole thickly
-covered with one impervious blackish-green forest. On the
-margins there are some cleared spaces, surrounding the high-
-roofed cottages.
-
-26th -- The day rose splendidly clear. The volcano of
-Orsono was spouting out volumes of smoke. This most
-beautiful mountain, formed like a perfect cone, and white
-with snow, stands out in front of the Cordillera. Another
-great volcano, with a saddle-shaped summit, also emitted
-from its immense crater little jets of steam. Subsequently
-we saw the lofty-peaked Corcovado -- well deserving the name
-of "el famoso Corcovado." Thus we beheld, from one point
-of view, three great active volcanoes, each about seven thousand
-feet high. In addition to this, far to the south, there
-were other lofty cones covered with snow, which, although
-not known to be active, must be in their origin volcanic.
-The line of the Andes is not, in this neighbourhood, nearly
-so elevated as in Chile; neither does it appear to form so
-perfect a barrier between the regions of the earth. This
-great range, although running in a straight north and south
-line, owing to an optical deception, always appeared more or
-less curved; for the lines drawn from each peak to the
-beholder's eye, necessarily converged like the radii of a
-semicircle, and as it was not possible (owing to the clearness
-of the atmosphere and the absence of all intermediate objects)
-to judge how far distant the farthest peaks were off,
-they appeared to stand in a flattish semicircle.
-
-Landing at midday, we saw a family of pure Indian extraction.
-The father was singularly like York Minster; and some
-of the younger boys, with their ruddy complexions, might
-have been mistaken for Pampas Indians. Everything I have
-seen, convinces me of the close connexion of the different
-American tribes, who nevertheless speak distinct languages.
-This party could muster but little Spanish, and talked to each
-other in their own tongue. It is a pleasant thing to see the
-aborigines advanced to the same degree of civilization, however
-low that may be, which their white conquerors have
-attained. More to the south we saw many pure Indians:
-indeed, all the inhabitants of some of the islets retain their
-Indian surnames. In the census of 1832, there were in Chiloe
-and its dependencies forty-two thousand souls; the greater
-number of these appear to be of mixed blood. Eleven thousand
-retain their Indian surnames, but it is probable that not
-nearly all of these are of a pure breed. Their manner of life
-is the same with that of the other poor inhabitants, and they
-are all Christians; but it is said that they yet retain some
-strange superstitious ceremonies, and that they pretend to
-hold communication with the devil in certain caves. Formerly,
-every one convicted of this offence was sent to the
-Inquisition at Lima. Many of the inhabitants who are not
-included in the eleven thousand with Indian surnames, cannot
-be distinguished by their appearance from Indians.
-Gomez, the governor of Lemuy, is descended from noblemen
-of Spain on both sides; but by constant intermarriages with
-the natives the present man is an Indian. On the other hand
-the governor of Quinchao boasts much of his purely kept
-Spanish blood.
-
-We reached at night a beautiful little cove, north of the
-island of Caucahue. The people here complained of want of
-land. This is partly owing to their own negligence in not
-clearing the woods, and partly to restrictions by the government,
-which makes it necessary, before buying ever so small
-a piece, to pay two shillings to the surveyor for measuring
-each quadra (150 yards square), together with whatever
-price he fixes for the value of the land. After his valuation
-the land must be put up three times to auction, and if no one
-bids more, the purchaser can have it at that rate. All these
-exactions must be a serious check to clearing the ground,
-where the inhabitants are so extremely poor. In most countries,
-forests are removed without much difficulty by the aid
-of fire; but in Chiloe, from the damp nature of the climate,
-and the sort of trees, it is necessary first to cut them down.
-This is a heavy drawback to the prosperity of Chiloe. In the
-time of the Spaniards the Indians could not hold land; and a
-family, after having cleared a piece of ground, might be
-driven away, and the property seized by the government.
-The Chilian authorities are now performing an act of justice
-by making retribution to these poor Indians, giving to each
-man, according to his grade of life, a certain portion of land.
-The value of uncleared ground is very little. The government
-gave Mr. Douglas (the present surveyor, who informed
-me of these circumstances) eight and a half square miles of
-forest near S. Carlos, in lieu of a debt; and this he sold for
-350 dollars, or about 70 pounds sterling.
-
-The two succeeding days were fine, and at night we reached
-the island of Quinchao. This neighbourhood is the most cultivated
-part of the Archipelago; for a broad strip of land on
-the coast of the main island, as well as on many of the smaller
-adjoining ones, is almost completely cleared. Some of the
-farm-houses seemed very comfortable. I was curious to
-ascertain how rich any of these people might be, but Mr.
-Douglas says that no one can be considered as possessing a
-regular income. One of the richest landowners might possibly
-accumulate, in a long industrious life, as much as 1000 pounds
-sterling; but should this happen, it would all be stowed away
-in some secret corner, for it is the custom of almost every
-family to have a jar or treasure-chest buried in the ground.
-
-November 30th. -- Early on Sunday morning we reached
-Castro, the ancient capital of Chiloe, but now a most forlorn
-and deserted place. The usual quadrangular arrangement
-of Spanish towns could be traced, but the streets and plaza
-were coated with fine green turf, on which sheep were
-browsing. The church, which stands in the middle, is entirely
-built of plank, and has a picturesque and venerable appearance.
-The poverty of the place may be conceived from the
-fact, that although containing some hundreds of inhabitants,
-one of our party was unable anywhere to purchase either a
-pound of sugar or an ordinary knife. No individual possessed
-either a watch or a clock; and an old man, who was supposed
-to have a good idea of time, was employed to strike the
-church bell by guess. The arrival of our boats was a rare
-event in this quiet retired corner of the world; and nearly all
-the inhabitants came down to the beach to see us pitch our
-tents. They were very civil, and offered us a house; and one
-man even sent us a cask of cider as a present. In the afternoon
-we paid our respects to the governor -- a quiet old man,
-who, in his appearance and manner of life, was scarcely
-superior to an English cottager. At night heavy rain set in,
-which was hardly sufficient to drive away from our tents the
-large circle of lookers-on. An Indian family, who had come
-to trade in a canoe from Caylen, bivouacked near us. They
-had no shelter during the rain. In the morning I asked a
-young Indian, who was wet to the skin, how he had passed
-the night. He seemed perfectly content, and answered, "Muy
-bien, senor."
-
-December 1st. -- We steered for the island of Lemuy. I
-was anxious to examine a reported coal-mine which turned
-out to be lignite of little value, in the sandstone (probably
-of an ancient tertiary epoch) of which these islands are
-composed. When we reached Lemuy we had much difficulty in
-finding any place to pitch our tents, for it was spring-tide,
-and the land was wooded down to the water's edge. In a
-short time we were surrounded by a large group of the nearly
-pure Indian inhabitants. They were much surprised at our
-arrival, and said one to the other, "This is the reason we
-have seen so many parrots lately; the cheucau (an odd red-
-breasted little bird, which inhabits the thick forest, and utters
-very peculiar noises) has not cried 'beware' for nothing."
-They were soon anxious for barter. Money was scarcely
-worth anything, but their eagerness for tobacco was something
-quite extraordinary. After tobacco, indigo came next
-in value; then capsicum, old clothes, and gunpowder. The
-latter article was required for a very innocent purpose: each
-parish has a public musket, and the gunpowder was wanted
-for making a noise on their saint or feast days.
-
-The people here live chiefly on shell-fish and potatoes. At
-certain seasons they catch also, in "corrales," or hedges
-under water, many fish which are left on the mud-banks as
-the tide falls. They occasionally possess fowls, sheep, goats,
-pigs, horses, and cattle; the order in which they are here
-mentioned, expressing their respective numbers. I never
-saw anything more obliging and humble than the manners
-of these people. They generally began with stating that
-they were poor natives of the place, and not Spaniards
-and that they were in sad want of tobacco and other comforts.
-At Caylen, the most southern island, the sailors
-bought with a stick of tobacco, of the value of three-halfpence,
-two fowls, one of which, the Indian stated, had skin
-between its toes, and turned out to be a fine duck; and with
-some cotton handkerchiefs, worth three shillings, three sheep
-and a large bunch of onions were procured. The yawl at
-this place was anchored some way from the shore, and we
-had fears for her safety from robbers during the night. Our
-pilot, Mr. Douglas, accordingly told the constable of the
-district that we always placed sentinels with loaded arms
-and not understanding Spanish, if we saw any person in the
-dark, we should assuredly shoot him. The constable, with
-much humility, agreed to the perfect propriety of this
-arrangement, and promised us that no one should stir out
-of his house during that night.
-
-During the four succeeding days we continued sailing
-southward. The general features of the country remained
-the same, but it was much less thickly inhabited. On the
-large island of Tanqui there was scarcely one cleared spot,
-the trees on every side extending their branches over the
-sea-beach. I one day noticed, growing on the sandstone
-cliffs, some very fine plants of the panke (Gunnera scabra),
-which somewhat resembles the rhubarb on a gigantic scale.
-The inhabitants eat the stalks, which are subacid, and tan
-leather with the roots, and prepare a black dye from them.
-The leaf is nearly circular, but deeply indented on its margin.
-I measured one which was nearly eight feet in diameter,
-and therefore no less than twenty-four in circumference!
-The stalk is rather more than a yard high, and each
-plant sends out four or five of these enormous leaves,
-presenting together a very noble appearance.
-
-December 6th. -- We reached Caylen, called "el fin del
-Cristiandad." In the morning we stopped for a few minutes
-at a house on the northern end of Laylec, which was the
-extreme point of South American Christendom, and a miserable
-hovel it was. The latitude is 43 degs. 10', which is two
-degrees farther south than the Rio Negro on the Atlantic
-coast. These extreme Christians were very poor, and, under
-the plea of their situation, begged for some tobacco. As a
-proof of the poverty of these Indians, I may mention that
-shortly before this, we had met a man, who had travelled
-three days and a half on foot, and had as many to return,
-for the sake of recovering the value of a small axe and a few
-fish. How very difficult it must be to buy the smallest article,
-when such trouble is taken to recover so small a debt.
-
-In the evening we reached the island of San Pedro, where
-we found the Beagle at anchor. In doubling the point, two
-of the officers landed to take a round of angles with the
-theodolite. A fox (Canis fulvipes), of a kind said to be
-peculiar to the island, and very rare in it, and which is a new
-species, was sitting on the rocks. He was so intently absorbed
-in watching the work of the officers, that I was able,
-by quietly walking up behind, to knock him on the head
-with my geological hammer. This fox, more curious or
-more scientific, but less wise, than the generality of his
-brethren, is now mounted in the museum of the Zoological
-Society.
-
-We stayed three days in this harbour, on one of which
-Captain Fitz Roy, with a party, attempted to ascend to the
-summit of San Pedro. The woods here had rather a different
-appearance from those on the northern part of the island.
-The rock, also, being micaceous slate, there was no beach,
-but the steep sides dipped directly beneath the water. The
-general aspect in consequence was more like that of Tierra
-del Fuego than of Chiloe. In vain we tried to gain the
-summit: the forest was so impenetrable, that no one who
-has not beheld it can imagine so entangled a mass of dying
-and dead trunks. I am sure that often, for more than ten
-minutes together, our feet never touched the ground, and
-we were frequently ten or fifteen feet above it, so that the
-seamen as a joke called out the soundings. At other times
-we crept one after another on our hands and knees, under
-the rotten trunks. In the lower part of the mountain, noble
-trees of the Winter's Bark, and a laurel like the sassafras
-with fragrant leaves, and others, the names of which I do
-not know, were matted together by a trailing bamboo or cane.
-Here we were more like fishes struggling in a net than any
-other animal. On the higher parts, brushwood takes the
-place of larger trees, with here and there a red cedar or an
-alerce pine. I was also pleased to see, at an elevation of a
-little less than 1000 feet, our old friend the southern beech.
-They were, however, poor stunted trees, and I should think
-that this must be nearly their northern limit. We ultimately
-gave up the attempt in despair.
-
-December 10th. -- The yawl and whale-boat, with Mr.
-Sulivan, proceeded on their survey, but I remained on board
-the Beagle, which the next day left San Pedro for the southward.
-On the 13th we ran into an opening in the southern
-part of Guayatecas, or the Chonos Archipelago; and it was
-fortunate we did so, for on the following day a storm, worthy
-of Tierra del Fuego, raged with great fury. White massive
-clouds were piled up against a dark blue sky, and across them
-black ragged sheets of vapour were rapidly driven. The
-successive mountain ranges appeared like dim shadows, and
-the setting sun cast on the woodland a yellow gleam, much
-like that produced by the flame of spirits of wine. The water
-was white with the flying spray, and the wind lulled and
-roared again through the rigging: it was an ominous, sublime
-scene. During a few minutes there was a bright rainbow,
-and it was curious to observe the effect of the spray,
-which being carried along the surface of the water, changed
-the ordinary semicircle into a circle -- a band of prismatic
-colours being continued, from both feet of the common arch
-across the bay, close to the vessel's side: thus forming a
-distorted, but very nearly entire ring.
-
-We stayed here three days. The weather continued bad:
-but this did not much signify, for the surface of the land
-in all these islands is all but impassable. The coast is so
-very rugged that to attempt to walk in that direction requires
-continued scrambling up and down over the sharp
-rocks of mica-slate; and as for the woods, our faces, hands,
-and shin-bones all bore witness to the maltreatment we
-received, in merely attempting to penetrate their forbidden
-recesses.
-
-December 18th. -- We stood out to sea. On the 20th we
-bade farewell to the south, and with a fair wind turned the
-ship's head northward. From Cape Tres Montes we sailed
-pleasantly along the lofty weather-beaten coast, which is
-remarkable for the bold outline of its hills, and the thick
-covering of forest even on the almost precipitous flanks. The
-next day a harbour was discovered, which on this dangerous
-coast might be of great service to a distressed vessel. It
-can easily be recognized by a hill 1600 feet high, which is
-even more perfectly conical than the famous sugar-loaf at
-Rio de Janeiro. The next day, after anchoring, I succeeded
-in reaching the summit of this hill. It was a laborious
-undertaking, for the sides were so steep that in some parts it
-was necessary to use the trees as ladders. There were also
-several extensive brakes of the Fuchsia, covered with its
-beautiful drooping flowers, but very difficult to crawl through.
-In these wild countries it gives much delight to gain the summit
-of any mountain. There is an indefinite expectation of seeing
-something very strange, which, however often it may be
-balked, never failed with me to recur on each successive
-attempt. Every one must know the feeling of triumph and
-pride which a grand view from a height communicates to the
-mind. In these little frequented countries there is also joined
-to it some vanity, that you perhaps are the first man who ever
-stood on this pinnacle or admired this view.
-
-A strong desire is always felt to ascertain whether any
-human being has previously visited an unfrequented spot.
-A bit of wood with a nail in it, is picked up and studied as
-if it were covered with hieroglyphics. Possessed with this
-feeling, I was much interested by finding, on a wild part of
-the coast, a bed made of grass beneath a ledge of rock. Close
-by it there had been a fire, and the man had used an axe.
-The fire, bed, and situation showed the dexterity of an Indian;
-but he could scarcely have been an Indian, for the race is
-in this part extinct, owing to the Catholic desire of making
-at one blow Christians and Slaves. I had at the time some
-misgivings that the solitary man who had made his bed on
-this wild spot, must have been some poor shipwrecked sailor,
-who, in trying to travel up the coast, had here laid himself
-down for his dreary night.
-
-December 28th. -- The weather continued very bad, but it
-at last permitted us to proceed with the survey. The time
-hung heavy on our hands, as it always did when we were
-delayed from day to day by successive gales of wind. In
-the evening another harbour was discovered, where we
-anchored. Directly afterwards a man was seen waving a
-shirt, and a boat was sent which brought back two seamen.
-A party of six had run away from an American whaling
-vessel, and had landed a little to the southward in a boat,
-which was shortly afterwards knocked to pieces by the surf.
-They had now been wandering up and down the coast for
-fifteen months, without knowing which way to go, or where
-they were. What a singular piece of good fortune it was
-that this harbour was now discovered! Had it not been for
-this one chance, they might have wandered till they had
-grown old men, and at last have perished on this wild coast.
-Their sufferings had been very great, and one of their party
-had lost his life by falling from the cliffs. They were
-sometimes obliged to separate in search of food, and this
-explained the bed of the solitary man. Considering what they
-had undergone, I think they had kept a very good reckoning of
-time, for they had lost only four days.
-
-December 30th. -- We anchored in a snug little cove at the
-foot of some high hills, near the northern extremity of Tres
-Montes. After breakfast the next morning, a party ascended
-one of these mountains, which was 2400 feet high. The
-scenery was remarkable The chief part of the range was
-composed of grand, solid, abrupt masses of granite, which
-appeared as if they had been coeval with the beginning of
-the world. The granite was capped with mica-slate, and this
-in the lapse of ages had been worn into strange finger-
-shaped points. These two formations, thus differing in their
-outlines, agree in being almost destitute of vegetation. This
-barrenness had to our eyes a strange appearance, from having
-been so long accustomed to the sight of an almost universal
-forest of dark-green trees. I took much delight in examining
-the structure of these mountains. The complicated and lofty
-ranges bore a noble aspect of durability -- equally profitless,
-however, to man and to all other animals. Granite to the
-geologist is classic ground: from its widespread limits, and its
-beautiful and compact texture, few rocks have been more
-anciently recognised. Granite has given rise, perhaps, to
-more discussion concerning its origin than any other formation.
-We generally see it constituting the fundamental rock,
-and, however formed, we know it is the deepest layer in the
-crust of this globe to which man has penetrated. The limit
-of man's knowledge in any subject possesses a high interest,
-which is perhaps increased by its close neighbourhood to the
-realms of imagination.
-
-January 1st 1835. -- The new year is ushered in with the
-ceremonies proper to it in these regions. She lays out no
-false hopes: a heavy north-western gale, with steady rain,
-bespeaks the rising year. Thank God, we are not destined
-here to see the end of it, but hope then to be in the Pacific
-Ocean, where a blue sky tells one there is a heaven, -- a
-something beyond the clouds above our heads.
-
-The north-west winds prevailing for the next four days,
-we only managed to cross a great bay, and then anchored in
-another secure harbour. I accompanied the Captain in a
-boat to the head of a deep creek. On the way the number of
-seals which we saw was quite astonishing: every bit of flat
-rock, and parts of the beach, were covered with them. There
-appeared to be of a loving disposition, and lay huddled
-together, fast asleep, like so many pigs; but even pigs would
-have been ashamed of their dirt, and of the foul smell which
-came from them. Each herd was watched by the patient but
-inauspicious eyes of the turkey-buzzard. This disgusting bird,
-with its bald scarlet head, formed to wallow in putridity, is
-very common on the west coast, and their attendance on the
-seals shows on what they rely for their food. We found the
-water (probably only that of the surface) nearly fresh: this
-was caused by the number of torrents which, in the form
-of cascades, came tumbling over the bold granite mountains
-into the sea. The fresh water attracts the fish, and these
-bring many terns, gulls, and two kinds of cormorant. We
-saw also a pair of the beautiful black-necked swans, and
-several small sea-otters, the fur of which is held in such
-high estimation. In returning, we were again amused by the
-impetuous manner in which the heap of seals, old and young,
-tumbled into the water as the boat passed. They did not
-remain long under water, but rising, followed us with
-outstretched necks, expressing great wonder and curiosity.
-
-7th. -- Having run up the coast, we anchored near the
-northern end of the Chonos Archipelago, in Low's Harbour,
-where we remained a week. The islands were here, as in
-Chiloe, composed of a stratified, soft, littoral deposit; and
-the vegetation in consequence was beautifully luxuriant. The
-woods came down to the sea-beach, just in the manner of
-an evergreen shrubbery over a gravel walk. We also enjoyed
-from the anchorage a splendid view of four great snowy
-cones of the Cordillera, including "el famoso Corcovado;"
-the range itself had in this latitude so little height, that few
-parts of it appeared above the tops of the neighbouring
-islets. We found here a party of five men from Caylen, "el
-fin del Cristiandad," who had most adventurously crossed in
-their miserable boat-canoe, for the purpose of fishing, the
-open space of sea which separates Chonos from Chiloe. These
-islands will, in all probability, in a short time become peopled
-like those adjoining the coast of Chiloe.
-
-
-The wild potato grows on these islands in great abundance,
-on the sandy, shelly soil near the sea-beach. The tallest
-plant was four feet in height. The tubers were generally
-small, but I found one, of an oval shape, two inches in
-diameter: they resembled in every respect, and had the same
-smell as English potatoes; but when boiled they shrunk much,
-and were watery and insipid, without any bitter taste. They
-are undoubtedly here indigenous: they grow as far south,
-according to Mr. Low, as lat. 50 degs., and are called Aquinas by
-the wild Indians of that part: the Chilotan Indians have a
-different name for them. Professor Henslow, who has examined
-the dried specimens which I brought home, says that
-they are the same with those described by Mr. Sabine [1] from
-Valparaiso, but that they form a variety which by some
-botanists has been considered as specifically distinct. It is
-remarkable that the same plant should be found on the sterile
-mountains of central Chile, where a drop of rain does not
-fall for more than six months, and within the damp forests
-of these southern islands.
-
-In the central parts of the Chonos Archipelago (lat. 45 degs.),
-the forest has very much the same character with that along
-the whole west coast, for 600 miles southward to Cape Horn.
-The arborescent grass of Chiloe is not found here; while the
-beech of Tierra del Fuego grows to a good size, and forms a
-considerable proportion of the wood; not, however, in the
-same exclusive manner as it does farther southward. Cryptogamic
-plants here find a most congenial climate. In the Strait
-of Magellan, as I have before remarked, the country appears
-too cold and wet to allow of their arriving at perfection; but
-in these islands, within the forest, the number of species and
-great abundance of mosses, lichens, and small ferns, is quite
-extraordinary. [2] In Tierra del Fuego trees grow only on the
-hill-sides; every level piece of land being invariably covered
-by a thick bed of peat; but in Chiloe flat land supports the
-most luxuriant forests. Here, within the Chonos Archipelago,
-the nature of the climate more closely approaches that
-of Tierra del Fuego than that of northern Chiloe; for every
-patch of level ground is covered by two species of plants
-(Astelia pumila and Donatia magellanica), which by their
-joint decay compose a thick bed of elastic peat.
-
-In Tierra del Fuego, above the region of woodland, the
-former of these eminently sociable plants is the chief agent
-in the production of peat. Fresh leaves are always succeeding
-one to the other round the central tap-root, the lower
-ones soon decay, and in tracing a root downwards in the peat,
-the leaves, yet holding their place, can be observed passing
-through every stage of decomposition, till the whole becomes
-blended in one confused mass. The Astelia is assisted by a
-few other plants, -- here and there a small creeping Myrtus
-(M. nummularia), with a woody stem like our cranberry and
-with a sweet berry, -- an Empetrum (E. rubrum), like our
-heath, -- a rush (Juncus grandiflorus), are nearly the only
-ones that grow on the swampy surface. These plants, though
-possessing a very close general resemblance to the English
-species of the same genera, are different. In the more level
-parts of the country, the surface of the peat is broken up into
-little pools of water, which stand at different heights, and
-appear as if artificially excavated. Small streams of water,
-flowing underground, complete the disorganization of the
-vegetable matter, and consolidate the whole.
-
-The climate of the southern part of America appears particularly
-favourable to the production of peat. In the Falkland
-Islands almost every kind of plant, even the coarse grass
-which covers the whole surface of the land, becomes converted
-into this substance: scarcely any situation checks its
-growth; some of the beds are as much as twelve feet thick,
-and the lower part becomes so solid when dry, that it will
-hardly burn. Although every plant lends its aid, yet in most
-parts the Astelia is the most efficient. It is rather a singular
-circumstance, as being so very different from what occurs
-in Europe, that I nowhere saw moss forming by its decay
-any portion of the peat in South America. With respect to
-the northern limit, at which the climate allows of that peculiar
-kind of slow decomposition which is necessary for its
-production, I believe that in Chiloe (lat. 41 to 42 degs.),
-although there is much swampy ground, no well-characterized peat
-occurs: but in the Chonos Islands, three degrees farther
-southward, we have seen that it is abundant. On the eastern
-coast in La Plata (lat. 35 degs.) I was told by a Spanish
-resident who had visited Ireland, that he had often sought for
-this substance, but had never been able to find any. He showed
-me, as the nearest approach to it which he had discovered, a
-black peaty soil, so penetrated with roots as to allow of an
-extremely slow and imperfect combustion.
-
-
-The zoology of these broken islets of the Chonos Archipelago
-is, as might have been expected, very poor. Of quadrupeds
-two aquatic kinds are common. The Myopotamus
-Coypus (like a beaver, but with a round tail) is well known
-from its fine fur, which is an object of trade throughout the
-tributaries of La Plata. It here, however, exclusively frequents
-salt water; which same circumstance has been mentioned
-as sometimes occurring with the great rodent, the
-Capybara. A small sea-otter is very numerous; this animal
-does not feed exclusively on fish, but, like the seals, draws a
-large supply from a small red crab, which swims in shoals
-near the surface of the water. Mr. Bynoe saw one in Tierra
-del Fuego eating a cuttle-fish; and at Low's Harbour, another
-was killed in the act of carrying to its hole a large volute
-shell. At one place I caught in a trap a singular little mouse
-(M. brachiotis); it appeared common on several of the islets,
-but the Chilotans at Low's Harbour said that it was not found
-in all. What a succession of chances, [3] or what changes of
-level must have been brought into play, thus to spread these
-small animals throughout this broken archipelago!
-
-In all parts of Chiloe and Chonos, two very strange birds
-occur, which are allied to, and replace, the Turco and Tapacolo
-of central Chile. One is called by the inhabitants
-"Cheucau" (Pteroptochos rubecula): it frequents the most
-gloomy and retired spots within the damp forests. Sometimes,
-although its cry may be heard close at hand, let a person
-watch ever so attentively he will not see the cheucau; at
-other times, let him stand motionless and the red-breasted
-little bird will approach within a few feet in the most familiar
-manner. It then busily hops about the entangled mass of
-rotting cones and branches, with its little tail cocked upwards.
-The cheucau is held in superstitious fear by the Chilotans, on
-account of its strange and varied cries. There are three
-very distinct cries: One is called "chiduco," and is an omen
-of good; another, "huitreu," which is extremely unfavourable;
-and a third, which I have forgotten. These words are
-given in imitation of the noises; and the natives are in some
-things absolutely governed by them. The Chilotans assuredly
-have chosen a most comical little creature for their prophet.
-An allied species, but rather larger, is called by the natives
-"Guid-guid" (Pteroptochos Tarnii), and by the English the
-barking-bird. This latter name is well given; for I defy any
-one at first to feel certain that a small dog is not yelping
-somewhere in the forest. Just as with the cheucau, a person
-will sometimes hear the bark close by, but in vain many
-endeavour by watching, and with still less chance by beating
-the bushes, to see the bird; yet at other times the guid-guid
-fearlessly comes near. Its manner of feeding and its general
-habits are very similar to those of the cheucau.
-
-On the coast, [4] a small dusky-coloured bird (Opetiorhynchus
-Patagonicus) is very common. It is remarkable from
-its quiet habits; it lives entirely on the sea-beach, like a
-sandpiper. Besides these birds only few others inhabit this
-broken land. In my rough notes I describe the strange
-noises, which, although frequently heard within these gloomy
-forests, yet scarcely disturb the general silence. The yelping
-of the guid-guid, and the sudden whew-whew of the
-cheucau, sometimes come from afar off, and sometimes from
-close at hand; the little black wren of Tierra del Fuego
-occasionally adds its cry; the creeper (Oxyurus) follows the
-intruder screaming and twittering; the humming-bird may
-be seen every now and then darting from side to side, and
-emitting, like an insect, its shrill chirp; lastly, from the top
-of some lofty tree the indistinct but plaintive note of the
-white-tufted tyrant-flycatcher (Myiobius) may be noticed.
-From the great preponderance in most countries of certain
-common genera of birds, such as the finches, one feels at
-first surprised at meeting with the peculiar forms above
-enumerated, as the commonest birds in any district. In central
-Chile two of them, namely, the Oxyurus and Scytalopus, occur,
-although most rarely. When finding, as in this case,
-animals which seem to play so insignificant a part in the great
-scheme of nature, one is apt to wonder why they were
-created.
-
-But it should always be recollected, that in some other
-country perhaps they are essential members of society, or
-at some former period may have been so. If America
-south of 37 degs. were sunk beneath the waters of the ocean,
-these two birds might continue to exist in central Chile for
-a long period, but it is very improbable that their numbers
-would increase. We should then see a case which must inevitably
-have happened with very many animals.
-
-These southern seas are frequented by several species of
-Petrels: the largest kind, Procellaria gigantea, or nelly
-(quebrantahuesos, or break-bones, of the Spaniards), is a common
-bird, both in the inland channels and on the open sea.
-In its habits and manner of flight, there is a very close
-resemblance with the albatross; and as with the albatross, a
-person may watch it for hours together without seeing on
-what it feeds. The "break-bones" is, however, a rapacious
-bird, for it was observed by some of the officers at Port St.
-Antonio chasing a diver, which tried to escape by diving
-and flying, but was continually struck down, and at last
-killed by a blow on its head. At Port St. Julian these great
-petrels were seen killing and devouring young gulls. A second
-species (Puffinus cinereus), which is common to Europe,
-Cape Horn, and the coast of Peru, is of much smaller size
-than the P. gigantea, but, like it, of a dirty black colour. It
-generally frequents the inland sounds in very large flocks:
-I do not think I ever saw so many birds of any other sort
-together, as I once saw of these behind the island of Chiloe.
-Hundreds of thousands flew in an irregular line for several
-hours in one direction. When part of the flock settled on the
-water the surface was blackened, and a noise proceeded from
-them as of human beings talking in the distance.
-
-There are several other species of petrels, but I will only
-mention one other kind, the Pelacanoides Berardi which
-offers an example of those extraordinary cases, of a bird
-evidently belonging to one well-marked family, yet both in
-its habits and structure allied to a very distinct tribe. This
-bird never leaves the quiet inland sounds. When disturbed
-it dives to a distance, and on coming to the surface, with the
-same movement takes flight. After flying by a rapid movement
-of its short wings for a space in a straight line, it drops,
-as if struck dead, and dives again. The form of its beak and
-nostrils, length of foot, and even the colouring of its plumage,
-show that this bird is a petrel: on the other hand, its
-short wings and consequent little power of flight, its form
-of body and shape of tail, the absence of a hind toe to its
-foot, its habit of diving, and its choice of situation, make it
-at first doubtful whether its relationship is not equally close
-with the auks. It would undoubtedly be mistaken for an auk,
-when seen from a distance, either on the wing, or when diving
-and quietly swimming about the retired channels of
-Tierra del Fuego.
-
-[1] Horticultural Transact., vol. v. p. 249. Mr. Caldeleugh
-sent home two tubers, which, being well manured, even the
-first season produced numerous potatoes and an abundance of
-leaves. See Humboldt's interesting discussion on this plant,
-which it appears was unknown in Mexico, -- in Polit. Essay
-on New Spain, book iv. chap. ix.
-
-[2] By sweeping with my insect-net, I procured from these
-situations a considerable number of minute insects, of the
-family of Staphylinidae, and others allied to Pselaphus,
-and minute Hymenoptera. But the most characteristic family
-in number, both of individuals and species, throughout the
-more open parts of Chiloe and Chonos is that of Telephoridae.
-
-[3] It is said that some rapacious birds bring their prey
-alive to their nests. If so, in the course of centuries,
-every now and then, one might escape from the young birds.
-Some such agency is necessary, to account for the distribution
-of the smaller gnawing animals on islands not very near each other.
-
-[4] I may mention, as a proof of how great a difference there
-is between the seasons of the wooded and the open parts of
-this coast, that on September 20th, in lat. 34 degs., these
-birds had young ones in the nest, while among the Chonos
-Islands, three months later in the summer, they were only
-laying, the difference in latitude between these two places
-being about 700 miles.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV
-
-CHILOE AND CONCEPCION: GREAT EARTHQUAKE
-
-San Carlos, Chiloe -- Osorno in eruption, contemporaneously
-with Aconcagua and Coseguina -- Ride to Cucao -- Impenetrable
-Forests -- Valdivia Indians -- Earthquake -- Concepcion --
-Great Earthquake -- Rocks fissured -- Appearance of the
-former Towns -- The Sea Black and Boiling -- Direction of
-the Vibrations -- Stones twisted round -- Great Wave --
-Permanent Elevation of the Land -- Area of Volcanic
-Phenomena -- The connection between the Elevatory and
-Eruptive Forces -- Cause of Earthquakes -- Slow Elevation of
-Mountain-chains.
-
-
-ON JANUARY the 15th we sailed from Low's Harbour,
-and three days afterwards anchored a second time in
-the bay of S. Carlos in Chiloe. On the night of the
-19th the volcano of Osorno was in action. At midnight the
-sentry observed something like a large star, which gradually
-increased in size till about three o'clock, when it presented
-a very magnificent spectacle. By the aid of a glass, dark
-objects, in constant succession, were seen, in the midst of a
-great glare of red light, to be thrown up and to fall down.
-The light was sufficient to cast on the water a long bright
-reflection. Large masses of molten matter seem very commonly
-to be cast out of the craters in this part of the Cordillera.
-I was assured that when the Corcovado is in eruption,
-great masses are projected upwards and are seen to burst in
-the air, assuming many fantastical forms, such as trees:
-their size must be immense, for they can be distinguished
-from the high land behind S. Carlos, which is no less than
-ninety-three miles from the Corcovado. In the morning the
-volcano became tranquil.
-
-I was surprised at hearing afterwards that Aconcagua in
-Chile, 480 miles northwards, was in action on the same night;
-and still more surprised to hear that the great eruption of
-Coseguina (2700 miles north of Aconcagua), accompanied by
-an earthquake felt over a 1000 miles, also occurred within
-six hours of this same time. This coincidence is the more
-remarkable, as Coseguina had been dormant for twenty-six
-years; and Aconcagua most rarely shows any signs of action.
-It is difficult even to conjecture whether this coincidence was
-accidental, or shows some subterranean connection. If Vesuvius,
-Etna, and Hecla in Iceland (all three relatively nearer
-each other than the corresponding points in South America),
-suddenly burst forth in eruption on the same night, the
-coincidence would be thought remarkable; but it is far more
-remarkable in this case, where the three vents fall on the same
-great mountain-chain, and where the vast plains along the
-entire eastern coast, and the upraised recent shells along
-more than 2000 miles on the western coast, show in how
-equable and connected a manner the elevatory forces have acted.
-
-Captain Fitz Roy being anxious that some bearings should
-be taken on the outer coast of Chiloe, it was planned that
-Mr. King and myself should ride to Castro, and thence across
-the island to the Capella de Cucao, situated on the west
-coast. Having hired horses and a guide, we set out on
-the morning of the 22nd. We had not proceeded far, before
-we were joined by a woman and two boys, who were bent on
-the same journey. Every one on this road acts on a "hail
-fellow well met" fashion; and one may here enjoy the privilege,
-so rare in South America, of travelling without fire-arms.
-At first, the country consisted of a succession of hills
-and valleys: nearer to Castro it became very level. The road
-itself is a curious affair; it consists in its whole length,
-with the exception of very few parts, of great logs of wood,
-which are either broad and laid longitudinally, or narrow and
-placed transversely. In summer the road is not very bad; but in
-winter, when the wood is rendered slippery from rain, travelling
-is exceedingly difficult. At that time of the year, the
-ground on each side becomes a morass, and is often overflowed:
-hence it is necessary that the longitudinal logs
-should be fastened down by transverse poles, which are
-pegged on each side into the earth. These pegs render a fall
-from a horse dangerous, as the chance of alighting on one of
-them is not small. It is remarkable, however, how active
-custom has made the Chilotan horses. In crossing bad parts,
-where the logs had been displaced, they skipped from one
-to the other, almost with the quickness and certainty of a
-dog. On both hands the road is bordered by the lofty forest-
-trees, with their bases matted together by canes. When
-occasionally a long reach of this avenue could be beheld, it
-presented a curious scene of uniformity: the white line of logs,
-narrowing in perspective, became hidden by the gloomy forest,
-or terminated in a zigzag which ascended some steep hill.
-
-Although the distance from S. Carlos to Castro is only
-twelve leagues in a straight line, the formation of the road
-must have been a great labour. I was told that several people
-had formerly lost their lives in attempting to cross the
-forest. The first who succeeded was an Indian, who cut his
-way through the canes in eight days, and reached S. Carlos:
-he was rewarded by the Spanish government with a grant of
-land. During the summer, many of the Indians wander
-about the forests (but chiefly in the higher parts, where the
-woods are not quite so thick) in search of the half-wild cattle
-which live on the leaves of the cane and certain trees. It
-was one of these huntsmen who by chance discovered, a few
-years since, an English vessel, which had been wrecked on the
-outer coast. The crew were beginning to fail in provisions,
-and it is not probable that, without the aid of this man, they
-would ever have extricated themselves from these scarcely
-penetrable woods. As it was, one seaman died on the march,
-from fatigue. The Indians in these excursions steer by the
-sun; so that if there is a continuance of cloudy weather, they
-can not travel.
-
-The day was beautiful, and the number of trees which
-were in full flower perfumed the air; yet even this could
-hardly dissipate the effects of the gloomy dampness of the
-forest. Moreover, the many dead trunks that stand like
-skeletons, never fail to give to these primeval woods a
-character of solemnity, absent in those of countries long
-civilized. Shortly after sunset we bivouacked for the night. Our
-female companion, who was rather good-looking, belonged to
-one of the most respectable families in Castro: she rode,
-however, astride, and without shoes or stockings. I was
-surprised at the total want of pride shown by her and her
-brother. They brought food with them, but at all our meals sat
-watching Mr. King and myself whilst eating, till we were
-fairly shamed into feeding the whole party. The night was
-cloudless; and while lying in our beds, we enjoyed the sight
-(and it is a high enjoyment) of the multitude of stars which
-illumined the darkness of the forest.
-
-January 23rd. -- We rose early in the morning, and reached
-the pretty quiet town of Castro by two o'clock. The old governor
-had died since our last visit, and a Chileno was acting
-in his place. We had a letter of introduction to Don Pedro,
-whom we found exceedingly hospitable and kind, and more
-disinterested than is usual on this side of the continent. The
-next day Don Pedro procured us fresh horses, and offered
-to accompany us himself. We proceeded to the south -- generally
-following the coast, and passing through several hamlets,
-each with its large barn-like chapel built of wood. At
-Vilipilli, Don Pedro asked the commandant to give us a guide
-to Cucao. The old gentleman offered to come himself; but
-for a long time nothing would persuade him that two Englishmen
-really wished to go to such an out-of-the-way place
-as Cucao. We were thus accompanied by the two greatest
-aristocrats in the country, as was plainly to be seen in the
-manner of all the poorer Indians towards them. At Chonchi
-we struck across the island, following intricate winding
-paths, sometimes passing through magnificent forests, and
-sometimes through pretty cleared spots, abounding with corn
-and potato crops. This undulating woody country, partially
-cultivated, reminded me of the wilder parts of England, and
-therefore had to my eye a most fascinating aspect. At Vilinco,
-which is situated on the borders of the lake of Cucao,
-only a few fields were cleared; and all the inhabitants appeared
-to be Indians. This lake is twelve miles long, and
-runs in an east and west direction. From local circumstances,
-the sea-breeze blows very regularly during the day,
-and during the night it falls calm: this has given rise to
-strange exaggerations, for the phenomenon, as described to
-us at S. Carlos, was quite a prodigy.
-
-The road to Cucao was so very bad that we determined to
-embark in a _periagua_. The commandant, in the most authoritative
-manner, ordered six Indians to get ready to pull
-us over, without deigning to tell them whether they would
-be paid. The periagua is a strange rough boat, but the crew
-were still stranger: I doubt if six uglier little men ever got
-into a boat together. They pulled, however, very well and
-cheerfully. The stroke-oarsman gabbled Indian, and uttered
-strange cries, much after the fashion of a pig-driver driving
-his pigs. We started with a light breeze against us, but yet
-reached the Capella de Cucao before it was late. The country
-on each side of the lake was one unbroken forest. In the
-same periagua with us, a cow was embarked. To get so
-large an animal into a small boat appears at first a difficulty,
-but the Indians managed it in a minute. They brought the
-cow alongside the boat, which was heeled towards her; then
-placing two oars under her belly, with their ends resting on
-the gunwale, by the aid of these levers they fairly tumbled
-the poor beast heels over head into the bottom of the boat,
-and then lashed her down with ropes. At Cucao we found
-an uninhabited hovel (which is the residence of the padre
-when he pays this Capella a visit), where, lighting a fire, we
-cooked our supper, and were very comfortable.
-
-The district of Cucao is the only inhabited part on the
-whole west coast of Chiloe. It contains about thirty or forty
-Indian families, who are scattered along four or five miles
-of the shore. They are very much secluded from the rest of
-Chiloe, and have scarcely any sort of commerce, except
-sometimes in a little oil, which they get from seal-blubber.
-They are tolerably dressed in clothes of their own manufacture,
-and they have plenty to eat. They seemed, however,
-discontented, yet humble to a degree which it was quite painful
-to witness. These feelings are, I think, chiefly to be
-attributed to the harsh and authoritative manner in which
-they are treated by their rulers. Our companions, although
-so very civil to us, behaved to the poor Indians as if they
-had been slaves, rather than free men. They ordered provisions
-and the use of their horses, without ever condescending
-to say how much, or indeed whether the owners should
-be paid at all. In the morning, being left alone with these
-poor people, we soon ingratiated ourselves by presents of
-cigars and mate. A lump of white sugar was divided between
-all present, and tasted with the greatest curiosity. The
-Indians ended all their complaints by saying, "And it is only
-because we are poor Indians, and know nothing; but it was
-not so when we had a King."
-
-The next day after breakfast, we rode a few miles northward
-to Punta Huantamo. The road lay along a very broad
-beach, on which, even after so many fine days, a terrible surf
-was breaking. I was assured that after a heavy gale, the
-roar can be heard at night even at Castro, a distance of no
-less than twenty-one sea-miles across a hilly and wooded
-country. We had some difficulty in reaching the point, owing
-to the intolerably bad paths; for everywhere in the shade
-the ground soon becomes a perfect quagmire. The point
-itself is a bold rocky hill. It is covered by a plant allied, I
-believe, to Bromelia, and called by the inhabitants Chepones.
-In scrambling through the beds, our hands were very much
-scratched. I was amused by observing the precaution our
-Indian guide took, in turning up his trousers, thinking that
-they were more delicate than his own hard skin. This plant
-bears a fruit, in shape like an artichoke, in which a number
-of seed-vessels are packed: these contain a pleasant sweet
-pulp, here much esteemed. I saw at Low's Harbour the
-Chilotans making chichi, or cider, with this fruit: so true is
-it, as Humboldt remarks, that almost everywhere man finds
-means of preparing some kind of beverage from the vegetable
-kingdom. The savages, however, of Tierra del Fuego,
-and I believe of Australia, have not advanced thus far in
-the arts.
-
-The coast to the north of Punta Huantamo is exceedingly
-rugged and broken, and is fronted by many breakers, on
-which the sea is eternally roaring. Mr. King and myself
-were anxious to return, if it had been possible, on foot along
-this coast; but even the Indians said it was quite
-impracticable. We were told that men have crossed by striking
-directly through the woods from Cucao to S. Carlos, but
-never by the coast. On these expeditions, the Indians carry
-with them only roasted corn, and of this they eat sparingly
-twice a day.
-
-26th. -- Re-embarking in the periagua, we returned across
-the lake, and then mounted our horses. The whole of Chiloe
-took advantage of this week of unusually fine weather, to
-clear the ground by burning. In every direction volumes of
-smoke were curling upwards. Although the inhabitants were
-so assiduous in setting fire to every part of the wood, yet
-I did not see a single fire which they had succeeded in making
-extensive. We dined with our friend the commandant,
-and did not reach Castro till after dark. The next morning
-we started very early. After having ridden for some time,
-we obtained from the brow of a steep hill an extensive view
-(and it is a rare thing on this road) of the great forest.
-Over the horizon of trees, the volcano of Corcovado, and
-the great flat-topped one to the north, stood out in proud
-pre-eminence: scarcely another peak in the long range
-showed its snowy summit. I hope it will be long before I
-forget this farewell view of the magnificent Cordillera fronting
-Chiloe. At night we bivouacked under a cloudless sky,
-and the next morning reached S. Carlos. We arrived on the
-right day, for before evening heavy rain commenced.
-
-February 4th. -- Sailed from Chiloe. During the last week
-I made several short excursions. One was to examine a
-great bed of now-existing shells, elevated 350 feet above
-the level of the sea: from among these shells, large forest-
-trees were growing. Another ride was to P. Huechucucuy.
-I had with me a guide who knew the country far too well;
-for he would pertinaciously tell me endless Indian names for
-every little point, rivulet, and creek. In the same manner as
-in Tierra del Fuego, the Indian language appears singularly
-well adapted for attaching names to the most trivial features
-of the land. I believe every one was glad to say farewell
-to Chiloe; yet if we could forget the gloom and ceaseless
-rain of winter, Chiloe might pass for a charming island.
-There is also something very attractive in the simplicity and
-humble politeness of the poor inhabitants.
-
-We steered northward along shore, but owing to thick
-weather did not reach Valdivia till the night of the 8th. The
-next morning the boat proceeded to the town, which is distant
-about ten miles. We followed the course of the river,
-occasionally passing a few hovels, and patches of ground
-cleared out of the otherwise unbroken forest; and sometimes
-meeting a canoe with an Indian family. The town is situated
-on the low banks of the stream, and is so completely
-buried in a wood of apple-trees that the streets are merely
-paths in an orchard I have never seen any country, where
-apple-trees appeared to thrive so well as in this damp part of
-South America: on the borders of the roads there were
-many young trees evidently self-grown. In Chiloe the inhabitants
-possess a marvellously short method of making an
-orchard. At the lower part of almost every branch, small,
-conical, brown, wrinkled points project: these are always
-ready to change into roots, as may sometimes be seen, where
-any mud has been accidentally splashed against the tree. A
-branch as thick as a man's thigh is chosen in the early spring,
-and is cut off just beneath a group of these points, all the
-smaller branches are lopped off, and it is then placed about
-two feet deep in the ground. During the ensuing summer
-the stump throws out long shoots, and sometimes even bears
-fruit: I was shown one which had produced as many as
-twenty-three apples, but this was thought very unusual. In
-the third season the stump is changed (as I have myself
-seen) into a well-wooded tree, loaded with fruit. An old
-man near Valdivia illustrated his motto, "Necesidad es la
-madre del invencion," by giving an account of the several
-useful things he manufactured from his apples. After making
-cider, and likewise wine, he extracted from the refuse a
-white and finely flavoured spirit; by another process he
-procured a sweet treacle, or, as he called it, honey. His
-children and pigs seemed almost to live, during this season of
-the year, in his orchard.
-
-February 11th. -- I set out with a guide on a short ride, in
-which, however, I managed to see singularly little, either
-of the geology of the country or of its inhabitants. There
-is not much cleared land near Valdivia: after crossing a
-river at the distance of a few miles, we entered the forest, and
-then passed only one miserable hovel, before reaching our
-sleeping-place for the night. The short difference in latitude,
-of 150 miles, has given a new aspect to the forest compared
-with that of Chiloe. This is owing to a slightly
-different proportion in the kinds of trees. The evergreens
-do not appear to be quite so numerous, and the forest in
-consequence has a brighter tint. As in Chiloe, the lower
-parts are matted together by canes: here also another kind
-(resembling the bamboo of Brazil and about twenty feet in
-height) grows in clusters, and ornaments the banks of some
-of the streams in a very pretty manner. It is with this plant
-that the Indians make their chuzos, or long tapering spears.
-Our resting-house was so dirty that I preferred sleeping
-outside: on these journeys the first night is generally very
-uncomfortable, because one is not accustomed to the tickling
-and biting of the fleas. I am sure, in the morning, there
-was not a space on my legs the size of a shilling which had
-not its little red mark where the flea had feasted.
-
-12th. -- We continued to ride through the uncleared forest;
-only occasionally meeting an Indian on horseback, or a troop
-of fine mules bringing alerce-planks and corn from the southern
-plains. In the afternoon one of the horses knocked up:
-we were then on a brow of a hill, which commanded a fine
-view of the Llanos. The view of these open plains was very
-refreshing, after being hemmed in and buried in the wilderness
-of trees. The uniformity of a forest soon becomes very
-wearisome. This west coast makes me remember with pleasure
-the free, unbounded plains of Patagonia; yet, with the
-true spirit of contradiction, I cannot forget how sublime is
-the silence of the forest. The Llanos are the most fertile
-and thickly peopled parts of the country, as they possess the
-immense advantage of being nearly free from trees. Before
-leaving the forest we crossed some flat little lawns, around
-which single trees stood, as in an English park: I have often
-noticed with surprise, in wooded undulatory districts, that
-the quite level parts have been destitute of trees. On account
-of the tired horse, I determined to stop at the Mission
-of Cudico, to the friar of which I had a letter of introduction.
-Cudico is an intermediate district between the forest
-and the Llanos. There are a good many cottages, with
-patches of corn and potatoes, nearly all belonging to Indians.
-The tribes dependent on Valdivia are "reducidos y cristianos."
-The Indians farther northward, about Arauco and
-Imperial, are still very wild, and not converted; but they
-have all much intercourse with the Spaniards. The padre
-said that the Christian Indians did not much like coming
-to mass, but that otherwise they showed respect for religion.
-The greatest difficulty is in making them observe the ceremonies
-of marriage. The wild Indians take as many wives
-as they can support, and a cacique will sometimes have more
-than ten: on entering his house, the number may be told by
-that of the separate fires. Each wife lives a week in turn
-with the cacique; but all are employed in weaving ponchos,
-etc., for his profit. To be the wife of a cacique, is an honour
-much sought after by the Indian women.
-
-The men of all these tribes wear a coarse woolen poncho:
-those south of Valdivia wear short trousers, and those north
-of it a petticoat, like the chilipa of the Gauchos. All have
-their long hair bound by a scarlet fillet, but with no other
-covering on their heads. These Indians are good-sized men;
-their cheek-bones are prominent, and in general appearance
-they resemble the great American family to which they belong;
-but their physiognomy seemed to me to be slightly
-different from that of any other tribe which I had before
-seen. Their expression is generally grave, and even austere,
-and possesses much character: this may pass either for honest
-bluntness or fierce determination. The long black hair,
-the grave and much-lined features, and the dark complexion,
-called to my mind old portraits of James I. On the road we
-met with none of that humble politeness so universal in
-Chiloe. Some gave their "mari-mari" (good morning) with
-promptness, but the greater number did not seem inclined to
-offer any salute. This independence of manners is probably
-a consequence of their long wars, and the repeated victories
-which they alone, of all the tribes in America, have gained
-over the Spaniards.
-
-I spent the evening very pleasantly, talking with the
-padre. He was exceedingly kind and hospitable; and coming
-from Santiago, had contrived to surround himself with some
-few comforts. Being a man of some little education, he bitterly
-complained of the total want of society. With no particular
-zeal for religion, no business or pursuit, how completely
-must this man's life be wasted! The next day, on
-our return, we met seven very wild-looking Indians, of whom
-some were caciques that had just received from the Chilian
-government their yearly small stipend for having long remained
-faithful. They were fine-looking men, and they rode
-one after the other, with most gloomy faces. An old cacique,
-who headed them, had been, I suppose, more excessively
-drunk than the rest, for he seemed extremely grave and
-very crabbed. Shortly before this, two Indians joined us,
-who were travelling from a distant mission to Valdivia
-concerning some lawsuit. One was a good-humoured old man,
-but from his wrinkled beardless face looked more like an
-old woman than a man. I frequently presented both of them
-with cigars; and though ready to receive them, and I dare
-say grateful, they would hardly condescend to thank me. A
-Chilotan Indian would have taken off his hat, and given his
-"Dios le page!" The travelling was very tedious, both
-from the badness of the roads, and from the number of great
-fallen trees, which it was necessary either to leap over or to
-avoid by making long circuits. We slept on the road, and
-next morning reached Valdivia, whence I proceeded on
-board.
-
-A few days afterwards I crossed the bay with a party of
-officers, and landed near the fort called Niebla. The buildings
-were in a most ruinous state, and the gun-carriages
-quite rotten. Mr. Wickham remarked to the commanding
-officer, that with one discharge they would certainly all fall
-to pieces. The poor man, trying to put a good face upon it,
-gravely replied, "No, I am sure, sir, they would stand
-two!" The Spaniards must have intended to have made this
-place impregnable. There is now lying in the middle of the
-courtyard a little mountain of mortar, which rivals in hardness
-the rock on which it is placed. It was brought from
-Chile, and cost 7000 dollars. The revolution having broken
-out, prevented its being applied to any purpose, and now it
-remains a monument of the fallen greatness of Spain.
-
-I wanted to go to a house about a mile and a half distant,
-but my guide said it was quite impossible to penetrate the
-wood in a straight line. He offered, however, to lead me, by
-following obscure cattle-tracks, the shortest way: the walk,
-nevertheless, took no less than three hours! This man is
-employed in hunting strayed cattle; yet, well as he must
-know the woods, he was not long since lost for two whole
-days, and had nothing to eat. These facts convey a good
-idea of the impracticability of the forests of these countries.
-A question often occurred to me -- how long does any vestige
-of a fallen tree remain? This man showed me one which
-a party of fugitive royalists had cut down fourteen years
-ago; and taking this as a criterion, I should think a bole a
-foot and a half in diameter would in thirty years be changed
-into a heap of mould.
-
-February 20th. -- This day has been memorable in the
-annals of Valdivia, for the most severe earthquake experienced
-by the oldest inhabitant. I happened to be on shore,
-and was lying down in the wood to rest myself. It came on
-suddenly, and lasted two minutes, but the time appeared
-much longer. The rocking of the ground was very sensible.
-The undulations appeared to my companion and myself to
-come from due east, whilst others thought they proceeded
-from south-west: this shows how difficult it sometimes is to
-perceive the directions of the vibrations. There was no
-difficulty in standing upright, but the motion made me almost
-giddy: it was something like the movement of a vessel in a
-little cross-ripple, or still more like that felt by a person
-skating over thin ice, which bends under the weight of his body.
-A bad earthquake at once destroys our oldest associations:
-the earth, the very emblem of solidity, has moved beneath
-our feet like a thin crust over a fluid; -- one second of time
-has created in the mind a strange idea of insecurity, which
-hours of reflection would not have produced. In the forest,
-as a breeze moved the trees, I felt only the earth tremble, but
-saw no other effect. Captain Fitz Roy and some officers
-were at the town during the shock, and there the scene was
-more striking; for although the houses, from being built of
-wood, did not fall, they were violently shaken, and the boards
-creaked and rattled together. The people rushed out of
-doors in the greatest alarm. It is these accompaniments that
-create that perfect horror of earthquakes, experienced by all
-who have thus seen, as well as felt, their effects. Within the
-forest it was a deeply interesting, but by no means an awe-
-exciting phenomenon. The tides were very curiously affected.
-The great shock took place at the time of low water;
-and an old woman who was on the beach told me that the
-water flowed very quickly, but not in great waves, to high-
-water mark, and then as quickly returned to its proper level;
-this was also evident by the line of wet sand. The same kind
-of quick but quiet movement in the tide happened a few
-years since at Chiloe, during a slight earthquake, and created
-much causeless alarm. In the course of the evening there
-were many weaker shocks, which seemed to produce in the
-harbour the most complicated currents, and some of great
-strength.
-
-
-March 4th. -- We entered the harbour of Concepcion. While
-the ship was beating up to the anchorage, I landed on the
-island of Quiriquina. The mayor-domo of the estate quickly
-rode down to tell me the terrible news of the great earthquake
-of the 20th: -- "That not a house in Concepcion or
-Talcahuano (the port) was standing; that seventy villages
-were destroyed; and that a great wave had almost washed
-away the ruins of Talcahuano." Of this latter statement I
-soon saw abundant proofs -- the whole coast being strewed
-over with timber and furniture as if a thousand ships had
-been wrecked. Besides chairs, tables, book-shelves, etc., in
-great numbers, there were several roofs of cottages, which
-had been transported almost whole. The storehouses at Talcahuano
-had been burst open, and great bags of cotton, yerba,
-and other valuable merchandise were scattered on the shore.
-During my walk round the island, I observed that numerous
-fragments of rock, which, from the marine productions adhering
-to them, must recently have been lying in deep water,
-had been cast up high on the beach; one of these was six feet
-long, three broad, and two thick.
-
-The island itself as plainly showed the overwhelming
-power of the earthquake, as the beach did that of the consequent
-great wave. The ground in many parts was fissured
-in north and south lines, perhaps caused by the yielding of
-the parallel and steep sides of this narrow island. Some of
-the fissures near the cliffs were a yard wide. Many enormous
-masses had already fallen on the beach; and the inhabitants
-thought that when the rains commenced far greater slips would
-happen. The effect of the vibration on the hard primary slate,
-which composes the foundation of the island, was still more
-curious: the superficial parts of some narrow ridges were as
-completely shivered as if they had been blasted by gunpowder.
-This effect, which was rendered conspicuous by the
-fresh fractures and displaced soil, must be confined to near
-the surface, for otherwise there would not exist a block of
-solid rock throughout Chile; nor is this improbable, as it is
-known that the surface of a vibrating body is affected
-differently from the central part. It is, perhaps, owing to this
-same reason, that earthquakes do not cause quite such terrific
-havoc within deep mines as would be expected. I believe this
-convulsion has been more effectual in lessening the size of
-the island of Quiriquina, than the ordinary wear-and-tear
-of the sea and weather during the course of a whole century.
-
-The next day I landed at Talcahuano, and afterwards rode
-to Concepcion. Both towns presented the most awful yet
-interesting spectacle I ever beheld. To a person who had
-formerly know them, it possibly might have been still more
-impressive; for the ruins were so mingled together, and the
-whole scene possessed so little the air of a habitable place,
-that it was scarcely possible to imagine its former condition.
-The earthquake commenced at half-past eleven o'clock in the
-forenoon. If it had happened in the middle of the night, the
-greater number of the inhabitants (which in this one province
-must amount to many thousands) must have perished,
-instead of less than a hundred: as it was, the invariable
-practice of running out of doors at the first trembling of the
-ground, alone saved them. In Concepcion each house, or
-row of houses, stood by itself, a heap or line of ruins; but in
-Talcahuano, owing to the great wave, little more than one
-layer of bricks, tiles, and timber with here and there part of
-a wall left standing, could be distinguished. From this
-circumstance Concepcion, although not so completely desolated,
-was a more terrible, and if I may so call it, picturesque sight.
-The first shock was very sudden. The mayor-domo at Quiriquina
-told me, that the first notice he received of it, was
-finding both the horse he rode and himself, rolling together
-on the ground. Rising up, he was again thrown down. He
-also told me that some cows which were standing on the steep
-side of the island were rolled into the sea. The great wave
-caused the destruction of many cattle; on one low island
-near the head of the bay, seventy animals were washed off
-and drowned. It is generally thought that this has been the
-worst earthquake ever recorded in Chile; but as the very
-severe ones occur only after long intervals, this cannot easily
-be known; nor indeed would a much worse shock have made
-any difference, for the ruin was now complete. Innumerable
-small tremblings followed the great earthquake, and within
-the first twelve days no less than three hundred were counted.
-
-After viewing Concepcion, I cannot understand how the
-greater number of inhabitants escaped unhurt. The houses
-in many parts fell outwards; thus forming in the middle of
-the streets little hillocks of brickwork and rubbish. Mr.
-Rouse, the English consul, told us that he was at breakfast
-when the first movement warned him to run out. He had
-scarcely reached the middle of the courtyard, when one side
-of his house came thundering down. He retained presence
-of mind to remember, that if he once got on the top of that
-part which had already fallen, he would be safe. Not being
-able from the motion of the ground to stand, he crawled up
-on his hands and knees; and no sooner had he ascended this
-little eminence, than the other side of the house fell in, the
-great beams sweeping close in front of his head. With his
-eyes blinded, and his mouth choked with the cloud of dust
-which darkened the sky, at last he gained the street. As
-shock succeeded shock, at the interval of a few minutes, no
-one dared approach the shattered ruins, and no one knew
-whether his dearest friends and relations were not perishing
-from the want of help. Those who had saved any property
-were obliged to keep a constant watch, for thieves
-prowled about, and at each little trembling of the ground,
-with one hand they beat their breasts and cried "Misericordia!"
-and then with the other filched what they could
-from the ruins. The thatched roofs fell over the fires, and
-flames burst forth in all parts. Hundreds knew themselves
-ruined, and few had the means of providing food for the day.
-
-Earthquakes alone are sufficient to destroy the prosperity
-of any country. If beneath England the now inert subterranean
-forces should exert those powers, which most assuredly
-in former geological ages they have exerted, how completely
-would the entire condition of the country be changed!
-What would become of the lofty houses, thickly packed cities,
-great manufactories, the beautiful public and private edifices?
-If the new period of disturbance were first to commence
-by some great earthquake in the dead of the night,
-how terrific would be the carnage! England would at once
-be bankrupt; all papers, records, and accounts would from
-that moment be lost. Government being unable to collect
-the taxes, and failing to maintain its authority, the hand of
-violence and rapine would remain uncontrolled. In every
-large town famine would go forth, pestilence and death following
-in its train.
-
-Shortly after the shock, a great wave was seen from the
-distance of three or four miles, approaching in the middle
-of the bay with a smooth outline; but along the shore it tore
-up cottages and trees, as it swept onwards with irresistible
-force. At the head of the bay it broke in a fearful line of
-white breakers, which rushed up to a height of 23 vertical
-feet above the highest spring-tides. Their force must have
-been prodigious; for at the Fort a cannon with its carriage,
-estimated at four tons in weight, was moved 15 feet inwards.
-A schooner was left in the midst of the ruins, 200 yards
-from the beach. The first wave was followed by two others,
-which in their retreat carried away a vast wreck of floating
-objects. In one part of the bay, a ship was pitched high
-and dry on shore, was carried off, again driven on shore, and
-again carried off. In another part, two large vessels anchored
-near together were whirled about, and their cables were thrice
-wound round each other; though anchored at a depth of 36
-feet, they were for some minutes aground. The great wave
-must have travelled slowly, for the inhabitants of Talcahuano
-had time to run up the hills behind the town; and
-some sailors pulled out seaward, trusting successfully to their
-boat riding securely over the swell, if they could reach it
-before it broke. One old woman with a little boy, four or
-five years old, ran into a boat, but there was nobody to row
-it out: the boat was consequently dashed against an anchor
-and cut in twain; the old woman was drowned, but the child
-was picked up some hours afterwards clinging to the wreck.
-Pools of salt-water were still standing amidst the ruins of
-the houses, and children, making boats with old tables and
-chairs, appeared as happy as their parents were miserable.
-It was, however, exceedingly interesting to observe, how
-much more active and cheerful all appeared than could have
-been expected. It was remarked with much truth, that from
-the destruction being universal, no one individual was humbled
-more than another, or could suspect his friends of coldness
--- that most grievous result of the loss of wealth. Mr. Rouse,
-and a large party whom he kindly took under his protection,
-lived for the first week in a garden beneath some apple-trees.
-At first they were as merry as if it had been a picnic; but
-soon afterwards heavy rain caused much discomfort, for they
-were absolutely without shelter.
-
-In Captain Fitz Roy's excellent account of the earthquake,
-it is said that two explosions, one like a column of smoke and
-another like the blowing of a great whale, were seen in the
-bay. The water also appeared everywhere to be boiling; and
-it "became black, and exhaled a most disagreeable sulphureous
-smell." These latter circumstances were observed in the
-Bay of Valparaiso during the earthquake of 1822; they may,
-I think, be accounted for, by the disturbance of the mud at
-the bottom of the sea containing organic matter in decay. In
-the Bay of Callao, during a calm day, I noticed, that as the
-ship dragged her cable over the bottom, its course was marked
-by a line of bubbles. The lower orders in Talcahuano thought
-that the earthquake was caused by some old Indian women,
-who two years ago, being offended, stopped the volcano of
-Antuco. This silly belief is curious, because it shows that
-experience has taught them to observe, that there exists a
-relation between the suppressed action of the volcanos, and
-the trembling of the ground. It was necessary to apply the
-witchcraft to the point where their perception of cause and
-effect failed; and this was the closing of the volcanic vent.
-This belief is the more singular in this particular instance,
-because, according to Captain Fitz Roy, there is reason to
-believe that Antuco was noways affected.
-
-The town of Concepcion was built in the usual Spanish
-fashion, with all the streets running at right angles to each
-other; one set ranging S.W. by W., and the other set N.W.
-by N. The walls in the former direction certainly stood
-better than those in the latter; the greater number of the
-masses of brickwork were thrown down towards the N.E.
-Both these circumstances perfectly agree with the general
-idea, of the undulations having come from the S.W., in which
-quarter subterranean noises were also heard; for it is evident
-that the walls running S.W. and N.E. which presented their
-ends to the point whence the undulations came, would be
-much less likely to fall than those walls which, running N.W.
-and S.E., must in their whole lengths have been at the same
-instant thrown out of the perpendicular; for the undulations,
-coming from the S.W., must have extended in N.W. and
-S.E. waves, as they passed under the foundations. This may
-be illustrated by placing books edgeways on a carpet, and
-then, after the manner suggested by Michell, imitating the
-undulations of an earthquake: it will be found that they fall
-with more or less readiness, according as their direction more
-or less nearly coincides with the line of the waves. The
-fissures in the ground generally, though not uniformly, extended
-in a S.E. and N.W. direction, and therefore corresponded
-to the lines of undulation or of principal flexure. Bearing in
-mind all these circumstances, which so clearly point to the
-S.W. as the chief focus of disturbance, it is a very interesting
-fact that the island of S. Maria, situated in that quarter, was,
-during the general uplifting of the land, raised to nearly
-three times the height of any other part of the coast.
-
-The different resistance offered by the walls, according to
-their direction, was well exemplified in the case of the
-Cathedral. The side which fronted the N.E. presented a grand
-pile of ruins, in the midst of which door-cases and masses
-of timber stood up, as if floating in a stream. Some of the
-angular blocks of brickwork were of great dimensions; and
-they were rolled to a distance on the level plaza, like
-fragments of rock at the base of some high mountain. The side
-walls (running S.W. and N.E.), though exceedingly fractured,
-yet remained standing; but the vast buttresses (at
-right angles to them, and therefore parallel to the walls that
-fell) were in many cases cut clean off, as if by a chisel, and
-hurled to the ground. Some square ornaments on the coping
-of these same walls, were moved by the earthquake into
-a diagonal position. A similar circumstance was observed
-after an earthquake at Valparaiso, Calabria, and other places,
-including some of the ancient Greek temples. [1] This twisting
-displacement, at first appears to indicate a vorticose
-movement beneath each point thus affected; but this is highly
-improbable. May it not be caused by a tendency in each stone
-to arrange itself in some particular position, with respect
-to the lines of vibration, -- in a manner somewhat similar to
-pins on a sheet of paper when shaken? Generally speaking,
-arched doorways or windows stood much better than any
-other part of the buildings. Nevertheless, a poor lame old
-man, who had been in the habit, during trifling shocks, of
-crawling to a certain doorway, was this time crushed to
-pieces.
-
-I have not attempted to give any detailed description of
-the appearance of Concepcion, for I feel that it is quite
-impossible to convey the mingled feelings which I experienced.
-Several of the officers visited it before me, but their
-strongest language failed to give a just idea of the scene of
-desolation. It is a bitter and humiliating thing to see works,
-which have cost man so much time and labour, overthrown in one
-minute; yet compassion for the inhabitants was almost instantly
-banished, by the surprise in seeing a state of things produced
-in a moment of time, which one was accustomed to attribute
-to a succession of ages. In my opinion, we have scarcely beheld,
-since leaving England, any sight so deeply interesting.
-
-In almost every severe earthquake, the neighbouring waters
-of the sea are said to have been greatly agitated. The
-disturbance seems generally, as in the case of Concepcion, to
-have been of two kinds: first, at the instant of the shock,
-the water swells high up on the beach with a gentle motion,
-and then as quietly retreats; secondly, some time afterwards,
-the whole body of the sea retires from the coast, and then
-returns in waves of overwhelming force. The first movement
-seems to be an immediate consequence of the earthquake
-affecting differently a fluid and a solid, so that their
-respective levels are slightly deranged: but the second case
-is a far more important phenomenon. During most earthquakes,
-and especially during those on the west coast of
-America, it is certain that the first great movement of the
-waters has been a retirement. Some authors have attempted
-to explain this, by supposing that the water retains its level,
-whilst the land oscillates upwards; but surely the water close
-to the land, even on a rather steep coast, would partake of the
-motion of the bottom: moreover, as urged by Mr. Lyell,
-similar movements of the sea have occurred at islands far
-distant from the chief line of disturbance, as was the case
-with Juan Fernandez during this earthquake, and with
-Madeira during the famous Lisbon shock. I suspect (but the
-subject is a very obscure one) that a wave, however produced,
-first draws the water from the shore, on which it is advancing
-to break: I have observed that this happens with the little
-waves from the paddles of a steam-boat. It is remarkable
-that whilst Talcahuano and Callao (near Lima), both situated
-at the head of large shallow bays, have suffered during
-every severe earthquake from great waves, Valparaiso,
-seated close to the edge of profoundly deep water, has never
-been overwhelmed, though so often shaken by the severest
-shocks. From the great wave not immediately following the
-earthquake, but sometimes after the interval of even half an
-hour, and from distant islands being affected similarly with
-the coasts near the focus of the disturbance, it appears that
-the wave first rises in the offing; and as this is of general
-occurrence, the cause must be general: I suspect we must
-look to the line, where the less disturbed waters of the deep
-ocean join the water nearer the coast, which has partaken
-of the movements of the land, as the place where the great
-wave is first generated; it would also appear that the wave
-is larger or smaller, according to the extent of shoal water
-which has been agitated together with the bottom on which it
-rested.
-
-
-The most remarkable effect of this earthquake was the permanent
-elevation of the land, it would probably be far more
-correct to speak of it as the cause. There can be no doubt
-that the land round the Bay of Concepcion was upraised
-two or three feet; but it deserves notice, that owing to the
-wave having obliterated the old lines of tidal action on the
-sloping sandy shores, I could discover no evidence of this
-fact, except in the united testimony of the inhabitants, that
-one little rocky shoal, now exposed, was formerly covered
-with water. At the island of S. Maria (about thirty miles
-distant) the elevation was greater; on one part, Captain Fitz
-Roy founds beds of putrid mussel-shells _still adhering to the
-rocks_, ten feet above high-water mark: the inhabitants had
-formerly dived at lower-water spring-tides for these shells.
-The elevation of this province is particularly interesting,
-from its having been the theatre of several other violent
-earthquakes, and from the vast numbers of sea-shells scattered
-over the land, up to a height of certainly 600, and I
-believe, of 1000 feet. At Valparaiso, as I have remarked,
-similar shells are found at the height of 1300 feet: it is
-hardly possible to doubt that this great elevation has been
-effected by successive small uprisings, such as that which
-accompanied or caused the earthquake of this year, and likewise
-by an insensibly slow rise, which is certainly in progress on
-some parts of this coast.
-
-The island of Juan Fernandez, 360 miles to the N.E., was,
-at the time of the great shock of the 20th, violently shaken,
-so that the trees beat against each other, and a volcano burst
-forth under water close to the shore: these facts are remarkable
-because this island, during the earthquake of 1751, was
-then also affected more violently than other places at an equal
-distance from Concepcion, and this seems to show some
-subterranean connection between these two points. Chiloe, about
-340 miles southward of Concepcion, appears to have been
-shaken more strongly than the intermediate district of Valdivia,
-where the volcano of Villarica was noways affected,
-whilst in the Cordillera in front of Chiloe, two of the volcanos
-burst-forth at the same instant in violent action. These
-two volcanos, and some neighbouring ones, continued for a
-long time in eruption, and ten months afterwards were
-again influenced by an earthquake at Concepcion. Some
-men, cutting wood near the base of one of these volcanos,
-did not perceive the shock of the 20th, although the whole
-surrounding Province was then trembling; here we have an
-eruption relieving and taking the place of an earthquake,
-as would have happened at Concepcion, according to the
-belief of the lower orders, if the volcano at Antuco had not
-been closed by witchcraft. Two years and three-quarters
-afterwards, Valdivia and Chiloe were again shaken, more
-violently than on the 20th, and an island in the Chonos
-Archipelago was permanently elevated more than eight feet.
-It will give a better idea of the scale of these phenomena, if
-(as in the case of the glaciers) we suppose them to have
-taken place at corresponding distances in Europe: -- then
-would the land from the North Sea to the Mediterranean
-have been violently shaken, and at the same instant of time a
-large tract of the eastern coast of England would have been
-permanently elevated, together with some outlying islands, -- a
-train of volcanos on the coast of Holland would have burst
-forth in action, and an eruption taken place at the bottom of
-the sea, near the northern extremity of Ireland -- and lastly,
-the ancient vents of Auvergne, Cantal, and Mont d'Or would
-each have sent up to the sky a dark column of smoke, and
-have long remained in fierce action. Two years and three-
-quarters afterwards, France, from its centre to the English
-Channel, would have been again desolated by an earthquake
-and an island permanently upraised in the Mediterranean.
-
-The space, from under which volcanic matter on the 20th
-was actually erupted, is 720 miles in one line, and 400 miles
-in another line at right angles to the first: hence, in all
-probability, a subterranean lake of lava is here stretched out,
-of nearly double the area of the Black Sea. From the intimate
-and complicated manner in which the elevatory and eruptive
-forces were shown to be connected during this train of
-phenomena, we may confidently come to the conclusion, that the
-forces which slowly and by little starts uplift continents, and
-those which at successive periods pour forth volcanic matter
-from open orifices, are identical. From many reasons, I
-believe that the frequent quakings of the earth on this line
-of coast are caused by the rending of the strata, necessarily
-consequent on the tension of the land when upraised, and
-their injection by fluidified rock. This rending and injection
-would, if repeated often enough (and we know that earthquakes
-repeatedly affect the same areas in the same manner),
-form a chain of hills; -- and the linear island of S. Mary,
-which was upraised thrice the height of the neighbouring
-country, seems to be undergoing this process. I believe that
-the solid axis of a mountain, differs in its manner of formation
-from a volcanic hill, only in the molten stone having
-been repeatedly injected, instead of having been repeatedly
-ejected. Moreover, I believe that it is impossible to explain
-the structure of great mountain-chains, such as that of the
-Cordillera, were the strata, capping the injected axis of
-plutonic rock, have been thrown on their edges along several
-parallel and neighbouring lines of elevation, except on this
-view of the rock of the axis having been repeatedly injected,
-after intervals sufficiently long to allow the upper parts or
-wedges to cool and become solid; -- for if the strata had been
-thrown into their present highly inclined, vertical, and even
-inverted positions, by a single blow, the very bowels of the
-earth would have gushed out; and instead of beholding abrupt
-mountain-axes of rock solidified under great pressure, deluges
-of lava would have flowed out at innumerable points on every
-line of elevation. [2]
-
-[1] M. Arago in L'Institut, 1839, p. 337. See also Miers's
-Chile, vol. i. p. 392; also Lyell's Principles of Geology,
-chap. xv., book ii.
-
-[2] For a full account of the volcanic phenomena which
-accompanied the earthquake of the 20th, and for the conclusions
-deducible from them, I must refer to Volume V. of the Geological
-Transactions.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV
-
-PASSAGE OF THE CORDILLERA
-
-Valparaiso -- Portillo Pass -- Sagacity of Mules -- Mountain-
-torrents -- Mines, how discovered -- Proofs of the gradual
-Elevation of the Cordillera -- Effect of Snow on Rocks --
-Geological Structure of the two main Ranges, their distinct
-Origin and Upheaval -- Great Subsidence -- Red Snow --
-Winds -- Pinnacles of Snow -- Dry and clear Atmosphere --
-Electricity -- Pampas -- Zoology of the opposite Side of
-the Andes -- Locusts -- Great Bugs -- Mendoza -- Uspallata
-Pass -- Silicified Trees buried as they grew -- Incas Bridge --
-Badness of the Passes exaggerated -- Cumbre -- Casuchas --
-Valparaiso.
-
-
-MARCH 7th, 1835. -- We stayed three days at Concepcion,
-and then sailed for Valparaiso. The wind
-being northerly, we only reached the mouth of the
-harbour of Concepcion before it was dark. Being very near
-the land, and a fog coming on, the anchor was dropped.
-Presently a large American whaler appeared alongside of us;
-and we heard the Yankee swearing at his men to keep quiet,
-whilst he listened for the breakers. Captain Fitz Roy hailed
-him, in a loud clear voice, to anchor where he then was. The
-poor man must have thought the voice came from the shore:
-such a Babel of cries issued at once from the ship -- every
-one hallooing out, "Let go the anchor! veer cable! shorten
-sail!" It was the most laughable thing I ever heard. If
-the ship's crew had been all captains, and no men, there could
-not have been a greater uproar of orders. We afterwards
-found that the mate stuttered: I suppose all hands were
-assisting him in giving his orders.
-
-On the 11th we anchored at Valparaiso, and two days
-afterwards I set out to cross the Cordillera. I proceeded to
-Santiago, where Mr. Caldcleugh most kindly assisted me in
-every possible way in making the little preparations which
-were necessary. In this part of Chile there are two passes
-across the Andes to Mendoza: the one most commonly used,
-namely, that of Aconcagua or Uspallata -- is situated some
-way to the north; the other, called the Portillo, is to the
-south, and nearer, but more lofty and dangerous.
-
-March 18th. -- We set out for the Portillo pass. Leaving
-Santiago we crossed the wide burnt-up plain on which that
-city stands, and in the afternoon arrived at the Maypu, one
-of the principal rivers in Chile. The valley, at the point
-where it enters the first Cordillera, is bounded on each side
-by lofty barren mountains; and although not broad, it is very
-fertile. Numerous cottages were surrounded by vines, and by
-orchards of apple, nectarine, and peach-trees -- their boughs
-breaking with the weight of the beautiful ripe fruit. In the
-evening we passed the custom-house, where our luggage was
-examined. The frontier of Chile is better guarded by the
-Cordillera, than by the waters of the sea. There are very
-few valleys which lead to the central ranges, and the
-mountains are quite impassable in other parts by beasts of
-burden. The custom-house officers were very civil, which
-was perhaps partly owing to the passport which the President
-of the Republic had given me; but I must express my admiration
-at the natural politeness of almost every Chileno. In
-this instance, the contrast with the same class of men in
-most other countries was strongly marked. I may mention
-an anecdote with which I was at the time much pleased: we
-met near Mendoza a little and very fat negress, riding astride
-on a mule. She had a _goitre_ so enormous that it was scarcely
-possible to avoid gazing at her for a moment; but my two
-companions almost instantly, by way of apology, made the
-common salute of the country by taking off their hats. Where
-would one of the lower or higher classes in Europe, have
-shown such feeling politeness to a poor and miserable object
-of a degraded race?
-
-At night we slept at a cottage. Our manner of travelling
-was delightfully independent. In the inhabited parts we
-bought a little firewood, hired pasture for the animals, and
-bivouacked in the corner of the same field with them. Carrying
-an iron pot, we cooked and ate our supper under a
-cloudless sky, and knew no trouble. My companions were
-Mariano Gonzales, who had formerly accompanied me in
-Chile, and an "arriero," with his ten mules and a "madrina."
-The madrina (or godmother) is a most important personage:
-
-She is an old steady mare, with a little bell round her neck;
-and wherever she goes, the mules, like good children, follow
-her. The affection of these animals for their madrinas saves
-infinite trouble. If several large troops are turned into one
-field to graze, in the morning the muleteers have only to lead
-the madrinas a little apart, and tinkle their bells; although
-there may be two or three hundred together, each mule
-immediately knows the bell of its own madrina, and comes to
-her. It is nearly impossible to lose an old mule; for if
-detained for several hours by force, she will, by the power
-of smell, like a dog, track out her companions, or rather the
-madrina, for, according to the muleteer, she is the chief
-object of affection. The feeling, however, is not of an
-individual nature; for I believe I am right in saying that any
-animal with a bell will serve as a madrina. In a troop each
-animal carries on a level road, a cargo weighing 416 pounds
-(more than 29 stone), but in a mountainous country 100
-pounds less; yet with what delicate slim limbs, without any
-proportional bulk of muscle, these animals support so great
-a burden! The mule always appears to me a most surprising
-animal. That a hybrid should possess more reason, memory,
-obstinacy, social affection, powers of muscular endurance,
-and length of life, than either of its parents, seems to
-indicate that art has here outdone nature. Of our ten animals,
-six were intended for riding, and four for carrying cargoes,
-each taking turn about. We carried a good deal of food in
-case we should be snowed up, as the season was rather late
-for passing the Portillo.
-
-March 19th. -- We rode during this day to the last, and
-therefore most elevated, house in the valley. The number of
-inhabitants became scanty; but wherever water could be
-brought on the land, it was very fertile. All the main valleys
-in the Cordillera are characterized by having, on both sides, a
-fringe or terrace of shingle and sand, rudely stratified, and
-generally of considerable thickness. These fringes evidently
-once extended across the valleys and were united; and the
-bottoms of the valleys in northern Chile, where there are no
-streams, are thus smoothly filled up. On these fringes the
-roads are generally carried, for their surfaces are even, and
-they rise, with a very gentle slope up the valleys: hence, also,
-they are easily cultivated by irrigation. They may be traced
-up to a height of between 7000 and 9000 feet, where they
-become hidden by the irregular piles of debris. At the lower
-end or mouths of the valleys, they are continuously united to
-those land-locked plains (also formed of shingle) at the foot
-of the main Cordillera, which I have described in a former
-chapter as characteristic of the scenery of Chile, and which
-were undoubtedly deposited when the sea penetrated Chile, as
-it now does the more southern coasts. No one fact in the
-geology of South America, interested me more than these
-terraces of rudely-stratified shingle. They precisely resemble
-in composition the matter which the torrents in each valley
-would deposit, if they were checked in their course by any
-cause, such as entering a lake or arm of the sea; but the
-torrents, instead of depositing matter, are now steadily at
-work wearing away both the solid rock and these alluvial
-deposits, along the whole line of every main valley and side
-valley. It is impossible here to give the reasons, but I am
-convinced that the shingle terraces were accumulated, during
-the gradual elevation of the Cordillera, by the torrents
-delivering, at successive levels, their detritus on the
-beachheads of long narrow arms of the sea, first high up the
-valleys, then lower and lower down as the land slowly rose. If
-this be so, and I cannot doubt it, the grand and broken chain
-of the Cordillera, instead of having been suddenly thrown up,
-as was till lately the universal, and still is the common
-opinion of geologists, has been slowly upheaved in mass, in the
-same gradual manner as the coasts of the Atlantic and Pacific
-have risen within the recent period. A multitude of facts in the
-structure of the Cordillera, on this view receive a simple
-explanation.
-
-The rivers which flow in these valleys ought rather to be
-called mountain-torrents. Their inclination is very great,
-and their water the colour of mud. The roar which the
-Maypu made, as it rushed over the great rounded fragments,
-was like that of the sea. Amidst the din of rushing waters,
-the noise from the stones, as they rattled one over another,
-was most distinctly audible even from a distance. This rattling
-noise, night and day, may be heard along the whole
-course of the torrent. The sound spoke eloquently to the
-geologist; the thousands and thousands of stones, which,
-striking against each other, made the one dull uniform sound,
-were all hurrying in one direction. It was like thinking on
-time, where the minute that now glides past is irrevocable.
-So was it with these stones; the ocean is their eternity, and
-each note of that wild music told of one more step towards
-their destiny.
-
-It is not possible for the mind to comprehend, except by
-a slow process, any effect which is produced by a cause repeated
-so often, that the multiplier itself conveys an idea,
-not more definite than the savage implies when he points to
-the hairs of his head. As often as I have seen beds of mud,
-sand, and shingle, accumulated to the thickness of many
-thousand feet, I have felt inclined to exclaim that causes,
-such as the present rivers and the present beaches, could
-never have ground down and produced such masses. But, on
-the other hand, when listening to the rattling noise of these
-torrents, and calling to mind that whole races of animals have
-passed away from the face of the earth, and that during this
-whole period, night and day, these stones have gone rattling
-onwards in their course, I have thought to myself, can any
-mountains, any continent, withstand such waste?
-
-In this part of the valley, the mountains on each side were
-from 3000 to 6000 or 8000 feet high, with rounded outlines
-and steep bare flanks. The general colour of the rock was
-dullish purple, and the stratification very distinct. If the
-scenery was not beautiful, it was remarkable and grand. We
-met during the day several herds of cattle, which men were
-driving down from the higher valleys in the Cordillera. This
-sign of the approaching winter hurried our steps, more than
-was convenient for geologizing. The house where we slept
-was situated at the foot of a mountain, on the summit of
-which are the mines of S. Pedro de Nolasko. Sir F. Head
-marvels how mines have been discovered in such extraordinary
-situations, as the bleak summit of the mountain of S.
-Pedro de Nolasko. In the first place, metallic veins in this
-country are generally harder than the surrounding strata:
-hence, during the gradual wear of the hills, they project
-above the surface of the ground. Secondly, almost every
-labourer, especially in the northern parts of Chile, understands
-something about the appearance of ores. In the great
-mining provinces of Coquimbo and Copiapo, firewood is very
-scarce, and men search for it over every hill and dale; and
-by this means nearly all the richest mines have there been
-discovered. Chanuncillo, from which silver to the value of
-many hundred thousand pounds has been raised in the course
-of a few years, was discovered by a man who threw a stone
-at his loaded donkey, and thinking that it was very heavy, he
-picked it up, and found it full of pure silver: the vein
-occurred at no great distance, standing up like a wedge of
-metal. The miners, also, taking a crowbar with them, often
-wander on Sundays over the mountains. In this south part
-of Chile, the men who drive cattle into the Cordillera, and
-who frequent every ravine where there is a little pasture, are
-the usual discoverers.
-
-20th. -- As we ascended the valley, the vegetation, with
-the exception of a few pretty alpine flowers, became exceedingly
-scanty, and of quadrupeds, birds, or insects, scarcely
-one could be seen. The lofty mountains, their summits
-marked with a few patches of snow, stood well separated
-from each other, the valleys being filled up with an immense
-thickness of stratified alluvium. The features in the scenery
-of the Andes which struck me most, as contrasted with the
-other mountain chains with which I am acquainted, were, --
-the flat fringes sometimes expanding into narrow plains on
-each side of the valleys, -- the bright colours, chiefly red and
-purple, of the utterly bare and precipitous hills of porphyry,
-the grand and continuous wall-like dykes, -- the plainly-
-divided strata which, where nearly vertical, formed the
-picturesque and wild central pinnacles, but where less inclined,
-composed the great massive mountains on the outskirts of the
-range, -- and lastly, the smooth conical piles of fine and
-brightly coloured detritus, which sloped up at a high angle
-from the base of the mountains, sometimes to a height of
-more than 2000 feet.
-
-I frequently observed, both in Tierra del Fuego and within
-the Andes, that where the rock was covered during the greater
-part of the year with snow, it was shivered in a very
-extraordinary manner into small angular fragments. Scoresby [1]
-has observed the same fact in Spitzbergen. The case
-appears to me rather obscure: for that part of the mountain
-which is protected by a mantle of snow, must be less subject
-to repeated and great changes of temperature than any other
-part. I have sometimes thought, that the earth and fragments
-of stone on the surface, were perhaps less effectually
-removed by slowly percolating snow-water [2] than by rain, and
-therefore that the appearance of a quicker disintegration of
-the solid rock under the snow, was deceptive. Whatever the
-cause may be, the quantity of crumbling stone on the Cordillera
-is very great. Occasionally in the spring, great masses
-of this detritus slide down the mountains, and cover the
-snow-drifts in the valleys, thus forming natural ice-houses.
-We rode over one, the height of which was far below the
-limit of perpetual snow.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, we reached a singular
-basin-like plain, called the Valle del Yeso. It was covered
-by a little dry pasture, and we had the pleasant sight of a
-herd of cattle amidst the surrounding rocky deserts. The
-valley takes its name of Yeso from a great bed, I should think
-at least 2000 feet thick, of white, and in some parts quite
-pure, gypsum. We slept with a party of men, who were
-employed in loading mules with this substance, which is used
-in the manufacture of wine. We set out early in the morning
-(21st), and continued to follow the course of the river, which
-had become very small, till we arrived at the foot of the ridge,
-that separates the waters flowing into the Pacific and Atlantic
-Oceans. The road, which as yet had been good with a steady
-but very gradual ascent, now changed into a steep zigzag
-track up the great range, dividing the republics of Chile
-and Mendoza.
-
-I will here give a very brief sketch of the geology of the
-several parallel lines forming the Cordillera. Of these lines,
-there are two considerably higher than the others; namely,
-on the Chilian side, the Peuquenes ridge, which, where the
-road crosses it, is 13,210 feet above the sea; and the Portillo
-ridge, on the Mendoza side, which is 14,305 feet. The lower
-beds of the Peuquenes ridge, and of the several great lines
-to the westward of it, are composed of a vast pile, many
-thousand feet in thickness, of porphyries which have flowed as
-submarine lavas, alternating with angular and rounded fragments
-of the same rocks, thrown out of the submarine craters.
-These alternating masses are covered in the central parts,
-by a great thickness of red sandstone, conglomerate, and
-calcareous clay-slate, associated with, and passing into,
-prodigious beds of gypsum. In these upper beds shells are
-tolerably frequent; and they belong to about the period of the
-lower chalk of Europe. It is an old story, but not the less
-wonderful, to hear of shells which were once crawling on the
-bottom of the sea, now standing nearly 14,000 feet above its
-level. The lower beds in this great pile of strata, have been
-dislocated, baked, crystallized and almost blended together,
-through the agency of mountain masses of a peculiar white
-soda-granitic rock.
-
-The other main line, namely, that of the Portillo, is of a
-totally different formation: it consists chiefly of grand bare
-pinnacles of a red potash-granite, which low down on the
-western flank are covered by a sandstone, converted by the
-former heat into a quartz-rock. On the quartz, there rest
-beds of a conglomerate several thousand feet in thickness,
-which have been upheaved by the red granite, and dip at an
-angle of 45 degs. towards the Peuquenes line. I was astonished
-to find that this conglomerate was partly composed of pebbles,
-derived from the rocks, with their fossil shells, of the
-Peuquenes range; and partly of red potash-granite, like that
-of the Portillo. Hence we must conclude, that both the Peuquenes
-and Portillo ranges were partially upheaved and exposed
-to wear and tear, when the conglomerate was forming;
-but as the beds of the conglomerate have been thrown off at
-an angle of 45 degs. by the red Portillo granite (with the
-underlying sandstone baked by it), we may feel sure, that the
-greater part of the injection and upheaval of the already
-partially formed Portillo line, took place after the
-accumulation of the conglomerate, and long after the elevation
-of the Peuquenes ridge. So that the Portillo, the loftiest line
-in this part of the Cordillera, is not so old as the less lofty
-line of the Peuquenes. Evidence derived from an inclined stream
-of lava at the eastern base of the Portillo, might be adduced
-to show, that it owes part of its great height to elevations of
-a still later date. Looking to its earliest origin, the red
-granite seems to have been injected on an ancient pre-existing
-line of white granite and mica-slate. In most parts, perhaps in
-all parts, of the Cordillera, it may be concluded that each line
-has been formed by repeated upheavals and injections; and
-that the several parallel lines are of different ages. Only
-thus can we gain time, at all sufficient to explain the truly
-astonishing amount of denudation, which these great, though
-comparatively with most other ranges recent, mountains have
-suffered.
-
-Finally, the shells in the Peuquenes or oldest ridge, prove,
-as before remarked, that it has been upraised 14,000 feet
-since a Secondary period, which in Europe we are accustomed
-to consider as far from ancient; but since these shells
-lived in a moderately deep sea, it can be shown that the area
-now occupied by the Cordillera, must have subsided several
-thousand feet -- in northern Chile as much as 6000 feet -- so
-as to have allowed that amount of submarine strata to have
-been heaped on the bed on which the shells lived. The proof
-is the same with that by which it was shown, that at a much
-later period, since the tertiary shells of Patagonia lived,
-there must have been there a subsidence of several hundred
-feet, as well as an ensuing elevation. Daily it is forced home
-on the mind of the geologist, that nothing, not even the wind
-that blows, is so unstable as the level of the crust of this
-earth.
-
-I will make only one other geological remark: although
-the Portillo chain is here higher than the Peuquenes, the
-waters draining the intermediate valleys, have burst through
-it. The same fact, on a grander scale, has been remarked in
-the eastern and loftiest line of the Bolivian Cordillera,
-through which the rivers pass: analogous facts have also
-been observed in other quarters of the world. On the supposition
-of the subsequent and gradual elevation of the Portillo
-line, this can be understood; for a chain of islets would
-at first appear, and, as these were lifted up, the tides would
-be always wearing deeper and broader channels between them.
-At the present day, even in the most retired Sounds on the
-coast of Tierra del Fuego, the currents in the transverse
-breaks which connect the longitudinal channels, are very
-strong, so that in one transverse channel even a small vessel
-under sail was whirled round and round.
-
-
-About noon we began the tedious ascent of the Peuquenes
-ridge, and then for the first time experienced some little
-difficulty in our respiration. The mules would halt every fifty
-yards, and after resting for a few seconds the poor willing
-animals started of their own accord again. The short breathing
-from the rarefied atmosphere is called by the Chilenos
-"puna;" and they have most ridiculous notions concerning
-its origin. Some say "all the waters here have puna;" others
-that "where there is snow there is puna;" -- and this no
-doubt is true. The only sensation I experienced was a slight
-tightness across the head and chest, like that felt on leaving
-a warm room and running quickly in frosty weather. There
-was some imagination even in this; for upon finding fossil
-shells on the highest ridge, I entirely forgot the puna in my
-delight. Certainly the exertion of walking was extremely
-great, and the respiration became deep and laborious: I am
-told that in Potosi (about 13,000 feet above the sea) strangers
-do not become thoroughly accustomed to the atmosphere for
-an entire year. The inhabitants all recommend onions for
-the puna; as this vegetable has sometimes been given in
-Europe for pectoral complaints, it may possibly be of real
-service: -- for my part I found nothing so good as the fossil
-shells!
-
-When about half-way up we met a large party with seventy
-loaded mules. It was interesting to hear the wild cries
-of the muleteers, and to watch the long descending string
-of the animals; they appeared so diminutive, there being
-nothing but the black mountains with which they could be
-compared. When near the summit, the wind, as generally
-happens, was impetuous and extremely cold. On each side of
-the ridge, we had to pass over broad bands of perpetual
-snow, which were now soon to be covered by a fresh layer.
-When we reached the crest and looked backwards, a glorious
-view was presented. The atmosphere resplendently clear;
-the sky an intense blue; the profound valleys; the wild
-broken forms: the heaps of ruins, piled up during the lapse
-of ages; the bright-coloured rocks, contrasted with the quiet
-mountains of snow, all these together produced a scene no
-one could have imagined. Neither plant nor bird, excepting
-a few condors wheeling around the higher pinnacles, distracted
-my attention from the inanimate mass. I felt glad
-that I was alone: it was like watching a thunderstorm, or
-hearing in full orchestra a chorus of the Messiah.
-
-On several patches of the snow I found the Protococcus
-nivalis, or red snow, so well known from the accounts of
-Arctic navigators. My attention was called to it, by observing
-the footsteps of the mules stained a pale red, as if their
-hoofs had been slightly bloody. I at first thought that it was
-owing to dust blown from the surrounding mountains of red
-porphyry; for from the magnifying power of the crystals
-of snow, the groups of these microscopical plants appeared
-like coarse particles. The snow was coloured only where it
-had thawed very rapidly, or had been accidentally crushed.
-A little rubbed on paper gave it a faint rose tinge mingled
-with a little brick-red. I afterwards scraped some off the
-paper, and found that it consisted of groups of little spheres
-in colourless cases, each of the thousandth part of an inch in
-diameter.
-
-The wind on the crest of the Peuquenes, as just remarked,
-is generally impetuous and very cold: it is said [3] to blow
-steadily from the westward or Pacific side. As the observations
-have been chiefly made in summer, this wind must be
-an upper and return current. The Peak of Teneriffe, with
-a less elevation, and situated in lat. 28 degs., in like manner
-falls within an upper return stream. At first it appears rather
-surprising, that the trade-wind along the northern parts of
-Chile and on the coast of Peru, should blow in so very southerly
-a direction as it does; but when we reflect that the Cordillera,
-running in a north and south line, intercepts, like a
-great wall, the entire depth of the lower atmospheric current,
-we can easily see that the trade-wind must be drawn northward,
-following the line of mountains, towards the equatorial
-regions, and thus lose part of that easterly movement which
-it otherwise would have gained from the earth's rotation. At
-Mendoza, on the eastern foot of the Andes, the climate is
-said to be subject to long calms, and to frequent though false
-appearances of gathering rain-storms: we may imagine that
-the wind, which coming from the eastward is thus banked up
-by the line of mountains, would become stagnant and irregular
-in its movements.
-
-Having crossed the Peuquenes, we descended into a mountainous
-country, intermediate between the two main ranges,
-and then took up our quarters for the night. We were now
-in the republic of Mendoza. The elevation was probably not
-under 11,000 feet, and the vegetation in consequence exceedingly
-scanty. The root of a small scrubby plant served as
-fuel, but it made a miserable fire, and the wind was
-piercingly cold. Being quite tired with my days work, I
-made up my bed as quickly as I could, and went to sleep.
-About midnight I observed the sky became suddenly clouded:
-I awakened the arriero to know if there was any danger of
-bad weather; but he said that without thunder and lightning
-there was no risk of a heavy snow-storm. The peril is
-imminent, and the difficulty of subsequent escape great, to
-any one overtaken by bad weather between the two ranges.
-A certain cave offers the only place of refuge: Mr. Caldcleugh,
-who crossed on this same day of the month, was
-detained there for some time by a heavy fall of snow. Casuchas,
-or houses of refuge, have not been built in this pass
-as in that of Uspallata, and, therefore, during the autumn,
-the Portillo is little frequented. I may here remark that
-within the main Cordillera rain never falls, for during the
-summer the sky is cloudless, and in winter snow-storms alone
-occur.
-
-At the place where we slept water necessarily boiled, from
-the diminished pressure of the atmosphere, at a lower
-temperature than it does in a less lofty country; the case being
-the converse of that of a Papin's digester. Hence the potatoes,
-after remaining for some hours in the boiling water,
-were nearly as hard as ever. The pot was left on the fire
-all night, and next morning it was boiled again, but yet the
-potatoes were not cooked. I found out this, by overhearing
-my two companions discussing the cause, they had come
-to the simple conclusion, "that the cursed pot [which was a
-new one] did not choose to boil potatoes."
-
-March 22nd. -- After eating our potatoless breakfast, we
-travelled across the intermediate tract to the foot of the
-Portillo range. In the middle of summer cattle are brought
-up here to graze; but they had now all been removed: even
-the greater number of the Guanacos had decamped, knowing
-well that if overtaken here by a snow-storm, they would be
-caught in a trap. We had a fine view of a mass of mountains
-called Tupungato, the whole clothed with unbroken
-snow, in the midst of which there was a blue patch, no
-doubt a glacier; -- a circumstance of rare occurrence in these
-mountains. Now commenced a heavy and long climb, similar
-to that of the Peuquenes. Bold conical hills of red
-granite rose on each hand; in the valleys there were several
-broad fields of perpetual snow. These frozen masses, during
-the process of thawing, had in some parts been converted
-into pinnacles or columns, [4] which, as they were high and
-close together, made it difficult for the cargo mules to pass.
-On one of these columns of ice, a frozen horse was sticking
-as on a pedestal, but with its hind legs straight up in
-the air. The animal, I suppose, must have fallen with its
-head downward into a hole, when the snow was continuous,
-and afterwards the surrounding parts must have been
-removed by the thaw.
-
-When nearly on the crest of the Portillo, we were enveloped
-in a falling cloud of minute frozen spicula. This was
-very unfortunate, as it continued the whole day, and quite
-intercepted our view. The pass takes its name of Portillo,
-from a narrow cleft or doorway on the highest ridge,
-through which the road passes. From this point, on a clear
-day, those vast plains which uninterruptedly extend to the
-Atlantic Ocean can be seen. We descended to the upper
-limit of vegetation, and found good quarters for the night
-under the shelter of some large fragments of rock. We met
-here some passengers, who made anxious inquiries about the
-state of the road. Shortly after it was dark the clouds suddenly
-cleared away, and the effect was quite magical. The
-great mountains, bright with the full moon, seemed impending
-over us on all sides, as over a deep crevice: one morning,
-very early, I witnessed the same striking effect. As
-soon as the clouds were dispersed it froze severely; but as
-there was no wind, we slept very comfortably.
-
-The increased brilliancy of the moon and stars at this
-elevation, owing to the perfect transparency of the atmosphere,
-was very remarkable. Travelers having observed
-the difficulty of judging heights and distances amidst lofty
-mountains, have generally attributed it to the absence of
-objects of comparison. It appears to me, that it is fully as
-much owing to the transparency of the air confounding
-objects at different distances, and likewise partly to the
-novelty of an unusual degree of fatigue arising from a little
-exertion, -- habit being thus opposed to the evidence of the
-senses. I am sure that this extreme clearness of the air
-gives a peculiar character to the landscape, all objects
-appearing to be brought nearly into one plane, as in a drawing
-or panorama. The transparency is, I presume, owing to
-the equable and high state of atmospheric dryness. This
-dryness was shown by the manner in which woodwork
-shrank (as I soon found by the trouble my geological hammer
-gave me); by articles of food, such as bread and sugar,
-becoming extremely hard; and by the preservation of the
-skin and parts of the flesh of the beasts, which had perished
-on the road. To the same cause we must attribute the singular
-facility with which electricity is excited. My flannel
-waistcoat, when rubbed in the dark, appeared as if it had
-been washed with phosphorus, -- every hair on a dog's back
-crackled; -- even the linen sheets, and leathern straps of the
-saddle, when handled, emitted sparks.
-
-March 23rd. -- The descent on the eastern side of the Cordillera
-is much shorter or steeper than on the Pacific side;
-in other words, the mountains rise more abruptly from the
-plains than from the alpine country of Chile. A level and
-brilliantly white sea of clouds was stretched out beneath our
-feet, shutting out the view of the equally level Pampas. We
-soon entered the band of clouds, and did not again emerge
-from it that day. About noon, finding pasture for the animals
-and bushes for firewood at Los Arenales, we stopped
-for the night. This was near the uppermost limit of bushes,
-and the elevation, I suppose, was between seven and eight
-thousand feet.
-
-I was much struck with the marked difference between
-the vegetation of these eastern valleys and those on the
-Chilian side: yet the climate, as well as the kind of soil, is
-nearly the same, and the difference of longitude very trifling.
-The same remark holds good with the quadrupeds, and in
-a lesser degree with the birds and insects. I may instance the
-mice, of which I obtained thirteen species on the shores of
-the Atlantic, and five on the Pacific, and not one of them
-is identical. We must except all those species, which habitually
-or occasionally frequent elevated mountains; and certain
-birds, which range as far south as the Strait of Magellan.
-This fact is in perfect accordance with the geological
-history of the Andes; for these mountains have existed as
-a great barrier since the present races of animals have
-appeared; and therefore, unless we suppose the same species
-to have been created in two different places, we ought not to
-expect any closer similarity between the organic beings on
-the opposite sides of the Andes than on the opposite shores
-of the ocean. In both cases, we must leave out of the question
-those kinds which have been able to cross the barrier,
-whether of solid rock or salt-water. [5]
-
-A great number of the plants and animals were absolutely
-the same as, or most closely allied to, those of Patagonia.
-We here have the agouti, bizcacha, three species of armadillo,
-the ostrich, certain kinds of partridges and other birds,
-none of which are ever seen in Chile, but are the characteristic
-animals of the desert plains of Patagonia. We have
-likewise many of the same (to the eyes of a person who is
-not a botanist) thorny stunted bushes, withered grass, and
-dwarf plants. Even the black slowly crawling beetles are
-closely similar, and some, I believe, on rigorous examination,
-absolutely identical. It had always been to me a subject of
-regret, that we were unavoidably compelled to give up the
-ascent of the S. Cruz river before reaching the mountains:
-I always had a latent hope of meeting with some great
-change in the features of the country; but I now feel sure,
-that it would only have been following the plains of Patagonia
-up a mountainous ascent.
-
-March 24th. -- Early in the morning I climbed up a mountain
-on one side of the valley, and enjoyed a far extended
-view over the Pampas. This was a spectacle to which I had
-always looked forward with interest, but I was disappointed:
-at the first glance it much resembled a distant view of the
-ocean, but in the northern parts many irregularities were
-soon distinguishable. The most striking feature consisted
-in the rivers, which, facing the rising sun, glittered like
-silver threads, till lost in the immensity of the distance. At
-midday we descended the valley, and reached a hovel, where
-an officer and three soldiers were posted to examine passports.
-One of these men was a thoroughbred Pampas
-Indian: he was kept much for the same purpose as a bloodhound,
-to track out any person who might pass by secretly,
-either on foot or horseback. Some years ago, a passenger
-endeavoured to escape detection, by making a long circuit
-over a neighbouring mountain; but this Indian, having by
-chance crossed his track, followed it for the whole day over
-dry and very stony hills, till at last he came on his prey
-hidden in a gully. We here heard that the silvery clouds,
-which we had admired from the bright region above, had
-poured down torrents of rain. The valley from this point
-gradually opened, and the hills became mere water-worn
-hillocks compared to the giants behind: it then expanded
-into a gently sloping plain of shingle, covered with low trees
-and bushes. This talus, although appearing narrow, must be
-nearly ten miles wide before it blends into the apparently
-dead level Pampas. We passed the only house in this
-neighbourhood, the Estancia of Chaquaio: and at sunset we pulled
-up in the first snug corner, and there bivouacked.
-
-March 25th. -- I was reminded of the Pampas of Buenos
-Ayres, by seeing the disk of the rising sun, intersected by an
-horizon level as that of the ocean. During the night a heavy
-dew fell, a circumstance which we did not experience within
-the Cordillera. The road proceeded for some distance due
-east across a low swamp; then meeting the dry plain, it
-turned to the north towards Mendoza. The distance is two
-very long days' journey. Our first day's journey was called
-fourteen leagues to Estacado, and the second seventeen to
-Luxan, near Mendoza. The whole distance is over a level
-desert plain, with not more than two or three houses. The
-sun was exceedingly powerful, and the ride devoid of all
-interest. There is very little water in this "traversia," and
-in our second day's journey we found only one little pool.
-Little water flows from the mountains, and it soon becomes
-absorbed by the dry and porous soil; so that, although we
-travelled at the distance of only ten or fifteen miles from
-the outer range of the Cordillera, we did not cross a single
-stream. In many parts the ground was incrusted with a
-saline efflorescence; hence we had the same salt-loving
-plants which are common near Bahia Blanca. The landscape
-has a uniform character from the Strait of Magellan,
-along the whole eastern coast of Patagonia, to the Rio Colorado;
-and it appears that the same kind of country extends
-inland from this river, in a sweeping line as far as San Luis
-and perhaps even further north. To the eastward of this
-curved line lies the basin of the comparatively damp and
-green plains of Buenos Ayres. The sterile plains of Mendoza
-and Patagonia consist of a bed of shingle, worn smooth
-and accumulated by the waves of the sea while the Pampas,
-covered by thistles, clover, and grass, have been formed by
-the ancient estuary mud of the Plata.
-
-After our two days' tedious journey, it was refreshing to
-see in the distance the rows of poplars and willows growing
-round the village and river of Luxan. Shortly before we
-arrived at this place, we observed to the south a ragged cloud
-of dark reddish-brown colour. At first we thought that it
-was smoke from some great fire on the plains; but we soon
-found that it was a swarm of locusts. They were flying
-northward; and with the aid of a light breeze, they overtook
-us at a rate of ten or fifteen miles an hour. The main body
-filled the air from a height of twenty feet, to that, as it
-appeared, of two or three thousand above the ground; "and the
-sound of their wings was as the sound of chariots of many
-horses running to battle:" or rather, I should say, like a
-strong breeze passing through the rigging of a ship. The
-sky, seen through the advanced guard, appeared like a mezzotinto
-engraving, but the main body was impervious to sight;
-they were not, however, so thick together, but that they
-could escape a stick waved backwards and forwards. When
-they alighted, they were more numerous than the leaves in
-the field, and the surface became reddish instead of being
-green: the swarm having once alighted, the individuals flew
-from side to side in all directions. Locusts are not an uncommon
-pest in this country: already during the season, several
-smaller swarms had come up from the south, where, as
-apparently in all other parts of the world, they are bred in
-the deserts. The poor cottagers in vain attempted by lighting
-fires, by shouts, and by waving branches to avert the
-attack. This species of locust closely resembles, and perhaps
-is identical with, the famous Gryllus migratorius of the East.
-
-We crossed the Luxan, which is a river of considerable
-size, though its course towards the sea-coast is very
-imperfectly known: it is even doubtful whether, in passing over
-the plains, it is not evaporated and lost. We slept in the
-village of Luxan, which is a small place surrounded by gardens,
-and forms the most southern cultivated district in the
-Province of Mendoza; it is five leagues south of the capital.
-At night I experienced an attack (for it deserves no less a
-name) of the _Benchuca_, a species of Reduvius, the great
-black bug of the Pampas. It is most disgusting to feel soft
-wingless insects, about an inch long, crawling over one's
-body. Before sucking they are quite thin, but afterwards
-they become round and bloated with blood, and in this state
-are easily crushed. One which I caught at Iquique, (for they
-are found in Chile and Peru,) was very empty. When placed
-on a table, and though surrounded by people, if a finger was
-presented, the bold insect would immediately protrude its
-sucker, make a charge, and if allowed, draw blood. No pain
-was caused by the wound. It was curious to watch its body
-during the act of sucking, as in less than ten minutes it
-changed from being as flat as a wafer to a globular form.
-This one feast, for which the benchuca was indebted to one
-of the officers, kept it fat during four whole months; but,
-after the first fortnight, it was quite ready to have another
-suck.
-
-March 27th. -- We rode on to Mendoza. The country was
-beautifully cultivated, and resembled Chile. This neighbourhood
-is celebrated for its fruit; and certainly nothing could
-appear more flourishing than the vineyards and the orchards
-of figs, peaches, and olives. We bought water-melons nearly
-twice as large as a man's head, most deliciously cool and
-well-flavoured, for a halfpenny apiece; and for the value of
-threepence, half a wheelbarrowful of peaches. The cultivated
-and enclosed part of this province is very small; there
-is little more than that which we passed through between
-Luxan and the capital. The land, as in Chile, owes its fertility
-entirely to artificial irrigation; and it is really wonderful
-to observe how extraordinarily productive a barren
-traversia is thus rendered.
-
-We stayed the ensuing day in Mendoza. The prosperity
-of the place has much declined of late years. The inhabitants
-say "it is good to live in, but very bad to grow rich in."
-The lower orders have the lounging, reckless manners of the
-Gauchos of the Pampas; and their dress, riding-gear, and
-habits of life, are nearly the same. To my mind the town
-had a stupid, forlorn aspect. Neither the boasted alameda,
-nor the scenery, is at all comparable with that of Santiago;
-but to those who, coming from Buenos Ayres, have just
-crossed the unvaried Pampas, the gardens and orchards must
-appear delightful. Sir F. Head, speaking of the inhabitants,
-says, "They eat their dinners, and it is so very hot, they go
-to sleep -- and could they do better?" I quite agree with
-Sir F. Head: the happy doom of the Mendozinos is to eat,
-sleep and be idle.
-
-
-March 29th. -- We set out on our return to Chile, by the
-Uspallata pass situated north of Mendoza. We had to cross
-a long and most sterile traversia of fifteen leagues. The
-soil in parts was absolutely bare, in others covered by
-numberless dwarf cacti, armed with formidable spines, and called
-by the inhabitants "little lions." There were, also, a few
-low bushes. Although the plain is nearly three thousand feet
-above the sea, the sun was very powerful; and the heat as
-well as the clouds of impalpable dust, rendered the travelling
-extremely irksome. Our course during the day lay nearly
-parallel to the Cordillera, but gradually approaching them.
-Before sunset we entered one of the wide valleys, or rather
-bays, which open on the plain: this soon narrowed into a
-ravine, where a little higher up the house of Villa Vicencio
-is situated. As we had ridden all day without a drop of
-water, both our mules and selves were very thirsty, and we
-looked out anxiously for the stream which flows down this
-valley. It was curious to observe how gradually the water
-made its appearance: on the plain the course was quite dry;
-by degrees it became a little damper; then puddles of water
-appeared; these soon became connected; and at Villa Vicencio
-there was a nice little rivulet.
-
-30th. -- The solitary hovel which bears the imposing name
-of Villa Vicencio, has been mentioned by every traveller who
-has crossed the Andes. I stayed here and at some neighbouring
-mines during the two succeeding days. The geology
-of the surrounding country is very curious. The Uspallata
-range is separated from the main Cordillera by a long narrow
-plain or basin, like those so often mentioned in Chile,
-but higher, being six thousand feet above the sea. This
-range has nearly the same geographical position with respect
-to the Cordillera, which the gigantic Portillo line has, but it
-is of a totally different origin: it consists of various kinds
-of submarine lava, alternating with volcanic sandstones and
-other remarkable sedimentary deposits; the whole having a
-very close resemblance to some of the tertiary beds on the
-shores of the Pacific. From this resemblance I expected to
-find silicified wood, which is generally characteristic of those
-formations. I was gratified in a very extraordinary manner.
-In the central part of the range, at an elevation of about
-seven thousand feet, I observed on a bare slope some snow-white
-projecting columns. These were petrified trees, eleven
-being silicified, and from thirty to forty converted into
-coarsely-crystallized white calcareous spar. They were abruptly
-broken off, the upright stumps projecting a few feet
-above the ground. The trunks measured from three to five
-feet each in circumference. They stood a little way apart
-from each other, but the whole formed one group. Mr. Robert
-Brown has been kind enough to examine the wood: he
-says it belongs to the fir tribe, partaking of the character
-of the Araucarian family, but with some curious points of
-affinity with the yew. The volcanic sandstone in which the
-trees were embedded, and from the lower part of which they
-must have sprung, had accumulated in successive thin layers
-around their trunks; and the stone yet retained the impression
-of the bark.
-
-It required little geological practice to interpret the
-marvellous story which this scene at once unfolded; though I
-confess I was at first so much astonished that I could
-scarcely believe the plainest evidence. I saw the spot where
-a cluster of fine trees once waved their branches on the
-shores of the Atlantic, when that ocean (now driven back
-700 miles) came to the foot of the Andes. I saw that they
-had sprung from a volcanic soil which had been raised above
-the level of the sea, and that subsequently this dry land,
-with its upright trees, had been let down into the depths of
-the ocean. In these depths, the formerly dry land was
-covered by sedimentary beds, and these again by enormous
-streams of submarine lava -- one such mass attaining the
-thickness of a thousand feet; and these deluges of molten
-stone and aqueous deposits five times alternately had been
-spread out. The ocean which received such thick masses,
-must have been profoundly deep; but again the subterranean
-forces exerted themselves, and I now beheld the bed of
-that ocean, forming a chain of mountains more than seven
-thousand feet in height. Nor had those antagonistic forces
-been dormant, which are always at work wearing down the
-surface of the land; the great piles of strata had been
-intersected by many wide valleys, and the trees now changed
-into silex, were exposed projecting from the volcanic soil,
-now changed into rock, whence formerly, in a green and
-budding state, they had raised their lofty heads. Now,
-all is utterly irreclaimable and desert; even the lichen cannot
-adhere to the stony casts of former trees. Vast, and
-scarcely comprehensible as such changes must ever appear,
-yet they have all occurred within a period, recent when
-compared with the history of the Cordillera; and the Cordillera
-itself is absolutely modern as compared with many
-of the fossiliferous strata of Europe and America.
-
-April 1st. -- We crossed the Upsallata range, and at night
-slept at the custom-house -- the only inhabited spot on the
-plain. Shortly before leaving the mountains, there was a
-very extraordinary view; red, purple, green, and quite white
-sedimentary rocks, alternating with black lavas, were broken
-up and thrown into all kinds of disorder by masses of porphyry
-of every shade of colour, from dark brown to the
-brightest lilac. It was the first view I ever saw, which
-really resembled those pretty sections which geologists make
-of the inside of the earth.
-
-The next day we crossed the plain, and followed the course
-of the same great mountain stream which flows by Luxan.
-Here it was a furious torrent, quite impassable, and appeared
-larger than in the low country, as was the case with the rivulet
-of Villa Vicencio. On the evening of the succeeding day,
-we reached the Rio de las Vacas, which is considered the
-worst stream in the Cordillera to cross. As all these rivers
-have a rapid and short course, and are formed by the melting
-of the snow, the hour of the day makes a considerable difference
-in their volume. In the evening the stream is muddy
-and full, but about daybreak it becomes clearer, and much
-less impetuous. This we found to be the case with the Rio
-Vacas, and in the morning we crossed it with little difficulty.
-
-The scenery thus far was very uninteresting, compared
-with that of the Portillo pass. Little can be seen beyond the
-bare walls of the one grand flat-bottomed valley, which the
-road follows up to the highest crest. The valley and
-the huge rocky mountains are extremely barren: during the
-two previous nights the poor mules had absolutely nothing
-to eat, for excepting a few low resinous bushes, scarcely a
-plant can be seen. In the course of this day we crossed some
-of the worst passes in the Cordillera, but their danger has
-been much exaggerated. I was told that if I attempted to
-pass on foot, my head would turn giddy, and that there was
-no room to dismount; but I did not see a place where any
-one might not have walked over backwards, or got off his
-mule on either side. One of the bad passes, called _las
-Animas_ (the souls), I had crossed, and did not find out
-till a day afterwards, that it was one of the awful dangers.
-No doubt there are many parts in which, if the mule should
-stumble, the rider would be hurled down a great precipice;
-but of this there is little chance. I dare say, in the spring,
-the "laderas," or roads, which each year are formed anew
-across the piles of fallen detritus, are very bad; but from
-what I saw, I suspect the real danger is nothing. With
-cargo-mules the case is rather different, for the loads project
-so far, that the animals, occasionally running against
-each other, or against a point of rock, lose their balance, and
-are thrown down the precipices. In crossing the rivers
-I can well believe that the difficulty may be very great: at
-this season there was little trouble, but in the summer they
-must be very hazardous. I can quite imagine, as Sir F.
-Head describes, the different expressions of those who _have_
-passed the gulf, and those who _are_ passing. I never heard
-of any man being drowned, but with loaded mules it frequently
-happens. The arriero tells you to show your mule
-the best line, and then allow her to cross as she likes: the
-cargo-mule takes a bad line, and is often lost.
-
-April 4th. -- From the Rio de las Vacas to the Puente del
-Incas, half a day's journey. As there was pasture for the
-mules, and geology for me, we bivouacked here for the
-night. When one hears of a natural Bridge, one pictures
-to one's self some deep and narrow ravine, across which a
-bold mass of rock has fallen; or a great arch hollowed out
-like the vault of a cavern. Instead of this, the Incas
-Bridge consists of a crust of stratified shingle cemented
-together by the deposits of the neighbouring hot springs. It
-appears, as if the stream had scooped out a channel on one
-side, leaving an overhanging ledge, which was met by earth
-and stones falling down from the opposite cliff. Certainly
-an oblique junction, as would happen in such a case, was
-very distinct on one side. The Bridge of the Incas is by
-no means worthy of the great monarchs whose name it
-bears.
-
-5th. -- We had a long day's ride across the central ridge,
-from the Incas Bridge to the Ojos del Agua, which are situated
-near the lowest _casucha_ on the Chilian side. These
-casuchas are round little towers, with steps outside to reach
-the floor, which is raised some feet above the ground on account
-of the snow-drifts. They are eight in number, and
-under the Spanish government were kept during the winter
-well stored with food and charcoal, and each courier had a
-master-key. Now they only answer the purpose of caves, or
-rather dungeons. Seated on some little eminence, they are
-not, however, ill suited to the surrounding scene of desolation.
-The zigzag ascent of the Cumbre, or the partition of
-the waters, was very steep and tedious; its height, according
-to Mr. Pentland, is 12,454 feet. The road did not pass over
-any perpetual snow, although there were patches of it on
-both hands. The wind on the summit was exceedingly cold,
-but it was impossible not to stop for a few minutes to admire,
-again and again, the colour of the heavens, and the
-brilliant transparency of the atmosphere. The scenery was
-grand: to the westward there was a fine chaos of mountains,
-divided by profound ravines. Some snow generally falls before
-this period of the season, and it has even happened that
-the Cordillera have been finally closed by this time. But
-we were most fortunate. The sky, by night and by day, was
-cloudless, excepting a few round little masses of vapour, that
-floated over the highest pinnacles. I have often seen these
-islets in the sky, marking the position of the Cordillera,
-when the far-distant mountains have been hidden beneath
-the horizon.
-
-April 6th. -- In the morning we found some thief had
-stolen one of our mules, and the bell of the madrina. We
-therefore rode only two or three miles down the valley, and
-stayed there the ensuing day in hopes of recovering the mule,
-which the arriero thought had been hidden in some ravine.
-The scenery in this part had assumed a Chilian character:
-the lower sides of the mountains, dotted over with the pale
-evergreen Quillay tree, and with the great chandelier-like
-cactus, are certainly more to be admired than the bare eastern
-valleys; but I cannot quite agree with the admiration
-expressed by some travellers. The extreme pleasure, I suspect,
-is chiefly owing to the prospect of a good fire and of a
-good supper, after escaping from the cold regions above: and
-I am sure I most heartily participated in these feelings.
-
-8th. -- We left the valley of the Aconcagua, by which we
-had descended, and reached in the evening a cottage near the
-Villa del St. Rosa. The fertility of the plain was delightful:
-the autumn being advanced, the leaves of many of the
-fruit-trees were falling; and of the labourers, -- some were
-busy in drying figs and peaches on the roofs of their cottages,
-while others were gathering the grapes from the vineyards.
-It was a pretty scene; but I missed that pensive stillness
-which makes the autumn in England indeed the evening
-of the year. On the 10th we reached Santiago, where I received
-a very kind and hospitable reception from Mr. Caldcleugh.
-My excursion only cost me twenty-four days, and
-never did I more deeply enjoy an equal space of time. A
-few days afterwards I returned to Mr. Corfield's house at
-Valparaiso.
-
-[1] Scoresby's Arctic Regions, vol. i. p. 122.
-
-[2] I have heard it remarked in Shropshire that the water, when
-the Severn is flooded from long-continued rain, is much more
-turbid than when it proceeds from the snow melting in the Welsh
-mountains. D'Orbigny (tom. i. p. 184), in explaining the cause
-of the various colours of the rivers in South America, remarks
-that those with blue or clear water have there source in the
-Cordillera, where the snow melts.
-
-[3] Dr. Gillies in Journ. of Nat. and Geograph. Science, Aug.,
-1830. This author gives the heights of the Passes.
-
-[4] This structure in frozen snow was long since observed by
-Scoresby in the icebergs near Spitzbergen, and, lately, with
-more care, by Colonel Jackson (Journ. of Geograph. Soc., vol. v.
-p. 12) on the Neva. Mr. Lyell (Principles, vol. iv. p. 360) has
-compared the fissures by which the columnar structure seems to
-be determined, to the joints that traverse nearly all rocks, but
-which are best seen in the non-stratified masses. I may observe,
-that in the case of the frozen snow, the columnar structure must
-be owing to a "metamorphic" action, and not to a process during
-deposition.
-
-[5] This is merely an illustration of the admirable laws, first
-laid down by Mr. Lyell, on the geographical distribution of
-animals, as influenced by geological changes. The whole
-reasoning, of course, is founded on the assumption of the
-immutability of species; otherwise the difference in the species
-in the two regions might be considered as superinduced during a
-length of time.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI
-
-NORTHERN CHILE AND PERU
-
-Coast-road to Coquimbo -- Great Loads carried by the Miners --
-Coquimbo -- Earthquake -- Step-formed Terrace -- Absence of
-recent Deposits -- Contemporaneousness of the Tertiary
-Formations -- Excursion up the Valley -- Road to Guasco --
-Deserts -- Valley of Copiapo -- Rain and Earthquakes --
-Hydrophobia -- The Despoblado -- Indian Ruins -- Probable
-Change of Climate -- River-bed arched by an Earthquake --
-Cold Gales of Wind -- Noises from a Hill -- Iquique -- Salt
-Alluvium -- Nitrate of Soda -- Lima -- Unhealthy Country --
-Ruins of Callao, overthrown by an Earthquake -- Recent
-Subsidence -- Elevated Shells on San Lorenzo, their
-decomposition -- Plain with embedded Shells and fragments
-of Pottery -- Antiquity of the Indian Race.
-
-
-APRIL 27th. -- I set out on a journey to Coquimbo, and
-thence through Guasco to Copiapo, where Captain
-Fitz Roy kindly offered to pick me up in the Beagle.
-The distance in a straight line along the shore northward is
-only 420 miles; but my mode of travelling made it a very
-long journey. I bought four horses and two mules, the
-latter carrying the luggage on alternate days. The six
-animals together only cost the value of twenty-five pounds
-sterling, and at Copiapo I sold them again for twenty-three.
-We travelled in the same independent manner as before,
-cooking our own meals, and sleeping in the open air. As
-we rode towards the Vino del Mar, I took a farewell view
-of Valparaiso, and admired its picturesque appearance. For
-geological purposes I made a detour from the high road
-to the foot of the Bell of Quillota. We passed through an
-alluvial district rich in gold, to the neighbourhood of Limache,
-where we slept. Washing for gold supports the inhabitants
-of numerous hovels, scattered along the sides of
-each little rivulet; but, like all those whose gains are
-uncertain, they are unthrifty in all their habits, and
-consequently poor.
-
-28th. -- In the afternoon we arrived at a cottage at the
-foot of the Bell mountain. The inhabitants were freeholders,
-which is not very usual in Chile. They supported themselves
-on the produce of a garden and a little field, but were
-very poor. Capital is here so deficient, that the people are
-obliged to sell their green corn while standing in the field,
-in order to buy necessaries for the ensuing year. Wheat in
-consequence was dearer in the very district of its production
-than at Valparaiso, where the contractors live. The next
-day we joined the main road to Coquimbo. At night there
-was a very light shower of rain: this was the first drop that
-had fallen since the heavy rain of September 11th and 12th,
-which detained me a prisoner at the Baths of Cauquenes.
-The interval was seven and a half months; but the rain this
-year in Chile was rather later than usual. The distant Andes
-were now covered by a thick mass of snow, and were a glorious
-sight.
-
-May 2nd. -- The road continued to follow the coast, at no
-great distance from the sea. The few trees and bushes which
-are common in central Chile decreased rapidly in numbers,
-and were replaced by a tall plant, something like a yucca in
-appearance. The surface of the country, on a small scale,
-was singularly broken and irregular; abrupt little peaks of
-rock rising out of small plains or basins. The indented coast
-and the bottom of the neighbouring sea, studded with breakers,
-would, if converted into dry land, present similar forms;
-and such a conversion without doubt has taken place in the
-part over which we rode.
-
-3rd. -- Quilimari to Conchalee. The country became more
-and more barren. In the valleys there was scarcely sufficient
-water for any irrigation; and the intermediate land was
-quite bare, not supporting even goats. In the spring, after
-the winter showers, a thin pasture rapidly springs up, and
-cattle are then driven down from the Cordillera to graze
-for a short time. It is curious to observe how the seeds of
-the grass and other plants seem to accommodate themselves,
-as if by an acquired habit, to the quantity of rain which
-falls upon different parts of this coast. One shower far
-northward at Copiapo produces as great an effect on the
-vegetation, as two at Guasco, and three or four in this
-district. At Valparaiso a winter so dry as greatly to injure
-the pasture, would at Guasco produce the most unusual
-abundance. Proceeding northward, the quantity of rain does
-not appear to decrease in strict proportion to the latitude.
-At Conchalee, which is only 67 miles north of Valparaiso,
-rain is not expected till the end of May; whereas at Valparaiso
-some generally falls early in April: the annual quantity
-is likewise small in proportion to the lateness of the
-season at which it commences.
-
-4th. -- Finding the coast-road devoid of interest of any
-kind, we turned inland towards the mining district and
-valley of Illapel. This valley, like every other in Chile, is
-level, broad, and very fertile: it is bordered on each side,
-either by cliffs of stratified shingle, or by bare rocky
-mountains. Above the straight line of the uppermost irrigating
-ditch, all is brown as on a high road; while all below is of as
-bright a green as verdigris, from the beds of alfalfa, a kind
-of clover. We proceeded to Los Hornos, another mining
-district, where the principal hill was drilled with holes, like
-a great ants'-nest. The Chilian miners are a peculiar race
-of men in their habits. Living for weeks together in the
-most desolate spots, when they descend to the villages on
-feast-days, there is no excess of extravagance into which
-they do not run. They sometimes gain a considerable sum,
-and then, like sailors with prize-money, they try how soon
-they can contrive to squander it. They drink excessively,
-buy quantities of clothes, and in a few days return penniless
-to their miserable abodes, there to work harder than beasts
-of burden. This thoughtlessness, as with sailors, is evidently
-the result of a similar manner of life. Their daily food is
-found them, and they acquire no habits of carefulness: moreover,
-temptation and the means of yielding to it are placed
-in their power at the same time. On the other hand, in
-Cornwall, and some other parts of England, where the system
-of selling part of the vein is followed, the miners, from
-being obliged to act and think for themselves, are a singularly
-intelligent and well-conducted set of men.
-
-The dress of the Chilian miner is peculiar and rather
-picturesque He wears a very long shirt of some dark-coloured
-baize, with a leathern apron; the whole being fastened
-round his waist by a bright-coloured sash. His trousers are
-very broad, and his small cap of scarlet cloth is made to fit
-the head closely. We met a party of these miners in full
-costume, carrying the body of one of their companions to be
-buried. They marched at a very quick trot, four men supporting
-the corpse. One set having run as hard as they
-could for about two hundred yards, were relieved by four
-others, who had previously dashed on ahead on horseback.
-Thus they proceeded, encouraging each other by wild cries:
-altogether the scene formed a most strange funeral.
-
-We continued travelling northward, in a zigzag line;
-sometimes stopping a day to geologize. The country was so
-thinly inhabited, and the track so obscure, that we often had
-difficulty in finding our way. On the 12th I stayed at some
-mines. The ore in this case was not considered particularly
-good, but from being abundant it was supposed the mine
-would sell for about thirty or forty thousand dollars (that is,
-6000 or 8000 pounds sterling); yet it had been bought by
-one of the English Associations for an ounce of gold (3l.
-8s.). The ore is yellow pyrites, which, as I have already
-remarked, before the arrival of the English, was not supposed
-to contain a particle of copper. On a scale of profits nearly
-as great as in the above instance, piles of cinders, abounding
-with minute globules of metallic copper, were purchased;
-yet with these advantages, the mining associations, as is well
-known, contrived to lose immense sums of money. The folly
-of the greater number of the commissioners and shareholders
-amounted to infatuation; -- a thousand pounds per annum
-given in some cases to entertain the Chilian authorities;
-libraries of well-bound geological books; miners brought out
-for particular metals, as tin, which are not found in Chile;
-contracts to supply the miners with milk, in parts where
-there are no cows; machinery, where it could not possibly
-be used; and a hundred similar arrangements, bore witness
-to our absurdity, and to this day afford amusement to the
-natives. Yet there can be no doubt, that the same capital
-well employed in these mines would have yielded an immense
-return, a confidential man of business, a practical
-miner and assayer, would have been all that was required.
-
-Captain Head has described the wonderful load which
-the "Apires," truly beasts of burden, carry up from the
-deepest mines. I confess I thought the account exaggerated:
-so that I was glad to take an opportunity of weighing one
-of the loads, which I picked out by hazard. It required
-considerable exertion on my part, when standing directly over
-it, to lift it from the ground. The load was considered under
-weight when found to be 197 pounds. The apire had carried
-this up eighty perpendicular yards, -- part of the way by
-a steep passage, but the greater part up notched poles, placed
-in a zigzag line up the shaft. According to the general
-regulation, the apire is not allowed to halt for breath, except
-the mine is six hundred feet deep. The average load is
-considered as rather more than 200 pounds, and I have been
-assured that one of 300 pounds (twenty-two stone and a half)
-by way of a trial has been brought up from the deepest mine!
-At this time the apires were bringing up the usual load
-twelve times in the day; that is 2400 pounds from eighty
-yards deep; and they were employed in the intervals in breaking
-and picking ore.
-
-These men, excepting from accidents, are healthy, and appear
-cheerful. Their bodies are not very muscular. They
-rarely eat meat once a week, and never oftener, and then only
-the hard dry charqui. Although with a knowledge that the
-labour was voluntary, it was nevertheless quite revolting to
-see the state in which they reached the mouth of the mine;
-their bodies bent forward, leaning with their arms on the
-steps, their legs bowed, their muscles quivering, the
-perspiration streaming from their faces over their breasts,
-their nostrils distended, the corners of their mouth forcibly
-drawn back, and the expulsion of their breath most laborious.
-Each time they draw their breath, they utter an articulate
-cry of "ay-ay," which ends in a sound rising from deep in
-the chest, but shrill like the note of a fife. After staggering
-to the pile of ore, they emptied the "carpacho;" in two or
-three seconds recovering their breath, they wiped the sweat
-from their brows, and apparently quite fresh descended the
-mine again at a quick pace. This appears to me a wonderful
-instance of the amount of labour which habit, for it can be
-nothing else, will enable a man to endure.
-
-In the evening, talking with the _mayor-domo_ of these
-mines about the number of foreigners now scattered over
-the whole country, he told me that, though quite a young
-man, he remembers when he was a boy at school at
-Coquimbo, a holiday being given to see the captain of an
-English ship, who was brought to the city to speak to the
-governor. He believes that nothing would have induced
-any boy in the school, himself included, to have gone close
-to the Englishman; so deeply had they been impressed with
-an idea of the heresy, contamination, and evil to be derived
-from contact with such a person. To this day they relate
-the atrocious actions of the bucaniers; and especially of
-one man, who took away the figure of the Virgin Mary, and
-returned the year after for that of St. Joseph, saying it
-was a pity the lady should not have a husband. I heard
-also of an old lady who, at a dinner at Coquimbo, remarked
-how wonderfully strange it was that she should have lived
-to dine in the same room with an Englishman; for she
-remembered as a girl, that twice, at the mere cry of "Los
-Ingleses," every soul, carrying what valuables they could,
-had taken to the mountains.
-
-14th. -- We reached Coquimbo, where we stayed a few
-days. The town is remarkable for nothing but its extreme
-quietness. It is said to contain from 6000 to 8000 inhabitants.
-On the morning of the 17th it rained lightly, the first time
-this year, for about five hours. The farmers, who plant
-corn near the sea-coast where the atmosphere is most humid,
-taking advantage of this shower, would break up the ground;
-after a second they would put the seed in; and if a third
-shower should fall, they would reap a good harvest in the
-spring. It was interesting to watch the effect of this trifling
-amount of moisture. Twelve hours afterwards the ground
-appeared as dry as ever; yet after an interval of ten days,
-all the hills were faintly tinged with green patches; the
-grass being sparingly scattered in hair-like fibres a full
-inch in length. Before this shower every part of the surface
-was bare as on a high road.
-
-In the evening, Captain Fitz Roy and myself were dining
-with Mr. Edwards, an English resident well known for his
-hospitality by all who have visited Coquimbo, when a sharp
-earthquake happened. I heard the forecoming rumble, but
-from the screams of the ladies, the running of the servants,
-and the rush of several of the gentlemen to the doorway, I
-could not distinguish the motion. Some of the women afterwards
-were crying with terror, and one gentleman said he
-should not be able to sleep all night, or if he did, it would
-only be to dream of falling houses. The father of this person
-had lately lost all his property at Talcahuano, and he
-himself had only just escaped a falling roof at Valparaiso,
-in 1822. He mentioned a curious coincidence which then
-happened: he was playing at cards, when a German, one of
-the party, got up, and said he would never sit in a room in
-these countries with the door shut, as owing to his having
-done so, he had nearly lost his life at Copiapo. Accordingly
-he opened the door; and no sooner had he done this, than he
-cried out, "Here it comes again!" and the famous shock
-commenced. The whole party escaped. The danger in an
-earthquake is not from the time lost in opening the door, but
-from the chance of its becoming jammed by the movement
-of the walls.
-
-It is impossible to be much surprised at the fear which
-natives and old residents, though some of them known to
-be men of great command of mind, so generally experience
-during earthquakes. I think, however, this excess of panic
-may be partly attributed to a want of habit in governing
-their fear, as it is not a feeling they are ashamed of. Indeed,
-the natives do not like to see a person indifferent. I
-heard of two Englishmen who, sleeping in the open air during
-a smart shock, knowing that there was no danger, did not
-rise. The natives cried out indignantly, "Look at those
-heretics, they do not even get out of their beds!"
-
-
-I spent some days in examining the step-formed terraces
-of shingle, first noticed by Captain B. Hall, and believed
-by Mr. Lyell to have been formed by the sea, during the
-gradual rising of the land. This certainly is the true
-explanation, for I found numerous shells of existing species
-on these terraces. Five narrow, gently sloping, fringe-like
-terraces rise one behind the other, and where best developed
-are formed of shingle: they front the bay, and sweep up both
-sides of the valley. At Guasco, north of Coquimbo, the
-phenomenon is displayed on a much grander scale, so as to
-strike with surprise even some of the inhabitants. The terraces
-are there much broader, and may be called plains, in
-some parts there are six of them, but generally only five;
-they run up the valley for thirty-seven miles from the coast.
-These step-formed terraces or fringes closely resemble those
-in the valley of S. Cruz, and, except in being on a smaller
-scale, those great ones along the whole coast-line of Patagonia.
-They have undoubtedly been formed by the denuding
-power of the sea, during long periods of rest in the
-gradual elevation of the continent.
-
-Shells of many existing species not only lie on the surface
-of the terraces at Coquimbo (to a height of 250 feet),
-but are embedded in a friable calcareous rock, which in some
-places is as much as between twenty and thirty feet in
-thickness, but is of little extent. These modern beds rest on an
-ancient tertiary formation containing shells, apparently all
-extinct. Although I examined so many hundred miles of
-coast on the Pacific, as well as Atlantic side of the continent,
-I found no regular strata containing sea-shells of
-recent species, excepting at this place, and at a few points
-northward on the road to Guasco. This fact appears to me
-highly remarkable; for the explanation generally given by
-geologists, of the absence in any district of stratified
-fossiliferous deposits of a given period, namely, that the
-surface then existed as dry land, is not here applicable; for we
-know from the shells strewed on the surface and embedded
-in loose sand or mould that the land for thousands of miles
-along both coasts has lately been submerged. The explanation,
-no doubt, must be sought in the fact, that the whole
-southern part of the continent has been for a long time
-slowly rising; and therefore that all matter deposited along
-shore in shallow water, must have been soon brought up
-and slowly exposed to the wearing action of the sea-beach;
-and it is only in comparatively shallow water that the greater
-number of marine organic beings can flourish, and in such
-water it is obviously impossible that strata of any great
-thickness can accumulate. To show the vast power of the
-wearing action of sea-beaches, we need only appeal to the
-great cliffs along the present coast of Patagonia, and to the
-escarpments or ancient sea-cliffs at different levels, one
-above another, on that same line of coast.
-
-The old underlying tertiary formation at Coquimbo,
-appears to be of about the same age with several deposits
-on the coast of Chile (of which that of Navedad is the
-principal one), and with the great formation of Patagonia.
-Both at Navedad and in Patagonia there is evidence, that
-since the shells (a list of which has been seen by Professor
-E. Forbes) there entombed were living, there has been a
-subsidence of several hundred feet, as well as an ensuing
-elevation. It may naturally be asked, how it comes that,
-although no extensive fossiliferous deposits of the recent
-period, nor of any period intermediate between it and the
-ancient tertiary epoch, have been preserved on either side of
-the continent, yet that at this ancient tertiary epoch,
-sedimentary matter containing fossil remains, should have been
-deposited and preserved at different points in north and
-south lines, over a space of 1100 miles on the shores of the
-Pacific, and of at least 1350 miles on the shores of the
-Atlantic, and in an east and west line of 700 miles across the
-widest part of the continent? I believe the explanation is
-not difficult, and that it is perhaps applicable to nearly
-analogous facts observed in other quarters of the world.
-Considering the enormous power of denudation which the sea
-possesses, as shown by numberless facts, it is not probable
-that a sedimentary deposit, when being upraised, could pass
-through the ordeal of the beach, so as to be preserved in
-sufficient masses to last to a distant period, without it were
-originally of wide extent and of considerable thickness: now
-it is impossible on a moderately shallow bottom, which
-alone is favourable to most living creatures, that a thick
-and widely extended covering of sediment could be spread
-out, without the bottom sank down to receive the successive
-layers. This seems to have actually taken place at about
-the same period in southern Patagonia and Chile, though
-these places are a thousand miles apart. Hence, if prolonged
-movements of approximately contemporaneous subsidence
-are generally widely extensive, as I am strongly
-inclined to believe from my examination of the Coral Reefs
-of the great oceans -- or if, confining our view to South
-America, the subsiding movements have been co-extensive
-with those of elevation, by which, within the same period
-of existing shells, the shores of Peru, Chile, Tierra del
-Fuego, Patagonia, and La Plata have been upraised -- then
-we can see that at the same time, at far distant points,
-circumstances would have been favourable to the formation of
-fossiliferous deposits of wide extent and of considerable
-thickness; and such deposits, consequently, would have a
-good chance of resisting the wear and tear of successive
-beach-lines, and of lasting to a future epoch.
-
-
-May 21st. -- I set out in company with Don Jose Edwards
-to the silver-mine of Arqueros, and thence up the valley of
-Coquimbo. Passing through a mountainous country, we
-reached by nightfall the mines belonging to Mr. Edwards.
-I enjoyed my night's rest here from a reason which will not
-be fully appreciated in England, namely, the absence of
-fleas! The rooms in Coquimbo swarm with them; but they
-will not live here at the height of only three or four
-thousand feet: it can scarcely be the trifling diminution
-of temperature, but some other cause which destroys these
-troublesome insects at this place. The mines are now in a
-bad state, though they formerly yielded about 2000 pounds
-in weight of silver a year. It has been said that "a person
-with a copper-mine will gain; with silver he may gain; but
-with gold he is sure to lose." This is not true: all the large
-Chilian fortunes have been made by mines of the more
-precious metals. A short time since an English physician
-returned to England from Copiapo, taking with him the
-profits of one share of a silver-mine, which amounted to
-about 24,000 pounds sterling. No doubt a copper-mine with
-care is a sure game, whereas the other is gambling, or rather
-taking a ticket in a lottery. The owners lose great quantities
-of rich ores; for no precautions can prevent robberies.
-I heard of a gentleman laying a bet with another, that one
-of his men should rob him before his face. The ore when
-brought out of the mine is broken into pieces, and the useless
-stone thrown on one side. A couple of the miners who
-were thus employed, pitched, as if by accident, two fragments
-away at the same moment, and then cried out for a joke
-"Let us see which rolls furthest." The owner, who was
-standing by, bet a cigar with his friend on the race. The
-miner by this means watched the very point amongst the
-rubbish where the stone lay. In the evening he picked it
-up and carried it to his master, showing him a rich mass of
-silver-ore, and saying, "This was the stone on which you
-won a cigar by its rolling so far."
-
-May 23rd. -- We descended into the fertile valley of Coquimbo,
-and followed it till we reached an Hacienda belonging
-to a relation of Don Jose, where we stayed the next day.
-I then rode one day's journey further, to see what were
-declared to be some petrified shells and beans, which latter
-turned out to be small quartz pebbles. We passed through
-several small villages; and the valley was beautifully
-cultivated, and the whole scenery very grand. We were here
-near the main Cordillera, and the surrounding hills were
-lofty. In all parts of northern Chile, fruit trees produce
-much more abundantly at a considerable height near the
-Andes than in the lower country. The figs and grapes of
-this district are famous for their excellence, and are
-cultivated to a great extent. This valley is, perhaps, the most
-productive one north of Quillota. I believe it contains,
-including Coquimbo, 25,000 inhabitants. The next day I
-returned to the Hacienda, and thence, together with Don
-Jose, to Coquimbo.
-
-June 2nd. -- We set out for the valley of Guasco, following
-the coast-road, which was considered rather less desert than
-the other. Our first day's ride was to a solitary house, called
-Yerba Buena, where there was pasture for our horses. The
-shower mentioned as having fallen, a fortnight ago, only
-reached about half-way to Guasco; we had, therefore, in the
-first part of our journey a most faint tinge of green, which
-soon faded quite away. Even where brightest, it was scarcely
-sufficient to remind one of the fresh turf and budding
-flowers of the spring of other countries. While travelling
-through these deserts one feels like a prisoner shut up in
-a gloomy court, who longs to see something green and to
-smell a moist atmosphere.
-
-June 3rd. -- Yerba Buena to Carizal. During the first part
-of the day we crossed a mountainous rocky desert, and afterwards
-a long deep sandy plain, strewed with broken sea-shells.
-There was very little water, and that little saline:
-the whole country, from the coast to the Cordillera, is an
-uninhabited desert. I saw traces only of one living animal in
-abundance, namely, the shells of a Bulimus, which were
-collected together in extraordinary numbers on the driest
-spots. In the spring one humble little plant sends out a few
-leaves, and on these the snails feed. As they are seen only
-very early in the morning, when the ground is slightly damp
-with dew, the Guascos believe that they are bred from it. I
-have observed in other places that extremely dry and sterile
-districts, where the soil is calcareous, are extraordinarily
-favourable to land-shells. At Carizal there were a few cottages,
-some brackish water, and a trace of cultivation: but it
-was with difficulty that we purchased a little corn and straw
-for our horses.
-
-4th. -- Carizal to Sauce. We continued to ride over desert
-plains, tenanted by large herds of guanaco. We crossed also
-the valley of Chaneral; which, although the most fertile one
-between Guasco and Coquimbo, is very narrow, and produces
-so little pasture, that we could not purchase any for our
-horses. At Sauce we found a very civil old gentleman,
-superintendent of a copper-smelting furnace. As an especial
-favour, he allowed me to purchase at a high price an armful
-of dirty straw, which was all the poor horses had for supper
-after their long day's journey. Few smelting-furnaces are
-now at work in any part of Chile; it is found more profitable,
-on account of the extreme scarcity of firewood, and from
-the Chilian method of reduction being so unskilful, to ship the
-ore for Swansea. The next day we crossed some mountains
-to Freyrina, in the valley of Guasco. During each day's ride
-further northward, the vegetation became more and more
-scanty; even the great chandelier-like cactus was here
-replaced by a different and much smaller species. During the
-winter months, both in northern Chile and in Peru, a uniform
-bank of clouds hangs, at no great height, over the Pacific.
-From the mountains we had a very striking view of this
-white and brilliant aerial-field, which sent arms up the
-valleys, leaving islands and promontories in the same manner, as
-the sea does in the Chonos archipelago and in Tierra del Fuego.
-
-We stayed two days at Freyrina. In the valley of Guasco
-there are four small towns. At the mouth there is the port, a
-spot entirely desert, and without any water in the immediate
-neighbourhood. Five leagues higher up stands Freyrina, a
-long straggling village, with decent whitewashed houses.
-Again, ten leagues further up Ballenar is situated, and above
-this Guasco Alto, a horticultural village, famous for its dried
-fruit. On a clear day the view up the valley is very fine; the
-straight opening terminates in the far-distant snowy Cordillera;
-on each side an infinity of crossing-lines are blended
-together in a beautiful haze. The foreground is singular
-from the number of parallel and step-formed terraces; and
-the included strip of green valley, with its willow-bushes, is
-contrasted on both hands with the naked hills. That the
-surrounding country was most barren will be readily believed,
-when it is known that a shower of rain had not fallen during
-the last thirteen months. The inhabitants heard with the
-greatest envy of the rain at Coquimbo; from the appearance
-of the sky they had hopes of equally good fortune, which, a
-fortnight afterwards, were realized. I was at Copiapo at the
-time; and there the people, with equal envy, talked of the
-abundant rain at Guasco. After two or three very dry years,
-perhaps with not more than one shower during the whole
-time, a rainy year generally follows; and this does more harm
-than even the drought. The rivers swell, and cover with
-gravel and sand the narrow strips of ground, which alone are
-fit for cultivation. The floods also injure the irrigating
-ditches. Great devastation had thus been caused three years
-ago.
-
-June 8th. -- We rode on to Ballenar, which takes its name
-from Ballenagh in Ireland, the birthplace of the family of
-O'Higgins, who, under the Spanish government, were presidents
-and generals in Chile. As the rocky mountains on each
-hand were concealed by clouds, the terrace-like plains gave
-to the valley an appearance like that of Santa Cruz in
-Patagonia. After spending one day at Ballenar I set out, on the
-10th, for the upper part of the valley of Copiapo. We rode
-all day over an uninteresting country. I am tired of repeating
-the epithets barren and sterile. These words, however,
-as commonly used, are comparative; I have always applied
-them to the plains of Patagonia, which can boast of spiny
-bushes and some tufts of grass; and this is absolute fertility,
-as compared with northern Chile. Here again, there are not
-many spaces of two hundred yards square, where some little
-bush, cactus or lichen, may not be discovered by careful
-examination; and in the soil seeds lie dormant ready to
-spring up during the first rainy winter. In Peru real deserts
-occur over wide tracts of country. In the evening we
-arrived at a valley, in which the bed of the streamlet was
-damp: following it up, we came to tolerably good water.
-During the night, the stream, from not being evaporated
-and absorbed so quickly, flows a league lower down than
-during the day. Sticks were plentiful for firewood, so that
-it was a good place to bivouac for us; but for the poor animals
-there was not a mouthful to eat.
-
-June 11th. -- We rode without stopping for twelve hours
-till we reached an old smelting-furnace, where there was
-water and firewood; but our horses again had nothing to eat,
-being shut up in an old courtyard. The line of road was
-hilly, and the distant views interesting, from the varied
-colours of the bare mountains. It was almost a pity to see
-the sun shining constantly over so useless a country; such
-splendid weather ought to have brightened fields and pretty
-gardens. The next day we reached the valley of Copiapo.
-I was heartily glad of it; for the whole journey was a continued
-source of anxiety; it was most disagreeable to hear,
-whilst eating our own suppers, our horses gnawing the posts
-to which they were tied, and to have no means of relieving
-their hunger. To all appearance, however, the animals
-were quite fresh; and no one could have told that they had
-eaten nothing for the last fifty-five hours.
-
-I had a letter of introduction to Mr. Bingley, who received
-me very kindly at the Hacienda of Potrero Seco. This
-estate is between twenty and thirty miles long, but very narrow,
-being generally only two fields wide, one on each side
-the river. In some parts the estate is of no width, that is
-to say, the land cannot be irrigated, and therefore is
-valueless, like the surrounding rocky desert. The small quantity
-of cultivated land in the whole line of valley, does not so
-much depend on inequalities of level, and consequent unfitness
-for irrigation, as on the small supply of water. The
-river this year was remarkably full: here, high up the valley,
-it reached to the horse's belly, and was about fifteen yards
-wide, and rapid; lower down it becomes smaller and smaller,
-and is generally quite lost, as happened during one period
-of thirty years, so that not a drop entered the sea. The
-inhabitants watch a storm over the Cordillera with great
-interest; as one good fall of snow provides them with water
-for the ensuing year. This is of infinitely more consequence
-than rain in the lower country. Rain, as often as it falls,
-which is about once in every two or three years, is a great
-advantage, because the cattle and mules can for some time
-afterwards find a little pasture in the mountains. But without
-snow on the Andes, desolation extends throughout the
-valley. It is on record that three times nearly all the
-inhabitants have been obliged to emigrate to the south. This
-year there was plenty of water, and every man irrigated his
-ground as much as he chose; but it has frequently been
-necessary to post soldiers at the sluices, to see that each
-estate took only its proper allowance during so many hours
-in the week. The valley is said to contain 12,000 souls, but
-its produce is sufficient only for three months in the year;
-the rest of the supply being drawn from Valparaiso and the
-south. Before the discovery of the famous silver-mines of
-Chanuncillo, Copiapo was in a rapid state of decay; but now
-it is in a very thriving condition; and the town, which was
-completely overthrown by an earthquake, has been rebuilt.
-
-The valley of Copiapo, forming a mere ribbon of green
-in a desert, runs in a very southerly direction; so that it is
-of considerable length to its source in the Cordillera. The
-valleys of Guasco and Copiapo may both be considered as
-long narrow islands, separated from the rest of Chile by
-deserts of rock instead of by salt water. Northward of
-these, there is one other very miserable valley, called Paposo,
-which contains about two hundred souls; and then there
-extends the real desert of Atacama -- a barrier far worse
-than the most turbulent ocean. After staying a few days at
-Potrero Seco, I proceeded up the valley to the house of Don
-Benito Cruz, to whom I had a letter of introduction. I found
-him most hospitable; indeed it is impossible to bear too
-strong testimony to the kindness with which travellers are
-received in almost every part of South America. The next
-day I hired some mules to take me by the ravine of Jolquera
-into the central Cordillera. On the second night the
-weather seemed to foretell a storm of snow or rain, and whilst
-lying in our beds we felt a trifling shock of an earthquake.
-
-The connection between earthquakes and the weather has
-been often disputed: it appears to me to be a point of great
-interest, which is little understood. Humboldt has remarked
-in one part of the Personal Narrative, [1] that it would be
-difficult for any person who had long resided in New Andalusia,
-or in Lower Peru, to deny that there exists some connection
-between these phenomena: in another part, however
-he seems to think the connection fanciful. At Guayaquil
-it is said that a heavy shower in the dry season is invariably
-followed by an earthquake. In Northern Chile, from the
-extreme infrequency of rain, or even of weather foreboding
-rain, the probability of accidental coincidences becomes very
-small; yet the inhabitants are here most firmly convinced of
-some connection between the state of the atmosphere and of
-the trembling of the ground: I was much struck by this
-when mentioning to some people at Copiapo that there had
-been a sharp shock at Coquimbo: they immediately cried out,
-"How fortunate! there will be plenty of pasture there this
-year." To their minds an earthquake foretold rain as surely
-as rain foretold abundant pasture. Certainly it did so happen
-that on the very day of the earthquake, that shower of
-rain fell, which I have described as in ten days' time producing
-a thin sprinkling of grass. At other times rain has
-followed earthquakes at a period of the year when it is a
-far greater prodigy than the earthquake itself: this happened
-after the shock of November, 1822, and again in 1829, at
-Valparaiso; also after that of September, 1833, at Tacna.
-A person must be somewhat habituated to the climate of
-these countries to perceive the extreme improbability of rain
-falling at such seasons, except as a consequence of some law
-quite unconnected with the ordinary course of the weather.
-In the cases of great volcanic eruptions, as that of Coseguina,
-where torrents of rain fell at a time of the year most
-unusual for it, and "almost unprecedented in Central
-America," it is not difficult to understand that the volumes
-of vapour and clouds of ashes might have disturbed the
-atmospheric equilibrium. Humboldt extends this view to
-the case of earthquakes unaccompanied by eruptions; but I
-can hardly conceive it possible, that the small quantity of
-aeriform fluids which then escape from the fissured ground,
-can produce such remarkable effects. There appears much
-probability in the view first proposed by Mr. P. Scrope, that
-when the barometer is low, and when rain might naturally
-be expected to fall, the diminished pressure of the atmosphere
-over a wide extent of country, might well determine
-the precise day on which the earth, already stretched to the
-utmost by the subterranean forces, should yield, crack, and
-consequently tremble. It is, however, doubtful how far this
-idea will explain the circumstances of torrents of rain falling
-in the dry season during several days, after an earthquake
-unaccompanied by an eruption; such cases seem to
-bespeak some more intimate connection between the atmospheric
-and subterranean regions.
-
-Finding little of interest in this part of the ravine, we
-retraced our steps to the house of Don Benito, where I stayed
-two days collecting fossil shells and wood. Great prostrate
-silicified trunks of trees, embedded in a conglomerate, were
-extraordinarily numerous. I measured one, which was fifteen
-feet in circumference: how surprising it is that every
-atom of the woody matter in this great cylinder should have
-been removed and replaced by silex so perfectly, that each
-vessel and pore is preserved! These trees flourished at about
-the period of our lower chalk; they all belonged to the fir-
-tribe. It was amusing to hear the inhabitants discussing the
-nature of the fossil shells which I collected, almost in the
-same terms as were used a century ago in Europe, -- namely,
-whether or not they had been thus "born by nature." My
-geological examination of the country generally created a
-good deal of surprise amongst the Chilenos: it was long
-before they could be convinced that I was not hunting for
-mines. This was sometimes troublesome: I found the most
-ready way of explaining my employment, was to ask them
-how it was that they themselves were not curious concerning
-earthquakes and volcanos? -- why some springs were hot and
-others cold? -- why there were mountains in Chile, and not
-a hill in La Plata? These bare questions at once satisfied
-and silenced the greater number; some, however (like a few
-in England who are a century behindhand), thought that all
-such inquiries were useless and impious; and that it was
-quite sufficient that God had thus made the mountains.
-
-An order had recently been issued that all stray dogs
-should be killed, and we saw many lying dead on the road. A
-great number had lately gone mad, and several men had been
-bitten and had died in consequence. On several occasions
-hydrophobia has prevailed in this valley. It is remarkable
-thus to find so strange and dreadful a disease, appearing
-time after time in the same isolated spot. It has been
-remarked that certain villages in England are in like manner
-much more subject to this visitation than others. Dr. Unanue
-states that hydrophobia was first known in South
-America in 1803: this statement is corroborated by Azara
-and Ulloa having never heard of it in their time. Dr. Unanue
-says that it broke out in Central America, and slowly
-travelled southward. It reached Arequipa in 1807; and it is
-said that some men there, who had not been bitten, were
-affected, as were some negroes, who had eaten a bullock
-which had died of hydrophobia. At Ica forty-two people thus
-miserably perished. The disease came on between twelve
-and ninety days after the bite; and in those cases where it
-did come on, death ensued invariably within five days. After
-1808, a long interval ensued without any cases. On inquiry,
-I did not hear of hydrophobia in Van Diemen's Land, or in
-Australia; and Burchell says, that during the five years he
-was at the Cape of Good Hope, he never heard of an instance
-of it. Webster asserts that at the Azores hydrophobia has
-never occurred; and the same assertion has been made with
-respect to Mauritius and St. Helena. [2] In so strange a disease
-some information might possibly be gained by considering
-the circumstances under which it originates in distant climates;
-for it is improbable that a dog already bitten, should
-have been brought to these distant countries.
-
-At night, a stranger arrived at the house of Don Benito,
-and asked permission to sleep there. He said he had been
-wandering about the mountains for seventeen days, having
-lost his way. He started from Guasco, and being accustomed
-to travelling in the Cordillera, did not expect any difficulty
-in following the track to Copiapo; but he soon became
-involved in a labyrinth of mountains, whence he could not
-escape. Some of his mules had fallen over precipices, and he
-had been in great distress. His chief difficulty arose from
-not knowing where to find water in the lower country, so that
-he was obliged to keep bordering the central ranges.
-
-We returned down the valley, and on the 22nd reached
-the town of Copiapo. The lower part of the valley is broad,
-forming a fine plain like that of Quillota. The town covers
-a considerable space of ground, each house possessing a garden:
-but it is an uncomfortable place, and the dwellings are
-poorly furnished. Every one seems bent on the one object
-of making money, and then migrating as quickly as possible.
-All the inhabitants are more or less directly concerned with
-mines; and mines and ores are the sole subjects of conversation.
-Necessaries of all sorts are extremely dear; as the
-distance from the town to the port is eighteen leagues, and
-the land carriage very expensive. A fowl costs five or six
-shillings; meat is nearly as dear as in England; firewood,
-or rather sticks, are brought on donkeys from a distance of
-two and three days' journey within the Cordillera; and pasturage
-for animals is a shilling a day: all this for South
-America is wonderfully exorbitant.
-
-
-June 26th. -- I hired a guide and eight mules to take me
-into the Cordillera by a different line from my last excursion.
-As the country was utterly desert, we took a cargo
-and a half of barley mixed with chopped straw. About two
-leagues above the town a broad valley called the "Despoblado,"
-or uninhabited, branches off from that one by which
-we had arrived. Although a valley of the grandest dimensions,
-and leading to a pass across the Cordillera, yet it is
-completely dry, excepting perhaps for a few days during
-some very rainy winter. The sides of the crumbling mountains
-were furrowed by scarcely any ravines; and the bottom
-of the main valley, filled with shingle, was smooth and nearly
-level. No considerable torrent could ever have flowed down
-this bed of shingle; for if it had, a great cliff-bounded
-channel, as in all the southern valleys, would assuredly have
-been formed. I feel little doubt that this valley, as well as
-those mentioned by travellers in Peru, were left in the state we
-now see them by the waves of the sea, as the land slowly rose. I
-observed in one place, where the Despoblado was joined by a
-ravine (which in almost any other chain would have been
-called a grand valley), that its bed, though composed merely
-of sand and gravel, was higher than that of its tributary.
-A mere rivulet of water, in the course of an hour, would have
-cut a channel for itself; but it was evident that ages had
-passed away, and no such rivulet had drained this great
-tributary. It was curious to behold the machinery, if such a
-term may be used, for the drainage, all, with the last trifling
-exception, perfect, yet without any signs of action. Every one
-must have remarked how mud-banks, left by the retiring tide,
-imitate in miniature a country with hill and dale; and here
-we have the original model in rock, formed as the continent
-rose during the secular retirement of the ocean, instead of
-during the ebbing and flowing of the tides. If a shower of
-rain falls on the mud-bank, when left dry, it deepens the
-already-formed shallow lines of excavation; and so it is with
-the rain of successive centuries on the bank of rock and soil,
-which we call a continent.
-
-We rode on after it was dark, till we reached a side ravine
-with a small well, called "Agua amarga." The water
-deserved its name, for besides being saline it was most
-offensively putrid and bitter; so that we could not force
-ourselves to drink either tea or mate. I suppose the distance
-from the river of Copiapo to this spot was at least twenty-five
-or thirty English miles; in the whole space there was not a
-single drop of water, the country deserving the name of desert
-in the strictest sense. Yet about half way we passed some old
-Indian ruins near Punta Gorda: I noticed also in front of
-some of the valleys, which branch off from the Despoblado,
-two piles of stones placed a little way apart, and directed so
-as to point up the mouths of these small valleys. My companions
-knew nothing about them, and only answered my
-queries by their imperturbable "quien sabe?"
-
-I observed Indian ruins in several parts of the Cordillera:
-the most perfect which I saw, were the Ruinas de Tambillos,
-in the Uspallata Pass. Small square rooms were there huddled
-together in separate groups: some of the doorways were
-yet standing; they were formed by a cross slab of stone only
-about three feet high. Ulloa has remarked on the lowness of
-the doors in the ancient Peruvian dwellings. These houses,
-when perfect, must have been capable of containing a
-considerable number of persons. Tradition says, that they were
-used as halting-places for the Incas, when they crossed the
-mountains. Traces of Indian habitations have been discovered
-in many other parts, where it does not appear probable
-that they were used as mere resting-places, but yet where
-the land is as utterly unfit for any kind of cultivation, as it
-is near the Tambillos or at the Incas Bridge, or in the Portillo
-Pass, at all which places I saw ruins. In the ravine of
-Jajuel, near Aconcagua, where there is no pass, I heard of
-remains of houses situated at a great height, where it is
-extremely cold and sterile. At first I imagined that these
-buildings had been places of refuge, built by the Indians on
-the first arrival of the Spaniards; but I have since been
-inclined to speculate on the probability of a small change of
-climate.
-
-In this northern part of Chile, within the Cordillera, old
-Indian houses are said to be especially numerous: by digging
-amongst the ruins, bits of woollen articles, instruments of
-precious metals, and heads of Indian corn, are not unfrequently
-discovered: an arrow-head made of agate, and of
-precisely the same form with those now used in Tierra del
-Fuego, was given me. I am aware that the Peruvian Indians
-now frequently inhabit most lofty and bleak situations; but
-at Copiapo I was assured by men who had spent their lives in
-travelling through the Andes, that there were very many
-(muchisimas) buildings at heights so great as almost to border
-upon the perpetual snow, and in parts where there exist
-no passes, and where the land produces absolutely nothing,
-and what is still more extraordinary, where there is no water.
-Nevertheless it is the opinion of the people of the country
-(although they are much puzzled by the circumstance), that,
-from the appearance of the houses, the Indians must have
-used them as places of residence. In this valley, at Punta
-Gorda, the remains consisted of seven or eight square little
-rooms, which were of a similar form with those at Tambillos,
-but built chiefly of mud, which the present inhabitants cannot,
-either here or, according to Ulloa, in Peru, imitate in
-durability. They were situated in the most conspicuous and
-defenceless position, at the bottom of the flat broad valley.
-There was no water nearer than three or four leagues, and
-that only in very small quantity, and bad: the soil was
-absolutely sterile; I looked in vain even for a lichen adhering
-to the rocks. At the present day, with the advantage of beasts
-of burden, a mine, unless it were very rich, could scarcely
-be worked here with profit. Yet the Indians formerly chose
-it as a place of residence! If at the present time two or
-three showers of rain were to fall annually, instead of one,
-as now is the case during as many years, a small rill of water
-would probably be formed in this great valley; and then, by
-irrigation (which was formerly so well understood by the
-Indians), the soil would easily be rendered sufficiently
-productive to support a few families.
-
-I have convincing proofs that this part of the continent of
-South America has been elevated near the coast at least from
-400 to 500, and in some parts from 1000 to 1300 feet, since
-the epoch of existing shells; and further inland the rise
-possibly may have been greater. As the peculiarly arid character
-of the climate is evidently a consequence of the height of the
-Cordillera, we may feel almost sure that before the later
-elevations, the atmosphere could not have been so completely
-drained of its moisture as it now is; and as the rise has been
-gradual, so would have been the change in climate. On this
-notion of a change of climate since the buildings were
-inhabited, the ruins must be of extreme antiquity, but I do
-not think their preservation under the Chilian climate any
-great difficulty. We must also admit on this notion (and
-this perhaps is a greater difficulty) that man has inhabited
-South America for an immensely long period, inasmuch as
-any change of climate effected by the elevation of the land
-must have been extremely gradual. At Valparaiso, within
-the last 220 years, the rise has been somewhat less than 19
-feet: at Lima a sea-beach has certainly been upheaved from
-80 to 90 feet, within the Indo-human period: but such small
-elevations could have had little power in deflecting the
-moisture-bringing atmospheric currents. Dr. Lund, however,
-found human skeletons in the caves of Brazil, the appearance
-of which induced him to believe that the Indian race has
-existed during a vast lapse of time in South America.
-
-When at Lima, I conversed on these subjects [3] with Mr.
-Gill, a civil engineer, who had seen much of the interior
-country. He told me that a conjecture of a change of climate
-had sometimes crossed his mind; but that he thought
-that the greater portion of land, now incapable of cultivation,
-but covered with Indian ruins, had been reduced to this state
-by the water-conduits, which the Indians formerly constructed
-on so wonderful a scale, having been injured by
-neglect and by subterranean movements. I may here mention,
-that the Peruvians actually carried their irrigating
-streams in tunnels through hills of solid rock. Mr. Gill told
-me, he had been employed professionally to examine one:
-he found the passage low, narrow, crooked, and not of uniform
-breadth, but of very considerable length. Is it not
-most wonderful that men should have attempted such operations,
-without the use of iron or gunpowder? Mr. Gill also
-mentioned to me a most interesting, and, as far as I am
-aware, quite unparalleled case, of a subterranean disturbance
-having changed the drainage of a country. Travelling from
-Casma to Huaraz (not very far distant from Lima), he
-found a plain covered with ruins and marks of ancient
-cultivation but now quite barren. Near it was the dry course of
-a considerable river, whence the water for irrigation had
-formerly been conducted. There was nothing in the appearance
-of the water-course to indicate that the river had not flowed
-there a few years previously; in some parts, beds of sand and
-gravel were spread out; in others, the solid rock had been
-worn into a broad channel, which in one spot was about 40
-yards in breadth and 8 feet deep. It is self-evident that a
-person following up the course of a stream, will always
-ascend at a greater or less inclination: Mr. Gill, therefore,
-was much astonished, when walking up the bed of this
-ancient river, to find himself suddenly going down hill. He
-imagined that the downward slope had a fall of about 40 or
-50 feet perpendicular. We here have unequivocal evidence
-that a ridge had been uplifted right across the old bed of a
-stream. From the moment the river-course was thus arched,
-the water must necessarily have been thrown back, and a new
-channel formed. From that moment, also, the neighbouring
-plain must have lost its fertilizing stream, and become a
-desert.
-
-June 27th. -- We set out early in the morning, and by midday
-reached the ravine of Paypote, where there is a tiny rill
-of water, with a little vegetation, and even a few algarroba
-trees, a kind of mimosa. From having firewood, a smelting-
-furnace had formerly been built here: we found a solitary
-man in charge of it, whose sole employment was hunting
-guanacos. At night it froze sharply; but having plenty of
-wood for our fire, we kept ourselves warm.
-
-28th. -- We continued gradually ascending, and the valley
-now changed into a ravine. During the day we saw several
-guanacos, and the track of the closely-allied species, the
-Vicuna: this latter animal is pre-eminently alpine in its
-habits; it seldom descends much below the limit of perpetual
-snow, and therefore haunts even a more lofty and sterile
-situation than the guanaco. The only other animal which we
-saw in any number was a small fox: I suppose this animal
-preys on the mice and other small rodents, which, as long as
-there is the least vegetation, subsist in considerable numbers
-in very desert places. In Patagonia, even on the borders of
-the salinas, where a drop of fresh water can never be found,
-excepting dew, these little animals swarm. Next to lizards,
-mice appear to be able to support existence on the smallest
-and driest portions of the earth -- even on islets in the midst
-of great oceans.
-
-The scene on all sides showed desolation, brightened and
-made palpable by a clear, unclouded sky. For a time such
-scenery is sublime, but this feeling cannot last, and then it
-becomes uninteresting. We bivouacked at the foot of the
-"primera linea," or the first line of the partition of waters.
-The streams, however, on the east side do not flow to the
-Atlantic, but into an elevated district, in the middle of which
-there is a large saline, or salt lake; thus forming a little
-Caspian Sea at the height, perhaps, of ten thousand feet. Where
-we slept, there were some considerable patches of snow, but
-they do not remain throughout the year. The winds in these
-lofty regions obey very regular laws every day a fresh
-breeze blows up the valley, and at night, an hour or two after
-sunset, the air from the cold regions above descends as
-through a funnel. This night it blew a gale of wind, and the
-temperature must have been considerably below the freezing-
-point, for water in a vessel soon became a block of ice. No
-clothes seemed to oppose any obstacle to the air; I suffered
-very much from the cold, so that I could not sleep, and in
-the morning rose with my body quite dull and benumbed.
-
-In the Cordillera further southward, people lose their lives
-from snow-storms; here, it sometimes happens from another
-cause. My guide, when a boy of fourteen years old, was
-passing the Cordillera with a party in the month of May;
-and while in the central parts, a furious gale of wind arose,
-so that the men could hardly cling on their mules, and stones
-were flying along the ground. The day was cloudless, and
-not a speck of snow fell, but the temperature was low. It is
-probable that the thermometer could not have stood very
-many degrees below the freezing-point, but the effect on
-their bodies, ill protected by clothing, must have been in
-proportion to the rapidity of the current of cold air. The gale
-lasted for more than a day; the men began to lose their
-strength, and the mules would not move onwards. My guide's
-brother tried to return, but he perished, and his body was
-found two years afterwards, Lying by the side of his mule
-near the road, with the bridle still in his hand. Two other
-men in the party lost their fingers and toes; and out of two
-hundred mules and thirty cows, only fourteen mules escaped
-alive. Many years ago the whole of a large party are supposed
-to have perished from a similar cause, but their bodies
-to this day have never been discovered. The union of a
-cloudless sky, low temperature, and a furious gale of wind,
-must be, I should think, in all parts of the world an unusual
-occurrence.
-
-June 29th -- We gladly travelled down the valley to our
-former night's lodging, and thence to near the Agua amarga.
-On July 1st we reached the valley of Copiapo. The smell of
-the fresh clover was quite delightful, after the scentless air
-of the dry, sterile Despoblado. Whilst staying in the town I
-heard an account from several of the inhabitants, of a hill
-in the neighbourhood which they called "El Bramador," -- the
-roarer or bellower. I did not at the time pay sufficient
-attention to the account; but, as far as I understood, the hill
-was covered by sand, and the noise was produced only when
-people, by ascending it, put the sand in motion. The same
-circumstances are described in detail on the authority of
-Seetzen and Ehrenberg, [4] as the cause of the sounds which
-have been heard by many travellers on Mount Sinai near the
-Red Sea. One person with whom I conversed had himself
-heard the noise: he described it as very surprising; and he
-distinctly stated that, although he could not understand how
-it was caused, yet it was necessary to set the sand rolling
-down the acclivity. A horse walking over dry coarse sand,
-causes a peculiar chirping noise from the friction of the
-particles; a circumstance which I several times noticed on the
-coast of Brazil.
-
-Three days afterwards I heard of the Beagle's arrival at
-the Port, distant eighteen leagues from the town. There is
-very little land cultivated down the valley; its wide expanse
-supports a wretched wiry grass, which even the donkeys can
-hardly eat. This poorness of the vegetation is owing to the
-quantity of saline matter with which the soil is impregnated.
-The Port consists of an assemblage of miserable little hovels,
-situated at the foot of a sterile plain. At present, as the
-river contains water enough to reach the sea, the inhabitants
-enjoy the advantage of having fresh water within a mile and
-a half. On the beach there were large piles of merchandise,
-and the little place had an air of activity. In the evening
-I gave my adios, with a hearty good-will, to my companion
-Mariano Gonzales, with whom I had ridden so many leagues
-in Chile. The next morning the Beagle sailed for Iquique.
-
-July 12th. -- We anchored in the port of Iquique, in lat.
-20 degs. 12', on the coast of Peru. The town contains about a
-thousand inhabitants, and stands on a little plain of sand at
-the foot of a great wall of rock, 2000 feet in height, here
-forming the coast. The whole is utterly desert. A light
-shower of rain falls only once in very many years; and the
-ravines consequently are filled with detritus, and the
-mountain-sides covered by piles of fine white sand, even to a
-height of a thousand feet. During this season of the year a
-heavy bank of clouds, stretched over the ocean, seldom rises
-above the wall of rocks on the coast. The aspect of the place
-was most gloomy; the little port, with its few vessels, and
-small group of wretched houses, seemed overwhelmed and out of
-all proportion with the rest of the scene.
-
-The inhabitants live like persons on board a ship: every
-necessary comes from a distance: water is brought in boats
-from Pisagua, about forty miles northward, and is sold at
-the rate of nine reals (4s. 6d.) an eighteen-gallon cask: I
-bought a wine-bottle full for threepence. In like manner
-firewood, and of course every article of food, is imported.
-Very few animals can be maintained in such a place: on the
-ensuing morning I hired with difficulty, at the price of four
-pounds sterling, two mules and a guide to take me to the
-nitrate of soda works. These are at present the support of
-Iquique. This salt was first exported in 1830: in one year an
-amount in value of one hundred thousand pounds sterling,
-was sent to France and England. It is principally used as a
-manure and in the manufacture of nitric acid: owing to its
-deliquescent property it will not serve for gunpowder. Formerly
-there were two exceedingly rich silver-mines in this
-neighbourhood, but their produce is now very small.
-
-Our arrival in the offing caused some little apprehension.
-Peru was in a state of anarchy; and each party having
-demanded a contribution, the poor town of Iquique was in
-tribulation, thinking the evil hour was come. The people
-had also their domestic troubles; a short time before, three
-French carpenters had broken open, during the same night,
-the two churches, and stolen all the plate: one of the robbers,
-however, subsequently confessed, and the plate was recovered.
-The convicts were sent to Arequipa, which though the capital
-of this province, is two hundred leagues distant, the government
-there thought it a pity to punish such useful workmen,
-who could make all sorts of furniture; and accordingly
-liberated them. Things being in this state, the churches were
-again broken open, but this time the plate was not recovered.
-The inhabitants became dreadfully enraged, and declaring
-that none but heretics would thus "eat God Almighty," proceeded
-to torture some Englishmen, with the intention of
-afterwards shooting them. At last the authorities interfered,
-and peace was established.
-
-
-13th. -- In the morning I started for the saltpetre-works,
-a distance of fourteen leagues. Having ascended the steep
-coast-mountains by a zigzag sandy track, we soon came in
-view of the mines of Guantajaya and St. Rosa. These two
-small villages are placed at the very mouths of the mines;
-and being perched up on hills, they had a still more unnatural
-and desolate appearance than the town of Iquique. We did
-not reach the saltpetre-works till after sunset, having ridden
-all day across an undulating country, a complete and utter
-desert. The road was strewed with the bones and dried skins
-of many beasts of burden which had perished on it from
-fatigue. Excepting the Vultur aura, which preys on the
-carcasses, I saw neither bird, quadruped, reptile, nor insect.
-On the coast-mountains, at the height of about 2000 feet
-where during this season the clouds generally hang, a very
-few cacti were growing in the clefts of rock; and the loose
-sand was strewed over with a lichen, which lies on the surface
-quite unattached. This plant belongs to the genus
-Cladonia, and somewhat resembles the reindeer lichen. In
-some parts it was in sufficient quantity to tinge the sand,
-as seen from a distance, of a pale yellowish colour. Further
-inland, during the whole ride of fourteen leagues, I saw only
-one other vegetable production, and that was a most minute
-yellow lichen, growing on the bones of the dead mules. This
-was the first true desert which I had seen: the effect on me
-was not impressive; but I believe this was owing to my
-having become gradually accustomed to such scenes, as I
-rode northward from Valparaiso, through Coquimbo, to Copiapo.
-The appearance of the country was remarkable, from
-being covered by a thick crust of common salt, and of a
-stratified saliferous alluvium, which seems to have been
-deposited as the land slowly rose above the level of the sea.
-The salt is white, very hard, and compact: it occurs in water
-worn nodules projecting from the agglutinated sand, and is
-associated with much gypsum. The appearance of this superficial
-mass very closely resembled that of a country after
-snow, before the last dirty patches are thawed. The existence
-of this crust of a soluble substance over the whole face of
-the country, shows how extraordinarily dry the climate must
-have been for a long period.
-
-At night I slept at the house of the owner of one of the
-saltpetre mines. The country is here as unproductive as
-near the coast; but water, having rather a bitter and brackish
-taste, can be procured by digging wells. The well at this
-house was thirty-six yards deep: as scarcely any rain falls,
-it is evident the water is not thus derived; indeed if it were,
-it could not fail to be as salt as brine, for the whole
-surrounding country is incrusted with various saline substances.
-We must therefore conclude that it percolates under ground
-from the Cordillera, though distant many leagues. In that
-direction there are a few small villages, where the inhabitants,
-having more water, are enabled to irrigate a little land,
-and raise hay, on which the mules and asses, employed in
-carrying the saltpetre, are fed. The nitrate of soda was now
-selling at the ship's side at fourteen shillings per hundred
-pounds: the chief expense is its transport to the sea-coast.
-The mine consists of a hard stratum, between two and three
-feet thick, of the nitrate mingled with a little of the sulphate
-of soda and a good deal of common salt. It lies close beneath
-the surface, and follows for a length of one hundred and
-fifty miles the margin of a grand basin or plain; this, from
-its outline, manifestly must once have been a lake, or more
-probably an inland arm of the sea, as may be inferred from
-the presence of iodic salts in the saline stratum. The surface
-of the plain is 3300 feet above the Pacific.
-
-
-19th. -- We anchored in the Bay of Callao, the seaport of
-Lima, the capital of Peru. We stayed here six weeks but
-from the troubled state of public affairs, I saw very little of
-the country. During our whole visit the climate was far
-from being so delightful, as it is generally represented. A
-dull heavy bank of clouds constantly hung over the land, so
-that during the first sixteen days I had only one view of the
-Cordillera behind Lima. These mountains, seen in stages,
-one above the other, through openings in the clouds, had a
-very grand appearance. It is almost become a proverb, that
-rain never falls in the lower part of Peru. Yet this can
-hardly be considered correct; for during almost every day of
-our visit there was a thick drizzling mist, which was sufficient
-to make the streets muddy and one's clothes damp: this the
-people are pleased to call Peruvian dew. That much rain
-does not fall is very certain, for the houses are covered only
-with flat roofs made of hardened mud; and on the mole shiploads
-of wheat were piled up, being thus left for weeks together
-without any shelter.
-
-I cannot say I liked the very little I saw of Peru: in
-summer, however, it is said that the climate is much pleasanter.
-In all seasons, both inhabitants and foreigners suffer
-from severe attacks of ague. This disease is common on the
-whole coast of Peru, but is unknown in the interior. The
-attacks of illness which arise from miasma never fail to appear
-most mysterious. So difficult is it to judge from the
-aspect of a country, whether or not it is healthy, that if a
-person had been told to choose within the tropics a situation
-appearing favourable for health, very probably he would
-have named this coast. The plain round the outskirts of
-Callao is sparingly covered with a coarse grass, and in some
-parts there are a few stagnant, though very small, pools of
-water. The miasma, in all probability, arises from these:
-for the town of Arica was similarly circumstanced, and its
-healthiness was much improved by the drainage of some
-little pools. Miasma is not always produced by a luxuriant
-vegetation with an ardent climate; for many parts of Brazil,
-even where there are marshes and a rank vegetation, are
-much more healthy than this sterile coast of Peru. The
-densest forests in a temperate climate, as in Chiloe, do not
-seem in the slightest degree to affect the healthy condition
-of the atmosphere.
-
-The island of St. Jago, at the Cape de Verds, offers another
-strongly marked instance of a country, which any one
-would have expected to find most healthy, being very much
-the contrary. I have described the bare and open plains as
-supporting, during a few weeks after the rainy season, a thin
-vegetation, which directly withers away and dries up: at this
-period the air appears to become quite poisonous; both natives
-and foreigners often being affected with violent fevers.
-On the other hand, the Galapagos Archipelago, in the Pacific,
-with a similar soil, and periodically subject to the same
-process of vegetation, is perfectly healthy. Humboldt has
-observed, that, "under the torrid zone, the smallest marshes
-are the most dangerous, being surrounded, as at Vera Cruz
-and Carthagena, with an arid and sandy soil, which raises
-the temperature of the ambient air." [5] On the coast of Peru,
-however, the temperature is not hot to any excessive degree;
-and perhaps in consequence, the intermittent fevers are not
-of the most malignant order. In all unhealthy countries the
-greatest risk is run by sleeping on shore. Is this owing to
-the state of the body during sleep, or to a greater abundance
-of miasma at such times? It appears certain that those
-who stay on board a vessel, though anchored at only a short
-distance from the coast, generally suffer less than those
-actually on shore. On the other hand, I have heard of one
-remarkable case where a fever broke out among the crew of
-a man-of-war some hundred miles off the coast of Africa,
-and at the same time one of those fearful periods [6] of death
-commenced at Sierra Leone.
-
-No state in South America, since the declaration of
-independence, has suffered more from anarchy than Peru. At
-the time of our visit, there were four chiefs in arms contending
-for supremacy in the government: if one succeeded
-in becoming for a time very powerful, the others coalesced
-against him; but no sooner were they victorious, than they
-were again hostile to each other. The other day, at the
-Anniversary of the Independence, high mass was performed, the
-President partaking of the sacrament: during the _Te Deum
-laudamus_, instead of each regiment displaying the Peruvian
-flag, a black one with death's head was unfurled. Imagine
-a government under which such a scene could be ordered, on
-such an occasion, to be typical of their determination of
-fighting to death! This state of affairs happened at a time
-very unfortunately for me, as I was precluded from taking
-any excursions much beyond the limits of the town. The
-barren island of St. Lorenzo, which forms the harbour, was
-nearly the only place where one could walk securely. The
-upper part, which is upwards of 1000 feet in height, during
-this season of the year (winter), comes within the lower
-limit of the clouds; and in consequence, an abundant cryptogamic
-vegetation, and a few flowers cover the summit. On
-the hills near Lima, at a height but little greater, the ground
-is carpeted with moss, and beds of beautiful yellow lilies,
-called Amancaes. This indicates a very much greater degree
-of humidity, than at a corresponding height at Iquique.
-Proceeding northward of Lima, the climate becomes damper,
-till on the banks of the Guayaquil, nearly under the equator,
-we find the most luxuriant forests. The change, however,
-from the sterile coast of Peru to that fertile land is described
-as taking place rather abruptly in the latitude of Cape Blanco,
-two degrees south of Guayaquil.
-
-Callao is a filthy, ill-built, small seaport. The inhabitants,
-both here and at Lima, present every imaginable shade of
-mixture, between European, Negro, and Indian blood. They
-appear a depraved, drunken set of people. The atmosphere
-is loaded with foul smells, and that peculiar one, which may
-be perceived in almost every town within the tropics, was
-here very strong. The fortress, which withstood Lord Cochrane's
-long siege, has an imposing appearance. But the
-President, during our stay, sold the brass guns, and proceeded
-to dismantle parts of it. The reason assigned was,
-that he had not an officer to whom he could trust so important
-a charge. He himself had good reason for thinking
-so, as he had obtained the presidentship by rebelling while
-in charge of this same fortress. After we left South America,
-he paid the penalty in the usual manner, by being conquered,
-taken prisoner, and shot.
-
-Lima stands on a plain in a valley, formed during the
-gradual retreat of the sea. It is seven miles from Callao,
-and is elevated 500 feet above it; but from the slope being
-very gradual, the road appears absolutely level; so that when
-at Lima it is difficult to believe one has ascended even one
-hundred feet: Humboldt has remarked on this singularly deceptive
-case. Steep barren hills rise like islands from the
-plain, which is divided, by straight mud-walls, into large
-green fields. In these scarcely a tree grows excepting a few
-willows, and an occasional clump of bananas and of oranges.
-The city of Lima is now in a wretched state of decay: the
-streets are nearly unpaved; and heaps of filth are piled up
-in all directions, where the black gallinazos, tame as poultry,
-pick up bits of carrion. The houses have generally an upper
-story, built on account of the earthquakes, of plastered
-woodwork but some of the old ones, which are now used by several
-families, are immensely large, and would rival in suites
-of apartments the most magnificent in any place. Lima, the
-City of the Kings, must formerly have been a splendid town.
-The extraordinary number of churches gives it, even at the
-present day, a peculiar and striking character, especially
-when viewed from a short distance.
-
-One day I went out with some merchants to hunt in the
-immediate vicinity of the city. Our sport was very poor;
-but I had an opportunity of seeing the ruins of one of the
-ancient Indian villages, with its mound like a natural hill in
-the centre. The remains of houses, enclosures, irrigating
-streams, and burial mounds, scattered over this plain, cannot
-fail to give one a high idea of the condition and number of
-the ancient population. When their earthenware, woollen
-clothes, utensils of elegant forms cut out of the hardest rocks,
-tools of copper, ornaments of precious stones, palaces, and
-hydraulic works, are considered, it is impossible not to respect
-the considerable advance made by them in the arts of
-civilization. The burial mounds, called Huacas, are really
-stupendous; although in some places they appear to be natural
-hills incased and modelled.
-
-There is also another and very different class of ruins,
-which possesses some interest, namely, those of old Callao,
-overwhelmed by the great earthquake of 1746, and its
-accompanying wave. The destruction must have been more
-complete even than at Talcahuano. Quantities of shingle
-almost conceal the foundations of the walls, and vast masses
-of brickwork appear to have been whirled about like pebbles
-by the retiring waves. It has been stated that the land subsided
-during this memorable shock: I could not discover any
-proof of this; yet it seems far from improbable, for the
-form of the coast must certainly have undergone some change
-since the foundation of the old town; as no people in their
-senses would willingly have chosen for their building place,
-the narrow spit of shingle on which the ruins now stand.
-Since our voyage, M. Tschudi has come to the conclusion,
-by the comparison of old and modern maps, that the coast
-both north and south of Lima has certainly subsided.
-
-On the island of San Lorenzo, there are very satisfactory
-proofs of elevation within the recent period; this of course
-is not opposed to the belief, of a small sinking of the ground
-having subsequently taken place. The side of this island
-fronting the Bay of Callao, is worn into three obscure terraces,
-the lower one of which is covered by a bed a mile in
-length, almost wholly composed of shells of eighteen species,
-now living in the adjoining sea. The height of this bed is
-eighty-five feet. Many of the shells are deeply corroded, and
-have a much older and more decayed appearance than those
-at the height of 500 or 600 feet on the coast of Chile. These
-shells are associated with much common salt, a little sulphate
-of lime (both probably left by the evaporation of the
-spray, as the land slowly rose), together with sulphate of
-soda and muriate of lime. They rest on fragments of the
-underlying sandstone, and are covered by a few inches thick
-of detritus. The shells, higher up on this terrace could be
-traced scaling off in flakes, and falling into an impalpable
-powder; and on an upper terrace, at the height of 170 feet,
-and likewise at some considerably higher points, I found a
-layer of saline powder of exactly similar appearance, and
-lying in the same relative position. I have no doubt that this
-upper layer originally existed as a bed of shells, like that on
-the eighty-five-feet ledge; but it does not now contain even a
-trace of organic structure. The powder has been analyzed
-for me by Mr. T. Reeks; it consists of sulphates and muriates
-both of lime and soda, with very little carbonate of
-lime. It is known that common salt and carbonate of lime
-left in a mass for some time together, partly decompose each
-other; though this does not happen with small quantities in
-solution. As the half-decomposed shells in the lower parts
-are associated with much common salt, together with some
-of the saline substances composing the upper saline layer,
-and as these shells are corroded and decayed in a remarkable
-manner, I strongly suspect that this double decomposition
-has here taken place. The resultant salts, however, ought
-to be carbonate of soda and muriate of lime, the latter is
-present, but not the carbonate of soda. Hence I am led to
-imagine that by some unexplained means, the carbonate of
-soda becomes changed into the sulphate. It is obvious that
-the saline layer could not have been preserved in any country
-in which abundant rain occasionally fell: on the other
-hand, this very circumstance, which at first sight appears so
-highly favourable to the long preservation of exposed shells,
-has probably been the indirect means, through the common
-salt not having been washed away, of their decomposition
-and early decay.
-
-I was much interested by finding on the terrace, at the
-height of eighty-five feet, _embedded_ amidst the shells and
-much sea-drifted rubbish, some bits of cotton thread, plaited
-rush, and the head of a stalk of Indian corn: I compared
-these relics with similar ones taken out of the Huacas, or old
-Peruvian tombs, and found them identical in appearance.
-On the mainland in front of San Lorenzo, near Bellavista,
-there is an extensive and level plain about a hundred feet
-high, of which the lower part is formed of alternating layers
-of sand and impure clay, together with some gravel, and the
-surface, to the depth of from three to six feet, of a reddish
-loam, containing a few scattered sea-shells and numerous
-small fragments of coarse red earthenware, more abundant
-at certain spots than at others. At first I was inclined to
-believe that this superficial bed, from its wide extent and
-smoothness, must have been deposited beneath the sea; but
-I afterwards found in one spot, that it lay on an artificial
-floor of round stones. It seems, therefore, most probable
-that at a period when the land stood at a lower level there
-was a plain very similar to that now surrounding Callao,
-which being protected by a shingle beach, is raised but very
-little above the level of the sea. On this plain, with its
-underlying red-clay beds, I imagine that the Indians
-manufactured their earthen vessels; and that, during some
-violent earthquake, the sea broke over the beach, and converted
-the plain into a temporary lake, as happened round Callao in
-1713 and 1746. The water would then have deposited mud,
-containing fragments of pottery from the kilns, more abundant
-at some spots than at others, and shells from the sea.
-This bed, with fossil earthenware, stands at about the
-same height with the shells on the lower terrace of San
-Lorenzo, in which the cotton-thread and other relics were
-embedded.
-
-Hence we may safely conclude, that within the Indo-human
-period there has been an elevation, as before alluded to, of
-more than eighty-five feet; for some little elevation must
-have been lost by the coast having subsided since the old
-maps were engraved. At Valparaiso, although in the 220
-years before our visit, the elevation cannot have exceeded
-nineteen feet, yet subsequently to 1817, there has been a rise,
-partly insensible and partly by a start during the shock of
-1822, of ten or eleven feet. The antiquity of the Indo-human
-race here, judging by the eighty-five feet rise of the land
-since the relics were embedded, is the more remarkable, as on
-the coast of Patagonia, when the land stood about the same
-number of feet lower, the Macrauchenia was a living beast;
-but as the Patagonian coast is some way distant from the
-Cordillera, the rising there may have been slower than here.
-At Bahia Blanca, the elevation has been only a few feet
-since the numerous gigantic quadrupeds were there entombed;
-and, according to the generally received opinion,
-when these extinct animals were living, man did not exist.
-But the rising of that part of the coast of Patagonia, is
-perhaps no way connected with the Cordillera, but rather with
-a line of old volcanic rocks in Banda Oriental, so that it
-may have been infinitely slower than on the shores of Peru.
-All these speculations, however, must be vague; for who will
-pretend to say that there may not have been several periods
-of subsidence, intercalated between the movements of elevation;
-for we know that along the whole coast of Patagonia,
-there have certainly been many and long pauses in
-the upward action of the elevatory forces.
-
-[1] Vol. iv. p. 11, and vol. ii. p. 217. For the remarks on
-Guayaquil, see Silliman's Journ., vol. xxiv. p. 384. For those
-on Tacna by Mr. Hamilton, see Trans. of British Association,
-1840. For those on Coseguina see Mr. Caldcleugh in Phil. Trans.,
-1835. In the former edition I collected several references on
-the coincidences between sudden falls in the barometer and
-earthquakes; and between earthquakes and meteors.
-
-[2] Observa. sobre el Clima de Lima, p. 67. -- Azara's Travels,
-vol. i. p. 381. -- Ulloa's Voyage, vol. ii. p. 28. -- Burchell's
-Travels, vol. ii. p. 524. -- Webster's Description of the
-Azores, p. 124. -- Voyage a l'Isle de France par un Officer du
-Roi, tom. i. p. 248. -- Description of St. Helena, p. 123.
-
-[3] Temple, in his travels through Upper Peru, or Bolivia, in
-going from Potosi to Oruro, says, "I saw many Indian villages or
-dwellings in ruins, up even to the very tops of the mountains,
-attesting a former population where now all is desolate." He
-makes similar remarks in another place; but I cannot tell
-whether this desolation has been caused by a want of population,
-or by an altered condition of the land.
-
-[4] Edinburgh, Phil. Journ., Jan., 1830, p. 74; and April, 1830,
-p. 258 -- also Daubeny on Volcanoes, p. 438; and Bengal
-Journ., vol. vii. p. 324.
-
-[5] Political Essay on the Kingdom of New Spain, vol. iv.
-p. 199.
-
-[6] A similar interesting case is recorded in the Madras
-Medical Quart. Journ., 1839, p. 340. Dr. Ferguson, in his
-admirable Paper (see 9th vol. of Edinburgh Royal Trans.),
-shows clearly that the poison is generated in the drying
-process; and hence that dry hot countries are often the most
-unhealthy.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVII
-
-GALAPAGOS ARCHIPELAGO
-
-The whole Group Volcanic -- Numbers of Craters -- Leafless
-Bushes Colony at Charles Island -- James Island -- Salt-lake in
-Crater -- Natural History of the Group -- Ornithology, curious
-Finches -- Reptiles -- Great Tortoises, habits of -- Marine
-Lizard, feeds on Sea-weed -- Terrestrial Lizard, burrowing
-habits, herbivorous -- Importance of Reptiles in the
-Archipelago -- Fish, Shells, Insects -- Botany -- American Type
-of Organization -- Differences in the Species or Races on
-different Islands -- Tameness of the Birds -- Fear of Man, an
-acquired Instinct.
-
-
-SEPTEMBER 15th. -- This archipelago consists of ten
-principal islands, of which five exceed the others in
-size. They are situated under the Equator, and between
-five and six hundred miles westward of the coast of
-America. They are all formed of volcanic rocks; a few
-fragments of granite curiously glazed and altered by the
-heat, can hardly be considered as an exception. Some of
-the craters, surmounting the larger islands, are of immense
-size, and they rise to a height of between three and four
-thousand feet. Their flanks are studded by innumerable
-smaller orifices. I scarcely hesitate to affirm, that there
-must be in the whole archipelago at least two thousand
-craters. These consist either of lava or scoriae, or of finely-
-stratified, sandstone-like tuff. Most of the latter are
-beautifully symmetrical; they owe their origin to eruptions of
-volcanic mud without any lava: it is a remarkable circumstance
-that every one of the twenty-eight tuff-craters which
-were examined, had their southern sides either much lower
-than the other sides, or quite broken down and removed. As
-all these craters apparently have been formed when standing
-in the sea, and as the waves from the trade wind and the
-swell from the open Pacific here unite their forces on the
-southern coasts of all the islands, this singular uniformity
-in the broken state of the craters, composed of the soft and
-yielding tuff, is easily explained.
-
-Considering that these islands are placed directly under
-the equator, the climate is far from being excessively hot;
-this seems chiefly caused by the singularly low temperature
-of the surrounding water, brought here by the great southern
-
-
-[map]
-
-
-Polar current. Excepting during one short season, very
-little rain falls, and even then it is irregular; but the clouds
-generally hang low. Hence, whilst the lower parts of the
-islands are very sterile, the upper parts, at a height of a
-thousand feet and upwards, possess a damp climate and a
-tolerably luxuriant vegetation. This is especially the case
-on the windward sides of the islands, which first receive and
-condense the moisture from the atmosphere.
-
-In the morning (17th) we landed on Chatham Island,
-which, like the others, rises with a tame and rounded outline,
-broken here and there by scattered hillocks, the remains
-of former craters. Nothing could be less inviting than the
-first appearance. A broken field of black basaltic lava,
-thrown into the most rugged waves, and crossed by great
-fissures, is everywhere covered by stunted, sun-burnt brushwood,
-which shows little signs of life. The dry and parched
-surface, being heated by the noon-day sun, gave to the air
-a close and sultry feeling, like that from a stove: we fancied
-even that the bushes smelt unpleasantly. Although I diligently
-tried to collect as many plants as possible, I succeeded
-in getting very few; and such wretched-looking little
-weeds would have better become an arctic than an equatorial
-Flora. The brushwood appears, from a short distance, as
-leafless as our trees during winter; and it was some time
-before I discovered that not only almost every plant was
-now in full leaf, but that the greater number were in flower.
-The commonest bush is one of the Euphorbiaceae: an acacia
-and a great odd-looking cactus are the only trees which
-afford any shade. After the season of heavy rains, the islands
-are said to appear for a short time partially green. The
-volcanic island of Fernando Noronha, placed in many respects
-under nearly similar conditions, is the only other
-country where I have seen a vegetation at all like this of
-the Galapagos Islands.
-
-The Beagle sailed round Chatham Island, and anchored
-in several bays. One night I slept on shore on a part of the
-island, where black truncated cones were extraordinarily
-numerous: from one small eminence I counted sixty of
-them, all surmounted by craters more or less perfect. The
-greater number consisted merely of a ring of red scoriae
-or slags, cemented together: and their height above the plain
-of lava was not more than from fifty to a hundred feet; none
-had been very lately active. The entire surface of this part
-of the island seems to have been permeated, like a sieve, by
-the subterranean vapours: here and there the lava, whilst
-soft, has been blown into great bubbles; and in other parts,
-the tops of caverns similarly formed have fallen in, leaving
-circular pits with steep sides. From the regular form of the
-many craters, they gave to the country an artificial appearance,
-which vividly reminded me of those parts of Staffordshire,
-where the great iron-foundries are most numerous.
-The day was glowing hot, and the scrambling over the rough
-surface and through the intricate thickets, was very fatiguing;
-but I was well repaid by the strange Cyclopean scene.
-As I was walking along I met two large tortoises, each of
-which must have weighed at least two hundred pounds: one
-was eating a piece of cactus, and as I approached, it stared
-at me and slowly walked away; the other gave a deep hiss,
-and drew in its head. These huge reptiles, surrounded by
-the black lava, the leafless shrubs, and large cacti, seemed to
-my fancy like some antediluvian animals. The few dull-
-coloured birds cared no more for me than they did for the
-great tortoises.
-
-23rd. -- The Beagle proceeded to Charles Island. This
-archipelago has long been frequented, first by the bucaniers,
-and latterly by whalers, but it is only within the last six
-years, that a small colony has been established here. The
-inhabitants are between two and three hundred in number;
-they are nearly all people of colour, who have been banished
-for political crimes from the Republic of the Equator, of
-which Quito is the capital. The settlement is placed about
-four and a half miles inland, and at a height probably of a
-thousand feet. In the first part of the road we passed
-through leafless thickets, as in Chatham Island. Higher up,
-the woods gradually became greener; and as soon as we
-crossed the ridge of the island, we were cooled by a fine
-southerly breeze, and our sight refreshed by a green and
-thriving vegetation. In this upper region coarse grasses and
-ferns abound; but there are no tree-ferns: I saw nowhere
-any member of the palm family, which is the more singular,
-as 360 miles northward, Cocos Island takes its name from
-the number of cocoa-nuts. The houses are irregularly scattered
-over a flat space of ground, which is cultivated with
-sweet potatoes and bananas. It will not easily be imagined
-how pleasant the sight of black mud was to us, after having
-been so long, accustomed to the parched soil of Peru and
-northern Chile. The inhabitants, although complaining of
-poverty, obtain, without much trouble, the means of subsistence.
-In the woods there are many wild pigs and goats;
-but the staple article of animal food is supplied by the
-tortoises. Their numbers have of course been greatly reduced
-in this island, but the people yet count on two days'
-hunting giving them food for the rest of the week. It is
-said that formerly single vessels have taken away as many
-as seven hundred, and that the ship's company of a frigate
-some years since brought down in one day two hundred
-tortoises to the beach.
-
-September 29th. -- We doubled the south-west extremity of
-Albemarle Island, and the next day were nearly becalmed
-between it and Narborough Island. Both are covered with
-immense deluges of black naked lava, which have flowed either
-over the rims of the great caldrons, like pitch over the
-rim of a pot in which it has been boiled, or have burst forth
-from smaller orifices on the flanks; in their descent they
-have spread over miles of the sea-coast. On both of these
-islands, eruptions are known to have taken place; and in
-Albemarle, we saw a small jet of smoke curling from the
-summit of one of the great craters. In the evening we
-anchored in Bank's Cove, in Albemarle Island. The next
-morning I went out walking. To the south of the broken
-tuff-crater, in which the Beagle was anchored, there was
-another beautifully symmetrical one of an elliptic form; its
-longer axis was a little less than a mile, and its depth about
-500 feet. At its bottom there was a shallow lake, in the
-middle of which a tiny crater formed an islet. The day was
-overpoweringly hot, and the lake looked clear and blue: I
-hurried down the cindery slope, and, choked with dust,
-eagerly tasted the water -- but, to my sorrow, I found it salt
-as brine.
-
-The rocks on the coast abounded with great black lizards,
-between three and four feet long; and on the hills, an ugly
-yellowish-brown species was equally common. We saw many of this
-latter kind, some clumsily running out of the way, and others
-shuffling into their burrows. I shall presently describe in
-more detail the habits of both these reptiles. The whole of
-this northern part of Albemarle Island is miserably sterile.
-
-October 8th. -- We arrived at James Island: this island, as
-well as Charles Island, were long since thus named after our
-kings of the Stuart line. Mr. Bynoe, myself, and our servants
-were left here for a week, with provisions and a tent,
-whilst the Beagle went for water. We found here a party
-of Spaniards, who had been sent from Charles Island to dry
-fish, and to salt tortoise-meat. About six miles inland, and
-at the height of nearly 2000 feet, a hovel had been built in
-which two men lived, who were employed in catching tortoises,
-whilst the others were fishing on the coast. I paid
-this party two visits, and slept there one night. As in the
-other islands, the lower region was covered by nearly leafless
-bushes, but the trees were here of a larger growth than
-elsewhere, several being two feet and some even two feet nine
-inches in diameter. The upper region being kept damp by
-the clouds, supports a green and flourishing vegetation. So
-damp was the ground, that there were large beds of a coarse
-cyperus, in which great numbers of a very small water-rail
-lived and bred. While staying in this upper region, we lived
-entirely upon tortoise-meat: the breast-plate roasted (as the
-Gauchos do _carne con cuero_), with the flesh on it, is very
-good; and the young tortoises make excellent soup; but
-otherwise the meat to my taste is indifferent.
-
-One day we accompanied a party of the Spaniards in
-their whale-boat to a salina, or lake from which salt is
-procured. After landing, we had a very rough walk over a
-rugged field of recent lava, which has almost surrounded a
-tuff-crater, at the bottom of which the salt-lake lies. The
-water is only three or four inches deep, and rests on a layer
-of beautifully crystallized, white salt. The lake is quite
-circular, and is fringed with a border of bright green succulent
-plants; the almost precipitous walls of the crater are clothed
-with wood, so that the scene was altogether both picturesque
-and curious. A few years since, the sailors belonging to a
-sealing-vessel murdered their captain in this quiet spot; and
-we saw his skull lying among the bushes.
-
-During the greater part of our stay of a week, the sky
-was cloudless, and if the trade-wind failed for an hour, the
-heat became very oppressive. On two days, the thermometer
-within the tent stood for some hours at 93 degs.; but in the open
-air, in the wind and sun, at only 85 degs. The sand was extremely
-hot; the thermometer placed in some of a brown colour
-immediately rose to 137 degs., and how much above that
-it would have risen, I do not know, for it was not graduated
-any higher. The black sand felt much hotter, so that
-even in thick boots it was quite disagreeable to walk over it.
-
-
-The natural history of these islands is eminently curious,
-and well deserves attention. Most of the organic productions
-are aboriginal creations, found nowhere else; there is even
-a difference between the inhabitants of the different islands;
-yet all show a marked relationship with those of America,
-though separated from that continent by an open space of
-ocean, between 500 and 600 miles in width. The archipelago
-is a little world within itself, or rather a satellite attached
-to America, whence it has derived a few stray colonists, and
-has received the general character of its indigenous
-productions. Considering the small size of the islands, we feel
-the more astonished at the number of their aboriginal beings,
-and at their confined range. Seeing every height crowned
-with its crater, and the boundaries of most of the lava-
-streams still distinct, we are led to believe that within a
-period geologically recent the unbroken ocean was here
-spread out. Hence, both in space and time, we seem to be
-brought somewhat near to that great fact -- that mystery of
-mysteries -- the first appearance of new beings on this earth.
-
-Of terrestrial mammals, there is only one which must be
-considered as indigenous, namely, a mouse (Mus Galapagoensis),
-and this is confined, as far as I could ascertain, to
-Chatham Island, the most easterly island of the group. It
-belongs, as I am informed by Mr. Waterhouse, to a division
-of the family of mice characteristic of America. At James
-Island, there is a rat sufficiently distinct from the common
-kind to have been named and described by Mr. Waterhouse;
-but as it belongs to the old-world division of the family, and
-as this island has been frequented by ships for the last hundred
-and fifty years, I can hardly doubt that this rat is
-merely a variety produced by the new and peculiar climate,
-food, and soil, to which it has been subjected. Although no
-one has a right to speculate without distinct facts, yet even
-with respect to the Chatham Island mouse, it should be borne
-in mind, that it may possibly be an American species imported
-here; for I have seen, in a most unfrequented part of
-the Pampas, a native mouse living in the roof of a newly
-built hovel, and therefore its transportation in a vessel is
-not improbable: analogous facts have been observed by Dr.
-Richardson in North America.
-
-Of land-birds I obtained twenty-six kinds, all peculiar to
-the group and found nowhere else, with the exception of one
-lark-like finch from North America (Dolichonyx oryzivorus),
-which ranges on that continent as far north as 54 degs., and
-generally frequents marshes. The other twenty-five birds
-consist, firstly, of a hawk, curiously intermediate in structure
-between a buzzard and the American group of carrion-feeding
-Polybori; and with these latter birds it agrees most
-closely in every habit and even tone of voice. Secondly,
-there are two owls, representing the short-eared and white
-barn-owls of Europe. Thirdly, a wren, three tyrant-flycatchers
-(two of them species of Pyrocephalus, one or both of
-which would be ranked by some ornithologists as only varieties),
-and a dove -- all analogous to, but distinct from, American
-species. Fourthly, a swallow, which though differing
-from the Progne purpurea of both Americas, only in being
-rather duller colored, smaller, and slenderer, is considered
-by Mr. Gould as specifically distinct. Fifthly, there are three
-species of mocking thrush -- a form highly characteristic of
-America. The remaining land-birds form a most singular
-group of finches, related to each other in the structure of
-their beaks, short tails, form of body and plumage: there are
-thirteen species, which Mr. Gould has divided into four
-sub-groups. All these species are peculiar to this archipelago;
-and so is the whole group, with the exception of one species
-of the sub-group Cactornis, lately brought from Bow Island,
-in the Low Archipelago. Of Cactornis, the two species may
-be often seen climbing about the flowers of the great cactus-
-trees; but all the other species of this group of finches,
-mingled together in flocks, feed on the dry and sterile ground
-of the lower districts. The males of all, or certainly of the
-greater number, are jet black; and the females (with perhaps
-one or two exceptions) are brown. The most curious fact is
-the perfect gradation in the size of the beaks in the different
-species of Geospiza, from one as large as that of a hawfinch
-to that of a chaffinch, and (if Mr. Gould is right in including
-his sub-group, Certhidea, in the main group) even to
-that of a warbler. The largest beak in the genus Geospiza
-is shown in Fig. 1, and the smallest in Fig. 3; but instead of
-there being only one intermediate species, with a beak of
-the size shown in Fig. 2, there are no less than six species
-with insensibly graduated beaks. The beak of the sub-group
-Certhidea, is shown in Fig. 4. The beak of Cactornis is
-
-
-[picture]
-
-1. Geospiza magnirostris. 2. Geospiza fortis.
-3. Geospiza parvula. 4. Certhidea olivasea.
-
-
-somewhat like that of a starling, and that of the fourth
-sub-group, Camarhynchus, is slightly parrot-shaped. Seeing this
-gradation and diversity of structure in one small, intimately
-related group of birds, one might really fancy that from an
-original paucity of birds in this archipelago, one species had
-been taken and modified for different ends. In a like manner
-it might be fancied that a bird originally a buzzard, had been
-induced here to undertake the office of the carrion-feeding
-Polybori of the American continent.
-
-Of waders and water-birds I was able to get only eleven
-kinds, and of these only three (including a rail confined to
-the damp summits of the islands) are new species. Considering
-the wandering habits of the gulls, I was surprised to
-find that the species inhabiting these islands is peculiar, but
-allied to one from the southern parts of South America.
-The far greater peculiarity of the land-birds, namely,
-twenty-five out of twenty-six, being new species, or at least
-new races, compared with the waders and web-footed birds, is
-in accordance with the greater range which these latter
-orders have in all parts of the world. We shall hereafter
-see this law of aquatic forms, whether marine or fresh-water,
-being less peculiar at any given point of the earth's
-surface than the terrestrial forms of the same classes,
-strikingly illustrated in the shells, and in a lesser degree in
-the insects of this archipelago.
-
-Two of the waders are rather smaller than the same species
-brought from other places: the swallow is also smaller,
-though it is doubtful whether or not it is distinct from its
-analogue. The two owls, the two tyrant-catchers (Pyrocephalus)
-and the dove, are also smaller than the analogous
-but distinct species, to which they are most nearly related;
-on the other hand, the gull is rather larger. The two owls,
-the swallow, all three species of mocking-thrush, the dove
-in its separate colours though not in its whole plumage, the
-Totanus, and the gull, are likewise duskier coloured than
-their analogous species; and in the case of the mocking-
-thrush and Totanus, than any other species of the two genera.
-With the exception of a wren with a fine yellow breast,
-and of a tyrant-flycatcher with a scarlet tuft and breast, none
-of the birds are brilliantly coloured, as might have been
-expected in an equatorial district. Hence it would appear
-probable, that the same causes which here make the immigrants
-of some peculiar species smaller, make most of the
-peculiar Galapageian species also smaller, as well as very
-generally more dusky coloured. All the plants have a
-wretched, weedy appearance, and I did not see one beautiful
-flower. The insects, again, are small-sized and dull-coloured,
-and, as Mr. Waterhouse informs me, there is nothing in their
-general appearance which would have led him to imagine
-that they had come from under the equator. [1] The birds,
-plants, and insects have a desert character, and are not more
-brilliantly coloured than those from southern Patagonia; we
-may, therefore, conclude that the usual gaudy colouring of
-the intertropical productions, is not related either to the
-heat or light of those zones, but to some other cause, perhaps
-to the conditions of existence being generally favourable
-to life.
-
-
-We will now turn to the order of reptiles, which gives
-the most striking character to the zoology of these islands.
-The species are not numerous, but the numbers of individuals
-of each species are extraordinarily great. There is one
-small lizard belonging to a South American genus, and two
-species (and probably more) of the Amblyrhynchus -- a genus
-confined to the Galapagos Islands. There is one snake which
-is numerous; it is identical, as I am informed by M. Bibron,
-with the Psammophis Temminckii from Chile. [2] Of sea-
-turtle I believe there are more than one species, and of
-tortoises there are, as we shall presently show, two or three
-species or races. Of toads and frogs there are none: I was
-surprised at this, considering how well suited for them the
-temperate and damp upper woods appeared to be. It recalled
-to my mind the remark made by Bory St. Vincent, [3]
-namely, that none of this family are found on any of the
-volcanic islands in the great oceans. As far as I can ascertain
-from various works, this seems to hold good throughout the
-Pacific, and even in the large islands of the Sandwich
-archipelago. Mauritius offers an apparent exception, where I
-saw the Rana Mascariensis in abundance: this frog is said
-now to inhabit the Seychelles, Madagascar, and Bourbon;
-but on the other hand, Du Bois, in his voyage in 1669, states
-that there were no reptiles in Bourbon except tortoises; and
-the Officier du Roi asserts that before 1768 it had been
-attempted, without success, to introduce frogs into Mauritius
--- I presume for the purpose of eating: hence it may be well
-doubted whether this frog is an aboriginal of these islands.
-The absence of the frog family in the oceanic islands is the
-more remarkable, when contrasted with the case of lizards,
-which swarm on most of the smallest islands. May this difference
-not be caused, by the greater facility with which the
-eggs of lizards, protected by calcareous shells might be
-transported through salt-water, than could the slimy spawn
-of frogs?
-
-I will first describe the habits of the tortoise (Testudo
-nigra, formerly called Indica), which has been so frequently
-alluded to. These animals are found, I believe, on all the
-islands of the archipelago; certainly on the greater number.
-They frequent in preference the high damp parts, but they
-likewise live in the lower and arid districts. I have already
-shown, from the numbers which have been caught in a single
-day, how very numerous they must be. Some grow to an
-immense size: Mr. Lawson, an Englishman, and vice-governor
-of the colony, told us that he had seen several so large,
-that it required six or eight men to lift them from the
-ground; and that some had afforded as much as two hundred
-pounds of meat. The old males are the largest, the females
-rarely growing to so great a size: the male can readily be
-distinguished from the female by the greater length of its
-tail. The tortoises which live on those islands where there
-is no water, or in the lower and arid parts of the others, feed
-chiefly on the succulent cactus. Those which frequent the
-higher and damp regions, eat the leaves of various trees, a
-kind of berry (called guayavita) which is acid and austere,
-and likewise a pale green filamentous lichen (Usnera plicata),
-that hangs from the boughs of the trees.
-
-The tortoise is very fond of water, drinking large quantities,
-and wallowing in the mud. The larger islands alone
-possess springs, and these are always situated towards the
-central parts, and at a considerable height. The tortoises,
-therefore, which frequent the lower districts, when thirsty,
-are obliged to travel from a long distance. Hence broad and
-well-beaten paths branch off in every direction from the
-wells down to the sea-coast; and the Spaniards by following
-them up, first discovered the watering-places. When I landed
-at Chatham Island, I could not imagine what animal travelled
-so methodically along well-chosen tracks. Near the springs
-it was a curious spectacle to behold many of these huge
-creatures, one set eagerly travelling onwards with outstretched
-necks, and another set returning, after having
-drunk their fill. When the tortoise arrives at the spring,
-quite regardless of any spectator, he buries his head in the
-water above his eyes, and greedily swallows great mouthfuls,
-at the rate of about ten in a minute. The inhabitants say
-each animal stays three or four days in the neighbourhood
-of the water, and then returns to the lower country; but
-they differed respecting the frequency of these visits. The
-animal probably regulates them according to the nature of
-the food on which it has lived. It is, however, certain, that
-tortoises can subsist even on these islands where there is no
-other water than what falls during a few rainy days in the
-year.
-
-I believe it is well ascertained, that the bladder of the frog
-acts as a reservoir for the moisture necessary to its existence:
-such seems to be the case with the tortoise. For some
-time after a visit to the springs, their urinary bladders are
-distended with fluid, which is said gradually to decrease in
-volume, and to become less pure. The inhabitants, when
-walking in the lower district, and overcome with thirst, often
-take advantage of this circumstance, and drink the contents
-of the bladder if full: in one I saw killed, the fluid was quite
-limpid, and had only a very slightly bitter taste. The
-inhabitants, however, always first drink the water in the
-pericardium, which is described as being best.
-
-The tortoises, when purposely moving towards any point,
-travel by night and day, and arrive at their journey's end
-much sooner than would be expected. The inhabitants, from
-observing marked individuals, consider that they travel a
-distance of about eight miles in two or three days. One large
-tortoise, which I watched, walked at the rate of sixty yards
-in ten minutes, that is 360 yards in the hour, or four miles a
-day, -- allowing a little time for it to eat on the road. During
-the breeding season, when the male and female are together,
-the male utters a hoarse roar or bellowing, which, it is said,
-can be heard at the distance of more than a hundred yards.
-The female never uses her voice, and the male only at these
-times; so that when the people hear this noise, they know
-that the two are together. They were at this time (October)
-laying their eggs. The female, where the soil is sandy, deposits
-them together, and covers them up with sand; but
-where the ground is rocky she drops them indiscriminately
-in any hole: Mr. Bynoe found seven placed in a fissure. The
-egg is white and spherical; one which I measured was seven
-inches and three-eighths in circumference, and therefore
-larger than a hen's egg. The young tortoises, as soon as they
-are hatched, fall a prey in great numbers to the carrion-
-feeding buzzard. The old ones seem generally to die from
-accidents, as from falling down precipices: at least, several
-of the inhabitants told me, that they never found one dead
-without some evident cause.
-
-The inhabitants believe that these animals are absolutely
-deaf; certainly they do not overhear a person walking close
-behind them. I was always amused when overtaking one of
-these great monsters, as it was quietly pacing along, to see
-how suddenly, the instant I passed, it would draw in its head
-and legs, and uttering a deep hiss fall to the ground with a
-heavy sound, as if struck dead. I frequently got on their
-backs, and then giving a few raps on the hinder part of their
-shells, they would rise up and walk away; -- but I found it
-very difficult to keep my balance. The flesh of this animal is
-largely employed, both fresh and salted; and a beautifully
-clear oil is prepared from the fat. When a tortoise is caught,
-the man makes a slit in the skin near its tail, so as to see
-inside its body, whether the fat under the dorsal plate is
-thick. If it is not, the animal is liberated and it is said to
-recover soon from this strange operation. In order to secure
-the tortoise, it is not sufficient to turn them like turtle, for
-they are often able to get on their legs again.
-
-There can be little doubt that this tortoise is an aboriginal
-inhabitant of the Galapagos; for it is found on all, or nearly
-all, the islands, even on some of the smaller ones where there
-is no water; had it been an imported species, this would
-hardly have been the case in a group which has been so little
-frequented. Moreover, the old Bucaniers found this tortoise
-in greater numbers even than at present: Wood and Rogers
-also, in 1708, say that it is the opinion of the Spaniards, that
-it is found nowhere else in this quarter of the world. It is
-now widely distributed; but it may be questioned whether
-it is in any other place an aboriginal. The bones of a tortoise
-at Mauritius, associated with those of the extinct Dodo,
-have generally been considered as belonging to this tortoise;
-if this had been so, undoubtedly it must have been there
-indigenous; but M. Bibron informs me that he believes that
-it was distinct, as the species now living there certainly is.
-
-The Amblyrhynchus, a remarkable genus of lizards, is confined
-to this archipelago; there are two species, resembling
-
-[picture]
-
-each other in general form, one being terrestrial and the
-other aquatic. This latter species (A. cristatus) was first
-characterized by Mr. Bell, who well foresaw, from its short,
-broad head, and strong claws of equal length, that its habits
-of life would turn out very peculiar, and different from those
-of its nearest ally, the Iguana. It is extremely common on all
-the islands throughout the group, and lives exclusively on the
-rocky sea-beaches, being never found, at least I never saw
-one, even ten yards in-shore. It is a hideous-looking creature,
-of a dirty black colour, stupid, and sluggish in its movements.
-The usual length of a full-grown one is about a yard,
-but there are some even four feet long; a large one weighed
-twenty pounds: on the island of Albemarle they seem to
-grow to a greater size than elsewhere. Their tails are flattened
-sideways, and all four feet partially webbed. They are
-occasionally seen some hundred yards from the shore,
-swimming about; and Captain Collnett, in his Voyage says,
-"They go to sea in herds a-fishing, and sun themselves on
-the rocks; and may be called alligators in miniature." It
-must not, however, be supposed that they live on fish. When
-in the water this lizard swims with perfect ease and quickness,
-by a serpentine movement of its body and flattened tail
--- the legs being motionless and closely collapsed on its sides.
-A seaman on board sank one, with a heavy weight attached
-to it, thinking thus to kill it directly; but when, an hour
-afterwards, he drew up the line, it was quite active. Their
-limbs and strong claws are admirably adapted for crawling over
-the rugged and fissured masses of lava, which everywhere form
-the coast. In such situations, a group of six or seven of
-these hideous reptiles may oftentimes be seen on the black
-rocks, a few feet above the surf, basking in the sun with
-outstretched legs.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them largely
-distended with minced sea-weed (Ulvae), which grows in
-thin foliaceous expansions of a bright green or a dull red
-colour. I do not recollect having observed this sea-weed in
-any quantity on the tidal rocks; and I have reason to believe
-it grows at the bottom of the sea, at some little distance from
-the coast. If such be the case, the object of these animals
-occasionally going out to sea is explained. The stomach
-contained nothing but the sea-weed. Mr. Baynoe, however, found
-a piece of crab in one; but this might have got in accidentally,
-in the same manner as I have seen a caterpillar, in
-the midst of some lichen, in the paunch of a tortoise. The
-intestines were large, as in other herbivorous animals. The
-nature of this lizard's food, as well as the structure of its
-tail and feet, and the fact of its having been seen voluntarily
-swimming out at sea, absolutely prove its aquatic habits;
-yet there is in this respect one strange anomaly, namely, that
-when frightened it will not enter the water. Hence it is
-easy to drive these lizards down to any little point overhanging
-the sea, where they will sooner allow a person to catch
-hold of their tails than jump into the water. They do not
-seem to have any notion of biting; but when much frightened
-they squirt a drop of fluid from each nostril. I threw one
-several times as far as I could, into a deep pool left by the
-retiring tide; but it invariably returned in a direct line to
-the spot where I stood. It swam near the bottom, with a
-very graceful and rapid movement, and occasionally aided
-itself over the uneven ground with its feet. As soon as it
-arrived near the edge, but still being under water, it tried to
-conceal itself in the tufts of sea-weed, or it entered some
-crevice. As soon as it thought the danger was past, it
-crawled out on the dry rocks, and shuffled away as quickly
-as it could. I several times caught this same lizard, by driving
-it down to a point, and though possessed of such perfect
-powers of diving and swimming, nothing would induce it to
-enter the water; and as often as I threw it in, it returned in
-the manner above described. Perhaps this singular piece of
-apparent stupidity may be accounted for by the circumstance,
-that this reptile has no enemy whatever on shore,
-whereas at sea it must often fall a prey to the numerous
-sharks. Hence, probably, urged by a fixed and hereditary
-instinct that the shore is its place of safety, whatever the
-emergency may be, it there takes refuge.
-
-During our visit (in October), I saw extremely few small
-individuals of this species, and none I should think under
-a year old. From this circumstance it seems probable that
-the breeding season had not then commenced. I asked several
-of the inhabitants if they knew where it laid its eggs:
-they said that they knew nothing of its propagation, although
-well acquainted with the eggs of the land kind -- a fact,
-considering how very common this lizard is, not a little
-extraordinary.
-
-We will now turn to the terrestrial species (A. Demarlii),
-with a round tail, and toes without webs. This lizard,
-instead of being found like the other on all the islands, is
-confined to the central part of the archipelago, namely to
-Albemarle, James, Barrington, and Indefatigable islands. To
-the southward, in Charles, Hood, and Chatham islands, and
-to the northward, in Towers, Bindloes, and Abingdon, I
-neither saw nor heard of any. It would appear as if it had
-been created in the centre of the archipelago, and thence had
-been dispersed only to a certain distance. Some of these
-lizards inhabit the high and damp parts of the islands, but
-they are much more numerous in the lower and sterile
-districts near the coast. I cannot give a more forcible proof
-of their numbers, than by stating that when we were left at
-James Island, we could not for some time find a spot free
-from their burrows on which to pitch our single tent. Like
-their brothers the sea-kind, they are ugly animals, of a
-yellowish orange beneath, and of a brownish red colour above:
-from their low facial angle they have a singularly stupid
-appearance. They are, perhaps, of a rather less size than the
-marine species; but several of them weighed between ten and
-fifteen pounds. In their movements they are lazy and half
-torpid. When not frightened, they slowly crawl along with
-their tails and bellies dragging on the ground. They often
-stop, and doze for a minute or two, with closed eyes and hind
-legs spread out on the parched soil.
-
-They inhabit burrows, which they sometimes make between
-fragments of lava, but more generally on level patches of the
-soft sandstone-like tuff. The holes do not appear to be very
-deep, and they enter the ground at a small angle; so that
-when walking over these lizard-warrens, the soil is constantly
-giving way, much to the annoyance of the tired walker. This
-animal, when making its burrow, works alternately the opposite
-sides of its body. One front leg for a short time
-scratches up the soil, and throws it towards the hind foot,
-which is well placed so as to heave it beyond the mouth of
-the hole. That side of the body being tired, the other takes
-up the task, and so on alternately. I watched one for a long
-time, till half its body was buried; I then walked up and pulled
-it by the tail, at this it was greatly astonished, and soon
-shuffled up to see what was the matter; and then stared me
-in the face, as much as to say, "What made you pull my
-tail?"
-
-They feed by day, and do not wander far from their burrows;
-if frightened, they rush to them with a most awkward
-gait. Except when running down hill, they cannot move
-very fast, apparently from the lateral position of their legs.
-They are not at all timorous: when attentively watching any
-one, they curl their tails, and, raising themselves on their
-front legs, nod their heads vertically, with a quick movement,
-and try to look very fierce; but in reality they are not at all
-so: if one just stamps on the ground, down go their tails,
-and off they shuffle as quickly as they can. I have frequently
-observed small fly-eating lizards, when watching anything,
-nod their heads in precisely the same manner; but I do not
-at all know for what purpose. If this Amblyrhynchus is held
-and plagued with a stick, it will bite it very severely; but
-I caught many by the tail, and they never tried to bite me.
-If two are placed on the ground and held together, they will
-fight, and bite each other till blood is drawn.
-
-The individuals, and they are the greater number, which
-inhabit the lower country, can scarcely taste a drop of water
-throughout the year; but they consume much of the succulent
-cactus, the branches of which are occasionally broken off
-by the wind. I several times threw a piece to two or three
-of them when together; and it was amusing enough to see
-them trying to seize and carry it away in their mouths, like
-so many hungry dogs with a bone. They eat very deliberately,
-but do not chew their food. The little birds are aware
-how harmless these creatures are: I have seen one of the
-thick-billed finches picking at one end of a piece of cactus
-(which is much relished by all the animals of the lower
-region), whilst a lizard was eating at the other end; and
-afterwards the little bird with the utmost indifference hopped
-on the back of the reptile.
-
-I opened the stomachs of several, and found them full of
-vegetable fibres and leaves of different trees, especially of
-an acacia. In the upper region they live chiefly on the acid
-and astringent berries of the guayavita, under which trees
-I have seen these lizards and the huge tortoises feeding
-together. To obtain the acacia-leaves they crawl up the low
-stunted trees; and it is not uncommon to see a pair quietly
-browsing, whilst seated on a branch several feet above the
-ground. These lizards, when cooked, yield a white meat,
-which is liked by those whose stomachs soar above all
-prejudices.
-
-Humboldt has remarked that in intertropical South
-America, all lizards which inhabit dry regions are esteemed
-delicacies for the table. The inhabitants state that those
-which inhabit the upper damp parts drink water, but that
-the others do not, like the tortoises, travel up for it from
-the lower sterile country. At the time of our visit, the
-females had within their bodies numerous, large, elongated
-eggs, which they lay in their burrows: the inhabitants seek
-them for food.
-
-These two species of Amblyrhynchus agree, as I have
-already stated, in their general structure, and in many of
-their habits. Neither have that rapid movement, so
-characteristic of the genera Lacerta and Iguana. They are both
-herbivorous, although the kind of vegetation on which they
-feed is so very different. Mr. Bell has given the name to the
-genus from the shortness of the snout: indeed, the form of
-the mouth may almost be compared to that of the tortoise:
-one is led to suppose that this is an adaptation to their
-herbivorous appetites. It is very interesting thus to find a
-well-characterized genus, having its marine and terrestrial
-species, belonging to so confined a portion of the world. The
-aquatic species is by far the most remarkable, because it is
-the only existing lizard which lives on marine vegetable
-productions. As I at first observed, these islands are not so
-remarkable for the number of the species of reptiles, as for
-that of the individuals, when we remember the well-beaten
-paths made by the thousands of huge tortoises -- the many
-turtles -- the great warrens of the terrestrial Amblyrhynchus
--- and the groups of the marine species basking on the coast-
-rocks of every island -- we must admit that there is no other
-quarter of the world where this Order replaces the herbivorous
-mammalia in so extraordinary a manner. The geologist
-on hearing this will probably refer back in his mind to the
-Secondary epochs, when lizards, some herbivorous, some
-carnivorous, and of dimensions comparable only with our
-existing whales, swarmed on the land and in the sea. It is,
-therefore, worthy of his observation, that this archipelago,
-instead of possessing a humid climate and rank vegetation,
-cannot be considered otherwise than extremely arid, and, for
-an equatorial region, remarkably temperate.
-
-To finish with the zoology: the fifteen kinds of sea-fish
-which I procured here are all new species; they belong to
-twelve genera, all widely distributed, with the exception of
-Prionotus, of which the four previously known species live
-on the eastern side of America. Of land-shells I collected
-sixteen kinds (and two marked varieties), of which, with the
-exception of one Helix found at Tahiti, all are peculiar to
-this archipelago: a single fresh-water shell (Paludina) is
-common to Tahiti and Van Diemen's Land. Mr. Cuming,
-before our voyage procured here ninety species of sea-shells,
-and this does not include several species not yet specifically
-examined, of Trochus, Turbo, Monodonta, and Nassa. He
-has been kind enough to give me the following interesting
-results: Of the ninety shells, no less than forty-seven are
-unknown elsewhere -- a wonderful fact, considering how
-widely distributed sea-shells generally are. Of the forty-
-three shells found in other parts of the world, twenty-five
-inhabit the western coast of America, and of these eight are
-distinguishable as varieties; the remaining eighteen (including
-one variety) were found by Mr. Cuming in the Low
-Archipelago, and some of them also at the Philippines. This
-fact of shells from islands in the central parts of the Pacific
-occurring here, deserves notice, for not one single sea-shell is
-known to be common to the islands of that ocean and to the
-west coast of America. The space of open sea running north
-and south off the west coast, separates two quite distinct
-conchological provinces; but at the Galapagos Archipelago
-we have a halting-place, where many new forms have been
-created, and whither these two great conchological provinces
-have each sent up several colonists. The American province
-has also sent here representative species; for there is a
-Galapageian species of Monoceros, a genus only found on the
-west coast of America; and there are Galapageian species
-of Fissurella and Cancellaria, genera common on the west
-coast, but not found (as I am informed by Mr. Cuming) in
-the central islands of the Pacific. On the other hand, there
-are Galapageian species of Oniscia and Stylifer, genera common
-to the West Indies and to the Chinese and Indian seas,
-but not found either on the west coast of America or in the
-central Pacific. I may here add, that after the comparison
-by Messrs. Cuming and Hinds of about 2000 shells from
-the eastern and western coasts of America, only one single
-shell was found in common, namely, the Purpura patula,
-which inhabits the West Indies, the coast of Panama,
-and the Galapagos. We have, therefore, in this quarter
-of the world, three great conchological sea-provinces, quite
-distinct, though surprisingly near each other, being separated
-by long north and south spaces either of land or of
-open sea.
-
-I took great pains in collecting the insects, but excepting
-Tierra del Fuego, I never saw in this respect so poor a country.
-Even in the upper and damp region I procured very few,
-excepting some minute Diptera and Hymenoptera, mostly of
-common mundane forms. As before remarked, the insects,
-for a tropical region, are of very small size and dull colours.
-Of beetles I collected twenty-five species (excluding a
-Dermestes and Corynetes imported, wherever a ship touches);
-of these, two belong to the Harpalidae, two to the
-Hydrophilidae, nine to three families of the Heteromera, and the
-remaining twelve to as many different families. This
-circumstance of insects (and I may add plants), where few in
-number, belonging to many different families, is, I believe,
-very general. Mr. Waterhouse, who has published [4] an
-account of the insects of this archipelago, and to whom I am
-indebted for the above details, informs me that there are
-several new genera: and that of the genera not new, one
-or two are American, and the rest of mundane distribution.
-With the exception of a wood-feeding Apate, and of one or
-probably two water-beetles from the American continent,
-all the species appear to be new.
-
-The botany of this group is fully as interesting as the
-zoology. Dr. J. Hooker will soon publish in the "Linnean
-Transactions" a full account of the Flora, and I am much
-indebted to him for the following details. Of flowering
-plants there are, as far as at present is known, 185 species,
-and 40 cryptogamic species, making altogether 225; of this
-number I was fortunate enough to bring home 193. Of the
-flowering plants, 100 are new species, and are probably confined
-to this archipelago. Dr. Hooker conceives that, of the
-plants not so confined, at least 10 species found near the
-cultivated ground at Charles Island, have been imported.
-It is, I think, surprising that more American species have
-not been introduced naturally, considering that the distance
-is only between 500 and 600 miles from the continent, and
-that (according to Collnet, p. 58) drift-wood, bamboos, canes,
-and the nuts of a palm, are often washed on the south-eastern
-shores. The proportion of 100 flowering plants out of 183
-(or 175 excluding the imported weeds) being new, is sufficient,
-I conceive, to make the Galapagos Archipelago a distinct
-botanical province; but this Flora is not nearly so
-peculiar as that of St. Helena, nor, as I am informed by
-Dr. Hooker, of Juan Fernandez. The peculiarity of the
-Galapageian Flora is best shown in certain families; -- thus
-there are 21 species of Compositae, of which 20 are peculiar
-to this archipelago; these belong to twelve genera, and of
-these genera no less than ten are confined to the archipelago!
-Dr. Hooker informs me that the Flora has an undoubtedly
-Western American character; nor can he detect in it any
-affinity with that of the Pacific. If, therefore, we except the
-eighteen marine, the one fresh-water, and one land-shell,
-which have apparently come here as colonists from the
-central islands of the Pacific, and likewise the one distinct
-Pacific species of the Galapageian group of finches, we see
-that this archipelago, though standing in the Pacific Ocean,
-is zoologically part of America.
-
-If this character were owing merely to immigrants from
-America, there would be little remarkable in it; but we see
-that a vast majority of all the land animals, and that more
-than half of the flowering plants, are aboriginal productions
-It was most striking to be surrounded by new birds, new
-reptiles, new shells, new insects, new plants, and yet by
-innumerable trifling details of structure, and even by the tones
-of voice and plumage of the birds, to have the temperate plains
-of Patagonia, or rather the hot dry deserts of Northern Chile,
-vividly brought before my eyes. Why, on these small points
-of land, which within a late geological period must have
-been covered by the ocean, which are formed by basaltic lava,
-and therefore differ in geological character from the American
-continent, and which are placed under a peculiar climate,
--- why were their aboriginal inhabitants, associated, I may
-add, in different proportions both in kind and number from
-those on the continent, and therefore acting on each other
-in a different manner -- why were they created on American
-types of organization? It is probable that the islands of the
-Cape de Verd group resemble, in all their physical conditions,
-far more closely the Galapagos Islands, than these latter
-physically resemble the coast of America, yet the aboriginal
-inhabitants of the two groups are totally unlike; those of the
-Cape de Verd Islands bearing the impress of Africa, as
-the inhabitants of the Galapagos Archipelago are stamped
-with that of America.
-
-I have not as yet noticed by far the most remarkable feature
-in the natural history of this archipelago; it is, that
-the different islands to a considerable extent are inhabited by
-a different set of beings. My attention was first called to
-this fact by the Vice-Governor, Mr. Lawson, declaring that
-the tortoises differed from the different islands, and that he
-could with certainty tell from which island any one was
-brought. I did not for some time pay sufficient attention
-to this statement, and I had already partially mingled together
-the collections from two of the islands. I never
-dreamed that islands, about 50 or 60 miles apart, and most of
-them in sight of each other, formed of precisely the same
-rocks, placed under a quite similar climate, rising to a nearly
-equal height, would have been differently tenanted; but we
-shall soon see that this is the case. It is the fate of most
-voyagers, no sooner to discover what is most interesting in
-any locality, than they are hurried from it; but I ought,
-perhaps, to be thankful that I obtained sufficient materials to
-establish this most remarkable fact in the distribution of
-organic beings.
-
-The inhabitants, as I have said, state that they can distinguish
-the tortoises from the different islands; and that
-they differ not only in size, but in other characters. Captain
-Porter has described [5] those from Charles and from the nearest
-island to it, namely, Hood Island, as having their shells
-in front thick and turned up like a Spanish saddle, whilst
-the tortoises from James Island are rounder, blacker, and
-have a better taste when cooked. M. Bibron, moreover,
-informs me that he has seen what he considers two distinct
-species of tortoise from the Galapagos, but he does not know
-from which islands. The specimens that I brought from
-three islands were young ones: and probably owing to this
-cause neither Mr. Gray nor myself could find in them any
-specific differences. I have remarked that the marine
-Amblyrhynchus was larger at Albemarle Island than elsewhere;
-and M. Bibron informs me that he has seen two distinct
-aquatic species of this genus; so that the different
-islands probably have their representative species or races
-of the Amblyrhynchus, as well as of the tortoise. My attention
-was first thoroughly aroused, by comparing together
-the numerous specimens, shot by myself and several other
-parties on board, of the mocking-thrushes, when, to my
-astonishment, I discovered that all those from Charles Island
-belonged to one species (Mimus trifasciatus) all from
-Albemarle Island to M. parvulus; and all from James and
-Chatham Islands (between which two other islands are situated,
-as connecting links) belonged to M. melanotis. These
-two latter species are closely allied, and would by some
-ornithologists be considered as only well-marked races or
-varieties; but the Mimus trifasciatus is very distinct.
-Unfortunately most of the specimens of the finch tribe were
-mingled together; but I have strong reasons to suspect that
-some of the species of the sub-group Geospiza are confined
-to separate islands. If the different islands have their
-representatives of Geospiza, it may help to explain the
-singularly large number of the species of this sub-group in this
-one small archipelago, and as a probable consequence of their
-numbers, the perfectly graduated series in the size of their
-beaks. Two species of the sub-group Cactornis, and two of
-the Camarhynchus, were procured in the archipelago; and
-of the numerous specimens of these two sub-groups shot by
-four collectors at James Island, all were found to belong to
-one species of each; whereas the numerous specimens shot
-either on Chatham or Charles Island (for the two sets were
-mingled together) all belonged to the two other species:
-hence we may feel almost sure that these islands possess
-their respective species of these two sub-groups. In land-
-shells this law of distribution does not appear to hold good.
-In my very small collection of insects, Mr. Waterhouse
-remarks, that of those which were ticketed with their locality,
-not one was common to any two of the islands.
-
-If we now turn to the Flora, we shall find the aboriginal
-plants of the different islands wonderfully different. I give
-all the following results on the high authority of my friend
-Dr. J. Hooker. I may premise that I indiscriminately collected
-everything in flower on the different islands, and fortunately
-kept my collections separate. Too much confidence,
-however, must not be placed in the proportional results, as
-the small collections brought home by some other naturalists
-though in some respects confirming the results, plainly show
-that much remains to be done in the botany of this group:
-the Leguminosae, moreover, has as yet been only approximately
-worked out: --
-
-----------------------------------------------------------------
- Number of
- Species
- confined
- to the
- Number of Number of Galapagos
- species species Number Archipelago
- Total found in confined confined but found
-Name Number other to the to the on more
-of of parts of Galapagos one than the
-Island Species the world Archipelago island one island
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-James 71 33 38 30 8
-Albemarle 4 18 26 22 4
-Chatham 32 16 16 12 4
-Charles 68 39 29 21 8
- (or 29, if
- the probably
- imported
- plants be
- subtracted.)
-----------------------------------------------------------------
-
-Hence we have the truly wonderful fact, that in James
-Island, of the thirty-eight Galapageian plants, or those found
-in no other part of the world, thirty are exclusively confined
-to this one island; and in Albemarle Island, of the twenty-
-six aboriginal Galapageian plants, twenty-two are confined
-to this one island, that is, only four are at present known to
-grow in the other islands of the archipelago; and so on, as
-shown in the above table, with the plants from Chatham and
-Charles Islands. This fact will, perhaps, be rendered even
-more striking, by giving a few illustrations: -- thus, Scalesia,
-a remarkable arborescent genus of the Compositae, is confined
-to the archipelago: it has six species: one from Chatham,
-one from Albemarle, one from Charles Island, two from
-James Island, and the sixth from one of the three latter
-islands, but it is not known from which: not one of these six
-species grows on any two islands. Again, Euphorbia, a mundane
-or widely distributed genus, has here eight species, of
-which seven are confined to the archipelago, and not one
-found on any two islands: Acalypha and Borreria, both mundane
-genera, have respectively six and seven species, none
-of which have the same species on two islands, with the
-exception of one Borreria, which does occur on two islands.
-The species of the Compositae are particularly local; and Dr.
-Hooker has furnished me with several other most striking
-illustrations of the difference of the species on the different
-islands. He remarks that this law of distribution holds good
-both with those genera confined to the archipelago, and those
-distributed in other quarters of the world: in like manner
-we have seen that the different islands have their proper
-species of the mundane genus of tortoise, and of the widely
-distributed American genus of the mocking-thrush, as well
-as of two of the Galapageian sub-groups of finches, and
-almost certainly of the Galapageian genus Amblyrhynchus.
-
-The distribution of the tenants of this archipelago would
-not be nearly so wonderful, if, for instance, one island had
-a mocking-thrush, and a second island some other quite distinct
-genus, -- if one island had its genus of lizard, and a
-second island another distinct genus, or none whatever; -- or
-if the different islands were inhabited, not by representative
-species of the same genera of plants, but by totally different
-genera, as does to a certain extent hold good: for, to give
-one instance, a large berry-bearing tree at James Island has
-no representative species in Charles Island. But it is the
-circumstance, that several of the islands possess their own
-species of the tortoise, mocking-thrush, finches, and numerous
-plants, these species having the same general habits,
-occupying analogous situations, and obviously filling the
-same place in the natural economy of this archipelago, that
-strikes me with wonder. It may be suspected that some of
-these representative species, at least in the case of the
-tortoise and of some of the birds, may hereafter prove to be
-only well-marked races; but this would be of equally great
-interest to the philosophical naturalist. I have said that most
-of the islands are in sight of each other: I may specify that
-Charles Island is fifty miles from the nearest part of Chatham
-Island, and thirty-three miles from the nearest part of
-Albemarle Island. Chatham Island is sixty miles from the
-nearest part of James Island, but there are two intermediate
-islands between them which were not visited by me. James
-Island is only ten miles from the nearest part of Albemarle
-Island, but the two points where the collections were made
-are thirty-two miles apart. I must repeat, that neither the
-nature of the soil, nor height of the land, nor the climate,
-nor the general character of the associated beings, and
-therefore their action one on another, can differ much in the
-different islands. If there be any sensible difference in their
-climates, it must be between the Windward group (namely,
-Charles and Chatham Islands), and that to leeward; but
-there seems to be no corresponding difference in the productions
-of these two halves of the archipelago.
-
-The only light which I can throw on this remarkable difference
-in the inhabitants of the different islands, is, that
-very strong currents of the sea running in a westerly and
-W.N.W. direction must separate, as far as transportal by the
-sea is concerned, the southern islands from the northern
-ones; and between these northern islands a strong N.W. current
-was observed, which must effectually separate James
-and Albemarle Islands. As the archipelago is free to a
-most remarkable degree from gales of wind, neither the
-birds, insects, nor lighter seeds, would be blown from island
-to island. And lastly, the profound depth of the ocean between
-the islands, and their apparently recent (in a geological
-sense) volcanic origin, render it highly unlikely that they
-were ever united; and this, probably, is a far more important
-consideration than any other, with respect to the geographical
-distribution of their inhabitants. Reviewing the facts
-here given, one is astonished at the amount of creative force,
-if such an expression may be used, displayed on these small,
-barren, and rocky islands; and still more so, at its diverse
-yet analogous action on points so near each other. I have
-said that the Galapagos Archipelago might be called a satellite
-attached to America, but it should rather be called a
-group of satellites, physically similar, organically distinct,
-yet intimately related to each other, and all related in a
-marked, though much lesser degree, to the great American
-continent.
-
-I will conclude my description of the natural history of
-these islands, by giving an account of the extreme tameness
-of the birds.
-
-This disposition is common to all the terrestrial species;
-namely, to the mocking-thrushes, the finches, wrens, tyrant-
-flycatchers, the dove, and carrion-buzzard. All of them are
-often approached sufficiently near to be killed with a switch,
-and sometimes, as I myself tried, with a cap or hat. A gun
-is here almost superfluous; for with the muzzle I pushed a
-hawk off the branch of a tree. One day, whilst lying down,
-a mocking-thrush alighted on the edge of a pitcher, made of
-the shell of a tortoise, which I held in my hand, and began
-very quietly to sip the water; it allowed me to lift it from
-the ground whilst seated on the vessel: I often tried, and
-very nearly succeeded, in catching these birds by their legs.
-Formerly the birds appear to have been even tamer than at
-present. Cowley (in the year 1684) says that the "Turtledoves
-were so tame, that they would often alight on our hats
-and arms, so as that we could take them alive, they not fearing
-man, until such time as some of our company did fire at
-them, whereby they were rendered more shy." Dampier
-also, in the same year, says that a man in a morning's walk
-might kill six or seven dozen of these doves. At present,
-although certainly very tame, they do not alight on people's
-arms, nor do they suffer themselves to be killed in such large
-numbers. It is surprising that they have not become wilder;
-for these islands during the last hundred and fifty years have
-been frequently visited by bucaniers and whalers; and the
-sailors, wandering through the wood in search of tortoises,
-always take cruel delight in knocking down the little birds.
-These birds, although now still more persecuted, do not
-readily become wild. In Charles Island, which had then
-been colonized about six years, I saw a boy sitting by a well
-with a switch in his hand, with which he killed the doves
-and finches as they came to drink. He had already procured
-a little heap of them for his dinner, and he said that he had
-constantly been in the habit of waiting by this well for the
-same purpose. It would appear that the birds of this
-archipelago, not having as yet learnt that man is a more
-dangerous animal than the tortoise or the Amblyrhynchus,
-disregard him, in the same manner as in England shy birds, such
-as magpies, disregard the cows and horses grazing in our fields.
-
-The Falkland Islands offer a second instance of birds
-with a similar disposition. The extraordinary tameness of
-the little Opetiorhynchus has been remarked by Pernety,
-Lesson, and other voyagers. It is not, however, peculiar to
-that bird: the Polyborus, snipe, upland and lowland goose,
-thrush, bunting, and even some true hawks, are all more or
-less tame. As the birds are so tame there, where foxes,
-hawks, and owls occur, we may infer that the absence of all
-rapacious animals at the Galapagos, is not the cause of their
-tameness here. The upland geese at the Falklands show, by
-the precaution they take in building on the islets, that they
-are aware of their danger from the foxes; but they are not
-by this rendered wild towards man. This tameness of the
-birds, especially of the water-fowl, is strongly contrasted with
-the habits of the same species in Tierra del Fuego, where for
-ages past they have been persecuted by the wild inhabitants.
-In the Falklands, the sportsman may sometimes kill more
-of the upland geese in one day than he can carry home;
-whereas in Tierra del Fuego it is nearly as difficult to kill
-one, as it is in England to shoot the common wild goose.
-
-In the time of Pernety (1763), all the birds there appear
-to have been much tamer than at present; he states that the
-Opetiorhynchus would almost perch on his finger; and that
-with a wand he killed ten in half an hour. At that period
-the birds must have been about as tame as they now are at
-the Galapagos. They appear to have learnt caution more
-slowly at these latter islands than at the Falklands, where
-they have had proportionate means of experience; for besides
-frequent visits from vessels, those islands have been at
-intervals colonized during the entire period. Even formerly,
-when all the birds were so tame, it was impossible by Pernety's
-account to kill the black-necked swan -- a bird of
-passage, which probably brought with it the wisdom learnt
-in foreign countries.
-
-I may add that, according to Du Bois, all the birds at
-Bourbon in 1571-72, with the exception of the flamingoes
-and geese, were so extremely tame, that they could be caught
-by the hand, or killed in any number with a stick. Again,
-at Tristan d'Acunha in the Atlantic, Carmichael [6] states that
-the only two land-birds, a thrush and a bunting, were "so
-tame as to suffer themselves to be caught with a hand-net."
-From these several facts we may, I think, conclude, first, that
-the wildness of birds with regard to man, is a particular
-instinct directed against _him_, and not dependent upon any
-general degree of caution arising from other sources of
-danger; secondly, that it is not acquired by individual birds
-in a short time, even when much persecuted; but that in the
-course of successive generations it becomes hereditary. With
-domesticated animals we are accustomed to see new mental
-habits or instincts acquired or rendered hereditary; but with
-animals in a state of nature, it must always be most difficult
-to discover instances of acquired hereditary knowledge. In
-regard to the wildness of birds towards man, there is no way
-of accounting for it, except as an inherited habit:
-comparatively few young birds, in any one year, have been
-injured by man in England, yet almost all, even nestlings, are
-afraid of him; many individuals, on the other hand, both at the
-Galapagos and at the Falklands, have been pursued and
-injured by man, yet have not learned a salutary dread of
-him. We may infer from these facts, what havoc the introduction
-of any new beast of prey must cause in a country,
-before the instincts of the indigenous inhabitants have
-become adapted to the stranger's craft or power.
-
-[1] The progress of research has shown that some of these birds,
-which were then thought to be confined to the islands, occur on
-the American continent. The eminent ornithologist, Mr. Sclater,
-informs me that this is the case with the Strix punctatissima
-and Pyrocephalus nanus; and probably with the Otus Galapagoensis
-and Zenaida Galapagoensis: so that the number of endemic birds
-is reduced to twenty-three, or probably to twenty-one. Mr.
-Sclater thinks that one or two of these endemic forms should be
-ranked rather as varieties than species, which always seemed to
-me probable.
-
-[2] This is stated by Dr. Gunther (Zoolog. Soc. Jan 24th,
-1859) to be a peculiar species, not known to inhabit any other
-country.
-
-[3] Voyage aux Quatre Iles d'Afrique. With respect to the
-Sandwich Islands, see Tyerman and Bennett's Journal, vol. i.
-p. 434. For Mauritius, see Voyage par un Officier, etc.,
-part i. p. 170. There are no frogs in the Canary Islands
-(Webb et Berthelot, Hist. Nat. des Iles Canaries). I saw
-none at St. Jago in the Cape de Verds. There are none at
-St. Helena.
-
-[4] Ann. and Mag. of Nat. Hist., vol. xvi. p. 19.
-
-[5] Voyage in the U. S. ship Essex, vol. i. p. 215.
-
-[6] Linn. Trans., vol. xii. p. 496. The most anomalous fact on
-this subject which I have met with is the wildness of the small
-birds in the Arctic parts of North America (as described by
-Richardson, Fauna Bor., vol. ii. p. 332), where they are said
-never to be persecuted. This case is the more strange, because
-it is asserted that some of the same species in their winter-
-quarters in the United States are tame. There is much, as Dr.
-Richardson well remarks, utterly inexplicable connected with the
-different degrees of shyness and care with which birds conceal
-their nests. How strange it is that the English wood-pigeon,
-generally so wild a bird, should very frequently rear its young
-in shrubberies close to houses!
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVIII
-
-TAHITI AND NEW ZEALAND
-
-Pass through the Low Archipelago -- Tahiti -- Aspect --
-Vegetation on the Mountains -- View of Eimeo -- Excursion into
-the Interior -- Profound Ravines -- Succession of Waterfalls --
-Number of wild useful Plants -- Temperance of the Inhabitants --
-Their moral state -- Parliament convened -- New Zealand -- Bay
-of Islands -- Hippahs -- Excursion to Waimate -- Missionary
-Establishment -- English Weeds now run wild -- Waiomio --
-Funeral of a New Zealand Woman -- Sail for Australia.
-
-
-OCTOBER 20th. -- The survey of the Galapagos Archipelago
-being concluded, we steered towards Tahiti
-and commenced our long passage of 3200 miles. In
-the course of a few days we sailed out of the gloomy and
-clouded ocean-district which extends during the winter far
-from the coast of South America. We then enjoyed bright
-and clear weather, while running pleasantly along at the
-rate of 150 or 160 miles a day before the steady trade-wind.
-The temperature in this more central part of the Pacific is
-higher than near the American shore. The thermometer in
-the poop cabin, by night and day, ranged between 80 and
-83 degs., which feels very pleasant; but with one degree or two
-higher, the heat becomes oppressive. We passed through
-the Low or Dangerous Archipelago, and saw several of
-those most curious rings of coral land, just rising above the
-water's edge, which have been called Lagoon Islands. A
-long and brilliantly white beach is capped by a margin of
-green vegetation; and the strip, looking either way, rapidly
-narrows away in the distance, and sinks beneath the horizon
-From the mast-head a wide expanse of smooth water can be
-seen within the ring. These low hollow coral islands bear
-no proportion to the vast ocean out of which they abruptly
-rise; and it seems wonderful, that such weak invaders are
-not overwhelmed, by the all-powerful and never-tiring waves
-of that great sea, miscalled the Pacific.
-
-November 15th. -- At daylight, Tahiti, an island which
-must for ever remain classical to the voyager in the South
-Sea, was in view. At a distance the appearance was not
-attractive. The luxuriant vegetation of the lower part could
-not yet be seen, and as the clouds rolled past, the wildest
-and most precipitous peaks showed themselves towards the
-centre of the island. As soon as we anchored in Matavai
-Bay, we were surrounded by canoes. This was our Sunday,
-but the Monday of Tahiti: if the case had been reversed,
-we should not have received a single visit; for the injunction
-not to launch a canoe on the sabbath is rigidly obeyed.
-After dinner we landed to enjoy all the delights produced
-by the first impressions of a new country, and that country
-the charming Tahiti. A crowd of men, women, and children,
-was collected on the memorable Point Venus, ready to
-receive us with laughing, merry faces. They marshalled
-us towards the house of Mr. Wilson, the missionary of the
-district, who met us on the road, and gave us a very friendly
-reception. After sitting a very short time in his house, we
-separated to walk about, but returned there in the evening.
-
-The land capable of cultivation, is scarcely in any part
-more than a fringe of low alluvial soil, accumulated round
-the base of the mountains, and protected from the waves of
-the sea by a coral reef, which encircles the entire line of
-coast. Within the reef there is an expanse of smooth water,
-like that of a lake, where the canoes of the natives can ply
-with safety and where ships anchor. The low land which
-comes down to the beach of coral-sand, is covered by the
-most beautiful productions of the intertropical regions. In
-the midst of bananas, orange, cocoa-nut, and bread-fruit
-trees, spots are cleared where yams, sweet potatoes, and
-sugar-cane, and pine-apples are cultivated. Even the brushwood
-is an imported fruit-tree, namely, the guava, which
-from its abundance has become as noxious as a weed. In
-Brazil I have often admired the varied beauty of the
-bananas, palms, and orange-trees contrasted together; and
-here we also have the bread-fruit, conspicuous from its large,
-glossy, and deeply digitated leaf. It is admirable to behold
-groves of a tree, sending forth its branches with the vigour
-of an English oak, loaded with large and most nutritious
-fruit. However seldom the usefulness of an object can
-account for the pleasure of beholding it, in the case of these
-beautiful woods, the knowledge of their high productiveness
-no doubt enters largely into the feeling of admiration. The
-little winding paths, cool from the surrounding shade, led
-to the scattered houses; the owners of which everywhere
-gave us a cheerful and most hospitable reception.
-
-I was pleased with nothing so much as with the inhabitants.
-There is a mildness in the expression of their countenances
-which at once banishes the idea of a savage; and
-intelligence which shows that they are advancing in
-civilization. The common people, when working, keep the upper
-part of their bodies quite naked; and it is then that the
-Tahitians are seen to advantage. They are very tall, broad-
-shouldered, athletic, and well-proportioned. It has been
-remarked, that it requires little habit to make a dark skin
-more pleasing and natural to the eye of an European than
-his own colour. A white man bathing by the side of a
-Tahitian, was like a plant bleached by the gardener's art
-compared with a fine dark green one growing vigorously in
-the open fields. Most of the men are tattooed, and the ornaments
-follow the curvature of the body so gracefully, that
-they have a very elegant effect. One common pattern, varying
-in its details, is somewhat like the crown of a palm-tree.
-It springs from the central line of the back, and gracefully
-curls round both sides. The simile may be a fanciful one,
-but I thought the body of a man thus ornamented was like
-the trunk of a, noble tree embraced by a delicate creeper.
-
-Many of the elder people had their feet covered with
-small figures, so placed as to resemble a sock. This fashion,
-however, is partly gone by, and has been succeeded by others.
-Here, although fashion is far from immutable, every one
-must abide by that prevailing in his youth. An old man
-has thus his age for ever stamped on his body, and he cannot
-assume the airs of a young dandy. The women are tattooed
-in the same manner as the men, and very commonly on their
-fingers. One unbecoming fashion is now almost universal:
-namely, shaving the hair from the upper part of the head,
-in a circular form, so as to leave only an outer ring. The
-missionaries have tried to persuade the people to change this
-habit; but it is the fashion, and that is a sufficient answer
-at Tahiti, as well as at Paris. I was much disappointed in
-the personal appearance of the women: they are far inferior
-in every respect to the men. The custom of wearing a white
-or scarlet flower in the back of the head, or through a small
-hole in each ear, is pretty. A crown of woven cocoa-nut
-leaves is also worn as a shade for the eyes. The women
-appear to be in greater want of some becoming costume even
-than the men.
-
-Nearly all the natives understand a little English -- that is,
-they know the names of common things; and by the aid of
-this, together with signs, a lame sort of conversation could
-be carried on. In returning in the evening to the boat, we
-stopped to witness a very pretty scene. Numbers of children
-were playing on the beach, and had lighted bonfires
-which illumined the placid sea and surrounding trees;
-others, in circles, were singing Tahitian verses. We seated
-ourselves on the sand, and joined their party. The songs
-were impromptu, and I believe related to our arrival: one
-little girl sang a line, which the rest took up in parts,
-forming a very pretty chorus. The whole scene made us
-unequivocally aware that we were seated on the shores of an
-island in the far-famed South Sea.
-
-17th. -- This day is reckoned in the log-book as Tuesday
-the 17th, instead of Monday the 16th, owing to our, so far,
-successful chase of the sun. Before breakfast the ship was
-hemmed in by a flotilla of canoes; and when the natives
-were allowed to come on board, I suppose there could not
-have been less than two hundred. It was the opinion of
-every one that it would have been difficult to have picked out
-an equal number from any other nation, who would have
-given so little trouble. Everybody brought something for
-sale: shells were the main articles of trade. The Tahitians
-now fully understand the value of money, and prefer it to
-old clothes or other articles. The various coins, however, of
-English and Spanish denomination puzzle them, and they
-never seemed to think the small silver quite secure until
-changed into dollars. Some of the chiefs have accumulated
-considerable sums of money. One chief, not long since,
-offered 800 dollars (about 160 pounds sterling) for a small
-vessel; and frequently they purchase whale-boats and horses at
-the rate of from 50 to 100 dollars.
-
-After breakfast I went on shore, and ascended the nearest
-slope to a height of between two and three thousand feet.
-The outer mountains are smooth and conical, but steep; and
-the old volcanic rocks, of which they are formed, have been
-cut through by many profound ravines, diverging from the
-central broken parts of the island to the coast. Having
-crossed the narrow low girt of inhabited and fertile land,
-I followed a smooth steep ridge between two of the deep
-ravines. The vegetation was singular, consisting almost
-exclusively of small dwarf ferns, mingled higher up, with
-coarse grass; it was not very dissimilar from that on some
-of the Welsh hills, and this so close above the orchard of
-tropical plants on the coast was very surprising. At the
-highest point, which I reached, trees again appeared. Of
-the three zones of comparative luxuriance, the lower one
-owes its moisture, and therefore fertility, to its flatness;
-for, being scarcely raised above the level of the sea, the water
-from the higher land drains away slowly. The intermediate
-zone does not, like the upper one, reach into a damp and
-cloudy atmosphere, and therefore remains sterile. The
-woods in the upper zone are very pretty, tree-ferns replacing
-the cocoa-nuts on the coast. It must not, however, be
-supposed that these woods at all equal in splendour the
-forests of Brazil. The vast numbers of productions, which
-characterize a continent, cannot be expected to occur in
-an island.
-
-From the highest point which I attained, there was a good
-view of the distant island of Eimeo, dependent on the same
-sovereign with Tahiti. On the lofty and broken pinnacles,
-white massive clouds were piled up, which formed an island
-in the blue sky, as Eimeo itself did in the blue ocean. The
-island, with the exception of one small gateway, is completely
-encircled by a reef. At this distance, a narrow but well-
-defined brilliantly white line was alone visible, where the
-waves first encountered the wall of coral. The mountains
-rose abruptly out of the glassy expanse of the lagoon, included
-within this narrow white line, outside which the heaving
-waters of the ocean were dark-coloured. The view was
-striking: it may aptly be compared to a framed engraving,
-where the frame represents the breakers, the marginal paper
-the smooth lagoon, and the drawing the island itself. When
-in the evening I descended from the mountain, a man, whom
-I had pleased with a trifling gift, met me, bringing with him
-hot roasted bananas, a pine-apple, and cocoa-nuts. After
-walking under a burning sun, I do not know anything more
-delicious than the milk of a young cocoa-nut. Pine-apples
-are here so abundant that the people eat them in the same
-wasteful manner as we might turnips. They are of an excellent
-flavor -- perhaps even better than those cultivated in
-England; and this I believe is the highest compliment which
-can be paid to any fruit. Before going on board, Mr. Wilson
-interpreted for me to the Tahitian who had paid me so adroit
-an attention, that I wanted him and another man to accompany
-me on a short excursion into the mountains.
-
-18th. -- In the morning I came on shore early, bringing
-with me some provisions in a bag, and two blankets for myself
-and servant. These were lashed to each end of a long
-pole, which was alternately carried by my Tahitian companions
-on their shoulders. These men are accustomed thus
-to carry, for a whole day, as much as fifty pounds at each
-end of their poles. I told my guides to provide themselves
-with food and clothing; but they said that there was plenty
-of food in the mountains, and for clothing, that their skins
-were sufficient. Our line of march was the valley of Tiaauru,
-down which a river flows into the sea by Point Venus.
-This is one of the principal streams in the island, and its
-source lies at the base of the loftiest central pinnacles,
-which rise to a height of about 7000 feet. The whole island
-is so mountainous that the only way to penetrate into the
-interior is to follow up the valleys. Our road, at first, lay
-through woods which bordered each side of the river; and
-the glimpses of the lofty central peaks, seen as through an
-avenue, with here and there a waving cocoa-nut tree on one
-side, were extremely picturesque. The valley soon began to
-narrow, and the sides to grow lofty and more precipitous.
-After having walked between three and four hours, we
-found the width of the ravine scarcely exceeded that of the
-bed of the stream. On each hand the walls were nearly vertical,
-yet from the soft nature of the volcanic strata, trees
-and a rank vegetation sprung from every projecting ledge.
-These precipices must have been some thousand feet high;
-and the whole formed a mountain gorge far more magnificent
-than anything which I had ever before beheld. Until
-the midday sun stood vertically over the ravine, the air felt
-cool and damp, but now it became very sultry. Shaded by a
-ledge of rock, beneath a facade of columnar lava, we ate our
-dinner. My guides had already procured a dish of small
-fish and fresh-water prawns. They carried with them a
-small net stretched on a hoop; and where the water was
-deep and in eddies, they dived, and like otters, with their
-eyes open followed the fish into holes and corners, and thus
-caught them.
-
-The Tahitians have the dexterity of amphibious animals
-in the water. An anecdote mentioned by Ellis shows how
-much they feel at home in this element. When a horse was
-landing for Pomarre in 1817, the slings broke, and it fell
-into the water; immediately the natives jumped overboard,
-and by their cries and vain efforts at assistance almost
-drowned it. As soon, however, as it reached the shore, the
-whole population took to flight, and tried to hide themselves
-from the man-carrying pig, as they christened the horse.
-
-A little higher up, the river divided itself into three little
-streams. The two northern ones were impracticable, owing
-to a succession of waterfalls which descended from the
-jagged summit of the highest mountain; the other to all
-appearance was equally inaccessible, but we managed to ascend
-it by a most extraordinary road. The sides of the
-valley were here nearly precipitous, but, as frequently happens
-with stratified rocks, small ledges projected, which were
-thickly covered by wild bananas, lilaceous plants, and other
-luxuriant productions of the tropics. The Tahitians, by
-climbing amongst these ledges, searching for fruit, had
-discovered a track by which the whole precipice could be scaled.
-The first ascent from the valley was very dangerous; for it
-was necessary to pass a steeply inclined face of naked rock,
-by the aid of ropes which we brought with us. How any
-person discovered that this formidable spot was the only
-point where the side of the mountain was practicable, I cannot
-imagine. We then cautiously walked along one of the
-ledges till we came to one of the three streams. This ledge
-formed a flat spot, above which a beautiful cascade, some
-hundred feet in height, poured down its waters, and beneath,
-another high cascade fell into the main stream in the valley
-below. From this cool and shady recess we made a
-circuit to avoid the overhanging waterfall. As before, we
-followed little projecting ledges, the danger being partly
-concealed by the thickness of the vegetation. In passing
-from one of the ledges to another, there was a vertical wall
-of rock. One of the Tahitians, a fine active man, placed
-the trunk of a tree against this, climbed up it, and then by
-the aid of crevices reached the summit. He fixed the ropes
-to a projecting point, and lowered them for our dog and
-luggage, and then we clambered up ourselves. Beneath the
-ledge on which the dead tree was placed, the precipice must
-have been five or six hundred feet deep; and if the abyss
-had not been partly concealed by the overhanging ferns and
-lilies my head would have turned giddy, and nothing should
-have induced me to have attempted it. We continued to
-ascend, sometimes along ledges, and sometimes along knife-
-edged ridges, having on each hand profound ravines. In
-the Cordillera I have seen mountains on a far grander
-scale, but for abruptness, nothing at all comparable with this.
-In the evening we reached a flat little spot on the banks
-of the same stream, which we had continued to follow, and
-which descends in a chain of waterfalls: here we bivouacked
-for the night. On each side of the ravine there were great
-beds of the mountain-banana, covered with ripe fruit. Many
-of these plants were from twenty to twenty-five feet high,
-and from three to four in circumference. By the aid of
-strips of bark for rope, the stems of bamboos for rafters,
-and the large leaf of the banana for a thatch, the Tahitians
-in a few minutes built us an excellent house; and with
-withered leaves made a soft bed.
-
-They then proceeded to make a fire, and cook our evening
-meal. A light was procured, by rubbing a blunt pointed
-stick in a groove made in another, as if with intention of
-deepening it, until by the friction the dust became ignited.
-A peculiarly white and very light wood (the Hibiscus tiliareus)
-is alone used for this purpose: it is the same which
-serves for poles to carry any burden, and for the floating
-out-riggers to their canoes. The fire was produced in a few
-seconds: but to a person who does not understand the art,
-it requires, as I found, the greatest exertion; but at last, to
-my great pride, I succeeded in igniting the dust. The
-Gaucho in the Pampas uses a different method: taking an
-elastic stick about eighteen inches long, he presses one end
-on his breast, and the other pointed end into a hole in a piece
-of wood, and then rapidly turns the curved part, like a
-carpenter's centre-bit. The Tahitians having made a small fire
-of sticks, placed a score of stones, of about the size of
-cricket-balls, on the burning wood. In about ten minutes the
-sticks were consumed, and the stones hot. They had previously
-folded up in small parcels of leaves, pieces of beef,
-fish, ripe and unripe bananas, and the tops of the wild arum.
-These green parcels were laid in a layer between two layers
-of the hot stones, and the whole then covered up with
-earth, so that no smoke or steam could escape. In about
-a quarter of an hour, the whole was most deliciously cooked.
-The choice green parcels were now laid on a cloth of
-banana leaves, and with a cocoa-nut shell we drank the
-cool water of the running stream; and thus we enjoyed our
-rustic meal.
-
-I could not look on the surrounding plants without admiration.
-On every side were forests of banana; the fruit
-of which, though serving for food in various ways, lay in
-heaps decaying on the ground. In front of us there was an
-extensive brake of wild sugar-cane; and the stream was
-shaded by the dark green knotted stem of the Ava, -- so famous
-in former days for its powerful intoxicating effects. I
-chewed a piece, and found that it had an acrid and unpleasant
-taste, which would have induced any one at once to
-have pronounced it poisonous. Thanks to the missionaries,
-this plant now thrives only in these deep ravines, innocuous to
-every one. Close by I saw the wild arum, the roots of which,
-when well baked, are good to eat, and the young leaves
-better than spinach. There was the wild yam, and a liliaceous
-plant called Ti, which grows in abundance, and has a soft
-brown root, in shape and size like a huge log of wood: this
-served us for dessert, for it is as sweet as treacle, and with
-a pleasant taste. There were, moreover, several other wild
-fruits, and useful vegetables. The little stream, besides its
-cool water, produced eels, and cray-fish. I did indeed admire
-this scene, when I compared it with an uncultivated one in
-the temperate zones. I felt the force of the remark, that
-man, at least savage man, with his reasoning powers only
-partly developed, is the child of the tropics.
-
-As the evening drew to a close, I strolled beneath the
-gloomy shade of the bananas up the course of the stream.
-My walk was soon brought to a close, by coming to a waterfall
-between two and three hundred feet high; and again
-above this there was another. I mention all these waterfalls
-in this one brook, to give a general idea of the inclination
-of the land. In the little recess where the water fell, it did
-not appear that a breath of wind had ever blown. The thin
-edges of the great leaves of the banana, damp with spray,
-were unbroken, instead of being, as is so generally the case,
-split into a thousand shreds. From our position, almost
-suspended on the mountain side, there were glimpses into the
-depths of the neighbouring valleys; and the lofty points of
-the central mountains, towering up within sixty degrees of
-the zenith, hid half the evening sky. Thus seated, it was
-a sublime spectacle to watch the shades of night gradually
-obscuring the last and highest pinnacles.
-
-Before we laid ourselves down to sleep, the elder Tahitian
-fell on his knees, and with closed eyes repeated a long
-prayer in his native tongue. He prayed as a Christian should
-do, with fitting reverence, and without the fear of ridicule
-or any ostentation of piety. At our meals neither of the men
-would taste food, without saying beforehand a short grace.
-Those travellers who think that a Tahitian prays only when
-the eyes of the missionary are fixed on him, should have
-slept with us that night on the mountain-side. Before morning
-it rained very heavily; but the good thatch of banana-
-leaves kept us dry.
-
-November 19th. -- At daylight my friends, after their
-morning prayer, prepared an excellent breakfast in the same
-manner as in the evening. They themselves certainly partook
-of it largely; indeed I never saw any men eat near so
-much. I suppose such enormously capacious stomachs must
-be the effect of a large part of their diet consisting of fruit
-and vegetables, which contain, in a given bulk, a comparatively
-small portion of nutriment. Unwittingly, I was the
-means of my companions breaking, as I afterwards learned,
-one of their own laws, and resolutions: I took with me a
-flask of spirits, which they could not refuse to partake of;
-but as often as they drank a little, they put their fingers
-before their mouths, and uttered the word "Missionary."
-About two years ago, although the use of the ava was prevented,
-drunkenness from the introduction of spirits became
-very prevalent. The missionaries prevailed on a few good
-men, who saw that their country was rapidly going to ruin,
-to join with them in a Temperance Society. From good
-sense or shame, all the chiefs and the queen were at last
-persuaded to join. Immediately a law was passed, that no
-spirits should be allowed to be introduced into the island,
-and that he who sold and he who bought the forbidden
-article should be punished by a fine. With remarkable justice,
-a certain period was allowed for stock in hand to be
-sold, before the law came into effect. But when it did, a
-general search was made, in which even the houses of the
-missionaries were not exempted, and all the ava (as the
-natives call all ardent spirits) was poured on the ground.
-When one reflects on the effect of intemperance on the
-aborigines of the two Americas, I think it will be acknowledged
-that every well-wisher of Tahiti owes no common debt
-of gratitude to the missionaries. As long as the little island
-of St. Helena remained under the government of the East
-India Company, spirits, owing to the great injury they had
-produced, were not allowed to be imported; but wine was
-supplied from the Cape of Good Hope. It is rather a striking
-and not very gratifying fact, that in the same year
-that spirits were allowed to be sold in Helena, their use was
-banished from Tahiti by the free will of the people.
-
-After breakfast we proceeded on our Journey. As my object
-was merely to see a little of the interior scenery, we
-returned by another track, which descended into the main
-valley lower down. For some distance we wound, by a most
-intricate path, along the side of the mountain which formed
-the valley. In the less precipitous parts we passed through
-extensive groves of the wild banana. The Tahitians, with
-their naked, tattooed bodies, their heads ornamented with
-flowers, and seen in the dark shade of these groves, would
-have formed a fine picture of man inhabiting some primeval
-land. In our descent we followed the line of ridges; these
-were exceedingly narrow, and for considerable lengths steep
-as a ladder; but all clothed with vegetation. The extreme
-care necessary in poising each step rendered the walk fatiguing.
-I did not cease to wonder at these ravines and
-precipices: when viewing the country from one of the knife-
-edged ridges, the point of support was so small, that the
-effect was nearly the same as it must be from a balloon. In
-this descent we had occasion to use the ropes only once, at
-the point where we entered the main valley. We slept under
-the same ledge of rock where we had dined the day before:
-the night was fine, but from the depth and narrowness of the
-gorge, profoundly dark.
-
-Before actually seeing this country, I found it difficult
-to understand two facts mentioned by Ellis; namely, that
-after the murderous battles of former times, the survivors
-on the conquered side retired into the mountains, where a
-handful of men could resist a multitude. Certainly half
-a dozen men, at the spot where the Tahitian reared the old
-tree, could easily have repulsed thousands. Secondly, that
-after the introduction of Christianity, there were wild men
-who lived in the mountains, and whose retreats were unknown
-to the more civilized inhabitants.
-
-November 20th. -- In the morning we started early, and
-reached Matavai at noon. On the road we met a large party
-of noble athletic men, going for wild bananas. I found that
-the ship, on account of the difficulty in watering, had moved
-to the harbour of Papawa, to which place I immediately
-walked. This is a very pretty spot. The cove is surrounded
-by reefs, and the water as smooth as in a lake. The
-cultivated ground, with its beautiful productions, interspersed
-with cottages, comes close down to the water's edge.
-From the varying accounts which I had read before reaching
-these islands, I was very anxious to form, from my own
-observation, a judgment of their moral state, -- although such
-judgment would necessarily be very imperfect. First impressions
-at all times very much depend on one's previously
-acquired ideas. My notions were drawn from Ellis's "Polynesian
-Researches" -- an admirable and most interesting
-work, but naturally looking at everything under a favourable
-point of view, from Beechey's Voyage; and from that of
-Kotzebue, which is strongly adverse to the whole missionary
-system. He who compares these three accounts will, I think,
-form a tolerably accurate conception of the present state of
-Tahiti. One of my impressions which I took from the two
-last authorities, was decidedly incorrect; viz., that the
-Tahitians had become a gloomy race, and lived in fear of the
-missionaries. Of the latter feeling I saw no trace, unless,
-indeed, fear and respect be confounded under one name.
-Instead of discontent being a common feeling, it would be
-difficult in Europe to pick out of a crowd half so many merry
-and happy faces. The prohibition of the flute and dancing
-is inveighed against as wrong and foolish; -- the more than
-presbyterian manner of keeping the sabbath is looked at in
-a similar light. On these points I will not pretend to offer
-any opinion to men who have resided as many years as I
-was days on the island.
-
-On the whole, it appears to me that the morality and
-religion of the inhabitants are highly creditable. There are
-many who attack, even more acrimoniously than Kotzebue,
-both the missionaries, their system, and the effects produced
-by it. Such reasoners never compare the present state with
-that of the island only twenty years ago; nor even with that
-of Europe at this day; but they compare it with the high
-standard of Gospel perfection. They expect the missionaries
-to effect that which the Apostles themselves failed to do.
-Inasmuch as the condition of the people falls short of
-this high standard, blame is attached to the missionary, instead
-of credit for that which he has effected. They forget,
-or will not remember, that human sacrifices, and the power
-of an idolatrous priesthood -- a system of profligacy
-unparalleled in any other part of the world -- infanticide a
-consequence of that system -- bloody wars, where the conquerors
-spared neither women nor children -- that all these have been
-abolished; and that dishonesty, intemperance, and licentiousness
-have been greatly reduced by the introduction of Christianity.
-In a voyager to forget these things is base ingratitude; for
-should he chance to be at the point of shipwreck on some
-unknown coast, he will most devoutly pray that the lesson of
-the missionary may have extended thus far.
-
-In point of morality, the virtue of the women, it has been
-often said, is most open to exception. But before they are
-blamed too severely, it will be well distinctly to call to mind
-the scenes described by Captain Cook and Mr. Banks, in
-which the grandmothers and mothers of the present race
-played a part. Those who are most severe, should consider
-how much of the morality of the women in Europe is owing
-to the system early impressed by mothers on their daughters,
-and how much in each individual case to the precepts of
-religion. But it is useless to argue against such reasoners; --
-I believe that, disappointed in not finding the field of
-licentiousness quite so open as formerly, they will not give
-credit to a morality which they do not wish to practise, or to a
-religion which they undervalue, if not despise.
-
-Sunday, 22nd. -- The harbour of Papiete, where the queen
-resides, may be considered as the capital of the island: it is
-also the seat of government, and the chief resort of shipping.
-Captain Fitz Roy took a party there this day to hear divine
-service, first in the Tahitian language, and afterwards in our
-own. Mr. Pritchard, the leading missionary in the island,
-performed the service. The chapel consisted of a large airy
-framework of wood; and it was filled to excess by tidy, clean
-people, of all ages and both sexes. I was rather disappointed
-in the apparent degree of attention; but I believe my
-expectations were raised too high. At all events the appearance
-was quite equal to that in a country church in England.
-The singing of the hymns was decidedly very pleasing, but
-the language from the pulpit, although fluently delivered, did
-not sound well: a constant repetition of words, like "tata
-ta, mata mai," rendered it monotonous. After English service,
-a party returned on foot to Matavai. It was a pleasant
-walk, sometimes along the sea-beach and sometimes under
-the shade of the many beautiful trees.
-
-About two years ago, a small vessel under English colours
-was plundered by some of the inhabitants of the Low Islands,
-which were then under the dominion of the Queen of Tahiti.
-It was believed that the perpetrators were instigated to this
-act by some indiscreet laws issued by her majesty. The
-British government demanded compensation; which was acceded
-to, and the sum of nearly three thousand dollars was
-agreed to be paid on the first of last September. The Commodore
-at Lima ordered Captain Fitz Roy to inquire concerning
-this debt, and to demand satisfaction if it were not
-paid. Captain Fitz Roy accordingly requested an interview
-with the Queen Pomarre, since famous from the ill-treatment
-she had received from the French; and a parliament was
-held to consider the question, at which all the principal chiefs
-of the island and the queen were assembled. I will not attempt
-to describe what took place, after the interesting account
-given by Captain Fitz Roy. The money, it appeared,
-had not been paid; perhaps the alleged reasons were rather
-equivocal; but otherwise I cannot sufficiently express our
-general surprise at the extreme good sense, the reasoning
-powers, moderation, candour, and prompt resolution, which
-were displayed on all sides. I believe we all left the meeting
-with a very different opinion of the Tahitians, from what we
-entertained when we entered. The chiefs and people resolved
-to subscribe and complete the sum which was wanting;
-Captain Fitz Roy urged that it was hard that their private
-property should be sacrificed for the crimes of distant
-islanders. They replied, that they were grateful for his
-consideration, but that Pomarre was their Queen, and that they
-were determined to help her in this her difficulty. This
-resolution and its prompt execution, for a book was opened
-early the next morning, made a perfect conclusion to this
-very remarkable scene of loyalty and good feeling.
-
-After the main discussion was ended, several of the chiefs
-took the opportunity of asking Captain Fitz Roy many intelligent
-questions on international customs and laws, relating
-to the treatment of ships and foreigners. On some
-points, as soon as the decision was made, the law was issued
-verbally on the spot. This Tahitian parliament lasted for
-several hours; and when it was over Captain Fitz Roy invited
-Queen Pomarre to pay the Beagle a visit.
-
-November 25th. -- In the evening four boats were sent for
-her majesty; the ship was dressed with flags, and the yards
-manned on her coming on board. She was accompanied by
-most of the chiefs. The behaviour of all was very proper:
-they begged for nothing, and seemed much pleased with Captain
-Fitz Roy's presents. The queen is a large awkward
-woman, without any beauty, grace or dignity. She has only
-one royal attribute: a perfect immovability of expression
-under all circumstances, and that rather a sullen one. The
-rockets were most admired, and a deep "Oh!" could be
-heard from the shore, all round the dark bay, after each
-explosion. The sailors' songs were also much admired; and
-the queen said she thought that one of the most boisterous
-ones certainly could not be a hymn! The royal party did
-not return on shore till past midnight.
-
-26th. -- In the evening, with a gentle land-breeze, a course
-was steered for New Zealand; and as the sun set, we had a
-farewell view of the mountains of Tahiti -- the island to which
-every voyager has offered up his tribute of admiration.
-
-December 19th. -- In the evening we saw in the distance
-New Zealand. We may now consider that we have nearly
-crossed the Pacific. It is necessary to sail over this great
-ocean to comprehend its immensity. Moving quickly onwards
-for weeks together, we meet with nothing but the
-same blue, profoundly deep, ocean. Even within the
-archipelagoes, the islands are mere specks, and far distant one
-from the other. Accustomed to look at maps drawn on a
-small scale, where dots, shading, and names are crowded
-together, we do not rightly judge how infinitely small the
-proportion of dry land is to water of this vast expanse.
-The meridian of the Antipodes has likewise been passed; and
-now every league, it made us happy to think, was one league
-nearer to England. These Antipodes call to one's mind old
-recollections of childish doubt and wonder. Only the other
-day I looked forward to this airy barrier as a definite point
-in our voyage homewards; but now I find it, and all such
-resting-places for the imagination, are like shadows, which
-a man moving onwards cannot catch. A gale of wind lasting
-for some days, has lately given us full leisure to measure
-the future stages in our homeward voyage, and to wish
-most earnestly for its termination.
-
-December 21st. -- Early in the morning we entered the Bay
-of Islands, and being becalmed for some hours near the
-mouth, we did not reach the anchorage till the middle of the
-day. The country is hilly, with a smooth outline, and is
-deeply intersected by numerous arms of the sea extending
-from the bay. The surface appears from a distance as if
-clothed with coarse pasture, but this in truth is nothing but
-fern. On the more distant hills, as well as in parts of the
-valleys, there is a good deal of woodland. The general tint
-of the landscape is not a bright green; and it resembles the
-country a short distance to the south of Concepcion in Chile.
-In several parts of the bay, little villages of square tidy
-looking houses are scattered close down to the water's edge.
-Three whaling-ships were lying at anchor, and a canoe every
-now and then crossed from shore to shore; with these
-exceptions, an air of extreme quietness reigned over the
-whole district. Only a single canoe came alongside. This,
-and the aspect of the whole scene, afforded a remarkable,
-and not very pleasing contrast, with our joyful and boisterous
-welcome at Tahiti.
-
-In the afternoon we went on shore to one of the larger
-groups of houses, which yet hardly deserves the title of a
-village. Its name is Pahia: it is the residence of the
-missionaries; and there are no native residents except servants
-and labourers. In the vicinity of the Bay of Islands, the
-number of Englishmen, including their families, amounts to
-between two and three hundred. All the cottages, many of
-which are whitewashed and look very neat, are the property
-of the English. The hovels of the natives are so diminutive
-and paltry, that they can scarcely be perceived from a distance.
-At Pahia, it was quite pleasing to behold the English
-flowers in the gardens before the houses; there were
-roses of several kinds, honeysuckle, jasmine, stocks, and
-whole hedges of sweetbrier.
-
-December 22nd. -- In the morning I went out walking; but
-I soon found that the country was very impracticable. All
-the hills are thickly covered with tall fern, together with
-a low bush which grows like a cypress; and very little
-ground has been cleared or cultivated. I then tried the
-sea-beach; but proceeding towards either hand, my walk
-was soon stopped by salt-water creeks and deep brooks. The
-communication between the inhabitants of the different
-parts of the bay, is (as in Chiloe) almost entirely kept up
-by boats. I was surprised to find that almost every hill which
-I ascended, had been at some former time more or less
-fortified. The summits were cut into steps or successive
-terraces, and frequently they had been protected by deep
-trenches. I afterwards observed that the principal hills inland
-in like manner showed an artificial outline. These are
-the Pas, so frequently mentioned by Captain Cook under the
-name of "hippah;" the difference of sound being owing to
-the prefixed article.
-
-That the Pas had formerly been much used, was evident
-from the piles of shells, and the pits in which, as I was
-informed, sweet potatoes used to be kept as a reserve. As
-there was no water on these hills, the defenders could never
-have anticipated a long siege, but only a hurried attack for
-plunder, against which the successive terraces would have
-afforded good protection. The general introduction of fire-arms
-has changed the whole system of warfare; and an exposed
-situation on the top of a hill is now worse than useless.
-The Pas in consequence are, at the present day, always built
-on a level piece of ground. They consist of a double stockade
-of thick and tall posts, placed in a zigzag line, so that every
-part can be flanked. Within the stockade a mound of earth is
-thrown up, behind which the defenders can rest in safety, or
-use their fire-arms over it. On the level of the ground
-little archways sometimes pass through this breastwork,
-by which means the defenders can crawl out to the stockade
-and reconnoitre their enemies. The Rev. W. Williams, who
-gave me this account, added, that in one Pas he had noticed
-spurs or buttresses projecting on the inner and protected
-side of the mound of earth. On asking the chief the use
-of them, he replied, that if two or three of his men were
-shot, their neighbours would not see the bodies, and so be
-discouraged.
-
-These Pas are considered by the New Zealanders as very
-perfect means of defence: for the attacking force is never
-so well disciplined as to rush in a body to the stockade, cut
-it down, and effect their entry. When a tribe goes to war,
-the chief cannot order one party to go here and another
-there; but every man fights in the manner which best pleases
-himself; and to each separate individual to approach a stockade
-defended by fire-arms must appear certain death. I
-should think a more warlike race of inhabitants could not
-be found in any part of the world than the New Zealanders.
-Their conduct on first seeing a ship, as described by Captain
-Cook, strongly illustrates this: the act of throwing volleys
-of stones at so great and novel an object, and their defiance
-of "Come on shore and we will kill and eat you all," shows
-uncommon boldness. This warlike spirit is evident in many
-of their customs, and even in their smallest actions. If a
-New Zealander is struck, although but in joke, the blow
-must be returned and of this I saw an instance with one
-of our officers.
-
-At the present day, from the progress of civilization, there
-is much less warfare, except among some of the southern
-tribes. I heard a characteristic anecdote of what took place
-some time ago in the south. A missionary found a chief and
-his tribe in preparation for war; -- their muskets clean and
-bright, and their ammunition ready. He reasoned long on
-the inutility of the war, and the little provocation which
-had been given for it. The chief was much shaken in his
-resolution, and seemed in doubt: but at length it occurred
-to him that a barrel of his gunpowder was in a bad state, and
-that it would not keep much longer. This was brought forward
-as an unanswerable argument for the necessity of immediately
-declaring war: the idea of allowing so much good
-gunpowder to spoil was not to be thought of; and this settled
-the point. I was told by the missionaries that in the
-life of Shongi, the chief who visited England, the love of
-war was the one and lasting spring of every action. The
-tribe in which he was a principal chief had at one time been
-oppressed by another tribe from the Thames River. A
-solemn oath was taken by the men that when their boys
-should grow up, and they should be powerful enough, they
-would never forget or forgive these injuries. To fulfil this
-oath appears to have been Shongi's chief motive for going
-to England; and when there it was his sole object. Presents
-were valued only as they could be converted into arms;
-of the arts, those alone interested him which were connected
-with the manufacture of arms. When at Sydney, Shongi,
-by a strange coincidence, met the hostile chief of the Thames
-River at the house of Mr. Marsden: their conduct was civil
-to each other; but Shongi told him that when again in New
-Zealand he would never cease to carry war into his country.
-The challenge was accepted; and Shongi on his return fulfilled
-the threat to the utmost letter. The tribe on the
-Thames River was utterly overthrown, and the chief to
-whom the challenge had been given was himself killed.
-Shongi, although harbouring such deep feelings of hatred
-and revenge, is described as having been a good-natured
-person.
-
-In the evening I went with Captain Fitz Roy and Mr.
-Baker, one of the missionaries, to pay a visit to Kororadika:
-we wandered about the village, and saw and conversed with
-many of the people, both men, women, and children. Looking
-at the New Zealander, one naturally compares him with
-the Tahitian; both belonging to the same family of mankind.
-The comparison, however, tells heavily against the New
-Zealander. He may, perhaps be superior in energy, but
-in every other respect his character is of a much lower
-order. One glance at their respective expressions, brings
-conviction to the mind that one is a savage, the other a
-civilized man. It would be vain to seek in the whole of
-New Zealand a person with the face and mien of the old
-Tahitian chief Utamme. No doubt the extraordinary manner
-in which tattooing is here practised, gives a disagreeable
-expression to their countenances. The complicated but
-symmetrical figures covering the whole face, puzzle and mislead
-an unaccustomed eye: it is moreover probable, that the deep
-incisions, by destroying the play of the superficial muscles,
-give an air of rigid inflexibility. But, besides this, there is
-a twinkling in the eye, which cannot indicate anything but
-cunning and ferocity. Their figures are tall and bulky; but
-not comparable in elegance with those of the working-
-classes in Tahiti.
-
-But their persons and houses are filthily dirty and offensive:
-the idea of washing either their bodies or their clothes
-never seems to enter their heads. I saw a chief, who was
-wearing a shirt black and matted with filth, and when asked
-how it came to be so dirty, he replied, with surprise, "Do
-not you see it is an old one?" Some of the men have shirts;
-but the common dress is one or two large blankets, generally
-black with dirt, which are thrown over their shoulders in a
-very inconvenient and awkward fashion. A few of the principal
-chiefs have decent suits of English clothes; but these
-are only worn on great occasions.
-
-December 23rd. -- At a place called Waimate, about fifteen
-miles from the Bay of Islands, and midway between the
-eastern and western coasts, the missionaries have purchased
-some land for agricultural purposes. I had been introduced
-to the Rev. W. Williams, who, upon my expressing a wish,
-invited me to pay him a visit there. Mr. Bushby, the British
-resident, offered to take me in his boat by a creek, where I
-should see a pretty waterfall, and by which means my
-walk would be shortened. He likewise procured for me a
-guide.
-
-Upon asking a neighbouring chief to recommend a man, the
-chief himself offered to go; but his ignorance of the value
-of money was so complete, that at first he asked how many
-pounds I would give him, but afterwards was well contented
-with two dollars. When I showed the chief a very small
-bundle, which I wanted carried, it became absolutely necessary
-for him to take a slave. These feelings of pride are
-beginning to wear away; but formerly a leading man would
-sooner have died, than undergone the indignity of carrying
-the smallest burden. My companion was a light active man,
-dressed in a dirty blanket, and with his face completely
-tattooed. He had formerly been a great warrior. He appeared
-to be on very cordial terms with Mr. Bushby; but at
-various times they had quarrelled violently. Mr. Bushby
-remarked that a little quiet irony would frequently silence
-any one of these natives in their most blustering moments.
-This chief has come and harangued Mr. Bushby in a hectoring
-manner, saying, "great chief, a great man, a friend
-of mine, has come to pay me a visit -- you must give him
-something good to eat, some fine presents, etc." Mr. Bushby
-has allowed him to finish his discourse, and then has quietly
-replied by some answer such as, "What else shall your slave
-do for you?" The man would then instantly, with a very
-comical expression, cease his braggadocio.
-
-Some time ago, Mr. Bushby suffered a far more serious
-attack. A chief and a party of men tried to break into his
-house in the middle of the night, and not finding this so easy,
-commenced a brisk firing with their muskets. Mr. Bushby
-was slightly wounded, but the party was at length driven
-away. Shortly afterwards it was discovered who was the
-aggressor; and a general meeting of the chiefs was convened
-to consider the case. It was considered by the New Zealanders
-as very atrocious, inasmuch as it was a night attack, and
-that Mrs. Bushby was lying ill in the house: this latter
-circumstance, much to their honour, being considered in all
-cases as a protection. The chiefs agreed to confiscate the
-land of the aggressor to the King of England. The whole
-proceeding, however, in thus trying and punishing a chief
-was entirely without precedent. The aggressor, moreover,
-lost caste in the estimation of his equals and this was
-considered by the British as of more consequence than the
-confiscation of his land.
-
-As the boat was shoving off, a second chief stepped into
-her, who only wanted the amusement of the passage up and
-down the creek. I never saw a more horrid and ferocious
-expression than this man had. It immediately struck me
-I had somewhere seen his likeness: it will be found in
-Retzch's outlines to Schiller's ballad of Fridolin, where two
-men are pushing Robert into the burning iron furnace. It
-is the man who has his arm on Robert's breast. Physiognomy
-here spoke the truth; this chief had been a notorious
-murderer, and was an arrant coward to boot. At the point
-where the boat landed, Mr. Bushby accompanied me a few
-hundred yards on the road: I could not help admiring the
-cool impudence of the hoary old villain, whom we left lying
-in the boat, when he shouted to Mr. Bushby, "Do not you
-stay long, I shall be tired of waiting here."
-
-We now commenced our walk. The road lay along a
-well beaten path, bordered on each side by the tall fern,
-which covers the whole country. After travelling some
-miles, we came to a little country village, where a few hovels
-were collected together, and some patches of ground cultivated
-with potatoes. The introduction of the potato has
-been the most essential benefit to the island; it is now much
-more used than any native vegetable. New Zealand is
-favoured by one great natural advantage; namely, that the
-inhabitants can never perish from famine. The whole
-country abounds with fern: and the roots of this plant, if
-not very palatable, yet contain much nutriment. A native
-can always subsist on these, and on the shell-fish, which are
-abundant on all parts of the sea-coast. The villages are
-chiefly conspicuous by the platforms which are raised on
-four posts ten or twelve feet above the ground, and on
-which the produce of the fields is kept secure from all
-accidents.
-
-On coming near one of the huts I was much amused by
-seeing in due form the ceremony of rubbing, or, as it ought
-to be called, pressing noses. The women, on our first approach,
-began uttering something in a most dolorous voice;
-they then squatted themselves down and held up their faces;
-my companion standing over them, one after another, placed
-the bridge of his nose at right angles to theirs, and commenced
-pressing. This lasted rather longer than a cordial
-shake of the hand with us, and as we vary the force of the
-grasp of the hand in shaking, so do they in pressing. During
-the process they uttered comfortable little grunts, very
-much in the same manner as two pigs do, when rubbing
-against each other. I noticed that the slave would press
-noses with any one he met, indifferently either before or
-after his master the chief. Although among the savages, the
-chief has absolute power of life and death over his slave,
-yet there is an entire absence of ceremony between them.
-Mr. Burchell has remarked the same thing in Southern Africa,
-with the rude Bachapins. Where civilization has
-arrived at a certain point, complex formalities soon arise
-between the different grades of society: thus at Tahiti all
-were formerly obliged to uncover themselves as low as the
-waist in presence of the king.
-
-The ceremony of pressing noses having been duly completed
-with all present, we seated ourselves in a circle in the
-front of one of the hovels, and rested there half-an-hour.
-All the hovels have nearly the same form and dimensions,
-and all agree in being filthily dirty. They resemble a cow-
-shed with one end open, but having a partition a little way
-within, with a square hole in it, making a small gloomy
-chamber. In this the inhabitants keep all their property,
-and when the weather is cold they sleep there. They eat,
-however, and pass their time in the open part in front. My
-guides having finished their pipes, we continued our walk.
-The path led through the same undulating country, the whole
-uniformly clothed as before with fern. On our right hand
-we had a serpentine river, the banks of which were fringed
-with trees, and here and there on the hill sides there was a
-clump of wood. The whole scene, in spite of its green colour,
-had rather a desolate aspect. The sight of so much fern
-impresses the mind with an idea of sterility: this, however,
-is not correct; for wherever the fern grows thick and breast-
-high, the land by tillage becomes productive. Some of the
-residents think that all this extensive open country originally
-was covered with forests, and that it has been cleared by fire.
-It is said, that by digging in the barest spots, lumps of the
-kind of resin which flows from the kauri pine are frequently
-found. The natives had an evident motive in clearing the
-country; for the fern, formerly a staple article of food,
-flourishes only in the open cleared tracks. The almost entire
-absence of associated grasses, which forms so remarkable a
-feature in the vegetation of this island, may perhaps be
-accounted for by the land having been aboriginally covered
-with forest-trees.
-
-The soil is volcanic; in several parts we passed over
-shaggy lavas, and craters could clearly be distinguished on
-several of the neighbouring hills. Although the scenery is
-nowhere beautiful, and only occasionally pretty, I enjoyed
-my walk. I should have enjoyed it more, if my companion,
-the chief, had not possessed extraordinary conversational
-powers. I knew only three words: "good," "bad," and
-"yes:" and with these I answered all his remarks, without
-of course having understood one word he said. This, however,
-was quite sufficient: I was a good listener, an agreeable
-person, and he never ceased talking to me.
-
-At length we reached Waimate. After having passed over
-so many miles of an uninhabited useless country, the sudden
-appearance of an English farm-house, and its well-dressed
-fields, placed there as if by an enchanter's wand, was
-exceedingly pleasant. Mr. Williams not being at home, I received
-in Mr. Davies's house a cordial welcome. After drinking tea
-with his family party, we took a stroll about the farm. At
-Waimate there are three large houses, where the missionary
-gentlemen, Messrs. Williams, Davies, and Clarke, reside;
-and near them are the huts of the native labourers. On an
-adjoining slope, fine crops of barley and wheat were standing
-in full ear; and in another part, fields of potatoes and clover.
-But I cannot attempt to describe all I saw; there were large
-gardens, with every fruit and vegetable which England produces;
-and many belonging to a warmer clime. I may instance
-asparagus, kidney beans, cucumbers, rhubarb, apples,
-pears, figs, peaches, apricots, grapes, olives, gooseberries,
-currants, hops, gorse for fences, and English oaks; also many
-kinds of flowers. Around the farm-yard there were stables,
-a thrashing-barn with its winnowing machine, a blacksmith's
-forge, and on the ground ploughshares and other tools: in
-the middle was that happy mixture of pigs and poultry, lying
-comfortably together, as in every English farm-yard. At the
-distance of a few hundred yards, where the water of a little
-rill had been dammed up into a pool, there was a large and
-substantial water-mill.
-
-All this is very surprising, when it is considered that five
-years ago nothing but the fern flourished here. Moreover,
-native workmanship, taught by the missionaries, has effected
-this change; -- the lesson of the missionary is the enchanter's
-wand. The house had been built, the windows framed, the
-fields ploughed, and even the trees grafted, by a New Zealander.
-At the mill, a New Zealander was seen powdered
-white with flower, like his brother miller in England. When
-I looked at this whole scene, I thought it admirable. It was
-not merely that England was brought vividly before my
-mind; yet, as the evening drew to a close, the domestic
-sounds, the fields of corn, the distant undulating country
-with its trees might well have been mistaken for our fatherland:
-nor was it the triumphant feeling at seeing what Englishmen
-could effect; but rather the high hopes thus inspired
-for the future progress of this fine island.
-
-
-Several young men, redeemed by the missionaries from
-slavery, were employed on the farm. They were dressed in
-a shirt, jacket, and trousers, and had a respectable appearance.
-Judging from one trifling anecdote, I should think
-they must be honest. When walking in the fields, a young
-labourer came up to Mr. Davies, and gave him a knife and
-gimlet, saying that he had found them on the road, and did
-not know to whom they belonged! These young men and
-boys appeared very merry and good-humoured. In the evening
-I saw a party of them at cricket: when I thought of the
-austerity of which the missionaries have been accused, I was
-amused by observing one of their own sons taking an active
-part in the game. A more decided and pleasing change was
-manifested in the young women, who acted as servants within
-the houses. Their clean, tidy, and healthy appearance, like
-that of the dairy-maids in England, formed a wonderful
-contrast with the women of the filthy hovels in Kororadika.
-The wives of the missionaries tried to persuade them not to
-be tattooed; but a famous operator having arrived from the
-south, they said, "We really must just have a few lines on
-our lips; else when we grow old, our lips will shrivel, and we
-shall be so very ugly." There is not nearly so much tattooing
-as formerly; but as it is a badge of distinction between the
-chief and the slave, it will probably long be practised. So
-soon does any train of ideas become habitual, that the
-missionaries told me that even in their eyes a plain face looked
-mean, and not like that of a New Zealand gentleman.
-
-Late in the evening I went to Mr. Williams's house, where
-I passed the night. I found there a large party of children,
-collected together for Christmas Day, and all sitting round
-a table at tea. I never saw a nicer or more merry group; and
-to think that this was in the centre of the land of cannibalism,
-murder, and all atrocious crimes! The cordiality and
-happiness so plainly pictured in the faces of the little circle,
-appeared equally felt by the older persons of the mission.
-
-December 24th. -- In the morning, prayers were read in
-the native tongue to the whole family. After breakfast I
-rambled about the gardens and farm. This was a market-
-day, when the natives of the surrounding hamlets bring their
-potatoes, Indian corn, or pigs, to exchange for blankets,
-tobacco, and sometimes, through the persuasions of the
-missionaries, for soap. Mr. Davies's eldest son, who manages a
-farm of his own, is the man of business in the market. The
-children of the missionaries, who came while young to the
-island, understand the language better than their parents,
-and can get anything more readily done by the natives.
-
-A little before noon Messrs. Williams and Davies walked
-with me to a part of a neighbouring forest, to show me the
-famous kauri pine. I measured one of the noble trees, and
-found it thirty-one feet in circumference above the roots.
-There was another close by, which I did not see, thirty-three
-feet; and I heard of one no less than forty feet. These trees
-are remarkable for their smooth cylindrical boles, which run
-up to a height of sixty, and even ninety feet, with a nearly
-equal diameter, and without a single branch. The crown
-of branches at the summit is out of all proportion small to
-the trunk; and the leaves are likewise small compared with
-the branches. The forest was here almost composed of the
-kauri; and the largest trees, from the parallelism of their
-sides, stood up like gigantic columns of wood. The timber
-of the kauri is the most valuable production of the island;
-moreover, a quantity of resin oozes from the bark, which is
-sold at a penny a pound to the Americans, but its use was
-then unknown. Some of the New Zealand forest must be
-impenetrable to an extraordinary degree. Mr. Matthews
-informed me that one forest only thirty-four miles in width,
-and separating two inhabited districts, had only lately, for
-the first time, been crossed. He and another missionary,
-each with a party of about fifty men, undertook to open a
-road, but it cost more than a fortnight's labour! In
-the woods I saw very few birds. With regard to animals,
-it is a most remarkable fact, that so large an island, extending
-over more than 700 miles in latitude, and in many parts
-ninety broad, with varied stations, a fine climate, and land
-of all heights, from 14,000 feet downwards, with the exception
-of a small rat, did not possess one indigenous animal.
-The several species of that gigantic genus of birds, the
-Deinornis seem here to have replaced mammiferous quadrupeds,
-in the same manner as the reptiles still do at the Galapagos
-archipelago. It is said that the common Norway rat, in
-the short space of two years, annihilated in this northern
-end of the island, the New Zealand species. In many places
-I noticed several sorts of weeds, which, like the rats, I was
-forced to own as countrymen. A leek has overrun whole
-districts, and will prove very troublesome, but it was imported
-as a favour by a French vessel. The common dock
-is also widely disseminated, and will, I fear, for ever remain
-a proof of the rascality of an Englishman, who sold the seeds
-for those of the tobacco plant.
-
-On returning from our pleasant walk to the house, I dined
-with Mr. Williams; and then, a horse being lent me, I returned
-to the Bay of Islands. I took leave of the missionaries
-with thankfulness for their kind welcome, and with feelings
-of high respect for their gentlemanlike, useful, and
-upright characters. I think it would be difficult to find
-a body of men better adapted for the high office which
-they fulfil.
-
-Christmas Day. -- In a few more days the fourth year of
-our absence from England will be completed. Our first
-Christmas Day was spent at Plymouth, the second at St.
-Martin's Cove, near Cape Horn; the third at Port Desire,
-in Patagonia; the fourth at anchor in a wild harbour in the
-peninsula of Tres Montes, this fifth here, and the next, I
-trust in Providence, will be in England. We attended divine
-service in the chapel of Pahia; part of the service being
-read in English, and part in the native language. Whilst at
-New Zealand we did not hear of any recent acts of cannibalism;
-but Mr. Stokes found burnt human bones strewed
-round a fire-place on a small island near the anchorage; but
-these remains of a comfortable banquet might have been
-lying there for several years. It is probable that the moral
-state of the people will rapidly improve. Mr. Bushby mentioned
-one pleasing anecdote as a proof of the sincerity of
-some, at least, of those who profess Christianity. One of
-his young men left him, who had been accustomed to read
-prayers to the rest of the servants. Some weeks afterwards,
-happening to pass late in the evening by an outhouse, he saw
-and heard one of his men reading the Bible with difficulty
-by the light of the fire, to the others. After this the party
-knelt and prayed: in their prayers they mentioned Mr.
-Bushby and his family, and the missionaries, each separately
-in his respective district.
-
-December 26th. -- Mr. Bushby offered to take Mr. Sulivan
-and myself in his boat some miles up the river to Cawa-
-Cawa, and proposed afterwards to walk on to the village of
-Waiomio, where there are some curious rocks. Following
-one of the arms of the bay, we enjoyed a pleasant row, and
-passed through pretty scenery, until we came to a village,
-beyond which the boat could not pass. From this place a
-chief and a party of men volunteered to walk with us to
-Waiomio, a distance of four miles. The chief was at this
-time rather notorious from having lately hung one of his
-wives and a slave for adultery. When one of the missionaries
-remonstrated with him he seemed surprised, and said
-he thought he was exactly following the English method.
-Old Shongi, who happened to be in England during the
-Queen's trial, expressed great disapprobation at the whole
-proceeding: he said he had five wives, and he would rather
-cut off all their heads than be so much troubled about one.
-Leaving this village, we crossed over to another, seated on
-a hill-side at a little distance. The daughter of a chief, who
-was still a heathen, had died there five days before. The
-hovel in which she had expired had been burnt to the ground:
-her body being enclosed between two small canoes, was
-placed upright on the ground, and protected by an enclosure
-bearing wooden images of their gods, and the whole was
-painted bright red, so as to be conspicuous from afar. Her
-gown was fastened to the coffin, and her hair being cut off
-was cast at its foot. The relatives of the family had torn
-the flesh of their arms, bodies, and faces, so that they were
-covered with clotted blood; and the old women looked most
-filthy, disgusting objects. On the following day some of the
-officers visited this place, and found the women still howling
-and cutting themselves.
-
-We continued our walk, and soon reached Waiomio. Here
-there are some singular masses of limestone, resembling
-ruined castles. These rocks have long served for burial
-places, and in consequence are held too sacred to be approached.
-One of the young men, however, cried out, "Let
-us all be brave," and ran on ahead; but when within a hundred
-yards, the whole party thought better of it, and stopped
-short. With perfect indifference, however, they allowed us
-to examine the whole place. At this village we rested some
-hours, during which time there was a long discussion with
-Mr. Bushby, concerning the right of sale of certain lands.
-One old man, who appeared a perfect genealogist, illustrated
-the successive possessors by bits of stick driven into the
-ground. Before leaving the houses a little basketful of
-roasted sweet potatoes was given to each of our party; and
-we all, according to the custom, carried them away to eat
-on the road. I noticed that among the women employed in
-cooking, there was a man-slave: it must be a humiliating
-thing for a man in this warlike country to be employed in
-doing that which is considered as the lowest woman's work.
-Slaves are not allowed to go to war; but this perhaps can
-hardly be considered as a hardship. I heard of one poor
-wretch who, during hostilities, ran away to the opposite
-party; being met by two men, he was immediately seized;
-but as they could not agree to whom he should belong, each
-stood over him with a stone hatchet, and seemed determined
-that the other at least should not take him away alive. The
-poor man, almost dead with fright, was only saved by the
-address of a chief's wife. We afterwards enjoyed a pleasant
-walk back to the boat, but did not reach the ship till late in
-the evening.
-
-December 30th. -- In the afternoon we stood out of the
-Bay of Islands, on our course to Sydney. I believe we were
-all glad to leave New Zealand. It is not a pleasant place.
-Amongst the natives there is absent that charming simplicity
-which is found in Tahiti; and the greater part of the English
-are the very refuse of society. Neither is the country itself
-attractive. I look back but to one bright spot, and that is
-Waimate, with its Christian inhabitants.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIX
-
-AUSTRALIA
-
-Sydney -- Excursion to Bathurst -- Aspect of the Woods -- Party
-of Natives -- Gradual Extinction of the Aborigines -- Infection
-generated by associated Men in health -- Blue Mountains -- View
-of the grand gulf-like Valleys -- Their origin and formation --
-Bathurst, general civility of the Lower Orders -- State of
-Society -- Van Diemen's Land -- Hobart Town -- Aborigines all
-banished -- Mount Wellington -- King George's Sound --
-Cheerless Aspect of the Country -- Bald Head, calcareous casts
-of branches of Trees -- Party of Natives -- Leave Australia.
-
-
-JANUARY 12th, 1836. -- Early in the morning a light air
-carried us towards the entrance of Port Jackson. Instead
-of beholding a verdant country, interspersed with
-fine houses, a straight line of yellowish cliff brought to our
-minds the coast of Patagonia. A solitary lighthouse, built of
-white stone, alone told us that we were near a great and
-populous city. Having entered the harbour, it appears fine
-and spacious, with cliff-formed shores of horizontally
-stratified sandstone. The nearly level country is covered with
-thin scrubby trees, bespeaking the curse of sterility.
-Proceeding further inland, the country improves: beautiful
-villas and nice cottages are here and there scattered along the
-beach. In the distance stone houses, two and three stories high,
-and windmills standing on the edge of a bank, pointed out to us
-the neighbourhood of the capital of Australia.
-
-At last we anchored within Sydney Cove. We found the
-little basin occupied by many large ships, and surrounded by
-warehouses. In the evening I walked through the town, and
-returned full of admiration at the whole scene. It is a most
-magnificent testimony to the power of the British nation.
-Here, in a less promising country, scores of years have done
-many more times more than an equal number of centuries
-have effected in South America. My first feeling was to
-congratulate myself that I was born an Englishman. Upon
-seeing more of the town afterwards, perhaps my admiration
-fell a little; but yet it is a fine town. The streets are
-regular, broad, clean, and kept in excellent order; the houses
-are of a good size, and the shops well furnished. It may be
-faithfully compared to the large suburbs which stretch out from
-London and a few other great towns in England; but not even near
-London or Birmingham is there an appearance of such rapid
-growth. The number of large houses and other buildings just
-finished was truly surprising; nevertheless, every one
-complained of the high rents and difficulty in procuring a
-house. Coming from South America, where in the towns every man
-of property is known, no one thing surprised me more than
-not being able to ascertain at once to whom this or that
-carriage belonged.
-
-I hired a man and two horses to take me to Bathurst, a
-village about one hundred and twenty miles in the interior,
-and the centre of a great pastoral district. By this means I
-hoped to gain a general idea of the appearance of the country.
-On the morning of the 16th (January) I set out on my excursion.
-The first stage took us to Paramatta, a small country
-town, next to Sydney in importance. The roads were excellent,
-and made upon the MacAdam principle, whinstone having
-been brought for the purpose from the distance of several
-miles. In all respects there was a close resemblance to England:
-perhaps the alehouses here were more numerous. The iron gangs,
-or parties of convicts who have committed here some offense,
-appeared the least like England: they were working in chains,
-under the charge of sentries with loaded arms.
-
-The power which the government possesses, by means
-of forced labour, of at once opening good roads throughout
-the country, has been, I believe, one main cause of the early
-prosperity of this colony. I slept at night at a very
-comfortable inn at Emu ferry, thirty-five miles from Sydney,
-and near the ascent of the Blue Mountains. This line of
-road is the most frequented, and has been the longest inhabited
-of any in the colony. The whole land is enclosed
-with high railings, for the farmers have not succeeded in
-rearing hedges. There are many substantial houses and good
-cottages scattered about; but although considerable pieces of
-land are under cultivation, the greater part yet remains as
-when first discovered.
-
-The extreme uniformity of the vegetation is the most
-remarkable feature in the landscape of the greater part of
-New South Wales. Everywhere we have an open woodland,
-the ground being partially covered with a very thin pasture,
-with little appearance of verdure. The trees nearly all
-belong to one family, and mostly have their leaves placed in
-a vertical, instead of as in Europe, in a nearly horizontal
-position: the foliage is scanty, and of a peculiar pale green
-tint, without any gloss. Hence the woods appear light and
-shadowless: this, although a loss of comfort to the traveller
-under the scorching rays of summer, is of importance to the
-farmer, as it allows grass to grow where it otherwise would
-not. The leaves are not shed periodically: this character
-appears common to the entire southern hemisphere, namely,
-South America, Australia, and the Cape of Good Hope. The
-inhabitants of this hemisphere, and of the intertropical
-regions, thus lose perhaps one of the most glorious, though
-to our eyes common, spectacles in the world -- the first
-bursting into full foliage of the leafless tree. They may,
-however, say that we pay dearly for this by having the land
-covered with mere naked skeletons for so many months. This is
-too true but our senses thus acquire a keen relish for the
-exquisite green of the spring, which the eyes of those living
-within the tropics, sated during the long year with the gorgeous
-productions of those glowing climates, can never experience.
-The greater number of the trees, with the exception
-of some of the Blue-gums, do not attain a large size;
-but they grow tall and tolerably straight, and stand well
-apart. The bark of some of the Eucalypti falls annually, or
-hangs dead in long shreds which swing about with the wind,
-and give to the woods a desolate and untidy appearance. I
-cannot imagine a more complete contrast, in every respect,
-than between the forests of Valdivia or Chiloe, and the
-woods of Australia.
-
-At sunset, a party of a score of the black aborigines passed
-by, each carrying, in their accustomed manner, a bundle of
-spears and other weapons. By giving a leading young man a
-shilling, they were easily detained, and threw their spears for
-my amusement. They were all partly clothed, and several
-could speak a little English: their countenances were good-
-humoured and pleasant, and they appeared far from being
-such utterly degraded beings as they have usually been
-represented. In their own arts they are admirable. A cap being
-fixed at thirty yards distance, they transfixed it with a spear,
-delivered by the throwing-stick with the rapidity of an arrow
-from the bow of a practised archer. In tracking animals or
-men they show most wonderful sagacity; and I heard of several
-of their remarks which manifested considerable acuteness.
-They will not, however, cultivate the ground, or build
-houses and remain stationary, or even take the trouble of
-tending a flock of sheep when given to them. On the whole
-they appear to me to stand some few degrees higher in the
-scale of civilization than the Fuegians.
-
-It is very curious thus to see in the midst of a civilized
-people, a set of harmless savages wandering about without
-knowing where they shall sleep at night, and gaining their
-livelihood by hunting in the woods. As the white man has
-travelled onwards, he has spread over the country belonging
-to several tribes. These, although thus enclosed by one common
-people, keep up their ancient distinctions, and sometimes
-go to war with each other. In an engagement which
-took place lately, the two parties most singularly chose the
-centre of the village of Bathurst for the field of battle. This
-was of service to the defeated side, for the runaway warriors
-took refuge in the barracks.
-
-The number of aborigines is rapidly decreasing. In my
-whole ride, with the exception of some boys brought up by
-Englishmen, I saw only one other party. This decrease, no
-doubt, must be partly owing to the introduction of spirits, to
-European diseases (even the milder ones of which, such as
-the measles, [1] prove very destructive), and to the gradual
-extinction of the wild animals. It is said that numbers of
-their children invariably perish in very early infancy from
-the effects of their wandering life; and as the difficulty of
-procuring food increases, so must their wandering habits
-increase; and hence the population, without any apparent
-deaths from famine, is repressed in a manner extremely
-sudden compared to what happens in civilized countries,
-where the father, though in adding to his labour he may injure
-himself, does not destroy his offspring.
-
-Besides the several evident causes of destruction, there
-appears to be some more mysterious agency generally at
-work. Wherever the European has trod, death seems to pursue
-the aboriginal. We may look to the wide extent of the
-Americas, Polynesia, the Cape of Good Hope, and Australia,
-and we find the same result. Nor is it the white man alone
-that thus acts the destroyer; the Polynesian of Malay extraction
-has in parts of the East Indian archipelago, thus driven
-before him the dark-coloured native. The varieties of man
-seem to act on each other in the same way as different species
-of animals -- the stronger always extirpating the weaker. It
-was melancholy at New Zealand to hear the fine energetic
-natives saying that they knew the land was doomed to pass
-from their children. Every one has heard of the inexplicable
-reduction of the population in the beautiful and healthy island
-of Tahiti since the date of Captain Cook's voyages: although
-in that case we might have expected that it would have been
-increased; for infanticide, which formerly prevailed to so
-extraordinary a degree, has ceased; profligacy has greatly
-diminished, and the murderous wars become less frequent.
-
-The Rev. J. Williams, in his interesting work, [2] says, that
-the first intercourse between natives and Europeans, "is
-invariably attended with the introduction of fever, dysentery,
-or some other disease, which carries off numbers of the people."
-Again he affirms, "It is certainly a fact, which cannot
-be controverted, that most of the diseases which have raged
-in the islands during my residence there, have been introduced
-by ships; [3] and what renders this fact remarkable is,
-that there might be no appearance of disease among the crew
-of the ship which conveyed this destructive importation."
-This statement is not quite so extraordinary as it at first
-appears; for several cases are on record of the most malignant
-fevers having broken out, although the parties themselves,
-who were the cause, were not affected. In the early
-part of the reign of George III., a prisoner who had been
-confined in a dungeon, was taken in a coach with four constables
-before a magistrate; and although the man himself
-was not ill, the four constables died from a short putrid
-fever; but the contagion extended to no others. From these
-facts it would almost appear as if the effluvium of one set
-of men shut up for some time together was poisonous when
-inhaled by others; and possibly more so, if the men be of
-different races. Mysterious as this circumstance appears to
-be, it is not more surprising than that the body of one's
-fellow-creature, directly after death, and before putrefaction
-has commenced, should often be of so deleterious a quality,
-that the mere puncture from an instrument used in its
-dissection, should prove fatal.
-
-17th. -- Early in the morning we passed the Nepean in a
-ferry-boat. The river, although at this spot both broad and
-deep, had a very small body of running water. Having
-crossed a low piece of land on the opposite side, we reached
-the slope of the Blue Mountains. The ascent is not steep,
-the road having been cut with much care on the side of a
-sandstone cliff. On the summit an almost level plain extends,
-which, rising imperceptibly to the westward, at last attains
-a height of more than 3000 feet. From so grand a title as
-Blue Mountains, and from their absolute altitude, I expected
-to have seen a bold chain of mountains crossing the country;
-but instead of this, a sloping plain presents merely an
-inconsiderable front to the low land near the coast. From
-this first slope, the view of the extensive woodland to the
-east was striking, and the surrounding trees grew bold and
-lofty. But when once on the sandstone platform, the scenery
-becomes exceedingly monotonous; each side of the road is
-bordered by scrubby trees of the never-failing Eucalyptus
-family; and with the exception of two or three small inns,
-there are no houses or cultivated land: the road, moreover,
-is solitary; the most frequent object being a bullock-waggon,
-piled up with bales of wool.
-
-In the middle of the day we baited our horses at a little
-inn, called the Weatherboard. The country here is elevated
-2800 feet above the sea. About a mile and a half from this
-place there is a view exceedingly well worth visiting. Following
-down a little valley and its tiny rill of water, an
-immense gulf unexpectedly opens through the trees which
-border the pathway, at the depth of perhaps 1500 feet.
-Walking on a few yards, one stands on the brink of a vast
-precipice, and below one sees a grand bay or gulf, for I know
-not what other name to give it, thickly covered with forest.
-The point of view is situated as if at the head of a bay, the
-line of cliff diverging on each side, and showing headland
-behind headland, as on a bold sea-coast. These cliffs are
-composed of horizontal strata of whitish sandstone; and
-are so absolutely vertical, that in many places a person
-standing on the edge and throwing down a stone, can see it
-strike the trees in the abyss below. So unbroken is the line
-of cliff, that in order to reach the foot of the waterfall,
-formed by this little stream, it is said to be necessary to go
-sixteen miles round. About five miles distant in front,
-another line of cliff extends, which thus appears completely
-to encircle the valley; and hence the name of bay is justified,
-as applied to this grand amphitheatrical depression. If we
-imagine a winding harbour, with its deep water surrounded
-by bold cliff-like shores, to be laid dry, and a forest to
-spring up on its sandy bottom, we should then have the
-appearance and structure here exhibited. This kind of view was
-to me quite novel, and extremely magnificent.
-
-In the evening we reached the Blackheath. The sandstone
-plateau has here attained the height of 3400 feet; and
-is covered, as before, with the same scrubby woods. From
-the road, there were occasional glimpses into a profound
-valley, of the same character as the one described; but from
-the steepness and depth of its sides, the bottom was scarcely
-ever to be seen. The Blackheath is a very comfortable inn,
-kept by an old soldier; and it reminded me of the small inns
-in North Wales.
-
-18th. -- Very early in the morning, I walked about three
-miles to see Govett's Leap; a view of a similar character
-with that near the Weatherboard, but perhaps even more
-stupendous. So early in the day the gulf was filled with a
-thin blue haze, which, although destroying the general effect
-of the view added to the apparent depth at which the forest
-was stretched out beneath our feet. These valleys, which so
-long presented an insuperable barrier to the attempts of the
-most enterprising of the colonists to reach the interior, are
-most remarkable. Great arm-like bays, expanding at their
-upper ends, often branch from the main valleys and penetrate
-the sandstone platform; on the other hand, the platform
-often sends promontories into the valleys, and even
-leaves in them great, almost insulated, masses. To descend
-into some of these valleys, it is necessary to go round twenty
-miles; and into others, the surveyors have only lately
-penetrated, and the colonists have not yet been able to drive in
-their cattle. But the most remarkable feature in their structure
-is, that although several miles wide at their heads, they
-generally contract towards their mouths to such a degree
-as to become impassable. The Surveyor-General, Sir T.
-Mitchell, [4] endeavoured in vain, first walking and then by
-crawling between the great fallen fragments of sandstone,
-to ascend through the gorge by which the river Grose joins
-the Nepean, yet the valley of the Grose in its upper part,
-as I saw, forms a magnificent level basin some miles in
-width, and is on all sides surrounded by cliffs, the summits
-of which are believed to be nowhere less than 3000 feet
-above the level of the sea. When cattle are driven into the
-valley of the Wolgan by a path (which I descended), partly
-natural and partly made by the owner of the land, they cannot
-escape; for this valley is in every other part surrounded
-by perpendicular cliffs, and eight miles lower down, it
-contracts from an average width of half a mile, to a mere
-chasm, impassable to man or beast. Sir T. Mitchell states
-that the great valley of the Cox river with all its branches,
-contracts, where it unites with the Nepean, into a gorge
-2200 yards in width, and about 1000 feet in depth. Other
-similar cases might have been added.
-
-The first impression, on seeing the correspondence of the
-horizontal strata on each side of these valleys and great
-amphitheatrical depressions, is that they have been hollowed
-out, like other valleys, by the action of water; but when one
-reflects on the enormous amount of stone, which on this
-view must have been removed through mere gorges or
-chasms, one is led to ask whether these spaces may not have
-subsided. But considering the form of the irregularly
-branching valleys, and of the narrow promontories projecting
-into them from the platforms, we are compelled to abandon
-this notion. To attribute these hollows to the present alluvial
-action would be preposterous; nor does the drainage
-from the summit-level always fall, as I remarked near the
-Weatherboard, into the head of these valleys, but into one
-side of their bay-like recesses. Some of the inhabitants
-remarked to me that they never viewed one of those bay-like
-recesses, with the headlands receding on both hands, without
-being struck with their resemblance to a bold sea-coast. This
-is certainly the case; moreover, on the present coast of New
-South Wales, the numerous, fine, widely-branching harbours,
-which are generally connected with the sea by a narrow
-mouth worn through the sandstone coast-cliffs, varying from
-one mile in width to a quarter of a mile, present a likeness,
-though on a miniature scale, to the great valleys of the
-interior. But then immediately occurs the startling difficulty,
-why has the sea worn out these great, though circumscribed
-depressions on a wide platform, and left mere gorges at the
-openings, through which the whole vast amount of triturated
-matter must have been carried away? The only light I can
-throw upon this enigma, is by remarking that banks of the
-most irregular forms appear to be now forming in some seas,
-as in parts of the West Indies and in the Red Sea, and that
-their sides are exceedingly steep. Such banks, I have been
-led to suppose, have been formed by sediment heaped by
-strong currents on an irregular bottom. That in some cases
-the sea, instead of spreading out sediment in a uniform sheet,
-heaps it round submarine rocks and islands, it is hardly
-possible to doubt, after examining the charts of the West
-Indies; and that the waves have power to form high and
-precipitous cliffs, even in land-locked harbours, I have noticed
-in many parts of South America. To apply these ideas to the
-sandstone platforms of New South Wales, I imagine that the
-strata were heaped by the action of strong currents, and of
-the undulations of an open sea, on an irregular bottom; and
-that the valley-like spaces thus left unfilled had their steeply
-sloping flanks worn into cliffs, during a slow elevation of
-the land; the worn-down sandstone being removed, either at
-the time when the narrow gorges were cut by the retreating
-sea, or subsequently by alluvial action.
-
-
-Soon after leaving the Blackheath, we descended from the
-sandstone platform by the pass of Mount Victoria. To effect
-this pass, an enormous quantity of stone has been cut
-through; the design, and its manner of execution, being
-worthy of any line of road in England. We now entered
-upon a country less elevated by nearly a thousand feet, and
-consisting of granite. With the change of rock, the vegetation
-improved, the trees were both finer and stood farther
-apart; and the pasture between them was a little greener and
-more plentiful. At Hassan's Walls, I left the high road,
-and made a short detour to a farm called Walerawang; to
-the superintendent of which I had a letter of introduction
-from the owner in Sydney. Mr. Browne had the kindness to
-ask me to stay the ensuing day, which I had much pleasure
-in doing. This place offers an example of one of the large
-farming, or rather sheep-grazing establishments of the
-colony. Cattle and horses are, however, in this case rather
-more numerous than usual, owing to some of the valleys
-being swampy and producing a coarser pasture. Two or
-three flat pieces of ground near the house were cleared and
-cultivated with corn, which the harvest-men were now reaping:
-but no more wheat is sown than sufficient for the annual
-support of the labourers employed on the establishment. The
-usual number of assigned convict-servants here is about
-forty, but at the present time there were rather more. Although
-the farm was well stocked with every necessary,
-there was an apparent absence of comfort; and not one
-single woman resided here. The sunset of a fine day will
-generally cast an air of happy contentment on any scene;
-but here, at this retired farm-house, the brightest tints on
-the surrounding woods could not make me forget that forty
-hardened, profligate men were ceasing from their daily
-labours, like the slaves from Africa, yet without their holy
-claim for compassion.
-
-Early on the next morning, Mr. Archer, the joint superintendent,
-had the kindness to take me out kangaroo-hunting.
-We continued riding the greater part of the day, but had
-very bad sport, not seeing a kangaroo, or even a wild dog.
-The greyhounds pursued a kangaroo rat into a hollow tree,
-out of which we dragged it: it is an animal as large as a
-rabbit, but with the figure of a kangaroo. A few years since
-this country abounded with wild animals; but now the emu
-is banished to a long distance, and the kangaroo is become
-scarce; to both the English greyhound has been highly
-destructive. It may be long before these animals are altogether
-exterminated, but their doom is fixed. The aborigines are
-always anxious to borrow the dogs from the farm-houses:
-the use of them, the offal when an animal is killed, and some
-milk from the cows, are the peace-offerings of the settlers,
-who push farther and farther towards the interior. The
-thoughtless aboriginal, blinded by these trifling advantages,
-is delighted at the approach of the white man, who seems
-predestined to inherit the country of his children.
-
-Although having poor sport, we enjoyed a pleasant ride.
-The woodland is generally so open that a person on horseback
-can gallop through it. It is traversed by a few flat-
-bottomed valleys, which are green and free from trees: in
-such spots the scenery was pretty like that of a park. In the
-whole country I scarcely saw a place without the marks of a
-fire; whether these had been more or less recent -- whether
-the stumps were more or less black, was the greatest change
-which varied the uniformity, so wearisome to the traveller's
-eye. In these woods there are not many birds; I saw, however,
-some large flocks of the white cockatoo feeding in a
-corn-field, and a few most beautiful parrots; crows, like our
-jackdaws were not uncommon, and another bird something
-like the magpie. In the dusk of the evening I took a stroll
-along a chain of ponds, which in this dry country represented
-the course of a river, and had the good fortune to see several
-of the famous Ornithorhynchus paradoxus. They were
-diving and playing about the surface of the water, but
-showed so little of their bodies, that they might easily have
-been mistaken for water-rats. Mr. Browne shot one: certainly
-it is a most extraordinary animal; a stuffed specimen does not
-at all give a good idea of the appearance of the head and beak
-when fresh; the latter becoming hard and contracted. [5]
-
-20th. -- A long day's ride to Bathurst. Before joining the
-highroad we followed a mere path through the forest; and
-the country, with the exception of a few squatters' huts, was
-very solitary. We experienced this day the sirocco-like wind
-of Australia, which comes from the parched deserts of the
-interior. Clouds of dust were travelling in every direction;
-and the wind felt as if it had passed over a fire. I afterwards
-heard that the thermometer out of doors had stood at
-119 degs., and in a closed room at 96 degs. In the afternoon we
-came in view of the downs of Bathurst. These undulating but
-nearly smooth plains are very remarkable in this country,
-from being absolutely destitute of trees. They support only
-a thin brown pasture. We rode some miles over this country,
-and then reached the township of Bathurst, seated in the
-middle of what may be called either a very broad valley, or
-narrow plain. I was told at Sydney not to form too bad an
-opinion of Australia by judging of the country from the
-roadside, nor too good a one from Bathurst; in this latter
-respect, I did not feel myself in the least danger of being
-prejudiced. The season, it must be owned, had been one of great
-drought, and the country did not wear a favourable aspect;
-although I understand it was incomparably worse two or
-three months before. The secret of the rapidly growing
-prosperity of Bathurst is, that the brown pasture which
-appears to the stranger's eye so wretched, is excellent for
-sheep-grazing. The town stands, at the height of 2200 feet
-above the sea, on the banks of the Macquarie. This is one of
-the rivers flowing into the vast and scarcely known interior.
-The line of water-shed, which divides the inland streams from
-those on the coast, has a height of about 3000 feet, and runs
-in a north and south direction at the distance of from eighty
-to a hundred miles from the sea-side. The Macquarie figures
-in the map as a respectable river, and it is the largest of
-those draining this part of the water-shed; yet to my surprise
-I found it a mere chain of ponds, separated from each other
-by spaces almost dry. Generally a small stream is running;
-and sometimes there are high and impetuous floods. Scanty
-as the supply of the water is throughout this district, it
-becomes still scantier further inland.
-
-22nd. -- I commenced my return, and followed a new road
-called Lockyer's Line, along which the country is rather more
-hilly and picturesque. This was a long day's ride; and the
-house where I wished to sleep was some way off the road,
-and not easily found. I met on this occasion, and indeed on
-all others, a very general and ready civility among the lower
-orders, which, when one considers what they are, and what
-they have been, would scarcely have been expected. The
-farm where I passed the night, was owned by two young
-men who had only lately come out, and were beginning a
-settler's life. The total want of almost every comfort was
-not attractive; but future and certain prosperity was before
-their eyes, and that not far distant.
-
-The next day we passed through large tracts of country in
-flames, volumes of smoke sweeping across the road. Before
-noon we joined our former road, and ascended Mount Victoria.
-I slept at the Weatherboard, and before dark took
-another walk to the amphitheatre. On the road to Sydney
-I spent a very pleasant evening with Captain King at Dunheved;
-and thus ended my little excursion in the colony of
-New South Wales.
-
-Before arriving here the three things which interested me
-most were -- the state of society amongst the higher classes,
-the condition of the convicts, and the degree of attraction
-sufficient to induce persons to emigrate. Of course, after
-so very short a visit, one's opinion is worth scarcely anything;
-but it is as difficult not to form some opinion, as it is
-to form a correct judgment. On the whole, from what I
-heard, more than from what I saw, I was disappointed in the
-state of society. The whole community is rancorously
-divided into parties on almost every subject. Among those
-who, from their station in life, ought to be the best, many
-live in such open profligacy that respectable people cannot
-associate with them. There is much jealousy between the
-children of the rich emancipist and the free settlers, the
-former being pleased to consider honest men as interlopers.
-The whole population, poor and rich, are bent on acquiring
-wealth: amongst the higher orders, wool and sheep-grazing
-form the constant subject of conversation. There are many
-serious drawbacks to the comforts of a family, the chief of
-which, perhaps, is being surrounded by convict servants.
-How thoroughly odious to every feeling, to be waited on by
-a man who the day before, perhaps, was flogged, from your
-representation, for some trifling misdemeanor. The female
-servants are of course, much worse: hence children learn the
-vilest expressions, and it is fortunate, if not equally vile
-ideas.
-
-On the other hand, the capital of a person, without any
-trouble on his part, produces him treble interest to what it
-will in England; and with care he is sure to grow rich. The
-luxuries of life are in abundance, and very little dearer than
-in England, and most articles of food are cheaper. The
-climate is splendid, and perfectly healthy; but to my mind
-its charms are lost by the uninviting aspect of the country.
-Settlers possess a great advantage in finding their sons of
-service when very young. At the age of from sixteen to
-twenty, they frequently take charge of distant farming stations.
-This, however, must happen at the expense of their
-boys associating entirely with convict servants. I am not
-aware that the tone of society has assumed any peculiar
-character; but with such habits, and without intellectual
-pursuits, it can hardly fail to deteriorate. My opinion is
-such, that nothing but rather sharp necessity should compel
-me to emigrate.
-
-The rapid prosperity and future prospects of this colony
-are to me, not understanding these subjects, very puzzling.
-The two main exports are wool and whale-oil, and to both
-of these productions there is a limit. The country is totally
-unfit for canals, therefore there is a not very distant point,
-beyond which the land-carriage of wool will not repay the
-expense of shearing and tending sheep. Pasture everywhere
-is so thin that settlers have already pushed far into the
-interior: moreover, the country further inland becomes extremely
-poor. Agriculture, on account of the droughts, can
-never succeed on an extended scale: therefore, so far as I
-can see, Australia must ultimately depend upon being the
-centre of commerce for the southern hemisphere, and perhaps
-on her future manufactories. Possessing coal, she
-always has the moving power at hand. From the habitable
-country extending along the coast, and from her English
-extraction, she is sure to be a maritime nation. I formerly
-imagined that Australia would rise to be as grand and powerful
-a country as North America, but now it appears to me
-that such future grandeur is rather problematical.
-
-With respect to the state of the convicts, I had still fewer
-opportunities of judging than on other points. The first
-question is, whether their condition is at all one of
-punishment: no one will maintain that it is a very severe one.
-This, however, I suppose, is of little consequence as long as
-it continues to be an object of dread to criminals at home.
-The corporeal wants of the convicts are tolerably well supplied:
-their prospect of future liberty and comfort is not
-distant, and, after good conduct, certain. A "ticket of
-leave," which, as long as a man keeps clear of suspicion as
-well as of crime, makes him free within a certain district, is
-given upon good conduct, after years proportional to the
-length of the sentence; yet with all this, and overlooking
-the previous imprisonment and wretched passage out, I
-believe the years of assignment are passed away with discontent
-and unhappiness. As an intelligent man remarked to
-me, the convicts know no pleasure beyond sensuality, and in
-this they are not gratified. The enormous bribe which Government
-possesses in offering free pardons, together with the
-deep horror of the secluded penal settlements, destroys
-confidence between the convicts, and so prevents crime. As to a
-sense of shame, such a feeling does not appear to be known,
-and of this I witnessed some very singular proofs. Though
-it is a curious fact, I was universally told that the character
-of the convict population is one of arrant cowardice: not
-unfrequently some become desperate, and quite indifferent as
-to life, yet a plan requiring cool or continued courage is
-seldom put into execution. The worst feature in the whole
-case is, that although there exists what may be called a legal
-reform, and comparatively little is committed which the law
-can touch, yet that any moral reform should take place
-appears to be quite out of the question. I was assured by
-well-informed people, that a man who should try to improve,
-could not while living with other assigned servants; -- his
-life would be one of intolerable misery and persecution. Nor
-must the contamination of the convict-ships and prisons, both
-here and in England, be forgotten. On the whole, as a place
-of punishment, the object is scarcely gained; as a real system
-of reform it has failed, as perhaps would every other plan;
-but as a means of making men outwardly honest, -- of converting
-vagabonds, most useless in one hemisphere, into
-active citizens of another, and thus giving birth to a new
-and splendid country -- a grand centre of civilization -- it has
-succeeded to a degree perhaps unparalleled in history.
-
-
-30th. -- The Beagle sailed for Hobart Town in Van Diemen's
-Land. On the 5th of February, after a six days' passage,
-of which the first part was fine, and the latter very cold
-and squally, we entered the mouth of Storm Bay: the weather
-justified this awful name. The bay should rather be called
-an estuary, for it receives at its head the waters of the
-Derwent. Near the mouth, there are some extensive basaltic
-platforms; but higher up the land becomes mountainous, and
-is covered by a light wood. The lower parts of the hills
-which skirt the bay are cleared; and the bright yellow fields
-of corn, and dark green ones of potatoes, appear very luxuriant.
-Late in the evening we anchored in the snug cove,
-on the shores of which stands the capital of Tasmania. The
-first aspect of the place was very inferior to that of Sydney;
-the latter might be called a city, this is only a town. It
-stands at the base of Mount Wellington, a mountain 3100
-feet high, but of little picturesque beauty; from this source,
-however, it receives a good supply of water. Round the cove
-there are some fine warehouses and on one side a small fort.
-Coming from the Spanish settlements, where such magnificent
-care has generally been paid to the fortifications, the
-means of defence in these colonies appeared very contemptible.
-Comparing the town with Sydney, I was chiefly struck
-with the comparative fewness of the large houses, either
-built or building. Hobart Town, from the census of 1835,
-contained 13,826 inhabitants, and the whole of Tasmania 36,505.
-
-All the aborigines have been removed to an island in
-Bass's Straits, so that Van Diemen's Land enjoys the great
-advantage of being free from a native population. This
-most cruel step seems to have been quite unavoidable, as
-the only means of stopping a fearful succession of robberies,
-burnings, and murders, committed by the blacks; and which
-sooner or later would have ended in their utter destruction.
-I fear there is no doubt, that this train of evil and its
-consequences, originated in the infamous conduct of some of
-our countrymen. Thirty years is a short period, in which to
-have banished the last aboriginal from his native island, --
-and that island nearly as large as Ireland. The correspondence
-on this subject, which took place between the government
-at home and that of Van Diemen's Land, is very interesting.
-Although numbers of natives were shot and taken prisoners
-in the skirmishing, which was going on at intervals for several
-years; nothing seems fully to have impressed them with
-the idea of our overwhelming power, until the whole island,
-in 1830, was put under martial law, and by proclamation the
-whole population commanded to assist in one great attempt
-to secure the entire race. The plan adopted was nearly similar
-to that of the great hunting-matches in India: a line was
-formed reaching across the island, with the intention of
-driving the natives into a _cul-de-sac_ on Tasman's peninsula.
-The attempt failed; the natives, having tied up their dogs,
-stole during one night through the lines. This is far from
-surprising, when their practised senses, and usual manner
-of crawling after wild animals is considered. I have been
-assured that they can conceal themselves on almost bare
-ground, in a manner which until witnessed is scarcely credible;
-their dusky bodies being easily mistaken for the blackened
-stumps which are scattered all over the country. I was
-told of a trial between a party of Englishmen and a native,
-who was to stand in full view on the side of a bare hill; if the
-Englishmen closed their eyes for less than a minute, he
-would squat down, and then they were never able to distinguish
-him from the surrounding stumps. But to return to
-the hunting-match; the natives understanding this kind of
-warfare, were terribly alarmed, for they at once perceived
-the power and numbers of the whites. Shortly afterwards
-a party of thirteen belonging to two tribes came in; and,
-conscious of their unprotected condition, delivered themselves
-up in despair. Subsequently by the intrepid exertions
-of Mr. Robinson, an active and benevolent man, who
-fearlessly visited by himself the most hostile of the natives,
-the whole were induced to act in a similar manner. They
-were then removed to an island, where food and clothes
-were provided them. Count Strzelecki states, [6] that "at the
-epoch of their deportation in 1835, the number of natives
-amounted to 210. In 1842, that is, after the interval of seven
-years, they mustered only fifty-four individuals; and, while
-each family of the interior of New South Wales, uncontaminated
-by contact with the whites, swarms with children, those
-of Flinders' Island had during eight years an accession of
-only fourteen in number!"
-
-The Beagle stayed here ten days, and in this time I made
-several pleasant little excursions, chiefly with the object of
-examining the geological structure of the immediate
-neighbourhood. The main points of interest consist, first in
-some highly fossiliferous strata, belonging to the Devonian or
-Carboniferous period; secondly, in proofs of a late small rise
-of the land; and lastly, in a solitary and superficial patch of
-yellowish limestone or travertin, which contains numerous
-impressions of leaves of trees, together with land-shells, not
-now existing. It is not improbable that this one small quarry
-includes the only remaining record of the vegetation of Van
-Diemen's Land during one former epoch.
-
-The climate here is damper than in New South Wales,
-and hence the land is more fertile. Agriculture flourishes;
-the cultivated fields look well, and the gardens abound with
-thriving vegetables and fruit-trees. Some of the farm-houses,
-situated in retired spots, had a very attractive appearance.
-The general aspect of the vegetation is similar to
-that of Australia; perhaps it is a little more green and
-cheerful; and the pasture between the trees rather more
-abundant. One day I took a long walk on the side of the bay
-opposite to the town: I crossed in a steam-boat, two of which
-are constantly plying backwards and forwards. The machinery
-of one of these vessels was entirely manufactured in
-this colony, which, from its very foundation, then numbered
-only three and thirty years! Another day I ascended Mount
-Wellington; I took with me a guide, for I failed in a first
-attempt, from the thickness of the wood. Our guide, however,
-was a stupid fellow, and conducted us to the southern
-and damp side of the mountain, where the vegetation was
-very luxuriant; and where the labour of the ascent, from the
-number of rotten trunks, was almost as great as on a mountain
-in Tierra del Fuego or in Chiloe. It cost us five and a
-half hours of hard climbing before we reached the summit.
-In many parts the Eucalypti grew to a great size, and composed
-a noble forest. In some of the dampest ravines, tree-
-ferns flourished in an extraordinary manner; I saw one
-which must have been at least twenty feet high to the base
-of the fronds, and was in girth exactly six feet. The fronds
-forming the most elegant parasols, produced a gloomy shade,
-like that of the first hour of the night. The summit of the
-mountain is broad and flat, and is composed of huge angular
-masses of naked greenstone. Its elevation is 3100 feet above
-the level of the sea. The day was splendidly clear, and we
-enjoyed a most extensive view; to the north, the country
-appeared a mass of wooded mountains, of about the same height
-with that on which we were standing, and with an equally
-tame outline: to the south the broken land and water, forming
-many intricate bays, was mapped with clearness before
-us. After staying some hours on the summit, we found a
-better way to descend, but did not reach the Beagle till eight
-o'clock, after a severe day's work.
-
-February 7th. -- The Beagle sailed from Tasmania, and,
-on the 6th of the ensuing month, reached King George's
-Sound, situated close to the S. W. corner of Australia. We
-stayed there eight days; and we did not during our voyage
-pass a more dull and uninteresting time. The country,
-viewed from an eminence, appears a woody plain, with here
-and there rounded and partly bare hills of granite protruding.
-One day I went out with a party, in hopes of seeing a
-kangaroo hunt, and walked over a good many miles of country.
-Everywhere we found the soil sandy, and very poor;
-it supported either a coarse vegetation of thin, low brushwood
-and wiry grass, or a forest of stunted trees. The
-scenery resembled that of the high sandstone platform of the
-Blue Mountains; the Casuarina (a tree somewhat resembling
-a Scotch fir) is, however, here in greater number, and
-the Eucalyptus in rather less. In the open parts there were
-many grass-trees, -- a plant which, in appearance, has some
-affinity with the palm; but, instead of being surmounted by
-a crown of noble fronds, it can boast merely of a tuft of
-very coarse grass-like leaves. The general bright green colour
-of the brushwood and other plants, viewed from a distance,
-seemed to promise fertility. A single walk, however, was enough
-to dispel such an illusion; and he who thinks with me will never
-wish to walk again in so uninviting a country.
-
-One day I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to Bald Head;
-the place mentioned by so many navigators, where some imagined
-that they saw corals, and others that they saw petrified
-trees, standing in the position in which they had grown.
-According to our view, the beds have been formed by the
-wind having heaped up fine sand, composed of minute rounded
-particles of shells and corals, during which process
-branches and roots of trees, together with many land-shells,
-became enclosed. The whole then became consolidated by
-the percolation of calcareous matter; and the cylindrical
-cavities left by the decaying of the wood, were thus also
-filled up with a hard pseudo-stalactical stone. The weather
-is now wearing away the softer parts, and in consequence
-the hard casts of the roots and branches of the trees project
-above the surface, and, in a singularly deceptive manner,
-resemble the stumps of a dead thicket.
-
-A large tribe of natives, called the White Cockatoo men
-happened to pay the settlement a visit while we were there.
-These men, as well as those of the tribe belonging to King
-George's Sound, being tempted by the offer of some tubs of
-rice and sugar, were persuaded to hold a "corrobery," or
-great dancing-party. As soon as it grew dark, small fires
-were lighted, and the men commenced their toilet, which
-consisted in painting themselves white in spots and lines.
-As soon as all was ready, large fires were kept blazing,
-round which the women and children were collected as spectators;
-the Cockatoo and King George's men formed two distinct
-parties, and generally danced in answer to each other.
-The dancing consisted in their running either sideways or in
-Indian file into an open space, and stamping the ground with
-great force as they marched together. Their heavy footsteps
-were accompanied by a kind of grunt, by beating their
-clubs and spears together, and by various other gesticulations,
-such as extending their arms and wriggling their
-bodies. It was a most rude, barbarous scene, and, to our
-ideas, without any sort of meaning; but we observed that
-the black women and children watched it with the greatest
-pleasure. Perhaps these dances originally represented actions,
-such as wars and victories; there was one called the Emu
-dance, in which each man extended his arm in a bent manner,
-like the neck of that bird. In another dance, one man
-imitated the movements of a kangaroo grazing in the woods,
-whilst a second crawled up, and pretended to spear him.
-When both tribes mingled in the dance, the ground trembled
-with the heaviness of their steps, and the air resounded with
-their wild cries. Every one appeared in high spirits, and the
-group of nearly naked figures, viewed by the light of the
-blazing fires, all moving in hideous harmony, formed a perfect
-display of a festival amongst the lowest barbarians. In
-Tierra del Fuego, we have beheld many curious scenes in
-savage life, but never, I think, one where the natives were
-in such high spirits, and so perfectly at their ease. After
-the dancing was over, the whole party formed a great circle
-on the ground, and the boiled rice and sugar was distributed,
-to the delight of all.
-
-After several tedious delays from clouded weather, on the
-14th of March, we gladly stood out of King George's Sound
-on our course to Keeling Island. Farewell, Australia! you
-are a rising child, and doubtless some day will reign a great
-princess in the South: but you are too great and ambitious
-for affection, yet not great enough for respect. I leave your
-shores without sorrow or regret.
-
-[1] It is remarkable how the same disease is modified in
-different climates. At the little island of St. Helena the
-introduction of scarlet fever is dreaded as a plague. In some
-countries, foreigners and natives are as differently affected by
-certain contagious disorders as if they had been different
-animals; of which fact some instances have occurred in Chile;
-and, according to Humboldt, in Mexico (Polit. Essay, New Spain,
-vol. iv.).
-
-[2] Narrative of Missionary Enterprise, p. 282.
-
-[3] Captain Beechey (chap. iv., vol. i.) states that the
-inhabitants of Pitcairn Island are firmly convinced that after
-the arrival of every ship they suffer cutaneous and other
-disorders. Captain Beechey attributes this to the change of diet
-during the time of the visit. Dr. Macculloch (Western Isles,
-vol. ii. p. 32) says: "It is asserted, that on the arrival of a
-stranger (at St. Kilda) all the inhabitants, in the common
-phraseology, catch a cold." Dr. Macculloch considers the whole
-case, although often previously affirmed, as ludicrous. He adds,
-however, that "the question was put by us to the inhabitants who
-unanimously agreed in the story." In Vancouver's Voyage, there
-is a somewhat similar statement with respect to Otaheite. Dr.
-Dieffenbach, in a note to his translation of the Journal, states
-that the same fact is universally believed by the inhabitants of
-the Chatham Islands, and in parts of New Zealand. It is
-impossible that such a belief should have become universal in
-the northern hemisphere, at the Antipodes, and in the Pacific,
-without some good foundation. Humboldt (Polit. Essay on King of
-New Spain, vol. iv.) says, that the great epidemics of Panama
-and Callao are "marked" by the arrival of ships from Chile,
-because the people from that temperate region, first experience
-the fatal effects of the torrid zones. I may add, that I have
-heard it stated in Shropshire, that sheep, which have been
-imported from vessels, although themselves in a healthy
-condition, if placed in the same fold with others, frequently
-produce sickness in the flock.
-
-[4] Travels in Australia, vol. i. p. 154. I must express my
-obligation to Sir T. Mitchell, for several interesting personal
-communications on the subject of these great valleys of New
-South Wales.
-
-[5] I was interested by finding here the hollow conical pitfall
-of the lion-ant, or some other insect; first a fly fell down the
-treacherous slope and immediately disappeared; then came a large
-but unwary ant; its struggles to escape being very violent,
-those curious little jets of sand, described by Kirby and Spence
-(Entomol., vol. i. p. 425) as being flirted by the insect's
-tail, were promptly directed against the expected victim. But
-the ant enjoyed a better fate than the fly, and escaped the
-fatal jaws which lay concealed at the base of the conical
-hollow. This Australian pitfall was only about half the size of
-that made by the European lion-ant.
-
-[6] Physical Description of New South Wales and Van Diemen's
-Land, p. 354.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XX
-
-KEELING ISLAND: -- CORAL FORMATIONS
-
-Keeling Island -- Singular appearance -- Scanty Flora --
-Transport of Seeds -- Birds and Insects -- Ebbing and flowing
-Springs -- Fields of dead Coral -- Stones transported in the
-roots of Trees -- Great Crab -- Stinging Corals -- Coral
-eating Fish -- Coral Formations -- Lagoon Islands, or Atolls --
-Depth at which reef-building Corals can live -- Vast Areas
-interspersed with low Coral Islands -- Subsidence of their
-foundations -- Barrier Reefs -- Fringing Reefs -- Conversion of
-Fringing Reefs into Barrier Reefs, and into Atolls -- Evidence
-of changes in Level -- Breaches in Barrier Reefs -- Maldiva
-Atolls, their peculiar structure -- Dead and submerged Reefs --
-Areas of subsidence and elevation -- Distribution of Volcanoes
--- Subsidence slow, and vast in amount.
-
-
-APRIL 1st. -- We arrived in view of the Keeling or Cocos
-Islands, situated in the Indian Ocean, and about six hundred
-miles distant from the coast of Sumatra. This is one of the
-lagoon-islands (or atolls) of coral formation, similar to
-those in the Low Archipelago which we passed near. When
-the ship was in the channel at the entrance, Mr. Liesk,
-an English resident, came off in his boat. The history
-of the inhabitants of this place, in as few words as
-possible, is as follows. About nine years ago, Mr. Hare,
-a worthless character, brought from the East Indian
-archipelago a number of Malay slaves, which now including
-children, amount to more than a hundred. Shortly afterwards,
-Captain Ross, who had before visited these islands in his
-merchant-ship, arrived from England, bringing
-with him his family and goods for settlement along with
-him came Mr. Liesk, who had been a mate in his vessel.
-The Malay slaves soon ran away from the islet on which
-Mr. Hare was settled, and joined Captain Ross's party. Mr.
-Hare upon this was ultimately obliged to leave the place.
-
-The Malays are now nominally in a state of freedom, and
-certainly are so, as far as regards their personal treatment;
-but in most other points they are considered as slaves. From
-their discontented state, from the repeated removals from
-islet to islet, and perhaps also from a little mismanagement,
-things are not very prosperous. The island has no domestic
-quadruped, excepting the pig, and the main vegetable production
-is the cocoa-nut. The whole prosperity of the place
-depends on this tree: the only exports being oil from the nut,
-and the nuts themselves, which are taken to Singapore and
-Mauritius, where they are chiefly used, when grated, in making
-curries. On the cocoa-nut, also, the pigs, which are
-loaded with fat, almost entirely subsist, as do the ducks and
-poultry. Even a huge land-crab is furnished by nature with
-the means to open and feed on this most useful production.
-
-The ring-formed reef of the lagoon-island is surmounted
-in the greater part of its length by linear islets. On the
-northern or leeward side, there is an opening through which
-vessels can pass to the anchorage within. On entering, the
-scene was very curious and rather pretty; its beauty, however,
-entirely depended on the brilliancy of the surrounding
-colours. The shallow, clear, and still water of the lagoon,
-resting in its greater part on white sand, is, when illumined
-by a vertical sun, of the most vivid green. This brilliant
-expanse, several miles in width, is on all sides divided, either
-by a line of snow-white breakers from the dark heaving
-waters of the ocean, or from the blue vault of heaven by
-the strips of land, crowned by the level tops of the cocoa-nut
-trees. As a white cloud here and there affords a pleasing
-contrast with the azure sky, so in the lagoon, bands of
-living coral darken the emerald green water.
-
-The next morning after anchoring, I went on shore on
-Direction Island. The strip of dry land is only a few hundred
-yards in width; on the lagoon side there is a white calcareous
-beach, the radiation from which under this sultry
-climate was very oppressive; and on the outer coast, a solid
-broad flat of coral-rock served to break the violence of the
-open sea. Excepting near the lagoon, where there is some
-sand, the land is entirely composed of rounded fragments of
-coral. In such a loose, dry, stony soil, the climate of the
-intertropical regions alone could produce a vigorous vegetation.
-On some of the smaller islets, nothing could be more
-elegant than the manner in which the young and full-grown
-cocoa-nut trees, without destroying each other's symmetry,
-were mingled into one wood. A beach of glittering white
-sand formed a border to these fairy spots.
-
-I will now give a sketch of the natural history of these
-islands, which, from its very paucity, possesses a peculiar
-interest. The cocoa-nut tree, at first glance, seems to
-compose the whole wood; there are however, five or six
-other trees. One of these grows to a very large size, but
-from the extremes of softness of its wood, is useless; another
-sort affords excellent timber for ship-building. Besides the
-trees, the number of plants is exceedingly limited, and consists
-of insignificant weeds. In my collection, which includes,
-I believe, nearly the perfect Flora, there are twenty
-species, without reckoning a moss, lichen, and fungus. To
-this number two trees must be added; one of which was not
-in flower, and the other I only heard of. The latter is a
-solitary tree of its kind, and grows near the beach, where,
-without doubt, the one seed was thrown up by the waves. A
-Guilandina also grows on only one of the islets. I do not
-include in the above list the sugar-cane, banana, some other
-vegetables, fruit-trees, and imported grasses. As the islands
-consist entirely of coral, and at one time must have existed
-as mere water-washed reefs, all their terrestrial productions
-must have been transported here by the waves of the sea.
-In accordance with this, the Florula has quite the character
-of a refuge for the destitute: Professor Henslow informs
-me that of the twenty species nineteen belong to different
-genera, and these again to no less than sixteen families! [1]
-
-In Holman's [2] Travels an account is given, on the authority
-of Mr. A. S. Keating, who resided twelve months on these
-islands, of the various seeds and other bodies which have
-been known to have been washed on shore. "Seeds and
-plants from Sumatra and Java have been driven up by the
-surf on the windward side of the islands. Among them have
-been found the Kimiri, native of Sumatra and the peninsula
-of Malacca; the cocoa-nut of Balci, known by its shape and
-size; the Dadass, which is planted by the Malays with the
-pepper-vine, the latter intwining round its trunk, and
-supporting itself by the prickles on its stem; the soap-tree;
-the castor-oil plant; trunks of the sago palm; and various kinds
-of seeds unknown to the Malays settled on the islands.
-These are all supposed to have been driven by the N. W.
-monsoon to the coast of New Holland, and thence to these
-islands by the S. E. trade-wind. Large masses of Java teak
-and Yellow wood have also been found, besides immense
-trees of red and white cedar, and the blue gumwood of New
-Holland, in a perfectly sound condition. All the hardy seeds,
-such as creepers, retain their germinating power, but the
-softer kinds, among which is the mangostin, are destroyed
-in the passage. Fishing-canoes, apparently from Java, have
-at times been washed on shore." It is interesting thus to
-discover how numerous the seeds are, which, coming from
-several countries, are drifted over the wide ocean. Professor
-Henslow tells me, he believes that nearly all the plants
-which I brought from these islands, are common littoral
-species in the East Indian archipelago. From the direction,
-however, of the winds and currents, it seems scarcely possible
-that they could have come here in a direct line. If,
-as suggested with much probability by Mr. Keating, they
-were first carried towards the coast of New Holland, and
-thence drifted back together with the productions of that
-country, the seeds, before germinating, must have travelled
-between 1800 and 2400 miles.
-
-Chamisso, [3] when describing the Radack Archipelago, situated
-in the western part of the Pacific, states that "the sea
-brings to these islands the seeds and fruits of many trees,
-most of which have yet not grown here. The greater part
-of these seeds appear to have not yet lost the capability of
-growing."
-
-It is also said that palms and bamboos from somewhere
-in the torrid zone, and trunks of northern firs, are
-washed on shore: these firs must have come from an immense
-distance. These facts are highly interesting. It cannot
-be doubted that if there were land-birds to pick up the
-seeds when first cast on shore, and a soil better adapted for
-their growth than the loose blocks of coral, that the most
-isolated of the lagoon-islands would in time possess a far
-more abundant Flora than they now have.
-
-The list of land animals is even poorer than that of the
-plants. Some of the islets are inhabited by rats, which were
-brought in a ship from the Mauritius, wrecked here. These
-rats are considered by Mr. Waterhouse as identical with the
-English kind, but they are smaller, and more brightly coloured.
-There are no true land-birds, for a snipe and a rail
-(Rallus Phillippensis), though living entirely in the dry
-herbage, belong to the order of Waders. Birds of this order
-are said to occur on several of the small low islands in the
-Pacific. At Ascension, where there is no land-bird, a rail
-(Porphyrio simplex) was shot near the summit of the mountain,
-and it was evidently a solitary straggler. At Tristan
-d'Acunha, where, according to Carmichael, there are only
-two land-birds, there is a coot. From these facts I believe
-that the waders, after the innumerable web-footed species,
-are generally the first colonists of small isolated islands. I
-may add, that whenever I noticed birds, not of oceanic
-species, very far out at sea, they always belonged to this
-order; and hence they would naturally become the earliest
-colonists of any remote point of land.
-
-Of reptiles I saw only one small lizard. Of insects I took
-pains to collect every kind. Exclusive of spiders, which were
-numerous, there were thirteen species. [4] Of these, one only
-was a beetle. A small ant swarmed by thousands under the
-loose dry blocks of coral, and was the only true insect which
-was abundant. Although the productions of the land are
-thus scanty, if we look to the waters of the surrounding sea,
-the number of organic beings is indeed infinite. Chamisso
-has described [5] the natural history of a lagoon-island in the
-Radack Archipelago; and it is remarkable how closely its
-inhabitants, in number and kind, resemble those of Keeling
-Island. There is one lizard and two waders, namely, a snipe
-and curlew. Of plants there are nineteen species, including
-a fern; and some of these are the same with those growing
-here, though on a spot so immensely remote, and in a different
-ocean.
-
-The long strips of land, forming the linear islets, have
-been raised only to that height to which the surf can throw
-fragments of coral, and the wind heap up calcareous sand.
-The solid flat of coral rock on the outside, by its breadth,
-breaks the first violence of the waves, which otherwise, in a
-day, would sweep away these islets and all their productions.
-The ocean and the land seem here struggling for mastery:
-although terra firma has obtained a footing, the denizens of
-the water think their claim at least equally good. In every
-part one meets hermit crabs of more than one species, [6]
-carrying on their backs the shells which they have stolen
-from the neighbouring beach. Overhead, numerous gannets,
-frigate-birds, and terns, rest on the trees; and the wood, from
-the many nests and from the smell of the atmosphere, might
-be called a sea-rookery. The gannets, sitting on their rude
-nests, gaze at one with a stupid yet angry air. The noddies,
-as their name expresses, are silly little creatures. But there
-is one charming bird: it is a small, snow-white tern, which
-smoothly hovers at the distance of a few feet above one's
-head, its large black eye scanning, with quiet curiosity, your
-expression. Little imagination is required to fancy that so
-light and delicate a body must be tenanted by some wandering
-fairy spirit.
-
-Sunday, April 3rd. -- After service I accompanied Captain
-Fitz Roy to the settlement, situated at the distance of some
-miles, on the point of an islet thickly covered with tall
-cocoa-nut trees. Captain Ross and Mr. Liesk live in a large
-barn-like house open at both ends, and lined with mats made of
-woven bark. The houses of the Malays are arranged along
-the shore of the lagoon. The whole place had rather a desolate
-aspect, for there were no gardens to show the signs of
-care and cultivation. The natives belong to different islands
-in the East Indian archipelago, but all speak the same language:
-we saw the inhabitants of Borneo, Celebes, Java, and
-Sumatra. In colour they resemble the Tahitians, from whom
-they do not widely differ in features. Some of the women,
-however, show a good deal of the Chinese character. I liked
-both their general expressions and the sound of their voices.
-They appeared poor, and their houses were destitute of
-furniture; but it was evident, from the plumpness of the little
-children, that cocoa-nuts and turtle afford no bad sustenance.
-
-On this island the wells are situated, from which ships
-obtain water. At first sight it appears not a little remarkable
-that the fresh water should regularly ebb and flow with the
-tides; and it has even been imagined, that sand has the power
-of filtering the salt from the sea-water. These ebbing wells
-are common on some of the low islands in the West Indies.
-The compressed sand, or porous coral rock, is permeated like
-a sponge with the salt water, but the rain which falls on the
-surface must sink to the level of the surrounding sea, and
-must accumulate there, displacing an equal bulk of the salt
-water. As the water in the lower part of the great sponge-
-like coral mass rises and falls with the tides, so will the
-water near the surface; and this will keep fresh, if the mass
-be sufficiently compact to prevent much mechanical admixture;
-but where the land consists of great loose blocks of
-coral with open interstices, if a well be dug, the water, as I
-have seen, is brackish.
-
-After dinner we stayed to see a curious half superstitious
-scene acted by the Malay women. A large wooden spoon
-dressed in garments, and which had been carried to the grave
-of a dead man, they pretend becomes inspired at the full of
-the moon, and will dance and jump about. After the proper
-preparations, the spoon, held by two women, became convulsed,
-and danced in good time to the song of the surrounding
-children and women. It was a most foolish spectacle;
-but Mr. Liesk maintained that many of the Malays believed
-in its spiritual movements. The dance did not commence till
-the moon had risen, and it was well worth remaining to behold
-her bright orb so quietly shining through the long arms
-of the cocoa-nut trees as they waved in the evening breeze.
-These scenes of the tropics are in themselves so delicious,
-that they almost equal those dearer ones at home, to which
-we are bound by each best feeling of the mind.
-
-The next day I employed myself in examining the very
-interesting, yet simple structure and origin of these islands.
-The water being unusually smooth, I waded over the outer
-flat of dead rock as far as the living mounds of coral, on
-which the swell of the open sea breaks. In some of the
-gullies and hollows there were beautiful green and other
-coloured fishes, and the form and tints of many of the zoophytes
-were admirable. It is excusable to grow enthusiastic over
-the infinite numbers of organic beings with which the sea of
-the tropics, so prodigal of life, teems; yet I must confess I
-think those naturalists who have described, in well-known
-words, the submarine grottoes decked with a thousand beauties,
-have indulged in rather exuberant language.
-
-April 6th. -- I accompanied Captain Fitz Roy to an island
-at the head of the lagoon: the channel was exceedingly
-intricate, winding through fields of delicately branched corals.
-We saw several turtle and two boats were then employed in
-catching them. The water was so clear and shallow, that although
-at first a turtle quickly dives out of sight, yet in a
-canoe or boat under sail, the pursuers after no very long
-chase come up to it. A man standing ready in the bow, at
-this moment dashes through the water upon the turtle's back;
-then clinging with both hands by the shell of its neck, he is
-carried away till the animal becomes exhausted and is secured.
-It was quite an interesting chase to see the two boats
-thus doubling about, and the men dashing head foremost
-into the water trying to seize their prey. Captain Moresby
-informs me that in the Chagos archipelago in this same
-ocean, the natives, by a horrible process, take the shell from
-the back of the living turtle. "It is covered with burning
-charcoal, which causes the outer shell to curl upwards, it is
-then forced off with a knife, and before it becomes cold
-flattened between boards. After this barbarous process the
-animal is suffered to regain its native element, where, after
-a certain time, a new shell is formed; it is, however, too
-thin to be of any service, and the animal always appears
-languishing and sickly."
-
-When we arrived at the head of the lagoon, we crossed a
-narrow islet, and found a great surf breaking on the windward
-coast. I can hardly explain the reason, but there is to
-my mind much grandeur in the view of the outer shores of
-these lagoon-islands. There is a simplicity in the barrier-like
-beach, the margin of green bushes and tall cocoa-nuts,
-the solid flat of dead coral-rock, strewed here and there
-with great loose fragments, and the line of furious breakers,
-all rounding away towards either hand. The ocean
-throwing its waters over the broad reef appears an invincible,
-all-powerful enemy; yet we see it resisted, and even
-conquered, by means which at first seem most weak and
-inefficient. It is not that the ocean spares the rock of coral;
-the great fragments scattered over the reef, and heaped on
-the beach, whence the tall cocoa-nut springs, plainly bespeak
-the unrelenting power of the waves. Nor are any
-periods of repose granted. The long swell caused by the
-gentle but steady action of the trade-wind, always blowing
-in one direction over a wide area, causes breakers, almost
-equalling in force those during a gale of wind in the temperate
-regions, and which never cease to rage. It is impossible
-to behold these waves without feeling a conviction that
-an island, though built of the hardest rock, let it be porphyry,
-granite, or quartz, would ultimately yield and be demolished
-by such an irresistible power. Yet these low, insignificant
-coral-islets stand and are victorious: for here another power,
-as an antagonist, takes part in the contest. The organic forces
-separate the atoms of carbonate of lime, one by one, from
-the foaming breakers, and unite them into a symmetrical
-structure. Let the hurricane tear up its thousand huge
-fragments; yet what will that tell against the accumulated
-labour of myriads of architects at work night and day, month
-after month? Thus do we see the soft and gelatinous body of a
-polypus, through the agency of the vital laws, conquering
-the great mechanical power of the waves of an ocean which
-neither the art of man nor the inanimate works of nature
-could successfully resist.
-
-We did not return on board till late in the evening, for we
-stayed a long time in the lagoon, examining the fields of
-coral and the gigantic shells of the chama, into which, if a
-man were to put his hand, he would not, as long as the animal
-lived, be able to withdraw it. Near the head of the
-lagoon I was much surprised to find a wide area, considerably
-more than a mile square, covered with a forest of delicately
-branching corals, which, though standing upright,
-were all dead and rotten. At first I was quite at a loss to
-understand the cause afterwards it occurred to me that it
-was owing to the following rather curious combination of
-circumstances. It should, however, first be stated, that corals
-are not able to survive even a short exposure in the air to
-the sun's rays, so that their upward limit of growth is
-determined by that of lowest water at spring tides. It appears,
-from some old charts, that the long island to windward was
-formerly separated by wide channels into several islets; this
-fact is likewise indicated by the trees being younger on these
-portions. Under the former condition of the reef, a strong
-breeze, by throwing more water over the barrier, would tend
-to raise the level of the lagoon. Now it acts in a directly
-contrary manner; for the water within the lagoon not only
-is not increased by currents from the outside, but is itself
-blown outwards by the force of the wind. Hence it is observed,
-that the tide near the head of the lagoon does not
-rise so high during a strong breeze as it does when it is
-calm. This difference of level, although no doubt very small,
-has, I believe, caused the death of those coral-groves, which
-under the former and more open condition of the outer reef
-has attained the utmost possible limit of upward growth.
-
-A few miles north of Keeling there is another small atoll,
-the lagoon of which is nearly filled up with coral-mud. Captain
-Ross found embedded in the conglomerate on the outer
-coast, a well-rounded fragment of greenstone, rather larger
-than a man's head: he and the men with him were so much
-surprised at this, that they brought it away and preserved it
-as a curiosity. The occurrence of this one stone, where
-every other particle of matter is calcareous, certainly is very
-puzzling. The island has scarcely ever been visited, nor is it
-probable that a ship had been wrecked there. From the absence
-of any better explanation, I came to the conclusion that
-it must have come entangled in the roots of some large tree:
-when, however, I considered the great distance from the
-nearest land, the combination of chances against a stone thus
-being entangled, the tree washed into the sea, floated so far,
-then landed safely, and the stone finally so embedded as to
-allow of its discovery, I was almost afraid of imagining a
-means of transport apparently so improbable. It was therefore
-with great interest that I found Chamisso, the justly
-distinguished naturalist who accompanied Kotzebue, stating
-that the inhabitants of the Radack archipelago, a group of
-lagoon-islands in the midst of the Pacific, obtained stones
-for sharpening their instruments by searching the roots of
-trees which are cast upon the beach. It will be evident that
-this must have happened several times, since laws have been
-established that such stones belong to the chief, and a
-punishment is inflicted on any one who attempts to steal them.
-When the isolated position of these small islands in the
-midst of a vast ocean -- their great distance from any land
-excepting that of coral formation, attested by the value
-which the inhabitants, who are such bold navigators, attach
-to a stone of any kind, [7] -- and the slowness of the currents
-of the open sea, are all considered, the occurrence of pebbles
-thus transported does appear wonderful. Stones may often
-be thus carried; and if the island on which they are stranded
-is constructed of any other substance besides coral, they
-would scarcely attract attention, and their origin at least
-would never be guessed. Moreover, this agency may long
-escape discovery from the probability of trees, especially
-those loaded with stones, floating beneath the surface. In
-the channels of Tierra del Fuego large quantities of drift
-timber are cast upon the beach, yet it is extremely rare to
-meet a tree swimming on the water. These facts may possibly
-throw light on single stones, whether angular or rounded,
-occasionally found embedded in fine sedimentary masses.
-
-During another day I visited West Islet, on which the
-vegetation was perhaps more luxuriant than on any other.
-The cocoa-nut trees generally grow separate, but here the
-young ones flourished beneath their tall parents, and formed
-with their long and curved fronds the most shady arbours.
-Those alone who have tried it, know how delicious it is to
-be seated in such shade, and drink the cool pleasant fluid
-of the cocoa-nut. In this island there is a large bay-like
-space, composed of the finest white sand: it is quite level
-and is only covered by the tide at high water; from this
-large bay smaller creeks penetrate the surrounding woods.
-To see a field of glittering white sand, representing water,
-with the cocoa-nut trees extending their tall and waving
-trunks around the margin, formed a singular and very pretty
-view.
-
-I have before alluded to a crab which lives on the cocoa-nuts;
-it is very common on all parts of the dry land, and
-grows to a monstrous size: it is closely allied or identical
-with the Birgos latro. The front pair of legs terminate in
-very strong and heavy pincers, and the last pair are fitted
-with others weaker and much narrower. It would at first
-be thought quite impossible for a crab to open a strong
-cocoa-nut covered with the husk; but Mr. Liesk assures me
-that he has repeatedly seen this effected. The crab begins
-by tearing the husk, fibre by fibre, and always from that
-end under which the three eye-holes are situated; when this
-is completed, the crab commences hammering with its heavy
-claws on one of the eye-holes till an opening is made. Then
-turning round its body, by the aid of its posterior and narrow
-pair of pincers, it extracts the white albuminous substance.
-I think this is as curious a case of instinct as ever
-I heard of, and likewise of adaptation in structure between
-two objects apparently so remote from each other in the
-scheme of nature, as a crab and a cocoa-nut tree. The
-Birgos is diurnal in its habits; but every night it is said to
-pay a visit to the sea, no doubt for the purpose of moistening
-its branchiae. The young are likewise hatched, and live for
-some time, on the coast. These crabs inhabit deep burrows,
-which they hollow out beneath the roots of trees; and where
-they accumulate surprising quantities of the picked fibres
-of the cocoa-nut husk, on which they rest as on a bed. The
-Malays sometimes take advantage of this, and collect the
-fibrous mass to use as junk. These crabs are very good to
-eat; moreover, under the tail of the larger ones there is a
-mass of fat, which, when melted, sometimes yields as much
-as a quart bottle full of limpid oil. It has been stated by
-some authors that the Birgos crawls up the cocoa-nut trees
-for the purpose of stealing the nuts: I very much doubt the
-possibility of this; but with the Pandanus [8] the task would be
-very much easier. I was told by Mr. Liesk that on these
-islands the Birgos lives only on the nuts which have fallen
-to the ground.
-
-Captain Moresby informs me that this crab inhabits the
-Chagos and Seychelle groups, but not the neighbouring Maldiva
-archipelago. It formerly abounded at Mauritius, but
-only a few small ones are now found there. In the Pacific,
-this species, or one with closely allied habits, is said [9] to
-inhabit a single coral island, north of the Society group. To
-show the wonderful strength of the front pair of pincers, I
-may mention, that Captain Moresby confined one in a strong
-tin-box, which had held biscuits, the lid being secured with
-wire; but the crab turned down the edges and escaped. In
-turning down the edges, it actually punched many small
-holes quite through the tin!
-
-I was a good deal surprised by finding two species of
-coral of the genus Millepora (M. complanata and alcicornis),
-possessed of the power of stinging. The stony branches or
-plates, when taken fresh from the water, have a harsh feel
-and are not slimy, although possessing a strong and disagreeable
-smell. The stinging property seems to vary in
-different specimens: when a piece was pressed or rubbed on
-the tender skin of the face or arm, a pricking sensation was
-usually caused, which came on after the interval of a second,
-and lasted only for a few minutes. One day, however, by
-merely touching my face with one of the branches, pain was
-instantaneously caused; it increased as usual after a few
-seconds, and remaining sharp for some minutes, was perceptible
-for half an hour afterwards. The sensation was as
-bad as that from a nettle, but more like that caused by the
-Physalia or Portuguese man-of-war. Little red spots were
-produced on the tender skin of the arm, which appeared as if
-they would have formed watery pustules, but did not. M.
-Quoy mentions this case of the Millepora; and I have heard
-of stinging corals in the West Indies. Many marine animals
-seem to have this power of stinging: besides the Portuguese
-man-of-war, many jelly-fish, and the Aplysia or sea-slug
-of the Cape de Verd Islands, it is stated in the voyage
-of the Astrolabe, that an Actinia or sea-anemone, as well as
-a flexible coralline allied to Sertularia, both possess this
-means of offence or defence. In the East Indian sea, a
-stinging sea-weed is said to be found.
-
-Two species of fish, of the genus Scarus, which are common
-here, exclusively feed on coral: both are coloured of a
-splendid bluish-green, one living invariably in the lagoon,
-and the other amongst the outer breakers. Mr. Liesk assured
-us, that he had repeatedly seen whole shoals grazing with
-their strong bony jaws on the tops of the coral branches: I
-opened the intestines of several, and found them distended
-with yellowish calcareous sandy mud. The slimy disgusting
-Holuthuriae (allied to our star-fish), which the Chinese
-gourmands are so fond of, also feed largely, as I am informed by
-Dr. Allan, on corals; and the bony apparatus within their
-bodies seems well adapted for this end. These Holuthuriae,
-the fish, the numerous burrowing shells, and nereidous
-worms, which perforate every block of dead coral, must be
-very efficient agents in producing the fine white mud which
-lies at the bottom and on the shores of the lagoon. A portion,
-however, of this mud, which when wet resembled
-pounded chalk, was found by Professor Ehrenberg to be
-partly composed of siliceous-shielded infusoria.
-
-April 12th. -- In the morning we stood out of the lagoon
-on our passage to the Isle of France. I am glad we have
-visited these islands: such formations surely rank high
-amongst the wonderful objects of this world. Captain Fitz
-Roy found no bottom with a line 7200 feet in length, at the
-distance of only 2200 yards from the shore; hence this island
-forms a lofty submarine mountain, with sides steeper even
-than those of the most abrupt volcanic cone. The saucer-shaped
-summit is nearly ten miles across; and every single
-atom, [10] from the least particle to the largest fragment of
-rock, in this great pile, which however is small compared
-with very many other lagoon-islands, bears the stamp of
-having been subjected to organic arrangement. We feel surprise
-when travellers tell us of the vast dimensions of the
-Pyramids and other great ruins, but how utterly insignificant
-are the greatest of these, when compared to these mountains
-of stone accumulated by the agency of various minute
-and tender animals! This is a wonder which does not at
-first strike the eye of the body, but, after reflection,
-the eye of reason.
-
-I will now give a very brief account of the three great
-classes of coral-reefs; namely, Atolls, Barrier, and Fringing-
-reefs, and will explain my views [11] on their formation. Almost
-every voyager who has crossed the Pacific has expressed
-his unbounded astonishment at the lagoon-islands, or
-as I shall for the future call them by their Indian name of
-atolls, and has attempted some explanation. Even as long
-ago as the year 1605, Pyrard de Laval well exclaimed, "C'est
-
-[picture]
-
-une merveille de voir chacun de ces atollons, environne d'un
-grand banc de pierre tout autour, n'y ayant point d'artifice
-humain." The accompanying sketch of Whitsunday Island
-in the Pacific, copied from, Capt. Beechey's admirable Voyage,
-gives but a faint idea of the singular aspect of an atoll:
-it is one of the smallest size, and has its narrow islets united
-together in a ring. The immensity of the ocean, the fury of
-the breakers, contrasted with the lowness of the land and the
-smoothness of the bright green water within the lagoon, can
-hardly be imagined without having been seen.
-
-The earlier voyagers fancied that the coral-building animals
-instinctively built up their great circles to afford themselves
-protection in the inner parts; but so far is this from
-the truth, that those massive kinds, to whose growth on the
-exposed outer shores the very existence of the reef depends,
-cannot live within the lagoon, where other delicately-branching
-kinds flourish. Moreover, on this view, many species
-of distinct genera and families are supposed to combine for
-one end; and of such a combination, not a single instance
-can be found in the whole of nature. The theory that has
-been most generally received is, that atolls are based on
-submarine craters; but when we consider the form and size of
-some, the number, proximity, and relative positions of others,
-this idea loses its plausible character: thus Suadiva atoll is
-44 geographical miles in diameter in one line, by 34 miles in
-another line; Rimsky is 54 by 20 miles across, and it has a
-strangely sinuous margin; Bow atoll is 30 miles long, and on
-an average only 6 in width; Menchicoff atoll consists of three
-atolls united or tied together. This theory, moreover, is
-totally inapplicable to the northern Maldiva atolls in the
-Indian Ocean (one of which is 88 miles in length, and between 10
-and 20 in breadth), for they are not bounded like ordinary
-atolls by narrow reefs, but by a vast number of separate
-little atolls; other little atolls rising out of the great
-central lagoon-like spaces. A third and better theory was
-advanced by Chamisso, who thought that from the corals growing
-more vigorously where exposed to the open sea, as undoubtedly is
-the case, the outer edges would grow up from the general
-foundation before any other part, and that this would account
-for the ring or cup-shaped structure. But we shall
-immediately see, that in this, as well as in the crater-theory,
-a most important consideration has been overlooked, namely,
-on what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at
-a great depth, based their massive structures?
-
-Numerous soundings were carefully taken by Captain Fitz
-Roy on the steep outside of Keeling atoll, and it was found
-that within ten fathoms, the prepared tallow at the bottom
-of the lead, invariably came up marked with the impression
-of living corals, but as perfectly clean as if it had been
-dropped on a carpet of turf; as the depth increased, the
-impressions became less numerous, but the adhering particles
-of sand more and more numerous, until at last it was evident
-that the bottom consisted of a smooth sandy layer: to carry
-on the analogy of the turf, the blades of grass grew thinner
-and thinner, till at last the soil was so sterile, that nothing
-sprang from it. From these observations, confirmed by many
-others, it may be safely inferred that the utmost depth at
-which corals can construct reefs is between 20 and 30 fathoms.
-Now there are enormous areas in the Pacific and Indian
-Ocean, in which every single island is of coral formation,
-and is raised only to that height to which the waves can
-throw up fragments, and the winds pile up sand. Thus
-Radack group of atolls is an irregular square, 520 miles long
-and 240 broad; the Low Archipelago is elliptic-formed, 840
-miles in its longer, and 420 in its shorter axis: there are
-other small groups and single low islands between these two
-archipelagoes, making a linear space of ocean actually more
-than 4000 miles in length, in which not one single island
-rises above the specified height. Again, in the Indian Ocean
-there is a space of ocean 1500 miles in length, including
-three archipelagoes, in which every island is low and of
-coral formation. From the fact of the reef-building corals
-not living at great depths, it is absolutely certain that
-throughout these vast areas, wherever there is now an atoll,
-a foundation must have originally existed within a depth of
-from 20 to 30 fathoms from the surface. It is improbable in
-the highest degree that broad, lofty, isolated, steep-sided
-banks of sediment, arranged in groups and lines hundreds of
-leagues in length, could have been deposited in the central
-and profoundest parts of the Pacific and Indian Oceans, at
-an immense distance from any continent, and where the
-water is perfectly limpid. It is equally improbable that the
-elevatory forces should have uplifted throughout the above
-vast areas, innumerable great rocky banks within 20 to 30
-fathoms, or 120 to 180 feet, of the surface of the sea, and
-not one single point above that level; for where on the whole
-surface of the globe can we find a single chain of mountains,
-even a few hundred miles in length, with their many summits
-rising within a few feet of a given level, and not one
-pinnacle above it? If then the foundations, whence the atoll-
-building corals sprang, were not formed of sediment, and if
-they were not lifted up to the required level, they must of
-necessity have subsided into it; and this at once solves the
-difficulty. For as mountain after mountain, and island after
-island, slowly sank beneath the water, fresh bases would be
-successively afforded for the growth of the corals. It is
-impossible here to enter into all the necessary details, but I
-venture to defy [12] any one to explain in any other manner
-how it is possible that numerous islands should be distributed
-throughout vast areas -- all the islands being low -- all being
-built of corals, absolutely requiring a foundation within a
-limited depth from the surface.
-
-Before explaining how atoll-formed reefs acquire their
-peculiar structure, we must turn to the second great class,
-namely, Barrier-reefs. These either extend in straight lines
-in front of the shores of a continent or of a large island, or
-they encircle smaller islands; in both cases, being separated
-from the land by a broad and rather deep channel of water,
-analogous to the lagoon within an atoll. It is remarkable
-how little attention has been paid to encircling barrier-reefs;
-yet they are truly wonderful structures. The following sketch
-represents part of the barrier encircling the island of Bolabola
-in the Pacific, as seen from one of the central peaks.
-In this instance the whole line of reef has been converted
-into land; but usually a snow-white line of great breakers,
-with only here and there a single low islet crowned with
-cocoa-nut trees, divides the dark heaving waters of the ocean
-from the light-green expanse of the lagoon-channel. And
-the quiet waters of this channel generally bathe a fringe of
-low alluvial soil, loaded with the most beautiful productions
-of the tropics, and lying at the foot of the wild, abrupt,
-central mountains.
-
-Encircling barrier-reefs are of all sizes, from three miles
-to no less than forty-four miles in diameter; and that which
-fronts one side, and encircles both ends, of New Caledonia,
-is 400 miles long. Each reef includes one, two, or several
-rocky islands of various heights; and in one instance, even
-as many as twelve separate islands. The reef runs at a
-greater or less distance from the included land; in the
-Society archipelago generally from one to three or four
-miles; but at Hogoleu the reef is 20 miles on the southern
-side, and 14 miles on the opposite or northern side, from the
-included islands. The depth within the lagoon-channel also
-varies much; from 10 to 30 fathoms may be taken as an
-average; but at Vanikoro there are spaces no less than 56
-fathoms or 363 feet deep. Internally the reef either slopes
-gently into the lagoon-channel, or ends in a perpendicular
-wall sometimes between two and three hundred feet under
-water in height: externally the reef rises, like an atoll, with
-extreme abruptness out of the profound depths of the ocean.
-
-What can be more singular than these structures? We see
-
-[picture]
-
-an island, which may be compared to a castle situated on the
-summit of a lofty submarine mountain, protected by a great
-wall of coral-rock, always steep externally and sometimes
-internally, with a broad level summit, here and there breached
-by a narrow gateway, through which the largest ships can
-enter the wide and deep encircling moat.
-
-As far as the actual reef of coral is concerned, there is not
-the smallest difference, in general size, outline, grouping,
-and even in quite trifling details of structure, between a
-barrier and an atoll. The geographer Balbi has well remarked,
-that an encircled island is an atoll with high land rising out
-of its lagoon; remove the land from within, and a perfect
-atoll is left.
-
-But what has caused these reefs to spring up at such
-great distances from the shores of the included islands? It
-cannot be that the corals will not grow close to the land;
-for the shores within the lagoon-channel, when not surrounded
-by alluvial soil, are often fringed by living reefs;
-and we shall presently see that there is a whole class, which
-I have called Fringing Reefs from their close attachment
-to the shores both of continents and of islands. Again, on
-what have the reef-building corals, which cannot live at
-great depths, based their encircling structures? This is a
-great apparent difficulty, analogous to that in the case of
-atolls, which has generally been overlooked. It will be
-perceived more clearly by inspecting the following sections
-which are real ones, taken in north and south lines, through
-the islands with their barrier-reefs, of Vanikoro, Gambier,
-and Maurua; and they are laid down, both vertically and
-horizontally, on the same scale of a quarter of an inch to
-a mile.
-
-It should be observed that the sections might have been
-taken in any direction through these islands, or through
-
-[picture]
-
-many other encircled islands, and the general features would
-have been the same. Now, bearing in mind that reef-building
-coral cannot live at a greater depth than from 20 to 30
-fathoms, and that the scale is so small that the plummets on
-the right hand show a depth of 200 fathoms, on what are
-these barrier-reefs based? Are we to suppose that each
-island is surrounded by a collar-like submarine ledge of rock,
-or by a great bank of sediment, ending abruptly where the
-reef ends?
-
-If the sea had formerly eaten deeply into the islands,
-before they were protected by the reefs, thus having
-left a shallow ledge round them under water, the present
-shores would have been invariably bounded by great precipices,
-but this is most rarely the case. Moreover, on this
-notion, it is not possible to explain why the corals should
-have sprung up, like a wall, from the extreme outer margin
-of the ledge, often leaving a broad space of water within,
-too deep for the growth of corals. The accumulation of a
-wide bank of sediment all round these islands, and generally
-widest where the included islands are smallest, is highly
-improbable, considering their exposed positions in the central
-and deepest parts of the ocean. In the case of the barrier-reef
-of New Caledonia, which extends for 150 miles beyond
-the northern point of the islands, in the same straight line
-with which it fronts the west coast, it is hardly possible to
-believe that a bank of sediment could thus have been
-straightly deposited in front of a lofty island, and so far
-beyond its termination in the open sea. Finally, if we look
-to other oceanic islands of about the same height and of similar
-geological constitution, but not encircled by coral-reefs,
-we may in vain search for so trifling a circumambient
-depth as 30 fathoms, except quite near to their shores; for
-usually land that rises abruptly out of water, as do most of
-the encircled and non-encircled oceanic islands, plunges
-abruptly under it. On what then, I repeat, are these barrier
-reefs based? Why, with their wide and deep moat-like channels,
-do they stand so far from the included land? We shall
-soon see how easily these difficulties disappear.
-
-We come now to our third class of Fringing-reefs, which
-will require a very short notice. Where the land slopes abruptly
-under water, these reefs are only a few yards in width,
-forming a mere ribbon or fringe round the shores: where
-the land slopes gently under the water the reef extends
-further, sometimes even as much as a mile from the land;
-but in such cases the soundings outside the reef always show
-that the submarine prolongation of the land is gently inclined.
-In fact, the reefs extend only to that distance from the shore,
-at which a foundation within the requisite depth from 20 to
-30 fathoms is found. As far as the actual reef is concerned,
-there is no essential difference between it and that forming
-a barrier or an atoll: it is, however, generally of less width,
-and consequently few islets have been formed on it. From
-the corals growing more vigorously on the outside, and from
-the noxious effect of the sediment washed inwards, the outer
-edge of the reef is the highest part, and between it and the
-land there is generally a shallow sandy channel a few feet in
-depth. Where banks or sediments have accumulated near to
-the surface, as in parts of the West Indies, they sometimes
-become fringed with corals, and hence in some degree resemble
-lagoon-islands or atolls, in the same manner as fringing-reefs,
-surrounding gently sloping islands, in some degree resemble
-barrier-reefs.
-
-
-No theory on the formation of coral-reefs can be considered
-satisfactory which does not include the three great
-
-[picture]
-
-classes. We have seen that we are driven to believe in the
-subsidence of those vast areas, interspersed with low islands,
-of which not one rises above the height to which the wind and
-waves can throw up matter, and yet are constructed by animals
-requiring a foundation, and that foundation to lie at
-no great depth. Let us then take an island surrounded by
-fringing-reefs, which offer no difficulty in their structure;
-and let this island with its reefs, represented by the unbroken
-lines in the woodcut, slowly subside. Now, as the island
-sinks down, either a few feet at a time or quite insensibly,
-we may safely infer, from what is known of the conditions
-favourable to the growth of coral, that the living masses,
-bathed by the surf on the margin of the reef, will soon regain
-the surface. The water, however, will encroach little by little
-on the shore, the island becoming lower and smaller, and the
-space between the inner edge of the reef and the beach
-proportionately broader. A section of the reef and island in
-this state, after a subsidence of several hundred feet, is given
-by the dotted lines. Coral islets are supposed to have been
-formed on the reef; and a ship is anchored in the
-lagoon-channel. This channel will be more or less deep,
-according to the rate of subsidence, to the amount of sediment
-accumulated in it, and to the growth of the delicately branched
-corals which can live there. The section in this state resembles
-in every respect one drawn through an encircled island: in fact,
-it is a real section (on the scale of .517 of an inch to a mile)
-through Bolabola in the Pacific. We can now at once see
-why encircling barrier-reefs stand so far from the shores
-which they front. We can also perceive, that a line drawn
-perpendicularly down from the outer edge of the new reef,
-to the foundation of solid rock beneath the old fringing-reef,
-will exceed by as many feet as there have been feet of
-subsidence, that small limit of depth at which the effective
-corals can live: -- the little architects having built up their
-great wall-like mass, as the whole sank down, upon a basis
-formed of other corals and their consolidated fragments.
-Thus the difficulty on this head, which appeared so great,
-disappears.
-
-If, instead of an island, we had taken the shore of a continent
-fringed with reefs, and had imagined it to have subsided,
-a great straight barrier, like that of Australia or New
-Caledonia, separated from the land by a wide and deep channel,
-would evidently have been the result.
-
-Let us take our new encircling barrier-reef, of which the
-section is now represented by unbroken lines, and which, as
-I have said, is a real section through Bolabola, and let it go
-on subsiding. As the barrier-reef slowly sinks down, the
-corals will go on vigorously growing upwards; but as the
-island sinks, the water will gain inch by inch on the shore --
-the separate mountains first forming separate islands within
-
-[picture]
-
-one great reef -- and finally, the last and highest pinnacle
-disappearing. The instant this takes place, a perfect atoll
-is formed: I have said, remove the high land from within an
-encircling barrier-reef, and an atoll is left, and the land has
-been removed. We can now perceive how it comes that
-atolls, having sprung from encircling barrier-reefs, resemble
-them in general size, form, in the manner in which they are
-grouped together, and in their arrangement in single or
-double lines; for they may be called rude outline charts of
-the sunken islands over which they stand. We can further
-see how it arises that the atolls in the Pacific and Indian
-Oceans extend in lines parallel to the generally prevailing
-strike of the high islands and great coast-lines of those
-oceans. I venture, therefore, to affirm, that on the theory of
-the upward growth of the corals during the sinking of the
-land, [13] all the leading features in those wonderful
-structures, the lagoon-islands or atolls, which have so long
-excited the attention of voyagers, as well as in the no less
-wonderful barrier-reefs, whether encircling small islands or
-stretching for hundreds of miles along the shores of a
-continent, are simply explained.
-
-It may be asked, whether I can offer any direct evidence
-of the subsidence of barrier-reefs or atolls; but it must be
-borne in mind how difficult it must ever be to detect a
-movement, the tendency of which is to hide under water the part
-affected. Nevertheless, at Keeling atoll I observed on all
-sides of the lagoon old cocoa-nut trees undermined and falling;
-and in one place the foundation-posts of a shed, which
-the inhabitants asserted had stood seven years before just
-above high-water mark, but now was daily washed by every
-tide: on inquiry I found that three earthquakes, one of them
-severe, had been felt here during the last ten years. At
-Vanikoro, the lagoon-channel is remarkably deep, scarcely
-any alluvial soil has accumulated at the foot of the lofty
-included mountains, and remarkably few islets have been
-formed by the heaping of fragments and sand on the wall-like
-barrier reef; these facts, and some analogous ones, led
-me to believe that this island must lately have subsided and
-the reef grown upwards: here again earthquakes are frequent
-and very severe. In the Society archipelago, on the
-other hand, where the lagoon-channels are almost choked up,
-where much low alluvial land has accumulated, and where in
-some cases long islets have been formed on the barrier-reefs
- -- facts all showing that the islands have not very lately
-subsided -- only feeble shocks are most rarely felt. In these
-coral formations, where the land and water seem struggling
-for mastery, it must be ever difficult to decide between the
-effects of a change in the set of the tides and of a slight
-subsidence: that many of these reefs and atolls are subject to
-changes of some kind is certain; on some atolls the islets
-appear to have increased greatly within a late period; on
-others they have been partially or wholly washed away. The
-inhabitants of parts of the Maldiva archipelago know the
-date of the first formation of some islets; in other parts, the
-corals are now flourishing on water-washed reefs, where
-holes made for graves attest the former existence of inhabited
-land. It is difficult to believe in frequent changes in the
-tidal currents of an open ocean; whereas, we have in the
-earthquakes recorded by the natives on some atolls, and in
-the great fissures observed on other atolls, plain evidence of
-changes and disturbances in progress in the subterranean
-regions.
-
-It is evident, on our theory, that coasts merely fringed by
-reefs cannot have subsided to any perceptible amount; and
-therefore they must, since the growth of their corals, either
-have remained stationary or have been upheaved. Now, it
-is remarkable how generally it can be shown, by the presence
-of upraised organic remains, that the fringed islands have
-been elevated: and so far, this is indirect evidence in favour
-of our theory. I was particularly struck with this fact, when
-I found, to my surprise, that the descriptions given by MM.
-Quoy and Gaimard were applicable, not to reefs in general
-as implied by them, but only to those of the fringing class;
-my surprise, however, ceased when I afterwards found that,
-by a strange chance, all the several islands visited by these
-eminent naturalists, could be shown by their own statements
-to have been elevated within a recent geological era.
-
-Not only the grand features in the structure of barrier-reefs
-and of atolls, and to their likeness to each other in form,
-size, and other characters, are explained on the theory of
-subsidence -- which theory we are independently forced to
-admit in the very areas in question, from the necessity of
-finding bases for the corals within the requisite depth -- but
-many details in structure and exceptional cases can thus also
-be simply explained. I will give only a few instances. In
-barrier-reefs it has long been remarked with surprise, that
-the passages through the reef exactly face valleys in the
-included land, even in cases where the reef is separated
-from the land by a lagoon-channel so wide and so much
-deeper than the actual passage itself, that it seems hardly
-possible that the very small quantity of water or sediment
-brought down could injure the corals on the reef. Now,
-every reef of the fringing class is breached by a narrow
-gateway in front of the smallest rivulet, even if dry during
-the greater part of the year, for the mud, sand, or gravel,
-occasionally washed down kills the corals on which it is
-deposited. Consequently, when an island thus fringed subsides,
-though most of the narrow gateways will probably
-become closed by the outward and upward growth of the
-corals, yet any that are not closed (and some must always be
-kept open by the sediment and impure water flowing out of
-the lagoon-channel) will still continue to front exactly the
-upper parts of those valleys, at the mouths of which the
-original basal fringing-reef was breached.
-
-We can easily see how an island fronted only on one side, or on
-one side with one end or both ends encircled by barrier-reefs,
-might after long-continued subsidence be converted
-either into a single wall-like reef, or into an atoll with a
-great straight spur projecting from it, or into two or three
-atolls tied together by straight reefs -- all of which
-exceptional cases actually occur. As the reef-building corals
-require food, are preyed upon by other animals, are killed by
-sediment, cannot adhere to a loose bottom, and may be easily
-carried down to a depth whence they cannot spring up again,
-we need feel no surprise at the reefs both of atolls and
-barriers becoming in parts imperfect. The great barrier of
-New Caledonia is thus imperfect and broken in many parts;
-hence, after long subsidence, this great reef would not produce
-one great atoll 400 miles in length, but a chain or
-archipelago of atolls, of very nearly the same dimension with
-those in the Maldiva archipelago. Moreover, in an atoll once
-breached on opposite sides, from the likelihood of the oceanic
-and tidal currents passing straight through the breaches, it
-is extremely improbable that the corals, especially during
-continued subsidence, would ever be able again to unite the
-rim; if they did not, as the whole sank downwards, one atoll
-would be divided into two or more. In the Maldiva archipelago
-there are distinct atolls so related to each other in
-position, and separated by channels either unfathomable or
-very deep (the channel between Ross and Ari atolls is 150
-fathoms, and that between the north and south Nillandoo
-atolls is 200 fathoms in depth), that it is impossible to look
-at a map of them without believing that they were once
-more intimately related. And in this same archipelago,
-Mahlos-Mahdoo atoll is divided by a bifurcating channel
-from 100 to 132 fathoms in depth, in such a manner, that
-it is scarcely possible to say whether it ought strictly to
-be called three separate atolls, or one great atoll not yet
-finally divided.
-
-I will not enter on many more details; but I must remark
-that the curious structure of the northern Maldiva atolls
-receives (taking into consideration the free entrance of the
-sea through their broken margins) a simple explanation in
-the upward and outward growth of the corals, originally
-based both on small detached reefs in their lagoons, such as
-occur in common atolls, and on broken portions of the linear
-marginal reef, such as bounds every atoll of the ordinary
-form. I cannot refrain from once again remarking on the
-singularity of these complex structures -- a great sandy and
-generally concave disk rises abruptly from the unfathomable
-ocean, with its central expanse studded, and its edge
-symmetrically bordered with oval basins of coral-rock just
-lipping the surface of the sea, sometimes clothed with
-vegetation, and each containing a lake of clear water!
-
-One more point in detail: as in the two neighbouring
-archipelagoes corals flourish in one and not in the other, and
-as so many conditions before enumerated must affect their
-existence, it would be an inexplicable fact if, during the
-changes to which earth, air, and water are subjected, the
-reef-building corals were to keep alive for perpetuity on any
-one spot or area. And as by our theory the areas including
-atolls and barrier-reefs are subsiding, we ought occasionally to
-find reefs both dead and submerged. In all reefs, owing to the
-sediment being washed out of the lagoon-channel to leeward,
-that side is least favourable to the long-continued vigorous
-growth of the corals; hence dead portions of reef not
-unfrequently occur on the leeward side; and these, though still
-retaining their proper wall-like form, are now in several
-instances sunk several fathoms beneath the surface. The
-Chagos group appears from some cause, possibly from the
-subsidence having been too rapid, at present to be much less
-favourably circumstanced for the growth of reefs than formerly:
-one atoll has a portion of its marginal reef, nine miles
-in length, dead and submerged; a second has only a few
-quite small living points which rise to the surface, a third
-and fourth are entirely dead and submerged; a fifth is a
-mere wreck, with its structure almost obliterated. It is
-remarkable that in all these cases, the dead reefs and portions
-of reef lie at nearly the same depth, namely, from six to
-eight fathoms beneath the surface, as if they had been carried
-down by one uniform movement. One of these "half-drowned
-atolls," so called by Capt. Moresby (to whom I
-am indebted for much invaluable information), is of vast
-size, namely, ninety nautical miles across in one direction,
-and seventy miles in another line; and is in many respects
-eminently curious. As by our theory it follows that new
-atolls will generally be formed in each new area of subsidence,
-two weighty objections might have been raised,
-namely, that atolls must be increasing indefinitely in number;
-and secondly, that in old areas of subsidence each separate
-atoll must be increasing indefinitely in thickness, if proofs
-of their occasional destruction could not have been adduced.
-Thus have we traced the history of these great rings of
-coral-rock, from their first origin through their normal
-changes, and through the occasional accidents of their
-existence, to their death and final obliteration.
-
-
-In my volume on "Coral Formations" I have published a
-map, in which I have coloured all the atolls dark-blue, the
-barrier-reefs pale-blue, and the fringing reefs red. These
-latter reefs have been formed whilst the land has been
-stationary, or, as appears from the frequent presence of
-upraised organic remains, whilst it has been slowly rising:
-atolls and barrier-reefs, on the other hand, have grown up
-during the directly opposite movement of subsidence, which
-movement must have been very gradual, and in the case of atolls
-so vast in amount as to have buried every mountain-summit over
-wide ocean-spaces. Now in this map we see that the reefs
-tinted pale and dark-blue, which have been produced by the
-same order of movement, as a general rule manifestly stand
-near each other. Again we see, that the areas with the two
-blue tints are of wide extent; and that they lie separate from
-extensive lines of coast coloured red, both of which
-circumstances might naturally have been inferred, on the theory
-of the nature of the reefs having been governed by the nature
-of the earth's movement. It deserves notice that in more
-than one instance where single red and blue circles approach
-near each other, I can show that there have been oscillations
-of level; for in such cases the red or fringed circles consist
-of atolls, originally by our theory formed during subsidence,
-but subsequently upheaved; and on the other hand, some of
-the pale-blue or encircled islands are composed of coral-rock,
-which must have been uplifted to its present height before that
-subsidence took place, during which the existing barrier-reefs
-grew upwards.
-
-Authors have noticed with surprise, that although atolls
-are the commonest coral-structures throughout some enormous
-oceanic tracts, they are entirely absent in other seas,
-as in the West Indies: we can now at once perceive the
-cause, for where there has not been subsidence, atolls cannot
-have been formed; and in the case of the West Indies and
-parts of the East Indies, these tracts are known to have been
-rising within the recent period. The larger areas, coloured
-red and blue, are all elongated; and between the two colours
-there is a degree of rude alternation, as if the rising of one
-had balanced the sinking of the other. Taking into consideration
-the proofs of recent elevation both on the fringed
-coasts and on some others (for instance, in South America)
-where there are no reefs, we are led to conclude that the
-great continents are for the most part rising areas: and from
-the nature of the coral-reefs, that the central parts of the
-great oceans are sinking areas. The East Indian archipelago,
-the most broken land in the world, is in most parts an area
-of elevation, but surrounded and penetrated, probably in
-more lines than one, by narrow areas of subsidence.
-
-I have marked with vermilion spots all the many known
-active volcanos within the limits of this same map. Their
-entire absence from every one of the great subsiding areas,
-coloured either pale or dark blue, is most striking and not
-less so is the coincidence of the chief volcanic chains with
-the parts coloured red, which we are led to conclude have
-either long remained stationary, or more generally have been
-recently upraised. Although a few of the vermilion spots
-occur within no great distance of single circles tinted blue,
-yet not one single active volcano is situated within several
-hundred miles of an archipelago, or even small group of
-atolls. It is, therefore, a striking fact that in the Friendly
-archipelago, which consists of a group of atolls upheaved
-and since partially worn down, two volcanos, and perhaps
-more, are historically known to have been in action. On the
-other hand, although most of the islands in the Pacific which
-are encircled by barrier-reefs, are of volcanic origin, often
-with the remnants of craters still distinguishable, not one of
-them is known to have ever been in eruption. Hence in these
-cases it would appear, that volcanos burst forth into action
-and become extinguished on the same spots, accordingly as
-elevatory or subsiding movements prevail there. Numberless
-facts could be adduced to prove that upraised organic remains
-are common wherever there are active volcanos; but until it
-could be shown that in areas of subsidence, volcanos were
-either absent or inactive, the inference, however probable in
-itself, that their distribution depended on the rising or
-falling of the earth's surface, would have been hazardous. But
-now, I think, we may freely admit this important deduction.
-
-Taking a final view of the map, and bearing in mind the
-statements made with respect to the upraised organic remains,
-we must feel astonished at the vastness of the areas, which
-have suffered changes in level either downwards or upwards,
-within a period not geologically remote. It would appear
-also, that the elevatory and subsiding movements follow
-nearly the same laws. Throughout the spaces interspersed
-with atolls, where not a single peak of high land has been
-left above the level of the sea, the sinking must have been
-immense in amount. The sinking, moreover, whether continuous,
-or recurrent with intervals sufficiently long for the
-corals again to bring up their living edifices to the surface,
-must necessarily have been extremely slow. This conclusion is
-probably the most important one which can be deduced from the
-study of coral formations; -- and it is one which it is
-difficult to imagine how otherwise could ever have been
-arrived at. Nor can I quite pass over the probability of the
-former existence of large archipelagoes of lofty islands,
-where now only rings of coral-rock scarcely break the open
-expanse of the sea, throwing some light on the distribution of
-the inhabitants of the other high islands, now left standing
-so immensely remote from each other in the midst of the
-great oceans. The reef-constructing corals have indeed
-reared and preserved wonderful memorials of the subterranean
-oscillations of level; we see in each barrier-reef a
-proof that the land has there subsided, and in each atoll a
-monument over an island now lost. We may thus, like unto
-a geologist who had lived his ten thousand years and kept a
-record of the passing changes, gain some insight into the
-great system by which the surface of this globe has been
-broken up, and land and water interchanged.
-
-[1] These Plants are described in the Annals of Nat. Hist.,
-vol. i., 1838, p. 337.
-
-[2] Holman's Travels, vol. iv. p. 378.
-
-[3] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 155.
-
-[4] The thirteen species belong to the following orders: -- In
-the Coleoptera, a minute Elater; Orthoptera, a Gryllus and a
-Blatta; Hemiptera, one species; Homoptera, two; Neuroptera a
-Chrysopa; Hymenoptera, two ants; Lepidoptera nocturna, a
-Diopaea, and a Pterophorus (?); Diptera, two species.
-
-[5] Kotzebue's First Voyage, vol. iii. p. 222.
-
-[6] The large claws or pincers of some of these crabs are most
-beautifully adapted, when drawn back, to form an operculum to
-the shell, nearly as perfect as the proper one originally
-belonging to the molluscous animal. I was assured, and as far as
-my observations went I found it so, that certain species of the
-hermit-crab always use certain species of shells.
-
-[7] Some natives carried by Kotzebue to Kamtschatka collected
-stones to take back to their country.
-
-[8] See Proceedings of Zoological Society, 1832, p. 17.
-
-[9] Tyerman and Bennett. Voyage, etc. vol. ii. p. 33.
-
-[10] I exclude, of course, some soil which has been imported
-here in vessels from Malacca and Java, and likewise, some small
-fragments of pumice, drifted here by the waves. The one block of
-greenstone, moreover, on the northern island must be excepted.
-
-[11] These were first read before the Geological Society in May,
-1837, and have since been developed in a separate volume on the
-"Structure and Distribution of Coral Reefs."
-
-[12] It is remarkable that Mr. Lyell, even in the first edition
-of his "Principles of Geology," inferred that the amount of
-subsidence in the Pacific must have exceeded that of elevation,
-from the area of land being very small relatively to the agents
-there tending to form it, namely, the growth of coral and
-volcanic action.
-
-[13] It has been highly satisfactory to me to find the following
-passage in a pamphlet by Mr. Couthouy, one of the naturalists in
-the great Antarctic Expedition of the United States: -- "Having
-personally examined a large number of coral-islands and resided
-eight months among the volcanic class having shore and partially
-encircling reefs. I may be permitted to state that my own
-observations have impressed a conviction of the correctness of
-the theory of Mr. Darwin." -- The naturalists, however, of this
-expedition differ with me on some points respecting coral
-formations.
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XXI
-
-MAURITIUS TO ENGLAND
-
-Mauritius, beautiful appearance of -- Great crateriform ring of
-Mountains -- Hindoos -- St. Helena -- History of the changes in
-the Vegetation -- Cause of the extinction of Land-shells --
-Ascension -- Variation in the imported Rats -- Volcanic Bombs --
-Beds of Infusoria -- Bahia -- Brazil -- Splendour of Tropical
-Scenery -- Pernambuco -- Singular Reef -- Slavery -- Return to
-England -- Retrospect on our Voyage.
-
-
-APRIL 29th. -- In the morning we passed round the
-northern end of Mauritius, or the Isle of France.
-From this point of view the aspect of the island
-equalled the expectations raised by the many well-known
-descriptions of its beautiful scenery. The sloping plain of
-the Pamplemousses, interspersed with houses, and coloured
-by the large fields of sugar-cane of a bright green, composed
-the foreground. The brilliancy of the green was the more
-remarkable because it is a colour which generally is conspicuous
-only from a very short distance. Towards the centre
-of the island groups of wooded mountains rose out of
-this highly cultivated plain; their summits, as so commonly
-happens with ancient volcanic rocks, being jagged into the
-sharpest points. Masses of white clouds were collected
-around these pinnacles, as if for the sake of pleasing the
-stranger's eye. The whole island, with its sloping border
-and central mountains, was adorned with an air of perfect
-elegance: the scenery, if I may use such an expression, appeared
-to the sight harmonious.
-
-I spent the greater part of the next day in walking about
-the town and visiting different people. The town is of
-considerable size, and is said to contain 20,000 inhabitants;
-the streets are very clean and regular. Although the island has
-been so many years under the English Government, the general
-character of the place is quite French: Englishmen
-speak to their servants in French, and the shops are all
-French; indeed, I should think that Calais or Boulogne was
-much more Anglified. There is a very pretty little theatre,
-in which operas are excellently performed. We were also
-surprised at seeing large booksellers' shops, with well-stored
-shelves; -- music and reading bespeak our approach to the
-old world of civilization; for in truth both Australia and
-America are new worlds.
-
-The various races of men walking in the streets afford the
-most interesting spectacle in Port Louis. Convicts from
-India are banished here for life; at present there are about
-800, and they are employed in various public works. Before
-seeing these people, I had no idea that the inhabitants of
-India were such noble-looking figures. Their skin is extremely
-dark, and many of the older men had large mustaches
-and beards of a snow-white colour; this, together with
-the fire of their expression, gave them quite an imposing
-aspect. The greater number had been banished for murder
-and the worst crimes; others for causes which can scarcely
-be considered as moral faults, such as for not obeying, from
-superstitious motives, the English laws. These men are
-generally quiet and well-conducted; from their outward
-conduct, their cleanliness, and faithful observance of their
-strange religious rites, it was impossible to look at them
-with the same eyes as on our wretched convicts in New
-South Wales.
-
-May 1st. -- Sunday. I took a quiet walk along the sea-coast
-to the north of the town. The plain in this part is quite
-uncultivated; it consists of a field of black lava, smoothed
-over with coarse grass and bushes, the latter being chiefly
-Mimosas. The scenery may be described as intermediate in
-character between that of the Galapagos and of Tahiti; but
-this will convey a definite idea to very few persons. It is a
-very pleasant country, but it has not the charms of Tahiti, or
-the grandeur of Brazil. The next day I ascended La Pouce,
-a mountain so called from a thumb-like projection, which
-rises close behind the town to a height of 2,600 feet. The
-centre of the island consists of a great platform, surrounded
-by old broken basaltic mountains, with their strata dipping
-seawards. The central platform, formed of comparatively
-recent streams of lava, is of an oval shape, thirteen
-geographical miles across, in the line of its shorter axis. The
-exterior bounding mountains come into that class of structures
-called Craters of Elevation, which are supposed to have
-been formed not like ordinary craters, but by a great and
-sudden upheaval. There appears to me to be insuperable
-objections to this view: on the other hand, I can hardly
-believe, in this and in some other cases, that these marginal
-crateriform mountains are merely the basal remnants of
-immense volcanos, of which the summits either have been
-blown off, or swallowed up in subterranean abysses.
-
-From our elevated position we enjoyed an excellent view over the
-island. The country on this side appears pretty well cultivated,
-being divided into fields and studded with farm-houses.
-I was, however, assured that of the whole land, not
-more than half is yet in a productive state; if such be the
-case, considering the present large export of sugar, this
-island, at some future period when thickly peopled, will be
-of great value. Since England has taken possession of it, a
-period of only twenty-five years, the export of sugar is said
-to have increased seventy-five fold. One great cause of its
-prosperity is the excellent state of the roads. In the
-neighbouring Isle of Bourbon, which remains under the French
-government, the roads are still in the same miserable state
-as they were here only a few years ago. Although the
-French residents must have largely profited by the increased
-prosperity of their island, yet the English government is far
-from popular.
-
-3rd. -- In the evening Captain Lloyd, the Surveyor-general,
-so well known from his examination of the Isthmus of Panama,
-invited Mr. Stokes and myself to his country-house,
-which is situated on the edge of Wilheim Plains, and about
-six miles from the Port. We stayed at this delightful place
-two days; standing nearly 800 feet above the sea, the air was
-cool and fresh, and on every side there were delightful walks.
-Close by, a grand ravine has been worn to a depth of about
-500 feet through the slightly inclined streams of lava, which
-have flowed from the central platform.
-
-5th. -- Captain Lloyd took us to the Riviere Noire, which is
-several miles to the southward, that I might examine some
-rocks of elevated coral. We passed through pleasant gardens,
-and fine fields of sugar-cane growing amidst huge
-blocks of lava. The roads were bordered by hedges of
-Mimosa, and near many of the houses there were avenues
-of the mango. Some of the views, where the peaked hills
-and the cultivated farms were seen together, were exceedingly
-picturesque; and we were constantly tempted to
-exclaim, "How pleasant it would be to pass one's life in
-such quiet abodes!" Captain Lloyd possessed an elephant,
-and he sent it half way with us, that we might enjoy a ride
-in true Indian fashion. The circumstance which surprised
-me most was its quite noiseless step. This elephant
-is the only one at present on the island; but it is said others
-will be sent for.
-
-
-May 9th. -- We sailed from Port Louis, and, calling at the
-Cape of Good Hope, on the 8th of July, we arrived off St.
-Helena. This island, the forbidding aspect of which has
-been so often described, rises abruptly like a huge black
-castle from the ocean. Near the town, as if to complete
-nature's defence, small forts and guns fill up every gap in
-the rugged rocks. The town runs up a flat and narrow
-valley; the houses look respectable, and are interspersed
-with a very few green trees. When approaching the anchorage
-there was one striking view: an irregular castle perched
-on the summit of a lofty hill, and surrounded by a few scattered
-fir-trees, boldly projected against the sky.
-
-The next day I obtained lodgings within a stone's throw
-of Napoleon's tomb; [1] it was a capital central situation,
-whence I could make excursions in every direction. During
-the four days I stayed here, I wandered over the island from
-morning to night, and examined its geological history. My
-lodgings were situated at a height of about 2000 feet; here
-the weather was cold and boisterous, with constant showers
-of rain; and every now and then the whole scene was veiled
-in thick clouds.
-
-Near the coast the rough lava is quite bare: in the central
-and higher parts, feldspathic rocks by their decomposition
-have produced a clayey soil, which, where not covered by
-vegetation, is stained in broad bands of many bright colours.
-At this season, the land moistened by constant showers,
-produces a singularly bright green pasture, which lower and
-lower down, gradually fades away and at last disappears. In
-latitude 16 degs., and at the trifling elevation of 1500 feet,
-it is surprising to behold a vegetation possessing a character
-decidedly British. The hills are crowned with irregular
-plantations of Scotch firs; and the sloping banks are thickly
-scattered over with thickets of gorse, covered with its bright
-yellow flowers. Weeping-willows are common on the banks
-of the rivulets, and the hedges are made of the blackberry,
-producing its well-known fruit. When we consider that the
-number of plants now found on the island is 746, and that
-out of these fifty-two alone are indigenous species, the rest
-having been imported, and most of them from England,
-we see the reason of the British character of the vegetation.
-Many of these English plants appear to flourish better than
-in their native country; some also from the opposite quarter
-of Australia succeed remarkably well. The many imported
-species must have destroyed some of the native kinds; and
-it is only on the highest and steepest ridges that the
-indigenous Flora is now predominant.
-
-The English, or rather Welsh character of the scenery, is
-kept up by the numerous cottages and small white houses;
-some buried at the bottom of the deepest valleys, and others
-mounted on the crests of the lofty hills. Some of the views
-are striking, for instance that from near Sir W. Doveton's
-house, where the bold peak called Lot is seen over a dark
-wood of firs, the whole being backed by the red water-worn
-mountains of the southern coast. On viewing the island
-from an eminence, the first circumstance which strikes one,
-is the number of the roads and forts: the labour bestowed
-on the public works, if one forgets its character as a prison,
-seems out of all proportion to its extent or value. There
-is so little level or useful land, that it seems surprising how
-so many people, about 5000, can subsist here. The lower
-orders, or the emancipated slaves, are I believe extremely
-poor: they complain of the want of work. From the reduction
-in the number of public servants owing to the island
-having been given up by the East Indian Company, and the
-consequent emigration of many of the richer people, the
-poverty probably will increase. The chief food of the working
-class is rice with a little salt meat; as neither of these
-articles are the products of the island, but must be purchased
-with money, the low wages tell heavily on the poor people.
-Now that the people are blessed with freedom, a right which
-I believe they value fully, it seems probable that their numbers
-will quickly increase: if so, what is to become of the
-little state of St. Helena?
-
-My guide was an elderly man, who had been a goatherd
-when a boy, and knew every step amongst the rocks. He
-was of a race many times crossed, and although with a
-dusky skin, he had not the disagreeable expression of a
-mulatto. He was a very civil, quiet old man, and such
-appears the character of the greater number of the lower
-classes. It was strange to my ears to hear a man, nearly
-white and respectably dressed, talking with indifference of
-the times when he was a slave. With my companion, who
-carried our dinners and a horn of water, which is quite
-necessary, as all the water in the lower valleys is saline, I
-every day took long walks.
-
-Beneath the upper and central green circle, the wild valleys
-are quite desolate and untenanted. Here, to the geologist,
-there were scenes of high interest, showing successive
-changes and complicated disturbances. According to my
-views, St. Helena has existed as an island from a very
-remote epoch: some obscure proofs, however, of the elevation
-of the land are still extant. I believe that the central
-and highest peaks form parts of the rim of a great crater,
-the southern half of which has been entirely removed by the
-waves of the sea: there is, moreover, an external wall of
-black basaltic rocks, like the coast-mountains of Mauritius,
-which are older than the central volcanic streams. On the
-higher parts of the island, considerable numbers of a shell,
-long thought to be a marine species occur imbedded in the soil.
-
-It proved to be a Cochlogena, or land-shell of a very
-peculiar form; [2] with it I found six other kinds; and in
-another spot an eighth species. It is remarkable that none
-of them are now found living. Their extinction has probably
-been caused by the entire destruction of the woods, and
-the consequent loss of food and shelter, which occurred
-during the early part of the last century.
-
-The history of the changes, which the elevated plains of
-Longwood and Deadwood have undergone, as given in General
-Beatson's account of the island, is extremely curious.
-Both plains, it is said in former times were covered with
-wood, and were therefore called the Great Wood. So late
-as the year 1716 there were many trees, but in 1724 the old
-trees had mostly fallen; and as goats and hogs had been
-suffered to range about, all the young trees had been killed.
-It appears also from the official records, that the trees were
-unexpectedly, some years afterwards, succeeded by a wire
-grass which spread over the whole surface. [3] General Beatson
-adds that now this plain "is covered with fine sward, and
-is become the finest piece of pasture on the island." The
-extent of surface, probably covered by wood at a former
-period, is estimated at no less than two thousand acres; at
-the present day scarcely a single tree can be found there. It
-is also said that in 1709 there were quantities of dead trees
-in Sandy Bay; this place is now so utterly desert, that nothing
-but so well attested an account could have made me believe
-that they could ever have grown there. The fact, that the
-goats and hogs destroyed all the young trees as they sprang
-up, and that in the course of time the old ones, which were
-safe from their attacks, perished from age, seems clearly
-made out. Goats were introduced in the year 1502; eighty-six
-years afterwards, in the time of Cavendish, it is known
-that they were exceedingly numerous. More than a century
-afterwards, in 1731, when the evil was complete and
-irretrievable, an order was issued that all stray animals should
-be destroyed. It is very interesting thus to find, that the
-arrival of animals at St. Helena in 1501, did not change the
-whole aspect of the island, until a period of two hundred
-and twenty years had elapsed: for the goats were introduced
-in 1502, and in 1724 it is said "the old trees had mostly
-fallen." There can be little doubt that this great change in
-the vegetation affected not only the land-shells, causing eight
-species to become extinct, but likewise a multitude of insects.
-
-St. Helena, situated so remote from any continent, in the
-midst of a great ocean, and possessing a unique Flora, excites
-our curiosity. The eight land-shells, though now extinct,
-and one living Succinea, are peculiar species found nowhere
-else. Mr. Cuming, however, informs me that an English
-Helix is common here, its eggs no doubt having been imported
-in some of the many introduced plants. Mr. Cuming
-collected on the coast sixteen species of sea-shells, of which
-seven, as far as he knows, are confined to this island. Birds
-and insects, [4] as might have been expected, are very few in
-number; indeed I believe all the birds have been introduced
-within late years. Partridges and pheasants are tolerably
-abundant; the island is much too English not to be subject
-to strict game-laws. I was told of a more unjust sacrifice to
-such ordinances than I ever heard of even in England. The
-poor people formerly used to burn a plant, which grows on the
-coast-rocks, and export the soda from its ashes; but a
-peremptory order came out prohibiting this practice, and giving
-as a reason that the partridges would have nowhere to build.
-
-In my walks I passed more than once over the grassy plain
-bounded by deep valleys, on which Longwood stands.
-Viewed from a short distance, it appears like a respectable
-gentleman's country-seat. In front there are a few cultivated
-fields, and beyond them the smooth hill of coloured
-rocks called the Flagstaff, and the rugged square black mass
-of the Barn. On the whole the view was rather bleak and
-uninteresting. The only inconvenience I suffered during my
-walks was from the impetuous winds. One day I noticed
-a curious circumstance; standing on the edge of a plain,
-terminated by a great cliff of about a thousand feet in depth,
-I saw at the distance of a few yards right to windward, some
-tern, struggling against a very strong breeze, whilst, where
-I stood, the air was quite calm. Approaching close to the
-brink, where the current seemed to be deflected upwards
-from the face of the cliff, I stretched out my arm, and
-immediately felt the full force of the wind: an invisible
-barrier, two yards in width, separated perfectly calm air
-from a strong blast.
-
-I so much enjoyed my rambles among the rocks and mountains
-of St. Helena, that I felt almost sorry on the morning
-of the 14th to descend to the town. Before noon I was on
-board, and the Beagle made sail.
-
-On the 19th of July we reached Ascension. Those who
-have beheld a volcanic island, situated under an arid climate,
-will at once be able to picture to themselves the appearance
-of Ascension. They will imagine smooth conical hills of a
-bright red colour, with their summits generally truncated,
-rising separately out of a level surface of black rugged lava.
-A principal mound in the centre of the island, seems the
-father of the lesser cones. It is called Green Hill: its
-name being taken from the faintest tinge of that colour,
-which at this time of the year is barely perceptible from the
-anchorage. To complete the desolate scene, the black rocks
-on the coast are lashed by a wild and turbulent sea.
-
-The settlement is near the beach; it consists of several
-houses and barracks placed irregularly, but well built of
-white freestone. The only inhabitants are marines, and some
-negroes liberated from slave-ships, who are paid and victualled
-by government. There is not a private person on the
-island. Many of the marines appeared well contented with their
-situation; they think it better to serve their one-and-twenty
-years on shore, let it be what it may, than in a ship; in this
-choice, if I were a marine, I should most heartily agree.
-
-The next morning I ascended Green Hill, 2840 feet high,
-and thence walked across the island to the windward point.
-A good cart-road leads from the coast-settlement to the
-houses, gardens, and fields, placed near the summit of the
-central mountain. On the roadside there are milestones, and
-likewise cisterns, where each thirsty passer-by can drink
-some good water. Similar care is displayed in each part of the
-establishment, and especially in the management of the
-springs, so that a single drop of water may not be lost: indeed
-the whole island may be compared to a huge ship kept
-in first-rate order. I could not help, when admiring the
-active industry, which had created such effects out of such
-means, at the same time regretting that it had been wasted on
-so poor and trifling an end. M. Lesson has remarked with
-justice, that the English nation would have thought of making
-the island of Ascension a productive spot, any other
-people would have held it as a mere fortress in the ocean.
-
-Near this coast nothing grows; further inland, an occasional
-green castor-oil plant, and a few grasshoppers, true
-friends of the desert, may be met with. Some grass is scattered
-over the surface of the central elevated region, and the
-whole much resembles the worse parts of the Welsh mountains.
-But scanty as the pasture appears, about six hundred
-sheep, many goats, a few cows and horses, all thrive well on
-it. Of native animals, land-crabs and rats swarm in numbers.
-Whether the rat is really indigenous, may well be doubted;
-there are two varieties as described by Mr. Waterhouse;
-one is of a black colour, with fine glossy fur, and
-lives on the grassy summit, the other is brown-coloured and
-less glossy, with longer hairs, and lives near the settlement
-on the coast. Both these varieties are one-third smaller than
-the common black rat (M. rattus); and they differ from it
-both in the colour and character of their fur, but in no
-other essential respect. I can hardly doubt that these rats
-(like the common mouse, which has also run wild) have
-been imported, and, as at the Galapagos, have varied from
-the effect of the new conditions to which they have been
-exposed: hence the variety on the summit of the island
-differs from that on the coast. Of native birds there are
-none; but the guinea-fowl, imported from the Cape de
-Verd Islands, is abundant, and the common fowl has likewise
-run wild. Some cats, which were originally turned out
-to destroy the rats and mice, have increased, so as to become
-a great plague. The island is entirely without trees,
-in which, and in every other respect, it is very far inferior
-to St. Helena.
-
-One of my excursions took me towards the S. W. extremity
-of the island. The day was clear and hot, and I saw the
-island, not smiling with beauty, but staring with naked
-hideousness. The lava streams are covered with hummocks, and
-are rugged to a degree which, geologically speaking, is not
-of easy explanation. The intervening spaces are concealed
-with layers of pumice, ashes and volcanic tuff. Whilst passing
-this end of the island at sea, I could not imagine what
-the white patches were with which the whole plain was
-mottled; I now found that they were seafowl, sleeping in such
-full confidence, that even in midday a man could walk up
-and seize hold of them. These birds were the only living
-creatures I saw during the whole day. On the beach a great
-surf, although the breeze was light, came tumbling over
-the broken lava rocks.
-
-The geology of this island is in many respects interesting.
-In several places I noticed volcanic bombs, that is, masses of
-lava which have been shot through the air whilst fluid, and
-have consequently assumed a spherical or pear-shape. Not
-only their external form, but, in several cases, their internal
-structure shows in a very curious manner that they have revolved
-in their aerial course. The internal structure of one
-of these bombs, when broken, is represented very accurately
-in the woodcut. The central part is coarsely cellular, the
-cells decreasing in size towards the exterior; where there
-is a shell-like case about the third of an inch in thickness,
-of compact stone, which again is overlaid by the outside
-crust of finely cellular lava. I think there can be little
-doubt, first that the external crust cooled rapidly in the state
-in which we now see it; secondly, that the still fluid lava
-within, was packed by the centrifugal force, generated by
-
-
-[picture]
-
-
-the revolving of the bomb, against the external cooled
-crust, and so produced the solid shell of stone; and lastly,
-that the centrifugal force, by relieving the pressure in the
-more central parts of the bomb, allowed the heated vapours
-to expand their cells, thus forming the coarse cellular mass
-of the centre.
-
-A hill, formed of the older series of volcanic rocks, and
-which has been incorrectly considered as the crater of a
-volcano, is remarkable from its broad, slightly hollowed, and
-circular summit having been filled up with many successive
-layers of ashes and fine scoriae. These saucer-shaped layers
-crop out on the margin, forming perfect rings of many different
-colours, giving to the summit a most fantastic appearance;
-one of these rings is white and broad, and resembles
-a course round which horses have been exercised; hence the
-hill has been called the Devil's Riding School. I brought away
-specimens of one of the tufaceous layers of a pinkish colour and
-it is a most extraordinary fact, that Professor Ehrenberg [5]
-finds it almost wholly composed of matter which has been
-organized: he detects in it some siliceous-shielded fresh-water
-infusoria, and no less than twenty-five different kinds
-of the siliceous tissue of plants, chiefly of grasses. From
-the absence of all carbonaceous matter, Professor Ehrenberg
-believes that these organic bodies have passed through the
-volcanic fire, and have been erupted in the state in which
-we now see them. The appearance of the layers induced me
-to believe that they had been deposited under water, though
-from the extreme dryness of the climate I was forced to imagine,
-that torrents of rain had probably fallen during some
-great eruption, and that thus a temporary lake had been
-formed into which the ashes fell. But it may now be suspected
-that the lake was not a temporary one. Anyhow, we
-may feel sure, that at some former epoch the climate and
-productions of Ascension were very different from what
-they now are. Where on the face of the earth can we find
-a spot, on which close investigation will not discover signs
-of that endless cycle of change, to which this earth has been,
-is, and will be subjected?
-
-On leaving Ascension, we sailed for Bahia, on the coast
-of Brazil, in order to complete the chronometrical measurement
-of the world. We arrived there on August 1st, and
-stayed four days, during which I took several long walks.
-I was glad to find my enjoyment in tropical scenery had not
-decreased from the want of novelty, even in the slightest
-degree. The elements of the scenery are so simple, that they
-are worth mentioning, as a proof on what trifling circumstances
-exquisite natural beauty depends.
-
-The country may be described as a level plain of about
-three hundred feet in elevation, which in all parts has been
-worn into flat-bottomed valleys. This structure is remarkable
-in a granitic land, but is nearly universal in all those
-softer formations of which plains are usually composed.
-The whole surface is covered by various kinds of stately
-trees, interspersed with patches of cultivated ground, out
-of which houses, convents, and chapels arise. It must be
-remembered that within the tropics, the wild luxuriance of
-nature is not lost even in the vicinity of large cities: for
-the natural vegetation of the hedges and hill-sides overpowers
-in picturesque effect the artificial labour of man.
-Hence, there are only a few spots where the bright red
-soil affords a strong contrast with the universal clothing
-of green. From the edges of the plain there are distant
-views either of the ocean, or of the great Bay with its
-low-wooded shores, and on which numerous boats and canoes
-show their white sails. Excepting from these points, the
-scene is extremely limited; following the level pathways,
-on each hand, only glimpses into the wooded valleys below
-can be obtained. The houses I may add, and especially the
-sacred edifices, are built in a peculiar and rather fantastic
-style of architecture. They are all whitewashed; so that
-when illumined by the brilliant sun of midday, and as seen
-against the pale blue sky of the horizon, they stand out more
-like shadows than real buildings.
-
-Such are the elements of the scenery, but it is a hopeless
-attempt to paint the general effect. Learned naturalists
-describe these scenes of the tropics by naming a multitude of
-objects, and mentioning some characteristic feature of each.
-To a learned traveller this possibly may communicate some
-definite ideas: but who else from seeing a plant in an herbarium
-can imagine its appearance when growing in its native
-soil? Who from seeing choice plants in a hothouse, can
-magnify some into the dimensions of forest trees, and crowd
-others into an entangled jungle? Who when examining in
-the cabinet of the entomologist the gay exotic butterflies,
-and singular cicadas, will associate with these lifeless
-objects, the ceaseless harsh music of the latter, and the
-lazy flight of the former, -- the sure accompaniments of the
-still, glowing noon-day of the tropics? It is when the sun has
-attained its greatest height, that such scenes should be
-viewed: then the dense splendid foliage of the mango hides
-the ground with its darkest shade, whilst the upper branches
-are rendered from the profusion of light of the most brilliant
-green. In the temperate zones the case is different -- the
-vegetation there is not so dark or so rich, and hence the
-rays of the declining sun, tinged of a red, purple, or bright
-yellow color, add most to the beauties of those climes.
-
-When quietly walking along the shady pathways, and admiring
-each successive view, I wished to find language to
-express my ideas. Epithet after epithet was found too weak
-to convey to those who have not visited the intertropical
-regions, the sensation of delight which the mind experiences.
-I have said that the plants in a hothouse fail to communicate
-a just idea of the vegetation, yet I must recur to it. The land
-is one great wild, untidy, luxuriant hothouse, made by
-Nature for herself, but taken possession of by man, who has
-studded it with gay houses and formal gardens. How great
-would be the desire in every admirer of nature to behold,
-if such were possible, the scenery of another planet! yet
-to every person in Europe, it may be truly said, that at
-the distance of only a few degrees from his native soil, the
-glories of another world are opened to him. In my last
-walk I stopped again and again to gaze on these beauties, and
-endeavoured to fix in my mind for ever, an impression which
-at the time I knew sooner or later must fail. The form of the
-orange-tree, the cocoa-nut, the palm, the mango, the tree-fern,
-the banana, will remain clear and separate; but the
-thousand beauties which unite these into one perfect scene
-must fade away: yet they will leave, like a tale heard in
-childhood, a picture full of indistinct, but most beautiful
-figures.
-
-August 6th. -- In the afternoon we stood out to sea, with
-the intention of making a direct course to the Cape de Verd
-Islands. Unfavourable winds, however, delayed us, and on
-the 12th we ran into Pernambuco, -- a large city on the
-coast of Brazil, in latitude 8 degs. south. We anchored outside
-the reef; but in a short time a pilot came on board and
-took us into the inner harbour, where we lay close to the
-town.
-
-Pernambuco is built on some narrow and low sand-banks,
-which are separated from each other by shoal channels of
-salt water. The three parts of the town are connected together
-by two long bridges built on wooden piles. The town is in
-all parts disgusting, the streets being narrow, ill-paved,
-and filthy; the houses, tall and gloomy. The season
-of heavy rains had hardly come to an end, and hence the
-surrounding country, which is scarcely raised above the
-level of the sea, was flooded with water; and I failed in
-all my attempts to take walks.
-
-The flat swampy land on which Pernambuco stands is surrounded,
-at the distance of a few miles, by a semicircle of
-low hills, or rather by the edge of a country elevated perhaps
-two hundred feet above the sea. The old city of
-Olinda stands on one extremity of this range. One day I
-took a canoe, and proceeded up one of the channels to visit
-it; I found the old town from its situation both sweeter and
-cleaner than that of Pernambuco. I must here commemorate
-what happened for the first time during our nearly five
-years' wandering, namely, having met with a want of politeness.
-I was refused in a sullen manner at two different
-houses, and obtained with difficulty from a third, permission
-to pass through their gardens to an uncultivated hill,
-for the purpose of viewing the country. I feel glad that
-this happened in the land of the Brazilians, for I bear
-them no good will -- a land also of slavery, and therefore
-of moral debasement. A Spaniard would have felt ashamed
-at the very thought of refusing such a request, or of
-behaving to a stranger with rudeness. The channel by which
-we went to and returned from Olinda, was bordered on each
-side by mangroves, which sprang like a miniature forest out
-of the greasy mud-banks. The bright green colour of these
-bushes always reminded me of the rank grass in a church-yard:
-both are nourished by putrid exhalations; the one speaks of
-death past, and the other too often of death to come.
-
-The most curious object which I saw in this neighbourhood,
-was the reef that forms the harbour. I doubt whether
-in the whole world any other natural structure has so artificial
-an appearance. [6] It runs for a length of several miles in
-an absolutely straight line, parallel to, and not far distant
-from, the shore. It varies in width from thirty to sixty
-yards, and its surface is level and smooth; it is composed of
-obscurely stratified hard sandstone. At high water the waves
-break over it; at low water its summit is left dry, and it
-might then be mistaken for a breakwater erected by Cyclopean
-workmen. On this coast the currents of the sea tend
-to throw up in front of the land, long spits and bars of
-loose sand, and on one of these, part of the town of Pernambuco
-stands. In former times a long spit of this nature
-seems to have become consolidated by the percolation of
-calcareous matter, and afterwards to have been gradually
-upheaved; the outer and loose parts during this process having
-been worn away by the action of the sea, and the solid
-nucleus left as we now see it. Although night and day the
-waves of the open Atlantic, turbid with sediment, are
-driven against the steep outside edges of this wall of stone,
-yet the oldest pilots know of no tradition of any change in its
-appearance. This durability is much the most curious fact
-in its history: it is due to a tough layer, a few inches thick,
-of calcareous matter, wholly formed by the successive
-growth and death of the small shells of Serpulae, together
-with some few barnacles and nulliporae. These nulliporae,
-which are hard, very simply-organized sea-plants, play an
-analogous and important part in protecting the upper surfaces
-of coral-reefs, behind and within the breakers, where
-the true corals, during the outward growth of the mass,
-become killed by exposure to the sun and air. These
-insignificant organic beings, especially the Serpulae, have done
-good service to the people of Pernambuco; for without their
-protective aid the bar of sandstone would inevitably have
-been long ago worn away and without the bar, there would
-have been no harbour.
-
-On the 19th of August we finally left the shores of Brazil.
-I thank God, I shall never again visit a slave-country. To
-this day, if I hear a distant scream, it recalls with painful
-vividness my feelings, when passing a house near Pernambuco,
-I heard the most pitiable moans, and could not but
-suspect that some poor slave was being tortured, yet knew
-that I was as powerless as a child even to remonstrate. I
-suspected that these moans were from a tortured slave, for I
-was told that this was the case in another instance. Near
-Rio de Janeiro I lived opposite to an old lady, who kept
-screws to crush the fingers of her female slaves. I have
-stayed in a house where a young household mulatto, daily
-and hourly, was reviled, beaten, and persecuted enough to
-break the spirit of the lowest animal. I have seen a little
-boy, six or seven years old, struck thrice with a horse-whip
-(before I could interfere) on his naked head, for having
-handed me a glass of water not quite clean; I saw his
-father tremble at a mere glance from his master's eye.
-These latter cruelties were witnessed by me in a Spanish
-colony, in which it has always been said, that slaves are
-better treated than by the Portuguese, English, or other
-European nations. I have seen at Rio de Janeiro a powerful
-negro afraid to ward off a blow directed, as he thought, at his
-face. I was present when a kind-hearted man was on the
-point of separating forever the men, women, and little
-children of a large number of families who had long lived
-together. I will not even allude to the many heart-sickening
-atrocities which I authentically heard of; -- nor would I have
-mentioned the above revolting details, had I not met with
-several people, so blinded by the constitutional gaiety of the
-negro as to speak of slavery as a tolerable evil. Such people
-have generally visited at the houses of the upper classes, where
-the domestic slaves are usually well treated, and they have
-not, like myself, lived amongst the lower classes. Such
-inquirers will ask slaves about their condition; they forget
-that the slave must indeed be dull, who does not calculate
-on the chance of his answer reaching his master's ears.
-
-It is argued that self-interest will prevent excessive cruelty;
-as if self-interest protected our domestic animals, which
-are far less likely than degraded slaves, to stir up the rage
-of their savage masters. It is an argument long since protested
-against with noble feeling, and strikingly exemplified,
-by the ever-illustrious Humboldt. It is often attempted to
-palliate slavery by comparing the state of slaves with our
-poorer countrymen: if the misery of our poor be caused
-not by the laws of nature, but by our institutions, great is
-our sin; but how this bears on slavery, I cannot see; as well
-might the use of the thumb-screw be defended in one
-land, by showing that men in another land suffered from
-some dreadful disease. Those who look tenderly at the slave
-owner, and with a cold heart at the slave, never seem to put
-themselves into the position of the latter; what a cheerless
-prospect, with not even a hope of change! picture to yourself
-the chance, ever hanging over you, of your wife and
-your little children -- those objects which nature urges even
-the slave to call his own -- being torn from you and sold
-like beasts to the first bidder! And these deeds are done
-and palliated by men, who profess to love their neighbours
-as themselves, who believe in God, and pray that his Will be
-done on earth! It makes one's blood boil, yet heart tremble,
-to think that we Englishmen and our American descendants,
-with their boastful cry of liberty, have been and are so
-guilty: but it is a consolation to reflect, that we at least
-have made a greater sacrifice, than ever made by any nation,
-to expiate our sin.
-
-
-On the last day of August we anchored for the second time
-at Porto Praya in the Cape de Verd archipelago; thence we
-proceeded to the Azores, where we stayed six days. On the
-2nd of October we made the shore, of England; and at Falmouth
-I left the Beagle, having lived on board the good little
-vessel nearly five years.
-
-
-Our Voyage having come to an end, I will take a short
-retrospect of the advantages and disadvantages, the pains
-and pleasures, of our circumnavigation of the world. If a
-person asked my advice, before undertaking a long voyage,
-my answer would depend upon his possessing a decided taste
-for some branch of knowledge, which could by this means be
-advanced. No doubt it is a high satisfaction to behold various
-countries and the many races of mankind, but the pleasures
-gained at the time do not counterbalance the evils. It is
-necessary to look forward to a harvest, however distant
-that may be, when some fruit will be reaped, some good
-effected.
-
-Many of the losses which must be experienced are obvious;
-such as that of the society of every old friend, and of the
-sight of those places with which every dearest remembrance
-is so intimately connected. These losses, however, are at
-the time partly relieved by the exhaustless delight of
-anticipating the long wished-for day of return. If, as poets
-say, life is a dream, I am sure in a voyage these are the
-visions which best serve to pass away the long night. Other
-losses, although not at first felt, tell heavily after a period:
-these are the want of room, of seclusion, of rest; the jading
-feeling of constant hurry; the privation of small luxuries, the
-loss of domestic society and even of music and the other
-pleasures of imagination. When such trifles are mentioned, it is
-evident that the real grievances, excepting from accidents, of
-a sea-life are at an end. The short space of sixty years has
-made an astonishing difference in the facility of distant
-navigation. Even in the time of Cook, a man who left
-his fireside for such expeditions underwent severe privations.
-A yacht now, with every luxury of life, can circumnavigate
-the globe. Besides the vast improvements in ships and
-naval resources, the whole western shores of America are
-thrown open, and Australia has become the capital of a
-rising continent. How different are the circumstances to a
-man shipwrecked at the present day in the Pacific, to what
-they were in the time of Cook! Since his voyage a hemisphere
-has been added to the civilized world.
-
-If a person suffer much from sea-sickness, let him weigh
-it heavily in the balance. I speak from experience: it is no
-trifling evil, cured in a week. If, on the other hand, he take
-pleasure in naval tactics, he will assuredly have full scope
-for his taste. But it must be borne in mind, how large a
-proportion of the time, during a long voyage, is spent on
-the water, as compared with the days in harbour. And what
-are the boasted glories of the illimitable ocean. A tedious
-waste, a desert of water, as the Arabian calls it. No doubt
-there are some delightful scenes. A moonlight night, with
-the clear heavens and the dark glittering sea, and the white
-sails filled by the soft air of a gently blowing trade-wind, a
-dead calm, with the heaving surface polished like a mirror,
-and all still except the occasional flapping of the canvas.
-It is well once to behold a squall with its rising arch and
-coming fury, or the heavy gale of wind and mountainous
-waves. I confess, however, my imagination had painted
-something more grand, more terrific in the full-grown storm.
-It is an incomparably finer spectacle when beheld on shore,
-where the waving trees, the wild flight of the birds, the
-dark shadows and bright lights, the rushing of the torrents
-all proclaim the strife of the unloosed elements. At sea
-the albatross and little petrel fly as if the storm were their
-proper sphere, the water rises and sinks as if fulfilling its
-usual task, the ship alone and its inhabitants seem the objects
-of wrath. On a forlorn and weather-beaten coast, the scene
-is indeed different, but the feelings partake more of horror
-than of wild delight.
-
-Let us now look at the brighter side of the past time. The
-pleasure derived from beholding the scenery and the general
-aspect of the various countries we have visited, has decidedly
-been the most constant and highest source of enjoyment. It
-is probable that the picturesque beauty of many parts of
-Europe exceeds anything which we beheld. But there is a
-growing pleasure in comparing the character of the scenery
-in different countries, which to a certain degree is distinct
-from merely admiring its beauty. It depends chiefly on an
-acquaintance with the individual parts of each view. I am
-strongly induced to believe that as in music, the person who
-understands every note will, if he also possesses a proper
-taste, more thoroughly enjoy the whole, so he who examines
-each part of a fine view, may also thoroughly comprehend
-the full and combined effect. Hence, a traveller should be
-a botanist, for in all views plants form the chief
-embellishment. Group masses of naked rock, even in the wildest
-forms, and they may for a time afford a sublime spectacle,
-but they will soon grow monotonous. Paint them with bright
-and varied colours, as in Northern Chile, they will become
-fantastic; clothe them with vegetation, they must form a
-decent, if not a beautiful picture.
-
-When I say that the scenery of parts of Europe is probably
-superior to anything which we beheld, I except, as a class by
-itself, that of the intertropical zones. The two classes cannot
-be compared together; but I have already often enlarged on
-the grandeur of those regions. As the force of impressions
-generally depends on preconceived ideas, I may add, that
-mine were taken from the vivid descriptions in the Personal
-Narrative of Humboldt, which far exceed in merit anything
-else which I have read. Yet with these high-wrought ideas,
-my feelings were far from partaking of a tinge of disappointment
-on my first and final landing on the shores of Brazil.
-
-Among the scenes which are deeply impressed on my mind,
-none exceed in sublimity the primeval forests undefaced by
-the hand of man; whether those of Brazil, where the powers
-of Life are predominant, or those of Tierra del Fuego,
-where Death and decay prevail. Both are temples filled with
-the varied productions of the God of Nature: -- no one can
-stand in these solitudes unmoved, and not feel that there is
-more in man than the mere breath of his body. In calling
-up images of the past, I find that the plains of Patagonia
-frequently cross before my eyes; yet these plains are pronounced
-by all wretched and useless. They can be described
-only by negative characters; without habitations, without
-water, without trees, without mountains, they support merely
-a few dwarf plants. Why, then, and the case is not peculiar
-to myself, have these arid wastes taken so firm a hold on
-my memory? Why have not the still more level, the greener
-and more fertile Pampas, which are serviceable to mankind,
-produced an equal impression? I can scarcely analyze these
-feelings: but it must be partly owing to the free scope given
-to the imagination. The plains of Patagonia are boundless,
-for they are scarcely passable, and hence unknown: they
-bear the stamp of having lasted, as they are now, for ages,
-and there appears no limit to their duration through future
-time. If, as the ancients supposed, the flat earth was
-surrounded by an impassable breadth of water, or by deserts
-heated to an intolerable excess, who would not look at these
-last boundaries to man's knowledge with deep but ill-defined
-sensations?
-
-Lastly, of natural scenery, the views from lofty mountains,
-through certainly in one sense not beautiful, are very
-memorable. When looking down from the highest crest of the
-Cordillera, the mind, undisturbed by minute details, was
-filled with the stupendous dimensions of the surrounding masses.
-
-Of individual objects, perhaps nothing is more certain to
-create astonishment than the first sight in his native haunt of
-a barbarian -- of man in his lowest and most savage state.
-One's mind hurries back over past centuries, and then asks,
-could our progenitors have been men like these? -- men,
-whose very signs and expressions are less intelligible to us
-than those of the domesticated animals; men, who do not
-possess the instinct of those animals, nor yet appear to boast
-of human reason, or at least of arts consequent on that
-reason. I do not believe it is possible to describe or paint
-the difference between savage and civilized man. It is
-the difference between a wild and tame animal: and part
-of the interest in beholding a savage, is the same which
-would lead every one to desire to see the lion in his desert,
-the tiger tearing his prey in the jungle, or the rhinoceros
-wandering over the wild plains of Africa.
-
-Among the other most remarkable spectacles which we
-have beheld, may be ranked, the Southern Cross, the cloud
-of Magellan, and the other constellations of the southern
-hemisphere -- the water-spout -- the glacier leading its blue
-stream of ice, overhanging the sea in a bold precipice -- a
-lagoon-island raised by the reef-building corals -- an active
-volcano -- and the overwhelming effects of a violent earthquake.
-These latter phenomena, perhaps, possess for me a
-peculiar interest, from their intimate connection with the
-geological structure of the world. The earthquake, however,
-must be to every one a most impressive event: the earth,
-considered from our earliest childhood as the type of solidity,
-has oscillated like a thin crust beneath our feet; and
-in seeing the laboured works of man in a moment overthrown,
-we feel the insignificance of his boasted power.
-
-It has been said, that the love of the chase is an inherent
-delight in man -- a relic of an instinctive passion. If so, I
-am sure the pleasure of living in the open air, with the sky
-for a roof and the ground for a table, is part of the same
-feeling, it is the savage returning to his wild and native
-habits. I always look back to our boat cruises, and my land
-journeys, when through unfrequented countries, with an extreme
-delight, which no scenes of civilization could have
-created. I do not doubt that every traveller must remember
-the glowing sense of happiness which he experienced, when
-he first breathed in a foreign clime, where the civilized man
-had seldom or never trod.
-
-There are several other sources of enjoyment in a long
-voyage, which are of a more reasonable nature. The map
-of the world ceases to be a blank; it becomes a picture full
-of the most varied and animated figures. Each part assumes
-its proper dimensions: continents are not looked at in the
-light of islands, or islands considered as mere specks, which
-are, in truth, larger than many kingdoms of Europe. Africa,
-or North and South America, are well-sounding names, and
-easily pronounced; but it is not until having sailed for
-weeks along small portions of their shores, that one is
-thoroughly convinced what vast spaces on our immense world
-these names imply.
-
-From seeing the present state, it is impossible not to look
-forward with high expectations to the future progress of
-nearly an entire hemisphere. The march of improvement,
-consequent on the introduction of Christianity throughout
-the South Sea, probably stands by itself in the records of
-history. It is the more striking when we remember that only
-sixty years since, Cook, whose excellent judgment none will
-dispute, could foresee no prospect of a change. Yet these
-changes have now been effected by the philanthropic spirit
-of the British nation.
-
-In the same quarter of the globe Australia is rising, or
-indeed may be said to have risen, into a grand centre of
-civilization, which, at some not very remote period, will rule
-as empress over the southern hemisphere. It is impossible
-for an Englishman to behold these distant colonies, without
-a high pride and satisfaction. To hoist the British flag,
-seems to draw with it as a certain consequence, wealth,
-prosperity, and civilization.
-
-In conclusion, it appears to me that nothing can be more
-improving to a young naturalist, than a journey in distant
-countries. It both sharpens, and partly allays that want and
-craving, which, as Sir J. Herschel remarks, a man experiences
-although every corporeal sense be fully satisfied. The
-excitement from the novelty of objects, and the chance of
-success, stimulate him to increased activity. Moreover, as a
-number of isolated facts soon become uninteresting, the
-habit of comparison leads to generalization. On the other
-hand, as the traveller stays but a short time in each place,
-his descriptions must generally consist of mere sketches,
-instead of detailed observations. Hence arises, as I have found
-to my cost, a constant tendency to fill up the wide gaps of
-knowledge, by inaccurate and superficial hypotheses.
-
-But I have too deeply enjoyed the voyage, not to recommend
-any naturalist, although he must not expect to be so
-fortunate in his companions as I have been, to take all
-chances, and to start, on travels by land if possible, if
-otherwise, on a long voyage. He may feel assured, he will meet
-with no difficulties or dangers, excepting in rare cases, nearly
-so bad as he beforehand anticipates. In a moral point of
-view, the effect ought to be, to teach him good-humoured
-patience, freedom from selfishness, the habit of acting for
-himself, and of making the best of every occurrence. In
-short, he ought to partake of the characteristic qualities of
-most sailors. Travelling ought also to teach him distrust; but
-at the same time he will discover, how many truly kind-hearted
-people there are, with whom he never before had, or ever again
-will have any further communication, who yet are ready to offer
-him the most disinterested assistance.
-
-[1] After the volumes of eloquence which have poured forth on
-this subject, it is dangerous even to mention the tomb. A
-modern traveller, in twelve lines, burdens the poor little
-island with the following titles, -- it is a grave, tomb,
-pyramid, cemetery, sepulchre, catacomb, sarcophagus, minaret,
-and mausoleum!
-
-[2] It deserves notice, that all the many specimens of this
-shell found by me in one spot, differ as a marked variety,
-from another set of specimens procured from a different spot.
-
-[3] Beatson's St. Helena. Introductory chapter, p. 4.
-
-[4] Among these few insects, I was surprised to find a small
-Aphodius (nov. spec.) and an Oryctes, both extremely numerous
-under dung. When the island was discovered it certainly
-possessed no quadruped, excepting perhaps a mouse: it becomes,
-therefore, a difficult point to ascertain, whether these
-stercovorous insects have since been imported by accident, or if
-aborigines, on what food they formerly subsisted. On the banks
-of the Plata, where, from the vast number of cattle and horses,
-the fine plains of turf are richly manured, it is vain to seek
-the many kinds of dung-feeding beetles, which occur so
-abundantly in Europe. I observed only an Oryctes (the insects of
-this genus in Europe generally feed on decayed vegetable matter)
-and two species of Phanaeus, common in such situations. On the
-opposite side of the Cordillera in Chiloe, another species of
-Phanaeus is exceedingly abundant, and it buries the dung of the
-cattle in large earthen balls beneath the ground. There is
-reason to believe that the genus Phanaeus, before the
-introduction of cattle, acted as scavengers to man. In Europe,
-beetles, which find support in the matter which has already
-contributed towards the life of other and larger animals, are so
-numerous that there must be considerably more than one hundred
-different species. Considering this, and observing what a
-quantity of food of this kind is lost on the plains of La Plata,
-I imagined I saw an instance where man had disturbed that chain,
-by which so many animals are linked together in their native
-country. In Van Diemen's Land, however, I found four species of
-Onthophagus, two of Aphodius, and one of a third genus, very
-abundantly under the dung of cows; yet these latter animals had
-been then introduced only thirty-three years. Previous to that
-time the kangaroo and some other small animals were the only
-quadrupeds; and their dung is of a very different quality from
-that of their successors introduced by man. In England the
-greater number of stercovorous beetles are confined in their
-appetites; that is, they do not depend indifferently on any
-quadruped for the means of subsistence. The change, therefore,
-in habits which must have taken place in Van Diemen's Land is
-highly remarkable. I am indebted to the Rev. F. W. Hope, who, I
-hope, will permit me to call him my master in Entomology, for
-giving me the names of the foregoing insects.
-
-[5] Monats. der Konig. Akad. d. Wiss. zu Berlin. Vom
-April, 1845.
-
-[6] I have described this Bar in detail, in the Lond. and
-Edin. Phil. Mag., vol. xix. (1841), p. 257.
-
-
-
-
-
-End of Project Gutenberg's Etext of The Voyage of the Beagle by Darwin
-
-
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